登陆注册
5452700000020

第20章

Oates swore, and, for once, is corroborated, that Godfrey complained 'of receiving affronts from some great persons (whose names I name not now) for being so zealous in this business.' If Oates, by 'great persons,' means the Duke of York, it was in the Duke's own cause that Godfrey had been 'zealous,' sending him warning by Coleman. Oates added that others threatened to complain to Parliament, which was to meet on October 21, that Godfrey had been 'too remiss.' Oates was a liar, but Godfrey, in any case, was between the Devil and the deep sea. As early as October 24, Mr.

Mulys attested, before the Lords, Godfrey's remark, 'he had been blamed by some great men for not having done his duty, and by other great men for having done too much.' Mulys corroborates Oates.* If Godfrey knew a secret dangerous to the Jesuits (which, later, was a current theory), he might be by them silenced for ever. If his conduct, being complained of, was examined into by Parliament, misprision of treason was the lowest at which his offence could be rated. Never was magistrate in such a quandary. But we do not know, in the state of the evidence, which of his many perils he feared most, and his possession of 'a dangerous secret' (namely, the secret of the consult of April 24) is a pure hypothesis. It is not warranted, but refuted, by Godfrey's own words as reported by Wynell, when, unlike Mr. Pollock, we quote Wynell's whole sentence on the subject. (see previous exchange between Godfrey and Wynell.)

*Lords' MSS., P. 48.

3.

The theories of Godfrey's death almost defy enumeration. For suicide, being a man of melancholic temperament, he had reasons as many and as good as mortal could desire. That he was murdered for not being active enough in prosecuting the plot, is most improbable.

That he was taken off by Danby's orders, for giving Coleman and the Duke of York early warning, is an absurd idea, for Danby could have had him on THAT score by ordinary process of law. That he was slain by Oates's gang, merely to clinch the fact that a plot there veritably was, is improbable. At the same time, Godfrey had been calling Oates a perjurer: he KNEW that Oates was forsworn. This was an unsafe thing for any man to say, but when the man was the magistrate who had read Oates's deposition, he invited danger. Such were the chances that Godfrey risked from the Plot party. The Catholics, on the other hand, if they were aware that Godfrey possessed the secret of the Jesuit meeting of April 24, and if they deemed him too foolish to keep the secret in his own interest, could not but perceive that to murder him was to play into the hands of the Whigs by clinching the belief in a Popish plot. Had they been the murderers, they would probably have taken his money and rings, to give the idea that he had been attacked and robbed by vulgar villains. If they 'were not the damnedest fools' (thus freely speaks L'Estrange), they would not have taken deliberate steps to secure the instant discovery of the corpse. Whoever pitched Godfrey's body into the bramble-covered ditch, meant it to be found, for his cane, scabbard, and so on were deliberately left outside of the ditch. Your wily Jesuit would have caused the body to disappear, leaving the impression that Godfrey had merely absconded, as he had the best reasons for doing. On the other hand, Oates's gang would not, if they first strangled Godfrey, have run his own sword through his body, as if he had committed suicide--unless, indeed, they calculated that this would be a likely step for your wily Jesuit to take, in the circumstances. Again, an educated 'Jesuit,' like Le Fevre, 'the Queen's confessor,' would know that the sword trick was futile; even a plain man, let alone a surgeon, could detect a wound inflicted on a corpse four or five days old.

Two other theories existed, first, that Godfrey hanged himself, and that his brothers and heirs did the sword trick, to suggest that he had not committed suicide by strangulation, but had been set on and stabbed with his own sword. In that case, of course, the brothers would have removed his rings and money, to prove that he had been robbed. The other theory, plausible enough, held that Godfrey was killed by Catholics, NOT because he took Oates's deposition (which he was bound to do), but because he officiously examined a number of persons to make discoveries. The Attorney-General at the trial of Godfrey's alleged murderers (February 1679), declared that Sir Edmund had taken such examinations: 'we have proof that he had some. . . perhaps some more than are now extant'* This theory, then, held that he was taken off to prevent his pursuing his zealous course, and to seize the depositions which he had already taken.

When this was stated to Charles II., on November 7, 1678, by the perjured Bedloe, the King naturally remarked: 'The parties were still alive' (the deponents) 'to give the informations.' Bedloe answered, that the papers were to be seized 'in hopes the second informations taken from the parties would not have agreed with the first, and so the thing would have been disproved.'** This was monstrously absurd, for the slayers of Godfrey could not have produced the documents of which they had robbed him.

*State Trials, vii. p. 163.

**Pollock, p. 385.

The theory that Sir Edmund was killed because Coleman had told him too many secrets did not come to general knowledge till the trial of Lord Stafford in 1680. The hypothesis--Godfrey slain because, through Coleman, he knew too many Catholic secrets--is practically that of Mr. Pollock. It certainly does supply a motive for Godfrey's assassination. Hot-headed Catholics who knew, or suspected, that Godfrey knew too much, MAY have killed him for that reason, or for the purpose of seizing his papers, but it is improbable that Catholics of education, well aware that, if he blabbed, Godfrey must ruin himself, would have put their hands into his blood, on the mere chance that, if left alive, he might betray both himself and them.

4.

