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A28563 The history of the desertion, or, An account of all the publick affairs in England, from the beginning of September 1688, to the twelfth of February following with an answer to a piece call'd The desertion discussed, in a letter to a country gentleman / by a person of quality. Bohun, Edmund, 1645-1699.; Collier, Jeremy, 1650-1726. Desertion discuss'd. 1689 (1689) Wing B3456; ESTC R18400 127,063 178

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to them and they again returned the Complement in such Rhetorical Addresses that it was verily thought the Church of England Party would very easily have been given up for a Sacrifice to the kind sincere well-meaning Catholicks But our Dissenters were not so easily wheedled into a forgetfulness of what they had so lately suffered and altho' they gave the Fathers many good words and fair Promises yet when they had opportunity they gave such bold hints of their Resolution to defeat the Expectations of these Gentlemen that I protest I wondred at nothing more than to see them so sar infatuated as to believe they should ever reap any Advantage from our Non-cons They were however ingaged and therefore they must go on be the Event what it would and finding it would be a work of time and that it was not possible James II. should live to see it effected and that after his death the Succession of the then Princess of Orange would put an end to all this Babel of Confusion they had with so much Labour and Hazard erected They resolved in the next place to take care for a Catholick Successor to finish this great Work. And in truth it was a Project worthy of such bold Undertakers if they could have as easily deluded the English Nation as they frequently do those who have a mighty fondness for Miracles and had rather be deceived than find out the Legerdemains of the Priesthood But then this was so highly improbable that I wonder they ever entred into it and that none of the Fathers have yet told us that we ought not to think it possible for them to be such Fools as to attempt to impose in a matter of that Consequence upon so learned so curious so distrustful and fierce a Nation as this of England is I assure them this Argument would have more force than all the Depositions they have printed in that case and engage many to espouse their Quarrel out of pure Piquantry How far they might yet have gone and what would in the end have been the consequence of this formal Plot upon our Lives Liberties and Religion is known to none but God They looked upon the Protestant or British Interest in Ireland as wholly at their Mercy Scotland was in such a condition that nothing could be begun there which would not termiin the ruin of the Undertakers And England was so divided in Interest and Religion that they expected a considerable Body of the Protestants would lend them their assistance to ruine the rest and therefore call'd them their Scaffolds France the most Potent of our Neighbours was apparently engag'd in the same Design Denmark and Sweden engaged against each other in the Quarrel of the Duke of Holstein The Protestant Princes in Germany were either awed by the French or divided between the Northern Crowns Spain was weak and unable to defend it self and too Catholick at last to espouse heartily the Interests of a Protestant Nation against a Roman Catholick Prince so that they had nothing to fear but the States of Holland and the Prince of Orange And they looked upon the States as a knot of Merchants more intent upon their Trade than concern'd for the Fate of England and yet if they should attempt any thing England and France by Sea and Land would easily reduce them into the same state they were in in the year 1672. Now supposing the French King who is so zealous a Roman Catholick had not so vigorously and as far as I can see so impolitickly carried on the Controversie with the Pope about the Franchises of his Ambassador at Rome and that he had had the patience to suffer the Emperor to recover what his Ancestors had lost to the Turks and left the Controversies between the Elector Palatine who is a Roman Catholick and the Dutchess of Orleans to the determination of the Pope what had France lost in all this And who then could have made one step to the Recovery of England I know very well it is said the Emperor would certainly begin a War with France so soon as ever he had ended this with the Turks to his mind And in truth he had just reason so to do But it is more probable he would have spent first some years in fortifying peopling and setling his new Conquests to secure himself on that side against his most formidable Neighbour rather than that he would presently transfer his Arms and victorious Armies from the East to the West and pass so suddenly from one long and ruinous War to another of no less hazard and expence And yet if he had done so the Princes of the Empire would never so heartily and generally have joyned with him against France if he had been the Aggressor how just soever his cause had been as it might