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A49445 Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow Esq; Lieutenant General of the Horse, Commander in Chief of the forces in Ireland, one of the Council of State, and a Member of the Parliament which began on November 3, 1640. In two volumes. Vol. 1.; Memoirs. Part 1. Ludlow, Edmund, 1617?-1692. 1698 (1698) Wing L3460_pt1; ESTC R1476 216,094 443

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replied They could not answer to his Majesty the giving of such Conditions to us Sir William Waller having lately refused to receive Arundel-Castle from some of the King's Party upon any other Terms than at Mercy who they knew to have been in a much better state of Defence than we were and therefore pressed us to deliver our selves upon the same Condition promising us much Favour To this I answered That some related to us had already experienced the Favours they extended to their Prisoners That the Compliance of those at Arundel ought to be no Precedent to us and that unless we might march off we would not surrender They told me the longer I held out the worse it would be for me and Mr. Plott who as he since informed me had prevailed with them to propose this Treaty earnestly pressed me to lay hold on the Opportunity intimating by his Words and Gestures that if I refused it I should not have another but I resolving to defend the Place as long as I could our Treaty came to nothing I had some thoughts of charging through the Enemy in the beginning of the Night in order to force our way to the nearest of our Garisons which I presumed might have been effected by the Morning but the desperate Condition in which we must have left our sick and wounded Men diverted me from putting that Design in execution And now the Spirits of my Souldiers began to flag my Gunsmith desiring leave to go home and several others making choice of one amongst them to speak for them were very importunate with me to surrender with which expressing my self displeased I acquainted them that I would take the best time to do it for their Advantage and thereby quieted them so that they resolved to move me no more about it yet ceasing not to complain to each other of their Wants and Hardships the Enemy became acquainted therewith as they afterwards told me On the Lord's-day in the Afternoon the Besiegers discoursed with some of our Men who were upon the Leads endeavouring to draw as many of them as they could thither that the Breaches being left unguarded they might have an opportunity to take us by storm which I perceiving made use of it to animate our Men afresh and succeeded so well therein that the Enemy by our Cheerfulness began to suspect that we had some notice of Relief approaching This Suspicion caused them to continue discoursing with my Souldiers most part of the Night to get the Truth out of them promising them liberty to march away if they would deliver Mr. Balsum our Minister or my self to them The next Morning many of them came up to one of the Breaches to perswade us to surrender which Opportunity being willing to improve having ten Doors blown open by the first Mine our Walls that stood being cracked in several places and another Mine ready to spring that would probably level the most part of the Castle with the Ground not having Provision sufficient for one day left nor any hopes of Relief I propounded to them to yield my self their Prisoner if they would consent that those with me might march off To which they answering That tho my good Nature led me to make that Offer yet they could not accept of it I told them that unless I might have four things granted I would not deliver the Castle 1 st Quarter without distinction for the Lives of every one 2 dly Civil Usage for all my Party 3 dly Not to be carried to Oxford 4 thly A speedy Exchange They promised me I should have all these made good to the full and Col. Barns said that if I pleased to come out to them I should find more Friends than I expected whereupon requiring my Men to be upon their Guard and not to suffer any to come near them till my Return I went out to them and they brought me to the Lord Arundel and Sir Francis Doddington who were without the Garden-wall where my Lord Arundel assured me that what was agreed should be made good to me and was pleased further to add that tho he preferred my Conversion before the Enjoyment of his own Children yet if I thought fit to persist in the way I had begun he would do his utmost to endeavour that I might be exchanged for his two Sons who were then Prisoners with Sir William Waller To this I answered that if I were convinced that the Cause I had engaged in was not good I should soon recede from it but till then I could not but persist in the prosecution thereof Sir Francis Doddington told me he was glad to see me alive but sorry to find so much Resolution employed in so bad a Cause I let him know that my Apprehensions concerning the Cause were very different from his else I had not hazarded my self as I had done He also promised the performance of the Articles to the utmost of his Power and for my self that whilst I was in his Custody I should have no other Prison but his own Lodgings Thus all things being agreed upon I returned to the Castle and ordered my Souldiers to lay down their Arms which being done the Enemy directed them to draw together into a certain Room in the Castle where they set a Guard upon them but gave me the liberty of the Place upon my Parole offering me one or two of my own Company to associate with me whereupon I desired that my