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A31771 Basiliká the works of King Charles the martyr : with a collection of declarations, treaties, and other papers concerning the differences betwixt His said Majesty and his two houses of Parliament : with the history of his life : as also of his tryal and martyrdome. Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649.; Fulman, William, 1632-1688.; Perrinchief, Richard, 1623?-1673.; Gauden, John, 1605-1662.; England and Wales. Sovereign (1625-1649 : Charles I) 1687 (1687) Wing C2076; ESTC R6734 1,129,244 750

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Esq Edmond Wilde Esquire James Chaloner Esquire Josias Barners Esquire Dennis Bond Esq Humphry Edwards Esquire Gregory Clement Esquire John Fry Esquire Thomas Wogan Esq Sir Gregory Norton Serjeant John Bradshaw Colonel Edmund Harvey John Dove Esq Colonel John Venne John Foulk Alderman Thomas Scot Esquire Thomas Andrews Alderman William Cawley Esquire Abraham Burrell Esquire Colonel Anthony Stapely Roger Gratwicke Esquire John Downes Esquire Colonel Thomas Horton Colonel Thomas Hammond Colonel George Fenwick Serjeant Robert Nichols Robert Reynolds Esquire John Liste Esquire Nicholas Love Esquire Vincent Potter Sir Gilbert Pickering John Weaver Esquire John Lenthal Esquire Sir Edward Baynton John Corbet Esquire Thomas Blunt Esquire Thomas Boone Esquire Augustine Garland Esquire Augustine Skinner Esquire John Dixwel Esquire Colonel George Fleetwood Simon Maine Esquire Colonel James Temple Colonel Peter Temple Daniel Blagrave Esquire Sir Peter Temple Colonel Thomas Waite John Brown Esquire John Lowry Esquire shall be and are hereby appointed Commissioners and Judges for the hearing Trying and Judging of the said Charles Stuart And the said Commissioners or any twenty or more of them shall be and are hereby Authorized and constituted an High Court of Justice to meet at such convenient times and places as by the said Commissioners or the major part or twenty or more of them under their hands and seals shall be appointed and notified by publick Proclamation in the great Hall or Palace-yard of Westminster and to adjourn from time to time and from place to place as the said High Court or the major part thereof meeting shall hold fit and to take order for the charging of him the said Charles Stuart with the Crimes above mentioned and for the receiving His Personal Answer thereunto and for examination of Witnesses upon Oath if need be concerning the same and thereupon or in default of such Answer to proceed to final Sentence according to Justice and the merit of the Cause to be executed speedily and impartially And the said Court is hereby Authorized and required to chuse and appoint all such Officers Attendanrs and other circumstances as they or the major part of them shall in any sort judge necessary or useful for the orderly and good managing of the premisses and Thomas Lord Fairfax the General with all Officers of Justice and other well-affected persons are hereby Authorized and required to be aiding and assisting unto the said Commissioners in the due execution of the Trust hereby committed unto them Provided that this Ordinance and the Authority hereby granted do continue for the space of one Month from the Date of the making hereof and no longer After the reading of this the several Names of the Commissioners were called over every one who was present rising up and answering to his call The King having again placed Himself in the Chair with His face towards the Commissioners Silence was again ordered and Bradshaw with Impudence befitting his person and his place stood up and said CHARLES STUART King of England The Commons of England assembled in Parliament being deeply sensible of the Calamities that have been brought upon this Nation which is fixed upon you as the principal Author of it have resolved to make inquisition for Blood and according to that Debt and Duty they owe to Justice to God the Kingdom and themselves and according to the Fundamental Power that rests in themselves they have resolved to bring you to Trial and Judgment and for that purpose have constituted this High Court of Justice before which you are brought Then their Solicitor John Cook standing within a Bar on the right hand began My Lord in behalf of the Commons of England and of all the People thereof I do accuse CHARLES STUART here present of high Treason and high Misdemeanures and I do in the name of the Commons of England desire the Charge may be read unto him As he was speaking the King held up his Staffe and laying it on his shoulders two or three times bid him Hold a little But Bradshaw ordered him to go on and the Charge being delivered to their Clerk Bradshaw told the King Sir the Court Commands the Charge to be read If you have any thing to say afterwards you may be heard Then the Clerk being ordered to read began The Charge of the Commons of England against CHARLES STUART King of England of High Treason and other High Crimes exhibited to the High Court of Justice THat the said CHARLES STUART being admitted King of England and therein trusted with a limited Power to govern by and according to the Laws of the Land and not otherwise and by his Trust Oath and Office being obliged to use the Power committed to him for the good and benefit of the People and for the preservation of their Rights and Liberties yet nevertheless out of a wicked Design to erect and uphold in himself an unlimited and Tyrannical Power to Rule according to his Will and to overthrow the Rights and Liberties of the People yea to take away and make void the Foundations thereof and of all redress and remedy of Mis-government which by the Fundamental Constitutions of this Kingdom were reserved on the Peoples behalf in the Right Power of frequent and successive Parliaments or National Meetings in Council he the said Charles Stuart for accomplishment of such his Designs and for the protecting himself and his Adherents in his and their wicked practices to the same Ends hath traiterously and maliciously levied War against the present Parliament and the People therein Represented Particularly upon or about the thirtieth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and two at Beverly in the County of York and upon or about the thirtieth day of July in the year aforesaid in the County of the City of York and upon or about the twenty fourth day of August in the same year at the County of the Town of Nottingham when and where he set up his Standard of War and upon or about the twenty third day of October in the same year at Edge-Hill and Kineton field in the County of Warwick and upon or about the thirtieth day of November in the same year at Brainford in the County of Middlesex and upon or about the thirtieth day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and three at Cavesham Bridge near Reading in the County of Berks and upon or about the thirtieth day of October in the year last mentioned at or near the City of Gloucester and upon or about the thirtieth day of November in the year last mentioned at Newbury in the County of Berks and upon or about the one and thirtieth day of July in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and four at Croperdy Bridge in the County of Oxon and upon or about the thirtieth day of September in the year last mentioned at Bodmin and other places near adjacent in the County of Cornwall and
command strict Watches to be kept in all suspected places Beacons to be new set up the Sea-marks to be watched and the Navy to be new rigged and fitted for the Sea New Plots were also discovered and strange and unheard-of Counsels to murder the most Eminent Patriots are brought to light A Taylor in a ditch hears some desperate Cavaliers contriving the Death of Mr. Pym. A Plaister also taken from a Plague-sore was sent into the House to the same person that the Infection first seising on a Member of the quickest senses might thence more impetuously diffuse it self upon all the most Grave Senators Such like plots as these and whatsoever could be devised were published to make the Vulgar think those demands of the Faction seem modest their dangers being so great which were very unjust And lest the King should at His coming into the North make use of that Magazine at Hull which at His own Charges He had provided for the Scotch Expedition for His own defence the Faction to secure that and the Town for their future purposes send down Sir John Hotham without any Order or Commission from either House of Parliament to seise on them This man of a fury and impudence equal to their commands when the King petitioned by the Gentlemen of Yorkshire to employ those Arms and that Ammunition for the Safety and Peace of that County where some of the Factious Members of Parliament had begun to form the like Seditions with those of London An. 1642 would have entred Hull April 23. insolently shut the Gates upon Him and would not permit Him though with but twenty Attendants for He offered to leave the Guard of Noblemen and Gentlemen which followed Him without The King thereupon proclaims him Traitor and by Letters complains of the Indignity and requires Satisfaction But the Faction rendred the Act so glorious that the House of Commons by their Votes approved what he had done without their Command and clamoured that the King had done them an injury in proclaiming so innocent a Member Traitor Ordered the Earl of Warwick to whom they had committed the Command of the Navy to land some men out of the Ships at Hull and to transport the Magazine there from thence to London An Order of Assistance was also given to several of their Confidents as a Committee of both Houses to reside at Hull and the Counties of York and Lincoln were commanded to execute their commands Besides they sent a Commission to Hotham to prosecute the Insolencies he had begun and kindle that War which took fire on the whole Nation and in a short space consumed him and his Son who were executed by the Instructors of his Villany For he fell under the same Fate which attends all the Instruments of Great Crimes to be Odious and suspected by those that made use of them Therefore they gave such a power to the Lord Fairfax in Yorkshire as did conclude the diminution and submission of Hotham to his Commands This caused him to reflect with grief and madness upon his first ministery to the Faction which appeared every day more monstrous to his Conscience being now spoiled of that Grandeur that he hoped would have been its reward and awakened by those Desolations in the whole Kingdom which followed it and were but as the Copies of his Original Treason Therefore he thought to expiate his former guilt by surrendring the Town to Him from whom he had detained it But his practices were discovered to the Faction by One whom they had sent thither in pretence to preach the Gospel but in truth secretly to search into the intrigues of his Counsels so that he perished in his design being neither stout nor wise enough in just enterprises nor of a pertinancy sufficient for a prosperous Perfidiousness And although in his Ruine the King observed how great a draught was offered to the highest thirst of Revenge yet He did truly bewail him and indeed he was so much the more to be pitied because his cruel Masters deluded him to a silence of their black Secrets with a false hope of Life till the Ax was upon his Neck So betraying his Soul to a surprise by his Spiritual enemies as his pretended Spiritual Guides had done his Body to them The Insolency of Hotham who acted according to his Instructions and late Commission beginning acts not usual in Peace nor justifiable by Law for he issued out Warrants for the Trained Bands to march into Hull with their Arms where he forced them to leave them and nakedly return to their homes that so they might be obnoxious to his Violence and the practices of the Committee which were sent down into the North to debauch the People in their Loyalty made the King intend His own Security by a Guard which the Gentry and Commonalty of Yorkshire that were witnesses of the Injury offered to their Prince did willingly and readily make up No sooner had the King expressed His intention of such a Guard but the Faction who were watchful of all opportunities of beginning a War and ingaging those that either through Fear or Weakness had hitherto submitted to their Impostures in a more obliging guilt for now the greatest part of the Peers who were of the most ancient Families and noblest Fortunes and a very great number of the House of Commons Persons of just hopes and fair Estates who perceiving the designs of the Disturbers scorned any longer to be their Slaves yet not thinking it safe to provoke the fury of the Vulgar Tumults by a present opposition had withdrawn from the Parliament to follow the King and His Fortune and every day some more were still falling off took this occasion to commence our Miseries and open those Sluces of Blood which polluted the whole Kingdom For upon the first Intelligence of it they filled the House of Commons and the City with Clamours that His Majesty had now taken Arms to the overthrow of them and the Protestant Religion and that they were not any longer to think the Happiness of the Kingdom did depend upon the King or any of the Regal Branches of that Stock that it would argue no want either of Duty or Modesty if they should depose Him By these Harangues they so heated the Parliament that was now more penurious than before in persons of Honour and Conscience to such a degree of Fury that unmindful how they themselves for eight months before upon impossible Fears and improbable Jealousies had taken a Guard they Resolved upon the Question that the King by taking to himself such a Guard did intend to levy War against the Parliament With an equal fury they issue out Commissions into all parts of the Kingdom and appoint certain days for all the Trained Bands to be put into a posture of War sending down some of their Members to see to the execution of these Commands and to seise on the Magazines in the several Counties To all these their violent and unjust
