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A89475 A manifestation directed to the honourable Houses of Parliament in England, sent from the Lord Inchequin, the Lord Broghill, Sir Wil. Fenton, Sir Percy Smith, Lieut. Col. Will. Brocket, Lieut. Col. Thomas Serle, Sarjeant Major Muschamp; containing the reasons of their now opposing the cestation with the blood-thirsty Irish rebels; and their resolution to live and die in defence of the Parliament and Protestant cause in that Kingdom. As also, the joynt and unamimous declaration of His Majesties Protestant subjects in the Province of Munster, shewing to the whole world the many inhumane, cruell, and unheard of perfidious dealings, treacherous conspiracies, and horrid combinations of friers, priests and Jesuits, to betray the castles, forts and garrisons, and their murthering many Protestants in that province, contrary to the article of free commerce, and other articles of the late treaty. Inchiquin, Murrough O'Brien, Earl of, 1614-1674. 1644 (1644) Wing M424; Thomason E6_1; ESTC R3771 7,096 14

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Nation and Protestant Religion we have reassumed our Armes according to our duty to God our King and Country with inviolable resolution to dye or frustrate this divelish designe And since those that dye acting for the Gospell are as perfect Martyers as those that dye suffering for it Wee cannot but with joy embrace any effect that proceeds from so glorious a cause Neither can this act be esteemed a crime in us since his Majesty upon the Rebels first insurrection his treasure being exhausted gave his Royall assent for the passing of an Act of Parliament wherin he granted to all his Subjects that would adventure mony towards reducing of the rebells Lands proportionable to the sum adventured which would fall to the Crowne when the conquest should be finished and the better to secure the adventurers his Majesty obliged himselfe to make no peace with the Rebels but with the advice and approbation of the Parliament of England And by that Act communicated to the Parliament that power which before was solely in himselfe So that they not condescending to this peace Our imploying of their Aids and reassuming of those Armes put into our hands by King and Parliament joyntly cannot be esteemed contradictory to his Majesty in regard that their joynt Act is so absolutely binding that neither of them severally can annull it as is evident in the Lawes of the Realme Therefore if this war were only offensive yet even slander it selfe must acknowledge us innocent having so just a cause so pious an intention and so lawfull an authority much more it being defensive and the Law both of God and nature allowing every one to defend himselfe from violence and wrong Moreover the King must never expect any obedience from the Irish but what proceeds either from their Interest or fear Through the first of these neither His Majesty or we can hope for assurance for not granting them all their desires their Interest which is more powerfull with them then their loyalty will make them throw off their subjection and to become absolute not scruple to destroy us then to expect any security by their feares were frivolous for though we have found their hearts as ill as their cause yet they cannot be apprehensive of two or 3000 ill armed and unprovided men having all things necessary and so numerous a people at their devotion And lest our Enemies should scandalize us with breach of faith in violating the pretended Cessation or with cruelty in expelling the Irish Papists from our Garrisons who hitherto seemed adhering to us Concerning the first we declare That although our necessities did induce us to submit supposing the Cossation would have produced other effects as is before mentioned yet that we had no power without authority from King and Parliament joyntly to treat or yeeld to it or if it had been in our powers yet by the Rebels daily breaches of it we are disengaged from it Concerning the second We declare That our Garrison cannot be secured whilst so powerfull and perfidious Enemies are in our bosomes Powerfull being foure to one in number more then the English Perfidious in their constant designes to betray us some whereof we will instance to convince their owne consciences and satisfie the world of our just proceedings One Francis Matthewes a Francisean Fryer being wonderfully discovered in an enigmaticall Letter and as justly executed before his death confessed that he had agreed to betray the City of Corke to the Lord of Muskery which must necessarily inferre that the chiefest and greatest part of that City were engaged in this conspiracie for otherwise he could not so much as hope th' accomplishment And if this had taken effect it had consequently ruined all the Protestants in the Province of Minister that being our chiefe Magazine and greatest Garrison Besides upon this occasion other Fryers being examined upon Oath confessed that in their daily Masses within that Towne and all other of our Garrisons where Papists did inhabite they prayed for the advancement of the Catholique cause which they believed the Rebels fought for And lastly Wee have lately discovered that the now Major and Corporation had conbined with the Rebells to betray the Towne to them and for that purpose an Army was drawne to all the parts adjoyning to our Garrisons In the three chiefest whereof we are confident the Rebells had their partie but by divine providence before the Plot could be executed the Major presuming on his speedy successe contemned the Lord of Inch●quins authority by opposing the levying of the monyes granted by the English for the maintenance of the Souldiers just about the nick of time that the treachery was to be effected And he being committed upon this occasion The Rebels apprehending their designe to be discovered with drew their Forces And lest this should be judged as an act of the Major onely as a private person Wee desire the world to take notice that as soone as our Army which forced their obedience was removed into England the Papists generally resisted what ever could be propounded for our security and would have disenabled us to continue our Garrisons had not the poore stript English taken all that burthen upon themselves Nay they were so insolent that they laboured to get Armes into their hands and to cause us to disband our Souldiers which they affirmed to be kept as an unnecessary charge upon the King that so they might with more facilitie receive the Irish and ruine us In a word since they pretend the ground of this Warre to be for Religion and that this is confessed by those who seemed to adhere to us what faith can be expected from such a people whose Religigion permits them to hold none with us By this preceding Relation it is evidently seene that unlesse we reassume our Armes we betray the trust committed to us by God the King and Parliament and become slaves both of bodies soules And therefore we have resolved to performe our dutie though with apparent hazard of our lives And likewise maintaine that which is a thousand times more deare unto us our Religion and also defend our Garrisons for the Kings just use These we take God to witnesse are our Intentions and we beseech him to punish us as strangely as his 〈◊〉 he hath preserved us if we decline at all from these loyall and religions resolutions And we firmely hope that the world will by this declaration be as fully satisfied of the justinesse of our proceedings as we our selves are Then though we all lose our lives in this cause we shall give o● friends occasion to rejoyce and our Enemies to envie at so blessed an and. FINIS