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A71223 The compleat History of independencie Upon the Parliament begun 1640. By Clem. Walker, Esq; Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth part was never before published.; History of independency. Walker, Clement, 1595-1651.; Theodorus Verax. aut; T. M., lover of his king and country. aut 1661 (1661) Wing W324B; ESTC R220805 504,530 690

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I leave you therefore to Pharaohs destiny to be drowned in your own Red sea as he was in his Thus far I adventured to vindicate our Religion Laws and Liberties with my pen Resolution scope of the Author in discharge of my Conscience and pursuance of our National Covenant which obligeth us to defend them against whosoever to our power neither knowing nor caring whether in so wicked an age wherein vice is honoured and vertue contemned I may be thought worthy of punishment for being more righteous than my superiors I know an honest man is wondred at like a monster and the innocency of his life and conversation suspected as a Libel against the State yet if I perish I perish pereundum in licitis nor am I less provided of a safe retreat than our Grandees my grave is open for me and one foot in it already Contempsit omnes ille qui mortem prius He that contemns Death scorns both Hope and Fear which are the only affections that make Knaves Fools and Cowards of all the World The world is a goodly Theater we are the actors God is Poet and chief spectator we must not choose our own parts that is at Gods appointment one man he appoints to play the King another the Begger one a Comick another a Tragick part whatsoever part God hath appointed for me in this remainder of my life I will have a care to personate it ingenuously and aptly not doubting but my Exit shall be accompanied with an applause into my Tyring-room my Tombe nor will I refuse the meanest part that may draw a plaudit from so excellent a spectator but will prepare my self for the worst of evills in this worst of times and pray to God to Reform our Reformers Amen THE END THE HISTORY OF INDEPENDENCY WITH The Rise Growth and Practices of that powerfull and restlesse FACTION D. AMBROSIUS Nec nobis ignominiosum est pati quod passus est Christus nec vobis gloriosum est facere quod fecit Judas TACIT Scelera sceleribus tuenda VIRGILIUS sua cuique Deus fit dira libido 1 St. JOHN c. 2. v. 16. Quicquid est in mundo est concupiscentia oculorum concupiscentia carnis aut superbia vitae LONDON Printed in the Year 1648. Reader GEntle or ungentle I write to all knowing that all have now got almost an equall share and interest in this Gallimaufry or Hotchpot which our Grandee Pseudo-Politicians with their negative and demolishing Councils have made both of Church and Commonwealth and therefore I write in a mixed stile in which I dare say there are some things fit to hold the judgements of the Gravest some things fit to catch the fancies of the Lightest and some things of a middle nature applying my self to all capacities as far as truth will permit because I fore-see the Catastrophe of this Tragedy is more likely to be consummated by multitude of hands than wisedome of heads I have been a curious observer and diligent inquirer after not only the Actions but the Counsels of these times and I here present the result of my indeavours to thee In a time of mis-apprehensions it is good to avoid mistakings and therefore I advise thee not to apply what I say to the Parliment or Army in generall if any phrase that hath dropped from my pen in hast for this is a work of hast seem to look asquint upon them No it is the Grandees the Junto-men the Hocas-Pocasses the state-Mountebanks with their Zanyes and Jack-puddings Committee-men Sequestrators Treasurers and Agitators under them that are here historified were the Parliament the major part whereof is in bondage to the minor part and their Janisaries and the Army freed from these usurping and engaged Grandees who betrayed the Honour and Priviledges of Parliament the Army to their own lusts both would stand right and be serviceable to the setling of a firm lasting Peace under the King upon our first Principles Religion Laws and Liberties which are now so far laid by that whosoever will not joyn with the Grandees in subverting them is termed a Malignant as heretofore he that would not adhere to the Parliament in supporting them was accounted so that the definition of a Malignant is turned the wrong side outward The body of the Parliament and Army in the midst of these distempers is yet healthy sound serviceable my endeavour is therefore to play the part of a friendly Physitian and preserve the body by purging peccant humors Were the Army under commanders and officers of better Principles who had not defiled their fingers with publick monies their consciences by complying with and cheating all interests King Parliament People City and Scots for their own private ends I should think that they carried the Sword of the Lord and of Gideon but clean contrary to the Image presented to Nebuchadnezzar in a dream the head and upper parts of this aggregate body are part of Clay part of Iron the lower parts of better metall I cannot reform I can but admonish God must be both the Aesculapius and Prometheus and amend all and though we receive never so many denials never so many repulses from him let us take heed how we vote even in the private corners of our hearts no Addresses no Applications to Him Let us take heed of multiplying sins against God lest he permit our Schismatical Grandees to multiply Armies and Forces upon us to war against Heaven as well as against our Religion Laws Liberties and Properties upon earth and keep us and our estates under the perpetual bondage of the Sword which hath been several ways attempted in the Houses these 2 last weeks both for the raising and keeping of a new Army of 30000. or 40000. men in the seven Northern Associate Counties upon established pay besides this Army in the South and also for the raising of men in each County of England and all to be engrossed into the hands of his Excellency and such Commanders and Officers as he shall set over them and this work may chance be carried on by the Grandees of Derby-house and the Army if not prevented for the Generall notwithstanding this power was denyed him in the House of Commons hath sent warrants into most Counties to raise Horse and Foot yea to that basenesse of Slavery hath our Generall and Army with their under-Tyrants the Grandees brought us that although themselves did heretofore set the rascality of the Kingdom on work in great multitudes especially the Schismaticall party to clamour upon the Parliament with scandalous Petitions and make peremptory demands to the Houses destructive to the Religion Laws Liberties and Properties of the Land and the very foundation of Parliaments to which they extorted what answers they pleased and got a generall vote That it was the undoubted right of the Subject to Petition and afterwards to acquiesce in the wisedome and justice of the two Houses Yet when upon 16 of May 1648. the whole County
continued in pay for safety of this Kingdom and some of them to be sent for Ireland for which purpose they borrowed 200000 l. of the City being the same sum which disbanded the Scots and for the rest of their Arrears they were to have Debenters and Security without all exceptions such terms of advantage as no other disbanded Souldiers have had the like neither are these like to attain to again so that they have brought the Souldiers into a loss as well as into a labyrinth their continuing in arms without nay against lawful Authority being a manifest act of Treason and Rebellion and so it is looked upon by the whole Kingdom nor can the Parliaments subsequent Ordinances which all men know to be extorted by force as hereafter shall appear help them To the passing of this Ordinance Cromwels Protestation in the House with his hand upon his brest In the presence of Almighty God before whom he stood that he knew the Army would disband and lay down tbeir Arms at their door whensoever they should command them conduced much this was maliciously done of Cromwel to set the Army at a greater distance with the Presbyterian Party and bring them and the Independent party neerer together he knew the Army abominated nothing more than Disbanding and returning to their old Trades and would hate the Authors thereof 8. Agitators raised by Cromw And at the same time when he made these protests in the House he had his Agitators Spirits of his and his Son Ireton's conjuring up in the Army 9. The beginning of the project to purge the Houses though since conjured down by them without requital to animate them against the major part of the House under the notion of Royalists a Malignant party and Enemies to the Army to engage them against Disbanding and going for Ireland and to make a Traiterous Comment upon the said Ordinance 10. The Army put into mutiny against the Parliament wherby Cromwell monopolizeth the Army to demand an Act of Indemnity and relie upon the advice of Judge Jenkins for the validity of it and to insist upon many o●her high demands some private as Souldiers some publique as States-men Cromwell having thus by mutinying the Army against the Parliament made them his own and monopolized them as he did formerly his Brew-house at Ely which he might easily do 11. Cromwel's family in the Army having before-hand filled most of the chief Officers in the Army with his own kindred allyes and friends of whose numerous family 12. Cromwel and Ireton usurp Offices in the Army Lievt Col. Lilburn gives you a list in one of his Books he now flies to the Army doubting his practises discoverd he might be imprisoned where he and Ireton assuming Offices to themselves acted without Commission having not only been ousted by the self-denying Ordinance if it be of any power against the godly but also their several Commissions being then expired and Sir Thomas Fairfax having no authority to make General Officers as appears by his Commission if he make any account of it and therefore Sprig alias Nathaniel Fines in his Legend or Romance of this Army called Anglia Rediviva sets down two Letters sent from Sir Thomas Fairfax to the Speaker William Lenthal one to desire Cromwel's continuance in the Army another of thanks for so long forbearing him from the House see Ang. Red. p. 10 11 29. which needed not had he been an Officer of the Army And now both of them bare-faced and openly joyn with the Army at Newmarket in trayterous Engagements Declarations Remonstrances and Manifesto's and Petitions penn'd by Cromwel himself were sent to some Counties to be subscribed against supposed Obstructors of justice and Invaders of the Peoples Liberties in Parliament and the Army at Newmarket and Triplo-Heath prompted to cry justice justice against them and high and treasonable demands destructive to the fundamental priviledges of Parliament were publickly insisted upon many of which for quietnesse sake and out of compassion to bleeding Ireland were granted yet these restless spirits hurried on to further designs made one impudent demand beget another and when by Letters and otherwise they had promised That if their then present demands were granted they would there stop and acquiesce yet when they seemed to have done they had not done but deluded and evaded all hopes of Peace by mis-apprehension and mis-construction of the Parliaments concessions making the mis-interpretations of one grant the generation of another demand so that almost ever since the Parliament hath nothing else to do but encounter this Hydra and roll this stone Having thus debauched the Army Securing Oxford plundring the King from Holdenby he plotted in his own Chamber the securing the Garison Magazine and Train of Artilery at Oxford and surprizing the Kings person at Holdenby which by his Instrument Coronet Joyce with a commanded party of Horse he effected and when Joyce giving Cromwel an account of that action told him He had now the King in his power well replied Cromwel I have then the Parliament in my Pocket O insolent Slave O slavish English thus to suffer your King and Parliament together with your Wives and Children Religion Laws Liberties and Properties to be Captivated by so contemptible a Varlet If our Noble Ancestors who vindicated their Liberties and got Magna Charta by the Sword shall look down from Heaven and see their Posterity so cowardly resign them to a handfull of bloody cheating Shismaticks they will not own us but take us for Russian Slaves French Peasants and cry out that we are a Bastard brood Servi natura born for bondage yet afterwards having recourse to his usual familiarity with Almighty God Cromwel used his Name to protest his ignorance and innocence in that businesse both to the King and Parliament adding an execration upon his Wife and Children to his protestation yet Joyce is so free from punishment that he is since preferred and his Arrears paid by their means and though both Houses required the Army to send his Royal Person to Richmond to be there left in the hands of the Parliaments Commissioners whereby both Kingdoms might freely make addresses to him for they had formerly excluded and abused the Scots Commissioners contrary to the law of Nations and Votes of both Houses and yet then granted free access to the most desperate persons of the Kings Party yet they could obtain no better answer from these Rebellious Saints than That they desired no place might be proposed for his Majesties residence nearer London Manifesto of the Army June 27. 1647 than where they would allow the Quarters of the Army to be This was according to their old threats of marching up to London frequently used when any thing went contrary to their desires they knew what dangerous and troublesome guests we should find them here How much is this Army degenerated since Cromwel and his demure white-livered Son-in-law Ireton poysoned their
manners with new principles Anglia Rediviva p. 247. tells us that about Woodstock private overtures were made by some from Court for receiving his Majesty who was minded to cast himself upon the Army but such was their faithfulness in that point that conceiving it derogatory to the honour and power of Parliament for his Majesty to wave that highest Court and address himself to any others and therefore inconsistent with their trust and duty being servants of the State they certified the Parliament thereof and understanding it to be against their sense also they absolutely refused to be tampered with Oh how faithful then how perfidious and Cromwellized are they now let their frequent tampering with the King and His Party to the amazement of the Kingdom and the abusing of the King testifie Read Putney Projects written by a considerable Officer of the Army and a friend to Cromwel though not to his false practices 14. Their project to keep the Parliament in Wardship Having thus gotten the King the first and most visible legal authority of England into their possession their next design is to get the Parliament the second legal authority of England into their power 15. Purging the Houses again This could not be effected but by purging the two Houses of Presbyterian Members especially the most active and such as had laboured their disbanding that an Independent Parliament and Army might govern the Kingdom In order to which design they sent to the House of Commons in the name of Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army 16. Accusing the 11. Members a general and confused Charge of High Treasons and other mis-demeanours against eleven Members for things done for the most part in the House and many of the principal such as the House had long before examined and acquitted them of and such as the whole Kingdom knows Cromwel and Ireton to be apparently guilty of as Trucking with the King c. One cheif Article insisted upon in the Charge was That by their power in the House they caused the Ordinance for Disbanding this Army to pass Here you see where the shooe wrings them This Charge was not subscribed by any informer that ingaged to make it good or else to suffer punishment and make the House and the parties accused reparations as by the Stat. 25. Ed. 3. c. 4. 27. Ed. 3. c. 18. 38. Ed. 3. c. 9. 17. R. 2. c. 6. 15. H. 6. c. 4. but especially by 31. H. 6. c. 1. concerning Jack Cade which comes nearest this case ought to be and they professed in the 2. 3. 4. Article of their Charge That they were dis-obliged and discouraged from any further engagement in the Parliament service or Irelands preservation And demanded the House should forthwith suspend the impeached Members from any longer sitting and acting Whereupon the House after full debate in a full and free Parliament Resolved June 25. 1647. That by the Laws of the Land no judgment could be given for their suspention upon that general Charge before particulars produced and proofs made Yet the Army which had now learned only to acquiesce in their own prudence and justice insolently threatned to march up to Westminster against the Parliament 17. Threats to march up to London in case the said 11 Members were not suspended and courted the City of London to sit Newters 18. London solicited to fit Newters and let them work their will with the Parliament The 11. impeached Members therefore modestly withdrew to free the House from such danger as they might incur by protecting them as in Justice and Honour they were bound to do After this the Army sent in their particular Charge and libellously published it in print by their own Authority To which the 11. Members sent in and published their Answer Upon which there hath been no prosecution because they pretend first to settle the Kingdom b●t if they stay till these fellows have either authority will or skill to settle the Kingdom they shall not need to make ready for their tryal till Dooms-day Here you have a whole Army for Accusers and the chief Officers of the Army being Members of the House not only accusers but parties Witnesses and Judges and carrying the Rules of Court and Laws by which they judge in their Scabards And the Charge of Impeachment such as all men know mutatis mutandis are more suitable to Cromwells and Iretons actions than the accused Parties If the proceeding in the Kings name against the 5 Members mentioned in The exact Collection part 1. p. 38. were Voted A Trayterous design against King and Parliament and the arresting any of them upon the Kings Warrant an Act of publick enmity against the Common wealth How much more Treasonable were these proceedings and the Armies March towards London to enforce them and their arresting Anthony Nichols having the Speakers Passe and leave of the House Colonel Burch being upon service of the Parliament going for Ireland and Sir Samuel Luke resting quiet in his own house 19. The first occasion of quarrel against the City Whilst these things were acting Cromwel finding he could not have his will upon the Parliament but that he must make the City of London who had denied the neutrality his Enemies cast about how to cheat the Country people of their affections for to have both City and Country his Enemies in the posture his Army was then in 20. Courting and cheating the Country and all other interest to lull them a sleep till the Grandees had wrought their will upon the City and Houses was dangerous he therefore by many Printed Books and Papers spread all England over by his Agitators and by some Journey-men Priests whose Pulpits are the best Juglers boxes to deceive the simple Absolom-like wooeth them to make loud Complaints of the pressures and grievances of the People to neglect the King and the Parliament and make Addresses to the Army as their only Saviours the Arbitrators of Peace Restorers of our Laws Liberties and Properties Setlers of Religion Preservers of all just interests pretended to settle the King in his just Rights and Prerogatives to uphold the Privileges of Parliament 21. Petitions to the Army and for the Army establish Religion to reform and bring to account all Committees Sequestrators and all others that had defiled their fingers with publique money or goods To free the people from that all devouring Excise and other Taxes to redresse undue elections of Members To relieve Ireland Things impossible to be performed by an Army and now totally forgotten so that they have only accepted of their own private demands as Souldiers That the Parliament should own them for their Army Establish pay for them put the whole Militia of this Kingdom and Ireland both by Sea and Land into their Hands and Vote against all opposite Forces But they are now become the only Protectors of all corrupt Committee-men Sequestrators Accomptants to the State and all other
within thirty miles of London 34. Members Engagement with the Army The Army to countenance their Rebellion draw the two Speakers and fugitive Members to sit in consultation and pass Votes promiscuously with the Council of War in the nature of a Parliament and to sign an Engagement dat 4. August to live and die with Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army under his command affirming therein that generally throughout their sense agreeth with the Declaratitn of Sir Tho. Fairfax and his Council of War shewing the grounds of their present advance towards the City of London In which Declaration the Council of the Army take upon them to be supreme Judges over the Parliament Telling you who of the two Houses they hold for persons in whom the publick trust of the Kingdom remaineth and by whose advise they mean to govern themselves in managing the weighty affairs of the Kingdom They declare against the late choice of a new Speaker by some Gentlemen at Westminster And that as things now stand there is no free nor legal Parliament sitting being through the violence 26. July suspended That the Orders and Votes c. passed 29. July last and all such as shall passe in this assembly of some few Lords and Gentlemen at Westminster are void and null and ought not to be submitted unto Behold here not only a power without the Parliament Houses judging of the very essence of a Parliament and the validity of their resolutions but usurping to themselves a negative Voice which they deny to the King and yet a Schismatical faction in the 2 Houses complying with them and betraying and prostituting the very being Honour and all the fundamental rights and privileges of this and all future Parliaments to an Army of Rebels who refuse to obey their Masters and disband This Engagement so over-leavened the army that their brutish General sent forth Warrants to raise the Trained Bands of some Counties to march with him against the City and both Houses although Trained Bands are not under any pay of the Parliament and therefore not under command of the General by any Order or Ordinance But what will not a Fool in authority do when he is possessed by Knaves Miserable man His Foolery hath so long waited upon Cromwell's and Ireton's knavery 35. The City send Commissioners to the Army Fowks Gibs and Estweck by whom they are betrayed that it is not safe for him now to see his folly and throw by his Cap with a Bell and his Bable The Earl of Essex died so opportunely that many suspected his death was artificiall Yet the City were so desirous of Peace that they sent Commissioners sundry times to the Army to mediate an Accord Who could obtain no more equal terms of Agreement than that They should yeeld to desert both Houses and the impeached Members Call in their Declaration newly Printed and published Relinquish the Militia Deliver up all their Forts and Line of Communication to the Army together with the Tower of London and all the Magazines and arms therein Disband all their Forces Turn all the Reformadoes out of the Line Withdraw all their guards from the Houses Receive such Guards of Horse and Foot within the Line as the Army should appoint to guard the Houses Demolish their works suffer the whole Army to march in triumph through the City as Conquerours of it and the Parliament and as they often give out of the whole Kingdome tearms which they might have had from the great Turk had he sate down before them and broken ground All which was suddenly and dishonourably yeelded to and executed according by such an Army as was not able to fight with one half of the City had they been united But they are the Devils seed-men and have sown the Cockle of Heresies and Scism so abundantly in City and Country especially amongst the more beggarly sort that these men joyning Principles and interests with the Army weaken the hands of all opponents They often brag that they made a civil march free from Plunder I Answer they neither durst nor could do otherwise their Souldiers being ill armed and so few that they were not able to keep stands in the streets and keep the Avenues while their Fellows dispersed to Plunder Charles 8. with a far greater and more Victorious Host durst not offer violence to the far less● City of Florence when Signior Capona put an affront upon him in the Town-house Bidding him beat his drums and he would ring their Bells 36. The fugitive Members returned Upon the 6. of August 1647. The General brought the fugitive Speakers and Members to the Houses with a strong Party who might have returned sooner without a Guard had not their own crimes and designs hindred them the two Palaces filled with armed guards double Files clean through Westminster hall up the stairs to the House of Commons and so through the Court of Requests to the Lords House and down stairs again into the old Palace The Souldiers looking scornfully upon many Members that had sat in the absence of the Speaker and threatning to cut some of their throats And all things composed to so ridiculous a terrour as if they would bespeak without speaking the absence of those Members that sat placed the Speakers in the Chairs without Vote out of which they had been justly Voted for deserting their calling where the General was placed in a Chair of State enough to make a fool of any man that was not fit for it and received special thanks for his service from both Speakers And in the second place a day of thanksgiving was appointed to God I think for his patience in not striking these Atheistical Saints with thunder and lightning for making him a stale to their premeditated villanies Here Sir Thomas Fairfax with a breath and before any man that was not privy to the design could recover out of his amazement was made Generalissimo of all the Forces and Forts of England and Wales to dispose of them at his pleasure Constable of the Tower of London The common Souldiers Voted one moneths gratuity besides their pay the Commons being in good case to give gifts before they pay debts left to the discretion of the General to set what Guards he pleased upon the two Houses Whereby you may perceive in what unequal condition those Members that did not run away with the Speaker do now sit after so many reiterated threats of the General against them in his printed Papers After this the General Lieutenant General 37. The Armies march in Triumph through the City with other subsequent Acts. Major General Skippon heretofore Waggoner to Sir Francis Pere and one that hath got well by serving the City and the whole Army with the Train of Artillery marched through London in so great pomp and Triumph as if they would have the People understand that the Authority of the Kingdom in whose hands soever it remains in these doubtfull times must
that there is a natural purging a natural phlebotomy belonging to Politique as well as to Natural bodies and that some good humors are always evacuated with the bad yet I cannot but deplore what I have observed That the honestest and justest men on both sides such as if they have done evil did it because they thought it good such as were carried aside with specious pretences and many of them seduced by Pulpit-devils who transformed themselves into Angels of light have always fared worse than other men as if this difference between the King and Parliament were but a syncretismus or illusion against honest men nay I do further foresee that in the period and closing up of this Tragedy they will fare worst of all because they have not taken a liberty to inrich themselves with publique spoils and fat themselves by eating out the bowels of their mother but are grown lean and poor by their integrity whereby being disabled to buy friendship in the dayes of Trouble they will be put upon it to pay other mens reckonings When Verres was Praetor of Sicily he had with wonderfull corruptions pillaged that Province and at the same time the Praetor of Sardinia being sentenced for depeculating and Robbing that Province Timarchides Verres Correspondent at Rome writ a very anxious Letter to him giving him warning of it But Verres in a jolly humour answered him That the Praetor of Sardinia was a fool and had extorted no more from the Sardinians than would serve his own turn but himself had gathered up such rich booties amongst the Sicilians that the very overplus thereof would dazle the eyes of the Senate and blind them so that they should not see his faults Such I foresee will be the lot of the more just and modest men who shall be guilty because they were fools as the other sort shall be innocent because they were knaves Whatsoever befalls you clear and innoxious soules be not ashamed be not affraid of your integrity if this Kingdom be a fit habitation for honest men God will provide you a habitation here if it be not capable of honesty God will take you away from the evils to come and pour out all the Vials of his wrath on this totally and universally corrupted Nation this incurable people Qui nec vitia sua nec eorum remedia ferre potest for my own part if I am not such already I hope God will make me such a man Quem neque pauperies neque mors neque vincula terrent and if Moses in an heroick zeal to draw a remission of the peoples sin from God desired to be blotted out of his Book the Book of Life and St. Paul to be Anathema for his Brethren why should not I with relation to my self and submission to Christ say oportet unum mori pro populo it is fit one man die for the people and devote my self to death for my Country as the family of the Decii in ancient Rome were wont to do I have read and admired their examples why not imitate them is it because as Machiavel saith The Christian Religion doth too much break enfeeble and cowardise the spirit of man by persecuting and subduing nature by denying her due Liberty and tying her to be more passive than active At facere pati fortia Romanum imo Christianum est or is it because in this generall deluge of sinne and corruption a publique spirit and excellency in virtue is accounted a degree of madness or is it because of the corrupt judgement of these times which makes a man more infamous for his punishment than for his sin and therefore Heroick acts are out of fashion the circumstances and ceremonies of Death are more taken notice of than Death it self these follies weigh not with me Sublimis an humi putrescam parvi refert The Thief upon the Crosse found a ready way to Heaven How much more an honest man Many a man out of Prison steps into Heaven no man out of Paradise ever found the way thither Salebrosa sit via modo certa modo expedita altè succinctus ad iter me accingo THe Premises considered I do here in the name and behalf of all the free Commons of England declare and protest that there is no free nor legal Parliament sitting in England but that the two Houses sit under a visible actual and an horrid force of a mutinous Army and of a small party of both Houses conspiring and engaged with the Army to destroy expell and murder with false Accusations and Blank and Illegal Impeachments and prosecutions the rest of their fellow Members who sate in Parliament doing their duty when the two Speakers with a small company of Members secretly fled away to the Army and sate in Council with them contriving how to enslave King Parliament City and Kingdom and how to raise Taxes at their pleasure which they share amongst themselves and their party under the name and title of the Godly the Saints and afterwards they brought the Army up to London against the Parliament and City in hostile manner a design far exceeding the Plot of Jermine Goring c. to bring up the Northern Army to London to over-awe the Parliament I do farther protest that the two Houses have sate under the said force ever since the sixth of August 1647. and therefore all they have done and all they shall do in the condition they sit in is void and null in Law ab initio by their own doctrine and judgement included in their Ordinance of the 20. of August last whereby they null and void ab initio all Votes Orders c. passed from the 26. July 1647. to the 6. August following Arguments against all accommodation and Treaties between the City of LONDON and the ingaged Grandees of the Parliament and Army 1 IT will never be safe nor honourable for so great a City to accommodate and joyn interest with a conspiring Party that by frequent violations of their faith and duty have inslaved King Parliament City and Kingdom and broken the Faith of this Nation given to the Scots in the large Treaties and in the National Covenant 2. By accommodating with them you make all their crimes your own their subtilty being to involve you to joyn with them in defence of their crimes 3. The Scottish quarrel is not against the English Nation but against the treacherous and hypocritical Grandees who by perjuring themselves and falsifying their ingagements both unto Kingdom and Army keeping the Souldiers by false suggestions from disbanding and totally obstructing Irelands relief and also a conspiring party in Parliament who keep them up to make good the aforesaid crimes forcing what Votes they please to passe by over-awing the Parliament Witnesse Cromwels laying his hand upon his Sword and forcing the House to passe those traiterous Votes against the King contrary to their own Consciences Allegiance Protestations Vow and Covenant and to raise Taxes upon the people which
