Page:A history of the gunpowder plot-The conspiracy and its agents (1904).djvu/153

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Sir Everard Digby's Letters from the Tower
129

'I do desire my brothers advice for Sir Oliver,[1] for his rents I never received any, and only owe £200, which I kept in my hands for the good of the best cause, out of which I had paid £30. There is £100 yet to be paid to my cousin John to him, and the bonds for that and three more he hath paid, are in my gilt-box, at least there I left them: I durst not make a perfect note for his estate, because I know not his course, and whether it would be hurtful for me to put it from myself to him, as.'

Paper V

'I do not well conceive my brother, for I did never say that any other told me but Mr. Catesby about the Lords' particulars; and for affirming that a priest in general said something of Intentions of redress, I did understand Tar: notice to give approbation, I have not been asked his name, which if I had, should have been such a one as I knew not of. Howsoever my brother is informed, I am sure they fear him for knowledge of the Plot, for at every examination I am told that he[2] did give the Sacrament to five [3] at one time, who they say have confessed it—I do not know who they may be; sure I am

  1. Sir Oliver Manners, son of the fourth, and brother of the fifth and sixth Earls of Rutland. He was received into the Church of Rome, and became a priest.
  2. Father Gerard, SJ.
  3. Of the conspirators.