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still the tumult at St Giles', viii. 314;
saves his life with diffi ulty, 315
Lindsay of Balcarres, John (Lord of Ses-
sion), proposes that the clergy shall be
represented in the Scottish Parliament,
i. 66

Lindsay of Byres, Lord, 1616, created Earl

of Lindsay, 1633, but the patent sus-
pended till 1635 (John Lindsay), visits
Charles at Berwick, ix. 47; is vouched
by Montrose as his authority for alleging
that Argyle proposed to depose the King,
396

Lindsay, Sir James, is employed by the
Pope to carry a message to James, i. 97 ;
is sent by James to Rome, 224
Lindsell, Augustine (Bishop of Peterbo
rough), becomes Bishop of Peterborough,
vii. 314

Lindsey, Earl of, 1626 (Robert Bertie),
commands the fleet after Buckingham's
murder, vi. 363; fails to relieve Rochelle,
364; receives instructions as commander
of the first ship-money fleet, 383; con-
voys vessels to Dunkirk, and sails down
Channel, 384; finds no enemy, 385; bad
state of the provisions on board the fleet
of, 388; end of the employment of, 390;
convoys Spanish vessels to Dunkirk, viii.
156; is sent to command at Berwick,
385; the King offers the Commons a
guard commanded by, x. 134; is made
General of the King's army, 211. See
Willoughby de Eresby, Lord
Linlithgow, Charles orders the removal of

the Council and the Court of Session to,
viii. 321; proclamation of Charles read
at, 326

Lisle, Viscount,_1605-1618 (Robert Syd-
ney), created Earl of Leicester, iii. 215.
See Leicester, Earl of

Little Gidding, community established by
Nicholas Ferrar at, vii. 263

Liveries, Statute of, enforced by Henry
VII., i. 5

Lodgers, householders prohibited from
taking, viii. 289

Loan, the forced. See Forced loan, the
Loftus of Ely, Viscount, 1622 (Lord Chan
cellor of Ireland), charges brought by
Falkland against, viii. 20; is appointed
a member of the Commission of Investi-
gation into the case of the Byrnes, 23:
is one of the Lords Justices, 27; gives
Wentworth a lukewarm support, 37:
Wentworth takes the Great Seal from,
71; is to be prosecuted in the Star
Chamber, 72

Loftus, Sir Adam, gives money to the
King, and becomes Vice-Treasurer of
Ireland, viii. 194

Loix, Isle of, defeat of Buckingham's
forces in retreating to the, vi. 197
London, City of, greatness of the trade of,
i. 179; feeling in favour of the Dutch in,
214; attack of the mob of, on Gondomar's
servant, iii. 135; ends money to James,
197: contest for the Recordership of,

LON

216; James's visit to, after his illness,
296; attempt to raise a loan for Frede
rick in, 332; attempt to raise a loan for
the Palatinate in, 340; is urged to con-
tribute to the repair of St. Paul's, 341;
is asked by James to contribute to the
Palatinate, 342; offers a voluntary sub.
scription, 343; outbreak of the plague in,
v. 337: refuses to lend to Charles, vi.
124, resists the requisition of ships for
Willougby's fleet, but is obliged to fit
them out, 132; again refuses to lend to
Charles, 140; its ships ur.der Penning-
ton's command, 151; mutiny in the ships
of, 153; impossibility of borrowing money
for the army at Rhé in, 193; is fined for
failing to discover the murderers of Dr.
Lambe, 320; Laud's unpopularity in,
vii. 128; attempts to prevent over-
crowding in, 161; orders to the Lord
Mayor to keep down the price of corn in,
162; the country gentlemen ordered to
leave, 240; authority of Laud over, 241 ;
objects to the first writ of ship-money,
375; makes submission, 376; is fined in
the Star Chamber for breaking the
charter of the Londonderry Settlement,
viii. 59; slowness of the sheriffs in as-
sessing ship-money in, 93; growth of,
287; complaints of the increase of build-
ings in, 288; proposal to divide the
government of the new districts between
Westminster and, ib.; demolition of new
buildings in, 289; sanitary defects of,
ib.; exaction of tithes due to the City
clergy in, 290; new corporation for gov-
erning the suburbs of, ib.; strength and
organisation of, 301; is asked for a con-
tribution for the war with Scotland, ix.
6: a loan demanded from, 26; fresh
attempt to obtain a loan by threats from.
39; refuses to lend to the King, 98; at-
tempt to enforce a loan from, by the impri-
sonment of four aldermen, 130; abandon-
ment of Charles's attempt to enforce a
loan from, 136; attempt of the Lord
Mayor personally to collect ship-money
in, 153; failure to collect coat-and-con-
duct money in, ib.; the levy of soldiers
resisted in, 160; rejects a demand for a
loan made by Cottington and Vane, 174;
persists in refusing to lend in spite of
a promise that negotiations will be
opened with the Scots, 177; refuses to
lend after the Scottish invasion, 189:
circulation of copies of the petition of
the twelve peers in, 202; a petition simi-
lar to that of the peers signed in, 205:
its petition presented to the King, 207:
disturbances in, 211; agrees to lend on
the security of the peers, 212; reduces
its loan, and chooses Alderman Wright
as Lord Mayor, 214; attack by a mob
on St Paul's Cathedral in, 215; refuses
to elect its Recorder to the Long Par
liament, 220; unpopularity of Strafford
in, 221; alarm lest the King's review of
troops at the Tower should be intended to

