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A38428 Englands remonstrance to their King wherein is declared the humble desire of His Majesties loyall and faithfull subjects within the kingdome of England, to the Kings Most Excellent Majestie, now resident in the Isle of Wight : containing the very sense of all the true hearted of the kingdom, touching His Majesties royall person ...; Englands petition to their King. Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1648 (1648) Wing E3039; ESTC R18648 4,911 10

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honour person or his propriety in his weapon Doth not nature teach us the preservation of our soules will not the eye wink without deliberation and the smallest worm turne back if you tread on it And beside nature we have frequent presidents in sacred Writ for even more then defensive resistance of Transcendent Monarchy 1 Sam. 14.44 45. But if all this were nothing yet we know your Majesty hath passed and Act for the continuance of this Parliament and sure that Act must needs mean a Parliament with its power and authority and not the meer name and carkasse of a Parliament It s not only that they shall stay together in London and doe nothing or no more then another Cour● but that they continue your chief Councel your chief Court and have sole legislative power which are your Parliaments peculiar properties And if your Majesty hath enacted the continuance of a real Parliament in its power who seeth not that you have thereby joyned with them your Royall Authority though not your person Doth not your Majesty in your Expresses oft Mention your selfe a part of the Parliament and that the Head without which the Body cannot live and is the Parliament valid without your authority Therefore if your Majesty have formerly withdrawne from them your Royal Authority then you have broke your own Laws which we dare not judge after so many solemn Protestations to maintain and rule by the known Laws Wherefore we hope your Majesty must needs discerne that wee fought not against you but for your known establisht Authority in Parliament And we hope your Majesty will not deny them to be your entire Parliament for is the Act recalled whereby they were established If not how can they cease to be your Parliament neither let the fault be laid on part of them for we all know the major part hath the Authority of the whole and if it were the minor part why did not or doth the major over-vote them And we beseech your Majesty blame us not to think our Religion and all lyes at the stake while we look back by what a train Popery had been almost brought upon us by that party and see them still the chief in favour and when so many Papists English and forreign have been in Arms against us and know no one Papist in the Land that is not zealous in the cause Wonder not Dread Soveraign if we hardly believe that those who would so cruelly have destroyed us should be most zealous in fighting for the Protestant Religion Blame us not we beseech you to fear while we see no contradiction appear to Mounsieur de Chesne his book sold openly for many yeers not in Paris onely but in London and read at Court which records your Maj. Letter to the Pope promising to venter Crown and all to unite us to Rome again Dread Soveraign many Princes have gone astray through strength of temptation and after have been happy in repenting and returning Oh that the Lord would make it your case and glorifie his mercy on you and us in making knowne to you the thing concerning our peace and not his justice in hardning you to destruction that it may never be read in our Chronicle by the Generations to come that England had a Prince who lived and dyed in seeking the desolation of his people and the Church of God Your Majesty knoweth there is a King and a Judge above you before whom You must very shortly stand and give account of your Government We desire you in the presence of that God to think and think seriously and think again how sad it will be to have all this bloud charged on your soule Can your Maj. think of this when you are dying Can those Councellours that have set you on then bring you as safely off Your Maj. may despise wha● we say an● judge us your enemies because we tell you the truth speak as dying men in the sorrow of our soules but you cannot so put by divine justice or quiet conscience at the last As true as the Lord liveth your Maj. will one day know that Blasphemers and Flatterers are not your friends but plain dealers who do assure you the ways you have taken tend to the utter ruine and destruction of your Kingdome And can your heart endure or can your hands be strong in the day the Lord will reckon with you for his people committed to your charge O think of the low condition your Majesty is now in how your friends have left and forsaken you and in stead of commanding three Kingdoms confin'd to a petty Island Suppose you now heard the bloud of your people already spilt crying in your ears saw the many thousands yet living a life worse then death lying in their sorrows at your feet crying for pitty help O King help or we lose our liberties laws lives and Religion help that you● Self and Royall Posterity be not Princes of an impoverished desolate Nation helpe as ever you would have God help you in the day of death and judgment when your Self shall cry for help and pitty helpe that deliverance come not some other way while you and your Fathers house are destroyed The Lord God of our hopes who hath for our sins most justly afflicted us in You give Your Majesty a discerning eye a holy and tender heart to yeeld to the Desires of your distressed Subjects To return to and concur with your Parliament that God and Man may forget your mistakings and you may be the blessed●st Prince that ever reigned in our Land the terrour of your reall enemies the joy of your people and the glory of posterity Such shall be the dayly and hearty prayers of Your Majesties loyall however esteemed Subjects c. POSTCRIPT GOod Friend We would have you know this Remonstrance was intended only for his Majesties view but because plain dealing is seldome well taken and his Majesty so guarded from the requests of his Subjests we are therefore forced to submit it to your common view and to turn it out in hope his Majesty may light of one Copy and seriously read it and lay to heart the distresse of the miserable if you censure it as the work of some few discontented persons Know you it is the sense of the North and North west of England and if you will promise us freedome and hopes of successe wee 'l soon return it you with the hands of 1000000. If you condemn us for speaking too plainly know that misery makes men forget good manners and dying men use not complements We are in the case of the Lepers If we sit still we perish therefore we will move in the way of hope and go in to the King though it be not according to law and if we perish we perish Yet know we will come far short of the plainnesse of better persons and times 2 Sam. 12.7 1 King 18.18 c. c. c. Febr. 16. 1647. Imprimatur GILBERT MABBOT FINIS