[Friends, though divided by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookFriends, though divided CHAPTER IV 11/19
The queen was in a house near the shore, and the balls struck in all directions round.
She was forced to get up, throw on a few clothes, and retire on foot to some distance from the village to the shelter of a ditch, where she sat for two hours, the balls sometimes striking dust over them, and singing round in all directions.
It was a question whether the small force which the queen brought with her was not rather a hindrance than an assistance to the royal cause, for the Earl of Newcastle, who had been sent to escort her to York, was authorized by the king to raise men for the service, without examining their consciences, that is to say, to receive Catholics as well as Protestants.
The Parliament took advantage of this to style his army the Catholic Army, and this, and some tamperings with the Papists in Ireland, increased the popular belief that the king leaned toward Roman Catholicism, and thus heightened the feelings against him, and embittered the religious as well as the political quarrel. Toward the end of March commissioners from the Parliament, under the Earl of Northumberland, came to Oxford with propositions to treat.
It is questionable whether the offers of the Commons were sincere.
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