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A52464 The triumph of our monarchy, over the plots and principles of our rebels and republicans being remarks on their most eminent libels / by John Northleigh ... Northleigh, John, 1657-1705. 1685 (1685) Wing N1305; ESTC R10284 349,594 826

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Claws the Doctor the Dr. our English man and he the Doctor and Venetian one of them must be somewhat of the Ass among them and then 't is Demonstrable they have a great share in it all and because the great Galen of the Times is so bold with his Catharticks as to set up for his Purging of the Court of Chancery tho I Page 129. am no Practiser in it yet I shall take the pains to defend it against the Doctor in its due place and since the Mountebank for the Body Natural is here all along made an Empirick for the Diseases of the POLITICK and from his Colledg brought to the Coffee-House to talk only of the Marasmus of State I 'll give him my sence tho no States-man of this whole Work in his own Phraseology The Piece seems to me like a sort of Preparation among the Doctors a meer Amalgama the Chymical Operator understands it better than many a Politician the Marasmus 't is a Composition of meer Quick-silver and Lead tho this Political Spagyrist perhaps will call it Saturn and Mercury here this Author with the help of the Fire of his hot Brain has incorporated his volatile thoughts and his dull ones together gay Compliments and Air Faction and Hell in a lump And tho this homely Physician won't allow himself to have been abroad tho the courteous Venetian contended for his breeding in Padua Page 81. yet the frequency of Murders here too would make a Body mistrust it and however their Human Bodys escape such Principles I am sure have Poyson'd some of their Souls and thus I have plac'd my Pleasant Observation upon their Ridiculous Stuff together that I might only reflect hereafter on what they would have thought serious and I shall worth a Reflection without the Mixture of Mirth Their mingl'd Foppery must otherwise provoke a little Laughter as well as their Principles of Sedition incense and I cannot Trim my Passions so well as to keep them in a pure Medley of Mirth and Anger If any affected to the Cause or disaffected thinks his Introduction deserv's a more serious Reply let him take the pains to give it a more solid Elaborate Confutation In the Second day they wisely agreed not to play the Fool and 't is well they slept upon 't for the sake of their Senses and the first Observation of the Venetian is as long as his Noble gown down to the very heels of two Pages but for brevity you shall have it in as many words Why that our English Nation signifies so Plat. Red. Page 16. little abroad yet makes such a great sight at home our Author having been so much Conversant with Dons and French can't forbear falling to his Formality agen and after a soft sort of Compliment to the Courteous Stranger and the Government thus Thunders out his Negative Reason Evil Counsellors Pensioner Parliament Thorough pac'd Judges Flattering Ibid p. 20 Divines designing Papists French Councils So I have seen at another sort of Cabal where such Disputants use to assemble for Edification and Doctrine not Dialogue and Dispute the Jack-Pudding of their Pulpit has seem'd to whisper his God Almighty in the Ear as a common Zany does his Mountebank for Instruction and then raves out to the list'ning and Attentive Rabble his Choledochons Phlegmagogons Balms of Gilead Conscience Salve Curse ye Meroz Sword of Gideon and for this Enthusiasm too those Harleqins of their Assemblies the Burlesques of the Bible shall Blaspheme with the very Book and vouch the Almighties coming to them in a still voice and sometimes in a rushing wind and the Devil of Sedition shall be countenanced with the word of God I should hardly pardon my self the Liberty of fullying the sacred Text with so much as the repetition of such a Simile did not I know the Zealots themselves had vouch't it for a Iustification of their sudden Raptures and Inspiration and for this Preacher of the Politicks tho I never saw him in his Geer and Gestures I am sure he makes just such another Figure in his Speech on a sudden 't is all Aposeiopesis soft and fair and assoon all in Exclamation and Ecphone and these heats and lucid Interval's of raving run through his whole Work But first for his Forreigner with his Observation is it a Mathematical Postulate that our Nation is so despicable with our Neighbour's that it must be granted assoon as ask't or has he rather beg'd the Question or can the Noble Student from his Geometry measure the fame and reputation of the Kingdoms of the Earth but whatever his skill be in the Doctrine of Triangles I am sure he is much out here in his Measures and whatever reputation England has at Venice or a compleat Monarchy with a mixt Republick I am sure with better Governments it has as much esteem and when ever it loses any it must proceed from the Scandals and Infectious breath of such Authors and Seditious Vipers that wound the Reputation as well as the Bowels of their Dam. But that matter of Fact may contradict what Malice does but suggest near the very same Time this most Impudent About 80. or 81. Observation was made did they propose to our present Prince the League of Guaranty and desire HIS entrance before that of the Empire But I