of the Army and Houses of Parliament to purchase their compliance and Votes in all matters agitated in the Houses of Parliament by reason whereof all motions for His Majesties return to his Parliament the first step to our desired Peace have been either totally rejected or by them politickly delayed because Peace would determine both their power and profit 7. The Estates of Delinquents the Lands of Bishops Deans and Chapters designed by several Ordinances for discharge of publique Debts are by the Houses and power of the Army shared and divided amongst themselves while the publique debts be unsatisfied the common Souldier unpayed the mained unrelieved the Widdows and Children of the slain unprovided for and all left burdens to the Commonwealth 8. That the Army consisting of mean ignorant and illiterate men only gilt with hypocrisie divine and civil under pretence of tender Consciences the better to induce and tolerate all Heresies have expelled and supprest all learned Orthodox Divines and Church Government and crying Liberty Liberty have subjected our Persons and Estates to arbitrary Law and tyranny and by Rape imbracing the Legislative power cuckolds the body Politick giving Laws to the whole Kingdom and yet by Petitions and Remonstrances make both Houses father as their own the adulterous issue 9. That this Army assuming to themselves the modelling and settlement both of Church and State at Windsor in April last in their Council did consult these 3. Questions First Whether shall we joyn with the Levellers and new model both Church and State Next Whether with the moderate Party Treat and receive the KING with more qualified and limited Power Thirdly Whether Depose the KING Dis-inherit the PRINCE Crown the DUKE of YORK and appoint a Protector The first was held to promise most of liberty and profit but threatned greatest danger in effecting and difficulty in continuing The second was said to be easiest obtained and continued because nighest to the present frame and constitution already setled but would bring them little of profit and less of Soveraignty The third like Benjamin last in birth but first in the Parents affections was held not difficult to be acted but to be maintained for it would require both the expence of much blood and money and the Kingdom to re-act York and Lancaster under the names of Wales and York To this Lieut. Gen. Cromwel answered It was the better for that would necessitate the continuance of our Army which secures our persons will enforce our reasons make just our demands and facilitate their grant For the bloud that will flow from the cheapveins of Common Souldiers whereof England hath plenty and we will not want For the money London is our bank and from their Purses it shall drain to our Coffers Commissary Ireton L. Gen. Cromwel's Son-in-law said The work was half done for we have already Voted no Addresses to be made to the King and Him guilty of crimes enough to Depose Him and by Imprisoning His Person have fitted Him for a private life and by it taught the people that He is subject to the dispose of both Houses of Parliament whole Ordinances are only powerful by our Swords and therefore our Actions shall be legal by their Vote Further the Prince said he is link'd with his Father in crime and therefore cannot be severed in punishment he hath been General in a Western Army warring as his Father against the Parliament a crime that as it rendred the Father fit to be Deposed so doth it the Son unfit to succeed in the Government And that the descent of the Crown purge not him as it did Hen. 7. let us in the Fathers life time Crown the Duke of York now in our power whose tender years have preserved him innocent and presents him fitter for protection and our design and should any blame our severity towards the King and Prince others will commend our clemency towards the Duke of York Upon the result of this Council L. Gen. Cromwel in the House of Commons tels Mr. Speaker That it was time to set on foot our great design and that such as should not concur in Votes with us be not continued of us The motion being mis-timed and divers of his party absent it was only wondred at by Master Knightly and died with the words The Scene now alters from Westminster to Carisbrook-Castle and the King that could not be removed by Votes must now by Poyson the Actor Col. Hammond Major Rolf c. all Members of the Army yet must we by cursed Excise that insensibly devours the poor by insupportable Monthly Taxes that impoverish the rich contrary to Law and our Allegiance contrary to our Protestation and Covenant inforced upon us we must traiterously maintain and pay this Army that traiterously contrive and endeavour the deposal and murder of our Soveraign Lord the King the subversion of our Protestant Church our Fundamental and known Laws We therefore declare to the World that God blessing us we will with hazard of our lives and fortunes disband and dissipate this Army the Suppressors of the pure Protestant Religion the Imprisoners and would be the Murtherers of their Soveraign Lord the King and grand Oppressors of the Common-wealth then free from Imprisonment our said Soveraign and him God-willing restore to his lawfull Government just Rights and Throne in Parliament this done we shall joyfully and readily deposite our justly assumed Arms and on our knees beg what his Majesty hath often most graciously offered and will undoubtedly grant his most Royal and gracious pardon to all his mis-led Subjects will return to their Allegiance and forward to bring the King back to his own house We therefore hereby earnestly desire and request all loyal and wel-affected Subjects as well Members of both Houses of Parliament as others to be herein aiding and assisting to us First by not recruiting the Forces of the Lord Fairfax Next by withdrawing all aid and assistance from his Army by with-holding Excise and Monthly Taxes allotted for their pay and support and to give us with their prayers such assistance as their Allegiance and opportunity shall advise and we trust that the God that judgeth rightly will crown our loyal action with happy successe and our successe with a glorious peace which is heartily prayed for and shall God willing be resolutely fought for by us His Majecties loyal and faithfull Subjects in Colchester A List of the Names of the Members of the House of Commons Observing which are Officers of the Army contrary to the self-denying Ordinance Together with such summes of Money Offices and Lands as they have given to themselves for service done and to be done against the KING and Kingdom Corrected and augmented Note Reader that such as have this mark * comming immediately before their Names are Recruiters illegally elected by colour of the new Seal the power of the Army and voices of the Souldiers and are unduly returned and serve accordingly The first Century 1. WIlliam Lenthall
of this Parliament and all Souldiers are engaged also by their own Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals to defend assert and vindicate with their Lives and Fortunes the Person Authority Title of our aforesaid Lawful KING and Suprem Governour the undoubtful Heire of all his late Fathers Dominions CHARLS the Second by the Grace of God King of Great Britaine France and Ireland c. against all opposites and pretended Authorities whatsoever unlesse they will be guilty of the fowlest sinnes of Treason Rebellion Perjury and Perfidiousnesse against their God their King and Countrey and of prostituting the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Land their Wives Children and Estates to the lusts of an Armed Faction usurping a farre more Arbitrary and Tyrannical Power over our Consciences Persons Liberties and Estates then ever was known in England before or then is now used by the Russe Turk or Tartar or any the most enslaving and lawlesse Tyrants under Heaven An Exhortatory CONCLUSION to the English NATION Compare the Date of the K. Commissions with those of the Parliament and their Declarations on both sides TO conclude the series of Affaires and Action on both Parties especially of late rightly compared it appeareth by the sequel That KING CHARLES the First from the beginning took up Defensive Armes to maintain Religion Lawes Liberties and the Antient fundamental Being of Parliaments and this Kingdome and that there alwayes was and now especially is a predominant Faction in Parliament notwithstanding their frequent Declarations Remonstrances Petitions Protestations Covenant and Votes to the contrary conspiring with a Party especially of Commissioned Officers of the Army without the Houses to change the Fundamental Lawes and Government of the Church and Common-wealth to usurp into a few hands the Supreme Authority to enslave the People with an Oligarchical Military and Arb trary Government to raise what illegal Taxes they please to establish their Tyranny and enrich themselves and their Party to oppresse consume and devoure all Men of a judgement contrary to their Interest to Murder them by new declared arbitrary Treasons contrary to the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. for ascertaining Treasons to Disfranchise them of their birth-rights and make them Adscriptios Glebae Villains Regardante to their owne Lands which the Nobility Gentry and Yeomanry plough sowe and reap whilest Brewers Dray-men and Coblers eate drink and play upon the sweat of their Labours and are the Usufructuaries of their Estates All which they have lately brought to passe wherefore let all true Engl shmen as becomes good Christians good Patriots and gallant Men claim their Birth-rights and with one voice cry out 1. We will not Change our Ancient setled and well-approved Lawes to which we are sworne 2. We will not Change our Ancient and well-tempered Monarchy to wh ch we are sworne 3. We will not change our old Religion for New Lights and Inventions 4. We will not subject our selves to an eighth part of one Estate or House of Parliament sitting under a force and having expelled two hundred and fifty of their Fellows more Righteous then themselves by force and usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority 5. We will not be subjected to a new Supreme Authority usurped by fourty ambitious covetous Tyrants arrogating to themselves to be a Councel of State and designed to supply the room of Parliaments under what name or title soever they shall mask themselves 6. We will not submit our selves to a Military Government or Councel of Officers 7. We must and will have A KING See the Star of Recognition 1. Iac. and the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy and The KING whom the Lawes of God and this Land have designed to us we being by the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy sworne to beare faith and true Allegiance to KING CHARLES the First his lawful Heires and Successors Hic telum infigam moriarque in vulnere Postscript REader at the latter end of my First part of The History of Independency I have presented to thy consideration some General Conclusions arising out of the Premises the same Conclusions does naturally arise out of the Premises of this Second Part of the History and do as aptly serve to illustrate this Second as that First part wherefore to that First Part I send thee for opening thy understanding When our old Lawes run again into their Ancient Channel and the Sword of Murder is sheathed and the Sword of Justice drawn the Author engageth to publish his Name and Apology and shew what he hath done and suffered for the Parliament and Kingdom THE END TO THE READER READER having spoken to thee in the First Part I might have forborn thee in this Second did I not feare to seem guilty of the fullennesse and malignity of these times The subject-matter of my Book is a Combination or Faction of Pseudo-Polititians and Pseudo-Theologicians Hereticks and Schismaticks both in Divinity and Policy who having sacrificed to their Fancies Lusts Ambition and Avarice both their God and Religion their King and Country our Laws Liberties and Properties all duties Divine and Humane are grown so far in love with their prosperous Sins as to entitle God himself to be Father and Author of them from whose written Word and revealed Will held forth to us in the Scriptures as the only North Pole and Cynosure of our Actions where they find no warrant for their doing they appeal to the secret Will and Providence of God to which they most Turkishly and Heathenishly ascribe all their enormities only because they succeed and from that Abysse of Gods Providence draw secondary principles of Necessity and Honest Intentions to build the Babel of their confused Designes and Actions upon not considering that wicked Men perform the secret Will a God to their Damnition as good Men do the known Will of their Father to their Salvation If a Man lie sick to death and his Son wish him dead this is Sin in the Son although his desire concur with the Secret Will of God because the Son ought to desire the preservation of his Fathers life whereto the Will of God revealed in his Word obligeth him and vivendum secundùm Praecepta non secundùm Decreta Dei The secret Will and Providence of God can be no rule and law of our Actions because we know it not nor can search into it without presumption We must not therefore altum sapere think our selves too wise and well-gifted to tie our selves to the Scripture of God and lust after Revelations and Inspirations expecting God should rain Bread from Heaven for us Manna Exod 16.4 but be wise unto Sobriety But prosperum scelus virtus vocatur Thus casting off the written Word of God unless where by an enforced Interpretation they can squeeze Atheisme and Blasphemy out of it as they do somtimes rack Treason Murder and Non-sense out of our Laws and Parliament-Priviledges conducible to their ends they insensibly cast off God himself and make themselves both the
strong armed Guards of Horse and Foot upon them without and against their Order is the highest and most detestable force and breach of Priviledge and Freedom ever offered to any Parliament of England and that all Acts Ordinances Votes and proceedings of the said House made since the 6. of Decemb. aforesaid or hereafter to be made during our restraint and forcille seclusion from the House and the continuance of the Armies force upon it are no way obligatorie but void and null to all intents and purposes And that all Contrivers of Actors in and Assistants to this unparallel'd force and treasonable armed violence are open Enemies to and professed Subverters of the Priviledges Rights and Freedom of Parliament and Disturbers of the pace and settlement of the Kingdom and ought to be proceeded against as such and that all Members of Parliament and Commoners of England by their solemn Covenant and dutie under paine of deepest perjurie and eternall infamie are obliged unanimouslie to oppose and endeavour to their utmost power to bring them to exemplarie and condigne punishment for this transcendent offence tending to the dissolution of the present and subversion of all future Parliaments and of the fundamentall Government and Laws of this Realm All which we held it our duties to declare and publish to the world for fear our stupid silence should give any tacit consent or approbation to this most detestable crime and make us guiltie of betraying the Priviledges Freedom and Honour of this Parliament to our perpatuall reproach and the prejudice of all succeeding Parliaments Dated at Westminster Decemb. 11. 1648. 27. The tame Lords and insolent Commons pass and print a Declaration against the said Declaration The said solemn Protestation of the secured Members being complained of was sufficiently barked at in the House of Commons and the Lords fell a barking at it too for company and at last that they might confute it with Authority instead of Reason both Houses passed this following declaration against it The Declaration of the Lords and Commons Against the first Declaration of the secured and secluded Members THe Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament taking into their consideration a printed Paper entituled A solemn Protestation of the Imprisoned and secluded Members c. wherein amongst other things it is Declared That all Acts Ordinances Votes and proceedings of the House of Commons made since the 6. of this instant Decemb. or hereafter to be made during their restraint and forcible seclusion from the House The present visible Government is the Power of the Sword in the hands of Rebels The fundamental Government of this Kingdom is destroyed by the Faction remaining in the House of Commons by their Acts For abolishing Kingly Government The House of Peers their putting down Trials by Jury of 12. men and setting up illegal High Courts of Justice their usurping the Supream Authority their m●k●ng Treason an Arbitrary crime their erecting a Councel of State o● Hogens mogens forty Tyrants in lieu of one King their altering the stile of Writs and Legal Proceedings c. Sentence given before any person accused or heard to speak for himself Oh the brutish understanding of men whose sins and fears have intoxicated their wits and the continuance of the Armies force upon it are no way obligatory but void and null to all intents and purposes The said Lords and Commons do thereupon judge and declare the said printed Paper to be false scandalous and seditious and tending to destroy the visible and fundamental Government of this Kingdome And do therefore order and ordain the said printed Paper to be suppressed and that all persons whatsoever that have had any hand in or given consent unto the contriving framing printing or publishing thereof shall be adjudged and hereby are adjudged uncapable to bear any Office or have any place of trust or authoritie in this Kingdome or to sit as Members of either House of Parliament And do further order and ordain That every Member of either House respectively now absent upon his first coming to sit in that House whereof he is a Member for the manifestation of his innocencie shall disavow and disclaim his having anie hand in or given consent unto the contriving framing printing or publishing of the said paper or the matter therein contained The 12. and 13. Decem●er 28. The Conventicle of Commons repeat ex tempore in a thin House under a force the Votes deliberately passed in a full and free House the Commons that they might purge their Journal Books of all State-Heresies as well as their House of all State-Hereticks voted this Index expurgatorius which in their own canting language I here present to you 1. Resolved c. That the Vote of this House Jan. 3. 1647. for revoking the Order Sept. 9. 1647. for suspending Commissary Lion●l Copley from being a Member of this House is of dangerous consequence and tending to the destruction of the justice and peace of the Kingdom and is hereby repealed The like for the rest of the Impeached Members mutatis mutandis 2. Resolved c. That the Vote of the House June 30. 1648. whereby this House did concur with the Lords for opening of a way to the Treaty with His Majesty for a safe and well-grounded Peace That the Votes Jan. 3. 1647. forbidding all Addresses to be made to or from the King be taken off was highly dishonourable to the proceedings of Parliament and apparently destructive to the good of the kingdom sure they meant the kingdom of the Saints They likewise by four several Votes revived the said 4. Votes Jan. 3. for no Addresses in terminis 3. Resolved c. That the Vote Iuly 28. 1648. That a Treaty be bad in the Isle of Wight with the King in person by a Committee appointed by both Houses upon the Propositions presented to him at Hampton-Court was highly dishonourable and apparently destructive to the good of the kingdome The House adjourned Good Boyes they can say their Lessons well and apace too when the Army whips them on they will shortly have a jubilee of play-days for their pains 40 or 50 new Lights snuffed by the Councel of War can better discover what is dishonourable and apparently destructive to their own kingdom then 340. or 244 could do at other times If you ask what Debates they had they could have none being now freed from the contradiction of sinners being all Birds of a feather taught the same tune by the same Masters and singing in the same cage 29. A Protest to be entred against the Votes That the Kings Grants were a ground for a settlement a Touch-stone of I. Gourdons See the Order Dec. 5. 1648. Yet the unanimous recalling those Votes was not thought by those that think one thing and say another a sufficient Test all were confidently for them that voted with them wherefore godly John Gourdon a Fellow that spits venome as naturally as a Toad moved That
let the Saints now voting in the House examine their pockets for I am confident their consciences had no hand in the businesse Resolved c. That the matters contained in these Papers are destructive to the beings of Parliaments and to the fundamental Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That a Letter should be sent to the General and those Papers inclosed together with the Vote of this House upon them and that he be desired to examine the proceedings of this businesse in the Army and returne an Account thereof to this House The General and Councel of Warre in pursuance of this Vote 37. The said Agreement damned by the General and Councel of War and a Souldier shot by sentence for promoting it condemned one of the Agitators who promoted it and shot him to death at Ware you see what it is to do a thing unseasonably this Designe of the Army and their Party was not yet ripe wherewith they acquainted the House yet they kept in the same fire in the City still where some of their Confederates 23. of the same Novem. sent the same Agreement c. inclosed in a Letter with a Petition into the House of Commons whereupon the House giving thanks to the General for the execution done at Ware and desiring him to examine that businesse to the bottome unanimously passed these Votes Die Martis 23. Nov. 1647. A Petition directed to the Supreme Authority of England 38. The said Agreement condemned by the House a second time 23. Nov. 1647. the Commons in Parliament assembled and entituled The humble Petition of many Free-borne People of England sent in a Letter directed to Mr. Speaker and opened by a Committee thereunto appointed was read the first and second time Resolved c. That this Petition is a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the People formerly adjudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamentall Government of the Kingdome c. Resolved c. That Tho. Prince Cheese-monger and Sam. Chidley be forthwith committed Prisoners to the Prison of the Gate-house there to remaine Prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the People formerly adjudged by this House destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamental Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Jeremy Ives Tho. Taylor and Will Larner be forthwith committed Prisoners to the Prison at New-gate c. as last aforesaid in Terminis Afterwards by an Ordinance Decemb. 17. 1647. for Electing Common-Councel-men and other Officers in London they expresly ordained That no Person who hath contrived abetted perswaded or entred into that engagement entituled The Agreement of the People declared to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamental Government of the Kingdome be elected chosen or put into the Office of the Lord Major of the City of London Sheriffe Alderman Deputy of a Ward or Common-Councel-man of the said City or shall have any voice in the election of any such Officers for the space of one whole yeare and be uncapable of any of the said Places yet now these petty Fellowes keep the whole City in awe 39. Yet this Agreement since inserted into the Remonstrance of the Army owned by the Generall and Councell of Warre and Nov. 20. 1648. obtruded upon the House These multiplied Votes and Ordinance laid this Agreement of the People asleep until the beginning of November 1648. when to hinder the peace of this Kingdome and reliefe of Ireland the Jesuits and Agitators prosecuted it againe in the Army and inserted it againe verbatim in the Remonstrance of the Army Novemb 20. 1648. to break off the Treaty with the King bring him to capitall punishment and cast the odium of all upon the Parliament And the General and his Councel of Officers though they had formerly shot a Souldier to death for prosecuting it unanimously approved it at Saint Albons November 16. 1648. and obtruded it upon the House the 20. Novemb. and when they found the House so resolute in the Treaty as to proceed they first seized the Person of the King and carried Him to Hurst-Castle as aforesaid and when the House at last closed up the Treaty with this Vote That the Kings Answers to the Propositions of both Houses were a ground for the Houses to proceed upon towards a settlement 40. Why they purged the House They seized upon 41. Members of Parliament secured them and villanously treated them secluded above 160. and frighted away at least 40. or 50. more leaving onely their owne Somerset-house Junto of 40. or 50. thriving Members sitting to unvote in a thin House under a force what had been voted in a full and free House To vote down the Kingly Office and House of Peers to vote the Supreme Authority to be in the People and in the House of Commons as their Representative clean contrary to their three last recited Votes To bring the King to capital punishment before a new invented illegal mixed Court consisting of engaged persons erected for that purpose that hath neither foundation by Prescription nor Law and to erect a Councel or Committee of States out of their number in the nature of Lords States General or Hogen Mogens with an unknown and therefore unlimited Authority to continue in being after the dissolution of this Parllament So farewel Kings Lords and Commons Religion Laws and Liberties and all Votes Declarations Remonstrances Protestation and Covenant made heretofore onely to gull the People and carry on their designe About 19. Decemb. 41. Diverse Lords doe homage to the General and wave their honours divers Lords went to do homage to the General to expresse their good affections to him and their concurrence with him for the Common good and their readinesse to wave their priviledges and Titles if they shall be found burdensome to the liberty of the People and had a gracious nod for their paines About this time the Lords and Commons passed an Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men and Officers in London for the yeare following to this effect 42. An Ordinance to curb the City in electing Officers That no Person that hath been imprisoned or sequestred rightfully or wrongfully or hath assisted the King against the Parliament in the first or second Warre or hath been aiding or assisting in bringing in the Scots Army to invade this Kingdome or did subscribe or abett the treasonable Engagement 1647. or that did ayde assist or abett the late Tumult within the Cities of London and Westminster or the Counties of Kent Essex Middlesex or Surrey shall be elected chosen or put into the Office or Place of Lord Mayor of London Alderman Aldermans Deputy Common-Councel-man or into any office or place of trust within the City for the yeare ensuing or be capable to give
recalling the Lord Lysle from his command there and putting the best part of the said Kingdom and where the Parliament had the strongest footing Munster into the hands of Inchiquine a Native Irish who hath since Revolted from the Parliament hath lately united with the Irish Rebels and with them and Ormond for the King To this we ●ay the Lord Inchiquine came in and brought Munster to the Parliament and preserved their Interest in Ireland in all the heat of their Warres in England when they had little other Interest there and less means to relieve them the Lord Lysle was not recalled from his Command there This Lo went late caried over 160000 l. for which he hath not yet accounted began a quarrell with Inchiqueen and put him into discontent and then returned See the Irish Letters and Papers to the the House in print but his Commission for Lord Lieutenant expiring 15. April 1647. on the 17. April he hoysed sayle for England after the Lord Lysles return for England the Lord Inchiquine did gallant service against the Rebels took many strong Holds from them and won the Battel of Knocke-knowes one of the greatest that ever was gotten of the Rebels The House therefore approved of his behaviour untill 3. April 1648. when the Army having led the way the Lord Inchiquine taking distast thereat by way of imitation began to enter into Engagements and Remonstrances against the Parliament as it was then constituted for which he made the Remonstrances Engagements and Declarations of the Army the Summer before both the cause and precedent as by the printed Relation doth appear 2. Their endeavours to bring in the King upon His own Tearms without satisfaction and security to the Kingdom v●z upon His Message of the 12. of May 1647. and to this end to Disband this Army before any peace made or assured To this we say the House of Commons upon the first notice thereof voted the said Engagement of the 12. of May Treasonable and by Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. put an incapacity upon such Citizens as had any hand in it which evidenceth we were here in a right majority as in other parts of their Paper they take the Votes of the House to prove us a corrupt majority The charge here lying in generall and not fixed upon any particular Concerning Disbanding the Army we say the House voted 8. Regiments of Foot 4. of Horse and 1. of Dragoones to be sent out of the Army for Ireland and resolved to keep 10000. Foot and 5400. Horse under Command of the Lord Fairfax for defence of England This was 1. For Relieving Ireland 2. For easing the heavy pressures of the poor People in England And 3. an honorable employment for the Forces of the Army to prevent such high distempers as have since ensued See my 1. part sect 16. 17. 18. and my said Animadversions pag. 2. neither were they legally impeached See Ardua regni or twelve arduous doubts written in defence of the expulsed Memb and the sa d Members Ans to the Armies Charge 3. That they endeavoured to protect the 11. impeached Members from justice and with them to raise a new Warre To this we say we gave them no other protection than the Laws allowed them For the mispending 200000 l. designed for Ireland we say that 80000 l. thereof was paid to Nicholas Loftus and others for service of Ireland and above 50000 l. to the Treasurers at Warre for the Army which may more reasonably be said to be mis-imployed because the Army had an established pay another way than what the Reformado Officers and Souldiers who obeyed the Orders of the House for Disbanding received who nevertheless pressed upon the House the more earnestly for their Arrears after the Declarations and Remonstrances published by the Army for paying the Arrears of all the Souldiers of England 4. Their countenancing abetting There was a close Inquisition of Godly Cut-throats purposely chosen to examine this Tumult which proceeded illegally and used so much foul play as to accuse men upon characters of their clothes persons yet malice it self could find nothing See my 1. part sect 45 46. to sect 54. Return to sect 2. 5. and partaking with the Tumult of Apprentices and others against both Houses of Parliament To this we say that we wonder they should urge the force offered to the House then which they declared horrid and treasonable to justifie the violence acted upon the House by themselves of a much higher nature This is a meer fiction of the Pen-mans which we do every one of us for our selves respectively deny 5. The holding correspondency engaging and assisting the tumultuous Petitioners last Spring the rebellious Insurrections in Kent the Revolted Ships Prince of Wales with the Scots Army We do every one of us for our selves respectively deny these 6. That when the Army was dispensed and engaged in severall parts c. and many faithfull Members employed abroad upon publique services and others through Malignant Tumults about this City could not with safety attend the House Then the corrupt and Apostating Party taking advantage of these distractions which themselves had caused First recalled in those Members c. Then they recalled those Votes for Non-Addresses and voted a Personall Treaty To this we say that if the proceedings of the Treaty were surreptitiously gotten in a thin House why do they then complain in other parts of their Paper that the majority of the House is corrupt Return to sect 2. 5. there see the true grounds of these Tumults See wh t u●e they make of provid nce in the 1. part of Englands new Chains and formed to serve the Kings corrupt Interest why did they force from the House above 200 Members at once the Counties never expressed so high contempt of the Parliament untill the like had been first done by the Armies quartering upon them And now let us come to that Vote of the House 5. Dec. 1648. That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses are a ground to proceed upon to a settlement of Peace of which they say That though they advanced hither to attend providence for opening some way to avoid the present evils designed and introduce the desired good into the Kingdom yet they said nor acted nothing in relation to the Parliament nor any Member thereof untill by the Vote passed Decemb. 5. they found the corrupt majority so resolvedly bent to compleat their Design in bringing in the King Do they call their threatning Declaration and Remonstrance a saying nothing and their marching up against the House contrary to the Order of the House a doing nothing in relation to the Parliament But by these words it appears that this Vote 5. Decemb. is the very point of that necessity they now relie upon to justifie their force upon the House For before that passed they say They acted nothing c. we must now state the difference between the
