in ipsum imperium est Iovis God is Soveraign over him It was thought his Excellency would intercede with his Majesty for a general pardon to all parties and persons but his Excellencie perceiving his Majesties extraordinary inclination to mercies thought fit rather to encourage him to do Justice 1. That innocent blood may not be upon our heads or upon our posterities such blood as may ovârthrow a world It s a fearful thing to let a Nation fall into the hand of the living by a neglect to satisfie that justice which divine mercy will not defraud and therefore humane mercy dares not Secondly that posterity may look upon their late villanies with horror when they see them punished with severity {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Plato apud A. Gel. l. 6. c. 14. Famosos publica furca figendos pluribus placuit ut conspectu deturreantur alii ab iisdem facinoribus F. de paenis L. 28 P. fumosos Pet. Erod decret l. 2. Til 14. Zeppa de leg. l. 1. c. 11. Plin. l. 29. c. 4. 3. That compleat justice be done to all sufferers of the Clergy and Layty righteousness establisheth a Nation and the guilty must be as contented for the good of the Nation to suffer Justice as the innocent may be to enjoy right But his Majesty and his Excellency hath taught the Nation to sing of mercy and judgement Ps. 101. 1. by their {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Arist. Rhet. Iudex ãâã medicus syropos habet aloen R. maim transl p. 63. When his Majesty had leisure for any thoughts of setling his Officers of state he began in his own family for as a Bishop so a King must rule well in his own family for how saith St. Paul can he rule the Church that cannot rule his house and how saith Aristotle Can he govern Kingdomes that governs not his own Court Indeed Kingship saith Selden in his titles of honour Weems exercitations 3. Arist. Polit. 7. Rev. Bp. Will. in his jura Majestatis was first exercised in the narrow compâss of an household and those increasing to Cities Kings a while contentedly possessed those Cities and Cities swelling into Nations we had our Kings of Nations Whence his Excellency had the honour himself of being Master of the Horse and to commend the incomparable Sir Will. Morris eminent in his Countrey for piety prudence publikemindedness and valour for rejected truths eminent in his worthy book called Caena quasi {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} for depth of judgement solid and accute reason sharp quick yet clear apprehension for comprehensive reading for a copious fancy for a choice grave brief perspicuous pleasant vigorous and moderately vehement expression with a gratious frame of spirit running through each part and the whole of it for the first Secretary of state His Majesty well weighing That in the multitude of Counsellors there is safety called his Excellency with his own high-borne Brothers in suffering as well as nature the Honourable Marquesses of Hartford of Ormond the Lord Chancellor Hide â to the Council Table where there is no person that need go beyond him who first hath been present at all the subtile debates wherby the {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} The Rulers of the darkness of this age promoted their mysteries of iniquity 2. Who hath managed the troublesome affairs of Scotland so succesfully for so many years 3. Who had manifested so much prudence in his late expedition that the King solemnly desired his sage advice for the settlement of his Kingdome But his Excellency conscious enough of the worth and ability of the most honourable Council is not so intent upon the affairs of state as upon those of the field his own peculiar charge where his chief care is to model the Army to a frame subservient to his Majesties and the whole Nations interest and well knowing that the whole Army is at the beck of superiour Officers as much as the lower Oâbs at the command of the first mover he disposed of most commands to persons of honour worth and sound interest His Majesty himself with his two Royal Brothers honouring their respective Regiments with their command And now it may be expected that from this confluence of the highest worth the most eminent virtues the most renouned performances the result must be the highest honour {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Arist. de mor. l. 4. â 7. Charron wisd. c. 7. Haell government l. 1. c. 5. and therfore his Majesty was pleased to call his Excellency to the House of Peers as Duke of Aumarle * Earle of Torrington Lord Mânk of Potheridge Beauchamp c. Knight of the most Honourable order of the Garter c. honours that others indeed have enjoyed but his Excellency made it his chief business to deserve and I hope as he hath attained this honour with great actions he will maintain it with greater until he is gathered to his Fathers full of honor and of daies until having seen 1. That Sacred Majesty which he was an instrument