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A66882 The history of independency the fourth and last part : continued from the death of His late Majesty, King Charls the First of happy memory, till the deaths of the chief of that juncto / by T.M. Esquire, lover of his king and country. T. M., Esquire, lover of his king and country.; Walker, Clement, 1595-1651. History of independency. 1660 (1660) Wing W331A; ESTC R18043 73,036 134

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THE HISTORY OF Independency The Fourth and last Part. Continued from the Death of his late MAIESTY King CHARLS the First of happy Memory till the deaths of the chief of that Juncto By T.M. Esquire a Lover of his King and Country Cicero Epist Lib. 2. Ep. 3. Civem mehercule non puto esse quitemporibus his ridere possit Id. Lib. 5. Ep. 12. Habet autem praeteriti doloris secura recordatio delectationem LONDON Printed for H. Brome at the Gun in Ivie-Lane and H. Marsh at the Princes Arms in Chancery-Lane 1660. Most Dread Soveraign IT is neither arrogance nor ambition that makes me thus boldly to intrude into your presence for I know so great a Sun will quickly dazle my weak eyes but because the former parts were honoured with your royal Fathers name this therefore hopes to be sheltered under your Princely wing this but concluding what they begun and making you the happy repayrer of those Breaches which that powerfull and restless faction of Independency made on the Regalia of England that posterity may as well see in this their felicity by you in the ruine of that faction as formerly they read their own misery in the Treasonable actings thereof against his late Majesty of ever glorious memory I have no more but only to pray that you may in this World be blessed with the wisdom and happynesse of Solomon a peaceable long and all glorious Reign the age of Methuselah wherein you may enjoy the full contents of a most happy life and at last full of honour and dayes arrive to the perfect fruition of a more glorious Kingdom in Gods presence before whom is fullness of joy and at his right hand pleasures for evermore This from his soul is the daily prayer of Your Majesties most faithfull subject and Servant T. M. 29 Oct. 1660. TO THE SACRED MAJESTY OF Great BRITTAINS MONARCH The Triumphant Son of a most Glorious Father who was in all things More than Conquerour The Illustrious ofspring of a Royal Traine of ANTIENT PRINCES CHARLES The Second of that Name Entituled PIOUS By the sole Providence of an Almighty hand of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender of the Faith Restorer of the English Church unto its Pristine State and Glory Patron of Law and Liberty Not to be Seconded by any but himself Who is the best of Kings And of all Vertue to the World THE GRAND EXEMPLAR To the Nobility Gentry Clergy and Commons of ENGLAND IT is I think more out of custome than necessity that I do at this time premise any thing the Subject whereof we treat having been fatally felt by most of the Nation in some way or other yet is it necessary that the history of such turgencies in the State should be communicated that poste●ity may hereafter see in their rise and fall the certain punishment of Treason though for a time guarded and upheld by armed violence and the highest policies of a subtle malice It is said of the Epicureans that though they acknowledged no providence nor any immortality of the soul and proposed pleasure as the only end of their lives yet they maintained most of them that they that were lovers of pleasure must of necessity be lovers of Justice and that without virtue it was not possible for men to live intrue pleasure So as it was said of the Stoicks who were for the most part notable hypocrites that they spoke good things and did foul actions but that the Epicureans spoke and taught things that seemed foul and shamefull but did that which was fair and honest Certenly these two sects of Phylosophers might be the very parallel of our date times wherein our Stoicall Grandees could speak nothing but holiness where the practice of their lives was a continued series of horrid Treasons while a litle innocent mirth and freeness of speech was the greatest that lay or indeed could be cast upon integrity of their despised Antagonists so that we might see Cucullus non fecit Monarchum It had been well for England if the sad occasions of writing this history of the times had never happened but they have been And as our Saviour saith Offences must come but wo be to them by whom they come so then to declare the actings and their method and manner is but so to lay them open that they may for the future be the better avoided and prevented The knowledg of all persons the meaning of all matters Voss de seri Agt. de art histor and the depth of all secrets is lockt up in history according to that of Vossius alluding to that of the Roman Poet Qui quid sit turpe aut pulchrum quid utile quid non Plenius melius Chrysyppo Crantore dixit And this I dare promise you in the ensuing Manual without too violent reflections to widen differences all the observations arising as naturally from the relations as suteable words do fitly supply the ready tongue of a Learned Oratour It is the general happinesse at this present that we can read the downfall of faction and rejoyce in the glory of restored Majesty with safety and content and I pray God that all the mischiefs of the remaining Achitophel's Shimei's and Rabshakeh's may sall upon their own heads but peace happiness and prosperity may waite on our Solomon that he may be blessed and his throne be established before the Lord forever To Conclude As your Loyalty in the worst oftentimes hath been signal if in nothing else yet in sufferings so dispise not to read this tractate wherein I dare presume you will find something which before you knew not the work ' its true is