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A79846 A full ansvver to an infamous and trayterous pamphlet, entituled, A declaration of the Commons of England in Parliament assembled, expressing their reasons and grounds of passing the late resolutions touching no further addresse or application to be made to the King. Clarendon, Edward Hyde, Earl of, 1609-1674. 1648 (1648) Wing C4423; Thomason E455_5; ESTC R205012 109,150 177

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as any other part of the discourse there being said only by Captain Chudleigh who it seems believed it not by His engaging Himself to the Parliament from that time as the better Pay-masters and was highly valued by them 20. It seems they take it as granted that their frivolous and malitious allegations will serve turne in stead of proofs and therefore they take the boldnesse to tax His Majesty with breach of honour and faith and to reproach Him for calling God to witnesse and making so many solemn protestations against any thought of bringing up the Northern Army or of leavying Forces to wage war with His Parliament or of bringing in forain Forces or aids from beyond the Sea which they say Himself said would not only bury the Kingdom in sudden destruction and ruine but His own name and Posterity in perpetuall scorne and infamy If these Gentlemen would deale faithfully with the world and confesse what troubles them most they would acknowledge that their grief is that the King is so punctuall and severe in keeping His word and protestations not that He is apt to fall from them If He would have practised their arts of dissembling and descended to their vile licence of promising and protesting what He never meant to think of after He might have prevented them in many of their successes but the greatnesse of His mind alwaies disdained even to prosper or be secure by any deviations from truth and honour and what He hath promised He hath been religious in observing though to His own damage and inconvenience He hath made no protestation about bringing up the Northern Army or of leavying Forces against the Parliament or for the Rights of the Subject which was not exactly true and agreeable to the Princely thoughts and resolutions of His heart The occasion of His Majesties using that expression concerning forain Force which is here remembred by them was this In the Declaration delivered to His Majesty from the two Houses at Newmarket on the 9 of March 1641. they told Him that by the manifold advertisements which they had from Rome Venice Paris and other parts they expected that His Majesty had still some great designe in hand and that the Popes Nuntio had solicited the Kings of France and Spaine to lend His Majesty four thousand men apiece to help to maintain His Royalty against the Parliament were some of the grounds of their fears and jealousies To which His Majesty made answer in these words What your advertisements are from Rome Venice Paris and other parts or what the Pope's Nuntio solicited the Kings of France or Spaine to do or from what persons such informations come to you or how the credit and reputation of such persons have been sifted and examined We know not but are confident no sober honest man in Our Kingdomes can believe that We are so desperate or so senslesse to entertain such designes as would not only bury this Our Kingdome in sudden destruction and ruine but Our name and posterity in perpetuall scorn and infamy That this Answer was most prudently and justly applied to that extravagant and senslesse suggestion cannot be doubted but because the King at that time before the War or a declared purpose in them to raise a War against Him held it an odious and infamous thing to thinke of bringing in foraine Forces upon His owne Kingdome that He might not therefore think it afterwards necessary and find it just to call in forain Succours to defend Him from a Rebellion that besides mixtures of all Nations was assisted by an intire forain Army to oppresse Him and His posterity no reasonable man can suggest or suppose and yet how far He hath been from entertaining any such aide the event declares which it may be many wise men reckon amongst His greatest errours and oversights and which no question if He had not been full of as much tendernesse and compassion towards His people as these men want He would have found no difficulty to have practised They proceed to improve this most groundlesse and unreasonable scandall by another instance that when His Majesty Himself and the Lords made a Protestation at Yorke against leavying Forces He commanded His Subjects by Proclamation to resist the Orders of the Parliament and did many other Facts contrary to that Protestation the particulars whereof are mentioned and shall be examined and answered The Act which they call a Protestation by the King the Lords at Yorke passed on the 15 day of June 1642. being six and twenty daies after both Houses had declared that the King intended to leavy war against the Parliament and thereupon published their Propositions for bringing in Money or Plate for the raising and maintaining an Army The King conceiving so positive and monstrous an averment might make some impression upon and gain credit with his people called the Peers together who attended Him and taking notice of that wicked Declaration declared to them That He alwaies had and then did abhor all such designes and desired them to declare whether being upon the place they saw any colour of preparations or counsels that might reasonably beget a belief of any such designe and whether they were not fully perswaded that His Majesty had no such intention whereupon seven and thirty Peers who then attended His Majesty being double the number that at that time or since remained in the House of Peers at Westminster unanimously declared under their hands which was published to the Kingdome that they saw not any colour of preparations or counsels that might