can tell him what once brought a Scandal indeed upon the Nation made it a reproach to it's Neighbours in a thing of the like Nature not to mention the Murder of their King for that supersedes all hopes of regaining it's former Esteem for did not the Proceedings of that Rebel Parliament make us a by-word to the Heathen and a Scandal even to the revolted Holland did not the very Turks bless themselves at the Villany and the Dutch since in Derision cut off the Tails of their Currs to let us know we made less of a Kings head than a Dogs Neck But this we mean to apply related to it's reputation upon a League too this was a Scandal also brought upon it by a Parliament this was the effect of unjustly altering the Succession And this was in the Time of Henry the 8 when the Princes of the Empire would have made him Head of the Protestant League but upon hearing of his Extravagant Parliamentary Proceedings of their repudiating what Wives he pleas'd and allowing a more cruel Divorce of a Pious Protestant Queen from her Life as well as his Bed and severing her Head from her Shoulders as well as the Crown when they saw the Senate of England so Inconsistent with themselves as to Legitimate Bastards and then make Bastards of those they thought Legitimate Then began our Nations Reputation to be low with our Neighbours Then began our Parliament's to be look't upon as insignificant and the Supream Power of our great Assembly to Forreign Councils seem inconsistent and their mighty Credit so mean that they could not be trusted and thereupon all the Leaguer's unanimously rejected Henry
of that Metropolis for the right Line was such and so considerable together with that Princes own Courage and Conduct that he remained Conqueror in three several Battels and had been so in the fourth too the last I believe the Dane would have dared to offer had not that false Edric the Traytor to his Father acted o're the same Treason to the Son and revolted in the fight when the Forces of the Foe where on the point of flying The taking but half his Kingdom at that Duel and Accommodation in the Isle of Aln●y was more fatal than fortunate when still his trusty Citizens would have fought for the whole and spent their last blood for the right Line they had first espoused the parting with some of his right was quickly succeeded with the losing of all and his Life to the Bargain and our Kingdom of England might well be too weak to stand when divided against its self and by that Donation of Edmund made half the Danes So dangerous is it to Princes to forgo the least of their right which only introduces the loss of a greater share or to part with a piece of Praerogative for the patching up some popular divisions whose twisted Interest like Cords that are a twining if it catch but the Skirts of the Purple will soon wind away the whole robe the Observation is here verified upon our old Records and has been newly transcribed in Blood in our latter days and the Son of our Royal Martyr reads the best Politicks for the Prevention in that unfortunate Testimony of his Father and if Sovereignty be somewhat that is Divine a Subjects robbing of the Crown must be next to that of a Church and a sin that favours as much of sacriledge But to let you know in short the design of this Historian's Complement upon which we have dwelt too long the pretty Parenthesis was applyed to another purpose 't was publisht at a time when the City was Influencing an House of Commons that were for altering Succession and they as great an Influence with the City at a Banquet of Politicks after their Parliament Feast and His time to let them know the † Brief Hist p. 2. Approbation of that renowned City had then no little Influence on the Succession And besides in the very Stow mentions not one word of this Athelstan 's Illegitimacy and his own Author whom he cites for the falsehood relates it but as a Fable by which Daniel too was deceived same Page he had prepared for them the pretty President of the Saxons preferring a brave and deserving Bastard before Him that was the Legitimate Prince He means that Athelstan whom he resolves rather erroniously to suppose Illegitimate than Ingeniously to allow him as he truly was the Lawful Heir But Baker and others tell us the Truth tho' he will not and say this Athelstan was the Eldest and no way spurious But the telling of the Truth would have prevented this malicious Authors Factious insinuation of a lye which he forg'd only for an application of it to the times and that it might be made more remarkable he must mark it out in Emphatical Italicks only to save the crying Monmouth and York But the Card is turned there now and the Loyal Heart Trump instead of his Clubs and to be hoped they 'l ever make good the best part of the Observation which he never designed they should stand and fall with their Loyal Progenitors in the defence of the right Line and the Royal Blood In short upon the whole united and happy union of the Monarchy of the Saxons give me leave to observe this great Truth that from their first King Egbert Even in the Heptarchy it self if you consult How you 'll find the next of Blood still succeeded to this Ironside the last no less then 14 in number besides that Edward the first Edmunds Brother all successively Reign'd in Lineal discents of the immediate and next Heir of the Royal Blood and most of them too the Successions of the next immediate