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A30389 The memoires of the lives and actions of James and William, Dukes of Hamilton and Castleherald, &c. in which an account is given of the rise and progress of the civil wars of Scotland, with other great transactions both in England and Germany, from the year 1625, to the year 1652 : together with many letters, instructions, and other papers, written by King Charles the I : never before published : all drawn out of, or copied from the originals / by Gilbert Burnet ; in seven books. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. Selections. 1677. 1677 (1677) Wing B5832; ESTC R15331 511,397 467

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his Holy Water Baptizing of Bells conjuring of Spirits crossing saning anointing conjuring hallowing of Gods good Creatures with the superstitious opinion joyned therewith his worldly Monarchy and wicked Hierarchy his three solemn Vowes with all the shavellings of sundry sorts his erroneous and bloody Decrees made at Trent with all the Subscribers and Approvers of that cruel and bloody Bond conjured against the Kirk of God and finally we detest all his vain Allegories Rites Signs and Traditions brought into the Kirk without or against the Word of God and Doctrine of his true Reformed Kirk to the which we joyn our selves willingly in Doctrine Faith Religion Discipline and use of the Holy Sacraments as lively Members of the same in Christ our Head promising and swearing by the great Name of the Lord our God that we shall continue in obedience of the Doctrine and Discipline of this Kirk and shall defend the same according to our vocation and power all the dayes of our lives under the paines contained in the Law and danger both of body and soul in the day of Gods fearful Iudgement and seeing that many are stirred up by Satan and that Roman Antichrist to promise swear subscribe and for a time use the Holy Sacrament in the Kirk deceitfully against their own Consciences minding hereby first under the external Cloak of Religion to corrupt and subver● secretly Gods true Religion within the Kirk and afterward where time may serve to become open enemies and persecuters of the same under vain hope of the Popes Dispensation devised against the Word of God to his greater confusion and their double Condemnation in the day of the Lord Jesus We therefore willing to take away all suspicion of h●pocrisie and such double-dealing with God and his Kirk protest and call the Searcher of all hearts to witness that our minds and hearts do fully agree with this our Confession Promise Oath and Subscription so that we are not moved for any worldly respect but are persuaded onely in our Consciences through the knowledge and love of Gods true Religion printed in our hearts by the Holy Spirit as we shall answer to him in the day when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed And because we perceive that the quietness and stability of our Religion and Kirk doth depend upon the safety and good behaviour of the Kings Majesty as upon a comfortable Instrument of Gods Mercy granted to this Country for the maintenance of his Kirk and ministration of Iustice among us we protest and promise with our hearts under the same Oath hand-writ and pains that we shall defend his Person and Authority with our Bodies and Lives in the defence of Christ his Evangel Liberties of our Country ministration of Iustice and punishment of Iniquity against all Enemies within this Realm or without as we desire our God to be a strong and merciful Defender to us in the day of our Death and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ to whom with the Father and the Holy Spirit be all Honour and Glory eternally Amen WE underscribing and considering the strait link and conjunction betwixt the true and Christian Religion presently profest within this Realm The Bond joyned to it and our Soveraign Lords Estate and Standing having both the self-same Friends and common Enemies and subject to the like event of standing and decay weighing therewithall the imminent danger threatned to the said Religion the Preservation whereof being dearer to us than whatsoever we have dearest to us in this Life and finding in His Majesty a most Honourable and Christian Resolution to manifest Himself to the World that zealous and religious Prince which he hath hitherto professed and to imploy the means and power that God hath put into his hands as well to the withstanding of whatsoever foreign Force shall mean within this Land for alteration of the said Religion or endangering of the present State as to the repressing of the inward Enemies thereto amongst our selves linked with them in the said Antichristian League and Confederacy have therefore in the presence of Almighty God and with His Majesties Authorizing and Allowance faithfully promised and solemnly sworn likeas we hereby faithfully and solemnly swear and promise to take a true effauld and plain part with His Majesty amongst our selves for diverting of the appearing danger threatned ●o the said Religion and His Majesties State and Standing depending thereupon by whatsoever foreign or intestine Plots or Preparations and to that effect faithfully and that upon our Truth and Honours bind and oblige us to others to convene and assemble our selves publickly with our Friends in Arms or in quiet manner at such Times and Places as we shall be required by His Majesties Proclamation or by Writ or Message directed to us from His Majesty or any having Power from him and being convened and assembled to joyn and concur with the whole Forces of our Friends and Followers against whatsoever foreign or intestine Powers or Papists and their Partakers shall arrive or rise within this Island or any part thereof ready to defend or pursue as we shall be authorised or conducted by His Majesty or any others having his Power and Commission to joyn and hold hand to the exe●ution of whatsoever Mean or Order shall be thought meet by His Majesty and His Council for suppressing of the Papists promotion of the true Religion and settling of H●s Highness Estate and Obedience in all the Countries and Corners of this Realm to expose the hazard of our Lives Lands and Goods and whatsoever means God hath lent us in the defence of the said true and Christian Religion and his Majesties Person and Estate against whatsoever Iesuits and Seminary or Mass Priests condemned Enemies to God and His Majesty to their utter wreck and exterminion according to the Power granted to us by His Majesties Proclamation and Acts of Parliament to try search and seek out all Excommunicates Practisers and other Papists whatever within our bounds and Shire where we keep residence and delate them to His Highness and His Privy Council and conform us to such Directions as from time to time we shall receive from His Majesty and His Council in their behalfs and so specially so many of us as presently are or hereafter shall be appointed Commissioners in every Shire shall follow pursue and travel by all means possible to take and apprehend all such Papists Apostates and Excommunicates as we shall receive in Writ from His Majesty And we the remanent within that Shire shall concur and assist with the said Commissioners with our whole Friends and Forces to that effect without respect of any person whatsoever and generally to assist in the mean time and defend every one of us another in all and whatsoever Quarrels Actions Debates moved or to be moved against us or any of us upon Action of the present Bond or other Causes depending thereupon and effauldly joyn in defence and pursuit against whatsoever shall
of that Our Ancient Kingdom Our Will and Pleasure is that a Free General Assembly be kept at Edinburgh the sixth day of August next ensuing where We intend God willing to be personally present and for the Legal Indiction whereof We have given Orders and Command to Our Council and thereafter a Parliament to b● holden at Edinburgh the twentieth day of August next ensuing for ratifying of what shall be concluded in the said Assembly and settling such other things as may conduce to the Peace and Good of Our Native Kingdom and therein an Act of Oblivion to be passed And whereas We are further desired that Our Ships and Forces by Land be recalled and all Persons Goods and Ships be res●ored and they made safe from Invasion We are Graciously pleased to declare That upon their disarming and disbanding of their Forces dissolving and discharging all their pretended Tables and Conventicles and restoring unto Vs all Our Castles Forts and Ammunitions of all sorts as likewise Our Royal Honours and to every one of Our good Subjects their Liberties Lands Houses Goods and Means whatsoever taken and detained from them since the late pretended General Assembly We will presently thereafter recall Our Fleet and retire Our Land-Forces and cause Restitution to be made to all persons of their Ships and Goods detained or arrested since the aforesaid time whereby it may appear that Our Intention in taking up of Arms was no ways for invading Our Own Native Kingdom or to innovate the Religion and Laws but mainly for the maintaining and vindicating of Our Royal Authority And since that hereby it doth clearly appear that We neither have nor do intend any Alteration in Religion and Laws but that both shall be maintained by Vs in their full Integrity We expect the performance of that humble and dutiful Obedience which becometh loyal and dutiful Subjects and as in their several Petitions they have often professed And as We have Iust Reason to believe that to Our peaceable and well-affected Subjects this will be satisfactory so We take God and the World to witness that whatsoever Calamities shall ensue by Our necessitated suppressing of the Insolencies of such as shall continue in their Disobedient Courses is not occasioned by Vs but by their own procurement After this the following Articles were signed THe Forces of Scotland to ●e disbanded and dissolved within eight and fourty hours after the Publication of His Majesties Declaration being agreed upon His Majesties Castles Forts Ammunition of all sorts and Royal Honours to be delivered after the Publication so soon as His Majesty can send to receive them His Majesties Ships to depart presently after the delivery of the Castles with the first fair Wind and in the mean time no interruption of Trade or Fishing His Majesty is Graciously pleased to cause to restore all persons Goods and Ships detained and arrested since the first of November last There shall be no Meetings Treatings Consultations or Convocations of His Majesties Lieges but such as are warrantable by Act of Parliament All Fortifications to desist and no further Work therein and they to be remitted to His Majesties Pleasure To restore to every one of His Majesties Subjects their Liberties Lands Houses Goods and Means whatsoever taken and detained from them by whatsoever means since the aforesaid time Next the Commissioners signed the following Note IN obedience to His Majesties Royal Commands we shall upon Thursday