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A30389 The memoires of the lives and actions of James and William, Dukes of Hamilton and Castleherald, &c. in which an account is given of the rise and progress of the civil wars of Scotland, with other great transactions both in England and Germany, from the year 1625, to the year 1652 : together with many letters, instructions, and other papers, written by King Charles the I : never before published : all drawn out of, or copied from the originals / by Gilbert Burnet ; in seven books. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. Selections. 1677. 1677 (1677) Wing B5832; ESTC R15331 511,397 467

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presently but four hundred thousand were Voted to them and only one hundred thousand presently and upon this they stood long The Two Houses having on the 24th of September Voted that the Kings Person should be demanded from the Scotish Army their Commissioners at London gave in long Papers against that The Scotish Commissioners at London complain of the Kings ill Usage and the harsh Votes of the Two Houses which were Printed and so need not be here inserted In them they shewed That the King being Soveraign of both Kingdoms was not to be disposed by the Parliament of one Kingdom That this was destructive to the Relation and Interest the Scotish Nation had in Him and contrary to the nature of Soveraignty and to the Covenant and Treaties of both Kingdoms by which it was agreed That His Majesties just Power and Greatness should not be diminished which by such a Demand of His Person was very signally done It was also agreed that all things in order to Peace to which the Disposal of the Kings Person did relate in a signal manner should be done by the Ioynt Councils of both Kingdoms After this in the Month of October begun the Treaty betwixt the Scotish Commissioners and the Committee appointed for that end by the Two Houses of Parliament Many Conferences are betwixt the Two Houses and them which was managed in the Painted Chamber in the presence of all the Members of the Two Houses The Scotish Commissioners who were the Earls of Lowdon and Lauderdale and the Lord Wariston declared in all their Papers and Speeches that they were not to Treat about His Majesties Person nor the Disposing of it but only about the Removal of the Army the Delivery of those Garrisons that their Army had in England and the Payment of Arrears due for their Armies both in England and Ireland and they continued to press that whereas the Two Houses had in all their former Declarations laid the blame of the Breach betwixt the King and them on His Majesties Withdrawing from His Parliament that therefore they would invite His Majesty to come with Honour Freedom and Safety to some of His Houses in or about London in which they still insisted to the last And so far were they from Treating about the Disposing of His Majesties Person that in the end of their Treaty when they had finally agreed on all things it was expresly declared in the first Article of the Treaty that pass'd under the Great Seal that nothing relating to the Kings Person was concluded on by it so that after that was ended the Scotish Parliament might have still preserved the King and brought him with their Army to Scotland But the Houses turned the Propositions to Bills The Houses press a speedy Answer to their Propositions and passed a Vote that new Commissioner● should be sent to the King with the concurrence of those of Scotland to press a satisfactory Answer with this Sanction that if it were not granted they should be forced to look to the Security of His Person And the English Army fell upon a most destructive Resolution of adjourning the Parliament neither were they over-awed by any thing so much as the fear of the Scotish Army The great point now debated in the Councils of Scotland was whether a final Settlement with the King should be the Condition of the Armies Retiring or not The Duke with all his Friends pressed this vigorously as that which was agreed on by their Covenant and Treaties But the Church-men still influenced all Counsels and finding the King irreconcileable to their Way were still full of their Jealousies of Him and it was said down-right that they ought not to meddle betwixt the King and the Parliament of England but leave Him and them to their own Counsels so strangely did their Language vary from what it was Anno 1643. At this time the King sent Mr. Murray of the Bed-Chamber to London Mr. Murray is sent by the King to London who carried another Message but it was so displeasing that it served only to put his Neck to a new hazard for the Kings Service and he durst scarce stir out of doors all the while he was there In the beginning of November a new Session of the Triennial Parliament of Scotland did hold The Parliament of Scotland meets but little was done for some Weeks save that there came to them a Remonstrance from the Assembly wherein in the first place Complaints were made of the Committee of Estates for their Agreement with Montrose and his Followers which was represented as a great Crime especially they being excommunicated Next they complained of His Majesties constant adherence to Prelacy and of the danger Religion was in by the Malignants for so was the Kings Party then called who were beginning to set up their Heads again wherefore they recommended to their Care both the Preservation of Religion and of the Treaties with England Upon this the Transaction of the Committee of Estates in the Agreement with Montrose was examined and it was put to the Vote Approve or Exoner them only the former was carried by twenty Votes but all the Pulpits thundered against it wherefore to stop the mouths of the Ministries it was enacted That in any Treaty that should be thereafter with those who were in Arms the Commission of the Kirk should be consulted about the Lawfulness of the Conditions For at this time both the Marquis of Huntley was in Arms in the North and Antrim was also come over to Kintyre in Iuly the former year and continued still there His Majesty sent Mr. Robert Lesley with Orders to my Lord Huntley for laying down of Arms with whom he wrote the following Letters to the two Brothers Hamilton A Trusty Messenger requires but a short Letter and brevity is the more convenient for Me who have much to do and but few helpers wherefore I shall say no more but hear and trust Robin Lesly for he is come from Your most assured real faithful constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle Nov. 12th 1646. Lanerick HEaring that Marquis Huntley expects My Commands for his laying down of Arms I have thought fit to send this Trusty Bearer Robin Lesly to him but thought it necessary to address him first to you that you in My Name might acquaint the Parliament with this My Intention which if they approve of he may go on accordingly if not there is no hurt done Yet howsoever I have expressed My Desire for the Peace of the Country but in case they shall permit Robin to obey My Commands then I expect that they give him Power to assure Huntley of the same Conditions that he might have had before All which I command you to represent to My Parliament in My Name leaving the particular expressions to you having only set down the sense Other things I have intrusted little Nobs to tell you too long for a Letter but of no small Consequence by which at
Procedure of the Parliament in this matter shall be set down from some of the Earl of Lanerick's Letters which the Writer chooses rather to insert than any Discourse of his own The first was written to a Friend at London but to whom it appears not I Had given you an account of the Condition of Affairs here long ere now Some of Lanerick's Letters had I known how to have addressed my Letters and however this be an uncertain way yet because possibly it may come to your hands first I shall acknowledge the receipt of yours the of the last Moneth which I have in part obeyed and to that end have written to Ireland to those I have interest in and I am confident that our Army there will follow our Advice in order to the Kings Service but our Difficulties here are greater than you can imagine for the same disloyal spirit that hath governed these years past is yet so powerful as to obstruct though I hope they shall not be able to destroy our Designs of serving the King and the same Instruments the Devil hath hitherto made use of are still the rigid Opposers of all dutiful Motions Many amongst us pretend to Loyalty but have such faint Hearts and love their Fortunes so well that they dare not act where there is danger others have both Courage and Affection but their Ambition will not allow them to act if they be not absolute and they have no power of themselves without a Conjunction with some of greater Eminence than themselves Thus while we are tearing our selves in pieces through Factions and Self-interests perit Saguntum our King is forgot and may God forget them that do so But though the Chancellour hath made a foul Defection and these that pretend Affection to the King are not so united as they ought to be yet I despair not but that with Gods assistance in despight of all opposition we will force an Engagement or perish I cannot descend to the Particulars only this I will assure you that all you have interest in are intirely right and resolute Adieu The next of Lanerick's Letters that are in the Writers hands was to His Majesty dated the 13th of April 1648. OVr last was of the fourth of this Moneth to be conveyed to you by Doctor Frazer In it did we shew you in general what extraordinary Opposition we met with here in our Desires to serve You but some of them we are now got over for to morrow it will be resolved that the Kingdom shall be presently put in a Posture and the whole Forces or such parts of them as shall be appointed are to be ordered to be ready to march when they shall be required and while this is doing we have voted the sending of three Demands to the Parliament of England having found all the Articles of the Covenant and divers of the Treaties highly violated The first is concerning Religion wherein we are very high and full knowing it will be refused and we thereby obliged to resent it besides our Design is rather to fix the Denial thereof on them than on Your Majesty The second is that Your Majesty may come to some of Your Houses in or near London with Honour Freedom and Safety where the Parliaments of both Kingdoms may make their Applications to Your Majesty for obtaining a well-grounded Peace The third is that the present Army under the Lord Fairfax be disbanded to the end that all the faithful Members of both Houses may with Safety return to attend their Charges the Parliament may Sit and Vote in Freedom both Kingdomes without their interposition may make their Addresses to Your Majesty and the Settlement of Religion and a common Peace be no longer hindred nor obstructed These Demands are to be sent by a Messenger who is to have a few days limited him for his Return We are forced to move by these steps which certainly will either speedily procure Your Majesties Freedom or an Engagement Our Opposition from the Ministers doth still continue but many formerly of their Party are ashamed of their unwillingness to all Duties and particularly Balmerino who is Lauderdale's Convert By the power of Perswasion our Army in Ireland hath offered their Service to us which may be of excellent use many ways Thus Sir you have the true Condition of Affairs but as we proceed which I confess is in a most horrid dull pace I shall still presume to give You an account of it as a part of our Duty Great Endeavours are used by some that we may again send our Desires concerning Religion to Your Majesty for their zeal will not allow them to hazard their Lives for Your Person who will as they say no sooner be at Liberty than you will destroy all that they have been doing with the hazard and expence of so much Blood and Treasure for Religion But this is as yet waved and forced Concessions such as certainly those must be while Your Majesty is in Prison are alledged can bring but small Security to Religion The next of the 18th of April was to a Friend at London I Had resolved upon eternal Silence since I could not but be wrapped in the guilt of others for their disloyal Delays nor should the receipt of yours of the 10th Instant have invited me to have broke that Resolution had not this days Proceedings in Parliament revived my languishing Hopes I shall not mention any thing of my last Dispatch upon Friday by Fisher but this day we have past in Parliament the great Act of putting this Kingdom into a posture of Defence under pretence whereof we mean to raise our Army the Colonels and Committees of War in several Counties are to be named on Friday next Besides this we have presented to the Parliament a large Declaration to be emitted to the Kingdom containing the Breaches of Covenant and Treaties the Demands which upon them we mean to make to the Houses and our Resolutions in case of a Refusal I confess it is clogged with many Impertinencies to which we are necessitated for satisfying nice Consciences yet it drives at a right end Argyle and the Minsters are still uncapable of Satisfaction and with horrid violence oppose all Loyal Motions and though the Chancellour hath intirely deserted us and not only joyned with them but endeavours by all means imaginable to divide us among our selves yet we are both fixed to our Principles and Friendships so that in despight both of Apostacy and Knavery we carry on the Work I confess it is neither in so quick nor so prudent a way as is fit and that we have already lost our greatest advantages yet we can never move so late but that we will make our selves considerable We hear there are strong endeavours to separate His Majesty from our Interests I confess we deserve no better from him yet possibly he may find it not unfit to own us even though we do not him as we ought This I swear I
to Scotish business yet I judged it a crime to let any of the Reliques of that Princes Pen perish How it came into the Marquis his hand I know not it is an Answer to a Remonstrance sent to the King by the Two Houses at Westminster in the end of this year I Having taken to my serious Consideration the late Remonstrance made to me by Both Houses of Parliament do make this Answer I take in good part your care for the Preservation of the true Religion established in this Kingdom from which I will never depart as also for your tenderness of my own Safety and security of this State and Government It is against my mind that Popery or Superstition should any way increase within this Kingdom and I will restrain the same by causing the Laws be put in due execution I resolve likewise to provide against the dangers of Iesuites and Priests setting forth a Proclamation with all speed commanding them to depart the Kingdom within one month whereof if they fail or shall return then they shall be proceeded withall according to the Laws Concerning Rosettie you must understand that my Wife hath always assured me that to her knowledge he hath no Commission but only to entertain a pers●nal Correspondence betwixt Her and the Pope of things requisite for the exercise of Her Religion which is warranted to Her by the Articles of Our Marriage which give Her a full Liberty of Conscience yet I have so perswaded Her that since the misunderstanding of this person's Condition gives offence She will within a convenient time remove him Moreover I will take special care to restrain my Subjects from resorting to Mass at Denmark-house St. Jame 's and the Chappels of Ambassadours Lastly concerning John Goodman the Priest you must know the reason why I reprieved him is that as I am informed neither Queen Elizabeth nor my Father did ever avow that any Priests in their times were executed meerly for Religion which to me seems to be this particular case yet seeing that I am pressed by Both Houses to give way to his Execution because I will avoid the inconvenience of giving so great a discontentment to my People as I perceive this Mercy may produce I remit this particular Cause to Both Houses but I desire you to take into your serious Considerations the inconveniences which as I conceive may upon this occasion fall upon my Subjects and other Protestants abroad especially since it may seem to other States to be a Severity with surprize which I having thus represented to you think my Self discharged from all ill consequences that may ensue upon the Execution of this person Anno 1641. THe Marquis notwithstandi●g all the malice he knew some of his Country-men bore him did not slacken his endeavours to bring things to a final Settlement An. 1641. and the high language which was now spoken at Westminster furnished him with too strong Reasons for enforcing the necessity of agreeing with the Covenanters The King yields to all the Demands of the Covenanters At length the King weary of contending so much resolved to yield to most of their Demands For the first of publishing their Acts though it was contrary to the practice of Scotland to hold a Session of Parliament unless the King were present by himself or his Commissioner yet it was represented that was but a point of Form for as they Sate by the Kings Summons so they did not pretend their Votes were Laws without the Kings Ratification and their Sitting in this manner though disorderly could not be so derogatory to the Kings Authority as at first view appeared since it was the constant practice of the Two Houses in England to Sit and Vote in the Kings absence The King was willing all these Acts should be of new voted promising his Royal Assent to them but they were stiff and the King yielded For the Reparation of Losses the King remitted them to the Two Houses who considered their Accompts and gave them a large Brotherly Assistance For the disposal of the Castles the election of the Councellours Officers of State and Judges which the Covenanters desired should be done with Advice of Parliament they went very harshly down with the King But they alledged divers old Laws for their Demands which seemed now necessary to he revived since His Majesty was so seldom in Scotland The Kings great apprehension of this was that it would give a Copy to England for making the like Demands to which it was answered that the Kings residence in England made the case to differ vastly the Scotish Lords engaging upon their Honour to declare in case the Two Houses should make the like Demands they were unreasonable in so doing In a Word the King granted all they demanded only he thought it unjust and unreasonable to grant an Indempnity to the other Party and let his Friends be secluded from it wherefore he pressed nothing so earnestly as that the Oblivion might be without exception and the List of those who were summoned upon the pretence of being Incendiaries was so great that he thought to abandon so many of his Faithful Servants to the violence of the Times was so dishonourable that he could not answer for it neither to God nor man The Covenanters to yield somewhat reduced their great number to five persons who were the Earl of Traquair the Bishop of Ross Sir Robert Spotswood Sir Iohn Hay and Doctor Balcanquell but the King thought he could not yield to that Demand were there but one excepted and told them that though he had better Grounds to pursue some of themselves as Incendiaries yet being willing to dispense with these his Resentments he had reason to expect the same Condescendency from them But they pretended their Bond and Oath for prosecuting of them and though it was told them that an ill Oath was worse kept yet they were stiff and the temper found was that their Processes should go on but their Censure should be remitted to the King and that the Scots should be satisfied with his Assurance that he should imploy them no more in Scotish Affairs without consent of Parliament And thus all things were agreed on and His Majesty determined to go in Person to Scotland to settle matters there but at this time the Scotish Commissioners began to Cabal with the Male-contents in the Two Houses and in particular concurred with them in the pursuit of the Earl of Strafford The Friendship betwixt the Marquis and that Gallant man had been great and intire and as his Testimony in those matters about which he was examined was among the Evidences Strafford had in his Defences so his Confidence in the Marquis did appear by the following handsome Letter he wrote to him a few days before his Death May it please your Lordship HItherto I judged it not fit to endanger your Lordship by any Intelligence betwixt us which might have turned much to your prejudice in a time when