easily have been foreseen they would when they were first attack'd and as it were forced to flie to the Emperor for his Protection So that it was apparently the Interest of France to have sate still and to have taken the first opportunity had offered it self to have enslaved the first of his Neighbours that had call'd him to their assistance and our English Jesuits did not doubt but that he would In the Interim it was well for England that the French King acted as he did for to him in a great measure our Delivery is owing tho' he never intended it his Breach with the Pope and the Empire having not only given the Dutch a pretence to arm by Sea and Land and so blinded the Eyes of our English Court that they never saw nor would believe themselves concern'd in it till it was too late to help it But it also united not only all the Protestant but all the Catholick Princes too except France in the Project of delivering us for their own security that we might be in a condition to unite with them again for the preservation of Europe from following the triumphant Chariot of France in Chains His late Majesty seems to have been the only Prince in Christendom who made it his great and almost only design to advance the Interests of the Church of Rome without and against his own temporal Interest The rest of the Princes and their Council look in the first place to their own Concerns at home and abroad and make the Affairs of Religion subservient to their other Designs The Pope is not so fond of his old Mumpsimus or of the Decrees of the Council of Trent it self as to suffer France to conquer Italy Spain or Germany no nor England nor Holland neither how much soever it might seem to facilitate their Reduction to the See of Rome because he knows very well the first Prince that shall make himself the Universal Monarch of Europe or gain such a power over the rest as is not to be disputed or opposed will certainly put an end to the Soveraignty Wealth Grandeur and Independency of the Court of Rome and the Pope will
become as subject to him notwithstanding his Infallibility as the Mufty is to the Grand Signior who never makes any Scruple to depose or bow-string the Infallible Gentleman whenever he crosseth his Designs and to set up another in his stead whose Infallibility will be more complaisant The Emperor of Germany is as religious and as zealous a Prince for the Roman Catholick Religion as ever sprung out of that Family But he has no mind after all to lose his Life his Empire and his Liberty he had rather there should be some Hereticks in Germany than to suffer the French King to send his Apostolick Dragoons to convert them and drive him into Exile The King of Spain values the poor dispeopl'd share he has yet left him in Europe too well to put it into the Hands of the French in order to the reducing the Northern Hereticks to the See of Rome No wonder then that these Princes should all unite with his now Majesty of England against a Prince of their own Religion when they saw he had embraced a design which would certainly end in his and all their Ruins and which would raise France to such an height of Power as could never be retrieved This was very near the state of Affairs at home and abroad when Monsieur the Comte d' Avaux the French King's Ambassador at the Hague the 9th of September last published this Memorial which first opened the Eyes of our small States-men here in England My Lords THe sincere desire the King my Master has to maintain the Tranquility of Europe will not suffer his Majesty to see the great Preparations for War both by Sea and Land made by your Lordships without taking the measures that Prudence the continual Companion of all his Actions inspires him with to prevent the Mischiefs these War-like Preparations will certainly draw after them And altho' the King perswaded of the Wisdom of your Councils would not imagine that a Free state should so easily resolve to take up Arms and to kindle a War which in the present Juncture cannot but be fatal to all Christendom Nevertheless his Majesty cannot believe your Lordships would engage your selves in so great Expences both at home and abroad to entertain in pay so many Foreign Troops to put to Sea so numerous a Fleet so late in the year and to prepare so great Magazines if you had not a design form'd answerble to the greatness of these Preparations All these Circumstances and many others that I may not here produce perswade the King my Master with reason that this Arming threatens England Wherefore his Majesty hath commanded me to declare to you on his part That the Bands of Friendship and Alliance between him and the King of Great Britain will oblige him not only to assist him but also to look on the first act of Hostility that shall be committed by your Troops or your Fleet against his Majesty of Great Britain as a manifest Rupture of the Peace and a Breach with his Crown I leave to your Lordships Prudence to reflect on the Consequences that such Enterprises may have his Majesty not having ordered me to make you this Declaration on his Part without