reasonably beget the belief of any such designe and did professe before God and testifie to all the world That they were fully perswaded that His Majesty had no such intention but that all His endeavours did tend to the firm and constant setlement of the true Protestant Religion the just Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject the Law Peace and prosperity of the Kingdome notwithstanding which clear evidence they made what haste they could to raise an Army and to engage the people against their Soveraigne Lord the King That His Majesty intended not by that profession on His part nor the Lords thought themselves obliged on their parts to give any countenance to or not to resist the Orders which then issued out every day from those at Westminster who called themselves the two Houses needs no other evidence then His Majesties Declaration published two daies before 13 of June in which amongst other particulars He declared to the Peers That He would not as was falsly pretended engage them or any of them in any War against the Parliament except it were for His owne necessary defence and safety against such as should insolently invade or attempt against His Majesty or such as should adhere to Him And that very day the very same Peers whereof the Earl of Salisbury was one engaged themselves to the King under their hands That they would defend
Law is as well known neither did He deny His royall assent to any one Bill till after He was by force Tumults driven from White Hall and after he had indeed consented to whatsoever could be honestly asked of Him for the security and benefit of the Kingdome 11. The Queen is too near His Majesty not to bear a part and a share with Him in these calumnies and therefore Her designe to advance Popery is remembred and Her observing a Popish Fast with Secretary Windebanks going beyond Sea by His Majesties Passe after He was questioned by the House of Commons What that designe of Her Majesty was for the advancement of Popery is not particularly mentioned and therefore no Answer can be given to it and having expressed so much undutifulnes malice to Her Majesty throughout the whole course of their Rebellion it is not probable they have concealed any thing they could lay to Her charge For the Fast observed by Her it is well known that the time of it was when the King was in the Field and his Person liable to much danger which piety and devotion was very agreeable to Her goodnesse and exemplar affection towards her Husband And the Kingdome would think it self abundantly blessed if the Fasts since observed by these men had produced no worse effects then that did w ch was observed by her M ty For S. Windebanke the House of Cōmons had it in their power to have proceeded against him to have prevented his escape he being in the House and according to order withdrawn into the Committee Chamber after the report was made and after as much appeared against him as was ever objected or discovered afterwards but the House contrary to custome rose without proceeding upon it and therefore His Majesty might very well give him leave to dispose of himself And the truth is they by whom the House was then guided were best pleased with his absence and purposely declined the proceeding against him when he was in their hands thinking it easier to procure his place for one of their principall Members to whom they had designed it upon the advantage of his flight then if he had staid to abide his Triall which for many reasons they would not have thought fit to hasten or to proceed in 12. The Allegations of Commissions given to Popish Agents for private leavies except they intend the Collections made amongst the Papists of money for the Kings expedition into the North which was likewise amongst and no lesse liberally complied with by the Lords of the Privy Counsell and the other Protestants of the best quality throughout the Kingdom or that the Papists began to rise and arme themselves in the Northwest of England and Wales the raising Soldiers under pretence for Portugal and the seizing of the Tower are so stale vaine and ridiculous that though upon the first contrivance of them the fame served the turn of the Contrivers mens observation and knowledge having since informed them that there was nothing like either of them there needs no further Answer to them 13. The next Article is the great Caball for bringing up the Northerne Army to over-awe the Parliament the chief part of which they can prove they say to come from Himself to the maine Actors though the King did so often and solemnly dis-avow it as nothing but loose discourses of a modest Petition which also vanished two or three Months he saith before they knew of it They doe well to except against the Kings positive denying it when they have onely their owne confident and positive affirming it for proof but they had need suppresse and burn all His Majesties Declarations and Answers in which He hath abundantly satisfied the world in this particular as well as they restrain His Person and as they have concealed all those Depositions taken by themselves in this Argument which would manifest clearly that there was no such designe by His Majesty so they need recall all those they have already published if they desire to have that designe believed The King in His Answer to the Declaration presented to Him at Newmarket uses these words We cannot without great indignation suffer Our self to be reproached to have intended the least force or threatning to Our Parliament as the being privy to the bringing up the Army would imply whereas We call God to witnes We never had any such thought or knew of any such resolution concerning Our late Army And afterwards His Majesty in His Declaration of the 12 of August a Declaration that never was offered to be Answered at large set forth all He ever knew of that businesse or which upon exact inquiry He could imagine to be in it by which it plainly appears that some Officers