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A43890 The history and transactions of the English nation more especially by their representatives assembled in Parliament in the reign of King Charles, &c. ... : also the wonderful and most solemn manner and form of ratitifying [sic], confirming and pronouncing of that most dreadful curse and execration against the violaters and infringers of Magna Charta in the time of Henry the Third, King of England, &c / by a person of quality and true lover of his countrey. Person of quality and true lover of his countrey. 1689 (1689) Wing H2110; ESTC R12837 58,860 66

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I conceive it will not be unacceptable unto your Lordships if setting aside all Rhetorical affectations I only in plain Countrey language humbly pray your Lordships favour to include many excuses necessary to my many infirmities In this one word I am commanded by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House to present unto your Lordships their most affectionate Thanks for your ready condescending to this Conference which out of confidence in your great Wisdoms and approved Justice for the service of his Majesty and the welfare of this Realm they desired upon this occasion The House of Commons by a fatal and universal concurrence of Complaints from all the Seabordering parts of this Kingdom did find a great and grievous interruption and stop of Trade and Traffick The base Pirates of Sally ignominiously infesting our Coasts taking our Ships and Goods and leading away the Subjects of this Kingdom into Barbarous Captivity while to our shame and hinderance of Commerce our Enemies did as it were Besiege our Ports and Block up our best Rivers Mouths our Friends on slight pretences made Embargoes of our Merchants Goods and every Nation upon the least occasion was ready to contemn and slight us So great was the apparent diminution of the ancient Honour of this Crown and once strong reputation of our Nation wherewith the Commons were more troubled calling to remembrance how formerly in France in Spain in Holland and everywhere by Sea and Land the Valours of this Kingdom had been better valued and even in latter times within remembrance when we had no Alliance with France none in Denmark none in Germany no Friend in Italy in Scotland to say no more united Ireland not setled in peace and much less security at home when Spain was as ambitious as it is now under a King Philip the Second they called their Wifest the House of Austria as great and Potent and both strengthned with a Malicious League in France of persons ill-affected when the Low-Countries had no being yet by constant Councels and Old English ways even then that Spanish pride was cool'd that greatness of the House of Austria so formidable to us now was well resisted and to the United Provinces of the Low-Countries such a beginning growth and strength was given as gave us Honour over all the Christian World. The Commons therefore wondring at the evils which they suffered debating of the causes of them found they were many drawn like one Line to one Circumference of Decay of Trade and Strength of Honour and Reputation in this Kingdom which as in one Centre met in one great man the cause of all whom I am here to name the Duke of Buckingham Here Sir Dudley Diggs made a stand as wondring to see the Duke present yet he took the Roll and read the Preamble to the Charge with the Duke's Titles which I shall here for the Readers Satisfaction insert and so proceed For the speedy Redress of the great evils and mischiefs The Preamble to the Impeachment against the Duke of Buckingham and of the chief causes of those evils and mischiefs which this Kingdom of England now grievously suffereth and of late years hath suffered and to the honour and safety of our Soveraign Lord the King and of his Crown and Diguities and to the good and welfare of his People The Commons in this present Parliament by the Authority of our Soveraign Lord the King assembled do by this their Bill shew and declare against George Duke Marquess and Earl of Buckingham Earl of Coventry Viscount Villers Baron of Whaddon Great Admiral of the Kingdoms of England and Ireland and of the Principality of Wales and of the Dominions and Islands of the same of the Town of Calais and of the Marches of the same and of Normandy Gascoin and Guyen General Governor of the Seas and Ships of the said Kingdoms Lieutenant-General Admiral Captain-General and Governor of his Majesties Royal Fleet and Armado lately set forth Master of the Horse of our Soveraign Lord the King Lord Warden Chancellor and Admiral of the Cinque-Ports and of the Members thereof Constable of Dover-Castle Justice in Eyre of all Forests and Chases on this side of the River of Trent Constable of the Castle of Windsor Lieutenant of Middlesex and Buckinghamshire Steward and Bayliff of Westminster Gentleman of his