his sincere Intention to prevent as I have already had the Honour to tell you all that may trouble the Peace of Europe Given at the Hague the 9th of September 1688. month September In England all things were then in the utmost degree of Disorder and Security the Army committing the utmost degree of Insolence in all places where they were quartered and the People making frequent and loud Complaints Whereupon his late Majesty issued out again an old Order which had been frequently and to no good purpose published before commanding that no Souldier should be lodged in any private House without the free and voluntary Consent of the Owner and that all Houses should be deem'd private Houses except Victualling-Houses and Houses of publick Entertainment or such as have License to sell Wine or any other Liquor c. Under this pretence they brought in all Bakers Cooks c. This Order bears date the 2d of September at Windsor Tho' the English Army were become thus intolerable to the Nation and there was so great a Storm gathering in Holland yet so stupid were our Drivers that nothing would serve our then Masters but the filling the Army with Irish men who were likely to be more disorderly and more hated to that end Major Slingsby Lieutenant Governour of Portsmouth under his Grace the Duke of Berwick had ordered the Regiment there quartered to take in about thirty Irish Gentlemen which was opposed by John Beaumont Lieutenant Coll. Thomas Pastor Simon Parke Thomas Orme William Cook and John Port Officers and Commanders in that Regiment which they had rais'd at their own Costs and Charges during the Monmouth Invasion The first of these made this Speech by their appointment and in all their names to the Duke of Berwick Sir I am desired by these Gentlemen with whose Sense I concur to inform your Grace that we do not think it consistent with our Honours to have Foreigners imposed upon us without being complain'd of that our Companies were weak or Orders to recruit them not doubting but if such Orders had been given us We that first in very ill times raised them Hundreds could easily now have made them according to the Kings Complement We humbly Petition we may have leave to fill up our Companies with such men of our Nation we may judge most suitable for the Kings Service and to support our Honours or that we may be permitted with all imaganable Duty and Respect to lay down our Commissions The Account of this Opposition being forthwith sent to Windsor where the Court then was the Rage and Fury against these rebellious heretical Officers was unspeakable and in truth nothing could be more contrary to their Designs which was by degrees to fill up the English Army with Irish and Roman Catholicks because they found it was not possible to do it at once as they had done in Ireland And now nothing would serve them but the hanging the six honest Gentlmen by Martial Law and accordingly a Party of Horse were ordered to go down to Portsmouth to bring them up in custody and a Court Martial was ordered to proceed against them and if the Memorial of the French Ambassador had not ●ome in that very Morning to shew them their danger ●n all probability they had been so treated but upon this the ●0th of September they were only casheer'd after they had on the Road been treated with great Severity and Indignity However this was one of those things which contributed very much to what followed The 20th of September the King being then returned with the Court to Whitehall published this Declaration HAving already signified Our pleasure to call a Parliament to meet at Our City of Westminster in November next and Writs of Summon being issued accordingly lest
however the Roman Catholicks from this time forward were studiously avoided no man fearing any trouble from any body else as in truth I never heard of any man that was prosecuted on this account The 28th of October the Earl of Sunderland was removed from the Office of Principal Secretary of State and the Lord Viscount Preston put in his room This Change pleased all men but it came too late As the Cause of the Dismission of the Earl of Sunderland was then wholly unknown so it gave occasion to the reviving a Report that had been spread not long before upon the Imprisonment of Sir Bevil Skelton the English Ambassador in France that there had lately been a League concluded between the King of England and France for the Extirpation of the Protestant Religion here and the establishing Popery and Arbitrary Government to which end the French King was as was said to send a considerable Army and great Sums of Money into England and as it was before pretended that Skelton being a Protestant had discovered this Transaction to the Prince of Orange So it was now said Sunderland had lost the Original League out of his Scritore and that it was carried over to the Prince of Orange who would produce it to the Parliament of England But since that the Earl of Sunderland has published a Letter wherein he has given a larger Account of the true Cause of his being laid aside than is any where else to be met with