to restore established above malice envy ambition rebellion faction and âreason by a sage Council well constituted Parliaments a well disciplined Army and Navy well chosen Officers and Ministers of State Secondly the sâbject secured against all encroachments by a Prince whoâe prerogative it is thât he cannot do wrong in their persons estates lives or liberties through wholesome just and good lawes the Chuâch established 1. Against all Heâesy in the faith onâe deliveâed to the Saints against all schisme by the Primitive order discipline and government 3. Against all prophaness 1. By a worship in spirit and in truth 2. decent 3. in order 4. to edification 2. by the power of godliness his daies be swallowed up of eternity and his honour be exchanged for An eternal weight of Glory FINIS Books Printed and Sould by Henry Marsh at the Princes Arms in Chancery Lane neer Fleetstreet Folio THe Soveraigns prerogative and the Subjects Priveledge comprised in several Speeches Cases and Arâuments of LAW discussed between the Kings sacred Majesty and the most eminent persons of both Houses of Parliamentâ together with the grand Mysteriâs of State then in agitation faithfully collected by Thomas Fuller B. D. A Compleat History of the Warrs of the Greeks written by the Learned Polibius and translated by Edward Grimstone Esquire Seiâgeant at Armes to his late Majesty Quarto The Faithful Lapidary or the natuâe and qualities of all preâious stones very useful for Merchants and others to avoid deceit by Thomas Nicols Richard Hannums exployts The Rump's Looking glass or a collection of such peices of Wit or Drollery as were prepared by several Witts to purge the Rump The Divâls Cabinet broâ open or a new discovery of High way Thâeves being a serious and seasonable advice of a Gentleman lately converted to Gentlemen c. others to avoid their villanies
his Excellency had the best Souldiery virtues valour and wisdome without any of their vices ambition c. He slights all temptations of Command Power and Authority which were offered him and resolves rather to be a Loyal Subject then an usuâping Soveraign he had rather have obsequii gloriam as Tacitus calls it the Glory of Obedience then the Majesty of command The Parliament having setled the City in its just power by Mayor Aldermen and an honourable Common-Council and an incomparable Militia under as worthy Commanders as ever lead English men to the field and vacated the Phanatique power in the Countrey and setled the Militia of the three Countries in honourable and great hands of men of worth and interest and pâovided for the future Parliament they dissolve upon the 16. of March leaving the care of the Nation to an incomparable Council of State and the care of the Army to his Excellency as Commander in chief and Major General of the City and the care of the Navy to his Excellency and the Honourable Lord Mountagne His Excellency in this interval condescends to the divertisements of several entertainments by most Companies in London The Honourable society of the Mercers beginning but in the middest of pastimes and pleasures his great and solid mind as invincible by these soft as formerly by his harder services âorgets not the greater affairs of State And he keeps good correspondence with his Army bâ frequent confeâences at last he brought them to declare their acquiescence in the resolves of the approaching Parliament to the confusion of such whose hope lay wholly in their reluctancy against lawful power When Lamberts escape had sâirred up the drooping spirits of the factioâs to designes threatning and formidable his Excellency first discreetly ordereth the Forces in the Countrey so as to prevent their uniting in any considerable posture and then Honourably offers his own person for the service of his King and Countrey In the mean time taking care to settle the Militia of London and Westminster so as they might be able to guard themselves if he shoâld be called abroad to engage against the Enemy He takes care likewise of Intelligence well knowing of what concernment it is for a Nation to have an impartial relation of the actions of the supreme power The Parliament being sare whereof he was a Member both for Devonshire and Cambridge he carrieth himself there with that modesty that might become the meanest Member hardly so confident as to own the honour that honorable House conferred upon him by their solemne thanks to him And would hardly accept the 20000. l. bestowed upon him until the Kingdomes account and stated his Majesties occasion supplyed his publike debts payed so little did this publike minded Worthy care for his own things and so much for the things of others When his Majesties gracious Declaration and Letters came over to give occasion to modest Loyalty to discover himself his Excellency having received the Declaration with a Letter to himself by the leave of the House which he humbly asked he sends his Brother