Brother to the preceding Prince no less than four several Brothers Sons to Ethelwolf the second sole Sovereign of the Saxons succeeding one another and then with what Face unless with one more lasting then I hope his corrupted History by being all Brass with what a Front but such an one could such a Libel and Imposture The True Protestant Legend to whom for ought I see a fabulous Monk might seem an Historian offer at such a part of our History for the dispossessing the very Brother of his King But as much as this raging Zealot in Sedition Clamours against Rome he runs for assistance to such Authors of that Religion as even some moderate Romanists condemn and those are the fam'd † Parsons Inglefield Allen. Triumvirate that clubb'd for the contriving to subvert the Succession the pernicious piece the Book of Sedition they publisht by the borrow'd name of Doleman All the shadow that he has of any thing of Election was that of the first Saxon King Egbert whom he would have no way related to Brissicus the last King of the West-Saxons but whom some more worthy * Vid. The g●eat point of Succession and Dr. B. cites the same out of Sim. Dunelm and Malmsb. Authors prove from Westminster's own words that he was the sole surviving branch of the Royal Stemm and that he was banisht into France and that only for fear of his Right But granting then what he is resolved to suppose still right Reason will confute his Impertinence even in complying in unreasonable Concession the Question here is of the Succession of our Establisht Monarchy and he brings us an Instance before the Monarchy was Establisht owns that the History of that Heptarchy was uncertain and yet very certainly determins the point of his Election and that we must take too upon an ipse dixit of this Dogmatical Historians for his being no way related he cites just no body and while for his near alliance you have the Authority of so many That other only broken Reed that in all these Reigns he has to rely on and that like Aegypts too is ready to run into his side so false so dangerous to trust too which is Edreds being crown'd in the Minority of his Nephews when all the Historians say it was only for their being Minors And the diligent Baker says he was not then made Protector only because that Authority was not then come into use but crowned as King with purpose to resign when the right Heir should come of age But lest his Modern Authority may be not sufficient with those that malign Flor. worst Westm Houden Malemsb and Stow says expresly he was look't on But as a Protector any thing that makes for the Monarchy let them consult even the most of the Antients and they all agree they were only set aside for their Nonage But this Royal Protectorate soon expired as if Providence
laboured to prevent an Vsurpation and provided for the right Heir who succeeded in his paternal Inheritance before arrived even to the Romans civil age of Puberty 14. And the malicious Perverter might as well say as great a stress as you 'll find afterwards he truly does upon Richard the thirds Butchery and Usurpation the breaking of the Laws of God and Man for a Crown All the difference is Here were only two Nephews for a while debarred there Butchered and shall such bloody Miscreants pass upon the World for credible Authors who for robbing of a Divine-right can cite you Murder and for the breaking of our Humane Laws the blackest Crime in the Declogue And since this Antimonarchical Zealot has shown himself thus elaborately studious to rake every musty Record of those Reigns for a Rebellious remark give me leave only from the same times to make this last and Loyal Observation where Providence seemed to shew it self remarkably concerned for its crowned Head and that in the subsequent Judgment upon the Proto-Martyrdom of the Saxon Edward as well as what we suffered since for our Martyr'd Charles tho there 't was only for anticipating a right by blood but ours a bloody Usurpation of those that had no right at all Ethelred's passage to his Reign was but before his time and the Almighty's yet the Government suffered for it as many Pangs till it quite miscarried within fifty years the new Monarchy fell quite asunder rent and torn by two several Conquests He himself meets with the Defection of all his Nobility forc't to raise his Danegelt and his Subjects into Rebellion by it prepared his Navies only to be shattered with a tempest or consumed with Fire both Elements and Heaven it self seemed to conspire But because he came to the Kingdom by ill means arose Civil Wars p. 86. to make him Miserable Famine and Mortality were the dismal attendants of his Wars the Depredations of Invaders would not allow peace the Reign that begun in a Murder ended in a Massacre The incensed Danes soon invade him the perjured Edric falsely forsakes him he languishes a long time as well he might under Guilt and Misfortune and to put the only period to his days Miseries and Kingdom together Vid. Daniel p. 13. Dies You see how little success this Author met with among the Saxons Sovereigns for altering Succession how much of Imposture his Reader may there meet with in him and you shall as soon see he deals as disingeniously with the Danes And here thorough his double diligence this Parliament Historiographer has not omitted an Argument for his purpose much of the same strength as those that he has used viz. That Knute was no