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A83946 Englands alarm from the north, vvherein the affaires of Scotland are represented, with the ominous aspect they have to England, to awaken all interests to consider of the nearest conjunction among themselves against the common enemie, who appears in a new disguize, yet as destructive as ever to our lawes, liberties, and priviledges. 1648 (1648) Wing E2938; Thomason E434_24; ESTC R205279 15,178 23

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bring him by the force of their Papers against the Sence of both Houses of Parliament the Commissioners must go visit the King in the Isle of Wight and there protest against the Parliaments Propositions though only proposing the very substance of what we fought for and for what private conferences they had with his Majestie though we know not the words we may easily understand the sence by their carriages since and what is now doing in Scotland How strangely by these transactions we are divided and what hopes and expectations are in our common enemies we may feele before we are aware And that some ingagement hath been made between some of the Grandees of Scotland and the King is more then probable if there were no more presumption of it then that secret and clandestine proceeding of the Comissioners in the Isle of Wight But when we do consider of the modell of the Parliament of Scotland and how it is framed and patcht with Malignants and how they cry up the Kings Interest against the honest party in Scotland and England we may well suspect that we shall want nothing of the same designe but the name and the place from whence it is visibly to be acted And these things are not bug-beares though false Alarms are sometimes usefull some of their own godly Ministers the last Fast did publiquely declare the great plottings and contrivings in the Parliament to ingage against the honest party and did even so point out the Agents who were no mean ones that the same night a challenge was sent from the Treasurer Lord Craford Lindsey to the Marquesse of Argyle supposing the Marquesse had prest them to speak what they did the Lord Lindsey being one pointed out in the designe And that you may yet be certaine of the strenuous indeavours of these men to effect this work you have it declared by the generall Assembly in their late Declaration And besides all this that we may have demonstration upon demonstration the continuall concourse of Cavaliers from all parts especially of English with the cold entertainment of our Commissioners and the great neglect and contempt of Mr. Marshall for but endeavouring a peace between the Army and the City speak loud enough that any one who is not lost in the same designe cannot but be sensible of And if it be not yet time for us to awake and consider what we are doing we may feele before we fear our danger the great incouragement of this designe is our divisions upon which stock they graffe all their hopes O Populi ad servitutem non ad libertatem nati Is there not a spark of true gallantry and of English Spirits yet within you Have the sound of Drums and Trumpets made you quite deafe and slavery and faction quite put out your eyes Is there any Interest like to the Publique Is it not now high time to unite when others mean to unite against you Whom do you gratifie but your common enemy and shall your divisions give life againe to the dying hopes of those sonnes of violence Had it not been better you had peaceably laid down your necks at first then to have given ground for such cruell revenge I would these were but passionate expressions and that we had not too much ground to inculcate them in every English heart But we must take off a disguise or else we shall but lose our labour and speak to ingaged men There are many glorious and faire pretences which are urged and made the ground of a new quarrell though the truth is they are but made the veile and varnish of the old cause the setting up the Covenant and Presbytery contrary to Sectaries and Schismatickes But what ever is pretended nothing lesse is intended and if it be intended first I am sure it will be executed last after they have served their own ends upon England they may perchance serve that But that honest and well meaning men may see how they are cheated and that there can be no such quarrell with England either for the Covenant or for Presbyteriall Government let it be considered first that the Parliament have according to the advice of the Assembly stablished it and have declared their intentions concerning it that they have and will set it up as the Government of the Kingdome and have given it the great preeminence of and above all others by its publick stamp of Authority and maintenance so that there can be no pretence for that except they will quarrell about an unlimited power which the Parliament cannot with safety give them which can be offensive to none but those who hold that Principle Non dominari instar servitatis est who think they are slaves except they be rulers But suppose Presbytery should not be set up yet doth it deserve the hazard of all the blood and liberties of English men to purchase its establishment which is so new to us and of which we have such little experience yea whose name is not in the Covenant but as it referres to Scotland to whose modell we are not to be tide but as we judge it to be according to the word of God Must Scotland have needs Bellum Presbyteriale with us as the Bishops had Bellum Episcopale with them can nothing but warre make up our difference Let men but remember the event of the Bishops warre and then they will have little heart to ingage Nations for an unexperienced Church government Hath Presbytery been indeared to us for so many hundred years and hath it left such sure and happy pledges of its divine descent in the purest distillations of holinesse A peace that its impossible for us to keep God and our liberties together without it if so we should be glad to venture the choisest of our outward accomodations to obtain it and let me adde this That when Presbytery shall give us good testimony of her benignesse to England as Episcopacy hath of her malignity we shall be able to plead more for her But it s too common for men of no religion to beginne their most mischievous practises with that name I cannot understand how these men can be so true to that government which so often calls them to the stoole of repentance But to be serious that there is no such matter in hand as either Covenant or Presbyteriall Government but purely the Kings Interest Let us but consider first that the greatest Malignants which have been in Scotland are now taken into the very bosome of their Parliament as the Marquesse Huntly the Lord Traquaire with many others who have been the greatest Incendiaries of that Kingdome Secondly Who are the great Agents in this businesse and do carry the sway in this designe but men who have ever been opposite unto the Covenant as Mr. George Gellespy spake openly in the Pulpit at Edinburgh that there are now got up into the greatest places to sit at the helme men of strange faces who were never known to appeare for