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A29957 A short and true relation of some main passages of things (wherein the Scots are particularly concerned (from the very first beginning of these unhappy troubles to this day; Short and true relation of some passages of things Buchanan, David, 1595?-1652? 1645 (1645) Wing B5273; ESTC R521 70,601 122

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the mixture or addition of their own interest for God will have our work wholly for himself and if we be faithfull in it he will not forget to give us what we need to have for our selves otherwayes he will not onely cast us off and our work but will curse both it and us Again I say Let England take example at her Neighbour yet I am sure God in his Judgement will remember his Mercy unto Scotland and for his own Name sake will keep his promise unto his faithfull ones whereof he hath a great number of all ranks and conditions in that distressed Countrey and will not suffer this proud insulting Enemy to domineer thus ever his poor people far lesse set up again his abominations and profane his holy Name but God will arise and throw his Enemies to the dust for it is against him they fight and for his sake they thus trouble vex now oppresse his People And although that all men at this great last blow were struken with astonishment yet many take courage to go on with the Service of the Cause of God with their whole heart and strength acknowledging Gods Justice in this his thus chastising them and confessing heartily their sins by which they have so provoked God to anger and are truly sorry not so much for their sufferings they now lie under as for their offending their good God on whom they are resolved to rely and in whom they will constantly trust and to whom they will more neerly adhere then ever let him deal with them as he pleaseth they are the Servants he is the Lord they are the Pot he is the Porter they are the Creatures and he is the Creator whose will is alwayes good not onely it self but for us if we be obedient and faithfull unto him But I will hold thee here no longer So recommending thee to God I go to the Discourse it self A short and true Relation of divers passages of things wherein the Scots are particularly concerned from the first beginning of these troubles to this day IT is not unknown to men of understanding how that many sinistrous reports one after another raised of the Scots for their faithfulnesse constancy to the Cause of Religion and Liberty in these Dominons by Malignants that is by Atheists Libertines Papists Prelatists and Sectaries of all kindes officiating in their severall wayes for the Common Enemy and spred abroad by the contrivers thereof with the help of their instruments Agents and Favourers then received by the simpler sort not knowing the truth of things lesse the drift of the Malignants in these calumnies otherwayes well-meaning people for the truth is no sooner made known unto them but they willingly lay hold on it and being admonished of the pernicious designe of the adversaries they do abhorre and detest both it and them hath done and yet doeth great prejudice according to the intent of the Enemy unto the service now in hand of the Common Cause of Church and State these two inseparable twins which both Kingdoms do now maintain and intend to do unanimously with heart and hand as they stand bound and united to lay aside all other and former tyes by the Nationall Covenant through the great Providence of God in mercy to both so that they prove faithfull and constant to this Cause of his and of his people according to the said Covenant against all opposition whatsoever whether by declared and open war or by clandestine and indirect undermining Wherefore after long forbearance with grief of mind and compassion to see faithfull men and earnest in this Common Cause so maliciously traduced and in them the good Cause so much wronged as likewise so many well-affected men to the said Cause so grosly abused by crafty lyes and impudent untruths I have thought fit for the good and service of the Common Cause to the advancement whereof every one is obliged to contribute according to what he hath as he will answer one day to him whose Cause first and principally it is to undeceive many well-minded men and to right in some measure those faithfull men to the Cause who are so wickedly slandred in giving unto the publike this true and short Discours whereby the truth of divers things will be made more known lyes in a kind repressed and the service of the Common Cause somewhat furthered at least it will not be so far kept back as it hath hitherto been by these undermining courses And the rather do I undertake this task that those in a manner are silent by whom most men do expect the clear truth of things of this kinde not so generally known should be conveyed to all by a particular publication of them in writing to the end that this course of so maliciously lying against trusty men may be stopped and the well meaning men no longer thus abused But these of whom men look for performance of this duty going about the main work they are come hither for in all earnestnesse and singlenesse of heart with care and diligence and not without a great deal of drudging to and from as faithfull and trusty labourers do take but little notice of this wicked practise of their and the cause its Enemies by lyes howsoever industriously devised and cunningly set forth as altogether below them chosing rather that their own good carriage with constant resolution and faithfull endeavours and that of their Country-men engaged with them in the same businesse although in another way in sincerity of heart advancing the publike work now in hand should speak for them both then either a flourishing tongue or a nimble pen Here although I value much the goodnesse of these men to relye rather upon their own their Countrey-mens honesty and integrity in and about the work then upon the setting forth of any Declaration by writing of their own and their friends faithfull proceedings and fair carrying on of things in the publike service Yet in this I cannot esteem their prudency for albeit native beauty ought not to be set forth by painting and patches being compleat in it self yet it must be kept free from spots and and dirt and made seen unto all under a modest and comely dressing by which means it is more pleasing and better liked of every one And although where there is no fault no Apologie ought to be made yet to make the truth openly known when it is desguised for the information of those who take things meerly upon trust and to stop the going on of wicked men with lyes is not only an Act of Wisdom but of Piety yea of Necessity if men will not abandon the interest of a good cause to the malice of the Enemies thereof and as it is said by the wise man Thou art not to answer a fool according to his folly that is in exorbitancy c. lest in so doing thou become like unto him even so by the same wise man thou art ordained to answer a fool
