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A90100 The Observator defended in a modest reply to the late Animadversions upon those notes the Observator published upon the seven doctrines and positions which the King by way of recapitulation layes open so offensive.; Animadversions animadverted. Parker, Henry, 1604-1652. 1642 (1642) Wing O123E; Thomason E114_19; ESTC R212780 10,555 12

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THE OBSERVATOR DEFENDED IN A modest Reply to the late Animadversions upon those Notes the Observator published upon the seven Doctrines and Positions which the King by way of Recapitulation layes open so offensive THe Animadversor hath attacht the Observator just like a weak and degenerous enemie that durst not encounter his adversary in open field but lodgeth himself in some obscure and ignoble passage to attempt at least upon his Arriere-guard not being able to pierce into his main body The ingenious peruser of both I doubt not may discern that the Observator in the conclusion of his Treatise only recapitulated seven Results out of His Majesties papers in contradiction to his Antecedent disquisition the Parliaments proceedings that so one might compendiously view the subject of his discourse and as it were by an Index find out the confutation of His Majesties positions by the fore-going Arguments of the book which the Animadversor very cautelously is pleased never to take notice of in the whole Discourse 1. In the first position the Animadversor grants the Observators Arguments for the declarative power of Parliament in respect of the safe residence of that power in the bosome of the Jutelary Assembly But with this restriction That he should have allowed the King his place in Parliament and not have named a Parliament without him But how could the Observator without affronting impudence speak otherwise seeing His Majestie in present is pleased actually to have his residence out of Parliament and will not allow himselfe a place in it but in stead of concurrence with it seeks the remotest distances from it The better therefore to see how the King and Parliament are in parts we will first negatively and then positively open the present Controversie betwixt them which is the cause of their disjunction Which in the first place is not this which most men conceive That when His Majestie shall agree and the Parliament likewise agree for establishing some new Law or interpreting some old which may be for the particular commoditie of some conditions of men onely in the Common-wealth Whether then the King ought to declare this or that to be Law exclusively of the Parliament or the Parliament doe the same exclusively of the King But positively it is this When there is visibly a danger readie to confound the whole common-wealth and consequently all particular commodities and persons Whether the State if then convened may not lawfully of it self provide for its preservation especially if the King either see not the danger or seeing it will not provide for it in such manner as may give best securitie to Himself and Common-wealth When therfore such a Question shall justly arise betwixt King and common-wealth which collectively is that we call a Parliament it being of publike interest of State and so De jure publico it cannot fall under the examination of any inferiour judicature with which those so known voted Lawes the Animadversor speakes of are to be found For that is furnisht only with rules of particular not universall justice for the decision of particular differences betwixt this or that man for this or that thing Which rules being too narrow for so capacious a subject we must recurre to those that the originall Laws of Nature and policy hold out to us which must needes be superiour to the other The chiefest rule of that is Ne quovis modo periclitetur respublica That by all means publike safety be secured And every State must principally endeavour to hold fast and sure our publike sociable Incorporations one with another from publike distresses calamities and destructions which may arise from our selves or other forraign Kingdoms And whilest that is done according as Natures Lawes and policy prescribes in Vniversall justice they may well in the mean time proceed to make or revile Lawes of particular justice which is of particular things whereby we may commutatively encrease our fortunes and estates one by another or by forraign commerce But if those that fit at the head of the common-wealth shall let loose the helm of it and so let it float at all hazards or else unadvisedly steere it directly towards rockes and shelves it selfe is bound by those originall Lawes which surely may be some meanes to save it self from a wrack And how the King is not invaded or wronged by having himselfe and his Kingdome preserved from imminent danger and how it is possible a King may ruine his Kingdom follow in its just place In the meane time from these premisses we prove that the Parliaments method is most excellent For in the first place it endevours to secure the being of the cōmon-wealth now floating at hazard And afterwards to apply its self to quicken particular Laws for our wel-being Now therfore the fundamentall Law which the Animadversor so hotly cals for the Parliament squares by is not such a one as some say was never known before it was broken Nor as he saies lies mentally or parliamentally in the wals of the Parliament House to be produced upon any emergent occasion But is such a one as is coucht radically in Nature it self and so becomes the very pin of law and society and is written and enacted irrepealably in her Magna charta which we are not beholden to any sublunary power for but belongs to us as we are living and sociable creatures And no knowne act of particular Justice or right to this or that petty thing can clash with this but must in equitie vail to it as to its superintendent For what can those particular Acts of Law which are to encrease our private and domestick profit advantage us when it s doubtfull in so great dangers whether we may enjoy our lives at all or no It is therefore notoriously calumnious and inconsequent which the Animadversor from hence affirms That the Parliament affects an arbitrary power or the particular rights in ordinary course of Justice as also the safety of King and people must at all times totally depend on their Votes exclusively of the King Which in the following Position comes to be more fully disproved Which power we confesse with him can never be safe either for King or people nor is presidentable 2. Posit Parliaments are not bound to presidents saith the Observator because not to Statutes viz. Absolutely For the cause both of the one and the other is not permanent And t is true therefore which the Animadversor saith that they are durable till they be repealed which had been to good purpose had he ever denied it For he rightly attributes no more power to Statutes then to other particular Lawes which as is proved in the first Position and further shall be in this cannot in his case stand in equitie nor act beyond their power and that contrary to the Legislative intent viz. to be a violation of some more soveraigne good introduceable or some extreme and generall evil avoidable which evil otherwise might