wherein it is represented that your Lordships late Warrant for Printing His Majesties Letter hath occasioned great Grief and heavy Regrate of all who tender the Glory of God His Majesties Honour and procuring Vnity of Religion and Vniformity in Church-Government the continuance of Peace and Vnion betwixt the two Kingdoms and fearing if at this time we should be silent your Lordships should conceive us and the rest of the Kingdom to be involved with them in the like Desires Iudgements and Opinions and lest by our silence our Gracious Soveraign the Kings Majesty should believe us wanting in the Duty and Allegiance which by so many Tyes and Obligations we owe to Him our Native King or that our Brethren of England should apprehend the least Intention ●r Desire in us to infringe or any ways to encroach upon the Brotherly Vnion of the two Kingdoms so happily united under one Head We presume in all Humility to clear our selves and our Intentions to your Lordships and to all the World and therewith to represent our humble Wishes and Desires for Establishing His Majesties Royal Authority and continuing that happy Vnion betwixt the two Kingdoms which can never truely be conceived to be intended to weaken the Head whereby it is knit together and without which it can have no subsistence The happy Vnion of the two Kingdoms under one Head our King doth so much add to His Majesties Greatness and Strength of both Kingdoms that we British Subjects cannot choose but wish that the said Brotherly Vnion be heartily entertained and cherished by all fair and reasonable means to which we conceive no one thing will so much conduce as that the late Articles of the Treaty of Peace and Conclusions taken thereupon about Vnity of Religion may be carefully and timeously prosecuted wherein as our Commissioners then so we now without presuming or usurping to prescribe Rules or Laws of Reformation to our Neighbour-kingdom Civil Liberty and Conscience being so tender that it cannot endure to be touched but by such as they are wedded to and have lawful Authority over them notwithstanding seeing the duty of Charity doth oblige all Christians to pray and profess their Desires that all were of the same Religion with themselves and since we all acknowledge that Religion is the base and foundation of Kingdoms and the strongest Bond to knit the Subjects to their Princes in true Loyalty and to knit their Hearts one to another in true Vnity we cannot but heartily wish that this work of Vnion so happily begun may be crowned and strengthened by the Vnity of Church-Government and that your Lordships with us may be pleased to represent it to His Majesty and Both Houses of Parliament as an expression and Testimony of our Affections to the good of our Brethren in England and of our Desires to make firm and stable our Brotherly Vnion by the strong chain and Bulwark of Religion but as we have said no ways intending thereby to pass our bounds in prescribing and setting down Rules and Limits to His Majesty and the Two Houses of Parliament their Wisdom and Authority in the way of prosecution thereof The sense we have of the great Calamities and irreparable Evils which upon occasion of these unhappy Distractions and Mistakes betwixt the Kings Majesty and the Two Houses of England which if not speedily removed cannot but produce the fearful and prodigious effects of a bloody and Civil War obligeth us in the duty of Christians and as feeling members of what may concern our Common Head the Kings Majesty and the Good and Happiness of our Brethren of England humbly to represent to your Lordships That as we will not be wanting with our Prayers and our faithful and best Endeavours to assist in the removing of these unhappy Mistakes and Misunderstandings so we heartily wish and humbly Petition your Lordships that from the deepness of your Wisdom such happy Motions may flow as upon that tender care of our Soveraigns Person and Authority Peace and Truth may be settled in all His Majesties Dominions Although we will not presume nor take upon us to prescribe Laws and Rules to your Lordships yet in all Humility we intreat your permission to represent such Particulars as we conceive and are very confident will conduce much to the removing of all ●hese Mistakes betwixt His Majesty and His Two Houses of Parliament and be a ready mean to facilitate a happy and wished Peace and continue the Brotherly Vnion between the Two Kingdoms And first that in answering the foresaid Petition your Lordships may be pleased to do no Act which may give His Majesty just occasion to repent him of what Trust he so Graciously expressed in his Letter of the Date the fifth of December He reposes in us His Subjects of His Ancient and Native Kingdom for we cannot think that our Brethren in England or any other can believe that the ground of this Mutual Vnion of the two Kingdoms by the several and respective Vnions to our Prince and Head should weaken the strong Bond whereby it is knit and by which we are so firmly tied by so many Ages and unparalelled lineal descents of an hundred and seven Kings Neither can we suppose that any good Protestant or true member of our Church can imagine far less seduce others to believe that by the late Treaty of Peace or Act of Vnion we as Scotish Subjects are in any sort liberated from the Dutiful Obedience which as Scotishmen we owe to our Scotish King or from that due Loyalty which as Scotish Subjects we owe to our Native Soveraign for Maintenance of His Person Greatness and Authority or that thereby we are in any other Condition in these necessary Duties to our Soveraign than we and our Ancestors were and have been these many Ages and Descents before the making of the said Act or before the Swearing and Subscribing of our late Covenant by which we have solemnly sworn and do swear not only our mutual Concurrence and Assistance for the cause of Religion and to the utmost of our power with our Means and Lives to stand to the Defence of our Dread Soveraign His Person and Authority in the preservation of Religion Liberty and Laws of this Church and Kingdom but also in every Cause which may concern His Majesties Honour we shall according to the Laws of this Kingdom and Duty of Subjects concur with our Friends and Followers in quiet manner or in Arms as we shall be required of His Majesty or His Councel or any having His Authority Secondly That if your Lordships think it fitting to make any answer to the Parliament of England their Declaration your Lordships may be pleased not to declare enact or promise any thing which may trouble or molest the Peace of this Kirk and Kingdom which by God's special Grace and His Majesties Favour and Goodness we enjoy and have established unto us according to our Hearts desire by the Laws Ecclesiastical or Civil of
this Kingdom respectivè and which His Majesty since by so many Declarations and deep Protestations hath Sworn to maintain inviolably Thirdly That your Lordships may be pleased to consider that as nothing will more diminish His Majesties Greatness than that this Kingdom should consume in Civil War so nothing will more conduce to the Suppressing of insolent Papists malignant schismatick and Disloyal Brownists and Separatists the special if not the sole promovers of these unhappy Misunderstandings than that heartily and freely without respect of worldly and secondary Considerations we give to Christ what is Christ's and to Caesar what is Caesar's by means whereof the Truth and Purity of Religion shall be established to the utter Confusion of all these Sectaries true Monarchical Government firmly setled by which likewise Laws and Authority shall retain their ancient vigour and force to the Suppression of all Commotions and tumultuous Conventions the bane and overthrow of all true Religion and Policy Fourthly Although there be nothing farther from our minds than to presume to question or crave of your Lordships an account of your Actions knowing perfectly by the inviolable Laws and Customes of this Kingdome that to be only proper and due to the King and Parliament from whence you have that great Charge and Trust delivered unto you yet we hope your Lordships will give us leave in all Humility to remember your Lordships of your Deliverance June 1642. and are confident that the said Lords the Petitioners neither have nor shall have necessity to trouble themselves nor the Council with Supplications of this kind and that your Lordships in your Wisdom will take some Course for preventing all occasions which may in any sort disturb the Peace of this Kingdom or make Division among the Subjects thereof This Petition was signed by a great many Noblemen and Gentlemen Many sign it but though they took much pains to get Ministers to concur in it yet none of them could be drawn to it This Petition was presented with many hands at it to the Council and it was observed that as it was written by a trusty Friend of the Marquis's so also all his Friends signed it which made the Author suspected and did shew that his Friends adhered hitherto to their Duty and his Example All the Answer the Councellors returned to it was that they should be careful to proceed as they should be answerable All the Ministers condemn it But the Preachers threatned Damnation to all the Authors and Subscribers of it and detestable Neutrality became the Head on which they spent their Eloquence The Commission of the General Assembly passed a severe Censure on the Cross Petition in a Remonstrance they gave in against it which was answered by a Counter-remonstrance Upon these cross tides of Petitions that were offered to the Council the Conservatours of the Peace resolved to send some Commissioners to London Commissioners sent to Treat betwixt the King and the Two Houses to Mediate betwixt the King and the Two Houses and endeavour chiefly the Uniformity of Church-Government for which end the Commission of the Kirk was also to send their Commissioners to second them in it and no resistance could be made to this that was able to obstruct it They also moved that the King should be desired to call a Parliament in Scotland The Marquis and his Friends opposed this vigorously not that he was against a Parliament but judged the Motion unseasonable and thought the Time prefixed at the last Parliament for the next to wit after three years needed not be anticipated It was also put in their Instructions to their Commissioners to press the King to put all Papists from his Person The Marquis and his Friends also opposed this not upon the account of the thing it self but because it seemed to cast a Scandal upon the King as if his Religion were to be suspected But the Church-party was strongest in this Meeting of the Conservatours and so carried every thing in it The Safe-conducts being come they named their Commissioners the Chancellour being the chief of them and though Lanerick in the Kings Name excepted against the Lord Waristoun and produced the Kings Warrant for it yet they named him but were so wise as not to send him They were also so discreet that they appointed the Commissioners to go first to the King Things being thus determined Lanerick took the start of them but they were at Court before him he being detained by a Garrison of the Parliaments for some days In the end of February he came to Oxford Lanerick goes to Court and discovers the inclination of the Church-party where he gave the King an account of the present state of the Scotish Affairs and that it was the Advice of His Majesties truest Friends in Scotland that he should entertain the Commissioners with the best words he could give them but should not by any means suffer them to go to London since there were great grounds to fear they would engage too deep in the Quarrel if they went thither This Advice agreed so with the Kings Inclinations that it could meet no resistance in his thoughts When the Commissioners arrived they delivered their Message but the King repeated what was formerly told them That Scotland and England had different Laws and Interests and therefore it was to give the one Kingdom too great an advantage over the other to suffer them to come and be Vmpires in the present Differences They pressed their Desires as warmly as they could but all was in vain for the King would by no means suffer them to go to London and in particular he told the Earl of Lowdon what grounds He had to believe they designed to raise an Army for the Parliaments Quarrel and that some of his fellow-Commissioners would prove Incendiaries rather than Mediators But Lowdon with great Protestations denied that they designed to raise Arms and said to the King These were but the Misrepresentations with which the Marquis and his Brother abused His Majesty As for the Calling a Parliament the King said he saw no reason for it and therefore would not anticipate the Day that was already prefixed for it But to the Commissioners from the Assembly the King gave the following Answer which I set down in his own Words having it written all with His Majesties own Hand HIs Majesty commends the Zeal of the Petitioners for the advancement of the true Reformed Religion against Heresy Popery Sects Innovations and Profanity and always shall use His best and uttermost endeavours for Advancing the one and the utter Suppressing the rest For the Vnity in Kirk-Government His Majesty knows that the Government now established by the Laws hath so near a relation and intermixture with the Civil State which may be unknown to the Petitioners that till a composed digested Form be presented to him upon a free debate by Both Houses of Parliament whereby the Consent and Approbation of the whole Kingdom
Lurking-holes and desert those who had trusted to them And after all this there was a Scotish Army in Ireland which was now well trained and disciplined consisting of ten thousand men who were for the most part at the Covenanters devotion and these would be instantly brought over there being no way to stop their Passage and it was not to be imagined that any Body of an Army could be raised in Scotland able to resist that Force Upon these Reasons it was that he not only disswaded the Queen from consenting to a present Breach but resisted it as long as was possible yet he undertook for none but himself of which he put the Queen frequently in mind and the utmost of his expectation was to drive off Matters for that Year And in this both my Lord Traquair and Mr. Murray concurred with him and desired the whole Matter might be laid before His Majesty that his Pleasure might be made known about it but after a few days waiting on the Queen the Marquis returned back to Scotland The Scotish Commissioners continued all this while at Oxford The Commissioners at Oxford get their last Answer giving in Papers and receiving Answers but advancing nothing and the last Answer they got from His Majesty the 19th of April containing both the Substance of their Papers and of His Majesties former Answers will give a clear account of the Grounds on which His Majesty went The Paper follows IT is acknowledged by His Majesty that if any one of the Articles of Treaty had been broken or violated as His Majesty doth not so much as see pretended or any Debate or Difference had risen thereupon about which there is now no Dispute the Commissioners had then been not only warranted but obliged to have laboured to prevent all Troubles and Divisions which might arise by such a Breach to the disturbance of t●e Common Peace and to remove and compose all such Differences according to such Power as was granted to them but till His Majesty be satisfied that Authority by some Law is given to the Commissioners for Conserving the Articles of Treaty to represent His Majesties Native Kingdom of Scotland in this Offer of Mediating for a desired and blessed Pacification here His Majesty cannot see how the pious dutiful provident or charitable Concernment of that Kingdom in the Calamities of this or their Sympathy and sense of the Troubles of their Head and fellow-Subjects can interess the Commissioners any more than any other of His good Subjects of that Kingdom to bestir themselves in Matters of that kind or why any such Endeavours should be by any much less universally expected from them so far is he from seeing that any undeclinable Necessity constrained them to it And since the express words of the Act of Pacification it self are that the Power of the Commission shall be restrained to the Articles of Peace concluded in the Treaty His Majesty cannot but wonder whence they can pretend any Obligation or Authority to meddle with or press him concerning any such Articles as are not included but still left dependent how important soever they suppose them to be even to the Common Peace And it giving them only liberty to convene to that effect among themselves or with the Commissioners chosen by His Majesty with consent of the Parliament of England and restraining them in all their Proceedings to the Power granted to them in manner aforesaid and no otherwise as clearly intending to restrain all Power that might be pretended to by any Inserences Analogies or Consequences how manifest soever they might appear and requiring them to consist of the number of Twelve and not giving them Power to delegate a smaller number His Majesty cannot consent That that number the Laws allow not that is Three should address themselves to those the Law hath not appointed them this is Both Hous●s not only concerning that which the Law intrusted not to them as a Pacification here but even concerning that from which the Law expresly restrains them that is one of the Articles of the Treaty no way concluded or agreed on but expresly reserved by the Parliament to be considered in due time that is in their own time concerning Church-Government the intermixture of which with the Civil State as His Majesty still conceives to be very great and of very high Concernment and not to be understood by the Commissioners who have not the knowledge of the Laws and Policy of this Kingdom so His Majesty is confident notwithstanding the Declaration and Bill abolishing the Order of Bishops that if they well knew how generally any thing of that kind was opposed whilst the Houses continued full and how the Major part of Both Houses were absent at the passing of that Declaration and Bill in so much that His Majesty is credibly informed that there were not above five Lords present when the Bill past and what violent and tumultuous Assemblies had occasioned so great and unusual Absence they would be confident as he is that in a full and peaceable Convention of Parliament Both Houses will appear to be of the same opinion with His Majesty in this Particular and to have in that the same thoughts of the Law and Policy of this Kingdom His Majesties care that the deluge of the Troubles of this Kingdom affect not that with the danger of the like is very visible to all the World His Majesty out of His great desire of continuing t●em in Peace and Tranquillity not desiring any assistance from them even for His Own Preservation And whoever doth desire any Commotion there to assist their Rebellious and Invasive Armes here will He hopes be lookt upon as the Troublers of Peace and as Incendiaries labouring to lay foundations of perpetual Hostility betwixt the Two Kingdoms And then for ought His Majesty can see there will be no cause to expect any Commotions there and such Dangers will rather prove imaginary than real though the Conservatours of the Treaty contain themselves within their legal and proper Bounds His Majesty wonders that since His approbation of their Mediation was desired when His Safe-conduct was asked and the first was not given when the latter was that it should not have been easily seen by these Proceedings of His Majesties that as He never granted the first as seeing no Authority they had for such a Mediation so He only at last granted the other as being contented to hear what they could say to Him upon that Point either as private persons or to give Him better satisfaction than He could give Himself what Right they could pretend to any Publick Capacity of that kind but having heard all they have offered and not finding any thing that warrants them in this in any special manner above His Majesties other Subjects His Majesty cannot with reason admit of any private Persons whatsoever into such a Publick Capacity nor with His Own Dignity and that of this Nation can allow His Subjects of another