Majesties Bed-Chamber and one of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council in his Realms both of England Scotland and Ireland and Knight of the most Noble Order of the Garter The Misdemeanors Misprisions Offences Crimes and other matters comprized in the Articles following And him the said Duke do Accuse and Impeach of the said Misdemeanors Misprisions Offences and Crimes And now my Lords This lofty Title of this mighty man methinks doth raise my Spirits to speak with a Paulo majora canamus and let it not displease your Lordships if for Foundation I compare the beautiful Structure and fair Composition of this Monarchy wherein we live to the great work of God viz. the World it self in which the solid Body of incorporated Earth and Sea as I conceive in regard of our Husbandry Manufactures and Commerce by Land and Sea may well resemble us the Commons and as it is encompassed with Air and Fire and Spheres Celestial of Planets and a Firmament of fixed Stars all which receive their heat light and life from one great glorious Sun even like the King our Soveraign so that Firmament of fixed Stars I take to be your Lordships those Planets the great Officers of the Kingdom that pure Element of Fire the most Religious Zealous and Pious Clergy and the Reverend Judges Magistrates and Ministers of Law and Justice the Air wherein we breathe all which encompast round with cherishing comfort this Body of the Commons who truly labour for them all and though they be the Footstool and the lowest yet may well be said to be the setled Centre of the State. Now my Lords if that glorious Sun by his powerful Beams of Grace and Favour shall draw from the bowels of this Earth an Exhalation that shall fire and burn and shine out like a Star it needs not be marvell'd at if the poor Commons gaze and wonder at the Comet when they feel the effects and impute all to the corruptible matter thereof But if such an imperfect Meteor appear like that in the last Age in the Chair of Casiopea among the fixed Stars themselves where Aristotle and the old Philosophers conceived there was no place for such corruption The Meteor in 1680. is worth your observation upon this very account then as the learned Mathematicians were troubled to observe the irregular motions the prodigious magnitude and the ominous Prognosticks of that Meteor so the Commons when they see such a Blazing-Star in course so exorbitant in the affairs of this Common-wealth cannot but look up upon it and for want of Perspectives commend the nearer examination to your Lordships who may behold it
crave our Kings aid in their distress hurrieth and ferrieth over their Deputies to England to solicit our King for fresh supplies before the prodigious work should be compleated who good Prince affected with their Miseries and desirous rather to protect them from being slaves than to enable them to be Masters condescended to assure them of what assistance he could make But alas what could his assistance signifie who was as necessitous as themselves Did they want Men Ammunition Ships So did he seeing he wanted that which was all these Money and how and where should that be had His last borrowing Commissions was a course so displeasing to the Subject as would not admit of repetition and it would prove an odd payment of that Loan arrears to demand another But the King was now the Subject of a greater Potentate than himself Necessity and this Necessity put him upon several projects First he borroweth of the Common-Council of London One hundred and twenty thousand pounds for which and other debts he assures unto them Twenty-one thousand pounds per annum of his own Lands and of the East-India Company Thirty thousand pounds and yet he wants Next Privy-Seals are sent out by Hundreds and a new way of Levy by Excise resolved to be executed by Commission Dated the 3d of February and yet he wants but the best and most taking project of all was a Parliament whereby he hoped not only to supply his necessities but also to give some better repose to his troubled spirit for he felt no inward contentment whilst he the Head and the Body were at a distance or like intersects and flies tackt together by a Mathematical line or imaginary thread therefore he seriously resolved for his part to frame and dispose himself to such obliging complacency and compliance as might re-consolidate and make them knit again This Parliament was Summoned to meet on the 17th of March 1627 King Charles his Third Parliament assembled March 17. 