LON

be followed by an attack on, 233: offers to
lend money to Parliament conditionally,
236; petition for the abolition of episco-
pacy numerously signed in, 247; stop-
page of the payment of the loan offered
by, 294; petition for the execution of
Strafford signed in, 341; the supposed
French attack on Jersey and Guernsey
causes a panic in, 362; overtures of
Charles to, x. 28; disturbances and fa-
naticism in, 29; is ready to lend money
for the suppression of the Irish rebellion,
70; petitions for the securing of Catholic
lords, and depriving the bishops of
their votes, 71; importance to Charles
of securing popularity in, 82; royalist
opinions of the wealthy citizens of, 83;
organisation of the ceremonial for the
King's entry into, ib; the King's en-
trance into, 84; Charles is applauded by
the citizens of, 85: Charles directs the
Lord Mayor to quiet tumults in, 97; peti-
tion against the votes of the bishops and
of the Catholic lords, 98; interference of
the Lord Mayor and Recorder with the
petitioners in, 104; arrest of Prophet
Hunt, and attack on Barebone's house
in, 105; election of a Puritan Common
Council in, 107; declaration of the Lord
Mayor that unless Lunsford is dismissed
from the Lieutenancy of the Tower he
cannot answer for the peace of, 112; the
Commons ask for the protection of the
trained bands of, 132; Charles orders the
Lord Mayor to keep the peace of, 134:
the five members take refuge in, 138; re-
fuses to surrender the five meinbers to the
King, 142; the Commons meet in coin-
mittee in, 143; panic in, 147; offers a
guard to the Commons, 148; triumphal
procession of the Commons from, 150;
review of the trained bands of, 195
Londonderry, state of the settlement at,
viii. 59 sentence in the Star Chamber
on the City of London for abuses in the
settlement of, 60; forfeiture of the lands
held by the City of London in, 290; the
City asks for the restitution of its lands
in, ix. 236; is seized by the army, 254
Londoners' petition against episcopacy,
the. See Root-and-Branch petition, the
Long, Walter, being imprisoned, applies
for a habeas corpus, vii. 90; is removed
to the Tower, 94: is liberated on giving
security for good behaviour, 110; returns
to prison, 111

Longford, settlement of, viii. T

Lope de Vega, his verses on the Prince's
visit to Madrid, v. 18

Lords, House of, position of, at the acces
sion of James, i. 162; takes part, in 1604,
in the controversy on Goodwin's case,
168; and in the inquiry into purveyance,
170; proposes to hold a conference on
Sunday, 173: concurs in a petition on
wardship, 175: blames the proposal of the
Commons on the subject, 176; opposes
the ecclesiastical policy of the Commons,

