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A87523 An apology for the army, touching the eight quære's upon the late declarations and letters from the army, touching sedition falsly charged upon them. Wherein those quæres are resolved, and thereby the present proceedings of the army are proved to be legall, just & honorable. By David Jenkins, prisoner in the Tower of London. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1647 (1647) Wing J582; Thomason E396_18; ESTC R201654 7,036 12

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new case without an Act of Parliament and therefore the imposers thereof are very blamable and guiltie of the highest Crime The Writer of these Quaeries seemes to professe the Lawes let him declare what Act of Parliament doth justifie the tendring giving or taking of the said Oath he knoweth there is none he knoweth that all the parts of it are destructive of the Lawes and Government to maintaine which the Law of nature the Law of the Land had obliged them Mag. Chart. cap. 1. Ultimo Articuli cleri and many other statutes 16. Ed. 4.10 The Oath of the Covenant makes the Houses Supreme Governours in causes Ecclesiasticall the Oath of Supremacy makes the King so and yet both taken by the same persons at the same time What credit is to be given to persons who make nothing of Oathes and contradict themselves How doe the Covenant and the Oath of Supremacy agree How doth their Protestation and the Covenant agree How doe their Declarations and Oathes agree The Lord be mercifull to this Land for these Oaths It is a sad thing to consider that so many gentlemen who professe the lawes and so many worthy men in both Houses should be so transported as they are knowing that the Lawes of the Land from time to time and in all times are contrary to all their actions and that yet they should amuse themselves and the people with the word of Parliament without the King and with the Covenant whereas they know they are no Parliament without His Majestie and that English men throughout the Kingdome should sweare a Covenant to preserve the reformed Religion of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which they no more know than the Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government of Prester Iohn in Ethiopia if they consider it they cannot but discerne that this is a high desperate and impious madnesse Be wise in time without the King and the Lawes you will never have one houre of safety for your Persons Wives Children or Es●●tes Be good to your selves and to your Posterities apply your selves to be capable of an Act of Oblivion and of a generall Pardon and to be able and willing to pay the Souldiery and to allow a reasonable liberty for mens consciences and God will blesse your endeavours and the people to whom you are now very hatefull will have you in better estimation The third Quaerie is thus answered You resemble the Army to Iacke Cade and his Complices and you cite the Act of Parliament of 31. Hen. 6. cap. 1. and that it may appeare who acts the Part of Iacke Cade you and that Party in the two Houses or the Army I thinke it necessary to set downe the said Act in words at large as followeth First Whereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious and arrant false Traytor Iohn Cade calling and naming himself sometime Mortimer sometime Cap. of Kent which name fame acts and feats are to be removed out of the speech and mind of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsely and traiterously purposing and imagining the perpetuall destruction of the Kings said Person and finall subversion of this Realme taking upon him Royall power and gathering to him the Kings people in great numbers by false subtle imagined Language and seditiously making a stirring Rebellion and Insurrection under colour of justice for reformation of the Lawes of the said King robbing stealing and spoiling great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraigne Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by advise and consent of the Lords aforesaid and at the request of the said Commons and by authority aforesaid hath ordained and established that the said Iohn Cade shall be reputed had named and declared a false Traytour to our Soveraigne Lord the King and that all his tyranny acts feats and falie opinions shall be voyded abated annulled destroyed put out of remembrance for ever and that all enditements and all things depending thereof had and made under the power of tyranny shall be likewise void a●●ulled abated repealed and holden for none and that the bloud of none of them be thereof defiled nor corrupted but by the authority of the said Parliament cleerely declared for ever and that all enditements in times comming in like case under power of tyranny rebellion and stirring had shall be of no Record nor effect but void in Law and all the Petitions delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at VVestminster Noveb 6. in the 29. of his Raigne against his mind by him not agreed shall be taken and put in oblivion out of remembrance undone voyded annulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and conscience and against His Royall Estate and preeminence and also dishonourable and unreasonable Now wee are to examine who hath trod in the steps of Jack Cade you and the present prevailing party of the two Houses tooke upon them and doe take all the Royall Power in all things so did Jack Cade as appeares by the said Act the Army doe not so They who imprison the King purpose to destroy His Person our imprisoned Kings alwayes * Edward 2. Henry 6. Richard 2. fared so Jack Cade did likewise so purpose but the Army doe not so The said party in the two Houses made a stirring under colour of Justice for Reformation of the Lawes so did Jack Cade The Army doe not so but desire that the Lawes should be observed Jack Cade levied Warre against the King the Army preserves Him Jack Cade dyed a Declared Traytor to his Soveraigne Lord the King this Army lives to have the glorious true Honour of being restorers of their King Simon Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury was murtheted by Jack Cade William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury was likewise