their Armies compleat to their mind of their own men So the Scots were employed in chief and prime places of command on both sides hence divers men indifferent not as yet engaged by affection to either party conceiving that neither party could have known how to manage or go on with the War without the Scots Commanders wished them many miles beyond S●n To the King went and took Service of him not onely divers who had been Malignants from the first beginning but also some superficiall Covenanters who not diving in businesses did make small scrupule to serve the King in this War it not being against the Letter of their Covenant as they conceived for the King protesting from day to day that he would stand firm to the true Religion and maintain it his intention in taking up Arms being onely to represse some factinus persons who had affronted him and the Parliament not then making it so clear to every one by their expressions that the main quarell the adversary had was the subversion of Religion made some not to discern things so clearly as otherwayes they had done if things had been more plainly set down To the Service of Parliament come divers in good affection being perswaded that the quarrell of England was one and the same with that in Scotland howsoever by the cunning of the adversary disguised and although not then so cleared by the Parliament as was need The Enemy seeing that sundry Scots Officers and Commanders were undertaking Service under the Parliament by his Emissaries up and down doeth what he can to draw them on his side or at least to make them keep off from serving the Parliament In this he did prevaile with some who will have their just reward in due time Then after the War began and some Fieldactions being done the Enemy perceiving how that divers Scots Officers had carried themselves gallantly in the Service of the Parliament returns again to his former courses and deales by his Instruments and Agents here to corrupt and debauche those men of Command upon whom the eyes of many were the Agents of the Enemy go craftily to work to compasse their ends upon those men for first by cunning insinuations they enter in privacy with them Next they make them fair promises with specious words of the Kings good intentions towards the publike good of both Church and State and of the esteem he had of their worth and deserts Then those good Agents for the Enemy under-hand cause give distaste to the Scots Officers by neglecting of them and otherwayes yea by some Boutefeux there were of them quarelled in Westminster-Hall with reproch that they took the Meat out of the English months who could manage and pursue the War as well atleast as they If this quarell had not been timely taken up by the Wisdom of the Parliament it had grown to a great hight according to the designe and desire of the Enemy This crafty dealing of the adversary by his Agents did prevaile so far that some of the Scots Officers not so touched with the interest of the good Cause as they ought to have been nor as they outwardly professed left off the Service of the Parliament for a time upon I know not what foolish excuse and thereafter upon a change fell to the Work again Next there were others so far perswaded as to lay down their Commissions and go to the Enemy and serve him for a while and thereafter leaving him returned hither again The Scots Officers with the Enemy were in high esteem and in good respect among those they did serve till the State of Scotland joyned with the Parliament of England in action for the Common Cause from thence by little and little the Scots with the Enemy became so to be neglected and ill thought of that there were many of them constrained to go away and others have been taken and killed by this side so that for the present there be very few at least of any note with the Enemy On this side likewise the Scots Officers notwithstanding the State of Scotland was now interessed and joyned with the Parliament by degrees came to be littler regarded neglected and divers of them laid aside after that sundry of them had lost their lives fighting valiantly for the Cause others had loosed their blood and others suffered imprisonment at last the Moulders of the new Modell cashier at one dash above two hundred of them brave fellows who constantly had carried themselves with honesty and gallantry without giving them any satisfaction or at least very little for what is justly due unto them and had cost some of them very dear The reason given out against them was That it was to be feared they would not be so earnest and so forward as was required in this new frame Then those cashiered Scots Commanders having danced attendance a long time to small purpose in pursuance of their just demands constant to their grounds although they were thus harshly used they would not abandon the Service of the Common Cause so they resolve to go to the Forces of their Countrey-men and serve with them in the same Cause and sends some of them accompanied with a number of good fellows before towards the Scots Army till the rest were ready Those Scots who went away first towards their Countrey-men being upon their journey they chanced to be at and neer Leicester when the Enemy made his approches to that place The Scots in meer kindnesse and love to those who were engaged with them in the Common Cause without any Commission from the Parliament or from the Scots Generall stay and help their Friends and how manfully their carriage was in the assistance of their Brethren is so known that it will never be forgotten when there is any mention of Leicester-businesse In generall I will say this of them That if they had been seconded the Town of Leicester had not been taken by the Enemy but having expected assistance from those whom they came to help after divers had prodagalized their blood and that some were killed with the losse of their Liberty and of all they had they were constrained to yeeld to force not without being admired by the vainquors for their valour Thereafter those that were taken prisoners finding their opportunity lays hold on it at the first and they carry the businesse so that they not onely gaine their own freedom but make themselves Masters of those in whose hands they were If those things had been done by some other men all the Pamphlets about the City of London should have been full of them In this businesse albeit the Scots did expresse their kindnesse really to their Friends and made known their valour to all Yet here I must tell you they did not shew their prudence for if the Enemy had known them to have no Commission as they had none by Law of Arms he had given them no quarter On the one side the ignorance of the