next the 20th of this June dismiss our Forces and immediately thereafter deliver His Majesties Castles and shall ever in all things carry our selves like Humble Loyal and Obedient Subjects Signed Rothes Dumfermline Lowden W. Douglas Al. Henderson Arch. Johnstown The Treaty being thus ended The Treaty is variously censured all parted with great expressions of Joy But few wise men expected it should be followed with a lasting Agreement the Covenanters being peremptory not to part with a hoof so that whatever Concessions came not up to all their Desires were not like to prove satisfactory Those who understood not the true state of the English Army wondered that the King should have let this opportunity out of his hands whereby they judged he was able to have broken and subdued Scotland And according to the vulgar Civility of of all Censurers of Kings Actions his bad Counsellours bore the blame whereof the far greatest share fell upon the Marquis But others who saw beyond those superficial Observers acknowledged there was an equal temperature of Wisdom and Goodness in His Majesties Concessions not denying a proportionable share of the praise to his good Counsellours The Covenanters judged they had scaped well who got off so easily for it would have been impossible for them to have maintained the great Bodies they had gathered together any longer except they had marched into England to which they had no mind unless forced by necessity But some made another Observation though of less moment yet not unpleasant upon Mr. Henderson's signing the former Paper That it was strange to see a Church-man who had acted so vigorously against Bishops for their meddling in Civil Affairs made a Commissioner for this Treaty and sign a Paper so purely Civil so strongly does Passion and Interest biass and turn men When the Commissioners came back to the Camp A Paper is given out for the Conditions of the Agreement though not agreed to they gave an account of their Negotiation and besides the Articles of Treaty they produced another Paper which passed among all for the Conditions of the Agreement It was a Note containing some Points which were alledged to have been agreed to at Berwick verbally though not set down in the written Treaty which was made up of some down-right Mistakes and of other things which the King in discourse had indeed said but not positively nor as a Determination on which he had concluded However the Army made a Declaration that their accepting of the Kings Papers wherein the Assembly of Glasgow was called the pretended Assembly did not infer their accounting it so which they could never do Yet all the Forc●s withdrew most of them laying down Arms but still keeping in great Bodies together and a Proclamation was sent to the North to Montrose on the one side Aboyne on the other to lay down Arms for all this while there had been a Body of about 2000 that had stood for the King in Aberdeenshire who were commanded by my Lord Bamf against whom my Lord Montrose was sent and these Orders were obeyed by them both and indeed they came in good time to Aboyne otherwise he had been sore put to it On the 22th of Iune the Marquis was ordered to go to the Castle of Edinburgh The Marquis receives and furnishes the Castle of Edinburgh and take possession of it in the Kings Name and relieve the Marquis of Huntley and put Ruthwen now created Lord Estrick in it and also to furnish it with store of Provision and Ammunition out
schismatical and perjured Ministers that contrary to their Oaths and Subscriptions from which no Humane power could absolve them have filthily resiled and so made themselves to the present and future Ages most infamous and that no Church-man be bound to appear before them nor any Citation Admonition Certification or Act whatsoever proceeding from the said pretended Meeting be prejudicial to the Iurisdiction Liberties Priviledges Rents Possessions and Benefices belonging to the Church nor to any Acts of former General Assemblies Acts of Council or Parliament made in favours thereof but to the contrary That all such Acts and Deeds and every one of them are and shall be reputed unjust partial and illegal with all that may follow thereupon And this our Protestation we humbly desire may be presented to His Majesty whom we do humbly supplicate according to the practice of Christian Emperours in Ancient times to convene the Clergy of His whole Dominions for remedying the present Schism and Division unto whose Iudgement and Determination we promise to submit our Selves and all our Proceedings Given under our hands at Morpeth Berwick and Holy-Island the tenth and eleventh of August 1639. Signed St. Andrews Da. Edinburgen Jo. Rossen Th. Galloway Wal. Brechinen Ja. Lismoren Ad. Aberdon When my Lord Traquair came to Scotland he found all the Conditions of the Treaty violated the Fortifications of Lieth continued the Forces not all disbanded Lesley keeping up still the Character of General besides many other particulars The Assembly sits and proceeds violently After his coming to Edinburgh the Assembly was held there about the middle of August but they had not remitted any thing of their Fervour only in renewing the last years Acts they were contented not to mention the Assembly of Glasgow magnifying that as a high Condescendency not considering how disproportioned it was to the great Concessions made by His Majesty Neither were they content with discharging the use of the Service-Book and Book of Canons but would needs tax them of Popery and the High Commission of Tyranny Like to these were their Narratives of Annulling the General Assemblies held by King James and of abolishing Episcopacy of which my Lord Traquair gave His Majesty an account and the following Answer was sent from His Majesty But one difference of the Kings Usage of the Marquis from what he gave his other Commissioners is that to him he wrote his Orders all with his own Pen but to others he wrote by another Pen only Superscribed the Letters himself And in his Letters to Traquair he imployed the Marquis for his Secretrary The Kings Letter follows taken from the Marquis his Copy bearing date the 20th of August CHARLES R. Right Trusty WE have hitherto commanded Hamilton to answer several of your Letters but that of the 16th of August being of more weight than any of your former We have thought fit to answer it Our Self And whereas you say that nothing will satisfie them except in terminis the last Assembly be named and ratified or that way be given to the discharging Episcopacy as abjured in that Church as contrary to the Confession of Faith 1580. and the Constitutions of the same you being yet in some hope that the word Abjured may be got changed and that in drawing up the words of the Act it be onely condemned as contrary to the Constitution of that Church We in this point leave you to your Instructions they being full if you consider what We have said concerning Episcopacy and subscribing the Confession of Faith 1580 We thinking it fit to declare hereupon unto you that let their Madness be what it will further than We have declared in Our Instructions in these points We will not go For the Service-book and Book of the Canons though We have been and are content it be discharged yet We will never give Our Voice nor Assent that they be condemned as containing divers Heads of Popery and Superstition In like manner though We have been and are content that the High Commission be discharged yet We will never acknowledge that it is without Law or destructive to the Civil and Ecclesiastical Iudicatories of that Our Kingdom nor that the Five Articles of Perth though dischargod with Our Approbation be condemned as contrary to the foresaid Confession As concerning the late Assemblies We cannot give Our Consent to have them declared null since they were so notorously Our Father of Happy Memory His Acts It seeming strange that We having condescended to the taking away all these things that they complained of which were done in those Assemblies they will not be content therewith without laying an Aspersion on Our Fathers Actions Wherefore if the Assembly will in despite of your Endeavours conclude contrary to this you are to protest against their Proceedings in these points and be sure not to ratifie them in Parliament Concerning the yearly Indicting of General Assemblies and the Confession of Faith We commanded Hamilton in his of the 16th to answer that point to this effect That We think it infinitely to Our Prejudice that We should consent to tie Our Self for the keeping yearly of their Assemblies not needing to repeat the Reasons they being well enough known to you seeing at Berwick it was conceived upon debate of that Point that your having Power to indict a New one within the Year would save that dispute which you are by all means to eschew But if this will not give satisfaction you are by no means to give your assent to any such Act nor to ratifie the same in Parliament The Article in your Instructions which is onely That the Covenant 1580 shall be subscribed you must have an especial care of and how you proceed therein That the Bond be the same which was in Our Fathers time mutatis mutandis and that you give your Assent no other ways to the Interpretations thereof then may stand with Our future Intentions well-known to you nor is the same otherwise to be ratified in Parliament Thus you have Our Pleasure fully signified in every particular of your Letter which you will find no ways contrary to Our Resolution taken at Berwick and Our Instructions given to you there But if the Madness of Our Subjects be such that they will not rest satisfied with what We have given you Power and Authority to condescend to which notwithstanding all their Insolencies We shall allow you to make good to them We take God to witness that what Misery soever shall fall to that Country hereafter it is no fault of Ours but their own procurement And hereupon We do command you that if you cannot compose this Business according to Our Instructions and what We have now written that you prorogue the Parliament till the next Spring and that you think upon some course how you may make publickly known to all Our Subjects what We had given you Power to condescend to And because it is not improbable that this way may produce a present Rupture