enter into Argument and Dispute concerning the Authority of this Court before whom You appear as a Prisoner and are charged as a High Delinquent You may not Dispute the Authority of this Court nor will any Court give way unto it You are to submit to it c. King Vnder favour I do plead for the Liberty of the people of England more then you do and therfore If I should impose a beleefe upon any man without Reasons given it were unreasonable Bradsh Oh Brutish Asinine Kingdome to be Governed by an up-start Authority without use of Reason Sir I must interrupt You You may not be permitted You speak of Law and Reason and there is both against you Sir The Vote of the Commons of England assembled in Parliament is the reason of the Kingdome and they are those that have given You that Law according to which you should have Ruled and Raigned Sir It will be taken notice of that you stand in contempt of the Court and Your contempt will be recorded accordingly King I do not know how a King can be a Delinquent but by all Laws that ever I heard all men may put in Demurrers against any proceedings as Illegall and I do demand that if you deny that you deny Reason Bradsh Over-rule a Demurrer without Argument If a man may not Demurre to the Jurisdiction of any Court that Court may enlarge its bounds and become a Corporation of Tyrants Sir Neither You nor any Man are permitted to Dispute that Point You are concluded You may not demurr to the Jurisdiction of the Court if You do I must let you know that they over-rule Your demurrer they sit here by the Authority of the Commons of England and all Your Predecessours and You are responsible to them King I deny that shew Me one President Bradsh Sir You ought not to interrupt while the Court is speaking to you this point is not to be debated by you if you offer it by way of Demurrer to the Jurisdiction of the Court they have considered of their Jurisdiction they do affirme their own Jurisdiction King I say Sir by your favour That the Commons of England were never a Court of Judicature I would know how they came to be so Bradsh Sir you are not to be permitted to go on in that Speech and these discourses Then the Clerke of the Court read as followeth Charles Stuart King of England you have been accused in the behalfe of the people of England of High Treason and other high crimes the Court hath determined that you ought to answer the same King I will Answer the same so soone as I know by what Authority you do this Bradsh If this be all that you will say then Gentlemen you that brought the Prisoner hither take charge of Him back again King I do require that I may give My Reasons why I did not Answer and give Me time for that Bradsh Sir 'T is not for Prisoners to require King Prisoners Sir I am not an ordinary Prisoner Bradsh The Court have affirmed their Jurisdiction if You will not Answer We shall give order to Record your default King You never heard my Reasons yet Bradsh Sir Your Reasons are not to be heard against the highest Jurisdiction King Shew Me that Jurisdiction where Reason is not to be heard Reasons are not to be heard against a remaining faction of the Commons of England Bradsh Sir we shew it you here the Commons of England and the next time you are brought You will know more of the pleasures of Court and it may be their finall Determination King Shew Me where ever the House of Commons was a Court of Judicature of that kind Bradsh Sergeant take away the Prisoner King Well Sir Remember that the King is not suffered to give in His Reasons for the liberty and freedome of all His Subjects Bradsh Sir You are not to have liberty to use this language how great a Friend You have been to the Lawes and Liberties of the People let all England and the world judge King Sir under favour it was the Liberty Freedome and Laws of the Subject that ever I took defended My selfe with Armes I never took up Armes against the People but for the Laws Bradsh The command of the Court must be obeyed no Answer will be given to the Charge So the King was guarded forth to Sir Robert Cottons and the Court adjourned to the Painted-Chamber Tuesday twelve a Clock 82. The 3d. daies Trial of His Majesty Tuesday January 23. The Court sate againe seventy three Commissioners present The King brought into the Court sits downe Solicit Cook May it please your Lordship my Lord President This is now the third time that by the great grace and favour of the Court the Prisoner hath been brought to the Bar before any Issue joyned in this Case My Lord I did at the first Court exhibite a Charge against Him containing the highest Treason that ever was wrought on the Theater of England That a King of England trusted to keep the Law that had taken an Oath so to do that had Tribute payed Him for that end should be guilty of a wicked Designe to subvert and destroy our Lawes and introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government in defiance of the Parliament and their Authority set up His Sandard for Warre against his Parliament and People and I did humbly pray in behalf of the People of England That he may speedily be required to make an Answer to the Charge but my Lord in stead of making any Answer He did then dispute the Authority of this High Court your Lordship was pleased to give Him a further day to put in His Answer which day being yesterday I did humbly move That He might be required to give a direct and positive Answer either by denying or confessing of it But my Lord He was then pleased to demur to the Jurisdiction of the Court which the Court did then over-rule and command Him to give a direct and positive Answer My Lord besides this great delay of Justice I shall now humbly move your Lordship for speedy Judgement against Him I might presse your Lordship upon the whole That according to the knowne rul●s of the Lawes of the Land that if a Prisoner shall stand contumacious in contempt and shall not put in an Issuable Plea guilty or not guilty of the charge given against him whereby he may come to a faire Triall that by an implicite confession it may be taken pro confesso as it hath been done to those who have deserved more favour than the Prisoner at the Bar hath done But besides my Lord I shall humbly presse your Lordship upon the whole fact You see the emnant ●f the House of Comm. had f●rejudged the King before they ●rected this new Court to sentence him and claime a Jurisdiction as well as a S●preme Authority That the House of Commons the Supreme Authority and
this when that every opinion is freely and clearly heard 2. For the King the Lawes of the Land will freely instruct you and because it concernes My self I will only give you a touch of it 3. For the people and truly I desire their Liberty and Freedom as much as any man whatsoever I must tell you their Liberty and Freedom consists in having such a Government whereby their Lives and Goods may be most their own it lies not in having a Share in the Government that is nothing pertinent to them a Subject and a Soveraign are clean different things and therefore until you restore the People to such a Liberty they will never enjoy themselves Sirs it was for this I now come hither if I would have given way to an Arbitrary sway to have all Lawes changed according to the power of the Sword I needed not to have come here See Sect. 90. and therefore I tell you and I pray God it be not laid to your charge that I am the Martyr of the People c. The House had the Impudence to answer the Dutch Ambassadours that what they had done to the King was according to the Law of the Land They mean that their Lusts are the Laws of the Land for other Law they can shew none This was the effect of his Majesties Speech who shewed much Magnanimity and Christian patience during all the time of His Trial and Death notwithstanding many barbarous affronts put by way of tentation upon Him He had his Head severed from his Body at one stroak the Souldiers and Schismaticks giving a great shout presently Thus this noble Prince a Gentleman sanctified by many afflictions after He had escaped Pistoll Poyson and Pestilent ayre could not escape the more venemous tongues of Lawyers and Pettyfoggers Bra●shaw Cooke Steele Aske and Dorislaus thus the Shepherd is smitten and the Sheep scattered THe said High Court of Justice with the downfall of King CHARLES the I. thereby and in Him of the Regall Government Religion Lawes and Liberties of this ancient Kingdom is Emblematically presented to the Readers view See the Figure before the Title page Presently after this dissolution of the King 94. Proclamations published against proclaiming the King the Commons sent abroad Proclamations into London and all England over reciting That whereas severall pretences might be made to this Crown and Title to the Kingly Office set on foot to the apparent hazard of the publique peace Be it enacted and ordained by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same that no Person whatsoever do presume to proclaime declare publish or any waies to promote Charles Stuart Sonne of the said Charles commonly called Prince of Wales or any other Person to be King or Chief Magistrate of England or Ireland or of any Dominions belonging to them by colour of Inheritance Succession Election or any other claime whatsoever without the free consent of the people in Parliament first had and signified by a particular Act or Ordinance for that purpose any Law Stat Usage or custome to the contrary notwithstanding Who shall judg● when these Fellows will be thought free and when not and whosoever shall contrary to this Act Proclaim c. Shall be deemed and adjudged a Traytor and suffer accordingly 95. A Proclamation privately printed and scattered proclaiming CHARLS the second Notwithstanding which inhibition the 2. February 1648. was printed and scattered about London-streets this following Proclamation * A Proclamation proclaiming CHARLES Prince of Wales King of Great Britaine France and Ireland VVEE the Noblemen Judges Knights Lawyers Gentlemen Freeholders Merchants Citizens Yeomen Seamen and other freemen of England do according to our Allegiance and Covenant by these presents heartily joyfully and unanimously acknowledge and proclaim the Illustrious CHARLES Prince of Wales next heir of the blood Royall to his Father King CHARLES whose late wicked and trayterous murther we do from our souls abominate and all parties consenters thereunto to be by herditary Birthright and lawfull succession rightfull and undoubted King of Great Britaine France and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging And that we will faithfully constantly and sincerely in our severall places and callings defend and maintaine his Royal Person Crown and Dignity with our Estates Lives and last drop of our Bloods against all Opposers thereof whom we do hereby declare to be Traytours and Enemies to his Majesty and his Kingdoms In testimony whereof we have caused these to be published and proclaimed throughout all Counties and Corporations of this Realm the first day of February in the first year of His Majesties Reign God save King CHARLES the Second The fag end of the House of Commons Febr. 1. 1648. 96. A V●te that such Members a● had assented to the Vote 5. Dec shall sit no more others to enter their d s●e●● and disappro all passed a thing they call an Act That such Members as had assented to the Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. That the Kings Concessions were a ground for the House to proceed to a settlement should not be re-admitted to sit as Members such as were then in the House and voted in the negative should first enter their dissent to the said Vote such as were ab●ent should declare their disapprovall before they sit You see the cheating Godly are resolved to keep all to themselves This day their tame Lordships sent a Message to the House of Commons but they were too surly to call the Messengers in 97. The Lords send a Message to the Commons but the messenger not called in the substance of the Message was That their Lordships had appointed 7. of their House to joyn with a proportionable number of Commons to consider of a way how to settle this Nation Munday 5. Febr. 1648. 98. The house of Lords voted down The Commons debated whether they should continue the House of Lords as a Court Judicatory or Consultory onely And the day following they put this Question Whether this House shall take the advise of the House of Lords in the exercise of the Legislative power of the Kingdom in pur●uance of the Votes of this House 4 Janu last This was carried in the Negative by many Voices in farther pursuance of which Vote they farther voted That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose and voted down their Priviledge of being exempt from Arrests yet they graciously condescended they shall be capable of being elected knights of Shires and Burgesses if any will be so mad as to chuse them yet my Lord of Pembroke is as much overjoyed with gay Priviledge as if they had bestowed a new Cap with a Bell and a Bable upon him who will not now conclude that the Votes of this Legislative this supreme piece of the House of Commons is the onely Law and reason of the Land which leads all our Laws
of Names not exceeding 40 to be a Committee of State by Act of the House of Commons This is to pull down one King to whom we owe Allegiance and set up forty Tyrants to whom we owe no Allegiance 104. New Commissions for the Judges whereof six hold and six quit their places Instructions were given by the Commons for drawing new Commissions for the Judges according to the new Antimonarchical stile and way the new Great Seal being now ready a Committee of the House met the Judges about it whereof six agreed to hold upon a Provision to be made by Act of the House of Commons that the Fundamental Laws be not abolished This very provision so made by Act of the Commons beside all their former Votes against Monarchy Peerage altering the stile of Writs coynage of Money c. is it self an abolition of the Fundamental Laws This is but a Fig-leaf to cover their shame Those that held were Of the Kings Bench Mr. Justice Rolls and Judge Jerman of the Common Pleas Mr Justice S. John and Judge Pheasant of the Exchequer Chief Baron Wilde and Baron Yates those which quitted their places and kept their Consciences were Justice Bacon and Justice Brown Sir Tho. Beddenfield Justice Creswel Baron Treaver and Baron Atkins 103. Cyrencester el●ction But the Clerk of the Crown cert fied that between the Commitee of Elections and himself they could not find the Indentures of return the House therefore Ordered That they should sit and do service so they are Burgesses not returned but ordered to sit 8. Febr. The Election of the General and Col. Rich at Cyrencester which never durst see the light before after about 3. years lying dormant and no account made of it is on a sudden reported to the House approved of and the Clerk of the Crown for whom they have not invented a new name yet ordered to mend the return of the Writ at the Bar. * 104. A Declaration That they will keep the Fundamental Laws lives why did they erect the High Court of Justice and do still continue Martial Law liberties why do they press Seamen then properties why do they levie illegal Taxes by Souldiers and continue illegal Sequestrations They likewise passed a Declaration to this purpose that they are fully resolved to maintain and shall and will uphold preserve and keep the Fundamental Laws of this Nation for and concerning the preservation of the lives liberties and properties of the People with all things incident thereunto with the alterations concerning Kings and House of Lords already resolved in this present Parliament Munday February 12. The Commons appointed the Circuits for those Judges that held 105. The Judges Circuits appointed the Benches filled up and their Oaths altered and passed an Act for compleating the Judges of the several Courts filling up the rooms of those that held not with some alterations in their former Commissions and a new Oath to be given them to swear well and truly to serve the Common-wealth in the Office of a Justice of the Upper Bench which all our Laws call the Kings Bench or Common Pleas according to the best of their skill and cunning 106 A new Oath for the Freemen of London and other Co●porations The House passed an Act that the Oath under-written and no other be administred to every Freeman of the City of London at his admission and of all other Cities Burroughs and Towns Corporate YOu shall swear that you will be true and faithfull to the Common-wealth of England and in order thereto you shall be obedient to the just and good Government of the City of London c. 107. An Act to repe●l the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy They passed an Act also to repeale the severall Clauses in the Statute 1. Eliz. 3. Jacob. enjoyning the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy That the said Oathes and all other Oathes of the like nature shall be and are hereby wholly taken away the said Clauses in the said Acts be made void and null and shall not hereafter be administred to any Person neither shall any place or office be void hereafter by reason of the not taking of them or any of them any Law Custome or Statute to the contrary notwithstanding 108. Another Declaration and Protestation of the secured and secluded Members In opposition to these tyrannous destructive illegal and trayterous proceedings of 40. or 50. cheating Schismaticks sitting under the force and promoting the Interests of will and power of the rebellious Councell of Officers in the Army The secured and secluded Members of the House of Commons Declared as followeth * A publike Declaration and Protestation of the secured secluded Members of the House of Commons Against the treasonable and illegall late Acts and proceedings of some few Confederate Members of that dead House since their forcible Exclusion 13. Febr. 1648. WE the secured and secluded Members of the late House of Commons taking into our sad and serious Considerations the late dangerous desperate and treasonable proceedings of some few Members of that House not amounting to a full eighth part of the House if divided into ten who confederating with the Officers and Generall Councell of the Army have forcibly detained and secluded us against the Honour Freedom and Priviledges of Parliament from sitting and voting freely with them for the better setling of the Kingdoms peace and contrary to their Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy their Protestation the Solemne League and Covenant and sundry Declarations and Remonstrances of both Houses to His late Murthered MAIESTY His Heires and Successors the whole Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland and to all forraine States and Nations since our exclusion and forced absence from their Counsels by reason of the Armies force most presumptuously arrogated and usurped to themselves the Title of The Supreme Authority of this Kingdome and by colour and pretence thereof have wickedly and audaciously presumed without and against our privities or consents and against the unanimous Vote of the House of Peers to erect a High Court of Justice as they terme it though never any Court themselves to Arraigne and condemn His Majesty against the Lawes of God and the municipall Lawes of the Realme which Court consisting for the most part of such partiall and engaged Persons who had formerly vowed His Majesties destruction and sought His bloud most illegally and unjustly refused to admit of His Majesties just Reasons and exceptions against their usurped Jurisdiction and without any lawfull authority or proofe against Him or Legall Triall presumed most trayterously and impiously to condemne and murder Him and since that have likewise presumed to Trie and Arraigne some Peers and others free Subjects of this Realme for their Lives contrary to Magna Charta the Petition of Right the Laws of the Land and the liberty of the Subjects to the great enslaving and endangering of the lives and liberties of all free
People of England And whereas the said confederated Commons have likewise tyrannically and audaciously presumed contrary to their Oathes and Engagements aforesaid to take upon them to make Acts of Parliament as they terme them without our privity or assents or the joynt consent of the King and House of Lords contrary to the Use and Priviledges of Parliament and knowne Lawes of the Land and by pretext thereof have trayterously and wickedly endeavoured to Dis-inherit the Illustrious CHARLES Prince of Wales next Heire to the Crowne and actuall KING of England Scotland France and Ireland immediately after His said Royall Fathers barbarous Murther by Right of descent and proclaimed it Treason for any Person to Proclaime him KING whereas it is high Treason in them thus to prohibit His proclaiming and have likewise trayterously and impudently encroached a tyrannicall and lawlesse power to themselves to Vote down our antient Kingly and Monarchicall Government and the House of Peers and to make a new Great Seale of England without the Kings Portraicture or Stile and to alter the antient Regall and Legall Stile of Writs and proceedings in the Courts of Justice and to create new Judges and Commissioners of the Great Seale and to dispense with their Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance and to prescribe new Oaths unto them contrary to Law though they have no Authority by any Law Statute or custome to administer or injoyne an Oath to any man and thereby have trayterously attempted to alter the fundamentall Laws and Government of this Kingdome and to subvert the freedome priviledges and being of Parliaments for which Treasons Strafford and Canterbury though least criminall lost their Heads this last Parliament by some of their owne prosecutions and the judgment of both Houses We in discharge of our respective duties and obligations both to God the King our owne Consciences our bleeding dying Kingdomes and the severall Counties Cities and Burrroughs for which we serve do by this present Writing in our owne Names and in the Names of all the Counties Cities and Burroughs which we represented in Parliament publickly declare and solemnly protest before the all-seeing God the whole Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland and the world that We do from the bottome of our hearts abominate renounce and disclaime all the said pretended Acts Votes and proceedings of the said confederate Members acted under the Armies power against our consents as treasonable wicked illegall unparliamentary tyrannical and pernitious both to the King Parliament Kingdomes and all the free-borne People of this Realme extreamly disadvantagious and dishonourable to our Nation scandalous to our Religion and meer forcible Usurpations and Nullities void in Law to all intents and purposes which we and all the Freemen of this Kingdome and all the Kingdomes and Dominions thereto belonging are bound openly to disavow oppugne and resist as such with our purses armes lives to the last drop of our blouds and to which neither We nor any other can ought or dare to submit or assent in the least degree without incurring the guilt of High Treason and the highest perjury infamy and disloyalty And in case the said confederates shall not speedily retract and desist from those their treasonable practises and tyrannicall usurpations which We cordially desire and entreat them by all obligations of love and respect they have to God Religion their King Country and Posterity timely to do We do hereby denounce and declare them to be Traytors and publique Enemies both to the King and Kingdome and shall esteem and prosecute them with all their wilfull Adherents and voluntary Assistants as such and endeavour to bring them to speedy and condigne Punishment according to the Solemne League and Covenant wherein We trust the whole Kingdome all those for whom We serve and the Lord of Hosts himself to whom We have sworne and lifted up our hands hearts and fervent prayers will be aiding and assisting to us and all our Bretheren of Scotland and Ireland who are united and conjoyned with us in covenant to our GOD and Allegiance to our Soveraigne King CHARLES the Second who we trust will make good all His destroyed Fathers concessions which really concerne our peace or safety and secure Us against all force and tyranny of our Fellow-subjects who now contrary to their Trusts and former Engagements endeavour by the meer power of that Sword which was purposely raised for the protection of our Persons Government Religion Laws Liberties the KING 's Royall Person and Posterity and the Priviledges of Parliament to Lord it over Us at their pleasure and enthrall and enslave Us to their armed violence and lawlesse martial wills which we can no longer tolerate nor undergoe after so long fruitlesse and abused patience in hope of their repentance About the same time came out another Paper entituled 109. A Paper entituled Foure true Positions c. ¶ Foure true and considerable Positions for the sitting Members the new Courts of Justice and new Judges Sheriffs Officers Lawyers Justices and others to ruminate upon 1. THat the whole House of Commons in no Age had any Power Right or Lawfull Authority to make any Valid or binding Act or Ordinance of Parliament or to impose any Tax Oath Forfeiture or capitall punishment upon any Person or Free-men of this Realme without the Lords or Kings concurrent assents much lesse then can a small remnant onely of the Members of that House do it sitting under an armed force which nulls and vacates all their Votes and proceedings as the Ordinance of 20. August 1647. declares whilst most of their Fellow-Members are forcibly detained and driven thence as Mr. St. John proves in his Speech concerning Ship-mony p. 33. and in his Argument concerning the Earle of Strafford's Attainder p. 70 71 76 77 78. and Sir Edw. Coke in his 4. Instit c. 1. 2. That the few Members now sitting in and the House of Commons being no Court of Justice of it selfe and having no power to hear and determine any civill or criminall causes nor to give an Oath in any case whatsoever cannot by the Lawes and Statutes of the Realm nor by any pretext of authority whatsover erect any new Court of Justice nor give power or authority to any new Judges Justices or Commissioners to arraigne try condemn or execute any Subject of meanest quality for any reall or pretended crime whatsoever much less their own Soveraign Lord the King or any Peers of this Realme who ought to be tryed by their Peers and by the Law of the Land alone and not otherwise And that the condemning and executing the King or any Peere or other Subject by pretext of such an illegall Authority is no lesse than High Treason and wilfull Murther both in the Members and Commissioners Judges or Justices giving and executing Sentence of Death in any such arbitrary and lawlesse void Court or by vertue of any such void and illegall Commissions 3. That the House of Commons and Members now sitting
