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A71223 The compleat History of independencie Upon the Parliament begun 1640. By Clem. Walker, Esq; Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth part was never before published.; History of independency. Walker, Clement, 1595-1651.; Theodorus Verax. aut; T. M., lover of his king and country. aut 1661 (1661) Wing W324B; ESTC R220805 504,530 690

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was no Traitor either to King or Country save only to Argile The Earl of Airly having his estate plundered and his House thrown down in revenge of an antient quarrel amongst their Predecessors for the Earl of Airly having some Lands in the Bray of Angus out of which Argile's men did many times drive Heards of Cattle Sheep and other Beasts for which the Lord Ogilbee could have no remedy these Thieves being protected by the Earl of Argile by advice of his Lawyers he did Charge the Earl of Argile that he should find surety not to maintain or protect such Out-lawes but before he could obtain the same he was obliged according to the custome of Scotland to give his Oath he did fear bodily harm from Argile which he was unwilling to do alleging it were only a Beastly harm that he did fear for if he would not protect those that did steal his poor mens Beasts he was nothing afraid of his body This tart Answer after an age must under colour of service to the State be so revenged The Gourdons divers of whom he betrayed under trust and under pretence of securing his Neces Portions that he was ingaged for possessing himself of Badinoch and Lochabar and plundring friends and foes indifferently in his marches too and fro and the inexhaustible treasure of the Scots Exchequer must allow him eleven or twelve thousand pound sterling for every Voyage whereas his Breechlesse Souldiery were well content with their Beef and Bannocks and such convenient plunder as the Country could afford these as I conceive were the most considerable Forces Montrosse ever had unlesse some that were through fear compelled to yield for the time so that the bloud-shed in Scotland by Montrosse and Macdonald do properly fall upon Argiles score no other under Heaven having occasioned both their out-breakings and all their partakers who did see no other way to be revenged on him that had made himself Master of all the Estate having made Argile's quarrel their own than by heaving at all under the specious pretext of the Kings interest which if God in mercy had not prevented they had almost effectuate through Argile's misgovernment wherein it is to be remarked that when he was overthrown by Montrosse in Lochaber the second of February 1645. many of his friends being killed and others taken he who would not release Culkettough for his Sons good service nor the Generals ingagement or the Committee of Estates desire you must not speak of Command for Master James Hamilton a faithful Minister of the Gospel who found more kindnesse from Culkettough than from this Canibal Covenanter is now content to release all to get a poor Company of his Country-men leaving the Godly Minister in cruel bondage whom Culkettough did release upon his Paroll and promise to send him a Boy that was forgot behind This religious Covenanter out of his pious care for the education of his Sister in the true Religion as he pretended did by His Majesties special favour overthrow the last will and Testament of his Mother-in-law by getting himself made Administrator in the room of him who was nominated therein whereby he got the Gentlewoman his Sisters whole patrimony into his hands but before he could prevail in this his Majesty did take special care that sufficient Surety should be given that the Will of the Dead should be truly performed by payment of their respective portions when they were Married and sufficient maintenance until they were Married the Elder whose Portion was Five thousand pound sterling is presently sent for and one thousand pound or thereby given to a Gentleman for his second Wife the rest there being a clause that if any of them should enter into Nunneries they should only have 300 l. sterling for all being kept so scarce of their due maintenance the Gentleman who was surety having advanced of his own above 1000 l. whereof he is not as yet repaid were seduced to go to Monasteries all save one who is now ready to enter through his neglect so this 12000 l. of his Sisters Portions with the ruine of their Souls to boot is a part of Argile's wel-made purchase The great care taken by the Earl of Morton for Argile's education and preservation both of his life from the crafty designs of a Step-mother and recovery of his almost ruined Estate was so wel requited that notwithstanding he hath the Earl of Morton's Daughter in his bed in open Parliament he spake what became him not both of that noble Lords Person and Estate only as he pretended out of his zeal to the welfare of the Kingdom whereas the truth is it was meerly out of his ambition to have that Honourable place conferred upon himself which was intended by his Majesty upon that noble Lord but finding His Majesty not inclinable that way the next assault was for one of his own name a man truly wel-deserving for to say better deserving than himself is no great praise and if his two much favouring of him do not stain his reputation worthy to be beloved Thus having shortly viewed Argile's religious carriage towards his Vassals and Tenants Parents Friends and Allyes Brother and Sisters Neighbours and fellow-Patriots let us take a short view of his Loyal carriage towards his Soveraign and his due observation of the Solemn League and Covenant with his covenanted Brethren of England and then let the impartial Reader judge whether he be not such as is affirmed in the proposition the greatest incendiary in the three Kingdoms It cannot be denied but His Maiesty as is mentioned before did confer many great and Princely favours upon him at the Earl of Morton's desire when he was Lord of Lorn such whereof as required confirmation were approved and ratified in Parliament His Majesty being present anno 1641. with the addition of the honour and title of Marquesse and a full Pension well paid ever since whoever want together with not only an act of oblivion but an approbation of all his tyrannical proceedings against the Athol men the Earl of Airely and others though not particularly mentioned yet as done in obedience of Orders from the Committee of Estates obtained by his own procurement therefore to be no further questioned The first endeavour in requital of these and many other Royal favours was the entring in conspiracy with certain his Confederates whom I forbear to name to transform the Kingdom of Scotland into a Free State like the Estates of Holland and because some truly noble Lords did abhor such a disloyal motion after so many Acts of favour witnessing to all Posterity his Royal bounty both to Church and State whereof these chief Conspirators tasted not a little he did at that time forbear not so much to prosecute his design as to conceal their Counsel from all these that had thoughts of Loyalty though most faithfull to the true Religion and their Countrey according to the Covenant The Irish Rebellion breaking out fearing his own stake if
submit to the power of the Sword the hilt and handle whereof they hold They turn out the Lieutenant of the Tower without cause shewn The consequences of these two actions were that immediately the City decayed in Trade above 200000 l. a week and no more bullion came to the Mint They displace all our Governours though placed by Ordinance of Parliament and put in men of their own party for this encroching faction will have all in their own hands they alter and divide the Militia of London setting up pa●ticular Militia's at Westminster Southwark and the Hamblets of the Tower that being so divided they may be the weaker Demolish the Lines of Communication that the City and Parliament may lie open to Invasion when they please and fright many more Members from the Houses with threats and fear of false impeachments The 11. impeached Members having leave by order of the House and license of the Speaker some to go beyond Sea and Anthony Nichols to go into his own Country to settle his Affairs Some of them as Sir William Waller and M. Den Hollis were attacht upon the Sea Nichols arrested upon the way into Cornwall by the Army and despightfully used And when the General was inclined to free him Cromwel whose malice is known to be as unquenchable as his Nose told him he was a Traitor to the Army You see now upon whom they meant to fix the peoples allegiance for where no allegiance is due there can be no Treason and to what purpose they have since by their 4 Votes first debated between the Independent Grandees of the Houses and Army laid aside the King and as much as in them is taken off our Allegiance from him Col. Birch formerly imployed for Ireland by the Parliament was imprisoned and his men mutinied against him by the Army and Sir Sam. Luke resting quietly in his own house was there seized upon and carried Prisoner into the Army All these Acts of terror were but so many scarecrowes set up to fright more Presbyterians from the Houses and make the Army masters of their Votes 38. Proceedings of both Houses under the power of the Army I must in the next place fall upon the Proceeding in both Houses acted under the power and influence of this all-inslaving all-devouring Army and their engaged party to attain the knowledge whereof I have used my utmost industry and interest with many my near friends and kinsmen sitting within those Walls heretofore when Kings 39. Ordinance to Nul and Void all Acts passed in absence of the 2 runagado Speakers not Brewers and Draymen were in power the walls of publick Liberty The Lords that sate in absence of the two Speakers all but the Earl of Pembrook whose easie disposition made him fit for all companies found it their safest course to forbear the House leaving it to be possessed by those few Lords that went to and engaged with the Army which ingaged Lords sent to the Commons for their concurrence to an Ordinance To make all Acts Orders and Ordinances passed from the 26 July when the tumult was upon the Houses to the 6 of August following being the day of the fugitive Members return Void and Null ab initio This was five or six several days severally and fully debated as often put to the question and carried in the Negative every time Yet the Lords still renewed the same message to them beating back their Votes into their throats and would not acquiesce but upon every denial put them again to roll the same stone contrary to the privileges of the Commons The chief Arguments used by the engaged party were all grounded upon the Common places of fear and necessity 40. Menaces used by the engaged party in the House Mr. Solicitor threatning if they did not concur the Lords were resolved to vindicate the Honour of their House and sit no more they must have recourse to the power of the Sword The longest Sword take all That they were all engaged to live and die with the Army They should have a sad time of it Haslerigge used the like language farther saying Some heads must flie off and he feared the Parliament of England would not save the Kingdom of England they must look another way for safety They could not satisfie the Army but by declaring all void ab initio and the Lords were so far engaged that no middle way would serve To this was answered That this was an appeal from the Parliament to the Army And when these and many more threats of as high nature were complained of as destructive to the liberty and beings of Parliaments the Speaker would take no notice of it Sir Henry Vane junior Sir John Evelin junior Prideaux Gourdon Mildmay Thomas Scot Cornelius Holland and many more used the like threats Upon the last Negative being the fifth or sixth the Speaker perceiving greater enforcements must be used pulled a Letter out of his pocket 41. A threatning Remonstrance from the Army to the House From the General and General Council of the Army for that was now their stile pretending he then received it But it was conceived he received it over night with directions to conceal it if the question had passed the affirmative It was accompanied with a Remonstrance full of villanous language and threats against those Members that sate while the two Speakers were with the Army calling them pretended Members charging them in general with Treason Treachery and breach of Trust and protested if they shall presume to stir before they have cleared themselve● that they did not give their assents to such and such Votes they should sit at their peril and he would take them as prisoners of War and try them at a Council of War What King of England ever offered so great a violence to the fundamental Privileges of Parliament as to deny them the Liberty of Voting I and No freely Certainly the little finger of a Jack Cade or a Wat Tyler is far heavier than the loynes of any King Many Members were amazed at this Letter and it was moved That the Speaker should command all the Members to meet at the House the next day and should declare That they should be secured from danger And that it might be ordered That no more but the ordinary Guards should attend the house But these two motions were violently opposed with vollies of threats by the aforesaid Parties and others And after more than two hours debate the Speaker refused to put any question upon them or any of them and so adjourned to the next morning leaving the Presbyterian Members to meet at their Peril The next day being Friday the 20. August there was a very thin Assembly in the House of Commons the House having with so much violence denyed protection to their Members the day before made most of the Presbyterian party absent Some went over to the Independent party others sate mute At last a Committee was appointed presently
Deposing or taking away the Kings life be not really guilty of High Treason and all those who were aiding or assenting to the erection thereof in such an irregular manner by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm 5. Whether those who are professed Enemies to the King and by their Remonstrances Speeches and actions profess they desire his blood and seek his life can either in Law or Conscience be reputed competent Judges to try him for his life It being a just exception to any Jury man who is to try the basest or poorest Felon and a legal challenge for which he must be withdrawn that he is a professed Enemy and Prosecutor who seeks his life and therefore no lawfull nor indifferent trier of him for it 6. Whether the triall and taking away of the Kings life by such an illegal and arbitrary High Court of Justice as this will not prove a most dangerous inlet to the absolutest tyranny and bloodiest butchery ever yet heard of or practised in this or any other Nation and a ready way to teach us how to chop off one anothers heads till we are all destroyed For if they may take away the Kings head in it without and against all rules of Law then by the same or stronger reason they may in like manner chop off the heads of any Nobleman Peer Member Gentleman or inferiour Subject for any imaginary Treason or offence and confiscate their Estates there being no assurance they will stop at the Kings The Answer of the Generall Councel of Officers touching the secluded Members Jan. 3. 1648. And if those who are confessed to be the Majority of the Com. House and therefore excluded or the Prince of Wales next Heir to the Crown or the Malignant party or any oher Faction whatsoever which may arise should at any time hereafter get the upper hand by the peoples general adhering to them or any divisions of the Army or by any means Gods providence should administer who hath thousands of ways to pull down the proudest Tyrants and dissipate the strongest Armies in a moment as he did Senacheribs the Midianites the Moabites and Ammonites with sundry others recorded in sacred Writ and prophane Stories and the Scots Army but few months since they may by like authority and president erect the like new Court to cut off the heads of all the Members now sitting and of the present General Councel of the Army and all the Commissioners acting in this new Court and so fall a murthering and butchering one another till we were all destroyed one by another and made a spectacle of most unnatural tyranny and cruelty to the whole world Angels and Men and a prey to our common Enemies Upon which consideration let every man now seriously lay his hand upon his own breast and sadly consider what the bloody tragical issue of this new Phaleris Bull may prove to him or his and whether every Free-born English-man especially of Noblest birth and amplest Estate be not deeply obliged in point of prudence and conscience to use his utmost endeavour with hazard of life and estate to prevent the erection of such an exorbitant and illegal Authority in the very rise and foundation ere it be over-late and not patiently suffer a rash inconsiderate number of Hotspurs of mean condition and broken desperate fortunes for the most part out of private malice fear or designs to secure and enrich themselves by the ruines of others of better fortunes and quality to set up such a new shambles to butcher and quarter the King Nobles Parliament-men Gentlemen and persons of all conditions as was never heard of among Pagans or Christians from the Creation to this present and will no way suit with our English soil already overmuch watred with English blood and so deeply ingaged against all arbitrary and tyrannical usurpations and proceedings especially capital in any hands whatsoever which have cost us so much blood and treasure to oppose and fight against for seven years last past Saturday Ian. 20. 1648. 80. The first days Trial of his Majesty The new thing called The High Court of Justice sate Bradshaw being President who had the Mace and Sword carried before him and 20 Gentlemen forsooth with Partizans for his Guard under the command of Colonel Fox the Tinker An O yes being made and silence commanded the said Act of the Commons for erecting the said Court was read and the Court called there being about 70 of the Commissioners present Then the King was brought to the Bar by Col. Hacker with Halberdiers the Mace of the Court conducting him to his chair within the Bar where he sate And then Pres Bradshaw said to the King Charles Stuart King of England The Commons of England assembled in Parliament being sensible of the great calamities brought upon this Nation Prove this power and trust The whole Kingdom in effect deny it So do all our Law-Books and the practice of all Ages and of the innocent blood shed which are referred to you as the Author of it according to that duty which they owne to God the Nation and themselves and according to that power and fundamental trust reposed in them by the People have constituted this High Court of Justice before which you are now brought and you are to hear your Charge upon which the Court will proceed Solicitor Cook 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 misdemeanours and I doe in the name of the Commons of England desire the Charge may be read unto him The King Hold a little President Sir the Court commands the Charge to be read afterwards you may be heard The Charge was read as followeth The Charge against King Charles the First January 20. 1648. The Charge read 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 and power of frequent and successive Parliaments or National meetings in Councel He the said Charles Stuart for accomplishment of such his Designs and for the protecting of himself and his Adherents in his and their wicked Practises to the same Ends hath traiterously and malitiously levied War against the present Parliament and the People therein Represented Particularly upon or