doing Evil then to an Army above two hundred miles distant who notwithstanding their willingnesse and readinesse to march according to their calling Southward could get neither draughts nor absolutely necessary provisions for a march in such a proportion as was thought very reasonable The truth of this may appear what troubles Generall Lesley found at Rippon to get provisions and draughts and how he went to York to that effect but to very small purpose Let things be tryed and no longer thus carried in hugger-mugger to the prejudice of the publike Service We have heard how that and upon what occasion some of those who had been so intimate with the Scots Commissioners leave them neglect them and oppose them in their proceedings so far as they can in a smooth-way above board to say nothing of what is done under-hand So in this place you shall take notice how that on the other side there be divers of those who formerly had cared so little for the Scots that they neither favoured their in-coming nor thereafter had assisted them so willingly in their honest faithful endeavour for the advancement of the publike Service now at last bethinking themselves of their own error and how that without reason they had been jealous of the Scots they begin to go along with them more freely and earnestly in the publike Work then they had done heretofore which the Scots minding mainly the furthering of the Service of the Common Cause take kindly at their hands and welcome the expressions of their good affection to the Service with respective civilitie wishing from their heart that those who are now withdrawn from them would return unto their wonted correspondence in sincere and brotherly unanimity for carrying on the heavy and tedious Work now lying upon them all Upon this there is great murmuring against the Scots that they had quite left off honest and well-affected men and taken semi-Malignants by the hand who not onely had been slack and backward in the pursuance of the publike Service but adverse unto themselves in particular To all this the Scots do declare truely that as when they came hither at first they took no interest in any man more then they judged him in all appearance to interest himself heartily without by-ends in the Common Cause and as yet they do the same resolved to continue so unto the end constant to their first principles and if any men have withdrawn themselves from them not willing to go constantly along with them in this necessary course they are sorry for those of whose constancy they were in a kind assured and they declare to the World that they neither gave nor intend to give any just distaste in their particular to any But if men will snuff because they are not humeured in all things who can help it The Scots did think at their coming in to have nothing a do with children and women who must be humeured but with set and staid rationall men without any by-respects or private Fancies wholly constants to the Cause both of Church and State as we are all sworn by the Solemn Oath of the Nationall Covenant As for those who having cast off their former mistakes now go along with them more earnestly then formerly in the businesses they cannot but welcome them as all those who put to their helping-hand heartily in the least kinde to the great Work of God and of his people howsoever their carriage have been towards their persons for the publike they having no spleen nor grudge at any forget whatsoever hath been amisse towards them praying God to forgive that his Work may be carried on more cheerfully and unanimously and they are likewise disposed and enclined towards those who have left them off to go along with them so freely and so brotherly as at the first they will imbrace them cheerfully in carrying on the businesses of Church State with them This they declare not to captive men by cunning insinuation as factious ones do but to invite all men fairly to go on with the Work of Church and State according to the Covenant as they hope a blessing from Heaven if they be zealous and faithfull without equivocation and may expect judgement if they either faint or be not sincere Of this enough for this time Yet there is one thing I cannot passe and it is this There be hardly any divisions among these of this side of which the blame is not laid upon the Scots as if they had not had their jealousies one of another and grudges one against another by reason of particular interest and private opinion before the Scots did join with them when it is well known that the Scots assistance faithfull in the Counsell and active in the Field is not onely usefull and necessary for the opposing and repressing of the Common Enemy but also for keeping together those who otherwayes in a likelyhood would fall asunder and so the publike Service suffer at which the Enemy aimes Then I adde that the Enemy howsoever low he seems to be at this instant desires to have no better Game then that the Scots would retire and withdraw their helping hand from the Service for he that of nothing made a party so great as to carry all before it till he was repressed by the Scots would raise up his party again But in despite of the devil and all opposition whether clandestin or open the Scots will stand firm and faithfull for the carrying on of the Work of God and of his people After a certain time the States of both Kingdoms resolved to try yet again if they could reclaime and recall upon any reasonable terms the abused and misled Prince from his evil courses of undoing thē people and himself cause draw up certain Propositions by Common Counsell of both Nations which they send by Commissioners of both States to the King in whom they find nothing but shifts and delays So they return without effectuating any thing A while thereafter the infortunate Prince intending to make the simpler sort beleeve that he was defirous at last of a reall agreement sends hither Commissioners of whose honest meaning the people did least doubt but in the end they were found to be cajeolors to draw things towards a Treaty unto which the Scots declared themselves to be inclined the main businesses of Church and State being secured as willing to try all means possible upon all occasion to take up the differences in a fair way to save further effusion of Christian and Brothers blood and further ruine of those Countreys For this the Scots are cried out upon as evil men by inconsiderate persons set on by Malignants notwithstanding the Treaty goe's on but to small purpose the Kings Commissioners feeling the pulse of the Parliaments Commissioners did promise unto themselves upon what ground they know best or at least should know that they could carry all things to their mind if it were not for the rude and
might have undone the Kings Army and consequently invaded England if they had pleased and that with small opposition instead of doing wrong to any English they supplied the wants of those who were come against them with Victuals which then did abound in the Scots Army but was very short in the Kings having the flower of the Kings Army in their power I mean the party that went to Dunslaw they suffered it to return back in safety and used it with all civility notwithstanding these chosen ones had come against promise and without cause to destroy them and to invade the Countrey Thereafter the Peace being made the Scots according to the agreement went quietly home and laid down their Arms as was promised Then the Plot the abused King and his good Counsell had at Berwick to draw the Chief men of Scotland to him for to destroy them and the breach of the Parlement the burning in London of the Articles of agreement made at the borders and many other like things did not move the Scots to recede in any measure from their dutifull respects to the King nor from their love to the English Nation neither the imprisonment of their Commissioners against the Law of Nations and the safe-conduct granted unto them upon publike Faith nor the great Forces prepared against them by Sea and by Land nor the many lyes spred against them through all England nor the Prelatical excommunication so canonically spewed out against them in all the Churches and Chappels of England All these things I say did not make them give the least expression of disrespect to the King nor disaffection to the English Upon this the Scots published a Declaration anew unto the World whereby they made known unto all how hardly they were dealt