short but will not I hope want substance inest enim sua gratia parvis and to remember these things certainly cannot be irksome Saepe recordari medicamine melius omni to see and escape danger causeth not only admiration but pleasure which that you may receive with content by the perusall hereof is desired I shall only add one word in particular first to the Nobility You are Right Honourable Princes in the Congregation of our Israel Men of renown exemplarily both in your names and honours Be as eminent in service for your Prince as obliged to him for favours that it may be recorded of you as it is of Davids Worthies These are the mighty men which David had who strengthened themselves with him in his Kingdom according to the word of the Lord. 2. To the Gentry You are they whom Jethro counselled Moses to provide out of all the people to assist him and be mediatours between Prince and People approve your selves according to that counsel to be able men such as fear God men of truth and hating covetousness so shall the Lord give a blessing as he hath promised 3. To the Clergy God hath made you as a Beacon upon an hill that you might forewarn Israel of her sins ye are the salt of the Earth while you preach to
a particular and peculiar care of but as it were in despight of Heaven they are not content with all their former wickednesses of banishing exiling and railing against their lawfull Soveraign but now they will enforce all to renounce him which in September they Resolved in these words J. A. B. Do hereby declare Oath of abjurati on that I renounce the pretended title of CHARLS STUART and the whole line of the late King James and of every other person as a single person pretending to the Government of these Nations of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging And that I will by the grace and assistance of Almighty God be true faithfull and constant to this Common-wealth against any King single person and house of Peers and every of them and hereunto I subscribe my name Thus may every one see that it was not to amend or reform any errours in the State but only their particular malice to the Royall line and covetousness after their Estate that made them run into such desperate designes wherein having so deeply engaged themselves that there was no going back they mean to make all sure to their interest and to that end take into debate in the beginning of September the matter of the Government and referred it to a Committee upon the votes in 1648. The blindness of the Juncto To prepare something in order to the settlement of the Government on or before the tenth of October See here the indiscretion of these men after a ten years unsettlement and bringing all into confusion in all which time they have minded nothing but their own private wealth and till this last minute of time have not so much as thought of resettling and that they now have is so weakly that it tends no further than to an offer thus running willingly into one crime they daily perpetrate new ones without any sense of evill or will of amending attributing the guilt of their faults to all that endeavour either to reform or punish them The business of Cheshire thus blown over and the great hopes that were grounded thereon blasted the Juncto fall to their old humour of raising money no less will serve their turn than 100000. l. a moneth besides Excise and Customes Taxes and excise confirmed new delinquents made and mi●itia arreas collected together with the hoped benefit that would arise from the sequestred Estates of new Delinquents and least any thing should escape them the 16th of September they vote That such persons as have been assessed to find horses and Armes by vertue of the Act of Parliament for setling the Militia and have not brought in their horses and Armes nor paid in lieu thereof the summ of money appointed by the said Act. That every such person and persons do under the penalty in the said Act mentioned pay after the rate of ten pounds for an horse and Armes for such number of horses and Armes respectively as they have been charged to find Resolved That such person and persons as have been assessed to find Armes for a foot Souldier and have not sent in the same or money in lieu thereof do under the penalties in the said Act mentioned pay respectively for every such foot Armes such summ of money as the Commissioners shall appoint not exceeding twenty five Shillings for every such foot Armes 'T is no matter you see by this whether any Horse or Armes be brought in at all so that the money be paid Oh! 'T is the money that adds Life and Legs to a decrepit and dying old cause The Grandees would never take so much pains unless an extraordinary profit also waited thereon which they resolve to compass though with the extreamest hazards whereof there began to be some kind of an appearance by the growing of heart-burnings and multiplying fears and jealousies between their late great Champion Lambert and themselves The Juncto grow suspitious o Lambert the sparks of which animosities growing into a flame quickly increased to that height that not daring to trust him any longer with the Army they send a seeming courteous Letter to invite him home which he taking no notice of any thing further than the pretended outside fair shew acceps of and on the 20th of September returnes accordingly to London but immediately before his arrivall there the Juncto He comes to London to shew the great charity wherewith they abounded took into consideration how to cozen the poor Knights of Windsor and to ingross into their hands all Hospitals and their reveneues by these two following votes Viz. Tuesday September 20th 1659. Resolved That it be referred to a Committee The Juncto intend to seize on all Hospitalls and convert their rents to look into the revenue for maintenance of the poor Knights of Windsor to examine what