said Army still in Ireland and for recovering payment of the Brotherly Assistance providing always that in the doing thereof no Resolution be taken for Levying of Forces or doing any Act whereby this Kingdom or any part thereof may be put in a posture of War or under any pretence to bring over the Scotish Army in Ireland or any part thereof without special Warrant from His Majesty wherewith if such as shall meet at this Convention rest not satisfied His Majesties Servants here are resolved to Protest and adhere to these Grounds and to oppose all other derogatory to His Majesties Authority or prejudicial to His Service The Duke by the same Bearer wrote to Mr. Iermine since Earl of St. Albans what follows which is set down to shew how far he was from abusing their Majesties or any about them with hopes of a good issue of Affairs in Scotland Noble Friend THere is so much said to this Bearer by word and in writing that I shall add but little thereto only this which I have often said The Duke apprehends the Ruine of the Kings Affairs in Scotland Time is precicious and would not be lost while we are quiet how long that will be for my own part I cannot tell so many unhappy Accidents have intervened of late that His Majesties Service is much prejudiced thereby I mean not so much your Misfortune at Wakefield as other Particulars which you will be informed of Howsoever think not that I am discouraged for never was Man more resolute to oppose all that shall endeavour the Dis-service of the King than I am and there are considerable men in this Country of the same mind But I ever feared our want of Power and never more than now Resolution we want not but Means how to put that in execution and therefore I say build no confidence but that you may receive great Prejudice from hence notwithstanding all we can be able to do which will be as much as you can expect from Men of Honour so deeply ingaged as we are Having thus freely expressed my thoughts to you it is e●sie to conjecture what Advice I would give you are Iudicious and so I shall conclude in a word Lose no Opportunity that is offered to end your business either by one means or other and esteem of me as Your most obliged Friend and humble Servant HAMILTON Holyrood House June 5th 1643. He wrote also the following Letter to Her Majesty May it please Your Majesty I Had not presumed to have troubled Your Majesty with any thing from me if Your Letter I received from Mr. Murray had not encouraged me to hope for Your Majesties Pardon And advertises the Queen of his fears I shall then humbly beg this may rather be believed an effect of Obedience than Boldness Vpon Tuesday last I delivered to His Majesties Council a Letter from Him to them wherein was inclosed a Declaration to His Scotish Subjects which was unanimously appointed to be Printed and Published but the Letter they have written in Answer to His Majesty a Copy whereof I have presumed to send Your Majesty did receive great opposition and with difficulty was carried Since there hath been no Publick Meeting but it is like there will be one appointed upon Wednesday next where they that came last from His Majesty are to be accused as Incendiaries The great Offers are to be made from t●e Two Houses of Parliament are like to work much upon the Affections of this Country being seconded with an alledged hazard to Religion and Government from Papists pretended to be in Armes in England and Ireland a popular though groundless Inducement for taking Arms in this Kingdom to which though many Noblemen and divers of the Gentry have hitherto been averse yet I both doubt t●e Continuance of their Resolutions and the Power of these few who must and will oppose it The Authority the other Party receives from the Iudicatories the absolute Power they have of the Magazines and Ammunition the popular Pretences they have of a danger to Religion and Liberty gives them so great advantages that I cannot but apprehend great Disservice to His Majesty from hence if the Differences betwixt Him and His people of England be not quickly decided either by Treaty or Force The Resolutions about the Convention of the States of such well-affected Noblemen and Gentlemen as are accidentally now in Edinburgh Your Majesty will know from the Bearer the Particulars being of that nature as are not without hazard to His Majesties Service to be trusted to Paper by May it please Your Majesty the humblest and faithfullest of all Your Servants HAMILTON To which Her Majesty wro●e the following Answer Cousin I Received your Letter The Queen writes to the Duke and have given an Account to the King of what you tell Me. I hope the Kings faithful Servants shall be so much the more firm to His Service that the wickedness of others appears and will by their Care and Diligence prevent the Malice of others We had here a mischance in one of Our Quarters by the negligence of Our People the greatest loss We have had is known yet We are not at all discouraged and hope quickly to have a Revenge Our Army consists without reckoning the Garrisons of seven thousand Foot and 69 Troops of Horse besides My two Regiments so that for all Our mischance We are in no ill Condition I have News from the King that His Army is as strong as Essex's and that Essex dares not advance The King hath sent Prince Maurice to the West with 2000 Horse and a thousand Foot the Gentlemen of the West have promised to raise an Army of 10000 Men in six Weeks so that I can assure you all Our Affairs go well And from France except the Death of the King My Brother I have very good News as likewise from Denmark If the King does not press me to go to Him quickly I hope to see Leeds taken bef●re I part You will give a share of these News to all Our Friends if any dare own themselves such after the House of Commons hath declared Me Traytor and carried up their Charge against Me to the Lords This I assure you is true but I know not yet what the Lords have done upon it God forgive them for their Rebellion as I assure you I forgive them from my Heart for what they do against Me and shall ever continue as I have promised Your affectionate Cousin and Friend HENRIETTA MARIA R. To this he returned the following Letter May it please Your Majesty I Shall not presume to take up much of Your Majesties Time with reading Particulars they being so well known to this faithful Bearer The Dukes Answer to Her Majesty therefore I shall only in the general crave liberty to say that though the State of Affairs here be far otherwise than I could wish yet I was never so hopeful as at this present that no Forces will
come from hence this Summer into England to disturb His Majesties Affairs Yet no Means ought to be neglected in preparing to oppose them lest they should do o●herwise nor shall I fail to do the same whatever Malice may whisper to the contrary with all the Power I have and as freely venture both Life and Fortune in that as any living shall So I humbly beseech Your Majesty to believe that not only in this but in all which doth concern His Majesties Service my part shall be such as I have promised and as becometh The Humblest most Faithful and most Obedient of all Your Majesties Servants HAMILTON Holyrood House 10th June The King having received the Letter of Advertisement concerning the Convention wrote down the following Answer about it CHARLES R. The Kings Letter about the Convention to the Council RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousins and Councellours and Right Trusty and well-beloved Councellours We Greet you well We are much surprized at Your Letter of the 12th of this Moneth whereby it seems you have given order for the Calling of a Convention of the Estates of that Our Kingdom without Our Privity or Authority which as it is a business We see no reason for at present and that hath never been done before but in the Minority of the Kings of Scotland without their Consent so We cannot by any means approve of it and therefore We command ●ou to take order that there be no such Meeting till you give Vs full satisfaction of the Reasons for it Given at Our Court at Oxford 22th of May 1643. With this he wrote another to the Earl of Lanerick which follows CHARLES R. and to Lanerick RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellour We Greet you well We have herewith sent you Copies not only of the Letters We lately received from Scotland but also of Our several Letters to Our Chancellour and Council there the Originals whereof We leave to your Discretion to deliver and make use of as you shall find best for Our Advantage but for the Business it self We have heretofore so fully declared to you Our Own Opinion therein as We need say no more of that Subject to you We observe in the Letter to Vs that there are but eleven Councellours Names to it and that n●ne of those that are best-affected have subscribed it and We find that as great or a greater number of Councellours Persons of great Quality Place and Trust have not subscribed to it Given at Our Court at Oxford 22th of May 1643 Upon what had past the Lords whom His Majesty had trusted resolved to keep up this Letter to the Council till a return came of the Message they had sent to His Majesty But a few days after that Letter was written the Earl of Lindsay came from London to Oxford The Earl of ●indsay ●s with the King to receive the Kings Commands for Scotland to which he was required to go and sit in the Convention of Estates then Summoned His Majesty asked his Advice whether He should give way to its Sitting or not but he answered as he durst not advise His Authorizing of it so on the other hand he might consider if it was like that they who had called it without His Warrant would desert it upon His Prohibition and if His Majesty thought fit to discharge it he would weigh well what the hazard might be of their Sitting against His Pleasure All this being considered by His Majesty He wrote by him the following Letter to My Lord Lanerick CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellour We Greet you well The Earl of Lindsay coming hither from London hath assured Vs that the Cause of the Two Houses sending into Scotland to have the Lords that went hence sequestred was the Intercepting of their Letter sent to Our Dearest Consort the Queen and nothing else We perceive by the Copy of the Resolutions you sent Vs with what Prudence and Loyal Courage your Brother Hamilton and the Lord Advocate opposed at Council there the Order for Calling a Convention of the Estates for which We would have you to give them Our particular Thanks You and others of Our Council there know well how injurious the Calling of a Convention of Estates without Our Consent is to Our Honour and Dignity Royal and as it imports Vs so We desire all Our well-affected Servants to hinder it what they may but shall leave it to them to take therein such Course as they shall there upon advice conceive best without prescribing any way or giving any particular Directions If notwithstanding Our Refusal and the endeavours of Our well-affected Subjects and Servants to hinder it there shall be a Convention of the Estates then We wish that all those who are right-affected to Vs should be present at it but to do nothing there but only Protest against their Meeting and Actions We have so fully instructed this Bearer that for all other Matters We shall refer you to his Relation whereto We would have you to give credit Given at our Court at Oxford the 29th of May 1643. But His Majesty having after that received the Advice sent him from Scotland and His own Thoughts agreeing with it did on the 10th of Iune write the following Letter to be presented to the Convention CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and well-beloved Cousins and Councellours The Kings Letter to the Convention of Estates c. We have received a Letter dated the 22th of May and Signed by some of Our Council some of the Commissioners for Conserving the Articles of the late Treaty and of the Commissioners for the Common Burdens and though it seem strange unto Vs that those Committees should Sign in an equal Power with Our Council especially about that which is so absolutely without the limits of their Commissions yet We were more surprized with the Conclusions taken at ●heir Meetings of Calling a Convention of the Estates without Our special Warrant wherein Our Royal Power and Authority is so highly concerned as that We cannot pass by the same without expressing how sensible We are of so Vnwarrantable a way of Proceeding and if We did not prefer t● Our Own unquestionable Right the Preservation of the present happy Peace within that Our Kingdom no other Consideration could move Vs to pass by the just Resentment of Our Own Interest therein But when We consider to what Miseries and Extremities Our Scotish Army in Ireland is reduced by reason that the Conditions agreed unto by Our Houses of Parliament for their Maintenance are not performed and likewise the great and heavy Burdens which We are informed Our Native Kingdom lies under by the not timely payment of the Remainder of the Brotherly Assistance due from England contrary to the Articles of the late Treaty and withall remembring the Industry which We know hath been used upon groundless Pretences to possess Our Scotish Subjects with an Opinion that if God should
so bless Vs here in England as to protect Vs from the Malice of Our Enemies Religion and the now-established Government of Our Native Kingdom would be in danger We laying aside all Consideration of Our Own particular resolve on Our part to endeavour by all possible means to prevent all colour or ground of Division betwixt Vs and Our good Subjects of Scotland and therefore do permit you to Meet Consult and Conclude upon the best and readiest ways of Supplying the present wants of Our Scotish Army in Ireland and providing for their future Entertainment there until some solid Course be taken for recovering of the Arrears due to them and for their constant Pay in time coming according to the Conditions agreed upon in the Treat● as also to advise upon the best way of Relieving the Publick Burdens of that Our Kingdom of Scotland by pressing by all fair and lawful means a speedy Payment of the Remainder of the Brotherly Assistance due from England as likewise to prevent the Practices of such as study to entertain in this Our Kingdom groundless Iealousies and Fears of Innovation of Religion or Government the Preservation whereof according to Our many Solemn Protestations shall ever be most Sacred to Vs providing always that in doing these things nothing be done which may tend to the Raising of Arms or Recalling Our Scotish Army or any part thereof from Ireland but by Order from Vs and Our Two Houses of Parliament according to the Treaty agreed upon to that effect and We do require you to limit your Consultations and Conclusions to the foresaid Particulars And as by this and many other Our former Acts of Grace and Favour to that Our Native Kingdom it clearly appears how desirous We are of preserving their Affections and preventing all occasions of Mistakes betwixt Vs and them so We do expect that your Proceedings at this time will be such as may shew your tender Care of Vs and Our Greatness which by so many Oaths and Obligations you are tied to preserve Given at Our Court at Oxford the 10th of Iune 1643. Mean-while the Duke and his Brother advertised both their Majesties of the great apprehensions they had of Mischief from Scotland and besought His Majesty The Duke studies to keep Scotland from agreeing w●●h the Two Houses that so long as they were idle in Scotland he should be busie in England for his good Success there was that which would engage most to appear for him here and they with those trusted with them made the Lord Chancellour understand the hazard he was in if the Annuities were discharged and accordingly filled up one of the Blanks with a Proclamation discharging them to all who had Signed the Petition against them which yet remains but without a Date and Signeting The Lord Chancellour was very sensible of the ruine of his Fortune which would follow from the Publishing of that which certainly would be popular as being an ease of the Subjects and therefore promised to them to use his utmost Endeavours to put all the stops he could in the Agreement with England wherefore with joint consent they resolved to proceed no further in that Affair for that time and accordingly the Lord Chancellour was very instrumental though covertly in getting things kept off so long for had not much Art been used the Church-party were inclined immediately upon the opening of the Convention to have engaged in the Quarrel for the Two Houses The 22th of Iune came and the Convention sate down The Convention sits which is a Court made up of all the Members of Parliament but as they are called and sit without the state or formalities used in Parliaments so their Power is to raise Money or Forces but they cannot make or repeal Laws The Duke and his Friends as they answered to their names declared they were present upon the notice they had of the Kings Warranting of the Convention After that Lanerick delivered the Kings Letter of the 10th of Iune and it being read drew on a great Debate which lasted four days whether the Convention was free or not and if bound up to the limits of the Kings Letter or not The grounds of the Debate were on the one side it was certain that by the Law of Scotland no Assembly of that nature could be called but on the Kings Writ and therefore there was a Nullity in the beginning of it but that now the King ex post facto allowing them as a Meeting of His Subjects to consider of some Particulars they could pretend to no Authority but what that Letter gave them therefore they had not the Authority of a Convention of Estates but were only a Meeting of so many Subjects to consult of some Affairs On the other side it was said that the Convention was summoned by a Writ under the Great Seal which was all that the Subjects were to look for they not being concerned to look into the Kings secret Orders or private Pleasure so this was a sufficient Authority for their Sitting and for the Kings Letter though it seemed he was not well-pleased with his Council for it yet it did not annull the former Writ nor indeed could it and it was essential to all Meetings of that nature to be free and not limited in their Consultations for if the King calls a Parliament or Convention their Freedom cannot be restrained to such Particulars as the King would limit them to otherwise the Grievances of the Nation should never be considered therefore they concluded it either must be no Convention at all or if it was one it must be left at liberty to treat of all the Affairs of the Nation The Duke and his Brother were the great Arguers on the one side and when they saw how it was like to go they resolved to Protest and leave them But the Kings Advocate told them that if the Convention were Voted a free Convention then to Protest against it was Treason but they might declare their Judgments and thereupon take Instruments which was equivalent to a Protestation and more Legal and they judging this punctilio of the word Protest of no Importance resolved to follow his Advice So on the 26th of Iune it being put to the Vote a Free Convention or not the Duke voted it no Convention but as regulated by the Kings Letter so did eighteen Lords and but one Knight all the rest voting it a Free Convention Whereupon the Duke rose up and declared he could no more own that for a Free Convention nor acknowledge any of their Acts or Orders further than as they kept within the bounds of the Kings Letter My Lord Argyle asked did he by that Protest against the Convention my Lord Lanerick answered they meant not to Protest but declare and take Instruments both in the Kings Name and their own which accordingly they did and so removed Only Lanerick required them to record the Kings Letter which was refused next he craved an