with all for not onely the things stipulated with them were not kept to them but also more and greater wrongs than formerly were done to them Yea a second expedition of War undertaken to destroy them and to fill up all more lyes of no lesse importance than the conquering of England made and spred abroad of them with other thunderbolts of the Prelaticall censure shot against them Also they make known by this Declaration their Christian resolution and just enterprise with their good intentions in taking Arms again for their own defence and the Cause which they maintain And by it assureth their Brethren of England although they were resolved to come into their Countrey to seek out their Enemies who were there gathering against them and not to suffer these wicked ones to come unto them and so make their own Countrey the Seat of the unhappy War Yet they had not the least thought to do any hurt to any body in England except to their professed Enemies So far were they from having the least thought of making a conquest And that when they had brought their Enemies to reason they would go home in Peace All which was thereafter performed by the Scots to the full For first being entred into England and having rencountred one party of their Enemies and routed it when it was in their power to pursue the Victory they stayed at New-castle till things were agreed upon betwixt the King and them This incoming of the Scots gave occasion and liberty to divers of the Nobles of England of whom some since have betray'd the Cause of God of his people what by open Warfare and what by clandestine undermining to desire of the King a Parliament for the good of the Kingdom The King then durst not refuse their demand by reason of the Scots more then the continuance of it which he granted likewise therafter for the same Cause Then the King finding that the Parliament did not onely crosse but quite spoile his designes be plots with his Army which he had raised against the Scots to come and destroy the said Parliament and to take the spoile of London for their reward But the businesse being discovered faileth besides they durst not undertake howsoever they had promised for fear of the Scots who then were so neer The King continuing in his wonted courses after a little pause tryes the Scots if they will do the deed and offers unto them for recompense not onely the spoile of London but also the foure Counties next adjacent unto their Countrey to be adjoyned hereafter to it with Jewels of great value in pawn for performance if onely they would be engaged into the businesse All these great offers could not make the Scots willing to give their consent in any kinde to this wickednesse For they not onely rejected the Kings offers but also giveth notice of the Plot to the Parliament and to the City of London that they might make their best use of it So you may see how that the Scots under God are the cause of the Assembling of the Parliament of the continuance of it being assembled and of the preservation of it from totall destruction and ruine The King seeing that he was stopped by the Scots first in their own Countrey next in England to carry on his great designe takes the Irish Papists by the hand rather then be alwayes disappointed and they willingly undertake to levie Armes for his Service that is for the Romish Cause the Kings designe being subservient to the Romish Cause although he abused thinks otherwayes and beleeves that Rome serveth to his purpose But to begin the Work they must make sure all the Protestants and if they cannot otherwayes by Murthering and Massacring them for they knew them according to the Principles of Religion and State to be forward either for the Covenanters of Scotland or for the troublesome Parliament of England if not for both But the Irish neither would nor durst enter to any open Action so long as the Scots Army in England was afoot therefore by all means it must be sent home and cashiered and to facilitate the businesse the Court-Parasites Instruments of Iniquity with their Emissaries must raise and spread abroad jealousies of the Scots among the people of the Countrey and City namely in and about the Houses of Parliament who having not before their eyes the reall Honesty and Integrity of the Scots known by so many faithfull and loyall expressions and not keeping in their mind the many good offices done to them by the Scots giveth in sillinesse of mind ear and place to the crafty tales and apprehensions invented by the Agents of the Common Enemy to bring them to confusion and trouble So the Plot taketh by the silly ones and is set forward by the hid Malignan's Yea in a word it is managed with such addresse and successe that the Scots must go home and till they had done it there could be no quiet but increase of jealousies The Scots although they were not acquainted with the hight of mischief that was intended against the Church and State in these Dominions by the Common Enemy nor with the wayes of it yet albeit they thought it
goeth on as he was approching the united Forces send Scouts to know his march and his strength upon whose relation they leave the siege and go to meet and fight him thinking if they had dispatched his Forces they would have lesse add in the work they had stook so long to Upon misinformation they take the wrong way to meet the Enemy so he had upon this mistake free accesse to the Town The united Forces seeing their mischance turn their course to stop the Enemies further coming South-ward he puft up with the successe of gaining free accesse to the Town resolves to follow the united Forces and fight them promising unto himself that his good Fortune would continue and if he had given a blow to their Forces he would easily put an end to the designe in hand for the Scots being once routed the main let and hinderance to the proceedings of the Court would much diminush the Reputation of the Parliaments party On the other side the united Forces perceiving the Enemies mind turn head towards him fight with him with Gods blessing and rout him but not without losse for notwithstanding all the care taken by the old and experimented Chief Commanders first to put all in as good order as time and place could permit and to keep things in order in time of Battel the new raised Horses of York-shire neglecting the command and example of their Noble and Gallant Leader who in this occasion as in all other carried himself valorously fall in disorder themselves and turning towards these of their own side that were to second them put many in such confusion that they would take no notice of any Commander or Leader yea they carrie some away with them by violence In this Battel divers gallant men of both Nations had an honourable share of the Victory but none I hear of without disparagement to any did appear so much in action that day with gallantry as David Lesley Here the Sectaries to indear themselves to the people attribute unto themselves the honour of the day and stick not to call their Champion The Savour of the three Kingdoms when God knows he that they extoll so much did not appear at all in the heat of the businesse having received at the first a little scar kept off till the worst was past After the Victory and the Town of York taken in the Generalls write to the Houses of Parliament to give thanks to God and in token of their thankfulnesse to setle the businesse of the Church