and therefore I think it reasonable to add it here The Earl of Sunderland 's Letter to a Friend in London published March 23d 1689. TO comply with what you desire I will explain some things which we talked of before I left England I have been in a Station of a great noise without Power or Advantage whilst I was in it and to my Ruin now I am out of it I know I cannot justifie my self by saying though it is true that I thought to have prevented much Mischief for when I found that I could not I ought to have quitted the Service neither is it an Excuse that I have got none of those things which usually engage men in publick Affairs My Quality is the same it ever was and my Estate much worse even ruin'd tho' I was born to a very considerable one which I am ashamed to have spoiled tho' not so much as if I had encreased it by indirect means But to go on to what you expect The pretence to a Dispensing Power being not only the first thing which was much disliked since the death of the late King but the foundation of all the rest I ought to begin with that which I had so little to do with that I never heard it spoken of till the time of Monmouth's Rebellion that the King told some of the Council of which I was one that he was resolved to give Employments to Roman Catholicks it being fit that all persons should serve who could be useful and on whom he might depend I think every body advised him against it but with little effect as was soon seen That Party was so well pleased with that the King had done that they perswaded him to mention it in his Speech at the next meeting of the Parliament which he did after many Debates whether it was proper or not in all which I opposed it as is known to very considerable Persons some of which were of another opinion for I thought it would engage the King too far and it did give such offence to the Parliament that it was thought necessary to prorogue it after which the King fell immediately to the supporting the Dispensing Power the most Chimerical thing that was ever thought of and must be so till the Government here is as absolute as in Turkey all Power being included in that one This is the sense I ever had of it and when I heard Lawers defend it I never changed my Opinion or Language however it went on most of the Judges being for it and was the chief business of the State till it was looked on as setled Then the Ecclesiastical Court was set up in which there being so many considerable men of several kinds I could have but a small part and that after Lawyers had told the King it was legal and nothing like the High Commission Court I can most truly say and it is well known that for a good while I defended Magdalen Colledge purely by care and industry and have hundreds of times begg'd of the King never to grant Mandates or to change any thing in the regular course of Ecclesiastical Affairs which he often thought reasonable and then by perpetual Importunities was prevailed upon against his ownsense which was the very case of Magdalen Colledge as of some others These things which I endeavoured though without Success drew upon me the Anger and Ill-will of many about the King. The next thing to be try'd was to take off the Penal Laws and the Tests so many having promised their concurrence towards it that his Majesty thought it feasible but he soon found it was not to be done by that Parliament which made all the Catholicks desire it might be dissolv'd which I was so much against that they complained of me to the King as a man who ruined all his Designs by opposing the only thing could carry them on Liberty of Conscience being the Foundation on which he was to build That it was first offered at by the Lord Clifford who by it had done the work even in the late King's time if it had not been for his weakness and the weakness of his Ministers Yet I hindred the Dissolution several Weeks by telling the King that the Parliament in Being would do every thing he could desire but the taking off the Penal Laws and the Tests or the allowing his Dispensing Power and that any other Parliament tho' such a one could be had as was proposed would probably never repeal those Laws and if they did they would certainly never do any thing for the support of the Government whatever exigency it might be in At that time the King of Spain was sick upon which I said often to the King that if he should die it would be impossible for his Majesty to preserve the peace of Christendom that a War must be expected and such a one as would chiefly concern England and that if the present Parliament continued he might be sure of all the help and service he could wish but in case he dissolv'd it he must give over all thoughts of fereign Affairs for no other would ever assist him but on such terms as would ruine the Monarchy so that from abroad or at home he would be destroy'd if the Parliament were broken and any accident should happen of which there were many to make the aid of his People necessary to him This and much more I said to him several times privately and in the hearing of others But being over-power'd