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A91263 A seasonable, legall, and historicall vindication and chronologicall collection of the good, old, fundamentall, liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen (their best inheritance, birthright, security, against arbitrary, tyrannicall, and Egyptian burdens) and of their strenuous defence in all former ages; of late years most dangerously undermined, and almost totally subverted, under the specious disguise of their defence and future establishment, upon a sure basis, their pretended, greatest propugners. Wherein is irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records, proofs, presidents, that we have such fundamentall liberties, ... that to attempt or effect the subversion of all or any of them, ... is high treason: ... / By William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire.; Seasonable, legall, and historicall vindication and chronologicall collection of the good, old, fundamentall, liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen. Part 1 Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1654 (1654) Wing P4062; Thomason E812_10; ESTC R207634 45,225 63

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CHARTERS CONTAINED SHALL BE INFRINGED OR BROKEN We ratifying and approving these Gifts and Grants aforesaid CONFIRM and CORROBORATE ALL THE SAME FOR US AND OUR HEIRS PERPETUALLY and by these Pr●sents as the later Charters run do renew the same Willing and granting FOR US AND OUR HEIRS THAT THESE CHARTERS AND ALL AND SINGULAR THEIR ARTICLES FOR EVER SHALL BE STEDFASTLY FIRMLY AND INVIOLABLY OBSERVED Sir Edward Cook that reverend learned Judge and Professor of our Laws in his Preface to his second Institutes and p. 2. and 77. thereof wherein he comments on this Great Charter printed by two Orders of the House of Commons in Parliament dated 12 Maii 1641. and 30 Junit 1642. resolves in direct terms That the Great Charter was for the most part declaratory of the Principal Grounds of THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF ENGLAND That these words therein for us and our heirs for ever were added to avoid all scruples THAT THIS GREAT PARLIAMENTARY CHARTER MIGHT LIVE AND TAKE EFFECT IN ALL SUCCESSIONS OF AGES FOR EVER A clear Resolution that the principal Liberties Customs Laws contained in these Great Charters and ratified by them are both Fundamental perpetual and unalterable being since confirmed in all points by neer fourty several special Acts of Parliament in succeeding Parliaments and likewise by the Solemn Oathes of our Kings Nobles Judges Great Officers and of the People too all several times sworn to defend and maintain the same and by sundry Solemn Excommunications against the infringers or contemners of them in any kinde as I shall prove more fully in the third Chapter The second is the punctual Resolution of the whole Parliament of 1 Jacobi even in a Printed Act of Parliament chap. 2. and of King James himself in his Speech therein as is evident by this Prologue to that Act Whereas his most excellent Majestie hath been pleased out of his great wisdom and judgement not onely to represent unto us by his own prudent and Princely Speech on the first day of this Parliament how much he desired in regard of his inward and gracious affection to both the famous and ancient Realms of England and Scotland now united in Allegiance and by all subjection IN HIS ROYAL PERSON TO HIS MAJESTY AND HIS POSTERITY FOR EVER that by a speedy mature and sound Deliberation such a future Union might follow as should make perfect that mutual love and uniformity of Maners and Customs which Almighty God in his providence for the strength and safety of both Realms hath so far already begun in apparent sight of all the world but also hath vouchsafed to express many ways how far it is and EVER SHALL BE from his Royal and sincere care and affection to the Subjects of England TO ALTER OR INNOVATE THE FUNDAMENTAL AND ANCIENT LAWS PRIVILEDGES GOOD CUSTOMS OF THIS KINGDOM whereby not onely HIS ROYAL AUTHORITY but THE PEOPLES SECURITY OF LANDS LIVINGS and PRIVILEDGES both in General and Particular ARE PRESERVED AND MAINTAINED Nota. and BY THE ABOLISHING OR ALTERATION OF THE WHICH IT IS IMPOSSIBLE BUT THAT PRESENT CONFUSION WILL FALL UPON THE WHOLE STATE AND FRAME OF THIS KINGDOM c. In which memorable Clause these four things are observable 1. That the Kin●dom and People of England have Fundamental ancient good Laws Priviledges and Customs 2. That these are no ways to be altered or innovated and that it always hath been is and ever shall be far from the thoughts and intents of all good Kings Governours and