the same at present is and will be for the future after Leases expired and to see that the charitable uses to which the said revenue was granted be performed and the residue to be answered to the use of the Common-wealth by all means pray take a care of that and to examine the Leases that have been made and the fines that have been paid thereupon and how disposed and by what authority with power to give reliefe and allowance to the said poor Knights and other poor people not exceeding their former allowance Oh take heed of too much charity and also to take a Catalogue of all Hospitalls within this Common-wealth and the revenewes of them they are sure to mind that And that the Masters and Governours do return to this Committee the constitution of the respective hospitalls and how the profits thereof have been and are disposed of and by what authority before the first of December 1659. And to report the whole matter to the house Ordered That all Masters and Governours of hospitalls be and are hereby prohibited to grant or renew any Leases of any Lands Tenements and hereditaments belonging unto any of the said respective hospitalls untill this house take further Order Notice of which is to be given to the respective concerned persons by the Councill of State See here how greedy is the zeal of these devouring Statists which yet is clothed in the g●●be of a seeming Sanctimonious care but this hypocrisie must not go long unpunished neither does it for now begins to appear the result of Lamberts designments abroad in a remonstrative address from the Army at the very first newes whereof the Parliament is so startled that fearing to be whipped with their own rod they ordered Col. Armies remonstrate the Juncto send for some Officers Ashfield Col. Cobbet and Lieutenant Col. Duckenfield three of the chief promoters of it to bring to them the original paper intended to be presented upon notice of which order given immediately a letter was delivered into the house signed by many persons of the Army superscribed to the said three summoned persons by whose
the ancient Government of the City and vacating the Phanatick power in the Country they commend the establishment of the Nation to a full and free Parliament to be called the 25th of Aprill 1660. Issuing out writs to that purpose in the name of the keepers of the Liberty of England by authority of Parliament and setling a Councell of State of most discreet and moderate men to whom the affairs of the three Nations in the intervall and untill the meeting of the Parliament on the aforesaid 25th of Aprill was committed who with much discretion managed their power to the satisfaction of all sober minded men and so saving to the house of Lords their rights notwithstanding the Commons were in this Juncture of time put upon necessity to act without them commending the Souldiery once more to his Excellency upon the sixteenth day of March in the year of our Lord 1659. Lorg P. legally ended a day worthy to be remembred they dissolved themselves and so at last put a legall period to that fatall long-Parliament which could not be dissolved by any but by it self And thus we see Independency laid in the dust and ready to give up the ghost and indeed not long after we shall see fully to expire the Prodromi of whose miserable end might be these and the like The Councel of State in this intervall of power The intervall with very great caution and wariness manage their affairs turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but keeping a direct course as knowing in medio ibunt tutissimi they set out a Proclamation against all disturbers of the peace under what pretence or name soever sparing none that in a time of such hopes durst either move a hand or tongue to work a disturbance taking care also that the order of the last Parliament touching elections should be duly and punctually observed Elections for a new Parl. as considering that the peace or ruine of the Nation would lye in their hands His Excellency the Lord Generall in this interregnum accepts of severall invitations and treatments in the City by several of the worthy companies yet still having an eye to the main he keeps close to his Officers who were not yet fully resolved and often confers with them in a more familiar manner than ordinary whereby he so wrought on them that at last he brought them to declare that they would acquiesce in the resolves of the approaching Parliament and indeed this was a shrewd forerunner of the fall of Independency as I said before whose only hope was builded on the averseness of these men to lawfull power which when they saw frustrated they might well depair yet endeavour once more to endeavour a confusion which being observed by the Councell and that a discontented Spirit possessed some of the old Officers and Grandees according to the power given them to that purpose they send for all suspected persons confining them unless they subscribed an engagement to demean themselves quietly and peaceably under the present Government and acquiesce submissively in the determination of the Parliament next ensuing which reasonable engagement Lambert and some others re●using were carefully confined to several prisons by which means the peace was wonderfully preserved but notwitstanding all this care such were the restless endeavours of that divellish faction that whether by the neglect or treachery of his keepers is not yet known Lambert gets out of prison cuningly who being a man of loose principles and desperate fortunes so encouraged the Phanatick party and stirred up their drooping Spirits that they began to threaten great matters and for perfecting their wicked design begin to gather to an head near Edg-hill which they hoped would prove to them an auspicious Omen for the beginning of a Second war but Heaven would no longer wink at such intollerable villanies for