[Footnote 187: Pusignan to Avaux March 30/April 9 1689.]
[Footnote 188: This lamentable account of the Irish beer is taken from a despatch which Desgrigny wrote from Cork to Louvois, and which is in the archives of the French War Office.]
[Footnote 189: Avaux, April 13/23. 1689; April 20/30,]
[Footnote 190: Avaux to Lewis, April 15/25 1689, and to Louvois, of the same date.]
[Footnote 191: Commons" Journals, August 12. 1689; Mackenzie"s Narrative.]
[Footnote 192: Avaux, April 17/27. 1689. The story of these strange changes of purpose is told very disingenuously in the Life of James, ii.
330, 331, 332. Orig. Mem.]
[Footnote 193: Life of James, ii. 334, 335. Orig. Mem.]
[Footnote 194: Memoirs of Saint Simon. Some English writers ignorantly speak of Rosen as having been, at this time, a Marshal of France. He did not become so till 1703. He had long been a Marechal de Camp, which is a very different thing, and had been recently promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General.]
[Footnote 195: Avaux, April 4/14 1689, Among the MSS. in the British Museum is a curious report on the defences of Londonderry, drawn up in 1705 for the Duke of Ormond by a French engineer named Thomas.]
[Footnote 196: Commons" Journals, August 12. 1689.]
[Footnote 197: The best history of these transactions will be found in the journals of the House of Commons, August 12. 1689. See also the narratives of Walker and Mackenzie.]
[Footnote 198: Mackenzie"s Narrative,]
[Footnote 199: Walker and Mackenzie.]
[Footnote 200: See the Character of the Protestants of Ireland 1689, and the Interest of England in the Preservation of Ireland, 1689. The former pamphlet is the work of an enemy, the latter of a zealous friend.]
[Footnote 201: There was afterwards some idle dispute about the question whether Walker was properly Governor or not. To me it seems quite clear that he was so.]
[Footnote 202: Mackenzie"s Narrative; Funeral Sermon on Bishop Hopkins, 1690.]
[Footnote 203: Walker"s True Account, 1689. See also The Apology for the True Account, and the Vindication of the True Account, published in the same year. I have called this man by the name by which he was known in Ireland. But his real name was Houstoun. He is frequently mentioned in the strange volume ent.i.tled Faithful Contendings Displayed.]
[Footnote 204: A View of the Danger and Folly of being publicspirited, by William Hamill, 1721]
[Footnote 205: See Walker"s True Account and Mackenzie"s Narrative.]
[Footnote 206: Walker; Mackenzie; Avaux, April 26/May 6 1689. There is a tradition among the Protestants of Ulster that Maumont fell by the sword of Murray: but on this point the report made by the French amba.s.sador to his master is decisive. The truth is that there are almost as many mythical stories about the siege of Londonderry as about the siege of Troy. The legend about Murray and Maumont dates from 1689. In the Royal Voyage which was acted in that year, the combat between the heroes is described in these sonorous lines]
"They met; and Monsieur at the first encounter Fell dead, blaspheming, on the dusty plain, And dying, bit the ground."]
[Footnote 207: "Si c"est celuy qui est sorti de France le dernier, qui s"appelloit Richard, il n"a jamais veu de siege, ayant toujours servi en Rousillon."--Louvois to Avaux, June 8/18. 1689.]
[Footnote 208: Walker; Mackenzie; Avaux to Louvois, May 2/12. 4/14 1689; James to Hamilton, May 28/June 8 in the library of the Royal Irish Academy. Louvois wrote to Avaux in great indignation. "La mauvaise conduite que l"on a tenue devant Londondery a couste la vie a M. de Maumont et a M. de Pusignan. Il ne faut pas que sa Majeste Britannique croye qu"en faisant tuer des officiers generaux comme des soldats, on puisse ne l"en point laisser manquer. Ces sortes de gens sont rates en tout pays, et doivent estre menagez."]
[Footnote 209: Walker; Mackenzie; Avaux, June 16/26 1689.]
[Footnote 210: As to the discipline of Galmoy"s Horse, see the letter of Avaux to Louvois, dated Sept. 10/30. Horrible stories of the cruelty, both of the colonel and of his men, are told in the Short View, by a Clergyman, printed in 1689, and in several other pamphlets of that year.
For the distribution of the Irish forces, see the contemporary maps of the siege. A catalogue of the regiments, meant, I suppose to rival the catalogue in the Second Book of the Iliad, will be found in the Londeriad.]