Parliaments who bear a sincere care and affection to the Subjects of England to alter or innovate them 3. That by these ancient good Laws Priviledges and Customs not onely the Kings Regal authority but the Peoples Security of Lands Livings and Priviledges both in general and particular are preserved and maintained 4. That by the abolishing or altering of them it is impossible but that present confusion will fall upon the whole State and frame of this Kingdom Which I wish all Innovators and New Modellers of our Laws would now at last say seriously to heart and the whole Kingdom and English Nation sadly consider who have found it an Experimental truth of late yeers and no imaginary feigned Speculation The third is The Remonstrance of the whole House of Commons in Parliament delivered in writing to K. James in the Parliament of 7 Jac. anno 1610. which begins thus To the Kings most Excellent Majesty Most gracious Soveraign WHereas we your Majesties most humble Subjects the Commons assembled in Parliament See Prop. 1. 6. in chap. 2. have received first by Message and since by Speech from your Majestie a Command of restraint from debating in Parliament your Majesties Right of imposing upon your subjects goods exported out of or imported into this Realm yet allowing us to examine the grievance of these Impositions in regard of quantity time and other circumstances of disproportion thereto incident We your said humble Subjects nothing doubting but that your Majestie had no intent by that command to infringe THE ANCIENT AND FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF THE LIBERTY OF PARLIAMENT in point of exact discussing of all matters concerning them and their Possessions Goods and Rights whatsoever which yet we cannot but conceive to be done in effect by this command Do with all humble duty make this Remonstrance to your Majestie First We hold it an AN ANCIENT GENERAL and UNDOUBTED RIGHT OF PARLIAMENT to debate freely all matters which do properly concern the Suject and his Right or Estate which freedom of debate being once fore-closed Nota. THE ESSENCE OF THE LIBERTY OF PARLIAMENT IS WITHAL DISSOLVED Here the whole House of Commons in a special Remonstrance to King James printed and published by Order of a Committee of the House of Commons for licensing of book● dated 20 Maii 1641. 17 Caroli declare resolve vindicate and maintain One principal ancient Fundamental general undoubted Right of the Liberty of Parliament against the Kings intrenchment on it Of which should they be but once fore-closed the Essence of the Liberty of Parliament is withal dissolved And peradventure it may not be unworthy the most serious Disquisition of the next ensuing nominal or real Parliament to examine whether some Clauses and Restrictions in the 9 12 14 16 17 21 22 24 25 27 30 32 33 36 37 38 39 40 Articles or Strings of the New Instrument intituled The Government of the Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging as it was publikely declared at Westminster the 16 day of December 1653. c. do not as much nay far more intrench upon the ancient Fundamental General undoubted Right and Liberty of Parliament and Parliamentary free Debates to the dissolution of the Essential Liberty of all future Parliaments as this Command of King James did or as the Bishops late Canons imposed on the Clergie in and by the Convocation Anno 1640. ever did and this Clause in their c. Oath then made now imitated by
are Destructive to the Fundamental Laws of the Realm the subjects Right of Propriety and contrary to former Resolutions in Parliament and the Petition of Right as the words of their several Impeachments run Sr. John Finch fled the Realm to preserve his head on his Shoulders some others of them d●ed through fear to prevent the danger soon after their Impeachments and the rest put to Fines who were lesse peccant 12. Mr. John Pim in his Declaration upon the whole matter of the Charge of High Treason against Thomas Earle of Strafford April 12. 