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A30389 The memoires of the lives and actions of James and William, Dukes of Hamilton and Castleherald, &c. in which an account is given of the rise and progress of the civil wars of Scotland, with other great transactions both in England and Germany, from the year 1625, to the year 1652 : together with many letters, instructions, and other papers, written by King Charles the I : never before published : all drawn out of, or copied from the originals / by Gilbert Burnet ; in seven books. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. Selections. 1677. 1677 (1677) Wing B5832; ESTC R15331 511,397 467

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what shall be agreed for me betwixt Your Majesty and these to whom this Affair is trusted by me I bind my self to ratifie To the fifth since the reasons of my Expedition to Germany are the same with Your Majesties I have firmly resolved to help and relieve the oppressed Princes and States of Germany with the ease of all these burdens with which they are now pressed and therefore shall do every thing in order and decently as becomes most friendly Auxiliaries and if any thing be taken by me from the common Enemy I shall desire nothing more than that the right of it be entirely and inviolably Your Majesties To the ninth since I have devoted my whole fortune with all my interests for promoting this our Design I promise that whatever any shall contribute for it shall all be laid out for this War which I shall with my whole Forces manage and carry on till either it please God that You obtain a desired Peace or that the Liberty of Germany which is now oppressed be restored To the tenth since by this Article Your Majesty requires and expects Fidelity from me and my Army I James Marquis of Hamilton by these presents give my Faith for my self and them and bind both my self and them and for the Confirmation of this I do subscribe this Article with all the preceding and put my Seal to it at London the first of March Anno Dom. 1631. Signed Hamilton Locus Sigilli Ramsay had in Commission to deal with any Scotish or English Officers who served beyond Sea to come and serve under the Marquis and finding Mackay the Lord Reay in good reputation Ramsay treats with the Lord Reay he dealt with him to engage in his Service who cordially undertook it and some moneths after that wrote to the Marquis which Letter is preserved That though the King of Sweden had given him the Command of three Regiments and made him Captain of his Guards yet he was so desirous to put life in his noble designs that he would serve him were it but to carry a Pike in his Army and thus Ramsay returned and Colonel Hamilton with him Whereupon the Marquis went about the executing of his designs and the levying of his men but all was according to the Kings Orders and Instructions yet His Majesty seemed onely a consenter to it The Levies went on all this Winter in which many were backward because the King owned them so little As for Money the King advanced a good summe though far short of what was necessary but he gave the Marquis a Lease of the Customs of the Wines in Scotland for 16 years upon which Security he and all his friends raised as much Money as the design required Many of the Marquis his friends did in the beginning dissuade him from the undertaking apprehending the hazards both of his person and fortune which were visible from an attempt that was full of dubious success but when they saw him engaged in it they did all very frankly concur mortgaging their Fortunes for raising such summes of Money as were necessary for the Expedition Next Spring the Marquis sent Ramsay to Holland to see what assistance he might expect from the States An. 1631. and in particular to deal with some British Officers who were then in their Service to come and take employment in his Army He likewise sent one Elphinston to the King of Sweden Ramsay is sent over to the States and Elphinston to the King of Sweden to shew him that he would be ready to land with his Army in Iune or Iuly and to press that the Forces he was to have from the Swede might be ready to meet him where ever he were appointed to land his men or if the King of Sweden could not spare so many men that he would order the money for their Levy and Pay to be sent to Hamburg or to any other Bank that so the Marquis might levy them himself Upon this the King of Sweden sent the Lord Reay first to Denmark and then to Holland for carrying on of those Levies and committed the levying of 3000 Foot and 1000 Horse to Colonel Farensback The King was betrayed by Farensback a Leeflander of good repute in the Wars who had served the Emperour but for I know not what crime had lost his favour and undertaken the Service of the Swede and seemed to be going on with his Levy till the time was past and then did basely run over to the Emperour shewing how great a Service he had done by his cousening the King of Sweden since he hoped the failing of the Swedish Auxiliaries would keep the Marquis of Hamilton's Army from coming over that Summer King Gustavus was now in Germany and by his frequent Letters pressed the Marquis his dispatch He pressed the Marquis to come in all haste for he was then in great straits the Princes of Germany begun to fear his success and were not so forward in joyning with him as he expected and by divers Letters both from himself and Camerarius his Ambassadour in Holland and Salvius his Agent in Hamburg it appears that the Princes of Germany took their measures chiefly from the Kings resolutions The King of Sweden also desired a League with the King and that the King should send over ten thousand men whom the King of Britain should maintain during the Wars and desires a League with the King and that Army with the other twelve thousand should be under the Marquis his Command as General upon which the King of Sweden should oblige himself never to make Peace with the Emperour till the Palatinat were restored To this the King gave a good hearing and promised to send over an Embassadour to finish the Agreement and in the mean time the Marquis his dispatch was hasted forward with all diligence His Army was partly Scots partly English and they were to be transported in the Kings Ships the Scotish Forces were to be shipped at Leith and the English at Yarmouth and Yarmouth-Road was to be their Rendezvous In the end of May both Reay and Ramsay came out of Holland to England Ramsay got nothing done with the States who would give no assistance to the Marquis till the King formally engaged himself yet he got some Officers to come over and in particular that gallant English Gentleman Sir Iacob Ashly who had acquired much reputation in the Dutch Wars but Ramsay drew much trouble on himself for being a man of an intemperate tongue he had talked loosly of the Court of England to the Lord Reay At this time the Marquis was in Scotland drawing the Souldiers together and having made all ready there he returned to Court having nothing more to doe but to kiss His Majesties Hand and receive his last Commands but there was then at Court the Lord Ochiltree Reay acccuseth Ramsay and Ochiltree the Marquis a man of a subtil spirit and good parts had not those endowments
Peers advised a Settlement with Scotland and a Parliament in England Strafford's Advice was more severe and the Marquis pressed a Pacification But though their Opinions varied yet their Friendship continued since both had the same designs for the Kings Honour and Service A recruit of Money which was beginning to run low was not to be hoped without a Parliament and their late experience told on how uneasie terms that was to be had Earl Lowdon also assured the Marquis by his Letters that the Covenanters were well armed well commanded and very resolute nor did they doubt of a strong Party in England and therefore shewed how dangerous it would prove to His Majesties Affairs if a Treaty should not presently follow The Marquis little regarding how ill these Counsels would be represented by others used all his Industry to prevail with the King for a Pacification on any terms since none could be so bad as the hazard the King was like to run if matters continued so broken for it was now apparent how faintly His Majesties Forces did serve him and with how much resolution the Scotish Armies proceeded neither were they without fears in their own Army and that many of the Peers and People of England would have assisted the Scots if matters had run to extremities A Breach betwixt the Marquis and the Earl of Montrose But at that time a passage fell out which drew after it a tract of great Troubles on the Marquis The Earl of Montrose had in Iuly that year procured a Meeting of some Noblemen at Cumbermwald the Earl of Wigtons house where there was a Bond signed by them of adherence to one another in pursuance of the Covenant and from New-Castle he continued to keep Correspondence with His Majesty notwithstanding an Act that had passed in the Committee that none should under pain of Death write any Letters to the Court but such as were seen and allowed of by at least three of the Committee But this Correspondence of my Lord Montrose came to the knowledge of the Covenanters and there were ill Instruments who suggested that this Advertisement must have been given by the Marquis which being too easily believed occasioned a Breach betwixt them that could never be made up And Sanderson hath had the Impudence not only to fasten this on him but as if there had not been Imputation enough in it he adds that the Marquis had in the night picked His Majesties Pockets for his Letters Indeed he needed not take such Courses had he been capable of that Treachery for the Kings Confidence in him was such that he delivered all the Letters he had from Scotland to his keeping and if he had designed such a thing upon Montrose it was in his Power to have done it long before for in October and December of the former year Montrose had writ much in the same strain to the King which Letters the King gave him and are yet extant but were never heard off till now that the Writer gives this account of them But the way how that Letter was discovered was this the Covenanters sent Sir Iames Mercer to York with their Letters to my Lord Lanerick of September the 14 th with whom my Lord Montrose sent his Servant with Letters to some of his Friends at Court and these Letters had been shown to the Committee but as he sealed them up he put within one to Sir Richard Grahame a Letter to the King which had not been seen and Sir Richard opening his Letter carelesly the inclosed to the King dropt out whereupon Sir Iames Mercer being near him stooped down in civility to take up the Letter and read the Direction of it and he returning next day to the Scotish Camp told what he had seen to the General who in a Committee that sate that afternoon wherein it was my Lord Montrose's turn to preside said that the Gentleman they had sent must be examined concerning any Letters he carried to the Court and so he was called in and examined But Montrose understanding that his Correspondence with the King was discovered said that seeing others kept a Correspondence with the Court he knew not why he might not do it as well as they it was answered if others were guilty that did not excuse his fault but when that could be made out against any they were liable to the same Censure he had now incurred whereupon he was commanded to keep his Chamber and he called a great many of his Friends to him to try who would adhere to him whereupon the General bade the Earl of Calender who was then Lieutenant-General tell him that if he came not and submitted himself he would hold a Council of War upon him and proceed against him Capitally Upon this my Lord Montrose came and produced a Copy of the Letter he said he had written and craved pardon and so this Matter was passed over ●ut it was suspected that his Letter had been sent to the Covenanters by the Marquis whereas indeed they knew no more of his Letter but what they had from Sir Iames Mercer who read the Address of it and so they knew not what was in it but by the Copy he produced Yet this went current for the Marquis his Treachery though Sir Iames Mercer did often vouch the truth of this before many Witnesses and particularly particularly to Sanderson himself before Noble Witnesses who acknowledged his Mis-information and promised to expunge that in the next Edition of his Book though there are no grounds to fear the Wo●ld will ever be troubled with another Edition of so ill a Book The Treaty at Rippon In the end of September a Treaty was agreed upon and His Majesty named the Marquis and my Lords of Traquair and Lanerick to be amongst the Commissioners who should Treat in His name But the Covenanters excepted against the Marquis and Traquair whom they intended to pursue as Incendiaries and therefore they could not Treat with them as for Lanerick they had nothing to fasten on him Upon this the King resolved to send none but English Lords conceiving it not fitting to send any Scotchman if the persons he had imployed as Commissioners were not of the number Rippon a little Town fifteen miles from York was appointed to be the place of Treaty instead of Northallertown and the King sent the English Lords thither appointing Traquair and Lanerick to wait upon them for giving them Information of Scotish Affairs but he kept the Marquis to wait upon Himself The Treaty begun at Rippon and after a few days by reason of the new Parliament the King had summoned against the beginning of November was removed to London The Covenanters Demands were the same with those contained in their Letter of the 8th of September about which they continued Treating till the Iune of the next year and so this year ended But here I shall insert a Paper all written with His Majesties hand which though it do not relate
with the like apprehensions to minister much Comfort to him only he pressed him not to give way to languishing Sorrow but to see what could be done for setting things right again and for infusing that sense of Shame and Horrour in all People for the late Action which might prepare them to a Noble Reparation of it by a generous Engaging in the Kings Quarrel And upon this much pains was taken to infuse Jealousies of the Independents in the minds of the Kirk-men though there were other violent persons as careful to refute them Most of this Year was spent in possessing all mens Minds with these Apprehensions so preparing them for what they designed to execute upon the first Opportunity The Duke and the Earls of Lauderdale and Lanerick were they who united most closely and cordially for the contriving and prosecuting of that Design The King was Prisoner at Holmby without any other Liberty save that of taking the air sometimes all his Servants were denied access to him and so cruel was the zeal of his Enemies that it reached to his Soul for they refused liberty for his Chaplains to wait on him a favour not denied to the worst of Malefactors but God was his Refuge who supported him in all his Sufferings and Solitudes The Two Houses wrote to the Committee of Estates in Scotland that they should take such a joynt Course with them as might tend most to bring things to a happy Peace But now the Jealousies betwixt the Parliament and the Army begun to grow visible and above board for the Presbyterian Party in the Parliament saw their Error too late Disorders rise in England most of them seemed to have intended the Kings Good only they were mistaken in Judging that the Parliament in which they were most numerous would never be disobeyed by the Army but being disappointed in this they ruined all their confidence in their Power in Parliament having been the cause why they let the Scotish Army go home for till they were gone the Independents crouched under them and trepanned them into Severities against the King and the Dismissing of the Scots who were no sooner gone but the Army acted what had been before projected but most industriously concealed from the Presbyterians Lauderdale is sent to England In April the Earl of Lauderdale was sent from Scotland to London to insist on the motion for a Settlement with the King and chiefly to hinder the adding of any new Propositions and he was also Instructed to deal for a permission to the Duke and the Earl of Dumfernline to go and serve the King in his Bedchamber But the Earl of Lauderdale found matters in great confusion at Westminster for the chief thing thought on was the Disbanding of the Army which was an unnecessary Burden to the Kingdom many grounds of Fear appearing that their Designs were to keep themselves up and govern the Nation by a Military and Arbitrary Power therefore such as were best-affected judged it necessary once to disband them before they engaged in a new Treaty with the King But for that private Proposition concerning the Duke and Dumfernline the Earl of Lauderdale seeing it would not take because there was not a Family yet settled about the King nor could it be expected that any from Scotland would be the first they would set about His Majesties Person did not present it and indeed the Duke's late Behaviour in opposing the Delivery of the King had forfeited his Credit with those of England then in Power But it is not my meaning to go on with a regular History of the irregular Transactions that past in England this Year I shall only say so much of them as will make appear what reason the Scots had for their Proceedings and to clear what may have relation to the Dukes Concerns In the middle of May the King sent a new Message to the Parliament of England in order to a Treaty but his Offers were the same upon the matter they had been at Newcastle and so not like to take and the Two Houses were then busied about Disbanding the Army They therefore ordered the Army to be disbanded and some of the Forces they kept up to be sent over to Ireland and all Satisfaction being offered The Army refuses obedience to the Parliament the time of their Disbanding was named But the Ring-leaders of the Army disposed them to mutiny against the Parliament upon pretence of want of Satisfaction in matter of Money and Reparation in point of Honour so the Army drew to a Body and erected a Court who were called the Agitators Mean-while Cromwel puts his Party in the House of Commons on the Recalling o● their Declarations against the Army and goes to the Army though his Commission was expired More Money was offered to the Army but nothing was accepted only divers of the Presbyterian Officers submitted and subscribed for Ireland whereupon they were by the prevailing part of the Army disbanded and takes the King from Holmby And the Army to make a sure game for their Party sent one Ioice a Taylor by Trade but now a Cornet by his Employment to Holmby who came at twelve a clock at night and forced the King to go with him against his will Upon which the Earl of Lauderdale emitted a Declaration in Name of the Scotish Nation against that Force put on the Kings Person contrary to all their Treaties and Declarations and demanded that His Majesties Person might be presently set at Liberty and brought with Honour Freedom and Safety to some of His Houses in or about London and after that he went to Newmarket to wait on the King who was there with the Army But the Army begun to abuse His Majesty into some Confidence in them And use Hi● civilly and used Him at another rate than had been done at Holmby They gave free access to all His Servants to come to Him they allowed His Chaplains to attend about Him and serve in their Office according to the Liturgy and permitted Him free Correspondence with the Queen and every body else and in their Discourses intimated their willingness to lay aside the Covenant and allow the Toleration of Episcopacy and the Liturgy all which though smoothly said was meant to cajole Him to his Ruine Assoon as His Majesty was at Liberty He wrote the following Letter to my Lord Lanerick Lanerick THe present condition of My Affairs is such He writes to Lanerick that I believe you and your Brother may do Me better Service at London than where you are therefore I desire that both or at least one of you would come up assoon as you could the rest I leave till meeting and so farewel Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Newmarket 22th Iune 1647. To this my Lord Lanerick wrote this Answer Sir YOur Majesties Letter of the 22th of June had been immediately obeyed Lanerick's Answer if our Stay here for some time had not
their Act which constituted this Court for his Trial declared him a Traytor it was not to be disputed what the Parliament had Power to do but no Parliament had ever done the like before and the meaning of the Act must be that he should be tried whether guilty of Treason or not since if the Parliament have already declared him a Traytor further Trial was needless And it was clear the Parliament by their Act in Iuly last which declared all the Scots who entred England Enemies considered not the distinction of Post-nati nor judged that inferred Treason since most of them all were Post-nati That many of the Officers of that Army who had been taken Prisoners though clearly Post-nati were ransomed others banished others still in Prison why then should the imputation of Treason be fastned on the Duke when the rest were used only as Enemies And for the Articles they made it appear they were the Publick Faith of the Kingdom when given by persons publickly Authorized upon the observing of which inviolably depended the whole Intercourse of all Nations and their mutual Confidence which is founded on all States being bound by the Acts of their Publick Ministers That this was not a pure Rendition but a Paction concluded upon Deliberation wherein the Parliament lost nothing but on the contrary were Gainers That the Parliament had ratified this upon the matter by Voting a hundred thousand pound Sterling Fine to be the price of the Dukes Liberty That the secret sence the Treaters pretended was not to be considered since all Compacts are to be understood according to the clear meaning of the Words the universal sense of Mankind who look on Articles wherein Life is granted as a sufficient Security not only from the Souldiers but from the Civil Powers and that these Treaters when the Articles were agreed should have made known their secret meaning otherwise it was not to be regarded and it was a most dangerous Precedent to admit of collateral Averments of secret meanings against express words much more in a Case of Life and yet much more in Military Agreements wherein the Concernments of Armies and Nations were included and which concerned the Honour and Security of all Souldiers and for this divers Precedents were cited The Argument ended thus That as the Court consisted of Gentlemen Lawyers and of Martial men so the Plea consisting of three Branches was the more proper for their cognizance a part of it being drawn from the Law of England another part from the Civil Law and a Third part from the Martial Law and if the Plea in any of the three Branches was made good and they doubted not but it would be found so in them all the Court would be satisfied there was Reason Justice for preserving the Dukes life The Tenth Appearance The Court adjourned till Friday the second of March and the Duke being again brought to the Bar the Counsel for the People pleaded but so poorly that all who heard them were asham'd But they had one advantage that neither the Duke nor his Counsel were allowed to speak after them nor to discover their impertinent Allegations which made the Dukes Counsel obviate all they could imagine they might say though they said a great deal so far out of the way of Reason that none could have thought of it and yet it was so weak that it needed neither be obviated nor replied to Yet at the end of every Branch of their Pleading I shall add the Answers against them as they are set down in some Notes taken by the Dukes Counsel The Counsel for the People plead against the Duke They begun with Alienage and studied to make it appear that though he was a Scotchman born yet he was no Alien having enjoyed all the Priviledges an Englishman was capable of as being a Peer a Privy-Councellour possessing Lands and Inheritances and Marrying in England But Naturalization cannot be but by Act of Parliament and not by the Kings single Deed much less by those Priviledges of which any Stranger might participate Next they urged his Fathers Naturalization and since his Name was not in that Act as was in other Acts of Naturalization that proved him to be no Alien otherwise his Name had been put in From that it rather appeared he was an Alien since others found it necessary to insert their Childrens Names which his Father not doing proves the Son an Alien still They also urged his being Post-natus which must be held true since he brought no Evidence to the contrary and it being so his Tie of subjection was as great in England as in Scotland That Allegeance was only due to the King and not to the Kingdom That there was a King when he entred into England and that though he was secluded from the Government yet all Writs were issued in his Name so that this Expedition was a breach of the Allegeance he owed the King This was the oddest part of all their Plea since his Charge was that he assisted the King against the Kingdom and now they did plead he owed no Allegeance to the Kingdom but to the King whom they had so lately murdered the Dukes coming with his Army being only to relieve him from the Barbarous Vsage he had met with They also urged at large That an Englishman's Children in what place of the World soever they were born were Denizens of England and cited many Precedents But the Mis-application of them was gross and palpable those being of Persons who were Englishmen before their Children were born whereas the Duke's Father was naturalized after he was born so that he could not communicate that Priviledge to him which he did indeed transmit to his Children born after his Naturalization Next they pleaded that the Parliament of Scotland had no power to commissionate him to enter into England and that if some of them were there they ought likewise to suffer for it and it was fit he suffered for his Masters who employed him That it was pitty the King had not suffered sooner They also produced many Precedents of Strangers being condemned as guilty of Treason for Treasons committed in England as the Queen of Scots Lopez Perkin Warbeck the Lord Harris Shirley the Frenchman and the Spanish Ambassadour All this was obviated in the former Argument where distinction was made betwixt secret Practices and an open Invasion with a forreign Force They added That Scotland belonged to the Crown of England and so was to be look't on as some of the Counties of England But Scotland had no subjection to the Crown but only to the King of England whom they had murdered and so they had no Power to judge any Scotchman As for the Articles they pleaded it was not in the Power of the Army to absolve any from the Justice of the Parliament which being above them was not tied to their Articles and therefore though they confessed the words ought to have been less
and passed the River Sala pressing the Marquis to pass with him so afraid was he of Papenheim but the Marquis sent Sir Iacob Ashley to view the Pass who told him it was so good that he might safely march away in a quarter of an hours warning in spite of Papenheim and his Army upon which he would not stir Meanwhile Papenheim advanced with his Army but is relieved by Papenheim which he gave out to be ten or twelve thousand though it was onely 4700 men but to make the fame of it greater the Purveyors who went before him made provision for near thrice so many his men were drawn out of Garrisons and brought up in all haste and if Bannier had not been stiff it had been easie to have fought him and the least foil given him had made Magdeburg their own Papenheim getting to Magdeburg and finding that it could not be kept who leaves it marched away with the Garrison and every thing worth carrying with them but when he came out of the Town the Marquis and he fac'd one another in a Plain betwixt Kalbe and Saltsa and the Marquis though very much weaker than he yet had a great mind to have engaged but Bannier would not think of it neither had Papenheim any mind to provoke them and so he marched away thus Duke Weimar's slowness and Bannier's carefulness lost them that occasion After Papenheim was gone the Marquis entred Magdeburg where he found they had left about 40 peece of Cannon and great store of Ammunition with plenty of Corns he staid there till the beginning of February that the King of Sweden ordered him to lie about Halberstadt but his Souldiers were ill-entertained and those he had levied in Germany were pressing for Pay which should have been advanced by the King of Sweden therefore in the middle of February he went to that King who received him with his former kindness and by other Letters from His Majesty he found he was still so happy as to retain the room he had in his Heart which appeared by the two following he found there from His Majesty James I Have received four Letters from you almost all together to wit of the 23th of September of the 8th and 14th of October and of the 11th of November this last being under Henry Vane's Cover which makes me not let this Post go without letting you know of the receipt of your Letters having little other thing to write to you at this time because I am taking two or three days to make a full Dispatch to you and Henry Vane that you may know the uttermost of what you may expect from hence assuring you that in all these Conditions you shall still find me to be Your loving Friend and Cousin CHARLES R. Whitehall 16 Decemb. 1631. James YOu know that I am lazie enough in writing being willing to find excuses to write short Letters therefore though I confess that at this time I have matter sufficient to fill a long Letter yet in earnest having commanded Henry Vane to acquaint you fully with all my resolutions it were needless to trouble my self with writing or you with reading a long Letter therefore I will onely say that you will find that I neither mean to forget or break my Promises to you and that you will not be unluckie if you have but as good fortune in all your actions as is wished to you by Your loving Friend and Cousin CHARLES R. Whitehall 31 Decemb. 1631. But there were great rubs in the Treaty with England the main thing pressed by the Ambassadour was that the King of Sweden should give the Marquis an Army The King of Sweden proposeth unmeasurable terms to the King with which and the Forces and Moneys to be sent from England he should fall in on the Palatinat But the King of Sweden proposed unreasonable Conditions demanding greater Assistance from the King of Bohemia than the whole Palatinat could have given in its most flourishing Condition and some Cities of the Palatinat to be put into his hands till the Wars were ended with many other hard Conditions almost as severe as these which had been proposed by the Emperour so that the Marquis did clearly perceive Gustavus was beginning to reckon on all Germany as his Conquest and that he was to give what Laws he pleased in it Thus the Ambassadour and he were in very ill terms but he continued to use the Marquis with great civility yet he still declined to give him a Commission to levy a new Army neither would he pay him those Summes of Money he had laid out in his Service and his Chancellour said to him they knew very well he had spent none of his own Money having gotten 100000 l. from his Master He answered though that were true he and his Master were to reckon but that must not be set to their Accompt In April the Marquis desired that some order should be taken with the remainders of his Army till he got a new one for their number at that time could onely have made him a Colonel but not a General so they were reduced into two Regiments The Marquis's Army is reduced to two Regiments the one of English and the other of Scots the English were commanded by Colonel Bellandin since made Lord Bellandin and the Scots by Colonel Hamilton and they were put in Duke Weimar's Army The Marquis sent over Sir Iacob Ashley to give the King accounts of what passed who was quickly dispatched back with the following Letter James YOu did very well to acknowledge to the Chancellour of Swede his allegation concerning the 100000 l. that he supposed you had from me for His Masters Service and so much as you did reply to him thereupon was good but methinks you might have adde● that that would more plainly have shewed him his error which is That if his Master would not accompt to you for what I gave you yet if he will take notice of it that way it were reason not onely that he sh●uld thank me for it but also suffer me to put it on his accompt in part of that Assistance I am to give him but if he will as he ought stand to his bargain with you then he must leave you and me to reckon together having n●thing to do to enquire particularly what passes betwixt us I need write little more to you at this time the trust and sufficiency of this Bearer making it needless onely to recommend him to you as you did to me and to tell you freely that you had done better in my mind if you had reserved to him the English Regiment when your Army was reduced This I write merely of my self on my word for no body knows that I do this and I never heard any blame you for it and for Jacob Ashley himself he is so far from censuring of you that you need wish to be no better than he calls you and he solicits your business
beyond the diligence and industry of a fee'd Lawyer So referring my self for what else I have to say at this time to him I rest Your constant loving Friend and Cousin CHARLES R. London the last of April 1632. POSTSCRIPT I hope shortly you will be in a possibility to perform your promise concerning Pictures and Statues at Muneken therefore now in earnest do not forget it All this Summer the Marquis followed the King of Sweden in the quality of a Volunteer The King of Sweden refuseth to give a new Commission of which he was sufficiently weary but he found that King was so jealous of him that he was not to expect any Trust near or in the Palatinat where he desired most earnestly to be imployed and that he did put him daily off in which the King of Sweden's design was that by his Impatience he might be quickned to carry on the Treaty with England on any terms But no consideration of his own could make him betray his Masters Service or drive on Propositions which he judged so dishonourable for him as were those he offered about the Palatinat wherefore he wrote to His Majesty to receive his positive Commands what to do His Majesties Answer follows James I Have received three Letters from you by James Lesley about the 25th of July all which I assure you have given me very good satisfaction as well for your right understanding of Affairs in general as to give me a light how to direct yours in particular which at this time is t●e onely subject of mine One of two you must chuse either to stay or come away For the first it were very Honourable to doe in the timis of Action if you had an Employment but neither having nor likely to have any hereafter it were dulness not patience to stay any longer yet it is fit to come off handsomly neither shewing impatience nor discontentment if may be although I think you have cause for both therefore I have commanded Henry Vane to propose a new Employment f●r you which though I think it will not take effect yet it will shew there is no way unsought for to find you out an Employment with the King of Sweden It is that you may be sent into the Palatinat to assist the French with so many men as my Contribution will maintain which if it may be done they promise me to put the lower Palatinat in my hands This though I do not hold as Gospel yet if this design might be put in practice it might certainly prove useful to my Affairs this being denied as I think it will you have no more to doe but to seek a fair excuse to come home which will be best in my opinion upon the conclusion of the Treaty between Sweden and Me or if any rubs arise that you might be sent to clear it with me So that upon the whole matter my Iudgment is that if you cannot serve me in the Palatinat as I have already said the best way is that you take the first civil excuse to come home to Your loving Cousin and faithful Friend CHARLES R. Oatland 1 Aug. 1632. POSTSCRIPT David Ramsay will as I imagine meet with you before you come hither which if he doe I hope you will remember what I have said concerning him already But at this time Oxenstern demanded a League Offensive and Defensive between the Crowns of Britain and Sweden and that the making of Peace in Germany should be onely in the King of Swedens hands This varying wholly from the former Treaty wherein they had onely treated about the Affairs of Germany and whereby no Peace could be without the Kings consent the Ambassadour and he broke up in very ill terms and on the back of this the Marquis pressing the King of Sweden to assign him a Country for levying a new Army The Treaty breaks up His Majesty answered him with a new delay but he told that King that he had been now fifteen moneths from his own Country and though he had been at a vast expence he had received nothing in that Service and that his Heart was too great to be a perpetual Volunteer as he had been these divers moneths past wherefore he pressed for a present Answer The King of Sweden confessed he had reason to be weary and he acknowledged the great obligation he had to him and that he would always look upon him as one of his best Friends but said the blame of all the delays he met with fell on the English Ambassadour on whom he fell a-railing with the greatest passion that the Marquis had ever seen him in The King of Sweden in ●reat passion and in a huffing way pulled the Marquis his Hat out of his hand and clapped it on his own head and went stamping up and down the room in great rage The Marquis shunned the Discourse since as he could not condemn the Ambassadour so he would not irritat the King of Sweden by an ill-timed Justification of him but the chief reason of his passion was that many of the Princes of Germany were beginning to talk that their Deliverer was like to prove a greater Tyrant than the Emperour had ever been and he suspected the Ambassadour was Caballing with them But the Marquis seeing nothing but delays desired liberty to return to England that he might levy a new Army and remove any Misunderstandings were betwixt his Master and the King of Sweden This Proposition was so fair that it could not be refused so on the 8th of September the King signed a Commission to him for bringing over a new Army The Marquis returns to England and gave him Instructions for ending the Treaty with the King and a little after that he took leave of him and was dismissed by the King of Sweden and all about him with very high expressions of Friendship that King telling him that in whatsoever place of the World he were he would ever look upon him as one of his own As he was returning home he received the following Letter from the King James I Wrote to you in my last to find a pretext to come home but now I must tell you it is not fit to stay any longer where you are for the impossibility of your Employment there and the necessity of your business here requires your return so that at this time I 'le say no more but Nil mihi rescribas attamen ipse veni for you shall be no sooner come than welcome to Your faithful Friend and Cousin CHARLES R. Hampton-Court 24 Sept. 1632. And thus ended the Marquis his Expedition into Germany wherein if he missed that Success which himself or others had expected it was no miscarriage nor neglect of his own nor could it be said that he had failed in a jot of what he undertook though almost in every particular the King of Sweden failed to him neither was any thing so much the occasion of these neglects he met
