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A65409 An answer to the late King James's declaration to all his pretended subjects in the kingdom of England, dated at Dublin-castle, May 8, 1689 ordered by a vote of the Right Honourable the House of Commons, to be burnt by the common-hangman. Welwood, James, 1652-1727. 1689 (1689) Wing W1298; ESTC R38525 17,178 40

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the least Grievance in a Parliamentary way was not only a vain Attempt but a design branded with the infamous Name of Dissatisfaction to the Government I need not be at the Pains to repeat all the Promises made by King Iames of the same Nature with this in his Declaration and how well they were observed we all know Yet I cannot but take notice of one made in his first Speech to his Privy-Council an hour after his Brother's Death printed by his own Command in these Words My Lords before I enter on any other I think fit to say something to you since it has pleased Almighty God to place me in this Station and I 'm now to succeed to so good and gracious a King as well as so very kind a Brother I think fit to declare to you That I will endeavour to follow his Example and most especially in that of his great Clemency and Tenderness to his People I have been reported to be a Man for Arbitrary Power but that is not the only thing that has been said of me And I shall endeavour to preserve this Government both in Church and State as it is now by Law established I know the Principle of the Church of England is for Monarchy and the Members thereof have shown themselves good and loyal Subjects therefore I shall always take care to defend and support it I know the Laws of England are sufficient to make the King as great a Monarch as I can wish And as I shall never depart from the just Rights and Prerogatives of the Crown so I shall never invade any Man's Property He that can reconcile this Speech with King Iames his after Actings is the fittest Person I know to explain the Popish Notion of our Saviour's Body being in a thousand distinct Places at once In these Expressions he takes it very unkindly to have been reported a Man for Arbitrary Power and promises a great many things that are contradictory to it but how well he deserved the Character all his Conduct has made it appear with a Witness We have one of the most remarkable instances of King Iames's being against Arbitrary Power in his Declaration of the 12th of February 1686 7. for a Toleration in Scotland where we find these new coin'd Words thrice made use of Our absolute Power with this addition Which all our Subjects are to obey without Reserve Now Absolute in its natural Signification importing the being without all ties and restraints then the true meaning of this seems to be That there is an inherent Power in the King which can neither be restrained by Laws Promises nor Oaths for nothing less than being free from all these renders a Power Absolute Though the Term Absolute was enough to stretch our Allegiance yet that which comes after is yet a step of an higher Nature tho' one can hardly imagine what can go beyond Absolute Power and 't is in these Words Which all our Subjects are to obey without Reserve This is indeed the carrying Obedience many degrees beyond what the Grand Seignior yet ever claimed for the most despotick Princes in the World before Lewis le Grand's time thought it enough to oblige their Subjects to submit to their Power and to bear whatever they thought fit to impose upon them But till the fatal Days of the Dragoon-Conversions it was never so much as pretended that Subjects were bound to obey their Princes without Reserve and to be of his Religion because he would have it so the only convincing Argument used by these booted Apostles of late So without doubt this Qualification of the Duty of Subjects was industriously put in here by King Iames his Jesuitick Counsels to prepare the Protestants of Scotland for a terrible Le Roy lê vent since the poor Pretensions of Conscience Honour Religion and Reason would have been reckonded as Reserves upon their Obedience which were all by the Expressions shut out Before I leave this Paramount instance of King Iames's assuming to himself an Arbitrary Power beyond what the Great Turk claims and contrary to his own reiterated promises I must take notice of another very comprehensive expression in that same Declaration for a Toleration in Scotland and it 's this We think fit to declare That we will not suffer Violence to be offered to any Man's Conscience nor will we use force or INVINCIBLE NECESSITY upon any Man on the account of his Perswasion nor the Protestant Religion When I first read these Words I easily perceiv'd what caution was used in the choice of them for it is clear the general Words of Violence and Force are to be explained and determined by these last of INVINCIBLE NECESSITY So that King Iames very wisely promised only to lay no invincible Necessity on his Subjects but for all Necessities that were not Invincible they might expect to have felt a large share of them For Disgraces want of Imployment Finings Imprisonments and even Death it self are all Vincible things to a Man of a firmness of Mind yea the Violence of Torture the Furies of Dragoons and the Precedents used of late in France might have been fairly included within this Promise since a great and sublime Soul fortified with an extraordinary measure of Grace might be able to support under them Now since we have had so many experiences of King Iames's faithfulness to his Promises before he