THE Unnatural Father: OR, The cruel Murder committed by JOHN ROWSE of the Town of Ewell, ten miles from London, in the County of Surry, upon two of his own Children. With his Prayer and Repentance in Prison, his Arraignment and judgement at the Sessions, and his Execution for the said fact at Croyden, on Monday the second of july. 1621. London printed for I. T. and H. G. 1621. THE UNNATURAL FATHER. AS a chain consists of diverse links, and every link depends and is inyoaked upon one another: Even so our sins, being the Chain wherewith Satan doth bind and manacle us, are so knit, twisted, and sodered together, that without our firm faith ascending, and God's grace descending, we can never be freed from those infernal fetters; for Sloth is linked with Drunkenness, Drunkenness with Fornication and Adultery, & Adultery with Murder, and so of all the rest of the temptations, suggestions and actions, wherewith miserable men and women are ensnared, and led captive into perpetual perdition, except the mercy of our gracious God be our defence and safeguard. For a lamentable example of the Devil's malice, and man's misery, this party, of whom I treat at this time, was a wretch, not to be matched, a fellow not be followed, & one that scarce hath an equal, for matchless misery, and unnatural Murder. But to the matter. This john Rowse being a Fishmonger in London, gave over his trade, and lived altogether in the Town of Ewell, near Nonesuch, in the County of Surry, ten miles from London, where he had Land of his own for himself and his heirs for ever to the value of fifty pounds a year, with which he lived in good and honest fashion, being well reputed of all his neighbours, and in good estimation with Gentlemen and others that dwelled in the adjoining Villages. Until at the last he married a very honest and comely woman, with whom he lived quietly and in good fashion some six months, till the Devil sent an instrument of his, to disturb their Matrimonial happiness: for they wanting a maidservant, did entertain into their house a Wench, whose name was jane Bl●ndell, who in short time was better acquainted with her Master's bed then honesty required, which in time was found out and known by her Mistress, and broke the peace, in such sort, between the said Rowse and his Wife, that in the end, after two years' continuance, it broke the poor woman's heart, that she died & left her Husband a widower, where he and his Whore were the more free to use their cursed contentments, and ungodly embracements. Yet that estate of being unmarried was displeasing to him, so that he took to wife another woman, who for her outward feature, and inward qualities was every way fit for a very honest man, although it were her hard fortune to match otherwise. With this last Wife of his he lived much discontented, by reason of his keeping his lewd Tr●ll in his house, so that by his daily Riot, excessive drinking, & unproportionable spending, his estate began to be much impoverished, much of his Land mortgaged and forfeited, himself above two hundred pounds indebted, and in process of time to be (as a lewd liver) of all his honest neighbours rejected and contemned. His estate and credit being almost past recovery wasted and impaired, he forsook his Wife, came up to London with his Wench, where he fell in new league with a corrupted friend; who (as he said) did most courteously cousin him of all that ever he had, & whom at this time I forbear to name; because it was john Rouse his request before his execution, that he should not be named in any Book or Ballad, but yet upon a die his name may be picked out betwixt a sink & a trey. This false friend of his (as he said) did persuade him to leave his Wife for altogether, and did lodge and board him and his paramour certain weeks in his house, and afterward caused him and her to be lodged (having changed his name) as Man and Wife in an honest man's house near Bishopsgate, at Bevis Marks, where they continued so long, till his money was gone, (as indeed he never had much, but now and then small petty sums from his secret friend aforesaid) and he being fearful to be smoked out by his Creditors, was counselled to leave his Country, and depart for Ireland; and before his going over-sea, his friend wrought so, that all his Land was made over in trust to him, and Bonds, Covenants, and Leases made, as fully bought and sold for a sum of two hundred and threescore pounds; of all which money the said Rowse did take the Sacrament and his death, that he never did receive one penny, but he said that now and then he had five or ten shillings at a time from his said friend, and