RECAPITULATION OF PROOFS, ARGUMENT, AND CONCLUSIONS. SUPPLEMENTA. Supplementum I. Guy Fawkes. APPENDICES. Appendix A. Circumstantial Evidence Defined and Described. “Veritas temporis filia. Truth is the daughter of Time, especially in this case, wherein, by timely and often examinations, matters of greatest moment have been found out.” — Sir Edward Coke (the Attorney-General who prosecuted the eight surviving conspirators). “Suffer no man and no cause to escape the undying penalty which History has the power to inflict on Wrong.” — Lord Acton. “History, it is said, revises the verdicts of contemporaries, and constitutes an Appeal Court nearest to the ordeal of heaven.” — Dr. James Martineau. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE CHARLES LINDLEY SECOND VISCOUNT HALIFAX OF HICKLETON AND GARROWBY IN THE COUNTY OF YORK ONE OF YORKSHIRE’S MOST GIFTED AND DISTINGUISHED SONS THIS BOOK WHICH AMONGST OTHER THINGS TELLS OF SOME OF THE WORDS AND DEEDS OF CERTAIN YORKSHIREMEN IN THE DAYS OF SHAKESPEARE IS (BY KIND PERMISSION) MOST RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR. Bland’s Court, Coney Street, York. To the Right Honourable Viscount Halifax. My Lord, The book which your characteristic generosity has permitted me to dedicate to you wears a two-fold aspect. For it is as to one portion — and predominantly — an Inquiry taking the form of a discourse with questions and proofs, propositions and demonstrations. While as to another portion — but subordinately — it is a History taking the form of a narrative of events, a relation of mental occurrences, a statement of concrete facts. Now these twain aspects will be found duly to play their respective parts in the course of the subsequent pages, in accordance with a selected order and method. With most of the allegations of fact and the inferences therefrom, and with many of the assumptions and conclusions which this work contains, your Lordship will agree. From others you will disagree. Whilst in the case of a third class, it may be that you will deem a suspension of judgment to be the part which wisdom and justice alike enjoin. Speaking for myself, both as a man and as a native of our great County of Yorkshire — whose sons are at The ancient Stagyrite ranked Poetry above History, because the former bequeaths to Man universal principles of action, whereas the latter bestows upon Man only a relation of individual facts. But the History of the Gunpowder Treason Plot rises to a higher unity. Because for a man to have read and mastered an impartial record of that deliberate and Nay, more; it is to have had a personal, experimental realization, through the historic feeling, of what is meant, in the realm of Moral actualities, by the infliction of Retribution, the working out of Expiation, the regaining of Justness, the restoration of Equality between outraged Right and outraging Wrong, and the attaining by the tempestuous, passionate human heart of final tranquillity, rest, and peace. For one of the greatest recorded Tragedies in the world is the History of the Gunpowder Treason Plot, regard being had to the intellectual and moral ends effected by that history’s recital. The man who has truly, if indeed but commemoratively, through force of the medium of language merely, taken his part in this great Action, even at a distance of well-nigh three hundred years, will have had his soul cleansed and purified by cleansed and purified pity and terror. Then will he have had that soul soothed and healed. He will have been first abased and then exalted. For so to act is to weep with a Humanity that weeps. Then with that same Humanity to join in a triumphant pÆan of victory that has for its universal and glorious theme this reality of realities which cannot be Trusting that your Lordship will crown your gracious kindness by pardoning the great length of this Introductory Letter, I beg to remain, My dear Lord Halifax, Yours sincerely and gratefully, HENRY HAWKES SPINK, Jun. Saturday, 26th October, 1901. Tragedy primarily implies imitation of Action by action, not by language, although of course language forms a constituent part. See the “Poetics of Aristotle,” chap. vi. “Although it is by no means proved to be impossible that this nobleman [Lord Mounteagle] was a guilty confederate in the Plot, the weight of evidence is at present in his favour. It is, however, a most curious State mystery: and I am persuaded that, if the truth is ever discovered, it will not be by State papers, or recorded confessions and examinations. When such expert artists as Bacon and Cecil framed and propagated a State fiction in order to cover a State intrigue, they took care to cut off or divert the channels of history so effectually as to make it hopeless, at the distance of three centuries to trace the truth by means of documents which have ever been in their control. If the mystery should hereafter be unravelled, it will be probably by the discovery of some letters or papers of a domestic nature, which either slumber in private repositories, or remain unnoticed in public collections.” — Letter by David Jardine, Editor of “Criminal Trials,” to Sir Henry Ellis, F.R.S., “ArchÆologia,” pp. 94-95. Dated 30th November, 1840. |