of the Army of very good and confessed reputation for their affection to their Country observing the strange Petitions every day presented to the House of Commons against the established Laws and Government of the Kingdome and the unlawfull manner in the delivering those Petitions by thousands of disorderly persons in Tumults supposed that a Petition of a most modest and dutifull nature from the whole Army for the composing and setling all grievances in the Church and State by Law might for the reason of it prevaile with the whole House and coming from such a body might confirm those who might be shaken with any fears of power or force by the Tumults and His Majesty being made acquainted with this proposition gave his full approbation to it which He had great reason to do since as there was notable industry used to corrupt His Army and to make it applicable to the ill purposes then resolved on so pains was taken to perswade the people that it was in truth very indevoted to the King and ready to serve the Parliament any way it should direct And as His Majesty saies if in the managery of this debate any rash discourses hapned of bringing up the Army it is evident whether they were proposed in earnest or no that they were never entertained and the whole matter was laid aside above two Months before any discovery so that that danger was never prevented by the power or wisdome of Parliament It appears by the evidence and Depositions published by themselves by the Order of the 19 of May 1642. together with that Declaration that this dangerous Plot began without the least privity of the Kings upon some Officers taking offence dis-like that of fifty thousand pounds Ordred for payment of the Kings Army ten thousand pounds was taken by an after Order out of that summe to satisfie a new motion and importunity from the Scots and that those Officers upon that distast discoursed that they were disobliged by the Parliament and not by the King and thereupon concluded to tender their Services to His Ma ty in all things honourable and agreeable to the fundamentall Laws of the Kingdome That in debates afterwards together
upon so dangerous a Precedent to their owne Crownes and Monarchies without contributing to suppresse this so pernicious a designe begun in this Kingdome God forgive those Princes who suffered His Majesty to be deceived in so just and Princely an expectation It is here likewise to be remembred that the two Houses had dispatched their Agent Strickland to the States of the united Provinces to invite them to their amity and assistance and to decline their League with His Majesty before Colonel Cockram was sent for Denmarke their Declaration to those Provinces bearing date the 8 of Occtober which was before the time that Cockram went towards Denmarke 19. The Queens going into Holland is next objected to the King and that contrary to His trust He sent the ancient Jewels of the Crowne of England to be pawned or sold for Ammunition and Armes of which they say they had certain knowledge before they took up Armes and that they had not so much as once asked the Militia till the Queen was going for Holland and that Her going beyond Sea was stayed many Months before Her going into Holland by their motions to the King because amongst other reasons they had heard that She had packed up the Crowne Jewels by which they might see what was then intended by that Iourney had not they prevented it till the Winter They are very unwilling to agree upon the time when they first took up Armes and would have their seizing upon the King's Forts possessing themselves of the Militia of the Kingdome of the Royall Navy to be thought only an exercise of their Soveraigne power and no taking up of Armes but though they could perswade the world that their countenancing and bringing downe the Tumults by which they first drove away many Members from the Houses and then the King Himself from Whitehall was not taking up Armes because there was no avowed Act of both Houses to bring downe those Tumults yet sure they cannot deny their marching out of the City with all the Trained bands of London in a hostile manner to Westminster where both Houses gave the chief Officers thanks approved what they had done undertook to save them harmlesse and appointed a new Officer of their own to Command those Traine bands which was on the 11 of Ianuary 1641. to be taking up Armes When they appointed the next day their own new Officer Skippon to besiege the Tower of London with the City Forces by land and water and not suffer any provision to be carried thither when the King's Lieutenant was in it and declared that whosoever should trouble him for so doing was an Enemy to the Common-wealth which was accordingly executed by him they must confesse undoubtedly that they took up Armes and both these high actions which by the expresse Statute of the 25 year of King Edw. 3. are High Treason were before any one Iewell belonging to the Crowne or the King was carried out of the Kingdome For the time of asking the Militia though no circumstance of time could make it justifiable not to speak of the Bill preferred to that purpose many Months before the House of Commons by their Petition of the 26 of Ianuary after the House of Peers had refused to concur with them in so dis-loyall a suit desired His Majesty to put the Tower of London and the principall Forts of the Kingdome and the whole Militia into such hands as they thought fit and the Queen went not into Holland till the 23 of February neither was her journy resolved on till the beginning of that Month so that their assertion of not having so much as asked the Militia till the Queen was going into Holland is utterly untrue and when they were made acquainted of such Her Majesties purpose they never in the least degree disswaded it But what was the Queens going into Holland and the King 's sending with Her the Iewels of the Crown to their taking Armes The Queen might very well go to