同类推荐
  • 六十种曲玉玦记

    六十种曲玉玦记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说犊子经

    佛说犊子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Ways of Men

    The Ways of Men

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛为年少比丘说正事经

    佛为年少比丘说正事经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 政理

    政理

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 卫生间里的袜子

    卫生间里的袜子

    刘星有一个怪癖,他从来都不喜欢洗袜子,原因是他的脚太臭。尽管他自己闻不到自己的脚臭味,但是别人常常说他的脚臭不可闻,所以他就在潜意识里非常讨厌自己的袜子。但是讨厌归讨厌,袜子总还是要穿的。为了解决这个问题,刘星想了一个自己认为很绝妙的办法,就是一次买很多双袜子,一双一双换着穿,等到所有的袜子都被他穿臭了的时候,他就花几块钱,随便找一个村妇全部洗净,然后再一双接着一双往臭里穿。了解他的人都知道,他的床底下始终有两个纸箱子,一个里面是逐日减少的净袜子,而另一个里面则是日渐增多的臭袜子。
  • 左心的悸动

    左心的悸动

    她是黑暗里的幽灵默默的享受着自己的孤独,她是阳光下的一朵向日葵沐浴着自己的快乐,她是雨天里的水滴嘀嗒着自己的悲伤,遇上了属于自己的王子,一次次心动的巧合,一次次的不放手,拯救了她的孤独与哭泣,陪伴她的是欢乐与幸福,给予她温暖与热情,不一样的她遇上从一而终的他,彼此的心慢慢靠近,童话里的不是灰姑娘,而是王子会与心爱之人过上幸福的生活。
  • 远古瞭望

    远古瞭望

    中医学院刚刚毕业的曾甜,不小心穿越到了远古世界,从最初的惊慌失措,到后面的努力振作,融入到这个世界,慢慢开始适应新的生活。而曾甜的到来,对阿乌部落的人们来说,无疑是幸运的,她不但能治病,还认识许多神奇的植物,而这些植物却是能填饱肚子,让他们免于饥饿,度过了一个又一个的寒夜。情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 重来一世风满华

    重来一世风满华

    先有前世因,后结今世果。苳梅前世欠人一命,纠缠一生还了个清楚。原以为再有生生世世也断不会扯上瓜葛,谁料命运的轮盘重回起点,那人却纠缠不清。前一世的山与河,这一世的情与歌。是谁将她拉回不愿重温的旧梦。
  • 兽权崛起

    兽权崛起

    兽潮天灾的降临,给世界带来了新生的资源。勇者和魔法师们舍命深入森林与沼泽探险,勇敢地挑战强大的魔兽,打败它们,用它们的身体制成魔法装备和炼金武器,驱使它们的幼崽成为坐骑伙伴。无尽的财富和荣耀就隐藏在那些山河湖泊中,等待着冒险者去发掘。可当视角转化之后呢?我们不是所谓“魔兽”,不是你们打怪升级的资源,我们同样是智慧的生物,会热爱,会悲伤,会痛苦,我们有一个共同的名字——“玄黄之民”,曾有比你们更伟大更璀璨的文明。……这是一个兽血沸腾的故事,一只卑微的魔兽重振玄黄文明的历程。战争和动乱给我带来机遇,潜伏和伪装是我的甲胄。长剑与魔法,热血与隐忍。一切都是最好的安排。
  • 重明卫:大明机密

    重明卫:大明机密

    以大明王朝为背景的传奇故事,以10年前离奇的梃击案为发端,牵扯出被称作中国“X战警”的重明卫组织,而这个传说中的“第十三卫”专司捉拿号称暴烈嗜血的异能者“畸众”,三个少年或因理想、或因身份、或因好奇各自深陷其中,应对接连发生的超自然事件,并由此揭开一段历史权谋的吊诡迷局。
  • 重生之无限梦想

    重生之无限梦想

    杨棠重生回人生的十字路口,正值迷茫之际,偶然附身的地藏王烙印却将他的人生搅得一塌糊涂!学生、诗人、侦探、导演、神医、赏金猎人……哪一个才是杨棠真面目?************Q群119563898
  • 玄学大爆炸

    玄学大爆炸

    ‘重生’有了,‘系统’有了,两大金手指在身,注定自己不用多久,就能成为天才,创建公司,大把赚钱,迎娶白富美,走上人生巅峰,想想还真的有些激动。等等……这是什么情况?语文课变成了铭文课,数学可变成了能量课,其他各个学科全都转变为各种玄学课程?重生之后,世界竟然变了?在改变之后的世界中努力专研,同样可走向人生巅峰!玄学大爆炸,超凡都拥有!
  • 东汉之后为后楚

    东汉之后为后楚

    一代兵仙韩信被扣以谋反之罪陨落,刘邦诛其三族,韩信后世子孙韦复为平反韩信谋反之名凭借韩信所留三卷兵法,争雄各方诸侯。
  • 是我的成大人呀

    是我的成大人呀

    作为一个冷漠的大理寺卿,成决杀伐果断,冷面无私。却对总是缠着自己问东问西的下属周真真束手无策。看着这个打不得、骂不得的小祖宗,成大人表示既然不能反抗,那就只能宠着。周真真查案辛苦了,成决亲自去买糖哄她。周真真称赞其他大理寺官员,成决疯狂吃醋,罚这个倒霉官员抄卷宗。周真真立功当上女官,成决一掷千金,送她玉器店镇店之宝的玉簪。某天成大人终于对周真真深情告白:“倘若我娶你,必将你捧在掌心,爱之护之,珍之重之。”周真真的面颊腾地红了:“大人,好像一直都是我在暗恋你呀!而且这么多人看着……”某属下大哭:“同样是下属,我怎么就跟捡来的一样呢?”