glad to get it carried on at any rate But many judged the oddest part of it all was their Oath to maintain the Priviledges of both Parliaments since that was never defined and was scarce capable of a Definition and the Priviledges of the Parliament of England were far enough from the knowledge and divination of the Scotish People who in this case must believe all that to be Priviledge which they called so The Covenant was carried up by those trusted with it to the Two Houses to be approved by them and being returned to Scotland the Committee of Estates did by their Printed Act of 22th of October ordain it to be Sworn and Subscribed by all the Subjects under the pain of being punished as Enemies to Religion His Majesties Honour and the Peace of these Kingdoms and to have their Goods and Rents confiscated and they not to enjoy any Benefit or Office within the Kingdom and to be cited to the next Parliament as enemies to Religion King and Kingdoms and to receive what further punishment His Majesty and the Parliament should inflict on them At this time His Majesty sent Mr. Mungo Murray to Scotland to assure his Friends of his Confidence in them who brought the following Letters from the King and Queen to the Duke Hamilton Letters from the King and Queen to the Duk● I Find there hath been a great Mistaking about that mark of Favour which I thought fit to bestow upon you the particulars I have commanded Mungo Murray to tell you only this I assure you that my Confidence of you is not lessened from what I commanded your Brother to assure you of in my Name for you shall find me Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Cousin AS soon as I had occasion since my Arrival hither to write to you I have resolved to do it both to assure you of all that I said to you when I was at York as also to tell you that I am none of the least sharers in rejoycing at the Honour the King hath put on you This is a mark of the Confidence He hath in you which I am assured you will make the World see was founded on very good reason The Bearer is a Person who will tell you more than I can write to him I refer my self and shall say no more but that I am Your affectionate Cousin HENRIETA MARIA R. Oxford 28th August The Kings Friends had gone to the several places where their Interests lay to see what likelyhood there was of Raising any Force for advancing the Kings Service by extreme ways and to put a better colour on their Gathering of People together they carried with them the following Letter which was Signed by His Majesty and of which Lanerick was ordered to give an attested Copy to all who were well-affected CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellour The Kings Letter to His good Subjects in Scotland We Greet you well Since nothing on Earth can be more dear to Vs than the Preservation of the Affections of Our People and amongst them none more than those of Our Native Kingdom which as the long and uninterrupted Government of Vs and Our Predecessors over them doth give Vs just reason in a more near and special manner to challenge from them so may they justly expect a particular Tenderness from Vs in every thing that may contribute to their Happiness but knowing what industry is used by scattering Seditious Pamphlets and employing private Agents and Instructions to give bad impressions of Vs and Our Proceedings under a Pretence of danger to Religion and Government to corrupt their Fidelities and Affections and to engage them in an unjust Quarrel against Vs their King We cannot therefore but endeavour to remove these Iealousies and secure their fears from all possibility of any hazard to either of these from Vs We have therefore thought fit to require you to call together your Friends Vassals Tenants and such others as have any dependance upon you and in Our Name to shew them Our Willingness to give all the Assurances they can desire or We possibly grant if more can be given than already is of preserving inviolably all those Graces and Favours which We have of late granted to that Our Kingdom and that We do faithfully promise never to go to the contrary of any thing there established either in Ecclesiastical or Civil Government but that We will inviolably keep the same according to the Laws of that Our Kingdom and We do wish God so to bless Our Proceedings and Posterity as We do really make good and perform this Promise We hope this will give so full satisfaction to all that shall hear of this Our solemn Protestation that no such persons as study Division or go about to weaken the Confidence betwixt Vs and Our People and justly deserve the name and punishment of Incendiaries shall be sheltred from the hand of Iustice and all such others as shall endeavour Peace and Vnity and Obedience to Vs and Our Laws may expect that Protection and increase of Favours from Vs which their Fidelity deserves So expecting your Care hereof We bid you heartily farewell From Our Court at Oxford the 21st of April 1643. These Lords appointed at parting to meet again about the end of August The Lords whom theKing employed meet and send Propositions to the King which accordingly they did and when they met divers told they found much coldness among their Friends Many professed a cordialness to the Kings Service but they had neither Armes nor Ammunition nor saw they a place of Security for a Rendezvouz nor of Safety for a Retreat in case of a Misfortune so that divers of the Noblemen said It was not in their power to bring any with them to the fields but their own Domesticks Whereupon it was agreed by them all to send one Neal Servant to Mr. Murray of the Bed-Chamber to the Marquis of Newcastle to desire him to seize on Berwick which was of great Importance and was at time without a Garison that it might be the Place whither they might bring what Forces they could draw together which was indeed the most proper Place for them since the Counties that lay next it were best-affected They likewise desired my Lord Newcastle to send them such Arms and Ammunition as could be spared them out of the Kings Magazins which were then in his hands they also ordered Neal to go forward from him to Oxford to give the King an account of their Desires that they might be presently supplied He was dispatched on the 29th of August but on the 4th of September my Lord Newcastle wrote back to them a short answer referring them to Neal who in a large one both which are extant told them that my Lord Newcastle said he could spare them neither Armes nor Ammunition and as for Berwick he could not seize on it without bringing Ruine on himself and his Posterity unless
to give a full and particular Answer to every Branch of them But the more He considers the nature of them together with the high Importance and variety contained therein not without some ambiguity as well in the several Propositions as also in comparing the one with the other so much the more He finds it necessary to desire the help of Explanation Debate and Conference concerning some of them as he touched in His Paper whereby His Vnderstanding may be informed in those things which as yet are not clear to Him His Reason may be more fully convinced and His Conscience so satisfied that without offence to either of them He may make such a particular distinct Answer as may best attain His Desires of satisfying them and though for the present His Majesty at this distance from His Two Houses wants the view of many necessary Papers and other Assistances yet at what disadvantage soever He will apply Himself to give all the satisfaction that is in His power desiring He may not be mis-interpreted in any thing He shall say or omit His Majesties Answer to the first Proposition is That upon His Majesties coming to London He will heartily joyn in all that shall concern the Honour of His two Kingdoms or the Assembly of Estates of Scotland or of the Commissioners or Deputies of either of them and particularly in those things which are desired in that Proposition upon confidence that all of them respectively with the same tenderness will look upon those things which concern His Majesties Honour Concerning all the Propositions touching Religion His Majesty says that He has often and solemnly professed His Opinion concerning Episcopacy to which He refers Himself yet considering the present Distractions about Religion which are so great and of that nature that Perswasion as well as Power must be used to restore that happy Tranquillity which the Church of England hath lately and miserably lost for certainly Violence and Persecution never was nor will be found a right way to settle mens Consciences His Majesty proposes that He will confirm the Presbyterian Government for Three Years being the time set down by the Two Houses that is to say that during the said time the Church be governed by Classical and Congregational Elderships National and Provincial Assemblies with their respective Subordinations with such Forbearance to those who through scruple of Conscience cannot in every thing practise according to the said Rules as may consist with the Rule of the Word of God and the Peace of the Kingdom and that the Office of Ruling-Elders the Power of Elderships to suspend from the Sacrament of the Lords Supper ignorant and scandalous Persons be all settled by Act of Parliament for the aforesaid Term as also that the Directory be by the same way authorized for the same time so that His Majesty and His Houshold be not hindred from using that Form of Gods Service which they have formerly done and also that in the mean time and with all convenient speed a Committee be chosen of Both Houses to have a free Consultation and Debate with the Assembly ●f Divines being also willing the said Assembly shall be authorized to sit for the space of the said Three Years twenty more being added of His Majesties Nomination how the Church shall be settled and governed at the end of Three Years or sooner if Differences may be agreed Also it is to be understood that those Committees shall have no Power but of hearing debating and reporting the better to prepare all these Differences for the Determination of His Majesty and the Two Houses To the Seventh and Eighth Propositions His Majesty will consent To the Ninth Proposition His Majesty doubts not but to give good satisfaction when He shall be particularly informed how the said Penalties shall be levyed and disposed To the Tenth His Majesties Answer is That He is and hath been always willing to prevent the Practices of Papists and therefore is content to pass an Act of Parliament for that purpose as also that the Laws against them may be duely executed His Majesty will give His consent to the Act for the strict Observance of the Lords Day for the suppressing of Innovations and those concerning the Preaching of Gods Word and touching Non-residencies and Pluralities And His Majesty will be willing to pass such an Act or Acts as shall be requisite to raise Moneys for the payment and satisfaction of all Publick and past Debts expecting that His also will be therein included As to the Proposition concerning the Militia though His Majesty cannot consent to it in terminis as it is proposed because thereby as He conceives He wholly devests Himself of the Power of the Sword intrusted to Him by God and the Laws of the Land for the Protection and Government of His People and placeth the same in effect for ever in the Two Houses of Parliament thereby at once disinheriting His Posterity of that Right and Prerogative of the Crown which is absolutely necessary to the Kingly Office and so weakening Monarchy in this Kingdom that little more than the Name and Shadow of it will remain yet if it be only Security for the preservation of the Peace of this Kingdom after these unhappy Troubles and the due performance of all the Agreements that now are to be concluded which is desired which His Majesty always understood to be the case and hopes that ●erein He is not mistaken His Majesty will give abundant Satisfaction to which end He will consent by Act of Parliament That the whole Power of the Militia both by Sea and Land be in the Two Houses for the space of Ten Years and afterwards to return to its proper channel again as it was in the time of Queen Elizabeth and King James of blessed Memory And now His Majesty conjures His Two Houses of Parliament as they are English-men Christians and Lovers of Peace by the Duty which they owe to Him their King and by the bowels of Compassion which they have to their Fellow-Subjects that they will accept of these His Majesties Of●ers whereby the joyful News of Peace may be again restored to this languishing Kingdom His Majesty will grant the same to the Kingdom of Scotland if it be desired touching the conservation of the Peace betwixt His two Kingdoms Touching Ireland His Majesty will give full satisfaction as to the managing of War and for Religion as in England Touching the mutual Declaration proposed to be established in both Kingdoms by Act of Parliament and the Qualifications Mollifications and Branches which follow in the Propositions His Majesty truly professes that He does not sufficiently understand divers things contained therein but this He sufficiently knows that a General Act of Oblivion is the best Bond of Peace and that after intestine Troubles the Wisdom of this and other Kingdoms hath usually and happily in all Ages granted general Pardons with none or very few Exceptions whereby the numerous Discontentments of
of a long Preamble and Eight Articles THe first was That before they went on to a War and find great opposition from the Ministers the Grounds and Causes of it might be well cleared Secondly that the alledged Breaches of the Covenant and Treaties might be condescended upon and Reparation of them first sought Thirdly that there might be no such Grounds of War as might break the Vnion of the two Kingdoms and disoblige the Presbyterians of England Fourthly that none of the disaffected or Malignant Party might be admitted to Trust but on the contrary that they should be opposed and suppressed Fifthly that the Kings late Concessions might be declared unsatisfactory Sixthly that they should engage not to restore His Majesty to the exercise of His Royal Power till He should by Oath bind Himself and His Successors to consent to Acts of Parliament for confirming the League and Covenant and settling Presbytery the Directory and the Confession of Faith Seventhly that none might be trusted but such as were of known Integrity and good affection to the Cause Eighthly that the Church might have the same Interest in carrying on this Engagement which they had in the Solemn League and Covenant These Demands run in so high a strain that those of the Church-Party judged either they would be rejected and so the Church would pretend somewhat for their breaking with the Parliament or if they were yielded to it would so alienate the Hearts of the King and all His Friends in England from them that they would hate them as much as they did the English Parliament or Army The Committee of Parliament found the Strait they were in and saw what an unhappy practice it had been to give the Church-men so great an interest in Civil Affairs Some were for brisker Courses and for clapping up in Prison all the more turbulent Ministers but the Duke apprehended great trouble from that fearing it should raise stirs among the people which might retard the design of the Kings Delivery upon which all his thoughts were bent The hazard of intercepting Letters made the Intercourse by them so slow that the Lords that corresponded with His Majesty had no Return from him before the beginning of April and then they got that which follows I Was as glad to see the constancy of your Resolutions as I was sorry to understand the great Opposition you find in Your Vndertakings The King writes to his Servants in Scotland But as for any Enlargement concerning Church-affairs I desire you not to expect it from Me for such expectations have been a great cause of this My present Condition which I assure you I am still resolved rather to suffer than to wrong My Conscience or Honour which I must do if I enlarge My Self any thing in those points But I take very well the freedom of your Advice because I see it flows from your Affection being also confident that you will cheerfully and resolutely go on according to your Engagements to Me who am Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. 17th March 1648. And to this the Earls of Lauderdale and Lanerick wrote the following Answers SIR WE have received Your Majesties of the 17th of March Nothing but the cruel slowness of Proceedings here would have made us so long silent and that was occasioned by the great Opposition we have met with from the Ministers and the rigid Persons who strongly pretend Your Majesties not satisfying in matters of Religion and upon these grounds have gained upon many and obstructed any Engagement Yet we and those we have interest in are so sensible of our Duties our Honour and of Your Majesties sad Condition which goes nearer our Hearts than any earthly thing that although an Engagement upon the terms we parted on be impossible yet we shall either procure Scotland's Vndertaking for Your Majesties Person or perish let the hazard or opposition be what it can We can boldly say we have the Major Vote of the Parliament clear and if we were blest with Your Majesties Presence the work were done We dare not presume in this troublesom way to express the particulars of our Difficulties or Resolution but hope shortly to give a more satisfactory account having vowed to live and die Your Majesties most humble most faithful and most loyal Subjects and Servants LAVDERDALE LANERICK 22th March 1648. Lanerick also wrote what follows taken from an imperfect Copy under his hand SIR I Have been long silent and possibly should have been so a little longer had I not received Your Majesties of the 17th of the last Moneth but lest I be involved in other mens Guilt I must first speak and then perish or do my Duty Sir at our first returning to Scotland we met with a general Dissatisfaction with what you offered concerning Religion from the Ministers and their Party though all I have Interest in would have cheerfully hazarded their Lives for Your Majesties Preservation upon these or easier terms but after long Debate upon the Consequences of engaging in so great a Work not only without Vnanimity but with the Opposition of the Church and most of those who have been of greatest Eminence and Power during these late Troubles this moved us to a willingness for a very extraordinary Compliance with their Desires providing we might be assured of an Engagemennt But now when we have gone a greater length than even our Loyalty can allow us we find that nothing is intended by them but either a Conjunction with those that seek your Ruine or at least a dull and stupid Suffering and enduring of those destructive Resolutions to Religion and Government which are now designed by the Enemies of God and Your Majesty After this there was a new Committee of 24 chosen by the Parliament for a Conference with the 12 Commissioners of the Kirk who had many Meetings with them and gave them satisfaction to all their Demands so that all back-doors were shut and they were ashamed that they had asked no more wherefore being driven from all their Pretences they fled to the last starting-hole of Jealousie and said that their Designs were contrary to their Professions This was a tedious Affair and cost many Conferences In end great Offers were made to satisfie the Church-party but nothing did prevail whereupon the Committee drew up a large Declaration of all the Violations of the Covenant and Treaties made by the Two Houses together with an account of their own Intentions suitable to the Propositions made by the Ministers only they stood much upon the sixth Article that seemed most contrary to their Duty to their Sovereign and it took them up many days at length they yielded even to that but for this the Reader is referred to the Declaration printed with the Acts of that Parliament On the 25th of April the great Business was carried The Parliament vote an Engagement for the King of putting the Kingdom into a posture of Defen●e but the account of the