any place the King thought fit She should go the Princess Mary being at that time to go into Holland to her Husband His Maj. thought it fit that the Queens Maj. should accompany Her Daughter thither And for the Jewels of the Crowne though most of the Jewels carried over by the Queen were Her owne proper goods let them shew any Law that the King may not dispose of those Jewels for the safety of His life and to buy Arms Ammunition to defend Himself against Rebels who have seized all His Revenue and have left Him nothing to live upon but those Jewels which He had only in His power to convey out of theirs or to leave them to be seized on and sold by them who applied all that He had else and His own Revenue to hasten His destruction In their mention of the Queens former purpose of going beyond Seas stayed as they say upon their motion because they had then heard She had packed up the Crown Jewels and Plate they use their old and accustomed licence If they will examine their own Journall they will not find amongst all those reasons which were carried up by Master Pim to the Lords at a Conference on the 14 of Iuly and the next day presented to the King to disswade Her Majesties Journy the least mention of Her having packed up the Crown Jewels and Plate but that they had received information of great quantity of treasure in Iewels Plate and ready Mony packed up to be conveyed away with the Queen and that divers Papists and others under pretence of Her Majesties Goods were like to convey great sums of Money and other treasure beyond the Seas which would not only impoverish the State but might be imployed to the fomenting some mischievous attempts to the trouble of the publike peace And they might remember that the chief reasons they gave to disswade Her Majesty was their profession and Declaration since they heard that the chief cause of Her Majesties sicknesse proceeded from dis-content of Her mind that if any thing which in the power of Parliament might give Her Majesty contentment they were so tender of Her health both in due respect to His most excellent Majesty and Her self that they would be ready to further Her satisfaction in all things and that it would be some dis-honour to this Nation if Her Majesty should at this unseasonable time go out of the Kingdome upon any grief or discontent received here and therefore they would labour by all good means to take away and prevent all just occasions of Her Majesties trouble in such manner as might further Her content and therein Her health which would be a very great comfort and joy to themselves and the rest of His Majesties loving Subjects These obligations they should have remembred and left the world to remember how punctuall they were in the performance The discourse at Burrough Bridge that the King would pawne His Iewels for the Army is as materiall
no word in his Commission or instructions implying the least direction not to suffer His Majesty to come thither but on the contrary the pretence was for His Majesties especiall service His Majesty made a quick reply to this strange Answer and delivering it to their Committee wished them to return with it to the Houses which they refused telling Him That they were appointed by the Parliament to reside at Yorke but they would send His Answer to Westminster It would be too long in this place and might be thought impertinent to consider whether this custome of sending Committees to be Lieger in the Counties which began at this time be agreeable to law and the just regular power of the Houses for as the like will not be found in the Presidents of former Parliaments so it may be reasonably believed that that Councell which is called by the Kings Writ to assemble at Westminster can no more appoint some of their Members to reside at Yorke or in any other place then they can adjourn themselves thither and it seems against right that those Deputies which are sent by the Counties or Cities to be present on their behalfs in the House of Commons at Westminster may be sent to another place by which they whom they represent are without any Members there Upon this Answer of the Committee as unexpected as the other from the Houses and the other acts done in this conjuncture as the sending another Committee to Hull another into Lincoln-shire all to perswade the people to approve of what Sir Iohn Hotham had done and to assist him if there were any occasion the King began very justly to apprehend a designe upon His owne Person and then and not till then resolved and declared His resolution to have a Guard to secure His Person that Sir Iohn Hotham might not as His Majesty said by the same forces or more raised by pretence of the same authority for he raised some daily continue the War that he had leavied against Him and as well imprison His Person as detain His goods and as well shut His Majesty up in Yorke as shut Him out of Hull This Guard was hereupon raised with the advice of the principall Gentlemen of that County and consisted of one Regiment of their Traine bands commanded by the proper Colonel who was one of the prime Gentlemen of fortune and reputation there and one Troup of Horse which had the honour of being called the Prince of Wales his Troup commanded by the Earle of Cumberland and consisting of near one hundred most if not all of them of the Gentry of that Shire and that the rumour scandall and imputation of entertaining Papists might be clearly answered there was neither Officer or Souldier of the Regiment or Troup who did not take the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy and they were punctually payed by the King that there might be no complaint on any side This was the Guard the occasion and manner of leavying it full five Months after the two Houses against Law or President and without the least probable colour of danger had raised a greater Guard for themselves under the command of their new Officer Skippon after they had besieged the Tower and compelled