and trye once more if it were possible to reconcile differences with the King in a peaceable way Things being setled at York by common consent the Scots go to New-castle to besiege it as the fittest service they could do for the publike then neer the place they joyn with the Earl Calender his Forces who had come from Scotland to represse the raging Enemy about New-castle while Lesley was at York with his Army the Scots drawing neer New-castle Calender and David Lesley with six men more went to view the place from which there issued two Troops of Horse which the eight men routed having charged twice through them The Scots for a long time endeavoured to take in the Town by fair means but at last through the obstinacy of those who were within they were constrained to storm it and so carried it Those very men who at the Battell neer York were put in disorder and fled with others gave the assault and took New-castle Thus the Scots being Masters of the Town wrong no man woman nor child takes a mediocre composition for the spoile in a word they carry themselves with such moderation that the Enemies who had been in Arms against them were constrained to speak well of them Few dayes after the taking of New-castle the Castle of Tinmouth is taken by the Scots The Winter by this time beginning after so hard employment of the last Winter and so toyling a Somerwork as the siege of York and the Battell besides divers skirmishes and rencounters with the Enemy then the long siege of New-castle and at last the storming of it they resolve to put their men in Garrisons During the siege of New-castle many calumnies was raised against the Scots and spewed abroad by Malignants and received here by the simpler sort As the taking of New-castle was the most important peece of service of that kinde that could be done to the Kingdom of England namely to the City of London so it did rejoyce all honest men but on the other side the Malignants of all kindes were sorry at the doing of it but more sorry that it was done by those who are so constantly opposite to their courses The Scots are not sooner peaceable Masters of New-castle but the trade is renewed again betwixt it and London to the comfort of the poor of London who were starving for want of fire and to the benefit of the richer sort The Coales above and under ground were rated disposed on in equity to the best use of the publike not wronging the particular according to the advice and by the Order of the Committee of both Kingdoms then residing in the North as the Commissioners appointed by the Parliament can be witnesses to whose consciences I appeale if all this be not true And the English prifoners taken by the Scots have been disposed on according to the will of the Houses of Parliament as soon as it was possible to be done by Military Order Now the Scots after the taking of New-castle although they were free of the open opposition of the Common Enemy for a time yet they were molested vexed crossed and traduced by the Malignants Agents to the Enemy in the Northern parts besides those in and about London Here you must know that those of the Northern Countreys of England have been constantly given to superstition as men neglected in their instruction or of purpose detained in ignorance by the Prelats fore-castingby that means to make them the furer for their designe And so the King himself at two severall times did find them ready for his designe The Earl of New-castle thereafter did find them likewise ready to follow him So what by breeding and what by latter yeers custome they are for the most part in that Country Malignants Next the heavy pressures of Souldiers for so many yeers with the barrennesse of the soile the Seots now coming upon them made them clamotous things not going according to their mind For first not liking the Cause next being already so spent they were very sensible of the least thing could be demanded of them joint the malice of some of the chief men in the Countrey made the people murmure at first them rise up in Arms but blessed be God the insurrection was soon calmed Further those who are employed by the Parliament to manage the affaires of these Countreys have put all the power in the hands of these who are wicked Malignants being either professed
papers to the Presse which the Printer intitles The Scots Manifest This being published opened the eyes of many men to see the truth of things which formerly had been kept in a cloud The publishing of this Manifest did much vex the Malignants but they then were more grieved to see it so well received and the truth therein contained so greedily laid hold on by the people whom they hitherto had so grosly abused by their malicious lyes Upon this these lye-inventers bethink themselves of another shift to cozen the World in this same businesse and they go this way to work seeing they could not hinder the printing of the Manifest they resolve to know whether or no the thing had been done by Order from the Commissioners who being enquired if they had caused print the Manifest they answered no and so it was for without their knowledge the thing was done because that those who had a care of the printing of it knew very well that the Commissioners going on in their ordinary course upon I know what prudentiall scrupulosity do make known nothing of that they acquaint the Houses with fearing to offend howsoever needfull to be opened for the publike Service and their own credit but if there be any thing to be said against them although without ground they must hear of it on the deaf-side of their ear and it must be in every bodies mouth Then the forgers and publishers of lyes gave out that the Manifest was a false and supposed thing since the Commissioners did not own it when as they onely did say that they had no hand in the printing of it although they ayouch the thing to be in it self most true Thus in this place I have set down a full relation of the publishing of the Manifest whereof I touched somewhat before upon another occasion to make more known unto the World with what cunning and crafty malice the Malignants of all kindes do oppose the truth upon all occasions and how they study to hide it from those whom it doth concern to the end they may feed them with lyes more easily the truth being kept from them After that the Commissioners had sent as we have said to the Army two severall dispatches the House of Commons think it fit likewise to send some of their number to the Scotish Army to see how things went in the said Army and to hasten it South-ward who met the Army about Rippon and come along with it no Nattingham where those Gentle-men leave the Army and come back to the Houses whom they acquainted with the truth of all things as namely of the good condition of the Army consisting in a fair number of brave Commanders and lusty Souldiers of their ability and readinesse to do Service Which relation as it did content and please honest men so it did gal and vexe the Malignants of all kindes But with what difficulties of want of provisions and of carriage the Army had to struggle with in this march and hath had formerly yea hath to this day for any thing I know except things be mended of late as now I hope they are or at least will be shortly is beyond expression partly through the neglect of some partly through the malice of others and that not of the meaner sort who make their study