never above twenty shillings, and that all that ever he had of him, being summed together, was not above three & twenty pounds, the which moneys his friend did pay himself out of his Rents. But some more friend to him, than he was to himself, did doubt that he was cheated of his Land: whereupon (to make all sure) he said that his false friend did so far prevail with him, that he the said Rowse took an Oath in the open Court at Westminster Hall, that he had lawfully sold his Land, and had received the sum abovesaid, in full satisfaction and payment, and his said friend did vow and protest many times unto him, with such oaths and vehement curses, that he never would deceive his trust, but that at any time when he would command all those forged Bonds and Leases, that he would surrender them unto him, and that he should never be damnifide by them or him, to the value of one halfpenny. Upon which protestations (he said) he was enticed to undo himself out of all his earthly possessions, & by a false oath to make hazard of his inheritance in Heaven. In Ireland he stayed not long, but came over again, and was by his friend persuaded to go into the Low Countries: which he did, never minding his Wife and two small Children which he had by her, having likewise a brace of bastards by his Whore (as some say) but he said that but one of them was of his begetting. But he, after some stay in Holland, saw that he could not fadge there, according to his desire, and withal, suspecting that he was cheated of his Land, and above all, much perplexed in his Conscience for the false oath that he had taken, pondering his miserable estate, and ruing his unkindness to his Wife, and unnatural dealing to his Children, thinking with himself what course were best to take to help himself out of so many miseries which did encompass him, he came over again into England to his too dear friend, demanding of him his Bonds and Leas●s of his Land which he had put him in trust withal. But then his friend did manifest himself what he was, and told him plainly, that he had no writings, not any Land of his, but what he had dear bought and paid for. All which (Rowse replied unto him) was false, as his own Conscience knew. Then said the other, have I not here in my custody your hand and Seal to confirm my lawful possession of your Land? and moreover have I not a Record of an Oath in open Court, which you took concerning the truth of all our bargain? And seeing that I have all these especial points of the Law, as an Oath, Indentures, and a sure possession, take what course you will, for I am resolved to hold what I have. These (or the like) words, in effect passed betwixt Rowse and his Friend (Trusty Roger) which entering at his ears, pierced his heart like Daggers; and being out of money and Credit, a man much infamous for his bad life, indebted beyond all possible means of payment; a perjured wretch to cousin himself, having no place or means to feed or lodge, and fearful of being arrested, having so much abused his Wife, and so little regarded his Children, being now brought to the pits brim of desperation, not knowing amongst these calamities which way to turn himself, he resolved at last to go home to Ewell again to his much wronged Wife, for his last refuge in extremity. The poor Woman received him with joy, and his Children with all gladness welcomed home the prodigal Father, with whom he remained in much discontentment and perplexity of mind: the Devil still tempting him 〈◊〉 mischief and despair; putting him in mind of his 〈…〉 better estate, comparing pleasures passed with present miseries, and he re●oluing that he had been a man in that Town had been a Gentleman's companion, of good Reputation and Calling, that he had Friends, Lands, Money, Apparel, and Credit, with means sufficient to have left for the maintenance of his Family, and that now he had nothing left him but poverty and beggary, and that his two Children were like to be left to go from door to door for their living. Being thus tormented and tossed with restless imaginations; he seeing daily to his further grief, the poor case of his children, and fearing that worse would befall them hereafter, he resolved to work some means to take away their languishing lives, by a speedy & untimely death, the which practice of his (by the Devil's instigation and assistance) he effected as followeth. To be sure that no body should stop or prevent his devilish enterprise; he sent his Wife to London in a frivolous errand, for a riding Coat: and she being gone somewhat timely, and too soon in the morning, both her Children being in bed and fast asleep, being