Hearts to yield much more than the Authority of the Kings Commands who having got notice of it from the Earl of Lindsay wrote down to Scotland peremptorily commanding them to desist from any such pursute if it were begun requiring also his Advocate to appear for them in His Majesties Name if they were pursued The Earl of Lanerick wrote to the King what follows May it please Your Majesty I Shall here Humbly presume to let Your Majesty know that before any of Your Scotish Servants who lately parted with Your Majesty at Oxford Lan●rick 's account of Affairs to His Majesty could possibly come hither the Chancellour had made his Report to the Council and Conservatours of the Treaty and Mr. Henderson to the Commissioners of the General Assembly of their Employments to Your Majesty where Your Answers to their Desires were found not satisfactory and thereafter Your Majesties Council Commissioners for the Treaty and Common Burdens having joyned together for giving of Security for such Moneys as should be levyed for the Maintenance of Your Majesties Scotish Army in Ireland they thought fit without admitting of any delay until Your Majesties Pleasure were known to call a Convention of the Estates as their several Acts and Proclamations to that effect here inclosed will more particularly shew Your Majesty And for the present Your Majesties Servants who came lately hither having only met with three or four of those whom Your Majesty appointed them to consult with have thought fit to advise with some others of the same Affection and Forwardness to Your Majesties Service before they presume to give Your Majesty any Advice upon the present Occasions being matters of so great Weight and so highly concerning Your Majesties Service but they have taken the readiest and most speedy Course they can think upon for Meeting and Consulting with them and thereafter are immediately to return hither from whence they will with all diligence offer unto Your Majesty their humble Opinion In the mean time I have dispatched Your Majesties Letters to such Noblemen and Burroughs as Your Majesty was pleased to direct me shewing Your Resolution of preserving here what you have been pleased so Graciously to establish in Church and State not having been able to deliver Your Majesties Letter to Your Council who were dissolved before my coming and my Lord Chancellour is gone out of Town without whose Appointment there can be no extraordinary Meeting so that I believe Your Majesties Gracious Declaration to Your Scotish Subjects cannot be published before that time nor till then can I be able to give Your Majesty any further account of Your Affairs here though in the mean time I shall study to serve Your Majesty faithfully according to the Duty of Your Majesties Most humble and most faithful and most obedient Subject and Servant LANERICK Edinburgh 18th May. 1643. In the end of May there was a Meeting of about thirty Noblemen where these two Questions were proposed The Lords consult what to advise His Majesty First if it were fit for the Kings Service that the Convention should be suffered to hold Next if it held whether those who were well-affected to the Kings Service should fit in it There were three or four Days spent in debating upon these Heads some moved that since by the calling of this Convention the other Party had so far encroached upon the King they should presently break with them this Motion came chiefly from other Lords who would not come to that Meeting But it was answered that the King as he would not give Commissions for raising an Army in England till he knew the Parliament had first done it on their side so it was his positive Pleasure that his Party should not make the first Breach which the King judged so much for his Honour that no Consideration could move him to dispense with it yet these who made that Proposition were desired to lay down ways how it could be made effectual since it was Madness and not Courage to hazard the Ruine of the Kings Service and Friends without at least a likelyhood of being able to carry it through with some Success All things being examined it was concluded that the following Message should be sent to His Majesty which was set down in a Paper dated the 5th of Iune but because of the War in England they committed it verbally to a Trusty Bearer lest it had been intercepted A Convention was indicted by the Chancellour and such others of the Council as have signed His Majesties Letter thereabout with the Advice and Concurrence of the Committees for conserving the Treaty and Common Burdens to be kept at Edinburgh the 22th of June whereby it is conceived His Majesty suffers exceedingly in His Regal Authority in the Calling thereof without his Special Warrant A Proclamation for the Indicting thereof is likewise issued forth in His Majesties Name expressing a danger to Religion His Majesties Person and the Peace of this Kingdom from Papists in Arms in England which in that appears to be contrary to His late Declaration sent to Scotland Hereupon divers Noblemen and Gentlemen well-affected to His Majesties Service met at Edinburgh and after three or four days Debate considering the exigency of Time the present posture of Affairs and the disposition and inclination of the People of this Country did not conceive it fitting that His Majesty should absolutely discharge that Meeting which certainly would be kept notwithstanding of any Discharge from Him which would both bring His Authority in greater Contempt and lose more of the Affections of the People whereby the Power of His Majesties Servants would be lessened but rather that His Majesty should so far take notice of the Illegal Calling thereof and His Own Suffering thereby that the same remaining upon Record may be an evidence to Posterity that this Act of theirs can infer no such Precedent for the like in the future but afterwards His Majesty or His Successors may Legally question the same And that His Majesties Servants here may be better enabled and strengthened with the assistance of others of His Majesties faithful Subjects who truly and really intend nothing but the Security of Religion as it is here established and are altogether averse from and against the Raising of Arms or Bringing over the Scotish Army in Ireland whereby His Majesties Affairs or their own Peace may be disturbed they conceive it fit that His Majesty should permit this Convention to Treat and conclude upon such Particulars as may secure their Fears from any danger of Religion at home without interessing themselves in the Government of the Church of England And in respect that the Two Houses of Parliament have not sent Supplies for Entertaining the Scotish Army in Ireland whereby they may have some colour or ground for recalling them it is conceived necessary that this Convention should have a Power from His Majesty to advise and resolve upon all fair and Legal wayes for Entertaining the
marks of His Majesties Favour and Confidence in the disposal of all Offices and Places at Court that every third time they should be filled with Scotish men together with other particulars not needful to be mentioned But against all this it was objected that those who had the Ascendant in the Councils at Oxford were either Papists or men of Arbitrary Principles and the Clamours that always follow Generals and Armies where there is no certain Pay were carried to Scotland not without great additions against the Kings Forces to possess people with a deep alienation from them It was likewise said that since the King notwithstanding the Declining of his Affairs in England would not grant what was desired there about Episcopacy it might be from thence gathered what he would do if his Arms were successful and therefore all People were possessed with the jealousies of his subverting the whole Settlement with Scotland assoon as he had put the War in England to a happy Conclusion And though it was answered to this that the Kings putting things to hazard rather than sin against his Conscience was the greatest assurance possible that he would faithfully observe what He had granted to this Malicious people said that it would be easie to find distinctions to escape from all Engagements and if the putting down of Episcopacy was simply sinful according to the Kings Conscience then that alone would furnish Him with a very good reason to overturn all since no Men are bound to observe the promises they make when they are sinful upon the Matter And these Reasons did generally prevail with the Covenanters to refuse to joyn with the Kings Party in England therefore they concluded it necessary to Engage with the Two Houses both because the Cause was dear to them it being a pretence for Religion and Liberty It was also said often that they owed their Settlement partly to the backwardness of the Armies the King had raised against them in England and partly to the Council of the Peers who had advised the King to grant a Treaty and afterwards a full Settlement to them And that Paper which was sent down in the Year 1640 as the Engagement of 28 of the Peers of England for their Concurrence with the Scotish Army that year was shown to divers to engage them unto a Grateful return to those to whom it was pretended they were so highly obliged For though the Earl of Rothes and a few more were well satisfied about the Forgery of that Paper yet they thought that a Secret of too great Importance to be generally known therefore it was still kept up from the Body of that Nation And upon these Pretences and Inducements it was that it came to be generally agreed to to enter into a Confederacy with the Two Houses So Fatal did the Breach between the King and his People prove that even when it seemed to be well made up by a full Agreement there was still an after-game of Jealousies and Fears which did again widen it by a new Rupture which to these men seemed at this time unavoidable otherwise they found the ease of a Neutrality to be such that the Men of the greatest Interest in those Councils have often told the Writer they had never engaged again had it not been for those Jealousies with which they were possessed to a high degree There was a Committee of Nine appointed to Treat with the Commissioners the English pressed chiefly a Civil League and the Scots a Religious one but though the English yielded to this yet they were careful to leave a door open for Independency Thus the Treaty with the English Commissioners went on notwithstanding a Letter the King wrote to the Chancellour to be communicated to the Council requiring them not to Treat with them since they came without His Majesties Order but they who had leaped over all other matters could not stand at this And now came to light that which had been a hatching these many Months among the Iunto's which was the Solemn League and Covenant which follows The Solemn League and Covenant of the three Kingdoms WE Noblemen Barons Knights Gentlemen Citizens and Burgesses The Solemn League and Covenant Ministers of the Gospel and Commons of all sorts in the Kingdoms of Scotland England and Ireland by the Providence of God living under one King and being of one Reformed Religion having before our eyes the glory of GOD and the advancement of the Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ the Honour and Happiness of the Kings Majesty and His Posterity and the true publick Liberty Safety and Peace of the Kingdom wherein every ones private condition is included And calling to mind the treacherous and bloody Plots Conspiracies Attempts and Practices of the Enemies of GOD against the true Religion and Professors thereof in all places especially in these three Kingdoms ever since the Reformation of Religion and how much their Rage Power and Presumption are of late and at this time encreased and exercised whereof the deplorable estate of the Church and Kingdom of Ireland the distressed estate of the Church and Kingdom of England and the dangerous estate of the Church and Kingdom of Scotland are present and publick testimonies We have now at last after other means of Supplication Remonstrance Protestations and Sufferings for the preservation of our selves and our Religion from utter ruine and destruction according to the commendable practice of these Kingdoms in former times and the example of Gods People in other Nations after mature deliberation resolved and determined to enter into a mutual and Solemn League and Covenant Wherein we all subscribe and each one of us for himself with our hands lifted up to the most high GOD do Swear THat we shall sincerely really and constantly through the grace of GOD endeavour in our several Places and Callings the preservation of the Reformed Religion in the Church of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government against our common Enemies the Reformation of Religion in the Kingdoms of England Ireland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government according to the Word of GOD and the example of the best Reformed Churches And shall endeavour to bring the Churches of GOD in the three Kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and Vniformity in Religion Confession of Faith Form of Church-Government Directory for Worship and Catechising that we and our Posterity after us may as Brethren live in Faith and Love and the Lord may delight to dwell in the midst of us That we shall in like manner without respect of persons endeavour the extirpation of Popery Prelacy that is Church-Government by Arch-bishops Bishops their Chancellours and Commissaries Deans Deans and Chapters Arch-deacons and all other Ecclesiastical Officers depending on that Hierarchy Superstition Heresie Schism Prophaneness and whatsoever shall be found to be contrary to sound Doctrine and the Power of Godliness lest we partake in other mens sins and thereby be in danger to
he had a Commission for it under the Great Seal of England it being contrary to the Articles of the late Treaty of the two Kingdoms which was ratified in Parliament At this time the Treaty betwixt the Two Houses in England The Treaty betwixt Scotland and England is concluded and the Convention in Scotland was closed Against the 5th of October a hundred thousand pounds Sterling was to be paid in Scotland and against the Twentieth of that Month an Army of Twenty thousand Horse and Foot was to be on the Borders from Scotland who were to have thirty thousand pounds Sterling a Month for Pay only the hundred thousand pounds Sterling was to serve for the first three Months The General was to be chosen by the Scots the Army was to receive Orders from a Commitee of both Kingdoms no Peace should be treated or concluded without the Scots and the Publick Faith was given by the Convention of Estates in Scotland that their Army should return out of England when a Peace was concluded by both Kingdoms And so the Convention Adjourned till Ianuary having chosen a Committee of Estates to whom they gave full Power in all matters Civil and Military About the middle of September the fairest opportunity of all was lost for the Parliament of England apprehending the hazard of the loss of Berwick sent down some Ships by which Berwick seized on by the Parliament with the Concurrence of the Scots it was presently Garrisoned and the Committee of Estates issued out toward the middle of September Commissions for making of Levies ●hrough the Kingdom so that nothing kept them from Marching but that they heard not of Money from England The Kings Friends were now in the greatest perplexities imaginable they saw his Affairs in a ruining Condition and themselves able to do nothing but regrate it All September passed over ere they had a return from Oxford and since the hope of Berwick was irrecoverably lost nothing remained but Despair The Church-party became daily more resolute and the Kings-party became fainter At length in the beginning of October Mr. Mungo Murray came from Court but brought no present Relief only large hopes of Assistance to follow quickly He also brought Letters from the King both to the Council and the Conservatours of the Peace that to the Conservatours of the Peace follows CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousins and Councellours Right Trusty and well-beloved Councellours and Trusty and well-beloved The Kings Letters to the Conservatours of the Treaty We greet you well No Industry hitherto could have so far prevailed with Vs as to gain any belief that Our Scotish Subjects would countenance much less assist this bloody Rebellion in England yet We know not how to understand the Levying of Forces both Foot and Horse within Our Native Kingdom and their entring Our Town of Berwick in an hostile manner You are particularly trusted by Vs and Our Parliament and solemnly sworn to be faithful in the discharge of that Trust of seeing the Articles of the late Treaty observed which here is most grosly violated therefore We require you as you will be answerable to God to Vs and Our Parliament to take speedy and present Order for recalling and suppressing those Forces Our most malicious Enemies must bear Vs witness how religiously We have observed these Articles on Our part whereof if We had not been more tender than the advisers of the Breach have been of the Publick Faith it is obvious to any how easily We could have secured that Town from all Rebels We have likewise thought fit to take notice of the private Preparations in that Our Kingdom of Raising an Army by a new Authority to come into Our Kingdom of England under the pretence of securing themselves from a Popish and Prelatical Army falsly alledged to be upon the Borders such Forces as We have there being only for Protecting of Our distressed Subjects from the Incursion of Rebels from their Ships at Berwick and Holy-Island and for no other end Such then as shelter themselves under that Pretext will find from thence but a slender Warrant before God who knows the integrity of Our Heart and how inviolably We intend to preserve all that We have granted to that Kingdom so long as they suffer themselves to be capable of Our Protection and those Favours We do require you not only to oppose and suppress all such unwarrantable Levies but by your Publick Declaration to disabuse those Rebels in England who endeavour to engage you in their Rebellion and expect Assistance from you in all which We look for ready Obedience and expect a present account thereof We bid you heartily farewell Given at Our Court at Oxford the 26th day of September in the 19th Year of Our Reign 1643. The Letter to the Council follows CHARLES R. The Kings Letter to the Council RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousins and Councellours and Trusty and well-beloved Councellours We greet you well Whereas Our desire of preserving Peace within Our Native Kingdom and preventing such Disputes which malicious Instruments might so heighten as to divide Vs and any of Our Scotish Subjects moved Vs by Our Letter of the tenth of June to dispense with the unwarrantable Calling together of the Nobility Commissioners of Shires and Burroughs at Edinburgh the twenty second of June 1643 and so far to give way to the Meeting as to allow them to take into Consideration the best ways of Maintaining Our Scotish Army in Ireland for Suppressing of that bloody Rebellion there since Our Two Houses of Parliament here had failed in the performance of the Treaty concluded upon betwixt the Two Nations for that effect and likewise for such other Particulars as Our said Letter doth more fully contain expecting they would have limited their Resolutions thereunto and paid an equal Gratitude of Duty and Obedience to Vs and Our Iust Commands as We have so lately and so many ways expressed Our Affection to that Our Kingdom in General and so many Members of that Meeting in their own particulars all which notwithstanding they have proceeded to Resolutions as unjustifiable as their Meeting and would engage Our Subjects to an Obedience of their Arbitrary Commands beyond the Power of any of the most Free and Lawful Conventions of the Estates Our Authority and Consent being so absolutely contemned that they have ex●eeded the Bounds We have prescribed and proceeded to Conclusions of the highest nature without so much as acquainting Vs therewith Such high Indignities to Vs and Our Authority make Vs believe they have forgot they have a King and their Oaths in preserving Vs in Our Iust Power as their King but God will discover and punish such undutiful Thoughts how closely soever they be clouded with pretences of Safety to Religion and Liberty which they know will ever be dearer to Vs than Our Own Preservation Our good Subjects will likewise suffer with Vs by their heavy Taxes upon
that he might make trial of all those large professions of Affection and Duty they had alwayes made This Design was communicated to the Earl of Lauderdale then at London but he as he informed the Writer studied to disswade His Majesty from it assuring him that he knew the Army and the Church-party whi●h then prevailed in Scotland would not be firm to him unless he yielded to their Demands about Religion but notwithstanding that upon some slender Assurances got from Mons. de Montrevil Agent from the French King His Majesty went to the Scotish Army the particulars whereof and of the subsequent as well as fore-going Publick Affairs not being the chief business of these Memoires little more is any-where toucht of them than what is necessary for making out the thread of the Dukes Concerns so as it may set them in their true light The Commissioners are sent to him from Scotland Assoon as this was known at Edinburgh the Committee of Estates which was then sitting sent the Earl of Lanerick and some others to wait on His Majesty with great expressions of their Duty and good Intentions protesting how dear the Preservation of His Sacred Person and His Just Power and Greatness should ever be to them wherefore they expected His Majesty would give full satisfaction to the Just Desires of His Subjects and as a preparation to this that He would recall any Commissions He had given against the Kingdom of Scotland But these Commissioners were ordered to do nothing that might raise Jealousies betwixt the Kingdoms and therefore were to Treat joyntly with such Commissioners as should be sent from the Two Houses And as they of Scotland sent their Commissioners with these Instructions yet extant so they emitted a Proclamation forbidding any to go out of the Kingdom without Publick Permission which was done to hinder those of the Kings Party from coming to him What Reception my Lord Lanerick had from His Majesty doth not appear to me but I find he was very quickly as well seated in the King's Affection and Confidence as ever On the 13th of May the Scotish Commissioners presented their first Paper which went not beyond general things containing a Welcome with an offer of their Service according to the Covenant But in their next Paper they pressed the King to send a Message to his Two Houses for a Happy Peace who press the King to settle matters not being satisfied with that Letter he had formerly written to the Speaker of the House of Peers since no grounds were laid down for a Pacification a Treaty being only in general terms desired Of all these Papers that passed the Originals do yet remain Next day the King called both for the chief Officers of the Army The King complains of the ill usage he met with and the Commissioners sent to him out of Scotland and in presence of Mons. de Montrevil did expostulate That whereas He had come to their Army upon the Assurances Mons. de Montrevil had given him that He should be safe in His Person Honour and Conscience the two last were not kept for he was pressed to settle Religion as they desired wherewith his Conscience was not satisfied next His Subjects had not free access to Him but Proclamations were issued out forbidding them to come to Him neither was the Ceremony due to Him as King suffered to be paid Him at His entry to Newcastle and lastly His Servants were not suffered to wait on Him And His Majesty attested Montrevil if those conditions were not made to Him who confidently affirmed it in all their presence and that he had the authentick Assurances in French The Commissioners retired to think of an answer but when they returned they desired His Majesty would put Montrevil to it to declare what those Assurances were and who gave them but this was not done Next they said they would not Treat with the King in his Presence nor admit of the interposition of any Foreign Agents betwixt them and their Native Prince And the Commissioners of the Army resolved that no suspected Person should be suffered to wait on the King with which His Majesty was highly displeased and for some days would not eat in publick but only in his Chamber But because there were many in the Army who would have engaged cordially for the King on any terms to les●en the apprehension of this they got a Petition to be signed by almost all the Considerable Officers of the Army yet extant that His Majesty would settle Religion according to the Covenant and that He would enter into it Himself and authorize it by His Command On the 18th of May His Majesty wrote another Letter to the Two Houses desiring them to send Propositions for Peace and in order to that The King moves for a Treaty He again offered to put the Militia into their hands for 7 years as had been offered at Vxbridge He demanded also a Safe-conduct for sending Orders to stop all further Proceedings in Ireland since He was resolved to leave the management of that War wholly to the Two Houses He shewed His Letter to the Scotish Commissioners but because it contained no Offer about Religion they were not satisfied with it yet it was sent The next thing the Commissioners from Scotland moved was that His Majesty would recall the Commissions He had given out against the Scotish Nation for the clearing whereof somewhat must be resumed that passed in those years which I have run over so hastily In the beginning of the year 1644. the King gave a Commission to the Marquis of Montrose A short Account of Montrose's Affairs to see what could be done in Scotland by Force for diverting the Army that was then entring into England He had great hopes of making a strong Party in Scotland and doubted not but he should be able with the Assistance Antrim undertook to send him out of Ireland to give the Scotish Army work enough at home but his hopes failed him for all were so over-awed by the Power of the Covenanters that none would stir till about the end of the year Some came out of Ireland but far short of the number that was promised and with these and a few of the Scotish Nation he adventured to disturb the Covenanters the particular Narration of whose Enterprizes is not to be here prosecuted This was judged by all a bold and desperate Attempt for as his Force was small so they wanted Arms and every thing necessary Some of the Wisest of the Covenanters advised them not to engage with him in any Action except on terms full of advantage but to follow him up and down whither he went securing the Country from Spoil and Plunder for they judged that his Men being so unprovided as they understood they were would not hold out long in the Hills but be forced either to lay down their Arms or break out in Mutinies among themselves whereby they should have been starved with
to come and wait on Him And for the Militia the Scots had declared themselves satisfied with the Kings Concessions about it wherefore He desired they would stick to Him according to their Promises As for Religion He desired they would represent to those who were best-affected how dangerous it would be to insist too much on that at this time when the greatest hazard was from the Sectaries and that His Majesties consenting to a temporary Establishment of what they craved did put them in a fair way to their Desires And beside all this it was recommended to them to procure a delay of the Desire for an answer to the Propositions till the 16th of September When these Instructions were given them the King desired their promise first of Secrecy next of Fidelity in discharging what was intrusted to them for the second they undertook it but refused the first except the King also promised Secrecy His Majesty presently apprehended their Design was that the Duke and his Brother might understand nothing of their Imployment and finding it was a thing wherein neither of them was concerned He thought it unfit to disoblige Argyle by that Refusal since he was so able to serve him if he should be Cordial in it and He was secure of the two Brothers that if they mistook His Reservedness it would be easie for Him to clear Himself afterwards Yet this Secret was ill-kept among them for the Earl of Lauderdale had notice of it as he told the Author before they came to London but opposed much the seeking a Delay to a prefixed day since he knew that could not be granted without adding a dreadful Sanction of Deposing the King in case a favourable Answer came not against the day appointed and found it would be easier to procure a Delay by other Methods than by asking it The Duke and his Brother were much troubled with the Kings Reservedness in that Affair but assoon as they understood the ground of it they were satisfied But what success that Negotiation had or how it was managed doth not appear to me from any of the Duke's Papers In the beginning of August the Duke went to Scotland where his greatest Care was to see what could be done to get the Committee of Estates to be satisfied with the Kings Concessions The Duke deals with the Committee of Estates to get them to acquiesce in His Majesties Concessions representing to them how they did at once put England in the possession of the desired Church-Government and set the other out of the way which was a great stop to their full satisfaction He desired they would consider how inhumane and unchristian it was to force the Kings Conscience and how much it favoured of the Violence they had lately condemned in the Bishops It was visible that nothing but Conscience could be imagined to lye in the way of the Kings Accepting the Propositions and were His Majesty like many Princes to swallow down all things and belch them up at their Pleasure there would be less ado made but the Kings sticking at what He could not yield did abundantly secure them of His making good to them all that was promised On the other hand they were to consider that if they should now desert the King and bring their Army out of England it would make them odious through the whole World and the payment of the Arrears of their Army would pass under a far worse Character Besides England was divided and the Party that was most prevalent among them wa● the Independent with the other Sectaries who would never carry on the Settlement of Religion and by their present carriage at London it appeared what Friendship they had for Scotland wherefore he moved earnestly that their Army should not be brought out of England till a firm Peace should be established according to the first Treaty Anno 1643. but was opposed by the Ministers This did shake many but some of the Leading Church-men were not satisfied with this and represented to their Party that all this was said smoothly to engage them to the Kings Quarrel which they were resolved never to do till the Covenant were taken by Him Neither were they well-satisfied with the Duke for his being instrumental in the Agreement with Montrose and his Party and it was preached to his face that all the Bloud that was lately shed would lye on them and their Posterity who for the pleasing of men had procured such Favour to the Enemies of God and of his Cause and People In the end of August they sent the Duke with the Earls of Crawford and Casilis and some others to deal with His Majesty for a speedy granting of the Propositions The Duke is sent to the King to obtain from him the granting the Propositions and to represent to him all the inconveniences that followed even upon a Delay much more upon a Denial The Duke had no willingness to the Employment misdoubting the Success and knowing his engaging avowedly in such a Message would be misrepresented but there was no avoiding of it for had he declined it he would have been suspected of being an ill Instrument and of Aversion from the thing which would have disabled him much from going on with the Kings Service They came to Newcastle in the beginning of September where they discharged themselves of their Commission to the full But the King answered them in the following Paper yet extant under His Majesties Hand My Lords I Shall begin by answering what you have now said for I assure you I had not thus long delayed My Answer The Kings Answer to their Desires but to weigh fully those Reasons and Arguments which you have laid before Me whereby to use the uttermost of My Endeavours to give you all po●sible Satisfaction for you having told Me nothing but what I have heard before the change of Answer could hardly be expected And now I do earnestly desire you to consider what it is that I desire which is To be heard which if a King should refuse to any of His Subjects He would for that be thought a Tyrant For this if I had but slight Reasons it were the less to be regarded but they are such upon which such a Peace as we all desire doth depend for albeit it is possible that if I should grant all you desire a Peace might be slubbered up yet it is impossible that it should be durable unless there should be a right Vnderstanding betwixt Me and My People which cannot be without granting of what I desire Yet I desire to be rightly understood for though many like to Esops Fable will call Ears Hornes yet let men say what they will I am far from giving you a Negative nay I Protest against it My only Desire being to be heard for I am confident that upon Debate I shall so satisfie them in some things as likewise I believe they may satisfie me in many things that we shall come to
presently but four hundred thousand were Voted to them and only one hundred thousand presently and upon this they stood long The Two Houses having on the 24th of September Voted that the Kings Person should be demanded from the Scotish Army their Commissioners at London gave in long Papers against that The Scotish Commissioners at London complain of the Kings ill Usage and the harsh Votes of the Two Houses which were Printed and so need not be here inserted In them they shewed That the King being Soveraign of both Kingdoms was not to be disposed by the Parliament of one Kingdom That this was destructive to the Relation and Interest the Scotish Nation had in Him and contrary to the nature of Soveraignty and to the Covenant and Treaties of both Kingdoms by which it was agreed That His Majesties just Power and Greatness should not be diminished which by such a Demand of His Person was very signally done It was also agreed that all things in order to Peace to which the Disposal of the Kings Person did relate in a signal manner should be done by the Ioynt Councils of both Kingdoms After this in the Month of October begun the Treaty betwixt the Scotish Commissioners and the Committee appointed for that end by the Two Houses of Parliament Many Conferences are betwixt the Two Houses and them which was managed in the Painted Chamber in the presence of all the Members of the Two Houses The Scotish Commissioners who were the Earls of Lowdon and Lauderdale and the Lord Wariston declared in all their Papers and Speeches that they were not to Treat about His Majesties Person nor the Disposing of it but only about the Removal of the Army the Delivery of those Garrisons that their Army had in England and the Payment of Arrears due for their Armies both in England and Ireland and they continued to press that whereas the Two Houses had in all their former Declarations laid the blame of the Breach betwixt the King and them on His Majesties Withdrawing from His Parliament that therefore they would invite His Majesty to come with Honour Freedom and Safety to some of His Houses in or about London in which they still insisted to the last And so far were they from Treating about the Disposing of His Majesties Person that in the end of their Treaty when they had finally agreed on all things it was expresly declared in the first Article of the Treaty that pass'd under the Great Seal that nothing relating to the Kings Person was concluded on by it so that after that was ended the Scotish Parliament might have still preserved the King and brought him with their Army to Scotland But the Houses turned the Propositions to Bills The Houses press a speedy Answer to their Propositions and passed a Vote that new Commissioner● should be sent to the King with the concurrence of those of Scotland to press a satisfactory Answer with this Sanction that if it were not granted they should be forced to look to the Security of His Person And the English Army fell upon a most destructive Resolution of adjourning the Parliament neither were they over-awed by any thing so much as the fear of the Scotish Army The great point now debated in the Councils of Scotland was whether a final Settlement with the King should be the Condition of the Armies Retiring or not The Duke with all his Friends pressed this vigorously as that which was agreed on by their Covenant and Treaties But the Church-men still influenced all Counsels and finding the King irreconcileable to their Way were still full of their Jealousies of Him and it was said down-right that they ought not to meddle betwixt the King and the Parliament of England but leave Him and them to their own Counsels so strangely did their Language vary from what it was Anno 1643. At this time the King sent Mr. Murray of the Bed-Chamber to London Mr. Murray is sent by the King to London who carried another Message but it was so displeasing that it served only to put his Neck to a new hazard for the Kings Service and he durst scarce stir out of doors all the while he was there In the beginning of November a new Session of the Triennial Parliament of Scotland did hold The Parliament of Scotland meets but little was done for some Weeks save that there came to them a Remonstrance from the Assembly wherein in the first place Complaints were made of the Committee of Estates for their Agreement with Montrose and his Followers which was represented as a great Crime especially they being excommunicated Next they complained of His Majesties constant adherence to Prelacy and of the danger Religion was in by the Malignants for so was the Kings Party then called who were beginning to set up their Heads again wherefore they recommended to their Care both the Preservation of Religion and of the Treaties with England Upon this the Transaction of the Committee of Estates in the Agreement with Montrose was examined and it was put to the Vote Approve or Exoner them only the former was carried by twenty Votes but all the Pulpits thundered against it wherefore to stop the mouths of the Ministries it was enacted That in any Treaty that should be thereafter with those who were in Arms the Commission of the Kirk should be consulted about the Lawfulness of the Conditions For at this time both the Marquis of Huntley was in Arms in the North and Antrim was also come over to Kintyre in Iuly the former year and continued still there His Majesty sent Mr. Robert Lesley with Orders to my Lord Huntley for laying down of Arms with whom he wrote the following Letters to the two Brothers Hamilton A Trusty Messenger requires but a short Letter and brevity is the more convenient for Me who have much to do and but few helpers wherefore I shall say no more but hear and trust Robin Lesly for he is come from Your most assured real faithful constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle Nov. 12th 1646. Lanerick HEaring that Marquis Huntley expects My Commands for his laying down of Arms I have thought fit to send this Trusty Bearer Robin Lesly to him but thought it necessary to address him first to you that you in My Name might acquaint the Parliament with this My Intention which if they approve of he may go on accordingly if not there is no hurt done Yet howsoever I have expressed My Desire for the Peace of the Country but in case they shall permit Robin to obey My Commands then I expect that they give him Power to assure Huntley of the same Conditions that he might have had before All which I command you to represent to My Parliament in My Name leaving the particular expressions to you having only set down the sense Other things I have intrusted little Nobs to tell you too long for a Letter but of no small Consequence by which at