[Footnote 211: Life of Admiral Sir John Leake, by Stephen M. Leake, Clarencieux King at Arms, 1750. Of this book only fifty copies were printed.]
[Footnote 212: Avaux, May 8/18 May 26/June 5 1689; London Gazette, May 9.; Life of James, ii. 370.; Burchett"s Naval Transactions; Commons"
Journals, May 18, 21. From the Memoirs of Madame de la Fayette it appears that this paltry affair was correctly appreciated at Versailles.]
[Footnote 213: King, iii. 12; Memoirs of Ireland from the Restoration, 1716. Lists of both Houses will be found in King"s Appendix.]
[Footnote 214: I found proof of Plowden"s connection with the Jesuits in a Treasury Letterbook, June 12, 1689.]
[Footnote 215: "Sarsfield," Avaux wrote to Louvois, Oct. 11/21. 1689, "n"est pas un homme de la naissance de mylord Galloway" (Galmoy, I suppose) "ny de Makarty: mais c"est un gentilhomme distingue par son merite, qui a plus de credit dans ce royaume qu"aucun homme que je connoisse. Il a de la valeur, mais surtout de l"honneur et de la probite a toute epreuve... homme qui sera toujours a la tete de ses troupes, et qui en aura grand soin." Leslie, in his Answer to King, says that the Irish Protestants did justice to Sarsfield"s integrity and honour.
Indeed justice is done to Sarsfield even in such scurrilous pieces as the Royal Flight.]
[Footnote 216: Journal of the Parliament in Ireland, 1689. The reader must not imagine that this journal has an official character. It is merely a compilation made by a Protestant pamphleteer and printed in London.]
[Footnote 217: Life of James, ii. 355.]
[Footnote 218: Journal of the Parliament in Ireland.]
[Footnote 219: Avaux May 26/June 5 1689.]
[Footnote 220: A True Account of the Present State of Ireland, by a Person that with Great Difficulty left Dublin, 1689; Letter from Dublin, dated June 12. 1689; Journal of the Parliament in Ireland.]
[Footnote 221: Life of James, ii. 361, 362, 363. In the Life it is said that the proclamation was put forth without the privity of James, but that he subsequently approved of it. See Welwood"s Answer to the Declaration, 1689.]
[Footnote 222: Light to the Blind; An Act declaring that the Parliament of England cannot bind Ireland against Writs of Error and Appeals, printed in London, 1690.]
[Footnote 223: An Act concerning Appropriate Tythes and other Duties payable to Ecclesiastical Dignitaries. London 1690.]
[Footnote 224: An Act for repealing the Acts of Settlement and Explanation and all Grants, Patents, and Certificates pursuant to them or any of them. London, 1690.]
[Footnote 225: See the paper delivered to James by Chief Justice Keating, and the speech of the Bishop of Meath. Both are in King"s Appendix. Life of James, ii. 357-361.]
[Footnote 226: Leslie"s Answer to King; Avaux, May 26/June 5 1689; Life of James, ii. 358.]
[Footnote 227: Avaux May 28/June 7 1689, and June 20/July 1. The author of Light to the Blind strongly condemns the indulgence shown to the Protestant Bishops who adhered to James.]
[Footnote 228: King, iii. 11.; Brief Memoirs by Haynes, a.s.say Master of the Mint, among the Lansdowne MSS. at the British Museum, No. 801. I have seen several specimens of this coin. The execution is surprisingly good, all circ.u.mstances considered.]
[Footnote 229: King, iii. 12.]
[Footnote 230: An Act for the Attainder of divers Rebels and for preserving the Interest of loyal Subjects, London, 1690.]
[Footnote 231: King, iii. 13.]
[Footnote 232: His name is in the first column of page 30. in that edition of the List which was licensed March 26, 1690. I should have thought that the proscribed person must have been some other Henry Dodwell. But Bishop Kennet"s second letter to the Bishop of Carlisle, 1716, leaves no doubt about the matter.]
[Footnote 233: A list of most of the Names of the n.o.bility, Gentry, and Commonalty of England and Ireland (amongst whom are several Women and Children) who are all, by an Act of a Pretended parliament a.s.sembled in Dublin, attainted of High Treason, 1690; An Account of the Transactions of the late King James in Ireland, 1690; King, iii. 13.; Memoirs of Ireland, 1716.]