the sins of these Amorites were fully ripe for judgment so that they were discovered and quickly nipped in the bud Lambert and his accomplices being so eagerly pursued by Col. R. Ingoldsby that they were suddenly forc'd to scatter and shift for themselves by flight Taken and sent to the Tower neither was that so swift or secure but that Lambert was taken prisoner by the said Col. Ingoldsby and sent prisoner up to London at which time passing by Hide park on the twenty fourth of Ayril he saw all the City Regiments both of horse and foot Trayned Band and Auxiliaries completed armed and trayned and ready to hazard their Lives and Fortunes against all seditious and factious Traitors to their King and Country The news of this first appearance of armed loyalty being spred abroad into the Countreys The first loyal muster did so animate and encourage the old oppressed that casting off their fetters and fears together they begin to appear in their wonted guise and because they were by the Phanaticks traduced as men of blood and full of revenge not to be satisfied but with the utter ruine of their adversaries thereupon to undeceive the vulgar who might possibly have been misled by such lies if not answered did from their several and respective Counties as also in the Cities of London and Westminster declare The Gentry declare that they were far from any thoughts of revenge it belonging to God alone alluding to that text of Scripture Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord but as for Justice they would acquiesce in the judgment of the approaching Parliament This being done The Parliament begins and the whole Parliament at the appointed time beginning first with their duty to God they follow that golden Pythagorean rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giving him hearty thanks for that their freedome of meeting which when they had cordially done they fell in order to their Governour First They fear God then honour the King As the same Pythagoras goes on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The very Heathen we see by the meer light of Nature could dictate that which our Grand Enthusiasts of Religion would not for these many years by the ignis fatuus of their new lighted notion walk after But the Parliament were better principled for after their devotions regularly paid to God they in the very next place own their duty to their Prince upon the first day of May a happy day to be remembred to posterity voting the Government to be by King Kingly government voted Lords and Commons a constitution so incomparably mixed that it may rather be admired then envied neither were they satisfied to rest there but on the Eighth day of the same May caused his Majesty to be proclaimed King of England King proclaimed Scotland France and Ireland which was performed with so much Solemnity and Joy as I presume England I dare say hardly any Kingdome in the World ever saw or were sensible of the like the shouts and acclamations of the pleased people rending the
morning that he defeated the Kings Army at Worcester Fight had conference personally with the Divell with whom he made a contract that to have his will then and in all things else for seven years after from that time being the Third of September 1651. he should at the expiration of the said years have him at his command to do at his pleasure both with his soul and body Now if any one will please to reckon from the third of September 1651. till the Third of September 1558. Cromwels death he shall find it to a Day just seven years and no more at the end whereof he dyed but with such extremity of tempestuous weather that was by all men judged to be prodigious neither indeed was his end more miserable for he dyed mad and despairing than he hath left his name infamous this was the end of our English Nero and thus having laid the best foundations his short and troublesome Reign would give leave to have continued his posterity in the same unlimited Dominion at his death si ullafides viris qui castra sequuntur declaring his eldest Son Richard his successour in his Usurpation Leaving his Son Henry Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and his Daughter Fleetwood married to the Commander in chief of the Army under himself and the only Man suspected for a Competitour in the Protectorship for Lambert had been laid aside long before as a person of too dangerous and aspiring principles to be trusted Richard Cromwell presently ascends the Throne Richard Cromwell Protector being but a private Gentleman of Hampshire invited thereunto and incouraged by Flee wood Deshorow Sydenham the two Jones Thurloe and others the relations and confidents of his Father His first work is to take care for his Fathers Funerall his corps being shortly after interred among the Kings and Queens at Westminster at a farr * 29000 l. greater charge than had been used upon like occasions in the richest times death giving him that honour which he aspired to but durst not embrace in his life time which solemity ast by the contrivance of the now Courtiers congratulations are sent prepared at Whitehall from most of the Counties Cities c●ief Townes of England And from the Armies of England Scotland Ireland with engagements to live and dye with him Addresses from the Independent Churches by Mr. Goodwine and Nye their Metropo●itans and was indeed worshipped by many as the rising Sun in our Horizon This Introduction being made for transferring the Government of these Nations from the Royal family of the Stewarts to that upstart of the Cromwells Di●ks Parliament now modelled it was thought fit that a generall Convention after the manner of a Parliament wisely chosen by influences from Whitehall should be called to meet the twenty seventh of January and upon pretence of restoring the people to their antient way of Elections but reall that the