swallow not onely Statutes but all other sanctions what ever And thus in respect of the effect they may be said in some sort to Repeal themselves For really in such a case they become mortified and can doe no more for us For the Parliaments case and controversie which the Animadversor still forgets to be of preserving the whole Kingdome and so De jure publico is of so transcendent a nature de facto it may not and de jure it ought not to be restrained by pettie and mortified Statutes or Lawes in acting so much good for us But how should Presidents as the Animadverso saith be best warrants or how should they be in the like degree limiting or binding that Oaths are Consider the consequence Such or such a Parliament did not or durst not doe this or that therefore may no Parliament do it Some Parliaments not comparable to the Worthies of this have omitted some good out of supinenesse difficulty or to avoid a greater evill which might be valuable with the good desired some perhaps hath done ill which the integritie and worth of this abhors to think of so that neither King nor Parliament have reason to plead so strongly for coherents to Presidents But both have better rules if they will not deceive them which are To direct all by the interest of State which is never accusable of Injustice And by Equitie which we may call a generall Law and though it be variable according to the subject matter and circummstances yet it is that only which will not let summum jus be summa injuria which is the supremest right that can be done us And it remains to be wisht that the Animadversor would have shown us in this main businesse wherein the Parliament hath gone crosse either to publike Interest of State or Equitie To say as the Animadversor doth that this single and extraordinary case excludes the King from Supremacy even above particulars and divests him to the naked priority onely of Place and Title is that which blasts it self unlesse the Animadversor be able to prove the Kings exercise of his former power totally intercepted and the more now then in other Parliaments of the like circumstances or that he is ruin'd by having his Kingdome preserved But Serjeant Major Skippon who is a particular was not permitted to obey the Kings summons of him therefore the King saith the Animadversor is denied a power even above particulars But we answer that his case reports to that of the Parliaments and must stand or fall with the equity of that In the mean time he is so imployed that he could not have been in any more redounding to His Majesties solid happinesse which rightly understood would have prodnced rather an excuse than an accusation For the Parliaments discharging of their trust which the Animadversor fears so much It is so notorious to all uncorrupted and unbiast judgements that we have reason to pray that those who so advisedly elected them in a time of lesse danger to the Kingdome than this present is be not more disloyall to them than they are to their chusers What they have actually effected with the Kings concurrence the Animadversor I hope will not except against and what they desire further to effect wherein they so humbly and pariently have attended his Majesties concurrence is onely for the happier continuation of that other to us and is to be reputed good or ill in order to that Where then is the evill for which the Parliament must be so scourged by all sort of hands why did we engage them so studiously to wipe off that Rust which began to eate so deep into the letter of our lawes and all our possessions and to make new purchases for us of all our estates if now being assembled they cannot discerne what and where those lawes are to be found by the luster and power of which they they should act all this for us We have blessings plentifully in store for his Majesty but desire he would not reduce the ultimate resolution and reserch of the Law our blessing to be in his own bosome more than in that of the Parliament lest when God in his anger shall deprive us of so great a blessing as is his life and government that dye with him I shall not multiply on the Animadversors Arguments Of the possibility of the Parliaments erring and not rightly discharging their trusts all which might be more powerfully urged on one man confiding in his own singularity He might have knowne them to have been unanswerably refuted and kild before their birth But since he will have the Parliament so great practitioners of Popish policy in respect of some infallibilitie which he saies and they never arrogated save onely a probabilitie of lesse erring in that question betwixt his Majesty and themselves let me I say nakedly recite what the learned and yet unanswered Divine in this matter which the Animadversor so triumphs in hath urged against the Papists whom it most concerns so to leave the Reader to assume what shall seem most deduceable to himself His words are these He that would usnrp an absolute tyranny and lordship over any people need not put himself to the trouble and difficulty of abrogating his Laws made to maintain the common liberty for he may frustrate their intent and compasse his design as well if he can get the power and authority to interpret them as he pleases and have his interpretarions stand for Laws I shall not need to recapitulate the condition of our Lawes before the Parliament nor yet what interpretations they received Which interpretation were held so Authentique that they made the Law but a nose of waxe to wring sometimes this way for Ship money and for the lawfulnesse of it as to make the King likewise the sole Iudge and redresser of all publike dangers sometimes another way for legall monopolies c. Let the world then iudge who arrogate most infallibilitie or have more made use of Papists or Popish policy 3. The Observator saith that the Parliament deserted by the King in the whole Kingdomes distresse may relieve it and the King Here is asserted the publike Interest of State which can fall under no notion of any inferior Court to examine But the Animadversor draws this consequence from thence That then every mans estate may be wrested from his propriety and possession Quàm urceus exit Here he doth most palpably discover the loosenesse of his Logick and cause and how little he holds to his premisses and state of the Controversie betwixt King and Parliament which I so oft noted before and shewed the case to be De Iure publico and so politicall Commutative therefore and Distributive Iustice being of inferior matters have their inferiour Courts and the apparant letter of the Law to decide and power to actuate what is rightly decided But this Controversie being De iure publico of a publike right it fals under