LOR

180; rejects a proposal for inflicting an
extraordinary punishment on the Gur
powder Plotters, 286; throws out a Bill
on purveyance, 299; a petition on the
grievances of the merchants in Spain for-
warded by the Commons to, 351: Bill
on impositions dropped in, ii. 83; con-
sults the judges on the question of im-
positions, 241; refuses to confer with the
Lords on the impositions, 242: acquaints
the Commons with Bishop Neile's regret
for his speech, 245; old and new peers
in, iv. 37; repudiates the answer of
Bacon and Mandeville to the charges
against the referees, 50; its unfitness for
conducting a political trial, 68; evidence
against Bacon laid before, 72; sentences
Mompe-son, 84: sentences Bacon, 103;
sentences Michell, 108; receives a charge
against Sir J. Bennett, ib.; examines
Yelverton, 111; sends Yelverton to the
Tower, 113; considers Yelverton's insult
to Buckingham, 114; sentences Yelver-
ton, 115; sentences Floyd, 123; judicial
functions of, 124; dismisses the Bishop
of Llandaff to the censure of the Arch-
bishop of Canterbury, 125; releases Sir
John Bennett on bail, ib.; exculpates
Buckingham, v. 188; condemns the
Spanish treaties, 189; discusses James's
demand of a supply, 195; orders an in-
quiry into insults to the Spanish em-
bassy, 203; sentences Middlesex, 231;
allows a Bill granting tonnage and pound-
age for a year to drop, 365; is adjourned
to Oxford, 373; reassembles at Oxford,
397 is summoned before the King in
Christchurch Hall, 403; orders that no
peers shall hold more than two proxies,
vi. 68; asks the Commons to support
the King's armaments, ib.; takes up
Arundel's case, 91; demands an account
of Arundel's absence, 92; acknowledges
the writ sent to Bristol, 94; orders that
the charges against Buckingham and
Bristol shall proceed together, 95; Bristol
defends himself before, 97; debate on
Bristol's claim to use counsel debated in,
98; impeachment of Buckingham before,
ib.; continues to urge the King to liberate
Arundel, and refuses to imprison Buck.
ingham, 108: sends a curt message to
Charles about Arundel, 109; questions
the accuracy of the report given to
Charles of the words used by Digges,
III; protest that Digges had said no-
thing contrary to the King's honour
argued in, 112; insists upon allowing
counsel to Bristol, ib.; proposal to de-
prive new peers of their votes in, 115:
Arundel takes his place in, ib.; begs for
a postponement of the dissolution, 120;
insists upon the restoration to their seats
of five excluded peers, 231; the Com-
mons' resolutions on the liberties of the
subject laid before, 253; inclines to sup-
port the King, and consults the judges,
256; legal argument on the Commons'

LOR

esolutions before, 257: discusses the
question of the King's power of com
mittal, 258; draws up counter-proposi-
tions to the Commons' resolutions, 259:
spirit in which the propositions were
adopted by, 261; report on the Petition
of Right by a committee of, 276: at-
tempts to modify the clause of the pe-
tition relating to imprisonment, 277:
an additional clause added to the petition
by, 279: hesitates to proceed with the
new clause after its rejection by the
Commons, 281; sends the clause again
to the Commons with an explanation,
282; is forced to abandon the clause,
286; asks the Commons to join in a pro-
testation to satisfy the King, 287; adopts
a declaration that its members had no
intention of lessening the power which
they were bound by the oath of supre-
macy to defend, and accepts the Petition
of Right, 289; directs the Lord Keeper
to acquaint the King that its feeling is
against a dissolution, 307; asks for a
better answer to the Petition of Right,
308; gives sentence upon Manwaring,
312; suggestion that Catholic peers need
not take the oath of allegiance in, ix. 88;
refuses to adjourn on account of the
sitting of Convocation, 101; questions
Manwaring's appointment to a bishopric,
106; unpopularity of the bishops in, ib. ;
obliges Bishop Hall to beg pardon of
Saye, 107; the King appeals for support
against the Commons to, 108; gives
support to the King, 109; continues by
a reduced majority to support the King,
111: Strafford appears in, 232; receives
Strafford's impeachment, and commits
him to custody, 235; the preliminary
charges against Strafford laid before,
241; ship-money condemned by, 264:
a congregation of Separatists brought
before, 266; joins the Commons in ask-
ing for the execution of the recusancy
laws, 269; passes the Triennial Bill, 273:
orders the arrest of Berkeley, 289; irri-
tates the Commons by granting time to
Strafford to prepare his defence, 291;
grants Strafford another week, 292;
anxiety of Charles to win votes in, 293:
Strafford's answer read in, 296; joins the
Commons in asking for the dispersion
of the Irish army, the disarmament of
the Catholics, and the dismissal of the
Queen's Catholic attendants, 297: ap-
points a committee on ecclesiastical in-
novations, 298; urges the City to lend,
and the King to disarm the Catholics
and disband the Irish army, 325; al-
lows both Strafford and his accusers to
produce fresh evidence, 327; is irritated
at the introduction of the Bill of At-
tainder, 331; hears the legal argument
on behalf of Strafford, 337; altercation
between Savile and Strafford in, 339;
reads the Bill of Attainder the second
tine, 341; hears St. John's argument on