1627. and the Writs being issued out the Loan-Recusants appeared the only men in the Peoples affections none thought worthy of a Patriots title but he that was under restraint upon that account so that the far greater number of the Parliament was formed of them And as their Sufferings had made them of Eminent remark for Noble Courage so did they for External respects appear the gallantest Assembly that ever those Walls immured they having Estates modestly estimated able to buy the House of Peers the King excepted One hundred and eighteen thrice over Thus were all things strangely turned in a trice topside t'other way they who lately were confin'd as Prisoners are now not only free but petty Lords and Masters yea and petty Kings Some few days before this Session a notable discovery was made of a Colledge of Jesuits at Clerkenwell The first Information was given by one Cross a Messenger to Secretary Coke who sent a Warrant to Justice Long dwelling near enjoyning to take some Constables and other aid with him and forthwith to beset the house and apprehend the Jesuits entring at first door they found at stairs-foot a Man and a Woman standing who told them My Masters take heed you go not up the stairs for there are above many resolute and valiant Men who are well provided with Swords and Pistols and will lose their lives rather than yield therefore if you love your lives be gone The Constable took their counsel and like cowardly Buzzards went their way and told Secretary Coke the danger whereupon the Secretary sent the Sheriff to attack them who coming with a formidable Power found all withdrawn and sneakt away but after a long search their place of security was found out it being a Lobby behind a new Brick-wall Wainscoated over which being demolisht they were presently unkennel'd to the number of Ten. They found also divers Letters from the Pope to them empowring them to erect this Colledge under the name of Domus Probationis but it proved Reprobationis Sancti Ignatii and their Books of Accounts whereby it appeared they had Five hundred pounds per annum contribution from their Penefactors and had likewise purchased Four hundred and fifty pounds per annum they had a Chappel Library and other Rooms of necessary accommodation with Houshold-utensils and implements marked † S. What became of these Jesuits will fall in afterward and what would have become of the Secretary for his double diligence in their prosecution you should have heard had not the Duke been cut off by an untimely end to himself but timely to the Popular Gust The Parliament being met the King began thus to them My Lords and Gentlemen THese times are for Action The Kings Speech for Action I say not for Words and therefore I shall use but few and as Kings are said to be Exemplary to their Subjects I wish you would imitate me in this and use as few falling upon speedy consultation No man is I conceive such a stranger to the Common Necessity as to expostulate the cause of this Meeting and not to think Supply to be the end of it And as this Necessity is the product and consequent of your advice so the true Religion the Laws and Liberties of this State and just defence of our Friends and Allies being so considerably concern'd will be I hope arguments enough to perswade supply For if it be as most true it is both my Duty and yours to preserve this Church and Common wealth this exigent time certainly requires it In this time of Common danger I have taken the most ancient speedy and best way for supply by calling you together if which God forbid in not contributing what may answer the Quality of my occasions you do not your Duties it shall suffice I have done mine in the conscience whereof I shall rest content and take some other course for which God hath impower'd me to save that which the folly of particular men might hazard to lose Take not this as a Menace for I scorn to threaten my Inferiors but as an Admonition from him who is tyed both by Nature and Duty to provide for your preservations And I hope though I thus speak your Demeanors will be such as shall oblige me in thankfulness to meet you oftener than which nothing shall be more pleasing unto me Remembring the distractions of our last Meeting you may suppose I have no confidence of good success at this time but be assured I shall freely forget and forgive what is past hoping you will follow that sacred advice lately inculcated To maintain the Vnity of the spirit in the bond of peace The Parliament seemed at first exceeding prompt to close with the Kings desires and as complyingly disposed as could be wished but they had not forgot the many pressures which made the subject groan something they must do for them who sent as well as for him who called them thither and to anticipate all manner of dispute in point of Precedence between