Lanerick Cousin YOu will perceive by this that you cannot make more haste in obliging Me A Letter from the Queen to Lanerick than I shall on My part in witnessing My Acknowledgements of it I ascribe a great deal of the good Inclinations your Commissioners do now express to the good Offices you do of which I intreat the Continuance The testimonies of Friendship which I receive from those of your Family surprize Me less than what I met with from other Hands and I promise My Self to see further effects of it And as I have all the esteem of you that you can expect so you owe Me the Iustice of believing that I shall give evidence of it upon every occasion that shall be offered to Me nor shall I rest satisfied with that but shall diligently search out every opportunity of expressing it Therefore I entreat you to believe that I am Cousin Your very good and very affectionate Friend and Cousin HENRIETA MARIA R. Towards the end of December the Earls of Lowdon Lauderdale and Lanerick The Scotish Commissioners go to His Majesty followed the English Commissioners to the Isle of Wight and after they had protested against the Bills they concluded their Treaty with His Majesty to engage for his Rescue and Re-establishment on his Throne and to bring in an Army into England assoon as it were possible for that effect An Agreement with the King to bring an Army for His Service The King on the other hand engaged to them for all the Assistance they could demand from the Queen or Prince or any other who would obey His Authority and that the Prince should come to Scotland assoon as they found it convenient to invite him and that His Majesty should grant all the Desires of Scotland which with a good Conscience he could grant And the Commissioners having advised and agreed with His Majesty both about the Methods of carrying on their Designs and the ways of keeping Correspondence with him they resolved to return home to Scotland and so they left His Majesty at Wight in the end of the Year But upon the Kings refusing to pass the Bills he was made close Prisoner and a Vote passed in both Houses against all further Addresses to him MEMOIRES OF THE LIFE and ACTIONS OF James Duke of Hamilton c. LIB VI. Of the Dukes Engagement for the Kings Preservation and what followed till His Death Anno 1648. An. 1648. THe former Book has given the Reader a just and full Representation of His Majesties Imprisonment and the Danger his Person was in of the Force put on the Two Houses by the Army and of the breach of former Treaties with the Scotish Nation and now it cannot but be imagined that such Illegal and Unjust Proceedings must have inflamed the Resentments of all good Subjects and more signally of such who had formerly been carried away in the crowd to act against the Kings Interests but now seeing how fatal the Breach between the King and his People was likely to prove to both were much concerned to correct all former Errours and expiate all past Faults by a vigorous appearance for the Kings Rescue out of his Imprisonment In order to this Design the Duke was not idle in Scotland The Dukes endeavours in Scotland but by all the Art and Diligence he was Master of did study to rouse up and work upon the Fidelity and Loyalty of that Nation representing that now an Occasion was in their Hands to witness to the World the sincerity of their Intentions for their King when he was under so base a Restraint and Designs were hatching against his Life Would they now look on and see the King murdered the Parliament of England over-awed the City of London oppressed the whole English Nation enslaved the Treaties with Scotland so unworthily violated the Covenant and Religion so neglected and swarms of Sectaries over-run all Now or never was the time for declaring themselves and if Duty did not move them yet the apprehension of their own Danger might provoke them to look to themselves for did they think to escape the fury of the Sectaries if they were so tame as to suffer them to prevail in England therefore all Laws Divine and Humane did oblige them to look to themselves and to those Enemies of theirs And there was good reason to hope for success since besides the Blessing of God which might be expected upon so just and Noble Enterprizes the People of England were groaning under this Usurpation and would be ready to assist them and they had reason to expect a welcome from the City of London and the better part of the Two Houses These things did prevail much on the most of the Nobility and Gentry Three Parties in Scotland But at this time Three Parties begun to appear in Scotland The one was of those who would hear of no Proposition for the Kings Delivery unless he first gave satisfaction in matters of Religion and this was made up of the Preachers and a few of the Nobility and the Western Counties Others were for a direct Owning of the Kings Quarrel without any restrictions and for taking all Persons who had been in Arms for the Kings Service within it The Earls of Traquair and Calendar were the chief of these and many Noblemen were of it who called themselves the Kings Party but their Power in the Country was not great The Duke was as much for that in his thoughts as any of them but saw it impossible to effectuate the Kings business at that rate and therefore judged it best to go on in so great a Design by degrees The present Strait was that he first looked to which was the Rescue of the Kings Person and he doubted not if they once got a good Army engaged upon that account though all were at first clogged with many severe Restrictions yet it would be easy afterwards to carry things that were not to be then spoken of and this way took with almost the whole Gentry of Scotland The Scotish Commissioners spent much of the month of Ianuary at London The Commissioners return to Scotland establishing a good Correspondence with the Kings Friends in England and they had Letters from St. Germans in France in which the Queen and Prince undertook to make good to them all that had been promised by the King in their Name And in the Commissions the Prince gave to Sir Marmaduke Langdale and others for Levying of Forces in the North of England he commanded them to receive their Orders from the Earls of Lauderdale and Lanerick and follow their Commands Thus having laid down the best Methods they could think of with their Friends in England they set out for Scotland about the end of Ianuary At their coming to Scotland they found a general dissatisfaction with the Kings Message in November about Religion And though all the Duke's Friends were ready to have hazarded their Lives for His
very necessary for him to speak much his Voice was so weak and low that few of the crowd that looked on could hear him nor was he ever so much in love with speaking or with any thing he had to say that he took much delight in it yet since this was his Last he being by the Divine Providence of Almighty God brought justly to that End for his Sins he would speak a little to the Sheriff for his Voice could not reach others He was now to suffer as a Traytor to the Kingdom of England a Country which he had ever loved equally with his own not having intended either any general Prejudice to it or to any particular Person in it his late Actings were the Commands of his own Country which he could not disobey It is true it had pleased God so to dispose of the Army under his Command that it was ruined and he for being cloathed with a Commission to be General stood now ready to dye He would not repeat what he had pleaded for his own Defence God was just nor would he say any thing of his Sentence but that he did willingly submit to Gods Providence acknowledging that on many accounts he deserved Punishment in this Life as well as in the next for he confessed himself a great Sinner yet for his Comfort he knew there was a God in Heaven who was very merciful and that his Redeemer did sit at his right Hand and he was confident that he was mediating for him at that very instant being hopeful through his All sufficient Merits to be pardoned all his Sins and to be received into his Mercy trusting only to the Free Grace of God through Jesus Christ. He declared he had never been tainted in the Religion professed and established in the Land in which he had been bred from his Infancy it was not this nor that mode or fancy of Religion that was to be built on but one that was right and sure and came from God Here he observed some taking Notes and upon that said he had not expected that else he had digested what he had said into a better Method but desired that what he had said might not be published to his disadvantage since he had not intended to speak any thing when he came to that place Then he went on and said Many dreadful Aspersions had been cast on him as if his Intentions had not been such as he pretended but he thanked God he was unjustly blamed That for the King he had ever loved him both as he was his King and his Master with whom he had been bred many years and had been his domestick Servant and that there was nothing the Parliament of Scotland declared for the King that was not really intended by himself and as he hazarded his Life for him one way so he now was to lose it another and that his Design of leading in the Army to England was really that which was published in the Declaration in so far as concerned the King he was not then to speak of the rest of the Declaration which had many other particulars in it And for what he said of his Duty to the King there was no reason to suspect him of Flattery or any other end in saying it God having now so disposed of His Majesty but though he could gain nothing by it yet he owed the freeing himself of that Calumny to Truth by which all men shall gain for ever There had been many Discourses founded on a part of the Scotish Declaration which mentioned an Invitation to come to England upon which he had been much laboured for discovering the Inviters but he had and did still remit himself to the Declaration without any other Answer He was ever willing to serve this Nation in any thing was in his Power which was known to many worthy Persons in it and he would still have continued in those Resolutions had those in whose hands the Power was then thought fit to have preserved his Life But since he was to be thence-forth of no more use all he could do was to wish the Kingdom Happiness and Peace and to pray that his Blood might be the last should be shed and though perhaps he had some reluctancy within himself at his Suffering for this Fact yet he freely forgave all men and carried no rancour with him to the Grave but did submit to the Will of him who created Heaven and Earth and himself a poor sinful Creature then speaking before him He conceived it could contribute to no end for him to speak of State-business of the Government of the Kingdom or things of that nature his own Inclinations had been still for Peace he was never an ill Instrument betwixt the King and his People nor had he acted to the prejudice of the Parliament And as he had not meddled much in those Wars so he was never wanting in his Prayers to Almighty God for his King's Happiness and he earnestly prayed God to direct his Majesty that now Reigns that he might do what should tend to his Glory and the Peace and Happiness of the Kingdoms He said he was of the Established Religion which he had professed in his own Country where he was born and bred but for particular opinions he was not rigid he knew many godly men had scruples about divers things wherein he had never concerned himself nor did Difference of opinion which was never more than at that time move him his own was clear He prayed the Lord to forgive him his Sins as he freely forgave even those against whom he had the greatest grounds of Animosity remembring that Prayer Forgive us our Trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us And to this purpose he spoke if the Writers did him right in what was published in his Name but how true the printed Papers were the Writer is not able to judge for he has three printed Relations of it before him all varying somewhat one from another As he expressed himself thus he discovered a great composure by his Looks and manner of Expression and when he was desired to change the Posture he stood in since the Sun shined full in his Face he answered pleasantly No it would not burn it and he hoped to see a brighter Sun than that very speedily After the Duke had done speaking he called for the Executioner and desired to know how he should fit his Body for the Blow and told him his Servants would give him satisfaction Then he called to his Servants and commanded them to remember him kindly to divers of his Friends in England particularly to his Mother-in-law the Countess of Denbigh to whom he had ever payed a Filial respect and to the old Countess of Devonshire who as the lived to a great Age and to the Honour of her Nation so was on all occasions a constant and true Friend to him He bade tell her she would no more question his Loyalty which she had done
that the Duke was suffered to return to Scotland with the King But at His Majesties Landing one appointed by the Parliament to put him from the King required him to withdraw and when the King pressed the Commissioners with the Articles of their Treaty they said they could not oppose an Order of Parliament The King was much offended with this and was inclining to resent it both as an unworthy Usage and as a Breach of Treaty but the Duke told him that at that time Argyle was the person who was most able to render him considerable Service in Scotland therefore though he knew he designed nothing so much as his Ruin yet he advised His Majesty to use all possible means to gain him absolutely to his Party and to neglect himself as much as Argyle desired and not at all to seem much concerned in him adding that he knew when His Majesties Affairs were in a better posture he would not forget his faithful Servants This particular His Sacred Majesty vouchsafed to tell the Writer It was in vain for him to claim either the benefit of the Treaty at Sterlin or Breda Interest and Jealousy prevailing more with these who then ruled than any other Tie so the Duke was forced to retire to the Isle of Arran And goes to Arran where he stayed till the end of Ianuary 1651 nor could his Petitions with the Intercessions of his Friends prevail for allowing him the liberty of coming to fight for his King and Country so that he was forced to stay at Arran till the best half of Scotland was lost Cromwell enters Scotland But God who had suffered the Church-party to prevail long did blast their Force and Success at once for Cromwel upon the Parliament of Scotland's bringing home their King entred it with his Army The Church-party as they had no mind to invade England on the Kings account so were very careful to declare that their Arming against Cromwel was not on the Kings account which they excluded from the state of the Quarrel by an Act of their Committee and declared that they stood only to their own Defence against that Hostile Invasion which was contrary to their Covenant and Treaties They were also very careful to model their Army so that neither Malignant nor Engager that had been of the Kings Party should serve in it for though when His Majesty came to their Army at Leith the Souldiers were much animated by his Presence and with the coming of two thousand brave Gentlemen with him to the Army yet the Leaders of that Party pretended that since the Malignants were in their Army God would be provoked to give them up to the Enemy and therefore forced the King to leave the Army They also forced away all those Gentlemen who came and offered their Service I shall not pursue this account further but only add that notwithstanding all their Confidence of their Army and though they had the Enemy at great disadvantages so that he and all his Officers gavethemselves for gone yet they were with very little Opposition broken and routed near Dunbar on the third of September 1650 Dunbar-Fight and even those who two years before had insulted over the Misfortunes of the Engagement were now themselves taught how ill an Argument Success was to evince the Goodness of a Cause The King is better used in Scotland This procured a great change in the Counsels of Scotland for by that time the honester and better part of the Clergy were by the Murther of the King and the other Proceedings in England filled with distast and horrour at them and began to think how defective they had hitherto been in their Duty to the King and therefore resolved to adhere more faithfully to it in all time coming Others of the Church-party did also see that as Cromwel was setting up a Common-wealth in England so they found many of the forwarder amongst themselves very much inclined to it in Scotland This divided them from the other violent Party made them joyn more cordially with the King and be willing to receive his other faithful Servants to oppose the Common Enemy therefore it was brought under debate if the Act of Classes that excluded them from Trust should not be rescinded and all Subjects allowed to enjoy their Priviledges and suffered to resist the Common Enemy after long debate it was carried in the Affirmative yet none vvere to be received but upon particular Applications and Professions of Repentance The Church-party divided The Commission of the Kirk being also asked their Opinions declared that in such an Exigency vvhen the Enemy vvas Master of all on the South of Forth and Clide all fensible persons might be raised for the Defence of the Country This vvas called the Resolution of the Commission of the General Assembly and was ratified by the subsequent General Assembly But against this many Ministers protested and from thence arose great Heats and Divisions among those of the Kirkmen who owned the Publick Resolutions An. 1652. and those who Protested against them the one being called the Publick-Resolutioners and the other Protesters And now all Churches were full of pretended Penitents for every one that offered his Service to the King was received upon the Publick profession of his Repentance for his former Malignancy wherein all saw they were only doing it in compliance to the peremptory Humour of that time It was about the end of Ianuary that the Duke was suffered to come and wait on the King The Duke is suffered to wait on the King but at that time Cliddisdale with the other Places where his Interest lay were in the Enemies hands who had put Garrisons in Hamilton Douglas Carnwath Boghall and other Houses of that Country Yet the Duke got quickly about him a brave Troop of about an hundred Horse made up of many Noblemen and Gentlemen who rode in it among whom were divers Earls and Lords whose Lands being also possessed by the Enemy they could do no more but hazard their own Persons in his Majesties Service the rest were his Vassals and Gentlemen of his Name and they were commanded under him by a gallant Gentleman Sir Thomas Hamilton of Preston whom he sent with 18 Horse to Cliddisdale to try if the Enemy could be catched at any disadvantage and the People of the Country raised for the King The Enemy kept so good Guards and was so strong at Hamilton that he could not fall in there therefore he went to Douglas where he took about 80 Horse that belonged to the Garrison but could not surprize the House for it was too strong to be taken without Cannon He likewise took all the Horse that belonged to the Garrison at Boghall and killed twenty Souldiers This made the Enemy keep closer at Hamilton upon which the Duke resolved to raise ten Troops of Horse and appointed Sir Thomas Hamilton Lieutenant-Collonel but the Enemies Garrisons gave great interruptions to his
you is that which you must pay your King I know you need no Incitements to this Duty else I would insist longer upon it but I conceive it mine to recommend it to you as the Earthly thing which in the first place you ought to study Next unto that prefer your Duty to the preservation of the House of Hamilton to all things else in this World and make no difference in the testimonies of your kindness to it whether the Lord shall think fit to continue the memory of that House in your own or my dear Brothers Issue And I do conjure you if you have any respect to my desires not to suffer any difference or mistakes to arise betwixt you and them but remember him who prefer'd me to them and what consequently my Duty and yours is to his Next I recommend to you the care of the Education of our Children for the Lords sake study to get them acquainted with God in their young years and to imprint his fear in their tender hearts keep all light and idle company from them and labour to make them rich in Piety and Vertue Loyal to their King and dutiful to the House of Hamilton As I hope all my Friends and Kindred will be dutiful to you so I intreat you for my sake continue your respects and kindness to them Be careful to keep none but pious and discreet Servants in your Family that the Lord being served and worshipped in it according to his Will may delight to dwell in it and to bless every member of it And now Sweet Heart seeing you know that these divers years my Life hath been a burden to me receive my Removal as a Mercy from God with that moderation which he commandeth and the hope of a Ioyful meeting in our Resurrection perswadeth being confident that the Lord hath placed me in Eternal Happiness with himself in Heaven where he hath already laid up some pieces of my self little James and Diana The Lord who hath wounded you bind up your sores and pour the Balm of Gilead in your Heart even the Comforts of the Holy Spirit in the assurance of the Remission of your sins and peace with him in Iesus Christ that his Grace in you may shine to the World in a godly and vertuous Life which having finished in his fear you may hereafter enter with him into that Glory which I trust in the Mercies and Mediation of Iesus Christ my Redeemer I shall be shareing of when you shall be reading these last words and expressions from Dear Heart Your HAMILTON THe Dispositions which you made to me of your Lands in England I do here again return to you to be disposed upon by you as you shall think fit being confident that you will not wrong the House of Hamilton or your Children in the Disposal thereof The Conclusion I shall conclude this Work with these Papers which though some nice Palats may think not so fit for the Publick and better for private Closets than the World yet I could not be of that opinion for in an Age in which the sense of Piety and Religion is so much decayed I thought such testimonies to the Power of it were not to be suppressed by which it will appear that a high-spirited and Great Person who had tasted of all the Follies that bewitch the greatest part of men did in end in the vigour of his Years and Spirits abandon them with all the seriousness of a hearty and lively Repentance and found in God and true Religion such solid satisfaction and joy as did wholly overcome him and engage him into a course of strict Piety and of a holy Life I wish this may work some effect upon a loose and debauched Generation and if the World becomes either better or wiser through my pains I have gained my chief end and design in this Work THE END THE CONTENTS Lib. I. Of what happened from his Fathers Death till the Year 1638. Anno 1625. THe Marquis of Hamilton dies Pag. 1. His Son succeeds him ibid. His Father's Character ibid. King James dies p. 2. An. 1626. The Marquis goes into Scotland ibid. The King writes to him p. 3. and invites him to Court ibid. but he lives retired ibid. The Earl of Denbigh goes for him p. 4. An. 1628. He comes to Court ibid. His Preferments there ibid. The State of Germany ibid. An. 1629. The Q. of Bohemia writes to him p. 5. The K. of Sweden desires a League with the King ibid. Who appoints the Marquis to treat with him p. 6. The Marq. sends Coll. Hamilton ibid. and David Ramsay to the King of Sweden ibid. An. 1630. Articles signed by the K. of Sweden p. 7. The Prince of Wales is born p. 8. The Marq. made Knight of the Garter ib. Articles with the K. of Sweden signed by the Marq. p. 9. Ramsay deals with the Lord Reay p. 10. and Negotiates with the States of Holland ibid. Farensbach's Treachery ibid. The K. of Swed presses the Marq. to come to Germany ibid. And desires a League with the King p. 11. An. 1631. Reay accuses Ramsay ibid. And L. Ochiltree accuses the Marq. ib. The Marq. Innocence appears p. 12. L. Weston is his Enemy ibid. But the K. will receive no ill Impressions of him ibid. And makes him lye in his Bed-chamber that night p. 13. Ochiltreeis tried and punished for his false Accusation ibid. Reay and Ramsay desire to fight p. 14. The Kings Letter about that matter ib. The Marq. sails to Germany p. 15. And goes through the Soundt ibid. The King writes to him ibid. He lands in Germany with 6000 men which did the K. of Sweden great Service p. 16. The Marq. goes to the K. of Sweden ib. The K. of Sw. sends him to guard some Passes on the Oder ibid. The Plague breaks in upon his Army ib. He relieves Crossen p. 17. And takes Guben ibid. He is called to besiege Magdeburg ib. Sir H. Vane Ambassadour to the King of Sweden p. 18. The King's Letters to the Marq. ibid. The Marq. goes to the K. of Swed p. 19. Magdeburg is brought to a Parly ib. but is relieved by Papenheim p. 20. who draws out the Garrison and leaves it ibid. Two Letters of the King 's to the Marq. p. 20 21. An. 1632. The K. of Swed proposes unreasonable terms to the King p. 21. The Marq. Army comes to nothing ibid. The K. of Sw. will not give him a new Commission p. 22. The King writes to him about a new Imployment for him p. 23. The Treaty between the King and the K. of Sweden breaks up ibid. The passion of the K. of Swden p. 24. The Marq. returns to England upon the King's Commands ibid. The K. of Sweden's Death p. 25. An. 1633. The King is Crowned in Scotland ibid. The King assigns a Taxation to the Marq. for repaying the expence of his Army p. 26. Lib. 2. Of what passed when he was the Kings Commissioner in Scotland in
The King consults with them ibid. He goes to the Isle of Wight ibid. And writes to Lanerick p. 325. The Scotish Commissioners write to him p. 326. The Kings Answer to Lanerick ibid. The four Bills are passed p. 327. The Scotish Commissioners protest against them ibid. And write to the King about them ibid. The King is well-pleased with their Papers p. 328. They write again to him ibid. Another Letter to the King p. 329. The Kings Answer to them ibid. Designs against the Kings Person p. 330. Traquair is well with the King p. 331. The Scotish Commissioners advise the King p. 332. The King sends for them ibid. The Kings care of Huntley p. 333. The Queen writes to Lanerick p. 334. The Scotish Commissioners agree with the King ibid. The King is made Prisoner ibid. Lib. 6. Of the Duke's Engagement for the Kings Preservation and what followed to his Death THe Duke's endeavours in Scotland p. 335. Three Parties in Scotland p. 336. The Commissioners return ibid. The Church-men are jealous of them p. 337. The King writes to them ibid. Their Answer ibid. Lowdon forsakes them p. 338. The Duke is designed General ibid. The Parliament sits ibid. Commissioners from England ibid. The Remonstrance of the Ministers p. 339. The King writes to the Lords p. 340. Their Answers to him ibid. and p. 342. Satisfaction offered to the Ministers ib. Lanerick's Letters about their Affairs ibid. And about their Demands to the Two Houses ibid. And about the Declaration p. 343. And putting the Kingdom into a posture of War ibid. And the modelling their Army p. 344. The Prince resolves to come to Scotland ibid. The King designs an Escape ibid. Great disorders in England p. 345. Letters to the Queen and Prince p. 346. And to the King about the Officers of the Army ibid. The Ministers oppose the Engagement p. 348. The Parl. Letter to the Presbyteries ib. The Parl. sends for the Scotish Army in Ireland p. 349. The Confusions in England p. 350. A Fast at Westminster ibid. The Parl. of Scotl. adjourned p. 351. Some are against a present March ibid. A Letter of the Prince's ibid. Others press a speedy March p. 352. And it is resolved on p. 353. An Insurrection at Mauchlin ibid. Some Troops are sent to the Borders p. 354. The whole Army enters England ibid. The Chief Officers of it ibid. Calander's Character ibid. The Condition of the Army p. 355. An Account of their March ibid. Lambert retires ibid. A Letter from Langdale ibid. The Army marches into Lancashire p. 357. The Scotish Army comes out of Ireland ibid. The Cavalry leave the Foot p. 358. Preston-Fight ibid. Middleton's Gallantry p. 361. At Warrington-Bridge the Foot Capitulate ibid. The Horse come to Utoxater p. 362. A Munity ibid. They treat with Lambert p. 363. The Articles are signed p. 364. L. Gray of Groby comes up ib. The Duke is made Prisoner p. 365. And examined but discovers nothing ibid. The Engagement variously censured ib. Lauderdale was sent to bring the Prince to Scotland p. 366. The Prince intended to go ibid. But the loss of the Army stopt him p. 367. An Insurrection in Scotland ibid. Many in the Committee of Estates incline to submit to them ibid. But Lanerick opposed that long p. 368. An Account of the Irish Army ibid. They are called back to Scotland p. 369. And joyn with the Committee of Estates p. 370. And defeat Argyle at Sterlin p. 371. A Treaty is carried on ibid. Cromwel is invited to Scotland p. 372. Different opinions about the Treaty ib. Articles offered for a Treaty p. 373. The Answer sent to these Offers p. 374. The Treaty is concluded p. 375. But not at all kept ibid. Instructions sent to the Two Houses ibid. Lanerick goes out of Scotl. p. 377. His Letter to the Chancellour ibid. The Duke is brought to Windsor p. 379. Oft examined but in vain ibid. The King is murthered ibid. Majesty in Misery in a Copy of Verses written by the King p. 381. The Duke escapes out of Windsor p. 384. But is taken in Southwark ibid. And kept in St. James's ibid. Argyle refused to interceed for him p. 385. He is brought to his Trial ibid. The Inditement against him ibid. The Duke's Plea ibid. The second Appearance p. 386. The third Appearance ibid. The fourth Appearance ibid. The fifth Appearance Witnesses examined p. 387. The Duke pleaded the Articles given him p. 388. The sixth Appearance more Witnesses p. 389. The seventh Appearance more Evidence led ibid. The eighth Appearance the Duke pleads for himself at great length p. 390. The ninth Appearance his Counsel plead p. 392. The tenth Appearance the Counsel for the People plead against him p. 394. The eleventh Appearance Bradshaw's Speech p. 396. Sentence is given against him ibid. The Duke prepares for Death ibid. And writes to his Brother p. 397. And to his Children ibid. His Speech before his Death p. 398. He is led out to his Execution p. 400. And writes a note to his Brother ibid. New Offers of Life made upon base Conditions and rejected by him p. 401. D. Sibbald encourages him on the Scaffold ibid. The Duke's last Speech p. 402. And Prayer p. 404. His Death ibid. And Burial p. 405. His Character p. 406. His Birth and Parents ibid. His Person ibid. His Education ibid. His Marriage ibid. His Lady's Vertues p. 407. and Death ibid. His Religion ibid. His Abilities p. 409. His Loyalty ibid. His love to his Country p. 411. His Temperance ibid. His Ingenuity p. 412. His Good Nature p. 413. His Death much lamented p. 414. A Letter of the Queens p. 415. Another of the Kings ibid. Lib. 7. A Continuation of Affairs till Worcester-Fight THe Character of William Duke of Hamilton p. 417. His first Appearance at Court p. 418. He is made Secretary of State and Earl of Lanerick ibid. The Friendship between his Brother and him ibid. His Diligence in his Imployment p. 419. His Abilities ibid. His Religion ibid. His troubles prove happy to him p. 420. His care of his Brothers Daughters ibid. His Duty to the King p. 421. He was ill used by his Enemies p. 422. He advises the King to settle with Scotland ibid. The Treaty at Breda ibid. The Duke returns with the King p. 423. But is put from the King ibid. And lives in the Isle of Arran ibid. Cromwel enters Scotland p. 424. Dunbar-Fight ibid. The King is better used in Scotland ibid. The Church-party divided ibid. The Duke comes to the King p. 425. The King marches into England ibid. The Duke's Letter about their March p. 426. Lambert is beat from Warrington-Bridge p. 427. The K. comes to Worcester ibid. Cromwel follows ●im ibid. The King is in great straits p. 428. The Duke apprehends his own Death ibid. And prepares for it ibid. His Meditations before the Fight ibid. And Prayer p. 429. Worcester-Fight p. 430. The Duke's Regiment c●arged gallantly ibid. The Duke 's great Valour ibid. He is wounded and taken p. 431. His wounds prove mortal ibid. His Letter to his Lady ibid. His Death p. 432. And Burial ibid. His last Will p. 433. A Le●ter with it to his Lady p. 434. The Conclusion p. 436. A Rational Method for proving the Truth of the Christian Religion as it is professed in the Church of England in Octavo The Royal Martyr and the Dutiful Subject in two Sermons Quarto both Written by Gilbert Burnet Author of Duke Hamilton 's Memoires and Printed for R. Royston Several Chirurgical Treatises by Rich. Wiseman Sergeant-Chirurgion to His Majesty Fol. New THE END
of his mind been stain'd with some ill qualities He had acquired some interest in Court by the service he did the Earl of Niddisdale in the matter of the Kings Revocation and the Commission of Surrenders which to explain were too long a digression here and needless to all who understand how the Rights of the Titles were at that time unsettled in Scotland His malice against the Marquis was hereditary he being the Son of Captain Iames Stewart who in King Iames his Minority when the Hamiltons were groundlesly and in a mock-Parliament attainted carried the Title of Earl of Arran and possessed their Fortunes Lord Reay upon what irritation I know not alledged to him that Mr. Ramsay had told him that the Marquises designs were not upon Germany but Britain and that when this Army was once gathered he purposed to pretend to the Crown of Scotland This lye was so ill told that it could take with none but those whose Judgments were blinded through malice for as that Army was very small and in no manner of capacity to prosecute such a design so it was made up of Scots and English and most of the Officers were persons of whom the Marquis had no acquaintance Reay alledged likewise the testimony of one Mr. Cleazar Borthwick Borthwick being a witness clears the Marquis to whom Mr. Meldrum should have communicated the same design but this testimony turned to his shame for that person who was of known integrity being brought from Germany and examined upon what Meldrum had said to him desired liberty to send his Deposition to the King sealed since the particulars were not fit to be publickly heard to which the King yielding he sent it The summe of it was that Meldrum had never communicated any such design to him that he had indeed spoken abominably of the King and Court but all was in his own name and that he brought no credence with him from the Marquis for his errand to the Swedish Court was onely to solicit the payment of some Arrears due to his Uncle who had served that Crown and he had no Employment from the Marquis onely he got from him Letters of recommendation for the dispatch of his business so that whatever he said was understood as his own sense and not as a message from the Marquis Reay also alledged the testimony of Lieutenant Colonel Lindsay for a great part of that he charged on Ramsay This Lindsay indeed was a brave Gentleman and Reay's Lieutenant Colonel but was killed two or three moneths before Reay met with Ochiltree at London He was in new Brandenburg with other Swedish Officers when Tilly took it in and all Reay's Regiment was cut to pieces except a very few which turned to his eternal disgrace who in such a hot time of Action left his Command to come over to England and forge lyes and after that Reay was in no esteem neither with Scots nor Swedes and irrecoverably lost himself in the K. of Swedens opinion But Reay kept himself from charging any thing on the Marquis fixing all he said on Ramsay which Caution was not observed by Ochiltree who drew a representation of the Marquis his interest in Scotland to shew what probabilities might be of such a design and reckoned up all his Kindred and Allyes by which he drew in most of the Nobility of Scotland and so fastned suspicions on them all a madness onely incident to those of Bedlam to which his malice drove him though he was no fool With this account of Reay's and his own he went to the Lord Weston Weston carries the Accusation to the King then Treasurer of England and personating great zeal for the safety of King and Kingdoms revealed this alledged Treason to him adding that it was probable all things being now ready to be put in execution that the Marquis upon his return to put things in the more fearful disorder might if admitted to wait in the Kings Bed-chamber murder him This was a Calumny than which Hell could not have forged a fouler for Lord Ochiltree judged that this would have infallibly produced one of two effects either raised such a Jealousie in the Kings thoughts as to have quite ruined the Marquis since few Princes are proof against such whispers or at least it would have stopt his voyage for a while till he were tried and the smallest delay in that would have scattered his Souldiers so that this design failing in which his Honour was now so far engaged a stain should lie on him through all Europe Lord Weston carried this Story to the King whether provoked to it out of hatred to the Marquis or moved from his zeal and duty to the King shall not be determined though the last was pretended by him and in many of his Letters to the Marquis when he was in Germany he expressed much friendship for him who gives it no good hearing But His Majesty knew the Marquis too well and understood all his motions and the progress of this Affair too exactly to give any credit to this Forgery and indeed he rejected listening to it in terms so full of affection for the Marquis as discovered he was incapable of any Jealousie either of him or any of his actions neither would he hearken to those who onely desired that upon his return he might not be admitted to his Presence at least not to lie in his Bed-chamber Within a very little while the Marquis came to Court utterly ignorant of the execrable designs of his Adversaries His Majesty welcomed him with an air of kindness beyond what he ordinarily gave him and drawing him apart immediately told him all that villainous story which had been whispered against him The Confusion this raised in his thoughts was unspeakable and opens the whole matter to the Marquis being amazed to find himself so horridly misrepresented knowing his heart to be full of duty and affection to his Soveraign he wondered how malice could be so impudent as at a time when he was hazarding Life Honour Friends and Fortune for the Kings Service to fasten such a devillish gloss on his actions but this surprize was overcome with a greater when he saw His Majesty with an unheard-of and truly Royal generosity express his confidence in him in such obliging terms as scarce to allow him to speak in his own Justification which seeming to insinuate he thought he needed to be vindicated the Marquis begged he might be presently tried and offered himself to restraint till he were cleared But His Majesty would not hear of that on the contrary commanded him to lie in the Bed-chamber that night and made him lie in the Bed-chamber that same night and he expressed his confidence and kindness for him in such a strain both of behaviour and discourse that the Marquis frequently said he looked on the kindness of that night as that which obliged him more than all the other publick testimonies of the Kings favour and