Attempts and he could neither be caressed nor cudgelled out of it Most of Pickering's Letters both to Pym and Clotworthy were intercepted from which I draw these Accounts About the 20th of December there was a Council-day a particular account whereof I shall give Great debates in the Council about the Kings Declaration as I have it from a Copy of a Letter written to London in which the Chancellour presented to the Council a Letter from my Lord Lindsay then at London with the Declaration of the Parliament But though the Lords of that Party knew nothing of this yet by private Letters Lanerick had some conjectures of it beforehand After the Parliaments Paper was twice read Lowdon resumed it fully and assoon as he had done with that Lanerick delivered another Letter from the King with as large a Declaration within it and after it was twice read Lanerick bade the Chancellour resume it as faithfully as he had done the former which accordingly he did The first thing the Marquis thought best to move as that of the least Importance which yet would discover how the Council was inclined was the Publishing the Kings Declaration The Lord Balmerino said the Parliament desired not theirs to be published so it were Officiousness to do it but that it were Injustice to publish the one without the other The Marquis asked was that because we owed as much to the Parliament of England as to the King Lanerick added he had a Command from the King for it Argyle answered they sate there to good purpose if every Message to them was a Command and they two let fly at one another for a while with much eagerness But the Marquis and Balmerino took the debate off their hands and managed it more calmly The Marquis said the Vote was to be stated Obey or Not obey the other answered that was the Bishops way of proceeding to procure Orders from the King without Advice and then charge all who offered better Counsel with Disobedience The Marquis said to what did they mean to reduce the Kings Authority if he might not set out Declarations for removing the Aspersions were cast on his Person and Government or would they speak plainly were they afraid that his Subjects might have too good an opinion of him if they heard himself There appeared a variety of Opinions before it was put to the Vote some were for Printing both some were for Printing neither some for Printing the Kings and not the Parliaments and one had a singular Opinion for Printing the Parliaments and not the Kings There were one and twenty Councellours present and it being put to the Vote Print or not Print there were eleven who voted I I I and nine voted No No No. This being carried that the Kings Declaration and not the Parliments should be Printed the Marquis moved next that the matter of these Declarations might be considered But the Lord Balmerino said the Parliament of England was long in contriving their Paper and the King and those about him had been no doubt as long in forming the other and if we shall fall upon a few hours Consideration to give our sense of them we were pretty fellows in faith which he twice repeated This rude Raillery touched the Marquis in the quick because he conceived these words were not so much a reflexion upon himself as on the King who on another great occasion had used the same expression However they had sate and debated long so they gave it over for that day This is set down more particularly because it was the first instance that these two Parties fell visibly asunder and henceforth they continued stated in two Factions But because I love not to name persons upon invidious occasions henceforth all the other Faction shall be designed by the General term of the Church-party others calling them Argyl's Party and the other the Hamilton-party However the Declaration was printed which drew a large share of Censure and Hatred on the two Brothers but the King was so well pleased with their Behaviour that he wrote the Marquis the following Letter Hamilton YOu know I am ill at words I think it were best for me to say to you as Mr. Major did you know my mind and indeed I know none of my Subjects that knows it better and having for the present little else to give my Servants but thanks I hold it a particular Misfortune that I can do it no better therefore this must suffice I see you are as good as your word and you shall find me as good in mine of being Your most assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Oxford December 29th 1642. An. 1643. POSTSCRIPT You cannot take to your self nor express to your Brother better thanks than I mean to you both for the Service you did me the last Council-day Anno 1643. THe next Year begun with Petitions which were brought from divers Shires and Presbyteries complaining of their Publishing the late Declaration but the Conservatours of Peace who were for the most part of the Church-party made this up the best way they could Most are inclined to joyn with the Two Houses against the King for first they declared a Publication was not an Approbation next they appointed the Parliaments Declaration to be also Published At this time the Marquis and Traquair renewed their old Friendship and seeing these Petitions coming in so fast which did clearly insinuate desires of engaging in the Parliaments Quarrel he with his Brother's and Traquair's advice contrived a Cross Petition to be offered to the Lords of Council And as the Motion of it came first from him so the first draught of it was from his Pen of which I find an account under Lanerick's hand so little reason there was to charge him with Juggling in that matter though it was not fit he should have owned it lest upon that account the Church-party might either have accused him as a Plotter or at least cast him from Sitting and Judging in it The Petition follows May it please your Lordships The Cross Petition THat whereas His Majesty with Advice of his Great Council the Estates of Parliament hath been pleased to select your Lordships to be His Councellours and hath by an Act of the late Parliament committed to your Lordships the Administration and Government of this Kingdom in all Affairs concerning the Good Peace and Happiness thereof and in regard of that great Trust reposed by His Majesty and the Estates of Parliament in you your Lordships have been and will continue so careful to acquit your selves of that weighty Charge as you may be answerable for all your Actions and Proceedings to His Majesty and the Estates of Parliament to whom as we conceive you are and can only be accomptable And now we being informed of a Petition presented by some Noblemen Gentlemen and others to the Commissioners for conserving the Articles of the late Treaty upon pretext of your Lordships not Sitting at that time
them and possibly by their desperate Resolutions of their Engaging them in a bloody and unnatural War Those Injuries to Vs and Oppre●sions upon them We expect you whom We have with Advice of Our Parliament entrusted with managing the greatest Affairs of that Our Kingdom will particularly resent and therefore We have thought fit to require you immediately after the receipt hereof to publish in Our Name a Proclamation to all Our loving Subjects of that Our Native Kingdom prohibiting them under all highest pains to give Obedience to any Act or Ordinance of that pretended Convention or of any Committee pretending a Power or Authority from them but to oppose by Armes or otherways all such Persons as shall endeavour to put in execution any Acts of theirs but such as We expressed in Our Letter We mentioned of the tenth of June which was so much slighted as it was refused to be Recorded for the Raising of Forces or Recalling Our Scotish Army in Ireland or any part thereof without Our Knowledge and Consent and We do likewise require that no Taxes imposed upon Our Subjects by that pretended Authority be paid assuring all Our Loving Subjects of Our Protection in the Obedience of these Our Commands for which these shall be your Warrant which We require you to Record Given at Our Court at Oxford the 26th of September in the 19th Year of Our Reign 1643. With these His Majesty wrote to my Lord Lanerick CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellour The Kings Letter to Lanerick We Greet you well We have sent to Our Privy-Council of Scotland Our Letters of Direction what they shall do now that the General Meeting there hath proceeded to such strange and undutiful Resolutions beyond the Matter We prefixed them to treat upon by Our former Letter Of those Our Letters We have sent you an exact Copy and particular Directions to your self what you shall do in order thereunto when you shall think fit for Our Service to make use of the same But We leave it now to your Discretion and the Iudgment of the rest whom We have entrusted with the Affairs of that Our Kingdom to deliver these Our Letters to Our said Privy-Council at that time and no sooner than you shall conceive to be most conducible to Our Service and the Good of that Kingdom for if you shall find that no Obedience is likely to be given to those Our Commands you are to consider how far you who are Our faithful Servants there will be able to withstand those Insolences which of necessity must follow upon such Disobedience and what the Consequence will be to anger before We be able to punish such Offenders But Our Will is that you forthwith publish the other anent the Proclamation Precept or Warrant falsly published in Our Name and We further require you to do whatsoever else you with the rest whom We have trusted with the Affairs of that Our Kingdom shall conceive most to conduce to Our Service as you will answer to Vs at your peril and for so doing this shall be a sufficient Warrant to you and those others entrusted by Vs as aforesaid Given at Our Court at Oxford 26th of September 1643. The Lords whom His Majesty trusted judged it not fitting to present the Letter written to the Council and suppressed it But His Majesty wrote another Letter to the Council about the Proclamation which was issued forth in his Name by the Convention of Estates which follows CHARLES R. The Kings Letter about the Proclamation to the Council RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellours and Trusty and well-beloved Councellours We greet you well Whereas We were graciously pleased to condescend that this present Meeting in Our Kingdom of Scotland of Our Nobility there and the Commissioners for Shires and Burroughs should resolve and conclude of such particular Affairs as We specified and allowed to them for the Security and Good of that Our Kingdom in Our late Letters to them dated the 10th of June last and for as much as we have to Our great amazement newly seen a Paper in form of a Proclamation Precept or Warrant in Our Royal Name dated at Edinburgh the 18th of August subscribed Per Actum Dominorum Conventionis Arch. Primrose Cler. Conven Being a Paper most impudently set forth without Our Privity or any Authority from Vs and tending to cast Our beloved People of that Our Native Kingdom into the like and more bloody Combustions and Rebellions Violation of their Religion and Allegeance to Vs and Laws of that Our hitherto peaceful Native Kingdom as hath been here practised by the malicious enemies of Peace and Government We have therefore upon good Deliberation and out of Our Princely and Gracious Care of Our People and of the Tranquility of that Our Native Kingdom as it was so lately and well setled by Our Self thought fit to Declare and we do hereby Declare unto you that We utterly dislike and disallow it forbidding all Our Subjects to obey the same and all other Papers published in Our Name which shall not immediately be warranted by Vs and We do hereby will and command you forthwith openly to publish these Our Letters to let all Our People understand Our Pleasure herein And lastly Our Pleasure and Command is that you cause these Our Letters to be forthwith recorded in the Books of Our Privy Council of that Our Native Kingdom for all which these Our said Letters shall be your sufficient Warrants Given at our Court at Oxford the 26th day of September in the 19th Year of Our Reign 1643. He wrote also to the same purpose to the Earl of Lanerick CHARLES R. His Majesties Letter to Lanerick to the same purpose RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousins and Councellour We Greet you well Whereas We have thought fit for the Good of Our Service and Safety of Our People to require Our Council to publish a Proclamation in Our Name to all Our loving Subjects in Scotland discharging them to give Obedience to any Act or Ordinance of the Pretended Convention of the Estates at Edinburgh the 22d of June or of any Commitee pretending Authority from them but to oppose with Arms or otherways all such Persons as shall endeavour to put in execution any Act of theirs but if Our Privy Council shall not give present Obedience to Our Commands and publish this Our Pleasure these are to require you to take what Course you shall think most fit to make this Known to all Our loving Subjects either by giving Warrant in Our Name to Print Our Letter to Our Council or by sending attested Copies thereof to all the Nobility Sheriffs of Counties and Majors of Towns within Our Kingdom of Scotland a Duplicate whereof you will herewith receive under Our Own Royal Hand and We further require you to do whatsoever else you with the rest whom We have trusted with the Affairs of that Our Kingdom shall conceive