and which was a Testimony of the Divine Assistance drew many of the unwilling Commissioners to His own Opinion though their Commission and the danger of their Lives necessitated them contrary to the dictates of their own Consciences to prolong the Debates with a wonderful Lenity proved their Demands unjust yet granted what was not directly against his Honour and Conscience thus devesting Himself of His own Rights He demonstrated that He had those Affections which might justly style Him the Father of His Country For He endeavoured by His own Losses to repair the damages of His People Yet the King saw by the Obstinacy of the most powerful of those He treated with that they intended nothing less than Peace nor any thing more than His Destruction which that it might be adequate to their Malice they would have it accompanied with the damnation of His Soul as He Himself in bitterness complained to One of His Servants pressing Him to do those things which they themselves acknowledged sinful as the Alienation of Church-Lands Although His Majesty was thus sensible of their insatiable thirst for His blood yet because He had passed His Royal Word not to stir out of that Island He did not hearken to the same Servant who perswaded Him to provide for His Safety by flight which He assured Him was not difficult and in administring to which He offered to hazard his own blood But the King always thought His Life beneath the Honour of Faithfulness and would not give His Enemies that advantage over His Fame which their unjust Arms and Frauds had gotten upon His Person chusing rather to endure whatsoever Providence had allotted for Him than by any approach to Infamy seek to protract those days which He now began to be weary of For that life is no longer desirable to Just Princes which their People either cannot or will not preserve And He thought it more Eligible to die by the Wickedness of Others than to live by His own While the Treaty thus preceeded the Army under the Command of the Lord Fairfax and Ireton this last was bold subtle perfidious and active in all designs so that his Soul being congenial with that of Cromwell had been the cause of an Alliance betwixt them for he had married one of Cromwell's Daughters and therefore was left to hover about the General as an evil Genius that he might do nothing contrary to their Impious Design drew towards London and quartered within half a days march from the City that if their Interest did require they might the more suddenly oppress those who were less favourable to their Enterprises The Officers did at first publickly profess a great Modesty as that they would quietly submit to the Orders of the Parliament that they did prefer the Common Peace to their own private Advantages and should be glad to be dismissed from the toyls of War yet in private practised an universal Confusion for mingling counsels with their Factious party in the two Houses they set up again the meetings of their Adjutators framed among themselves Petitions against the Treaty and to require that all Delinquents without difference wherein they included the Person of the King might be brought to Tryal and by their Emissaries abroad drew some inconsiderable and ignominious persons by representing large spoils in the subversion of Monarchy and imaginary advantages by the change of Government to subscribe to them When they thought these practices had produced their desired effect and they had infected most of the Souldiers in the several Garrisons and that more parties of their Army were gathered to their Quarters about London Ireton under pretext of a Contrast betwixt him and Fairfax withdraws himself privately to Windsor-Castle where being met by some of his Complices in the Parliament they joyntly frame a Declaration in an imperious and affected Style Wherein in the name of the Army he maliciously declaims against all Peace with the King and His Restitution to the Government afterwards he impiously demands that he may be dealt with as the Grand and Capital Delinquent with these he mingles some things to terrifie the Parliament some to please the Souldiers and others to raise hopes of Novelty in the Rabble This being prepared and the Treaty now drawing towards an End which those of the Faction had prolonged and disturbed that the Army might have more time to gather together and the Commanders having a perfect Intelligence how all things in the Isle of Wight and in the Parliament did strongly tend to an Accommodation they thought it now seasonable to begin their intended Crime Therefore they speedily call a Council of War at which met the Colonels and other inferiour Officers all men of Mercenary souls seditious covetous and so accustomed to Dissimulation that they seemed to be composed by nature to frame and colour impostures They began their Meeting with Prayers and Fasting pretending to inquire and seek the Will of God concerning the Wickedness they had predetermined to act This is the constant practice of such who would most securely abuse the Patience of the People while they commit the most horrid Crimes For not being able to honest their Iniquities by any colour of Reason or any Command of the known Will of God they pretend to a guidance by Revelation and Returns of Prayer This Imposture they had hitherto successfully used and the credulous Rabble of the common Souldiers were drawn to a perswasion that God did counsel all the Designs of these armed Saints Thus having prefaced their Villany Ireton produces his Remonstrance which being read among them was received by the Souldiers who through a pleasure in blood and hopes of Spoil are used to praise every thing of their Chiefs whether good or bad that tends to disturbance and continuance of War with as great an Applause as if it had been an Oracle from Heaven and to make it the more terrible they styled it the Remonstrance of the Army and order it to be presented to the Parliament in the name of the Army and People of England When this Remonstrance was published the minds of men were variously affected Some wondred that persons of so abject a Condition should dare to endeavour the alteration of an ancient Government an attempt so far above their fortune and to design against the Person of their Sovereign who by the Splendour of His former Majesty and by a continued Descent from so many Royal Progenitors had derived all that challenges the Reverence of the People And they thought the act so full of a manifest Wickedness that the Contrivers could not really intend the Execution but only used it as a Mormo to frighten the King and Parliament to hearken to their Pretensions of a lesser guilt Others considering their former Crimes and Injuries both to King and People and their damnable blasphemies of the Almighty God did truly judge that their preceding Iniquities had now habituated and temper'd them for the extremest mischiefs and that having
of Himself and as He believeth of all His good and well-affected Subjects dissolved also although He well knoweth the the calling adjourning proroguing and dissolving of Parliaments being His Great Council of the Kingdom do peculiarly belong unto Himself by an undoubted Prerogative inseparably united to His Imperial Crown of which as of His other Regal Actions He is not bound to give an account to any but to God only whose immediate Lieutenant and Vicegerent He is in these His Realms and Dominions by the Divine Providence committed to His Charge and Government yet forasmuch as by the assistance of the Almighty His purpose is so to order Himself and all His Actions especially the great and publick Actions of State concerning the weal of His People as may justifie themselves not only to His own Conscience and to His own People but to the whole World His Majesty hath thought it fit and necessary as the Affairs now stand both at home and abroad to make a true plain and clear Declaration of the causes which moved His Majesty to assemble and after inforced Him to dissolve these Parliaments that so the mouth of Malice it self may be stopped and the doubts and fears of His own good Subjects at home and of His Friends and Allies abroad may be satisfied and the deserved blame of so unhappy accidents may justly light upon the Authors thereof When His Majesty by the death of His dear and Royal Father of ever-blessed memory first came to the Crown He found himself ingaged in a War with a potent Enemy not undertaken rashly nor without just and honourable grounds but inforced for the necessary defence of Himself and His Dominions for the support of His Friends and Allies for the redeeming of the ancient honour of this Nation for the recovering of the Patrimony of His dear Sister her Consort and their Children injuriously and under colour of Treaties and Friendship taken from them and for the maintenance of the true Religion and invited thereunto and incouraged therein by the humble advice of both the Houses of Parliament and by their large promises and protestations to His late majesty to give Him full and real assistance in those Enterprises which were of so great importance of this Realm and to the general Peace and Safety of all His Friends and Allies But when His majesty entred into a view of His Treasure He found how ill provided He was to proceed effectually with so great an Action unless He might be assured to receive such Supplies from His loving Subjects as might inable Him to manage the same Hereupon His majesty being willing to tread in the steps of His Royal Progenitors for the making of good and wholsome Laws for the better government of His people for the right understanding of their true Grievances and for the supply of moneys to be imployed for those publick services He did resolve to summon a Parliament with all convenient speed He might and finding a former Parliament already called in the life of His Father He was desirous for the speedier dispatch of His weighty affairs and gaining of time to have continued the same without any alteration of the members thereof had He not been advised to the contrary by His Judges and Counsel at Law for that it had been subject to question in Law which He desired to avoid But as soon as possibly He could He summoned a new Parliament which He did with much confidence and assurance of the love of His People that those who not long before had with some importunity won his Father to break off his former Treaties with Spain and to effect it had used the mediation of his now majesty being then Prince and a member of the Parliament and had promised in Parliament their uttermost assistance for the inabling of his late majesty to undergo the War which they then foresaw might follow would assuredly have performed it to his now majesty and would not have suffered him in his first Enterprise of so great an expectation to have run the least hazard through their defaults This Parliament after some adjournment by reason of his majestie's unavoidable occasions interposing being assembled on the eighteenth day of June it is true that his Commons in Parliament taking into their due and serious consideration the manifold occasions which at his first entry did press his majesty and his most important affairs which both at home and abroad were then in action did with great readiness and alacrity as a pledge of their most bounden Duty and Thankfulness and as the first-fruits of the most dutiful affections of his loving and loyal Subjects devoted to his service present his majesty with the free and