two very pretty Girls, one of the age of six years, and the other four years old, none being in the house but themselves, their unfortunate Father, and his ghostly Counsellor, the doors being fast locked, he having an excellent Spring of water in the Seller of his house (which, to a good mind that would have employed it well, would have been a blessing: for the water is of that Crystalline purity, and clearness, that Queen Elizabeth of famous memory would daily send for it for her own use) in which he purposed to drown his poor innocent children sleeping: for he going into the Chamber where they lay, took the youngest of 〈◊〉 named Elizabeth forth of her bed, and carried her 〈◊〉 the Stairs into his Seller, and there put her in the Spring of Water, holding down her head under that pure Element with his hands, till at last the poor harmless soul and body parted one from another. Which first Act of this his inhuman Tragedy being ended, he carried the dead corpse up three pair of stairs, and laying it down on the floor, left it, and went down into the Chamber where his other Daughter, named Marry, was in bed; being newly awaked, and seeing her father, demanded of him where her Sister was? To whom he made answer that he would bring her where she was. So taking her in his arms, he carried her down towards the Seller: and as he was on the Seller stairs, she asked him what he would do, and whither he would carry her? Fear nothing, my Child (quoth he) I will bring thee up again presently: and being come to the Spring, as before he had done with the other, so he performed his last unfatherly deed upon her, & to be as good as his word, carried her up the stairs & laid her by her sister; that done, he laid them out, and covered them both with a sheet, walking up and down his house, weeping and lamenting his own misery, and his friend's treachery, that was the main ground of all his misfortunes, & the death of his Children: and though there was time and opportunity enough for him to fly, & to seek for safety; yet the burden and guilt of his conscience was so heavy to him, and his desperate case was so extreme, that he never offered to depart; but as a man weary of his life, would, and did stay, till such time as he was apprehended and sent to Prison, where he lay till he was rewarded with a just deserved death. What his other intents were, after he had drowned his Children, is uncertain; for he drew his sword and laid it naked on a Table, and after, he gate a poor woman down into the Seller, and in the same place where the two Infants lost their lives, he did help the woman to wring a Buck of his clothes, and then he requested her to help to convey his goods out of his house; for he said that he feared that the Sheriff of Surry would come and seize upon all. But the woman not thinking of any of the harm that was done, imagined that he had meant that his goods would be seized for debt, and not for murder. But to return to the miserable Mother of the murdered Children, she said that her heart throbbed all day, as fore-boading some heavy mischance to come: and having done her business that she came about to London, as soon as she came home, she asked for her Children, to whom her Husband answered that they were at a neighbour's house in the Town. Then said she, I will go thither to fetch them home. No quoth he, I will go myself presently for them. Then said his wife, let the poor woman that is here go and bring them home. But at last she saw such delay was used, she was going herself; then her Husband told her that he had sent them to a Kinsman's of his at a Village called Sutton, four miles from Ewell, and that he had provided well for them, and prayed▪ her to be contented and fear nothing, for they were well. These double tales of his, made her to doubt somewhat was amiss: therefore she entreated him for God's sake to tell her truly where they were. Whereupon he said, If you will needs know where they are, go but up the stairs into such a Chamber, and there you shall find them. But in what a lamentable perplexity of mind the poor woman was when she perceived how and which way they lost their lives, any Christian that hath an heart of flesh may imagine. Presently the Constable was sent for, who took him into his custody, who amongst other talk, demanded of him why and how he could commit so unnatural a fact, as to murder his Children? To whom he answered, that he did it, because he was not able to keep them, and that he was loath they should go about the Town a begging: and moreover, that they were his own, and being so, that he might do what he would with them, and that they had