be graciously pleased to hear his faithful Servants inform him of the Truth he shall direct that which is just and right and with the same assurance I dare promise him Obedience The interest your Lordship has in this poor Kingdom but more particularly the Duty you owe to His Majesty and the true respect I know you have ever carried to His Majesties Honour and the good of his Service makes me thus bold to acquaint your Lordship with this business which in good faith is by the folly and misgovernment of some of our Clergie-men come to that height that the like has not been seen in this Kingdom of a long time But I hope your Lordship will take in good part my true meaning and ever construct favourably the actions of Your loving faithful Friend and humble Servant TRAQVAIR Edinburgh Aug. 27. After all inquiry was made it did not at all appear that any above the meaner sort were accessory to that Tumult the sequel whereof in the Afternoon had almost been Tragical not onely to the Bishop of Edinburgh but to the Earl of Roxburgh for having him in his Coach But His Majesty though he was willing to be gentle to the Transgressours yet continued firm to his former Resolutions of having the Liturgy and Book of Canons established In October thereafter a new Tumult fell out in Edinburgh against the Earl of Traquair and some of the Bishops whom the People in their fury went about to have killed upon which by Proclamation the Council and Session and other Courts were removed from Edinburgh Hereupon the Earl of Roxburgh who was then Lord Privy-Seal went to Court to give the King an account of Affairs for all this time divers had petitioned the Council against these Books complaining they were contrary to Religion in the matter of them and the Laws of the Land in the manner of bringing them in but all he could procure was a Pardon for what was past to such as should thenceforth live quietly and that was proclaimed in December but was far from giving satisfaction for by this time the Malecontents were become considerable and had formed themselves into a Body It was also studiously infused in the minds of all through Scotland that the Bishops were introducing Popery that many points of Popery were in these Books and that the whole of them was both superstitious and illegal This took mightily with the Vulgar and the malecontented Ministers began every-where to talk high in their Pulpits against the Bishops they also formed themselves into a Body called the Table where there were Deputies from the Shires and Burroughs and a great many Noblemen and Ministers That which they pretended was the Security of Religion They pretend the Security of Religion and swear the Covenant with the preserving the Fundamental Laws and Liberties of the Land the Honour of the King and the defence of his Authority and for this end it was judged fit and necessary to renew the Covenant made in King Iames his time against Popery and signed by that King with his Council and Family which according to the new draught was made up first of King Iames his Covenant next of a long Narrative of all Acts of Parliament whereby the Reformed Religion was ratified thirdly of an Addition wherein the late Innovations were sworn against till they were judged in a free General Assembly and declared also to be abjured in the old Covenant as formally as if they had been expresly named in it and all ended with a Bond of Defence for adhering to one another in pursuing the ends of the Covenant This was no sooner moved but the advice took as if it had been an Oracle so the Covenant was sworn first at Edinburgh in the moneth of February and then sent every-where through the Country to get the example of those in Edinburgh imitated which was accordingly done not without great appearances of Devotion among all sorts of People they pretending it was nothing but the preservation and purity of Religion they aimed at For the Covenant I judge it needless to insert it here both because of its length and that it is in the large Manifesto of the Affairs of this year published in His Majesties Name and therefore that Book being both common and of great Authority I do not insert Papers at their length that are to be found there and shall onely adde that the Originals and other authentick Justifications of that Declaration are in my hands The Session or Term was held that Winter at Sterlin but the Council sate often at Dalkeith within four miles of Edinburgh which being then so full of People it was not judged fit for the Council to withdraw too far from it Petitions were often offered to the Council encouraged from the Table full of Complaints against the Bishops and the late Innovations but they were as often rejected Upon this the Earl of Traquair went to Court and gave a full account both of the Petitions the Humours and the Strength of the Malecontents and that all was occasioned by the Bishops misgovernment and by the introducing the lately-authorized Books with which scarce a Member of the Council the Bishops onely excepted was well satisfied neither were all these cordially for them for the Archbishop of S. Andrews from the beginning had withstood these designs foreseeing how full of danger the executing of them might prove The Archbishop of Glasgow was worse pleased but the Bishops of Ross Dumblane Brechin and Galloway were the great Advancers of them Traquair represented also that the Body of all Scotland was staggering if not wholly alienated from their Duty to the King and that nothing could recover them out of this distemper but assurances of His Majesties affection to the Protestant Religion and of his aversion from Popery together with the laying aside of these Books at least till better Times At this time also the Covenanting Lords wrote to the Duke of Lenox the Marquis of Hamilton and the Earl of Morton who were then at Court representing their Grievances and desiring they would offer their Petition to His Majesty which was humble enough though full of Complaints against these Books desiring they might be heard to object against them offering under the highest pains to prove they contained things both contrary to Religion and the Laws of the Land But all the Earl of Traquair said was suspected his prejudices against the Bishops being known The opposition he had made the Bishops had rendered him hitherto very Popular in Scotland and there want not grounds to suspect him a secret worker in this opposition to these Books though he seems to have been far from cherishing any further designs All he could procure from the King was a Proclamation The King proclaims his firmness to the Protestant Re-Religion Giving assurance of His Majesties firmness to the Protestant Religion and that great care was used in drawing the Liturgie so that not onely it was not
contrary to but would prove a ready mean to preserve the true Religion already received and beat down all Superstition Withall the King considering the disorderly Conventions had been to form Petitions against these Books though they deserved a high Censure yet His Majesty willing to impute that rather to a preposterous Zeal than to any Disloyalty therefore dispensed with them to all such as should thence forth retire and return to their Obedience whereupon these Conventions were in all time coming discharged under pain of Treason The Tumults grow This was proclaimed at Sterlin the nineteenth of February but was so far from giving satisfaction that it proved a crisis to greater Confusion for it met with a Protestation as it was proclaimed sent from those of the Tables who notwithstanding continued to sit in that Iunto An Answer also came from the Duke of Lennox and the other Lords at Court directed only to three of the Lords of the Covenant in Scotland the Earls of Rothes Cassils and Montrose wherein they wrote that they had communicated their desires to His Majesty who answered that as hitherto he had received all the Petitions they had offered to the Council so he had considered them and would declare His Royal Intentions about them The Combustions continuing and growing the Council appointed a solemn Meeting to be the first of March at Sterlin for a full examining of things that they might send their joint Advices to Court This was likewise agreed to by the Lord Chancellour who was then at Edinburgh and undertook for himself and the rest of the Clergy that were of the Council to keep that Appointment The first of March came but none of the Clergy kept the day the Lord Bishop of Brechin only excepted an excuse came from the Lord Chancellour but the necessity of Affairs pressed the Lords of the Council to go on they continued four days consulting and debating about things but after the third day Bishop Brechin left them seeing in what Determinations they were likely to close The issue of their Consulting was to send Sir Iohn Hamilton the Justice-Clerk to the King with Instructions which follow as they are taken from the Original yet extant INSTRUCTIONS from His MAJESTIES Council to the Lord Iustice-Clerk whom they have ordained to go to Court for His MAJESTIES service Instructions to the Justice-Clerk concerning the rise and remedies of these Disorders IN the first place you are to receive from the Clerk of the Council all the Acts past since our meeting upon the first of March instant Item You have to represent to his Majesty That the Dyet of Council was appointed to be solemnly kept by the advice of the Lord Chancellour and remnant Lords of the