166. A debate how to defeat Judgments Extents c. upon Delinquents lands sect Extents c. lying upon Delinquents Estates you see notwithstanding their Declaratory Vote That in things concerning the Lives Liberties and Prop●rties of the People they would maintain the known Laws of the Land yet this Vote as well as all others hath a condition implied that is do no wayes hinder the Gains of our godly Grandees otherwise they would not consider how to defeat Creditors of their legal assurance John Lilburne being ordered a close Prisoner in the Tower by the Commons without Pen Ink or Paper 167. John Lilburne starving imprisonment in the Tower which was tyranny under King Charls but not under K. Oliver a Petition was presented to the Commons by many well-affected that John might have the allowance usually and legally due to Prisoners in the like case for his support The allowance is 4 l. a Week as I conceive which was rejected insomuch that John was kept 3 whole dayes with one half meales meat this is to condemn men unheard to be murdered by famine in their private slaughter-houses when they cannot or dare not murder them in their pretended Courts of Judicature or publick shambles yet afterwards when the drawing together of the Levellers and discontents of Newcastle affrighted the Commons they Voted him the short allowance of 20 s. a week Thus you see nothing but feares and dangers can kindle the least spark of goodness and compassion in their woolvish breasts wherefore Lord I beseech thee heap fears and terrors upon their guilty pates till with Judas Iscariot they cry out We have sinned in that we have betrayed innocent blood 168. Why Ireton laid down his Commission Cromwel being to march against the Levellers left Ireton behind him like a hobby daring of larks to over-awe the Conventicle at Westminster and see they chaunt no tune but of their setting the better to keep himself in a neutral reconciling posture Ireton laid down his Commission which he can take up again at pleasure whereby he puts off all addresses to him from the levelling party for the present This poor fellow now keepeth his golden Coach which cost 200 l. and 4 gallant Horses The world is well altered with such petty Companions and hereby the Souldiers may see what becomes of their Arrears There hath been a seeming falling out between Cromwel and Ireton 169. Hugh Peters ●isits J. Lil●urne in the Tower and ●he sum of ●heir Conse●ence Witness his ●ampering with Hamil●on c. John Lilburne being a close Prisoner in the Tower as hath been said Hugh Peters Chaplain in Ordinary to-two great Potentates Lucifer and Oliver came about dinner-time May 25. 1649. to visit him and though admittance be denied to other men yet to him the Gates flew open as sure as Saint Peter keeps the keyes of Heaven Hugh Peters keeps the keyes of our Hell and our Grandees Consciences and openeth and shutteth at pleasure he is Confessor at Tyburn and hath a great power over damned Spirits or rather over such Spirits as not submitting basely to the tyranny of our State-Mountebanks incur their condemnation in this world by Gods permission in order to their salvation in the next world the tyranny of these Usurpers implying at once their cruelties over our bodies and Gods mercy to our souls Hugh's first salute was That he came meerly to give John a visit without any design his guilty conscience prompting him to a voluntary Apology John answered I know you wel enough you are one of the setting Dogs of the great Men of the Army with fair and plausible pretences to intimate into men when they have done them wrong and to workout their designs when they are in a strait and cover over the blots that they have made Then John complained of the ‖ Compare this Act of the Kings with the violent act of those Traytors and Tyrants Fairfax and his Councel of War in imprisoning and secluding above 200. Members at once without cause shewn and leaving only 40 or 50 of their cheating Faction in the House to carry on their bloody Anarchical designs some of which secured Members with barbarous usage were almost brought to death and their murder since attempted by Souldiers illegal and violent seizing upon him by Souldiers and carrying him before that new erected thing called A Councel of State who committed him without any Accusor Accusation Prosecutor or Witness or any due process of Law and yet when the King impeached the five Members and preferred a Charge of high Treason against them Recorded 1. part Book of Decl. p. 35. and only failed in a single punctilio of due process of Law they cryed outs it was an invasion of the Peoples Liberties so that four or five Recantations from him recorded in their own Declarations would not serve his turn Peters half out of countenance if so prostituted a Villain that practises impudence amongst common Whores and whose Pulpit is more shameful than another mans Pillory can be out of countenance takes up one of Coke's Institutions and pofessed Lilburn was meerly gulled in reading or trusting to those Books for there were no Laws in England John answered he did beleeve him for that his great Masters Cromwel Fairfax c. had destroyed them all Nay quoth Hugh there never were any in England with that John shewed him the Petition of Right asking him whether that were Law which Peters had the impudence to deny asking what Law was John replied * The Law is now taken away and all things in confusion by turning our Monarchy without or consent into a Free-State of Slaves governed by Tyrants out of the Parliaments own Declarations The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt good and evil just and unjust If you take away the Law all things will fall into confusion every man will become a law unto himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce great enormities Lust will become a law Envy a law Covetousness and Ambition will become laws and what dictates what decisions such laws will produce may easily be discerned This Mr. Peters is a Definition of Law by the Parliament in the dayes of their primitive purity before they had corrupted themselves with the Commonwealths money And elsewhere the Law is called The safeguard the custody of all private Interests your honours lives liberties and estates are all in the keeping of the Law without this every man hath a like Right to any thing It is the best birth-right the Subject hath It is a miserable servitude or bondage where the Law is uncertain or unknown To this the Comick Priest replied I tell you for all this there is no Law in this Nation but the Sword and what it gives neither was there any Law or Government in the world This doctrine of Devils that it is lawful to submit to any present power that is strongest is
Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or Free Customs or be out-lawed or exiled or any other ways destroyed Nor we shall not pass upon him but by a lawful Iudgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land 2. We shall sell to no man nor deferr to any man Iustice or Right By the Stat. 42. Ed. III chap III. The Great Charter is commanded to be kept in all points and it is enacted That if any Stat. be made to the contrary That shall be holden for none By the Act 26 March 1650. entituled An Act for establishing An High Court of Iustice Power is given to this Court To Try Condemn and cause execution of death to be done upon the Freemen of England according as the Major number of any 12. of the Members thereof shall judge to appertain to Justice And therupon the Respondent doth humbly inferre and affirme that the Tenor of the said Act is diametrically opposite to and inconsistent with the said Great Charter And is therefore by the said recited Stat. 42. Ed. III. to be holden for none Secondly That it can with no more Reason Equity or Justice hold the reputation or value of a Law if the said Stat. had not bin then if contrary to the 2d Clause of the 29. chap of Magna Charta it had bin also enacted That Iustice and Right shall be deferred to all Freemen and sould to all that will buy it By the Petition of Right 3. Car. upon premising That contrary to the Great Charter Trials and Executions had bin had and done against the Subjects by Commissions Martial c. it was therby prayed and by Commission enacted That 1. No Commissions of the like nature might be thenceforth issued c. 2. To prevent least any of the Subjects should be put to death Contrary to the Laws and Franchises of the Land The Respondent hereupon Humbly observeth and affirmeth That this Court is though under a d●fferent stile in nature and in the Proceedings therby directed the same with a Commission Martial The Freemen thereby being to be tried for life and adjudged by the Opinion of the Major Number of the Commissioners sitting as in Courts of Commissioners Martiall was practised and was agreeable to their constitution And consequently against the Petition of Right in which he and all the Freemen of England if it be granted there be any such hath and have Right and Interest he humbly claimes his right accordingly By the Declarations of this Parliament Dec. and Jan. 17. 1641. The benefit of the Laws and the ordinary course of Justice are the Subjects Birthright By the Declaration 12. July 6. 1. Octob. 1642. The Prosecution of the Laws and due administration of Iustice are owned to be the justifying cause of the War and the end of the Parliaments affaires managed by their Swords and Counsels and Gods curse is by them imprecated in case they should ever decline those ends By the Declaration 17. Aprill 1646. Promise was made not to interrupt the Course of Justice in the ordinary Courts By the Ordinance or Votes of Non-addresses Jan. 1648. It is assured That though they lay aside the King yet they will govern by the Laws and not interrupt the course of Iustice in the ordinary Courts thereof * * Th y forget the 2. Declarations 9. Febr. 17. March 1648. And therfore this Respondent humbly averreth and affirmeth That the constitution of this Court is a breach of the publique Faith of the Parliament exhibited and pledged in those Declarations and Votes to the Freemen of England And upon the whole matter the Respondent saving as aforesaid doth affirme for Law and claimeth as is Right That 1. This Court in defect of the validity of the said Act by which it is constituted hath no power to proceed against him or to presse him to a further Answer 2. That by vertue of Magna Charta The Petition of Right and the before recited Declarations he ought not to be proceeded against in this Court but by an ordinary Court of Iustice and to be tried by his Peers And humbly prayeth That this his present Answer and Salvo may be accepted and registred Eusebius Andrewes The Second Answer of Col. Eusebius Andrews Esquire To the Honorable The High Court of Justice 1650. THe said Respondent with the Favour of this Honorable Court reserving and praying to be allowed the Benefit and Liberty of making further Answer if it shall be Necessary In all humblenesse for the present Answer offereth to this Honourable Court. That by the Letter and genuine sense of the Act entituled An Act for establishing an High Court of Justice The said Court is not qualified to try a Freeman of England such as the Respondent averreth himself to be for life in case of Treason For that 1. The said Court is not constituted a Court of Record neither hath Commission returnable into a Court of Record So that 1. The State cannot upon the Record and but upon Record cannot at all have that account of their Freemen which Kings were wont to have of their Subjects and States exact else where at the hands of their Ministers of Justice 2. The Freemen and those who are or may be concerned in him can have no Record to resort to by which to preserve the Rights due to him and them respectively viz. 1. A writ of Errour in case of erronious judgment 2. A plea of Auterfoies acquit in case of new question for the same fact 3. An Enlargement upon Acquitall 4. A Writ of Conspiracy not to be brought until Acquital against those who have practised to betray the life of the Respondent 1. The Writ of Errour is due by Presidents Paschae 39. Ed. III. John of Gaunts Case Rot. Parliament 4. Ed. III. Num. 13. Count de Arundells Case Rot. Parliament 49. Ed. III. Num. 23. Sr. John of Lees Case 2. Auterfois acquit appears by Wetherell and Darl●is Case 4. Rep. 43. EliZ. Vaux his Case 4. Rep. 33. Eliz. 3. The Enlargement appears by Stat. 14. Hen. IV. chap. 1. Diers Reports fol. 121. The year book of E●● IV. 10. fol. 19. 4. The writ of Conspiracy by The Poulters Case 9 Rep. fol. 55. This Court is to determine at a day without account of their proceedings and have power to try judge and cause Execution but not to acquit or give Enlargement So that the nocent are therby punishable the injured and betrayed not vindicable Which are defects incompatible with a Court of Iustice and inconsistent with Iustice it self and the honor of a Christian Nation and Common wealth 2. The Members of this Court are by the said Act directed to be sworn 1. Not in conspectu populi For the Freemans satisfaction 2. Not in words of Indifferency and obliging in equality 3. But in words of manifest partiality viz. You shall swear That you shall well and truly according to the best of your skill and
himself and moderate his Actions the Army looking upon him as their onely Enemy and Opponent in the City lest they should seize upon him and carry him away or do him some other mischief This is conceived to be an Independent mouse-trap set up to catch a Presbyterian in for if the Major General had not discovered the said Letter and it had been found about him or in his House or if it had been testified that such a Letter was left at his house and concealed here had been matter enough for an Impeachment against him 104. Correspondency with Card. Mazerini The Grandees of Derby house and the Army solicit the detaining of the PRINCE in France and the delaying of his journey for England lest he trouble the yet unsetled Kingdom of the Saints To negotiate which they have an Agent lying Lieger with Cardinal Mazarini the great French instrument of State who is so well supplied with Money and so open handed That it hath been heard from Mazarin's own mouth That all the money the Queen and Prince hath cost the Crown of France hath come out of the Parliament Purse with a good advantage It is likewise said Mazarini hath an Agent here to drive on the Interests of France in England The Grandees in reference to the pulling down of Monarchy 105. Doleman's Antimonarchical Book printed and the establishing of their Olygarchy or Tyranny contrary to their Remonstrances Declarations the National Covenant and their late Vote That they would not alter the ancient form of Government by King Lords and Commons have caused the Book written by Parsons the Jesuit 1524 under the feigned Name of Doleman and called A Conference about the succession of the Crown to be published under the Title of Several Speeches delivered at a Conference concerning the power of Parliaments to proceed against their Kings for mis-government Parsons had made this Book a Dialogue these Men have made it into Speeches The Arguments and Presidents are meerly the same you see they can joyn Interests with France Doctrine with the Jesuits to carry on their design See the Conclusions 15 16 17. and reduce us to the condition of French Peasants or Slaves under the Kingdom of the Saints Doleman's Book was condemned by Act of Parliament 35 Eliz. But what care the Grandees for Acts of Parliament having fooled the people into a belief That both the Legislative and Judicative power is in the two Houses of Parliament without the King and that an over-powering party or Junto in the two Houses complying with an Army to keep the rest under force and awe is the Parliament 106. The Legislative Judicative power and the Militia where they reside See the Conclusions 15 16 17. The Parliament consisteth of 3 Estates 1. The King whom the Law calleth Principium Caput finis Parliamenti and therefore he only can Call He only can Dissolve a Parliament and is himself called and chosen by none being primus motor that animates all 2. The Lords who have their creation and vocation only from the Kings bounty 3. The Commons who have their summons onely from the Kings Writ though their election from the people and in that respect only the people being too diffused a Body to be Assembled they have something of Representation in them being the Epitome of the People These 3 Estates concurring have power to make news Laws to change or repeal old Lawes and in some doubtfull cases rarely hapning which the Judges dare not venture upon they have power to interpret the Laws This is a wise and politick constitution for if any one or any two of the said three Estates should make new Laws Change Repeal or Interpret old Laws arbitrarily and at pleasure without mutual agreement of all the three Estates it were in the power of that one or two to enslave the other Estate or Estates so omitted Besides the Law doth not favour the making of new Laws nor the changing and repealing of old Laws being an innovation that stirs too many humors in a body politick and indangers its health and brings contempt upon the Laws Leges priusquam latae sunt perpendendae quando latae sunt obediendae saith Arist Pol. But though all 3 Estates must assent to the making altering or repealing a Law yet any one of the 3 Estates hath a Negative Voice and may dissent from such making 2 H. 5. 4. H. 7. c. 18. 12. H. 7. c. 20. 1 Ja. c. 1. 2 Ch. c. 1. altering or repealing to avoid innovation as abovesaid How then can the two Houses of Parliament exercise the Legislative power and make change or repeal any Law by Ordinance without the King the first Estate and head of the Parliament and so deprive Him of His Negative Voice and the people of their Laws Liberties and Estates contrary to 9 H. 3. Magna Charta 1 part Instit sect 234. in fine 7. H. 7. 14. especially when this very Parliament declares in the Exact Col. 1 part p. 727. That the King hath a Negative Voice and that Bils are not Laws or Acts of Parliament without the Kings assent consequently nor Ordinances And as the two Houses take upon them the Legislative power without the King so in the case of the 4 Aldermen and Sir John Maynard they usurped a Judicative Power in case of Treason tryable in the Kings Bench yet it is most certain that when the 3 Estates in Parliament have passed any Act their power determines as to that Act and then the Authority of the Judges begins which is Judicative whose Office is upon cases brought before them to determine whether that Act be binding or no for Acts of Parliament against common right Repugnant or Impossible are Void Cook 8. f. 118. Dr. and Student l. 1. c. 6. and to expound the meaning and signification of the words of such Act. If therefore the 2. Houses usurp the Legislative and Judicative power or the Militia otherwise than hath been by the fundamental constitution of this Monarchy and the practice of all ages accustomed the Grandees of the two Houses and Army seem to lay claim to them all by the Sword for in the late Declaration against the Scots Papers p. 64. they say That they engaged in this war upon these principles viz. To keep the Legislative power and the exercise of the Militia without and against the Kings consent and p. 63. ibidem the Members tell us that in all matters concerning Church or State we have no judge upon Earth but themselves It follows then the Grandees do it to subvert the ancient Government Laws and Liberties of this Nation and establish a Military Olygarchy or the Kingdom of the Saints over us in themselves In order to which design they have put all things out of order and turned them upside down nay they have crucified the whole Kingdom with Saint Peters Crucifixion the head downwards and the Heels upwards When this King went into Scotland He compared the