not onely to furnish no encouragement to these who are come for their help but also give them all the distaste they can to make them weary of the Service yea to make them do things by the Law of necessity to keep themselves from starving which otherwayes they would not and so make them odious to those for whose good they are come into this Countrey If this were done by an open Enemy yea by those who declare themselves to be indifferent it were to be in some kinde digested but it is done by those who would make men beleeve that they are not onely most addicted to the good Cause but also that they are advancers of the Service whereas they make onely the Cause serve for a cloke to their ambition and avarice in their heart caring for nothing howsoever they make a shew otherwayes but to compasse their own ends whereunto a shew of affection to the good Cause doth contribute namely where they have any credit But to leave off complaining of those who are neither faithfull nor honest to the Cause in thus useing the Scots I going on in my Discourse will say a word or two in this place to the clearing of three things whereof the first is concerning the moneys received by the Scots for their pay since their first undertaking either in Ireland or in England unto this day The next is how and what provisions they have had for their going on with the Service either here or in Ireland The third is of the disorders committed by the Scots in their Armies either in England or in Ireland First I assure you in the name of the Scots that their earnest desire is that all these things in particular be exactly tryed by the Law of Arms and in equity judged where the failings are and by whom and how to the end that every one may have his due of praise or of shame of thanks or of blame of recompense or of punishment of remembrance or of oblivion according as the cause shall require and the sooner this be done the better it will for the Service of the publike and the encouragement of honesty and the repressing of wickednesse In the mean time I will tell you in generall that what money is received by the Scots is far short of what they ought to have and that they could wish their Armies in England to say nothing of their Forces in Ireland had as much money for six weeks as the other Forces employed in the Service with them have in two weeks and this without jealousie or envie that others are look●d and cared for yet there is no reason why they should be neglected since they are constantly following the publike Service with activity and faithfulnesse There is a great stir of sending money to them and far greater of raising it for them although they receive but a very small proportion in regard either of what is allowed for them and lesse of what is due unto them and least of all what is said to be levied for them Wherefore I say again they are most desirous of fair reckonings among Friends let the payment come when it may the most pressing necessity being supplied Next For provisions besides the smalnesse of them they come so slowly I must say again that when they are upon their march they are constrained to stay three dayes in one place against their will for one dayes provision and draughts can hardly be had for their march as it hath been in their march so it is in their abode witnesse their being ten dayes before Hereford not seeing bread but one day all the rest liying upon Beanes green Corn and
Fruits In these they are so crossed that it seems to be done expresly for the disenabling them so far as may be to do the publike Service answerable to their own desire and readinesse and to the expectation of the Kingdom As for the disorders said to be done in the Army as it is acknowledged that they are not Angels of Light without feeding being but poor infirme men they cannot but fall and do amisse in many and many a thing so they are not Cameleons to live upon the air but are of such constitutions that they must have more solid food of necessity for their subsistance which now and then they cannot come by so orderly as should be Yet I dare be bold to say that the Scots Army is as well regulated as most Armies are without vanity be it said and that exorbitancy or scandall is no sooner known but it is censured punished according to its degree by Ecclesiasticall and Military Law and that no complaint is made but it is heard and answered according to equity and reason Yea Proclamations are made to incite every one that hath any complaint to repaire unto the Prime-Officers or Counsell of War Yet let the Leaders do what they can some slips will fall out among the Souldiers that are not allowable and indeed the Commanders cannot be altogether so exact as otherways they would be with the Souldiers since the pay is so slow and so little of it at a time and provisions so scarce and so hardly had for when the bellie is thus extreamly pinched it were hard measure to beat the back When the Scots Army came to Nottingham the Generall sent a Letter subscribed by himself and two more unto the Committee of both Kingdoms whereby in few words he tels how that the Scots employed in this Service of the Common Cause have had and have to this day very harsh usage and hard measure in divers fashions even from these who not onely by the Common Interest of both Nations are bound to be then Friends and Brethren but also from these who formerly made a particular shew of Friendship unto them Yet notwithstanding all this he declareth how that with hearty earnestnesse they are in readinesse to go on faithfully and resolutely with the Work But judging that a view of the Letter it self would give satisfaction to many I have thought fit to set down here a true Copy of it furnished unto me by a Friend A Letter of the Scots Generall at Nottingham to the Committees of both Kingdoms My Lords and Gentlemen THe continuance of a firme Union and good correspondance betwixt the Kingdoms is so much in our thoughts and wishes as that without it we can expect no better then the weakning yea the undoing of this Common Cause and the strengthening of the Common Enemies and although there be neither few nor small occasions and discouragements from the misrepresentation of our Actions and misapprehension of our intentions from the cooling if not changing of that affection formerly expressed both towards our selves and towards divers of our Countrey-men who have deserved well for their abilities and faithfulnesse in the publike and from the usage and entertainment of this Army which is neither to that which other Armies in this Kingdom do receive nor according to the Treaty between the Kingdoms nor at all certain such as can avoid the hatred and discontent of the people whose affections and good will we desire to carry along with us yet notwithstanding all these and the like discouragements our Actions have been are and shall be reall testimonies of our constant resolution to pursue actively the ends expressed in the Covenant and to adventure our selves and whatsoever is dearest to us in this Cause and that as we had great reason to march into Westmerland in regard of the Intelligence both then and since confirmed to us so we have been as ready and willing to come South-ward as we were desired by the honourable Houses of Parliament and by your Lordships and we have marched with more speed and lesse interruption then is usuall in such cases yea our march