the King to commit the government of it to a man of their own nomination and election after they had put a Governour and Garrison into Hull and that Governour and Garrison kept His Majesty out of the Towne after they had in defiance of His Majesty and against His expresse pleasure signified to them put His Royall Navy into the hands and under the command of the Earle of Warwick after they had in many Counties executed the Ordinance of the Militia and after they had brought the danger to His Chamber dore by their Orders to the very Sheriffe of Yorke-shire to assist Sir John Hotham and imploying their Committee there to the same purpose For abusing the Committees sent to His Majesty they should and no doubt if it had been in their power they would have mentioned one particular abuse offered to them it is very well known that they had all freedome and respect albeit His Majesty well knew the ill and seditious offices they did there and though they appeared publickly at all meetings and when His Majesty proposed any thing to the County they produced their instructions and disswaded the County from complying with His just desires the suffering and induring whereof might more reasonably be imputed to the King then any ill usage they received of which their owne Letters printed by Order will be sufficient testimony and when the King went from Yorke towards Nottingham after He had declared by His Proclamation that He would erect His Royall Standard the Lord Fairfax being one of that Committee by some accident of sicknesse continuing still at his house in that County albeit the King well knew the dis-service he had done Him and that the keeping him in prison might prevent much more that he was like to do Him yet since He had received him there as a Member imployed from the Parliament and that his returne thither was hindred by an indisposition of health he would not suffer him to be apprehended but left him un-disquieted or disturbed to recollect himself and to revolve His Majesties goodnesse So far was that Committee or any Member of it from being abused whatsoever they deserved The next instance of the King's breach of His Protestation or doing somewhat against it is the beating their publique Officers and Messengers and protecting notorious Papists Traytors Felons such as Beckwith and others from the Posse Comitatus since there is no other named it may be supposed that this is the only or most notorious example of that protection and therefore it will be fit to examine what the Case of this man was This Gentleman Mr. Beckwith whether a Papist or no is not materiall lived in Beverly whither His Majesty came that night after Sir John Hotham had refused to suffer Him to come into Hull and was utterly unknown to His Majesty but had the just sense an honest Subject should have of the indignity offered to his Soveraigne and the mischiefe that might befall that County and Kingdome by this rebellious act and was forward to expresse as most of the Gentlemen of that County were a desire to repaire His Majesty and to prevent the inconveniences which were otherwise like to follow He had in the Towne of Hull a Son-in-law one Fookes who was a Lieutenant of a Foot Company in that Garrison whom he supposed being only drawn in with the Traine bands not malitiously engaged in the purpose of Treason and therefore as well to preserve a man who was so near to him innocent as for other respects to his King and Country he sent for him to come to him to his house which the other there being then no intercourse hindred on either side did and upon discourse fully sensible of the unlawfulnesse of
passe in that Assembly of some few Lords and Gentlemen at Westminster under what pretence and colour soever were void and null and ought not to be submitted to by the free-borne Subjects of England It is not denied that the presentation of those humble desires of the young men and Apprentices of the City of London to both Houses on the 26 of Iuly last by which they compelled them to reverse and repeale two severall Acts of both Houses passed but three daies before was most destructive to the priviledge and freedome of Parliament and no question the Speakers and Members of both Houses had good reason to withdraw and absent themselves upon that violation but it is affirmed that the freedome of Parliament was as much obstructed by severall other acts preceding as it was on the 26 of Iuly last and that the Members of both Houses who attended his Majesty at Oxford had as great reason to withdraw themselves and at least as much authority to declare their want of freedome as the Speaker and the others had then or the Army to declare on their behalfs When the Tumults brought down by Manwaring and Ven compelled the House of Peers to passe the Act of Attainder against the Earle of Strafford to which the fifth part of the Peers never consented the rest being driven from thence and afterwards so absolutely forced his Majesty to signe it that it cannot be called His Act His hand being held and guided by those who kept Daggers at His Breast and so His royall name affixed by them and it being told Him at His Counsell board by those who were sworn to defend Him from such violence that if it were not done in that instant there would be no safety for Himself His royall Consort or His Progeny the Rabble having at that time besieged His Court The freedome of Parliament was no lesse invaded then it was on the 26 of Iuly last When the same Captain Ven then a Member of the House of Commons in November and December 1642. sent notes in writing under his hand into the City that the people should come downe to Westminster for that the better part of the House was like to be over-powred by the worser part whereupon at that time and some daies after multitudes of the meanest sort of people with Weapons not agreeing with their condition or custome in a manner contrary and destructive to the priviledge of Parliament filled up the