their lives from him, and therefore he had taken their lives from them, and was contented to lose his life for them: for he was sure that their miseries were passed, and for his part, he had an assured hope to go to them, though they could not come to him. So being had before a justice, his Examination was very brief; for he confessed all the whole circumstances of the matter freely; so that he was sent to the common Prison of Surry, called the White Lion, where he remained fourteen or fifteen weeks a wonderful penitent Prisoner, never, or very seldom, being without a Bible or some other good book meditating upon; and whon any one did but mention his Children, he would fetch a deep sigh, and weep, desiring every one to pray for him and upon his own earnest request, he was prayed for at Paul's Cross, and at most of the Churches in London, and at many in the Country, and at the Sessions holden at Croyden, the latter end of june last, he made such free confession at the Bar, declaring the manner of his life, his odious Drinking, his abominable Whoring, his cruel Murder, and the false dealing of his deceitful friend, which was the cause of his final wrack: with which Relations of his pronounced, with such vehemency and protestations, he moved all that heard him to commiseration and pity. So, according to Law and justice, he was there condemned and judged (for the murdering of his two Children) to be hanged; which judgement was executed on him at the common Gallows at Croyden, on Monday the second day of june, 1621. where he died with great penitency and remorse of Conscience. This was the lamentable end of john Rowse, a man of the age of fifty years, and one that might have lived and died in better fashion, if he had laid hold on the grace of heaven, and craved God's protection and fatherly assistance: but of all that herein is declared, this one thing which I now declare, is most lamentable & remarkable; which is, that Ewell being a Market Town, not much above ten miles from London, in a Christian Kingdom, and such a Kingdom, where the all-saving Word of the everliving God is most diligently, sincerely, and plentifully preached; & yet amidst this diligence, as it were in the Circle or Centre of this sincerity, and in the flood of this plenty, the Town of Ewell hath neither Preacher nor Pastor: for although the Parsonage be able to maintain a sufficient Preacher, yet the living being in a Layman's hand, is rent out to another for a great sum, & yet no Preacher maintained there. Now the chief Landlord out of his portion, doth allow but seven pounds yearly for a Reader, and the other that doth hire the Parsonage at a great Rent, doth give the said Reader four pound the year more out of his means and courtesy: and by this means the Town is served with a poor old man that is half blind, and by reason of his age can scarcely read: for all the world knows, that so small a stipend cannot find a good Preacher Books, and very hardly bread to live on; so that the poor souls dwelling there, are in danger of famishing, for want of a good Preacher to break the Bread of Life unto them: for a Sermon amongst them, is as rare as warm weather in December, or Ice in july: both which I have seen in England, though but seldom. And as the Wolf is most bold with the Sheep, when there is either no Shepherd, or an impotent insufficient one, so the Devil (perhaps) took his advantage of this wretched man, seeing he was so badly guarded, & so weakly guided to withstand his force and malice: for where God is least known and called upon, there Satan hath most power and domination. But howsoever, I wish with all my heart, that that Town and many more were better provided than they are, and then such numbers of souls would not be in hazard to perish; nor so many sufficient scholars that can preach and teach well, live in penury through want of maintenance. I could run further upon this point, but that I do shortly purpose to touch it more to the quick in another Book. By this man's fall, we may see an example of God's justice against Drunkenness, Whoredom, and Murder; the Devil being the first Author, who was a Murderer from the beginning: who filled Cain with Envy, that he murdered his brother Abel: who tempted David first to Adultery, and afterwards to Murder; who provoked Herod to cause the blessed Servant of God john Baptist to lose his head, because he told him it was not lawful for him to marry his brother Philip's Wife; and who was the provoker of the aforesaid Herod to murder all the innocent male children in his Kingdom. And let us but mark and consider the plagues and punishments that God hath