the Honourable Sir Tho. Clergies to attend his Majesty with his humble answer wherein was incloâed a loyal address from the Army to let the world see how well a Generals command became him who had modelled his Army to that temper that there seemed to be but one soul controuling that whole great body that expressed its allegiance to his Majesty unanimously as one man When the Honourable Parliament each Member whereof deserves an everlasting monument had upon that blessed 1. of May voted the Governmenâ by Kings Lords and Commons a constitution to be admired and envied but not imitated and were preparing Commissioners to attend his Majesty to deââre him to come to his Parliament and People with all speed possible His Excellency takes care for Pallaces to entertain him his own incomparable Lady condescending to the drugery of a common maid for the service of her Soveraign and then gives order for so many Regiments of Horse to attend his Majesty taking great care and giving many discreeâ orders for his Majesties security providing with vâlour against open foes and prudence against base friends knowing his Majesty had good reason to pray with the Italian God deliver me from my friends {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Hom. Il. 313. Who have taken Theogenis wicked Counsel to his Cyrnus {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Vid. dom vit. Agric. Tacit. Annal. l. 1. His Excellency according to his Majesties order waites upon his Majesty at Dover being unwilling to Land before he came with so much humility as if he had not knowne any worth and merit in himselfe and was received by his majesty as if he had knowne nothing in him but worth and desert how Honorably doe the best of subjects and the best of Kings greet each other how modestly doth the Subject kneel how humbly doth the Soveraign kiss and embrace its one property of love to condescend with a {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Eurip. Hal. So Parents out of love to their Children lisp and play and fit their speech and dalliances âo the age and infirmities of their children In that renouned progress of his Majesty to London his Excellency had the honour to ride nexâ before his Majesty with the Illustrious Duke of Buckingham all the way to London and with the Honourable Mayor through London where the whole Nation saw him more Honourable in that he restored a soveraigne then if he had been one more glorious in his Loyall Subjection then in an usurped majesty his bare head was more honourable then others Crowns When some careful of the Subjects liberty would have bounded his Majesties prerogative within the compass of the Lawes it being a power not to be intrusted to frail flesh and blood to be above Law and what was more have capitulated with his for his own right and brought him to him Throne upon termes his Excellency withstood the motion scorning to fetch home a âettered Majesty and to restore a captive Soveraignty if he brought in a King he would also bring in prerogative and a plenam potestatem 2. Ed. 4. 17.21 H. 7 2. H. 7.7 as it was in principio rerum where Gentium nationumque imperium penes reges erat Iust. l. 1. See R. B. Ios. in Mishput Aammelech and indeed preâogative cannot be inârusted to a mortal more capable of it than our Soveraign who thinks it his highest power not to be abâe to do an injury and his highest prerogative to take nothing from his Subjects but a libeâty to offend Principi summum rerum arbitrium dijdederunt subdiâis obsequiâ gloria relicta est and may it suffice us when we admit his Majesty to a Soveraignty over us that we know Regem
to which is added a notable discovery of Hectoring Trappanning acted in and ââout this City of London M. H. Esq. Large Octa. Royal History compleated in the life of his sacred Majesty Charles the II. and his two illustrious Brother Iames Dâke of Yoâk and Henry Duke of Glocestâr with their restauration happily concluded by the Lord Gen. Monck Now D. of Aumarle being a compleat History of all the Remarkable passages since 1630. to this present year 1660. Mounsiâur de Bâlzac's Letters translated by Sir Ric. Baker Knight and others That useful book for Gântlemeâ and Travellers intitled England described being an exact description of the several Counties and Shires in England by Ed. Leigh Esq. M. A. of both Vniversities A Treple reconciler sâating the controversies first whether Ministers have an exclusive power of communicants from the Sacâament 2. If any person unordained may lawfully preach 3. If the Lords Prayer ought not to be used by al Christians to which is added a Sermon preached at his late Majesties Inauguration by Thâ. Fuller B. D. Modern Policy compleated or the actions and councils Civil and Military of his Excellency the Lord General Monck under all revolutions since 164â to 1660. with the Principles moral and Political upon which they were grounded illustrated out of tâe best