or Coronation solemnized notwithstanding that by his unjust Banishment caused by the interposition of the said trayterous combined Antimonarchical Faction He be eclipsed for the present and not suffered to perform any Acts of Government to his three Kingdomes and restore Peace Plenty Justice Mercy Religion Laws and Liberties to them again which no hand but his own can bestow and therefore in vain do the people long for and expect Figgs from Thistles Grapes from Thorns This Kingdome of the Brambles now set up being onely able to Scrath and Tear not to Protect and Govern them I farther Declare and Protest That this combined trayterous Faction have forced an Interregnum and a Justitium upon us an utter suspension of all Lawful Government Magistracy Laws and Judicatories so that we have not de jure any Laws in force to be executed any Magistrates or Judges Lawfully constituted to execute them any Court of Justice wherein they can be judicially executed any such Instrument of the Law as a lawful Great Seal nor any Authority in England that can lawfully Condemn and Execute a Thief Murderer or other Offender without being themselves called Murtherers by the Law all legal proceedings being now coram non Judice nor can this remaining Faction in the House of Commons shew any one President Law Reason or Authority whatsoever for their aforesaid doings but onely their own tyrannical Votes and the Swords of their Army Wherefore I do further Declare and Protest before God and the World That all Free-born Subjects of the Kingdomes of England and Ireland are bound by the Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. and by all our Laws and Statutes By their Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy the Protestation and National Covenant by very many Declarations Remonstrances Petitions and Votes of this Parliament and all Souldiers are engaged also by their own Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals to defend assert and vindicate with their lives and fortunes the Person Authority and Title of our aforesaid lawful KING and Supreme Governour the undoubted Heir of all His late Fathers Dominions CHARLES the Second by the Grace of God King of Great Britain France and Ireland c. against all Opposites and pretended Authorities whatsoever unless they will be guilty of the fowlest sins of Treason Rebellion Perjury and perfidiousness against their God their King and Country and of prostituting the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Land their Wives Children and Estates to the lusts of an Armed Faction usurping a far more Arbitrary and Tyrannical power over our Consciences Persons Liberties and Estates than ever was known in England before or then is now used by the Russe Turk or Tartar or any the most enslaving and lawless Tyrants under Heaven 223. Compare the date of the K. Commissions with those of the Parliament and their Declarations on both sides An Exhortatory Conclusion to the English Nation TO conclude the series of Affairs and Action on both Parties especially of late rightly compared it appeareth by the sequel That King CHARLES the First from the beginning took up defensive Armes to maintain Religion Lawes Liberties and the antient fundamental being of Parliaments and this Kingdom and that there alwayes was and now especially is a predominant Faction in Parliament notwithstanding their frequent Declarations Remonstrances Petitions Protestations Covenant and Votes to the contrary conspiring with a Party especially of Commissioned Officers of the Army without the Houses to Change the fundamental Lawes and Government of the Church and Common-wealth to usurp into a few hands the Supream Authority to enslave the People with an Olygarchical Military and Arbitrary Government to raise what illegal Taxes they please to establish their tyranny and enrich themselves and their Party to oppresse consume and devour all men of a judgment contrary to their Interest to Murder them by new-declared arbitrary Treasons contrary to the Stat. 25 Edw. 3. for ascertaining Treasons to Disfranchise them of their Birth-rights and make them Adscriptios Glebae Villains Regardant to their own Lands which the Nobility Gentry and Yeomanry plough sow and reap whilst Brewers Dray-men and Coblers eat drink and play upon the sweat of their labours and are the Usufructuaries of their Estates All which they have lately brought to pass wherefore let all true Englishmen as becomes good Christians good Patriots and gallant Men claim their Birth-rights and with own voice cry out 1. We will not Change our Antient setled and well approved Laws to which we are Sworn 2. We will not Change our Antient and well-tempered Monarchy to which we are Sworn 3. We will not Change our old Religion for New Lights and Inventions 4. We will not subject our selves to an eighth part of one Estate or House of Parliament sitting under a force and having expelled two hundred and fifty of their Fellows more Righteous than themselves by force and usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority 5. We will not be subjected to a new Supreme Authority usurped by forty ambitious covetous Tyrants arrogating to themselves to be a Councel of State and designed to supply the room of Parliaments under what name or Title soever they mask themselves 6. We will not submit our selves to a Military Government or Councel of Officers 7. We must and will have A KING and The KING whom the Lawes of God and this Land have Designed to us See the Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. and the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy we being by the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy sworn to ●ear Faith and true Allegiance to King CHARLES the First his lawful Heirs and Successors Hic telum infigam moriarque in vulnere Postscript REader at the latter end of my First part of The Historie of Independency I have presented to thy consideration some General Conclusions arising out of the Premises the same Conclusions do as naturally arise out of the Premises of this Second part of the History and doe as aptly serve to illustrate this Second as that First part wherefore to that First part I send thee for opening thy understanding When our old Lawes run again into their Antient Channel and the Sword of Murder is sheathed and the Sword of Justice drawn the Author engageth to publish his Name and Apologie and shew what he hath done and suffered for the Parliament and Kingdome THE END THE High Court OF JUSTICE OR CROMWELS New Slaughter-House in ENGLAND With the Authority that Constituted and Ordained it Arraigned Convicted and Condemned FOR Usurpation Treason Tyranny Theft and Murther Being the Third Part of the History of INDEPENDENCY Written by the same Authour Printed Anno Domini 1660. In the second Year of the States Liberty and the Peoples Slavery Plin. Paneg. ad Trajanum Olim criminibus jam legibus laboratur metuendum est ne legibus fundata Respublica sit legibus eversa Isaiah 59. vers 3 4. Your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with iniquity your lips have
THE COMPLEAT HISTORY OF Independencie UPON THE PARLIAMENT Begun 1640. By CLEM. WALKER Esq Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth Part was never before published Horat. Spe Metuque procul LONDON Printed for Iohn Wiliams at the Crown in St. Paul's Church-yard 1661. RELATIONS AND OBSERVATIONS HISTORICAL and POLITICK upon the PARLIAMENT begun Anno Dom. 1640. Divided into II. Books 1. The Mystery of the two Junto's Presbyterian and Independent 2. The History of Independency c. TOGETHER WITH An APPENDIX touching the Proceedings of the Independent Faction in SCOTLAND POLIB Historici est Ne quid falsi audeat dicere Ne quid veri non audeat HORAT Spe metuque procul Printed in the Year 1648. To my dread Soveraign Royal Sir YOU have Drunk deep in the Cup of Affliction and we have all Pledged you it is wholsome though bitter but let us pray to God to remove this Cup in time for the dregs and lees are poyson You have learned by over-winding the strings of Authority how to tune the People of this Monarchy without breaking their Patience hereafter Most Princes desire unlimited power which is a Sail too great for any Vessel of Mortality to bear though it be never so well Ballasted with Justice Wisdome Moderation and Piety yet one flarb or other will endanger the over-setting it Those Commonwealths are most stable and pleasing where the State is so mixed that every man according to his degree and capacity hath some interest therein to content him The KING Sovereign Command and Power The Nobility and Gentry a derivative Authority and Magistracy and all enjoy their Laws Liberties and Properties God hath cursed him that removeth the Bound-marks of his neighbour this is a comprehensive curse Kings enlarging their Prerogatives beyond their limits are not excepted from it You may be pleas'd to take heed therefore of two sorts of men most likely to mis-lead you in this point Ambitious Lawyers who teach the Law to speak not what the Legislators meant but what you shall seem to desire To avoyd this snare suffer your Parliament to nominate 3. men for every Judges place out of which you may please to choose one as in pricking of Sheriffs For it is the people that are obnoxious to their wickedness you are above the reach of their malice The second sort is Parasitical Divines These Ear-wigs are alwayes hovering in Princes Courts hanging in their ears They take upon them to make Princes beholding to their violent wresting of the Text to bestow upon them whatever Prerogative the Kings of Juda or Israel used or usurped as if the judicials of Moses were appointed by God for all Common-wealths all Kings as a good Bishoprick or Living is fit for every Priest that can catch it These men having their best hopes of preferment from Princes make Divinity to be but Organon Politicum an instrument of Government and harden the hearts of Princes Pharaoh-like Kings delight to be tickled by such venerable warrantable flattery Sir you have more means to prefer them than other men therefore they apply themselves more to you than other men do Tu facis hunc Dominum te facit ille Deum The King makes the poor Priest a Lord and rather than he will be behind with the King in courtesie he will flatter him above the condition of a Mortal and make him a God Royal. Sir permit me to give you this Antidote against this poyson let an Act be past That all such Divines as either by Preaching Writing or discoursing shall advance your Prerogative and Power above the known Laws and Liberties of the Land forfeit all his Ecclesiastical preferments ipso facto and be incapable ever after and for ever banished your Court. But above all learn to trust in your Judgment Plus aliis de te quàm tu tibi credere noli God hath enabled you to remember things past to observe things present and by comparing them together to conjecture things to come which are the three parts of Wisdom that will much honor and advantage you God keep your Majesty so prayes Your humble Subject THEOPH VERAX To his Excellency Sir THOMAS FAIRFAX and the ARMY under his Command MY Lord and Gentlemen I have here by way of Preparation laid open to your view those Vlcers which you have undertaken to cure viz. The 2 Factions in Parliament Authors of Schismes and Divisions in the two Houses from whence they are derived to the whole Kingdome to the obstructing of justice and of the establishment of our Laws Rights Liberties and Peace the enslaving of the Parliament it self and the dilapidating of the Publick Treasure whereby the whole Kingdom may be enfranchised secured and united and the King and his Posterity setled in His due Rights which is the sum of all your undertakings in your many reiterated Papers I confess a Herculean labour and far beyond his clensing of the Augaean Stable That was performed by an Arm of flesh this cannot be effected without an extraordinary calling for ordinary calling thereto you have none and God seldome blesseth a man out of his calling and though an heroick heat and zeal may go far yet it will tire many miles on this side the work unless it be blown and inspired with divine breath And as Alchymists say of the Philosophers Stone so I of this work which is the Philosophers Stone in our English Politicks it cannot be effected but by a man of wonderfull and unspotted Integrity and Innocency free from all Fraud Self-seeking and Partiality In order to this great work you have already begun to sift and winnow the House of commons by charging 11 Presbyterian Grandees who if they be proved guilty must needs have their counterpanes equally faulty even to a syllable in the opposite Junto of Independents for when two factions shall conspire to toss keep up the golden ball of Government Profit Preferment between them neither can be innocent unless therefore you apply your corrosive to one Vlcer as well as the other you will never work a compleat cure nor will be free from scandal and appearance of faction or design that I may use your own words to weaken onely one party under the notion of unjust or oppressive that you may advance another more than your own Representation p. 6. sect 2. Besides it is observed that you speak but coldly to have the publick accounts of the Kingdom Stated putting it off with a wish only as if you did secretly fear what the Presbyterians openly say That the Independents are guilty of more Millions than their party your own words are p. 14. sect 7. We could wish the Kingdom might both be righted publickly satisfied in point of Accounts for the vast sums that have been Leavied as also for many other things c. But we are loath to press any thing that may lengthen dispute Are so many Millions to be cursorily passed over without dispute were they not the
and legal way of proceeding put him upon it to answer ex tempore He confessed and avoided some things but denied the most material He denied he was more frequent at their meetings than ordinary For his silence he alleged he was but the Cities servant and had no voice amongst them but when his opinion was demanded That he gave thanks to the Apprentices as a servant by command yet had mixed some admonitions and reprehensions in his Speech to them So the Recorder withdrew And presently Haslerig according to his custom moved judgment might be given against him To which was answered that the Recorder denied the principal parts of his Charge and offered proofs by Witnesses you must give him that leave or take all parts of his speech for granted as well that makes for him as against him Two or three days more will make this business ripe for judgment let him have one judgment for all If you judge him now to be expelled the House he is already fore judged and that will be a leading case to a farther judgment for who dares acquit where you have condemned A man ought to be but once judged upon one accusation The dishonour of expulsion is a punishment exceeding death If you judge now upon one part of the Accusation and hereafter upon another part of the Accusation he will be twice condemned upon one Accusation and shall never know when he hath sati fied the Law an endless vexation Yet Haslerig moved he might receive judgment now for what was already proved or confessed to be expelled the House saying The Lords went on without obstruction in their businesses because they had purged their House and that he might be farther impeached hereafter upon farther hearing So he was adjudged to be discharged the House committed to the Tower and farther impeached hereafter Against S John Maynard Sir John Maynnrd the same day was called to Answer He desired a copy of his Charge with leave to Answer in writing by advice of Counsel as the 11. Members formerly did to examine Witnesses on his part and cross examine their Witnesses But these requests were denied and he commanded to Answer ex tempore He gave no particular Answer but denied all in general as Col. Pride whom he cited for his president had formerly done at their Bar. He was adjudged to be discharged the House committed to the Tower and farther impeached The like for Commissary General Copley whose case differed little Against the 7. Lords The 8. of Sept. the Earls of Suffolk Lincoln Middlesex the Lords Berkley Willioughby Hunsdon and Maynard were impeached of High Treason in the name of the Commons of England for leavying War against the King Parliament and Kingdom The Earl of Pembroke then sent to Hampton Court with the Propositions on purpose to avoid the storm was omitted untill Wednesday following and so had the favour to be thought not worth remembring Sir John Evelin the younger sent up to the Lords with the Impeachment and a desire they might be committed They were committed to the Black Rod and so the engaged Lords had their House to themselves according to their desires 50. Schismatical Petitions The 14. Sept. A Petition from divers Schismaticks in Essex came to the Houses bearing this Title To the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled distinct from the Lords and Commons that sate in absence of the two Speakers 16. Sept. a Petition from divers Sectaries of Ox fordshi Bucks Berksh was delivered to the House against divers Members sitting in the House Enemies to God and Godliness Enemies to the Kingdom c. Usurpers of Parliamentary authority who endeavoured to bring in the King upon his own Tearms They desired a free Parliament and that according to the desires of the Army those that sate when the Parliament was suspended in absence of Tythes c. in it Such another Petition came but the day before from Southwark These Petitions were all penned by the engaged party of the Houses and Army The aym of these Petitions and sent abroad by Agitators to get subscriptions The design was to put the two parties in the House into heights one against another to make the lesser party in the House viz. the ingaged party but 59. to expel the greater party being about 140. whereby the House might be low and base in the opinion of the people and no Parliament and so leave all to the power of the Sword The Army dayly recruiting and thereby giving hopes to all loose people that the Army should be their common Receptacle as the sea is the common Receptacle of all waters because those who had no hopes to be Members of Parliament might become Members of this Army Besides their plausible way of prompting the people to Petition against Tythes Enclosures and Copy-hold fines uncertain was to encourage them to side with the Army against all the Nobility Gentry and Clergy of the Land from whom the Army did most fear an opposition and to destroy Monarchy it self since it is impossible for any Prince to be a King only of Beggers Tinkers and Coblers But these interlopping discourses omitted Against the Lord Major Aldermen and Citizens let us again return to these prodigious Impeachments The next in order comes in the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Citizens with whom short work was made Impeachments were sent to the Lords against them and they sent to the Tower upon a bare report of the Inquisitor-general Corbet and the reading of some depositions the Witnesses names for the most part concealed and none of them so much as called to the Commons Bar to see what they could say for themselves contrary to Magna Charta 29. ch and contrary to 28. Edw. 3. enacting That no man shall be put out of his Land c. nor taken nor Imprisoned c. or put to death c. without being brought to answer by due process of Law That is according to the Stat. 42. Ed. 3. c. 3. That no man be brought to answer without presentment before Justices or matter of Record or by due process or writ o●iginal according to the old Law of the Land not according to new invented Articles of Impeachment but according to those Laws that were well known and old in Edw. 3. time See Stat. 37. Ed. 3. 1. Ed. 6. ch 12. 6. Ed. 6. c. 11. and the Stat. 25. E. 3. saith No man shall be taken by Petition or suggestion made to the King or his Counsel c. and the House of Peers is no more but the Kings Counsel as anon I shall make evident 51. Arguments against impeachments before the Lords It was moved by divers that these Gent. might be tryed according to Law at the Kings Bench by a Jury of twelve men de vicineto their Peers and Equals to judg of matter of fact alleging that the Common Law was the Birthright of all the free People of England which was one of the 3.
the rest of the Propositions demanded without a Treaty The Bill for adjournment of both Houses to any other place c. 64. Bill for adjournment of the Parliament as well for Place as time will enable the engaged Party of the two Houses and Army to adjourn the two Houses from time to time to or near the Head-quarters of the Army where those Members that refuse to enter into the same Engagement shall neither sit with accommodation nor safety and so be shaken off at last this is a new way of purging the Houses Besides the Parliament following the motions of the Army the King shall follow the Parliament whereby the Army having both King and Parliament present with them whatsoever attempt shall be made against the Army shall be said to be against the safety and Authority of the King and Parliament and a legal Treason triable by Indictment not a constructive Treason only triable before the Lords Note this Message to the King plus significat quam loquitur though it holdeth forth but four Demands to open view yet it includes five for if the King passe these four Bils as Acts of Parliament either he must do it by his Personal Presence in the House of Peers or by His Commission under the Great Seal and so consequently must confirm the Parliaments Great Seal and all things done by it to the nullifying His own Great Seal at Oxford His personal presence they will not admit for though they pretended heretofore they toook up Arms to bring the King to his Parliament yet now they continue in Arms to keep Him from His Parliament lest the presence of the true Sun should obscure such Meteors and Ignes fatni as they are Though this may be Godly and Saint-like dealing yet it is not plain nor fair dealing latet anguis in herba there is Coloquintida nay death in the pot 65. The Kings answer debated Monday 3 Jan. the Kings Answer to the said Bils and Propositions was debated in the House of Commons And first Sir Thomas Wroth Jack-Pudding to Prideaux the Post-master had his cue to go high and feel the pulse of the House who spake to this purpose That Bedlam was appointed for madmen and Tophet for Kings that our Kings of late had carried themselves as if they were fit for no place but Bedlam that his humble motion should consist of three parts 1 To secure the King and keep him close in some inland Castle with sure guards 2 To draw up Articles of Impeachment against him 3 To lay him by and settle the Kingdom without him he cared not what form of Government they set up so it were not by Kings and Devils Ireton's speech Then Commissary Ireton seeming to speak the sense of the Army under the notion of many thousand Godly men who had ventured their lives to subdue their enemies said after this manner The King had denied safety and protection to his people by denying the four Bils that subjection to him was but in liers of his protection to his people this being denied they might well d●ny any more subjection to him and settle the Kingdom without him That it was now expected after so long patience they should shew their Resolution and not desert those valiant men who had engaged for them be ond all possibility of retreat and would never forsake the Parliament unless the Parliament forsook them first After some more debate when the House was ready for the question Cromwel's Speech Cromwel brought up the rear and giving an ample Character of the valour good affections and godliness of the Army argued That it was now expected the Parliament should govern and defend the Kingdom by their own power and resolutions and not teach the people any longer to expect safety and government from an obstinate man whose heart God had hardned That those men who had defended the Parliament from so many dangers with the expence of their Blood would defend them herein with fidelity and courage against all opposition Teach them not by neglecting your own and the Kingdoms safety in which their own is involved to think themselves betrayed and left hereafter to the rage and malice of an irreconcileable enemy whom they have subdued for your sake ●nd therefore are likely to finde His future Government of them insupportable and fuller of Revenge than Justice lest despaire teach them to seek their safety by some other means than adhering to you who will not stick to your selves and how destructive such a resolution in them will be to you all I tremble to think and leave you to judge Observe he laid his hand upon his Sword at the latter end of his speech that Sword that which by his side could not keep him from trembling when S. Philip Stapleton baffled him in the House of Commons This concluding Speech having something of menace in it was thought very prevalent with the House The first of the four questions being put 66. The 4 Bils for no addresses nor applications passed That the two Houses should make no more Address●s nor Applications to the King the House of Commons was divided 141 yeas to 91 noes so it was carried in the Affirmative The other three Votes followed these Vote with facility See them in print Upon the last of these 4 Votes the House was divided and candles were Voted to be brought it only to tell the House yet contrary to the said Order when the candles were in they proceeded farther as followeth The Members had been locked into the House of Commons from before nine of the clock in the morning to seven at night 67. The Committee of Safety revived and then the doors were unlocked and what Members would suffered to go forth whereby many Presbyterians thinking the House had been upon rising departed when presently the House being grown thin the Vote to revive the Committee of both Kingdoms called the Committee of safety at darby-Darby-house passed by Ordinance dated 3 Jan. 1647. in these words Resolved c. That the powers formerly granted by both Houses to the Committee of both Kingdoms viz. England and Scotland in relation to the two Kingdoms of England and Ireland be now granted and vested in the Members of both Houses onely that are of that Committee with power to them alone to put the same in execution The original Ordinance that first erected this Committee and to which this said Ordinance relates beareth date 7 February 1643. in which the English Committees were appointed from time to ti●e to propound to the Scotish Commissioners whatsoever they should receive in charge from both Houses and to ●ake report to both Houses to direct the managing of the War and to keep good correspondency with forein States and to receive directions from time to time from both Houses and to continue for three months and no longer But this Ordinance 3 January 1647. vests the said power in the Members thereof onely and alone words
survey his Actions but as if it were purposely done when the Commissioners came as far on their way as Bristol about a dozen renegado Officers of his Army met the Commissioners and turned them back again The said Officers posted up to the Parliament before the Commissioners and the 13 April were called in to the Commons Bar where they made a relation to the House to this purpose That the Lord Inchiquin having made an expedition into the County of Kerry upon his return sent for these Officers into his presence Chamber and told them He intended to declare against the Army and Independent party in England who kept the King and Parliament under a force that he would stand for the Liberty of the King and Parliament and a free Conference to settle Peace and that he expected all his Officers should joyn with him in so honourable an undertaking but should take an Oath of secrecy before he discover'd himself farther to them They Answered They could make no such Oath before they knew whether they might with a safe conscience keep it saying they would be true to the Parliament My Lord Inchiquin replied So have I and will be delude me not with ambiguous words do you mean this pretended Parliament telling them farther he had good correspondence with all the Presbyterians in Scotland and England as well in the Parliament as out of it that he doubted not to go through with his undertaking and if the worst hapned to make good conditions for himself and his party That he would make peace with my Lord Taff and that he knew the Independents in England were upon Treaty with Owen Roe Oneal who was a man of their humour and loved to keep all in combustion They refused to joyn he dismissed them for England The same day Letters from Capt. John Growthen Vice-Admiral of the Irish Seas from a shipboard were read in the House much to the same purpose though not so large wherein he said He had already blocked up all my Lord Inchiquin's Havens Presently Allen the Goldsmith moved 87. Allen the Gold-smith moveth to put the House to the touch by some Covenant Declaration c. That since the Lord Inchiquin had discovered that he had a correspondency with the Presbyterians in the House before they dealt with their Enemies without doors they should try who were their Enemies within doores by putting all men to some Covenant Engagement or Protestation c. And Lieutenant General Cromwell said That being to debate this business to morrow whosoever with crosse Arguments shall spin out the debate and so retard our prceedings by my consent shall be noted with a Black Coal to which was answered That this tended to take away freedom of debate which was the life of Parliaments and of all Councils and was destructive to the very being of Parliaments It is not amisse to insert here by way of digression what I formerly omitted Sir Henry Mildmay long since moved That 150 rich Guard Coats of the King might be sold for 800 l. to find Fire and Candle for the Souldiers in White-hall The question put The Speaker gave judgement the Yeas had it Mr. Edward Stephens declared the Noes had it They were unwilling to divide upon such a question but Mr. Stephens persisted and Robert Reynolds said aloud notice shall be taken of him for putting such a dishonour upon the House Upon the Division the Noes carried it by nine voices Thereupon complaint was made against Reynolds for attempting against the liberty of Voting but no redress But to return from my digression the next day 14 of April it was moved that my Lord Inchiquin's Son a Child of 8 or 9 years old going to School at Thistleworth might be secured in the Tower and kept for a Hostage To which was Answered That no man could take an Hostage without consent an Hostage must be given upon the publick faith upon some stipulation and must be so received by mutual agreement you cannot punish the child for the Fathers fault yet he was voted to the Tower and sent My Lord Inchinquin's Commission as President of Munster and General of the Army Voted void and no man to obey him himself Voted a Traitor yet no man examined upon Oath against him nor any man sent to take information of the businesse into Ireland and his professed enemy the Lord Lisle is to go General into Munster in his room and the said fugitive Officers all rewarded as if they had brought acceptable news This day Reynolds revived Allens motion for putting the Members to the Test by some Covenant Protestation or Declaration subscribed That this is a free Parliament and that they would live and die with this Parliament and Army To which was answered 1. That by Ordinance of both Houses all men were enjoyned to take the National Covenant This Covenant is the true Touch-stone of the Parliament and so agreed upon by the wisdom of both Nations yet many sit here who refuse to obey this Ordinance I know no reason therefore why any man should obey you in any other Ordinance of this Nature let us keep the old Covenant before we take any new 2. It hath been moved in the House that the Oathes of Justices of the Peace and Sheriffs might be taken away I hope you will not abolish legal Oathes and impose illegal Oathes This House hath not so much Authority as to administer an Oath much more to impose one you must allow to others that liberty of Conscience which you demand for your selves 3. Major Gray told you my Lord Inchiquin said he had correspondency with all the Presbyterians in the House who had made their peace with the King But my Lord Inchiquin told him farther the Independents were upon Treaty with Owen Roe and Oneal let them clear themselves of that imputation first before they give a purgation unto others otherwise what you do will savour of force 4. The true Touch-stone to try every mans integrity is to examine who have inriched themselves by the calamities of the times and your service and who are impoverished 5. This is a new device to purge the House The Grandees of the House have cantonized the Kingdom between them 88. The Counties compelled to give thanks to the Houses for their Votes against the King every man in his Division protecting the Country Committees and receiving tribute from them in recompence of their protection and Prideaux the Post master being King of the West Saxons his Vice-roy or Lord Deputy for the County of Somerset is that running Col. John Pyne who being often inspired with Sack rules the Committee and County by inspirations Pyne and his Peers of the Committee to please his superiours set on foot a draught of a Petition to be handed by the Country Giving thanks to the Parliament for the four Votes against the King and promising to live and die with the Parliament and Army and desiring the County might be freed from