abandoned the Government I pray what Arguments has he of late given us that he will be more observing of his Word then hitherto he has been Sure the reducing Hereticks to the See of Rome is no less Meritorious than before nor King Iames by breathing a little of the French Air and concerting Measures with Lewis the Fourteenth become less Bigot King Iames concludes his Declaration with assuring all his pretended Subjects That if within twenty Days after his appearing in person within England they return to their Obedience by deserting his Enemies and joining with him he will grant them his full pardon and all past miscariages shall be forgot This merits no other Answer but what has been already said Only this he must have the worst Opinion of the frailty of Humane Nature that can be brought to believe That any Man not altogether divested of his Reason can be prevailed with to join King Iames though he were in England except he be of that Religion that obliges him to assist a Prince that sets up so fairly forthe Glorious Title of the Extirpator of Heresie and to venture all upon the uncertainty of seeing their Church Triumphant And if there be any of the Protestant Perswasion so strangely infatuated as but to wish his Return I shall entertain them with no other Answer but the recomending to them that place of Holy Writ Preached upon before the House of Commons of late by an eminent Divine Ezra 9. v. 13 14. And after all that is come upon us for our evil deeds and for our great-trespass seeing that thou our God hast punished us less than our Iniquities deserve and hast given us such a Deliverance as this Should we again break thy Commandments and joyn in affinity with the People of these abominations wouldst not thou be angry with us till thou hadst consumed us so that there should be noremnant nor escaping FINIS ADVERTISEMENT A Vindication of the present great Revolution in England in five letters passed betwixt Iames Welwood M. D. and Mr. Iohn March Vicar of Newcastle upon Tyne Occasioned by a Sermon preached by him on Ian. 30. 1688 9. before the Mayor and Aldermen for Passive Obedience and Non-Resistance The Second Edition
That no other Methods were us'd to convert these poor Victims but those of fair Persuasion and Calmness Just so King Iames that he may follow as near his Copy as possible having since his Arrival in Ireland abandoned the Protestants of that Country to the merciless Rage of an Enemy irreconcilable from both a Principle of Religion and Civil Interest who within his View have laid desolate whole Counties and acted Barbarities proper only to themselves and their French Confederates and by which they have forc'd away a great many Thousands from their Country at the point of Starving having sav'd nothing of their Fortunes from so universal a Calamity Yet notwithstanding all this appears in the Face of the Sun King Iames that he may not come short of his Patron boldly affirms That the Religion Priviledges and Properties of his Protestant Subjects as he names them are his chiefest Care over and above What a gross Contradiction is it to common Sense and Reason that a Prince bigotted to the Romish Religion and enslav'd to Jesuitick Councils should make that Religion which in his Opinion is an execrable Heresy become his equal Care with what he calls the Recovery of his Right Sure I am in this Expression he has mightily overacted his part and nothing but a belief capable to receive Transubstantiation can be persuaded of the fair meaning of it If the Proposition could possibly admit of a favourable Construction then it must necessarily follow That King Iames is of another Communion than that of Rome which were a great injury done him to suppose seeing he has given us such convincing Proofs to the contrary For every Roman Catholick is obliged to look upon the Protestants as Hereticks and their Religion as Heresy and we have once every year the imaginary Successor of Saint Peter formally Cursing us in Person and from his plenary Power declaring us to be fallen from all our Civil Rights If King Iames had said The Protestants are his Care meaning the Conversion of them to his Religion by the calm methods of a Dragoon Mission he would have found no great difficulty to have been believ'd But to affirm that That pestilent Northern Heresie the Protestant Religion was his care is indeed a stretch beyond the ordinary pitch of Jesuitick Equivocation it self We have had occasion enough to be acquainted with the Charity of the Church of Rome towards those of our Religion It has been both fervent and burning And lest we should forget what has been done in former Ages France and Savoy have of late set before us new instances of the Charity of that Church No doubt King Iames's sincerity in this assertion is the same with that of all his Promises And albeit when he was upon the Throne we were told in some of his Proclamations That we were bound to obey without reserve it 's hardship upon hardship to be oblig'd now when he is justly Abdicated to believe without reserve But that we may the easier be persuaded of King Iames's care of the Protestants of Ireland and their Properties let us take a short glance of the great favours he has bestowed on them since his Arrival there One would think that a Man's Estate his House Furniture his Arms Money Chattels and the like were included under the word Property King Iames his care has been so transcendently great of this sort of Property that there are at this day in England and the Neighbouring Nations Noblemen Gentlemen Clergy Merchants and Tradesmen