Duke Hamilton and a few dis-affected persons who were not likely to send any of the honest Godly party to Treat whereby the Treaty would be carried on to the disadvantage and ruine of the Godly and of the Church our only friends there And Mr. Ashurst related That the major part of the past Parliament of Scotland over-powred the minor part by an Army and so got the Engagement and other Acts and the Committee of Estates passed against which the Assembly of the Kirk consisting of 400 persons declared with one Voice I know not what he meant by saying the major part in Scotland over-powred the minor when I consider that major pars obtinet rationem totius the major part is virtually the Parliament to which the minor part must submit although here in England the lesser part of the Parliament engaging and conspiring with an Army whom themselves in a full and free Parliament had formerly declared Enemies to the State overpowred the greater part contrary to reason and practice This question seemed to agree with the sense of the Independents reasonably well because it leaves it onely to the pleasure of the King to Treat dis-junctively with the Scots upon the sole Interest of Scotland as men no ways concerned in the settlement of Peace in England whereby it is tacitely inferred that the Treaties Covenant and Union between the two Kingdoms is dissolved so the question aforesaid was put with this addition That if the King shall be pleased to invite the Scots to send some Persons Authorized c. the Parliament will give them safe conduct The fifth Vote of the Lords was That Newport in the Island of Wight should be the place of Treaty to which the Commons concurred With these debates ended this Week the 19 day of August About this time came forth a Book entituled 133. A pestilent Book called The necessity of the absolute power of Kings c. The necessity of the absolute power of all Kings and in particular of the King of England concerning which I am to admonish the Reader that it is conceived to be a Cockatrice hatched by the Antimonarchical Faction to envenome the people against the KING and PRINCE The next Week begins with Monday 21 August of whose proceedings I can give you only an imperfect scambling relation and so shall surcease all farther endeavours in this kind because I have already delivered enough for your Instruction if God have not appointed you to be led blindfold into the pit digged for your destruction but principally because my good Genius that furnished me with Intelligence hath now retired himself from acting without hope to praying with faith for his Country being tired out with hearing and seeing so much sinne and folly as now raigns at Westminster and I love not much to take news upon trust from the vulgar Peripateticks of the Hall 134. Mr. Martyns levelling practises and principles The chief things of note were More Complaints of Henry Martyn who now declares himself for a Community of Wealth as well as of Women and protests against King Lords Gentry Lawyers and Clergy nay against the Parliament it self in whose bosome this Viper hath been fostered and against all Magistrates like a second Wat Tyler all Pen and Inkhorn-men must down His Levelling Doctrine is conteined in a Pamphlet called Englands Troubler Troubled wherein All Rich men whatsoever are declared Enemies to the Mean men of England and in effect War denounced against them 135. Skippon's Listings Next the Ordinance for transferring over to the Militia of London Skippon's power of listing men in London was passed in the House of Commons with this Coloquintida in it That Skippon should name and appoint Commanders and Officers for the Forces listed to be approved of by the Militia of London 136. Cromwel's laureat letters 20 Aug. 1648 A Letter from Oliver Cromwel was read in the House of Commons relating his easie victory over Duke Hamilton and Major Gen. Bayly which puts me in mind of Ovid's Victory over Corinna of whom he saith Victa est nou aegrè proditione sua and conteining an admonition not to hate Gods people who are as the apple of his eye and for whom even Kings shall be reproved and exhorting the Speaker to whom it was written to fullfill the end of his Magistracy that all that will live peaceably and quietly viz. in Vassalage to Oliver and his Faction and neglect Religion Laws and Liberties may have countenance from him God blesse all honest men from the light of Oliver's countenance lest in an ignis fatuus mislead them from the duties of their Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy Potestation and Covenant and they that are implacable may speedily be destroyed out of the Land 137. Martial Law in London To prepare the way to whose destruction it was Ordered That an Ordinance be penned and brought into the House of Commons to try all such by Martial Law in the City of London as shall be found to plot design or contrive any thing to endanger the Parliament or City And yet London is no Garrison now as it was when Tomkims and Challoner were tried not is there any Enemy considerable in the Field whereby the known Laws of the Land may not passe currently through the Kingdom but our known Laws are not written in blood nor are they so flexible as to make all Traytors the Faction pleaseth to call such Yet as cruel as these Caco fuegos of the Faction are to some 138. Rolf's Bayl again pressed they have mercy enough for Rolf whose Bayl was again exceedingly pressed and that his two Prosecutors Osburn and Dowcet should be under restraint in his stead whom they have forejudged out of the King's Letter to the Houses not to be able to prove their information whereas it may be discretion in the King not to encrease his danger by acknowledging it Saturday 26. August 139. The KINGS Letter to the States of Scotland taken from Haly-burton The King's Letter to the Committee of States in Scotland c. in Answer to their Letter sent to Him by Haly-burton which Letter was taken from Haly-burton although a publique Minister of State and allowed by Parliament to carry their Letter to the King was read in the House of Commons I hear in general that it was excellently well penned and a very just honest and peaceable Letter Yet it was Voted neither to be sent to the Lords nor to be restored to Haly-burton but damned to close imprisonment in a Box under Seal lest the people should know how truly zealous his Majesty is to settle Peace in the Land a mystery their understandings must not be trusted withall Prolegomena Promises Protestations and Covenants made by this Parliament in behalf of the King and People AFter a repetition of many good Acts and Concessions obtained by this Parliament of the King for the ease of the People Remonstrance 15. December 1642. Exact Collect. p. 15. they
they share among themselves This war is not like to be of any continuance considering there being in the Army many conscientious men who have had such ample experiment of the falshood of their Grand Officers that they are not like to hazard their lives again under the command of such Grand Impostors as they are also knowing the General hatred of the Kingdom to them under whose insupportable burthens and oppressions it groaneth Nor have we any way to break the power of the said Grandees of this Army but by the Scots whereby the just rights and Interests of all the three Kingdoms may be setled and Ireland relieved All which the Scots have declared in their former Papers delivered to both Houses of Parliament 4. If you accommodate with this faction you must have the same friends and foes with them as well as the same sins and quarrels and then it will grow to a Nationall quarrel between England and Scotland which will be of long continuance and misery and the Interest of the King and his Children and of all Princes of Christendom concerned in the example will be carried on in the Kingdom of Scotland against you if you joyn with those beggarly Grandees who have inriched themselves and their fellow-Impostors by the ruines of the Kingdom You will lose your credit and interests with your friends and brethren of Scotland the only fear and terror of whose coming into England kept this Faction which all men know is never satisfied with money and blood from taking many of your innocent heads from off your shoulders and confiscating your Estates to pay the arrears of the Army witnesse their often speeches to this purpose in the house of Commons and their illegal and violent proceedings against you you will likewise lose all the people of England I have shewed you your losses let me shew you your gains by this accommodation that by comparing one with the other you may cast up your account whether you shall be gainers or losers by it 1. They offer you the Tower of London and your Militia to be restored things of no great consideration and your Aldermen and Citizens to be set at liberty they do not offer to disband their Army which makes them Lord it over you and over-power both Tower and Militia and when they have divided you from all your friends and destroyed your reputation and are secure from the Scots the same violence which at first took your Tower your Militia and your most honest Citizens from you can deprive you of them all again at pleasure when you shall have none to stick by you your obligation to them shall be of steel theirs to you but of straw he that gives me that he can deprive me of at pleasure gives me nothing 2. Cromwell and his party knew your City to be the entire strength of England In Rich. 2. dayes when it was not half so great and populous as now it slew Wat Tyler and routed his rabble six times as many in number as the Army They therefore fear you and consequently hate you and labour nothing more than to divide and weaken you which is their proper interest For which purpose to divide the City in it self they caused the Parliament to change your Militia into other hands they cut off Westminster Southwark and the Hamlets from your Militia to weaken it they have divided you from the Parliament they have endeavoured to divide the Countrey from you Ut dividendo singula imperent universis Wherefore the Army in their Remonstrance 7. December 1647. Insolently demand Reparations from the City to the Countrey adjacent for above 100000 l. losse sustained through the Armies attendance on the Cities defaults which was a device only to make the Country quarrell with the City and to make the Army Umpiers 3. Consider you shall joyn with them that never kept Faith longer than they may gain by it whereof you have many examples Any honest man may be deceived once but he is a fool that will be deceived twice by one man 4. Nay you cannot treat with these men nor give them a Common Council or Hall without losse and danger they have always made lies their refuge and built their Designs upon the sandy foundations of Rumors and Fables Cromwel and Glover already give out that they and you are as good as agreed that you differ only upon a puntilio of honour which will soon be reconciled what is the meaning of this but that they having creatures of their own Commissioners in Scotland have advertisement to spread the same reports there thereby to take off the edge of your friends affections to lay an imputation of inconstancy upon you and make you inconsiderable in the judgements of your best friends and retard all indeavours for your succour In the mean time this party hath blocked up all passages to Scotland that truth can have no accesse to you and you have only such news as Derby-house doth please to impart to you These men have committed those crimes that cannot be safe without committing greater they must on headlong go not with them for company they desire to bestow their plague-sores upon others Let it not trouble you that the Parliament hath approved their subscription of the Ingagement with the Army it was a Vote extorted in a thin house many Members having been driven away by threats of the Army before and there were many dissenting Members A little patience and constancy will settle you in a lasting peace To petition the Houses to repeal their four Votes against the King is to save their reputation that seek to destroy yours A seasonable Caution to the City of London Gentlemen of the City YOur Neighbours of Kent and other Counties wishing well to them take it unkindly that notwithstanding all these former admonitions you should let down your chains and give a free march to this bloody cheating schismatical Army at all hours of the night through your City to cut their throats and lend them 6000 l. to enable them to march when they had no other design but in a peaceable way to deliver a Petition to the Houses demanding nothing but what the Parliament by their Declarations Covenant the Oaths of Supremacy and allegiance and the known Laws of the Land ought to grant Onely being fore-warned by the inhumane assassination of the Surrey Petitioners they had some men in Armes a sufficient distance from the Town to secure their Messengers They have by their Letters to your selves and the Houses manifested the clearnesse of their intentions to you all They are known to be men of setled habitations and fortunes for the most part not vagabonds and Souldiers of Fortune like the Army Their commerce with you help you both to trade and feed whereas the Armies insolent march in triumph through your City so far lessened your reputation ever since that you constantly lose in your trading 200000 l. a Week and no Bullion comes into the Mint
the good opinion of the people and City and to keep them from stirring and to stay the moderate Party of the two Houses from Declaring the Army Enemies recalling and Voting their Commissions and established Pay void which they might have done with ruine to the Army and their Party in that Conjuncture of Affairs and with safety to themselves and applause of all honest men of England that had taken part with the Parliament from the beginning had not some Grandees of the rigid Presbyterian party both within and without the Houses some cursed thing some Achans wedge in their bosomes which suggested Their sins were greater than could be forgiven and therefore they durst not cast down the partition-wall between them and the King this Army though it lean so hard upon them it is ready to overwhelm them War is necessary for some men of every Faction whose crying sins peace will lay open and naked to the scorn derision and detestation of the world How well these sanctimonious Sword-players of the Army have observed the Duties and Undertakings of their said Humiliation let the world judge Have they not returned again with the Dog to the Vomit have they not cozened God and their own Soules Sure they fasted from sin then that they might sin with the more greedy appetite now and asked God forgiveness of the old score that they might sin again upon a new score Thus you see the two Treaties in the Isle of Wight were begotten by fear and that Idol of the Independents to which they offer up all their knaveries necessity They were Cockatrice Eggs laid by their Grandees when they had been Crow-trodden by Armies from abroad and Tumults at home See my 1. part sect 65 66 105 106 107 and the Conclusions there Sect. 16 17 18. upon which they s●te abrood onely to hatch Scandals and new quarrels against the King Anarchy and confusion to the State and Tyranny and oppression of the People to set up the Olygarchy of the Saints or Councel of State the Kingdom of the Brambles which since doth scratch the wool from off the skin the skin from off the flesh and the flesh from off the bones I have been compelled to use some introductory Repetitions in this part of my discourse that I may give you the whole mystery of the 2. Treaties with the King in the Isle of Wight with the causes efficient and final of them under one view lest some one link of the Chain escaping your observation it become a Chain of errors to you My first part of the History of Independency ends with that which was but an unlucky preface to a Treaty with the King 3. Hamilton overthrowne See my 1. part sect 136. namely Cromwel's menacing Letters to the Speaker of the House of Commons dated August 20. 1648. Relating his easie purchase of a great Victory over Duke Hamilton and Lieut. Gen. Bayly wherein he relates the number of the Scotish Forces farre differing from the former Report of Lieut. Col. Osborne a Scottish Gentleman made in the House of Commons July 20. Sect. 110 111. whereof I have spoken in my first part who to take away the terror of them estimated Hamiltons and Langdales conjoyned forces to be but 10000. and it was then thought a note of disaffection to report them any more but this Letter for the greater glory of his sanctified Army multiplies them to be 21000. The manner of the Fight was very strange and Exceedingly to be suspected especially by any man who hath heard or read of Bayly's former demeanour in his own Country at Kylsythe and Auforte Kirke It was little better than a beating up of Quatters for 20. miles together for so far the Scots Army lay scattered in their Quarters the Horse so farre distant from their Foot they could bring them no seasonable reliefe Sir Marmaduke Langdale with his small Party drew forth and made an honourable resistance had he been timely and strongly seconded on the Scotish Party the Fight began at Preston in Lancashire where the Duke being worsted retreated to Wigon from thence to Warrington thorow Lanes and Fastnesses where Bayly Lieut. General of the Scotish Foot being strongly quartered upon a Bridg and Passe yeilded up 6000. Foot and Armes without fighting and so ruined his whole Infantry from Warrington the Duke fled with 4000. Horse to Namptwich from thence to Vtoxeter where his manner of yeilding himselfe to Colonel Wayte a Member of the House of Commons take out of Waytes owne report in the House who said the Duke yeilded simply and without any Articles of Surrender that he voluntarily gave him his Sword Scarfe Signet of Armes and his George that he hung upon him so that he could not get from him desiring him to secure him from the rage of the Souldiers saying He had not come into England but that he was invited by a greater part of Lords Commons Citizens and Covenanters then called in the last Scotish Army presently the Bloud-hounds of the Faction in the House sented this and called upon Wayte to know whether he named any Wayte Answered that Hamilton was ● s●btil● politique Lord and no doubt for the saving of his owne life would do that in more convenient time Hereupon a Committee all of Canibal Saints was presently packed and ordered to go downe and examine the Duke but no particulars could they get from him which was an honourable silence and made amends for his former lavish speech It was happy the Prince did not trust himself in the Head of this Army Had Hamilton marched immediately to Colchester or but to Pont●fract which he might easily have done Lambert his onely Opposite still retreating before him the whole Country had risen with him But he knew the Presbyterian party had rendred themselves contemptible and he as much contemned the Independents therefore he foreslowed his march willing Cromwell and Fairfax should subdue all other Parties and that he onely might have Armes in his hands to bring in the King upon his own tearmes this over-confidence undid him He was too much a States-man and too little a Souldier 4. The insolency of the schismaticall Members upon report of the Victory This Victory did worke like Botled-Ale with Scot Thomson Cornelius Holland Sir Henry Mildmay and many others of the light headed Saints who were so puffed up with the windinesse of it that they began to swell with disdaine and malice against the Personal Treaty and to threaten and insult over all that had either Petitioned for it from abroad or spoke for it in the House as the only meanes of peace and a settlement 5. The wiser sort subtilly continue a mock-Treaty But the wiser sort more crafty to doe mischiefe knowing that the people were weary of Taxes and the Army and had no hopes of peace but by a Personal Treaty and were resolved to purchase peace although at the price of a new VVarre that Colchester Pontefract Scarborough and