LOR-

the legality of the Bill of Attainder, 344 :
alarm felt in, at the King's intrigues, 343:
is beset by a mob demanding Strafford's
execution, 349; sees to the safety of the
Tower, 355; the Protestation taken in,
356; appoints a committee to examine
the Army Plot, 358; pushes on the At-
tainder Bill, 359: passes the Attainder
Bill and the Bill against the dissolution
of Parliament, 361; sends a deputation
to urge the King to give the Royal as-
sent to the Attainder Bill, 363; agrees to
the withdrawal of the clergy from tem
poral functions, but excepts the bishops'
seats in Parliament, 378; discusses the
Bishops' Exclusion Bill in conference,
382; throws it out, 383; does not adopt
any particular plan of Church reform,
387 does not support Williams's scheme
of Church reform, 409; throws out a Bill
for making the signature of the Protesta.
tion obligatory, 413; is recommended by
the King not to oppose the Commons till
his return from Scotland, 414; joins the
Commons in asking the King to make
Pembroke Lord Steward and Salisbury
Lord Treasurer, 417; gives a day for the
adjournment, x. 1o; adopts amendments
to the Commons' resolutions on ecclesias-
tical innovations, 15: orders Divine ser
vice to be performed according to law,and
refuses to communicate its resolution to
the Commons, 16: appeals to the law, 17;
adjournment of, 18; the second Bishops'
Exclusion Bill sent up to, 38; the King's
declaration that he will stand by the dis
cipline and doctrine of the Church cir
culated in, 39; is asked to suspend the
bishops from voting on the Exclusion
Bill, 40: postpones consideration of the
suspension of the bishops, 41: imprisons
Father Philips, 54; unpopularity of pro-
tections given by members of, 70: the
City petition for depriving bishops of
their votes in, 71; agrees to the proposal
that 5,000 Scots shall be sent to Ireland,
ib. orders an inquiry into Beale's alle
gations, 73; refuses to give powers to
Essex and Holland in excess of those
conferred by the King's commission, ib. ;
amends the Impressment Bill, 95; is dis-
satisfied with the King's speech on the
Impressment Bill, 99; declares that no
religion except that established by law
in England is to be tolerated, 100; enters
into a contest with the Commons on the
Scottish army for Ireland, and th Im
pressment Bill, 103; refuses to join in a
petition for Lunsford's removal, 109;
wishes to give Charles time to reconsider
Lunsford's appointment, 111; intimida-
tion of the bishops outside, 117; offers to
join the Commons in bringing to justice
Newport's accusers, and asks the Com-
mons to support them in demanding a
guard against riotous assemblages, ih.;
most of the bishops absent themselves
from, 118; is asked by Digby to declare

LOR

that Parliament is no longer free, 119:
rejects Digby's motion, and attempts to
mediate between the King and the Com-
mons, 120; sides with the Commons after
the protest of the bishops, 123: accepts
the impeachment of the bishops who had
signed the protest, and imprisons them,
125; refuses to ask that ssex may com
mand the guard, 126; Mandeville and
five members of the House of Commons
charged with treason before, 130: ap
points a committee to inquire into the
legality of the proceeding, 131; places
itself in opposition to the King, 132;
joins the Commons in ordering Hotham
to occupy Hull, 153; is agreed with the
Commons in taking measures of defence,
but objects to ask the King to ppoint
Conyers Lieutenant of the Tower, 154;
Byron refuses to answer a summons
from, 155 objects to the form of the
Commons' declaration for defence, 156;
wishes to thank the King for his concilia-
tory message, 159; refuses to join in the
demand of the Commons for the fortresses
and the militia, or to censure Lennox
heavily, 160; resists the Commons, 161;
presentation of the artificers' petition to,
162 joins the Commons about the mi itia,
and passes the Bishops' Exclusion Bill,
163 accepts the list of Lords-Lieu-
tenants sent up by the Commons, 165;
the bishops deprived of their seats in,
166; accepts the Commons' resolution
for putting the kingdom in a state of
defence, 171; sentences Benyon to fine
and imprisonment, 185; many Royalist
peers abandon, ib.; sentences Sir Ed-
ward Herbert, 194