whose Estates seiz'd upon by King Iames's Order amounts to more than Four Millions of Pounds Sterling If any doubt the Truth of this I refer them to the List and Account taken of the Irish Protestants by the Commissioners appointed by the King for that effect Neither is there at present one single Protestant within that Kingdom that can rationally assure himself of one moments possession of what the Barbarous Irish has left them yet undestroyed Who knows not That upon-weighty Reasons the Wisdom of the Kings of England thought it very dangerous to trust the Natives of Ireland with Arms knowing from many funest Experiences they were a People impatient of the English Yoake and ready to accept all occasions to throw it off But King Iames treads quite another Path instead of dis-arming these his darling Wild Irish they are the only People he can trust as knowing their surious Zeal to His Religion and their Hereditary hatred to the English Nation renders them fit Instruments to execute the Designs concerted betwixt Him and his Intimate Allie the French King And which to capacitate them the better to effectuate he has wisely dis-armed before-hand the whole Protestants of that Kingdom and prepared them ready Victims for their Bloody Enemies when ever it shall be time to give the Blow I confess it requires the greatest stock of patience to hear one boldly affirm his Care of my Life and at the same time to see him give me up bound and defenceless into the Hands of my cruel and mortal Enemies There is another transcendent Instance of King IAMES's Care of the Protestants in Ireland their Religion and Property which merits to be engraven in Corinthian Brass to Posterity All that are in the least acquainted with the Laws and Affairs of that Kingdom know That the Act of Settlement is the great Security of the Protestants their Religion and Properties and the Fundamental Right they have to their Estates conquer'd from the Rebellious Irish at the expence of their Blood and Treasure By this Act the lasting Landmarks are sixt among the Protestants themselves and between them and the Natives This is indeed the Magna Charta of the Protestants of Ireland and the true Basis of their Liberties and Properties upon the taking away of which the Superstructure must tumble to the ground Now King IAMES's Care of the Protestants is of so high a nature that in His first Speech to His Mock-Parliament consisting all of Papists except about Five or Six May 7. he assures them He would consent to the enacting such Laws as might relieve them of the Act of Settlement And May 10. we find it moved in the House That nothing could be more advantageous to the King and Countrey than to destroy the horrid barbarous Act of Settlement and whosoever shall alledg the contrary shall be deem'd an Enemy to both Thereafter we find it mov'd by one of the Worthy Members of that Parliament That the Act of Settlement should be publickly burnt by the Common Hangman Behold the transcendent Care of King IAMES for the Priviledges and Properties of the Protestants of Ireland His accustomed Zeal obliges him at the first meeting of His Packt-up Popish Parliament to put them in mind of the best methods to Repeal the Great Security of the Protestants Estates His impatience to have this done could not stay till it had been propos'd by any of the Members themselves He must needs demonstrate his tenderness to his belov'd
false light which led Him to imploy none about Him with any intimacy of confidence but those of His own Persuasion prov'd an Ignis fatuus that cheated Him into Paths never trod by any of His Predecessors but to their destruction If He had been so happy as to have continued in His most Secret Councels a great many Persons of the Reform'd Religion whom He kept at a distance though to amuse the Nation He allowed them the empty Names of Privy Councellors He had not brought three Kingdoms to the brink of Ruine nor upon Himself so hard a fate Yet I must acknowledge some part of the obligation we have to these Gentlemen that of late had the sole conduct of King IAMES His Affairs For in giving Him such Counsels as His greatest Enemies could have wish'd Him they prov'd the occasion of our being at this day happy under the Auspicious Reign of Their Majesties being Princes of the same Religion and Interests with Their People And we may justly say as Themistocles of old We had undoubtedly perish'd if we had not perish'd How little is King Iames oblig'd to His Secretary that penn'd this Declaration since he so foolishly rakes up the Remembrance of those things that made Him and His Government odious to the World by the names of Calumnies and Stories which it was so much his Master's Interest to bury in silence Good God! Were the late palpable and baresac'd Incroachments upon the Fundamental Laws of the Nation but Calumnies Were the open Violations of Solemn Oaths Promises and Ingagements but Stories Does King IAMES or His French and Irish Councellors imagine that we have so soon forgot His Promises made in Council not many hours after His Brother's Death and his conspicuous Breaches of them not many months thereafter Can we allow our selves to forget that all the Trusts both in Court Bench and the Army were fill'd up with these very Men whom Reiterated Laws had rendred incapable of them Was a Person 's sitting at the Council-board whose very being found in England was death by the Law but a mere Calumny Can a few months be able to obliterate the Memory of that Affair of Magdalen Colledge one of the most open Invasions of Property that could be Have