Attorney-General—Did they come from the same place, the tavern in the Strand that you were at?

Crippes—Yes, I believe they did, my lord; for capt Coote bid us follow them, and threatened us if we did not make greater haste.

Attorney—General—Do you know my lord of Warwick?

Crippes—Yes, he had whitish cloaths on; and none but he had such clothes on as those were.

Lord High Steward—Will your lordship ask this witness any questions?

Earl of Warwick—My lord, I desire he may be asked, Whether I did not bid him stop? and, whether I did not say, they should not go to quarrel that night?

Attorney-General—My lord, I desire to know of him, directly and downright, Whether my lord of Warwick was not one of them that held him when he was within the rails of the fields?

Crippes—No, he was not; he was neither of them; for the one of them was too big for him, and the other was too little for my lord Mohun.

Attorney-General—Now we call the chairman that carried the earl of Warwick into Leicester-fields, James Crattle.

(He was sworn.)