a Corporation of Tyrants suspect an opposition from the Levellers and would faine turn them out of the Kingdome into Ireland to seek their fortunes and practice their Levelling principles in a strange Land The Levellers more numerous in the Army though lesse numerous in the said Committee strain courtesie with their Betters and would have them go first thinking the seeds of liberty and equality will prosper better in the soyle and aire of England While they were disputing if Marquesse Ormond had been acting as he had been had not the King been necessitated to retard him by his said Letters sent from the Isle of Wight during the Treaty the King had recovered that Kingdom intirely to himself which had bin of great advantage to him The 20. Novemb. 1648. Col. Ewers with seven or eight Officers more presented at the House of Commons Barre a thing called by those that use to miscal things An humble Remonstrance of the Army It is founded upon these five Anarchical Principles 1. That themselves and their faction only whom they call exclusively the Well-affected Godly Honest Party the Saints are the People of England all the rest but Philistines Amorites or at the best but Gibeonites 2. That their Interest only is the publick Interest of the People 3. That the People that is themselves are the only competent Judges of the peoples safety contrary to the Lawes and Practice of all Nations which bestow that Prerogative only upon the Supreme Magistrate but it may be here lies hid another subsequent principle That they are the Supreme Magistrates armed with Supreme Authority as well as with their Swords and hereupon they as good as tell the House That if their supposed dangers be not removed and those remedies which they Remonstrate admitted they shall make such appeal to God that is their Sword as formerly they have done 4. Principle is consequential to the 3. That they may drive on their designe upon pretence of necessity self-preservation honest intentions providence or revelation against all Powers Formes of Government and Lawes whatsoever under colour of the much abused Maxime Salus Populi Supremae Lex esto the safety of the People is the Supreme Law which hath been the fruitful Mother of many Rebellions in all Ages to serve the corrupt ends of ambitious Persons who usually fish in troubled waters to attaine to those ends which they could never arrive at in setled Governments This is a Principle or new light discovered by Major Huntington That it is lawfull to passe through any formes of Government for accomplishment of their ends and therefore either to purge the Houses and support the remaining Party by power everlastingly or put a period to them by force and themselves imploy as much in this Remonstrance p. 45. saying It cannot be safe to accommodate with the King because if He returne and this Parliament continue long and unlimited He will make a Party amongst them He hath bid faire for it among the Commons already and the Lords are his owne out of Question and therefore we dare not trust the King amongst them Againe they say That if the King come into the Parliament He will be looked upon as the Repairer of breaches Restorer of trade peace plenty c. and if the Army should keep up as it must upon Taxes the Houses and Army will be looked upon as Oppressors and the jealousies and discontents of the People be increased against them and make them apt to joyne issue with the Kings interest and may yeild us up a sacrifice to appease the King and his Party out of these words and their owne practice I concluded for them ergo They may carry on their designe upon necessity for self-preservation against the Monarchical Government and Law of the Land to murder the KING as they have since done Againe they say If the King were returned each Party would strive first and most to comply with Him ergo there is a necessity to subvert the Kingdome and murder the KING Behold what use these cowardly Saints make of necessity and self-preservation 5. That they may appeale to their Sword against the Authority of any their Governours in order to publique safety which two last conclusions set the door wide open to Faction and Rebellion since the People are ever floating and given to change and every turbulent ambitious Fellow is apt to raise them into a storme against their Governours for their fabulous assertions wherewith these Saints usually guild over their foule actions 1. That the Houses were free when they passed the 4. Votes for Non-Addresses 2. That they were not free when they recalled them 3. That the People were quiet and contented untill the recalling those 4. Votes and afterwards were unsetled and presented clamorous Petitions 4. That the Army did not apply themselves to the King untill he proffered himself to them 5. That when they made Addresses to Him it was but to prevent the Presbyterian Party But it appeares their ayme from the beginning was to suppresse the Presbyterian and advance their owne Party and lay by the King and domineer over Him and the Kingdome for when Cromwel had brought his Designe to perfection he said at Kingston That he was as fit to rule the Kingdome as Hollis 6. And then but hypocritically Sect. 65.66 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 88 89 97 98. All these are sufficiently confuted in my said Animadversions and in the said Plea for the King and Kingdome in Putny Projects and in my First part of the History of Independency After all this tedious stuffe aforesaid they make Propositions to the Parliament of two sorts all founded upon the said five Antimonarchical Principles The first for satisfying publique Justice that is for the Hang-man to teach the Judges who they shall sentence to execution 1. They demand the Person of the King may be brought to speedy Justice this affront they put upon the Parliament when they were neer conclusion of their Treaty with Him when He had already granted more to his Subjects than ever any King condescended to The Kings Supremacy and from thence his indempnity proved this is through the sides of the King to give Monarchy the fundamental Government and Lawes of this Land and consequently the Liberty and Property of the People their Deaths-wound By the Law of God nature reason and the Lawes of all Kingdomes impunity is an inseparable prerogative of Kings as they are Supreme in their Dominions See the Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. Cokes Institut 5.1 Stamford's Pleas of the Crowne l. 1 ch 1 2 Stat. 25. Edw. 3 42. E. 3. Read Mr. Pryns Memento to the unparliamentary Iunto his Speech in the House of Commons 4. Dec. p. 72 73 74 75 76 77. and my 1. part sect 106. The Conclusions sect 17. and my Animadversions p. 18. the Petition of Right 3. Caroli Declares That they had no power to hurt the Kings Prerogative much
could not be carried on by any private designe in Conventicles and corners as are all the bloudy Petitions for justice justice against capital Delinquents and the most High which being penned and solicited by the Army or sectary Committee-men 48. Somersetshire encouraged by the House to associate all the wel-affected i. e. all the Anarchists and Cheaters and subscribed and prosecuted by some few beggerly Schismaticks without Cloaks in the Names of whole Counties whom they had the impudence to belie were entertained in state and they and that wel-affected County though they abhorred the villany thanked for their paines * 25. Decemb. The House voted a Letter to be sent by way of encouragement to the County of Somerset to go on with setling their association with the wel-affected and forces of the Counties adjacent this is to associate and Arme all the Schismaticks Committee-men guilty and desperate Persons Antimonarchists and Anarchists against all the peaceable and honest men of the Kingdome 26. Decemb. Mr. Pryn sent a Letter to the General 49. Mr. Pryns Letter to the General demanding his liberty demanding his liberty and seconded it with a Declaration as followeth Mr. Pryn's Demand of his Liberty to the Generall Decemb. 26. 1648. with his Answer thereto And his Declaration and Protestation thereupon For the Honourable Lord Fairfax Generall of the present Army THese are to acquaint your Lordship 50. Mr. Pryns Declaration seconding his said Letter That I being a Member of the Commons House of Parliament a Free-man of England a great Sufferer for and an Assertor of the Subjects Liberties against all Regal and Prelatical tyranny and no way subject to your owne your Councel of Warrs or Officers military power or jurisdiction going to the House to discharge my duty on the 6 of this instant December was on the staires next the Commons House door forcibly kept back entring the House seized on and carried away thence without any pretext of Lawfull Authority therto assigned by Colonel Pride and other Officers and Souldiers of the Army under your Command And notwithstanding the Houses demand of my enlargement both by their Sergeant and otherwise ever since unjustly detained under your Marshals custody and tossed from place to place contrary to the known Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject and fundamental Laws of the Land which you are engaged to maintaine against all violation And therefore do hereby demand from your Lordship my present enlargement and just liberty with your Answer hereunto From the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. This was delivered to the Generals own hands at his House in Queen-street about three of the clock the same day it beares date by Doctor Bastwijcke VVho returned this Answer by him upon the reading therof THat he knew not but Mr. Pryn was already released and that he would send to his Officers to know what they had against him VVho it seems act all things without his privity and steer all the Armies present counsels and designes according to their absolute wills The Publique Declaration and Protestation of William Pryn of Lincolnes Inne Esquire Against his present Restraint and the present destructive Councels and Jesuiticall proceedings of the Generall Officers and Army I VVilliam Pryn a Member of the House of Commons and Freeman of England who have formerly suffer'd 8. years Imprisonment four of them close three in exile three Pillories the losse of my Ears Calling Estate for the vindicating of the Subjects just Rights and Liberties against the arbitrary tyranny injustice of King and Prelats and defence of the Protestant Religion here established spent most of my strength and studies in asserting the Peoples just freedom and the power and priviledges of Parliament against all Opposers and never received one farthing by way of damages gift or recompence or the smallest benefit or preferment whatsoever for all my sufferings and publicke services Do here solemnly declare before the most just and righteous God of Heaven and Earth the Searcher of all hearts the whole Kingdome English Nation and the World that having according to the best of my skill and judgment faithfully discharged my trust and duty in the Commons House upon real grounds of Religion Conscience Justice Law prudence and right reason for the speedy and effectual setlement of the peace and safety of our three distracted bleeding dying Kingdoms on Monday Dec. 4. I was on Wednesday morning following the 6 of this instant going to the House to discharoe my duty on the Parliament staires next the Commons door forcibly seized upon by Col. Pride Sir Hardress VValler and other Officers of the Army who had then beset the House with strong Guards and whole Reg of Horse and Foote haled violently thence into Queens Court notwithstanding my Protestation of breach of priviledge both as a Member and a Freeman by a meere usurped tyrannicall power without any lawfull Authority or cause assigned and there forceibly detained Prisoner with other Members there restrained by them notwithstanding the Houses double demand of my present enlargement to attend its service by the Sergeant and that night contrary to faith and promise carried Prisoner to Hell and there shut up all night with 40. other Members without any lodging or any other accommodations contrary to the known Priviledges of Parl. the fundamental Laws of the Realm and Liberty of the subject which both Houses the 3. Kingdoms the General with all Officers and Soldiers of the Army are by solemn Covenant and duty obliged inviolably to maintain Since which I have without any lawful power or authority bin removed and kept prisoner in several places put to great expences debar'd the liberty of my person calling denied that hereditary freedom which belongs to me of right both as a Freeman a Member an eminent sufferer for the publick and a Christian by these who have not the least shadow of authority or justice to restrain me and never yet objected the least cause for this my unjust restraint I do therfore hereby publickly protest against all these their proceedings as the highest usurpation of an arbitrary and tyrannical power the greatest breach of faith trust Covenant priviledges of Parl. and most dangerous encroachment on the Subjects liberties and Laws of the Land ever practised in this Kingdome by any King or Tyrant especially by pretended Saints who hold forth nothing but justice righteousnesse liberty of conscience and publick freedom in all their Remonstrances whils they are triumphantly trampling them all under their armed iron feet And do further herby appeal to summon them before all the Tribunals and powers in heaven and earth for exemplary justice against them who cry out so much for it against others less tyrannical oppressive unjust and fedifragus to God and men than themselves And do moreover remonstrat that all their present exorbitant actings against the King Parl. present Government and their new modled representative are nothing else
they fell through pride and ambition as most conceive became the very foulest Devils in Hell so the most resplendent seeming hypocriticall Saints when they fall through the like sins and have power in their hands become the most incarnate Devils and Monsters of treachery and tyranny upon earth exceeding Turks and Pagans therein of which we have now sad experience in our Army-Saints who every day aggravate and yet justifie their impieties and exorbitances 2 Chron. 28.11 Now hear me therefore and deliver the Captives again which ye have taken Captives of your Brethren for the fierce wrath of God is upon you Will Pryn. 64. Another forg'd Letter endeavoured to be fastned upon Sheriff Brown The Saints having nothing to say against Major Gen. Brown unless they should accuse him for being true to King Parliament City and Kingdom and to all the first declared Principles of this Parliament fell to their old trick to fasten another counterfeit Letter upon him wherefore a Man coming to S. Jame's where he was then imprisoned desired in the hearing of all present to speak with him in private Major Gen. Brown told him He was not for private conference and bade him speak openly then the Fellow presented a Letter to him saying It was from the Prince but Major Gen. Brown remembring the like trick put upon him before called for the Guard to apprehend him when presently the Messenger threw the Letters into the fire and the Marshall catching them out halfe burnt affirmeth He saw Charles Prince written upon them Sanctified eyes may see through the spectacles of their own fantasie what they please to accomplish their Design and therefore they have a new principle or light which as the 7. May be added to the aforesaid 6. that though they have no proofs nor evidence against a man yet if in their consciences they think him guilty they may condemn him upon the testimony of their own consciences this is to condemn by Revelation such whose bloud they desire to suck This supposed Messenger from the Prince was seized by the Guard but no proceedings against him heard of which argues it was but a snare set to catch the Major About this time to second this device a man gallantly clothed and mounted comes to the Beare in the Strand 65. Another more general forgery to endanger whom the Faction please It will be proved that divers Witnesses have bin practised and tampered with against Mr. Brown and others gives the Hostler a Peece and bids him have a care of his Horse then goes into the City and the Plot being forelaid was taken there with Letters subscribed with the Princes name to divers Citizens and Members against whom they want matter of accusation I hear no more of this matter yet this is a device dorman● to be awakened hereafter if any shall oppose the present actings of the Army and their Parliament Cromwell Ireton and Hugh Peters have several times made it their errand to go into the City and visit the Ministers giving them threatning Admonitions not to preach any thing against the Actings of the Army and their Parliament 66. London-Ministers threatned See the Ministers of Londons Letter to the General called A serious Representation Dated Jan. 18. 1648. But Hugh acted his part above them all he took some Musketiers with him to the house of Mr. Calamy and knocking at the door a Maid asked whom he would speak with he told her with her Master she asked his name he replied Mr Hugh Peters the Maid going up the stairs to acquaint her Master who was above-stairs in conference with some Divines over-heard Peters say to the Souldiers The very name of Peters will fright them all Peters being called up the staires told Mr. Calamy He was commanded by the General to warne him to come before him Mr. Calamy leaving Peters vapouring and canting Religion and non-sense to the rest of the Divines slipt down staires and went to the General to know his pleasure telling him He had bin summoned before him by Hugh Peters the General said Peters was a Knave and had no such directions from him Since this 67. The C. of War consider how to shut up the Churches doors the Council of Warr finding it difficult to stop the Ministers mouths have sundry times debated How to shut up the Churches doors in the City for Reformation of the Church and propagation of the Gospel they have imprisoned Mr. Canton a worthy Minister for praying for King CHARLES and threaten to try him for his life in the Upper Bench forsooth which all the Lawes call the Kings Bench and upon their new Acts of Parliament made by a ninth part of the Members the small remnant or Junto of the House of Commons notwithstanding by The Directory for publique Worship established by both Houses the Ministers are enjoyned to pray for the King It is said that Monsieur Paux one of the Dutch Agents here hath advised Cromwell to stop the Ministers mouthes by hanging up a dozen of them and vouches a president for it in the Low Countries 68. The Lords sent some Votes to the C●mmons for their concurrence Jan. 9. The Lords sate again and passed some Ordinances which they sent down to the Commons for their concurrence to feel their pulse w●ether they would vouchsafe to take so much notice of them the Commons laid them aside after some expres●ions of disdain 69. Sergeant Dandy proclaimeth the sitting of the new H Court of Justice This day Sergeant Dandie Sergeant at Arms to the Comissioners for Triall of His Majesty rode into Westminster-hall with the Mace belonging to the House of Commons upon his shoulder and some Officers attending him all bare and 6. Trumpeters on horsback before him Guards of Horse and Foot attending in both the Palace-yards the 6. Trumpeters sounded on horseback in the middle of the Hall and the Drums beat in the Palace-yards after which a Proclamation was read aloud by Mr. King one of the Messengers of the said High Court of Justice to this purpose To give notice that the Commissioners were to sit tomorrow and that all those that had any thing to say against CHARLES STVART King of England might be heard The like was done in Cheapside and at the Old Exchange 70. The Great Seal voted to be broken This day the remainder of the House voted their Great Seal to be broken in order to the making of a new one justly putting the same affront upon their own Seal which they had formerly put upon the Kings 71. Mr. Pryns Memento to the unparliamentary Junto Upon these occasions Mr. Pryn it is said published his Memento to the unparliamentary Junto therein telling the House That being forcibly secluded from the House by the Officers of the Armies violence whereby he could not speak his mind to them freely in or as the House of Commons yet he would write his thoughts to them as private Persons onelie under