1641. before a Committee of both Houses of Parliament in Westminster Hall printed and published by Order of the House of Commons proves his endeavour to subvert the Fundamentall Law of England and to introduce an Arbitrary Power to be High Treason and an offence very hainous in the nature and mischievous in the effects thereof which saith he will best appear if it be examined by that universall and supream Law Salus Populi the element of all laws out of which they are derived the end of all Laws to which they are designed and in which they are perfected 1. ' It is an offence comprehending all other offences Here you shall finde several Treasons Murthers Rapins Oppressions Perjuries There is in this Crime a Seminary of all evills hurtfull to a State and if you consider the Reasons of it it must needs be so The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt Good and Evill betwixt just and unjust Nota. If you take away the Law all things will fall into Confusion every man will become a law to himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce man great enormities * And are they not so now Lust will become a Law and Envy will become a Law Covetousnesse and Ambition will become Laws and what Dictates what decisions such laws will produce may easily be discerned in the late Governm●nt of Ireland and England too since this The Law hath a power to prevent to restrain to repair evils without this all kind of mischiefs and distempers will break in upon a State It is the Law that doth the King to the Allegiance and Service of his people it intitles the People to the Protection and Justice of the King c. The Law is the Boundary the measure betwixt the Kings Prerogative and the peoples Liberty whiles these move in their own O●b they are a support and security to one another but if these Bounds be so removed that they enter into contestation and conflict one of these mischiefs must needs ensue If the Prerogative of the King overwhelm the Liberty of the people it will be turned into Tyranny If Liberty undermine the Prerogative it will turn into Anarchy The Law is the safeguard the custody of all private interests your honours your lives your liberties and estates are all in the keeping of the Law without this every man hath a like Right to any thing and this is the condition into which the Irish were brought by the Earl of Strafford and the English by others who condemned him And the reason which he gave for it hath more mischief than the thing it self THEY ARE A CONQUERED NATION Let those who now say the same of England as well as Scotland and Ireland consider and observe what follows There cannot be a word more pregnant and fruitfull IN TREASON then that word is There are few Nations in the world that have not been conquered and no doubt but the Conquerour may give what Laws he please to those that are conquered But if the succeeding Acts and agreements do not limit and restrain that Right what people can be secure England hath been conquered and Wales hath been conquered and by this reason will be in little better case than Ireland If the King by the Right of a Conquerour give Lawes to his people shall not the people by the same reason be restored to the Right of the conquered To recover their Liberty if they can What can be more hurtfull more pernicious than such Propositions as these 2. It is dangerous to the Kings person and dangerous to his Crown It is apt to cherish Ambition usurpation and Oppression in great men and to beget Sedition Discontent in the people and both these have been and in reason must ever be causes of great Trouble and Alterations to Prince and State If the Histories of those Eastern Countries be perused where Princes order their Affairs according to the mischievous Principles of the Earl of Strafford LOOSE and ABSOLVED FROM ALL RULES OF GOVERNMENT they will be found to be frequent in combustions full of Massacres and of the tragicall end of Princes If any man shall look into our own Stories in the times Nota. when the Laws were most neglected he shall find them full of Commotions of Civil Distempers whereby the Kings that then raigned were alwayes kept in want and distresse the people consumed with CIVIL WARRES and by such wicked Counsels as these some of our Princes have been brought to such miserable ends As * Note this all whole commons-house Opinion then no honest heart can remember without horrour and earnest Prayer that it may never be so again 3. As it is dangerous to the Kings person and Crown so it is in other respects very prejudiciall to his Majesty in honour profit and greatnesse which he there proves at large as you may there read at leasure and yet these are the Guildings and Paintings that are put upon such Counsels These are for your Honour for your Service 4. It is inconsistent with the Peace the Wealth the Prosperity of a Nation It is destructive to Justice the mother of Peace to Industry the Spring of Wealth to Valour which is the active vertue whereby the prosperity of a Nation can onely be procured confirmed and enlarged It is not onely apt to take a way Peace and so intangle the Nation with warres but doth corrupt Peace and powrs such a malignity into it as produceth the effects of War both to the * Is not this an experimentall truth now NOBILITY and others having as little security of THEIR PERSONS OR ESTATES in this peaceable time as if the Kingdome had been under the fury and rage of warre And as for Industry and Valour who will take pain● for that which when he hath gotten is not his own or who fights for that wherein he hath no other interest but such as is subject to the will of another c. Shall it be Treason to embase the Kings Coin though but a piece of twelve pence or six pence and must it not needs be the effect of GREATER TREASON to * And were they ever so base cowardly slavish as now embase the Spirits of his Subjects and to set a stamp and Character of Servitude upon them whereby they shall be disabled to do any thing for the Service of the King or Common-wealth 5.
