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A79224 His Majesties gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, on Tuesday, July 30. 1661. The day of their adjournment. : Together with the speech of Sir Edward Turnor, Knight, speaker of the honorable House of Commons, to the Kings Most Excellent Majesty. Delivered on Tuesday the thirtieth day of Juy, 1661 at the adjournment of the Parliament. England and Wales. Sovereign (1660-1685 : Charles II); Turnor, Edward, Sir, 1617-1676.; Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. 1661 (1661) Wing C3044A; ESTC R223297 4,526 14

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His Majesties GRACIOUS SPEECH To Both HOUSES of PARLIAMENT On Tuesday July 30. 1661. the day of their ADJOURNMENT Together with the SPEECH OF Sir EDWARD TVRNOR KNIGHT Speaker of the Honorable House of COMMONS TO THE KINGS Most Excellent MAJESTY Delivered on Tuesday the thirtieth day of July 1661. at the Adjournment of the Parliament Printed at London and Re-printed at Edinburgh 1661. C R HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT His MAJESTIES gracious SPEECH to both Houses of PARLIAMENT on Tuesday July 30. 1661. the day of their Adjournment My Lords and Gentlemen I Perceive by the thin appearance of the Members of both Houses this day that it is high time to Adjourn In truth the season of the year as well as your particular affairs require it and therefore I do willingly consent to it I thank you for the many good Bills you have presented Me with this day of which I hope the benefit will redound to the whole Kingdom I thank you for the care you have taken for the safety of My Person which trust Me is the more valuable to Me for the consequence I think it is of to you and upon My conscience there is no body wishes ill to Me but they who would quickly revenge themselves of you if they could I thank you for the care you have taken of your selves of your own safety and honour in the Act against Tumults and Disorders upon pretence of Petitions to which licence We owe much of the Calamities We have undergone but I thank you with all My heart indeed as much as I can do for any thing for the repeal of that Act which excluded the Bishops from sitting in Parliament it was an unhappy Act in an unhappy time passed with many unhappy circumstances and attended with miserable events and therefore I do again thank you for repealing it you have thereby restored Parliaments to their primitive Institutions And I hope My Lords and Gentlemen you will in a short time restore them to the primitive order and gravity of Debates and Determinations which the licence of the late distempered times had so much corrupted which is the only way to restore Parliaments to its primitive Veneration with the people which I heartily wish they should alwayes have My Lords and Gentlemen you are now going to your several Countreys where you cannot but be very welcome for the Services you have performed here I do very earnestly recommend the good Government and Peace of your Countreys to your care and your counsel and your vigilance There are distempered spirits enough which ly in wait to do mischief by laying reproaches upon the Court upon the Government reproaches upon Me and reproaches upon you your Wisdoms and Reputation and Authority will I doubt not weigh down their light Credit and the old and new good Laws will I hope prevent any mischief they intend however you have done very well and I do very heartily thank you for it in declaring My sole Right over the Militia the questioning of which was the Fountain from which all Our bitter Waters flowed I pray make haste to put the whole Kingdom into such Posture that evil men who will not be converted may yet choose to be quiet because they finde that they shall not be able to do the harm they desire to do I know you have begun many Bills in both Houses which cannot be finished till your meeting again and that they may be finished then I forbear to make a Sessions now but am contented that you Adjourn till the twentieth of November when I hope by Gods blessing We shall come happily together again In a word My Lords and Gentlemen I thank you for what you have done and am confident that what you have left undone you will dispatch with all alacrity and to all Our satisfactions at Our next meeting and so you may Adjourn till the twentieth of November THE SPEECH OF Sr. EDWARD TVRNOR KNIGHT Speaker of the Honorable House of COMMONS TO THE KINGS Most Excellent MAJESTY Delivered on Tuesday the Thirtieth day of July 1661. at the Adjournment of the Parliament May it please Your most Excellent Majesty THe Wise man tells us there is a time to sow and a time to reap Since Your Majesty did conveen the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House of Parliament they have with unwearied labour consulted for the Service of Your Majesty and the good of this Nation and now the Fields grow white to Harvest In the great field of Nature all fruits do not grow ripe together but some in one moneth some in another one time affords Your Majesty Primroses and Violets another time presents you with July-flowers So it is in the course of our proceedings some of our fruits are in the Blossome when others are in the Bud some are near ripe and others fit to be presented to Your Majesty Amongst the number of our choicest ripe fruits we first present You with a Bill for the Safety and Preservation of Your Majesties Royal Person and Government Your Predecessor Queen Elizabeth of famous memory in the Thirteenth year of her Reign by Pius Quintus then Bishop of Rome was Excommunicated and Anathematized John Felton posted up a Bull at the Bishop of Londons Palace whereby she was declared to be deprived of her Title to the Kingdom and all the People of this Realm absolved from their Allegiance to her The Queen of Scots was then a prisoner in England and the Duke of Norfolk for many Designs against our Queen committed to the Tower Historians tell us the times were very troublesome full of suspitions and conspiracies But Sir what then was onely feared hath in our time been put in execution No Age hath known no History makes mention of such sad Tragedies It therefore now becomes Your People after this glorious Restitution to endeavour all just wayes of preservation The Queen in her time of trouble and danger summoned a Parliament and such was the Love of the People to her and her Government that they forthwith made a Law for her security According to which President We your Loyal Commons also who have before them no lesse cause of fear but more Obligations and Affection to your Majesty do humbly tender You a Bill wherein we desire it may be Enacted That if any Person shall compasse imagine or design Your Majesties Death Destruction or bodily Harm to imprison or restrain Your Royal Person or depose You or shall levy War against Your Majesty within or without Your Realm or stir up any forraign Power to invade You and shall express or declare such his wicked intention by Printing Writing Preaching or malicious and advised speaking being thereof legally convicted shall be adjudged a Traitor And because much of our late Misery took its rise from seditious Pamphlets and Speeches from the Pulpits it is provided That if any man shall maliciously and advisedly publish or affirm Your Majesty to be