had been more speedy if we had not been stayed in some places for want of draughts and provisions and now we are with the assistance of God Almighty to undertake any Action which may be fittest for the Cause and safety of both Kingdoms But if which God forbid for want of the conjunction and assistance promised or for want of necessary provisions the publike work be retarded or disappointed we shall be blamelesse And therefore we do recommand to your Lordships most serious deliberation that some more effectuall and speedy course may be taken for necessary provisions to this Army that both Officers and Souldiers may have in all orderly and constant way not onely a part of their pay in Victuals but a part in money for their other necessary uses and in case of our conjunction with any other Forces of this Kingdom that then the provisions of this Army be no worse then of those other Forces which things as they are just in themselves so they are the rather desired that this Army be not burthensome nor hatefull to the Counties where we come and that we may not be redacted to the unhappy necessity of not punishments wrongs and disorders strictly which as we have not onely forbidden by the strictest Edicts but have exemplarly and severely punished so shall we ever be ready upon complaint and proof of the fact either to punish the same by death or other condigne punishment according to the quality of the offence We further intreat and expect that this War might be managed according to the Treaty by the Committees of both Kingdoms upon the place and for that end that a Quorum of the Commissioners from the honourable Houses of Parliament may be constantly with this Army and that your Lordships may entertain charitable thoughts of our proceedings confident that according to the knowledge which God hath given us in the matters of our profession we shall improve all opportunities to the best advantage We shall not need to put your Lordships in remembrance how necessary it is that before the Armies of either or of both Kingdoms undertake the besieging of any Town they first endeavour a totall dissipation of all the Forces which the Enemy hath in the Fields and so much the rather because by the blessing of God the dissipation shall be more easie if the Armies of both Kingdoms be continually aiding and assisting each one to other and that each act their part and attend the Enemies motions What we have written to your Lordships we desire it may be made known to both Houses of Parliament and City of London And above all that your Lordships would with all earnestnesse presse the expediting of the Reformation of Religion and uniformity in Church-government together with the speedy prosecuting and ending of this War that we may return home with the comfort
and makes his addresses unto the Independents but how he hath sped with them it is not as yet fully known things not being manifested but some fidling businesses there have been betwixt him and them whether or no by the whole Cabale or by some few of the prime of the faction it is uncertain First That there was some under-hand-dealing by them the intercepted Letters of Digby unto Leg give a shrewd proof of it Next The Papers found since in the cajeolors friends closet under the cajeolors own hand When these things are tryed to the full we hope the light of all will appear which all honest men wish it may be done exactly and speedily And till then mens minds will not be satisfied and they will hardly refrain to speak of these things howsoever it be taken for they conceive not onely by the opennesse of the time they are free from the thraldom of the corrupt Court but also since they have interest in the businesse and have hazarded all what they have or had for the publike Service they may expresse their thoughts freely of occurrences so it be with discretion sparing mens persons till things be cleared And sincerely I think no innocent man can be angry at this if any in conscience finds himself guilty in any kinde that he will do well to suffer it patiently for fear he suffer more if things go exactly on to a triall The light that happily may be found out of this will not be and cannot be by a mathematicall or metaphysicall demonstration yet by so certain proofes as the nature of the thing can suffer or require for businesses of this nature take probable Arguments for demonstration as we are taught by the Doctors of of the Politicks I know some have suffered for their free expression of these things yet I am confident it had been greater wisdom under favour to let go free speeches rather then to examine them too neerly namely when they proceed without malice or scurrility from honest men who in their zeal perhaps now and then may exceed the exact terms of moderation and this I am perswaded hath been the constant practice of wise men grounded upon this if the discourse be groundlesse it fals of it self If there be any ground by stirring and ripping up speeches things will appear openly which otherwayes in a short time would have been buried in oblivion I forbear instances as in all my discourse keeping my self to generalls although I could have furnished divers examples upon every point I have touched for albeit it be said He that speaks in generall of all and to all speak of none and to none yet every one may make use of what is said in generall and apply it unto himself for the good of the publike and of himself which I wish every one that reads this discourse may do in all singlenesse of heart as it is set forth by him in sincerity who hath no other end in it besides the glory of God the good of Church and State and the true advantage of every honest man without any wrong-meaning but an earnest desire that every one who is right and honest in this Cause without by-respects may continue so till the end and that those who have gone a wrong way may return into the true to the glory of God the advancement of his Cause and of his people with their own praise and benefit Before I conclude I will say this in truth There was never a People in any age who by Gods blessing did carry on the work of Reformation with more wisdom and resolution and successe then the Scots did in their own Countrey and no more compassionate of their Neighbours in distresse nor more forward to help them by action and counsell and to carry on the work of Reformation amongst them then the Scots have been and are to this hour So there was never a People so harshly used in divers kindes by some of those for whose good they have been and are so earnest If this coarse usage went no further then their own persons means and reputation they could passe it with silence and not so much as think of it laying it aside in Christian charity and brotherly love although they suffer much in all these by it since they have joyned with their Neighbours to help them But since by the neglecting opposing and in a word ill-dealing with the Scots the Service and work they are about is wronged stopped and delayed which is mainly and namely to help the setting forward the Reformation of the Church of God as it is expressed in the Nationall Covenant they cannot but take it heavily to heart for the Name of Gods sake Surely those factions ones who have used and at this time use thus their Brethren who have ventured yea lost themselves in a manner with all what is dear unto men for their sake and to do them 2 double good that is to help them out of trouble and to settle 3 true and through Reformation amongst them have much to answer not onely for their malice unthankfulnesse and ingratitude to those who have spent themselves for them but also for their stopping and hindering so far as in them lieth the good work of God and by that means give occasion of the continuance of these miseries wherein we are all now involved and almost overwhelmed God forgive these men and turn them truely unto him if it be his will otherwise let them have no power to hinder his good Cause And thus good Reader I have thought fit to give a little touch of divers main passages of these our troublesome businesses leaving a fuller Discourse of things to another time and another place FINIS