Journey was delayed The Marquis indisposed through long Fatigue through an Indisposition of Body some days longer than he intended and indeed all things being considered it was a wonder how either Body or Mind could hold out so long His Negotiation was both painful and unprosperous most of the day he was obliged to spend with unmanagable and unruly Spirits and much of the night in writing Letters for every third or fourth day he gave the King a large account of what passed which was sometimes of the length of two sheets of all sides in close writing This was always seconded by another to my Lord of Canterbury of the same and often a greater length Besides that about other matters of course he wrote as often to the Earl of Sterlin and almost as often to Sir Henry Vane And this was besides all his Letters up and down Scotland most of which particularly those to my Lord Huntley which were at least weekly were all with his own Hand And the most uneasie part of all was that he was obliged to keep himself in a reserve almost with every Body there being very few about him whom he durst intirely trust and certain it is had not his Mind been of a great and undaunted stayedness and calmness the shocks he met with had dashed him to pieces But having recovered his Health put things in the best Order could be expected in the midst of so great Disorders he took Journey to London on the 28th of December having committed the chief care of business to the Earl of Traquair in who●e hands he left some of the Blanks under the Kings Hand which he had by him to be filled up as Traquair should be answerable with a particular Order that if the Lords of the Covenant pressed the Lords of the Session to doe any thing that might infer an Acknowledgment of the Assembly of Glasgow and if he saw any grounds to fear their yielding then he should fill up one of the Blanks with a Proclamation to the Session to rise Thus ended this Ominous Year An. 1639. Anno 1639. The sad posture Affairs were in THE Marquis his thoughts did bear him sad company during his Journey the least painful of them was that he knew he had many Enemies who would impute the present Disorders to his Mismanagement if not to his unfaithfulness but those he quieted with his confidence in His Majesties Justice and his own Integrity And indeed any personal Hazard could meet him must have had small footing in a mind prepossessed with other thoughts That which tormented him most as appears by his Letters was that he saw inevitable Ruine hanging either over his Master or his Country if not over both since the Ruine of either would prove fatal to both To advise His Majesty to Treat any further before he were in a posture to command as well as to treat was so dishonourable that he could not think of it He saw a Kingly way must be taken but he knew well His Majesties Affairs were not in a very good posture England had enjoyed a long quiet and so both their Warlike Spirits and Preparations were much rusted there was store of Factious Spirits among them who would give heartless assistance to His Majesty in his Designs and those who would be most forward he knew were ready to drive His Majesties Resentments too far He saw little hope of any Party to be made for the King in Scotland except from the Marquis of Huntley He knew the Covenanters would proceed as men desperate and less heartiness could be expected from His Majesties hired Souldiers than from such as had no hope but in their hands and actions In a word all things looked so cloudy to his discerning mind that it proved a melancholy Journey to him The King highly displeased with the Covenanters On the 5th of Ianuary he came to Whitehall where he gave the King a true and ample Relation of all particulars His Majesty was fully satisfied with his Carriage in every step of it approving all he had done but was so highly irritated at the Covenanters that he resolved neither to think nor talk of Treating till he should appear in a more formidable posture judging it would render his Person and Government contemptible not onely to all abroad but to his other Subjects and teach them to kick off his Authority if after all the Affronts had been put upon his Laws and Condescensions he should be so tame as still to Treat and therefore was resolved not to receive the Letter he knew was coming from the Assembly to him backed with a Petition from the Lords But the Marquis desired he would delay any such more apparent Breach till he were ready to appear in the Field which was impossible before March. All His Majesties thoughts were now bent upon the way of reducing Scotland to due Obedience in which the Marquis offered him his humble and hearty concurrence for though his Affection to his Country and Friends did struggle strongly against his engaging further yet it yielded to his Duty but not so intirely as to clear his Spirit of sad regrates And in this he was not onely rivalled but far out-stripped by his Soveraign whose Sorrow keeping pace with his Affection and Interest made this Expedition prove as sad as it was just The Design was thus laid down His Majesty was to raise an Army of thirty thousand Horse and Foot and to lead them in Person towards Scotland He was to write to all the Nobility of England and resolves on a War to wait upon him to the Campagne with their Attendants who should be maintained by His Majesties Pay He was to put good Garrisons in Berwick and Carlisle two thousand in the former and five hundred in the latter He was at the same time to send a Fleet to ply from the Frith North-ward for stooping of Trade and making a great Diversion for guarding the Coast He was also to send an Army of five thousand men under the Marquis his Command to land in the North and joyn with Huntley's Forces all which should be under his Command he retaining still the Character of Commissioner with the addition of General of the Forces in Scotland And with these he was First to make the North sure and then to move South-ward which might both make another great Diversion and encourage such as wished well to His Majesties Service who were the greater number in those Parts Next the Earl of Antrim was to land in Argyle-shire upon his Pretensions to Kyntire and the old Fewds betwixt the Mackdonalds and Campbels and he promised to bring with him ten or twelve thousand men And last of all the Earl of Strafford was to draw together such Forces as could be levied and spared out of Ireland and come with another Fleet into Dumbriton-Frith and for his encouragement the Marquis desired him to touch at Arran that being the only place of his
Instructions and of full and ample Power from His Majesty He having fully signified His Pleasure to those whom He did entrust with the executing thereof not thinking it fit to imploy other Servants of greater Eminence by reason of the disorders and iniquities of the Times and as forced by the importance of his other great and weighty Affairs He was necessitated to prorogue the Parliament for some few days so did He most really intend to perform at the time prefixed whatsoever He had promised by the Act of Pacification But neither can the neglect of His Servants if any be nor those other Reasons alledged by the foresaid Noblemen Barons and Burgesses in their Declaration for their Sitting satisfie His Majesty for their proceeding in a Parliamentary way since by the Duty and Allegeance of Subjects they are bound to acknowledge in a most special manner His Transcendent Power in Parliaments and if Subjects there do assume the Power of Making Laws and of Rescinding those already made what Act can be done more derogatory to that Regal Power and Authority we are all sworn to maintain Therefore His Majesty conceives they cannot in reason expect He can interpose His Royal Authority to these or any other Acts whatsoever whereto neither He in His own Royal Person nor by His Commissioner did assist Yet such is His Majesties Clemency that when they shall take such an Humble and Dutiful way as may witness that they are as careful and tender of His Majesties Royal Power as they are desirous of His Approbation then shall it be time for them to expect such a Gracious and Iust Answer as may testifie His Majesties Fatherly Compassion of that His Native Kingdom and his Pious and Princely care of performing whatsoever is necessary for establishing their Religion and Laws So thus having imparted unto you all that was enjoyned me by His Majesty I shall say no more from my self but I am Your Lordships humble Servant LANERICK Whitehall 27th of June 1640. My Lord Lowdon found matters at so great a height that he was able to do little more than give intelligence that he delivered the Letter to the Lords at Edinburgh who returned to it the following Answer My Lord The Reply of the Committee WE received your Lordships Letter of the 27th of June from the Lord Lowdon whose relief out of Prison gives us occasion before we answer your Lordships Letter to acknowledge the same as an act of His Majesties Royal Iustice and Goodness although the pretended cause of his Imprisonment was but a malicious Calumny of the Enemies of the Kings Honour and our Peace forged to engage both His Majesties Kingdoms in a National War As we cannot but regrate that any neglect of His Majesties Officers or absence of His Commissioner whose presence we did both desire and expect should hinder the interposing of His Royal Authority to these Acts of Parliament which were found most necessary for establishing Religion and the Peace of this Kingdom and which according to the Acts of Pacification His Majesty was graciously pleased to promise so we have and shall still endeavour to give demonstration of that tender Respect we have of His Majesties Honour and Royal Power And whereas your Lordships Letter doth imply that we should take some other way for the more easie obtaining His Majesties Approbation which also by several reasons hath been most instantly pressed by the Lord Lowdon yet we conceive that Parliamentary way which was taken by the Estates convened by His Majesties Special Warrant to have been most Legal and necessary and no ways derogatory to His Majesties Power in Parliament nor contrary to the Duty of good Subjects who are warranted by the Articles of Pacification under His Majesties Hand to determine all Civil questions ratifie the Conclusions of the Assembly and remove the present Distractions of this Kingdom as is more abundantly demonstrated by their Declaration in Parliament thereabout So that we dare not take any other Course which may entrench upon their Parliamentary Power or Proceedings nor will we being so few in number appointed by them to stay here presume of our selves in a matter of so great moment to return a more full and particular Answer till there be a more frequent Meeting of those appointed by Parliament which will be shortly and then your Lordship shall be acquainted that you may shew His Majesty their Resolutions and humble Desires and we shall remain Your Lordships affectionate Friends and Servants Signed Lindsay Balmerino Burghly Napier J. Murray G. Dundas Ja. Sword J. Forbes Ed. Eggar Edinburgh 7th of July 1640. They went on with their Preparations The Preparations are great in Scotland and caused all to bring in the tenth Peny of their Rents to make this War look like a Sacred one since carried on by the Tithes and ordered their Forces to be drawn together Mean while the King went on at as good a pace as he could and went from London in the end of Iuly to make his Rendezvous at York The Earl of Strafford staid some time behind partly for Sickness partly to see what Money could be borrowed from London and at this time there were great and high Misunderstandings between him and Sir Henry Vane both making their Complaints to the Marquis by their Letters Strafford was also to bring an Army out of Ireland upon the West of Scotland whereupon they in Scotland drew their Forces together in the end of August and resolved to march into England and make that the Seat of the War pretending as by their Declaration then emitted doth appear that their Trade was block't up by English Ships that in England and Ireland Scotishmen were proceeded against for taking the Covenant and the English Council had voted a War with them wherefore they said they were constrained to go into England with their Petitions declaring they came not to invade England but to avert the Invasion of their Country that was designed adding that they should be so far from doing prejudice to any in England that severe Justice should be executed upon those who took any thing in England without payment And about this time Ruthwen being for many months block't up in the Castle of Edinburgh so that Victuals and Ammunition were spent his Water also failed and most of his Souldiers died was forced to Capitulate and render up the Castle of the Covenanters But not to stand too long on matters universally known as soon as they entred England The Scotish Army enters England the King by Proclamation declared them Traytors on the 22th of August yet they went on and when they came to the Ford of Tine at Newburn some miles above Newcastle they found it guarded by a Body of Foot who had raised a Brest-work near the River and lay there to obstruct their passage Yet no sooner did the Scottish Cannon begin to play but they struck with Fear threw down their Arms and run away whereupon the General
that till you express the Particulars of your Desires His Majesty can give no direct Answer therefore His Majesty requires that you set downthe Particulars of your Demands with expedition he having been always willing to hear and redress the Grievances of His People and for the more mature Deliberation of these great Affairs His Majesty hath already given out Summons for the Meeting of the Peers of the Kingdom in the City of York upon the 24th of this Month that so with the advice of the Peers you may receive such Answer to your Petition as shall most tend to His Honour and the Peace and Wellfare of His Dominions And in the mean time if Peace be that you desire as you pretend He expects and by these His Majesty commands that you advance no further with your Army to these parts which is the only means that is left for the present to preserve Peace betwixt the two Nations and to bring these unhappy Differences to a Reconciliation which none is more desirous of than His most Sacred Majesty Signed LANERICK With which he wrote this Cover My Lords ACcording to your Desires I presented unto His Majesty in your names the Petition you sent me whereupon His Majesty hath been Graciously pleased to command me to make this reference which you shall receive herein inclosed joined unto the Petition My Lords by this you may see His Majesty is as he ever was willing to hear and redress the Grievances of His Subjects and I pray God you may take those Courses that may not too much incroach on the Goodness of so Gracious a Soveraign This shall be the earnest Prayer of Your Lordships Servant LANERICK York 5th Sept. 1640. To this they returned the Answer that follows which was sent by Sir Iames Mercer Right Honourable An. 1639. AS nothing in Earth is more desired of us than His Majesties favour so doth nothing delight us more than that His Majesty beginneth again to hearken to our Humble Desires The Covenanters make a second Address wherein we trust nothing shall be found but what may serve for His Majesties Honour and for the Peace of His Dominions The Particulars we would have expressed but that they are contained in the Conclusions of the late Parliament and our Printed Declarations which were sent to your Lordship but in case the Papers be not by your Lordship we now summarily repeat them That His Majesty would be Graciously pleased to command that the last Acts of Parliament may be published in his Highness's Name as our Soveraign Lord with the Estates of Parliament convened by His Majesties Authourity Next That the Castle of Edinburgh and other strengths of the Kingdom of Scotland may according to the first foundation be furnished and used for our Defence and Security Thirdly That our Countrymen in his Majesties Dominions of England and Ireland may be free from Censure for subscribing the Covenant and be no more pressed with Oaths and Subscriptions unwarranted by our Laws and contrary to their National Oath and Covenant approved by His Majesty Fourthly That the Common Incendiaries who have been the Authors of this Combustion in His Majesties Dominions may receive their Iust Censure Fifthly That our Ships and our Goods with all the Damage thereof may be restored Sixthly That the Wrongs Losses and Charges which at this time we have sustained may be repayed Seventhly That the Declarations made against us as Traytors may be recalled and in end by advice and consent of the Estates of England convened in Parliament His Majesty may be pleased to remove the Garisons from the Borders and any Impediment that may stop free Trade and with their advice may condescend to all Particulars which may establish a stable and well-grounded Peace for enjoying of our Religion and Liberties against all fears of molestation and undoing from year to year as our Adversaries shall take the advantage This Royal testimony of His Majesties Iustice and Goodness we would esteem to be doubled upon us were it speedily bestowed and therefore must crave leave to regrate that His Majesties Pleasure concerning the Meeting of the Peers the 24th of this Instant will make the time long ere the Parliament be convened which is conceived to be the only mean of settling both Nations in a firm Peace and which we desire may be seriously represented to His Majesties Royal thoughts the more this time is abridged the more able will we be to obey His Majesties Prohibition of not advancing with our Arms Our Actions and whole comportment since the beginning of these Commotions and especially of late since our coming into England are Real Declarations of our love and desire of Peace nothing but invincible necessity hath brought us from our Country to this Place no other thing shall draw us beyond the limits appointed by His Majesty which we trust His Majesty will consider of and wherein we hope your Lordship will labour to be a profitable Instrument for the Kings Honour the Good of your Country and of Your Lordships humble Servants and affectionate Friends A. Lesly Rothes Cassils Montrose Dumfermline Lindsay Lowdon Napier Tho. Hope W. Rickarto●n J. Smith P. Hepbu●● D. Home Keir Ja. Sword Scots-Leager at New-Castle Sept. 8th 1640. An. 1640 On the 24th of September the Peers of England having met the King by their Advice commanded his Secretary to write the following Letter My Lords The King appoints a Treaty ACcording to His Majesties appointment the most part of the Peers of this Kingdom of England met here at York this day where His Majesty did communicate unto them your Desires and Petitions and because you do so earnestly press for a speedy Answer His Majesty with Advice of the Peers hath nominated such a number of them for a Conference with you upon Tuesday at Northallerton whose Names are underwritten But withall if you shall think the time too short and that with conveniency you cannot come so soon thither if betwixt this and Sunday you do acquaint His Majesty therewith he will take Order for the delay thereof for one day or two And that you may without all fear or danger of Detention send such Persons unto the said Conference as you shall think most fit if betwixt this and Sunday you send hither the Names of these you mean to imploy His Majesty will with all possible diligence return a safe conduct under his own Royal Hand for them and their necessary Servants His Majesty hath likewise commanded me to let you know that upon your relieving of such Officers and others of His Subjects as are detained by you he will return all such of yours as are his Prisoners either here or at Berwick and hereafter resolves that fair Quarters should be kept betwixt both Armies Thus having imparted His Majesties Pleasure I continue Your Lordships Servant LANERICK York 24th of September 1640. And now the King was in a great strait what to resolve on Most of all the
all so that no clear Proof being brought the Parliament could come to no other Decision but that the Lords had good reason to withdraw themselves and so they were invited to return to their place in Parliament But he is again in His Majesties favour This was a tedious business and put a great stop to the Settlement betwixt the King and the Nation but further Particularities are thought needless to be set down since this Matter vanished no effect following on it The Marquis quickly recovered his former ●oom in the Kings Affection so that there remained not so much as a vestige of this cross Adventure Things in Scotland took presently a Settlement and those were called Plotters and Banders after examination and a delivering up of their Bond which was burnt by the hand of the Common Hangman were set at Liberty after some time of further Restraint but the Process of the alledged Incendiaries was to go on yet they were to enjoy their Liberty and undergo no other Censure but the loss of Publick Imployment which though yielded at London was long resisted in Scotland they pretending their Oath to bring them to condign Punishment But as the King was going on with the Settlement of one Kingdom The Rebellion breaks out in Ireland he got the saddest News that ever were heard out of Ireland of the desperate Rebellion and Massacre had broken out there whereupon His Majesty recommended to the Parliament of Scotland the Relief of his oppressed Protestant Subjects in Ireland which they undertook very willingly But because of the interest England had in Ireland Commissioners were appointed to Treat with the Parliament of England for Concluding a Peace betwixt the two Nations and Settling of Trade and particularly about the Terms upon which they should engage in the War of Ireland and so about the middle of November the King having granted to the Scotish Nation all they could demand ended the Parliament there and returned to London about the end of that month But before the Marquis left Scotland he by the Kings particular Command entred in a close Friendship with Argyle considering that besides the great Power of that Family his Interest with the Clergy and Covenanters was such that none could be so useful to His Majesties Service as he And this Friendship was to be twisted closer by a Bond of a near Alliance betwixt their Children But from all the Letters that passed betwixt them yet to be seen it is as clear as can be that all the Marquis his design in this Friendship was for the Kings Service and that all that time Argyle expressed a hearty concurrence in it To gratifie the Covenanters the more the King had created him a Marquis Lowdon was also made Chancellor Lesley Earl of Leven and Lindsay put in a fair way to be Treasurer Traquair being turned out The King at his return to London The King returns to London where he finds matters worse found the Edge he had left on some of their spirits was no way blunted but growing into more sharpness When the Marquis was in Scotland a Member of the House of Commons laying out their Grievances among other things inveighed against Monopolies and spoke so plainly that all understood he meant the Marquis as a Person that deserved to be accused as well as either Strafford or Canterbury but others of that same Cabal took him up sharply And now upon the Kings return his Enemies finding their designs against him could not take with the King in whose Favour he was as much as ever they took a strange Course to destroy him which was to set on some Members of the House of Commons to accuse him as the Incendiary betwixt England and Scotland who had engaged England into all that Expence who had also invited the Scots to march into England and had been always the third in Strafford's and Canterburie's Counsels who had advised the Dissolving of the former Parliament and had oppressed the Subjects by the grants of many Monopolies which he had This was smelled out even by some of the same Cabal who perswaded their Friends to desist shewing them That for his Carriage betwixt England and Scotland an Oblivion was passed in the late Treaty which was ratified by the Parliament of England That for other things though his Engagement in the Court had carried him along to some extreme Counsels yet they said it was well enough known how moderate his Inclinations were how great an Instrument he had been in the late Settlement of Scotland and how much he was hated upon that account and that this was a design to destroy him either out of malice or because some feared his moderate Counsels in England as much as they hated them in Scotland This seems to have flowed from the Friendship which divers of the Leaders in the House of Peers had for him whom he had often obliged and as they were not unsensible nor forgetful of his good Offices so they seem to have had a particular kindness for his Person And while he was in Scotland he kept Correspondence with Mandevil Essex and others and chiefly with the Lord Say and Seale but all their Letters shew that his greatest business with them was to prepare them to a better Correspondence with the King But when the Marquis smelled out the design against him he gave the King an account of it and told him that if His Majesty intended to go on in his Affairs in a Kingly way he would wait on his Commands and expose himself to the displeasure of the House of Commons but if His Majesty intended to settle Matters by an absolute Compliance with the Parliament then he conceived it was fit that his Servants should use their endeavours for their own Preservation that so they might be afterwards useful to his Service yet he said he would do nothing for himself but by His Majesties Allowance and Direction being it is like taught more caution by the Jealousies had been taken from his care of vindicating himself in the Parliament of Scotland The King upon this allowed him to use all means for his own Preservation which he so managed that the designed Accusation came to nothing This partic●lar His Sacred Majesty vouchsafed to tell the Writter adding that he had it from the Queen His Mother Anno 1642. An. 1642. THe Tumults and Disorders about Whitehall and Westminster rose to that height that the King withdrew to Windsor in the beginning of the year The Scotch Commissioners continued Treating about their engaging for Ireland The S●ots Commissioners animate the Houses to press the change of the Laws about Church-Government which the King pressed forward very earnestly but some of the Commissioners begun to tamper with those who were most opposite to the Court in the Two Houses and in stead of Moderating them were instigating them to persist in their Demands about Religion to get Episcopacy brought down and Presbytery set up To
may be had and He and all His Subjects may discern what is to be left or brought in as well as what taken away He knows not how to consent to an Alteration otherwise than to such an Act for t●e ease of Tender Consciences in the matter of Ceremonies as His Majesty hath often offered And His Majesty hath formerly expressed Himself and still continues willing that the Debates of Religion may be entred into by a Synod of Learned and Godly Divines to be regularly c●osen according to the Laws and Customs of this Kingdom to which end His Majesty will be very willing that some Learned Divines of the Kirk of Scotland may be likewise sent to be present and offer their Reasons and Opinions This was the Success of that Negotiation but because the Reader may wonder how Lowdon and the Marquis came to be in such terms I shall set down the occasion of their Breach When Lowdon was to go up the Marquis resolved on a Course that should either stop his Journey or make him so obnoxious to the King that he should not dare to act contrary to his Duty which was this Lowdon had purchased from the King a Right to the Annuities of the Tythes that was confirmed to His Majesty by Act of Parliament whereupon the Marquis caused the following Petition to be drawn by Traquair's Advice To the Kings most Excellent Majesty the Humble Petition of the Noblemen Barons and Gentlemen occasionally met at Edinburgh Humbly Sheweth THat whereas Your Majesty at Your late being in Scotland being humbly moved to disburden and liberate the Subjects of this Kingdom of the Annuity due to Your Majesty out of the Tythes The Petition against the Annuities were pleased in that only Particular to delay to give us our Hearts desire and now out of the sense of the great Burdens that lye on us and in Confidence of the Continuance of Your Majesties Fatherly Care of the Good of Your Subjects we presume humbly to supplicate Your Majesty to be Graciously pleased in this Particular to dispense with Your Own Benefit or at least till Your Majesty be informed of the true state thereof to discharge Execution against us for the said Annuities And for Your Majesties incomparable Goodness and Gracious Favours we shall as in duty bound behave our selves in every thing as becometh Loyal and Faithful Subjects As we have unanimously endeavoured so shall we still continue to return such thank●ul Acknowledgment as may give to Your Majesty a real Testimony of our zealous Affections to Your Majesties Sacred Person Honour and Greatness derived upon Your Majesty by so many unparalelled Descents and as Your Majesty may expect and justly challenge from the Allegiance of us Your Majesties most obedient and obliged Subjects 16th February 1643. The last words of this Petition were by the first draught so conceived as would have amounted to a Bond of Mutual Defence and Adherence which the Marquis thought might draw on a Rupture and occasion a pursute as against Plotters therefore since this Paper was to be avowed and publick he judged such Expressions as were smooth and general were fittest for their Design This Petition was signed by him and a great many of the Nobility he also sent it up and down all the places where he or his Friends had Interest to get Subscriptions to it This was generally lookt upon as a well-couched Bond both by such as took it and those who refused it and yet this smoothing of the Expressions of it was represented by the Marquis's Enemies as done in prejudice to the Kings Service These Petitions were sent immediately to the King upon which great Complaints were made as if by these immediate Addresses the Judicatories of Scotland had been neglected but the King justified that part of it in an Answer he wrote to the Council and for the thing it self he resolved to keep Lowdon under the fear of it and therefore delayed to make any Answer In the end of February Her Majesty landed at Burlingtown whither the Earl of Montrose went to represent to Her the hazard of a new Rebellion in Scotland The Queen lands in England and Montrose waits on Her and offers his Service and that the only way to prevent it was to take the start of them before they were ready and with a great deal of forwardness offered his Service in that Design adding that he had great Assurances of a considerable Party who he knew would own the Kings Quarrel but he did not condescend on the particular way of prosecuting it so that the Queen was not satisfied of his being able to effectuate what he undertook Mean-while the Marquis hearing of Her Majesties Landing went to wait on Her to whom She proposed the Earl of Montrose's Offer but he studied by all means to divert Her from listning to it upon the following Grounds The King had settled a Treaty with Scotland The Marquis goe● to Her and dis●wades the precipitating a Rupture with Scotland and till that were violated on their part he knew His Majesty would never consent to a Rupture on his part and the King had so often and so lately in his Letters and Declarations protested he was resolved unalterably to adhere to the late Settlement that if he should now authorize the first Breach it would bring an indelible stain upon his Honour and create a perpetual Dif●idence in his Subjects of all his Concessions and Assurances He conf●ssed he had great Fears of Scotland and therefore would undertake for nothing but his own Faithfulness and Diligence yet he hoped to get things kept in Agitation all that Summer so that for that Year there should not be a Scotish Army in England But that was the utmost of his Hopes yet it was much fitter to spin out things as long as could be than to precipitate them by an over-hasty Rupture besides he could not see how any Hopes could be conceived from that design of Force There was never a Castle nor Strength in Scotland in the Kings Power to which they might retire The Vulgar were still at the Ministers devotion and by late and fresh experience they saw them all as one man resolved to die in the Defence of the Covenant and any handful of Gentry could be gathered together would signifie nothing but to expose their own Throats to their Enemies Rage and the Kings Authority to their Hatred and Scorn so there remained no hopes but in the Highland-men which he accounted as good as none Their two chief Heads where the Marquis●es of Huntley and Argyle the former was not to be much rested on being unable to do what so brisk an Undertaking required and they knew well what to expect from the other Besides any Companies could be brought down from the High-lands might do well enough for a while but no Order could be expected from them for assoon as they were loaded with Plunder and Spoil they would run away home to their
Breach might follow betwixt him and his Native Kingdom but on the other hand he could not permit them to go both because of the Reasons he had alledged and the Fears he had of their engaging with the Parliament and chiefly that all his Councellours and Officers at Oxford were so far against it that he heard it was whispered amongst them that they would all forsake him if he gave them leave since they held themselves assured that the Design of their going was to bring an Army from Scotland wherefore he intreated Lindsay would serve him in that Particular which he undertook frankly though he added he had small hopes since he had already attempted as much as he could with no Success But as he left His Majesty he made a Visit in his way to his Lodgings where he met the Earl of Crawford who told him plainly That though the King should consent to their going to London thither should they never get for a great many were resolved to lie in their way and cut them all to pieces ere they were many miles from Oxford This he confirmed to him with many Oaths adding that as the King knew nothing of it so it would not be in his power to hinder it and out of kindness to my Lord Lindsay he advised him not to go though the Chancellour went With this Lindsay came to his Lodgings and shewed the Lord Chancellour the hazard not only their Lives would be in but of the irreparable Breach would follow upon it which being considered by them it was resolved they should pass from their Desires and crave the Kings Commands for Scotland since they would not offend him by the importunity of an unacceptable Mediation which they accordingly did to His Majesties great satisfaction And so they took leave the Chancellour with the other Commissioners going for Scotland only Lindsay returned to London Upon this His Majesty sent all the Scotish Lords then at Court to Scotland to serve him there who were the Earls of Morton Roxburgh Kinnoul Annandale Lanerick and Carnwath but before they could be dispatched he sent Mr. Murray to Scotland with an account of his opinion about the Services his Friends might do him there who came by York and brought from the Queen the following Letter to the Marquis in answer to what he had written to Her Majesty which though written in French as all Her private Letters were yet I shall set down translated in English that all may run more smoothly Cousin I Received your Letter with the assurances of the Continuance of your A●fection of which I hold my self secure and make no doubt to see both the effects of it and of that which you promised me at your parting concerning my Lord of Argyle Will. Murray came yesterday from Oxford as for News from hence I refer you to Henry Jermine who will give you an account of them I shall only tell you that the Scotish Lords who were with the King are on their way for Scotland so likewise are the Commissioners that were with the King You will know from Will. Murray the Kings Answers to the Propositions which you made me at York I am very glad to know by Your Letter as likewise by what my Lord Montgomery hath told me the Protestations General Lesly makes concerning the Armies in Ireland and now when all the Kings Servants shall be together you must think of the means for preserving that Army for my part I know not what to say farther about it I am now upon my going to the King and hope to part hence within ten dayes If there be any thing that hath occurred of late I shall be glad to know it and that you will believe how much I am Your affectionate Cousin and Friend HENRIETA MARIA R. About the beginning of May Lowdon and the other Commissioners came down and a day after them came the Earl of Morton who told the Marquis They proceed to final Resolutions in Scotland that in a few days he should see the Earls of Roxburgh Kinnoul and Lanerick with the Kings Instructions but by reason of Kinnoul's Infirmity and Roxburgh's Age they moved slowly On the 21th of May the Iunto of the Church-party moved that there might be a Joynt-meeting of the Council and Conservatours of the Peace and Commissioners for Publick Burdens to consider of the present State of Affairs The Marquis and Morton resisted this all they could but they were over-ruled and so these Judicatories met to them it was proposed that considering the hazard the Nation was in by reason of Armies which were now levying in the North of England there was a necessity of putting the Kingdom in a posture of Defence which could not be done without a Convention of Estates or a Parliament wherefore it was moved that a Convention of Estates should be presently called The Marquis argued much against it shewing that this was to encroach upon the Kings Prerogative in the highest degree and so would be a direct Breach of the Peace with the King and against the Laws of the Land adding Was this all the Acknowledgment they gave the King for his late Gracious Concessions for this struck at the root of his Power In this he was seconded by my Lord Morton but most vigorously by Sir Thomas Hope the Kings Advocate who debated against it so fully from all the Laws and constant Practice of Scotland that no Answer could be alledged and indeed discharged his Duty so faithfully that the Marquis forgave him all former errors for that dayes Service But it was in vain to argue where the Resolution was taken on Interest more than Reason so it was carried that the Lord Chancellour should summon a Convention of Estates against the 22th of Iune A Convention of Estates is called This Resolution being taken they gave Advertisement of it to the King in the following Letter which all who Voted against it refused to sign Most Dread Sovereign THe extreme necessity of the Army sent from this Kingdom by Order from Your Majesty and the Parliament here against the Rebellion in Ireland the want of means for their necessary Supply through the not payment of the Arrears and Maintenance due to them by the Parliament of England the delay of the Payment of the Brotherly Assistance so necessary for the relief of the Common Burdens of this Kingdom by reason of the unhappy Distractions in England and the sense of the danger of Religion of Your Majesties Royal Person and of the Common Peace of Your Kingdoms have moved Your Majesties Privy Council the Commissioners for conserving the Peace and Common Burdens to joyn together in a Common Meeting for acquitting our selves in the Trust committed to us by Your Majesty and the Estates of Parliament and having found after long Debate and mature Deliberation that the Matters before-mentioned are of so Publick Concernment of so deep Importance and so great Weight that they cannot be determined by us in such a