we lost the Remembrance of that Illegal Ecclesiastical Court and the Tyrannick Judgments past therein Have we not seen a Reverend Prelate suspended from his Function merely because he would not do what he could not that is for not condemning a man unheard Have not we seen Seven of the Spiritual Peers of England sent Prisoners to the Tower and brought as Criminals to the Bar for barely representing the Reasons why they could not obey an Arbitrary Command contrary to their Conscience Both England and our Neighbouring Nation have too many Reasons to remember the Late King Iames's assuming to himself an Arbitrary and Despotick Power not only to dispence with Laws and the firmest Constitutions but to act diametrically opposite to them Can King Iames's Oratory persuade us That the continuing to Levy the Customs and additional Excise which had been only granted during the Late King Charles's Life before the Parliament could meet to renew this Grant was but a Calumny Was the strange Essay of Mahometan Government acted at Taunton and Lyme and the no less strange Proceedings of that Bloody Chief Justice in his Western Circuit justly term'd his Campaign for it was an open Hostility to all Law for which and the like Services he had the reward of the Great Seal were they all but Stories We have too good Reason not to forget the many Violences committed by the Soldiers of a standing Army in most Parts of England and Scotland which are the most severe and insupportable Invasions of Property These and such like with a great many more were the things that render'd King Iames's Government justly Odious to the Brittish World and made these three Kingdoms groan after Liberty If so grave and Tragick a Subject could allow it I could be almost tempted to laugh at that Expression in the Declaration of his Enemies not daring to attempt the proving these Charges to the World which is all one as if a Man in the severest fit of the Gout should be desir'd to prove that he is so when the Sense of the Pain proves too sad a remembrancer of his Distemper And indeed this part of King Iames's Declaration merits no other answer than that of the Philosopher to him who deni'd motion When making a step up and down the Room he vouchsafed him no other Refutation of his Ridiculous Assertion than these two words hicne Motus In fine It will be equally impossible to persuade the World that these Actions that render'd King Iames's Government Odious to the World were but Calumnies and Stories as to persuade a Man upon the Rack that he feels no pain How unluckily have the Penners of this Declaration stumbled upon that Expression of his Enemies not caring what Slavery they reduce the Kingdoms to Quis tulerit Gracchos That King Iames had in a great measure enslav'd these Nations and was upon the Ripening his designs in Conjunction with Lewis the 4th to teach us a French kind of Subjection has appear'd in legible Characters by the whole Scheme of his Actings But since his present Majesties Accession to the Throne there is not the least footstep of Slavery left us we are blest with a King that takes the Advice of his Parliament and owns no distinct Interest from that of his People a Prince who to deliver us from Popery and Slavery has ventur'd his All and who by his Conduct at home and his Allies abroad is capable to render us happy if our own Divisions and Folly do not precipitate us into an inevitable and unpitied Ruin. In the next place King Iames tells us That since his Arrival in Ireland the Defence of his Protestant Subjects as he calls them their Religion Priviledges and Properties is especially his Care with the Recovery of his own Rights And to this end he has preferr'd such of them of whose Loyalty and Affection he is satisfied to places both of the highest Honour and Trust about his Peson as well as in his Army The reading of those Lines puts me in mind of the Parallel so exactly observ'd betwixt the French King and King Iames in all their Conduct and particularly in both their way of asserting the calm Methods us'd by them towards their Protestant Subjects When that Common Enemy of the Christian Part of Europe as the present Pope was pleased to call him had out-done all the Nero's and Iulian's of old in the art of Persecution and had render'd himself abominated to the World by the Cruelties committed by his Dragoon Missioners upon those very People that had done him the best Offices and preserved the Crown upon his Head in his Minority yet at the very same time Lewis the 14th and his Ministers have had the Impudence to affirm
Words I Richard Hamilton Lieutenant-General of his Majesties Forces in Ulster do hereby receive into his Majesty's Protection the Body and Goods of James Hunter of Bullymenach in the County of Antrim Yeoman and do promise and oblige my self that none of the Army shall molest and hurt him or take any thing from him Given c. The poor protected Man thus noos'd returns to his House and follows his labour but anon down comes upon him the Rabble of the Army like an inundation of Goths and Vandals sweep all before them and leaves nothing behind them but a starving Family The wretched Man making his address to Hamilton receive this cold answer I promised to protect you from the Army but I have no power to restrain the Rabble In the beginning of the second Paragraph we are told of the Care King James has taken of the Church of England that they be not disturbed in the exercise of their Religion and possession of their Benefices and that all Protestant Dissenters enjoy Liberty of their Consciences without the