wicked courses of the Enemies against the Cause we say we maintain I am sure at least we ought or by open and professed Apostasie we have joyned our hearts and affection with the Common Enemy who so actively by all means opposeth this Cause of God and persecuteth his people for it This is done both in Scotland and England not by a few but by many not by little and small ones but by the Chief and Leaders of the rest not by stopping things of humane infirmity and weaknesse but with study and an high hand Here we shall say a word or two of the carriage of those two Nations in the going on with the Work of the Lord for the setling of the Church and quiet of his People We shall begin at those of Scotland who some few yeers ago were lifted up with praises among men for their faithfull minding and following earnestly this great Work of God all by-ends laid aside for which God blessed them from Heaven and made them be called happy among men for they had their hearts desire in the businesse and their Enemies were subdued by them But now leaving off their former integrity and sincerity to the Cause of God and their Love unto him following the devices and desires of their own corrupt hearts in pride coveteousnesse and factions notwitstanding the earnest and pressing admonitions both in private and publike of the Prophets and Ministers of God they continue in their evil courses preposterously minding themselves and their worldly foolish interest of ambition and avarice more then God and the Cause of his Church and people For this God as it were by an essay to try them if they would laying aside their lewd by wayes mind him and his Service heartily and sincerly sends amongst them an hand-full of contemptible profane and wicked villains whom at first they despise and neglect but going on in their wonted wayes while the holy Name of God is profaned by those Sons of Belial a part of their Land is wasted the poor people spoiled and slain with all other barbarous usage and so these number and power of the Slaves of Iniquity growing they are plotting caballing and devising how to supplant another and increase their severall faction the seed of dissension being sowed amongst them by the Enemy to divide and so more easily compasse his ends upon them which they would not and could not see blinded with their corrupt passion Then God to admonish them anew suffers some of those whom they had employed against the Sons of Rebellion to betray their trust and omit divers good occasions in all appearance to make havock of these villains yea some to run over unto them in the hour of fight and so these Enemies of goodnesse to advance their pernicious designe do what they list Yet all this will not die with those hard-hearted and stubbling men still employing and busying their thoughts how to bear down one another yea some there were amongst them who were not sorry in their hearts of the progresse that those despisable villains made in the Countrey against the Service of the Common Cause conceiving it did help to the setting up of their faction But since the affronts and blows they received at divers times from those contemptible fellows did not move these ingrate Children God sends a Pestilence amongst them which rageth with such fury that hardly the like hath been heard of in that Land to try if at last they would leave their slacknes remissenes in pursuing the Service of the Cause of Gods Church and People their conniving and complying with his Enemies yea their helping those villains with means and advice in opposing the Cause of God and oppressing his People But they remain obdured like Children of disobedience in their perverse wayes So at length God in his wrath delivers them up to the hands of their wicked Enemies making them as far to be scorned and misprised for their not heartly minding him his Service as they had been before esteemed and extolled for their adhering to him and doing his Service faithfully Yea the Chief men of them who had been cried up for Valour and Wisdom are constrained to flie away and have their lives for a prey So God who from the beginning of all those unhappy disturbances till this last time had made Scotland a Mirrour of his Mercy in testimony of its faithfulnesse adhering unto him makes it an example of his Justice for its back sliding from him And thus Judgement begins at the House of God now let England look seriously to it for the same very sins which have been committed in Scotland and for which it now lieth under the heavy rod of a chastising and angry God are now raigning in England namely ambition and avarice with many more which have not been seen in Scotland example heresies errors and Sects of all sorts to the dishonour of God and to the withdrawing of the People from his Truth are connived at and countenanced by those who are in Authority Then there be some of power and credit who are so far from furthering the Reformation of the Church as they and we all are sworn to by the Covenant that they hinder the same not onely by secret undermining and by plots but by a continued open profession against it Next There be great oppressions vexations concussions and injustices done unto the People by divers in Authority the cry of all which is as loud if not louder unto Heaven then the cry of the sins of Scotland It may be that God as he hath not be gun so soon to shew his Mercy unto England as he did unto Scotland will not send his Judgement upon it so speedily yet doubtlesse without a serious Repentance and a true turning unto God Judgement will come and the longer it is a coming the heavier it will be It is not the good Cause of Church and State that will do Englands turn more then the Temple and the Law of old did save Judah from ruine nor the same good Cause hath kept Scotland from punishment the good Cause ill managed by negligence ambition avarice faction self-conceit and other vices of that kinde draweth vengeance upon those who have the managing of it and make the Cause to be in derision Never good Cause hath been worse managed by the ignorance of weak ones and the malice of other wicked At last God will maintain his Cause no thanks to thee without thee for he needs not thy help to do it but since he hath been pleased to make use of thee in the Service of this his Cause he expects faithfulnesse and zeal to it from thee free from worldly and humane interest Otherwayes vengeance is at thy door for God as he will not in his Worship and Cult have linsey-wolsey of mens inventions intermingled with his pure and sacred Ordinance so he will not in managing the Service of his Cause and of his People that men bring in