to whom he declined his ear in the posture of attention in the very instant of Sir Thomas his retiring from the Duke Felton with a back blow stabbed him in the left side into the very heart leaving the Knife which was a Tenpenny Coutel in his Body Some now thought that though his Majesty disliked the mode of this great mans dispatch yet with the thing he was well enough satisfied as if Providence had thereby rid him of the Subject of his so great perplexity whom he could not preserve with safety nor desert with honour but such as these were soon convinced of their error when they observed how his Majesty did treat his relations with so intense respect But whatever satisfaction the King received thereby certain it is the Common man was well enough pleased thereat For though Christianity and the Law found the Act Murder yet in vulgar sense it rather past for an Executioner of a Malefactor and an Administration of that Justice dispenced from Heaven which they thought was denied on Earth And because all those storms or publick miscarriages generated in the lower Region of the Parliament had of late been terminated in him as their grand efficient every man would now be wise and forespeak fair weather and a sweet harmony between the King and his Subjects but how truly a few Months will discover November the 29th Felton having been arraigned and found guilty at the Kings-Bench-Bar suffered at Tyburn His Confession was as sincere and full of remorse as could be wished the fact he much detested and renounced his former error in conceiving it would be for his glory to sacrifice himself for his Countreys good And whereas other Motives were suggested by report he protested upon his Salvation that he had no other inducement thereunto than the Parliaments Remonstrance His body was from thence transmitted to Portsmouth and there hung in Chains January the 20th The Parliament meet 1628 the Parliament meet again who soon found they were like to have work enough for Complaints came thronging in especially against the Customers for taking and distraining Merchants Goods for Tonnage and Poundage which the King taking notice of called them to the Banqueting-house and told them viz. That the occasion of that Meeting was a complaint made in the lower House for staying of some mens Goods for denying Tonnage and Poundage which difference might be soon decided were his words and actions rightly understood For if he did not take those Duties as an Appendix of his Hereditary Prerogative and had declared he challeng'd them not of right and only desired to enjoy them by the gift of his People Why did they not pass the Bill as they promised to him to clear his by-past actions and future proceedings especially in this his time of so great necessity Therefore he did now expect they should make good what they promised and put an end to all questions emergent from their delay The House of Commons said That Religion is above Policy God above the King and that they intend to reform Religion before they engage in any other consideration Nor was it agreeable to the Liberty of Consultation to have their Transactions proscribed so that they would at present lay aside the Bill of Tonnage and Poundage till they thought convenient and they were as good as their words For the first thing they resolved upon was the appointment of Committees which the Courtiers called an Inquisition one for Religion another for Civil Affairs and these to represent the abuses in both The Abuses then in the Church and likewise in the State as represented to the Commons by their Committees you may read at large Page 97 98 99 100 101. in the said Narrative But the distempers continued so long and with so quick and high a pulse as the King having every day notice of them He forthwith sent for the Serjeant of the Mace but the House would not permit him to depart but taking the key of the door from him gave it to Sir Miles Hobart a Member of the House to keep The King deeply incensed at these Exceedings of contempt sent Maxwell Usher of the Black Rod to Dissolve the Parliament but neither he nor his Message would be admitted Whereupon the King much enraged sent for the Captain of the Pensioners and the Guard to force an entrance But this passion that shut out the King yet let so much reason in as perswaded them it was good sleeping in a whole skin and understanding the Kings intentions they suddenly voided the House Soon after this the King came that very morning into the House of Lords and making a short though smart Speech unto them Commanded the Lord-Keeper to Dissolve that Parliament The King having thus Dissolved this Parliament The King sends forth a Declaration or rather broke up School those whom he now called Vipers had not in the House of Commons spit up all their Malignity but reserv'd some to disperse and dispose of in the Country whereby an ill odour might be cast upon his Government and the hearts of his People alienated from him As an antidote therefore against that poyson and to anticipate all misunderstanding he speedeth out a Declaration setting forth to all his Subjects the Motives perswading him to Dissolve the Parliament and a breviate of all the Transactions in this and the former Session withal minding them in the close of all that the Duke of Buckingham was decried while he lived as the solitary cause of all bad events in former Parliaments that he is dead and yet the Distempers not in