murthered by that party of the two Houses for that an Ordinance by Law cannot take away any mans life 25 Ed. 3.4 28 Ed. 3.3 Petition of Right 3 ●ar his life was taken away by an Ordinance of the two Houses the Army had no hand in it Many misled by Jack Cade perceiving his Trayterous purposes fell from him and as that was lawfull just and Honourable so it is for this Army to adhere to their naturall King and to indeavour to settle the Kingdome againe in the just Lawes and Liberties thereof London did then right worthily adhere to the King and the Lawes and not to Iack Cade and his specious pretences and i● is hoped they will now so doe By this it appeares that the Gentlemans Discourse touching Iack Cade fastens altogether on his party and cleareth the Army To the IV. which is solved thus The Arreares of the Army howbeit it is the least thing they looke after yet being not paid them it is by the Law of the Land a sufficient cause to leave and desert that party in the Houses A person who serves in any kinde and is not paid his
wages the desertion of that service is warrantable by the Lawes of the Land Fi●z N. B. 25 ● 9 Ed. 4.20 38 H. 6.27 23 Eliz. Dier 369. You say the Houses will reforme all things when the Army doth disband who will beleeve it Will any beleeve that the setling of the Presbytery will doe it Will any beleeve that his Majesty will passe the Propositions sent to Him to Newcastle Will any man beleeve that this Kingdome will ever bee quiet without His Majesty and the ancient and just Lawes Can the Members of the Army conceive any of them to be safe in any thing without a Pardon from His Majesty Have they not seene some of their Fellows hanged before their eyes for actions done as Souldiers Shall the Kingdome have no account of the many Millions received of the Publike Money Will the Members of the Houses accuse themselves Shall private and publike Debts bee never paid Shall the Kingdome lye ever under burthens of Oppression and Tyranny There is no visible way to remedy all these enormities but the power of the Army To the V. which is solved thus The Kingdome hath better assurance of Reformation from the Army then from the Houses for that in their Military way they have bin just faithfull honorable they have kept their words That party of the Houses have bin constant to nothing but in dividing the publike Treasure among themselves and in laying burdens upon the people and in breaking all the Oathes Vowes and Promises they ever made 2 2 Ed. 6. cap. 2.11 H 7 cap. 1. Calvins case 7. para Cook Iol. 11. As the Army hath power so now adhering to the King all the Lawes of God Nature and Man are for them their Armes are just and blessed and the King is bound in Justice to reward his Deliverers with Honour Profit and meet Liberty of Conscience To the VI. Quaere All the sixth Quaere containes Calumnies cast upon the Armie the new elections are against all the Lawes mentioned in the Margin 11 H. 4. c. 1. 1 H. 5. c. 1. 8 H. 6. c. 7. 23 H. 6. c. 15. and are against the ejection of the old Members and by this it may be judged what a House of Commons we have By the said Lawes it appeares that if any undue returne be made the person returned is to continue a Member the Sherifes punishment is two hundred pounds one to the King and the other to the partie that is duly elected imprisonment for a yeare without Bayle or Mainprise and that person who is unduly returned shall serve at his owne charge and have no benefit at the end of the Parliament by the Writ de solutione feodorum Militum Civium Burgensium Parliament And the tryall of the falsitie of the returne is to be before the Justices of Assises in the proper Countie or by Action of Debt in any Court of Record This condemnes the Committee for undue elections which hath been practised but of late times for besides these Lawes it is a Maxime of the Common Law 3 Ed. 4.20 5 Ed. 4.42 an Averment is not receivable against the returne of the Sherife for his returne is upon Oath which Oath is to be credited in that fuit wherein the returne is made The said Statutes condemne elections of such men which were not resiant and dwelt in the Countie or Boroughs for which they were returned and any abusive practise of late times to the contrary is against the Law and ought not to be allowed To the VII Quaere The Quaerist saith That the Votes of the Independents in the Houses were arbitrarie exorbitant and irregular and that they disposed and fingred more of the common Treasure then others That whole Quaere I believe is false and slanderous 57 E. 3. c. 17. and the Author ought to make it good or else to undergoe the Law of Talion which is to suffer such punishment failing of his proofe as the accused should in case of proofe made To the VIII Quaere This Quaere is all minatorie and threatning and the contrarie of every part is true by the deliverance of the King and Kingdome from the bondage of that partie in the two Houses by the Army their renowne will be everlasting they secure themselves they content and please the Kingdome Citie and Countrey as appeares by their confluence to see his Majestie and the Armie and their acclamations for his Majesties safetie and restitution all which doth evidence to every one of the Armie how acceptable the intentions of the Armie are to the people of this Land who have been so long inthralled Sir Thomas Fairfax let your Worthinesse remember your extraction and your Ladies by the grace and favour of the Prince to be in the ranke of Nobilitie remember what honour and glory the present Age and all posteritie will justly give to the restorer of the King to his Throne of the Lawes to their strength and of the afflicted people of this Land to peace let the Colonels and Commanders under you and likewise your Souldierie rest assured that they shall not only share in the renowne of this action but also shall have such remuneration as their hautie courage and so high a vertue doth deserve This his Majestie can and will doe the Houses neither will nor can and God blesse you all and prosper you I conclude all as I have alwayes done Without an Act of Oblivion a generall Pardon the Arreares of the Souldierie payd and a regard to Libertie of Conscience this Kingdome will certainly be ruined FINIS