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A88190 The grand plea of Lievt. Col. John Lilburne, prerogative prisoner in the Tower of London, against the present tyrannicall House of Lords, which he delivered before an open committee of the House of Commons, the twenteth day of October, 1647. where Mr. Iohn Maynard the lawyer had the chaire. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1647 (1647) Wing L2112; Thomason E411_21; ESTC R202731 16,502 16

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upon the 12. of Iuly 1645. joyntly under both their hands send into the Speaker a most malicious false note by way of accusation against me about 60000. l that then was said to be sent to Oxford by the Speaker whereupon without being called into the House though then at the doore either to justifie or deny the charge fixed upon me I was by vote of the House committed a prisoner to the Serjeant at Armes and from thence by Mr. Lawrence Whitaker was sent to Newgate and being there there was an expresse order of the House of Commons for any thing I know to the contrary by Col. King procured for the arreigning of me at Newgate Sessions where I was acquitted by proclamation as guiltlesse of any crime and afterward by the certifying thereof by Mr. Glyn Recorder of London to the House of Commons I was by vote thereof the 14. of Octob. 1645. freely and cleerly discharged But King being conscious of his own guilt and judging himselfe not safe nor long lived unlesse he crushed me to peeces and therfore most maliciously and unjustly upon the 14. of April 1646. contrary to the just priviledge of Parliament and the Common law of England caused me at Westminster as I was following my businesse depending and then in agitation before the house of Commons by whom I ought therefore in justice and law to have been protected comming staying and going till I had beeen dispatched by them ☞ to be arrested by the Bayliffe thereof into the Court of Common Pleas in an action of trespasse for 2000. l. pretending that I the day I was delivered out of Newgate had said that he the said Col. Edward King was a Traytor and I would prove him one which according to your Articles of Warre or your own Ordinances had and still is easie to doe if you will doe iustice whereupon by petition to your House I pressed hard that he upon his impeachment might speedily come to his tryal or else that I as in justice law and equity ought to be might be protected and the Judges of the Common pleas might be commmanded to sease their proceedings till King upon his impeachment then depending in the house of Commons might either be condemned or iustified but I could get no answer to my petition although I followed it with all the interest might and strength I had wherupon being in very great straits I was necessitated to pen my plea my self to I. Reeves and print it in the penning of which I was necessitated for my own iustification to touch a little upon the Earle of Manchesters refusing to doe me and the kingdome iustice and right in an open Councell of War against Col. King and having by L. G. Cromwells meanes beene deeply with him engaged against the said Earle in actively prosecuting of that impeachment of Treason and breach of trust which he exhibited to your house about two yeares agoe against the said Earle of Manchester he the said Earle of Manchester being then Speaker of the house of Lords and so chief Iudge in his own case caused me as ● conceive though most illegally and uniustly upon the 10. of Iune 1646. to be summoned up to their barre to answer as by their warrant appeares such things as I should be there charged with for writing that book or plea which if there had been any thing in it scandalous it was only tryable by a Iury of my Peers or Equalls which are Commons or men of my own condition at the Common Law the house of Lords having not by law the least cognizance or iurisdiction in the world of it and therefore all their proceedings upon me from the beginning to the end are most illegall and uniust and coram non iudice And now in the third place I come unto my plea but by the way I desire to premise this unto you that by your own Declaration of the 15. of December 1641 and 17. of Ianuary 1641. and the 12. of Iuly 1642. I find the law of the land and the ordinary course of iustice called by you the common birth-right of all the free men or people of England 1. part book Decl. pag. 7. 38. 39. 459. and in your Declaration of the 23. of October 1642. you aver that it is the birth right of the meanest of the Commonalty of this Kingdome to inioy the freedome and libertyes of the lawes of the land being as there you say intituled unto it with the greatest Subiect The inviolable preservation of which in divers of your Declarations you declare is the maine and principall end of all your undertakings mannaged both by your swords and councells And this is that for which you have compelled the kingdome to sweare divers oaths to maintaine with the uttermost hazzards of their lives and estates and you have also imprecated in your Declarations the fearce wrath and vengeance of the great God of heaven and earth to fall upon you when you decline th●se ends And therefore Mr Maynard considering all these your own words and considering your own deepe knowledge and understanding in the lawes of England by the practize of which you have got a great part of your estate and by the destruction whereof you are not worth a groate in all the world having no propriety in that you possesse being subject every moment of time to have all you have taken from you without remidie by him that is stronger then you and therefore well did Mr. Iohn Pym say in his speech against the Earle of Straford recorded in your own booke of Declarations 1 part page 140. that the law is that which puts a difference betwixt good and evill betwixt just and unjust if you take away the law all things will fall into confusion every man will become a law unto himself which in the depraved condition of human nature must needs produce many great inormities Lust will become a law envy will become a law coveteousnesse and ambition will become a law and what dibates what divisions such lawes will produce may easily be discern'd And truly Sir neither the Lords nor you can lay it to my charge that I am leagally convicted of the least crime that doth disfranchise me or render me in the least uncapable of injoying the utmost benefit and priveledge that the Law of England will afford to a freeborne Englishman neither can the Lords nor you justly pretend against me that I have drawne my sword against or otherwise publickly or privatly engaged with any interest in England for the destroying the lawes and liberties thereof nay so farre have I beene from any of those things that I doe with confidence avere it that I have as freely with my sword in my hand upon your and their primitive declared principles adventured my life and blood for the preservation of the lawes and liberties of England with as much resolution as any Lord in England and though it may unjustly be bruted abroad to my disgrace by
