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Prologue: The Travails of Christopher Hogg
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Published:November 2015
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On 19 november 1625, Christopher Hogg was near the end of a long walk home after a stint driving cattle to the St Martin’s Day fair in Hempton, Norfolk. Somewhere in north Yorkshire he overtook “a man cloathed in black seaming to be a minister”. The man, a Northumberland clerk called Martin Danby, struck up a conversation, and asked Hogg “what newes there was in the South”. Hogg did not have much to offer. He had kept to himself at the fair; he was a “poore labourer … hired to drive & looke to the cattell he had in charge”, as he later put it, and he spent most of his time in Norfolk taking care of his animals. But he had overheard people talking about “Our greate duke whoe was in Spaine with the king”, saying that he was “committed to prison and the Earle of Rutland with him”. When Danby asked Hogg whether he knew the reason for their arrest, Hogg answered that “he hard it reported it was for geving the kings Majestie poyson”. King Charles had been “sick three daies”, Hogg added, “yet God be thanked was recovered”.
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