urge more out of my Duty to Him than kindness to our selves The next was of the 24th of April 1648. SInce my last to you I have received yours of the 18th and 22th of the last Moneth We have made an indifferent good progress in our Parliament here for we have stated all the Breaches of Covenant and Treaties we have resolved upon some Demands to be sent to the Houses of Parliament for Religion for His Majesty and for Disbanding of the present Army of Sectaries and we have pressed a Declaration containing the Grounds of our Resolutions In order to all these we likewise Voted the present putting of this Kingdom into a posture of War and this Week we are to nominate and make choice of all the Officers of our Army The Church doth still violently oppose us and threatens us with cross Declarations if not the extremity of Church-Censures Argyle and his Party maintain them in their Obstinacy or rather they do him in his Disloyalty but neither the fear of their Curses nor want of their Prayers can fright us from our Duty so soon as we are ready to act which possibly may be sooner than you imagine The next was of the 28th of April to His Majesty MY last to you was of the 13th of this Moneth by the Conveyance of Doctor Frazer Since that time we have perfected what was then designed for we have made choice of all the Officers of our Forces wherein we have been forced to spend much time and the next Week we intend to model our Army for England which we hope shall be upon the Borders against the 21th of the next Moneth which is the time limited for the Return of our Messenger from London who this day parts from hence with the three Demands to the Houses of Parliament wherof my last made mention and with a positive Command to stay only 15 days for his Answer We intend likewise in the beginning of the next Week to dispatch Sir William Fleming to the Queen and Prince to give them an account of our Proceedings and to know his Highness's Resolution concerning his coming hither and to desire the present sending of Arms and Ammunition to us whereof we are absolutely unprovided so that if the Queen or Prince of Orange to whom we beg Your Majesty would write do not supply us it will infinitely retard the Service We have passed a Declaration which is full of many rude Restrictions both in order to Your Majesty and Your faithful Servants But we are forced to them for the satisfaction of the Nice Consciences of the Clergy and their Proselytes whom we find still so inflexible that nothing can perswade them to a Conjunction with us in the Work on the contrary we meet with all imaginable Opposition from them yet as we have carried the Declaration and all that is yet done against their strongest Endeavours so we hope in despight of them to be Instruments in accomplishing the chief end it drives at which is Your Majesties Rest and Restauration Our next will certainly bring you the Knowledg of some Acting in order to that which we dare not hazard to this Cypher lest there may be more Copies of it than what we have with Your Majesty The slowness of their Motions in Scotland begun to give great Jealousies of their Proceedings every-where Jealousies of the Scotish Proceedings At Paris the Prince was much courted to go to Ireland but he resolved rather to go to Scotland and designed to go first to Holland Yet there were some about him who studied to give him ill Impressions of all that passed in Scotland grounding them on the old Calumnies that had been cast on the Duke and on the slowness of their Procedure at that time in Scotland together with the extraordinary Cajolery they gave the Church-party all which were made use of for alienating his Highness from that Resolution But he resolved to obey the Kings Commands and sent them new Assurances of that by Sir William Fleming and to oblige the Duke the more a Book being dedicated to his Highness containing some passages much to the Dukes dishonour he refused to accept of it and ordered it to be called in While things were thus preparing in Scotland His Majesty in the Isle of Wight was contriving an Escape being resolved if it succeeded to have come to Scotland but the means failed oftener than once which being discovered made his Prison the straiter He was also courted under hand with new Propositions from the Parliament of England but refused to enter into any Treaty without the Concurrence of the Scotish Nation Yet it troubled him much to hear no more of the progress of their Designs on which all his Hopes were then set for in that disorderly time it was not easy to transmit frequent and clear accounts of all that passed At length having understood from Scotland what advance was made in that Affair he was satisfied with the Fidelity of those he had imployed there At London there went various Constructions on the Scotish Actions The Commissioners of the Two Houses that were at Edinburgh wrote up that the Church-party would undoubtedly keep the Duke and his Party in play at least that Year and that the zeal of the Ministers would make the Levies go slowly on they either believing this themselves or at least designing that others should do so At this time there was a great Inclination all over England to shake off the Armies Arbitrary Yoke Great Disorders in England Stirs were rising in every place The Duke with his other Friends in Scotland dealt earnestly with their Correspondents in England to get all kept quiet till they were ready to march that so there might be an universal Rising at once which would have undoubtedly divided the Army that was against them into so many Fractions as might make way for their easier Overthrow This Design was zealously promoted by many who saw the great advantage it might produce but many were too jealous of the Scotish Designs and so did precipitate their own Ruin Others apprehended from their Declarations that the Bondage would be the same only the Masters changed if they prevailed and this made the Kings Party resolve rather to perish than receive any help from the Scots on these terms Their slowness made others despair of their Sincerity and the reports of the Power of the Church-party made all suspect their Strength so the untimely Rising in England was the Ruin of this Years Design for they rose only to be destroyed and to animate the Army with those many Victories they obtained over them And as these Defeats did much discourage the Scotish Army so it forced them to march into England before they were ready and e're they had looked well to the Security of Affairs behind them The first Rising was by Poyer in Wales to whom Langhorn came within a little and Commanded most of the Country At Westminster as they understood the state
both that they should have some honest Noblemen Commissioners here to reside at Edinburgh and that we shall have some at London that by Commutation of Counsels our Common Peace may be the better settled and continued You shall try if the Treaty betwixt the Kings Majesty and the Two Houses of Parliament be like to take effect and shall study to preserve the Interest of this Kingdom in the matter of the settling of the Peace of these Kingdoms and if you shall find there are real Grounds to hope an Agreement betwixt the King and the Two Houses in respect both Kingdomes are engaged in the same Cause and Covenant and have been and still are under the same Dangers and to the end our Peace may be more durable you shall endeavour that before any Agreement of Peace be made we may be first acquainted therewith An. 1649. that we may send up Commissions in relation to the Treaty with the King upon the Propositions and in relation to mutual Advice for the settling of the Peace of these Kingdomes and accordingly as you find the Two Houses inclined therein you shall give us Advertisement You shall according as upon the place it shall be found expedient present the same Desires to the Two Houses of Parliament in name of this Kingdome touching the Work of Reformation as shall be presented to them from this Kirk You shall assist Mr. Blair in this Imployment and take his advice and assistance in yours and give us Advertisement weekly how all matters goe You shall publish all Papers either concerning the Proceedings of the Church or of the Protesters which are necessary to be known You shall endeavour to keep a good Vnderstanding betwixt us and the City and the Assembly of Divines and strive to remove all Iealousies betwixt us and them or betwixt honest men amongst themselves You shall endeavour that honest men who have suffered for opposing the Engagement be not prejudiced but furthered in payment of the Sumes assigned unto them before the Engagement out of the two hundred thousand pound Sterling and Brotherly Assistance for publick Debts or Losses You shall acquaint the Speakers of both Houses with his Majesties Letter to this Committee and our Answer sent to Him You shall desire that the Noblemen and Gentlemen of Quality and considerable Officers of the Army that went into England under the Duke of Hamilton and which are now there Prisoners may be kept as Pledges of the Peace of the Kingdomes especially to prevent a new Disturbance in this Kingdome or Trouble from this Kingdome to England until the Peace of both be settled You shall acquaint the Two Houses with our Answer to that of L. General Cromwell 's of the sixth of this Instant and make use of the Grounds therein mentioned as you shall find occasion Their next Care was to look well to Lanerick Lanerick appointed to be secured but escapes to Holland and the other Engagers lest they should attempt somewhat against them the account of which shall be set down in a Letter Lanerick wrote to the Lord Chancellour when he left Scotland For in the end of Ianuary the Earl of Lauderdale came from Holland being commanded by the Prince to see what might be done there but he found all so discouraged and overpowered that no good was to be expected and he got advertisement from the Lord Balmerino that they designed to secure both Lanerick and himselfe and as he believed would deliver them up to the Parliament of England as Incendiaries whereupon they both resolved to go beyond Sea in the same Ship in which Lauderdale came and to offer their Service to the Prince The Letter follows My Lord ALbeit the Proceedings of the late Committee constituted of Dissenters against me was without president in Confining me a free Subject who was neither Guilty nor so much as accused of any Guilt or Breach of the Laws of the Kingdome for declining to sign a Declaration and Bond which even they themselves conceived in Iustice they could not enjoyn me to sign yet I did submit and went not without the Bounds limited for my Confinement until I was certainly informed that upon Wednesday last at a private and select Committee it was resolved I should instantly be Committed and the little Liberty left me taken from me for it seems that these private persons I speak not of Iudicatories who procured the severe Instructions given those employed to London against my Brother the Duke of Hamilton and the many Noble and Gallant Persons who are now in Bonds with him for their Loyal Endeavours to have rescued His Majesty from being murthered are not satisfied or think themselves secure while any enjoy their Liberties who would have been Instruments in that pious Duty to our Sovereign therefore I am forced to seek shelter and protection abroad since Innocency and Law and even Treaties and Publick Engagements prove now too weak Grounds for securing me at home And though this rigid and unparalell●d Procedure against me might have tempted the dullest and calmest nature to some Desperation yet I have still preferred the Peace and Quiet of Scotland to all my own Interests and I do ingeniously declare upon my Honour unto your Lordship that I neither have had neither do I know of any Design from abroad or at home of interrupting the same and now in whatsoever corner of the World it shall please the Lord to throw me as I shall endeavour by his assistance to maintain my Loyalty to my Prince untainted so I shall still preserve a perfect affection to the Peace and Happiness of my Country My prayers to God shall be that it may yet be instrumental of advancing the Work of Reformation and so fixing the Crowns of these Kingdomes upon the Head of our Soveraign Lord the King and of His Royal Progeny after Him that Faction and Rebellion may never be able to shake or interrupt their Government that Loyalty may lose the name of Malignancy and a good Christian may with Safety and without Scandal be and profess to be a good Subject that the Acts of unquestionable Parliaments and the Decrees of other Sovereign Iudicatories of this Kingdom may be Security sufficient to the Subjects to govern their Civil Actions by that they may be free of arbitrary Exactions and Impositions and may enjoy with Truth and Peace their Estates and Liberties without the tyrannous Encroachments of great men and other impowered persons and I am confident that the God of Heaven who will Iudge all the Iudges on earth will avenge the wrongs of the oppressed and in his own time restore me again to my Country who am now forced by unjust Persecution to flee from it This I shall patiently wait for and give your Lordship no more Trouble but desire you to make what use of this you think fit from My Lord Your Lordships most humble Servant LANERICK Dirleton 25th January 1649. But now I return to prosecute what remains to
as to write the following Letter about him Hamilton I Have heard this day that the Dean of Durham is dead for the disposing of which Place though I may have many Suiters and which is more though heretofore I have had divers Intentions upon the disposing of that Place for the better accommodating of my Service the reason of which is now as forcible as ever yet I have thought fit not to dispose of it till I might if your stay be not longer than I expect speak with you and to shew you that I am not unmindful of the daily pains that at this time Balcanqual takes in my Service I would let you see the case before I dispose of it and have your Opinion if he might not stay a little longer for another nearer my eye and yet not dishearten him when it may accommodate my Service another way and so I rest Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. The Assembly went on at such a rate that the Marquis judged it no longer fit to bear with their Courses for all Elections how disorderly soever were judged good their ears were shut upon Reason and the Bishops Declinator being read was rejected and an Answer drawn The Marqui● resolves to dissolve the Assembly wherefore on the 28th in the morning he call'd a Council in the Chapter-House and told them he was necessitated to dissolve the Assembly and gave his Reasons for doing it using much industry to gain them to concur with him in it The Earl of Argyle asked if he was to desire the Councils Approbation of what he intended or not the Marquis answered his Instructions from His Majesty were clear and positive for what he was to doe and therefore it was not in his Power to let any Debate be whether he should doe it or not onely he desired their concurrence and advice as to the manner of doing it Two hours were spent in Discourse but clear advices were not given from any of them from thence the Marquis went to the Church where the Assembly sate and after he sate long a Witness to some Debates were among them it was offered to be put to the Vote whether the Assembly was a free Assembly notwithstanding the Bishops Declinator or not upon which the Marquis knowing well how the Vote would run rose up and said I Find this day great contrarieties of Humours in my self first His Speech a● the Dissolution cause of Joy next cause of Sorrow cause of Joy in making good what hath been promised by His Majesty cause of Sorrow in that I cannot make further known His Majesties Pious Intentions You have called for a Free General Assembly His Majesty hath granted you one most Free on his part and in his intentions but as you have handled and marred the matter let God and the World judge whether the least shadow or footstep of Freedom can be discerned in this Assembly by any man who hath not given a Bill of Divorce both to his Understanding and Conscience With what wresting and wringing your last Protestation charges His Majesties last Gracious Proclamation in the point of Prelimitations is both known and misliked by many even of your own pretended Covenant but whether your Courses especially in the Elections of the Members of this Assembly be not onely Prelimitations of it but strong Bars against the Freedom of it nay utterly destructive both of the Name and Nature of a Free Assembly and unavoidably inducing upon it many and main Nullities will be made manifest to the whole World But His Majesties Sincere Intentions being to perform in a lawful Assembly all he hath promised in his Gracious Proclamation if you find out a way how these things may pass and be performed even in this Assembly such as it is and yet His Majesty not made to approve any way the Illegalities and Nulliti●s of it for satisfying all His Majesties good Subjects of the Reality of his Meaning I am by His Majesties special Command ready to doe it and content to advise with you how it may be done And after this he caused read His Majesties Concessions as they had been before proclaimed upon which he took Instruments that by producing and signing of them first his Majesties Intentions were made known next that in the producing and delivering of them the Lawfulness of the Assembly was not acknowledged After that he went on and discoursed against the Constitution of the Assembly in the following words But now I am sorry I can go on with you no more for the sad part is yet behind about Ruling-elders for neither Ruling-elders nor any Minister chosen Commissioner by Ruling-elders can have voice here because no such Election is warranted either by the Laws of this Church or Kingdom or by the practice or custom of either for even that little which appeareth to make for those Elders in the Book of Discipline hath at this time been broken by you there being more Lay-elders giving votes at every one of those Elections than there were Ministers contrary to the Book of Discipline as in Lanerick but eight Ministers and eighteen or nineteen Lay-elders and so in divers other Presbyteries and in every Presbytery when the Ministers upon the List were removed the remaining Elders exceeded far the remaining Ministers But say there were Law for those Lay-elders the interruption of the execution of that Law for above 40 years makes so strong a Prescription against it that without a new reviving of that Law by some new Order from the General Assembly it ought not again be put in practice for if His Majesty should put in practice and take the Penalties of any disused Laws without new intimations of them from Authority it would be thought by your selves very hard dealing To say nothing of that Office of Lay-elders it being unknown to the Scripture or Church of Christ for above 1500 years let the World judge whether those Laymen be fit to give Votes in inflicting the Censures of the Church especially that great and highest Censure of Excommunication none having power to cast out of the Church by that Censure but those who have power to admit into the Church by Baptism and whether all the Lay-elders here present at this Assembly be fit to judge of the high and deep Mysteries of Predestination of the Universality of Redemption of the Sufficiency of Grace given or not given to all men of the Resistibility of Grace of total and final Perseverance or Apostasie of the Saints of the Antilapsarian or Postlapsarian Opinion of Election and Reprobation all which they mean to ventilate if they do determine against the Arminian as they give out they will In many Presbyteries these Lay-elders disagreed in their Elections wholly or for the most part from the Ministers and carried it from them by number of Votes though in all reason the Ministers themselves should best know the abilities and fitness of their Brethren and this was done in the Presbyteries of
you are to warn and assist Ruthwen for the defence of the Castle of Edinburgh and to take in general the like care of all Our Houses and Forts in that Kingdom and likewise to advertise all such who are affected to Our Service that timously they may secure themselves And so We bid you heartily farewell The greatest Point gained in the Assembly was an Explication of the Bond of Defence which was conceived in these Words WE do swear not onely our mutual concurrence and assistance for the cause of Religion and to the uttermost of our power The Explication of the Covenant with our Means and Lives to stand to the Defence of our Dread Soveraign and His Authority in the preservation and defence of the said true Religion Liberties and Laws of this Kirk and Kingdom but also in every cause which may concern His Majesties Honour we shall according to the Laws of this Kingdom and Duties of good Subjects concur with our Friends and Followers in quiet manner or in Arms as we shall be required of His Majesties Council or any having His Authority The Clause about Episcopacy was worded That it was unlawful in this Church Episcopacy abjured in Scotland Upon this the Covenant was presented to the Commissioner and Council on the 30th of August with a desire that it might be signed and it was accordingly done which was received with great Joy witnessed by Bonfires and ringing of Bells and all the Pulpits and Streets were full of Traquair's Praises But His Majesty was no way satisfied with this as appears from the following Letter CHARLES R. Right Trusty c. The King displeased with Traquair YOur Letter of September the 27th to Hamilton We have seen and think fit to return Answer thereunto Our Self and the rather because We find by yours that some Points in the former Letter were not so fully expressed but that you desire more clear Answers First you say that in all your Directions it is condescended that by Act of Assembly Episcopacy should be declared unlawful in this Kirk and that by all the Capitulations of Agreement and Instructions given to you that same is allowed to be ratified in Parliament upon the foresaid terms agreed upon in the Assembly In this Point We must tell you that you are much mistaken for though you have Power for giving way to the Abolition of Episcopacy as contrary to the Constitutions of the Church of Scotland yet you will not find either in your Instructions or any other Direction since sent you that We have consented to declare the same Unlawful We making a great difference therein for many things may be contrary to the Constitutions of a Church which of th●mselves are not simply unlawful for whatsoever is absolutely unlawful in one Church cannot be lawful in the other of the same Profession of Religion but there may be many several Constitutions and yet they all lawful Therefore if I do acknowledge or consent That Episcopacy is unlawful in the Church of Scotland though as you have set it down in your consenting to the Act the word Unlawful may seem onely to have a relation to the Constitutions of that Kirk yet the Construction thereof doth run so doubtfully that it may be probably inferred That the same Function is acknowledged by Vs to be unlawful in any other Churches in Our Dominions Therefore as we totally disapprove of your consenting to the word Unlawful as well to the Function as Civil Places and Power of Church-men in the Act of the General Assembly so We absolutely command you not to ratifie the same in these terms in the Parliament but onely as contrary to the Constitutions of that Kirk and to declare that We ratifie this Act meerly for the Peace of the Land though otherwise in Our Own Iudgment We neither hold it convenient nor fitting which you are to declare at the Ratifying of the same And for the rest of your Declaration in the Assembly to be registred in the Books of Council for brevities sake We send you herewith a Copy of the same as likewise that of the Covenant interlined in those places which We disapprove of and conceive to be the contrary to your Instructions and some other Directions As We have formerly written to you We cannot consent to the rescinding any Acts of Parliament made in favour of Episcopacy nor do We conceive that Our refusal to abolish those Acts is contradictory to what We have consented to or to that we was obliged to there is less danger in discovering any future Intentions of Ours or at the best letting them guess at the same than if We should permit the rescinding those Acts of Parliament which Our Father with so much expence of Time and Industry established and which may hereafter be of so great use to Vs. And though it should perhaps cast all loose as you express yet We take God to witness We have permitted them to doe many things in this Assembly for establishing of Peace contrary to Our Own Iudgment And if on this point a Rupture happen We cannot help it the fault is on their own part which one day they may smart for So you have in this Point Our full Resolution We likewise wrote formerly to you that We thought it not fit at this time that the Power of the Lords of the Articles should be defined and that you are to avoid the same and to be sure not to consent thereunto Now your last Letter gives Vs ground to repeat the same again and to declare to you that We remain in Our former Opinion And whereas you say that it is to no purpose to vex Vs with all the indiscreet and mad Propositions that are made since they go about not onely to reform all pretended Abuses of what nature soever but to constitute and define the Power of all Iudicatories from the highest to the lowest and that you are like to agree in few or none of the General Acts If you find that what We have commanded you to doe is likely to cause a Rupture their impertinent Motions give you a fair occasion to make it appear to the World that We have condescended to all matters which can be pretended to concern Conscience and Religion and that now they aim at nothing but the Overthrow of Royal Authority contrary to all their Professions which We can neither with Honour nor Safety suffer And therefore We hope and expect that if a Rupture happen you will make this appear to be the cause thereof and not Religion which you know not onely to be true but must see it will be of great advantage to Vs and therefore must be seriously intended by you We have no Directions of new to give you concerning the Marquis of Huntley Sir Donald Mack-donald or any others to whom Malice is carried for their Zeal for Our Service but again recommend them to your care What hath past betwixt your self and the Earl of Argyle We
