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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A88204 The just defence of John Lilburn, against such as charge him with turbulency of spirit. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1653 (1653) Wing L2123A; Thomason E711_10; ESTC R207124 13,471 11

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manifested and he shall finde that for no other cause have I been reputed so ever since to this very day and that it shall be any mans portion that doth so About this time the Army began to dispute the command of Parliament and that as they largely declared because the Parliament had forsaken their rule the fundamental Laws of England and exercised an arbitrary and tyrannical power over the consciences lives liberties and estates and instanced in me and others who had been long illegally imprisoned These now espousing the publike Cause and that their onely end was that the ancient Rights and Liberties of the people of England might be cleared and secured not onely prevailed with me but thousands others in London Southwark and most places thorowout the Land so to adhere unto them as notwithstanding great preparations against them both by Parliament and City of London yet they prevailed without bloodshed A friendship they should not have forgotten Obstacles being thus removed I who with many others had adhered to them daily solicited the performance of the end of this great undertaking and engagement viz. the re-establishment of the fundamental laws but as it appeared then in part and more plainly since there being no such real intention whatever had been pretended upon this our solicitation the countenances of the great ones of the Army began to change towards us and we found we were but troublesome to them and accounted men of turbulent and restless spirits but at that time the Agitators being in some power these aspersions were but secretly dispersed We seeing the dangerous consequence of so suddain a defection from all those zealous promises and protestations made as in the presence of God and having been instrumental in their opposition of the Parliamentary authority and knowing that in our consciences nor in the sight of God we could not be justified except we persevered to the fulfilling of the end The restauration of the Fundamental Laws and Rights of the Nation and I especially who had spilt both my own and other mens bloods in open fight for the attainment thereof look'd upon my self as no other or better then a murtherer of my brethren and Country-men if I should onely by my so doing make way for raising another sort of men into power and so enable them to trample our Laws and Liberties more under foot then ever Upon these grounds I ceased not day nor night to reduce those in chiefest power into a better temper of spirit and to perswade them to place their happiness not in Absoluteness of domination but in performance of their many zealous Promises and Declarations made with such vehemencie of expression as in the presence of God and published in print to all the world urging what a dishonour it would be to the whole Army to have their faith so broken and violated that though they might succeed in making out power and domination to some few of them yet God could not be satisfied nor their consciences be at peace This was my way to most of them for a long time but I may truely say with David They plentifully payd me hatred for my good will and for my good counsel for so I believe time will prove it though now they seem to ride on the wings of prosperity with their ill-gotten wealth and power they layd snares to take away my life And in order thereunto I with others being at the prosecuting of a Petition one of their officious Spyes lays an accusation against me at the House of Commons bar where clayming a Tryal at Law for any thing could be alleadged against me and denying their Authority as to be my Judges and for maintaining that I ought not to be tryed in any case but by a Jury of my Neighbourhood For this doing I was sent again prisoner to the Tower where I continued for many months and then again accounted a factious seditious and turbulent fellow that owned no Authority and that would have no Government the cause being still the same for that I would not renounce the Law my birthright and submit to the wills of men in power which as an English man I am bound to oppose But new Troubles appearing and the great ones being in supposition they might once more need their dissatisfied friends after a sore imprisonment I obtained my liberty and so much ●hew of respects as to have the damages alotted for my sufferings under the Star-chamber sentence ascertained but not the least motion towards the performance of publike engagements but only as troubles came as about that time they did appear upon the general rising coming in of Hamil●on Goring and the like then indeed promises were renewed and tears shed in token of repentance and then all again embraced as Friends all names of reproach cease turbulent and leveller and all and welcome every one that will now but help and this trouble being but over all that ever was promised should be faithfully and amply performed but no sooner over then all again forgotten and every one afresh reproached that durst but put them in minde of what they so lately had promised yea all such of the Army under one pretence or other excluded the Army and so nothing appearing but a making way for Absoluteness and to render the Army a meer mercenary servile thing sutable to that end that might make no conscience of promises or have any sense of the Cause for which they were raised Perceiving this I with others having proved all their pretences of joyning in an Agreement of the People to be but delusion and that they neither broke the Parliament in pieces nor put the King to death in order to the restauration of the Fundamental Laws of the Nation whatever was pretended but to advance themselves I having been in the North about my own business while those things were done and coming to London soon after and finding as to the Common Freedom all things in a worse condition and more endangered then ever made an application to the Councel of the Army by a Paper wherein were good grounds of prevention but some there making a worse use thereof interpreted the same a disturbance of the Army earnestly moving they might get a Law to hang such as so disturbed them affirming they could hang twenty for one the old Law could do Whereupon we applyed our selves to the new purged Parliament with a Paper called The Serious Apprehensions unto which obtaining no answer I endeavoured to have gotten hands to another Paper to be presented to the House which was printed under the title of The second Part of Englands new Chains discovered wherein was laid open much of what since hath been brought upon the Nation of will and power which at this day deserveth to be read by all that conceive me to be of a turbulent spirit wherein they will finde the cause still the same viz. my constant adherence to the known rights of the nation and no other