Court might command the more votes the Burroughs also had writs sent to them and the Elections were all made in the antient way only thirty members were called by writs from Scotland and as many from Ireland according to the late combination of the three Nations into one Common-wealth This new kind of Parliament being met at the time and place appointed God who had so well ordered the Elections notwithstanding the practices of Men that their English Spirit quickly appeared against Impositions both from Court and Army Act of Recognition which being discerned by the Protector and his Grandees a Recognition is sent to them to be drawn into a bill the debate whereof taking up a whole fourtnights time and they still remaining in a great streight till by the expedient of an honest Gentleman they were extricated thence by passing these votes on Munday the 14th of February 1658. without any division or negative Resolved that it be part of this Bill to Recognize and declare his Highnesse Richard Lord Protector and chiefe Magistrate of the Common-wealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging Resolved that before this Bill be committed the House do declare such additionall clauses to be part of this Bill as may bound the power of the chief Magistrate and fully secure the Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and the Liberties and Rights of the People and that neither this nor any other previous vote that is or shall be passed in order to this Bill shall be of force or binding to the People till the whole Bill be passed This done Committee of inspection a Committee of In spections is appointed to take a view of the accounts and revenue of the Common-wealth twelve Members versed in matters of account were selected and fully impowered for that work in order to the lessening the charge of the Common-wealth On Saturday the 19th of February they re-assumed the debate upon the Act of Recognition and resolved That it be part of the bill to declare the Parliament to consist of two houses Parl. to consist of two houses after which they fell upon the point of bounding the chiefe Magistrates power and the bounds and powers of the other house the Protectors party standing for the powers given by the Petition and advice and the rest of the house withstood it as of no value being obteined by force by which force also thirteen hundred thousand pounds a year was setled for ever upon the single person and the ruling members of the other house being a hotch potch or medley of Officers of the Army and Protectorian Courtiers contrary to the law of the land The other house debated and to the enslaving of the people By this means nothing being done herein as to the powers the Cromwelians that they might enforce something propose the question of transacting with the persons sitting in the other house as an house of Parliament urging both law and necessity for the same yea threatning force from the Army upon refusall notwithstanding all which a whole fornight the honest party of the House thought of nothing less asserting the undoubted Right of the antient Peers and denying all the rest but seeing nothing could be done till this was over in a very full house they came at last to this well qualified resolve Resolved That this House will transact with the Persons now sitting in the other house as an house of Parliament during this present Parliament And that it is not hereby intended to exclude such Peers as have been faithfull to the Parliament from their priviledge of being duly summoned to be Members of that house Herein may be seen something of the old English gallantry Not owned as Lords for in this vote those in the other House are not owned as Lords but called the Persons now sitting in the other House as an house of Parliament neither would the Commons treat and confer with them in the usuall way as with the house of Peers but found ou● a new word to transact
and that neither but upon tryall Viz. during this present Parliament And the better and more legally to curbe them if they should begin to grow imperious they inserted the priviledge of the antient Peers as a good reserve concluding also to receive no message from them but by some of their own number During this time The intent of that Par●●ment they had under consideration severall good Acts about the Militia against Excise concerning Customes c. and questioned diverse illegall imprisonments calling some Jaylors to the Bar and preparing a strict bill to prevent the unlawfull sending Freeborn Englishmen against their wills to be slaves in forreign Plantations They also examined severall grievances by the Farmers of the Excise Major Generalls and tyrannicall and exorbitant Courts of Justice The Committee of Inspections having by this time brought in their report by which it did appear that the yearly incomes of England Scotland and Ireland Committee of inspections report came to Eighteen hundred sixty eight thousand seven hundred and seventeen pounds and the yearly Issues to Two Millions two hundred and one thousand five hundred and forty pounds So that Three hundred thirty two thousand eight hundred twenty three pounds of debt incurred yearly by the ill management of double the revenew that ever any King of England enjoyed And to maintain the unjust conquest of Scotland cost us yearly One hundred sixty three thousand six hundred and nineteen pounds more than the revenew of it yields At these proceedings the Protector and the Army who were already jealous of one another Divisions between the Protector Praliament and Army grew both suspicious of the Parliament because the people begin to speake as if they expected great good from the issue of their Counsells therefore the Army least they should come too late put in for to get the power into their hands and according to the method used by them in like cases erect a Generall