Malignants Neuters and Apostates which in their interpretation signifies Presbyterians and moderate men who will not dance about the flame when the Independents make a Bonfire of the Common-wealth The Eastern Division of Somerset-shire rejected the Petition in the Western Division Pyne and his Committee sending abroad his Sequestrators with the Petition threatned to take them for Malignants and Sequester them that refused got many Subscriptions but the Subscribers since better informed of the danger and mischief of those Votes retracted what they had done by a counter Petition wherein they declare that their Subscription to the former Petition was contrary to their Judgement and Consciences and extorted by the terror of Sequestrators and threats of being Sequestred This affront stung the Committee and opened the eyes of the Country As the like foolish attempt of Sir Henry Mildmay did the eyes of the County of Essex Wherefore to find a Plaster for this broken pate Sergeant Wild he that hang'd Capt. Burly coming that Circuit care was taken to have a select Grand-Jury of Schismaticks and Sequestrators blended together who made a presentment subscribed by 19. of their hands which Sergeant Wild preserved in his pocket and upon Tuesday 18. April delivered with as much gravity as a set speech and a set ruffe could furnish him withall in the House of Commons and was read and hearkned unto by the thriving Godly with as much attention as pricking up of eares and turning up of eyes could demonstrate the Contents of this presentment were the same with the aforesaid revoked Petition Great care was taken to give thanks to the High Sheriff and Grand Jury who had so freely delivered the sence of that wel-affected County and as much care taken to improve this Talent and put it to interest throughout the Kingdom Collonel Purefoy is now at this work in Warwick-shire Sir Arthur Haslerig about Newcastle others in other places Pitifull Crutches to support a cripled reputation which now halts and begs for relief worse than their own maimed Souldiers do and with as bad success they have juggled themselves out of credit and would fain juggle themselves in again Behold the wisdom of our Grandees wise religious new-modelled Politicians who have brought themselves and the whole Kingdom into these deplorable contemptible straits take notice of your Representative you that are represented call them to a seasonable account But whither doth my zeal carry me I shall anon stumble upon a new fangled Treason to be declared against me without nay against Law 89. Mens tongues tied up by an Ordinance Friday 21. April An Ordinance was presented to the House intituled For suppressing all Tumults and insurrections the Committee of Safety at Derby House had before an ample power conferred upon them for that purpose but guilty consciences though they be safe are never secure like Cain they think that every man will slay them it was passed after some amendments to this purpose That any three Committee-men shall have Power to Imprison and Sequester all such as shall actually adhere to any that shall raise or endeavour to raise Tumults and Insurrections or shall speak or publish any thing reproachfull to the Parliament or their proceedings Behold here an excise amounting to the Value of all you have set upon every light word a man made an offender for a word to the utter ruine of him and his posterity under colour of defending Laws Liberties and Properties you are cheated of them all and reduced to meer and absolute slavery and beggery you are not Masters of your own carcasses yet your mouths are but toned up you must not be allowed that silly comfort of venting your griefs by way of complaint what Tyrant was ever so barbarous so indiscreet as to do the like It was moved that Offenders of this kind might be bound to the good behaviour and the offences proved openly at the Assizes or Sessions before so destructive a punishment be inflicted There are three principles in Law of which the Laws are very tender and will not suffer them to be touched but upon great Offences cleer proofs and exact formalities observed life liberty and estate by Magna Charta the Petition of Right and many other Statutes these principles are so sacred that nothing but the Law can meddle with them Nemo imprisonetur aut disseisietur nisi per legale judicium parium suorum You have made the people shed their money and blood abundantly pretending defence of Religion Laws and Liberties let them now at last being a time of peace enjoy what they have so dearly paid for and delay them not with a pretended necessity of your own making you now make all that is or can be neer and deer to them liable to the passions of three Committee-men to judge and execute according to their discretion without Law or so much as a formality thereof And yet both Houses of Parliament have often heretofore offered to abolish those Committees as men whose wickednesse and folly they and the whole Kingdom were ashamed of The Grandees of the Parliament and Army when the Houses are called and full have resolved to draw their forces neer about the Town and by that terrour to trie the temper of the Houses such Members as will not comply with them they will with fresh Charges purge out of the House and publish base and infamous scandals against them to which if they submit with silence they betray their reputations for ever and spare the credits of their jugling enemies If they make any defence for their honours by way of Apology they shall be brought within the compasse of this devouring inslaving Ordinance as men that reproach the Parliament and their Proceedings Thus the same whip shall hang over the shoulders of the Presbyterian party who will not agree to King-deposing Anarchy and Shism as it did formerly over the Kings party And the Presbyterians shall be squeesed into the Independents coffers as formerly the Kings party were so long as they had any thing to lose for the whole earth is little enough for these Saints who are never satisfied with money and blood although they never look towards Heaven but through the spectacles of this world The old elogium and Character of this English Nation was that they were Hilaris gens cui libera mens libera lingua But now Country-men your tongues are in the Stocks your bodies in every gaole your souls in the dark and estates in the mercy of those that have no mercy and at the discretions of those that have no discretion Farewell English liberty 90. The Kentish Committee-War In the Epistle to this book I have given you an account of the bloody Answer given to the Surrey Petitioners May 16. 1648. I must in the next place speak something of the Kentish Petition and of the Committee-war they raysed to oppose it which took his rising and beginning partly from the insolencies and oppressions of their tyrannical
the whole House of Peers of that Committee so the whole House of Peers and twenty six of the ablest and best spoken Commons being ingaged in that Committee that Committee would sway the Houses which way they pleased draw by degrees all power and authority from the Parliament to themselves cause the House to adjourn at pleasure or leave them so evirtuated and enervated that they should no longer keep the dignity nor Authority of a Parliament contrary to the trust reposed in them by those that chose them and contrary to the tenor of the Writ of Election It were more for the service of the Common-wealth to examine what the powers of that Committee are and to set a short time to its continuance and not leave it indefinite as now it is After more than an hours debate the Speaker instead of putting the question whether an addition or no called to have the names read first of the Lords who were Voted one by one and then the Commons were named who are almost all Independents Weaver excepted against the naming of Major Gen. Brown to be of that Committee for being disaffected to the Army to which Major Gen. Brown gave a discreet and honest Answer in reply to which Weaver concluded That the Parliament in the posture it was in was not likely to save the Kingdom but the Committee of Safety and the Army must save it whereupon satisfaction was demanded against Weaver for dishonouring the Parliament and alleged that the Honour of the Parliament was more considerable than the Honour of the Army and ought to be vindicated before the Honour of the Army whatsoever their Agents and Servants in the House who gained by them thought to the contrary unlesse they would acknowledg the Parliament to be subordinate to the Army It was farther said that if the Parliament should relinquish the work of setling Peace Religion Laws and Liberties in the Kingdome to the Committee of Safety as the Gentleman that spake last seems to intimate that in order thereto the said Committee is enlarged the Parliament should forsake their trust and be no longer a Parliament and all they had done and should doe in that way even the erecting empowering and enlarging of that Committee is void in law Note that several Orders have been made appointing set days to examine the powers of this Committee and limit a time for its determination but always upon the appointed days either some Letters of news or some new invented Plots have been cast like stumbling blocks in the way to put it off The like for setling the general Militia of the Counties all which are now left sine die Thurday 15. June Mr. Solicitor reported to the House 94. 20. Royalists sent to the General in lieut of 10. Committee-men in Colchester That Sir William Masham and the rest of the Committee were carried up and down in the head of Goring's Army hardly used and threatned to be in the front of the battel whem they came to fight and moved that 20. of the Kings party should be seised and sent to the General to be used in the like manner But Gourdon moved That the Lady Capell and her Children and the Lady Norwich might be sent to to General with the same directions saying their Husbands would be carefull of their safety and when divers opposed so barbarous a motion and alleged the Lady Capell was great with child near her time Gourdon pressed it the more eagerly as if he had taken the General for a Man-midwife he was seconded by Ven Sir Hen. Mildmay Tho. Scot Blackstone Hill of Haberdashers-hall Purefoy Miles Corbet c. Note that Rushworth Secretary to the General reported at the Commons Bar The Committee were well used and wanted nothing And though they have had many Fights and Sallies they did never put any of the Committee in the Front so that it should seem this is only a fabulous pretence to carry 20. of the Kings party in Front before them to facilitate and secure their Approaches against the Enemies shot which is the more credible because the sense of the House was not to exchange these for the Committee This is to cheat the Enemy of a Town not to conquer it Behold the Saints way of getting Victories and Cromwell practi●eth the same in Wales as I hear And that it may farther appear this Saint-like Army neither Conquers by Miracle nor the Sword but by the battery of Angels I can assure you that lately one of the setting-bitches of these States as they now call themselves in their foreign negotiations the hogen mogens of Derby-house the Lady Norton Wife to bul-headed Sir Grig offered a large sum of money to a Gentlewoman to procure her Husband to yield up a Hold he keepes for the KING using this argument to perswade it That most of the good Towns they seemed to conquer were purchased of men that had wit enough to respect themselves for you must know that this virtuous Lady trucks as well for strong Townes and Forts as for Plackets and other weaker pieces but the motion was contemned And the General having gotten together the Trained men of Suffolk and Essex to assist him putteth them in the Forlorne Hope in all his stormings of the Town of Colchester and drives them on with his Horse using them as the Turk useth his Asapi to dead the first fury and edge of the Enemy that his Janisaries may at last come on with the more safety and carry the businesse 95. The National Covenant Saturday 17. June It was moved that no Commissions might be granted to any Commanders or Officers until they had taken the National Covenant against which it was argued That the Covenant was become the pretence of all Rebellions and Insurrections that most of them that had Rebelled in Wales Kent Essex had taken it but those that refused it were true friends to the Parliament and had done them gallant service That the Covenant had so many various interpretations put upon it that no man knew what to make of it or how with a safe Conscience to take it thus argued the Independent as if the Covenant were malum in se To which was answered that by this last reason they might lay aside the Scriptures which were frequently and variously mis-interpreted by Hereticks and Shismaticks If the Covenant in its own nature were the cause of Insurrections it was unwisely done of the Parliament to impose it upon men and to tie them by Vow to defend it and one another in defence of it with their lives and fortunes whatsoever number of Armed men should gather together in defence of the Kings Person Crown and Dignity or of Religion Laws Liberties or of Privileges of Parliament according to the said Covenant they have the authority of Parliament nay of Heaven where their Vow is recorded for what they do and cannot be said to Rebell or War against the Parliament but against a Faction who having
That all the Arms and Garrisons of the Kingdom may be put into the hands of Antimonarchical Sectaries and the Militia of Godly Cut-throats established in every County towards the putting down of Monarchy and the erecting of the many-headed Tyranny of the Saints of Derby-house and the Army This Ordinance was commited 125. Letters uncharacterized a new invented net to catch Presbyterians in Tuesday 8 August Thomas Scot made report to the House of Commons of the private Letters brought out of Scotland by Master Haly-barton whereof I have formerly given you notice this Gentleman being a publique Messenger from the Kingdom of Scotland and not from Duke Hamilton or his Army whom only the House of Commons have declared Enemies without the concurrence of the Lords hath leave given him by the Lords to stay a Month in England yet the Commons have since Voted he shall be gone in twenty four hours or else he shall be sent home in Custody These Letters are most of them written in Characters yet this wel-gifted Brother Scot hath found out a New Light to Decipher them by and can tell by Inspiration or by Privilege of Parliament what Cypher or Character must signifie such a Letter of the Alphabet or such a mans name This engine added to the Schismatical High Commission or Committee of Clandestine Examinations is better than any spring or trap to catch any active Presbyterian that lies crosse to the design of the Godly They may suppose any mans name to lie hid under such or such Characters and Cyphers and so accuse him by virtue of this mysterious art of ayding or complying with the Scots or the Prince and pin whatsoever the Faction pleaseth to call Treason upon his sleeve these are the Arts of the Godly to make Innocency it self seem nocent and remove out of the way such as hinder the erecting the Kingdom of the Saints These Letters so decyphered were afterwards at a Conference reported to the Lords Wednesday 9 August 126. The City Petition answered The Answer to the City Petition the day before delivered to the House of Commons was reported to the House It was an Answer to some of the Prayers of that Petition only but gave no Answer to their desires for the Disbanding of all Armies to ease the people of their Burdens The restoring of the peoples Lawes and Liberties The enjoyning all Members to attend the House nor to the effectuall observation of the self-denying Ordinance this last is a noli me tangere if all Members should be enjoyned to be self-denying men there would be few Godly men left in the House How should the Saints possesse the good things of this world yet after some debate and divers expressions used by Weaver and Harvy That it appeared by the Petition that the City would desert the Parliament they gave an Answer to their desires concerning the union to be kept with Scotland and a Cessation of all acts of Hostility during the Treaty of Peace That they had Voted the Army under Duke Hamilton Enemies and Declared They would Act accordingly against them to which they would adhere Master Hugerford argued 127. The Commons debate to take away the Lords Negative voice and act without them That because the Lords had denyed to concur in the said Vote he conceived the House could make no such Declaration nor act therein without them This put the Zealous into a flame that any Member should argue against the Pr●vileges of their House so far as to deny them to be Almighty singly and per se Reynolds the Lawyer positively affirming that the Houses of Commons being the Representative of all the People had power to Act without the Lords for safety of the people in case the Lords deserted their trust you see in this doctrine as it hath been already and is likely to be practised hereafter a ground layd to subvert the foundation of all Parliaments for ever and to bring all degrees of men to a parity or levell For the Parliament by all the known Laws of the Land consisting of 3. Estates 1. King 2. Lords And 3. Commons Two of the Estates viz. the Lords and Commons have already laid by the King and His Negative Voice and now the Commons debate of laying by the Lords and their Negative Voice because in their judgement they desert their Trust And so the Commons alone shall act as a Parliament without KING or Lords until falling into contempt and hatred of the people which will soon happen the Grandees of derby-Derby-house and the Army shall take advantage to lay the House of Commons by and usurp the Kings supreme Governing Power the Parliaments Legislative Power yea and the Judges Judicative Power to themselves and establish the many-headed Kingdom Tyranny or Oligarchy of the Saints so much contended for in themselves O populum in servitutem paratum as Tyberius said of the Romans This is the tail of the Viper here lies his venom 128. Dead men Sequestred and the Sanctuary of the Grave violated Saturday 12 August A Message was sent to the Commons from the House of Lords in the behalf of Commissary Generall Copley who had bought and had a grant of the Wardship of the Heir of Sir William Hansby for which he paid Fine and Rent and was outed of it by a Sequestration laid upon Hansby's Estate after his death he having been never questioned for Delinquency during his life-time and this was maliciously done about the time when Master Copley was Imprisoned by the power of the Independent Faction whereof I have already said something Master Copley desired the Sequestration might be taken off and he permitted to enjoy his Contract made with the Court of Wards alleging that to Sequester or condemn a man after his death when he could not answer for himself was against the Laws of the Land even in the highest crimes of Felony and Treason and produced a President That the Committee of Lords and Commons for Sequestrations had taken off a Sequestration from the Lands of Andrew Wall for no other reason but because Andrew Wall was Sequestred after his death The case was diversly argued it was alleged that in cases of the highest Treason no man was condemned after death because he was not then in being to answer for himself there could be no proceeding in Law against a non ens In Felony if a man will stand mute he forfeits not his lands because there wants an Answer and yet it was his own fault not to answer The Parliament is bound by all their Declarations made both to KING and People and by the Nationall Covenant which contains all the first and just Principles of the Parliament to defend the Laws and Liberties of the Land and not to subvert them Take heed of giving so dangerous a President for Kings to act by hereafter against the People and against this Parliament and their friends since no man yet knows which way the tide may turn But
Duke Hamilton and a few dis-affected persons who were not likely to send any of the honest Godly party to Treat whereby the Treaty would be carried on to the disadvantage and ruine of the Godly and of the Church our only friends there And Mr. Ashurst related That the major part of the past Parliament of Scotland over-powred the minor part by an Army and so got the Engagement and other Acts and the Committee of Estates passed against which the Assembly of the Kirk consisting of 400 persons declared with one Voice I know not what he meant by saying the major part in Scotland over-powred the minor when I consider that major pars obtinet rationem totius the major part is virtually the Parliament to which the minor part must submit although here in England the lesser part of the Parliament engaging and conspiring with an Army whom themselves in a full and free Parliament had formerly declared Enemies to the State overpowred the greater part contrary to reason and practice This question seemed to agree with the sense of the Independents reasonably well because it leaves it onely to the pleasure of the King to Treat dis-junctively with the Scots upon the sole Interest of Scotland as men no ways concerned in the settlement of Peace in England whereby it is tacitely inferred that the Treaties Covenant and Union between the two Kingdoms is dissolved so the question aforesaid was put with this addition That if the King shall be pleased to invite the Scots to send some Persons Authorized c. the Parliament will give them safe conduct The fifth Vote of the Lords was That Newport in the Island of Wight should be the place of Treaty to which the Commons concurred With these debates ended this Week the 19 day of August About this time came forth a Book entituled 133. A pestilent Book called The necessity of the absolute power of Kings c. The necessity of the absolute power of all Kings and in particular of the King of England concerning which I am to admonish the Reader that it is conceived to be a Cockatrice hatched by the Antimonarchical Faction to envenome the people against the KING and PRINCE The next Week begins with Monday 21 August of whose proceedings I can give you only an imperfect scambling relation and so shall surcease all farther endeavours in this kind because I have already delivered enough for your Instruction if God have not appointed you to be led blindfold into the pit digged for your destruction but principally because my good Genius that furnished me with Intelligence hath now retired himself from acting without hope to praying with faith for his Country being tired out with hearing and seeing so much sinne and folly as now raigns at Westminster and I love not much to take news upon trust from the vulgar Peripateticks of the Hall 134. Mr. Martyns levelling practises and principles The chief things of note were More Complaints of Henry Martyn who now declares himself for a Community of Wealth as well as of Women and protests against King Lords Gentry Lawyers and Clergy nay against the Parliament it self in whose bosome this Viper hath been fostered and against all Magistrates like a second Wat Tyler all Pen and Inkhorn-men must down His Levelling Doctrine is conteined in a Pamphlet called Englands Troubler Troubled wherein All Rich men whatsoever are declared Enemies to the Mean men of England and in effect War denounced against them 135. Skippon's Listings Next the Ordinance for transferring over to the Militia of London Skippon's power of listing men in London was passed in the House of Commons with this Coloquintida in it That Skippon should name and appoint Commanders and Officers for the Forces listed to be approved of by the Militia of London 136. Cromwel's laureat letters 20 Aug. 1648 A Letter from Oliver Cromwel was read in the House of Commons relating his easie victory over Duke Hamilton and Major Gen. Bayly which puts me in mind of Ovid's Victory over Corinna of whom he saith Victa est nou aegrè proditione sua and conteining an admonition not to hate Gods people who are as the apple of his eye and for whom even Kings shall be reproved and exhorting the Speaker to whom it was written to fullfill the end of his Magistracy that all that will live peaceably and quietly viz. in Vassalage to Oliver and his Faction and neglect Religion Laws and Liberties may have countenance from him God blesse all honest men from the light of Oliver's countenance lest in an ignis fatuus mislead them from the duties of their Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy Potestation and Covenant and they that are implacable may speedily be destroyed out of the Land 137. Martial Law in London To prepare the way to whose destruction it was Ordered That an Ordinance be penned and brought into the House of Commons to try all such by Martial Law in the City of London as shall be found to plot design or contrive any thing to endanger the Parliament or City And yet London is no Garrison now as it was when Tomkims and Challoner were tried not is there any Enemy considerable in the Field whereby the known Laws of the Land may not passe currently through the Kingdom but our known Laws are not written in blood nor are they so flexible as to make all Traytors the Faction pleaseth to call such Yet as cruel as these Caco fuegos of the Faction are to some 138. Rolf's Bayl again pressed they have mercy enough for Rolf whose Bayl was again exceedingly pressed and that his two Prosecutors Osburn and Dowcet should be under restraint in his stead whom they have forejudged out of the King's Letter to the Houses not to be able to prove their information whereas it may be discretion in the King not to encrease his danger by acknowledging it Saturday 26. August 139. The KINGS Letter to the States of Scotland taken from Haly-burton The King's Letter to the Committee of States in Scotland c. in Answer to their Letter sent to Him by Haly-burton which Letter was taken from Haly-burton although a publique Minister of State and allowed by Parliament to carry their Letter to the King was read in the House of Commons I hear in general that it was excellently well penned and a very just honest and peaceable Letter Yet it was Voted neither to be sent to the Lords nor to be restored to Haly-burton but damned to close imprisonment in a Box under Seal lest the people should know how truly zealous his Majesty is to settle Peace in the Land a mystery their understandings must not be trusted withall Prolegomena Promises Protestations and Covenants made by this Parliament in behalf of the King and People AFter a repetition of many good Acts and Concessions obtained by this Parliament of the King for the ease of the People Remonstrance 15. December 1642. Exact Collect. p. 15. they
whereby multitudes of you are undone and yet the Armies Arrears and all other Taxes are exacted from you with as much cruelty as you lost nothing Remember that Butchery committed upon the unarmed Apprentices when Cromwel cried to the Souldiers to kill man woman and child and fire the City at which time his Nose looked as prodigiously upon you as a Comet Remember the scorn put upon you by a Grandee when you were enabled to put up your Chains again That the House had consented your Posts should have Chains as well as your Aldermen and did as well deserve them And Weaver's word when your Guards came to attend the House that 60 of the Army should beat 3000 of them Remember how unwillingly and juglingly they restored unto you the Tower first plundered of all its ammunition you formerly had in it and part only of your Militia and that clogged with many restrictions they that bestow gifts so grudgingly upon you when they are weak will deprive you of them again when they are strong Adversity makes them your false friends Prosperity your real Enemies Necessity only ties them to you have a care therefore you do not relieve their necessities lest you lose them like the frozen Snake in the bosome when they grow warm they will bite and sting You seem to have forgotten the unjust imprisonment of your Aldermen the unfaithfulnesse and inconstancy of their Votes and Ordinances even for security of Money and Land bought the several Informations and Testimonies you had of their good intentions to borrow more of your Money not by way of Loan nor upon the Publique Faith but by way of plunder Notwithstanding all these injuries and many more as if God had infatuated you to destroy you you suffer a corrupt Faction within you to List men to the amazement of your neighbour Counties whose principles you first examine and if they be not Independents you trust them not with Arms. I hear of a young man who being asked of what principles he was he answered That in these doubtfull times he professed no principles but gain to whom was replied then we are of one principle for we are resolved to keep what we have got Behold the Principles of these men that obstruct our peace consider that Heaven and Earth have denounced war against these men and that God himself hath touched the hearts of all men as one man to rise against them and demand to have Peace Religion and Justice restored When the whole Kingdom shall rise in a flame what will be your lot but smoak in your eyes and at last a consuming fire in your bowels when you only shall be left to maintain this domineering Army with your money and to recruit them with your blood many of their Officers say already That the Country is exhausted of Money and you shall be their purse-bearers but because you are a curst Cow they must keep the Army about you that the Souldiers may hold you by the horns whilst their friends milk you Consider how absolute a necessity and how general a resolution there is that all things should return to their old channel If you stop the violence of this Torrent it will swell untill it overwhelm and drown you You that are guiltless joyn not with the guilty you that are guilty sin no more there will be mercy for you if you repent and amend in time The very multitude of offenders will help to excuse your offences let not despair hu●● you from one sin to another until you fall into destruction as ●●aid Judas whose Despair by all Divines is held to be a greater i●piety than his Treachery by the first he sinned against the God-head of Christ by the second against his Manhood only The Remonstrance and Declaration of the Knights Esquires Gentlemen and Freeholders in COLCHESTER PEtitions the birth-right of Subjects are by Law our addresses to our King Gods Vicegerent by custom our approaches to the Houses of Parliament His Majesties great Council by them we used humbly to present our modest desires and were wont to receive answers as Gideons fleece the dew without noise yet satisfactory but that was denied our first Petition and before our second could be ready our brethren of Surrey by theirs ecchoed our prayer to both Houses of Parliament but received their answer as the Jews their Law in thunder and lightning a two-edged sword the tongue and the report of Muskets the voice which spake nothing but wounds and death We therefore thus admonished resolved thus to present our grievances to the World and our Petitions to Heaven for a blessing upon our intended indeavours Our grievances are these 1. First the distraction and threatned ruine of our glorious Protestant Church the neglect and abuse of Religion the destruction of our Universities the springs of all Learning Divine and Humane occasioned by the fierce and ignorant Separatists set up and maintained as Rulers both in Church and State by the prevalency and violence of a rebellious and destructive Army under the command of the L. Fairfax and countenanced by the seeming Authority of a pact unfree and over-awed House of Parliament 2. Next that contrary to the Oath and duty of Allegiance from which no power can nor yet hath pretended to absolve us our Soveraign Lord the King is by the design of the said Army drawn from His House at Hampton Court to the Isle of Wight and there by the power of Col. Hammond and others of the Army Imprisoned and detained from His Parliament by which act the said Hammond and all adhering to him are according to the Votes passed in both Houses 16. March 1641. Enemies to the peace of the Kingdom 3. A third is the violent and unchristian separation of the King His Royal Consort and Children at once depriving His Majesty of the two first blessings bestowed on Man 4. The forcing the Queen and Prince of Wales to seek in a forein Nation what in their own they could not enjoy liberty safety and support 5. The exercise of Martial Law while the Courts of Justice are open and sitting at Westminster the obstructing justice in our Courts of Judicature and by the privat Committee of Indemnity perverting judgment and exercising arbitrary power which is a subversion of our ancient Laws and an introducing of a tyrannical government as was resolved by both Houses in the Cases of the E. of Strafford and Archb. of Canterbury and writ in their bloud 6. Sixtly the present mischief and future danger to the whole Kingdom by reason that the publique affairs of highest concern are managed and carried on by a few particular men in a private Committee at derby-Derby-house wherein contrary to the self-denying Ordinance the prime actors are chief Officers of the Army and have by our unhappy differences possest themselves of the most beneficial offices and imployments of the Kingdom and the other Places of profit and commodity are by their design conferred on others Members