Instrument of his producing it which was also refused so having taken witness of it he withdrew and none of these Lords would sit in the Convention any more After this some came to the Duke and asked his Advice if they should sit or not he suspected their Intentions were only to betray him and told them that his Practice declared his own Judgment which he wished the whole Convention had followed but for particular Advices he left it to themselves Others of their Friends were by them all thought necessary to sit still in the Convention to keep up delays in the approaching Treaty with the English but divers of their Friends being over-awed with the Power of the Church-party did forsake them Great Jealousies and Divisions in Scotland At the same time some of the Church-party who feared the Duke more than all that opposed them knowing the depth of his Designs and the smoothness of his Address took a strange Course to render him suspected to the Kings Party which was to let a Whisper fly out but so as they should not appear in it that he and they kept a Correspondence which was too easily believed by many who were already ill-affected to his Person and displeased with his Methods and the great forwardness of some for appearing in the Kings Service made them impatient of all Delays But the Duke sent divers Messages by Mr. Murray of the Bed-chamber who was at that time sent by His Majesty to Scotland to those of the Kings Friends who he saw were displeased with him to mediate a Reconciliation who dealt in it with all possible diligence but their Jealousies of the Duke were insuperable And a little after that in the end of Iuly some of them went to Court to represent to the King how ill His Affairs were managed by those He trusted them to and to offer their Servi●e if He would change his Tools and Methods The Duke upon this wrote to the King that he found himself betwixt two Tides of those who were perverse on the one hand and over-forward on the other yet he wished not only Life and Fortune but his Soul might perish if he left any thing unessayed and undone that was in his power for the Kings Service But all in which he could hope to prevail was Delays which to draw out longer than this Winter he could not promise And the Methods he used to draw out the Treaty by Delays were to set some on work to get Scotland to insist on their Demands for the rest of the Brotherly Assistance and for what was agreed to by the former years Treaty to be paid for the Army in Ireland before they engaged further all which amounted to a round Sum and he knew it would neither be soon nor easily advanced The time of the Assembly was also approaching wherefore they advised the King for his Advocates encouragement to Name him Commissioner for it The Convention did little at first only they begun a new Process against some alledged Incendiaries and named many Committees waiting still for the English Commissioners who were daily expected On the first of August came the Kings Advocat's Commission with his Instructions and a Letter to the Assembly His Instructions were First to assure the Assembly of the Kings constant adherence to the late Establishment and his willingness to encourage all good Motions He was to oppose all Treaty with England or Declarations about the Commotions there He was to oppose any new Commission of the Kirk He was to hinder any Censure to pass on those who had subscribed the Cross Petition On the second of August the Assembly sat down The General Assembly sit● but no curb could hold them so high was their Zeal and so void were they of respect of Persons that the opposition the Kings Commissioner gave them was little regarded for they went on at a great rate The Convention voted an hundred thousand Marks Sterling to be raised by a Loan this was a pretty Device to fine all that were not judged well-affected for they were appointed to lend Sums upon the Publick Faith which every one knew would turn to no Security for their Money On the ninth of August came the much-longed for Commissioners from England Commissioners come from England with a large Declaration from the Two Houses justifying all their Procedure and intreating the assistance of their Brethren in Scotland This was cheerfully welcomed by the Assembly and some did run so far back as to remember how Queen Elizabeth helped the Lords of the Congregation in the Scotish Reformation in opposition to the Queen Regent and therefore it was but Justice that they should now repay them with the like Assistance But that which generally prevailed to engage the greater part of the Nation in the War The Arguments that prevailed for entring in a League with them shall here be set down with that fulness and freedom that becomes a Historian The now Duke of Newcastle had raised a great Army in the North of England for the King upon which that Countrey was like to be for some time the seat of the War and though Berwick and Carlisle had no Garrisons in them according to the Treaty between both Kingdoms yet it was not to be doubted but either the one side or the other would see their advantage in putting Garrisons in these places upon which all in Scotland judged it necessary to raise some Forces otherwise the best Counties in Scotland which lye toward the South had been put under Contribution by those Garrisons and they had been all a prey to the prevailing Army yea and which side soever were either beaten or straitned it was not to be doubted but they would send in Parties to Scotland to bring Provisions and what else could be had therefore it was Concluded that a Force must be raised for the Security of Scotland This being laid down it was not uneasie to perswade all that it was better to carry in and maintain their Army in England than keep it in Scotland to be a vast Charge upon themselves And the Forces that were raised in the years 1639 and 40 had been very heavy on the chief Nobility and Gentry nor had the Brotherly Assistance which the Two Houses had Voted to be raised for their reimbursement come to their Supply the War of England intercepting it therefore they had generally a great mind to Quarter their Army in England Now this could not be done they keeping up the Neutrality they were then in therefore they must either joyn with the King or the Two Houses For joyning with the King many Arguments were used both from the Laws of Scotland that obliged all the Subjects to assist the King in his Wars and from the Covenant wherein they swore to assist Him in every cause in which His Majesties Honour was concerned There were also private assurances given not only to the leading Men but to the whole Nation of signal
receive of their Plagues and that the Lord may be one and his Name one in the three Kingdoms We shall with the same sincerity reality and constancy in our several Vocations endeavour with our Estates and Lives mutually to preserve the Rights and Priviledges of the Parliaments and the Liberties of the Kingdoms And to preserve and defend the Kings Majesties Person and Authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms That the World may bear witness with our Consciences of our Loyalty and that we have no thoughts or intentions to diminish His Majesties just Power and Greatness We shall also with all faithfulness endeavour the discovery of all such as have been or shall be Incendiaries Malignants or evil Instruments by hindering the Reformation of Religion dividing the King from his People or one of the Kingdoms from another or making any faction or parties amongst the People contrary to this League and Covenant That they may be brought to publick Trial and receive condign Punishment as the degree of their Offences shall require or deserve or the Supreme Iudicatories of both Kingdoms respectively or others having power from them for that effect shall judge convenient And whereas the happiness of a blessed Peace between these Kingdoms denyed in former times to our Progenitors is by the good Providence of GOD granted unto us and hath been lately concluded and settled by both Parliaments We shall each one of us according to our place and interest endeavour that they may remain conjoyned in a firm Peace and Vnion to all posterity and that Iustice may be done upon the wilful opposers thereof in manner expressed in the precedent Article We shall also according to our places and callings in this common cause of Religion Liberty and Peace of the Kingdoms assist and defend all those that enter into this League and Covenant in the maintaining and pursuing And shall not suffer our selves directly or indirectly by whatsoever combination perswasion or terrour to be divided and withdrawn from this blessed Vnion and Conjunction whether ●o make de●ection to the contrary part or to give our selves to a detestable indifferency or neutrality in this Cause which so much concerneth the Glory of GOD the Good of the Kingdoms and Honour of the King But shall all the days of our lives zealously and constantly contin●e therein against all opposition and promote the same according to our power against all ●ets and Impediments whatsoever And what we are not able our selves to suppress or overcome we shall reveal and make known that it may be fully prevented or removed And which we shall do as in the sight of God And because these Kingdoms are guilty of many sins and provocations against GOD and his Son Iesus Christ as is too manifest by our present distresses and dangers the fruits thereof We profess and declare before GOD and the World our unfained desire to be humbled for our own sins and for the sins of these Kingdoms especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel that we have not laboured for the purity and power thereof and that we have not endeavoured to receive Christ in our hearts to walk worthy of him in our li●es which are the causes of other sins and transgre●sions so much abounding amongst us And our true and unfained purpose des●re and endeavo●r for our selves and all others under our power and charge both in publick and in private in all Duties we owe to God and Man to amend our lives and each one to go before another in the example of a real Reformation That the Lord may turn away his wrath and he●vy indignation and establish these Churches and Kingdoms in Truth and Peace And this Covenant we make in the presence of Almighty GOD the Searcher of all hearts with a true intention to perform the same as we shall answer at that great Day when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed Most humbly beseeching the Lord to strengthen us by his Holy Spirit for th●● end and to bless our desires and proceedings with such success as may be deliverance and safety to his People and encouragement to other Christian Churches groaning under or in danger of Antichristian Tyranny to joyn in the same or like Association and Covenant To the Glory of GOD the Enlargement of the Kingdom of Iesus Christ and the peace and tranquility of Christ●an Kingdoms and Commonwealths This was offered to the Assembly on the 17th of August The Censures that generally were passed on it and after it was publickly read Mr. Henderson being then Moderator had a long Speech about it Then it was read the second time and many of the most eminent Ministers and Lay-Elders were desired to deliver their Opinions about it who did all magnifie it highly and though the Kings Commissioner pressed a Delay till at least it were communicated to the King yet the approving it was put to the Vote and carried unanimously and they ordered the Lord Maitland the now Duke of Lauderdale and Mr. Henderson and Mr. Gillespy to carry it up to the Two Houses at Westminster On the same day it was also approved in the Convention Wise Obfervers wondered to see a matter of that Importance carried through upon so little Deliberation or Debate It was thoug●t strange to see all their Consciences of such a size so exactly to agree as the several Wheels of a Clock which made all apprehend there was some first Mover that directed all those other Motions this by the one Party was imputed to Gods extraordinary Providence but by others to the Power and Policy of the Leaders and the simplicity and fear of the rest One Article of it was thought strange that one Government of the Church was abjured but none sworn to in its place for England this was not the fault of the Scots who designed nothing so much as to see Presbytery established in England But the English Commissioners would not hear of that and by that General words of Reforming according to the Word of God cast in by Sir Henry Vane thought themselves well-secured from the inroads of the Scotish Presbytery and in the very contriving of that Article they studied to out-wit one another for the Scots thought the next words of Reforming according to the Practice of the best Reformed Churches made sure game for the Scotish Model since they counted it indisputable that Scotland could not miss that Character Those of Scotland would have had Episcopacy abjured as simply unlawful but those of England would not condemn that Order which had merited so much Glory in the whole Christian Church therefore the second Article was so conceived that it might import only an Abolition of the present Model of England and it was so declared both in the Assembly of Divines and in the Two Houses of Parliament when they swore it The Scots either perceived not this Change or were
when the Convention sat the Defendant did often and no way ambiguously See p. 224. but very plainly declare he did not own their Authority nor would give obedience to any of their Acts that were beyond the Bounds prefixed in His Majesties Letter upon which he withdrew with divers of his Friends and did advise and prevail on many to follow his Example It is true some came and asked his Advice of whose Fidelity he had no reason to be assured judging not without grounds that they came to him on design to trepan him and therefore he told them that for his own part he was resolved not to acknowledg their Authority nor give obedience to their Commands by which they might easily judge what he would advise seeing his Practice It is also false that the Defendant procured from His Majesty an allowance to that Convention since the Letter His Majesty wrote was so far from allowing it that it particularly challenged the Illegality and Nullity of that Meeting See p. 232. and the Convention was so far from thinking themselves Authorised by it that they refused to stand to it or so much as to put it on Record It is also false that any such Offers as are vainly and without truth said to have been made to Mr. Murray were ever brought by him to the Defendant or others intrusted with him he was indeed imployed to deal with them to overcome their untoward Jealousies and ambitious Vanity but with no success as he reported and is ready to make good but they venting their implacable Hatred and ill-grounded Jealousies of His Majesties faithful Servants left the Kingdom in the Summer and possessed many with such Prejudices that they infinitely retarded His Majesties Service and divided the small Party that adhered to him yet His Majesty sustained no Prejudice from Scotland all that year which was the uttermost that ever the Defendant gave His Majesty any hope of But it is most basely false that the Defendant did bring the Convention of Estates to the wished period since he did all that was in his power to hinder its Sitting and to get it broken up assoon as it sat down It is also false that the Defendant was on the design of raising the Army in Scotland which he opposed by all the probable and honest ways were in his power and was ever ready upon the least appearances or hopes of Success to have hazarded his Life and Fortune to hinder it and therefore sent frequently to England for those Supplies without which their Attempt could signifie nothing but the exposing the Kings Party in Scotland to the scorn and malice of their Enemies But the necessity of His Majesties Affairs in England did so retard the Answers that opportunities were lost and the other Party had prevailed over all which forced the Defendant to fly out of that Kingdom Order being given for seizing on his Estate and taking and imprisoning his Person and yet Affairs there are not quite desperate but the Defendant had many very probable Propositions to have offered to His Majesty the Maintaining of whose Prosperity and Authority hath been the constant designofhis whole Life Charge That he hath endeavoured to set on foot a Title to the Crown of Scotland Article 8. having Treated with Forreign Princes touching his Claim thereunto and desired their Aid and Assistance to his Right protecting and maintaining such as wrote Treatises in his behalf and Claim to the Crown Besides all which particulars of his treacherous sowing of Sedition 'twixt His Majesty and His Subjects his undervaluing and reviling his own Sacred Person his fomenting all the unhappy Differences betwixt King and People his exciting of each against the other his pouring of oyl into the fire betwixt them both his direct Attempts upon the Crown and intentions to Vsurp his late Carriage doth give too evident a Character of his invincible Disloyalty as particularly his treacherous Carriage before in the time and at the late Convention his juggling in the business of the Counterpetition and that of the late pretended Bond which are so notorious Truths and so evidently to be instructed by all His Majesties good Subjects but more particularly by those with whom by His Majesties special Command he kept a seeming Correspondence Besides divers other circumstances whereby it may be clearly demonstrated that he is of the Party with them that have raised this Rebellion in Scotland namely that in the Instructions given by that Faction to the Earl of Lowthian in his late French Negotiation one of the particulars earnestly recommended to him was to desire of the Crown of France Restitution of the Dutchy of Chastleherault to him which in all probability they would never have done in his favour if they had taken him for an Enemy to their designs and purposes Last of all it is craved that in respect of his unexpected Arrival here there may be liberty to add and amplifie this Charge as occasion shall offer One particular omitted above is not amiss to be here inserted at what time the business of the Scotish Covenant was at the greatest height a distressed Gentleman of Scotland Sir John Ferguson desired the Loan of some Money from Sir John Hamilton of Broomhill whose Relation and Interest every way to the Duke are known to every one who knows them both who answered him in flat terms he would neither give nor lend him a penny except he and his Sons would bind themselves to go home and sign the Covenant upon which Condition he offered to lend him what he sought We do engage from our faithful respects to His Majesties Service without any consideration or interest else whatsoever to make good this Charge some of the weightiest points by several Witnesses and all the rest by some and strong Probabilities Answer The Answer to the eighth Article To the eighth Article the Defendant says here lies the Master-piece of his Enemies Malice and Calumny to charge him with a point treasonable in the highest degree without offering one circumstance to make the Truth of it appear probable and such publick things as the setting on foot a pretence to the Crown the Treating with Forreign Princes touching his Claim to it the Authorising and Protecting of any who wrote in defence of his Title must have been notour and known things and yet no particular is here named which clearly shews the Forgery of the whole on design to beget in His Majesty Jealousies of the Defendant who knows of no such Title to the Crown but acknowledges His Majestie 's and His Posteritie's whom he prays God to preserve their undoubted Right to the Crown And as the Defendant acknowledgeth the great Honour of his Relation to the Royal Blood so there is no more reason to Charge him on that account than to Charge any others who are more nearly related to His Majesty as are all the Noble branches of the Prince Elector Palatin's Family But as the Honour of
small Trouble except the loss of some Time which this lingring Course would have cost whereas if they fought with them it was to be feared that the Irish with some Scotish Highlanders and other Gentlemen that joyned with Montrose being desperate would be too hard for such raw Souldiers as would be drawn together to oppose them for the Covenanters resolved not to bring any of their Forces out of England or Ireland till they were forced to it by necessity Besides the Plague at that time had broken in upon Scotland and swept away many thousands which filled all Places with so much fear and horrour that the hearts and hands of all did fail them and so a faint Resistance was to be expected in such a general Consternation But the more forward did not relish these Advices and many Church-men being full of hopes of Success and the opinion of Gods Favour to their Way were for engaging into present Action This Advice was plausible for they hoped for a speedy issue of it whereas Delays drew a vast expence on the Nation This their errour cost them dear and opened a way for a great deal of Honour to Montrose who managed his small Force with as much Conduct as Success and carried all down before him with a torrent of Victories till at length after his last Victory at Kilsyth the High-landers loaded with Prey would needs go home to their Lurking-holes which he could not resist his Authority over them being but precarious And instead of retiring with them into the Hills he came down into the South-Country with the little handful that adhered to him in hopes that many should have flockt about his Victorious Standard but he was generally hated by the Vulgar so powerfully had the Excommunications and Thunders of the Church wrought upon them Besides many Outrages had been committed by his Irish and High-land Souldiers which had been indeed resisted by him as much as was possible but having no Pay to give them he durst not exercise that severity of Martial Discipline which had been otherwise necessary Yet all was imputed to his Orders by his Enemies which made him very odious to the generality of those who knew him not and hence it was that wise men did not hope for a good account of the Kings Affairs from this Design therefore he was not assisted with such Forces as he had promised himself from the Kings Friends in the South-Countrey But he was become too secure of Victory and began to apprehend the Fame of his former Conquests was able to scatter any Force could be brought against him therefore notwithstanding some Advertisements he had of Lieutenant General Lesley's coming down with a good Body of Horse from the Scotish Army in England he still remained in the low Countrey till he was surprized and routed of a sudden Then he went again to the Hills but there he saw how groundless it was to expect any real Aid from those wild and disorderly People he traversed to and again through the Hills sparing neither Labour Industry nor Art to draw together new Forces but was never able to effectuat it a small Body of a few hundreds being all the Strength he could ever make only he was in hopes of great matters And thus it continued till this time that the Scotish Commissioners moved the King for recalling his Commission His Majesty was willing to grant this only he desired he might have liberty to send for him with a Safe-conduct and that he might be suffered to kiss his Hand after which he should go beyond Sea never again to return without their Consent But to this they would not hearken wherefore His Majesty being constrained to yield to all their Demands His Majesty call in his Commissions to Montrose did by Proclamation call in his Commission and sent a Gentleman with Orders to him and such as were with him to lay down their Arms immediately To this Montrose answered by a Dispatch yet extant dated the second of Iune that as he had proposed nothing to himself in all he had done but His Majesties Service so he was not now to dispute his Obedience to His Commands Only he desired that Security might be granted for those Gentlemen who had hazarded their Lives for the Kings Service that they might not be laid open to the Fury of their Enemies but might live at quiet in their own Houses and as for such as were counted unpardonable he desired they might have Passes to go beyond Seas and at this it stuck for some time When this was done His Majesty began to be importuned from all hands to settle Religion according to the Covenant The King is much pressed to take the Covenant Addresses being made to him for that effect both from the Army the Commissioners sent from Scotland the Committee of Estates in Scotland and the Commissioners from the General Assembly But to all those the King answered That when he was satisfied in Conscience with the lawfulness of what they desired then but never till then could he grant their Demands wherefore he said he was willing to enter in Conference with any they should appoint Protesting that if he got satisfaction to his Conscience in those two Points the one being that he judged Episcopacy of Divine Appointment and the other that by his Coronation-Oath in England he was tied to the Defence of the Church as it was then established he should not be ashamed to change his Iudgement and alter his Resolutions Whereupon Mr. Henderson was pitched upon as the man of greatest Abilities and Discretion for that task and during the Month of Iune Papers passed to and again betwixt the King and him of which they being so often published I shall say no more but that from these it appears had His Majesties Armes been as strong as his Reason was he had been every way unconquerable since none have the dis-ingenuity to deny the great advantages His Majesty had in all these Writings And this was when the help of his Chaplains could not be suspected they being so far from him And it is indeed strange to see a Prince not only able to hold up with but so far to outrun so great a Theologue in a Controversie which had exercised his thoughts and studies for so many years And that the King drew with his own Hand all his Papers without the help of any is averred by the Person who alone was privy to the interchanging of them that worthy and accomplished Gentleman Sir Robert Murray who at that time was known to His Majesty and he discovering in him those great parts and excellent qualities that recommended him to the love and esteem of all vertuous persons that knew him honoured him with a great deal of Freedom and it was believed few were more in the Kings Favour than he was him therefore did His Majesty imploy in that exchange of Papers being all written with his own Hand and in much less
time than Mr. Henderson did his They were given by His Majesty to Sir Robert Murray to transcribe the Copies under Sir Robert Murray's hand were by him delivered to Mr. Henderson and Mr. Henderson's hand not being so legible as his he by the Kings Appointment transcribed them for His Majesty and by His Majesties permission kept Mr. Henderson's Papers and the Copies of the Kings as was signified to the Writer by himself a few days before His much-lamented Death All this while they were consulting at Westminster They consult at VVestminster about Propositions to be made to the King about the Propositions to be sent to His Majesty for now the Independent Party begun to prevail and as they were certainly the strongest in the English Army so they had a great Party in the House of Commons Their Design was to perpetuate a Military Power in their own hands and to set up a Toleration of all Sects and so the Propositions at Vxbridge were much altered The Scotish Commissioners The Scotish Commissioners are for making them easie to the King in the Papers they gave in concerning the Propositions first complained That the Settling of Religion was conceived in general Terms and that no particulars about Vniformity of Religion were laid down next they opposed much the Propositions about the Militia desiring that no new ones differing from what had been offered at Uxbridge might be made that so it might appear they were not taking advantages from the Straits His Majesty was in to diminish His Iust Power and Greatness to which they were bound both by Covenant and Treaties and which had been often repeated in all their Declarations adding that they could not consent to any Proposition that should take from their Soveraign the Power of Protecting and Defending His Subjects which necessarily followed were the Militia put into the hands of the Parliament wherefore they pressed that the Militia might not be settled in the hands of the Parliament but of the King and Parliament jointly and so consigned to such Commissioners of both Kingdoms as should be chosen by the King and them together This they backed with a Paper Many Papers past betwixt them and the Two Houses containing the Extracts and Citations of the former Declarations and Papers emitted by Both Houses to the same purpose both about Uniformity of Religion and the Maintaining the Kings Authority even in the matter of the Militia which was a long and smart Paper They also in another Paper appealed to all the Treaties that had been betwixt the Kingdoms since the beginning of that War wherein the Maintenance of the Kings Just Power had still been laid down as a ground on which they were to proceed in order to a Peace But upon this the Independent Party begun to say that the Agreement made with Scotland An. 1643. was no Treaty and that the Parliament was not bound to make good what was agreed to in it And this drew from the Scotish Commissioners another large Paper proving That to be a Treaty wherein they did shew How that the Kingdom of Scotland had engaged both in the Irish and English War upon the invitation the Two Houses sent them by Commi●sioners impowered with ample Credentials Signed by the two Speakers which gave them power to Treat and conclude both about the Scotish Army then in Ireland and the Army they invited to come to their Assistance in England upon which an Agreement was treated and concluded betwixt the Committee of Estates in Scotland and the Commissioners from England and Signed by them and so transmitted to the Two Houses who by frequent Letters to Scotland expressed their Ratification of that Agreement and whereas in some of the Articles then Agreed to there was an Alternative concerning the Scotish Army then in Ireland their Stay there or their Transportation upon which the Independents founded their Allegation that matters were not finally concluded they did shew how false that was since that Alternative was emitted in their Agreement then made to the Determination of the Two Houses who thereupon declared by repeated Letters to what branch of it they agreed So they made it appear that no obligation could be brought on any State by any Treaty that was wanting in that But at length the Propositions were all agreed on The Propositions are agreed on and the Scotish Commissioners though they opposed that Article of the Militia yet gave way to it rather than hazard on a Rupture The Propositions being so oft in Print need not be at length set down only the Heads of them follow taken from the Original that was delivered to the King which he gave to the Earl of Lanerick and is among his Papers FIrst The annulling of all Oaths The Heads of them and Declarations against the Parliaments and Kingdoms was desired The next five Propositions were about establishing the Covenant the Abolition of Episcopacy and Liturgy and the Kings taking and authorizing the Covenant The next five were against Popery and Papists The 12th was for the observation of the Lords Day and against Pluralities and Nonresidences and about Vniversities 13 That the Militia should be in the hands of the Parliament for 20 years who should also have a power to raise Money and that after those years the Two Houses might raise what Forces they pleased by their Bills though His Majesty gave not his assent to them and that the Rights of the City of London should be confirmed 14 That all Honours and other Writs passed under the great Seal since it was taken away from Westminster should be annulled 15 That the Treaties betwixt England and Scotland should be ratified 16 Delinquents were to be excepted from the general Oblivion and those were put in several Classes and accordingly several Punishments designed against them 17 The late Cessation granted by the King in Ireland to be annulled and the management of that War to be remitted to the Two Houses The 18 was about the City of London 19 That all Writs passed under the Parliaments Great Seal should be in force In Iuly the Duke came to Newcastle to wait on His Majesty The Duke waits on the King and is well received by him and and when he first kissed the Kings Hand His Majesty and he blushed at once and as the Duke was retiring back with a little Confusion into the croud that was in the Room the King asked if he was afraid to come near him upon which he came to the King and they entred into a large Conversation together wherein His Majesty expressed the sense he had of his long Sufferings in terms so full of affection that he not only brake through all of his Resentments but set a new edge again upon his old Affection and Duty He told him He ever had Iudged him Innocent as to the bulk of things though he confessed there were some particulars he was not so well satisfied with but that his Restrain was extorted from
hazards The Propositions were brought from the Two Houses about the middle of Iuly and a speedy answer was craved to them The Propositions are brought to the King But for an account of His Majesties Thoughts of them I cannot give it better than by setting down a written account of them in a Letter sent to the Earl of Lauderdale at His Majesties Command by Sir Robert Murray THe Duty which I conceive every good Subject owes His Majesties first Thoughts of them to use his utmost Endeavours how weak soever for the furtherance of the happy Peace of these afflicted Kingdoms hath made me take the boldness to talk with the King upon the Propositions to see how far he can be induced to yield to them And although to every particular I cannot promise you an exact account because there are divers things in them which neither He nor I understand yet to the main Points I shall and such as I hope may be a good ground-work for happy Conclusions First then for Religion I find His Majesty really Conscientious and not superstitiously Scrupulous wherefore until He be better satisfied the uttermost He can be brought to is that He will be content that Presbyterial Government be generally established within this Kingdom by Act of Parliament for three years provided that He and all those of His Opinion may freely enjoy their Consciences according to the practices in Queen Elizabeth 's and King James 's Times Now how to do this would be too long for a Letter but as there are Examples so I doubt not to shew you more than one way to do it so willing ears may be brought to such a Motion and I assure you His Majesty is most willing to hearken and seek after information to the end He may be satisfied how with a safe Conscience He may give you full satisfaction herein but this Proviso that His Majesty grants will probably be but temporary For the Militia I can neither see inclinations in His Majesty to relinquish nor can I find Arguments to perswade him to it nevertheless I perceive so great inclinations in Him to strain to the uttermost to give His Subjects all just Satisfaction especially in what concerns the securing of their Fears that He will be content for Ten years the Two Houses should dispose of the Militia by Act of Parliament in the hands of such and so many persons as they shall name as likewise to change them within the said time and appoint others in their Places as they shall think fit but after the expiration of the said Time to return to the Crown as Queen Elizabeth and King James enjoyed it Concerning Delinquents His Majesties Opinion is that a good Act of Oblivion is the best way to bind up a Peace after Intestine Troubles it having been the Wisdom of other Kingdoms most usually and with good success to grant general Pardons with very few or no Exceptions whereby the numerous Discontentments of all sorts of People which are the seeds and fuel to future Disorders might be totally extinguished and His Majesty further conceives that He cannot desert so many gallant Persons of Condition and Fortune who have engaged themselves with Him only out of a sense of Duty without a perpetual and irrecoverable Dishonour As for Offices though His Majesty judges that the Disposal of them is a necessary Flower of the Crown yet He is content for this time to accept of the Nomination of them from the Two Houses to be enjoyed by these persons quam diu se bene gesserint so that after Vacancies they return to be disposed of as before I unwillingly mention Ireland because His Majesties Publick Faith being engaged how dare I speak to Him to violate that which is and must be all our Security but even in this will I pawn my Life He will prove Himself a zealous Protector of Protestants and a constant Maintainer of Sovereign Power My Conclusion is that if upon these grounds a Conference may be had betwixt His Majesty and the Two Houses I will engage any thing that an Honest man can that these Kingdoms will be shortly happy in a firm Peace which if it should fail on our part for our not hearing of our Soveraign it would be an unparalelled Misfortune not without Infamy These were His Majesties private Thoughts but His publick Answer inclined more to a Denial which when it was brought to Westminster was entertained both with Joy and Sorrow The King does not yield to the Propositions according to the inclinations of the several Parties The Independents and those of the Army feared nothing so much as the Kings granting them for in that case they saw there could be no colour for keeping up an Army and in the House of Commons when Thanks were Voted to the Commissioners that had been with the King for their pains one Member whispered another in the ear that they owed more Thanks to the King than any body and in another corner an honest Member saying to another what shall become of us since the King refuseth these Propositions the other answered nay what had become of us if He had granted them The Independent Party upon this moved The Houses go on to high Resolutions but are stopped by the Scotish Commissioners that no more Addresses should be made and that His Majesties Person should be demanded and the Army commanded Northward to see it executed which had been infallibly done had not the Scotish Commissioners given them in some Papers complaining of many Violations of the Treaty and the Arrears due to the Army The King had also desired a Personal Treaty near London and the Scots seconded it but the obtaining it was impossible for all this time the Scotish Commissioners and the English whereof the greatest part were of the Independent Faction were in no good terms As for the Arrears of their Pay the Two Houses talked of offering five hundred thousand pounds Sterling whereof an hundred and fifty thousand should be paid presently that so they might be rid of their Army which they said was no more necessary in England and a Complaint being made against some who spoke and wrote in prejudice of the Scotish Nation an Ordinance was debated for punishing them The Independents Imployed all their Strength against it Cromwell spoke most vehemently that it was to discourage their Friends and to encourage their Enemies but Hollis took him up so sharply for calling base Libellers Friends that he was glad to recant When it went to the Vote it run near an equality for 102 were against it and 132 for it so quickly were the Services of their dear Brethren of Scotland forgotten At this time the King sent my Lords of Argyle The King employes Argyle at London for obtaining a Personal Treaty Lowdon and Dumfermline to London Their Instructions were to deal for a Personal Treaty near London to get some of the Kings faithfullest Servants to be suffered