Cousin Gabriel Ludlow Mr. Balsum and a Servant might be permitted to come to me which was granted Their Civility to me was such especially that of the Lord Arundel that I discovered to him the Plate and other things that I had hid in the Castle but I cannot say that they performed their Articles with me in relation to my Men for the second day after their entrance they threatned to take away the Lives of two of them who having been formerly pressed by them and their Consciences not giving them leave to serve them chose rather to come to us and be besieged with us than to have liberty to range and oppress the Country with them The poor Men made their Condition known to me and I went to the chief Officers of the Enemy and charged them with it as a breach of that Article by which we were to have all our Lives secured to us in virtue of these words Quarter without distinction Capt. Leicester to whom I principally applied my self because he pretended to most Experience in things of this nature told me that I only conditioned for my Souldiers and that these who ran from them were not mine but theirs I replied that they were never theirs tho they had forced them to be with them having pressed them into their Service which they had no Power to do but tho it should be granted that they had been theirs yet they were now ours and the words of the Article were Quarter without distinction He answered that if I had
occasion commanded us to wheel about but our Gentlemen not yet well understanding the difference between wheeling about and shifting for themselves their Backs being now towards the Enemy whom they thought to be close in the Rear retired to the Army in a very dishonourable manner and the next Morning rallied at the Head-quarters where we received but cold Welcome from the General as we well deserved The Night following the Enemy left Worcester and retreated to Shrewsbery where the King was upon which the Earl of Essex advanced to Worcester where he continued with the Army for some time expecting an Answer to a Message sent by him to the King from the Parliament inviting him to return to London This Time the King improved to compleat and arm his Men which when he had effected he began his March the Earl of Essex attending him to observe his Motions and after a day or two on Sunday Morning the 23d of October 1642. our Scouts brought advice that the Enemy appeared and about nine a Clock some of their Troops were discovered upon Edge-hill in Warwickshire Upon this our Forces who had been order'd that Morning to their Quarters to refresh themselves having had but little Rest for eight and forty Hours were immediately countermanded The Enemy drew down the Hill and we into the Field near Keinton The best of our Field-pieces were planted upon our right Wing guarded by two Regiments of Foot and some Horse Our General having commanded to fire upon the Enemy it was done twice upon that part of the Army wherein as it was reported the King was The great Shot was exchanged on both sides for the space of an hour or thereabouts By this time the Foot began to engage and a Party of the Enemy being sent to line some Hedges on our right Wing thereby to beat us from our Ground were repulsed by our Dragoons without any Loss on our side The Enemy's Body of Foot wherein the King's Standard was came on within Musquet-shot of us upon which we observing no Horse to encounter withal charged them with some Loss from their Pikes tho very little from their Shot but not being able to break them we retreated to our former Station whither we were no sooner come but we perceived that those who were appointed to guard the Artillery were marched off and Sir Philip Stapylton our Captain wishing for a Regiment of Foot to secure the Cannon we promised to stand by him in defence of them causing one of our Servants to load and level one of them which he had scarce done when a Body of Horse appeared advancing towards us from that side where the Enemy was We fired at them with Case-shot but did no other Mischief save only wounding one Man through the Hand our Gun being overloaded and planted on high Ground which sell out very happily this Body of Horse being of our own Army and commanded by Sir William Balfour who with great Resolution had charged into the Enemy's Quarters where he had nailed several pieces of their Cannon and was then retreating to his own Party of which the Man who was shot in the Hand was giving us notice by holding it up but we did not discern it The Earl of Essex order'd two Regiments of Foot to attack that Body which we had charged before where the King's Standard was which they did but could not break them till Sir William Balfour at the head of a Party of Horse charging them in the Rear and we marching down to take them in Flank they brake and ran away towards the Hill Many of them were killed upon the place amongst whom was Sir Edward Varney the King's Standard-bearer who as I have heard from a Person of Honour engaged on that side not out of any good opinion of the Cause but from the Sense of a Duty which he thought lay upon him in respect of his Relation to the King Mr. Herbert of Glamorganshire Lieutenant Colonel to Sir Edward Stradling's Regiment was also killed with many others that fell in the Pursuit Many Colours were taken and I saw Lieutenant Colonel Middleton then a Resormade in our Army displaying the King's Standard which he had taken but a Party of Horse coming upon us we were obliged to retire with our Standard and having brought it to the Earl of Essex he delivered it to the Custody of one Mr. Chambers