inflicted upon Murderers, Adulterers, and Incestuous persons: First, Cain, although by his birth he was the first man that ever was borne, a Prince by his birth, and heir apparent to all the world; yet for the Murder by him committed on his brother, he was the first Vagabond and Runagate on the face of the earth, almost fearful of his own shadow: and after he had lived along time terrified in Conscience, was himself slain (as is supposed) by Lamech. Simeon and Leu● the sons of jacob were accursed of their Father for the slaughter of the Sichemites; joab the Captain of David's Host, was slain for the murdering of Abner; David himself, for the death of Urias, and the Adultery committed with Bethsheba, was continually plagued and vexed with the Sword of War, with the Rebellion of his own sons, and with the untimely deaths of Amnon, and Abs●lon. Baanah and R●chab, for the slaying of Ishbosheth the son of Saul, they were both by David's commandment put to death, who had both their hands and feet cut off, & were afterward hanged over the Pool in Hebron: Samuel 2. 4. The examples are infinite out of divine and humane Histories, that God did never suffer Murder to go unrewarded: and this miserable man, of whom I have here related, is a most manifest spectacle of God's revenging vengeance, for that crying and heinous sin. As concerning Lust and Incontinency, it is a short pleasure, bought with long pain, a hunnied poison, a Gul●●● of Shame, a Pickpurse, a breeder of Diseases, a gall to the Conscience, a corrosive to the heart, turning man's wit into foolish madness, the body's bane, and the soul's perdition: it is excessive in youth, and odious in age; beside, God himself doth denounce most fearful threats against Fornicators and Adulterers, as the Apostle saith, that Whoremongers and Adulterers shall not inherit the Kingdom of Heaven, 1. Cor. 6. 9 And God himself saith, that he will be a swift witness against Adulterers, Mal. 3. 5. And the Wise man saith, that because of the whorish woman, a man is brought to a morsel of bread, and a woman will hunt for the precious life of a man: For, saith he, can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burnt? or can a man go upon hot Coals, and his feet not be burnt? So he that goeth in to his neighbour's Wife, shall not be innocent, Prou. 6. 27, 28, 29. Abimelech, one of the sons of Gedeon, murdered threescore and ten of his Brethren; and in reward thereof (by the just judgement of God) a woman with a piece of a Millstone beat out his brains, after he had usurped the Kingdom three years, judges the 9 Our English Chronicles make mention, that Roger Mortimer, Lord Baron of Wallingford, murdered his Master King Edward the second, and caused the King's Uncle, Edmund Earl of Kent, causelessely to be beheaded: but God's justice overtook him at last, so that for the said Murders he was shamefully executed. Humphrey Duke of Gloucester was murdered in the Abbey of Bury by William de la Poole Duke of Suffolk, who afterward was beheaded himself on the Sea by a Pirate. Arden of Feversham, and Page of Plymouth, both their Murders are fresh in memory, and the fearful ends of their Wives and their Aiders in those bloody actions will never be forgotten. It is too manifestly known, what a number of Stepmothers and Strumpets have most inhumanely murdered their Children, and for the same have most deservedly been executed. But in the memory of man (nor scarcely in any History) it is not to be found, that a Father did ever take two Innocent Children out of their beds, and with weeping tears of pitiless pity, and unmerciful mercy, to drown them, showing such compassionate cruelty, and sorrowful sighing remorseless remorse in that most unfatherly and unnatural deed. All which may be attributed to the malice of the Devil, whose will and endeavour is that none should be saved, who lays out his traps and snares, entangling some with Lust, some with Covetousness, some with Ambition, Drunkenness, Envy, Murder, Sloth, or any Vice whereto he sees a man or a woman inclined most unto, as he did by this wretched man, lulling him, as it were, in the cradle of sensuality, and ungodly delight, until such time as all his means, Reputation, and Credit was gone, and nothing left him but misery and reproach. Then he leads him along through doubts and fears, to have no hope in God's Providence, persuading his Conscience that his sins were unpardonable, and his Estate and Credit unrecoverable. With these suggestions, he led him on to despair, and in desperation to kill his Children, and make shipwreck of his own Soul, in which the diligence of the Devil appeareth, that