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A78251 The case of the King stated, from the very beginning of the warre to this present day, in relation I. To the two Houses. II. To the Army. III. To the Scots. IV. To the subjects of England in generall. In justification & commiseration of his Majesty in this his distressed condition; and for the satisfaction of the whole kingdom. / By Basilius Anonymus. Basilius Anonymus. 1647 (1647) Wing C1099; Thomason E416_5; ESTC R204479 21,297 25

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his Majesty and with the consent and love of the whole Kingdome when they have restored his Majesty Fifthly their Party being wholly broken here and the Houses likewise themselves there is no hope of serving their ends any longer in a Parliamentary way but upon the King they may and serve him too So that they have no way left to procute an Interest again to any purpose in this Nation but by closing with the King Sixthly notwithstanding their former Parliamentary engagements they are not to seek of a cleanly pretence to stand for his Majesty as long as the Covenant is in being and the Houses and Army have broken that Covenant by their palpable endeavours not only to ruine his Majestie 's Person but also to root out the very Principles of Monarchy both which both They and the Houses have Covenanted to defend Seventhly there can be no doubt of carrying the work through because the miscarriages of the Houses and the Affronts of the Army have wholy made ship wrack of the Affections of the City as for the rest of the Kingdom variety of oppressions hath made them absolutely the Kings own reckoning their own deliverance to depend on his Rostauration Lastly though it may be objected there is a great distance betwixt the Scots and the Royall Party in matter of Church-Government and so little hope of a cordiall uniting betwixt them yet I am bold to imagine that since all the world knowes the Design of a Presbytery by them upon this Nations was only to quell their Adversaries the Bishops that were the only men which vexed them and hindered them from thriving so well as they desired in this Kingdom and so to make a sure footing here by trampling them under it will be no hard matter to reconcile them so far as to let us have Bishops again upon condition they may establish themselves here with them And it is probable they will be contented to save their own souls in their Kirk of Scotland and let us alone with ours if their Bodies and Purses be well provided for in the Common-Wealth of England The Case of the King in relation to all his Loyall Subjects VVHat the Spaniards have often boasted of themselves as the only Nation under Heaven most zealous of the Honour of their Princes might with as much truth and more modesty have bin verified in former times upon the English Nation it having bin an old received Maxime of State amongst them That the glory of the Kingdom consist much in the State and Majestick splendour of their King And God be blessed this Loyall principle is not yet worne out unlesse it be in the hearts and pract ses of some few in these later yeares who have sold themselves to work wickednesse and been Ring-leaders in an open and most horrid Rebellion wherein they had drawn in a great part of their fellow Subjects to serve their own factions and ambitions ends as hath been manifested sufficiently in stating the severall passages betwixt his Majesty the two Houses and the Army Now it remains in the next place to shew how the City of London and the rest of the Kingdome hath been abused likewise as well as the King and what obligation lies upon them all for the immediate entring upon some Course for the Restauration of the King and the deliverance of the Kingdome from the slavery and oppression of a tyrannicall Parliament and a more tyrannicall and insulting Souldiery No way more ready to finde out how the City and Kingdome have been abused than by recounting the innumerable Tricks that have bin used to milk the Purses of the people in pretence of maintayning the Warre when the least part God knowes hath been imployed that that way but either treasured up in the purses of the Members or laid out by them in rich and fair purchases at home or transported to serve their turnes abroad against a rainy day while the Souldiers have pined for want of pay in their religious cause and devoured the poore Countrymen by Free quarter For whereas one or two wayes well ordered would have served the turne they have made use of so various wayes for raising of vast and incredible Summes of money as were never heard of before at a time in one kingdome whereof I will here set down the Catalogue 1 Royall Subsidy of 300000 l. 2 Pole-money 3 The Free Loanes and Contributions upon the Publique Faith amounted to avast incredible summe in Money Plate Horse and Arms Bodkins Thimbles and Wedding-Rings of the zealous Sisters 4 The Irish Adventure for sale of Lands a first and second time 5 The weekly Meale 6 The City-loane after the rate of fifty Subsidies 7 The Assesments for bringing in the Scots 8 The fifth and twentieth part 9 The weekly Assesment for the Earle of Essex his Army 10 The weekly or monthly Assesment for Sir Tho. Fairfax his Army 11 The weekly Assesment for the Scotish Army 12 The weekly Assesment for the British Army in Ireland 13 The weekly Assesment for my Lord of Manchesters Army 14 Free-Quarter at least connived at by the State because the Souldiers having for a time subsistence that way were the lesse craving for pay whereby their Arrears growing stale must at last either be frustrated by a tedious Committee of Accounts discount it out of the Commanders Arrears whereby the State saves it 15 The Kings Revenue 16 Sequestrations and Plunder by Committees which if well answered to the State would have carried on the work which may be thus demonstrated One halfe of all the goods and chatrels and at least one halfe of all the Lands Rents and Revenues of the kingdome have bin Sequestred And who can imagine that one halfe of the profits and goods of the Land will not maintayn any Forces that can be kept and fed in England for the defence thereof 17 Excise upon all things this alone if well managed would have maintayned the warre The Low-Countreys make it almost their only support 18 Fortification money All which amounting to about forty Millions have bin expended heretofore whereto wee may adde since the sale of a great part of Bishops Lands which the unmeasurable summes arising still by Fines for Delinquents Compositions with the continuance of the Excise and yet not so much as a penny disbursed for the pay of the souldiers insomuch that they threaten every moment to come and levy their Arreares within the City of London which is become now the common mark of all intolerable affronts and injuries that the ingratitude of the Houses or the insolent threats of the Souldiers can cast upon them And the Countrey groanes still under those three heavy burthens Excise Taxes and Free-Quarter without hope when or how they shall have remedy But rather on the other side they see nothing but a cloud of perpetuall misery and slavery hanging over their heads ready to fall upon them by the late Votes of the Houses and the generall Councell of the