kin to Edmund or Ethelred And the Dane no way related to the Line of the Saxon that is the poor conquered England was not Cosin German to Denmark the Conqueror and yet the Title of the latter was preferred and their King acknowledged ours I can't conceive what necessity of Relation an Invader needs to the poor Prince he Invades and whether that be not a pretty sort of an Argument for altering Succession to say the Kingdom was Conquered Swayn had before cut out a fine Title for his Son with the Sword The North West and some of the South part of England had submitted frightned with his revengeful Cruelties which their own had provoked Canute himself after his Fathers Death lands as soon at Sandwich with a Navy of two hundred gave our English a great overthrow possest himself of what Swayn had before harassed the West and because the Nobility favoured only whom they feared and set him up in Competition for the Crown whom they could not keep down from being a Competitor ergo therefore the Succession must not run in the right Line and why because here it did not if more absur'd Inferences can be drawn from matter of Fact or greater Solecisms from Historical Observation I 'le forfeit all the little Right I have to Reason and with an Implicit Faith believe the Legend for a Bible and his History for the Revelations But yet this Prince though by Conquest and Composition he got half the Kingdom and upon Edmunds Death the whole foresaw what Power the pleas of Right and Succession might have for animating an Interest in the defence of the poor injured Heirs and therefore took all the ways to ingratiate himself with his wavering People his young and unexperienced Subjects and all manner of means for preventing the Lawful Heirs for attempting for their Right sticking at neither Murder Malice and Treachery and in order to the first he made a shew of governing with more Justice then he conquered and took mildness for the best means of his Establishment and to let the Nation know he designed only to subdue them sends away his Mercenaries ships away his Navy and for a popular Specimen of an Heroick Kindness to the memory of the Saxons he succeeded as a Satisfaction to their injured Dust prefers Edricks perjured Head to the highest place on the City Gate and with that Expedient reconciled himself at once to his own promise deserved Justice and the Peoples favour and yet for securing himself from any danger from the Lawful Heirs so politickly Cruel that all the Royal Blood felt of his Injustice sent the two Sons of his late Co-partner in the Kingdom to be murdered abroad and got his Brother to be butchered at home such an experienced truth is it that Powers usurpt Successions altered like the blackest Villanies can only be Justifyed and defended by committing more At his Death 't is true he disposed of his Crowns by Testamentary Bequest and well he might when there was so little known for Kingdoms of Feudatory Law and private Estates then far from being entailed yet in that very Legacy you can observe what Power the Consideration had with him of Right and Blood for he leaves his own Paternal Dominions Norway to his Eldest son Swayn and to his Youngest Hardicanute his conquered England considering his Mothers Blood which was Emma Wife to the late King Ethelred might as indeed it did give him some precedency to his middle Brother Harold the one having somewhat of Saxon in him the other all Dane especially if he was as some say Illegitimate tho' Baker calls him an Elder Brother by a former Wife so that upon the whole the Contest that rose about the Succession was but whether he had Right and when at last Harald was preferred 't was upon the Resolution of his being Legitimate so that here his own Inference contradicts the end for which 't was brought and instead of altering the discent shows they industriously contended to keep it in the right Channel and allowing they were mistaken in their Opinions of his Birth the Lords to make amends for their error streight on his Death fetch home Hardicanute who dying without Issue the Right of Blood prevailed again and the Saxon entred in Edward the
a plain puny Doeg and all this at a time the Government stood firm upon its Foundations and the best of Basis its Fundamental Law to what an height of exalted Insolence was the very Soul of Sedition then aspired to to suffer such a Serpent to see the Light that hist at the sight of a Soveraign and spit its Venom in the very Face of Majesty And whatever Recommendation this virulent Republican gives us of the Venetian Justice he would find sufficient severity sublim'd Cruelty instead of Law distributed to such daring Offenders as should offer at a Monarchy there tho but a mixt and of which they seem to have some necessitated resemblance in their constant creating of a Duke as if there were yet some remains of Royalty left which they could not extirpate and like Nature it self whom all the Art of Man can never expel the Libeller would not be long then without an Halter the Jealous State would soon send Vid. Resiquiae Wotton Foscarino 's case him the sight of his Sin and Sentence together and that by the Hands of his Hangman and some little Gondula to Ferry him to the deep No Magna Charta no Petition of Right no privilege of a Tryal of Peers or even a Plea allowed to the Prisoner and whom with a Praevious Sentence too they many times dispatch assoon