Discontent Constructions which are not possible for him to make but obvious to malevolent humours That although you should not be suspected to be any ways accessory to disloyal Courses it will be said you are one of those who could have best hindred them That your Countrey and Friends may say you have deserted them in their greatest Exigences and that Differences may be reconciled betwixt His Majesty and His Subjects by the endeavours of others These Commands were both peremptory and obliging so that they could not fail of conquering all his Resistance and carrying his Obedience after them which were strengthened from the Letter he had at that same time from Her Majesty which follows Cousin THe account the King hath given me of your A●fection for His Interest and those marks of it which from other hands have met me do so sensibly affect me that without any difficulty or scruple I do now entertain you with my Acknowledgments and Resentments of it before I have heard from you and I assure you of the satisfaction I shall ever have of the Continuance of it from you which I shall desire may be as intire and full as the Returns I shall study to make to you being resolved to lay hold on all occasi●ns by which I may discover my Friendship for you and to express the Esteem I have of your Friendship by all means that may depend on my cares which I shall imploy in giving you day by day new Proofs that I am and ever shall be Your affectionate Cousin and Friend HENRIETA MARIA R. St. Germanes 22th September Upon these Intreaties and Assurances he was made to change his purpose though he could not so easily part with his Melancholy thoughts which he expressed in this following Letter May it please Your Sacred Majesty THe Reasons You were pleased to offer to my Brother And writes to the King and Sir Robert Murray for diverting my Resolution of leaving Your Majesties Dominions at this time were I confess of strength enough to have fixed me in any place of the World where Your Majesties Service was concerned but now seeing Your Majesty hath honoured me so much as by Your Gracious Letter Your Self to shew me still Your dislike thereof how dare I dispute what Your Majesty thinks unfit and now Sir the Thoughts I formerly had of leaving as it were the World because I would not be a witness of what I feared Your Majesties Fall since as I conceive I could not be instrumental to Your Service or Preservation upon the Grounds Your Majesty went on shall be changed into a Resolution of being most miserable in Your Dominions if it shall not please God to deliver You out of those Difficulties Your Majesty is in for I take God to witness upon Your Happiness depends my greatest worldly Ioy how unfortunately soever I have of late been misunderstood And though I cannot promise my self so much good Fortune as to prove useful to Your Majesty yet I dare and do engage for a cheerful Willingness and perfect Fidelity in Your Majesties Service and trust that God in his Mercy will so direct Your Majesty as by timeously granting the now necessary and most pressing Demands of Your Kingdoms the great Evils will be prevented that threaten Your Sacred Self the Queens Majesty and Your Royal Posterity and likewise that of having any other Guard to attend Your Royal Person than such as shall be approved of by You or Your Majesties being necessitated to retire into Scotland vpon the return of the Scotish Army where I apprehend Your Majesties Entertainment will not answer Your Expectation nor prove at all advantagious to Your Service More I will not presume to say but shall really study in all things to serve Your Majesty and ever give such ready Obedience to Your Commands as becometh Your Majesties most faithful most loyal and most obedient Subject and Servant HAMILTON Kinneel 6th Octob. 1646. A day or two after His Majesty received this Letter He wrote the following Letter to my Lord Lanerick the Post-script whereof seems to relate to the Letter he had received from his Brother Lanerick BEfore now I had not matter to write to you and now I have so much that I shall say the less leaving this inclosed to speak for me But thus much I must assure you of that I have herein gone the utmost length as you call it to give all possible Satisfaction for upon my word one jot further cannot be gone by Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle 15th Octob. 1646. POSTSCRIPT Tell your Brother that it were a fault to him to trouble my Self in Complementing with him and indeed to either of you any ways to doubt but that you will make the best use you may of what I now send you for my Service The inclosed Paper is to be found among His Majesties printed Messages to the Two Houses and therefore it is not inserted here But the satisfaction the King had in the Dukes consenting to stay still in Scotland appears by the end of the next Letter he wrote to himself Hamilton THis is rather to perform my Promise to a Lady than that I believe it to be needful in respect of you for I know you naturally so much favour all my Friends and know so well the great Estimation I have of the Earl of Brainford beside what hath been told you concerning him by your Brother Lanerick by my Directions that I am certain without this you will favour his business what you can and since I am writing I must say that there is no particular Mans business wherein you can give me so much Contentment as this of which I need say no more but only that you will shew his Wife that my Recommendation to you of her Lords Affairs is real and hearty Nor can I end this without taking notice to you of the Contentment I had that my last Letter to you had the wished for operation for besides the obtaining my end which several ways is satisfactorily useful to Me I see that all men have not forsaken Reason or at least that I am sometimes in the Right as I am confident you will make appear the great Reason I have to be Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. But to return to Publick Affairs the Duke at his coming to Scotland The Duke labours to engage Scotland for a Personal Treaty procured new Instructions to be sent to their Commissioners at London to press a Personal Treaty and that the King might be with Safety and Honour in England and that it might be declared that the Government of England should still continue according to the Fundamental Laws The chief business at Westminster was to be rid of their Brethren of Scotland wherefore they fell a-treating about the Removal of the Army and the Delivery of the Garrisons The Scots demanded five hundred thousand pounds Sterl●ng and of that Sum two hundred thousand pound
least you will find that according to My Professions I am Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. His Majesty also expressed His Concerns for Traquair in the following Letter Lanerick ALbeit I am confident that you will further all My Friends Affairs yet I must not be so negligent in Traquair's behalf as not to name his business to you for admittance to his Place in Parliament of which I will say no more but you know his Sufferings for Me and this is particularly recommended to you by Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle 17th November 1646. POSTSCRIPT I account writing to you or your Brother all one They consult in Scotland how to dispose of their Armies But the main Business was what to do with their Armies that were in England The Kingdom was groaning under a heavy and unsupportable Burden for their Maintenance so disbanding was a very plausible Motion and all desired that only such Forces should be kept up as were necessary for the Preservation and Security of Scotland The Duke and his Brother regrated much that so many Gallant Men should be disbanded who might be very useful for the Kings Service therefore they opposed all these Propositions arguing that till a final Peace were settl●d in England they might look for no Security to Scotland And in their Letters to His Majesty they continued to represent the desperate estate of Affairs if he did not quickly satisfie them in the business of Religion and that the Money for the Pay of the Army was now coming in daily at London and would be quickly ready and after that was sent down they could not keep the Army any longer in England without a present Breach to which they found no inclinations in the Scotish Parliament as long as they were not satisfied in what was so earnestly desired But the King was firm to his first Resolution Master Lesley at his return to the King brought him such assurances of the Affection and Duty of both the Brothers that the next Dispatch carried the following Letters to them Hamilton I Remember yet so much Latine as an old Proverb comes to which is quod valde volumus id sacile credimus This I apply to Robin Lesley's report of your Carriage in My present Service concerning which I will only say that you shall not more certainly make good what he hath promised Me in your Name than I will to you what he hath said in Mine and even in something by way of speaking beyond My Power I doubt not but to make it good as concerning your French particular But I shall leave all things not only of this nature to this honest Bearers relation but likewise whatsoever else may concern the Service of Your most assured real faithful constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle 24th Nov. 1646. Lanerick I Have according to your Advice given a quick Return to this Trusty Bearer having instructed him fully in what I conceive necessary to My Affairs wherein in many things I have given him a Latitude to govern them according to your Directions wherefore I will say no more because if I should enter into Particulars I would not know how to end but that with Contentment I find daily more and more cause to be Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle 24th November 1646. POSTSCRIPT I recommend particularly the Earl of Morton's Affairs Matters were now ripening unto much Confusion and Mischief which made His Majesty think of a full Answer to the Propositions but before He sent it to London He communicated it to my Lord Lanerick in the following Letter Newcastle 4th Decemb. 1646. Lanerick The Kings Letter about His Answer to the Propositions ACcording to My Promise by little Nobs I send you here inclosed the Answer which I have resolved to send to London wherein you will find a Clause in favour of the Independents to wit the Forbearance I give to those who have Scruples of Conscience and indeed I did it purposely to make what I send relish the better with that kind of People But if My Native Subjects will so countenance this Answer that I may be sure they will stick to Me in what concerns My Temporal Power I will not only expunge that Clause but likewise make what Declarations I shall be desired against the Independents and that really without any reserve or equivocation yet know that no Perswasion or Threatning whatsoever shall make Me alter a tittle of any thing else in it nor that neither but upon these Assurances The end therefore why I send you this before it go to the English Parliament is to try before-hand how I can procure it to be countenanced by My Scotish Friends for which you are to use all possible industry not seeking a full Approbation but taking what you can get absolutely commanding you not to hazard it in a Publick Way unless you be sure that I shall receive no rub in it For this I conceive it were a wrong to you to use any Arguments to make you do your best but to tell you this is Coup de partie assuring you that I shall not judge you by the Event but by your Endeavours which I am confident will be according to your Professions and for Gods sake do not so much as expect much less linger after any other or further matter from Me whereby to serve Me in this great Business for upon the Faith of a Christian you shall have no more than what is now laid before you And know that I rather expect the worse than the better Event of things being resolved by the Grace of God and without the least repining at him to suffer any thing that Injury can put upon Me rather than sin against My Conscience of which upon My credit you see the furthest Extent in relation to the present Affairs I say no more but difficilia quae pulchra and so God bless your Endeavours Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. POSTSCRIPT In order to that I have written and sent you herein I have commanded this Trusty Bearer Sir James Hamilton to tell you as many things as I can remember whom I desire you to return to Me or some other Trusty Messenger assoon as you may with what I am to expect from thence The inclosed Paper is marked on the back by the Kings Hand thus The Answer to the Propositions which I have resolved to send to London which I insert because it is not among His Majesties Printed Messages His Majesties Answer to the Propositions tendered to Him by the Commissioners from the Lords and Commons in the Parliament of England at Westminster and the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland CHARLES R. AS it is His Majesties chief desire to make such a Return to the Propositions The Kings Answer to the Propositions as may speedily produce a blessed firm and lasting Peace in all His Dominions so He hath employed His uttermost endeavours
over-●wed both Parliament and City they began to levy new Forces but assoon as they withdrew from London the Citizens of London came in great numbers to Westminster and petitioned to have their Militia settled again according to their former Votes which being granted the Parliament next day was at liberty and the Secluded Members returned About the end of Iuly the Earl of Lauderdale going to wait on His Majesty who was then at Wooburn was not only hindred access but by the Violence of the Souldiers carried away and say or complain what he would of the Violation of the Treaty with Scotland and the Law of Nations by that Affront put upon a Publick Minister of another Kingdom he could not prevail but was forced to be gone After this the King was Voted to come to London But the Army instead of Obedience came thither again and by the interposition of some treacherous People got the City surrendred to them whereupon they marched through it in Triumph with Lawrels in their Hats and came to Westminster bringing with them the two Speakers and some other Members of their Party who had run away from the Parliament pretending Fear though no appearance of it had been in the Proceedings of the Parliament Fairfax was declared Captain-General of all England Constable of the Tower of London and Commander of all the Garisons and then they fell to the Purging of the House And besides the forcing the eleven Members to flee seven of the Lords were also impeached and all Orders that past in the absence of the Speakers were repealed yet this was not carried but upon a fortnights Debate Divers of the City of London with the Mayor and some Aldermen were likewise charged and imprisoned and all this was upon a general Accusation of their designs to raise a new War Those in Scotland being advertised by their Commissioners of all that passed failed not to make good use of it This is resented in Scotland to stir up the Affection and Duty of all to appear for His Majesty which prevailed generally and even the Ministers begun both from their Pulpits and by their Remonstrances to complain of the Prevailings of the Sectarian Party and of the Force that was put on the Kings Person But the old language of the Covenant and Presbytery was still in their mouths yet all were pretty forward for a real Resentment of the late Disorders in England Only Mr. George Gillespie who was indeed of good parts but bold beyond all measure withstood these Inclinations and represented that the greatest Danger to Religion was to be feared from the King and the Malignant Party He was suspected of correspondence with the Sectaries which some Letters in my hand written in Cypher give good grounds to believe Certain it is that he proved a very ill instrument and marred that great Design by which all former Errors might have been corrected Thus as the Duke and his Friends designs began to appear there was a violent Party no less careful to withstand them Therefore it was not judged fitting the Duke should leave Scotland his Service in it being greater than any he could do in England besides his being a Peer in England made him more obnoxious to their fury than any other Scotchman could be But His Majesties Concessions about Religion pinched them much and the Liberty offered to Tender Consciences did very much disgust the Scotish Clergy for in Scotland a Toleration was little less odious than Episcopacy and nothing but Presbytery would satisfie them In the end of August they sent Mr. Lesley to His Majesty to represent the State of Affairs in Scotland according to the following Instructions The Duke sends a Message to the King YOu shall shew what Endeavours have been used to incense this Kingdom against the Proceedings of the Army under the Command of Sir Thomas Fairfax witness George Windram 's Relation the Declaration of the General Assembly and the Voice of the daily cryes from the Pulpit You shall represent what Industry was used to precipitate a present Engagement upon the grounds of the Covenant and for Settling Presbyterial Government in England who were the pressers and who were the opposers of it You shall shew what Pains were taken by the moderate Party here to procure the sending of Commissioners to His Majesty and the Parliament thereby to procrastinate and delay all Resolutions till their return or a report from them which will probably consume the rest of this Summer and for this Year prevent a new War except upon eminent advantage You are therefore to represent how necessary it is for preventing Prejudices from hence that a free Passage and all other Encouragements be given to those who are now to be employed if that shall be refused or the Law of Nations in their Persons violated a Breach betwixt the Kingdoms cannot be longer prevented You shall shew that if it had not been for His Majesties Commands to the Moderate Party here a Scotish Army had e're this time been in England which so long as His Majesty is well used they are hopeful to prevent but if His re-establishing be delayed a greater Army than ever Scotland raised will own His Quarrel You shall shew that the Instructions now given to our Commissioners who Treat with the Parliament are only Generals the chief whereof is That His Majesty be again invited to come to London with Honour Freedom and Safety the delay whereof is exceedingly ill taken here and nothing would give so general satisfaction to this Kingdom nor more stop the mouths of Incendiaries than that His Majesty were so at London You shall shew that the Message that was to be sent to His Majesty was only to represent to Him the constant Affection of this Kingdom their longings to see Him re-established in His Throne their Resolutions never to withdraw themselves from under His Government and their Desires to know immediately from Himself in what Condition He is since the Safety of this Kingdom so much depends upon the Safety of His Person You shall shew that the Disorders in the High-lands are now composed and our Army is to be scattered in several quarters through the whole Shires of the Kingdom With these Instructions My Lord Lanerick wrote what follows to His Majesty Sir SInce eminent Advantages for Your Majesties Service could not at this time be procured but at the old rate of satisfaction in Religion and the Covenant our Study hath been to prevent Prejudices and Disservices wherein our endeavours have not proved unsuccessful though ●ven in that we met with extraordinary Opposition The Particulars will be shewed to Your Majesty by the Bearer with the humble sense and advice upon the whole as it now stands in relation to this Kingdom of Your Majesties most humble most faithful most loyal and most obedient Subject and Servant LANERICK Edinburgh 23th August 1647. To which His Majesty answered Lanerick I Very much like and approve of Robin
urge more out of my Duty to Him than kindness to our selves The next was of the 24th of April 1648. SInce my last to you I have received yours of the 18th and 22th of the last Moneth We have made an indifferent good progress in our Parliament here for we have stated all the Breaches of Covenant and Treaties we have resolved upon some Demands to be sent to the Houses of Parliament for Religion for His Majesty and for Disbanding of the present Army of Sectaries and we have pressed a Declaration containing the Grounds of our Resolutions In order to all these we likewise Voted the present putting of this Kingdom into a posture of War and this Week we are to nominate and make choice of all the Officers of our Army The Church doth still violently oppose us and threatens us with cross Declarations if not the extremity of Church-Censures Argyle and his Party maintain them in their Obstinacy or rather they do him in his Disloyalty but neither the fear of their Curses nor want of their Prayers can fright us from our Duty so soon as we are ready to act which possibly may be sooner than you imagine The next was of the 28th of April to His Majesty MY last to you was of the 13th of this Moneth by the Conveyance of Doctor Frazer Since that time we have perfected what was then designed for we have made choice of all the Officers of our Forces wherein we have been forced to spend much time and the next Week we intend to model our Army for England which we hope shall be upon the Borders against the 21th of the next Moneth which is the time limited for the Return of our Messenger from London who this day parts from hence with the three Demands to the Houses of Parliament wherof my last made mention and with a positive Command to stay only 15 days for his Answer We intend likewise in the beginning of the next Week to dispatch Sir William Fleming to the Queen and Prince to give them an account of our Proceedings and to know his Highness's Resolution concerning his coming hither and to desire the present sending of Arms and Ammunition to us whereof we are absolutely unprovided so that if the Queen or Prince of Orange to whom we beg Your Majesty would write do not supply us it will infinitely retard the Service We have passed a Declaration which is full of many rude Restrictions both in order to Your Majesty and Your faithful Servants But we are forced to them for the satisfaction of the Nice Consciences of the Clergy and their Proselytes whom we find still so inflexible that nothing can perswade them to a Conjunction with us in the Work on the contrary we meet with all imaginable Opposition from them yet as we have carried the Declaration and all that is yet done against their strongest Endeavours so we hope in despight of them to be Instruments in accomplishing the chief end it drives at which is Your Majesties Rest and Restauration Our next will certainly bring you the Knowledg of some Acting in order to that which we dare not hazard to this Cypher lest there may be more Copies of it than what we have with Your Majesty The slowness of their Motions in Scotland begun to give great Jealousies of their Proceedings every-where Jealousies of the Scotish Proceedings At Paris the Prince was much courted to go to Ireland but he resolved rather to go to Scotland and designed to go first to Holland Yet there were some about him who studied to give him ill Impressions of all that passed in Scotland grounding them on the old Calumnies that had been cast on the Duke and on the slowness of their Procedure at that time in Scotland together with the extraordinary Cajolery they gave the Church-party all which were made use of for alienating his Highness from that Resolution But he resolved to obey the Kings Commands and sent them new Assurances of that by Sir William Fleming and to oblige the Duke the more a Book being dedicated to his Highness containing some passages much to the Dukes dishonour he refused to accept of it and ordered it to be called in While things were thus preparing in Scotland His Majesty in the Isle of Wight was contriving an Escape being resolved if it succeeded to have come to Scotland but the means failed oftener than once which being discovered made his Prison the straiter He was also courted under hand with new Propositions from the Parliament of England but refused to enter into any Treaty without the Concurrence of the Scotish Nation Yet it troubled him much to hear no more of the progress of their Designs on which all his Hopes were then set for in that disorderly time it was not easy to transmit frequent and clear accounts of all that passed At length having understood from Scotland what advance was made in that Affair he was satisfied with the Fidelity of those he had imployed there At London there went various Constructions on the Scotish Actions The Commissioners of the Two Houses that were at Edinburgh wrote up that the Church-party would undoubtedly keep the Duke and his Party in play at least that Year and that the zeal of the Ministers would make the Levies go slowly on they either believing this themselves or at least designing that others should do so At this time there was a great Inclination all over England to shake off the Armies Arbitrary Yoke Great Disorders in England Stirs were rising in every place The Duke with his other Friends in Scotland dealt earnestly with their Correspondents in England to get all kept quiet till they were ready to march that so there might be an universal Rising at once which would have undoubtedly divided the Army that was against them into so many Fractions as might make way for their easier Overthrow This Design was zealously promoted by many who saw the great advantage it might produce but many were too jealous of the Scotish Designs and so did precipitate their own Ruin Others apprehended from their Declarations that the Bondage would be the same only the Masters changed if they prevailed and this made the Kings Party resolve rather to perish than receive any help from the Scots on these terms Their slowness made others despair of their Sincerity and the reports of the Power of the Church-party made all suspect their Strength so the untimely Rising in England was the Ruin of this Years Design for they rose only to be destroyed and to animate the Army with those many Victories they obtained over them And as these Defeats did much discourage the Scotish Army so it forced them to march into England before they were ready and e're they had looked well to the Security of Affairs behind them The first Rising was by Poyer in Wales to whom Langhorn came within a little and Commanded most of the Country At Westminster as they understood the state
of the Scotish Affairs better than the Rabble did so they did more apprehend the Danger of it And first great pains were taken to reconcile the Presbyterian and Independent Parties at least to unite them against the Scots wherefore they Voted that the Government should be by King Lords and Commons yet the Independents opposed this so that it was carried but by 45 Voices They also appointed that the Propositions offered at Newcastle should be the Grounds of settling the Kingdom and they Voted that it should be lawful notwithstanding the Vote of Non-Addresses to make new Applications to His Majesty Their Design in this was visible for they hoped the Scots could not pass from these Propositions and they were assured the King would never consent to them particularly to that of Religion which was so dear to Scotland But Cromwel was not at all pleased with these Votes and as little with the City and if the Stirs over England had not given him other Employment he would have made a Journey to London with his Army for the Purging the House a-new They in Scotland were much straitned with want of Ammunition and Mony therefore they sent Sir William Bellandin to Holland to see what could be had from the Prince of Orange they likewise wise sent Sir William Fleeming to Paris to the Queen and Prince with the following Letters May it please Your Majesty ALL verbal Assurances would justly appear too low and mean testimonies of our Fidelity Letters to the Queen and Prince from the Duke and his Friends since Actions are now the only touch-stones of Loyalty which we hope e're long shall be better than what we can in this Common way speak of our real Affections to His Majesties Service We have presumed from the Encouragements we have received from Your Majesty to hope the Prince his Highness will countenance our Endeavours for his Father's Rescue with his presence amongst us which would certainly give an extraordinary vigour and life to all our Motions For that end we have instructed this worthy Bearer with our humble desires therein to Your Majesty and to his Highness and with such other Particulars as are necessary for enabling us to carry on the Work to whom we beg Your Majesty would be pleased to give Trust and further to believe that nothing was ever more absolutely fixed than are our Resolutions either to perish or eminently to shew our selves Your Majesties most humble most faithful and most obedient Subjects and Servants Hamilton Lauderdale Crawford Lanerick Roxburgh Calender May 1st 1648. May it please Your Highness THe deep sense we have of His Majesties sad Condition invites us to these Actions of Duty and Loyalty to which we are by so many Relations and Tyes bound and obliged and having divers Encouragements from His Majesty and from the Queen to hope for your Highness's Presence amongst us in countenancing our faithful Endeavours for His Majesties Rescue we have presumed humbly to address our selves to your Highness that from your Self we might know your own Inclinations that accordingly such publick Assurances and Invitations may come from hence as your Highness shall think fit to require being confident that before we can receive your Highness's Directions herein we shall be in some condition to evidence our Loyalties otherwise than by Words So until we give a more real testimony thereof we shall only beg to be esteemed of by your Highness as Persons that have vowed themselves to this Service and who are faithfully Your Highness's most humble most faithful and most obedient Servants Hamilton Lauderdale Crawford Lanerick Roxburgh Calender May 1st 1648. Next they modelled the Army which will better appear by the following Letters written to the King SIR YOu now find the effects of what my last of the 28th of April promised we are now engaged and Sir Marmaduke Langdale's successful Attempt upon Berwick and Carlisle will be resolutely seconded by Your Servants here Letters to His Majesty To morrow Sir William Fleeming and Mr. Murray part for France the last acknowledges the baseness of his new Friend Argyle We hope the Prince will now countenance with his Presence our Endeavours for Your Majesties Rescue since the Duke of York is escaped for he will give an extraordinary life and vigour to all our Motions The Kirk hath this day declared against our Declaration and Engagement but all it hath procured is a Vote of thirty thousand Foot and near six thousand Horse which is this day remitted to the Consideration of the several Bodies and I hope will pass the House to morrow 2d May. 1648. SInce my last we are far advanced in our Designs of serving Your Majesty our new Army is modelled which I hope will be more considerable than any Army that ever went out of Scotland the Old General hath laid down his Charge and the Duke of Hamilton is to Command in chief who joys to meet with so happy an occasion to vindicate his Loyalty He will be found active in his Trust and seconded by the most gallant and eminent persons of the Kingdom his Election was carried very unanimously in Parliament Argyle and only six with him dissenting Calender with the same Vnanimity and the same Opposition is chosen Lieutenant-General and David Lesley Lieutenant-General of the Horse but he hath not as yet accepted of his Charge Middleton is appointed Major-General of the Horse who is most eminent for his Loyalty and forward in this Service Our Armie will be on foot about the end of the Moneth and that the Raising of men may the more actively be gone about we have adjourned the Parliament till the first of June We have sent Commissioners with Instructions and Money to invite our Army in Ireland to come and joyn with us in this Service Our Opposition from Argyle and the Ministers is still as great as they can make we are undone for want of Arms and a little Money if we be not supplied from France or Holland this glorious and most hopeful Vndertaking that ever this Nation had may be in hazard to miscarry Sir William Fleeming and Mr. Murray went ten days ago for France and this day we have dispatched Sir William Bellandin to Holland We are much dejected because we have not heard from Your Majesty since the 17th of March which makes us fear You involve us in the Guilt of the by-past deadness and slowness of their Motions here but we take God to witness we are as free thereof as we shall be faithful to the Vows we have made of perishing or of serving Your Majesty in such a loyal and dutiful way as hath been professed by Your Majesties c. 17th May. The Differences that were among the Lords were adjusted The Levies are much retarded by the Ministers and most of the Officers were also well named yet the Levies went on dully though many of the Lords were so cordial that they who had allowance from the Publick but for 80 Horse
inclinations over England should prove too hard for them but Mr. Marshall Great Disorders in England who was sent back from the English Commissioners in Scotland comforted them the best he could giving them all assurance that the Designs there would meet with vigorous Opposition wherefore it was moved that some of the Forces might be presently sent down before the Army were drawn together who might hope for good Assistance in Scotland But he also told them that nothing would be so likely to divide them in Scotland as to declare for the Covenant and the Propositions sent to Newcastle and indeed this was much dreaded by the Duke and his Friends since there was nothing so popular in Scotland as that the Parliament and Army of England had fallen from the Covenant but they resolved though that were granted to accept of no Treaty till the Army were presently disbanded for which the former Years Transactions did furnish them with very good reasons Mr. Marshall did what he could to reconcile the Presbyterians and Independents in London and that they might not fall out about Religion it was Voted that the Kingdom should be first settled before Religion was fallen upon The City of London was generally well-affected to the Scotish Design though some studied to alien●te them from it by telling them that those in Scotland were in Correspondence with the Cavaliers in England The City was inconstant and the Citizens feared the Armies falling on them to plunder them so that they were easily over-awed and at that time the Agitators of the Army were upon the Fining of the City in a Million of English Mony A general Answer was returned to the Scotish Demands by the day they had prefixed with the Promise of a more particular one to follow shortly which was looked on as a Design to shift them off by Delays At this time the Two Houses were much lifted up with a Defeat given to Langhorn in Wales which was represented to be greater than indeed it was But to allay their Joy there came in Petitions from many Counties of England for a Personal Treaty with the King and for being disburdened of the Army one came from Essex which was subscribed by twenty four thousand Hands and eight thousand men came out of Surrey with their Petition upon whom the Souldiers fell barbarously and killed about Twenty of them wounding above an Hundred Next the Kentish men rose in a formidable number but it was more terrible that the Navy was staggering and many of the Captains of the Ships declared against their Proceedings This was sad News for London by reason of their Trade which was like to be blockt up And now Cromwel to please the City of London drew the Forces out of it and left the Militia of London in their own Hands only he got Skippon who was of their own Cabal made Major-General of their Trained Bands and there was no small Disorder in the Army the Agitators being for the most part Levellers and against Cromwel as was by some supposed With all this Tragical visage of things they at W●stminster were not a little mortified A Fast at Westminster so they appointed a Day of Humiliation and when they were naming the reasons for the Fast one of the Members had a singular opinion that notwithstanding the Self-denying Ordinance they had past yet they had ingrossed all Places of Power and Profit to themselves by which Juggling God was mocked wherefore he moved that they might devest themselves of these but the rest were not of his mind And if three Sermons and a great many long Prayers would reconcile God to them they would be at the cost but were resolved to quit none of their Power nor Places All these Tumults in England as they had hindered the Two Houses from sending down their Forces to Scotland so they called aloud for hasty Relief from the Scotish Army which from all places was called for But the Oppositition the Clergy and their Party made had so fore-slowed their Levies that they could not overtake this fair opportunity but were forced to leave the poor People in England to be knockt down by the insulting Army The Parliament of Scotland re-assembled in Iune The Parliament adjourns and after few days Sitting and the emitting of new Declarations both for Scotland and England but of a milder strain than their former of April had been being now weary of their hopeless courting of the Clergy they adjourned for Two Years having chosen a Committee of Estates sure to their Designs and they were drawing their Army together with all possible diligence But the great matter now debated in Scotland was A present March is disswaded by some whether they should first make all sure at home or leave things in that disordered posture and make haste into England Lanerick was for taking order with the Opposite Party and the Lords that headed them before they stirred out of Scotland lest otherwise assoon as they were gone the Ministers might blow up the People into Sedition which would either force them to send back a part of their Army for curbing them or lose Scotland totally by their Tumults while their Army should be strugling with an uncertainty in England Besides they were neither well-furnished with Arms Ammunition nor Mony but had good Assurances of large Supplies from the Queen and Prince by Sir William Fleeming and the Prince though much disswaded by these who were both Enemies to the Scotish Nation in General and the Duke in particular continued still firm to his first Resolutions of going to them when all things were brought to that Posture that it were fit for him to hazard himself amongst them and therefore in the middle of Iune Sir William Fleeming was dispatched again from his Highness to Scotland with the following Letter directed For the Lord Duke Hamilton and the Earls of Lindsay Roxburgh Lauderdale Lanerick and Calender My Lords YOu will receive by Sir William Fleeming who is amply instructed the full account of My Intentions and he is not more particularly charged with any thing than to let you know the sense I have of Your Affections yet I thought fit to reserve unto My Self the assuring you that as I conceive I am not capable of being more obliged than I have been by you so I shall be most exactly just in the discharge of my Acknowledgments when it shall please God to make My Condition fit for it In the mean time I have nothing to say but to desire you to be intirely confident of it and that I am most truly My Lords Your Affectionate Friend CHARLES P. Sir William Bellandin met with more Opposition in Holland for Judgments were passed on the Scotish Proceedings from their Declarations and all he could say was not able to take off those Impressions so that no good was expected from Scotland The States of Holland had no great inclination to the Kings Party and the Prince of Orange
