'With such proofs of his peaceful submission to government in all things that touched not the prerogatives of God; it would have been marvelous indeed if he had taken up arms against his king. His infatuated delight in swearing, and roisterous habits, were ill-suited to the religious restraints of the Parliamentarians, while they would render him a high prize to Rupert's dragoons. Add to this, the remarkable fact, that Leicester was besieged and stormed with terrible slaughter by the king, but not by the army of the Parliament.
The taking of
Leicester by the king in person was attended with great cruelties. The abbey
was burnt by the cavaliers. Rupert's black flag was hoisted on the gate which
had been treacherously given up. Every Scotchman found in the town was
murdered. The mace and town seals were carried off as plunder; and, if the
account given by Thoresby in his History of Leicester is correct, the scene of
carnage was quite enough to sicken Bunyan of a military life. He knew the mode
in which plunder taken from the bodies of the slain was divided by the
conquerors:—
'The king's forces having made their batteries, stormed Leicester; those within made stout resistance, but some of them betrayed one of the gates; the women of the town laboured in making up the breaches, and in great danger. The king's forces having entered the town, had a hot encounter in the market-place; and many of them were slain by shot out of the windows, that they gave no quarter, but hanged some of the committee, and cut others to pieces. Some letters say that the kennels ran down with blood; Colonel Gray the governor, and Captain Hacker, were wounded and taken prisoners, and very many of the garrison were put to the sword, and the town miserably plundered. The king's forces killed divers who prayed quarter, and put divers women to the sword, and other women and children they turned naked into the streets, and many they ravished. They hanged Mr. Reynor and Mr. Sawyer in cold blood; and at Wighton they smothered Mrs. Barlowes, a minister's wife, and her children.'
Lord Clarendon admits
the rapine and plunder, and that the king regretted that some of his friends
suffered with the rest. Humphrey Brown deposed that he was present when the
garrison, having surrendered upon a promise of quarter, he saw the king's
soldiers strip and wound the prisoners, and heard the king say—'cut them more,
for they are mine enemies.' A national collection was made for the sufferers,
by an ordinance bearing date the 28th October, 1645, which states that—' Whereas
it is very well known what miseries befell the inhabitants of the town and
county of Leicester, when the king's army took Leicester, by plundering the
said inhabitants, not only of their wares in their shops, but also all their
household goods, and their apparel from their backs, both of men, women, and
children, not sparing, in that kind, infants in their cradles; and, by violent
courses and tortures, compelled them to discover whatsoever they had concealed or
hid, and after all they imprisoned their persons, to the undoing of the
tradesmen, and the ruin of many of the country.'
Can we wonder that 'the king was abused as a barbarian and a murderer, for having put numbers to death in cold blood after the garrison had surrendered; and for hanging the Parliament's committee, and some Scots found in that town?' The cruelties practiced in the king's presence were signally punished. He lost 709 men on that occasion, and it infused new vigour into the Parliament's army. The battle of Naseby was fought a few days after; the numbers of the contending forces were nearly equal; the royal troops were veterans, commanded by experienced officers; but the God of armies avenged the innocent blood shed in Leicester, and the royal army was cut to pieces; carriages, cannon, the king's cabinet, full of treasonable correspondence, were taken, and from that day he made feeble fight, and soon lost his crown and his life.
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