chearful gift of two entire Subsidies which their gift and much more the freeness and heartiness expressed in the giving thereof his majesty did thankfully and lovingly accept But when he had more narrowly entred into the consideration of his great affairs wherein he was imbarked and from which he could not without much dishonour and disadvantage withdraw his hand He sound that this summe of money was much short of that which of necessity must be presently expended for the setting forward of those great actions which by advice of his Council he had undertaken and were that Summer to be pursued This his majesty imparted to his Commons House of Parliament but before the same could receive that debate and due consideration which was fit the fearful visitation of the Plague in and about the Cities of London and Westminster where the Lords and the principal Gentlemen of quality of his whole Kingdom were for the time of this their service lodged and abiding did so much increase that his majesty without extream peril to the lives of His good Subjects which were dear unto him could not continue the Parliament any longer in that place His Majesty therefore on the eleventh day of July then following adjourned the Parliament from Westminster until the first day of August then following to the City of Oxford and his Highness was so careful to accommodate his Lords and Commons there that as He made choice of that place being then the freest of all others from the danger of that grievous Sickness so He there fitted the Parliament-men with all things convenient for their entertainment and his Majesty himself being in his own heart sincere and free from all ends upon his people which the Searcher of hearts best knoweth He little expected that any misconstruction of His Actions would have been made as He there found But when the Parliament had been a while there assembled and His Majestie 's Affairs opened unto them and a further supply desired as necessity required He found them so slow and so full of delays and diversions in their resolutions that before any thing could be determined the fearful Contagion daily increased and was dispersed into all the parts of this Kingdom and came home even their doors where they were assembled His
Parishes first by special Letters and earnest Sollicitations from the prime Leaders of this turbulent Faction after by Orders requiring such Ministers as would not accept their Recommendations to attend and shew cause All licence was given to those leud Seditious Pamphlets which despised the Government both of the Church and State which laid any Imputations and Scorns upon Our Person or Office and which filled the ears of all Our good Subjects with Lyes and monstrous Discourses to make them believe all the ill of the Government and Governors of Church and State Books against the Book of Common-Prayer and the established Laws of the Land suffered without reprehension to be dedicated to both Houses of Parliament whatsoever the Rancour and Venome of any Infamous person could digest published without control and nothing discountenanced and reproached but a dutiful regard of Us and Our Honour and a sober esteem and application to the Laws of the Kingdom This was the condition We found at our return from Scotland besides a strange groundless apprehension of Danger infused generally into the minds of Our good Subjects as if some notable Design were in hand against the Parliament against the City of London against the whole Kingdom of England There fell out an Accident whilest We were in Scotland concerning the Marquesses of Hamilton and Argile Those two Lords upon some information given to them that their Persons were in danger upon a sudden withdrew themselves from the Parliament in Scotland and for some few days removed out of Edenburgh Whatever they had been informed and what ever they suspected the Grounds of both were very fully examined by the Parliament there their Persons being of that quality and estimation in that Kingdom that they were sure of Justice Upon the whole themselves and the Parliament were satisfied that the Information first given to them could not be made good to the proof of any Design to the Danger of these Lords and the Examinations of the whole matter sent by Our direction to Our Parliament here How if all had been true that was imagined this business could so highly and nearly concern the Peace of this Kingdom and the present Safety of both Our Houses of Parliament We cannot imagine Yet upon the first report of it here which was the day before the first Meeting after the Recess without staying to hear the opinion of Our Parliament there who used all diligence in the examination or of Our Parliament here such strange Glosses and Interpretations were made upon that accident not without reflection upon Us and Our Honour as if at the same time there had been such a Design to have been executed here as they had fancied to themselves that to be and a sudden resolution was taken first by the Committee during the Recess after by the Houses to have a Guard for the defence of London Westminster and both Our Houses of Parliament which must needs make a great impression in the minds of Our good Subjects in a time when they were newly freed from the fears of two Armies to be awaked with the apprehension of Dangers of which seeing no ground they were to expect no end Matters being thus stated and all possible skill being used by that Faction and by their Emissaries of the Clergy who at the same time such Clamour was raised of the unlawfulness that the Clergy should meddle in Temporal Affairs were their chief Agents to derive their Seditious directions to the People and were all the week attending the doors of both Houses to be imployed in those errands to infuse the most desperate Fears into the minds of all Men that could be imagined To be sure that the memory of former bitterness might not depart they provide for Our Entertainment against We should come to London to present Us with a Remonstrance as they called it of the State of the Kingdom laying before Us and publishing to all the world all the mistakes and all the misfortunes which had happened from Our first coming to the Crown and before to that hour forgetting the blessed condition notwithstanding the unhappy mixture all Our Subjects had enjoyed in the benefit of Peace and Plenty under Us to the envy of Christendom objecting to Us the Actions of some and the thoughts of others and reproaching Us with matters which indeed never entred into Our thoughts nor to Our knowledge into the thoughts of any other reviling Us to the People and complaining to Us of the House of Peers whose Authority Interest and Privilege was then as much slighted and despised as Ours is since and easily passing over those singular Acts of Our Grace passed by Us this Parliament or ascribing them to their own wisdom in the procurement they concluded against a Malignant Party and that they had no hope of settling the Distractions of the Kingdom for want of concurrence with the House of Peers and that concurrence was desperate by reason of the Prevalency of the Bishops and of the Recusant Lords into which number all those Lords were cast who presumed to dissent from any Propositions made by the House of Commons When this Engine was prepared for the People by the prime Leaders of that desperate Faction it was presented to the House of Commons and the greatest industry and skill used that is imaginable by private Sollicitations Threats and Promises to procure consent that it might be passed by that House and after a long debate longer than ever was known in Parliament till three of the clock in the morning from ten the day before when very many through weariness and weakness were forced to leave the House so that it looked as was well said like the Verdict of the Starved Jury they carryed it by eleven Voices And shortly within very few days after Our return when We had been received with all possible expressions of Joy by Our City of London which was publickly murmured against and the chief advancers of that Duty and Affection discountenanced as if they envied Us the Loyalty of Our People and when it was publickly said in Our House of Commons upon some dispute of a pretended breach of the Orders of the House That their Discipline ought to be severe for the Enemy was in view that Remonstrance was presented to Us at Our Court at Hampton-Court by some Members of the House of Commons with a Petition contracting the sharp Language in the Remonstrance into less room amongst other things That We would concurr with Our People for depriving the Bishops of their Votes in Parliament for which there was no Bill passed both Houses and to employ such Persons about Us as Our Parliament might confide in We received this strange Petition and stranger Remonstrance graciously from the hands of the Presenters promised them an Answer and in the mean time desired that the Remonstrance might not be published to the People the thing it self and the printing any thing of the like nature being never heard of by the
satisfie their own private Ends and Ambition for themselves know what overtures have been made by them and with what importunity for Offices and Preferments what great Services should have been done for Us and what other undertakings were even to have saved the Life of the Earl of Strafford if We would confer such Offices upon them We were sure We could make such particular proofs against them of a solemn Combination entred into by them for altering the Government of the Church and State of their designing Offices to themselves and other Men of their solliciting and drawing down the Tumults to Westminster and of their bidding the People in the height of their rage and fury to go to White-Hall of their scornful and odious mention of Our Person and their design of getting Our Son the Prince into their hands of their treating with Foreign Power to assist them if they should fail in their enterprises Yet we saw too that their Interest and reputation was so great with many of both Houses of Parliament their Power so absolute with a multitude of Brownists Anabaptists and other Sectaries about London who were ready to appear in a body at their command that it would be a hard matter to proceed against them In this streight We resolved to do Our part in both to give Our People a clear satisfaction of Our upright Intentions to the publick whereby they should find their Happiness did not at all depend on such Instruments and to proceed against the Persons of the other in a legal way that all the world might see what Ambition Malice and Sedition had been had under the Vizour of Conscience and Religion Hereupon We prepared an Answer to the Remonstrance the House of Commons had before published to the People of the State of the Kingdom wherein without taking notice of the uncomely Language in and the Circumstances of that Remonstrance We declared with as gracious and full Expressions as We could make Our earnest Resolutions for the maintenance of the true Protestant Religion the Liberty and Property of the Subject and the Law of the Land and made no less gracious offers to consent to any Act that should be offered for the ease of tender Consciences in matters indifferent and very earnestly desired that the same might be provided and whatever else should be thought necessary for the Peace and Security of Our People And then that We might likewise manifest the Actions of that Malignant Party which had done so much mischief and intended so much more We resolved to accuse the Lord Kimbolton Master Hollis Master Pym Master Hampden and Master Stroud who had so maliciously contrived the Ruine of Our Self and the established Government of this Church and Kingdom and Sir Arthur Hesilrigge who had been made their Instrument to obey and execute their bold and wild designs of High Treason as We had great reason to do hoping that their Duty due to Us and the Obligations We had put upon Our People this Parliament would never suffer the Interest and reputation of these Men to be laid in the scale and to over-weigh Our Regal Authority and the Law of the Land but that We should have found a way open to a fair and Legal Trial of them which was all We desired How our proceeding was in that business and Our managery of it We have truly and at large set forth in Our Answer to the Declaration of both Houses of the nineteenth of May That what We did first in acquainting the House of Commons with Our Accusation by Our Serjeant at Arms was in Correspondence and out of regard to that House that We might rather have them delivered to the hands of Justice by them than apprehend them by an ordinary Minister of Justice which We were and are assured whatever Doctrine is preached to the contrary We might well have done