Clergy being at Edinburgh for the time who assured us that they should keep the Dyet precisely but at our meeting at Sterlin we received a Letter of excuse from the Lord Chancellour which forced us to proceed without his Lordships presence or any others of the Lords of the Clergy except the Bishop of Brechin who attended us three days but removed before the closing of our Opinions anent the business Item That immediately after we had resolved to direct you with a Letter of Trust to His Majesty we did send our Letter to the Lord Chancellour acquainting him with our proceedings and desiring him to consider thereof and if he approved the same to sign them and to cause t●e remnant Lords of the Clergy nearest unto him and namely the Bishop of Brechin who was an ear and eye Witness to our Consultations to sign the same and by their Letter to His Majesty to signifie their approbation thereof or if his Lordship did find some other way more convenient for His Majesties Honour and the Peace of the Country that his Lordship by his Letter to the Lord Treasurer or Privie-Seal would acquaint them therewith to the effect they might convene the Council for consulting thereabout Item That you shew His Majesty that His Majesties Council all in one voice finds that the causes of the general Combustions in the Country are the Fears apprehended of Innovation of Religion and Discipline of the Kirk established by the Laws of the Kingdom by occasion of the Service-Book Book of Canons and High-Commission and from the Introduction thereof contrary to or without warrant of the Laws of the Kingdom Item You are to represent to His Majesty our humble opinion That seeing as we conceive the Service-Book Book of Canons and High-Commission as it is set down are the occasion of this Combustion and that the Subjects offer themselves upon peril of their Lives and Fortunes to clear that the said Service-Book and others foresaid contain divers Points contrary to the Religion presently professed and Laws of the Kingdom in matter and manner of Introduction That the Lords think it expedient that it be represented to His Majesties gracious Consideration if His Majesty may be pleased to declare as an act of his singular Iustice that he will take trial of His Subjects Grievances and the reasons thereof in His own time and in His own way according to the Laws of this Kingdom and that His Majesty may be pleased g●aciously to declare that in the mean time he will not press nor urge His Subjects therewith notwithstanding any Act or Warrant made in the contrary And in case His Majesty shall be graciously pleased to approve of our humble opinions you are thereafter to represent to His Majesties gracious and wise Consideration if it shall not be fitting to consult His Majesties Council or some such of them as He shall be pleased to call to Himself or allow to be sent from the Table both about the time and way of doing of it And if His Majesty as God forbid shall dislike of what we have conceived most conducing to His Majesties Service and Peace of the Kingdom you are to urge by all the arguments you can that His Majesty do not determine upon any other course until some at least of His Council from this be heard to give the reasons of their Opinions and in this case you are likewise to represent to His Majesties Consideration if it shall not be fitting and necessary to call for His Informers together with some of His Council that in His Own presence he may hear the Reasons of both Informations fully debated You shall likewise show His Majesty that His Council having taken to their Consideration what further was to be done for composing and settling of the present Combustion within the Kingdom and dissipating of the Convocations and Gatherings within the same seeing Proclamations are already made and published discharging all such Convocations and unlawful Meetings the Lords after debating find they can do no further than is already done herein until His Majesties pleasure be returned to this our humble Remonstrance Signed Traquair Roxburgh Winton Perth Wigton Kinghorn Lauderdale Southesk Angus Lorn Down Elphinston Napier J. Hay Tho. Hope
for the curbing of disobedient and stubborn People Our Will therefore is and we charge you c. C. R. And by another Paper His Majesty left it to the Marquis his choice whether of the two he should make use of as he found it might tend to His Service but withall if he made use of the second and it gave no satisfaction so that within 6 Weeks most of the Bonds were not delivered up upon his desiring them to doe so then he should publish another Proclamation Declaring the Covenanters Traitors if within 5 days they came not to accept of Mercy and deliver up the Bonds if they were in their power And so a third Declaration penned by the Chancellour was laid aside onely it is extant marked by the Kings Hand on the back and therefore shall be set down here WHereas we were in hope by Our late Proclamations to have given satisfaction to Our People and to have removed their Mistakings of the Book of Common-prayer which We caused to be published having thereby declared that it never entred into Our thoughts to make any Innovation in Religion and Form of Gods Worship nay not to press the said Books upon any of Our Subjects till by a fair way they were induced to approve the same yet having understood that to the contrary by what means We know not occasions have been taken to confirm them in their former Mistakings and to bind them by the Oaths and Subscriptions against the Laws established by Our dear Father of blessed memory and ratified by Our Selves since Our coming to the Crown howsoever there is in that more than just cause offered to take punishment of such an open Contempt and Rebellion yet considering that this is not the fault of the simple sort and multitude of People who have been seduced through specious pretexts as if nothing were contained in the said Bond or Covenant as they call it but the promoting of Gods Glory the maintaining of Our Honour and Liberty of the Country with the preserving of Vnity among themselves We no way willing to use Our People with rigour or to enquire severely into their errors of that kind have thought meet to renew Our former Declaration by assuring them and every one of them that Our constant Resolution is and hath been to maintain the true Religion professed and established by the Laws of that Our Kingdom without any Change or Innovation at the hazard of Our Life and Crown and that We will not force on Our Subjects either the said Book of Common-prayer or Book of Canons till the same be duly examined and they in their Iudgments satisfied with the legality thereof nor will We permit the exercise of any Commission upon them for whatsoever cause which may give unto them any just cause of Grief and Complaint Willing therefore and requiring all Our People and Subjects to acquiesce to this Our Declaration and not suffer themselves to be misled by the private or publick Informations of turbulent spirits as if We did intend any thing contrary to this Our Profession having always esteemed it a special point of Royal Dignity to profess what We intend to doe and to perform what We do promise certifying all Our good Subjects who shall hereupon rest quiet in the obedience of God and Vs that We will faithfully perform whatsoever We have declared whether in this or in Our former Proclamations made to that purpose and be unto them a good and merciful King as on the other side if any shall hereafter make business and disturb the Peace of that Church and Kingdom by following their private Covenants and refusing to be ruled by the Laws established that We will use the Force and Power which God hath put into Our hands for compescing and subduing such mutinous and disobedient Rebels Given at Our Palace of This is marked by the Kings Hand Declaration made by the Chancellour Thus that wise Prelat foresaw well how it would be easier to effectuate all that had been designed than to get that alone of disclaiming the Covenant brought about and therefore left that out in his draught of the Declaration But the King was peremptory saying That as long as that Covenant was not passed from He had no more Power than the Duke of Venice For the Commissioners Instructions the Chancellour gave his Advice in writing which was very closely followed After that many particular Questions were given in by the Marquis in writing for Orders how to carry himself whatever might meet him in his Negotiation to which he got positive Answers in writing from the King which are extant and though the Material points in that Paper be to be found in the Instructions yet this seems too considerable to be suppressed and therefore it is set down in the very Form wherein it is in the Original the Queries being written by the Marquis and the Answers over against them by the King QUERIES whereunto Your MAJESTIES Direction and Resolution is humbly prayed that accordingly I may govern my self and be warranted for my Proceedings 1. IF before the publishing of the Declaration some of the chiefest of the Petitioners may not be prepared and laboured to conceive aright of the same and in general acquainted with Your Majesties gracious Intentions They may 2. Where the first meeting of the Council shall be Where you shall find most convenient the City of Edinburgh only excepted 3. If Your Majesty will not permit the Council to sit where and in such places as is conceived may tend most for the advancement of Your Service Yes 4. If the Declaration shall not be read to the Council and they required to sign the same By all means 5. If we shall not all swear to give our best assistance for the putting the same in due execution Yes 6. If any Councellour refuse to doe it what course shall be taken with him Dismiss him the Council 7. If Acts of Council are not to be made finding that this Declaration ought to free us of the fears of Innovations either of Religion or Laws Yes 8. If all Councellours are not to be warned to give their attendance till the business be settled Yes 9. If upon the publication of this Declaration there be Protestations made what course shall be taken The Protesters must be proclaimed Rebels 10. If no Protestations but Petitions of new be presented either demanding further satisfaction or adhering to their former what Answer shall be made or what course taken Vt supra 11. If they remain still in a Body at Edinburgh or elsewhere after the Declaration what course shall be taken You must raise what Force you may to treat them as Rebels 12. If they should petition against the High Commission itself as not to be introduced without an Act of Parliament what Answer shall be given That they mu●t be content with My Declaration in that point 13. If against the matter contained therein it is then desired that those particulars may