which could never be recovered for this raised Jealousies in the minds of the Scotish Lords as if the King had no Confidence in them which was cherished sufficiently by divers Male-contents upon which the Marquis despaired of getting any good done in Scotland All he judged possible thereafter was to prevent and provide against the Evil he feared and that he prosecuted with all the Zeal he was master of which His Majesty understanding by Mr. Mungo Murray Cupbearer wrote him what follows Hamilton YOur Letter and this Bearer hath so fully satisfied me that I cannot be more confident in any thing than that you will beside what you have deserve that mark of Favour I intend you You know me too well to have more words spent upon you only this I think unfit to trust particulars to Paper having so trus●y a Messenger whom I stayed this long expecting dayly a Battel but now I think the Rebels want either Courage or Strength to fight before they be forced So referring you to my Servant Mungo I rest Your most assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Wollerhampton the 27th Octob. 1642. The next Meeting of the Conservatours was on the 24th of November The Conservatours become worse affected where their strain seemed much altered to the worse yet they still resolved to interpose in a Mediation betwixt the King and the Parliament of England whereupon they wrote both to the King and the Two Houses for a Safe-conduct to such as they should send up At this time there were great Complaints of some encroachments made upon the Priviledges the Scotish Nation had enjoyed in France The Earl of Louthian is sent to France for Redress whereof the Council thought it necessary to send one to France and made choice of the Earl of Louthian and sent him first to the King with the Instructions they had given him that His Majesty might send him as His Minister to negotiate that Affair One of the Instructions was to get the Marquis put in possession of the Honour and Revenue of Chastle-herault Upon the Earl of Lowthian's coming to Court the Instructions he had from Scotland were called for by His Majesty who judged he had no reason to allow this Precedent of His Subjects instructing His Agents to Foreign Courts and these are yet extant among Lanerick's Papers But the King caused write them over in his Name so that there was no ground from this to charge any thing on the Marquis as tampering with Foreign Princes which was publickly done by his Enemies on this occasion it having been ordinarily recommended by King Iames to all the Ministers he sent from Scotland to France Neither was this done without the Kings particular Knowledge and Orders for besides that the King gave that Instruction with the rest he very seriously recommended it by word of mouth to Lowthian's Care as he informed the Writer After this the Marquis represented to the King that it were fit he should send down some person of Quality to give fresh Assurances and Hopes before they sent up their Commissioners Lanerick is sent back to Scotland whereupon the King sent down the Earl of Lanerick as the person who understood his thoughts best and was ablest to second his Brother in advancing his Service He came from Oxford in the beginning of December and brought the following Letter from the King to his Brother Hamilton THough the Trust of this Bearer needs not a Credential Letter An extraordinary Letter of the Kings yet the Civility of a Friend cannot but under his hand as well as by word of mouth express his Kindness and resentment of Courtesies which of late have been such that you have given me just cause to give you better Thanks than I will offer at in in words I shall not neglect the lazie use of so trusty a Bearer by referring to him not only the estate of my Affairs here but likewise in what way you will be of most use to Me yet I cannot but tell you I have set up my rest upon the Iustice of my Cause being resolved that no extremity or misfortune shall make me yield for I will be either a Glorious King or a Patient Martyr and as yet not being the first nor at this present apprehending the other I think it now no unfit time to express this my Resolution unto you One thing more which but for the Messenger were too much trust to Paper the sailing to one Friend hath indeed gone very near me wherefore I am resolved that no Consideration whatsoever shall ever make me doe the like Vpon this Ground I am certain that God hath either so totally forgiven me that he will still bless this Good Cause in my Hands or that all my Punishment shall be in this World which without performing what I have resolved I cannot flatter my self will end here This accustomed Freedom will I am confident add chearfulness to your honest Resolutions seeing beside Generosity to which I pretend a little my Conscience will make me stick to my Friends assuring you I have none if I am not Your most assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Oxford 2d Decemb. 1642. This excellent Letter will both shew what pious Resentments His Majesty carried along with him in the greatest perplexities of his Affairs and discover how he did not think that the Marquis had either neglected or abused his Trust. Lanerick acted with more briskness and spoke more home and roundly than his Brother which preserved him in a high degree from the Jealousies which the smoothness of his carriage brought upon him Now the Pulpits were not idle for the Ministers begun again to work on the People The Ministers perswade the People to Arms. for the Defence of the Good Cause now in hazard which was ecchoed back with the applause of the Vulgar The Marquis and Argyle at enmity At this time the Marquis his Friendship with Argyle grew to a Coldness which after a few moneths turned into an Enmity for he finding Argyle so backward in all motions for the Kings Service and that he could not be prevailed upon to continue in a Neutrality in the English quarrel broke with him There was then in Scotland one Pickering an Agent from England who studied to poyson all with Misinformations of the Kings Proceedings and Designs The Marquis is complained of England as the Incendiary He wrote to Mr. Pym that he found good inclinations with all in Scotland to own their Quarrel and declare for them only the Marquis with his Friends resisted it so powerfully that till he were laid aside the success of his Negotiation was to be feared Wherefore he advised to proceed against him roundly and either to summon him to the House of Peers or to send down a Warrant to pursue him in Scotland as the Incendiary betwixt the two Kingdoms and he sent threatnings of this to the Marquis but he found his firmness to the Kings Service was proof against all
himself into Affairs and if he did not act only as he was commanded and employed by him nor does the Defendant know who those Noblemen were that made such Offers His Majesty knows better if any such were made The Defendant knows well that some of his Accusers made some Offers to Her Majesty about eight Months after His Majesty had sent him to Scotland Comp. p. 212. with p. 195. but as these Offers were designed to make His Majesty the first breaker which would have been infinitely to the prejudice of His Service and have given incurable jealousies to the Subjects of all His Majesties Concessions so no rational Methods were proposed for prosecuting them and it seemed they flowed from the desperate State those Lords were in who had engaged as deep against the King as any had done but afterwards not meeting that Esteem and those Rewards which their Ambition and Vanity had designed and their Fortunes being ruined they pretended much zeal for the Kings Service but offered no rational appearances of being able to prosecute what they undertook But the Defendant as both their Majesties well know laid the whole Matter before them with his own Opinion and the grounds on which he went and they do also know with what impudent Falshood it is alledged See p. 21● 227 228. that he undertook to keep the Kingdom of Scotland in Peace since both in his Discourses and Letters he often said he would undertake for none but himself and that he very much feared the Conjunction of that Kingdom with the Two Houses and that the utmost of his Hopes was to keep off things by delays for that year and in this he appeals to His Majesty and to all in the Court with whom he kept Correspondence And for his Engagements to break with the Marquis of Argyle if he did not faithfully adhere to His Majesties Interests it is well known how ill an understanding and how little Correspondence hath been betwixt the Defendant and Argyle these twelve Months past His Majesty also knows See p. 210. that when the Chancellour of Scotland was sent up last the Defendant wrote to him to look well to him for it was believed and it was the Defendant's own Opinion that if he went to London he would engage in an Union with the Two Houses in name of the Kingdom of Scotland of which when His Majesty challenged the Chancellour he denied it and said These were Jealousies infused into His Majesty by the Defendant so far was he from abusing His Majesty with vain Hopes Nor is it strange that his Enemies charge Falshoods on him in Matters pretended to be transacted among few hands since they are so impudent in Matters that were publick as to say that immediately upon his return to Scotland a Convention of Estates was called Comp. p. 195. and p. 218. for that was not done but after he had been sent to Scotland almost a whole year and all that time the Defendant did render His Majesty such Services that he was pleased out of His Royal Goodness not only to write him many Letters of Thanks but to confer divers marks of His Favour on him And when the Convention of Estates was appointed to be called See p. 21● the Defendant did all he could to oppose that Resolution and entred his Declaration against it which is yet upon Record having omitted nothing he could either say or do to hinder the Calling of it for which Service he received a particular Letter of Thanks from His Majesty and the Defendant says See p. 232. that there was no Letter written from His Majesty to him to hinder the meeting of that Convention nor does he know who are meant by his Complices or Cabal as they are afterwards called except those Lords whom His Majesty joyned with the Defendant in the Instructions he sent them The first Article of these being that they should do all was possible for avoiding Divisions among His Majesties Subjects See p. 219. and a Latitude being left for them to do what might be most for His Majesties Service on their perils and as they should be answerable See p. 245. they were to consider what was most to His Majesties Service It is true His Majesty did direct a Letter to the Council to forbid the meeting of the Convention See p. 230. but did remit it to the consideration of the Lords whom he had trusted whether it were fitter to deliver or conceal it upon which they were obliged to consider what was best to be done nor was it fit for them to divulge that Letter till it was considered whether it should be made use of or not But the Lords that had His Majesties Trust did call some meetings of all who were judged best-affected to consider what Advices were to be offered to His Majesty and they all did return their joynt-Advices See p. 226. with the reasons that prevailed with them to His Majesty wherein the Defendant was but one of seven and so is not to be charged nor answerable for the Advice so given since they only offered Advertisements to the King with their Advices and the reasons that prevailed with them and as His Majesty who could only judge what Advices were best gave Orders so they did Act if the Advertisements sent were false or their Advices against Law they are accountable for them but are not bound to answer for the good success of every thing they advised that being in the hands of God and neither the Defendant nor any other joyned with him in Trust did advise His Majesty to authorize the Convention but only to allow them liberty to sit so they kept within the prefixed Limits And there was good reason for offering such Advice His Majesties Affairs not being in so promising a condition that it was fit for them to begin the Rupture and it was certain that these who called the Convention without His Order would have acted in it notwithstanding His Prohibition which must have either affronted His Authority or precipitated a Breach which could not have been done at that time without the Ruin of the King's Affairs in that Kingdom The Defendant did at that time desire the Earl of Calander that he would use his Endeavours with some of these who pretended zeal for the King's Service and are now the Defendant's Accusers that they would lay aside all private Animosities and concur in His Majesties Service and offer their Opinions with the Method in which they desired things might be carried on and the Defendant offered them all possible satisfaction in every thing for which they stood at a distance from him but that Earl brought Answers very far different from what they pretend they sent and all wise men looked on their Propositions as so extravagant and unpromising that none could think them fit to be followed But the Defendant denies there were any such Engagements passed as in the Article is falsly alledged yet
that he might make trial of all those large professions of Affection and Duty they had alwayes made This Design was communicated to the Earl of Lauderdale then at London but he as he informed the Writer studied to disswade His Majesty from it assuring him that he knew the Army and the Church-party whi●h then prevailed in Scotland would not be firm to him unless he yielded to their Demands about Religion but notwithstanding that upon some slender Assurances got from Mons. de Montrevil Agent from the French King His Majesty went to the Scotish Army the particulars whereof and of the subsequent as well as fore-going Publick Affairs not being the chief business of these Memoires little more is any-where toucht of them than what is necessary for making out the thread of the Dukes Concerns so as it may set them in their true light The Commissioners are sent to him from Scotland Assoon as this was known at Edinburgh the Committee of Estates which was then sitting sent the Earl of Lanerick and some others to wait on His Majesty with great expressions of their Duty and good Intentions protesting how dear the Preservation of His Sacred Person and His Just Power and Greatness should ever be to them wherefore they expected His Majesty would give full satisfaction to the Just Desires of His Subjects and as a preparation to this that He would recall any Commissions He had given against the Kingdom of Scotland But these Commissioners were ordered to do nothing that might raise Jealousies betwixt the Kingdoms and therefore were to Treat joyntly with such Commissioners as should be sent from the Two Houses And as they of Scotland sent their Commissioners with these Instructions yet extant so they emitted a Proclamation forbidding any to go out of the Kingdom without Publick Permission which was done to hinder those of the Kings Party from coming to him What Reception my Lord Lanerick had from His Majesty doth not appear to me but I find he was very quickly as well seated in the King's Affection and Confidence as ever On the 13th of May the Scotish Commissioners presented their first Paper which went not beyond general things containing a Welcome with an offer of their Service according to the Covenant But in their next Paper they pressed the King to send a Message to his Two Houses for a Happy Peace who press the King to settle matters not being satisfied with that Letter he had formerly written to the Speaker of the House of Peers since no grounds were laid down for a Pacification a Treaty being only in general terms desired Of all these Papers that passed the Originals do yet remain Next day the King called both for the chief Officers of the Army The King complains of the ill usage he met with and the Commissioners sent to him out of Scotland and in presence of Mons. de Montrevil did expostulate That whereas He had come to their Army upon the Assurances Mons. de Montrevil had given him that He should be safe in His Person Honour and Conscience the two last were not kept for he was pressed to settle Religion as they desired wherewith his Conscience was not satisfied next His Subjects had not free access to Him but Proclamations were issued out forbidding them to come to Him neither was the Ceremony due to Him as King suffered to be paid Him at His entry to Newcastle and lastly His Servants were not suffered to wait on Him And His Majesty attested Montrevil if those conditions were not made to Him who confidently affirmed it in all their presence and that he had the authentick Assurances in French The Commissioners retired to think of an answer but when they returned they desired His Majesty would put Montrevil to it to declare what those Assurances were and who gave them but this was not done Next they said they would not Treat with the King in his Presence nor admit of the interposition of any Foreign Agents betwixt them and their Native Prince And the Commissioners of the Army resolved that no suspected Person should be suffered to wait on the King with which His Majesty was highly displeased and for some days would not eat in publick but only in his Chamber But because there were many in the Army who would have engaged cordially for the King on any terms to les●en the apprehension of this they got a Petition to be signed by almost all the Considerable Officers of the Army yet extant that His Majesty would settle Religion according to the Covenant and that He would enter into it Himself and authorize it by His Command On the 18th of May His Majesty wrote another Letter to the Two Houses desiring them to send Propositions for Peace and in order to that The King moves for a Treaty He again offered to put the Militia into their hands for 7 years as had been offered at Vxbridge He demanded also a Safe-conduct for sending Orders to stop all further Proceedings in Ireland since He was resolved to leave the management of that War wholly to the Two Houses He shewed His Letter to the Scotish Commissioners but because it contained no Offer about Religion they were not satisfied with it yet it was sent The next thing the Commissioners from Scotland moved was that His Majesty would recall the Commissions He had given out against the Scotish Nation for the clearing whereof somewhat must be resumed that passed in those years which I have run over so hastily In the beginning of the year 1644. the King gave a Commission to the Marquis of Montrose A short Account of Montrose's Affairs to see what could be done in Scotland by Force for diverting the Army that was then entring into England He had great hopes of making a strong Party in Scotland and doubted not but he should be able with the Assistance Antrim undertook to send him out of Ireland to give the Scotish Army work enough at home but his hopes failed him for all were so over-awed by the Power of the Covenanters that none would stir till about the end of the year Some came out of Ireland but far short of the number that was promised and with these and a few of the Scotish Nation he adventured to disturb the Covenanters the particular Narration of whose Enterprizes is not to be here prosecuted This was judged by all a bold and desperate Attempt for as his Force was small so they wanted Arms and every thing necessary Some of the Wisest of the Covenanters advised them not to engage with him in any Action except on terms full of advantage but to follow him up and down whither he went securing the Country from Spoil and Plunder for they judged that his Men being so unprovided as they understood they were would not hold out long in the Hills but be forced either to lay down their Arms or break out in Mutinies among themselves whereby they should have been starved with