his Secretary from whom it was taken by one Captain Smith who with two more disguising themselves with Orange-colour'd Scarfs the Earl of Essex's Colour and pretending it unfit that a Penman should have the Honour to carry the Standard took it from him and rode with it to the King for which Action he was knighted Retreating towards our Army I fell in with a body of the King's Foot as I soon perceived but having passed by them undiscovered I met with Sir William Balfour's Troop some of whom who knew me not would have fired upon me supposing me to be an Enemy had they not been prevented and assured of the contrary by Mr. Francis Russell who with ten Men well mounted and armed which he maintained rode in the Life-Guard and in the heat of the pursuit had lost sight of them as I my self had also done I now perceived no other Engagement on either side only a few great Guns continued to fire upon us from the Enemy but towards the close of the Day we discovered a body of Horse marching from our Rear on the left of us under the Hedges which the Life Guard whom I had then found having discovered to be the Enemy and resolving to charge them sent to some of our Troops that stood within Musquet-shot of us to second them which tho they refused to do and we had no way to come at them but through a Gap in the Hedg we advanced towards them and falling upon their Rear killed divers of them and brought off some Arms. In which Attempt being dismounted I could not without great difficulty recover on Horse-back again being loaded with Cuirassiers Arms as the rest of the Guard also were This was the Right Wing of the King's Horse commanded by Prince Rupert who taking advantage of the Disorder that our own Horse had put our Foot into who had opened their Ranks to secure them in their Retreat pressed upon them with such Fury that he put them to flight And if the time which he spent in pursuing them too far and in plundering the Wagons had been employed in taking such Advantages as offered themselves in the place where the Fight was it might have proved more serviceable to the carrying on of the Enemy's Designs The Night after the Battle our Army quartered upon the same Ground that the Enemy sought on the day before No Man nor Horse got any Meat that Night and I had touched none since the Saturday before neither could I find my Servant who had my Cloak so that having nothing to keep me warm but a Sute of Iron
by storm with little loss on our side About this time a considerable Party in Kent rose and declared for the King which was dispersed by some Forces sent from London under the Command of Col. Brown whereby the Committee of Kent were encouraged and enabled to raise a good Body of Horse and Foot for the Service of the Parliament My Father apprehending that I was not likely to be relieved in three or four Months in case I were besieged and knowing that the Enemies were Masters of the Field in those Parts and that I was about twenty Miles from any of our Garisons procured an Order from the Parliament impowering me to slight the Castle of Warder and to draw off the Garison if I saw cause which Care of theirs quickned my Zeal to their Service and put me upon endeavouring as well as I could to prepare for the worst To that end being in want of Ammunition I went to Southampton where I bought what they could spare and returned to the Castle where being in great want of Money having always paid the Country People for whatsoever I had from them I made a seasonable Discovery of Money Plate and Jewels to the value of about twelve hundred Pounds walled up by the Enemy Part of this Sum I expended upon the Garison and gave an account thereof to the Parliament The Enemy was now beginning to draw about us yet would not actually besiege us before they had endeavoured to reduce us by Treachery To this end one Capt. White a Papist of Dorsetshire having found a Boy at Shaftsbury fit for the purpose gave him such Instructions as he thought fit He was not above twelve Years of Age and yet as I was afterwards informed had already attempted to poison his Grandfather This Boy he sent to the Castle to desire of me to be admitted to turn the Spit or perform any other servile Employment to which I consented his Youth freeing him as I thought from any Suspicion About three or four days after a Party of the Enemies Horse appeared before the Castle and making a great shout the Cattle belonging to the Garison consisting of about forty Cows and one Bull which they all followed ran away at the Noise Some of us endeavouring to turn them the Enemy fired so thick upon us that one of my Souldiers and my self were forced to betake our selves to a Tree for shelter where my Souldier levelling his Musquet through a hole of the Tree which was about a Foot in diameter a Ball from the Enemy grazing upon the upper part of the Hole and thereby forced downwards shot the young Man through the Hand and me into the Leg which obliged me to keep my bed for two days A great Wall-gun called a Harquebuz de Croq being fired from the top of the Castle burst in the middle At night as this Boy was sitting with the Guard by the fire some of them conceived a Jealousy of him and strictly examining him about the cause of his coming he affirmed it to be because the Master whom he served had used him cruelly for speaking some Words in favour of the Parliament With which Answer they not being satisfied threatned that unless he would confess the truth they would hang him immediately and to afright him tied a piece of Match about his Neck and began to pull him up on a Halbert Upon this