and in new illegall Military or other Arbitrary Judicatories Committees or Courts of High Justice unknown to our Ancestors 3. That no Freeman of England unlesse it be by Speciall Grant and Act of Parliament may or ought to be compelled enforced pressed or arrayed to go forth of his own Countrey much lesse out of the Realm into forreign parts against his will in times of Warre or Peace or except he be specially obliged thereto by ancient Tenures and Charters save onely upon the sudden coming of strange enemies into the Realm and then he is to array himself onely in such sort as he is bound to do by the ancient Laws and Customes of the Kingdome still in force 4. That no Freeman of England may or ought to be disinherited disseised dispossessed or deprived of any inheritance Freehold Liberty Custome Franchise Chattle Goods whatsoever without his own Gift Grant or free Consent unlesse it be by lawfull Processe Triall and Judgement of his Peers or special Grant by act of Parliament 5. That the old received Government Lawes Statutes Customes Priviledges Courts of Justice legal Processe of the Kingdome and Crown ought not to be altered repealed suppressed nor any new form of Government Law Statute Ordinance Court of Judicature Writs or legal Proceedings instituted or imposed on all or any of the Free-men of England by any Person or Persons but onely in and by the Kingdomes free and full consent in a lawfull Parliament wherein the Legislative Power solely resides 6. That Parliaments ought to be duly summoned and held for the good and safety of the Kingdome every year or every three years at least or so often as there is just occasion That the Election of all Knights Citizens and Burgesses to sit and serve in Parliament and so of all oother Elective Officers ought to be free That all Members of Parliament hereditary or Elective ought to be present and there freely to speak and vote according to their judgements and Consciences without any over-awing Guards to terrifie them and none to be forced or secluded thence And that all Parliaments not thus duly summoned elected whilst held but unduly packed and all Acts of Parliament fraudulently and forcibly procured by indirect means ought to be nulled repealed as void and of dangerous president 7. That neither the Kings nor any Subjects of the Kingdome of England may or ought to be summoned before any Forreign Powers or Jurisdictions whatsoever out of the Realm or within the same for any manner of Right Inheritance Thing belonging to them or Offence done by them within the Realm 8. That all Subjects of the Realm are obliged by Allegiance and duty to defend their Lawfull Kings Persons Crowns the Laws Rights and Priviledges of the Realm and of Parliament against all Usurpers Traytors violence and Conspiracies And that no Subject of this Realm who according to his duty and Allegiance shall serve his King in his Warres for the just defence of him and the Land against Forreign enemies or Rebels shall lose or forfeit any thing for doing his true duty service and Allegiance to him therein but utterly discharged of all vexation trouble or losse 9. That no publick Warre by Land or Sea ought to be made or levied with or against any Forreign Nation or Publick Truce or League entred into with Forreign Realms or States to bind the Nation without their Common advice and consent in Parliament 10. That the ancient Honours Manors Lands Rents Revenues Inheritances Right and perquisites of the Crown of England originally settled thereon for the Ease Exemption of the people from all kind of Taxes payments whatsoever unlesse in cases of extraordinary necessity and for defraying all the constant ordinary expences of the Kingdome as the expences of the Kings houshold Court Officers Judges Embassadors Garisons Navy and the like ought not to be sold alienated given away or granted from it to the prejudice of the Crown and burdening of the people And that all Sales Alienations Gifts or Grants thereof to the empairing of the publick Revenue or