way between both Houses offring injuries both by words and actions to and laying violent hands upon severall Members proclaiming the names of severall of the Peers as evill and rotten hearted Lords crying many howers together against the established Laws in a most tumultuous and menacing way and when this act was complained of to the House of Commons and Witnesses offered to prove Capt. Ven guilty of it and a Fellow who had assaulted and reproached a Member of the House of Commons in those Tumults coming again to that Bar with a Petition shewed and complained of to that House and yet in neither of these cases justice or so much as an Examination could be obtained and when these proceedings were so much countenanced by particular Members that when the House of Peers complained of them as derogatory to the freedome as well as dignity of Parliament Mr. Pim said God forbid we should dishearten our friends who came to assist us no doubt the freedome and safety of the Parliament was no lesse in danger and violated then it was on the 26 of Iuly last When in Ianuary 1642. after the first Proposition concerning the Militia was brought to the House of Peers and by them rejected a Petition was brought in a tumultuous manner to the House of Lords in the name of the Inhabitants of Hertford-shire desiring liberty to protest against all those as enemies to the Publique who refused to joyne with the Honourable Lords whose endevours were for the publique good and with the House of Commons for the putting the Kingdome into a posture of safety under the command of such persons as the Parliament should appoint when other Petitions of that nature and in the same manner delivered were presented to that House concluding that they should be in duty obliged to maintain their Lordships so far as they should be united with the House of Commons in their just and pious proceedings when at the same time a Citizen accompanied with many others said at the Bar of the House of Commons without reprehension That they heard there were Lords who refused to consent and concur with them and that they would gladly know their Names When that signall Petition of many thousand poor people was delivered to the House of Commons which took notice of a Malignant faction that made abortive all their good motions and professed that unlesse some speedy remedy were taken for the removing all such obstructions as hindred the happy progresse of their great endevours the Petitioners would not rest in quietnesse but should be forced to lay hold on the next remedy that was at hand to remove the disturbers of the peace and when that monstrous Petition was carried up to the House of Peers by an eminent Member of the Commons as an Argument to them to concur with the Commons in the matter of the Militia and that Member desired That if the House of Commons was not assented to in that point those Lords who were willing to concur would find some means to make themselves known that it might be known who were against them and they might make it known to those who sent them Upon which Petition so strangely framed countenanced and seconded many Lords thereupon withdrawing themselves in pure fear of their lives the Vote in Order to the Militia twice before rejected was then passed The freedome of Parliament was as absolutely invaded as it was on the 26 of July last In August 1643. the House of Commons agreed after a long and solemn debate to joyne with the Lords in sending Propositions of Peace to the King the next day printed Papers were scattered in the Streets and fixed upon the publique places both in the City and the Suburbs requiring all persons wel-affected to rise as one man and to come to the House of Commons next morning for that 20000 Irish Rebels were landed which direction and information was that day likewise given in Pulpits by their seditious Preachers and in some of those Papers it was subscribed that the malignant Party had over-voted the good and if not prevented there would be Peace a Common Councell was called late at night though Sunday and a Petition there framed against Peace which was the next morning brought to the House countenanced by Alderman Penington who being then Lord Major of London that day came to the House of Commons attended with a great multitude of mean persons who used threats menaces and reproaches to the Members of both Houses their Petition took notice of
Propositions passed by the Lords for Peace which if allowed would be destructive to Religion Laws and Liberties and therefore desired an Ordinance according to the tenour of an Act of their Common Councell the night before Thanks were given by the Commons whilst the Lords complained of the Tumults and desired a concurrence to suppresse them and to prevent the like many of the people telling the Members of both Houses that if they had not a good Answer they would be there the next day with double the number by these threats and this violence the Propositions formerly received were rejected and all thoughts of Peace laid aside and then surely the freedome of Parliament was as much taken away as on the 26 of Iuly last In a word when the Members of both Houses were compelled to take that Protestation to live and die with the Earle of Essex and some imprisoned and expelled for refusing to take it when they were forced to take that sacred Vow and Covenant of the 6 of Iune 1643. by which they swore that they would to their power assist the Forces raised and continued by both Houses of Parliament against the Forces raised by the KING when they were compelled to take the last solemn League and Covenant that Oath Corban by which they conceive themselves absolved from all obligations divine and humane as their Predecessours the Jewes thought they were discharged by that though they had bound themselves not to help or relieve their Parents and lastly when the Army marched to London in the beginning of August last in favour of the Speakers and those