Councill of Officers who daily meet at Wallinford-house which the Protector hearing endeavours to countermine at Whitehall but they better skilled in their work than he was conclude a representation which is with speed both drawn and presented to him about the seventh of Aprill a copy whereof the next day after is sent enclosed by him in a Letter to the Speaker of the House who hereupon takes the Alarum and while the Protector thinks to secure himself by standing on his guard they not fearing the menaces of the Souldiers but resolving to behave themselves like true Englishmen on Munday the 18th of Aprill passed these votes following Resolved That during the sitting of the Parliament there should be no generall Concill or meeting of the Officers of the Army without direction leave and Authority of his Higness the Lord Protector and both houses of Parliament Resolved That no person shall have and continue any command or trust in any of the Armies or Navies of England Scotland or Ireland or any the Dominions and Territories thereto belonging who shall refuse to subscribe That he will not disturbe or interrupt the free meeting in Parliament of any the members of either house of Parliament or their freedom in their debates and Counsells Now that this bitter pill might be the easier swallowed knowing or at least believing that want of money was the thing that pinched in chief as to the private Souldier without whom the Officer was worthless they passed a vote to take into consideration how to satisfie the Arrears of the Army and provide present pay for them and also to prepare an Act of Indempnity for them But all this tended nothing to satisfaction for the Souldier being through Levened with the wicked designes of their Officers did nothing but murmur especially since the Protector in pursuance of the votes of the house had forbidden the meetings of the Officers so that now the animosities grew so high that guards were kept night and day by one against the other in which divided posture the management of affairs continued till Friday the 22. of April on which day early in the Morning Fleetwood Desborough and the rest of the Mutinous Officers Dicks Parliament dissolved with the greatest part of the Army at their beck the Cromwelian party not daring to stir got the supereminency and forced young Richard to consent to a commission and Proclamation ready pre-prepared thereby giving power to certain therein named to dissolve the Parliament although he had with much serious earnestness protested and promised rather to dye than be guilty of so pusillaminous an act which he was well assured would work for his confusion But actum est for the same day the black rod was sent twice to the house of Commons to go to the other house which they refused and scorned but understanding there were guards of horse and foot in the Pallace yard after some ebullient motions without resolving any question they adjourned till Munday morning the five and twenty of April and with much courage and resolution attended the Speaker in order through Westminster-Hall to his Coach even in the face of the Souldiery The Army having thus for the present missed their design resolve no longer to dally whereupon they lay aside their new Mr. Richard and all the Officers great and small with one consent take the Government into their own hands having shut up the house of Commons door whither when the Members came on Munday entrance was denyed them by the Souldiers who had possessed themselves of the Court of requests and all avenues in all places giving no other account to the Members than this Viz. They must sit no more The Army rew modelled The next meeting of Officers new modelleth themselves some they casheire as Whaly Ingoldsby Gosse c. others they re-admit as Lambert Haselrig Okey and others in which time not knowing how to behave themselves in such a condition and weary of the perpetuall toyle they foresaw they must still with ceasing undergo they mean to cast the burthen off from their own shoulders and to that purpose they send to some of their old hackney drudges of the long Parliament The Rump comes in as they then did call it at that time about London whose consciences they knew would digest any thing and did not care how per fas aut nefas so they might again be suffered to sit with severall of these I say upon the fifth and sixth dayes of May they had conference the last of which was at their never failing Speakers the Master of the Rowles house in Chancery-Lane where both Officers of the Army and pretended Members to the number of twenty sollicited William Lenthall Esquire to sit Speaker again but he objected diverse scruples in judgment and conscience But O how soon had the sweet ambition of domineering obliterated all such idle fancies yet nevertheless instantly fifteen Articles being agreed upon among themselves they conclude to meet in the house on Saturday the 7th
late Juncto to beat after the mode of a free-state think they shall merit highly at the hands of the General if they promote that though they disown the Parliament he pretended to declare for and to that purpose having nominated severall Gallant fellowes of their own number Viz. Fleetwood Vane Ludlow Saloway Tichburn Lambert Desborow Hewsen Holland and others to consider of and prepare a form of Government to be setled over the three Nations Safe Committee for a free-state in the way of a Free-State and Common-wealth they send away Whalley Goffe Caryl and Barker to shew the same to General Monck and thereupon to mediate with him for avoiding the effusion of blood the Officers at London writing also to his Officers and expostulating with them touching the necessity of a brotherly union crying out of nothing but Liberty while the Nation groan'd under their oppression But Menck revolving with himself both the greatness difficulty and hazard