prejudice of the Crown and people are void in Law and ought to be resumed and repealed by our Parliaments and Kings as they have frequently been in all former ages For the Readers fuller satisfaction in each of these propositions some of which I must shew here but briefly touch for brevity sake having elsewhere fully debated them in print I shall specially recommend unto him the perusall of such Tractates and Arguments formerly published wherein each of them hath been fully discussed which he may peruse at his best leasure The first of these Fundamentalls which I ●ntend principally to infist on is fully asserted debated confirmed by 13. H. 4. f. 14. By Fortescue Lord Chief Justice and Chancellour of England de laudibus Legum Angliae dedicated by him to King Henry the 6. f. 25. c. 36. f. 84. By a learned and necessary Argument against impositions in Parliament of 7. Jacobi by a late Reverend Judge printed at London 1641. By Mr. William Hakewell in his Liberty of the Subject against Impositions maintained in an Argument in the Parliament of 7. Jacobi printed at London 1641. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments concerning Shipmony both printed at London 1641. By the Case of Shipmony briefly discussed London 1640. by Mr. St. Johns Argument and Speech against Shipmony printed at London 1641. By Sir Edward Cook in his 1. Institutes p. 46. and 57. to 64. and 528. to 537. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons in Parliament against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. to 398. and 850. to 890. and by my own Humble Remonstrance against Shipmony London 1643. The fourth part of the Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 14. to 26. and my Legall Vindications of the Liberties of England against Illegall Taxes c. London 1649. and by the Records and Statutes cited in the ensuing Chapter referring for the most part to the first Proposition The second third and fourth of them are largely debated and confirmed by a Conference desired by the Lords and had by a Committee of both Houses concerning the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject 3. Aprilis 4. Caroli printed at London 1642. By Sir Edward Cook in his Institutes on Magna Charta c. 29. p. 45. to 57. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. c. 850. to 890. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments against Shipmony By Sir Robert Cotton his Posthuma p. 222. to 269. By my Breviate of the Prelates encroachments on the Kings Prerogative and Subjects Liberties p. 138. c. My new discovery of the Prelates tyranny p. 137. to 183. and some of the ensuing Statutes and Records The fifth and sixth of them are fully cleared and vindicated in and by the Prologues of all our Councils Statutes Laws before and since the Conquest By Sir Edward Cooks 4. Institutes ch 1. Mr. Cromptons Jurisdiction of Courts Title High Court of Parliament My Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 1 2 3 4. My Legal Vindication against illegal Taxes and pretended Acts of Parliament London 1649 Prynne the Member reconciled to Prynne the Barrester printed the same year My Historicall Collection of the ancient great Councils of the Parliaments of England London 1649. My Truth triumphing over Falshood Antiquity over Novelty London 1645. and some of the Records hereafter transcribed In this I shall be more sparing because so fully confirmed in these and other Treatises The seventh is ratified by Sir Edward Cooks 1. Institutes p. 97 98. 4. Institutes p. 89. and 5. Report Cawdries Case of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Lawes and Rastals Abridgement of Statutes Tit. Provisors Praemunire and Rome 11. H. 7. c. 1. and other Records and Statutes in the ensuing Chapter The eighth and ninth are fully debated in my Soveraign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes Part. 2. p. 3. to 34. Part fourth p. 162. to 170. and touched in Sir Robert Cottons Posthuma p. 174. 179. How all and every of these Fundamentall Liberties Rights Franchises Lawes have been unparalelledly violated subverted in all and every particular of late years beyond all Presidents in the worst of former ages even by their greatest pretended Propugners their own printed Edicts Instruments Ordinances Papers together with their illegall oppressions Taxes Excises Imposts Rapines violences Proceedings of all kinds whereof I shall give a brief accompt in its due place will sufficiently evidence if compared with the premised propositions Which abundantly confirm the truth of our Saviours words John 10. 1. 10. and this rule of Johannis Angelius Wenderhagen Politicae Synopticae lib. 3. c. 9. sect 11. p. 310. Hinc Regulae loco notandum Quod omne Regnum Vi Armata acquisitum in Effectu Subditis Semper in durioris Servitutis conditiones arripiat licet à principio Ducedinem prurientibus spirare videatur Ideo cunctis hoc cavendum Nè temerè se duci patiantur FINIS