the House of Lords or some other of my adversaries that I am now falen from and forsaken my first principals and would have neither law nor government yet I doe with abundance of confidence avere it that I am not if I know my own heart changed or falen from my first principles in the least but that the Lords themselves are the true apostates and that they are the men that in their constant practizes now of late yeares strongly endeavour to destroy all law and government and to set up in themselves an absolute arbitrary Tyranie worse then either Starre Chamber Councell Table or High commission or all three of them put all together in one which I doubt not but in my following plea to make as apparant to this Committee as the Sun that shines at noone day for which end I desire this Committee to take notice in the first place That the Lords doe not sit in their House by any power or authority derived from the peoples free election and choice who cannot in justice reason and equitie be bound but by their own free consents neither in reason iustice or equity can any be law-makers to them that are not thereunto justly impowred by them which the House of Lords are not in the least but are meerly and altogether the creatures of the King made by his prerogative some times of the basest and corruptest of the people being the meere issue of his will sitting by his command who himselfe in referrence to the bodies and estates of the people is lymitted and bounded by the law 1. As for instance by the 29 th of Magna Charta the King himselfe cannot imprison any man nor dispossesse him of his freehold liber●ies or free customes or outlaw him exile him or any otherwise destroy him but by due processe of law according to the law of the Land neither can he sell deny or deferre to any man either justice or right 2. And by the Statute of the 2 Edward 3 8 and 14 Edwaard 3 14 and 11 R. 2. 10 the King is tyed that he shal not hinder disturbe nor delay common right and justice according to the Law of the Land by any command under the great Seale or the little Seale neither by any letters of his Signet or privy seale and if he shall send any such commands the Judges notwithstanding shall and ought to goe on to execute the Law in every point as if any such command had never been 3. And by the Petition of right made in the 3.d of the present King all those lawes and liberties are not only confirmed but it is there inacted and fully declared that no man be adjudged or condemned but by the lawes already established and declared and that all the Administrators of the lawes of England and all other of the Kings ministers shall serve him and the Kingdome according to the declared lawes thereof and not otherwise 4. And in the acts that abolished Shipmoney and abolished the Star Chamber and rectiffeth the Councell Board all and every the particulars of the said Petition of right is not only confirmed but it is inacted further that neither his Majesty nor his privie Councell have or ought to have any jurisdiction power or ●…er authority by English Bill Petition Articles libells or any other arbitrarie way whatsoever to examine or draw into question determine or dispose of the Lands Tenements heredetaments goods or chattels of any the subjects of this Kingdome but that the same ought to be tryed and determined in the ordinary Courts of justice and by the ordinary courses of law which last clause is extraordinary pertinent to my purpose that the ordinarie Courts of iustice and the ordinary Courts of the law are to be tryers of all causes and differences betwixt partie and partie And in that act there is a remedie provided for any man that shal illegally suffer imprisonment or hereafter be committed or restrained of his libertie by the command or warrant of the King himselfe his heires or successors in their own person yea and the Kings oath that he takes when he is made King recorded 1. part booke decla page 712 713 714. tyes him to govourn his people according to the established Lawes and to preserve unto them their liberties and freedomes Now Sir if the King the creator of the Lords be thus restrained by Law as he is that he shall not doe to the freemen of England what he pleaseth nor exercise an arbitrarie tyranicall illegall power over their bodies or estates It is impossible for him to give unto the Lords the exercise of an arbitrarie tyranicall illegall power over their lives liberties or estates for it is a maxime in nature there is no being beyond the power of being neither I am confident are they able to produce any soled testimonie that he ever gave them any such power And though I grant that the King to the iudges gives such a power as he can not nor doth not in his own person execute 〈◊〉 I say that it is alwayes a power not flowing from his owne will but lim●…ted by the Law by which he is authorized so to doe by acts of Parliament and I am sure by the words of the writt by which he summond them to sit in Parliament as I find it printed in a late printed book called the manner of holding Parliaments pag. which writt is the foundation and roote of their power all the power that is given them by that writt is to come to the Parliament to confer and treat with the King or afford their councell of certaine hard urgent affaires concerning the King the State and defence of the Kingdome of England and the Church therof But my pretended offence touching none of these things but at the most is meerely an action or offence tryable at common Law Cooks 5. part reports delibellis Famosis and besides the Lords about me had no conferrence nor treatie with the King their prorogative fountaine as by their writt of summons which is the foundation and ground of their power they ought to have And therefore the Lords not only by the common law but by their own law and principles had not the least ground to pretend to a power or jurisdiction in the least of my cause 2ly I am summond by the Lords Warrant to come to their Barre and to answer such things as I stand charged with before their Lordships concerning a pamphlet intitulled the iust mans iustification Now Mr Maynard admit that that pamphlet as they call it were mine and full of scandals in the highest nature yet lybells and scandalum magnatum is not to be tryed by the House of Lords but is to be tryed only now the Starchamber is downe by an action at the common law as appeares by the 5. part of Cookes reports Page 125. and the 13. Hen. 7. Kelay 11. Eliz. Dier 285. and 30. assis Pla. 19. all which is fully confirmed by your own words in your