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facetious in adverse as well as prosperous fortune; but after that event, if he would converse with any one, it was only respecting the enormous crime of Cromwell, Bradshaw, and the other regicides, and inquiring whether the Divine vengeance had not yet overtaken them?

Like his great predecessors, Morton and Wolsey, he had the sons of the principal nobility-of the Marquess of Hertford, and the Earls of Pembroke, Salisbury, and Leicester, and many other young gentlemen-reared in his family before they went to the University. They were taught the classics by his chaplains; they had proper instruction in all manly exercises from the officers of his household; and he himself read them lectures on logic, and catechised them in religion during Lent.

He affected to rival Wolsey in his princely expenditure on public buildings. He repaired and beautified Westminster Abbey at his own expense. He rebuilt Lincoln College, Oxford, merely because it had been founded by one of his predecessors; and he was a splendid benefactor to St. John's College, Cambridge, the place of his education.

While Lord Keeper he embraced an opportunity of repurchasing his family estate, which he left, though considerably burdened with debt, to his nephew and heir, Sir Griffith Williams.

His writings, which are entirely theological, I do not presume to criticise. They had long fallen into oblivion, but I should think they might now be read with advantage in the Tractarian controversy. He was superior in learning and acutenesss to Laud, whose reputation is owing to the illegal, barbarous, unprovoked sentence passed upon him,-as little to be palliated as defended,and the calm, dignified, and courageous manner in which he met it, whereby all his faults, and follies, and cruelties were forgotten, and he, who if he had been left alone would have sunk into oblivion, or remembered only for his bigotry and intemperance, is now regarded as a martyr and a saint.'

Williams's printed speeches which have come down to us show a vile taste in oratory and composition. They are most pedantic, quibbling, and illogical.

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He might have played a great part, first in opposing the arbitrary measures of the Court on his dismissal from office, and afterwards in checking the excesses of the parliamentary party when he was released from the Tower at the meeting of the Long Parliament; but he wanted moderation and firmness of purpose; he could not command the support of his own friends, and he was constantly laying himself open to the assaults of his antagonists. There is no sufficient ground for Clarendon's censure, that he was "a man of a very corrupt nature, whose passions transported him into the most unjustifiable actions;" but still less can he be taken for the immaculate character represented by Bishop Hacket,—although it speaks loudly for his good qualities, that he so powerfully attached to him a man of learning and discernment, who had known him most intimately for many years, and who continued warmly to defend him after his disgrace, and after his death.'

Williams was buried in a little Welsh church near Penrhyn, where a monument was some years after erected to his memory, for which an epitaph was written by the faithful Hacket,-recording at great length his origin, his accomplishments,' and his services,-and thus conclud

ing:

"Postquam inter tempora luctuosissima
Satur esset omnium quæ videret et audiret,
Nec Regi aut Patriæ per rabiem perduellium amplius servire potuit.
Anno Aetatis 680 expleto Martis 25° qui fuit ei natalis
Summa fide in Christum, inconcussâ erga Regem fidelitate
Animam angina extinctus piissime Deo reddidit.

Nec refert quod tantillum monumentum in occulto angulo positum
Tanti viri memoriam servat,

Cujus virtutes omnium ætatum tempora celebrabunt."

1 Hacket's "Scrinia Reserata, a memorial offered to the great deservings of John Williams, D.D.," is one of the most curious pieces of biography in our language, and should be studied by all who would thoroughly understand the history of the reigns of James I. and Charles I. Consisting of two folio volumes, generally bound up together-what it contains of Williams is like two grains of wheat in two bushels (not of chaff) of various other sorts of grain-but it is full of most rare quotations, and of quaint illustrations. The author must have been a man of extensive learning and most agreeable conversation: he makes us always highly pleased with himself, if not with his hero. Dr. Johnson says, rather harshly, "This book is written with such depravity of genius, and such mixture of the fop and the pedant, as has not often appeared." Philips's "Life of Williams," written in the beginning of the last century, contains little additional information, and is a work of very inferior merit.

(Inter alia)" Novem Linguarum Thesaurus." He was not like the polyglot Sir William Jones, ignorant of his mother-tongue (Welsh).

CHAPTER LXI.

LIFE OF LORD KEEPER COVENTRY FROM HIS BIRTH TILL THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE PROCEEDINGS RESPECT

W

ING SHIP MONEY.

E now come to the life of a steady lawyer, regularly bred to the bar,-by "a mixture of good and evil arts" advancing to the highest honors of his profession,-of powerful though not brilliant parts, -of great skill in his own science, but without any ornamental accomplishments, unscrupulous where any great object was to be gained, yet with tact to stop without too much shocking public opinion, though unaided by principle, knowing how to preserve a certain reputation for honesty,-uniformly prosperous while living-and fortunate in his death.