himself nor to his particular advantage These grounds thus laid extend not to the Commission of Array alone but to all other charges that his Majesty shall impose upon his Subjects upon pretence of Defence of the Kingdom for there is the same reason of Law for any other charge that is pretended for Defence as for this If his Majesty by the Common Law may charge his Subjects to finde Arms and other things in the Commission injoyned because they are for Defence of the Kingdom by the same reason of Law he may command his People to build Castles Forts and Bulworks and after to maintain them with Garrisons Arms and Victuals at their own charges And by the same reason he may compel his Subjects to finde Ships and furnish them with Men Ammunition and Victuals and to finde Souldiers pay coat and conduct-money provide victuals for Souldiers and all other things NECESSARY FOR AN * Do not the Army-Officers now enforce them to all this without a Parliament ARMY these things being as necessary for Defence as any thing that can be done in execution of this Commission And for that exposition of the Petition of Right and other Statutes therein noted if it should hold doth it not overthrow as well the Petition it self as all other Lawes that have been made for the Subjects benefit against Taxes and other Charges either in this or any other Parliament These Positions thus laid down and maintained DO SHAKE THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE KINGDOM THE ANCIENT BIRTH-RIGHT OF EVERY SUBJECT both for THE PROPERTY OF HIS GOODS AND LIBERTY OF HIS PERSON Nay they strike at the root of Parliaments What need his * These Expostulations reach to those at White-Hall now who presume to impose Taxes Customs Excises and make b●nding Laws which no Kings there ever did in like nature no● their Counc●ls in any Age. Majesty call Parliaments to provide for Defence of the Realm when himself may compel his Subjects to defend it without Parliaments If these grounds should hold what need the Subjects grant Subsidies in Parliament for Defence of the Kingdom in time of real danger if the King for defence at any times when he shall only conceive or pretend danger may impose Charges upon his Subjects without their consent in Parliament Upon that which hath been said in this and our former Declaration we doubt not but all indifferent men will be satisfied that this Commission of Array is full of danger and inconvenience to the Subjects of England AND AGAINST THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE LAND both for PROPERTY OF GOODS AND LIBERTY OF PERSON c. 2. As it is against THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM so no Statute makes it good c. And the Lords and Commons do upon the whole matter here conclude that they are very much aggrieved that after so many Declarations and solemn Protestations made by his Majesty to rule by the known Laws of this Land his Majesty by advice of his ill Councellors should be perswaded to set such a Commission on foot which is so clearly contrary TO THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THIS LAND the Right of Property and Liberty of the Subject contrary to former Resolutions of Parliament and to the Petition of Right I am certain the generality of the Nation are now as much and more aggrieved that some who were Parties to this Declaration and others who have made as many or more Declarations and Protestations as his Majesty ever did to rule by the known Laws of the Land should since this far exceed his Majesty in the like or more exorbitances in the Militia Excises Taxes Impositions Imprisonments arbitrary extravagant proceedings and capital executions in new erected Courts of Injustice as diametrically contrary as the Kings Commissions of Array to the Fundamental Laws of the Land four times together so stiled and insided on as such in this one Declaration of both Houses the Right of Property of the Subject contrary to former Resolutions and the Petition of Right yea which is most abominable to their own Declarations Remonstrances Votes Protestations Vows Solemn Leagues and Covenants in Parliament to their own eternal Infamy as well as the peoples intolerable oppression and Slavery who thereupon may justly conclude and protest against them as both Houses did in the close of that Declaration against the Array viz * Exact Collection p. 888. And the Lords and Commons do and shall adhere