recalling the Lord Lysle from his command there and putting the best part of the said Kingdom and where the Parliament had the strongest footing Munster into the hands of Inchiquine a Native Irish who hath since Revolted from the Parliament hath lately united with the Irish Rebels and with them and Ormond for the King To this we ●ay the Lord Inchiquine came in and brought Munster to the Parliament and preserved their Interest in Ireland in all the heat of their Warres in England when they had little other Interest there and less means to relieve them the Lord Lysle was not recalled from his Command there This Lo went late caried over 160000 l. for which he hath not yet accounted began a quarrell with Inchiqueen and put him into discontent and then returned See the Irish Letters and Papers to the the House in print but his Commission for Lord Lieutenant expiring 15. April 1647. on the 17. April he hoysed sayle for England after the Lord Lysles return for England the Lord Inchiquine did gallant service against the Rebels took many strong Holds from them and won the Battel of Knocke-knowes one of the greatest that ever was gotten of the Rebels The House therefore approved of his behaviour untill 3. April 1648. when the Army having led the way the Lord Inchiquine taking distast thereat by way of imitation began to enter into Engagements and Remonstrances against the Parliament as it was then constituted for which he made the Remonstrances Engagements and Declarations of the Army the Summer before both the cause and precedent as by the printed Relation doth appear 2. Their endeavours to bring in the King upon His own Tearms without satisfaction and security to the Kingdom v●z upon His Message of the 12. of May 1647. and to this end to Disband this Army before any peace made or assured To this we say the House of Commons upon the first notice thereof voted the said Engagement of the 12. of May Treasonable and by Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. put an incapacity upon such Citizens as had any hand in it which evidenceth we were here in a right majority as in other parts of their Paper they take the Votes of the House to prove us a corrupt majority The charge here lying in generall and not fixed upon any particular Concerning Disbanding the Army we say the House voted 8. Regiments of Foot 4. of Horse and 1. of Dragoones to be sent out of the Army for Ireland and resolved to keep 10000. Foot and 5400. Horse under Command of the Lord Fairfax for defence of England This was 1. For Relieving Ireland 2. For easing the heavy pressures of the poor People in England And 3. an honorable employment for the Forces of the Army to prevent such high distempers as have since ensued See my 1. part sect 16. 17. 18. and my said Animadversions pag. 2. neither were they legally impeached See Ardua regni or twelve arduous doubts written in defence of the expulsed Memb and the sa d Members Ans to the Armies Charge 3. That they endeavoured to protect the 11. impeached Members from justice and with them to raise a new Warre To this we say we gave them no other protection than the Laws allowed them For the mispending 200000 l. designed for Ireland we say that 80000 l. thereof was paid to Nicholas Loftus and others for service of Ireland and above 50000 l. to the Treasurers at Warre for the Army which may more reasonably be said to be mis-imployed because the Army had an established pay another way than what the Reformado Officers and Souldiers who obeyed the Orders of the House for Disbanding received who nevertheless pressed upon the House the more earnestly for their Arrears after the Declarations and Remonstrances published by the Army for paying the Arrears of all the Souldiers of England 4. Their countenancing abetting There was a close Inquisition of Godly Cut-throats purposely chosen to examine this Tumult which proceeded illegally and used so much foul play as to accuse men upon characters of their clothes persons yet malice it self could find nothing See my 1. part sect 45 46. to sect 54. Return to sect 2. 5. and partaking with the Tumult of Apprentices and others against both Houses of Parliament To this we say that we wonder they should urge the force offered to the House then which they declared horrid and treasonable to justifie the violence acted upon the House by themselves of a much higher nature This is a meer fiction of the Pen-mans which we do every one of us for our selves respectively deny 5. The holding correspondency engaging and assisting the tumultuous Petitioners last Spring the rebellious Insurrections in Kent the Revolted Ships Prince of Wales with the Scots Army We do every one of us for our selves respectively deny these 6. That when the Army was dispensed and engaged in severall parts c. and many faithfull Members employed abroad upon publique services and others through Malignant Tumults about this City could not with safety attend the House Then the corrupt and Apostating Party taking advantage of these distractions which themselves had caused First recalled in those Members c. Then they recalled those Votes for Non-Addresses and voted a Personall Treaty To this we say that if the proceedings of the Treaty were surreptitiously gotten in a thin House why do they then complain in other parts of their Paper that the majority of the House is corrupt Return to sect 2. 5. there see the true grounds of these Tumults See wh t u●e they make of provid nce in the 1. part of Englands new Chains and formed to serve the Kings corrupt Interest why did they force from the House above 200 Members at once the Counties never expressed so high contempt of the Parliament untill the like had been first done by the Armies quartering upon them And now let us come to that Vote of the House 5. Dec. 1648. That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses are a ground to proceed upon to a settlement of Peace of which they say That though they advanced hither to attend providence for opening some way to avoid the present evils designed and introduce the desired good into the Kingdom yet they said nor acted nothing in relation to the Parliament nor any Member thereof untill by the Vote passed Decemb. 5. they found the corrupt majority so resolvedly bent to compleat their Design in bringing in the King Do they call their threatning Declaration and Remonstrance a saying nothing and their marching up against the House contrary to the Order of the House a doing nothing in relation to the Parliament But by these words it appears that this Vote 5. Decemb. is the very point of that necessity they now relie upon to justifie their force upon the House For before that passed they say They acted nothing c. we must now state the difference between the
enter into Argument and Dispute concerning the Authority of this Court before whom You appear as a Prisoner and are charged as a High Delinquent You may not Dispute the Authority of this Court nor will any Court give way unto it You are to submit to it c. King Vnder favour I do plead for the Liberty of the people of England more then you do and therfore If I should impose a beleefe upon any man without Reasons given it were unreasonable Bradsh Oh Brutish Asinine Kingdome to be Governed by an up-start Authority without use of Reason Sir I must interrupt You You may not be permitted You speak of Law and Reason and there is both against you Sir The Vote of the Commons of England assembled in Parliament is the reason of the Kingdome and they are those that have given You that Law according to which you should have Ruled and Raigned Sir It will be taken notice of that you stand in contempt of the Court and Your contempt will be recorded accordingly King I do not know how a King can be a Delinquent but by all Laws that ever I heard all men may put in Demurrers against any proceedings as Illegall and I do demand that if you deny that you deny Reason Bradsh Over-rule a Demurrer without Argument If a man may not Demurre to the Jurisdiction of any Court that Court may enlarge its bounds and become a Corporation of Tyrants Sir Neither You nor any Man are permitted to Dispute that Point You are concluded You may not demurr to the Jurisdiction of the Court if You do I must let you know that they over-rule Your demurrer they sit here by the Authority of the Commons of England and all Your Predecessours and You are responsible to them King I deny that shew Me one President Bradsh Sir You ought not to interrupt while the Court is speaking to you this point is not to be debated by you if you offer it by way of Demurrer to the Jurisdiction of the Court they have considered of their Jurisdiction they do affirme their own Jurisdiction King I say Sir by your favour That the Commons of England were never a Court of Judicature I would know how they came to be so Bradsh Sir you are not to be permitted to go on in that Speech and these discourses Then the Clerke of the Court read as followeth Charles Stuart King of England you have been accused in the behalfe of the people of England of High Treason and other high crimes the Court hath determined that you ought to answer the same King I will Answer the same so soone as I know by what Authority you do this Bradsh If this be all that you will say then Gentlemen you that brought the Prisoner hither take charge of Him back again King I do require that I may give My Reasons why I did not Answer and give Me time for that Bradsh Sir 'T is not for Prisoners to require King Prisoners Sir I am not an ordinary Prisoner Bradsh The Court have affirmed their Jurisdiction if You will not Answer We shall give order to Record your default King You never heard my Reasons yet Bradsh Sir Your Reasons are not to be heard against the highest Jurisdiction King Shew Me that Jurisdiction where Reason is not to be heard Reasons are not to be heard against a remaining faction of the Commons of England Bradsh Sir we shew it you here the Commons of England and the next time you are brought You will know more of the pleasures of Court and it may be their finall Determination King Shew Me where ever the House of Commons was a Court of Judicature of that kind Bradsh Sergeant take away the Prisoner King Well Sir Remember that the King is not suffered to give in His Reasons for the liberty and freedome of all His Subjects Bradsh Sir You are not to have liberty to use this language how great a Friend You have been to the Lawes and Liberties of the People let all England and the world judge King Sir under favour it was the Liberty Freedome and Laws of the Subject that ever I took defended My selfe with Armes I never took up Armes against the People but for the Laws Bradsh The command of the Court must be obeyed no Answer will be given to the Charge So the King was guarded forth to Sir Robert Cottons and the Court adjourned to the Painted-Chamber Tuesday twelve a Clock 82. The 3d. daies Trial of His Majesty Tuesday January 23. The Court sate againe seventy three Commissioners present The King brought into the Court sits downe Solicit Cook May it please your Lordship my Lord President This is now the third time that by the great grace and favour of the Court the Prisoner hath been brought to the Bar before any Issue joyned in this Case My Lord I did at the first Court exhibite a Charge against Him containing the highest Treason that ever was wrought on the Theater of England That a King of England trusted to keep the Law that had taken an Oath so to do that had Tribute payed Him for that end should be guilty of a wicked Designe to subvert and destroy our Lawes and introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government in defiance of the Parliament and their Authority set up His Sandard for Warre against his Parliament and People and I did humbly pray in behalf of the People of England That he may speedily be required to make an Answer to the Charge but my Lord in stead of making any Answer He did then dispute the Authority of this High Court your Lordship was pleased to give Him a further day to put in His Answer which day being yesterday I did humbly move That He might be required to give a direct and positive Answer either by denying or confessing of it But my Lord He was then pleased to demur to the Jurisdiction of the Court which the Court did then over-rule and command Him to give a direct and positive Answer My Lord besides this great delay of Justice I shall now humbly move your Lordship for speedy Judgement against Him I might presse your Lordship upon the whole That according to the knowne rul●s of the Lawes of the Land that if a Prisoner shall stand contumacious in contempt and shall not put in an Issuable Plea guilty or not guilty of the charge given against him whereby he may come to a faire Triall that by an implicite confession it may be taken pro confesso as it hath been done to those who have deserved more favour than the Prisoner at the Bar hath done But besides my Lord I shall humbly presse your Lordship upon the whole fact You see the emnant ●f the House of Comm. had f●rejudged the King before they ●rected this new Court to sentence him and claime a Jurisdiction as well as a S●preme Authority That the House of Commons the Supreme Authority and
and reason captive and is almighty against all but the Councell of the Army The 8. Febr. came forth A Declaration and Protestation of the Peeres Lords and Barons of this Realm 99. A Protestation of the Peers against the late treasonable proceedings and tyrannicall usurpations of some Members of the Commons House who endeavour to subvert the fundamentall Laws and Regall Government of this Kingdom and enslave the People to their boundless Tyranny in stead of Freedom The Protestation followeth VVE the Peers Lords and Barons of this Realm of England for the present necessary vindication of the undoubted Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and more particularly of the House of Peers the just Prerogatives and Personall safety of our Kings the known Laws and Liberties of this Kingdom the Hereditary Freedom of all the Freemen of this Nation and our own affronted and contemned Honours and Authority against the many late unparallel'd dangerous Invasions and treasonable Vsurpations of a few insolent mis-advised Members of the late House of Commons whiles the greatest and ablest part of that House were forcibly detained or deterr'd from thence wherewith we find our selves and the whole Kingdom unsufferably injured and deeply afflicted Do after a long patient expectation of their own ingenious Retractions of such injustifiable Exorbitancies which their own judgements and consciences cannot but condemn whereof we now utterly despair being thereto engaged in point of Honour Loyalty Conscience Oath and love to our Native Country as also by our Solemn League and Covenant publikely declare and protest to all the world That by the Laws and Customes of this Realm and usage of Parliament time out of mind ever since there were Parliaments in this Island the principall Authority and Iudicatory of the Parliaments of England hath alwaies constantly resided and ought still to continue onely in the King and House of Peers wherein He alwaies sits and not in the Commons House who never had claimed nor ought to have any right or power to judge any Person or Cause civilly or criminally having no authority to examine any Witnesses upon Oath and being no Court of Record but onely to accuse and impeach Delinquents in and before the House of Peers where they alwaies have used to stand bare-beaded at their Barre but never yet to stand covered much less to sit vote or give Judgement And that the House of Commons without the concurrent assent of the House of Peers and Kings of England never heretofore challenged nor enjoyed nor can of right pretend to any lawfull power or Jurisdiction to make or publish any form or binding Ordinance Vote Act or Acts of Parliament whatsoever nor ever once presumed to pass any Act or Acts to erect a new High Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the meanest Subject least of all their own Soveraign Lord and King or any Peer of the Kingdome who by the Common and Statute Laws of this Realm and Magna Charta ought to be tried only by their Peers and not otherwise or to dis-inherit the right Heir to the Crown or to alter the Fundamental Government Laws Great Seal or ancient forms of process and legal proceedings of this Realm or to make or declare High Treason to be no Treason or any Act to be Treason which in it self or by the Law of the Land is no Treason or to dispose of any Offices or Places of Judicature or impose any Penalties Oaths or Taxes on the Subjects of this Realm And therefore we do here in the presence of Almighty God Angels and Men from our hearts disclaim abhor and protest against all Acts Votes Orders or Ordinances of the said Members of the Commons House lately made and published for setting up any new Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the King or any Peers or Subject of this Realm which for any Person or Persons to sit in or act as a Judge or Commissioner to the condemning or taking away the life of the King or any Peer or other Subject We declare to be High Treason and wilful Murther to disinherit the Prince of Wales of the Crown of England or against proclaiming him King after his Royal Fathers late most impious traiterous and barbarous murther or to alter the Monarchical Government Laws Great Seal Judicatories and ancient forms of Writs and legal process and proceedings or to keep up or make good any Commissions Judges or Officers made void by the Kings bloody execution or to continue any old or raise any new Forces or Armies or to impose any new Taxes Payments Oaths or forfeitures on the Subjects or to take away any of their Lives Liberties or Estates against the Fundamental Laws of the Realm or to make any new Judges Justices or Officers or set aside the House of Peers far ancienter than the Commons House and particularly this insolent and frantick Vote of theirs Feb. 6. That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose to be not onely void null and illegal in themselves by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm but likewise treasonable detestable tyrannical and destructive to the Priviledges Rights and being of Parliaments the just Prerogatives and Personal safety of the Kings of England the Fundamental Government and Laws of the Realme the Lives Liberties Properties and Estates of the People and the most transcendent tyranny and usurpation over the King Kingdome Parliament Peers Commons and Freemen of England ever practised or attempted in any Age tending onely to dishonour enslave and destroy this antient flourishing Kingdom and set up Anarchy and confusion in all places All which exorbitant and trayterous Usurpations We and all free-born Englishmen are by all obligations bound to oppose to the uttermost with our ●●●es and fortunes lest We sh●uld be accessary to our own and our Posterities slavery and ruine for preventing whereof We have lately spent so much blood and treasure against the Mal●gnant Party whose Treasons and Insolencies they far exceed * 100. The Kingly Office voted down after almo●t 1000 years it is now discovered by these new Lights to be inconvenient to be in one hand therefore it must be in the Councel of State forty Tyrants for one King that is the Army and their Party The 7. Febru the Commons debated about the Kingly Office and passed this Vote Resolved c. By the Commons of England assembled in Parliament that it hath been found by experience and this House doth declare That the Office of a King in this Nation and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burdensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike Interest of the People of this Nation and therefore ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose 101. A Committee to bring in a list of Names for a Councel of State A Committee was named to bring in a list