be expressed that will not be yielded to The settling thereof according to My Declaration will answer this 14. If it be pressed that what is now concluded concerning the High Commission be ratified in the next Parliament what Answer shall be given If I may be sure that a Parliament will doe it I shall be content 15. If they Petition for a Convention what Answer shall be given No Petition must be admitted till the Bond be broken if after you may grant it leaving the time to Me. 16. If they petition for a General Assembly that it may be once in the year what Answer shall be given I will not be tied but as I shall find cause 17. If they petition that the Ministers Oath may be no other than that which the Act of Parliament doth order them to take what Answer shall be given I and the Bishops will consider of it 18. If they petition that the Five Articles of Perth may be held as indifferent what Answer shall be given I will hear of no Petition against an Act of Parliament 19. If the Town of Edinburgh may not be dealt with apart to petition for Your Majesties Favour and if they desire that the Council Exchequer and Session may be returned them what Answer shall be given Upon their full submission and renouncing of the Bond they may have their desires 20. If the like course may not be taken with some other principal Burghs As before 21. If to gain some leading men from the Party marks of Your Majesties Favour may not be hoped for To some I to some No. 22. If particular men desire either Acts of Council or Pardons under the Great Seal what shall be done Grant their desires 23. What Service shall be used in the Chappel Royal The English 24. If the Lords of Council and Session shall at that time be pressed to receive Kneeling This is no time for a Communion but when there is they must kneel 25. If thought fit what shall be be done to them that refuse Advise of it 26. If all Acts of Council that have injoyned the use of the Service-Book Book of Canons are not to be suspended and declared of no force in time coming Yes 27. How far Your Majesty will warrant me to declare Your Pleasure to the Lords of the Clergy concerning their living within their Diocesses I shall do it My Self but you may tell any of it 28. How far I may declare Your willingness to give ear to and receive the private Complaints of Your Subjects in general and in particular against any of the Bishops Refuse none 29. If those Ministers who have been by the Multitude displaced are not again to be established They must 30. If in the Abbey-Church the use of the Organs shall be presently enjoyned Yes 31. If those Ministers formerly silenced may not for a time be connived at and permitted to preach If they preach not Sedition 32. If Your Majesty aim at more for the present than establishing the Peace of the Country No more for the present 33. If more it is humbly desired Your Majesty may be pleased to express it When time shall be fit In execution of all which or what else Your Majesty shall think fit to command it is most humbly desired that I may be so warranted that the labouring to put them in execution may not turn to my Ruine nor hazard the losing of Your Majesties Favour dearer to me than life You shall The whole Instructions were signed the 16th of May which follow taken from the Original CHARLES R. BEfore you publish the Declaration which We have signed you shall require all the Council to sign it and if you find that it may conduce to Our Service you shall make all the Council swear to give their best assistance in the execution of the same but this of putting them to their Oaths We leave to your discretion to doe as you shall find occasion but if you shall find it fit to put them to their Oaths those that refuse must be dismissed the Council till Our further Pleasure be known We give you power to cause the Council to sit in what soever place you shall find most convenient for Our Service Edinburgh onely excepted and to change the Meeting thereof as often as occasion shall require You may labour to prepare any of the refractory persons to conceive aright of Our Declaration before it be published so that it be privately and underhand You are to get an Act of Council to pass to declare that this Declaration of Ours ought to free all honest Subjects from the fears of Innovations of Religion or Laws but this you are not to propose publickly except you be sure to carry it If any Protestation be made against Our Declaration the Protesters must be reputed Rebels and you are to labour to apprehend the chiefest of them If Petitions be presented to demand further satisfaction than that We have already given by Our Declaration you are to receive them and to give them a bold Negative both in respect of the Matter and the Form as being presented from a Body which you are no ways to acknowledge If it should be objected against the High Commission that it ought not to be introduced but by Act of Parliament your Answer must be that We found it left Vs by Our Father and therefore We mean to continue it having first regulated it in such a way that it shall be no just Grievance to Our Subjects or against Our Laws and when there is a Parliament We shall be content that i● be ratified as We shall now rectifie it If after the limited time in Our Declaration a Body remain at Edinburgh or elsewhere you must raise what Force you can to di●sipate and bring them under Our Obedience As soon as the Peace of the Country will permit you are to call a General Assembly for settling of a constant and decent way for Gods Worship We having resolved to call them or to permit them to be as often as occasion shall require We likewise intending to have a Parliament to ratifie what shall be condescended on at the Assembly You may say the Bishops shall impose no other Oath upon Ministers at their Admission but what is warranted by Act of Parliament You are to give direction that the same Service be used in Our Chapel Royal that was before the enjoyning of the Service-book You must admit of no Petition against the 5 Articles of Perth but for the present you are not to press the exact execution of them Whenever the Town of Edinburgh shall depart from the Covenant and petition for Our Favour We will that you bring back the Council and Session to it You shall deny no Pardons nor Acts of Council to any particular persons that shall desire the same for their security Some marks of Favour We may be moved to give to particular persons that may deserve the same All Acts of Council that enjoyn
the Accompts of his Trustees at that time Upon the Kings Pleasure that was signified by the Archbishop of Canterbury the Marquis emitted a Proclamation for the Sessions sitting down on the second of Iuly at Edinburgh The Session sits again at Edinburgh and thither he went that day to intimate to them His Majesties Goodness for them in no● putting them to the trouble and expence of removing their Families elsewhere wherefore he recommended His Majesties Service to them and that if any thing came from the Tables they should not fail to pass that Censure on it which was according to Law Next he called for the Covenanters Petitions which he promised to present to His Majesty and return them an Answer betwixt that and the fifth of August with which they were satisfied for that time On the fourth of Iuly he held a Council and presented the Kings Declaration to the Councellours and having before-hand prepared most of them with a great deal of industry he got it signed by them all an Act passed The Kings Proclamation is published and protested against that the Subjects ought to rest satisfied with it It was immediately sent to the Market-cross and proclaimed but notwithstanding all the Grace it contained it met with a Protestation from the Tables But upon the back of this the Marquis met with one of the most troublesome passages of his whole Negotiation There were some Councellours who were not satisfied with the Declaration and those he got to be absent from Council that day but divers of thos● who had signed the Act that the Subjects ought to rest satisfied with the Declaration came afterwards to him telling him that he had pressed them to what they had not well considered when they did it but upon second thoughts they found they had wronged their Consciences wherefore they desired he would call a new Council The Council is inconstant that they might retract what they had done This he studied to divert by all means representing how contrary it would be to their Honour and to the Kings Service and Good of the Country and so he shook them off that night but next day those and many more came to him with the same Desires and say or do what he could nothing would prevail with them for they told him plainly if he called not a Council they would find another way to make their Retractation well enough known and that was to subscribe the Covenant The Marquis having spoken with the whole Council apart found that three parts of four would immediately fall off if he gave them not satisfaction and judging that such a visible breach with the Council would ruine the Kings Affairs therefore since the Act was not registred but onely subscribed he thought the Course that had least danger in it was to tear it before them by this means he got that storm calmed All this while that he had been in Scotland he had not forgot the Kings Orders about his Castles The Marquis takes care of the Kings Castles Dumbriton was secured though it run a risque the Constable being at London and the Under-keeper taking the Covenant but he called home Sir William Stewart who was Constable under the Duke of Lennox to wait on his Charge and this delivered him from that hazard As for Edinburgh-Castle which was then in the Earl of Marre's hand it cost him more trouble Divers of the Earl of Marre's friends who had much credit with him being not well inclined and much being trusted to the Constable he durst not in the Kings Name require him to yield it up lest that had hasted on a Rupture and he could not prevail by fairer ways at first but the issue of this shall be told in its due place This being done the Marquis took his Journey He takes Journey and on the way he had the following Letter from His Majesty Hamilton I Hope that this will find you on the way hitherward wherefore remitting all business till I speak with you these Lines are only to hearten you in your Iourney for I think that it will be very much for my Service So desiring you to make as much haste as the weather will permit I rest Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Greenwich the 9th July 1638. POSTSCRIPT Forget not to bring with you the Copies of all the Proclamations and Protestations that have been made When he came to Court he gave the King a full account of all had passed in Scotland and of the strength and fury of the Covenanters and gives the King an account of Affairs together with the inconstancy of many of the Council and how His Majesty had been abused in the hopes he was put in of the readiness of his Preparations in England which I gather from some little Notes he took of things and the Copies of his Letters He next told His Majesty that nothing prevailed so much on the Vulgar in Scotland as the cursed insinuations were given of His Majesties staggering in the Protestant Religion wherefore he proposed that