the least abated which he takes as an argument that they were mistaken in the cause and that it was rather resident in some few Members of Parliament The King having as he hoped disabused his Subjects by his late Declaration next intended to proceed severely against those who had offended him and whose punishment he said he reserved to a due time upon this account the 18th of this Month he sent for Ten of the late Members to appear at the Council-Table viz. Mr. Hollis Mr. Selden Sir Miles Hobart Sir John Elliot Sir Peter Hayman Mr. Stroud Mr. Coriton Mr. Valentine Mr. Long Mr. Kirton These appearing Mr. Hollis was interrogated Wherefore contrary to his former use he did the morning the Parliament was Dissolved place himself by the Chair above divers of the Privy-Councellors He answered That he had some other times as well as then seated himself in that place and as for his sitting above the Privy-Councellors he took it to be his due in any place whatsoever unless at the Council-Board and for his part he came into the House with as much zeal for his Majesties Service as any one whatsoever and yet nevertheless finding his Majesty was offended with him he humbly desired that he might rather be the subject of his mercy than of his power To the which the Lord Treasurer answered You mean rather of his Majesties Mercy than
Letter And we are of opinion That when the good and safety of the Kingdom in general is concerned and the whole Kingdom in danger Your Majesty may by Writ under your Great Seal of England Command all the Subjects of this your Kingdom at their charge to provide and furnish such number of Ships with Men Victual Munition and for such time as your Majesty shall think fit for the defence and safeguard of the Kingdom from such peril and danger and that by Law your Majesty may compel the doing thereof in case of refusal or refractoriness And we are also of opinion That in such case your Majesty is the sole Judg. both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided John Bramston John Finch Humphrey Davenport John Denham Richard Hotton William Jones George Crook Thomas Trever George Vernon Robert Barkley Francis Crauly Richard Weston These Opinions being subscribed by all the Judges and inrolled in all the Courts in Westminster-Hall the King thought he had now warrant sufficient to proceed against all defaulters and especially against Mr. Hambden who being summoned by process appeared and required Oyer of the Ship Writs which being read he demurred in Law and demanded the Opinion of all the Judges upon the Legal sufficiency of those Writs This great Case coming to be argued in the Exchequer the Major part of the Judges delivered their Opinions in favour of the Writs and accordingly gave Judgment against Mr. Hambden yet did not the question altogether so repose but Mr. Hambden observing some Judges viz. Crook and Hatton of a contrary sense held up the Contest still though all in vain all his inquietude not gaining him the least acquittal until an higher Power interposed About the beginning of January this year Anno 1639. Sir Thomas Coventry dyeth dyed Sir Thomas Coventry Lord-Keeper of the Great Seal of England a Dignity he had Fifteen years enjoyed if it be not more proper to say That Dignity had enjoyed him so long this latter affording not one every way of more apt qualifications for the place His front and presence bespake a venerable regard not inferior to that of any of his Ancestors His train and suit of followers was disposed agreeably to shun both envy and contempt not like that of the Viscount St. Albans or the Bishop of Lincoln whom he succeeded ambitious and vain His port was State their 's Ostentation they were indeed the more knowng men but their Learning was extravagant to their Office of what concerned his Place he knew well enough and which is the main acted according to his knowledg for in the administration of Justice he was so erect and so incorrupt as captious malice stands mute in the blemish of his same a miracle the greater when we consider that he was also a Privy Councellor A Trust wherein he served his Master the King most faithfully and the more faithfully because of all those Councils which in those times did so much deceive his Majesty and I pray God there were fewer at this juncture of time than there is he was an earnest disswader and did much disaffect those Sticklers who rather laboured to make the Prerogative tall and great as knowing that such men loved the King better than Charles Stuart so that although he was a Courtier and had for his Master a passion most intense yet had he also always of passion some reserve for the publick welfare An Argument of a free noble and right principled mind for what both Court and Country have always held as inconsistent is in truth erroneous and no man can be truly Loyal who is not also a good Patriot nor any a good Patriot the Ballance indispensably ought