Page:A history of the gunpowder plot-The conspiracy and its agents (1904).djvu/75

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

CHAPTER VII
PROGRESS OF THE PLOT

THE vague idea of blowing up the Parliament House seems first to have occurred to Robert Catesby 'about Lent,' 1604. Roughly speaking, we may date the genesis of the actual conspiracy from about April in that year. The first formal meeting of the first three plotters (Catesby, Thomas Winter, and John Wright) was held at a house in Lambeth, probably at the end of March, 1604. Later on, after the admission of Percy into the conspiracy, an empty house, with a small garden, adjoining the Palace of Westminster, was hired.[1] This house rented in Thomas Percy's[2] name, was leased by one Ferris as tenant to Mr. Whyneard, keeper of the King's wardrobe. From a cellar in this house the conspirators began digging a mine through the wall into the contiguous vault beneath the Parliament House; but the work proved much harder than anticipated, as the wall was

  1. The decision to hire this abode was taken at a meeting of five of the conspirators held in a lonely house near Clement's Inn.
  2. 'Thomas Percy hired a house at Westminster' (Confession of Guy Faukes).

59