His Majesty might cause renew the Confession of Faith which was established at the Reformation and ratified in Parliament An. 1567 and to that His Majesty did readily consent At length His Majesty having considered for some days of the whole Affair and having fully debated every particular with the Marquis and my Lord of Canterbury in end His Goodness and Paternal Affection for his poor Subjects overcame all that Indignation which their Actions had raised in him wherefore he resolved on enlarging his Instructions which he did as follows CHARLES R. YOV shall try by all means to see if the Council will sign the Confession of Faith established by Act of Parliament and gets new and fuller Instructions with the new Bond joyned thereto but you are not publickly to put it to Voting except you be sure to carry it and thereafter that probably they will stand to it If the Council do sign it though the Covenanters refuse you shall proceed to the indicting of a free General Assembly and though you cannot procure the Council to sign it yet you are to proceed to the indicting thereof if you find that no other Course can quiet business at this time You shall labour by all fair means that the sitting of the Assembly be not before the first of November or longer if you can obtain it for the place We are pleased to leave it to your election for the manner of indicting you must be as cautious as you can and strive to draw it as near as may be to the former Assemblies in my Fathers time You must labour that Bishops may have Votes in Assemblies which if you cannot obtain then you are to protest in their Favours in the most formal manner you can think of As for the Moderator in the Assembly you are to labour that he may be a Bishop which though you cannot obtain yet you must give way to
as bad if not worse than the Disease The Marquis was so far from denying this that he confessed he could hardly without straining of his own Conscience resolve on the doing of it himself upon divers accounts a chief one being that in disclaiming of Transubstantiation the real presence of the Body and Blood of Christ was rejected which he could not sign without declaring that by real he understood corporal and this he accordingly declared when he signed it But to this he added that it was the Idol of Scotland and he saw no other way to reduce things to any temper unless this Course were taken and followed He presented likewise to the King a Paper of all the Inconveniences which were not only like to follow on the calling of an Assembly but seemed certain which Account was so full that when the Bishop of Ross came up after that being sent by the Bishops to divert the King from calling an Assembly His Majesty said he offered no inconvenience could follow on it but what the Marquis had laid out to the full before him And now the King resolved to try the utmost of yielding for the recovery of His Subjects therefore he again dispatched His Commissioner from Oatlands on the tenth of September with ample Instructions which follow CHARLES R. YOV shall in full and ample manner by Proclamation or otherwise as you shall see cause The Marquis gets new Instructions declare That We do absolutely revoke the Service-Book the Book of Canons and the High Commission You shall likewise discharge the practise of the Five Articles of Perth notwithstanding the Act of Parliament which doth command the same and in the said Proclamation you shall promise in Our Name that if in the first Parliament to be held the three Estates shall think fit to repeal the said Act We shall then give Our Royal Assent to the said Act of Repeal You shall likewise declare that We have enjoyned and authorized the Lords of Our Privy Council to subscribe the Confession of Faith and Bond thereto annexed which was subscribed by Our dear Father and enjoyned by His Authority in the year 1580. and likewise have enjoyned them to take order that all our Subjects subscribe the same You shall likewise declare That Our meaning and pleasure is that none of Our Subjects whether Ecclesiastical or Civil shall be exempted from censures and trial of the Parliament or General Assembly those Courts proceeding against them in due form and order of Law You shall likewise declare That we are Graciously content that the Episcopal Government already established shall be limited with such Instructions as may stand with the Laws of this Church and Kingdom already established You shall offer a Pardon by Proclamation and promise in it a Ratificatification of the same in Parliament to all Our good Subjects who shall rest satisfied with this Our gracious Declaration and hereafter carry themselves as becomes peaceable and dutiful Subjects You shall procure an Act of Council wherein every Councellour shall declare himself fully satisfied with this our Declaration and if you can they shall moreover solemnly swear and protest to adhere to Vs and with their Lives Fortunes and whole Means assist Vs in the punishing and repressing all such as shall be found to be disobedient to Vs or persist in turbulent and unpeaceable Courses and if any of Our Councellours shall refuse so to doe you shall presently remove him from the place of a Councellour You shall likewise require every Lord of the Session to subscribe the Confession of Faith abovementioned and the Bond t●ereunto annexed as likewise to make the same Protestation in all things as in the last Instruction is required of a Councellour and if they shall refuse to doe it you shall then certifie to Vs the Names of such Refusers You shall likewise declare that Our Pleasure is That a most solemn Fast be indicted upon a set day throughout the whole Kingdom which shall precede the General Assembly in some competent time The Causes shall be declared to beg Gods blessing on that Assembly to beg of God a peaceable end to the Distractions of this Church and Kingdom with the aversion of Gods heavy judgement from both The form of Indiction we desire to be according to the most laudable Custom of this Church in most extraordinary cases You shall labour as much as in you lieth that both the Electors and Persons elected to be Commissioners as the General Assembly shall be the same that were wont to be in My Fathers time and the same forms to be observed as near as may be but yet if that cannot be obtained it shall be no lett to you from indicting a General Assembly but you shall go on in it by all such means as you shall find to be most advantageous to Me in that Service The time and place of the Assembly Edinburgh only excepted We leave to your Iudgment and Pleasure You shall likewise presently indict a Parliament th● time and place We leave likewise to you Whether you shall first publish Our Gracious Offers or first indict the Assembly We leave it to your own Iudgment as you shall see cause If you shall find the most considerable part of the Council not to acquiesce in this Our Gracious Declaration and not to promise hearty and chearful Assistance to Vs as is above-expressed or not a considerable part of other Lords and Gentlemen in case Our Council refuse then you shall neither indict Parliament nor Assembly nor publish any of My Gracious Offers except only the abolishing of the Service-Book Book of Canons and High Commission but leave them to themselves and to such further Order as We shall be forced to take with them only if you foresee a Breach you shall give timely warning thereof to such as have stood well-affected to Our Service that so they may in due time provide for their safety and your self is to return to Vs with expedition You must by all means possible you can think of be infusing into the Ministers what a wrong it will be unto them and what an oppression upon the freedom of their Iudgements if there must be such a number of Laicks to overbear them both in their Elections for the General Assembly and afterwards Likewise you must infuse into the Lay-Lords and Gentlemen with art and industry how manifestly they will suffer if they let the Presbyters get head upon them For the Forms of these We leave to you and such Learned Council as you shall use upon the place always provided that you retain the substance of these Our Instructions You shall enjoyn in Our Name the Lords of Council and all other Our good Subjects to subscribe the Confession of Faith signed by Our dear Father and publish Our charge to all Commissioners and Ministers for that end according to the same signed with Our Royal Hand and further proceed in that particular according as We have directed you and
not well but God forgive them with misconceits of His Intentions concerning the Religion professed in this Church and Kingdom But to rectifie all such Misconceptions of His Subjects His Majesties desire is that before this Assembly proceed to any thing else His Subjects may receive ample and clear satisfaction in these Points wherein His Majesties gracious Intentions have been misdoubted or glanced at by the malevolent Aspects of such as are afraid that His Majesties good Subjects should see His clear mind through any other Glasses or Spectacles than those they have tempered and fitted for them Those sinistrous Aspersions dispersed by surmizes have been especially two first as if there had been in His Majesty if not some Intention yet at least some inclination to give way if not to Alterations yet to some Innovations in the Religion professed in and established by the Laws of this Church and Kingdom I am confident that no man can harbour or retain any such thought in his breast any more when His Majesty hath commanded that Confession of Faith which you call the Negative to be subscribed by all His Subjects whatsoever and hath been Graciously pleased to put the Execution of this His Royal Command in your own hands The next false and indeed foul and devilish Surmize wherewith His good Subjects have been mis-led is that nothing promised in His Majesties last most Gracious Proclamation though most ungraciously received was ever intended to be performed nay not the Assembly it self but that only Time was to be gained till His Majesty by Arms might oppress this His Own Native Kingdom than which Report Hell it self could not have raised a blacker and falser For that part which concerneth the Report of the Intention of not holding the Assembly this Day and Place as was first promised and proclaimed thanks be to God confuteth that Calumny abundantly for the other of making good what His Majesty did promise in His last Gracious Proclamation His Majesty hath commanded me thus to express His Heart to all His good Subjects He hath seriously considered all the Grievances of His Subjects which have been presented to Him by all and several of their Petitions Remonstrances and Supplications exhibited unto Himself His Commissioner and Lords of His Secret Council and hath graciously granted them all and as He hath already granted as far as could be by Proclamation so he doth now desire that His Subjects may be assured of them by Acts of this General Assembly and afterwards by Acts of Parliament respectivé And therefore he not onely desires