to their former Votes and Resolutions That all those that are Actors in putting of this Commission of Array in execution shall be esteemed disturbers of the Peace of the Kingdome and the Properties and Liberties of the Subject The tenth evidence is 10. a A Collection of all 〈◊〉 Order● 〈…〉 and Declarations of Parliament p. 451 452 457 458. the Vote and Letter of both Houses of Parliament sent to his Majesty at Oxford 9. March 1643. in answer to his Majesties of the third of March wherein there is this passage We the Lords and Commons assembled in the Parliament of England c. have resolved with the concurrent advice and consent of the Commissioner● of Scotland to represent to your Majesty in all hum●●ity and plainness as followeth That this present Parliament convened according to the known and FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE KINGDOM the continuance whereof is established by a Law consented to by your Ma●esty is in effect denied to be a Parliament c. And hereupon we think our selves bound to let your Majesty know That since the * Yet forcibly dissolved by the Army and some new in Power against their Commissions Oaths Trusts Protestation Covenant and an Act of Parliament for their continuance who may do well to peruse this 〈◊〉 See Chap. 2. Proposition 6. 7. continuance of this Parliament is setled by a Law which as all other Laws of your Kingdom your Majesty is sworn to maintain as we are sworn to our Allegiance to your Majesty these Obligations being reciprocal we must in duty and accordingly are resolved with our lives and fortunes to defend and preserve the just Rights and full Power of this Parliament To which the Earl of Essex then General by both Houses direction in his Letter to the Earl of Forth Jan. 30. 1643. adds this Corollary My Lord the maintenance of the Parliament of England and the Priviledges thereof is that for which we are all resolved to spend our bloud as being THE FOUNDATION WHEREON ALL OUR LAWS and LIBERTIES ARE BUILT Which both the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament in their Declaration of 23. Martii 1643. touching their proceedings upon his Majesties Letter concerning a Treaty of Peace wherein this Earls former Letter is recited thus second The Parliament of England is the only Basis the chief Support and Pillar of our Laws and Liberties c. And if notwithstanding all these Obligations the King shall * How much more ●h●n if the Army o● Army-Officers shall do●● without question or exemplary
have done some other of my writings of this nature with all which they must first brand Mr. St John Mr. Pym the whole House of Commons the last two with all other Parliamens forecited ere they can accuse traduce or censure me who do but barely relate apply their words and judgements without malice or partiality for the whole Kingdomes benefit and security To these punctuall full Jury of Records and Parliamentary Authorities in point I could accumulate Sir Edward Cook his 3. Institutes p. 9. printed and authorised by the House of Commons speciall Order the last Parliament The severall Speeches of Mr. Hide Mr. Walker Mr. Pierpoint and Mr. Hollis July 6. 1641. at the Lords Bar in Parliament by order of the Commons House at the Impeachment of the Shipmony Judges of High Treason printed in Diurnall Occurrences and speeches in Parliament London 1641. p. 237. to 264. Mr. Samuel Browns Argument at Law before the Lords and Commons at Canterburies Attainder all manifesting their endevouring to subvert the Fundamentall Laws and government of the Nation to be HIGH TREASON with sundry other printed Authorities to prove That we have fundamentall Laws Liberties Rights and a fundamentall Government likewise which ought not to be innovated violated or subverted upon any pretences whatsoever by any power or prevailing Faction But to avoid prolixity the double Jury of irrefragable and punctuall Authorities already produced being sufficient to satisfie the most obstinate Opposites formerly contradicting it I shall onely adde three swaying Authorities more wherewith I shall conclude this point The first is a very late one in a Treatise intituled A true State of the Common wealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging in Reference to the late established Government by a Lord Protector and a PARLIAMENT It being the Judgement of DIVERS PERSONS who throughout these late troubles have approved themselves faithfull to the Cause and interest of God and their COUNTRY presented to the Publick for the satisfaction of others Printed at London 1654. who relating the miscarriages of the last Assembly at Westminster use these expressions of them p 13 14 16 17 21 