least molestation And out of his Royal Care for the prosperity of his People as he calls them he has recommended to his Parliament as the first thing necessary to be dispatched to setle such a security and Liberty both in Spiritual and Temporal Matters as may put an end to these Divisions which has been the source of all their Miseries being resolued as much as in him lies to cut all Liberty and Happiness on his People so far as to put it out of the power of his Successors to invade the one or infringe the other And this he takes God to Witness was always his design The first part of this long period is but a repetition of what had been formerly said in the first Paragraph of the Protestants their Religion Privileges and Properties being his chief Care and what truth that can bear we have shewed already There is one thing that I find King Iames was ever inclinable to value himself upon and which he here likewise mentions I mean his tenderness to Protestant Dissenters and his Principle for Liberty of Conscience They are very thick sighted that could not discern what lay at the bottom of this Liberty and what could be the true motive that should have induced one of King Iames's Religion to do it But because he has been at the pains so often during his Reign to assure us That it was his Opinion Conscience should not be constrained nor People forced in Matters of Religion and particularly in his Declaration for Liberty of Conscience dated August 4. 1687. I 'll beg leave to say That in this King Iames is no obedient Son of the Church of Rome for it has over and over again decreed the extirpation of Hereticks It encourages Princes to it by the offer of the Pardon of their Sins It threatens them to it by denouncing to them not only the Judgments of God but that which is often more sensible the loss of their Dominions It 's true Bellarmine tells us The Church does not always execute her power of deposing Heretical Princes though she always retains it and he gives a very good reason for it because she is not at all times in a capacity to put it in Execution So the very same Reason might have made it unadviseable to King Iames when he was so liberal of his Tolerations to extirpate Heresie because it could not be then easily done But we see the Right remains intire and is put in execution in such an unrelenting manner in our neighbouring Countries that it has a very ill Grace to see any Member of that Church pretend to be against constraining the Conscience in point of Religion And when we consider that neither the Policy and true Interest of France nor the greatness of their Monarch could withstand these bloody Counsels that are indeed parts of that Religion I could never see any reason to induce us to believe that the late Tolerations of Religion were proposed with any other design but either to divide the Protestants among themselves or to lay them asleep till it was time to give the alarm for destroying them And that in the Opinion of that Church the Glory of extirpating Heresie is valued above all other great Actions we have a remarkable instance in that famous Harangue made by the Bishop of Valence to the French King in the Name of the Convention of the French Clergy at St. Germane in Iune 1684. where that Prelate having recounted the innumerable Conversions made by that Kings Orders Cares and Liberalities to use his very Words he subsumes thus Ie bien même que se chercherois vainement dans les sicoles passés que l' appellerois vainement a mon secours touts les éboges des primiers et des plus saints Empereurs It were says he in vain to search into the Ages past It were in vain to call to my assistance all the Panegyricks of the first and holiest of the Emperours And afterwards he treats him with the Title of the Great Restorer of the Faith and extirpator of Heresie and tells him that these infinitely surmount all his other glorious Titles And then speaking of his Masters great Victories in Germany Flanders c. and the Peace of Nimiguen made upon the back of them he concludes thus That the Fruit which the King had received by that Peace made it fully apparent what was the principal end he aim'd at in his Victories meaning the Extirpation of Hereticks The late King Iames has always copied so fair after Louis le Grand That we have no Reason to question but in this so glorious a work of extirpating Heresie he would have come up to the Original if his Designs and a favourable juncture of time had concurr'd together When he tells us That the first thing he has recommended to his parliament is to settle such a Security and Liberty as may put an end to these Divisions which have been the source of all our miseries I find the greatest exactness of Truth in these Words if we but take them in the sence and meaning of the Speaker viz. a Roman Catholick Prince For albeit we all know that the first thing recommended by King Iames to his Irish Parliament was The repealing the Act of Setlement which is indeed the great Charter by which most of the Protestants enjoy their Estates And tho' the destroying that Act gives a mortal blow to the Protestant Interest in Ireland yet according to the native Principles of King Iames his Religion the repealing of this Act of Setlement may well be called The setling a Security that may put an end to their Divisions which has been the source of all our Miseries That is to say King Iames from a Principle of Religion is resolved to remove that Barrier that protects the Protestants of Ireland in their Separation from the Church of Rome That by its removal he may be in a