that you may take a short view of his proceedings as you have done of Argile's by comparing them you will find who doth deserve the Title of the most Religious Duke Hamilton suffered his worthy Mother to enjoy besides her own Joynture all his Estate whereby indeed he lost nothing she improving it much to his advantage hath helpt his Brother to a great estate with Titles and Places of Honour and profit suitable to his birth and worth his Sisters and now some of his Neices matched in the Noblest and best Families of the Kingdom 1. Whereas Argile did in his Fathers life time bring him to a Pension outed his Brother of his Estate Kintyre and ruined his Sisters by cheating them of their portions and so enforcing them to go to Cloysters The Duke had no quarrel with any save Montrosse the ground you heard for crossing his first intention for the Invasion of Scotland to prevent the misery and bloudshed that he did foresee was like to follow 2. Argile for private quarrels betwixt him and Montrosse Culkettough and the Athol men the Earl of Airely and other hath drawn much misery and bloudshed upon the Kingdom whom he enforced to espouse his quarrels The Duke had no spoyls nor gifts given him since ever he signed the Covenant save the Title of DVKE but hath been spoyled both himself and friends by those that followed Montrosse 3. Argile had enrich'd his Country with the spoyls of the Kingdom and himself with the great treasure bestowed on him both by Scotland and England which is well secured without the reach of an Impeachment The Duke stands firm to his Covenant for the established religion loyal to his Prince for Monarchical Government faithfull to his Country against all forein Invasion 4. Argile hath contrary to his Covenant Duty and Allegiance conspired to extirpate Monarchical Government to introduce forein forces of Sectaries to the utter overthrow of the established Religion The Duke acts nothing but according to the Laws established according to the Covenant and the duty of every good Subject 5. Argile hath overthrown all Laws tyrannizing over the Lives Liberties and Estates of the Subjects Duke Hamilton hath been of that temper to mediate for a wel-grounded Peace his Majesties deliverance and the Personal Treaty being the only probable waies for setling the three Kingdoms and setling the power where it ought to be for the Honour and safety both of King and Subjects 6. Argile opposeth all wayes of the Peace settlement of the three Kingdoms His Majesties deliverance and being brought to a Personal Treaty lest the power should be taken out of his and his Confederates hands whereby they oppress and ruine both King and Subject The Duke hath used and is using all endeavours to Vindicate the oppressed Subjects in both Kingdoms never changing Interests being alwaies faithfull to all those to whom he did profess love and friendship 7. Lastly Argile hath betrayed his old friends the Presbyterian party in both Kingdoms especially the Presbyterians in the Parliament of England and City of London not only suffering them to be made a prey to their enemies but obstructing their relief Let the impartial Reader now judge which of the two is most religious As this opposition betwixt Duke Hamilton and Argile makes them both to appear what they are so this following Parallel betwixt the Argathelian Faction and the Independent Junto will serve for an eye-salve to cure the eye-sight of both Kingdoms and let them see clearly how near they are to the brink of an intolerable and perpetual slavery Argile and his Faction stiled by the Independents the Godly party in Scotland the rest all Malignants 1. The Army of Sectaries in England however formerly Preached and wrote against now called by Argile's faction the hope of their safety The like in England by the Army of Sectaries and Independent Junto above twenty millions shared amongst them whereof the Kingdom can never get accompt all places of Honour and Trust of England still in the hands of those that are engaged for and with the Army of Sectaries 2. The heavy Taxes imposed and continued upon Scotland by Argile and his Faction and all the benefit thereof and most part of the monies got from England shared amongst them and no satisfactory accompt given to the Kingdom thereof Cromwell and the army for the King in their first ingagements but having inslaved the City inforced the Parliament to the dethroning Votes and as not formerly acquainted therewith gave thanks for them and sent their Emissaries to some seduced Counties and Corporations to do the like 3. All places of Honour and trust usurped by Argathelians till of late and the Army modelled to maintnin their Interest 4. Argile formerly yet but seemingly for Monarchy now really against it and all that desire to assert it Cromwell contributes a Passe to His Guides slacking the guards as he did the second time when he frighted him with a Plot from Hampton-Court to the Isle of Wight where he remains close Prisoner 5. That Faction first betrays the King to come to the Scots Army promising protection and then most persidiously delivered Him up to the mercy of His most cruel Enemies The blood shed in England under colour of justice in cold blood calls aloud for vengeance and the persidious breaches of the Army of their promises to King Parliament and Country is too too evident 6. Argile and his Faction have been most cruel to those they call their Enemies especially in cold bloud and perfidious to their friends deserting and betraying them What the insolent Army did comming with Bayes in their hats when they inslaved the Parliament and riding in triumph through the City by whose bounty they were made and maintained an Army will to their perpetual infamy be registred to all posterity 7. Argile when he had done mischief must have both thanks and reward and like a Conquerour march through the Kingdom in triumph a thing never granted amongst the noble Romans to triumph for a Victory in a Civil War The Army and some others by their instigation petition that the Kingdome may be setled without the King and that Army continued to e●slave the Kingdom especially the Presbyterian party their Army being for Toleration 8. Argile's Faction petitions That the Army intended for His Majesties inlargement and the relief of our Presbyterian Brethren shall not come in Cromwell was ready to comply but got some other work for the time and if God prevent it not will now speedily be able to obey Argile's desires but if that fail Argile shall have money and send David Lesley to levy Forces abroad to work Argile's ends 9. Argile and his Faction desires but five thousand Horse to assist them to subdue Scotland which must be turned a Province to the Kingdom of the Saints Let this serve for a Caveat to the mis-led and deluded Protestants of the three Kingdomes not to trust the fair promises or pretences of these
seeming Saints who have made the solemn League and Covenant intended for preservation of Religion His Majesties Honour and the just Liberties of the Subject to be the ruine of Religion the dishonour so far as in them lieth of His Majesty and the most absolute enslaving of all free Subjects not to Kings or Princes to Great men or Good men but to the very scum and off-scouring of both Kingdoms it being no● small grief to all that truly feared God that so many of the reputed honest Presbyterian party should out of base fear or other by-respects comply so long with these Stare-Juglers the Clergy being most active hastning thereby their own and the Kingdoms misery for they may be well assured if these Saints prevail they must as some of them have done already turn their Coats once more and become the Hirelings and tongue-tied Tenants at will to their Brethren of the Independency or be kicked out of their fat Benefices and possibly out of the Kingdom to prevent new Insurrections against them which they are cunning to procure having the power in their hand to repress all that dare appear against them may be ruined others by their example terrified and their Saints may enjoy the fatness of England but I would ask these violent Clergy-men of the Presbyterian Party that are unwilling His Majesty should be brought speedily to a Personal Treaty what their Assemblies of Divines have been doing for if that Confession of Faith set out in England approved of in Scotland be agreeable to the truth of Gods word as I know nothing to the contrary why should the chief Magistrate our dread Soveraign be any longer debard of his just dues is He worse than Infidel that you will assist those that deny His sacred Majesty that which they allow to Infidel Magistrates blush for shame and repent in time lest as they change their Votes every day according as the tide of their power ebbs and flows so they may soon force you to repeal that Article concerning the chief Magistrate or like the gloss of Orleans put an exposition upon it which destroyeth the text God send us peace and truth and preserve His sacred Majesty and his Posterity and confound the wicked counsels of all such as are enemies to Peace Truth and Monarchy Si quid novistirectius istis Candidus imperti Si non his utere mecum THE END ANARCHIA ANGLICANA OR THE HISTORY OF Independency THE SECOND PART BEING A Continuation of Relations and Observations Historicall and Politique upon this present PARLIAMENT Begun Anno 16. CAROLI PRIMI By THEODORUS VERAX PSAL. 8.8 Virum sanguinum dolosum abominabitur Dominus Printed in the Year M.DC.XL IX THE PROTESTATION AND DECLARATION THe premises considered I do hereby in the name and behalf of my selfe and of all the Free People of England Declare and protest That the Generall Councel of Warre and officers of the Army by their said violent and treasonable force upon the farre major more honest and moderate part of the House of Commons being above 250. and leaving only 50. or 60. Schismaticks of their own engaged party sitting and voting under their Command and almost all of them such as have and do make a prey of the Commonwealth to enrich themselves and their Faction have broken discontinued and waged War against this Parliament have forfeited their Commissions And the remaining Faction in the House of Commons by abetting aiding and concurring with the said Councel of War in the said rebellious Force by setting up new illegal and arbitrary Courts of Judicature to murder King Charles the First our Lawful King and Governour who by his Writ according to the Law summoned and authorized this Parliament to meet sit Principium Caput finis Parliamenti Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Advise with Him and was the Fountain Head and Conclusion or consummatory End of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all Persons and in all Causes of this Kingdom and by Abolishing the House of Peers and the Kingly Office and dis-inheriting the Kings Children and Usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority and Legislative Power of this Nation in order to make and establish themselves a Councel of State Hogen Mogens or Lords States General and translate the said Supreme Power and Authority into the said Councel of State and then Dissolve this Parliament and perpetuate their said Tyranny and this Army and Govern Arbitrarily by the power of the Sword and raise what illegal Taxes they please and eat out consume and destroy whosoever will not basely submit to their Domination See 1. part sect 105 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17 18. and returne to sect 79 109 110. Stat. of Recognition 1. Iac. Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy have by the aforesaid ways and means totally subverted this Kingdome and destroyed the fundamental Laws Authority and Government thereof Dissolved and Abolished this and all future Parliaments so that there is now no visible lawful Authority left in England but the Authority of King CHARLS the Second who is actually KING of all his Dominions presently upon the Decease of the King his Father before any Proclamation made or Coronation solemnized notwithstanding that by his unjust Banishment caus●d by the interposition of the said traiterous combined Antimonarchical Faction He be eclipsed for the present and not suffered to perform any Acts of Government to his three Kingdoms and restore peace plenty justice mercy Religion Laws and Liberties to them again which no Hand but his own can bestow and therefore in vain do the people long for expect Figs from thistles Grapes from thornes This Kingdom of the Brambles now set up being only able to Scratch and Tear not to Protect and Govern them I farther Declare and Protest That this combined traiterous Faction have forced an Interregnum and a Justitium upon us an utter suspension of all lawful Government Magistracy Lawes and Judicatories so that we have not de jure any Laws in force to be executed any Magistrates or Judges lawfully constituted to execute them any Court of Justice wherin they can be judicially executed any such Instrument of the Law as a lawful Great Seal nor any Authority in England that can lawfully Condemn and Execute a Thief Murderer or other Offender without being themselves called Murderers by the Law all legal proceedings being now coram non Judice nor can this remaining Faction in the House of Commons shew any one President Law Reason or Authority whatsoever for their aforesaid doing but only their own irrational tyrannical Votes and the Swords of their Army Wherefore I do further Declare and Protest before God and the World That all free-born subjects of the Kingdom of England and Ireland are bound by the Stat. of Recognition 1. Jac. and by all our Lawes and Statutes By their Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy the Protestation and National Covenant by very many Declarations Remonstrances Petitions and Votes
all the Parliaments Declarations and Remonstrances held forth to the world their Treaties and promises made to the Scots when they delivered the Kings Person into our hands against our promises made to the Hollanders and other Nations and against all the Professions Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals made by this Army when they made their Addresses to the King at New-market Hampton-Court and other places William Pryn. Clem Walker January 19. 1648. 75. The Coun of Officers order 2. Petitions for the Commons House against Tythes 2. against the Stat. for Banishing the Jews Aout this time the Generall Councell of Officers at White-Hall ordered That two Petitions or mandates rather should be drawn and presented to their House of Commons One against Payment of Tythes the other for Repealing the Act for Banishment of the Jews Hear you see they shake hands with the Jews and crucifie Christ in his Ministers as well as in his Anointed the King About this time Col Tichburn and some schismaticall Common-Councell-men 57. Col Tichburns Petition and complaint against the Lord Mayor and their Orders thereupon The like Petitions were invited from most Counties where a dozen Schism●ticks and two or three Cloaks represented a whole Country presented a Petition to the supreme Authority the Commons in Parliament demanding justice against all grand and capitall Actors in the late Warres against the Parliament from the highest to the lowest the Militia Navy and all Places of power to be in faithfull hands that is in their own Faction all others being displaced under the generall notion of disaffected to settle the Votes That the supreme Authority is in the Commons in Parliament assembled They complained That the Lord Mayor and some Aldermen denied to put their Petition to the Question at the Common Councell and departed the Court with the Sergeant and Town-Clerke That the Court afterwards passed it Nemine contradicente The Commons thanked the Petitioners for the tender of their assistance and Ordered That the Petition should be entered amongst the Acts of the Common Councell and owned them for a Common Councell notwithstanding the departure of the Lord Mayor c. And about four or five daies after the Commons Ordered * See a just and solemn Protest of the free Cit●zens of London against the Ordinance 17. Decemb. 1647. disabling such as had any hand in the City Engagment to bear Office That any six of the Commons Councell upon eme gent occasions might send for the Lord Mayor to call a Common Councell themselves and any forty of them to have power to Act as a Common Councell without the Lord Mayor any thing in their Charter to the contrary notwithstanding Thus you see the Votes of this supreme thing the House of Commons are now become the onely Laws and Reason of all our actions 77 An Act passed for adjournment of part of Hillary Term and the Lords concurrence rejected The 16 Jan. 1648. was passed an Act of the Commons for adjournment of Hillary Term for fourty daies This was in order to the Kings Triall but the Commissioners of the Great Seal declared That they could not agree to seal Writs of Adjournment without the Lords concurrence the assent of one Lord being requisite their tame Lordships sent down to the Commons to offer their readiness to joyn therein But the Commons having formerly Voted The Supreme Power to be in themselves as the Peoples Representative and that the Commons in every Committee should be empowered to Act without the Lords The Question was put Whether the House would concurre with the Lords therein which passed in the Negative so the Lords were not owned Afterwards they ordered that the Commoners Commissioners for the Great Seal should issue forth Writs without the Lords 78. The Agreement of the People presented to the House of Commons by the Officers the Army Diurnall from Jan. 15. 10. 22. 1648. nu 286. 20. January Lieut. Generall Hammond with many Officers of the Army presented to the Commons from the Generall and Councell of the Army a thing like a Petition with The Agreement of the People annexed Mr. Speaker thanking them desired them to return the hearty thanks of the House to the Generall and all his Army for their gallant services to the Nation and desired the Petition and Agreement should be forthwith printed to shew the good affection between the Parliament and Army I cannot blame them to brag of this affection being the best string to their bowe About this time some wel-meaning man that durst think truth in private published his thoughts under the Title of Six serious Quaeries concerning the Kings Triall by the High Court of Justice .. 79. 6. Queries concerning the Kings Triall by the new High Court of Justice 1. Whether a King of three distinct Kingdoms can be condemned and executed by one Kingdom alone without the concurrent consent or against the judgement of the other two 2. Whether if the King be indicted or arraignd of high Treason he ought not to be tried by his Peers whether those who are now nominated to trie him or any others in the Kingd be his Peers 3. Whether if the King be triable in any Court for any Treason against the Ki●gdom He ought not to be tried onely in full Parliament in the most solemn and publike manner before all the Members of both Houses in as honourable a way as Strafford was in the beginning of this Parliament And whether He ought not to have liberty and time to make His full defence and the benefit of his learned Counsel in all matters of Law that may arise in or about his Trial or in demurring to the jurisdiction of this illegal new Court as Strafford and Canterbury had 4. Whether one eighth part only of the Members of the Commons House meeting in the House under the Armies force when all the rest of the Members are forcibly restrained secluded or scared away by the Armies violence and representing not above one eighth part of the Counties Cities Boroughs of the Kingdom without the consent and against the Vote of the majority of the Members excluded and chased away and of the House of Peers by any pretext of Authority Law or Justice can erect a New great Court of Justice to try the King in whom all the rest of the Members Peers and Kingdom being far the Major part have a greater interest then they Whether such an High Court can be erected without an Act of Parl. or at least an Ordin of both Houses and a Commission under the Great Seal of England And if not whether this can be properly called a Court of Justice and whether it be superiour or inferiour to those who erected it who either cannot or dare not try and condemn the King in the Com. House though they now stile it The Supreme Authority of the Kingdom and whether all who shall sit as Judges or act as Officers in it towards the
Jurisdiction of the Kingdome they have declared That it is notorious that the matter of the charge is true as it is in truth my Lord as cleare as crystall and as the Sun that shines at noone-day which if your Lordship and the Court be not satisfied in I have notwithstanding on the Peoples behalf severall Witnesses to produce and therefore I do humbly pray and yet I do confesse it is not so much I as the Innocent bloud that hath been shed the cry whereof is very great for Justice and Judgement and therefore I do humbly pray that speedy Judgment be pronounced against the Prisoner at the Bar. Bradshaw Sir You have heard what is moved by the Councel on behalfe of the Kingdome against you you were told over and over againe That it was not for you nor any other man to dispute the Jurisdiction of the Supreme and highest Authority of England from which there is no appeal and touching which there must be no dispute yet you did persist in such carriage as you have no manner of obedience nor did you acknowledge any authority in them nor the high Court that constituted this high Court of Justice Sir I must let you know from the Court that they are very sensible of these delaies of Yours and that they ought not being thus Authorized by the Supreme Court of England be thus trifled withall and that they might in Justice and according to the rules of Justice take advantage of these delayes and proceed to pronounce Judgment against you yet neverthelesse they are pleased to give direction and on their behalf I do require you That You make a positive Answer unto this charge that is against you in plaine Tearmes for Justice knowes no respect of Persons you are to give your positive and finall Answer in plaine English whether you be guilty or not guilty of these Treasons laid to your charge King When I was here Yesterday I did desire to speak for the Liberties of the people of England I was interrupted I desire to know yet whether I may speak freely or not Bradsh Sir You have had the resolution of the Court upon the like question the last day and you were told that having such a charge of so high a nature against you Your work was that you ought to acknowledge the Jurisdiction of the Court and to answer to your charge when you have once Answered you shall be heard at large make the best defence You can But Sir I must let you know from the Court as their commands That You are not to be permitted to Issue out into any other di●●●●●ses till such time as You have given a positive answer concerning the matter charg'd upon you King For the charge I value it not a Rush it is the Liberty of the people of England that I stand for for Me to acknowledge a new Court that I never heard of before I that am your KING that should be an example to all the people of England to uphold Justice to maintaine the old Lawes Indeed I do not know how to do it you spoke well the first day that I came here on Saturday of the Obligations that I had laid upon me by God to the maintenance of the Liberties of my people the same Obligation you spake of I do acknowledge to God that I owe to him and to My people to defend as much as in Me lies the antient Laws of the Kingdome therefore untill that I may know that this is not against the fundamentall Lawes of the Kingdome I can put in no particular Answer if you will give Me time I will shew you My Reasons and this here being interrupted the King said again Whether these breaches and interruptions were made by Bradshaw or whether they are omissions and expunctions of some material parts of the King's Speech which this licenced Pen man durst not let downe I Know not I hear much of the King's Argument is omitted and much depraved none but Licenced-men being suffered to take Notes By your favour you ought not to interrupt Me How I came here I know not there 's no Law for it to make your King your Prisoner I was in a Treaty upon the publique Faith of the Kingdom that was the known two Houses of Parliament that was the Representative of the Kingdome and when I had almost made an end of the Treaty then I was hurried away and brought hither and therfore Bradsh Sir You must know the pleasure of the Court. King By your favour Sir Bradsh Nay Sir by your favour You may not be permitted to fall into those Discourses You appear as a Delinquent You have not acknowledged the Authority of the Court the Court craves it not of You but once more they command You to give your positive Answer Clerke do your Duty King Duty Sir The Clerke reads Charles Stuart King of England You are accused in behalfe of the Commons of England of diverse high Crimes and Treasons which Charge hath been Read unto You The Court now requires You to give Your positive and finall Answer by way of confession or deniall of the Charge King Sir I say againe to you so that I may give satisfaction to the People of England of the clearnesse of My proceedings not by way of answer not in this way but to satisfie them that I have done nothing against that Trust that hath been committed to Me I would do it but to acknowledge a New Court against their Priviledges to alter the fundamentall Lawes of the Kingdome Sir you must excuse me Bradsh Sir This is the third time that You have publiquely disavowed this Court and put an affront upon it how far You have preserved the priviledges of the people Your actions have spoken but truly Sir mens intentions ought to be known by their actions You have written Your meaning in bloudy Characters throughout the whole Kingdome but Sir you understand the pleasure of the Court Clerke Record the default and Gentlemen you that took charge of the Prisoner take Him back againe So the King went forth with His Guards and the Court adjourned to the Painted Chamber the Cryer as at other times crying God blesse the Kingdome of England 83. The fourth and last dayes Triall of His Majesty Saturday 27. Jan. 1648. The Court sate again in Westminster-hall the President was in his Scarlet Robes after him 67. Commissioners answered to their Names The King came in in His wonted posture with his Hat on a Company of Souldiers and Schismaticks placed about the Court to cry for Justice Judgement and Execution The people not daring to cry God blesse Him for fear of being againe beaten by the Souldiers Bradsh Gentlemen it is well knowne to all or most of you here present that the Prison●r at the Bar hath been severall times convented and brought before this Court to make Answer to a charge of High Treason and other high crimes exhibited against Him in the Name
and reason captive and is almighty against all but the Councell of the Army The 8. Febr. came forth A Declaration and Protestation of the Peeres Lords and Barons of this Realm 99. A Protestation of the Peers against the late treasonable proceedings and tyrannicall usurpations of some Members of the Commons House who endeavour to subvert the fundamentall Laws and Regall Government of this Kingdom and enslave the People to their boundless Tyranny in stead of Freedom The Protestation followeth VVE the Peers Lords and Barons of this Realm of England for the present necessary vindication of the undoubted Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and more particularly of the House of Peers the just Prerogatives and Personall safety of our Kings the known Laws and Liberties of this Kingdom the Hereditary Freedom of all the Freemen of this Nation and our own affronted and contemned Honours and Authority against the many late unparallel'd dangerous Invasions and treasonable Vsurpations of a few insolent mis-advised Members of the late House of Commons whiles the greatest and ablest part of that House were forcibly detained or deterr'd from thence wherewith we find our selves and the whole Kingdom unsufferably injured and deeply afflicted Do after a long patient expectation of their own ingenious Retractions of such injustifiable Exorbitancies which their own judgements and consciences cannot but condemn whereof we now utterly despair being thereto engaged in point of Honour Loyalty Conscience Oath and love to our Native Country as also by our Solemn League and Covenant publikely declare and protest to all the world That by the Laws and Customes of this Realm and usage of Parliament time out of mind ever since there were Parliaments in this Island the principall Authority and Iudicatory of the Parliaments of England hath alwaies constantly resided and ought still to continue onely in the King and House of Peers wherein He alwaies sits and not in the Commons House who never had claimed nor ought to have any right or power to judge any Person or Cause civilly or criminally having no authority to examine any Witnesses upon Oath and being no Court of Record but onely to accuse and impeach Delinquents in and before the House of Peers where they alwaies have used to stand bare-beaded at their Barre but never yet to stand covered much less to sit vote or give Judgement And that the House of Commons without the concurrent assent of the House of Peers and Kings of England never heretofore challenged nor enjoyed nor can of right pretend to any lawfull power or Jurisdiction to make or publish any form or binding Ordinance Vote Act or Acts of Parliament whatsoever nor ever once presumed to pass any Act or Acts to erect a new High Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the meanest Subject least of all their own Soveraign Lord and King or any Peer of the Kingdome who by the Common and Statute Laws of this Realm and Magna Charta ought to be tried only by their Peers and not otherwise or to dis-inherit the right Heir to the Crown or to alter the Fundamental Government Laws Great Seal or ancient forms of process and legal proceedings of this Realm or to make or declare High Treason to be no Treason or any Act to be Treason which in it self or by the Law of the Land is no Treason or to dispose of any Offices or Places of Judicature or impose any Penalties Oaths or Taxes on the Subjects of this Realm And therefore we do here in the presence of Almighty God Angels and Men from our hearts disclaim abhor and protest against all Acts Votes Orders or Ordinances of the said Members of the Commons House lately made and published for setting up any new Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the King or any Peers or Subject of this Realm which for any Person or Persons to sit in or act as a Judge or Commissioner to the condemning or taking away the life of the King or any Peer or other Subject We declare to be High Treason and wilful Murther to disinherit the Prince of Wales of the Crown of England or against proclaiming him King after his Royal Fathers late most impious traiterous and barbarous murther or to alter the Monarchical Government Laws Great Seal Judicatories and ancient forms of Writs and legal process and proceedings or to keep up or make good any Commissions Judges or Officers made void by the Kings bloody execution or to continue any old or raise any new Forces or Armies or to impose any new Taxes Payments Oaths or forfeitures on the Subjects or to take away any of their Lives Liberties or Estates against the Fundamental Laws of the Realm or to make any new Judges Justices or Officers or set aside the House of Peers far ancienter than the Commons House and particularly this insolent and frantick Vote of theirs Feb. 6. That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose to be not onely void null and illegal in themselves by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm but likewise treasonable detestable tyrannical and destructive to the Priviledges Rights and being of Parliaments the just Prerogatives and Personal safety of the Kings of England the Fundamental Government and Laws of the Realme the Lives Liberties Properties and Estates of the People and the most transcendent tyranny and usurpation over the King Kingdome Parliament Peers Commons and Freemen of England ever practised or attempted in any Age tending onely to dishonour enslave and destroy this antient flourishing Kingdom and set up Anarchy and confusion in all places All which exorbitant and trayterous Usurpations We and all free-born Englishmen are by all obligations bound to oppose to the uttermost with our ●●●es and fortunes lest We sh●uld be accessary to our own and our Posterities slavery and ruine for preventing whereof We have lately spent so much blood and treasure against the Mal●gnant Party whose Treasons and Insolencies they far exceed * 100. The Kingly Office voted down after almo●t 1000 years it is now discovered by these new Lights to be inconvenient to be in one hand therefore it must be in the Councel of State forty Tyrants for one King that is the Army and their Party The 7. Febru the Commons debated about the Kingly Office and passed this Vote Resolved c. By the Commons of England assembled in Parliament that it hath been found by experience and this House doth declare That the Office of a King in this Nation and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burdensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike Interest of the People of this Nation and therefore ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose 101. A Committee to bring in a list of Names for a Councel of State A Committee was named to bring in a list