was at that time much influenced by the Dukes Enemies yet Bellandin got many promises made him of a large supply of Mony and Ammunition Upon these Expectations the Earl of Lanerick was against a speedy March into England but much pressed by others but this was opposed by the Earl of Lauderdale who pressed a present Dispatch They were called upon so earnestly from their Friends in England that to linger still was to lose the Kings Party there for now the Kentish men were broken and some of them had passed over unto Essex where many rose with them and carried Colchester and made a good Body both of Horse and Foot but were not able to hold out long against the Army yet they gave them divers foils But that of the greatest Importance was that most of the Navy had declared for the King and desired a Correspondence with Scotland and Willoughby who was made Vice-Admiral by the Prince was a great Friend to the Scotish Nation The Earl of Inchequin also with his Army in Ireland had declared against the Parliament and sent to Scotland a very kind Message for a good Understanding with that Parliament and finally a part of the English Army being much sollicited by the Church-party in Scotland who complained that they were now exposed by them to Ruin was coming North-ward under the Command of Lambert and Langdale had written to them that he could not be able to stand long before Lambert if he were not speedily relieved and that Carlisle also would be in great hazard neither was the hazard only the loss of Carlisle of which they made less account but the Army which was with Langdale whose Wives and Children were in Carlisle did threaten to leave him and Capitulate if that Place were not preserved Besides all this they at Westminster to temper the general Hatred against them had called back the Secluded Members of both Houses and were Levying new Forces and had Voted a Personal Treaty with the King at which time also one Osburn avouched that there were Designs against the Kings Person and that himself had been sollicited to assist in the poysoning him All these Considerations were pressing and could admit of no delays wherefore Lauderdale insisted for a present March and that the Dukes Carriage might shew it was the Kings Service and not a Faction he was designing nor Resentments against these who withstood him in Scotland for so did Lauderdale mistake Lanerick's advice for curbing of the Church-party and punishing their Leaders The Duke saw great reason on both sides and is resolved on and though his own Judgment went along with his Brothers Advice knowing well it was easie for him to have forced all Scotland very soon into a Compliance with their Design which being once done he could have marched into England upon greater advantages and with a far better Army yet he was content to be over-ruled believing that if they were prosperous in England upon which depended all their hopes it would be no great Work to Master any Opposition might be made in Scotland And thus did the unripened forwardness of those in England force the Duke on a fatal Precipitation of Counsels The resolution was taken and a General Rendezvous appointed to be at Annan near the Borders of England on the 4th of Iuly All this while my Lord Lanerick had not forgotten the Kings Commands about the Marquis of Huntley but the ill Opinion the Church-men had of them was such that to have proceeded roundly in that matter would have given greater grounds of Jealousie to that Party therefore the Iunto sent him word to the Castle of Edinburgh where he was then Prisoner that though at that time it was not fit to set him at liberty by an Order yet they were willing he should make his Escape and they offered their Assistance for conveying him safe away But he said he was brought thither by Order and he would not steal out as a Thief and from this fatal stiffness they could not get him removed yet they resolved to liberate him openly when they should be better able to avow their Actions The Opposition the Church-men made to the Raising of the Army An Insurrect●on at Mauchlin did still retard the Levies and discourage the Souldiers though the Officers were generally resolute Some Forces were sent West-ward under the Command of Sir Iames Turner to keep that Country quiet who found a little Authority vigorously managed did quickly tame some of the most unruly But at Mauchlin there was a great Gathering under the Colour of an Assembly to a Solemn Communion and many went thither Armed pretending hazard from the danger of that time Turner got notice that an Insurrection was designed there and advertised the Duke of it who ordered Turner not to stir till the Earls of Calander and Middleton should come to assist him who came to Pasely on the Saturndy before that Communion they drew out the Forces that lay there consisting of two Regiments of Foot and fourteen Troops of Horse and marched to Steuarton where the Earl of Glen●airn and others of the Nobility met them Some advised a March of the whole Forces others thought a few Troops were sufficient for dispersing that Multitude whereupon Middleton was commanded out with six Troops who found them near two thousand strong Horse and Foot but being ill-commanded they were soon disordered Middleton and Hurry gave the Charge and were briskly encountered so that they were made to retreat with the loss of some men and both Middleton and Hurry got slight Wounds but the Party that had given them this rude Shock having cleared a way for themselves made their Retreat The report of this Disorder was brought hot to Calender who leaving the Foot at Kilmarnock went with the eight Troops he had with him to assist Middleton but upon his appearing all run away The Horse were not pursued sixty Foot Souldiers were taken and five Officers and some Ministers who were all dismissed only the Officers were condemned to dye by a Council of War but were afterwards pardoned by Calander Some Forces were sent towards the Borders After this before a General Rendezvous was possible the Duke for animating those of Carlisle who began to be sore put to it sent Collonel Lockhart with some Regiments of Horse to lye at Annan and Collonel Turner with five or six Regiments of Foot to lye at Dumfrice hoping thereby to hinder Lambert from coming near Carlisle wherein his expectation did not fail him for no sooner came Lockhart to Annan but Lambert drew his Troops nearer and Sir Marmaduke Langdale got air a while for Provision both for his Men and Horses and against the day appointed the General came from Edinburgh to Annan with Calander Middleton and Baylie and several Regiments of Horse and Foot The Army enters England Turner also came to him from Dumfrice with the Regiments that lay there and some Ammunition and abundance of Meal
that had been sent from Edinburgh but before I go further a little must be premised of the state of the Army and of those who commanded it The chief Officers of the Army The Duke was General of whom I find an old experienced Souldier who served under him passing this judgment His Conduct of Forces was as good as that of any under his Command without exception but it was his Fate I dare not say his Fault in Military matters as was his Masters in Political Affairs not to trust to his own Iudgment but to the Iudgments of others though inferiour as all the World knew to their own and to this Character all with whom the Writer ever spake who served in that Army did agree Calander's Character The Lieutenant-General was the Earl of Calander who was bred from his youth a Souldier in the Wars of Germany and the Low-Countries where he long commanded a Regiment of Scotish Foot and had gained deservedly the reputation of a man of great Courage and understood well the Dutch Discipline of War which he observed with a strictness that seemed not free of Affectation The promptness of his Deportment and the Authority he usually took on him being judged far beyond his skill in the Conduct of an Army he was made Lieutenant-General of the Scotish Army that went against the King under General Lesley Anno 1640 and joyned with Montrose and the other Noblemen and Gentlemen who signed the Bond mentioned in the account of that Year and from that time he continued for some Years in a great Friendship with Montrose which as it did alienate the Church-party from him so it set him at a distance from the Duke of whom he was ready both to receive and give ill Impressions Yet he having made great and constant Professions of Loyalty and having got himself to make a considerable figure among some Noblemen who were called the Kings Party a Conjunction with him being also earnestly recommended by the Queen in her Letters to the Duke he and some of his Friends though many condemned the choice were easily induced to such an opinion of the Reality of Calander's Loyalty and Military Conduct and Courage as to accept of him for Lieutenant-General of the Army though the Duke had no reason to have any confidence in his Friendship But as he left nothing undone to overcome all Obstacles that lay in the way of this loyal Expedition so he complied with divers things that were uneasie to him whereof this was none of the least because he would leave no ground for Calumny it self to charge him with Slackness in attempting to do this signal Service to God the King and his Country The Lieutenant-General was quickly observed to design a Faction in the Army for himself and to oppose all that the General suggested which he did so peremptorily that he usually pressed all his own Propositions with such warm Language as that the Kings Service was ruined if other Courses were followed and this never failed to over-rule the Duke and in effect he gave away almost his whole Power to him But if he expected little Friendship from Calander he had as much confidence in Middleton Lieutenant-General of the Horse who was a Person of great Courage and Honour and none had been more gallantly active in carrying on this Expedition than he was for which and other Great Services he was by His Majesty that now reigns created Earl of Middleton nor had he less assurance of Baylie Lieutenant-General of the Foot who had given many signal demonstrations of Valour and Conduct The Inferiour Officers stood all divided according as their Affections led them either to the General or Lieutenant-General and thus was the Army modelled The Regiments were not full many of them scarce exceeded half their number and not the fifth man could handle Pike or Musket The Horse were the best mounted that ever Scotland set out yet most of the Troopers were raw and undisciplined They had no Artillery not so much as one Field-piece very little Ammunition and very few Horse to carry it for want of which the Duke stayed often in the Reer of the whole Army till the Country-men brought in Horses and then conveyed it with his own Guard of Horse Thus the precipitating of Affairs in England forced them on a March before they were in any posture for it but now they were engaged and they must go forward an account whereof follows but not drawn as the former Parts of this Work have been from the Dukes Papers and little Notes he used to take on all occasions for if any of these were taken by him in this Expedition they were either destroyed by himself or fell into the Enemies hands when he was made Prisoner so that the Writer was forced to seek help from others for supplying this Defect and procured divers Relations from very worthy Gentlemen who were Eye-Witnesses or Actors in the whole Affair upon whose Informations he must rest and therefore offers them as follows UPon the Armies march to Carlisle Lambert drew back and we advanced to Crofton-Hall where we lay about eight or ten days The account of the March of the Army from thence we went towards Penreith but the Duke sent out a Party of some three hundred Horse who discovered the Enemies Main-Guard of Horse and gave the General notice of it who thereupon commanded the whole Cavalry to march purposing to fall upon the Enemy that very night and he sent orders to Baylie to hasten the advance of the Infantry A full discovery being made of the Enemy our Cavalry was drawn up in their view where expecting the advance of the Foot we stood in Arms till night but about midnight the Enemy drew off quietly Next morning betimes a great rain falling we advanced to a Bridge a mile beyond Penreith with design to engage the Enemy but missing our hopes were forced for our accomodation in Quartering to return to Penreith Next day my Lord Levingstoun commanding a Party of Horse discovered the Enemies Main-Guard within a mile of Appleby-Castle in Westmoreland consisting of about three hundred Horse of which having sent advertisement to the General he ordered the Army to march immediately towards the Enemy and Middleton commanded the Captain of the Generals Troop to charge who beat back the Enemies Horse into the Town of Appleby That evening our whole Cavalry made a stand for several hours expecting the advance of Langdale who being marched up did presently with his Foot engage with the Enemy into the Town till it was dark Our Infantry Quartered that night on the Moor near Appleby but before the next morning the Enemy marched away both Horse and Foot leaving only a Garrison in Appleby-Castle and did cut the Bridge so that it was impossible to follow for the rains had fallen in such abundance that the Waters were not to be forded whereupon we went to Kirby-thure in Cumberland where we lay three Weeks
could to the Army but he was first to go to Holland where he intended to stay some few days The Earl of Lauderdale had got Instructions from Scotland to go to the Prince of Orange and the States General to give them an account of their Affairs and to crave their Assistance in Money Arms Ammunition and Shipping to see also what Money could be borrowed upon the Publick Faith of Scotland for the prosecuting the Engagement and to desire from them the three Scotish Regiments that were then in the States Service and to settle a firm Alliance with them and from them he was to go to France with Letters to the Queen and to treat with the Queen Mother of France for the Assistance of that Nation according to the ancient Alliances between the Crowns of France and Scotland All these Instructions being communicated to his Highness he judged the Imployment might be of good use but would not let the Earl of Lauderdale leave him intending to carry him with him to Holland and was very well pleased that Sir Robert Murray was appointed to go to France in case the other went not yet he resolved to carry him along likewise to Holland Upon which the Earl of Lauderdale sent advertisement to Scotland to make ready for his Highness Reception This was done on the 20th of August and as the Prince was making ready the sad news of the Defeat of the Army was brought him so that Design vanished But in Scotland the news of the routing of the Army was received by the opposite Party with all the insultings of Joy they adding infamous opprobries to their Invectives Some observing that the Division of the Duke's Army which was its Ruin was on the 17th day of August the day in which the Covenant was first made which from thence some used to call Saint Covenants day this Conjuncture of Affairs was held a visible Declaration of Gods Displeasure for their breaking the Covenant and their Juggling in it by those who took upon them to expound all Gods Providences The Western Counties were commanded and animated to an Insurrection by the Lord Chancellour and the Earl of Eglinton together with their Ministers who came leading out whole Parishes with such Arms as could be had and when these failed with Staves and Pitch-forks and Sythes When the Resolutions for raising an Army were taken in the Parlialiament divers of the Nobility did dissent from them An Insurrection in Scotland the chief of whom were Lowdon who was then Lord Chancellour and Argyle and now Lowdon upon the notice of the misfortune in England gave out Orders for raising the Western Counties and all others who would zealously own the Covenant against the late Engagement Those that were raised were at first commanded by the Earl of Eglinton and the Marquis of Argyle made all the haste he could to come down with his Highlanders the Earl of Cassilis was slowest with his men for though he had dissented from the Engagement yet he was long unsatisfied with the Tumultariness of the Insurrection but after some times consulting about it he came up to them at Linlithgow This together with the sad account of Affairs from England did not a little disorder the Committee of Estates who as they drew a few Troops that were kept in the Country for their Guard nearer them so were not well resolved what to do They looked on the business as desperate by the ruin of the Army in England Many in the Committee of Estates incline to yield to them and though it was easie to scatter the confused Bodies were coming from the West yet they apprehended that certainly they finding their own weakness would call for the Assistance of the English Army before which they knew they could not stand Most of the Committee were men of good Estates who apprehending certain ruin to their Fortunes were resolved to see to their own Preservation the best way they could Others were much addicted to the Ministers and though they had gone along with the Service notwithstanding the opposition of the Clergy yet now that they knew they were resolved to excommunicate all who were for the Engagement their hearts failed them Many of the Ministers did also represent to them and some of their Friends that their Designs being blasted by God why should they fight any longer against him and assured them that if they would lay down Arms and accommodate matters without Blood all should go well that they would all own the Kings Quarrel according to the Covenant but if on the other hand they persisted in their opposition to the Church the English Army would be called in which would undoubtedly destroy both the Country and them These things prevailed with most of the Committee of Estates But the Earl of Lanerick opposed all these Resolutions judging it base and dishonourable to treat with those Rebels and abandon so good a Cause because of a Misfortune He thought it therefore necessary to recall Sir George Monro with his Forces and secure themselves of Sterlin and St. Iohnstoun and then to raise all the North by which they might gather a new Army and the time of the Year told them that Cromwel durst not stay long in these Parts so that upon his going to London they might make themselves Masters of Scotland and force a new Army into England the next Year Yet in this he was almost alone and many of the Committee of Estates plied him hard especially with one Argument that if more Bloud were shed in Scotland their Enemies would undoubtedly revenge themselves on his Brother and then all the World would say his Ambition to succeed him had made him contribute to his Ruin But on the other hand the Ministers and their Adherents gave great Assurances that they should procure his Brother's Liberty if matters were packt up This being constantly pressed on him he yielded to be passive and let them be doing and so after some days Debate they resolved to prosecute the Engagement no more and to pack up the business if it were possible therefore they sent the Lords of Lee and Humby to the Western Forces who were come in their March the length of Hamilton to see what their Demands were and to propose a Cessation in order to a Treaty they also sent Orders to Sir George Monro to return to Scotland But here I shall stop a little to give account of the motions of his Army in England The account of the Irish Army Musgrave had got intelligence that Cromwel with his Army was upon his March to stop the Duke's progress and had advanced the length of Skipton-Castle in Yorkshire which Advertisement was instantly dispatched to the Duke at Preston and a small Party of about forty Horse was sent under the Command of one Galbreath to examin the truth of these Reports who returned with this Account That having concealed their Party within a Hedge near that Place some of them came to a
and persist in the Causes in the which you are now engaged contrary to the Declaration of the General Assembly and their Commissioners We do hereby certifie you that all who have been Active in the late Engagement as well those in England as those in this Kingdom and all such as have or shall hereafter joyn with you are to be declared Enemies to both Kingdoms and that this Kingdom will be necessitated to concur with the Kingdom of England for punishing them accordingly as breakers of the Covenant and Treaties We leave it to you seriously to consider whether the Ways and Courses you are upon be really for the good of the King and this Kingdom or a safe way for the relief of your Friends that are Prisoners in England Signed By Warrant and Command of the Noblemen Officers and Gentlemen now in Armes for the Covenant THO. HENDERSON Edinb 20th Sept. 1648. After some dayes treating upon the Heads wherein they differed the Treaty was finished upon the 26th of September those at Sterlin yielding to the Propositions made by the Whiggamors And it was agreed that the Irish Army should be suffered to march to Ireland and should have free Passage thither that none should be questioned for what was past only that all who had been in the Engagement should lay down their Offices and places of Trust and not be permitted to sit in any Judicatory and that all Publick Matters should be referred to the Determination of the Parliament and the General Assembly It was very soon after the closing of the Treaty remarked how small regard was had to it for the Troops being once dissipated and those who were to go to Ireland being on their March thither there came News that the Garrisons of Carrick-Fergus Belfast and Culrain belonging to the Scotish Army in Ireland under the Command of Major-General Robert Monro were basely betrayed under Trust by his own Officers and Countrey-men into the hands of General Monk for the Parliament of England This being spread about the people of the West Countrey fell upon those who were returning to Ireland plundered abused and dispersed them in their way betwixt Glasgow and Air and after a few days a Proclamation was issued out at Edinbourgh commanding all persons who had been in the Army designed by the name of the unlawful Engagement to remove at least twelve Miles from Town under pain of Imprisonment Cromwell being on his way thither And thus ended the design of the Engagement gallantly undertaken and well contrived but unfortunately and fatally brought to nothing The Whiggamors having now possessed themselves of the Power their Leaders did constitute themselves into a Committee of Estates for hitherto they had acted in no Legal Character There were divers among them who were by Authority of Parliament commissionated to be of the Committee of Estates but with this express Provision that they should not be capable of Sitting there till they had owned the Resolutions and Declarations of the Parliament for divers of those who dissented were named to be of the Committee that so there might be a fair way for bringing them off from their Opposition But now all these without regarding that Provision pretended they were a Quorum of the Committee of Estates and that so they were warranted by Authority of Parliament to Act in that Supreme Authority They sent a Message to the King in their usual style and were very careful to give no Umbrage to the Parliament of England and so not only entertained Cromwell with all the expressions of Friendship and Confidence imaginable delivering Berwick and Carlisle to him but sent Commissioners with the following Instructions to the Two Houses YOu shall repair to London and deliver our Letter to the Honourable Houses of the Parliament of England Their Instructions to the Two Houses You shall excuse the long delay in sending to them and in the mean time let them know we hold Correspondence with the Commander in Chief of their Forces You shall give them a Narrative of our whole Proceedings according to the Declaration of the Kirk and our own particularly you shall acquaint them with our Proceedings in opposition to the late unlawful Engagement and what Industry was used on the other part for the Election of Malignants to be Members of Parliament and how unlawfully some were admitted to sit in Parliament and great numbers of Malignants were brought in from England to over-awe the honest Party and how many of the Army were corrupted And you shall further represent particularly the great Sufferings and Oppressions of honest men and that before they heard any thing of the Defeat of the Forces under Duke Hamilton in England they had resolved on the manner and time of their Rising in Arms here in this Kingdom against the Promoters and Abettors of that Engagement and their Adherents You shall also shew them the result of the Treaty betwixt us and those Armies about Sterlin and how useful their Forces have been to us by being at so near a distance You shall endeavour to take away all Mis-information or Mis-constructions of any of our former Proceedings and settle a good Vnderstanding betwixt them and the honest protesting Party in Scotland and you shall show them the continued evil Principles Malice and Designs of the Malignant Party in this Kingdom yet to trouble our Peace and interrupt theirs and as they call it not to live and outlive the not carrying on so pious and loyal an Engagement and that some of them are going to Holland with an intention as we are informed to bring over Forces if they can therefore we have caused deliver Berwick to be disposed of for the Good of both Kingdoms and given the like Warrant for Carlisle and that it is also surrendred or presently to surrender for the use foresaid So we agree during these Troubles until the Peace of this Kingdom be settled that the Honourable Houses may keep some Forces upon the Borders and sufficient Garrisons in them both upon a twofold assurance First that in case any new Troubles be raised in Scotland by the Malignants both they and the Forces about Newcastle have Directions from the Parliament to come unto Scotland to pursue the Common Enemy when they shall be desired by the Committee of Estates as it is now constituted of the Protesting Party in Scotland and Secondly that the Parliament shall remove all Garrisons out of those two Towns and from our Borders and put them in the Condition agreed on by the Treaties betwixt both Kingdoms whensoever the Troubles are at an end and the Peace of the Kingdoms settled You shall shew how desirous and willing we are to harken to any good Overture that may conduce to prevent any such-like Breaches again betwixt the Two Nations and that it may not be in the power of Malignants again either to seduce or to enforce upon the People the like Sin and Snare and for mutual Consultation we think it expedient
both that they should have some honest Noblemen Commissioners here to reside at Edinburgh and that we shall have some at London that by Commutation of Counsels our Common Peace may be the better settled and continued You shall try if the Treaty betwixt the Kings Majesty and the Two Houses of Parliament be like to take effect and shall study to preserve the Interest of this Kingdom in the matter of the settling of the Peace of these Kingdoms and if you shall find there are real Grounds to hope an Agreement betwixt the King and the Two Houses in respect both Kingdomes are engaged in the same Cause and Covenant and have been and still are under the same Dangers and to the end our Peace may be more durable you shall endeavour that before any Agreement of Peace be made we may be first acquainted therewith An. 1649. that we may send up Commissions in relation to the Treaty with the King upon the Propositions and in relation to mutual Advice for the settling of the Peace of these Kingdomes and accordingly as you find the Two Houses inclined therein you shall give us Advertisement You shall according as upon the place it shall be found expedient present the same Desires to the Two Houses of Parliament in name of this Kingdome touching the Work of Reformation as shall be presented to them from this Kirk You shall assist Mr. Blair in this Imployment and take his advice and assistance in yours and give us Advertisement weekly how all matters goe You shall publish all Papers either concerning the Proceedings of the Church or of the Protesters which are necessary to be known You shall endeavour to keep a good Vnderstanding betwixt us and the City and the Assembly of Divines and strive to remove all Iealousies betwixt us and them or betwixt honest men amongst themselves You shall endeavour that honest men who have suffered for opposing the Engagement be not prejudiced but furthered in payment of the Sumes assigned unto them before the Engagement out of the two hundred thousand pound Sterling and Brotherly Assistance for publick Debts or Losses You shall acquaint the Speakers of both Houses with his Majesties Letter to this Committee and our Answer sent to Him You shall desire that the Noblemen and Gentlemen of Quality and considerable Officers of the Army that went into England under the Duke of Hamilton and which are now there Prisoners may be kept as Pledges of the Peace of the Kingdomes especially to prevent a new Disturbance in this Kingdome or Trouble from this Kingdome to England until the Peace of both be settled You shall acquaint the Two Houses with our Answer to that of L. General Cromwell 's of the sixth of this Instant and make use of the Grounds therein mentioned as you shall find occasion Their next Care was to look well to Lanerick Lanerick appointed to be secured but escapes to Holland and the other Engagers lest they should attempt somewhat against them the account of which shall be set down in a Letter Lanerick wrote to the Lord Chancellour when he left Scotland For in the end of Ianuary the Earl of Lauderdale came from Holland being commanded by the Prince to see what might be done there but he found all so discouraged and overpowered that no good was to be expected and he got advertisement from the Lord Balmerino that they designed to secure both Lanerick and himselfe and as he believed would deliver them up to the Parliament of England as Incendiaries whereupon they both resolved to go beyond Sea in the same Ship in which Lauderdale came and to offer their Service to the Prince The Letter follows My Lord ALbeit the Proceedings of the late Committee constituted of Dissenters against me was without president in Confining me a free Subject who was neither Guilty nor so much as accused of any Guilt or Breach of the Laws of the Kingdome for declining to sign a Declaration and Bond which even they themselves conceived in Iustice they could not enjoyn me to sign yet I did submit and went not without the Bounds limited for my Confinement until I was certainly informed that upon Wednesday last at a private and select Committee it was resolved I should instantly be Committed and the little Liberty left me taken from me for it seems that these private persons I speak not of Iudicatories who procured the severe Instructions given those employed to London against my Brother the Duke of Hamilton and the many Noble and Gallant Persons who are now in Bonds with him for their Loyal Endeavours to have rescued His Majesty from being murthered are not satisfied or think themselves secure while any enjoy their Liberties who would have been Instruments in that pious Duty to our Sovereign therefore I am forced to seek shelter and protection abroad since Innocency and Law and even Treaties and Publick Engagements prove now too weak Grounds for securing me at home And though this rigid and unparalell●d Procedure against me might have tempted the dullest and calmest nature to some Desperation yet I have still preferred the Peace and Quiet of Scotland to all my own Interests and I do ingeniously declare upon my Honour unto your Lordship that I neither have had neither do I know of any Design from abroad or at home of interrupting the same and now in whatsoever corner of the World it shall please the Lord to throw me as I shall endeavour by his assistance to maintain my Loyalty to my Prince untainted so I shall still preserve a perfect affection to the Peace and Happiness of my Country My prayers to God shall be that it may yet be instrumental of advancing the Work of Reformation and so fixing the Crowns of these Kingdomes upon the Head of our Soveraign Lord the King and of His Royal Progeny after Him that Faction and Rebellion may never be able to shake or interrupt their Government that Loyalty may lose the name of Malignancy and a good Christian may with Safety and without Scandal be and profess to be a good Subject that the Acts of unquestionable Parliaments and the Decrees of other Sovereign Iudicatories of this Kingdom may be Security sufficient to the Subjects to govern their Civil Actions by that they may be free of arbitrary Exactions and Impositions and may enjoy with Truth and Peace their Estates and Liberties without the tyrannous Encroachments of great men and other impowered persons and I am confident that the God of Heaven who will Iudge all the Iudges on earth will avenge the wrongs of the oppressed and in his own time restore me again to my Country who am now forced by unjust Persecution to flee from it This I shall patiently wait for and give your Lordship no more Trouble but desire you to make what use of this you think fit from My Lord Your Lordships most humble Servant LANERICK Dirleton 25th January 1649. But now I return to prosecute what remains to
be said of the Duke Anno 1649. ON the 4th of December Orders were sent to bring him to Windsor and he came thither the 11th of that Month. He was lodged in the House of one of the poor Knights of Windsor and kept under strict Guards yet on the 21th of that Month as the King was carried through Windsor he prevailed so far with his Keepers as to permit him to see his Majesty and as he passed he kneeled down and with a transport of humble Sorrow kissed his hand and had only time to say My dear Master the King embraced him very kindly and said I have been so indeed to you but they were parted and suffered to have no discourse It may easily be imagined with what sorrow he followed the King with his eyes as far as he could see him knowing he was to do so no more nor did he much regrate his present Trouble or imminent Danger all his thoughts being swallowed up in sorrow at the Consideration of his Master's Ruin which was then no more to be doubted the Army and House as it was then modelled or rather forced having avowed their Design against his Person and thrown off the Disguise with which they had long mask'd themselves The Parliament of England had upon the matter condemned the Duke to perpetual Imprisonment Much pains is taken to draw discoveries from him but in vain by setting an hundred thousand pound sterling for his Ransome which sum could not be raised by him at a time when by the Debts he had contracted in the Kings Service his Fortune was fallen so low Cromwel came several times to him to draw from him some Discoveries of his Correspondents in England and gave him great assurances of Life Rewards and Secrecy but he rejected the Proposition with horrour and disdain though often repeated and apprehending they might get his Brother into their hands sent him at that time the following Note which I set down though unfinisht and written with the Juyce of a Lemmon I Vnder the power of the Sword and merciless men no favour to be expected oft examined but nothing discovered being ignorant perhaps you will abide the same Trial beware if you do The thirtieth of Ianuary was that fatal and never-to-be-forgotten Day wherein His Sacred Majesty after the Pageantry of a Trial to add the appearance of Justice to so base and barbarous a Murder was beheaded to the Amazement of all Europe by an unexampled practice in any Monarchy But the particulars of his Royal Constancy and Christian Patience being so punctually related by others I shall not stand to repeat what is already known but having proposed to my self nothing more in this whole Work than to let the World see the great Piety and strictness of Conscience that Blessed Prince carried along with him in all his Affairs and to publish such Remains of his Pen as had not been formerly seen or known I shall therefore insert a Copy of Verses written by his Majesty in his Captivity which a very worthy Gentleman who had the honour of waiting on him then and was much trusted by him Copied out from the Original who avoucheth it to be a true Copy but I shall first present that Royal Martyr to the Readers view in the Posture which was most familiar to Him and then set down those Verses in which the mighty sense and the great Piety will be found to be beyond all the finest sublimities of Poetry which yet are not wanting here An. 1648. Rom. VIII more than Conquerour Bona agere mala pati Regium est Alij diutius Imperium tenuerunt nemo tam fortiter reliquit Tacit. Histor. Lib. 2 c.47 p417 MAJESTY in MISERY OR An Imploration to the KING of Kings Written by His late Majesty King CHARLES the First during His Captivity at Carisbrook Castle Anno Dom. 1648. GREAT Monarch of the World from whose Power Springs The Potency and Power of Kings Record the Royal Woe my Suffering sings And teach my tongue that ever did confine Its faculties in Truths Seraphick Line To track the Treasons of thy foes and mine Nature and Law by thy Divine Decree The only Root of Righteous Royaltie With this dim Diadem invested me With it the sacred Scepter Purple Robe The Holy Vnction and the Royal Globe Yet am I levell'd with the life of Job The fiercest Furies that do daily tread Vpon my Grief my Gray Dis-crowned Head Are those that owe my Bounty for their Bread They raise a War and Christen it The Cause Whil'st sacrilegious hands have best applause Plunder and Murder are the Kingdoms Laws Tyranny bears the Title of Taxation Revenge and Robbery are Reformation Oppression gains the name of Sequestration An. 1649. My Loyal Subjects who in this bad season Attend me by the Law of God and Reason They dare impeach and punish for High Treason Next at the Clergy do their Furies frown Pious Episcopacy must go down They will destroy the Crosier and the Crown Church-men are chain'd and Schismaticks are free'd Mechanicks preach and Holy Fathers bleed The Crown is crucified with the Creed The Church of England doth all Faction foster The Pulpit is usurpt by each Impostor Ex tempore excludes the Pater noster The Presbyter and Independent Seed Springs with broad blades to make Religion bleed Herod and Pontius Pilate are agreed The Corner-stone's misplac'd by every Pavier With such a bloody method and behaviour Their Ancestors did crucifie our Saviour My Royal Consort from whose fruitful Womb So many Princes legally have come Is forc'd in Pilgrimage to seek a Tomb. Great Britain's Heir is forced into France Whilst on his Father's head his foes advance Poor Child He weeps out his Inheritance With my own Power my Majesty they wound In the King's Name the King himself 's uncrown'd So doth the Dust destroy the Diamond With Propositions daily they enchant My Peoples ears such as do Reason daunt And the Almighty will not let me grant They promise to erect my Royal Stem To make Me great t' advance my Diadem If I will first fall down and worship them But for refusal they devour my Thrones Distress my Children and destroy my bones I fear they 'l force me to make bread of stones My Life they prize at such a slender rate That in my absence they draw Bills of hate To prove the King a Traytor to the State Felons obtain more priviledge than I They are allow'd to answer e're they die 'T is death for me to ask the reason Why. But Sacred Saviour with thy words I woo Thee to forgive and not be bitter to Such as thou know'st do not know what they do For since they from their Lord are so disjointed As to contemn those Edicts he appointed How can they prize the Power of his Anointed Augment my Patience nullifie my Hate Preserve my Issue and inspire my Mate Yet though We perish bless this Church and State Vota dabunt quae bella