to be kept even who is not truly Loyal To this worthy Gentleman succeeded Sir John Finch formerly Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. The Heer Somerdick An Embassador from the States of Holland Embassador from the States of Holland in the Month of January had Audience of the King He had with him Count William of Nassaw and the Rhine-Grave with a very splendid train his business was to give his Majesty satisfaction concerning the late Attack made upon the Spaniards by the Dutch Fleet in the Downs and the Embassy was sweetned by some overture of Marriage between the young Prince of Orange and the Kings Eldest Daughter On the Thirteenth of April A Parliament sits in England after near 12 years interval April 1640. A Parliament met and sate and the Deputy of Ireland being not long before Created Earl of Strafford and made Lord Lieutenant of that Kingdom was lead into the upper House by two Noblemen where he gave an account of his service in Ireland where he had obtained the grant of four Subsidies for the maintenance of an Army Mr. John Glanvil was chosen Speaker of the House of Commons and generally the choice of Members to that House was so good that great probabilitles were given of a happy Union betwixt the King and the Parliament Some few days after a Report was made to the Lords by the Lord Cottington who with Windebank and the Attorney General were sent by the King to the Lord Lowden to examine him concerning a Letter before mentioned that the Lord did acknowledge the Hand-Writing to be his and that it was framed before the pacification at Berwick and was never sent to the King but only prepared in a readiness should need require and that it was supprest upon that pacification nevertheless it was thought fit he should continue in the same state until clearer Evidence should be given either for or against him Soon after the King sent a message to the Lower House about Supplies representing unto them the intolerable indignities and injuries wherewith the Scots had treated him and withal declared unto them that if they would assist him sutable to the exigency of his sad occasion he would for ever quit his claim of Shipmoney and into the bargain give them full content in all their just demands But they replied as being somewhat deliberate in this affair of Money that they expected first security from his Majesty in these three particulars viz. 1. For the clearing the Subjects Property 2. For the Establishment of Religion 3. For the Priviledg of Parliament Many Conferences there was had between the Lords and Commons as to this old Contest which should precede The Lords after a strong division among themselves at length Voted for the King and the Commons for the Subject But it was not long before this unhappy difference was unhappily decided For Secretary Vane who was employed to declare the particulars of the Kings desires required twelve Subsidies whereas it was said his express order was for only six some there are who suspect this mistake to have been not involuntary but industrious in him as to his Majesties service but leaving that undetermined the House of Commons was raised by this Proposition The
And Forger of all Mischiefs both in Church and State But will at length get such a Broken Pate As will confound him and his Holy Church When as Old Nick shall leave him in the Lurch To him I 'll leave him and his Tory Crew And now proceed to what doth here ensue Tuesday Novemb. 3. being the day prefixt and the Parliament assembled His Majesty bespake them in these words My Lords THE knowledge that I have of the Scotish Subjects was the cause of my calling of the last Assembly of Parliament wherein if I had been believed I do most sincerely think that things had not fallen as We now see but it is no wonder that men are so slow to believe that so great a Sedition should be raised upon so little ground But now My Lords and Gentlemen the Honor and Safety of this Kingdom lying so heavily at stake And had His Majesty kept close to this resolution some think things had ne'er come to that extremity that afterwards they did I am resolved to put My Self freely upon the Love and Affections of my English Subjects as those of my Lords that waited upon me at York very well remember I there declared Therefore My Lords I shall not mention Mine own Interest or that Support I might justly expect from you till the Common Safety be secured though I must tell you I am not ashamed to say those Charges I have been at have been meerly for the securing the good of this Kingdom though the Success hath not been answerable to My desires Therefore I shall only desire you to consider the best way for the Security of this Kingdom wherein there are two things chiefly considerable 1. The chasing out the Rebells 2. That other in satisfying your just Grievances wherein I shall promote you to concur so heartily and clearly with you that all the World