in the case of Treason otherwise that Maxime in the Law acknowledged in a Petition of both Houses to Us in the beginning of Our Reign in the Case of the Earl of Arundel That in case of Treason Felony and breach of Peace Priviledge of Parliament doth not extend is of no signification The words are They find it an undoubted Right and constant Priviledge of Parliament That no Member of Parliament sitting the Parliament or within the usual times of Priviledge of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Order of the House unless it be for Treason Felony or for refusing to give Sureties for the Peace In those Cases 't was then thought a Member of either House was not to be distinguished from another Subject and why We might not as well have expected that upon Our Articles not so general as a meer verbal Accusation of High Treason either House would have committed their several Members as they had done so many this Parliament and about that time Twelve together upon a confessed ground which every Man there who knew what Treason was knew that fact to be none meerly because they were accused and as the House of Peers had formerly done a Member of that House the Earl of Bristol accused in the same manner most of the good Lords being then Judges We neither could then nor can yet understand That Our own coming to the House was to prevent that shedding of blood which in all possibility was likely to follow that Order made the night before for resisting all such Officers who endeavoured upon how legal Warrant soever to arrest any Members of either House an Order much more unjustifiable by any Rule of Law and Justice by which Orders or Acts are to be examined than any thing We have done or any body by Our Authority That Our purpose was no other but to acquaint that House with the matter of Our Accusation to desire their Persons might be secured and without any thought of the least violation of their Priviledges This is that which We did Examine now their part and their progress since and then judge whose Priviledges have been invaded and with how good a mind to the Common-wealth they have proceeded We were no sooner gone but the House adjourned it self with some unusual expressions of offence and We were speedily informed that some Reports and Scandals were raised against Us in Our City of London That We had offered Violence to Our House of Commons come thither with force to murther several Members and used threatning Speeches there against Our Parliament and that this was but a Preface to an attempt We meant to make against and upon the City Whereupon We resolved the next day to go to the Guild-Hall and to shew the great Confidence We had in the affections of Our said City which We expected should have begot a proportionable Confidence from them in Us We went attended with very few of Our own Servants and then in the presence of the Lord Mayor the Aldermen and a very great assembly of the chief Citizens and others We made
them a full Narration of what We had done the day before and assured them that We intended no proceedings but such as were most agreeable to the Law of the Land and the Priviledge of Parliament This demeanour of Ours We thought would have given satisfaction to all Our loving Subjects that if in truth We had erred in the form of Our Proceedings yet Our intentions were full of Justice and regard to the general Law of the Land from which We shall never willingly swerve But in stead of any application to inform our Judgment wherein we had erred and how We were to proceed both Our Houses of Parliament under the title of Committees adjourned themselves to the Guild-Hall and afterwards to Grocers-Hall the Persons accused remove themselves into the City as to a Sanctuary and there manage and contrive business to their own ends they cause Discourses to be published and Infusions to be made of incredible danger to the City and Kingdom by that Our coming to the House and Alarm was given to the City in the dead time of the night That We were coming with Horse and Foot thither and thereupon the whole City put in Arms. And however the envy seemed to be cast upon the Designs of the Papists mention was only made of actions of Our own Their seditious Preachers and Agents are by them and their special and particular directions sent into the several Counties to infuse those Fears and Jealousies into the minds of Our good Subjects with Petitions ready drawn by them for the People to sign which were yet many times by them changed three or four times before the delivery upon accidents and occurrences of either or both Houses And when many of Our poor deceived People of Our several Counties have come to Our City of London with a Petition so framed altered and signed as aforesaid that Petition hath been suppressed and a new one ready drawn hath been put into their hands after their coming to Town insomuch as few of the company have known what they petitioned for and hath been by them presented to one or both Houses of Parliament as that of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire witness those Petitions and amongst the rest that from Hartfordshire which took notice of matters agreed on or dissented from the night before the delivery which was hardly time enough to get so many thousand hands and to travel to London in that errand The accused Members to shew how much they were above Us and the reach of the Law march with a Guard of armed Men to the place where the Committee sate sit with them and govern those Counsels First they procure a Declaration to be set forth and printed from the Committee without being reported to the House contrary to all Custom and Priviledge of Parliament and against the Law it self with very strange expressions of Our carriage and upon the matter requiring all people to assist them This they cause to be sent into the City to the common-Councel which by the undue practices of Captain Venne and Master Foulk since made Alderman for his good service their principal Agents they had caused to be altered by putting out the gravest and most substantial Citizens and taking in persons of desperate Fortunes and Opinions who they knew would concur with them in their more desperate Actions the same Design and the same way pursued to make the City of London at their disposal as had been practised in the House of Commons to work upon the whole Kingdom and with this Common-Council Correspondence is kept for the setting of unusual Watches placing of Guards in several places of the City as if some desperate attempt and assault were to be made upon the whole City by Us who were known scarce to have a Guard strong enough to preserve Our own House from Violence A Commander is appointed under the Title of Serjeant-Major-general and as if all Men were now by their new Protestation made Judges of the Priviledges of Parliament and the Breaches thereof and absolved from all Rules of Obedience special provision is made and publick direction is given for drawing down the Trained-bands of Our City of London to Westminster on a day appointed to guard and bring in triumph the persons accused of High-Treason as such worthy Patriots that the Commonwealth it self could not subsist but with reference to them who in their discourses and by their Messages to their Confederates expressed the greatest Scorn of and the most treasonable Reproaches against Us that can be imagined When We understood this horrid preparation made against Us the Power it was evident these persons had to do hurt and the Malice We knew they bore against Our Person which We had too great reason to fear they intended to seize We resolved to yield for the present to this Storm and so the day before their coming to Westminster We withdrew Our Person with Our Royal Consort and Our Children to Our House at Hampton-Court and the rather lest the Courage and Indignation of some of Our good Subjects might how weakly soever yet with the effusion of blood oppose that great scorn intended Us and believing that possibly by Our removing with all such persons whose presence was excepted against and discharging that small Guard which the Tumults had forced Us to take for Our Safety and which was urged as an Argument of Danger and Ground of the general Fears might at least lessen their appearance the next day But these Powerful Persons would by no means conceal their triumph over Us but the next day are guarded from their residence in the City with multitudes of armed Men and Ammunition in a hostile and warlike manner to Westminster The same Care and Industry was used to provoke and incense Our Mariners Masters of Ships and other Seamen who were solicited by the Agents for the accused Persons and by their special direction to express their Affection likewise to the Cause in hand and thereupon near one hundred Lighters and Long-Boats were set out by water laden with Sakers Murthering-Pieces and other Ammunition dressed up with Wast-clothes and Streamers as ready for fight And in this Array these Men by water and the Soldiers by land cried out as they passed by That they would thus Protect and Defend those worthy Gentlemen whom We had accused of High-Treason and as they passed by Our Windows at White-Hall scornfully asked what was become of Vs whither We were gone In this Equipage they came to both Houses where it is no wonder they have been since able to govern having given such testimony of their Power both by land and water Let all the world judge by what Law this Army was raised and whether any Act of Ours against these persons was as unwarrantable as these proceedings We bore all this being so much amazed at these Distractions that We could not easily find what colour the Malice of these Men had found out thus to out-face Us not yet conceiving We
had broke any Priviledge or that the casual breaking of Priviledge could have produced such prodigious Distempers But We were no sooner advertised where Our mistaking was but without recrimination or complaining of the Injuries against Our Self We sent to both Houses on the twelfth and fourteenth of January by Message That in Our proceeding against those Persons We had not the least Intention of violating their Priviledges which We would be willing to assert by any reasonable way We should be advised That We would wave Our former proceedings againsts them and when the minds of Men should be composed would proceed in an unquestionable way in the mean time desired all jealousies might be laid aside and application be made to the publick and pressing Affairs especially to those of Ireland which cried for the utmost of Our Assistance But it concerned those Persons by no means to suffer such a Composition if these Fears and Jealousies were not kept up and inflamed in the People and the Distractions heightned they knew they should not only be disappointed of the Places Offices Honours and Employments they had promised themselves but be exposed to the Justice of the Law and just Hatred of all good Men. Therefore the business of both Kingdoms was not considerable to the Interests of the Six Members who would be thought the Pillars both of Church and State They had now found a danger nearer hand than Ireland and an Army raised by Us in one night at Kingston upon Thames and upon some extravagant Information pretended to be given to a Committee though some of their pretended Witnesses publickly in the House disavowed any such Testimony they procured an Order to be framed and though before the publishing of it they had full and clear evidence to the contrary by Persons come immediately from the place and testifying it to be most quiet and peaceable they yet had power to procure that Order to be published on the thirteenth of January the next day after they had received so gracious a Message from Us declaring that the Lord Digby and Colonel Lunsford the former of which was in the Town only with a Coach and six Horses the other only attended by his Servant and hath been since earnestly pressed by the Serjeant of the House of Commons in whose custody he was to accuse the Lord Digby with promises that thereby himself should be discharged had gathered Troops of Horse and appeared in a warlike manner at Kingston upon Thames being within a Mile of Our Court to the terror and affrightment of Our good Subjects and to the disturbance of the publick weal of the Kingdom and therefore it was ordered That the Sheriff and Justices of the Peace should with the Assistance of the Train-Bands suppress such Assemblies c. And this way they found out to draw that County to affront Us and sent multitudes of mean people under pretence of petitioning Us to shew Us how unsecure Our Residence was like to be there too and so in a short time compelled Us Our Royal Consort and Our Children to remove to Our Castle at Windsor They proceed then by