have no power nor authority to make or alter the Great Seale of England or grant any Commissions to any Commissioners Judges Sheriffs Justices of the Peace or any other That all the Commissions granted by them under their New or any other Seale are meerly void and illegall and all the new Writs and proceedings in Law or Equity before any Judges Justices Sheriffs or other Officers made by them meerly void in Law to all intents coram non judice 4. That the deniall of the KING's Title to the Crowne and plotting the meanes to deprive Him of it or to set it upon anothers Head is High Treason within the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. ch 2. And that the endeavouring to subvert the Fundamentall Lawes and Government of the Realme of England by King Lords and Commons and to introduce a tyrannicall or arbitrary Government against Law is High Treason at the Common Law especially in Judges and Lawyers not taken away by any Statute Both which Mr. St. John in his Argument at Law concerning the Bill of attainder of high Treason of Tho. E. of Stafford published by order of the Com. House An. 1641. p. 8. 14. to 33. and 64. to 78. And in his Speech as a conference of both Houses of Parl. concerning Ship-mony An. 1640. hath proved very fully by many reasons and presidents and Coke in his 7. Report f. 10 11 12 and 3. Instit c. 1. That the Commons now sitting in making a new Great Seale without the Kings Image or Style in granting new illegall Commissions to Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs and other Officers in the name of Custodes Angliae in the generall in omitting and altering the Kings Name Style and Title in Writs Processe Indictments and proceedings at the Common Law and thereby indeavouring to Dis-inherit the Prince now lawfull King by and since his Fathers bloudy murther and to alter and subvert the Fundamentall Lawes and Government of the Realme by such commissions and proceedings and by the power of an Army to enforce them and the Judges Justices Sheriffs and other Officers who accept of such Commissions and all those especially Lawyers who voluntarily assist consent and submit to such Commissions and Alterations by such usurped illegall Authority and the Commissioners sitting in the new Courts of Justice are most really guilty of both these high * * Whereupon six Judges refused to accept any new Commissions or to act as Judges Treasons in which there are no Accessories and lesse excusable than Strafford or Canterbury whom some of these new Judges and sitting Members impeached and prosecuted to death for those very Treasons themselves now act in a more apparent and higher degree than they and in respect of their oaths covenant callings and places are more obliged to maintaine the Kings Title the Fundamentall Lawes and Government the Rights and Liberties of the Kingdome and Parliament then they and therefore if they persevere therein may justly expect the self-same capitall punishments they underwent if not farre worse especially since they attempt to reduce the antientest Kingdome of all Christendom into the puniest and most contemptible State in all the World and thereby to render us the most infamous perfidious and dishonourable Nation under Heaven both to the present and all succeeding Ages which must needs make the contrivers and Abetters thereof the most detestable Traytors and publique Enemies to their King and native Country that ever this Realme brought forth in any Age. Repent therefore of these your Treasons and amend your lives if you expect the least hope of pardon from God or Man and expiate all your former high misdemeanours by engaging all your power and endeavours to settle all things in Church and State according to your primitive engagements instead of accumulating one sin and Treason to another which will prove your certaine ruine in conclusion not your safety About the same time and it is thought from the same Author came forth a Paper bearing the Title of 110. Six propositions of undoubted verity Another Paper Every Act of Parliament relateth to the first day of the same Parliam but it cannot be that any Act passed in the Reigne of King Charles the second should relate to the first day of this Parliament which happened in the sixteenth yeare of Charles the First ergo this Parliament is determined by the death of King Charles the first ¶ Six Propositions of undoubted verity fit to be considered in our present exigency by all loyall Subjects and conscientious Christians 1. THat this Parliament is ipso facto Dissolved by the King's death He being the Head Beginning and End of the Parliament called onely by his Writ to confer with Him as His Parliament and Councel about urgent affaires concerning Him and His Kingdome and so was it resolved in 1. Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. n. 1. 14 H. 4. Coke 4. Instit p. 46. 4. c. 4. f. 44. b. 2. That immediately upon this Parliaments dissolution by the Kings death all Commissions granted by the King or by one or both Houses to the Generall or Officers of the Army the Commissioners of the great Seale of England Judges of the Kings Courts Justices of Peace Sheriffs Excise-men Customers and the like with all Committees and ordinances of one or both Houses made this Parliament did actually determine expire and become meerly void in Law to all intents and purposes and cannot be continued as good and valid by any Power whatsoever 3. That instantly after the Kings decease the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme of England and of the Kingdomes Dominions and Rights thereunto belonging was by inherent Birth-right and Lawfull undoubted succession and descent actually vested in the most Illustrious Charles Prince of Wales being next lineall Heire of the bloud Royall to his Father King CHARLES and that He is actuall KING thereof before any ceremony of Coronation as is resolved in full Parliament by the Statute of 1. Jacobi ch 1. and by all the Judges of England since Coke 7. Report f. 10 11. in Calvins case Whose Royall Person and Title to the Crowne all loyall Subjects are bound by their Oaths of Supremacy Allegiance and Solemne League and Covenant with their Estates Lives and last drop of their blouds to maintaine against all Opposers 4. That all Peers of the Realme Mayors Sheriffs chief Officers of Cities and Corporations in this Kingdome are obliged by their Places and Allegiance without any delayes or excuses to declare and proclaime Prince Charles to be rightfull King of England and of all Kingdomes and Rights thereunto belonging notwithstanding any illegall prohibitions or menaces to the contrary by any usurped Power whatsoever under paine of being guilty of High Treason and forfeiting their City and Corporation Charters in case of supine neglect or refusall thereof through fear terror or any sinister respect 5. That till King Charles be setled in his Throne or give other Order the present Government of the Kingdome is legally vested
own such prodigious abuses should happen p. 19. It is said The Kings Revenue by a medium of 7 years was yearly 700000 l. The legall and justifiable Revenue of the Crown fell short of 100000 l. per annum I perceive this is all the Account the Common-wealth is likely to have from the Committee of the Kings Queens and Princes Revenue nor do I know what a pruning-hook that phrase legall Revenue may prove But I conceived all that Q. Elizabeth the Kings Father and Himself received had been His Revenue de jure I am sure it was de facto and the Parliament in their Declarations promised to settle a better Revenue upon Him than any of His Ancestors enjoyed neither did this nor any former Parliament complain that His Purse was grown too full or His Revenue too fulsome and if the Committe of the Revenues had enjoyed no more but their own legal and justifiable Revenue so many of the KING'S Servants and Creditors had not starved for want of their own p. 19. They very much aggravate Monopolies Patente and Projects I wonder they suffer so many Men guilty in that kind to sit in their House old Sir Henry Vane Sir Henry Myldmay Sir John Hypsley Cornelius Holland Laurence Whytakers c. p. 20. 2 Part of Englands New Chains discovered c and the Hunting the Foxes return to s 127. They speak against the Lords Negative Voice but not a word against the Councell of Warres Negative Voice who march up in hostile manner against Parliament and City and secure seclude and drive away 250 Members at one time if they vote any thing contrary to their Interest They speak likewise against the Lords Judiciall power over Commoners but have forgot what unjust and illegal use themselves attempted to make of the Lords jurisdiction against the 11 impeached Members the 4 Aldermen and Citizens p. 21. 1 Part. sect 45. 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54. They excuse their receding from their Declaration of April 1646. they might have minded you of a Vote of a later Date had it made for their turn for Governing the Kingdom by King Lords and Commons To this it is said the King nor Lords could take no advantage thereof being a contract they never consented unto indeed it was never presented to them but I shall ask whether the people may not take advantage thereof for whose satisfaction this was Declared a generall grudge being then amongst them that the Parliament and Army would subvert the ancient Fundamentall Government p. 22 23. They answer an Objection that these great matters ought to be determined in a full House not when many Members are excluded by force and the priviledges so highly broker and those who are permitted to sit do act under a force To this is answered how truly let any man that hath read our Histories tell That few Parliaments have acted but some force or other hath been upon them I wonder they did not argue thus for the silly Tumult of Apprentices for Breach of Priviledges of Parliament They Answer It will not be charged upon the remaining party or to have been within their power to prevent it or repair it to this I reply that it is doubted the remaining party being the Army party contrived it in their Junto at Somerset-house for p. 23. it is acknowledged they called and appointed the Army for their Guard which was not openly done by a full House it must be therefore secretly done by a party See many Reasons for this conjecture before Sect. 24. Farther they say That the safety of the Kingdom ought to be preferred before priviledge of Parliament and that if their House had declined their dutie viz by not Acting they had resigned up all to ruine and confusion from whence should this ruine and confusion come but from their own Army which they perpetuate to eat up the Kingdom and continue their own power and profit and I wonder they did not use the same moderation after that childish Tumult of Apprentices but Declared all Acts c. passed from 26. July which day the Tumult began and ended to the 6. August null and void And endeavoured to make the very sitting of the Members and the Citizens obeying to the said Orders though no Judges of the force Treasonable they deny they sit now under a force the Army being their best friends called by them for their safety Indeed it is generally thought the Army and this remnant of the House of Commons are as good Friends and Brethren as Simeon and Levi Pilate and Herod were and were called to secure the Members and purge the House yet if the remaining party should Vote contrary to the Dictates of the Councell of War Quaere 2 Part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting the Foxes c. Whether they will not be used as uncivilly as the secured Members nay worse by being called to account for cousening the State p. 24. They say There is a cleer consistencie of our Laws with the present Government of a Republique I desire to know who by our Law can call or bold a Parliament but the KING who is Principium Caput Finis Parliamenti who is the fountain of Justice Honour Peace when we have no King who is Conservator of the Laws and Protector of the people where is the Supreme Authority to Vote it in their own case to be in a Representative of 50 or 60 Commons without legall proofs or precedents is to lead Mens reason captive as well as their Persons and Estates to impose an implicite faith upon Man not to use discourse and reason against their Votes is to take Man out of Man to deny him his definition Animal rationale to whom doth the Subject owe Allegiance and where is the Majesty of England when there is no King for all Treason is Crimen laesae majestatis contra debitam ligeanciam Therefore where by the known Laws no Allegiance is there is no Treason Lastly if our present Laws be so consistent with the Republique I desire to know why they did not Trie the 4 Lords legally at the Common Law by their Peers and Sir John Owen by a Jury of 12 Men of the Neighbourhood according to Magna Charta and other good Laws but were faine to put a Legislative Trick upon them and erect such a Court for the Triall of them as was never heard of in England before nor hath no place in our Government They conclude p. 26. That as they have not intermedled with the affairs and Government of other States so they hope none will intermeddle with them This assertion is as true as the rest it being well known that for about 3. years last pass'd they have boasted That they have many Agents in France who under colour of Merchandise vent Antimonarchicall and Anarchicall Tenents and sow seeds of Popular Liberty amongst the poor Peasants and Huguenots of France which they brag prospered well there their very
aforesaid commotions and all other causes they pleased to call High Treason They had no other bounds nor limits in their proceedings than what they prefixed to themselves in certain Articles Some few whereof I will here present unto my Reader because they judged of High Treason by those Articles not by the known Laws of the Land a thing very observable and applicable to my purpose so that they were not only Judges Leges dicere but also Law-makers Leges dare as all Judges are who take upon them a liberty to observe no set forms of proceedings but at their own pleasure 1. Article Petitioning against Innovations in Government and for the known Laws made Treason the like the Parliament practiseth against such as petitioned for peace by accommodation And against our High Court of Justice Arbitrary Imprisonments and Taxes All Petitions heretofore tendered to the States or Cities Corporate against the erecting of new Episcopal Sees or against the Holy Inquisition or or requiring a Moderation of Decrees or Acts of State Parliament are accounted meer conspiracies against God and the King 2. Art All Nobles Gentry Judges Magistrates and all others who connived at Heretical Sermons plundering of Churches and delivering such Petitions as aforesaid pretending the necessity of the times and did not resist and oppose them 3. Art Whosoever affirms that all His Majesties Subjects of Belgia have not forfeited their ancient Priviledges immunities and laws for Treason We have forfeited our laws by conquest or else our Grandees would not pass the two Acts for Treason 14. May 17. July 1648. nor erect the High Court of Justice and abolish our ancient lawes and government See Pol. 3. Oct. 1650. and the Case of the Kingdome stated and that it is not lawful for the King to use and handle them for the aforesaid Treasons as he pleaseth to prevent the like Treasons for the time to come and that the King is not absolved thereby from all Oaths Promises Grants Contracts and Obligations whatsoever Compare this with the two Acts for New Treasons 14. May 17. July 1649. and the Act 26 March 1650. and Sir John Gells Case stated 4. Art They that affirm this Councel or High Court of Justice exercise Tyranny in their Proceedings or Judgements and that they are not Supreme and competent Judges in all causes Criminal and Civil Our High Court of Just exceeds all this See Sir John Gells Case stated Printed Aug. 1650. 5. Art Those that in case of Heresie deny that all manner of Informers and Witnesses of whatsoever Degree and condition they be are to be credited and that upon the Testimony of any two witnesses this High Court ought to proceed to Judgment Execution and Confiscation of life and goods without publishing the cause or charge and without any legal form of Trial. All these are guilty of High Treason against God and the King The Rigour Cruelty and Injustice of this New erected Counsel of Blood or High Court of Justice enforced the Low Countries to revolt and cast off the King of Spain LEt us now examine whether in some one little Province or Island belonging to that vast Roman Empire and in some mean petty fellowes Natives of that Island men even at home of obscure Birth Breeding and Fortunes we cannot finde examples of Ambition Usurpation and Tyranny as high and transcendent as bloody and destructive as covetous and greedy as any of the fore-recited presidents And which is worst of all carried on by those that call themselves Christians nay Saints which is more than they vouchsafe to Saint Peter and the rest of the Apostles though glorified Saints in the Church Triumphant and such as in all their bloody oppressing cheating Designs promoted by Perjury Treachery breach of Faith Oaths and publick Declarations pretend to the singular favour Providence and will of heaven as confidently as if they could shew Gods special Commission to warrant Usurpation Treason Tyranny and Thievery It is not unknown by what Artifices frauds falsified promises Oaths and Covenants a party of Antimonarchists Schismaticks and Anabaptists lurking in the Parliament fooled the people to contribute their blood and money towards the subduing of the King and in him of themselves and how by the same wayes and subtilties the said party in the two Houses now combined openly under the General Title of Independents engaging and conspiring with the Officers of the Army and Souldiery expelled by armed force seven parts of eight of the House of Commons leaving not above 43. or 44. of their own engaged party sitting men inriched with publick spoyls and voting under the power of the Armies Commanders whose commands are now become a law to the said sitting Members as their Votes are become Laws to the Kingdome In Obedience to their said Masters of the Army The said remainder of Commons voted down the House of Lords though an integral and principal Member of the Parliament of England far antienter than the House of Commons and having a power of Judicature to administer an Oath which the House of Commons never had nor pretended to have until this time that they overflow their Bounds and the whole Kingdomes under the protection of their Army which prerogative of the House of Lords is clearly demonstrated by the House of Commons standing bare before them at all conferences as the Grand Inquest doth before the Judges because they rejected the Ordinance for Trial of the King And now these Dregs and Lees of the House of Commons take upon them to be a compleat Parliament To enact and repeal Statutes To subvert the Fundamental Government Laws and Liberties of the Land To pull up by the Roots without Legal proceedings every mans private property and possession and destroy his life To burden the people with unsupportable unheard of unparliamentary Taxes Impositions Excise Freequarter buying of New Arms after the Countrey have been disarmed of their old Arms three times in one year In their Tax Rolls they usually set in the Margent to every name private notes of distinction an M. an N. or P. The letter M. stands for Malignant he that is so branded is highly taxed and his complaints for redress slighted N stands for a Neuter he is more indifferently rated and upon cause shewn may chance to be relieved The letter P. signifies a perfect Parliamentarian He is so favourably taxed as he bears an inconsiderable part of the burden and that they may the better consume with Taxes and want all such as do not concur with them in the height of their villanies The pretended Parliament are now debating to raise the Monethly Tax to 240000 lib. or to deprive every man of the third part of his Estate both Real and Personal for maintenance of their immortal Wars and short lived Commonwealth Besides Excise Customes Tonnage and Poundage Freequarter finding Arms and Horses and the sale of Corporation Lands now in agitation Whilest our Grandees enrich all the Banks of
to rest satisfied therewith You see here a Whip and a Bell provided to keep the whole Kingdom in awe the declared Supreme power of their Soveraign Lord the People must resign their known Lawes to their Trustees their Representatives in Parliament and take New Lawes from their Arbitrary votes or woe to be to their Necks and Shoulders I must interrupt you what you do is not agreeable to the Proceedings of any Court of Justice You are about to enter into Argument and dispute concerning the Authority of this Court before whom you appear as a Prisoner you may not dispute the Authority of this Court nor will any Court give way to it you are to submit to it It is not safe to confute a lie told with Authority Yet if a man be Endited of Treason or Felony in the Court of Common Pleas a man may Demur to and dispute the Jurisdiction of that Court because it is not in Criminall Causes Competens Forum nor the Judges Competent Judges every man and every cause must be tried Suo Foro non Alieno So if a Peer be arraigned in the Kings Bench. And for this upstart unpresidented High Court it is no Court of Judicature at all as being erected without lawfull Authority Consisting of Incompetent Judges no Records belonging to it and tending to disinherit and disfranchise all the People of England and to murder them You may not dispute the Jurisdiction of the Supreme and Highest Authority of England from which there is no Appeal The votes of the Commons of England assembled in Parliament is the Reason of the Kingdom Oh Brutish irrationall Kigdom Where 40. or 50. Anabaptisticall Members the Dregs and lees of the House of Commons after all the best and sincerest 7. Parts of 8. had been racked and purged out at the Bunghole by Cromwell the Bruer and Pride his Dray-man shall be called the Reason and Law of the Land This confirmes the truth of what King Charles I. Objected to the Parliament whereof I have formerly spoken That they disposed of the Subjects Lives and Fortunes by their own Votes against the known Lawes of the Land But that there should be no Appeal to their declared Soveraign Lord the People from their subordinate Trustees in Parliament is wonderfull Considering that in all Governments the last Appeal is ever the Highest and most Absolute power But it may be they will be the Peoples Trustees in spight of their Teeth and by the power of the Sword and so free themselves from rendring any account of their Stewardship You may not demu●re to the Jurisdiction of the Court. If you do they let you know that they over-rule your Demurrer and affirm their own Jurisdiction Reason is not to be heard against the Highest Jurisdiction the Commons of Engl. make a direct and positive Answer either by denying or confessing and put in immediately an issuable Plea Guilty or Not Guilty of the Charge or we will record your Default and Contumacy and by an implicite confession take you Guilty proconfesso and immediately give Judgement against you This as I told you before is it that blanches the Deer into the Toile But God deliver us from that Jurisdiction that is too high to hear Reason and that overrules Demurrers before they be heard I have told you as much of the proceedings of this Court as the Novelty Obscurity Uncertainty and confusion thereof will give me leave Let me now by way of overplus give you the great dangers and Slavery that will befall all sorts of People if they tamely and cowardly suffer themselves to be deprived of their antient Legall Trialls by Enditement and Juries of the Neighbourhood then which the whole world cannot boast of a more equall way and suffer their Lives Liberties Estates and Honours to be subject to an Arbitrary Extrajudiciall conventicle of Bloud Cromwells New Slaughterhouse which hath neither Law Justice Conscience Reason Presisident or Authority Divine or Humane but onely the pretended Parliaments irrationall Votes and the Power of the Sword to maintain it which will prove a Cittadell over their Liberties a Snare to their Estates a Deadfall to their Lives and Scandall to their honors and Families if not timely opposed 1. By the Law The Enditement must specifie what the Treason is and against what Person committed As against our Soveraign Lord the King his Crown and Dignity But in the said Articles of Impeachment it is alleaged that the Treason is committed against the present Government or against the Keepers of the Libe●ties of England but in this dead-water our turning Tide between the old Regall and this New unknown Government no man knows how to do look or speak for fear of contradicting the guilt of an Interpretative Treason upon the said two Statutes for New Treasons and before this boundless lawless New Court And to say that Treason is committed against a Government in abstracto is Non-sence it must be said that Treason is committed against the Governors in Concreto naming them For there being no Treason without Allegeance And Allegeance being a personall Obligation must be due from a certain known Person to a certain known Person or Persons And therefore the Keepers of the Liberties of England not being yet made particularly known to us who they are or where to be found or what their power Duty or Office is and being not tied by any set Oath to deal well and truly with the People as Kings are by their Coronation Oath for if the stipulation be not mutuall the People are Slaves not Subjects Since the Duties of Allegeance and Protection Obedience and Command being reciprocall as they must needs be the Parliament having declared the Supreme power to be in the People they must not govern them Mero Imperio by Lawless votes like Turkish Tartarian and Russian Slaves I cannot owe nor perform Allegiance to those Individua vaga the Keepers or Gaolers of our Liberties nor to an Utopian Commonwealth And without Allegeance no Treason for in all Enditements of High Treason it must be alleaged That the Accused did Proditoriè perpetrate such and such Crimes Contra debitam Allegantiam suam And the word Proditoriè signifies the betraying of a Trust According to the Proverb In Trust is Treason Now where there is no profession of Allegeance there is no Acceptance of a Trust no man can trust me against my will I was born under a Regall Government have read the Stat. Recognition 1. Jac. Have taken as well as others the Legall Oathes of Allegeance Obedience and Supremacy to the King his Heires and Lawfull Successors imposed upon me by lawfull Authority and from which no power on Earth can absolve me and so much I attest in the Oath of Supremacy And how I should now come after the New Moduling of the Parliament and Kingdom by Souldiers to owe Allegeance to Cromwell the Bruer Scot the Bruers Clerk Bradshaw the Murderous Petty fogger Sir Henry Mildmay the Court Pander and
the Duke of Buckingham and the Lord Generall bareheaded and then his Majesty rid between his two brothers the Duke of York on the right hand and the Duke of Glocester on the other after whom followed his Excellencies Life-guard and then the Regiments of the Army all completely accoutred with back breast and Pot. In this order they came to Saint Georges fields in a part of which towards Newington was a Tent erected in which the Lord Mayor King rides through the Citie and Aldermen in their most solemne Formalities with their Officers Servants Livery-men and Lackeyes innumerable waited to which place when his Majesty came the Lord Mayor presented him on his knees with all the Insignia of the City viz. Sword Mace Charter c. Which he immediately returned with promise of Confirmation and conferred the Honour of Knighthood on the Lord Mayor in the place whereafter a short refreshment three hundred in Velvet Coats and Chains representing the several Companies passing on before the Lord Mayor bearing the Sword before the King they proceeded in an excellent order and equipage into and through the City which was all hung with Tapistry and the Streets lined on the one side with Livery men on the other side with the Trained Bands both taking and giving great satisfaction until at last even tyred with the tedious pleasure of his Welcome Journey he came to the Gate of his Pallace of Whitehall which struck such an impression of greif into his sacred heart by the Remembrance of his Fathers horrid Murther there as had almost burst forth if not stopt or recalled by the Joy he received from the acclamations of the people and the thought that he was peaceably returned after so many years unto His own House The King being come in went presently to the Banqueting House where the Houses of Parliament attended for him to whom the two Speakers severally made an incomparable Speech wherein with great eloquence they set forth the many years misery under which the Nation laboured then repeated the Kingdomes Joyes at present for their hoped happinesse in the future by his Majesties Restauration and so commended to his Princely care his three Kingdomes and people with their Laws and priviledges whereto the King in a Majestick style made this short but full return That he was so disordered by his Journey and the Acclamations of the people still in his Ears which yet pleased him as they were demonstrations of Affection and Loyalty that he could not express himself so full as he wished yet promised them that looking first to Heaven with a Thank-ful heart for his Restoration he would have a careful Eye of especial grace and favour towards his Three Kingdomes protesting that he would as well be a Defendor of their Laws liberties properties as of their faith Having thus received and taken several Congratulations and Entertaiments and dismissed his Noble Honourable Worshipful and Reverend Guard of the Nobility Gentry Citizens and Ministry he retired to Supper and afterwards having devoutly offered the Sacrifice of Prayer and Praise to the most high for his safe return he went to his Repose and Bed The first Beam that darted from our Royal Sun infused such a sense of piety into the peoples Affection that it even made them break into an Excess of Joy it was that happy Omen of a vertuous Government the admirable Proclamation against debauchednesse wherein such is his Majesties zeal he takes no notice of his Enemies but our sin which had so long occasioned his exile not sparing therein those who pretended to be his friends yet by their prophanenesse disserved him A happy Prince and happy people sure where the Extremity of Justice endevoureth to take nothing from the Subject but a Liberty to offend which so highly pleased the people that their Joyes rather increased then diminished according to that of the Poet. Littora cum plausu clamor superasque Deorum Implevere Domos gaudent generumque salutant Auxiliumque Domus servatoremque fatentur The Shores ring with applause the Heavens abound With grateful Clamours which therein resound All men salute him Father Prince and King That home again their banish'd peace doth bring Which is further also expressed by the Poet in these words Largis satiantur odoribus ignes Sertaque dependent tectis ubique lyraeque Tibiaque cantus animi felicia laeti Argumenta sonant reseratis aurea valvis Atria tota patent pulchroque instructa paratu Proceres ineunt convivia Regis The Bonfires light the Skie Garlands adorn The Streets and Houses Nothing is forborn That might express full joy while to his Court The King by Nobles follow'd doth resort And in their Feasts Gods wondrous Acts report So restless were the Nights of our pious King that he began to account all time spent in vain and amisse wherein he did not do or offer some good to his Kingdome to this purpose on the first of June the very next day but one after his Arrival accompanied with his two Brothers and Sir Edward Hide Lord Chancellour of England with many other honourable persons went by water to the House of Lords where having seated himself in his Royal seat the Black Rod was sent to the Commons to inform them of his being there They immediately adjourned and with their Speaker waited his Majesties pleasure who in a short speech acquainted them with the Occasion and Cause of his present sending for them viz. To pass those Bills which he understood were prepared for him the said Bills being therefore read according to ancient form by the Clerk of the Crown were passed by his Majesty First The Bill constituting the present Convention to be a Parliament Secondly For authorizing the Act of Parliament for 70000. l. per mens for 3 moneths Thirdly For Continuance of Easter Term and all proceedings at Law which done the Lord Chancellor Hide in a pithy Speech told both Houses with how much readinesse his Majesty had passed these Acts and how willing they should at all times hereafter find him to pass any other that might tend to the advantage and benefit of the people desiring in his Majesties behalf the Bill of Oblivion to be speeded that the people might see and know his Majesties extraordinary gracious care to ease and free them from their doubts and fears and that he had not forgotten his gracious Declaration made at Breda but that he would in all points make good the same Things being brought to that happy issue the King wholly intends to settle the Kingdome and because that in the multitude of Counsellors there is both peace and safety he nominates and elects to himself a Privy Councel whereof were The Duke of York The Duke of Glocester The Duke of Somerset The Duke of Albemarle The Marquiss of Ormond The Earl of Manchester The Earl of Oxford The Earl of Northampton Lord Seymour Lord Say Lord Howard Sir Atho Ashly Cooper Sir William Morris Mr. Hollis Mr.