time than Mr. Henderson did his They were given by His Majesty to Sir Robert Murray to transcribe the Copies under Sir Robert Murray's hand were by him delivered to Mr. Henderson and Mr. Henderson's hand not being so legible as his he by the Kings Appointment transcribed them for His Majesty and by His Majesties permission kept Mr. Henderson's Papers and the Copies of the Kings as was signified to the Writer by himself a few days before His much-lamented Death All this while they were consulting at Westminster They consult at VVestminster about Propositions to be made to the King about the Propositions to be sent to His Majesty for now the Independent Party begun to prevail and as they were certainly the strongest in the English Army so they had a great Party in the House of Commons Their Design was to perpetuate a Military Power in their own hands and to set up a Toleration of all Sects and so the Propositions at Vxbridge were much altered The Scotish Commissioners The Scotish Commissioners are for making them easie to the King in the Papers they gave in concerning the Propositions first complained That the Settling of Religion was conceived in general Terms and that no particulars about Vniformity of Religion were laid down next they opposed much the Propositions about the Militia desiring that no new ones differing from what had been offered at Uxbridge might be made that so it might appear they were not taking advantages from the Straits His Majesty was in to diminish His Iust Power and Greatness to which they were bound both by Covenant and Treaties and which had been often repeated in all their Declarations adding that they could not consent to any Proposition that should take from their Soveraign the Power of Protecting and Defending His Subjects which necessarily followed were the Militia put into the hands of the Parliament wherefore they pressed that the Militia might not be settled in the hands of the Parliament but of the King and Parliament jointly and so consigned to such Commissioners of both Kingdoms as should be chosen by the King and them together This they backed with a Paper Many Papers past betwixt them and the Two Houses containing the Extracts and Citations of the former Declarations and Papers emitted by Both Houses to the same purpose both about Uniformity of Religion and the Maintaining the Kings Authority even in the matter of the Militia which was a long and smart Paper They also in another Paper appealed to all the Treaties that had been betwixt the Kingdoms since the beginning of that War wherein the Maintenance of the Kings Just Power had still been laid down as a ground on which they were to proceed in order to a Peace But upon this the Independent Party begun to say that the Agreement made with Scotland An. 1643. was no Treaty and that the Parliament was not bound to make good what was agreed to in it And this drew from the Scotish Commissioners another large Paper proving That to be a Treaty wherein they did shew How that the Kingdom of Scotland had engaged both in the Irish and English War upon the invitation the Two Houses sent them by Commi●sioners impowered with ample Credentials Signed by the two Speakers which gave them power to Treat and conclude both about the Scotish Army then in Ireland and the Army they invited to come to their Assistance in England upon which an Agreement was treated and concluded betwixt the Committee of Estates in Scotland and the Commissioners from England and Signed by them and so transmitted to the Two Houses who by frequent Letters to Scotland expressed their Ratification of that Agreement and whereas in some of the Articles then Agreed to there was an Alternative concerning the Scotish Army then in Ireland their Stay there or their Transportation upon which the Independents founded their Allegation that matters were not finally concluded they did shew how false that was since that Alternative was emitted in their Agreement then made to the Determination of the Two Houses who thereupon declared by repeated Letters to what branch of it they agreed So they made it appear that no obligation could be brought on any State by any Treaty that was wanting in that But at length the Propositions were all agreed on The Propositions are agreed on and the Scotish Commissioners though they opposed that Article of the Militia yet gave way to it rather than hazard on a Rupture The Propositions being so oft in Print need not be at length set down only the Heads of them follow taken from the Original that was delivered to the King which he gave to the Earl of Lanerick and is among his Papers FIrst The annulling of all Oaths The Heads of them and Declarations against the Parliaments and Kingdoms was desired The next five Propositions were about establishing the Covenant the Abolition of Episcopacy and Liturgy and the Kings taking and authorizing the Covenant The next five were against Popery and Papists The 12th was for the observation of the Lords Day and against Pluralities and Nonresidences and about Vniversities 13 That the Militia should be in the hands of the Parliament for 20 years who should also have a power to raise Money and that after those years the Two Houses might raise what Forces they pleased by their Bills though His Majesty gave not his assent to them and that the Rights of the City of London should be confirmed 14 That all Honours and other Writs passed under the great Seal since it was taken away from Westminster should be annulled 15 That the Treaties betwixt England and Scotland should be ratified 16 Delinquents were to be excepted from the general Oblivion and those were put in several Classes and accordingly several Punishments designed against them 17 The late Cessation granted by the King in Ireland to be annulled and the management of that War to be remitted to the Two Houses The 18 was about the City of London 19 That all Writs passed under the Parliaments Great Seal should be in force In Iuly the Duke came to Newcastle to wait on His Majesty The Duke waits on the King and is well received by him and and when he first kissed the Kings Hand His Majesty and he blushed at once and as the Duke was retiring back with a little Confusion into the croud that was in the Room the King asked if he was afraid to come near him upon which he came to the King and they entred into a large Conversation together wherein His Majesty expressed the sense he had of his long Sufferings in terms so full of affection that he not only brake through all of his Resentments but set a new edge again upon his old Affection and Duty He told him He ever had Iudged him Innocent as to the bulk of things though he confessed there were some particulars he was not so well satisfied with but that his Restrain was extorted from
hazards The Propositions were brought from the Two Houses about the middle of Iuly and a speedy answer was craved to them The Propositions are brought to the King But for an account of His Majesties Thoughts of them I cannot give it better than by setting down a written account of them in a Letter sent to the Earl of Lauderdale at His Majesties Command by Sir Robert Murray THe Duty which I conceive every good Subject owes His Majesties first Thoughts of them to use his utmost Endeavours how weak soever for the furtherance of the happy Peace of these afflicted Kingdoms hath made me take the boldness to talk with the King upon the Propositions to see how far he can be induced to yield to them And although to every particular I cannot promise you an exact account because there are divers things in them which neither He nor I understand yet to the main Points I shall and such as I hope may be a good ground-work for happy Conclusions First then for Religion I find His Majesty really Conscientious and not superstitiously Scrupulous wherefore until He be better satisfied the uttermost He can be brought to is that He will be content that Presbyterial Government be generally established within this Kingdom by Act of Parliament for three years provided that He and all those of His Opinion may freely enjoy their Consciences according to the practices in Queen Elizabeth 's and King James 's Times Now how to do this would be too long for a Letter but as there are Examples so I doubt not to shew you more than one way to do it so willing ears may be brought to such a Motion and I assure you His Majesty is most willing to hearken and seek after information to the end He may be satisfied how with a safe Conscience He may give you full satisfaction herein but this Proviso that His Majesty grants will probably be but temporary For the Militia I can neither see inclinations in His Majesty to relinquish nor can I find Arguments to perswade him to it nevertheless I perceive so great inclinations in Him to strain to the uttermost to give His Subjects all just Satisfaction especially in what concerns the securing of their Fears that He will be content for Ten years the Two Houses should dispose of the Militia by Act of Parliament in the hands of such and so many persons as they shall name as likewise to change them within the said time and appoint others in their Places as they shall think fit but after the expiration of the said Time to return to the Crown as Queen Elizabeth and King James enjoyed it Concerning Delinquents His Majesties Opinion is that a good Act of Oblivion is the best way to bind up a Peace after Intestine Troubles it having been the Wisdom of other Kingdoms most usually and with good success to grant general Pardons with very few or no Exceptions whereby the numerous Discontentments of all sorts of People which are the seeds and fuel to future Disorders might be totally extinguished and His Majesty further conceives that He cannot desert so many gallant Persons of Condition and Fortune who have engaged themselves with Him only out of a sense of Duty without a perpetual and irrecoverable Dishonour As for Offices though His Majesty judges that the Disposal of them is a necessary Flower of the Crown yet He is content for this time to accept of the Nomination of them from the Two Houses to be enjoyed by these persons quam diu se bene gesserint so that after Vacancies they return to be disposed of as before I unwillingly mention Ireland because His Majesties Publick Faith being engaged how dare I speak to Him to violate that which is and must be all our Security but even in this will I pawn my Life He will prove Himself a zealous Protector of Protestants and a constant Maintainer of Sovereign Power My Conclusion is that if upon these grounds a Conference may be had betwixt His Majesty and the Two Houses I will engage any thing that an Honest man can that these Kingdoms will be shortly happy in a firm Peace which if it should fail on our part for our not hearing of our Soveraign it would be an unparalelled Misfortune not without Infamy These were His Majesties private Thoughts but His publick Answer inclined more to a Denial which when it was brought to Westminster was entertained both with Joy and Sorrow The King does not yield to the Propositions according to the inclinations of the several Parties The Independents and those of the Army feared nothing so much as the Kings granting them for in that case they saw there could be no colour for keeping up an Army and in the House of Commons when Thanks were Voted to the Commissioners that had been with the King for their pains one Member whispered another in the ear that they owed more Thanks to the King than any body and in another corner an honest Member saying to another what shall become of us since the King refuseth these Propositions the other answered nay what had become of us if He had granted them The Independent Party upon this moved The Houses go on to high Resolutions but are stopped by the Scotish Commissioners that no more Addresses should be made and that His Majesties Person should be demanded and the Army commanded Northward to see it executed which had been infallibly done had not the Scotish Commissioners given them in some Papers complaining of many Violations of the Treaty and the Arrears due to the Army The King had also desired a Personal Treaty near London and the Scots seconded it but the obtaining it was impossible for all this time the Scotish Commissioners and the English whereof the greatest part were of the Independent Faction were in no good terms As for the Arrears of their Pay the Two Houses talked of offering five hundred thousand pounds Sterling whereof an hundred and fifty thousand should be paid presently that so they might be rid of their Army which they said was no more necessary in England and a Complaint being made against some who spoke and wrote in prejudice of the Scotish Nation an Ordinance was debated for punishing them The Independents Imployed all their Strength against it Cromwell spoke most vehemently that it was to discourage their Friends and to encourage their Enemies but Hollis took him up so sharply for calling base Libellers Friends that he was glad to recant When it went to the Vote it run near an equality for 102 were against it and 132 for it so quickly were the Services of their dear Brethren of Scotland forgotten At this time the King sent my Lords of Argyle The King employes Argyle at London for obtaining a Personal Treaty Lowdon and Dumfermline to London Their Instructions were to deal for a Personal Treaty near London to get some of the Kings faithfullest Servants to be suffered
Lesly's Discourse and Instructions but I do not so well understand your Letter of the 23th of this Month as not agreeing fully with what Robin hath said and shewn to Me wherefore I have the more reason to desire you to hasten your Coming up In a word every minute that you stay 't is so much the worse for the Affairs of Your most real constant Friend CHARLES R. Hampton-Court 29th August 1647. For Particulars I refer you to Robin The King was then so filled with Hopes from Assurances given Him by the Army The King is abused by the Army that He was out of doubt of getting things carried by Treaty and therefore continued to press Lanerick's Coming up The Earl of Lauderdale wrote also to Scotland that some Person of Eminence might be sent to concur with him in the great Transactions that were coming on whereupon the Lord Chancellour and Lanerick were appointed to go up upon which a Pass was signed by Fairfax for the Earls of Lowdon and Lanerick according to the desire sent from Scotland to come and wait upon the King But their Coming up was delayed the occasion whereof is given in the following Letter written by my Lord Lanerick to the King which though I set down in the due Stile yet both it and almost all the Letters written this Year being in Cypher run in the third person but for making the Narration smoother I have presumed to change their phrase a little Sir THe difference betwixt Robin's Relation and my Letter of the 23th of August last I shall easily reconcile The Reasons that stopt Lanerick 's Journey for some time when I shall have the happiness to see Your Majesty for I can hardly speak truth and sense without running a hazard of making my self useless and uncapable of speaking at all Those of the Chancellor's Friends who were against his being employed at this time take occasion to press a Delay to his and my present Going to London or Court from the Two Houses their not yet answering a Letter the Committee here wrote to them for Reparation of the Affront done to the Earl of Lauderdale and for Assurances to all Commissioners employed from this Kingdom so until a satisfactory Answer be returned to that Letter it is alledged that their Going will be useless since except they be allowed by the Two Houses access to Your Majesty may still be denied them and so their Endeavours to serve You frustrated This is the rather urged by reason of many informalities in the Pass sent them by Sir Thomas Fairfax by which they were only warranted to come to Your Majesty at Hampton-Court and if You chance not to be there it doth not warrant them to wait upon Your Majesty in any other place especially since it bears not at all a liberty for them to go to London where their Endeavours probably would be of the 〈…〉 use If the Earl of Lauderdale had not been affronted they would not have desired any Assurance at all but that being unrepaired for they are not at all satisfied with Sir Thomas Fairfax his Answer to the Two Houses Letter in that particular if they shall have occasion to move any thing in Your Majesties Favours which shall be disliked by the Parliament or Army they may chance to meet with the same or worse Vsage that Lauderdale did I was not so scrupulous but willingly would have hazarded through these or any Difficulties being required as I am by Your Majesty to haste thither but the Chancellor's Stay would have made my single Going I being only employed to Your Majesty useless yet if it shall be thought fit and I again commanded to it want of Formalities or Passes will not fright me from my Duty In the mean time Instructions are this day sent to our Commissioners at London to delay their concurrence in sending the Propositions of Peace to Your Majesty till the Chancellour's Coming for the Committee resolved to adhere to their former Instructions in pressing Your Majesties Coming to London with Honour Freedom and Safety for confirming so far as You have already granted by Your Message of the 12th of May last and there to Treat upon the rest of the Propositions Thus begging Pardon for this tedious account I expect Your Majesties further Commands which shall immediately be obeyed by Your Majesties most humble most faithful and most obedient Subject and Servant LANERICK Edinburgh 4th September 1647. His Majesties Answer follows Lanerick The Kings Answer to Lanerick YOu had reason not to come up without the Chancellour but I do not understand why you did both stay for is this a time for Scotland to vie punctilio's of Honour with England and thereby neglect even almost to loss the Opportunity of redeeming that Fault which they committed at Newcastle certainly you are not yet in the right way But seriously I write not this for you but to you that others by you might learn more wit In a word Time is not altogether lost redeem it for shame and be not startled at My Answer which I gave yesterday to the Two Houses for if you truly understand it I have put you in a right way where before you were wrong remember the Proverb Ill bairns are best heard at home I say no more but make what haste you can with your Colleague to Your most assured r●al constant Friend CHARLES R. In the mean while a Message was sent from Scotland to the Parliament of England for such a full Pass as was demanded Lowdon and Lanerick with difficulty are permitted to wait on the King which drew on a great Debate for Haslerig Martin and others of that Cabal argued much against it saying why should Lanerick be sent up who was a known Incendiary and the Latham Letter mentioned in the account of the Year 1643 with many other Particulars were remembred Next they excepted against it that by the Pass that was demanded it appeared they were to go first to the King as if they had been to Treat without the Parliament of England But old Sir Henry Vane took them up sharply for remembring things which were long ago buried yet the Heat was so great that it was referred to a Committee to consider of it but in end it was granted All this while the Earl of Lauderdale went not near Westminster because he got not Reparation for the Affront put on him by the Army but was extremely v●xed to see the King possessed with such a good opinion of the Army and used all the ways he could think of to undeceive Him In the beginning of October the Earls of Lowdon and Lanerick came to London The Scotish Commissioners wait on the King and with them the Earl of Lauderdale went to wait on the King who was then at Hampton-Court and after they had learned from Him the State in which His Affairs were and had expressed the Sense and Affection of His Subjects in Scotland who judged all their happiness
