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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A83701 A disclaimer and answer of the Commons of England, of and unto a scandalous libell, lately published against the Parliament, and espcially the House of Commons and their proceedings: intituled The remonstrance of the Commons of England to the House of Commons assembled in Parliament, and falsely suggested to be preferred to them by the hands of the speaker. Wherein the malicious cavills and exceptions by the libeller taken to the proceedings of Parliament are detected and summarily answered, and the sottish ignorance and wicked falsehood of the libeller cleerely discovered, and the justice of the proceedings of this Parliament and House of Commons evinced and manifested. England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons.; White, John, 1590-1645, attributed name. 1643 (1643) Wing E2573; Thomason E100_23; ESTC R12060 28,839 39

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the Kingdom the Parliament ought to complain of them unto him in a mannerly and respective and honorable way and if that take not effect they ought to take care that the Laws and peace and safety of the Kingdome be preserved not only without but against his personall will So Bracton Fol. 34. If the King shall be without a bridle that is to say shall not governe according to his Lawes the great Court of his Parliament ought to bridle him And so Parliaments have often done as both our Histories and Records of Parliament abundantly testifie * See the book entituled The treachery and disloyalty of Papists c. Thirdly An absolute Monarch chooses what Councellours he will but the Politick Monarchs great Councell for the weighty affaires and urgent businesse of his Kingdome is in greatest part chosen by the people and the rest have it annexed to their honours conferred or descended as the House of Peeres and these are not his Councell only but the Councell of his Kingdom and people Fourthly An absolute Monarch hath the Forts Ports and Ships of the Kingdome to use and dispose at his pleasure But our Politick Monarch hath none of these but in trust for the use and good of the Kingdome to take order they be used kept and imployed for the good peace and safety of the Kingdome according to Law and not to the hurt or endangering of the safety or peace of the Kingdome as is clearely manifested and proved in the Declaration of Parliament concerning Hull 25. May 1642. And in the Reply to the Answer therof and more particularly and largely in M. Prinns Soveraigne Power of Parliaments 5. An Absolute Monarch hath the Militia of his Kingdome and Monarch in his owne hand and pleasure as in truth the Lives Estates and the Whole of his Subjects are But a Politick Monarch hath no power to compell his Subjects to find Arms or serve with Arms except they be bound thereunto by Tenure or Contract and then but as their Tenures oblige them and can only compell his Subjects that have Armes to shew them in Musters before his Commissioners as appeares cleerely in the Declaration of the Parliament concerning the Commissions of Array lately Illegally granted so far is our King from having power over the Militia of the Kingdome without the consent of his Parliament And there having beene a manifest designe to alter Religion and the very constitution of this our Politick Monarchy by a Malignant party prevailing with his Majesty discovered by the wisedome of the Parliament and so far carried on as in a manner all was become subject to will and power and the Laws neither a defence of our persons nor of our rights and our Judges inforced against their Oathes and duties to comply with them and these Vipers finding the whole mould of their hellish devices to be likely to be broken and Lawes to be made for the establishing of our Liberties and proprieties and vindicating thereof and a through Reformation of the Church in Worship discipline and government to be set upon and resolved by the Parliament they endeavoured to get all the strength of the Kingdome into their hands The Lord Digbies advice in his Letter to the King and to that end perswaded his Majesty to possesse himselfe of the Ports and Forts places of strength as they called them that they might without feare of being brought to Justice for their delinquency by the Parliament have accesse unto him to advance their said designe and seduced the Queene out of the Kingdome and raised Armes by open force against the Parliament to destroy it and therein all our Religion Lawes and Liberties and drive the King to owne and take all those things upon himselfe and forged all the false colours and glosses upon those hellish proceedings of theirs that Jesuited devillish wits can invent to deceive the people and to draw them to become Felons and destroyers of themselves Was there not just cause and was it not high time for the Parliament to take care in such case that the Kingdome should be set in a Posture of defence and that the Ports Forts Magazeenes and Ships should be secured for the Peace safety and good of the Kingdome Was this done by designe surely if this had not beene done we had all ere this beene over-runne with tyranny and we and our Posterity made slaves When the King refuses to doe his duty which by Oath and Office he is bound to doe and imploys any thing he is intrusted withall by his Kingdome to the publike prejudice of him his Posterity and Kingdome It is necessary yea just and Legall that the Kingdomes representative the great Court the Councell of the Kingdome should seise upon secure and use the same to the publike defence and for the publike good and prevent the Kings satisfying the base lusts of a few wicked Councellours and Sycophants that would raise themselves on the ruines of the Common-wealth And though many parts of the Kingdome have been wasted and grievously spoiled by forraigne Enemies of which there are very many in the Kings Armies brought from beyond the Seas in great numbers and though we have felt their heathenish and barbarous cruelties this fellow would perswade us they never appeared And though the preservation of the Kingdome against forraigne Enemies were one cause of the Parliaments taking the Forts Ports and Ships into their hands power and disposition yet that was not the only cause as appeares in their Declaration * Declar● 2o. Martij 1641. And the Ordināce for the Militia Ob. Eightly he saith That they who refuse to joyne in this Warre with the Parliament or to contribute unto it they plunder as Malignants and ill affected to the Commonwealth although he sees not how it can be lesse then Treason against the King to joyne with the Parliament therein Sol. We verily beleeve the wayes of the Parliament to be very just and full of reason and Legall to inforce them that have Estates and will not help to quench the publike fire kindled in the Kingdome by the Enemies thereof nor to preserve the Parliament which preserves their Religion Lawes Liberties and all from tyranny and violence with some small part of it and to judge them Malignants and Enemies of their Countrey Did not the Inhabitants of the County Palatine of Duresme when the Scots had broken in upon them to redeeme their Countrey from plunder and spoile compound with the Scots for 1600 Markes and breake open the Chest of William Heburne and take 70. pound from him by force in such a necessity for the publike safety to help make up the summe when he would not let them otherwise have it and was not this judged lawfull by all the Judges of the Kings bench in a Writt of Errour brought Mich. 14. Ed. 2d. Rot. 60. and a Legall plundering and other plandring the Parliament never commanded or countenanced And though this fellow blinded with Malice