a Close Committee a thing scarce heard of till this Parliament and of dangerous consequence to the fame and reputation of all Men to examine such mean unknown persons as they had by Threats and Promises solicited to that purpose concerning the circumstances of Our coming to the House exhibiting bold and malicious Interrogatories and Questions concerning Our Self and upon such wild Informations of desperate persons contrary to the known truth and concealing other Examinations which they had taken and by which the contrary to what they would have the People believe would have appeared particularly that very full Examination of Captain Ashley wherein Our publick and peremptory Commands against all manner of Violence though provoked are sufficiently manifested they procured an infamous Declaration to be published by the House of Commons for the House of Peers could not be yet prevailed with to joyn in those Extravagancies on the seventeenth of January mentioning Our coming to the House and some rude expressions of some persons who if there were any such persons there We are most confident they were not of Our Train and would infer from some Mens calling for the Word at Our coming out of the House which is a form used in Our Court that those of Our Train who are before may know when and whither they are to go that We had a purpose to have fallen upon the House of Commons and to have cut all their Throats and do therefore declare That Our coming to the House was a traitorous Design against the King and Parliament That Our Proclamation issued out of the Apprehension of them was false scandalous and illegal That it was lawful for all Men to harbour them and that whosever did so should be under the Protection and Priviledge of Parliament with many other expressions of and aspersions upon Us which they hoped would render Us odious to Our good Subjects and force Us for Our safety to submit to such unreasonable Propositions which amongst themselves they had provided to be offered to Us or provoke Us to such Actions as might give them some advantage To keep the People in a continual Alarm and apprehension of Danger few days passed without some pretended Discovery by Sir Walter Earl or other quick-sighted Men of some Treason or Plot against the Parliament the City or the Kingdom and upon every light and impossible Information many of Our Subjects sent for out of several Counties who after chargeable attendance were dismissed without any reparation or reprehension One day the Tower of London is in danger to be taken and Information given That great Multitudes at least a hundred had that day resorted to visit a Priest then a Prisoner there by Order of the Lords and that at the time of the Information above fifty or threescore were then there and a Warder dispatched of purpose to give that notice upon enquiry but four Persons were then found to be there and but eight all that day who had visited that Priest Another day a Tailour in a Ditch in the open fields over-hears two Passengers to plot the death of Mr. Pym and of many other Members of both Houses then Libellous Letters found in the Streets without names probably contrived by themselves and by their Power published printed and entred in their Journals and Intimations given of the Papists training under ground and of notable provision of Ammunition in Houses where upon examination a single Sword and a Bow and Arrows are found a design of the Inhabitants of Covent-Garden to murther the City of London news from France Italy Spain and Denmark of Arms ready to come for England with infinite such ridiculous Discourses which are not only suffered and directed to be Printed but such countenance and credit given to them that thereupon Guards must be doubled Correspondencies and Letters interrupted and broken open even
of Glocester Bristol and the Castle and Town of Berkley shall be guided by the Rule exprest in the later part of the precedent Article V. That in case it be pretended on either side that the Cessation is violated no act of Hostility is immediately to follow but first the party complaining is to acquaint the Lord General on the other side and to allow three days after notice given for satisfaction and in case satisfaction be not given or accepted then five days notice to be given before Hostility begin and the like to be observed in the remoter Armies by the Commanders in chief VI. That all other Forces in the Kingdom of England and Dominion of Wales not before-mentioned shall remain in the same Quarters and places as they are at the time of publishing this Cessation otherwise than in passage and communication between their several Quarters as is mentioned in the latter part of the third Article and that this Cessation shall not extend to restrain the setting forth or imploying any Ships for the defence of His Majesty's Dominions provided that His Majesty be first acquainted with the particulars and that such Ships as shall be set forth be commanded by such persons as His Majesty shall approve of VII Lastly that during the Cessation none of His Majesty's Subjects be imprisoned otherwise than according to the known Laws of the Land and that there shall be no plundring or violence offered to any of His Subjects And His Majesty is very willing if there be any Scruples made concerning these Propositions and Circumstances of the Cessation that the Committee for the Treaty nevertheless may immediately come hither and so all matters concerning the Cessation may be here settled by them H. Elsinge Cler. Parl. D. Com. Mis MAJESTY's Answer to the Articles of Cessation sent to His Majesty HIS Majesty hath sent a safe Conduct for the Earl of Northumberland Mr. Pierrepont Sir William Armyne Sir John Holland and Mr. Whitelocke but hath not admitted the Lord Say to attend Him as being excepted against by name in His Proclamation at Oxford of the third of November and by Writ to the Sheriff proclaimed then in that County in which His Majesty's Intention is declared to proceed against him as a person guilty of High-Treason and so falling to be within the case of Sir John Evelin who upon the same Exception was not admitted to attend His Majesty with the rest of the Committee at Colebrook in November last But His Majesty doth signifie that in case the House shall think fit to send any other person in the place of the Lord Say that is not included in the like Exception His Majesty hath commanded all His Officers Soldiers and other Subjects to suffer Him as freely to pass and repass as if His Name had been particularly comprised in this safe Conduct His Majesty is content that His Proposition concerning the Magazines Forts Ships and Revenue and the Proposition of both Houses for the disbanding of the Armies shall be first Treated of and agreed of before the proceeding to treat upon any of the other Propositions and that after the second of His Majesty's and the second of theirs be treated on and agreed of and so on in the same order and that from the beginning of the Treaty the time may not exceed Twenty days in which He hopes a full Peace and right understanding may be established throughout the Kingdom H. Elsinge Cler. Parl. D. Com. The last Articles of Cessation now sent to His MAJESTY THE Lords and Commons in Parliament being still carried on with a vehement desire of Peace that so the Kingdom may speedily be freed from the Desolation and Destruction wherewith it is like to be overwhelmed if the War should continue have with as much expedition as they could considered of the Articles of Cessation with those Alterations and Additions offered by His Majesty unto which they are ready to agree in such manner as is exprest in these ensuing Articles viz. I. That all manner of Arms Ammunition Victual Mony Bullion and all other Commodities passing without a safe Conduct from the Generals of both Armies as well of His Majesty 's as of the Armies raised by the Parliament may be stayed and seized on as if no such Cessation were agreed on at all II. That all manner of persons passing without such a safe Conduct as is mentioned in the Articles next going before shall be apprehended and detained as if no such Cessation were agreed on at all III. That His Majesty's Forces in Oxfordshire shall advance no nearer to Windsor than Wheatly and in Buckinghamshire no nearer to Ailesbury than Brill and that in Berkshire the Forces respectively shall not advance nearer the one to the other than they shall be at the day to be agreed on for the Cessation to begin and that the Forces of the other Army raised by the Parliament shall advance no nearer to Oxford than Henley and those in Buckinghamshire no nearer to Oxon than Ailesbury and that the Forces of neither Army shall advance their Quarters nearer to each other than they shall be upon the day agreed on for the Cessation to begin IV. That the Forces of either Army in Gloucestershire Wilts and Wales as likewise in the Cities of Gloucester and Bristol and the Castle and Town of Berkly shall be guided by the Rule exprest in the latter part of the precedent Article V. That in case it be pretended on either side that the Cessation is violated no act of Hostility is immediately to follow but first the party complaining is to acquaint the Lord General on the other side and to allow three days after notice given for satisfaction and in case satisfaction be not given or accepted then five days notice to be given before Hostility begin and the like to be observed in the remoter Armies by the Commanders in chief VI. That all other Forces in the Kingdom of England and Dominion of Wales not before mentioned shall remain in the same Quarters and places as they are at the time of the publishing of this Cessation and under the same Conditions as are mentioned in the Articles before and that this Cessation shall not extend to restrain the setting forth or employing of any Ships for the defence of His Majesty's Dominions VII That as soon as His Majesty shall be pleased to disband the Armies which both Houses earnestly desire may be speedily effected and to disarme the Papists according to Law the Subjects may then enjoy the benefit of Peace in the liberty of their Persons Goods and Freedom of Trade in the mean time the Generals and Commanders of the Armies of both sides shall be enjoyned to keep the Souldiers from plundering which the two Houses of Parliament have ever disliked and forbidden And for the speedy settling of this so-much-desired Peace they have thought good to send their Committees with Instructions that if His Majesty be pleased to consent to a
Provisions to any Harbour in this Kingdom in the hands of such as shall obey the Articles of this Cessation from any Ports in the Kingdom of England having His Majesty's Pass or the Pass of any who is or shall be His Majesty's Admiral or Vice-Admiral or the Pass of any Governour or Governours of any the Ports in England in His Majesty's Hands or which shall hereafter during this Cessation be in His Majesty's Hands or the Pass of the said Marquess shall not be interrupted by any of those for whom the said Lord Viscount Muskery and the rest of the above-named Persons are authorized as aforesaid neither in their coming to this Kingdom nor in their return so as they use not any Act of Hostility to any of their said Party And this to be a Rule until His Majesty's pleasure be further declared therein upon application of the Agents of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. to His Majesty Item It is concluded and accorded and the said James Marquess of Ormond doth promise and undertake for and in the name of His Majesty that no interruption shall be given by any Ship or Ships under His Majesty's Power and Command or waged employed or contracted with by or in the behalf of His Majesty or by any of His Majesty's Forts Garrisons or Forces within this Kingdom to any Ship or Ships that shall trade with any of the said Roman Catholicks who are now in Arms c. or any of their Party or which shall come in or go out of any the Cities Towns Harbours Creeks or Ports of this Kingdom in the hands of the said Roman Catholicks now in Arms c. with Arms Ammunition Merchandize Commodity or any thing whatsoever during this Cessation as on the other side the said Donnogh Viscount Muskery and the rest above-named of that Party do promise and undertake for and in the behalf of those by whom they are authorized that no interruption shall be given by any Ship or other Vessel whatsoever under the Power and Command of their Party or waged employed or contracted with by or in the behalf of their Party or by any Forts Garrisons or Forces within this Kingdom in their power to any Ship or Ships that shall Trade with any of His Majesty's Subjects obeying this Cessation or which shall come in or go out of any the Cities Towns Harbours or