he promised to confess all if they would spare his Life and thereupon acknowledged that Capt. White had hired him to number the Men and Arms in the Castle to poison the Arms the Well and the Beer to blow up the Ammunition to steal away one of my best Horses to carry him back to them for which Service he was to receive half a Crown confessing that he had accordingly poisoned two Cannon and the Harquebuz that was broken but pretended that his Conscience would not give him leave to poison the Water and the Beer The great Guns were made serviceable again by oiling and making a fire in them The Poison he used was of a red Colour and made up in the shape of a Candle with part of which he had rubbed three of our Guns After this Deliverance we got in some Cattle for our Provision but the Enemy drawing into the Villages about us soon prevented us from bringing in any more Yet we ventured one Morning knowing it to be Market-day to draw out between forty and fifty Pikes and Firelocks with which we went about a quarter of a Mile from the Castle upon the Road that leads to Shaftsbury According to our expectation the Market-people came with Carts and Horses loaded with Corn and other Provisions which we seized and sent to the Castle paying for it the Market-price at which they were not a little surprized By this means we furnished our selves with three Months more Provision than we had before which we had no sooner taken in when the Enemy drew round the Castle and from that time blocked us up more closely raising a Breastwork by casting up of Earth about a Tree which we had cut down on the side of a Hill from whence they commanded the Gate of the Castle the only way that we had to sally out upon occasion and shot several of our Men amongst the rest my Gunner as they fetched in Wood. The Person that commanded the Party which lay before us was one Capt. Christopher Bowyer of Dorsetshire who to get us out of the Castle proposed to grant us what terms we desired to which we replied that we designed to discharge our Duty by keeping it as long as we could Upon this he threatned us with great Numbers of Horse and Foot attended with several pieces of Cannon which he said were drawing towards us boasting of the Justice of his Cause and representing to us the Greatness of our Danger and the inevitable Ruin that must ensue upon our Obstinacy But Capt. Bean who at that time served as Cannoneer ours being shot as I mentioned before told him that we were not at all afrighted with his Menaces but upon confidence of the Justice of our Cause were resolved to defend the Place to the utmost and warning him to look to himself fired a Gun with which he wounded him in the Heel and it being unsafe for any to carry him off by day his Wound gangreened before night and he died about two days after In the room of Capt. Bowyer one Col. Barnes was sent by the King to command the Forces that lay before us he was Brother to an honest Gentleman who was Chaplain to my Father for whose sake and because he had the Reputation of being an old Souldier a thing much valued by the Parliament at that time my Father had procured him a considerable Employment in their Service in which he continued as long as their constant Pay lasted but that failing he ran away to the King Upon his coming he raised a Fort within Musquet-shot of us on the Hill that
the Inn several of them pressing me to discourse and particularly concerning the Justice of our Cause I excused my self by reason of my present Circumstances but they still persisting I thought my self obliged to maintain the necessity of our taking up Arms in defence of our Religion and Liberties but some of them being wholly biassed to their Interest as they went from me met a Relation of mine one Col. Richard Manning who tho a Papist commanded a Regiment of Horse in the King's Service and told him that they came from one of the boldest Rebels that they had ever seen The Colonel coming to visit me informed me of this Discourse advising me whatsoever I thought not to be so free with them lest they should do me some Mischief The next Morning before our Departure for Oxford Sir Francis Doddington brought me to Sir Ralph Hopton's Lodgings which being the Head-quarters we found there most of the Principal Officers of that Army where the General after he had saluted me demanded how I being a Gentleman could satisfy my self to bear Arms against my King I told him that as I conceived the Laws both of God and Man did justify me in what I had done Well said he I understand you are so fixed in your Principles that I am like to do little good upon you by my Perswasions but shall desire the Archbishop of Armagh to take the pains to speak with you when you come to Oxford and if he cannot work on you I know not who can This Bishop was very learned and of great Reputation for Piety yet I was assured by one who had his Information from Mr. Bernard of Batcomb that when the said Mr. Bernard earnestly pressed him to deal faithfully with the King in the Controversy which was between him and the Parliament concerning Episcopacy according to his own Judgment in that matter which he knew to be against it representing to him the great and important Service he would thereby do to the Church of God the Archbishop answered that if he should do as Mr. Bernard proposed he should ruin himself and Family having a Child and many Debts For this reason those Arguments which could not prevail with me when used by others were not likely to be of more Efficacy from him who in a business of such Concernment had been diverted from the discharge