may see my intentions have ever been and shall be to make this a glorious and flourishing Kingdom There are onely two things more that I shall mention to you the one is to tell you That the Loan of Money which I lately had from the City of London wherein the Lords that waited on me at York assisted me will only maintain my Army for two months from the beginning of that time it was granted Now my Lords and Gentlemen I leave it to your Consideration what Dishonour and Mischief it might be in case for want of Money my Army be Disbanded before the Rebels be put out of this Kingdom Secondly The securing the Calamities the Northern People endure at this time and so long as the Treaty is on foot And in this I may say Not only they but all this Kingdom will suffer the harm therefore I leave this also to your Consideration for the ordering of the Great Affairs whereof you are to Treat at this time I am so confident of your Love to me and that your Care is such for the Honour and Safety of the Kingdom that I should freely leave to you where to begin Only this that you may know the better the State of all Affairs I have commanded my Lord Keeper to give you a short and free Account of those things that have happeued in this Interim with this Protestation That if his Account be not Satisfactory as it ought to be I shall whensoever you desire it give your Full and Perfect Account of every Particular One thing more I desire of you as one of the greatest means to make this an Happy Parliament That you on your part as I on mine lay aside Suspition one of another as I promised my Lords at York It shall not be my Fault if this be not a Happy and Good Parliament The King having ended the Lord Keeper in pursuance of His Majesty's Commands gave them a Summary Account and Relation of all Things relating to the Scottish Invasion I dare not say Rebellion for that the King represented them under that Disgustful Character was very ill resented by some considerable Peers whereof His Majesty having notice told the Parliament two days after He must needs call them Rebels so long as they have an Army that does invade England The remainder of this Week was spent partly in settling Committees for General Grievances and partly in set Speeches Rhetorically declaiming against and dissecting them The remainder of the particular Transactions of this year of the Commons of England Assembled in Parliament and of the year succeeding 1641. I shall not here relate at large but refer you to the Annals of King Charles the First written by this ingenious Author from whom I have borrowed and transcribed the major part of my precedent Relations who ends at the Death of the Earl of Strafford which was May the 12th 1641. And after that I must refer you for the remainder of that year unto Sir Richard Baker's Chronicle of the Kings of England c. But the particular heads of those Transactions as to matter of fact I shall be willing here to recite for your Courteous Readers present satisfaction in manner and form as followeth viz. 1. Several Petitions against Grievances 2. Priviledges of the Lords House Vindicated 3. The Lieutenant of Ireland Impeached of high Treason 4. The Northern Armies in want 5. Bishop of Lincoln Enlarged 6. Justice Howard assaulted by a Papist 7. Prinn and Bastwick enter London in Triumph 8. Secretary Windebanck flieth 9. Votes against Ship-money 10. The London Petition against Bishops 11. The late Canons damn'd 12. The Lord-Keeper Finch defends his Innocency 13. He is Voted Traitor upon four Considerations and thereupon he flyeth beyond Sea. 14. The Kings Speech for Bishops 15. One Goodman a Priest reprieved 16. A Remonstrance against Goodman the Priest 17. The Kings Answer to that Remonstrance 18. The Scottish Commissioners Demands and the Answer thereunto 19. A Match propounded between the Lady Mary and the Prince of Orange 20. The Kings Speech to the Lords concerning that Match 21. Some Plots of the Papists 22. The Earl Berkly Impeacht of High-Treason 23. The King passeth a Bill for Trienial Parliaments and his Speech concerning it 24. The Bill of Subsidies passeth at the same time and Bonefires and other tokens of joy were made that night in the City of London by Order of Parliament 25. William Laud Arch-Bishop of Canterbury accused of high Treason in fourteen Articles 26. The Lord Digbyes Speech for Episcopacy 27. The Charge against the Earl of Strafford is given and his Answers thereunto and Westminster-Hall is appointed for his Trial. 28. The Commons justifie their Charge by Law. 29. The Earl answereth by Councel 30. The Commons Vote him guilty of High-treason 31. The Commons Petition the King against Papists and the King's Answer 32. The Kings Speech to the Parliament in defence of the E. of Strafford 33. The Prince of Orange Marryeth the Lady Mary 34. A Tumult in Westminster crying for Justice against the Earl. 35. A Protestation framed by the Commons 36. A