Ports of this Kingdom which shall obey this Cessation with Arms Ammunition Merchandize Commodity or any other thing whatsoever during this Cessation Provided that no Ship or Ships shall be admitted free Trade by colour of this Article but such as are warranted by the precedent Articles Item It is concluded and accorded that the Quarters in the Province of Leimster be as followeth viz. That the County of Dublin the County of the City of Dublin the County of the Town of Droghedagh and the County of Lowth shall remain and be during the Cessation in the possession of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and of such as adhere unto them respectively saving and excepting unto the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party all such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said fifteenth day of September 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed in the said Counties or any of them by any of the said Party And it is further concluded and accorded that as much of the County of Meath as is on the East and South sides of the River of Boyne from Droghedagh to Trim and thence to the Lordship of Moylagh and thence to Moyglare and thence to Dublin shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the possession of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and of such as adhere unto them respectively saving and excepting to the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms and their party all such Castles Towns Lands and Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said fifteenth day of September 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by any of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and of their Party within the said limits and boundaries and that the residue of the said County of Meath shall remain in the hands and possession of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except the Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the fifteenth day of September 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed within the said last-mentioned Quarters in the County of Meath by His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and such as adhere unto them or by any of them respectively And that so much of the County of Kildare as is on this side of the Liffy where Naas is situate and on the other side of the Liffy from Dublin Westward into the County of Kildare so far as the Rye water at Kilcock and so far betwixt that and the Liffy as shall be at the same distance from Dublin as the said Rye water is at Kilcock on that side of the Liffy shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the hands and possessions of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and their adherents respectively except such Castles Towns Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said 15th day of Sep. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed within the said Quarters by the said Roman Catholick Subjects who are now in Arms c. and their Party and that the residue of the said County of Kildare shall remain in the hands of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said 15th day of Sep. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and their adherents respectively within the said last mentioned Quarters in the said County of Kildare And that the several Counties of Wicklow West-Meath King County Queens County Catherlagh Kilkenny County of the City of Kilkenny Weixford and Longford shall during the said Cessation remain in the hands of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said fifteenth day of Septemb. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed within the said County by His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and their adherents respectively Item It is concluded and accorded that what Corn hath been sown by any of His Majesty's Army or by any of His Protestant Subjects or their adherents or by any of them within any of the Quarters allotted in the Province of Leimster to the said other Party the same shall be enjoyed by the sowers and manurers paying for the same as they did agree and in case they did not agree paying the fourth sheaf unto such Garrison within whose Quarters the same shall
fall And that in case any of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. or any of their Party have sown Corn within any the Quarters allotted in the Province of Leimster to the said other Party the same shall be enjoyed by the sowers and manurers paying for the same as they did agree and in case they did not agree paying the fourth sheaf unto such Garrisons within whose Quarters the same shall fall And it is likewise concluded and accorded that those places which have been protected by the Lords Justices or any Officer of His Majesty's Army do pay according to the agreement which was made and if no agreement were made to pay the fourth sheaf to those Garrisons or Persons who protected them in whose soever Quarters they are And this to continue for a Rule other than as to so many of those Garrisons who granted such protection and are since regained by the said Party or some of them for whom the said Donnogh Viscount Muskery and the Persons above-named are authorized as aforesaid And that the Tenants of the Town of Balliboght in the County of Dublin if they have not been protected shall pay according to agreement and if no agreement made then the fourth sheaf and to continue their possession during this Cessation And it is further concluded and accorded that where His Majesty or any of His Protestant Subjects or their adherents shall happen to have any Garrison or Garrisons within the Quarters set forth in the next precedent Article for the said other Party that such Garrison and Garrisons shall have such competency of the Lands as well profitable as unprofitable now termed Wast as shall be found necessary for them by any indifferent Commissioners to be appointed to that purpose Item It is concluded and accorded that the Quarters in the Province of Munster be as followeth viz. That the County of the City of Corck and so much of the County of Corck as is within the subsequent Garrisons viz. from Youghall and Mogeely thence to Formoye thence to Michells-town thence to Liscaroll and so in a line from Michells-town and Liscaroll North-ward as far as His Majesty's out-Garrisons on that side do extend and from Liscaroll to Mallow thence to Corck thence to Carrig-croghan thence to Rochfordstown thence to Bandon-bridge thence to Timmoleagie and thence forward to the Sea together with the said Garrisons shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the possession of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and of such as adhere unto them saving and excepting to the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party all such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which on the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed in the said Counties or any of them by any of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party And that the residue of the said County of Corck shall likewise remain to the said Party last named saving and excepting to His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and their Adherents all such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which on the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed in the last mentioned Quarters by them or any of them And that the County of Tipperary the County of Limerick the County of the City of Limerick the County of Kerry the County of Waterford the County of the City of Waterford and the County of Clare shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the possession of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except Knockmorne Ardmore Piltowne Cappoquin Ballinetra Strongcally Lismore Balliduffe Lisfinny and Tallow all situate in the County of Waterford or as many of them as are possessed by His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and their adherents the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid and likewise except all such Castles Towns Lands Territories and Hereditaments thereunto belonging as within the said Counties respectively on the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by any of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects or such as adhere unto that Party respectively in the said County of Waterford and the rest of the last mentioned Counties And it is concluded and accorded that the like Rule for Corn sown and what shall be payed by places protected and for the laying out Wasts for the respective Garrisons shall be observed in the Province of Munster as it is set down for Leimster Item It is concluded and accorded that the Quarters in the Province of Ulster be as followeth viz. That such Counties Baronies Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the Province of Ulster which the said 15th of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by any of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects or any that adhere unto them and all places protected by any Commander deriving Authority from His Majesty shall during the said Cessation remain entirely in the hands and in the possession of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects and such as adhere unto them excepting such Castles Lands and Hereditaments as on the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. or their Party And that all such Counties Baronies Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the said Province which on the said 15th of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party shall remain entirely during this Cessation in the hands and possession of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party saving and excepting thereout all places protected by any Commander deriving Authority from His Majesty and likewise excepting thereout all such Territories Castles Towns Lands Tenements and Hereditaments which on the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by any of His Majesty's Protestant Subjects or such as adhere unto them And it is concluded and accorded that the like Rule for Corn sown and what shall be payed for protected places and for the laying down of Wasts for the respective Garrisons shall be observed in the Province of Ulster as is set down for Leimster Item It is concluded and accorded that the Quarters in the Province of Connaght be as followeth viz. That the County of Galway Roscomon Slego and Letrym in the Province of Connaght and all such Castles Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the said Province which the said 15th day of Sept. 1643. at the hour aforesaid are possessed by the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party shall during the said Cessation remain entirely in the possession of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party excepting all such Territories Castles Lands Tenements and Hereditaments within the said several Counties which upon the