Members who had resorted to them and brought them back to the Houses and drove away some and caused others of the Members of a contrary Faction to be imprisoned and expelled the Houses the liberty and freedome of Parliament was no lesse violated and invaded then it was on the 26 of Iuly last Upon these reasons and for want of the freedome so many severall waies taken from them those Lords and Commons who attended his Majesty at Oxford had withdrawne themselves from Westminster and might then as truly and more regularly have said what the Army since with approbation and thanks have said on the 22 of Iune last That the freedome of this Parliament is no better then that those Members who shall according to their consciences endeavour to prevent a War and act contrary to their waies who for their owne preservation intend it they must do it with the hazard of their lives which being a good reason for those lately to go to St. Albons or Hounslow heath cannot be thought lesse justifiable for the other to go to Oxford Since this objection of calling the Members of Parliament to Oxford is not of waight enough to give any advantage against his Majesty to His Enemies they endeavour to make their entertainment and usage there very reproachfull with His friends and would perswade them to believe themselves derided in that expression of the Kings in a Letter to the Queen where He calls them a Mungrell Parliament by which they infer what reward His own Party must expect when they have done their utmost to shipwrack their faith and conscience to his will and tyranny Indeed they who shipwrack their faith and conscience have no reason to expect reward from the King but those Lords and Gentlemen who attended his Majesty in that convention well know that never King received advice from His Parliament with more grace and candor then his Majesty did from them and their consciences are too good to think themselves concerned in that expression if his Majesty had not Himself taken the pains to declare to what party it related besides it is well known that some who appeared there with great professions of loyalty were but Spies and shortly after betrayed his Majesties service as Sir John Price and others in Wales and some since have alleaged in the House of Commons or before the Committee for their defence to the Charge of being at Oxford at that Assembly That they did the Parliament more service there then they could have done at Westminster So that the KING had great reason to think He had many Mungrels there 23. The last Charge is the making a Pacification in Ireland and since that a Peace and granting a Commission to bring over ten thousand Irish to subdue the Parliament and the rebellious City of London and the conditions of that peace That loud clamour against the Cessation in Ireland was so fully clearly answered by the King's Cōmissioners at the Treaty at Uxbridge that there can no scruple remain with any who have taken the pains to read the transactions in that Treaty it plainly appears that the King could not be induced to consent to that Cessation till it was evident that His Protestant Subjects in that Kingdome could not be any other way preserved The Lords Justices and Councell of that Kingdome signified to the Speaker of the House of Commons by their Letter of the 4 of April which was above six Months before the Cessation That his Majesties Army and good Subjects there were in danger to be devoured for want of needfull supplies out of England and that His Majesties Forces were of necessity sent abroad to try what might be done for sustaining them in the Country to keep them alive till supplies should get to them but that designe failing them those their hopes were converted into astonishment to behold the miseries of the Officers and Souldiers for want of all things and all those wants made insupportable in the want of food and divers Commanders and Officers declaring they had little hope to be supplied by the Parliament pressed with so great importunity to be permitted to depart the Kingdome as that it would be extreame difficult to keep them there and in another part of that Letter they expressed that they were expelling thence all Strangers and must instantly send away for England thousands of poor dispoyled English whose very eating was then insupportable to that place that their confusions would not admit the writing of many more Letters if any for they had written divers others expressing their great necessities And to the end His Majesty and the English Nation might not irrecoverably and unavoidably suffer they did desire that then though it were almost at the point to be too late Supplies of Victuall and Ammunition in present might be hastened thither to keep life untill the rest might follow there being no Victuall in the Store nor a hundred Barrels of Powder a small proportion to defend a Kingdome left in the Store when the out-Garrisons were supplied and that remainder according to the usuall necessary expence besides extraordinary accidents would not last above a Month and in that Letter they sent a Paper signed by sundry Officers of the Army delivered to them as they were ready to signe that dispatch and by them apprehended to threaten imminent danger which mentioned that