People of England And whereas the said confederated Commons have likewise tyrannically and audaciously presumed contrary to their Oathes and Engagements aforesaid to take upon them to make Acts of Parliament as they terme them without our privity or assents or the joynt consent of the King and House of Lords contrary to the Use and Priviledges of Parliament and knowne Lawes of the Land and by pretext thereof have trayterously and wickedly endeavoured to Dis-inherit the Illustrious CHARLES Prince of Wales next Heire to the Crowne and actuall KING of England Scotland France and Ireland immediately after His said Royall Fathers barbarous Murther by Right of descent and proclaimed it Treason for any Person to Proclaime him KING whereas it is high Treason in them thus to prohibit His proclaiming and have likewise trayterously and impudently encroached a tyrannicall and lawlesse power to themselves to Vote down our antient Kingly and Monarchicall Government and the House of Peers and to make a new Great Seale of England without the Kings Portraicture or Stile and to alter the antient Regall and Legall Stile of Writs and proceedings in the Courts of Justice and to create new Judges and Commissioners of the Great Seale and to dispense with their Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance and to prescribe new Oaths unto them contrary to Law though they have no Authority by any Law Statute or custome to administer or injoyne an Oath to any man and thereby have trayterously attempted to alter the fundamentall Laws and Government of this Kingdome and to subvert the freedome priviledges and being of Parliaments for which Treasons Strafford and Canterbury though least criminall lost their Heads this last Parliament by some of their owne prosecutions and the judgment of both Houses We in discharge of our respective duties and obligations both to God the King our owne Consciences our bleeding dying Kingdomes and the severall Counties Cities and Burrroughs for which we serve do by this present Writing in our owne Names and in the Names of all the Counties Cities and Burroughs which we represented in Parliament publickly declare and solemnly protest before the all-seeing God the whole Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland and the world that We do from the bottome of our hearts abominate renounce and disclaime all the said pretended Acts Votes and proceedings of the said confederate Members acted under the Armies power against our consents as treasonable wicked illegall unparliamentary tyrannical and pernitious both to the King Parliament Kingdomes and all the free-borne People of this Realme extreamly disadvantagious and dishonourable to our Nation scandalous to our Religion and meer forcible Usurpations and Nullities void in Law to all intents and purposes which we and all the Freemen of this Kingdome and all the Kingdomes and Dominions thereto belonging are bound openly to disavow oppugne and resist as such with our purses armes lives to the last drop of our blouds and to which neither We nor any other can ought or dare to submit or assent in the least degree without incurring the guilt of High Treason and the highest perjury infamy and disloyalty And in case the said confederates shall not speedily retract and desist from those their treasonable practises and tyrannicall usurpations which We cordially desire and entreat them by all obligations of love and respect they have to God Religion their King Country and Posterity timely to do We do hereby denounce and declare them to be Traytors and publique Enemies both to the King and Kingdome and shall esteem and prosecute them with all their wilfull Adherents and voluntary Assistants as such and endeavour to bring them to speedy and condigne Punishment according to the Solemne League and Covenant wherein We trust the whole Kingdome all those for whom We serve and the Lord of Hosts himself to whom We have sworne and lifted up our hands hearts and fervent prayers will be aiding and assisting to us and all our Bretheren of Scotland and Ireland who are united and conjoyned with us in covenant to our GOD and Allegiance to our Soveraigne King CHARLES the Second who we trust will make good all His destroyed Fathers concessions which really concerne our peace or safety and secure Us against all force and tyranny of our Fellow-subjects who now contrary to their Trusts and former Engagements endeavour by the meer power of that Sword which was purposely raised for the protection of our Persons Government Religion Laws Liberties the KING 's Royall Person and Posterity and the Priviledges of Parliament to Lord it over Us at their pleasure and enthrall and enslave Us to their armed violence and lawlesse martial wills which we can no longer tolerate nor undergoe after so long fruitlesse and abused patience in hope of their repentance About the same time came out another Paper entituled 109. A Paper entituled Foure true Positions c. ¶ Foure true and considerable Positions for the sitting Members the new Courts of Justice and new Judges Sheriffs Officers Lawyers Justices and others to ruminate upon 1. THat the whole House of Commons in no Age had any Power Right or Lawfull Authority to make any Valid or binding Act or Ordinance of Parliament or to impose any Tax Oath Forfeiture or capitall punishment upon any Person or Free-men of this Realme without the Lords or Kings concurrent assents much lesse then can a small remnant onely of the Members of that House do it sitting under an armed force which nulls and vacates all their Votes and proceedings as the Ordinance of 20. August 1647. declares whilst most of their Fellow-Members are forcibly detained and driven thence as Mr. St. John proves in his Speech concerning Ship-mony p. 33. and in his Argument concerning the Earle of Strafford's Attainder p. 70 71 76 77 78. and Sir Edw. Coke in his 4. Instit c. 1. 2. That the few Members now sitting in and the House of Commons being no Court of Justice of it selfe and having no power to hear and determine any civill or criminall causes nor to give an Oath in any case whatsoever cannot by the Lawes and Statutes of the Realm nor by any pretext of authority whatsover erect any new Court of Justice nor give power or authority to any new Judges Justices or Commissioners to arraigne try condemn or execute any Subject of meanest quality for any reall or pretended crime whatsoever much less their own Soveraign Lord the King or any Peers of this Realme who ought to be tryed by their Peers and by the Law of the Land alone and not otherwise And that the condemning and executing the King or any Peere or other Subject by pretext of such an illegall Authority is no lesse than High Treason and wilfull Murther both in the Members and Commissioners Judges or Justices giving and executing Sentence of Death in any such arbitrary and lawlesse void Court or by vertue of any such void and illegall Commissions 3. That the House of Commons and Members now sitting
disclose any thing in whole or in part directly or indirectly that shall be debated or resolved upon in the Councel without the command or direction of the Parliament or without the order or allowance of the major part of the Councel or of the major part of them that shall be present at such Debates or Resolutions In confirmation of the premises I have hereto subscribed my Name 117. The C. of War debate to massacre the Kings party See Will. Sedgwicks Iustice upon the Armies Remonstrance About this time it was debated at the Councel of Warre to Massacre and put to the Sword all the KING'S Party The Question put was carried in the Negative but by two Voices You see what Furies pursue these sinfull Wretches and what dangerous rocks they dash upon in order to that base and cowardly principle of Self-preservation The Army hath in every County of England packs of schismatical Beagles 118. Schismaticall Petitions for 2. or 3. principal Gentlemen in each County to be brought to justice whom they hollow on to hunt in full crie by Petitions to the House after the bloud of such whom they design for slaughter Many Petitions have been lately presented That two or three principall Gentlemen of the KING'S Party by name in each County might be sacrificed to Justice whereby the Land might be freed from bloud-guiltinesse Divers Merchants have contracted to send forth severall Ships for the next Summers Fleet at their own charge 119. Merchants arming Ships for this Summers Fleet. The Prodigious High Court of Justice was revived in order to the Trial of the Earle of Holland the Earle of Cambridge the Earle of Norwich the Lord Capel and Sir John Owens 120 The High Court of Justice revived the Commissioners were changed that they may engage as many men in arbitrary illegal tyranny and bloud-shed as they can Hamilton was exceedingly importuned by Cromwell who took a journey to Windsor purposely to name such Members of Parliament and Citizens as had any hand in calling him in 121. The History of Hamiltons imprisonment and death See digitus Dei upon Duke Hamil●on this he either could not or would not do he had in order to his own ambition first exasperated the Independent party against the KING and afterwards sought their ruine by engaging for the KING and he doubted that to undertake so odious an office as to play the Devils part and be an Accuser of his Brethren would but set a glosse upon the Independents intended severity against him Being brought to St. James's in order to his Tryall Cromwell hoping to traine him to a confession caused all his Creatures to carry a favourable countenance to him Bradshaw smoothed him up with soft language at the Barre the Lord Gray of Grooby Col. Wayte and Hugh Peters gave him hopes that they would not much obstruct his pretended Plea of Quarter from Lambert upon Articles Peters avouched Quarter so given by Lambert notwithstanding Colonel Wayte when he made Report to the House of Commons how he took him affirmed He yeilded at discretion and Lambert was not then neer him after this Peters gives Hamilton a Visit who gives Peters thanks and money to boot for his late favour done him in Court Quaere What an accusation extorted for feare of death ●nd hope of life is worth Hamilton confessed at his death he had been much pressed yet had named no ma● Argyle and knowing him to be an Instrument of Cromwells imployed him as his Solicitor to the Members of the House and Army Peters prayes for Hamilton openly as his Lord Patron still feeding him with hopes If he would Impeach their Opposites yet still he waved this offering them 100000 l. for his life and often inculcating what services he would do them in Scotland for which purpose he offered to joyn Interests with Argyle and be a Servant to their Party Messengers were posted into Scotland to know Argyles pleasure But he had been over-reached formerly by Hamilton and he was resolved to admit no Competitor which would have eclipsed his greatnesse and have made him not the sole Patron of Scotish Independency Besides the Kirk so farre hated Hamilton that they preached off his head in Scotland before it was cut off in England the High Court of Justice lingered long in expectation of an Answer at last such a one came as decried all reconciliation with Hamilton whereupon the scene was altered presently Bradshaw handled him roughly at the Bar Mar. 6. Those which smiled on him before frowned now being asked what he could say he pleaded Quarter and vouched Peters Testimony who with a brazen face renounced his former Testimony When Hamilton was upon the Scaffold divers Officers of the Army and Hugh Peters conversed familiary with him to the last and Messengers passed to and fro saying He now remembred no such matter but that the Army scorned to give quarter to him or any of his Nation whereupon he was condemned to the Block which Sentence was executed upon him March 9. yet they fed Hamilton with vaine hopes to the last gasp for fear he should give glory to God and throw shame and infamy upon themselves by a Christian confession of his Argyles and their mutual villanies besides such a Discovery would have made Argyle lesse serviceable to them in Scotland whose next designe is to cajole the Kirk by seeming an Enemy to the Sectaries of England and pretending to serve the Presbyterian Interest Thus I conclude the Tragedy of Duke Hamilton 122. The Death of the Lord Capel In opposition to whom I will briefly relate the Tragedy of the noble Lord Capel a Gentleman of great courage and integrity He had made an adventurous escape out of the Tower but was re-taken by the treachery of a limping Water-man if I knew his Name I would bestow a blot of Inke upon him He pleaded for himself Articles of Surrender which were reall in him though not in Hamilton that divers that were in Colchester and in his condition had been admitted to compound and desired to be referred to Martial Law which being denyed He moved he might not be debarred of Additionall defence if he must be judged by the Common Law then he demanded the full benefit of that Declaration of the Commons 19. Feb. 1648. which Enacteth and Declareth That though King and Lords be laid aside yet all other the fundamental Laws shall be in force concerning the lives liberties and properties of the Subject and recommended to them Magna Charta The Petition of Right 3. Caroli and the Act made H. 7. for indempnity of all such as adhered to the present King in possessione also the exception in the Act of Attainder of Strafford and Canterbury which saies Their Cases shall not be used as a precedent against any man He desireth to see his jury and that they might see him and so might be Tryed by his Peers saying He did beleive no precedent could
they would not hear him so he went forth into the Church-yard the people following him where he related to them That he had a Vision and received a command from God to deliver his will unto them which he was to deliver and they to receive upon pain of damnation It consisted of 5 Lights 1. That the Sabbath was abolished as unnecessary Jewish and meerly ceremonial And here quoth he I should put out my first Light but the wind is so high I cannot light it 2. Tythes are abolished as Jewish and Ceremonial a great burden to the Saints of God and a discouragement of industry and tillage And here I should put out my second Light c. as aforesaid which was the burden of his song 3. Ministers are abolished as Antichristian and of no longer use now Christ himself descends into the hearts of his Saints and his Spirit enlightneth them with Revelations and inspirations And here I should have put out my third Light c. 4. Magistrates are abolished as useless now that Christ himself is in puritie of Spirit come amongst us and hath erected the Kingdom of the Saints upon earth besides they are Tyrants and Oppressors of the Liberty of the Saints and tie them to Laws and Ordinances meer humane inventions And here I should have put c. 5. Then putting his hand into his pocket and pulling out a little Bible he shewed it open to the People saying Here is a Book you have in great veneration consisting of two parts the Old and New Testament I must tell you it is abolished It containeth beggarly rudiments milk for Babes But now Christ is in Glory amongst us and imparts a fuller measure of his Spirit to his Saints then this can afford and therefore I am commanded to burn it before your faces so taking the Candle out of his Lanthorn he set fire of the leaves And then putting out the Candle cryed And here my fifth Light is extinguished Upon a Report from the Councell of State 143. The Earle of Warwick's Commission recalled and 3 Admirals appointed the Commons Voted void the Earle of Warwick's Commission for Admirall and appointed three Commissioners to have and execute the Admirals Place with 3 l. a day a piece a Commission for Martiall Law and Land Souldiers aboard to keep under the Seamen The three Admirals are Col. Edw Popham Col. Rob Blake and Col Deane Sunday after Easter-day 144. Cromwell turned Preacher six Preachers militant at White-hall tried the patience of their Hearers one calling up another successively at last the Spirit of the Lord called up Oliver Cromwell who standing a good while with lifted up eyes as it were in a trance and his neck a little inclining to one side as if he had expected Mahomet's Dove to descend and murmure in his eare and sending forth abundantly the groans of the Spirit spent an hour in prayer and an hour and an half in a Sermon In his prayer he desired God to take off from him the Government of this mighty People of England as being too heavy for his shoulders to bear An audatious ambitious and hypocriticall imitation of Moses It is now reported of him that he pretendeth to Inspirations and that when any great or weighty matter is propounded he usually retireth for a quarter or half an hour and then returneth and delivereth out the Oracles of the Spirit surely the Spirit of John of Leyden will be doubled upon this Man 145. The last Retreat of the Faction by H. Martins report About this time the Palsgrave took his leave of the Parliament being much courted and complemented by them and his 8000 l. per annum with all Arrears confirmed to him since his departure Harry Martin in a jolly humour was heard to say If the worst hapned and that they should not he able to stand their ground in England yet the Palsgrave would afford them a place of retreat in the Palatinate the seeds of these Anarchicall Anabaptisticall humours upon the reducing of Munster spread themselves in England and now have a mind to return into Germany to kindle a fire there 146 Io. Lilburn's third Book called The Picture of the Councell of State About this time John Lilburn and his Company set forth a Book called The Picture of the Councell of State c. wherein they set forth the illegall and violent proceedings of the said Councell against them in seizing upon them with armed Bands of Souldiers and interrogating them against themselves c. where they have these words The Faction of a Traiterous Party of Officers of the Army hath twice rebelled against the Parliament and broke them in pieces and by force of Armes culled out whom they pleased and imprisoned divers of them and laied nothing to their charge and have left onely in a manner a few men besides 11 of themselves viz the Generall Cromwell Ireton Harrison Fleetwood Rich Ingolsby Hazelrigge Constable Fennick Walton and Allen Treasurer of their own Faction behind them that will like Spaniel dogs serve their lusts and wills yea some of the chiefest of them viz Ireton Harrison c. yea Mr. Holland himself styled them a Mock Parliament a Mock power at Windsor yea it is yet their expressions at London And if this be true that they are a Mock-power and a Mock Parliam●nt then Quare Whether in Law or Justice especially considering they have fallen from all their many glorious promises and have not done any one action that tends to the universall good of the people can those Gentlemen sitting at Westminster in the House called the House of Commons be any other than a factious company of Men trayte●ously combined together with Cromwell Ireton and Harrison to subdue the Laws Liberties and Freedoms of England for no one of them protests against the rest and to set up an absolute and perfect tyranny of the Sword will and pleasure and absolutely intend the destroying the Trade of the Nation and the absolute impoverishing the people thereof to sit them to be their Vassals and Slaves And again the three forementioned Men viz Cromwell Ireton and Harrison the Generall being but their stalking horse and a cypher and their trayterous Faction having by their wills and Swords got all the Swords of England under their command and the disposing of all the great Places in England by Sea and Land and also the pretended Law making power and the pretended Law executing power by making among themselves contrary to the Laws and Liberties of England all Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs Bayliffs Committee-men c. to execute their wils and tyranny walking by no limits or bounds but their own wills and pleasures and trayterously assume unto themselves a power to leavy upon the people what money they please and dispose of it as they please yea even to buy knives to cut the peoples throats that pay the money to them and to give no account for it till Dooms-day in the