Lords Justices of Ireland, the (Sir William
Parsons and Sir John Borlase), find it
difficult to manage Parliament, x. 45:
are horrified to hear that the plantation
of Connaught is abandoned, io.; fresh
confiscations desired by, 49: receive
intelligence of a plot to seize Dubl n
Castle, 51 arrest the chief conspirators,
52 do not know how to deal with the
Catholic lords, 53: project of supersed-
ing, 113 summon the Catholic lords to
Dublin, 114; behaviour of, to Ormond,
115; think that the spread of the re-
bellion will lay open a great part of Ire-
land to confiscation and the settlement
of religion, ib.; send Ormond to relieve
Drogheda, but order him not to follow
up the enemy, 174
Lords-Lieutenants, a committee of the
Commons recommends that the members
of each county shall nominate, x. 157
Lords of the Articles, the Scottish, manner
of the election of, vii. 287: necessity of
reconstituting, ix. 50; reconstitution of,

53
Iorkin Thomas, is Charles's agent at the
French Court, v. 381

Lorne, Lord (Archibald Campbell), wish
of Charles to marry Elizabeth Stuart to,

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LOU

vi. 71; quarrels with the Bishop of Gal.
loway, viii. 316. See Argyle, Earl of
Lorraine, armies of Mansfeld and Chris-
tian of Brunswick threaten to enter, iv.
338; is ravaged by Mansfeld, 339; mis-
Sion of Walter Montague to, vi. 167; is
seized by Richelieu, vii. 347: Charles
wishes France to surrender, in exchange
for the Palatinate, viii. 97. See Charles
III., Duke of

Lothian, Earl of, 1631 (William Ker), his
opinion of Montrose, ix. 397

Loudoun, Earl of, by patent granted in
1633, but superseded till 1641 (John
Campbell), is interrupted in Parliament
by Charles, vii. 289: Charles complains
to, ix. 45 visits Charles at Berwick, 47;
is sent to England to plead the cause of
the Scottish Parliament, 55; arrives in
London, 73: is sent back to Scotland,
74 returns to England, and negotiates
with Charles, 91; is committed to prison,
97; declares himself ignorant of French,
99; is set at liberty, 168: finds that the
terms which he brings from Carles do
not give satisfaction in Scotland, 169:
takes the lead on the Scottish side at the
Treaty of Ripon, 210; dis overs Savile's
treachery, ib.; goes to Scotland charged
with a secret commission from the King,
410; returns from Scotland, 414; in-
formation brought by, 415; Charles pro-
poses to make Chancellor of Scotland,
x. 20; is accepted as Chancellor by the
Parliament, 22

Louis XIII. (King of France, 1610-1643),
his relations to the States-General, ii.
315: approves of the murder of Ancre,
iii. 109; mediates in Germany, 364;
accompanies Luynes against the Hugue.
nots, iv. 290; refuses to accept Don-
caster as a mediator, 291; makes peace
with the Huguenots, 402; takes alarm
at the power of Spain, v. 215; appoints
La Vieuville as his minister, 216; sends
Mariscot to the Elector of Bavaria, 218;
is more anxious about the Valtelline
than about the Palatinate, 219; receives
Mansfeld and sends him to England,
221; insists on the insertion in the mar
riage treaty of an engagement in favour
of the English Catholics, 251; dismisses
La Vieuville and appoints Richelieu his
chief minister, 255; promises to support
Mansfeld, 260; aims at the conquest of
the Valtelline, 265; explains that Mans-
feld will be used for the recovery of the
Valtelline, 266; disputes with James
about Mansfeld's passage, 267; gives a
vague promise about the Palatinate, 270;
promises to allow Mansfeld to land in
France, 274: wishes Mansfeld to be em.
ployed in the relief of Breda, 276; refuses
to allow Mansfeld to land in France,
280; wishes to involve James in a war
with Spain, 282; prohibits Mansfeld
from landing in France, 286; neglects to
Dull down Fort Louis, 304; cbtains from