We are to receive Advice for the Preservation of the Religion Laws and Safety of the Kingdom and as far as in Us lyes to restore it to its former Peace and Security Our chief and only end from those whom they have trusted though We cannot receive it in the place where We appointed And for the better encouragement of those Members of either House to resort to Us who may be conscious to themselves of having justly incurred Our Displeasure by submitting to or concurring in unlawful Actions and that all the World may see how willing and desirous We are to forget the Injuries and Indignities offered to Us and by an Union of English Hearts to prevent the lasting Miseries which this Foreign Invasion must bring upon this Kingdom We do offer a free and General Pardon to all the Members of either House who shall at or before the said twenty second day of January appear at Our City of Oxford and desire the same without Exceptions which considering the manifest Treasons committed against Us and the Condition We are now in improved by God's wonderful blessing to a better degree than We have enjoyed at any time since these Distractions is the greatest instance of Princely and Fatherly Care of Our People that can be expressed and which malice it self cannot suggest to proceed from any other Ground And therefore We hope and are confident that all such who upon this our gracious Invitation will not return to their Duty and Allegiance shall be no more thought Promoters of the Religion laws and liberty of the Kingdom which this way may be without doubt setled and secured but Persons engaged from the beginning out of their own Pride Malice and Ambition to bring Confusion and Desolation upon their Country and to that purpose having long since contrived the Design to invite and joyn with a Foreign Nation to ruine and extinguish their own and shall accordingly be pursued as the most desperate and malicious Enemies of the Kingdom And Our pleasure is That this Our Proclamation be read in all Churches and Chapels within this Our Kingdom and Dominion of Wales Given at Our Court at Oxford the two and twentieth day of December in the Nineteenth year of Our Reign 1643. God Save the KING MDCXLIII IV. A Letter from the Lords at Oxford and other Lords whose Names are subscribed to the Lords of the Privy-Council and the Conservators of the Peace of the Kingdom of Scotland Our very good Lords IF for no other Reason yet that Posterity may know we have done our Duties and not sate still while our Brethren of Scotland were transported with a dangerous and fatal mis-understanding that the Resolution now taken among them for an Expedition into England is agreeable to their obligation by the late Treaty and to the Wishes and Desires of this Kingdom expressed by the two Houses of Parliament we have thought it necessary to let your Lordships know That if we had dissented from that Act it could never have been made a Law And when you have examined and considered the Names of us who subscribe this Letter who we hope are too well known to your Lordships and to both Kingdoms to be suspected to want Affection to Religion or to the Laws and Liberties of our Country for the Defence and maintenance of which we shall always hold our Lives a cheap Sacrifice and when you are informed that the Earls of Arundel and Thanet and the Lords Stafford Stanhope Coventry Goring and Craven are in the parts beyond the Seas and the Earl of Chesterfield Westmorland and the Lord Mountague of Boughton under restraint at London for their Loyalty and Duty to His Majesty and the Kingdom your Lordships will easily conclude how very few now make up the Peers at Westminster there being in truth not above five and twenty Lords present or privy to those Councils or being absent consenting or concurring with them whereas the House of Peers consist of above one hundred besides Minors and Recusant Lords neither of which keep us company in this Address to your Lordships How we and the major part of the House of Commons come to be absent from thence is so notorious to all the World that we believe your Lordships cannot be strangers to it How several times during our sitting there Multitudes of the meanest sort of People with weapons not agreeing with their condition or custom in a manner very contrary and destructive to the privilege of Parliament fill'd up the way between both Houses offering Injuries both by words and actions to and laying violent hands upon several Members and crying out many Hours together against the established Laws in a most tumultuous and menacing way How no remedy would be submitted to for preventing those Tumults After which and other unlawful and unparliamentary Actions many things rejected and setled upon solemn debate in the House of Peers were again after many Threats and Menaces resumed altered and determined contrary to the Custom and Laws of Parliaments and so many of us withdrew ourselves from thence where we could not Sit Speak and Vote with Honour Freedom and Safety and are now kept from thence for our Duty and Loyalty to our Sovereign And we must therefore protest against any Invitation which hath been made to our Brethren of Scotland to enter this Kingdom with an Army the same being as much against the Desires as against the Duty of the Lords and Commons of England And we do conjure your Lordships by our common Allegiance and Subjection under one gracious Sovereign by the Amity and Affection between the two Nations by the Treaty of Pacification which by any such Act is absolutely dissolved and by all Obligations both Divine and Humane which can preserve Peace upon earth to use your utmost endeavours to prevent the effusion of so much Christian blood and the Confusion and Desolation which must follow the unjust Invasions of this Kingdom which we and we are confident all true English men must interpret as a Design of Conquest and to impose new Laws upon us And therefore your Lordships may be assured we shall not so far forget our own Interests and the Honour of our Nation as not to expose our Lives and Fortunes in the just and necessary defence of the Kingdom But if your Lordships in truth have any doubts or apprehensions that there now is or hereafter may be a purpose to infringe your Laws or Liberties from any Attempt of this Kingdom we do engage our Honours to your Lordships to be our selves most religious observers of the Act of Pacification and if the Breach and violation do not first begin within that Kingdom we are most confident you shall never have cause to complain of this And having thus far expressed Our selves to your Lordships we hope to receive such an Answer from you as may be a means to preserve a right understanding between the two Nations and lay an Obligation upon us to continue Your Lordships
County of Surrey directed to the House of Peers concluded with this close That they should be in duty obliged to mantain their Lordships so far as they should be united with the House of Commons in their just and pious proceedings sufficiently intimating that if they joyned not with the House of Commons they then meant as much as others had plainly professed About the same time a Citizen saying at the Bar of the House of Commons That they heard there were Lords who refused to consent and concur with them and that they would gladly know their names or words to that effect a Petition in the name of many thousand poor People in and about the City of London was directed to the House of Commons taking notice of a malignant Faction that made abortive all their good motions which tended to the Peace and Tranquillity of this Kingdom desiring that those noble Worthies of the House of Peers who concurred with them in their happy Votes might be earnestly desired to joyn with that Honourable House and to sit and Vote together as one entire body and professing that unless some speedy remedy were taken for the removing all such Obstructions as hindred the happy progress of their great Endeavours their Petitioners should not rest in quietness but should be forced to lay hold on the next remedy which was at hand to remove the disturbers of the Peace and Want and necessity breaking the bounds of Modesty not to leave any means unessayed for their relief lastly adding that the cry of the poor and needy was that such Persons who were the obstacles of their Peace and the hinderers of the happy proceedings of this Parliament might be forthwith publickly declared whose removal they conceived would put a period to those Distractions And this Petition was brought up to the House of Lords by the House of Commons at a Conference And after the same day Master Hollis a Member of the House of Commons in a Message from that House pressed the Lords at their Bar to joyn with the House of Commons in their desire about the Militia and farther with many other expressions of like nature desired in words to this effect That if that desire of the House of Commons were not assented unto those Lords who were willing to concur would find some means to make themselves known that it might be known who were against them and they might make it known to those that sent them After which Petition so strangely framed countenanced and seconded many Lords thereupon withdrawing themselves the Vote in order to the Militia twice before rejected was then passed After these and other unparliamentary Actions many things rejected and settled upon solemn debate were again after many Threats and Menaces resumed altered and determined contrary to the Custom and Laws of Parliament And so many of us withdrew our selves from thence where we could not Sit Speak and Vote with Honour Freedom and Safety and are now kept from thence for our Duty and Loyalty to our Sovereign And though some of us Sate and continued there long after this hoping that we might have been able to have prevented the growth and progress of farther Mischief yet since the Privilege of Parliament is so substantial and entire a Right that as the Invasion of the Liberties of either House is an injury to the other and the whole Kingdom so the Violence and Assaults upon any of our fellow-Members for expressing their opinions in matters of debate were instances to us what we were to look for when we should be known to dissent from what was expected and under that consideration every one of our just Liberties suffered violation Many of us for these and other reasons after His Majesty Himself was by many Indignities and Force driven from Westminster have been contrary to the Right and Freedom of Parliament Voted out of the House without committing any Crime and some of us without hearing or so much as being summoned to be heard and so our Countries for which we were and are trusted have been without any Proxies or Persons trusted on their behalf An Army hath been raised without and against His Majesty's Consent and a Protestation enjoyned to live and die with the Earl of Essex their General of that Army and a Member now amongst us refusing to take that Protestation was told That if he left not the Town speedily he should be committed to the Tower or knocked on the head by the Souldiers All Persons even the Members of both Houses have been and now are forced or injoyned to contribute for the maintenance and support of that Army A trayterous Covenant is since taken by the Members who remain and imposed upon the Kingdom That they will to their power assist the Forces raised and continued by both Houses of Parliament against the Forces raised by the King with many other Clauses directly contrary to their Allegiance and another for the alteration of the Covenant of the Church established by Law and such Members as have refused according to their Duty and Conscience to take those Covenants have been imprisoned or expelled so as they have suffered none to reside with them but those who are engaged with them in their desperate courses The whole Power and Authority of both Houses is delegated against the Law and nature of Parliament to a close Committee which assumes and usurps the Power of King Lords and Commons disposes of the Persons Liberties and Estates of us and our fellow-Subjects without so much as communicating their Resolutions to those that sit in the Houses And when an Order hath been reported to be confirmed by them it hath been only put to the Question no debates being suffered it having been said in the House where the Commons sit to those who have excepted against such an Order when presented That they were only to Vote not to dispute and thereupon all Argument and contradiction hath been taken away And to shew how impossible it is to contain themselves within any bond of civility and humanity when they have forfeited their Allegiance after the attempt in a most barbarous manner to murther the Queens Majesty at Her landing at Burlington by making many great shot at the house where She lodged for Her repose after a long Voyage by Sea where by God's blessing it was disappointed they impeached Her of High Treason for assisting the King Her Husband and the Kingdom in their greatest necessities All Petitions and Addresses for Peace have been with great Art and Vehemence discountenanced and suppressed whilst others for Sedition and Discord have with no less industry and passion been promoted And when the Members of the House of Commons in August last had agreed upon a long and solemn debate to joyn with the Lords in sending Propositions of Peace to His Majesty the next day printed Papers were scattered in the Streets and fix'd upon the publick places both in the City and Suburbs requiring all Persons