22. But on the contrary it so fell out in a short time that there appeared many in this Assembly of very contrary Principles to the interest aforesaid which led them violently on to attempt and promote many things the consequence whereof would have been A Subverting of the fundamentall Laws of the Land the Destruction of Property and an utter extinguishment of the Gospel In truth their Principles led them TO A PULLING DOWN ALL AND ESTABLISHING NOTHING So that instead of the expected settlement they were running ●ut into FURTHER ANARCHY and CONFUSION As to the Laws and Civil Rights of the Nation nothing would serve them but A TOTALL ERADICATION OF THE OLD and INTRODUCTION OF A NEW and so the Good Old Laws of England the Guardians of our Lives and Fortunes established with prudence and confirmed by the experience of many Ages and Generations The Preservation whereof was a principall Ground of our late Quarrel with the King having been once abolished what could we have expected afterward but an inthroning of Arbitrary Power in the Seat of Judicature and an exposing of our Lives our Estates our Liberties and all that is dear unto us as a Sacrifice to the boundlesse Appetite of Meer Will and Power c. Things being at this Passe and the House through these proceedings perfectly disjointed it was in vain to look for a settlement of this Nation from them thus constituted on the contrary nothing else could be expected But that the Common-wealth should sink under their Hands and the great cause hitherto so happily upheld and maintained to be for ever lost through their preposterous management of these affairs wherewith they had been intrusted Whereupon they justifie their dissolution and turning them forcibly out of doores by the Souldiers with shame and infamy to prevent that destruction which thereby was coming on THE WHOLE LAND but this New Powder Treason Plot set on foot by the Jesuites and Anabaptists to destroy our Laws Liberties properties Ministers and Religion it self at one blow and that in the very Parliament House where they had been constantly defended vindicated preserved established in all former ages by all true English Parliaments The second is a See my Speech in Parliament p. 100. to 108. The Votes of the House of Commons concerning a Paper presented to them entituled An agreement of the people for a firm and present peace upon grounds of Common Right 9. November 1647. viz. Resolved upon the Question That the matters contained in these Papers Are destructive to the being of Parliaments and to the Fundamentall Government of this Kingdome Resolved c. That a Letter be sent to the Generall and those Papers inclosed together with the Vote of this House upon them And that he be desired to examine the proceedings of this businesse in the Army where it was first coined and return an Accompt hereof to this House These Votes were seconded soon after with these ensuing votes entred in the Commons Journall and printed by their special Order 23. November 1647. A Petition directed to the Supream Authority of England the Commons in Parliament assembled The humble petition of many Free born people of England c. was read the first and second time Resolved upon the Question that this petition is A sedititious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former petition and paper annexed stiled an agreement of the people formerly adjudged by this House to be Destructive to the being of Parliaments and Fundamentall Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Thomas Prince Cheesemonger and Samuel Chidley be forthwith committed prisoners to the Prison of the Gatehouse there to remain prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a Seditious avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the People formerly Ajudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliamen's and fundamentall Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Jeremy Jues Thomas Taylor and William Larnar be forthwith committed to the Prison of Newgate there to remain Prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agrement of the people formerly adjudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and Fundamentall Government of this Kingdome Resolved c. That a Letter be prepared and sent to the Generall taking notice of his proceeding in the execution according to the Rules of Warre of a mutinous person avowing and prosecuting this agreement in the Army contrary to these Votes at the Rendezvouz near Ware and to give him thanks for it and to desire him to prosecute that Businesse to the bottome and to bring Such guilty persons as he shall think fit to condigne and exemplary Punishment Resolved c.