Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n great_a time_n year_n 7,732 5 4.6212 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A88168 The copie of a letter, written to the General from Lieut. Col. Iohn Lilburn, M. Richard Overton, April 27. 1649. In behalf of M. Robert Lockwer, M. Geo. Ash, M. Joseph Hockley, M. Robert Osburn, M. Matthew Heyworth, M. Thomas Goodwin; all of them in Captain Savages troup: who by the said Councel were adjudged to cast lots for their lives, and one of them to dy. In which it is by law fully proved, that it is both treason and murder, for any general or Councel of War to execute any souldier in time of peace, by martial law. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657.; Overton, Richard, fl. 1646.; Fairfax, Thomas Fairfax, Baron, 1612-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing L2094; Thomason 669.f.14[23]; ESTC R204434 2,596 1

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

The Copie of a Letter Written to the General from Lieut. Col. Iohn Lilburn M. Richard Overton April 27. 1649. In behalf of M. Robert Lockwer M. Geo. Ash M. Joseph Hockley M. Robert Osburn M. Matthew Heyworth M. Thomas Goodwin all of them in Captain Savages Troup who by the said Councel were adjudged to cast lots for their lives and one of them to dy In which it is by Law fully proved that it is both Treason and Murder for any General or Councel of War to execute any Souldier in time of Peace by Martial Law May it please your Excellency WEE have not yet forgot your Solemn Engagement of June 5. 1647. whereby the Armies Continuance as an Army was in no wise by the Will of the State but by their own mutual Agreement And if their standing were removed from one Foundation to another as is undeniable then with the same they removed from one Authority to another and the Ligaments and Bounds of the First were all Dissolved and gave place to the Second and under and from the head of their first Station viz. By the Will of the State the Army derived their Government by Martial Law which in Iudgment and Reason could be no longer binding then the Authority which gave being thereto was binding to the Army For the denial of the Authority is an Abrogation and Nulment of all Acts Orders or Ordinances by that Authority as to them And upon this account your Excellency with the Army long proceeded upon the Constitution of a new Councel and Government contrary to all Martial Law and Discipline by whom only the Army Engaged to be Ordered in their prosecution of the ends to wit Their several Rights both as Souldiers and Commoners for which they associated Declaring Agreeing and Promising each other not to Disband Divide or suffer themselves to be Disbanded or Divided without satisfaction and security in relation to their Grievances and Desires in behalf of themselves and the Common-wealth as should be agreed unto by their Councel of Agitators And by vertue and under Colour of this Establishment all the Extraordinary Actions by your Excellency your Officers and the Army have past Your refusal to Disband dispurings the Orders of Parliament Impeachment and Ejection of Eleven Members your First and Second March up to London your late violent Exclusion of the Major part of Members out of the House and their imprisonment without Cause c. which can no way be justified from the Guilt of the highest Treason but in the accomplishment of a righteous end viz. The enjoyment of the benefit of our Laws and Liberties which we hoped long ere this to have enjoyed from your hands Yet when we consider and herewith compare many of your late carriages both towards the Souldiery and other Free People and principally your Cruel Exercise of Martial Law even to the Sentence and Execution of Death upon such of your Souldiers as stand for the Rights of that Engagement c. And not only so but against others not of the Army we cannot but look upon your defection and Apostasie in such dealings as of most dangerous Consequence to all the Laws and Freedoms of the People And therefore although there had never bin any such solemn Engagement by the Army as that of June 5. 1647. which with your Excellency in point of duty ought not to be of the meanest obligation We do protest against your Exercise of Martial Law against any whomsoever in times of Peace where all Courts of Iustice are open as the greatest encroachment upon our Laws and Liberties that can be acted against us And particularly against the Tryal of the Souldiers of Captain Savages Troup yesterday by a Court Martial upon the Articles of War and sentencing of two of them to death and for no other end as we understand but for some dispute about their pay And the reason of this our Protestation is from the Petition of Right made in the third yeer of the late King which declareth That no person ought to be judged by Law Martial except in times of War And that all Commissions given to execute Martial Law in time of Peace are contrary to the Laws and Statutes of the Land And it was the Parliaments complaint That Martial Law was then commanded to be executed upon Souldiers for Robbery Mutiny or Murder Which Petition of Right this present Parliament in their late Declarations of the 9. of Feb. and the 17. of March 1648. commend as the most excellentest Law in England and there promise to preserve inviolably it and all other the Fundamental Laws and Liberties concerning the preservation of the Lives Properties and Liberties of the people with all things incident thereunto And the Exercise of Martial Law in Ireland in time of Peace was one of the chiefest Articles for which the Earl of Strafford lost his head The same by this present Parliament being judged High Treason And the Parliament it self neither by Act nor Ordinance can justly or warrantably destroy the Fundamental Liberties and Principles of the Common Law of England It being a maxime in Law and Reason both that all such Acts and Ordinances are ipso facto null and void in Law and binds not at all but ought to be resisted and stood against to the death And if the Supreme Authority may not presume to do this much less may You or Your Officers presume thereupon For where Remedy may be had by an ordinary course in Law the Party grieved shall never have his recourse to extraordinaries Whence it is evident That it is the undoubted Right of every Englishman Souldier or other that he should be punishable onely in the ordinary Courts of Iustice according to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm in the times of Peace as now it is and the extraordinary way by Courts Martial in no wise to be used Yea the Parliaments Oracle Sir Edward Cook Declares in the third part of his Institutes Chap. of Murder That for a General or other Officers of an Army in time of Peace to put any man although a Souldier to death by colour of Martial Law it is absolute murder in that General c. Therefore erecting of Martial Law now when all Courts of Iustice are open and stopping the free current of Law which sufficiently provides for the punishment of Souldiers as well as others as appears by 18. H. 6. Chap. 19. and 2 3. Ed. 6. Chap. 2. 4 5. P. M. Chap. 3. 5. El. 5. 5. Jam. 25. is an absolute destroying of our Fundamental Liberties and the razing of the Foundation of the Common Law of England the which out of Duty and Conscience to the Rights and Freedoms of this Nation which we value above our lives and to leave You and your Councel without all excuse we were moved to represent unto Your Excellency Earnestly pressing you well to consider what you do before you proceed to the taking away the Lives of those men by Martial Law lest the bloud of the Innocent and so palpable Subversion of the Laws and Liberties of England bring the reward of just vengeance after it upon you as it did upon the Earl of Strafford For innocent bloud God will not pardon and what the people may do in case of such violent Subversion of their Rights we shall leave to Your Excellency to judge and remain From our Causeless and unjust and Tyrannical Captivity in the Tower of 7 London April 27. 1649. Your Excellencies humble Servants John Lilburn Richard Overton