he labours and travels uncessantly: and as Saint Bernard saith, in the last day shall rise in condemnation against us, because he hath ever been more diligent to destroy souls, than we have been to save them. And for a Conclusion, let us beseech God of his infinite mercy to defend us from all the subtle temptations of Satan. JOHN ROWSE his Prayer for pardon of his lewd life, which he used to pray in the time of his imprisonment. GOD of my Soul and Body, have mercy upon me: the one I have cast away by my Folly, and the other is likely to perish in thy Fury, unless in thy great mercy thou save it. My Sins are deep Seas to drown me; I am swallowed up in the bottomless Gulf of my own transgressions. With Cain I have been a Murderer, and with judas a Betrayer of the Innocent. My body is a Slave to Satan, and my wretched Soul is devoured up by Hell. Black have been my thoughts, and blacker are my deeds. I have been the Devil's instrument, and am now become the scorn of men; a Serpent upon earth, and an Out-cast from Heaven. What therefore can become of me (miserable Caitiff?) if I look up to my Redeemer, to him I am an Arch Traitor, if upon Earth, it is drowned with Blood of my shedding, if into Hell, there I see my Conscience, burning in the Brimstone Lake. God of my Soul and Body have mercy therefore upon me: Save me, O save me, or else I perish for ever: I die for ever in the world to come, unless (sweet Lord) thou catchest my repentant Soul in thine Arms; O save me, save me, save me. JOHN ROUSE of Ewell his own Arraignment, Confession, Condemnation, and judgement of himself, whilst he lay Prisoner in the White Lion, for drowning of his two Children. I Am arraigned at the black dreadful Bar, Where Sins (so red as Scarlet) judges are; All my Inditements are my horrid Crimes, Whose Story will affright succeeding Times, As (now) they drive the present into wonder, Making Men tremble, as trees struck with Thunder. If any asks what Evidence comes in? O'Tis my Conscience, which hath ever been A thousand witnesses: and now it tells A Tale, to cast me to ten thousand Hells. The jury are my Thoughts (upright in this,) They sentence me to death for doing amiss: Examinations more there need not then, Than what's confessed here both to God and Men. The Crier of the Court is my black Shame, Which when it calls my jury, doth proclaim Unless (as they are summoned) they appear, To give true Verdict of the Prisoner, They shall have heau 〈…〉 set, Such, as may 〈…〉uens debt. About me round sit Innocence and Truth, As Clerks to this high Court; and little Ruth From People's eyes is cast upon my face, Because my facts are barbarous, damned, and base. The Officers that 'bout me (thick) are placed, To guard me to my death, (when I am cast) Are the black stings my speckled soul now feels, Which like to Furies dog me, close at heels. The Hangman, that attends me is Despair, And gnawing worms my fellow-Prisoners are. His Indictment for Murder of his Children. THe first who (at this Sessions) loud doth call me, Is Murder, whose grim visage doth appall me, His eyes are fires, his voice rough winds out-rores, And on my head the Divine Vengeance scores: So fast and fearfully I sink to ground, And wish I were in twenty Oceans drowned. He says I have a bloody Villain been, And (to prove this) ripe Evidence steps in, Browed like myself: justice so brings about, That black sins still hunt one another out: 'Tis like a rotten frame ready to fall, For one main Post being shaken, pulls down all. To this Indictment, (holding up my hand,) Fettered with Terrors mor● than Irons stand, And being asked what to the Bill I say, Guilty I cry. O dreadful Session's day! His judgement. FOr these thick Stygian streams in which thoust swom, Thy guilt hath on thee laid this bitter doom; Thy loathed life on a Tree of shame must take A leave compelled by Law, e'er old age make Her signed Passport ready. Thy offence No longer can for days on earth dispense. Time blot thy name out of this bloody roll, And so the Lord have mercy on my Soul. His speech what he could say for himself. OWretched Caitiff! what persuasive breath Can call back this just Sentence of quick death? I beg no boon, but mercy at God's hands, (The King of Kings, the Sovereign that commands Both Soul and Body) O let him forgive My Treason to his Throne, and whilst I live, jebbits and Racks shall torture limb by limb, Through worlds of Deaths I'll break to fly to him. My Birthday gave not to my Mother's womb, More ease, than this shall joys, when e'er it come. My body mould to earth, sins sink to Hell, My penitent Soul win Heaven, vain world farewell. FINIS.