divide and destroy the Parliament and the City of London under the notion of peace and by engaging them in a Treaty of peace without the advice and consent of their Brethren of Scotland which he said would be contrary to the late Articles solemnly agreed upon by both Kingdomes and to the perpetuall dishonour of this Nation by breach of their Publique Faith engaged therein to that Nation so that the two Houses having given their judgment in the point the King hath great reason if He had no other to have the whole well debated before Him and the severall interests weighed and agreed upon before He give His consent to any particulars which will else produce more mischief then His refusing all can possibly doe Nor will these and their other extravagant and licentious demands be better justified by their undervaluing the Kings present power in their insolent question in their late Declaration concerning the Scots Commissioners which in truth throughout is but a paraphrase upon that Speech of Demetrius to his Companions of the like occupation Sirs you know that by this craft we have our wealth what can the King give them but what they have already It is not out of their duty or good will to Him that they make any Application to Him and if they did indeed believe that His Majesty could give them nothing but what they have already He should hear no more from them but they very well know they have yet nothing except He give them more and that the man that is robbed and spoyled of all that He hath when He hath procured a pardon for and given a Release to the Thieves and Robbers He hath given them more then they had before and that which onely can make what they had before of benefit and advantage to them they know and will feel the judgment upon the wicked man in Job He hath swallowed down Riches and he shall vomit them up again God shall cast them out of his belly Because he hath oppressed and hath forsaken the poor Because he hath violently taken away a house which he builded not In the fulnesse of his sufficiency he shall be in straits That all their reproachings and revilings with which they have triumphed over the Lords Anointed must come into their Bowels like water and like Oyle into their bones And that nothing can restore and preserve them but the Antidotes and Cordials and Balme which the King only can Administer they know very well that even the most unfortunate Kings that ever have been in England could never be destroyed without their own consent and that all their power and strength and successe though for a time it may oppresse can never subdue the Crown without its owne being accessary to its own ruine and the King very well knows that what He yet suffers is not through His own default but by such a defection as may determine all the Empires of the world and that in the unspeakable miseries which all His good Subjects have undergone He is yet innocent the conscience whereof hath refreshed Him in all His sufferings and maketh Him superiour to their insolence contempt and Tyranny and keeps Him constant to His Princely and pious resolution but that if by any unhappy consent of His own such an establishment shall be made as shall expose Himself His Posterity and people to misery it will lie all upon His own account and rob Him of that peace of mind which He now enjoyes and values above all the considerations of the world well knowing that God requires the same and no more of Him then he did of his servant Joshuah Only be thou strong and very couragious that thou mayest observe to doe according to all the Law which Moses my servant commanded thee turne not from it to the right hand or to the left that thou mayest prosper whithersoever thou goest Honest men and good Christians will be lesse moved with their bold and presumptuous conclusion which they have learned from their new Confederates the Turkes That God himself hath given his Verdict on their sides in their successes not unlike the Logick used by Dionysius who because he had a good gale of wind at Sea after he had sacked the Temple of Proserpine concluded That the immortall Gods favoured Sacriledge It is very true they have been the instruments of Gods heavy judgments upon a most sinfull people in very wonderfull successes yet if they would believe Solomon they would find There is a time wherein one man rules over another to his own hurt and prosperity was never yet thought a good argument of mens piety or being in the right and yet if these men did enough think of God Almighty and seriously revolve the works of his owne hand throughout this Rebellion and since they had looked upon themselves as Conquerours they would be so far from thinking that he had given his Verdict on their side that they would conclude that he hath therefore onely suffered to prosper to this degree that his owne power and immediate hand might be more cleerly discerned and manifested in their destruction and that the cause might appear to be his own by his most miraculous vindication of it If Master Hambden had been lesse active and passionate in the businesse of the Militia which might have proceeded from naturall reason and reformation of his understanding the judgment and Verdict of God would not have been so visible as it was in the loosing his life in that very Field in which he first presumed to execute that Ordinance against the King If Sir John Hotham had never denied his Majesty entrance into and shut the Gates of Hull against Him from which naturall Allegiance and civill prudence might have restrained him the judgment and Verdict of God had been lesse evident then it was when after he had wished that God would destroy him and his posterity if he proved not faithfull to the King at the same time that he had planted his Cannon against him he and his Son were miserably executed by the judgment of those who but by his Treason could never have been enabled to have exercised that jurisdiction and that having it in his power he should perfidiously decline to serve his Majesty and afterwards loose his head for desiring to do it when he had no power to perform it They who remember the affected virulency of Sir Alexander Carew against the King and all those who adhered to him and how passionately he extolled and magnified the perjury and treachery of a Servant as if he had done his duty to the Kingdome by being false to his Master the King and that this man afterwards should by the treachery of his Servant be betrayed and lose his head by their judgments for whose sakes he had forfeited it to the King cannot but think the Verdict of God more visible then if he had contained himself within the due limits of his obedience and