Majesties Preservation on these or on easier terms yet it was long debated amongst them what the Consequences might be of engaging in so great a Work not only without Unanimity but with the Opposition of the Church and most of those who had been of greatest Eminence and Power during the late Troubles Wherefore they resolved to give very extraordinary Complyances to their Desires whereby they might either gain their Concurrence or at least mitigate their Opposition and determined to go a greater length than otherwise their Loyalties could allow of But the Church-men by the insinuations of Mr. Gillespie and others were possessed with an opinion of their bad Intentions and that their Resolutions if they were blessed with Success were to overturn all that had been formerly established and so they resolved not to be satisfied with any Security or Proviso they might grant believing that nothing they offered was really meant to be kept and that all they intended was but Cajolery therefore they determined to oppose them with their utmost Zeal and Industry A few dayes after the three Lords returned to Scotland the following Letter came to them from His Majesty UPon Saturday I received yours of the twenty fourth of January A Letter from the King and have written to Lee as you desired Let no reports of any Personal Threatning against Me stagger your Confidence of My Constancy nor hinder Scotland in what shall be best for Kingly Authority lose no time in your great and honest Designs for him who is Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Monday 7th February 1648. POSTSCRIPT I resolve within these two or three Days to write to you by a trusty Messenger however I hope not to fail by these ways you mention To which they returned the following Answer May it please Your Majesty THis day we received Your Majesties of the 7th Instant Your Letter to Lee we hope may be useful Our Resolution to serve Your Majesty cannot be shaken with which we will go through or perish The Clergy cannot be satisfied with what Your Majesty offers in Religion for the reason expressed in our last of the 15th yet we hope to engage them in the Work We wish Your Majesty could further enable us in that Particular as the only mean to procure Vnanimity In the mean time we will set up our rest on the procuring a speedy Engagement though without that we cannot do it so much to Your Majesties advantage Sir Marmaduke Langdale is come hither and our first care shall be to secure Berwick and Carlisle which ere this we had done if our Forces had not been at too great a distance scattered in their Quarters They have now Orders in private to draw together and we intend to act and speak both at a time POSTSCRIPT We want Arms and Ammunition exceedingly and do earnestly desire the Queen may be pleased to endeavour the supplying us from France and Holland speedily The Lord Chancellour though at first the most forward of them all for an Engagement Lowdon falls off to the Church-party yet was quickly wrought upon to abandon his generous Resolutions and not only turned over to the violent Church-Party but some Months after was made do Penance by a solemn Acknowledgment in the High-Church of Edinburgh for his sinful complyance with these unlawful Courses as they were termed Traquair played his old game a great while with both hands and studied to make a Reconciliation with some Lords of the Church-party if by any means they could have been engaged in the Design and Mr. Murray of the Bed-Chamber who was sent to Scotland from France treated also long with the Heads of the Church-party whom he thought more powerful in the Country and so more able to deliver the King but finding them so backward without positive Concessions about Religion and the Covenant he and the rest of these called the Kings Party were forced to unite with the Duke and his Friends The first thing was to engage all the Officers of the little Army then standing which was carried very successfully and their next care was to fix on one to command Those who united for engaging in the Kings Quarrel designed that David Lesley now Lord Newark should command the Army to be raised and he at first undertook the Service very cordially but some of the Church-men fell upon him very furiously and prevailed so far on others who had a great Ascendant over him that he being of an easie nature struck off and refused the Service Whereupon finding it necessary that a Person of Eminence and Integrity should command the Army They resolve the Duke should be General which he oposed much they resolved on making the Duke General which he opposed to a high degree saying that he was resolved to hazard his Life with the first yet he would decline all Command knowing with what Calumnies he had been aspersed and what Jealousies many had still of him as if his Designs were for himself and to the Kings Prejudice And many yet alive with whom he lived in the greatest Confidence know with what earnestness he pressed them to set their eye on some other Person but there were none to choose fit for the Trust wherefore it was agreed by them all that the Charge must be laid on him to which he submitted with great Aversion The Parliament meets in Scotland In the beginning of March the Parliament sate Their first trouble was from the Remonstrance which the Commission of the Kirk sent them against Association with Malignants and of the danger Religion was in which Paper they intended to have printed but with much difficulty this was stopped There were Commissioners sent down from the Two Houses with whom Mr. Stephen Marshal came for Justifying their Proceedings and keeping a good correspondence with the Scotish Nation and notwithstanding all the Injuries done by them last Year yet some of the Clergy and of the Lords of their Party were in a very good understanding with them But first of all the Carriage of the Scotish Commissioners in England was approved in Parliament next there was a Committee of Eighteen appointed for preparing business and to confer with the Commissioners of the Kirk for giving them satisfaction which was a long and slow Work On the 14th of March the English Commissioners complained that they heard there were Designs among some Malignants to seize Berwick which they desired these in Scotland would oppose whereupon the Parliament referred it to the Committee of Eighteen to see to the Security of the Kingdom in that Affair from which all the Members who were of the Church-Party dissented and against this Vote the Commissioners of the Kirk sent in another Remonstrance because they knew that Committee was so chosen that they would send Orders for the securing of Berwick On the 22th of March the Committee of the General Assembly commonly called the Commission of the Kirk gave in their large Paper consisting
of the Scotish Affairs better than the Rabble did so they did more apprehend the Danger of it And first great pains were taken to reconcile the Presbyterian and Independent Parties at least to unite them against the Scots wherefore they Voted that the Government should be by King Lords and Commons yet the Independents opposed this so that it was carried but by 45 Voices They also appointed that the Propositions offered at Newcastle should be the Grounds of settling the Kingdom and they Voted that it should be lawful notwithstanding the Vote of Non-Addresses to make new Applications to His Majesty Their Design in this was visible for they hoped the Scots could not pass from these Propositions and they were assured the King would never consent to them particularly to that of Religion which was so dear to Scotland But Cromwel was not at all pleased with these Votes and as little with the City and if the Stirs over England had not given him other Employment he would have made a Journey to London with his Army for the Purging the House a-new They in Scotland were much straitned with want of Ammunition and Mony therefore they sent Sir William Bellandin to Holland to see what could be had from the Prince of Orange they likewise wise sent Sir William Fleeming to Paris to the Queen and Prince with the following Letters May it please Your Majesty ALL verbal Assurances would justly appear too low and mean testimonies of our Fidelity Letters to the Queen and Prince from the Duke and his Friends since Actions are now the only touch-stones of Loyalty which we hope e're long shall be better than what we can in this Common way speak of our real Affections to His Majesties Service We have presumed from the Encouragements we have received from Your Majesty to hope the Prince his Highness will countenance our Endeavours for his Father's Rescue with his presence amongst us which would certainly give an extraordinary vigour and life to all our Motions For that end we have instructed this worthy Bearer with our humble desires therein to Your Majesty and to his Highness and with such other Particulars as are necessary for enabling us to carry on the Work to whom we beg Your Majesty would be pleased to give Trust and further to believe that nothing was ever more absolutely fixed than are our Resolutions either to perish or eminently to shew our selves Your Majesties most humble most faithful and most obedient Subjects and Servants Hamilton Lauderdale Crawford Lanerick Roxburgh Calender May 1st 1648. May it please Your Highness THe deep sense we have of His Majesties sad Condition invites us to these Actions of Duty and Loyalty to which we are by so many Relations and Tyes bound and obliged and having divers Encouragements from His Majesty and from the Queen to hope for your Highness's Presence amongst us in countenancing our faithful Endeavours for His Majesties Rescue we have presumed humbly to address our selves to your Highness that from your Self we might know your own Inclinations that accordingly such publick Assurances and Invitations may come from hence as your Highness shall think fit to require being confident that before we can receive your Highness's Directions herein we shall be in some condition to evidence our Loyalties otherwise than by Words So until we give a more real testimony thereof we shall only beg to be esteemed of by your Highness as Persons that have vowed themselves to this Service and who are faithfully Your Highness's most humble most faithful and most obedient Servants Hamilton Lauderdale Crawford Lanerick Roxburgh Calender May 1st 1648. Next they modelled the Army which will better appear by the following Letters written to the King SIR YOu now find the effects of what my last of the 28th of April promised we are now engaged and Sir Marmaduke Langdale's successful Attempt upon Berwick and Carlisle will be resolutely seconded by Your Servants here Letters to His Majesty To morrow Sir William Fleeming and Mr. Murray part for France the last acknowledges the baseness of his new Friend Argyle We hope the Prince will now countenance with his Presence our Endeavours for Your Majesties Rescue since the Duke of York is escaped for he will give an extraordinary life and vigour to all our Motions The Kirk hath this day declared against our Declaration and Engagement but all it hath procured is a Vote of thirty thousand Foot and near six thousand Horse which is this day remitted to the Consideration of the several Bodies and I hope will pass the House to morrow 2d May. 1648. SInce my last we are far advanced in our Designs of serving Your Majesty our new Army is modelled which I hope will be more considerable than any Army that ever went out of Scotland the Old General hath laid down his Charge and the Duke of Hamilton is to Command in chief who joys to meet with so happy an occasion to vindicate his Loyalty He will be found active in his Trust and seconded by the most gallant and eminent persons of the Kingdom his Election was carried very unanimously in Parliament Argyle and only six with him dissenting Calender with the same Vnanimity and the same Opposition is chosen Lieutenant-General and David Lesley Lieutenant-General of the Horse but he hath not as yet accepted of his Charge Middleton is appointed Major-General of the Horse who is most eminent for his Loyalty and forward in this Service Our Armie will be on foot about the end of the Moneth and that the Raising of men may the more actively be gone about we have adjourned the Parliament till the first of June We have sent Commissioners with Instructions and Money to invite our Army in Ireland to come and joyn with us in this Service Our Opposition from Argyle and the Ministers is still as great as they can make we are undone for want of Arms and a little Money if we be not supplied from France or Holland this glorious and most hopeful Vndertaking that ever this Nation had may be in hazard to miscarry Sir William Fleeming and Mr. Murray went ten days ago for France and this day we have dispatched Sir William Bellandin to Holland We are much dejected because we have not heard from Your Majesty since the 17th of March which makes us fear You involve us in the Guilt of the by-past deadness and slowness of their Motions here but we take God to witness we are as free thereof as we shall be faithful to the Vows we have made of perishing or of serving Your Majesty in such a loyal and dutiful way as hath been professed by Your Majesties c. 17th May. The Differences that were among the Lords were adjusted The Levies are much retarded by the Ministers and most of the Officers were also well named yet the Levies went on dully though many of the Lords were so cordial that they who had allowance from the Publick but for 80 Horse
The King consults with them ibid. He goes to the Isle of Wight ibid. And writes to Lanerick p. 325. The Scotish Commissioners write to him p. 326. The Kings Answer to Lanerick ibid. The four Bills are passed p. 327. The Scotish Commissioners protest against them ibid. And write to the King about them ibid. The King is well-pleased with their Papers p. 328. They write again to him ibid. Another Letter to the King p. 329. The Kings Answer to them ibid. Designs against the Kings Person p. 330. Traquair is well with the King p. 331. The Scotish Commissioners advise the King p. 332. The King sends for them ibid. The Kings care of Huntley p. 333. The Queen writes to Lanerick p. 334. The Scotish Commissioners agree with the King ibid. The King is made Prisoner ibid. Lib. 6. Of the Duke's Engagement for the Kings Preservation and what followed to his Death THe Duke's endeavours in Scotland p. 335. Three Parties in Scotland p. 336. The Commissioners return ibid. The Church-men are jealous of them p. 337. The King writes to them ibid. Their Answer ibid. Lowdon forsakes them p. 338. The Duke is designed General ibid. The Parliament sits ibid. Commissioners from England ibid. The Remonstrance of the Ministers p. 339. The King writes to the Lords p. 340. Their Answers to him ibid. and p. 342. Satisfaction offered to the Ministers ib. Lanerick's Letters about their Affairs ibid. And about their Demands to the Two Houses ibid. And about the Declaration p. 343. And putting the Kingdom into a posture of War ibid. And the modelling their Army p. 344. The Prince resolves to come to Scotland ibid. The King designs an Escape ibid. Great disorders in England p. 345. Letters to the Queen and Prince p. 346. And to the King about the Officers of the Army ibid. The Ministers oppose the Engagement p. 348. The Parl. Letter to the Presbyteries ib. The Parl. sends for the Scotish Army in Ireland p. 349. The Confusions in England p. 350. A Fast at Westminster ibid. The Parl. of Scotl. adjourned p. 351. Some are against a present March ibid. A Letter of the Prince's ibid. Others press a speedy March p. 352. And it is resolved on p. 353. An Insurrection at Mauchlin ibid. Some Troops are sent to the Borders p. 354. The whole Army enters England ibid. The Chief Officers of it ibid. Calander's Character ibid. The Condition of the Army p. 355. An Account of their March ibid. Lambert retires ibid. A Letter from Langdale ibid. The Army marches into Lancashire p. 357. The Scotish Army comes out of Ireland ibid. The Cavalry leave the Foot p. 358. Preston-Fight ibid. Middleton's Gallantry p. 361. At Warrington-Bridge the Foot Capitulate ibid. The Horse come to Utoxater p. 362. A Munity ibid. They treat with Lambert p. 363. The Articles are signed p. 364. L. Gray of Groby comes up ib. The Duke is made Prisoner p. 365. And examined but discovers nothing ibid. The Engagement variously censured ib. Lauderdale was sent to bring the Prince to Scotland p. 366. The Prince intended to go ibid. But the loss of the Army stopt him p. 367. An Insurrection in Scotland ibid. Many in the Committee of Estates incline to submit to them ibid. But Lanerick opposed that long p. 368. An Account of the Irish Army ibid. They are called back to Scotland p. 369. And joyn with the Committee of Estates p. 370. And defeat Argyle at Sterlin p. 371. A Treaty is carried on ibid. Cromwel is invited to Scotland p. 372. Different opinions about the Treaty ib. Articles offered for a Treaty p. 373. The Answer sent to these Offers p. 374. The Treaty is concluded p. 375. But not at all kept ibid. Instructions sent to the Two Houses ibid. Lanerick goes out of Scotl. p. 377. His Letter to the Chancellour ibid. The Duke is brought to Windsor p. 379. Oft examined but in vain ibid. The King is murthered ibid. Majesty in Misery in a Copy of Verses written by the King p. 381. The Duke escapes out of Windsor p. 384. But is taken in Southwark ibid. And kept in St. James's ibid. Argyle refused to interceed for him p. 385. He is brought to his Trial ibid. The Inditement against him ibid. The Duke's Plea ibid. The second Appearance p. 386. The third Appearance ibid. The fourth Appearance ibid. The fifth Appearance Witnesses examined p. 387. The Duke pleaded the Articles given him p. 388. The sixth Appearance more Witnesses p. 389. The seventh Appearance more Evidence led ibid. The eighth Appearance the Duke pleads for himself at great length p. 390. The ninth Appearance his Counsel plead p. 392. The tenth Appearance the Counsel for the People plead against him p. 394. The eleventh Appearance Bradshaw's Speech p. 396. Sentence is given against him ibid. The Duke prepares for Death ibid. And writes to his Brother p. 397. And to his Children ibid. His Speech before his Death p. 398. He is led out to his Execution p. 400. And writes a note to his Brother ibid. New Offers of Life made upon base Conditions and rejected by him p. 401. D. Sibbald encourages him on the Scaffold ibid. The Duke's last Speech p. 402. And Prayer p. 404. His Death ibid. And Burial p. 405. His Character p. 406. His Birth and Parents ibid. His Person ibid. His Education ibid. His Marriage ibid. His Lady's Vertues p. 407. and Death ibid. His Religion ibid. His Abilities p. 409. His Loyalty ibid. His love to his Country p. 411. His Temperance ibid. His Ingenuity p. 412. His Good Nature p. 413. His Death much lamented p. 414. A Letter of the Queens p. 415. Another of the Kings ibid. Lib. 7. A Continuation of Affairs till Worcester-Fight THe Character of William Duke of Hamilton p. 417. His first Appearance at Court p. 418. He is made Secretary of State and Earl of Lanerick ibid. The Friendship between his Brother and him ibid. His Diligence in his Imployment p. 419. His Abilities ibid. His Religion ibid. His troubles prove happy to him p. 420. His care of his Brothers Daughters ibid. His Duty to the King p. 421. He was ill used by his Enemies p. 422. He advises the King to settle with Scotland ibid. The Treaty at Breda ibid. The Duke returns with the King p. 423. But is put from the King ibid. And lives in the Isle of Arran ibid. Cromwel enters Scotland p. 424. Dunbar-Fight ibid. The King is better used in Scotland ibid. The Church-party divided ibid. The Duke comes to the King p. 425. The King marches into England ibid. The Duke's Letter about their March p. 426. Lambert is beat from Warrington-Bridge p. 427. The K. comes to Worcester ibid. Cromwel follows ●im ibid. The King is in great straits p. 428. The Duke apprehends his own Death ibid. And prepares for it ibid. His Meditations before the Fight ibid. And Prayer p. 429. Worcester-Fight p. 430. The Duke's Regiment c●arged gallantly ibid. The Duke 's great Valour ibid. He is wounded and taken p. 431. His wounds prove mortal ibid. His Letter to his Lady ibid. His Death p. 432. And Burial ibid. His last Will p. 433. A Le●ter with it to his Lady p. 434. The Conclusion p. 436. A Rational Method for proving the Truth of the Christian Religion as it is professed in the Church of England in Octavo The Royal Martyr and the Dutiful Subject in two Sermons Quarto both Written by Gilbert Burnet Author of Duke Hamilton 's Memoires and Printed for R. Royston Several Chirurgical Treatises by Rich. Wiseman Sergeant-Chirurgion to His Majesty Fol. New THE END