of his Duty by such low and sordid Considerations The next day I came to Oxford conducted by a Party of Horse commanded by one who was Captain Lieutenant to Sir Francis Doddington where reposing a while at a House near Christ-Church till the Pleasure of the King might be known concerning me there came to me two Persons very zealous to justify the King's Cause and to condemn that of the Parliament These Men were Irish Papists sent over by the Rebels in Ireland to treat with the King on their part about assisting him against the Parliament This I afterwards understood from one of them whose Name was Callaghan O Callaghan when together with the Brigade commanded by the Lord Musquerry he laid down his Arms to me in Ireland The King looking upon such Men as most fit to be confided in gives the Presidentship of Munster vacant by the Death of Sir William St. Leger to the Lord Musquerry an Irish Rebel which the Lord Inchequin Son-in-law to Sir William soliciting for and claiming a Right to it took so ill that the Lord Broghill as he since informed me found no great difficulty to prevail with him to declare for the Parliament who thereupon made him their President of Munster In this Capacity he performed many considerable Services against the Irish taking great store of Plunder from them and not sparing even his own Kindred but if he found them faulty hanging them up without distinction Having brought together an Army he marched into the County of Tipperary and hearing that many Priests and Gentry about Cashell had retired with their Goods into the Church he stormed it and being entred put three thousand of them to the Sword taking the Priests even from under the Altar Of such Force is Ambition when it seizes upon the Minds of Men. About this time Sir Edward Deering came from the King's Quarters at Oxford and surrendred himself at Westminster where being examined in the House of Commons he said that since the Cessation made with the Rebels in Ireland seeing so many Papists and Irish in the King's Army and his Councils wholly governed by them his Conscience would not permit him to remain longer with the King and therefore he was come to throw himself upon the Mercy of the Parliament and in conformity to their Declaration to compound for his Delinquency Accordingly he was admitted to Composition and an Order made to proceed in like manner towards such as should come in after him Whereupon the Earl of Westmorland and divers others came in to the Parliament and desired the Benefit of their Declaration for Composition Whilst I was attending the King's Pleasure at Oxford the Captain that conveyed me thither brought me word that he was ordered to deliver me to Mr. Thorpe the Keeper of the Castle and pretending much Affection to me told me that the said Keeper would take from me my upper Garment my Money and all that was loose about me advising me therefore to leave such things with him and promising to bring them to me in the Morning I not suspecting his Design delivered him my Cloke with my Money and some other things all which he carried away with him the next day neither could I have any Redress tho I wrote to Sir Francis Doddington complaining of this Treachery the Keeper of the Castle not laying the least Claim to any such thing Our sick and wounded Men after they had been kept for some time Prisoners in the Hall of Warder-Castle where a Popish Priest very solemnly with his Hands spread over them cursed them three times were carried from thence to Bristol In the Castle at Oxford I met with Mr. Balsum and other Friends who had been with me in Warder-Castle with many more who were detained there for their Affection to the Parliament amongst whom were Col. Shilborn of Buckinghamshire Col. Henly of Dorsetshire Capt. Haley of Glocestershire and Capt. Abercromy a Scots-man I had a Friend in the Town who furnished me with what I wanted those who had not any such means of Relief were supplied from London by a Collection of the Sum of three hundred Pounds made for them by some Citizens and conveyed down to them Neither was Oxford it self destitute of some who contributed to their Relief one Dr. Hobbs in particular who preached then at Carfax an honest Man of the Episcopal Party usually putting them in mind of it after his Sermon The Prisoners taken by the King's Party had been treated very cruelly especially at Oxford by Smith the Marshal there but the Members of Parliament that deserted their Trust at Westminster coming thither and
England and the Common Council of the City of London presented a Petition to the Parliament by the hands of Col. Titchborn to that effect but some of the Commonwealths-men desired that before they consented to that Method it might be resolved what Government to establish fearing a Design in the Army to set up some one of themselves in his room others endeavoured to perswade them that the execution of Justice ought to be their first Work in respect of their Duty to God and the People that the failure therein had been already the occasion of a second War which was justly to be charged on the Parliament for neglecting that Duty that those who were truly Commonwealths-men ought to be of that Opinion as the most probable means to attain their Desires in the establishment of an equal and just Government and that the Officers of the Army who were chiefly to be suspected could not be guilty of so much Impudence and Folly to erect an Arbitrary Power in any one of themselves after they had in so publick a manner declared their Detestation of it in another In order to the accomplishment of the