fancy for their owne vindication and the Commons must Father the Bastard and set the stamp of their Authority and priviledge upon it least any man should confute it and beat back the Authors lies into their throats But this is no new invention for formerly when the Councel of Officers set forth their Answer to the House of Commons Demands concerning their secured Members Ireton penned this scandalous Answer of the said Officers Cromwell and Ireton caused their Journey-men of that Conventicle to Vote That the House did approve the matter of the said Answer therby owning all the grosse lies therin contained to deterre the imprisoned Members from replying to it and so by a tacite confession to acknowledge themselves guilty About this time appeared out of the East a New Light in our Horizon 156. The Turkish Alchoran taught to speak English the Alchoran of Mahomet Predecessor to Cromwell and of Sergius forerunner of Hugh Peters naturalized and turned English Now the Jewes Professed Enemies to Christ which Mahomet is not are accepted of it is beleived that their Thalmude and Caball will shortly be made English too that this Island may be rendred a compleat Pantheon a Temple and Oracle for all Gods and all Religions our light-headed innovating People being like Reeds as apt to be shaken by and bend unto every wind every breath of pretended Inspiration as the antient Arabians were May 1. 1649. The frighted Conventicle of Commons considered of an Act forsooth to fortifie themselves and their usurpations with a Scar-crow of new-declared Treasons 157. New-declared Treasons to defend tyranny and usurpation and ensnare the People to the purpose following 1. If any man shall malitiously this is a word of qualification a back-door to let out such as they shall think fit Affirme the present Government to be tyrannical usurped or unlawfull or that the Commons in Parliament are not the supreme Authority of the Nation or endeavour to alter the present Government 2. If any affirme the Councel of State or Parliament to be Tyrannicall or unlawfull or endeavour to subvert them or stirre up sedition against them For Souldiers of the Army to contrive the death of the Generall or Lieutenant Generall or endeavour to raise mutinies in the Army Quere whether Cromwell be Lieutenant Generall or no or to leavy Warre against the Parliament to joyne with any to invade England or Ireland counterfeit the Great Seale kill any Member of Parliament or Judge or Minister of Justice in their duty All these several cases to be Declared Treason You see the terrors of Caine pursue these guilty Cowards This Fools Bolt is chiefly aymed at the honest Levellers this Junto of Commons have made themselves legall Traytors already and would now make all the Kingdome legislative Traytors but I hope none of those that arrogate the Reverend Title of Judges of the Law although against Law will be so lawlesse as to give Sentence of Death upon any such illegal Act of the House of Commons nay this very Act denounceth slavery and bondage to the Nation and therefore is an Act of the highest tyranny and a snare 158. The Levellers Randezvouz in Oxfordshire May 6. 1649. The honest Levellers of the Army for that is the Nick-name which Cromwell falsly and unchristianly hath christned them withal Enemies to Arbitrary Government tyranny and oppression whether they finde it in the Government of one or many whether in a Councel of Officers a Councel of State or a fag end of a House of Commons whether it vaile it selfe with the Title of a Supreme Authority or a Legislative power drew together to a Randezvouz about Banbury in Oxfordshire to the number of 4000 or 5000. others resorting to them dayly from other parts This gave an Alarme to our Grandees fearing the downfall of their domination Cromwell not knowing what Party to draw out against them that would be stedfast to him shunned the danger and put his property the General upon it to oppose the Randezvouz and looking as wan as the guilles of a sick Turkey-cock marched forth himself Westward to intercept such as drew to the Randezvouz In the meane time the said Levellers printed and published this ensuing Paper entituled Englands Standard advanced or A Declaration from Mr. Will. Thompson and the oppressed People of this Nation now under his conduct in Oxfordshire Dated at their Randezvouz May 6. 1649. WHereas it is notorious to the whole world that neither the Faith of the Parliament nor yet the Faith of the Army formerly made to the people of this Nation in behalf of their Common Right Freedom and Safety hath bin at all observed or made good but both absolutely declined and broken and the people only served with bare words and faire promising Papers and left utterly destitute of all help or delivery And that this hath principally been by the prevalency and treachery of some eminent persons now domineering over the people is most evident The Solemn Engagement of the Army at New-market and Triploe-heaths by them destroyed the Councel of Agitators dissolved the blood of Warr shed in time of Peace Petitioners for Common Freedom suppressed by force of Arms and Petitioners abused and terrified the lawful Trial by 12. sworn men of the Neighbourhood subverted and denied bloody and tyrannical Courts called an High Court of Justice and a Council of State erected the power of the Sword advanced and set in the Seat of the Magistrates the Civil Lawes stopt and subverted and the Military Introduced even to the hostile seizure imprisonment triall sentence and execution of death upon divers of the Free people of this Nation leaving no visible Authority devolving all into a Factious Juncto and Councel of State usurping and assuming the name stamp and authority of Parliament to oppresse torment and vex the People whereby all the lives liberties and estates are all subdued to the Wills of those Men no Law no Justice no Right or Freedome no Case of Grievances no removal of unjust barbarous Taxes no regard to the cries and groans of the poore to be had while utter beggery and famine like a mighty terrent hath broken in upon us and already seized upon several parts of the Nation Wherefore through an inavoidable necessity no other meanes left under Heaven we are enforced to betake our selves to the Law of Nature to defend and preserve our selves and Native Rights and therefore are resolved as one Man even to the hazard and expence of our Lives and Fortunes to endeavour the Redemption of the Magistracy of England from under the force of the Sword to vindicate the Petition of Right to set the unjustly imprisoned free to relieve the poore and settle this Common-wealth upon the grounds of Common Right Freedome and Safety Be it therefore known to all the free people of England and to the whole world that chusing rather to die for Freedome then live as Slaves We are gathered and associated together
broached in a Pamphlet by old Rowse the illiterate Jew of Eaton-Colledge And by John Goodwin the sophistical Divine which is fully con●uted in A Religious Demurrer concerning submission to the present power an excellent peece but what the Sword gave To this the honest Lievtenant Colonel answered Mr. Peters You are one of the Guides of the Army used by the chief Leaders to trumpet their Principles and Tenents and if your reasoning be good then if six Theeves meet three or four honest men and rob them that act is righteous because they are the stronger Party And if any power be a just power that is uppermost I wonder how the Army and Parliament can acquit themselves of being Rebels and Traytors before God and man in resisting and fighting against a just power in the King who was a power up and visible fenced about with abundance of Laws so reputed in the common acceptation of Men by the express letter of which all th●se that fought against him are ipso facto Traytors and if it were not for the preservation of our Laws and Liberties why did the Parliament fight against Him a present power in being and if there be no Laws in England nor never was then you and your great M●sters Cromwel Fairfax and the Parliament are a pack of bloody Rogues and Villains to set the People to murder one an●ther in fighting for preservation of their Laws in which their Liberties were included which was the principal declared Cause of the War from the beginning to the end I thought quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I had been safe when I made the known Laws the rules of my actions which you have all sworn and declared to Defend and make as the standard and touchstone between you and the People * The Laws are now no protection to us nor the rule of our actions but the arbitrary wills and lusts of the Grandees I but replied Hugh I will shew that your safety lyes not therein their minds may change and then where are you I but quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I cannot take notice of what is in their minds to obey that but the constant Declaration of their minds never contradicted in any of their Declarations as That they will maintain the Petition of Right and Laws of the Land c. This was the substance of their discourse saving that John pinched upon his great Masters large fingring of the Common-wealths money calling it Theft and State-Robbery and saying That Cromwel and Ireton pissed both in one quill though they seem sometime to go one against another yet it is but that they may the more easily carry on their main design To enslave the People Reader I was the more willing to present the summ of this Debate to thee that by comparing their doctrine and principles with their daily practices thou mayst perfectly see to what condition of slavery these beggarly upstart Tyrants and Traytors have reduced us by cheating us into a War against our lawful Soveraign under pretence of defending our Laws and Liberties and the Priviledges of Parliament which themselves onely with a concurring faction in the House have now openly and in the face of the Sun pulled up by the roots and now they stop our mouths and silence our just complaints with horrid Sect. 162. illegal and bloody Acts Declaring words and deeds against their usurpations and tyranny to be High Treason nothing is now Treason but what the remaining faction of the House of Commons please to call so To murder the King break the Parliament by hostile force put down the House of Lords erect extrajudicial High Courts of Justice to murder Men without Trial by Peers or Jury or any legal proceeding to subvert the fundamental Government by Monarchy and dispossess the right Heir of the Crown and to usurp his Supreme Authority in a factious fagg-end of the House of Commons to put the Kingly Government into a packed Junto of forty Tyrants called A Councel of State to exercise Martial Law in times of peace and upon persons no Members of the Army to raise what unnecessary illegal Taxes they please and share them and the Crown Lands and Revenues amongst themselves leaving the Souldiers unpaid to live upon Free-quarter whilst they abuse the People with pretended Orders against Free-quarter to alter the Styles of Commissions Patents Processe and all Legal proceedings and intoduce a forraign Jurisdiction to Counterfeit the Great Seal and Coin of the Kingdome and to keep up Armies of Rebels to make good these and other Tyrannies and Treasons is High Treason by the known Lawes but now by the Votes of the Conventicle of Commons it is High Treason to speak against these crimes Good God! how long will thy patience suffer these Fools to say in their hearts there is no God and yet profess thee with their mouths to break all Oathes Covenants and Protestations made in thy Name to cloak and promote their Designes with dayes of impious fasting and thanksgiving how often have thy Thunderbolts rived sensless Trees and torn brute Beasts that serve thee according to their Creation yet thou passest over these men who contemn thee contrary to their knowledge and professions Scatter the People that delight in War Turn the Councels of the wise into folly let the crafty be taken in their own net and now at last let the Oppressed taste of thy mercies and the Oppressor of thy justice throw thy rod into the fire and let it no longer be a bundle bound together in thy right hand They appeal to thee as Author of their prosperous sins become Lord Author of their just punishments bestow upon them the rewards of Hypocrites and teach them to know the difference between the saving strength of Magistrates and the destroying violence of Hang-men But what am I that argue against thy long-suffering whereof my self stand in need and seek to ripen thy vengeance before thy time Shall the Pot ask the Potter what he doth I beheld the prosperity of the wicked and my feet had slipped Lord amend all in thy good time and teach us heartily to pray Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven 170. The Act for Abolishing Monarchy proclaimed in London May 30. 1649. The aforesaid Trayterous Act for abolishing Kingly Government and converting England into a Free-State consisting of forty Tyrants and many millions of slaves was proclaimed in London by the newly intruded illegal Lord Mayor Andrewes accompanied with 14 Aldermen of the same pack the People in great abundance crying out Away with it away with it GOD save King CHARLES the Second and bitterly reviling and cursing it and them until some Troops of Horse ready prepared in secret were sent to disperse beat and wound them and yet the Trial of the King and the subverting of our well-formed Monarchy under which we lived so happily heretofore with all other Acts of the like high nature was done in the name of the People of
That the House is content the farther consideration thereof as to him be laid aside and shall not at any time hereafter be called in question So exit Monck and the Play was done wherein take notice of these following Observations 1. The Armies Doctrine See the Answer of the Councel of Officers to the Parliaments Demand concerning their secured Members And their Answer thereunto and use of apprehended necessity and good intentions to justifie evil actions approved of by this example of the Parliament as they will be called 2. This Agreement though it were at least twelve Weeks ago publickly known in England and divulged in their own Licensed News-books was never scrupled until now That 1. the said Agreement was expired 2. That O Neale was so beaten by the Lord Inchiquine that he is as their own News-books say inconsiderable and must suddenly joyn with the Marquesse of Ormond or be destroyed 3. That these Votes call this * Let me not seem over-bold in maintaining a different opinion since Parliaments are no more infallible than Popes and all humane opinions are equal unless Reason make the difference I hope we have not lost our Reason with our Lawes and Liberties nor the exercise and use of it Agreement but a Treaty and Cessati●n of Arms which I affirm to be a League Defensive and Offensive against Ormond Inchiquine and all that do and shall uphold Monarchy if not Protestancy too for these Reasons 1. Article second saith That upon all occasions both Parties be ready with their Forces to assist one another until a more absolute Agreement be made and condiscended unto by the Parliament of England This is beyond a Cessation 2. Article third saith That the Creaghts of Ulster residing within the Quarters of Col. Monck shall pay Contribution to General Owen Oneale This is a Concession of a great latitude far beyond the authority of any subordinate Commander or General and against the Lawes and Liberties of the Land to grant Taxes It should seem by this that Oneale and his Army were become Mercenaries taken into pay by Monck 3. Article fourth saith That if General Owen Oneale shall happen to fight against the Forces under the Command of the Marquesse of Ormond the Lord Inchiquine or any other Enemies of the Parliament of England and thereby sp●nd his Ammunition if he be near unto my Quarters and be distressed for want of Ammunition I shall then furnish him This was actually performed when my Lord Inchequine Besieged Dundalke I make the same interpretation of this Article that I have made of the third 4. The fifth Article alloweth to Oneale the use of any Harbours within Col. Moncks liberty which likewise is too much fot a bare Cessation or Truce 4. Who can believe that any subordinate Officer commissionated to prosecute a War against Owen Roe and the rest in Arms in that Kingdom should dare to Treat and conclude an Agreement and conjunction with that very Enemy he had Commission to fight against without the knowledge and directions publique or private of those from or under whom he hath his Authority and should be so bold when he had done to come over and justifie his said doings notwithstanding they proved unprosperous Col. Monck being so much a Souldier as to know That all the world over to exceed the bounds of his Commission much more to act against his Commission as in this case is assured death without mercy both by the Law Martial without which Military Discipline will perish and by the Lawes of hur Land See the said Letter printed at the latter end of a Relation of the securing and secluding of the Members by the Army 5. Wherefore was Sir John Winter and Sir Kenelm Digby sent for over as was foretold by an intercepted Letter whereof of I have formerly spoken and O Realy the Popes Irish Agent and another Agent from Owen Roe O Neal privately entertained in England as I have formerly hinted but to drive on Treaties and Associations of this nature insomuch that long since it was whispered amongst Cromwels party in England to uphold their spirits That upon his shewing himself in Arms in Ireland Ormonds Catholick Irish party would all forsake him and go over to O Neal who maintained the Popes Interest in that Kingdome Nota. The aforesaid paper prinred by Authority and stiled The true State of the Transactions c. besides the said Articles of Cessation setteth down other Articles called The Propositions of General Owen O Neale the Lords Gentry and Commons of the confederate Catholicks of VLSTER To the most High and most Honourable The PARLIAMENT of ENGLAND 1. INprimis That such as are already joyned or shall within the space of three Months joyn with General Owen O Neale Within the space of three Months is not in the said Copy printed at Cork in the service of the Parliament of England in this Kingdome as well Clergy as others may have all Laws and Penalties against their Religion and its Professors taken off by Act of Parliament and that Act to extend to the said parties their Heirs and Successors for ever while they Loyally serve the Parliament of England 2. The said General O Neale desireth an Act of Oblivion to be passed to extend to all and every of his party for all things done since the beginning of the Year 1641. 3. They desire that General Owen O Neal be provided with a competent Command in the Army befitting his worth and quality 4. They desire that they may enjoy all the Lands that were or ought to be in their or their Ancestors possession 5. That all incapacity inability and distrust hitherto by Act of State or otherwise against the said party be taken off 6. That on both sides all jealousies hate and aversion be laid aside Vnity Love and Amity be renewed and practised between both parties 7. That General Owen O Neale may be restored and put in possession of his Ancestors Estates or some Estates equivalent to it in the Counties of Tyrone Ardmarch or Londondery in regard of his merit and the good service that he shall perform in the Parliament of Englands Service in the preservation of their Interest in this Kingdome 8. That the Army belonging to General Owen O Neale and his party be provided for in all points as the rest of the Army shall be 9. That the said party be provided with and possessed of a convenient Sea-port in the Province of Ulster I do upon receiving a confirmation of these Propositions forthwith undertake and promise in behalf of my self and the whole party under my Command faithfully and firmly adhere to the State of the Parliament of England in this Kingdome and maintain their Interest hereafter with the hazard of our lives and fortunes In witness whereof I have hereunto put my Hand and Seal this 8. day of May An. Dom. 1649. Signed Owen O Neale Thus far the said paper stiled The true State c.