but commands that all the Particulars he hath promised be first gone in hand with in this Assembly and enacted and then afterwards what His Subjects shall desire being found reasonable may be next thought upon that so it may be known to God and the whole World and particularly to all His good Subjects how careful His Majesty is to discharge himself of all His Gracious Promises made to them hoping that when you shall see how Royally Graciously and Faithfully His Majesty hath dealt with you and all His Subjects you will likewise correspond in loyal and dutiful Obedience in chearful but calm and peaceable Proceeding in all other business to be treated of in this Assembly and because there shall be no mistake I shall now repeat the Particulars that you may see they are the same which were promised by His Majesties first Proclamation To this I shall adde the Paper of His Majesties Concessions taken from the Original wherein His Majesty had interlined and dashed out some things with his own Pen. CHARLES R. THe Kings Majesty being informed The Kings O●fers to the Assembly that many of His good Subjects have apprehended that by the introduction of the Service-book and Book of Canons the in-bringing of Popery and Superstition hath been intended is Graciously pleased to discharge the said Books and to annul all Acts made for establishing thereof and for His good People their further satisfaction is Graciously pleased to declare by me that no other in that kind shall hereafter be introduced but in a fair and legal way of Assembly allowed by Act of Parliament and the Laws of this Kingdom The Kings Majesty as he conceived for the ease and benefit of the Subjects established the High Commission that thereby Iustice might be administred and the Faults and Errours of such persons as are made liable thereto taken order with and punished with the more convenience and less trouble to the People but finding His Gracious Intentions to be herein mistaken hath been pleased likeas he is Graciously content that the same be discharged with all Acts and Deeds made for the establishing thereof and is pleased to declare by me That that Court or Iudicatory nor no other of that nature shall be brought in hereafter but in that way allowed by the Laws of this Kingdom And the Kings Majesty being informed that the urging of the five Articles of Perth's Assembly hath bred Distraction in the Church and State hath been Graciously pleased to take the same into His consideration and for the quiet and peace of Church and State doth not onely dispense with the practice of the said Articles but also discharges and by these hath discharged all and whatsoever Persons from urging the practice thereof upon either Laick or Ecclesiastick person whatsoever and doth hereby free all His Subjects from all Censure and Pain whether Ecclesiastical or Secular for not urging practising or obeying them or any of them notwithstanding any thing contained in the Acts of Parliament or General Assembly to the contrary And because it is pretended that Oaths have been administred to Ministers at their entry contrary and differing from that which is set down in the Acts of Parliament His Majesty is pleased to declare and ordain that no other Oath shall be required of any Minister at his entry than that which is expresly set down in the Acts of Parliament and this He is content be considered of in the Assembly to be represented to the Estates of Parliament and enacted as they shall find expedient And that it may appear how careful His Majesty is that no Corruption or Innovation shall creep into this Church neither any scandal vice or fault of any person whatsoever censurable or punishable by the Assembly go unpunished it is His Majesties Pleasure likeas by these His Majesty does assure all His good People that hereafter General Assemblies shall be kept as oft as the Affairs of this Kirk shall require and to this purpose because it is probable that some things necessary for the present Estate and Good of this Church may be left unperfected at this present Assembly We do by these indict another Assembly to be holden at And that none of Our Subjects may have cause of Grievance against the Procedure of Prelats Our Pleasure is that all and every one of the present Bishops and their Successours shall be answerable and accordingly from time to
with you in a safe and good posture and your self to come hither in person to consult what Counsels are fit to be taken as the Affairs now hold And so wishing your Lordship a speedy passage I rest Your Lordships most humble Servant and faithful Friend H. VANE From the Camp at Huntley-field this 4th of Iuly 1639. To this His Majesty added the following Postscript with his own Hand HAving no time to write my Self so much I was forced to use his Pen therefore I shall only say that what is here written I have directed seen and approved C. R. How great the Marquis his surprize and trouble was when he received this cannot be easily expressed The Marqu●● goes to the King though it was but what he always looked for and before the King left Whitehall he told him in the Gallery none but Sir Henry Vane being present that few of the English would engage in an Offensive with Scotland However he was too well taught in Obedience to question or delay it after such positive Orders and therefore could neither give a satisfactory answer to the Earl of Airly who at that time wrote to him pres●●ng him to come to the North in all haste otherwise the Kings Party there would be presently overrun nor to my Lord Aboyne's Letter who desired fresh Supplies of Men and Moneys though the refusing of both these was after that alledged against him Yet the last being dated the fourth of Iune met him on his way to the King the other could be no sooner at him being of the 26th of May and in the Postscript excuse is made that it was of an old Date for want of a sure Bearer both these are yet extant But most of all it appears how groundless that great and crying Accusation was which as it made up no small part of his Charge to be mentioned in its proper place so was it in the mouths of every person that he betrayed His Majesties Service in the Frith which could not be better cleared than by giving this particular Deduction of every step of it where he finds a Treaty begun About the time that the Marquis arrived at His Majesties Camp the Covenanters sent a Petition by the Earl of Dumfermline to the King desiring a Safe-conduct for such of the●r number as they ●hould send to His Majesties Camp with their humble Desires and Offers for a Treaty This was granted and their first Meeting was appointed to be on the ●leventh of Iune at Arundel's Tent. So they ●ent the Earls of Rothes Dumfermline and Lowdon the Sheriff o● Tevio●dale Mr. Alexander Henderson and Mr. Archbald Iohnstown who first proposed their Desires in general That Religion and Liberties migh● be secured upon which they should behave themselves as good Subjects and then the Marquis his affection to his Country made him imploy his whole Interest with the King for procuring a Gracious Answer to them offering that if the King found it suitable to his Honour and fit for his Service he should not be displeased though His Majesty did disown his former Actions and let the load of Obloquy and Censure fall as heavy upon himself as the King pleased But in this His Majesty was positive judging the owning of what he had done the former year to be both for his Honour and Interest However the Marquis did show the King that while the fire-edge was upon the Scotish Spirits it would not prove an easie task to tame them but would be a Work of some years and cos● much Money and many Men he therefore desired the King would consider if it were not fit to consent to the abolishing of Episcopacy and giving way to their Covenant till better times and that as the chief Leaders had entred upon that Course being provoked by some Irritaons and Neglects they had met with so it might be fit to regain them by Cajolery and other Favours And to perswade the King to this Course was the easier that both his Reason and his Affection to his Subjects did cooperate with it a great strengthening coming to it by my Lord Canterbury's Opinion who saw a Pacification absolutely necessary for the Kings Service and did advise it So on the thirteenth of Iune His Majesty returned Answer That he supposed Religion and Liberties were abundantly settled by his former Proclamations but if any thing was wanting wherein either Religion or Liberties were concerned none should be more zealous for it than himself The Covenanters insisted That the Assembly of Glasgow might be ratified but His Majesty rejected that adding That he was willing to call a new Assembly and ratifie what should be legally established by it in the following Parliament The Commissioners were willing to yield to this provided His Majesty did not oblige them to renounce the Assembly of Glasgow to which they resolved to adhere His Majesty said He should not press them to that but that Assembly should not be mentioned on either hand They moved next about Lay-elders in the Assembly The King referred himself in that to the Laws of the Land They next moved That Episcopacy should be abolished The King answered He would not prelimit his Vote by declaring what it should be in the ensuing Assembly Finally after all things had been debated divers days not without some heat wherein the Earl of Rothes got new Irritations from some warm expressions of the Kings to him at length on the eighteenth of Iune all was concluded which is within few days concluded First His Majesty signed the following Declaration of which the Original is extant CHARLES R. WE having considered the Papers and humble Petitions presented to Vs His Majestie● Declaration by those of Our Subjects of Scotland who were admitted to attend Our Pleasure in the Camp and after a full hearing by Our Self of all that they could say or alledge thereupon having communicated the same to Our Council of both Kingdoms upon mature Deliberation with their unanimous Advice have thought fit to give them this Iust and Gracious Answer That though We cannot condescend to ratifie and approve the Acts of the pretended General Assembly at Glasgow for many grave and weighty Considerations which have happened both before and since much importing the Honour and Security of that true Monarchical Government lineally descended upon Vs from so many of Our Ancestours yet such is Our Gracious Pleasure that notwithstanding the many Disorders committed of late We are pleased not only to confirm and make good whatsoever Our Commissioner hath granted and promised in Our Name but also We are further Graciously pleased to declare and assure that according to the Petitioners humble Desires all matters Ecclesiastical shall be determined by the Assembly of the Kirk and matters Civil by the Parliament and other inferiour Iudicatories established by Law and Assemblies accordingly shall be kept once a year or as shall be agreed upon at the next General Assembly And for settling the general Distractions