both Kingdoms and endeavours to bring over more into both of them as also Forces from Foreign parts Your Majesty being in Arms in these parts and the Prince in the head of an Army in the West divers Towns made Garrisons and kept in Hostility by Your Majesty against the Parliament of England there being also Forces in Scotland against that Parliament and Kingdom by Your Majesties Commission the War in Ireland fomented and prolonged by Your Majesty whereby the three Kingdoms are brought near to utter Ruine and Destruction we conceive that until satisfaction and security be first given to both Your Kingdoms Your Majesties coming hither cannot be convenient nor by us assented unto neither can we apprehend it a means conducing to Peace that Your Majesty should come to Your Parliament for a few days with any thoughts of leaving it especially with intentions of returning to Hostility against it And we do observe That Your Majesty desires the Ingagement not only of Your Parliaments but of the Lord Mayor Aldermen Common-Councel and Militia of the City of London the chief Commanders of Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army and those of the Scots Army which is against the Priviledges and Honour of the Parliaments those being joyned with them who are subject and subordinate to their Authority That which Your Majesty against the Freedom of the Parliaments inforces in both Your Letters with many earnest expressions as if in no other way than that propounded by Your Majesty the Peace of Your Kingdoms could be established Your Majesty may please to remember that in our last Letter we did declare that Propositions from both Kingdoms were speedily to be sent to Your Majesty which we conceive to be the only way for the attaining a happy and well-grounded Peace and Your Majesties Assent unto those Propositions will be an effectual means for giving satisfaction and security to Your Kingdoms will assure a firm Union between the two Kingdoms as much desired by each for other as for themselves and settle Religion and secure the Peace of the Kingdom of Scotland whereof neither is so much as mentioned in Your Majesties Letter And in proceeding according to these just and necessary grounds for the putting an end to the bleeding Calamities of these Nations Your Majesty may have the glory to be a Principal Instrument in so happy a Work and we however mis-interpreted shall approve our selves to God and the World to be real and sincere in seeking a safe and well-grounded Peace Westminster 13. Jan. 1645. Grey of Wark Speaker of the House of Peers pro tempore VVilliam Lenthal Speaker of the House of Commons Signed in the Name and by warrant of the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland Balmerino His MAJESTIES Reply to the Answer of both Houses from Oxford Jan. 17. 1645-46 For the Speaker of the House of Peers pro tempore to be communicated to the two Houses of Parliament at Westminster and the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland CHALLES R. HIS Majesty thinks not fit now to answer those Aspersions which are returned as Arguments for his not admittance to VVestminster for a Personal Treaty because it would inforce a Style not suitable to his End it being the Peace of these miserable Kingdoms yet thus much he cannot but say to those who have sent him this Answer That if they had considered what they had done themselves in occasioning the shedding of so much innocent Blood by withdrawing themselves from their Duty to him in a time when he had granted so much to his Subjects and in violating the known Laws of the Kingdom to draw an exorbitant Power to themselves over their fellow-Subjects to say no more to do as they have done they could not have given such a false Character of his Majesties Actions Wherefore his Majesty must now remember them that having some hours before his receiving of their last Paper of the 13. of Jan. sent another Message to them of the fifteenth wherein by divers particulars He inlargeth himself to shew the reality of his endeavours for Peace by his desired Personal Treaty which he still conceives to be the likeliest way to attain to that blessed End he thinks fit by this Message to call for an Answer to that and indeed to all the former For certainly no rational man can think their last Paper can be any Answer to his former Demands the scope of it being that because there is a War therefore there should be no Treaty for Peace And is it possible to expect that the Propositions mentioned should be the grounds of a lasting Peace when the Persons that send them will not endure to hear their own King speak But whatever the success hath been of his Majesties former Messages or how small soever his hopes are of a better considering the high strain of those who deal with his Majesty yet he will neither want Fatherly bowels to his Subjects in general nor will he forget that God hath appointed him for their King with whom he Treats Wherefore he now demands a speedy Answer to his last and former Messages Given at Our Court at Oxon this 17. of Jan. 1645. His MAJESTIES further Reply to the said Answer of both Houses Jan. 24. To the Speaker of the House of Peers pro tempore to be communicated to the two Houses of Parliament at Westminster and to the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland CHARLES R. THE procuring Peace to these Kingdoms by Treaty is so much desired by his Majesty that no unjust Aspersions whatsoever or any other Discouragements shall make him desist from doing his endeavour therein untill he shall see it altogether impossible and therefore hath thought fitting so far only to make Reply to that Paper or Answer which he hath received of the 13. of this instant Jan. as may take away those Objections which are made against his Majesties coming to VVestminster expecting still an Answer to his Messages of the 15. and 17. which he hopes by this time have begotten better thoughts and resolutions in the Members of both Houses And first therefore Whereas in the said last Paper it is objected as an impediment to his Majesties Personal Treaty that much innocent Blood hath been shed in this War by his Majesties Commissions c. He will not now dispute it being apparent to all the World by whom this Blood hath been spilt but rather presseth that there should be no more and to that end only he hath desired this Personal Treaty as judging it the most immediate means to abolish so many horrid Confusions in all his Kingdoms And it is no Argument to say That there shall be no such Personal Treaty because there have been Wars it being a strong inducement to have such a Treaty to put an end to the War Secondly That there should be no such Personal Treaty because some of his Irish Subjects have repaired to his Assistance in it seems an Argument altogether as strange as the other as
Westminster with that Honour which is due to their Sovereign there solemnly to confirm the same and legally to pass the Acts before mentioned and to give and receive as well satisfaction in all the remaining particulars as likewise such other pledges of mutual Love Trust and Confidence as shall most concern the good of Him and His People Upon which happy Agreement His Majesty will dispatch His Directions to the Prince His Son to return immediately to Him and will undertake for his ready Obedience thereunto Holdenby May 12. 1647. MDCXLVII Jul. The Londoners Petition and Engagement To the Right Honourable the Lord Maior the Right Worshipful the Aldermen and Commons of the City of London in the Common or Guild-Hall of the City of London assembled The Humble Petition of the Citizens Commanders Officers and Soldiers of the Trained Bands and Auxiliaries the Young men and Apprentices of the Cities of London and VVestminster Sea-Commanders Sea-men and Water-men together with divers other Commanders Officers and Soldiers within the Line of Communication and Parishes mentioned in the Weekly Bills of Mortality Sheweth THat your Petitioners taking into serious consideration how Religion His Majesties Honour and Safety the Priviledges of Parliament and Liberties of the Subject are at present greatly endangered and like to be destroyed and also sadly weighing with our selves what means might likely prove the most effectual to procure a firm and lasting Peace without a further effusion of Christian English Blood have therefore entred into a solemn Engagement which is hereunto annexed and do humbly and earnestly desire that this whole City may joyn together by all lawful and possible means as one man in hearty endeavours for His Majesties present coming up to His two Houses of Parliament with Honour Safety and Freedom and that without the nearer approach of the Army there to confirm such things as He hath granted in His Message of the 12. of May last in answer to the Propositions of both Kingdoms and that by a Personal Treaty with his two Houses of Parliament and the Commissioners of the Kingdom of Scotland such things as are yet in difference may be speedily settled and a firm and lasting Peace established All which we desire may be presented to both Houses of Parliament from this Honourable Assembly And we shall pray c. A solemn Engagement of the Citizens Commanders Officers and Soldiers of the Trained Bands and Auxiliaries the Young men and Apprentices of the Cities of London and VVestminster Sea-Commanders Sea-men and Water-men together with divers other Commanders Officers and Soldiers within the Line of Communication and Parishes mentioned in the Weekly Bill of Mortality WHereas we have entred into a solemn League and Covenant for Reformation and Defence of Religion the Honour and Happiness of the King and the Peace and Safety of the Three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland all which we do evidently perceive not only to be endangered but ready to be destroyed we do therefore in pursuance of our said Covenant Oath of Allegiance Oath of every Free-man of the Cities of London and Westminster and Protestations solemnly engage our selves and vow unto Almighty God That we will to the utmost of our power cordially endeavour that His Majesty may speedily come to His two Houses of Parliament with Honour Safety and Freedom and that without the nearer approach of the Army there to confirm such things as He hath granted in His Message of the 12. of May last in Answer to the Propositions of both Kingdoms and that by a Personal Treaty with His two Houses of Parliament and the Commissioners of the Kingdom of Scotland such things as are yet in difference may be speedily settled and a firm and lasting Peace established For effecting whereof we do protest and re-oblige our selves as in the presence of God the searcher of all hearts with our Lives and Fortunes to endeavour what in us lies to preserve and defend His Majesties Royal Person and Authority the Priviledges of Parliament and Liberties of the Subject in their full and constant Freedom the Cities of London and Westminster Lines of Communication and Parishes mentioned in the Weekly Bills of Mortality and all others that shall adhere with us to the said Covenant Oath of Allegiance Oath of every Freeman of London and VVestminster and Protestation Nor shall we by any means admit suffer or endure any kind of Neutrality in this Common Cause of God the King and Kingdom as we do expect the Blessing of Almighty God whose help we crave and wholly devolve our selves upon in this our Undertaking A Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament Die Sabbathi 24. Julii 1647. THE Lords and Commons having seen a printed Paper intituled A Petition to the Right Honourable the Lord Maior the Right VVorshipful the Aldermen and Commons of the City of London in the Common or Guild-Hall of the City of London assembled under the Name of divers Citizens Commanders Officers and Soldiers of the Trained Bands Auxiliaries and others Young men and Apprentices Sea-Commanders Sea-men and VVater-men together with a dangerous Engagement of the same persons by Oath and Vow concerning the King 's present coming to the Parliament upon Terms far different from those which both Houses after mature deliberation have declared to be necessary for the good and safety of this Kingdom casting Reflections upon the Proceedings both of the Parliament and Army and tending to the imbroiling the Kingdom in a new War and the said Lords and Commons taking notice of great endeavours used by divers ill-affected persons to procure Subscriptions thereunto whereby well-meaning people may be misled do therefore declare That whosoever after Publication or notice hereof shall proceed in or promote or set his Name to or give Consent that his Name be set unto or any way joyn in the said Engagement shall be deemed and adjudged guilty of High Treason and shall forfeit Life and Estate as in cases of High Treason accustomed H. Elsynge Cler. Par. Dom. Com. Die Lunae 26. Julii 1647. BE it ordained by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled That the Declaration of the twenty fourth of this instant July which declares all those Traitors and so to forfeit Life and Estate who shall after Publication thereof act thereupon to get Subscriptions be Null and Void any thing in the said Declaration to the contrary notwithstanding Joh. Browne Cler. Par. Hen. Elsynge Cler. Par. Dom. Com. Die Lunae 26. Julii 1647. REsolved upon the Question That His Majesty shall come to Londo Die Saturni 31. Julii 1647. Resolved upon the Question That the King's Majesty come to one of His Houses nearer London that Propositions may be sent and Address made to His Majesty from both Houses of the Parliament of England and the Kingdom of Scotland for Peace MDCXLVII His MAJESTIES Declaration and Profession disavowing any Preparations in Him to levy War against His two Houses of Parliament CHARLES R. THere having been many