LOU

England and the States-General the
promise of a loan of ships to be used
against the Huguenots, 305; intimates
his wish that Charles shall not appear
in person at his marriage, 306; refuses
to engage
in war with Spain, 331: opens
negotiations with the Huguenots, 381;
is reported to have made peace with the
Huguenots, 386; the Huguenot deputies
demand peace from, 392; wishes to play
the first part in an alliance against
Spain, vi. 24; refuses to allow Bucking-
ham to visit France, 25: Buckingham is
instructed to demand engagements in
favour of the Huguenots from, 26;
claims the restoration of the 'St. John,'
28; offers to receive Buckingham if the
English Catholics are relieved from the
penal laws, and if the old arrangement
of the Queen's household is unchanged,
38: is irritated at the proposal that he shall
play a secondary part in the league for
the recovery of the Palatinate, 48; carries
on negotiations with the Huguenots, 50;
comes to an agreement with them,
through the mediation of Holland and
Carleton, 51; offers to release the Eng-
lish ships detained in reprisal for the
prize goods seized in England, 69;
wishes to co-operate with England, 87:
offers to recall Blainville, 88; finds the
hope of an alliance with England slip-
ping away, 89; accepts the Peace of
Barcelona with Spain, 90; is angry at
the expulsion of his sister's attendants,
and resolves to send Bassompierre to
England, 137; sends an ultimatum to
Charles, 152; crosses the Alps to take
part in a campaign in Italy, vii. 99:
abandons the English Catholics in the
Treaty of Susa, 100; refuses to dismiss
Richelieu on the Day of Dupes, 184:
expects the German Princes on the left
bank of the Rhine to seek his protec-
tion, 195; refuses to do anything for
Frederick which will ruin the German
Catholics, 198; takes Bernhard's army
into his pay, 374: presses Charles to
make a league with him, viii. 161;
takes the field against a Spanish inva-
sion, 164; birth of the son of, 381; first
letter written, but not sent, by the
Covenanters to, ix. 91; second letter
sent by the Covenanters to, 92; Charles
sends a copy of the first letter of the
Covenanters to. 97

Louis, the Dauphin (afterwards Louis
XIV.), birth of, viii. 381

Louth, misappropriation of the property of
the Free School at, viii. III

Louth, county of, rebellion of a great part
of the gentry of, x. 96

Louvain, the French abandon the siege of,
vii. 387

Lowe, Sir Thomas, brings before the
Commons the grievances of the mer
chants in Spain, i. 349

Lübeck, peace of, vii. 101

MAC

Ludlow Castle, performance of the Comus
at, vii. 335

Ludovisi, Cardinal, letter of Olivares to,
V. 14 announces the decision of the
Cardinals on the grant of a dispensa.
tion for the Infanta's marriage, 33.
Lumsden, Thomas, fined and imprisoned
by the Star Chamber, ii 342
Lunsford, Thomas, complains of the con
duct of his soldiers, ix. 160; is appointed
Lieutenant of the Tower, x. 108: the
Lords refuse to join the Commons in a
petition for the removal of, 109; protest
of the Commons against, 110; dismissal
of, 112; drives a mob out of Westmin-
ster Hall, 117; collects his followers at
Kingston, 154; is supposed to have a
design on Portsmouth, 155; accompanies
Hastings into Leicestershire, 208
Lutheranism, character of, i. 16; influence
in Germany of, iii. 273

Luttrell, Thomas, is a member of an Irish
deputation to the King, and is sent to
the Fleet, ii. 294

Lützen, battle of, vii. 207

Luynes, Duke of, rise of, at the French
Court, iii. 109; is victorious over the
French Protestants, iv. 290; insults Sir
Edward Herbert, ib.; death of, 291
Lycidas, written by Milton, viii. 244; lines
relating to Laud in, 245

Lynn, Brent's report of the metropolitical
visitation of, viii. 109

Lyttelton, Edward, declares that the sub-
ject will be in a worse position if the
statutes are confirmed without explana
tion, vi. 273; moves to send for those
who had seized Rolle's goods, vi. 32;
does not support Eliot in his resolution
to appeal to the country, 67; asks in the
King's Bench that the imprisoned mein.
bers of Parliament may be bailed, 92;
becomes Recorder of the City of Lon-
don, 221; becomes Solicitor-General,
366. See Lyttelton, Sir Edward; Lyt-
telton, Lord

Lyttelton, Sir Edward, argues for the
Crown in Hampden's case, viii. 273; is
made Lord Keeper, ix. 263. See Lyttel
ton, Edward; Lyttelton, Lord
Lyttelton, Lord, 1640 (Edward Lyttelton),
is disabled by illness from presiding over
the House of Lords during Strafford's
trial, ix. 302; r fuses to seal a commis.
sion for the Parliamentary Commis
sioners, x. 4; votes against the refusal
of the Lords to lay their resolution on
Divine service before the Commons, 16:
receives the protests of the bishops
from Nicholas, 122; takes the Great Seal
to York, 196. See Lyttelton, Edward;
Lyttelton, Sir Edward

Macbeth, reference to touching for the
King's evil in, i. 152; to Garnet's doctrine
of equivocation, 282

Machiavelli, Wentworth adopts the maxims
of, viii. 30

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