Birkhead by Dures of Imprisonment with the connivance of the Commons Col. Bromfield Hooker Cox and Baynes Citizens who the last year were committed upon suspition of High Treason to which every offence against this new Babel-state is now wrested notwithstanding the Stat. 25 Edw. 3. for limitation of Treasons as in an infectious season all diseases turn to the plague and were then discharged for want of matter to make good the Charge are now again imprisoned in the first year of Englands Liberty at the request of Birkhead Sergeant at Armes to the Commons until they pay such unreasonable Fees as he pleases to exact from them This had been great Extortion and Tyranny in the KINGS time when this Nation enjoyed so much freedome as to call a Spade a Spade an Extortioner an Extortioner and a Tyrant a Tyrant And reason good for if such Fees be legally due Birkhead hath Legal means to recover them if not Legally due it is Extortion in him to demand them in so violent a way and Tyranny in his Masters the Commons to maintain him in it Sir Henry Mildmay lately coming to the Tower and perceiving the Countess of Carlisles window had some prospect to Col. Lilborns Grates out of his parasitical diligence told the Lievtenant of the Tower 219. Sir Har. Mildmay's Politick Observations Chaste Conversation and first initiation at Court That notwithstanding the distance was such as they could not communicate by speech yet they might signifie their intentions by signs upon their fingers to the prejudice of the tender infant State and accompanying this admonition with some grave and politick Nods hasted away to the Councel of State and being both out of breath and sense unloaded himself of his Observations there and was seconded by Tho. Scot the Demolisher of old Palaces and Deflowrer of young Mayden-heads before they are ripe who much aggravated the danger and applauded the Observator Sure Sir Henry hath not yet forgot the bawdy Language of the hand and fingers since he first in Court began to be Ambassadour of Love Procuror Pimp or Pandor to the Duke of Buckingham and laboured to betray the honour of a fair Lady his nearest Ally to his Lust had not she been as Vertuous as he is Vitious if it be possible for any Woman to be so and did actually betray others to him I can tell you that very lately Sir Harry pretending himself taken with the Wind-collick got an opportunity to insinuate himself into a Citizens house in Cheapside and tempted his Wife but had a shameful repulse but more of this I will not speak lest his Wife beat him and give an ill example to other Women to the prejudice of our other New States-men 220. Felons fetched out of Newgate to inform against Merchants for not paying Customes and their New erected Sodomes and Spintries at the Mulbury-garden at St. Jamses Master Gybs Master of a Ship having caused three fellows to be committed to New-gate upon Felony for Robbing him These Fellows sent to Col. Harvey That if he would procure their Liberty they would discover to him several Merchants who had lately stoln Customes Whereupon Harvey sends for those Rogues out of New-gate hears their Accusation approves it prosecutes the Merchants upon the Information of those Villains discharges them of their Imprisonment by his own power and recommends them to Col. Deane to be imployed in the Navy And one Master Lovel a Silk-man in Saint Lawrence-lane is committed to the Gate-house Prisoner because he refuseth to swear how many Bayl 's of Silk he hath come over If the first year of our Liberty make such presidents what Monsters will the Sixth and Seventh year produce All Princes begin with moderation The Elders gave good Councel to Rehoboam Serve the People one day and they will serve thee for ever hereafter Nero had a commendable Quinquennium But our Novice Statists are Tyrants ab incunabilis Oppressors with shels upon their heads from the Nest before they are fledge what will they be hereafter 221. Sommer-hill given to Bradshaw A sop for Cerberus Sommerhil a pleasant Seat worth 1000 l. a year belonging to the Earle of Saint Albans is given by the Juncto to their Blood-hound Bradshaw so he hath warned the Countess of Leicester who formerly had it in possession to raise a Debt of 3000 l. pretended due to her from the said Earle which she hath already raised four-fold to quit the possession against our Lady-day next The Protestation and Declaration THe Premises considered I do hereby in the name and behalf of my self and of all the Free people of England Declare and Protest That the General Councel of War and Officers of the Army by their said violent and treasonable force upon the far major more honest and moderate part of the House of Commons being above 250. and leaving only fifty or sixty Schimaticks of their own engaged Party sitting and voting under their Command and almost all of them such as have and do make a prey of the Commonwealth to enrich themselves and their Faction have broken discontinued and waged War against this Parliament and have forfeited their Commissions And the remaining Faction in the House of Commons by abetting ayding and concurring with the said Councel of War in the said rebellious Force and by setting up new illegal and arbitrary Courts of Judicature to Murther King CHARLES the First our lawful King and Governour who by his Writ according to the Law summoned and authorised this Parliament to meet sit Principium Caput fini● Parliamenti Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and advise with him and was the Fountain Head and conclusion or su●matory end of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all Persons and in all Causes of this Kingdome and by Abolishing the House of Peers and the Kingly Office and Dis-inheriting the Kings Children and Vsurping to themselves the Supreme Authority and Legislative P●wer of this Nation in order to make and establish themselves a Councel of State Hogen Mogens or Lords States General and translate the said Supreme Power and Authority into the said Councel of State and then Dissolve this Parliament and perpetute their said Tyranny and this Army and Govern Arbitrarily by the Power of the Sword and raise what illegal Taxes they please and eat out consume and destroy whosoever will not basely submit to their Domination See 1. part sect 105 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17 18. and return to sect 79 109 110. Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. Oaths of Algiance and Supremacy Have by the aforesaid wayes and means totally subverted this Common-wealth and destroyed the fundamental Laws Authority and Government thereof Dissolved and Abolished this and all future Parliaments so that there is now no visible lawful Authority left in England but the Authority of King CHARLES the Second who is actually KING of all his Dominions presently upon the Decease of the King his Father before any Proclamation made
debere legibus interrogari nequeat qui jus aequum ferre non potest in eum vim haud injustam fore No man ought to advance himself above the powers of the Law he that will not submit to equal right if he be cut off by violence suffers no wrong but this is to be understood of the eminency and greatness of the person not of the greatness of the crime whereof no man is to be forejudged because a great crime may prove a great calumny until a legal trial have adjudged it But there is no person in England so eminent for power or Authority but that the least of Bradshaws Ban-dogs can drive him to the Slaughter-house make him offer his throat to Keeble Therefore Animadversio Gladii if at any time lawful is now unlawful To make great examples upon men of little power is great injustice But the way of this Court is not Animodversio per Gladium It is a Mocking a Counterfeiting an Adulterating and Alchimisting of Justice it is to falsifie her weights and ballance and steal her sword to commit Murder withall See Col. Andrews three Answers 6. By the known Laws Matter of fact is intrusted to the Jury matter of Law to the Judges to prevent all errours combinations and partiallities The Judges are sworn to do justice according to the Law the Jury are sworn to finde according to their evidence But in this high Court the Commissioners or Judges are all packed confiding men chosen by and out of one party to destroy all of a different party They usurp the office of Judges not being sworn to deal well and lawfully with the people as by the said Stat. 18 Ed. 3. nor to do justice according to the Law But only to execute powers given by the said Act 26. Mar. 1650. And they arrogate as Jury-men to be Triers of the Fact without being sworn to find according to evidence So that they are Judges Juries and parties for ease of their tender consciences without any Oath of Indifferency A most excellent Compendium of Oppression They may go to the Devil for injustice and not be forsworn Great is the priviledge of the godly 7. The prisoner may except against his Jurors either against the Array if the Sheriff or Bayly impannelling the Jury be not wholly disingaged and indifferent both to the cause and to the parties prosecuting and prosecuted or against the Poll he may challenge 35 peremptorily as many more as he can render legal cause of challenge for As for defect of estate or other abilities or for partiality Disaffection Engagement Infamy But this Array of Jury-men Judges a Medley so new we know not how to express it though picked and empannelled by an engaged remainder of the Commons and abnoxious to all exceptions must not be challenged their backs are too much galled to indure the least touch Take heed you scandal not the Court cries Mr. Atturney See Col. Andrews three Answers 8. Many exceptions in a legal Trial are allowed against Imperfections Vncertainties and Illegallities in the Bill of Endictment for the advantage of the Prisoner But no Exceptions are allowed against these illegal Articles of Impeachment which are made uncertain intricate and obscure and ambiguous purposely to puzle confound and entangle the Respondent 9. By the Law a bill of Endictment must have two full and clear lawful witnesses to every considerable Matter of Fact both at finding the Bill and at the Trial. Where there is but one witness it shall be tried by combate before the Earl Martial Cooke ibidem Cooks 3. Instit pag. 25 26. And Probationes debent esse luce clariores Proofs must be as clear as the Sun not grounded upon Inferences Presumptions Probabilities And the Prisoner must be Provablement Attaint saith the Stat. 25. Ed. 3. chap. 2. Cooks 3. Instit pag. 12. The word attainted shews he must be legally proceeded with not by absolute power as formerly had been used and as is now used by this bloody High Court But before these Slaughter-men of the High Court all manner of witnesses Legal or Illegal one or two sworn or not sworn or apparently forsworn and suborned and all proofs clear or not clear are sufficient The Prisoner is sent thither foredoomed and hath its deaths Mark his fate in his forehead 10. The said Act 26. March 1650. carries two faces under one hood and looks backwards as well as forwards To facts precedent as well as subsequent the said Act contrary to the nature of all Laws whose office is to prohibit it before it punish to warn before it strike Where St. Paul defineth Sin to be the breach of Commandement or Law I had not known Sin but by the Law The Law must therefore be precedent to the Offence But these Acts are not Laws to admonish but Lime-twigs and Traps to ensnare and catch men See Col. Andrews 3. Answers at the latter end of this book Fourthly and lastly I am to consider To what end and purpose this new invented High Court is constituted and appointed Concerning which see a Letter dated 6. June 1650. Stilo veteri from the Hague supposed to be Walter Stricklands the Parliaments Agent there as I finde it in Walter Frosts brief Relations of some affairs and transactions c. from Tuesday June 11. to June 18. 1650. wherein the Epistoler hath these words One piece of the cure viz. of the dangers that threaten your new State must be Phlebotomy but then you must begin before Decumbency and then it wil be facile to prevent danger c. they are here most of all afraid of your high Court of Justice which they doubt may much discourage their party they wish you would not renew the power thereof but let it expire then they think that after Michaelmas they may expect Assistance with you And indeed that Court is of almost as much use to you as an Army and will prevent the rising of as many Enemies as the other will destroy only you must be sure to execute Justice there with all severity A few of the first stirrers taken away by the power thereof without respect to cousin or Countrey will keep all the rest quiet But whosoever that Court condemns let them be as already dead c. But let them be most free in cutting the vena Coephalica that is the Presbyterian Party for the Basilica or Royal Party will be latent The Median or Levellers would be spared as much as may be that the body be not too much emaciated Besides the blood is most corrupt in the Coephalicks or Presbyterians and is the very causa continens of your disease You need not fear to take freely of this vein c. Here you see this State Mountebank gives you the use and application of this corrasive The High Shambles of Justice so fully that I shall not need to comment upon it And in the latter end of a Letter from Cromwel dated from Dunbar 4. Sept.
happy Omen surely was this promise and undertaking hoped to be and so indeed it might have proved if it had been gained from any but the worst of Scotch-men the Presbyterians for at the very same time as it were when they had concluded the Treaty and thus highly promised the King as is before mentioned I say at the same time having gotten the famous Marquess of Montross into their hand whose only fault was Loyalty to his Prince having brought him with as much ignominy as they could devise to Edenburgh they there charge him for keeping away the King observe the King was now upon the point of coming to them from his subjects 2. For the invading that Kingdom 3. For all the murders in the war and for wast upon Argiles Estate c. Mark here I pray Montross murthered and the reasons thereof Montross must be murthered the best subject the King had in Scotland and just when the King is ready to come thither as if it were done in despight to him but why for keeping away the King No he had promised to be with them with all speed which Montross in prison could not have hindred Was it for invasion alas neither for he had none but his own Countrymen and of them but a very few and they quickly and easily defeated what was it for then for muder alas neither what then O! here 's the Divel that murthered the famous Montross for waste upon Argiles Estate Argile I say that underminer of his Soveraign who in a short time after upon his arrival was by the means and instigation of him upon pretence of non-performance by the King left destitute either of friends whom they banished from his Court The K. in Scotland held to hard meat means which they curtailed him of and strength allowing him neither a Souldier nor a garison nay not a town where he might with safety repose his head things being at this pass and his Majesty with much adoe gotten into Scotland as aforesaid which the Juncto at Westminster having perfect intelligence of and weighing with themselves that promise of the Scots to bring the murtherers of the Kings Father to condign punishment they begin to think it high time to provide for their own safety in consulting whereof after much time spent it is resolved the safest wisest and to them least chargeable course to wait on the Enemy in his own Country whereby they carried the war from home and not to stay for him to bring it to their own doors As a strong motive to this just at the instant they discover that many of the Presbyterians of England had by their agents agreed with the Scots at Bredah to re-establish his Majesty in all his Dominions Whereupon many eminent persons are seized on and among them Mr. Case Mr. Jenkins Mr. Jackson Mr. Love c. Which Mr. Love together with one Mr. Gibbons suffered death together on Towerhill Mr. Love and Gibbons beheaded at the earnest sute of Cromwell protesting he would not march into Scotland unless they were cut off Being moved hereby as well as by their own fear and guilt Cromwell invades Scotland his Majesty is scarce in Scotland but Cromwell is at the borders with 16000. Horse and Foot on their behalf to whom Leslly L. G. of the horse which were now raised after some expostulations by Letters and Declarations sends word that he is in armes upon the account of the good old cause and not upon the account of the King Scots divided among themselves whom he cleerly disowned Straughan and Ker not only disown the King but say positively they will fight against him so that now it was not Bellum Regale a war to maintain the Kings honour and the points of the treaty but bellum Presbyteriale a war for the Kirke of Scotland against the Independent faction of England those two great parties being come now to a second contest for superiority for Leven commanded the Foot and Leslly as I said before the horse and these two unaminously drew out against Cromwell and fought him within six miles of Edenburgh though to little purpose for he immediately after became Master of the field 1. Fight at Edenburgh and took Garririsons as fast as he came to them defeating them at Musselbourgh and pursuing them to Pentlan-hills 2. Fight at Musselbourgh where the Scots had him in a straight and might have destroyed him but the certainty as they thought of the victory caused them to delay by which and the fatal necessities of sickness hunger and cold pressing upon Cromwells Army made them choose rather at one fight desperately to hazard all then timourously to become the scorn of an insulting foe which they knew they should find following this resolve with diligence they whisper about the word to each other in the midst of a dark and rainy night they crept up the hill and fell on the Scots so suddenly and beyond expectation that they were disordered by the first attempt yet by reason of their multitudes 3. Dunbar fight and totall defeat and a little courage they held up a while till surrounded on the back by Cromwells horse the Scots horse affrighted begin to retreat and soon after to flie in good earnest leaving their foot to mercy who were taken in greater numbers then the English Army consisted of the Independent power by this victory being absolute conquerors King in the North of Scotl. private and the Presbyterian pride laid groveling in the dust During this quarrell between the said two factions the King as disowned so not interested therein retires first to St. Johnstons and after that privately into the North of Scotland where he continued expecting what God would do for him assuring himself that this defeat at Dunbar as things then stood could not be for his prejudice King sent to and returnes which indeed quickly fell out according to his expectation for the Scots upon that overthrow were somwhat humbled in Spirit and now began again to think of their late abused King wishing in their hearts he were among them fearing to speake the truth least he would have joyned with Northern and loyal Highlanders to prevent which they send M. G. Montgomery with forces to intreat his Majesties return who finds him out and affectionately delivers his message which the King received even with joyfull tears as minding the justice of God upon those perfidious Scots whose pride in success carried them beyond all bounds of allegiance and like a stubborn child must be soundly whipt ere they will kneell and the good manners they obtain must be beaten into them Yet he accepts of their request and accordingly goes towards them Who but so good a King would have exposed himself to such mens trust in so dangerous a time Innocentia est sibi munimentum for he resolves to return King crowned Upon notice hereof and his arrivall the Parliament address themselves to