important Work which the House of Commons had now before them they voted That by the Fundamental Laws of the Land it is Treason for the King of England for the time being to levy War against the Parliament and Kingdom To which the Lords not concurring they passed it the next day without their Consent and the day after declared That the People are under God the Original of all just Power That the House of Commons being chosen by and representing the People are the Supreme Power in the Nation That whatsoever is enacted or declared for Law by the Commons in Parliament hath the Force of a Law and the People are concluded thereby tho the Consent of King or Peers be not had thereto This Obstruction being removed several Petitions were brought to the Parliament for so the House of Commons now stiled themselves from the City of London Borough of Southwark and most of the Counties in England requesting that the King might be brought to Justice in order to which they passed an Act authorizing the Persons therein named or any thirty of them to proceed to the Arraignment Condemnation or Acquittal of the King with full Power in case of Condemnation to proceed to Sentence and to cause the said Sentence to be put in Execution This High Court of Justice met on the 8 th of January 1648 in the Painted Chamber to the number of about fourscore consisting chiefly of Members of Parliament Officers of the Army and Gentlemen of the Country where they chose Serjeant Aske Serjeant Steel and Dr. Dorrislaus to be their Counsel Mr. John Coke of Grays-Inn to be their Solicitor and Mr. Andrew Broughton their Secretary and sent out a Precept under their Hands and Seals for proclaiming the Court to be held in Westminster-Hall on the tenth of the said Month which was performed accordingly by Serjeant Dendy attended by a Party of Horse in Cheapside before the old Exchange and in Westminster-Hall On the the tenth they chose Serjeant Bradshaw to be their President with Mr. Lisle and Mr. Say to be his Assistants and a Charge of High Treason being drawn up against the King the Court appointed a convenient Place to be prepared at the upper end of Westminster-Hall for his Publick Trial directing it to be covered with Scarlet Cloth and ordered twenty Halberdiers to attend the President and thirty the King All things being thus prepared for the Trial the King was conducted from Windsor to St. James's from whence on the 20 th of January he was brought to the Bar of the High Court of Justice where the President acquainted the King with the Causes of his being brought to that Place For that He contrary to the Trust reposed in him by the People to see the Laws put in execution for their Good had made use of his Power to subvert those Laws and to set up his Will and Pleasure as a Law over them that in order to effect that Design he had endeavoured the Suppression of Parliaments the best Defence of the Peoples Liberties That he had levied War against the Parliament and People of England wherein great numbers of the good People had been slain of which Blood the Parliament presuming him guilty had appointed this High Court of Justice for the Trial of him for the same Then turning to Mr. Broughton Clerk of the Court he commanded him to read the Charge against the King who as the Clerk was reading the Charge interrupted him saying I am not intrusted by the People they are mine by Inheritance demanding by what Authority they brought him thither The President answered that they derived their Authority from an Act made by the Commons of England assembled in Parliament The King said the Commons could not give an Oath that they were no Court and therefore could make no Act for the Trial of any Man much less of him their Soveraign It was replied that the Commons assembled in Parliament could acknowledg no other Soveraign but God for that upon his and the Peoples Appeal to the Sword for the Decision of their respective Pretensions Judgment had been given for the People who conceiving it to be their Duty not to bear the Sword in vain had appointed the Court to make Inquisition for the Blood that had been shed in that Dispute Whereupon the President being moved by Mr. Solicitor Coke in the Name and on the Behalf of the good People of England commanded the Clerk of the Court to proceed in the reading of the Charge against him which being done the King was required to give his Anser to it and to plead guilty or not guilty The King demurred to the Jurisdiction of the Court affirming that no Man nor Body of Men had Power to call him to an account being not intrusted by Man and therefore accountable only to God for his Actions entring upon a large Discourse of his being in Treaty with the Parliament's Commissioners at the Isle of Wight and his being taken from thence he knew not how when he thought he was come to a Conclusion with them This Discourse seeming not to the purpose the President told him that as to his Plea of not being accountable to Man seeing God by his Providence had over-ruled it the Court had resolved to do so also and that if he would give no other Answer that which he had given should be registred and they would proceed as if he had confessed the Charge In order to which the President commanded his Answer to be entred directing Serjeant Dendy who attended the Court to withdraw the Prisoner which as he was doing many Persons cried out in the Hall Justice Justice The King being withdrawn the Court adjourned into the Painted Chamber to consider what farther was fit to be done and being desirous to prevent all Objections tending to accuse them