of his design concludes not to be rash in a direct quarrel but rather by procrastinations to weaken the force of his enemies which he knew could not continue long without money and so to gain the victory without striking a blow therefore to amuse them and cast the more seeming gloss upon his action he orders Col. Talbot Monck desires a treaty and Dr. Clargies who were the first messengers sent to him to send Fleetwood word that himself and his Officers had nominated Col. Wilkes L. C. Cloberry and Major Knight to repair speedily to London and treat with the like number of Officers there for a firm unity and peace and the better to confirm it he sends another Letter from himself to the same purpose with promise that his forces should advance no further But the Committee of safery willing by strength to hold what they had got and not knowing what to think of the Generall issue out many severall Commissions to raise forces throughout all England to anticipate him and to settle Militia's to be ready in a moment Militia setled as it were to resist him which he hearing and that Lambert was coming against him with thirteen thousand men be according to his before mentioned Letter forthwith sends his three appointed messengers for peace upon whose arrivall at Yorke in November and speech with Lambert he became so farr satisfied of their intentions towards an Accommodation that thereupon he gave order his forces should advance no further Northward in their march Things being brought now into this posture The treary begun the Generalls three Commissioners arrive at London November the 12th where the Treaty is immediately begun which lulled the Committee of safety into such a security that they begin to think of shareing great Offices and places of trust and profit among themselves to this end appointing Fleetwood Desborow Sydenham Saloway Cornelius Holland Col. Clark Col. John Blackwell or any two of them to be Commissioners for the Treasury and to manage the affaris of the publick revenue with power as large as could be desired And would it not be well managed think you in the hands of such bankrupts but while these men mind their own wealth only the Treaty must not be forgotten which was now in hand and on a sudden brought to such an issue that it startled the City who had by Col. Alured and Collonel Markham received Letters from Scotland of another purport for at last the Commissioners on both sides agreed on these heads ensuing that is to say That the pretended Title of CHARLES STUART The articles of the Treaty or any other claiming from that family should be utterly renounced O horrid Treason first murder the Father and then abjure the Son That the Government of these Nations shall be by a free State or Common-wealth and not by a single person King or house of Lords What must the new settlement utterly abolish all the old fundamentall Laws of England at one breath Your Precipitation bodes your ruine That a Godly and learned Ministery shall be maintained and encouraged 'T is well the Generalls Men thought of it for you may be assured it is against the principle of Anabaptists and fifth-Monarchy Men That the Universities shall be reformed and countenanced so as that they may become Nurseries of Piety and Learning That the Officers and Souldiers and other persons on either side be indemnified for what is past touching their late difference and that all unkindness betwixt them be buried in perpetuall Oblivion pray take care of that but it may be supposed you shall be the furthest off when you think your self neerest That the Officers which were made prisoners in Scotland be forthwith set at liberty How will the Generall like that That the Armies be presently disposed into quarters and that there be a committee of nineteen whereof nine to make the Quorum who were to meet about qualifications for succeeding Parliaments This was the effect of part of the agreement which was sent away with all speed to Generall Monck upon knowledge whereof and by reason the conclusions of the said Treaty were so contrary to the Letters by them formerly received the City was startled The City startle having as they supposed by order been encouraged to stand fast in their liberty for their Laws Priviledges Properties and lawfull Government But the Generall in a wise foresight and providentiall care having cast in his mind the danger he stood in for he had a wolfe by the ears though he sent his Commissioners aforesaid yet reserved to himself the ratification so that nothing should be of force untill it were confirmed with his own seal But now the articles of the Treaty being come to his hands he commands the return of his Commissioners which they obeying he presently commits Col. Monck commits one of his Commissioners Wilks to custody for going beyond his Commission declareth the Treaty void and marcheth toward the borders which the Committee of safety being advertised off fall to their old tricks to delude the people endeavouring to make them believe it was only a rumour grounded on a fained Letter pretended to be by him sent to the City whereas they seemed to be assured that he would acquiesce in the former agreement but truth who is filia temporis the daughter of time quickly appeared to undeceive the people for in this interim his excellency having as himself expressed it a call from God and Man to march into England for resetling the Parliament calleth an assembly of the Nobles and Gentry of Scotland at Edenburgh He calls an adembly in Scotland to whom he proposed these three things 1. That they would during his absence which would not be long preserve and secure the peace of that Nation 2. That they would supply him with some men for his undertaking which he engaged upon his honour should be to their satisfaction and that if any troubles should arise they would assist him in the suppressing thereof 3.