as seiz'd And shall a Monarchy here founded upon Kingly Government has been the usage of the Land beyon'd History it self the Common Law is but Common usage Plowd Comment p. 195 Le Commen Ley n'est que Commen use its Fundamental Law and that for fifteen hundred years be invaded with impunity by the Pen of every virulent Villain each Factious Fellow that can but handle the Feather of a Goose I confess when they were arriv'd here to their Acme of Transcendent Villany when Vice had fixt her Pillars here and that in an Ocean too but of Blood when they had washt their Hands even in Insuperable Wickedness and shed that of their Prince when by a Barbarous Rebellion they had subverted the best of Civil Governments our Monarchy and establisht their own Anarchy a Common Wealth 2. part of the Inst fol. 496. Kings Praerogative is part of the Law of England then they might well be so bold as to write their Panegyricks upon their own Usurpation when they were to be paid for it by the Powers instead of Punshment Then they might tell us as indeed they did that the greatest of Crimes was the committing of High Treason against the Majesty of the People That the Romans gave us good Presidents for Rebellion M●rc Pol. Num. 107. in the turning out of their Tarquins and the Government together that Caesar Usurpt upon the power of the People Marius and Sylla on the Jurisdiction of the Senate Pisistratus turned Tyrant at Athens and Agathocles in Sicily that Cosmus was the first Founder of a Merc. Pol. Jun. 17. 52. Dukedom and a fatal Foe to Florence that Castruccio made himself the Lord of all Luca and oppressed the Liberty of all the Freeborn Subjects of the Land that all our Kings from him they called the Conqueror to the Scottish Tyrant were but the same sort of Usurpers upon the power of the People All this with much more Execrable Treason was Printed Publish'd and Posted through the Kingdom with Approbation of Parliament and which we shall in its proper place represent in its own blackness black as Hell it self the seat of such Seditious Souls full of Anarchy and Confusion But why we should now have so lately left us such daring desparadoes to retrieve to us the same Doctrine to tell Plato us that Affairs of State must be managed by a Parliamentary that is in their own Phraseology a meer popular Power could proceed certainly from nothing but the deepest the most dangerous Corruption of the Times from the desperate Condition of a Goverment ready to be undermined by Treachery Plot and Machination brought so low that it did not dare to defend it self and its boldest Assertors so far frightened into a dishonest and imprudent sort of Diffidence as to distrust the strength of their own Cause and that was evident too from the sad servile Complyance of some fearful Souls otherwise well affected that seemed to give up their Government like a Game lost that had rather sink then swim against the Tyde But for a more direct Answer to this Proposition we shall shew that Affairs of State must be managed by our Monarch that matter of Fact has prov'd it by Prescription that it is our Kings Prerogative by the Lands Law and his unquestionable Right by the force of Reason For the first 't is evident from History that for above 600. years near a thousand before the Conquest we had Kings that had an Absolute and Soveraign sway over their Subjects as appears from the Gildas B. who was born Anno 493. most Antient Writer of our British History it is apparent that all our Monarchs Britains Saxons and Danes exercis'd unlimited Jurisdiction without having their Affairs Govern'd by any estabisht Council much less a Parliament and that to be prov'd beyond Contradiction from the several Authors that Lived Wrote and were Eye These were Nennius a Monk of Bangor who liv'd An. 620. Bede a Saxon who wrot in their Heptarchy dy'd in the 733. Asserius Menev. who writ the Acts of King Alfred Colemannus Ang. who liv'd in the time of the Danes and Harold the first Vortiger the British King on his own Head call'd in the Saxon without his Subjects consent Egbert an absolute Monarch of the Saxons over all the Isle Canutus as absolute among the Danes call'd only his Convention of Nobles at Oxford about 1017. Witnesses of the manner and Constitution of their Government and then sure must be suppos'd to understand that to which they were Subjected from those good Authorities can be easily gather'd that the power of Peace and War was always in the Prince that they were Govern'd by him Arbitrarily and at his Will that he call'd what Councils of whom when and where he pleased so far from being Limited that the most popular Parliamentarians would be loth his present Majesty should prescribe to such an Absoluteness and which nothing but the kind Concessions of some of his Predecessors to their Clamourous Subjects has given from the Crown and dispens'd with that power and right enjoy'd by their Royal Ancestors 'T is strange and unaccountable that those which stretch their Wit and Invention for this power of Parliament and run through all the Mazes of Musty Records for the proving it so Ancient yet will not allow that of their King so long a standing and which after all their fruitless Labour lost proves at last nothing but the Council of their King those Noble and Wise-men he would please to Assemble their Gemotes the name of that most Ancient Assembly implying nothing more as appears