Masters of Policy ancient and modern Montelion or the Prophetical Almanack being an exact account of all the Revolutions that are to happen in the world till this time twelve month by Montelion Knight of the Oracle a well wisher to the Mathematicks That excellent piece Scutum Râgale the Royal âuckler or Vox legis a Lecture to Traytors who most wickedly murthâred Charlesâhe âirst and contrary to all Law and Religion banished Charles the II. third Monarch of Great Brittain by Giles Dunâomb of the Inner Temple Gent. The compleat Attorney fift and last edition The Baptised Turk shewing his happy conversion from the delusion of that great impostor Mahomet unto the Christian Religion by Mr. Gunning at Exeter House Chappel the fifth of Nove. published by Tho Warmstrey D. D. in Octavo Iohn Quarles his last Poems The Crafty Whâre or the mystery and Iniquity of âaudy houses laid open with dehortations from lust drawn from the sad and lamentable consequences it produceth published for the good of young men by R. H. Esq. Arist. Pol. 6. 2. Aquin. eâh 1.2 suârez et Burid ibid Rev. D. Priâp dead. cosmogr (b) Mentes âapientiores sunâ qâi escendo Plat. {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} vid Revâd Reyn Passions ex Arist. et âliiâ c. (c) Bacon de Augment. sciâât descârtes medit. â Dâgby immortality soul 7. (d) De Idea in Dââ vid. Gâotâ Christ relig. 1. Annââ. ex Anââg c. He hath made all things in nââber and mââsuâe Syr. {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} âyneâ beautifull in his âime Ecâ 3.11 (f) vid Dâckens Delph Phâen dâ Panâ {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Sâalig exerciâ â c. 7. 8 Im. Terâull de Palleo 2 Plaâ dâ 21. (g) Norunt Gâramantes et Indj c. I have heard Turks Jews speak honorably of you (h) Arist eth 6. 7 {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Meâ â 2. Nulla quâ natura impeditâ sunâ confiliâ expediânâuâ Liv. see Reyn on Hos. 14. v. 9. Ser. 7. * Me liâ tuliâsiâus ihij tâe Duke of Rhoan Interest of Staâes and Kingdomes (i) Diznââââaââc virum musae vetat morj Horat. k {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Or a Pâurtraict âre of his saârâd Maââsty CHARLES the seâond with his two illustrious Brothers the Duke of Yorke and Gloucâster Sold by H M at the Pâinces Armes in the lowâr end oâ Chancery lane (l) Amorem asseruit Platâ {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Cael. Rhodâg 16. 15. â Diou Hal. a see Sueâ in Tit. Vesp. Leighes Caeâars Mallel M. S S. Bâb Bodl. The occasion Birth and Education Employment A Souldier war Iâish War Command Discipline Familiarity * See Gratâum in mare lib. Seld. mare Clouâ Sââinâ Mar. Com. Greg. Thol jur reg. Franc. prop. L. L. quae propria ulpian l. o. L. L. quae comuniae vid servium in 12 AEn. virg. Eustâch in il x. n. 22â Sect. His Excellencies behaviour upon Cromwel's death a Magna Latrocinia Sect. Sect. Sect. His acquiescing in Richards free Parliament Sect. His carriage towards the long Parliament when recalled T. Fregis âidem A. quà m nequâ dedi neque do Infidâli cui periam Accuis Sect. His design upon Sir G. Booth's rising Sect. His resolution against the Armies Arbitrary power Sect. He imprisons Cobbet the Armies Messenger Sect. He models his Army Sect. He declares Sect. The eâficacy of his Declaration Messengers sent to him Sectâ He calls an Honorable convention of Nobility and Gentry aâEdenborough Sect. His propositions to them with there Answer and his Reply Sect. His prudent management of a Treaty Sect. His Letters to the City Sect. Sect. Sectâ Sect. Overtures towards a second treatyâ with the grounds of it Sect. Sect. He moveth to England with his whole Army Sect. His prudent management His conference with âe Lord Fairfax in his way to York-shire Setct Sect. He is caressed by the whole Countrey but not understood Sect. He conceales his Sect. How he controls his Souldiers Sect. A Letter to Mr. Roll in his name Sect. His honorable Ladies arrivall at London He lodgeth at White-Hall Sect. He gives account of his expedition to the House Sect. His depoâtment and speech Sect. The Parliament imploy him to the City Sect. Thây afterwaâds degrade him His Officers Remonstrance thereupon Sect. He adheres to the City for a Free Parliament He heardt the controversie between the Secluded and the other Members He admits Secluâed Members to the House Sect. His speech to them at White-Hal Sect. He is Voted General Sect. He rejects all temptations to bâsenesâ Sect. Sect. His Excellency entertained in London Sect. His prudence in the interval of power Sect. Sect. Sect. Sect. His modesty Sect. He sends his brother in Law to his Majesty Sect. His care to make all things ready against his Majesties coming Sect. Sect. He meets his Majesty His tenderness of his Majâsties prerogative Sect. His care for justice Sect. Sect. Sect. Sect. * See Heylin Surv. France Seele blane French Nob. See 39. Art Rogers Dr. Overal Dr. Ellis Bp. Andr. ibid.