as to breed an open enmity between him and the City thereby to compell him to serve them perpetually by being assured that they were mortall enemies yet not willing since he had gone so farr with success to loose all now by passion he with silence obeyes them readily and thereby cleerly finds the temper of the City to be positively resolute for Liberty and right so that being sensible they might be trusted he hopes shortly to make them an amends which he had an occasion offered to do soon●e than he expected Is ungene●all'd for the Parliament had a double design upon him first to weaken him in his interest and credit by an imployment which they knew would so incense the City and then while he is acting their unreasonable commands they are busie in undermining him in his power for when he had done their design as they thought to the enraging of the Citizens and breeding in their hearts revengefull thoughts He joynes with the City he returnes to White-Hall upon Friday the 10th Day of February upon which day his Commission did expire instead of the renewing whereof which he might with much justice have expected as the reward of his merit he is made a Colonel again and only made equal in command with six men more as short of him in desert as in honesty wherewith when he had acquainted the Officers of his Army who were much unsatisfied with such a reward for their late abominated imployment agreed unanimously among themselves that the Parliament intended to lay them aside notwithstanding their former faithfull service to them and to perpetuate the Nations slavery by their datelesness and therefore they resolved to march with their General into the City to joyn with them and declare for a free Parliament to this purpose a conference is had at the Three Tunnes near Guild-hall where the City and Army strike hands at which time his Excellencies Officers remonstrate the resent they had of the violence they were commanded to offer that famous City which was of a stamp unparalleled in the most horrid rage of former ages whose barbarousness even spared that when they harassed the whole Nation beside then give warning of several persons both within and without the City whose tyrannous minds they feared abhorring in an especiall manner a late petition delivered in the house by one Praise-God Barebone being a treasonous libell subversive of all order and Government dangerous to religion both in discipline and worship and destructive to all Lawes Statutes and Customes even in fundamentalls wishing at last the Parliament to think of determining their Session and provide for future Parliaments This being by his Officers I say presented to his Excellency and by him in a letter communicated to the Speaker he marcheth into London and taketh quarters Free P. promised declaring for a free Parliament and this blow was it made Independency stagger for so highly were both City and Country pleased with this Declaration that they did hardly know in what manner to express their joy ringing their bells making bonfires the air resounding nothing but the name and prayses of Monck and the Streets filled with gratefull hearts who on bended knees prayed for blessings on the head of the hoped restorer both of the Church and Common-wealth and in this relolution he persisted notwithstanding all the flatteries threatnings and snares of the house who now studied nothing more than his ruine as in him foreseeing their own nevertheless he waits for the Parliaments answer to his last letters to them but finding they neither minded him nor them and thought of nothing but setling their own interest and continuing themselves in power he procures a conference between some fitting members of the house and some of the honourable Gentlemen and worthy Patriots that were excluded from it at which himself being in person present and weighing judiciously the reasons and arguments formed on both fides which he heard with a deep and reserved silence after all were withdrawn he concluded with himself upon result from the whole that the pretended settlement proposed by the house was of compass too narrow and too weak of foundation to bear up the Nation and repair its breaches Secluded members admitted he resolved therefore to withdraw all manner of force from the house and to admit men of more sober moderate and less byassed judgments whose Spirits being more apt for publick good would establish the Kingdom upon termes comprehensive of every considerable interest therein hereupon on the one and twentyeth day of February meeting the secluded members at White-hall and expressing himself to them in a speech not delivered by himself but by his Secretary wherein he commended to their care 1. Religion that great primum mobile unum necessarium without which to live rather befits beasts than men and this was proposed in the most sober and moderate way imaginable yet neither countenancing errour nor allowing libertinisme 2. He commended to them the State desiring them to be good Physitians to its crazed body by applying suteable Physick which he said he supposed would be a full and a free Parliament upon whose resolves as himself so he doubted not but the whole Nation would acquiesce he told them the house was open for them to enter and prayed for their good success The secluded members being thus admitted How they begin and wherein proceed fall immediately to work where they were abruptly forced to break of in December 1648. Confirming their Vote made then by another now that the concessions of the late King were a sufficient ground to proceed on for setling the peace of the Kingdom hereby not only vindicating themselves but as it were at once disanulling all that had been done as dissonant thereto during the whole time of their recess This began to infuse a new spirit of life into the Kingdom in whom at this springing season of the year began a new to bud and peep out the bloomes of a too long frost-nipped loyalty so that one now might have seen what twenty years before could never shew countenances that lately were dejected through the cruell tyranny of their Aegipitian task masters now gather cheerfull looks and like fresh blown roses yield a fragant savour The Parliament thus sitting freely vote his Excellency Lord Generall of all the forces in England Scotland and Ireland by vertue of which Commission he disarmes all the Phanatick party both in City and Country the Parliament in the mean time providing to secure the Nation by two seasonable Acts the one of Assessment and the other of the Militia the last impowering and arming Gentlemen and Men of worth and power to stand up for their Liberties and Priviledges and put the Country into a posture of defence against all encroaching pretenders whatsoever and the former enabling them to raise moneyes which are the sineues of war for maintaining of the forces so raised to assert their and our rights Thus setling