The Great Seal having been surrendered up by Lord Keeper Williams, at Foxley, in Wiltshire, remained with the King for a few days till he returned to Whitehall, and on the 1st of November, 1625, was delivered to Sir THOMAS COVENTRY.'

His family is traced to an inhabitant of the city of Coventry, who, coming to push his fortune in London in the reign of Henry IV., took the name of his native place. He left a son, John, who being an eminent mercer rose to be Sheriff in 1416, and Lord Mayor of London in 1425. He is much celebrated in the Chronicles for his discreet carriage in the struggle which took place during his Mayoralty between Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, and Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester,' and for having been appointed one of the executors of the famous Richard Whittington, who had risen to be thrice Lord Mayor from having had no property in the world but his cat. He bought an estate at Cussington, in Oxfordshire, long possessed by his posterity. From him was descended Sir Thomas Coventry, a very learned Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in the reign of James I.,' who married the

1 Rot. Pat. I Car. 1, p. 24, n 7.

3

Ante, vol. I. p. 317.

Appointed Jan. 25, 1606. See in Dugd. Or. Jur. p. 97, a curious account of the procession on this occasion from Sergeants' Inn to Westminster, when

heiress of a family of the name of Jeffreys, settled at Croome, in Worcestershire.

Thomas, the Lord Keeper, was their eldest son, and was born there in the year 1578. He was an instance, not so rare in former as in more recent times, of the son of a great lawyer, proving a greater lawyer, although he labored under the disadvantage of being heir to considerable wealth, both by his father's and mother's side. But he showed from infancy, uncommon quickness and vigor of application. He remained under the paternal roof with a private tutor till he was fourteen, when he was entered a gentleman commoner at Baliol College, Oxford. He resided there three years, till he took his Bachelor's degree. He was then removed to the Inner Temple of which his father was a bencher, and he now diligently devoted himself to the study of the law. Instead of making acquaintance with William Shakespeare, or any of Burbage's company of players, he attached himself to Sir Edward Coke, then Attorney General. To law students and worshippers of his greatness, this tyrant of the bar was condescending and kind, carrying them with him to public disputations, directing their private reading, and warning them against prepropera praxis as well as prepostera lectio.

When called to the bar, young Coventry's progress was slow but sure. In 1606 his father died, and it was expected that he would have retired to the family estates; but he was ambitious, and he continued assiduously to follow his profession in the hope of political advancement.

So great did his reputation become in the course of a few years, without the prestige of office, that when Sir Edward Coke was to be dismissed from the Chief Justiceship of the King's Bench, Coventry, only thirty-seven years old, was designated by the public voice as his successor. Bacon, however, who had then a powerful ascendency, disliked him for having been protected by Coke, and thus wrote to James:

"I send a warrant to the Lord Chancellor for making forth a writ for a new Chief Justice, leaving a blank for the name, to be supplied by your Majesty's presence; for I never received your Majesty's express pleasure in it. If the frightful mistake was committed of making those of highest dignity march first, so that the students of the inns of Chancery came last.

your Majesty resolve of Montagu, as I conceive and wish, it is very material, as these times are, that your Majesty have some care that the Recorder succeeding be a temperate and discreet man, and assured to your Majesty's service. If your Majesty, without too much harshness, can continue the place within your own servants, it is best. If not, the man upon whom the choice is likely to fall (which is Coventry) I hold doubtful for your service; not but that he is a well learned and honest man; but he hath been, as it were, bred by Lord Coke, and seasoned in his ways.

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Montagu was appointed Chief Justice; and Coventry contriving to make it understood that, however much he respected the learning of his old master, he could not but lament his recent popular courses, was permitted to succeed as Recorder of London. An adhesion to ancient friendships, and a recollection of benefits received, do not seem in those days to have stood much in the way of promotion.

Having lost his first wife, who was of an ancient Worcestershire family, he now married "the widow of a citizen,-lovely, young, rich, and of good fame." "We may represent his happiness," says his biographer, "in nothing more than this, that London had first given him the handsel of a place both honorable and gainful, together with a wife as loving as himself was uxorious; and of that sort which are not unaptly styled housewives; so that these two drew diversely, but in one way, and to one and the self-same end, he in the exercise of his professionshe in the exercise of her domestic; for they that knew the discipline of their house aver, that he waved that care as a contiguous distraction to his vocation, and left her only as a helper to manage that charge which best suited to her conversation."*

Coventry so rapidly got rid of all suspicion of favoring Sir. E. Coke, that on the 14th of March in the following year he was made Solicitor General; and two days after, going down to Theobald's to be presented to the King, he received the honor of knighthood.

He was counsel for the Crown on the trial of the Somersets for the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, and in

1 Bac. Works, vi. 131.

* MS. Life of Lord Coventry in the British Museum.

III.-13

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