no Conjunction so it did not appear that they were his Letters only Peters asserted they were like his hand Then a Vote of the Two Houses was read repealing a former Vote of setting an hundred thousand pounds Sterling upon him for Ransome and proof was brought that notwithstanding Articles were given yet some had been forced to take the Negative Oath and thereby they studied to evince that the Parliament did not hold themselves bound to stand to Articles After this his Grace resumed the substance of all those Evidences and shewed that it was not proved he was a post-natus nor that he joyned with Sir Marmaduke Langdale who neither received Orders nor the Word from him but marched and quartered apart and that though he had done otherwise it could not be criminal in him since he had no Orders to the contrary from the Parliament of Scotland but was commanded by them to joyn with all who would concur with him for prosecuting the ends of the Engagement of which Sir Marmaduke approving he had no reason to refuse Concurrence with him neither could this be made Treason by the Law of England of all which it seemed the Parliament was once well-satisfied since by a Vote they had fined him in an hundred thousand pound Sterling as the price of his Liberty by which it appeared they look'd not on him as a Traytor but as an Enemy who had Life granted him by Articles Upon this the Court adjourned till Thursday the 22d and his Counsel were appointed to plead and he was to close his Evidence The Duke was brought to the Bar The ei●ht Appearance and by divers Witnesses it was proved that there was no Rendition made to the Lord Gray but a plain Refusal and that the Treaty was ended the Articles signed and Lambert come up before the Lord Gray came thither There was also produced an Order of Parliament made four years before that No Quarters should be given to any of the Iris● in Arms which inferred that others might have them and another Order was read of the 14th Iuly last declaring all the Sco●s who entred England Enemies and all the English and Irish who assisted them Tr●ytors and with this he closed his Evidence and since he was not to be suffered to speak any more he enlarged on all the parts of his Plea and spake at length as follows That he was sent by the Kingdom of Scotland which was a free Kingdom The Duke pleads largely for himself and independent on England That he having had his Birth Honour and Fortune there was bound to give obedience to their Orders That for himself he had lived much out of business and was seldom in Publick Trust in that Kingdom nor very desirous of any but that being commanded to undertake the Charge of General for ends which he conceived lawful and no way contrary to the Peace or Interest of England he was obliged to follow their Orders and that by some Papers emitted by the Parliament of England against that Expedition they declared they looked on it as a National Breach whereby Scotland had violated their Leagues and Treaties with them so that it was no private Act of his That the entring of the Scotish Army into England Anno 1640 was accounted no Invasion nor Treason but on the contrary was acceptable to this Kingdom which gave a Brotherly Assistance for it and that the late unfortunate Army was designed fully for as good Ends and would have been so looked on had it prospered And for his joyning with Sir Marmaduke Langdale he answered it as was before set down Therefore he being taken Prisoner in such a War he conceived it without a Precedent that he should be Tried for his Life for serving his Native Kingdom in an open War As for his being an Alien he referred that to his Counsel but said it was undeniable he was born in Scotland nor was he proved a post-natus he was also born before his Father's Naturalization and so not included in it and his own Naturalization had been in agitation in the beginning of this Parliament That his sitting in Parliament did not conclude him an English Earl for if questioned he might probably have been expelled out of the House of Peers as his Countryman Mr. Walter Stuart was out of the House of Commons and that his being an Earl did not naturalize him that being the King 's single Act where as Naturalization was only by Act of Parliament As for the Articles it was clear that Lambert being a General Officer commissionated by Parliament was impowered to Capitulate both by the Parliament and by Cromwel the L. Gray having no Authority from the Parliament but only from Cromwel's Letter that he became the Lord Gray's Prisoner only by Lambert's Order and that he made no Surrender till the Articles were signed and delivered that though the Lord Gray had protested against it and yet only an intention to do it was proved he was not concerned in it nor bound to take notice of it Lambert being the Parliaments Officer and sent against him by them That Articles were to be expounded by their plain meaning and not by any mental reserves pretended by the Commissioners That by the first Article he was a Prisoner of War and that it was seldom known that the Life of any such was taken and that by the second Article Life and Safety of Person were expresly secured without any exception That if Articles were now violated it would make the sequel of the Wars if any more followed a down-right Butchery since none would any more trust to a Capitulation which Mischief he prayed God to avert That his Escape out of Prison was no Breach he being only bound by the Articles to deliver himself Prisoner which he did but not to continue so and he concluded that he was confident had he no better Plea his Articles were sufficient according to the Laws of all Nations to preserve his Life Then the President asked him if he had any thing to say as he was Earl of Cambridge whereupon he and his Counsel moved that if what he had said and proved was not satisfactory for the Averment of his Plea he might answer the Charge exhibited which he had not yet done But to this neither the Court nor their Counsel would yield though they gave no reason for it save only that it implyed a desire of Delay but the reason as was said was that they knew had they yielded to that the Charge had been overthrown since the Law of England does not admit that to be Treason which they charged on him that he had assisted the King against the Kingdom and People by levying War Then the Court told his Counsel that Saturday was the longest time they allowed them for performing their part but the Counsel answered that it was impossible for them to undertake it and discharge their Consciences to their Client having so short a time allowed them there
being a necessity of searching divers Records for Precedents which required a competent time as had been allowed in former cases but the Court refused to promise it only they said they would take it into their consideration The Counsel insisted and said plainly they declined the Imployment on those terms and would be forced to declare it Monday the 26th the other two Officers that had signed the Capitulation for the Duke and his Troops The ninth Appearance who had been sent for a great way off were examined who agreed with the former Witnesses in matters of Fact and also with Lilburn that by signing the Articles they only meant the Duke should be preserved from the Violence of the Souldiers and not from the Justice of the Parliament Then the Counsel began to Plead and all four spoke on the several Heads of the Plea Mr. Heron spoke cursorily and elegantly but not very materially Mr. Parsons a young man spoke boldly and to good purpose Mr. Chute the Civilian spoke learnedly and home and Mr. Hales since the much-renowned Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench elaborately and at length The Heads of their Arguments follow The Duke's Counsel at Law plead for him The Duke being as was granted a born Scotch-man his Tie of obligation and subjection to that Kingdom was indispensable and indissoluble so that his late Imployment could not be refused when laid on him by the Authority of that Kingdom no more than a Native of England living in it can disobey the Commands of this Parliament whereas any Subjection the Duke owed the Parliament of England was only acquired and dispensable That since no man can be a Subject of two Kingdoms whatever Tye lay on him to the Kingdom of England it was not to be put in Competition with what he owed Scotland it being a Maxim in Law that Major relatio trahit ad se minorem and that Ius Originis nemo mutare potest That there was an Allegeance due to the King and another to the Kingdom and no Treason could be without a Breach of Faith and Allegeance due to them against whom it was committed for these Kingdoms were two distinct Kingdoms and though the Allegeance due to the King was the same in both Kingdoms yet that due to the Kingdoms was distinct nor was the Actual administration of the Kingdoms in the Kings Person when the Duke got his Imployment therefore as his Allegeance to the Kingdom of Scotland was ancienter and stronger than any Tie that lay on him in England so what he did by their Order might well make him an Enemy to this Kingdom but could not infer Treason Yet all this of the Allegeance due to the Kingdom was founded on no Common or Statute Law as Mr. Hales himself confessed afterwards but he urged this well against those who asserted it it being the universally received Maxim at that time That whether he was a Post-natus or Ante-natus did not appear but though he were it did not vary the Case nor his obligation to the place of his Nativity and so though he were Post-natus or accounted a Denizen by his Fathers Naturalization his Offence could not be Treason but Hostility at most and by that supposed Hostility he could only lose his Priviledge of a Denizen but could not be made a Traitor there being no Precedent where ever any man was attainted of Treason for a hostile Invasion and it was questionable if this Offence could amount to that nor could any case be alledged where one born in another Independent Kingdome acting by a Commission from that Kingdom and residing there when he received his Commission and raising the Body of his Army in that Kingdom and coming into this in an Open Hostile manner was ever judged guilty of Treason Naturalization was intended to be a Benefit and not a Snare so that one might well lose it but was not to be punished for it And so when France and England were under one Soveraign divers of both Nations were naturalized in the other yet when Hostility broke out betwixt them many so naturalized fought on the side of their Native Kingdom for which none were put to death though divers were taken Prisoners And in Edward the third's time though he claimed France as his by Right yet when the Constable of France invaded England and was taken Prisoner he was not tried nor put to death but sent back to France as being a Native of that Kingdom And when David Bruce King of Scotland invaded this Kingdom and was taken Prisoner great endeavours were used to find a Legal ground for his Trial he being Earl of Huntington in England but this Plea was waved for it was found that it could not be done justly that being but a less degree of Honour though King Edward claimed a kind of Homage from the Crown of Scotland That if the Duke were on that account put to death it might prove of sad consequence in case there was War any more betwixt the Kingdoms since most of the present Generation were Post-nati and all would be so quickly and yet if the Lord Fairfax who was both a Post-natus and had his Honour in Scotland were commanded to lead an Army thither and being taken were put to death it would be thought hard measure For the Duke's Father's Naturalization it was true by the Statute of the 25 Ed. 3. provision was made that Children born without the Kingdom whose Parents were then in the King's Allegeance should be Denizens but the Duke was born before his Father's Naturalization which can never reach him none but the Issue after his Father's Naturalization being included within it and the word Haeres in the Act is only a word of Limitation and not of Creation nor did his making use of the assistance of some English Forces make him a Traytor It is true if an Englishman conduct a Foreign Army or if a Foreigner come of his own head or in a Rebellious way to assist an English Rebellion it will amount to Treason for the Act of such an Alien is denominated from the crime of those he assist here where he owed a local Obedience which was the Case of Shirley the Frenchman and of Lopez but if an Alien come with a Foreign Force though he make use of English Auxiliaries that only infers a Hostility but no Treason and was the case of the Lord Harris a Scotchman 15 Eliz. and of Perkin Warbeck both having English help and though Warbeck was put to death it was by no Civil Judicatory but only by the Will of Henry the 7th who erected a Court-Marshall for that purpose The present case was yet clearer where the Alien had Authority from his Native Kingdom and was commanded by them to make use of English help so that though Langdale's assisting the Duke did make himself a Traytor yet the Duke's accepting of it only infers an Act of Hostility And whereas it was objected that the Parliament had already by
in his Breast Nothing did so much support his spirit under the heavy Pressure that lay over it as the desire he had to preserve his Life for His Majesties Service of which he was prodigal when he saw it useless to his Master for his Life had been of a great while burdensome to him and indeed it was no wonder to see Death so welcome to one who had so little reason to desire to live and so much ground to hope in Death for when the Tossings and unjust unmerciful Usage he met with in those years he survived his Brother are well looked into it is a wonder they forced him not unto the horridest Resolutions imaginable I use his own words and to pursue private and publick Injuries with a mortal Resentment yet his zeal for the Kings Service and the Countries Quiet over-ruled all other thoughts From Scotland he went to Holland where he was scarce landed when he heard the sad and dismal news of the Kings Murder nor had he recovered of the extreme Grief that raised in him when he heard likewise how his Brother was murthered which afflicted him beyond expression nor did any thing grieve him more than his laying down Arms at Sterlin for when he saw too late how they had been abused in it he censured it more severely than any of his Enemies could do He was ill used by his Enemies and the Preachers In Scotland the Parliament if that Meeting could ever deserve that name wherein there were scarce any of the Nobility present not only condemned the Engagement for the King but passed an Act against all the Engagers ranking them in several Classes whence it got the name of an Act of Classes whereby they were excluded from all Offices publick Trust and Vote in Parliament nor were they ever to be admitted to Trust till they had satisfied the Church by a publick profession of their Repentance for their accession to the unlawful Engagement as it was then called and were by them recommended to the favour of the State and those that ruled were resolved to readmit none but such as would depend on them and adhere to their Interests They were also particularly severe to the Duke for breaking Confinement and leaving Scotland without their Pass The Duke upon his arrival in Holland offered his Service to his Master our Gracious Soveraign who now Reigns which he received and entertained with so much Royal Goodness as if the Affection and Confidence of their Masters had been the Inheritance of these Brothers and what the late King was to the Elder his Majesty was to the Younger who continues to this day to honour his Memory with the highest Commendations And indeed his Royal Favour was not misplaced on one that was either unsensible or ungrateful for never Subject served Master with more Honesty Zeal and Affection so that no consideration either of Hope or Fear wrought so much on him as the Affection he bore his Master neither expressed he anxiety for any thing at his Death save for His Majesties Person fearing lest he might fall into their cruel hands whom he knew to be thirsting for his Blood He stayed in the Netherlands till His Majesty came to Scotland He adviseth the King to settle with Scotland and though those that governed there were so much his Enemies that they would have the King stand to their Act of Classes and made that one of the Articles of their Treaty at Breda yet the Duke seeing the desperate posture the Kings Affairs were in and that no visible hope remained unless His Majesty settled fully with Scotland was not only satisfied to consent to that severe Demand but did earnestly press His Majesty to agree with that Kingdom whatever might become of him Many were for extremer Methods and pressed the Duke to concur for making a forcible Impression upon Scotland but he well foresaw the mischief of that Course and how little could be promised from it for as no great Concurrence could be expected in the condition things were then driven to so all that could follow even on a little success was to expose the Country to the rage of a prevailing Army from England against which Scotland entirely united would have had work enough though it had not been weakned by a Civil War and therefore he was against all Divisions which might also have tempted the prevailing Party to joyn with the English Army The Treaty with the Scotish Commissioners was held at Breda where things stuck long their Demands being very high and uneasy to the King The chief of the Commissioners was the Earl of Cassilis who did truly love the King and Kingly Government so that when the Usurpation proved sucessful by the Conquest of Scotland afterwards though Usurper studied by the greatest Offers he could make to gain him to his Party considering the high esteem he was in for his Piety and Vertue could never prevail so far as to make him advance one step towards him even in outward Civilities yet he was a most zealous Covenanter but of so severe a Vertue and so exactly strict to every thing in which he judged his Honour or Conscience concerned that he would not abate an ace of his Instructions but stood his ground so that nothing could beat or draw him out of it But he did it with so much Fairness and Candor that the King though troubled enough with the difficulties that bred him yet was much taken with the Openness of his Proceeding with him and conceived so high an Opinion of his Fidelity to him that nothing could ever cha●ge or lessen it so so excellent a thing is Ingenuity that it begets an esteem wherever it is to be found even when we are most displeased with the Instances in which it appears The next in the Commission was the Earl of Lothian who though he was deeply engaged in Friendship and Interests with the Marquis of Argyle yet was of a Noble Temper had great Parts and a high sense of Honour The other Commissioners depended on them and went easily along with them in what they agreed to The Commissioners seeing the good Offices the Duke did were willing he should return with his Majesty to Scotland Anno 1650 and enjoy the common Priviledges of Scotchmen only be secluded from all publick Trust and from his Vote in Parliament But the leading-men in Scotland judged it necessary for the Peace of that Kingdom that the Duke might not return with His Majesty and sent Orders for stopping his Voyage These Orders came not to Holland before most of the Commissioners were aboard only the Earls of Cassilis and Lothian were ashore when they got them they were much troubled to get such severe Commands obliging them to break the Treaty they had so lately signed But since most of their fellow-Commissioners were gone But is put from His Majesty at his return to Scotland and they without them made not a Quorum they could do nothing so
Designs At that time the Enemy landed at Innerkeething in Fife The King marches to England and the great Loss the King had there did both raise the Enemies boldness and much daunt his faithful Friends for now Cromwell was betwixt His Majesty and the Northern Counties of Scotland which were both most affectionate to his Service and from whence he was to expect Provisions and Supplies so that it was not possible for the King to maintain the War any longer in Scotland and therefore he resolved on a March to England being put in hopes of great Accessions of force to his Army from the Royal Party there and this gave a trial to the Fidelity and Courage of many of the Scotish Nation but too many looking on the Attempt as desperate being more careful of their Lives and Fortunes than to hazard either in the King's Service shrunk away though divers of them had Charges in the Army Against these base Deserters of their King and Country the Duke was moved with such just Indignation that he vowed if ever he returned with Life and Liberty he should make these in whom he had interest answer for it But the Duke's thoughts of this March and his sad apprehensions of the whole Business will appear from the following Letter he wrote to his Neece that succeeded him Dear Neece INdeed I know not what to say to you I would fain say something more encouraging than my last was but I cannot lie our Condition is no better and since that time we have a thousand men I fear twice that number run from our Army Since the Enemy shuns Fighting with us except upon advantage we must either starve disband or go with a handful of Men into England This last seems to be the least Ill yet it appears very desperate to me for more reasons than I will trouble you with I fear your own Reason will afford you too many Dear Neece it is not your Courage I will desire you to make use of in this Extremity look for Strength to bear it from a higher Power all your Natural Virtues will not resist it therefore look to him who hath in former times assisted you to resist a great Affliction and can do it again if you seek to him aright you have already lost so much that all other Earthly Losses were drowned in that Those you meet with now are Christian Exercises wherewith oftimes the Lord visits his own to wean their Affections from things here below that we may place them upon himself in whom we have all things and if we could as we ought set our Hearts upon him we should find our selves very little concerned in most things which bring us greatest Trouble here on Earth where we are but for a minute in our way to Eternity O consider that word Eternity and you will find we struggle here for that that 's even less than nothing why trouble we our selves for Earthly Losses for when we have lost all we have there are thousands as dear to God as we as poor as we We are rich though we lose the whole World if we gain him let us set before our eyes the example of those who to give testimony to the Truth rejoyced to lay down their Lives nay let us with humble presumption follow the Pattern of our Blessed Saviour who for our sakes suffered more than man can think on the burthen of all our Sins and the Wrath of his Father and shall we then repine to lay down our Lives for him when he calls for it from us to give us a nearer admittance to him than we can hope for while we are clog'd with our Clay-Tenements Dear Neece I should never be weary to talk with you though this be a Subject I confess I cannot speak of well but even that Happiness is bereft me by the importunity of a Crowd of Persons that are now in the Room with me grudging the time I take in telling you that while I am I am Yours c. Sterlin 28th July 1651. The Duke waited on the King in the whole March and gave Order that the Troops which he had levyed should follow with all possible haste Seven of them came up and joyned the Army at Moffet but the interruptions the Enemy gave made that the rest could not be raised nor were these Troops full The Duke welcomed them with great affection and assured them they should be as dear to him as his own Life and that if God blessed the King with Success he should be very careful to see them rewarded as they should deserve but seeing they made in all but betwixt two and three hundred he feared too many Standards would make them look like the remains of a broken Army and therefore he set up only his own Standard and so turned his small Regiment into a great Troop and marched on with the Army When the Army came to Warington-Bridge An. 1651. and beat Lambert from it the Duke Commanded the Brigade where his Horse were that was in the Reer of the Foot Lambert is beat from Warington-bridge but that and the other Brigade of Horse being commanded to halt he sent his Major to the Lieutenant-General for Orders to March that the Enemy might be vigorously pursued but the Lieutenant-General would have the Foot led over first and so that occasion was lost which he with many others did infinitely greater with great demonstrations of Grief Then it was debated which way the King should hold the Duke pressed that they should March streight to London which was the desire of the whole Army and that which Lambert apprehended for in his Retreat he took the London-Road There were also many other reasons used to enforce it but the English Nobility and Gentry who were in the Army and the Earl of Derby who with many Gentlemen came to the Army that night gave many reasons against that March The Duke seeing them so much against it though his Reason could not go along with theirs yet that he might not oppose so many brave and LoyalGentlemen went out of the Kings Tent for he would not by his Presence seem to consent to that which he apprehended would prejudice the Kings Service but was so far from disparaging the other Counsels and enhancing the value of his own that he went and laboured with all the Officers of the Army to engage them to a cheerful Concurrence in the Resolutions that were taken and studied even to perswade them to assent to that which had not yet prevailed on his own Reason The Resolution being taken to go to Worcester and storm it The King entered Worcester the Army marched and when they came near the Town some Horse and Dragoons which were sent thither by Lambert two days before retired to Glocester and the King entred Worcester with two Bodies of Foot the rest Marched through the Town over the Severn The day after the King came to Worcester the Duke with many
the Frith ibid. The Marq. puts his Souldiers aboard ibid. Some alterations in the Proclamation p. 122. The King orders the Marq. not to go to the North p. 123. The Marq. sails into the Frith p. 124. He sends the Kings Proclamation to Edinburgh ibid. The Covenanters write to him p. 125. To which he answers p. 126. Some come and treat with him p. 127. The Kings Advices to him ibid. A Proposition about the Ferries in Scotland p. 128. The Earl of Rothes writes sharply to the Marq. p. 129. The Marq. Answers him p. 130. The Marq. sends some proposals for a Treaty to the King p. 131. Which the K. is pleased with ibid. The state of the Covenanters Forces p. 132. The K. sends for two Regiments from the Marq. p. 133. A Conference between the Marq and some Covenanters ibid. The K. sends some Lords to the Marq. p. 135. And the Viscount of Aboyn p. 136. The K. is willing to enter on a Treaty p. 137. And is well satisfied with the Marq. ibid. Some on the Borders gained to the Kings Party p. 138. The K. Orders the Marq. to proceed to Hostilities ibid. Who sets about it ibid. But gets new Orders and goes to Court p. 139. A Treaty is begun p. 140. and concluded p. 141. The Kings Declaration ibid. The Articles of the Treaty p. 142. It is variously censured p. 143. And not like to take effect ibid. The Castles are delivered to the K. p. 144. The Marq. offers advice to the K. p. 145. The King thinks to send him again Commissioner ibid. But he gives many reasons against it p. 146. Traquair is made Commissioner p. 148. The K. writes for many Covenanters ibid. Some only come ibid. The Kings Order to the Marq. about them ibid. Montrose is gained by the King p. 149. Traquair's Instructions ibid. Lib. 3. Of what passed after he laid down his Commission till July 1642. THe Marq. retires from Publick Affairs p. 153. Traquair goes to Scotland ibid. The King writes to the Scotish Bishops p. 154. Their Declinatour of the Assembly p. 155. The Assembly sits and are very high p. 156. The King sends further directions to Traquair ibid. A new explanation of the Covenant p. 157. Traquair signs the Covenant p. 158. The King is much displeased with him ibid. T●e Parliament sits p. 159. But is Prorogued ibid. The Covenanters send up their Complaint to the King p. 160. Whom Traquair incites to a War ibid. The Earl of Lowdon put in the Tower ibid. and the reason of it p. 161. A new War resolved on ibid. An. 1640. The Covenanters preparations p. 162. Lanerick is made Secretary of State ibid. Lindsay writes to the Marq. to prevent a War ibid. The Marq. answers him by the King's Orders p. 163. The Grounds of the Covenanters confidence p. 165. A short Parl. in England p. 166. The Privy Councellours lend money ibid. And so does the Marquis ibid. The Parl. in Scotland sits without any Commissioner from the King ibid. And send up their Acts to the K. p. 167. With which the King is much offended p. 168. A Memorial of Lowdon's p. 169. An Agreement between the Marq. and him in two Papers p. 170 171. He is set at Liberty ibid. Lanerick writes by him in the King's name to the Committee in Scotland ibid. Their Answer to that Letter p. 172. The Scots Complaints p. 173. They come into England ibid. The K. declares them Traitors ibid. They beat the Kings Forces at Newburn ibid. And pass Tine and take Newcastle p. 174. They write again to Lanerick ibid. And send a Petition to the K. p. 175. The K. answers it p. 176. They send another Letter p. 177. The K. appoints a Treaty p. 178. The Marq. presses a Pacification ibid. A breach between the Marq. and Montrose p. 179. The Treaty begins at Rippon p. 180. and is carried on at London ibid. The Kings Answer to the Remonstrance of the Two Houses ibid. An. 1641. The King yields to the demands of the Covenanters p. 181 The E. of Strafford writes to the Marq. p. 182 Many complain of the Marq. p. 183 The E. of Rothes dies p. 184. The Parl. proceeds against Incendiaries ibid. Montrose is put in Prison ibid. The K. goes to Scotland ibid. The Members of Parl. there subscribe the Covenant p. 185. The Marq. is vindicated by Act of Parl. from the Calumnies some did cast on him ibid. But the K. grows jealous of him ibid. An account of the Incident p. 186. He again recovers the Kings favour ib. The Rebellion in Ireland p. 187. The Marq. Friendships designed for the Kings Service ibid. The K. returns to London ibid. Some design to impeach the Marq. in England ibid. But that is prevented p. 188. An. 1642. The Scotish Commissioners stickle in England against Episcopacy ibid. The King is offended with them for it p. 189. And requires them to do so no more ibid. He writes about it to Lowdon and Argyle ibid. The Scotish Army is sent to Ireland p. 191. The Marquis's sickness p. 192. The Treaty between Scotland and England ibid. New Calumnies on the Marquis ibid. But he clears himself p. 193. The K. thinks of going to Ireland ibid. The Marq. waits on the King p. 194. And is sent by him to Scotland ibid. Lib. 4. Of the Duke's and his Brother the Earl of Lanerick's Negotiation in Scotland till their Imprisonment IN Scotland they favour the Two Houses p. 195. The Marq. sends the K. an account of it p. 196. An Assembly in Scotland ibid. They declare against Episcopacy ibid. Motions for a meeting of the Conservators of the Peace p. 197. The K. writes about Vniformity in Religion ibid. The Scots keep a Resident at London ibid. Mr. Murray's Letter about the Affairs of Scotland p. 198. Lanerick's Letter about Affairs in England p. 199. The Marq. studies to gain many to the King p. 200. The Kings Letter to the Conservators ibid. They incline to serve the K. p. 201. And to invite the Queen back ibid. But the K. did not approve of it p. 202. Yet is sensible of the Marq. fidelity ibid. The Earl of Louthian is sent to France ibid. An Extraordinary Letter of the Kings to the Marquis p. 203. The Marquis and Argyle at Enmity p. 204. Great debates in the Council ibid. The King has a great sense of the Marq. Services p. 205. An. 1643. Many Petitions come in to favour the Two Houses p. 206. The Cross Petition ibid. It is condemned by the Ministers p. 209. Commissioners are sent to Treat between the King and the Two Houses ibid. The King rejects their Mediation p. 210. And answers the desires of the Ministers ibid. A Petition against the Annuities p. 211. signed by many ibid. Montrose proposes to the Queen to begin a War in Scotland p. 212. The Marq. opposes it ibid. The Kings Answer about the Mediation of the Scotish Commissioners p. 213. They are called home p. 215. The Marq. writes
raised Regiments of five or six Troops on their own expences And though it is not to be imagined that the publick Expence of so great a Design was not likewise great yet there was a sad want of Money which the Duke and his Brother did all they could to supply as far as their Credit could go and raised above two and twenty thousand pounds sterling for prosecuting of the Engagement and were on all publick occasions so liberal of their own Money as if some Bank had been put into their hands The Curses the Ministers thundred against all who joyned in this Engagement made the Souldiers very heartless being threatned with no less than Damnation This obliged the Lords to use Force in some places for carrying on their Levies and indeed the Ministers counter-acting the State was such that it is hard to judge whether their Boldness or the Parliaments Patience was most to be wondred at The Lords resolved to chastise them to purpose in due time but judged the present time improper for it and to carry on the Levies the better the Parliament adjourned for three weeks So the Lords went to the several places of their Interests leaving a Committee behind them at Edinburgh but before their Adjournment they wrote the following Letter to the Presbyteries The Parliaments Letter to the Presbyteries THe many Scandals that are t●rown on our Actions by the favourers of Sectaries and haters of the Person of our King and Monarchical Government invite us to this extraordinary Address to you conjuring you as you will answer the Great God whose Servants you are not to suffer your selves to be possest with unjust and undeserved Prejudices against us and our Proceedings who have since our late Meeting in Parliament preferred no earthly thing to Religion and the promoving all the ends of our Covenant and have constantly used all real Endeavours to have carried on these Duties to the satisfaction of the most tender Consciences and especially by our great Compliance with the many Desires from the Commissioners of the General Assembly we have proceeded to greater discoveries of our Resolutions in the ways and means of managing of this present Service than possibly in prudence we ought to have done having so near and active Enemies to oppose us neither can it with any Truth or Iustice in any sort be alledged that we have in the least measure wronged or violated the least Priviledges and Liberties of the Church or taken upon us the determination or decision of any matters of Faith or Church-discipline though we be unjustly charged with making an Antecedent Iudgment in matters of Religion under pretence whereof great Encroachments are made on our unquestioned Rights for what can be more Civil than to determine what Civil Duties we ought to pay to our King or what Civil Power he ought to be possessed of and if we meet with obstructions and opposition in carrying on these Duties are not we the only Iudges thereof is there any other Authority in this Kingdom but that of King and Parliament and what flows from them that can pretend any Authoritative Power in the choice of the Instruments and Managers of our Publick Resolutions is it a Subject for the Dispute of Church-Iudicatories whether His Majesty have a Negative Voice or not These things certainly cannot be pretended to by any Kirk-man without a great Vsurpation over the Civil Magistrate whereof we are confident the Church of Scotland or any Iudicatory thereof will never be guilty nor fall into the Episcopal disease of meddling in Civil Affairs and if any have already in these Particulars exceeded their bounds we expect the ensuing General Assembly will censure it accordingly and prevent the vilifying and contemning the Authority of Parliament by any of their Ministers either in or out of their Pulpits who shall offer to stir up the Subjects of this Kingdom to disobey or deny to give Civil Obedience to their Laws it being expresly prohibited by the 2 and 5 Acts of King James the sixth his eighth Parliament Anno 1584. That none of His Majesties Subjects under pain of Treason impugne the Authority of Parliament And therefore seeing the Cause is the same for which this Kingdom hath done and suffered so much and that we are resolved to proceed for the Preservation and Defence of Religion before all wordly Interest whatsoever and to carry on sincerely really and constantly the Covenant and all the Ends of it as you will find by our Declaration herewith sent to you we do confidently expect that as the Ministers of this Kingdom have hitherto been most active and exemplary in furthering the former Expeditions so now you will continue in the same Zeal to stir up the People by your Preaching and Prayers and all other ways in your Calling to a chearful Obedience to our Orders and Engageing in the business that you will not give so great advantage to the Enemies of Presbyterial Government and bring so great a Scandal on this Church as to oppose the Authority of Parliament or obstruct their Proceedings in their necessary Duties for the good of Religion Honour and Happiness of the King and his Royal Posterity and the true Peace of His Dominions Signed by Order of Parliament Alex. Gibsone Clerk Regist. Edinburgh May 11 1648. The Parliament having resolved to raise an Army for the Kings Relief The Parliament sends for the Scotish Army in Ireland found it expedient for encreasing the number and strength of their Forces to send to Ireland for a part of their Scotish Army there which as was told An. 1642 had been sent from Scotland thither by Commission from the King under the Great Seal and upon a Treaty and Establishment betwixt the two Nations for suppressing the Irish Rebellion and for perswading them to desert for so Noble an Undertaking their Interest in Ireland which was very considerable for there was above seven hundred and seventy thousand pound sterling of Arrear resting to them upon a stated Accompt fitted by Persons intrusted by the Parliament of England and Commissioners from them preceding the 16th of Iune 1647 besides a year more until Iune 1648 not at all reckoned they sent over three of their number two Knights Sir Iames Macdougal and Sir William Cocheran now Earl of Dundonald and Mr. Crawford Burgess of Linlithgow with Letters and Instructions to that purpose They were kindly received by such of the Officers as had chief Power there but most unwelcome to a contrary Party who had notice how averse the Kirk to which they were addicted had declared themselves from the Designs of that Parliament nevertheless it was quickly agreed to that about twelve hundred Horse and two thousand and one hundred Foot should be provided and regimented and transported to Scotland to be conducted by Sir George Monro in the quality of a Major-General and to be joyned with the Dukes Armie At Westminster they were in great Confusion fearing that the General