blood and tears of the exhausted people and the milk of their Babes are they not like Achan's wedge amongst us would it not much ease the people of burthens and go far in the payment of Souldiers and publick debts to have both the Kings and the Parliaments sponges of what party and profession soever squeezed into the common Treasury whensoever the Common-wealth settles Review this clause well and as the Parliament hath altered some Votes for you so do you alter this clause for the people who long not only to see the Kingdom but also our new-made Gentlemen in statu quo prius Gentlemen you that will give Counsel will take it without offence against him that dares lay as good claim to justice and honesty as your selves THEODORUS VERAX The Mystery of the Two Juntoes Presbyterian and Independent with some Additions THe Kingdom being overgrown with Prerogative Corruption and Superstition the fruits of a long and lazie peace by a long discontinuance of Parliaments at last by Providence his Majesty was necessitated to call a Parliament the onely Colledge of Physicians to purge the much-distempered body of the Common-wealth In this Parliament a contest between the Kings Prerogative and the Peoples Laws and Liberties begat a War The Divines on both sides out of their Pulpits sounding Alarum thereto and not only Sermons but Declarations of Parliament and National Covenant holding forth to the people the defence of Religion Laws Liberties and Properties inflamed the people to the rage of battel as the Elephant is enraged at the sight of Red. This War occasioned extraordinary Taxes and Leavies of money such as were never heard of by our Ancestors and were Irritamenta malorum the nurse of our corruptions This incentive working upon the humane frailty of the speaking and leading Members of the Houses Grandees caused them first to interweave their particular interests and ambitions with the publick and lastly to prefer them before the publick Wherefore the said leading men or Grandees for that is now Parliament language first divided themselves into two factions or Juntoes Presbyterians and Independents Factions seeming to look onely upon the Church but Religion having the strongest operation upon the spirit of man involved the interests of the Common-wealth The common people of the two Houses following with an implicite faith and blind obedience the example of their leaders divided themselves also into the said Dichotomy which they did with more seriousness than their leaders as not perceiving any thing of design therein but according to the diversity of their Judgments or rather Fancies and Confidings for to resign a mans judgment to the opinion of another man is but a silly trust and confidence studied the upholding of their parties with earnestness whilest the Grandees of each party in private close together for their own advancement serving one anothers turn The Grandees in all publick debates seem as real in their reciprocal oppositions as those silly ones who are in earnest whereby they cherish the zeal of their respective parties keep them still divided Divide impera is the Devils rule and so amuse them and take them off from looking after other interests in which were they conjoyned they might share with the Grandees themselves and for the better contentment of such their Confidents as looking too intentively after their own gain the Grandees of each Junto confer something of advantage upon those that are subservient unto them as five pounds a week or some petty imployment The seeds of these factions spread themselves into the Common-wealth and Armies as Rheum distils from the head into all the body Thus the leading men or Bel-weathers having seemingly divided themselves Monopolizing profits and preferments and having really divided the Houses and captivated their respective parties judgment teaching them by an implicite faith Jurare in verba Magistri to pin their opinions upon their sleeves they begin to advance their projects of Monopolizing the Profits Preferments and Power of the Kingdome in themselves To which purpose though the leaders of each party seem to maintain a hot opposition yet when any profit or preferment is to be reached at it is observed that a powerful Independent especially moves for a Presbyterian or a leading Presbyterian for an Independent and seldom doth one oppose or speak against another in such cases unless something of particular spleen or Competition come between which causeth them to break the common Rule By this means the Grandees of each faction seldom miss their mark since an Independent moving for a Presbyterian his reputation carries the business clear with the Independent party and the Presbyterians will not oppose a leading man of their own side By this artifice the Grandees of each side share the Common-wealth between them and are now become proud domineering Rehoboams even over the rest of their fellow Members contrary to the liberty of Parl. which consists in an equality that were formerly fawning ambitious Absoloms There hath been lately given away to Members openly besides innumerable and inestimable private cheats mutually connived at at least 300000 l. in money besides rich Offices Imployments in money Committees Sequestrations and other advantages And those Members who have so well served themselves under colour of serving the publick are for the most part old Canvasers of Factions who have sate idlely and safely in the House watching their advantages to confound businesses and shuffle the cards to make their own game when others that have ventured their persons abroad labour'd in the publick work like Israelites under these Aegyptian task-masters and lost their estates are left to sterve untill they can find relief in that empty bag called by fools fides Publica by wise men fides Punica and are now looked upon in the House superciliously like unwelcome guests for it is known how malignantly and how juglingly writs for new Elections were granted and executed and called younger brothers and like younger brothers they are used their elder brothers having slipped into the World before them and anticipated the inheritance they have broken first into the common field and shut the door to prevent after commers even from gleaning after their full harvest for the better effecting whereof they have now morgaged in effect all the means they have to raise money unto the City and being themselves fat and full with the publick Treasure to express rather their scorn than care they are making an Ordinance that no more money shall be given to their Members and yet to shew how carefull they are of all such as have cheated the Commonwealth under them I will not say for them they have taken advantage of the Petition of the Army wherein they desire Indempnity for all acts done in Relation to the War and have passed an Ordinance of Indempnity for all such as have acted by Authority and for the service of the Parliament wherein under great penalties and with an appeal at last from the Judges of
Turk they subject all things even Religion Laws and Liberties so much cried up by them heretofore to the power of the Sword ever since by undermining practices and lies they have jugled the States Sword into the Independent Scabbard ●he Earl of ●●sex and Sir ●ill Waller ●●dermined 〈◊〉 let in the ●●dependents The Earl of Essex General of all the Parliaments Forces a man though popular and honest yet stubbornly stout fitter for Action than Counsel and apter to get a victory than improve it must be laid by and his Forces reduced The like for Sir William Waller and his Forces that Commanders of Independent Principles and Interests with Soldiers suitable to them might by degrees be brought into their room to reap the harvest of those crops which they had sowen This was the ground-work of the Independent design to monopolize the power of the Sword into their hands This could not be better effected than by dashing the Earl of Essex and Sir William Waller one against another for which purpose the hot-headed Schismatique Sir A. Haslerigge was imployed with Sir William Waller and some others whose Ashes I will spare with the E. of Essex to break them one upon another This was at last effected by taking advantage of their several misfortunes the one at Lislethyell in Cornwall the other at the Devises in Wiltshire where Haslerigge a man too ignorant to command and too insolent to obey not staying for the foot who lay round about the Devises in a storming posture charged up a steep hill with his Horse onely against the Lord Wilmots Party one Division so far from another that the second Division could not relieve the first thereby freeing Sir Ralph Hopton from an assured overthrow and bestowing an unexpected Victory on the L. Wilmot he received a wound in his flight the smart whereof is still so powerfully imprinted in his memory that he abhors fighting ever since witnesse his praying and crying out of Gun-shot at the Battle at Cheriton when he should have fought and his complaints openly made in the House of Commons of the Earl of Stanford for Bastonadoing him Which rashnesse of his if it deserve not a worse name was so far from being discountenanced that he received not long after a gift of 6500 l. from the House and is lately made Governour of Newcastle and 3000 l. given him to repair the works there I shall not need the Spirit of Prophecy to foresee that the tenth part of the said 3000 l. will not be bestowed upon those Works Thus was he favoured by his party in the House who were thought to look upon this action as an acceptable service In farther porgresse of this design Manchester a Lord 3 The Earl of Manchester undermined and therefore not to be confided in was undermined and accused by his Lievt General Cromwell of high Crimes whom he again recriminated with a Charge of as high a nature and when all men were high in expectation of the event it grew to be a drawn battle between them whereby all men concluded them both guilty Manchester was discarded Out of the ashes of these three arose that Phoenix forsooth a new moddell'd Army under the Command of Sir Thomas Fairfax a Gentleman of an irrational and brutish valour fitter to follow another mans counsel than his own and obnoxious to Cromwel and the Independent faction upon whose bottome he stands for his preferment it being no dishonour to him to become the property to a powerful Faction 4 The Victories ●f the new ●odel how ●tchieved It pleased God to bestow many Victories upon this Army over the Kings Forces then strong in bulk but weakned by Factions want of pay and other distractions wherby many of their Commanders not confiding in one another began to provide for their future safety and subsistence but above all they had generally lost the peoples affections To these their Victories the constant pay and supplies and all other helps and encouragements from a concurring State which their working and restless Faction carefully accommodated them withal far beyond what any other Army had formerly did much conduce in so much as they cleared the Field and took in all the enemies Garisons with so much facility that to many men they seemed rather Cauponantes bellum quam belligerantes to conquer with silver than with steel a good Purse is a shrewd weapon 5 Artifices to make Cromwel and his ●ew Model popular Thus this Faction having got a General fit for their turn and a Lievtenant General wholly theirs in judgement and interest were diligent to make him famous and popular by casting upon him the honour of other mens atchievements and valour The News-books taught to speak no language but Cromwel and his Party and were mute in such actions as he and they could claim no share in for which purpose the Presses were narrowly watched When any great exploit was half atchieved and the difficulties overcome Cromwel was sent to finish it and take the glory to himself all other men must be eclipsed that Cromwel the Knight of the Sun and Don Quixot of the Independents and his Party may shine the brighter 6 The new Model new-modelled by degrees to put the Sword into the hands of Schismaticks And that Cromwels Army might be suitable to himself and their Designs carried on without interruption or observation of such as are not of their Principles all the Sectaries of England are invited to be Reserves to this Army and all pretences of scandals and crimes laid hold of at their own Councils of War to casheer and disband the Presbyterian party that Independents might be let into their rooms though such as for the most part never drew Sword before so that this Army which boasteth it self for the Deliverer nay the Conquerour of two Kingdoms is no more the same that fought at Nazeby than Sir Francis Drakes Ship that brought him home can be called the same Ship that carried him forth about the Earth having been so often repaired and therefore suffered so many substractions and additions that hardly any of the old vessel remained It was therefore nominally and formally not really and materially the same The said mystery of the two Juntoes farther tells you that the Independent Junto bottomed all their hopes and interests upon keeping up this Army whereby to give the Law to King Kingdom Parliament and City and to establish that Chimaera called Liberty of Conscience That this was Cromwels ambition formerly the Earl of Manchester's aforesaid Charge against Cromwel though let fall without prosecution lest so great a mystery should be discovered makes it probable and his later practices upon which I now fall makes it infallible The Houses long since for ease of the people in a full and free Parliament ordained the disbanding of this Army 7. The Army voted to be disbanded through Cromwels craft only 5000. Horse 1000. Dragoons and some few Fire-locks to be
scrutiny and search into the lives and actions of the Presbyterian Party that sate in Parliament doing their duty when the engaged Party fled to the Army and brought them up in hostile manner against them The unreasonableness of this way of proceeding was much urged and farther alleged 47. Debate upon passing the Committee of Secret examinations that it was neither consonant to the customes of the House nor unto common reason that a Sub-committee should be chosen out of the Grand Committee of Examinations with more power then the Grand Committee it self had and excluding the rest of the Committee under the pretence of Secrecie Besides it was against the privilege of the House of Commons that the Lords should nominate the Commons in that Sub-committee as well as their own Members But the Independent Grandees would have it pass Breach of Privilege and all other considerations are easily swallowed when they are subservient to their present designs 48. The manner of prosecution proceeding upon the Tumult The party engaged were resolved to be Examiners Informers and Witnesses as well as Parties so active was their malice and had so well packed their Cards that eight or nine Schismatical Lords engaged likewise with them and the Army should be Judges of the Presbyterian Party that sate in absence of the two Speakers the better to give the two Houses a through Purge and make them of the same complexion with the Army without which they had no hopes to divide the power and profit of the Land between themselves by 10000 l. 20000 l. in a morning shared amongst the Godly and to make the whole Kingdom to be Gibeonites hewers of wood and drawers of water to the faithfull 49. Miles Corbet makes report of Examinations taken at the Close Committee First against the Committee of Safety In order to the playing of this game Miles Corbet Interpreter to the State-puppet play behind the curtain commonly called The Close Committee of Examinations upon the 3. September stood up and began his Report from that Inquisition saying He would begin with the Committee of Safety wherein many Members were concerned and it was necessary to purge the Houses first But further said he would suppress the names of many of his Witnesses because the Depositions he should report were but preparatory Examinations and it would be for service of the State to conceal their names He first produced many Warrants signed at the Committee of Safety by the Earls of Pembroke Suffolk Middlesex Lincoln Lord Willoughby of Parham Maynard Mr. Hollis Sir Phi. Stapleton Sir Will. Waller Mr. Long Mr. Nichols Sir William Lewis Mr. Baynton Against Master Baynton Next Corbet reported he had a Witness who deposed that a Gentleman with a Red head had signed many Warrants supposed to be Master Edward Baynton at length after much wyer-drawing of the business one Warrant was shewn to Master Baynton which he confessed to be his hand And presently Haslerig moved that Master Baynton might forthwith Answer against which was objected That since these were but preparatory Examinations not legal proofs no man was bound to Answer them otherwise a man shall be but to as many several answers as several new matters of Charge come in against him and shall day by day be liable to new vexations and never know when he hath cleared himself But Corbet who of an examiner was now become the Kings Solicitor or Advocate Criminal moved to proceed to Judgement against him but first to aske him some preparatory questions But it was answered that it was illegal to squeese examinations out of a mans own mouth neither was a man bound to answer where his words may condemn but not absolve him for so much as depends upon the testimony of Witnesses against this Gentleman you cannot proceed unless he be by and have liberty to put cross questions to the Witnesses It is alleged Warrants were signed and all done in relation to a new War It is answered it was done in order to Self-defence allowed by the Laws Long before this occasion when the Army first mutinied and threatned to march up to London and use such extraordinary means against the Parliament and City as God had put into their hands you then in a full and free Parliament appointed a Committee of Safety for your defence who sate and acted This Committee was but the same revived and upon the like or worse threats and menaces as by the many printed papers from the Army will appear you have no Testimony against this Gentleman by name but only a character of his Hair and for signing the Warrant confessed by himself he is acquitted by the Proviso of the Ordinance 20 August last which excepted only such as acted upon the force but when the Committee of Safety was revived the Parliament was freer from force than it is now Mr. Baynton notwithstanding was adjudged to be suspended the House during pleasure of the House which is as much as to say So long as the Tyranny of this Domineering Faction lasteth The 4 of Sept. Corbet reported he had a Witness but named him not Against Mr. Walker because they were but preparatory examinations who deposed that an elderly Gentleman of low stature in a Gray suit with a little stick in his hand came forth of the House into the Lobby when the tumult was at the Parliament door and whispered some of the Apprentices in the ear and encouraged them supposed to be Mr. Walker Mr. Walker denyed he spake then with any man in the Lobby or saw any face that he knew there and so neglected the business as a thing not considerable But the next day Corbet moved that Mr. Walker might be ordered to put on his Gray suit again and appear before the Close Committee and the Witness who saith he knoweth him again if he see him I hear Mr. Walker desired to know seeing the Witness had not named him by what Authority the examiners should take such a Deposition and make application thereof to him And seeing there were many Gentlemen in the House that day with whom that Character agreed as well as with himself why the Reporter did not move that all to whom that Character was appliable might be put to that test as well as himself but single him out for a mark to shoot at complaining that he was not ignorant out of what quiver this Arrow came he had been threatned with a revenge by some of that Close Committee and had other Enemies amongst them that could bite without barking He told them that yesterday Mr. Corbet reported that the supposed old man whispered c. but desired those that were then in the House to call to mind that the noise was then so great in the Lobby that no whisper nay the loudest words he was able to speak could not be heard Then Corbet changed his Tale saying the words were What you do do quickly and were spoken aloud and said the
should hear of it and beget a slavish fear in the whole Kingdom to submit to the laying aside of the KING and his Negative Voice and the establishing of a tyrannical Oligarchy in the Grandees of the two Houses and Army for finding the whole Kingdom to hate them with a perfect hatred they have no hope to govern by Love but by Fear which according to the Turkish rule is more predominant and constant passion And certainly had not Goring's passing over at Greenwich into Essex compelled Fairfax to follow immediately after with his Army they had been used with much extremity insomuch that Weaver a Member fuller of zeal than wisdom though wise enough for his own profit as most Saints and knaves are moved in the House That all Kent might be sequestred because they had rebelled and all Essex because they would rebell And truly this is as good a way as Cromwel's selling his Welch Prisoners for 12 d. a head to be transported into barbarous Plantations whereby to expell the Canaanites and make new plantations in old England for the Godly the seed of the Faithfull for this faction like the Divell cry all is mine 91. Banbury-Castle obtruded upon the State 27. May A friend of my Lord Say's moved in the House of Commons That Banbury-Castle might be demolished to prevent any surprise thereof by Malignants saying it had already cost the State 200000 l. to reduce it and had undone the Country which was unable to pay for it it belonged to a Noble Godly person the L. Say and it was not fit to demolish it without his consent and recompence it was therefore desired the State should bear the charge his Lordship being willing to sell it for 2000 l. To which was answered That other well-affected Gentlemen had their Houses destroyed for service of the State without recompence not so well provided to bear the loss as my Lord Say as Mr. Charles Doyly two handsome habitable Houses Mr. Vachell some Houses in Reading and others well deserving of the State though not of themselves This Castle was unhabitable a rude heap of stones a publick nusance to the Country It cost his Lordship but 500 l. and now to obtrude it upon the State at 2000 l. price in so great a scarcity and want of mony the Kingdom graoning under Taxes was not reasonable So Divine providence not saying Amen to it this Cheat failed like the untimely birth of a Woman 92 The Impeached Lords Members and Aldermen About the beginning of June a debate hapned in the House of Commons about the four imprisoned Aldermen occasioned by a Petition from the City and concerning the impeached Lords and Commons Mr. Gewen spake modestly in their behalf saying That what they did was done by virtue of an Ordinance of Parliament made this very Sessions of Parliament and without any intent to raise a new war but only to defend the City against the menaces of the Army marching up against them and the Parliament But Mr. Gourdon a man hot enough for his zeal to set a Kingdom on fire Answered He thought they intended a new War and were encouraged thereto by the Gentleman that spake last when he said to them at their Common Council Vp and be doing Mr. Walker perceiving Mr. Gewen to be causlesly reflected upon replied that since this debate upon the City Petition tended towards a closing up of all differences it was unfit men that spake their consciences freely and modestly should be upbraided with Repetitions tending to dis-union and desired men might not be permitted to vent their malice under colour of shewing their zeal when presently Tho. Scot the Brewers Clerk he that hath a Tally of every mans faults but his own hanging at his Girdle by virtue of his Office being Deputy-Inquisitor or Hangman to Miles Corbet in the clandestine Committee of examinations replyed upon Mr. Walker That the Gent. that spake last was not so well-affected but that the close Committee of examinations would find cause to take an order with him shortly Mr. Walker offered to answer him and demanded the Justice of the House but could not be heard those that spake in behalf of the Aldermen were often affronted and threatned with the displeasure of the Army which they alleged would be apt to fall into distempers if we discharged them Notwithstanding these menaces it was Voted that the House would not prosecute their Impeachments against the said four Aldermen Sir John Maynard and the seven Lords and that they would proceed no faother upon their Order for impeaching Mr. Hollis Sir William Waller c. Two or three dayes after a motion was set on foot That the Order whereby the said Members were disabled from being of the House might be revoked many zealots argued fiercely and threatned against it amongst many arguments for them a President was insisted upon That Master Henry Martin was by Order disabled from being a Member yet was afterwards readmitted upon his old Election and desired these Gentlemen might find equall justice The House having freed them à Culpa could not in equity but free them à poena and put them in the remainder of all that belonged to them But Sir Peter Wentworth answered That Mr. Martins case and theirs differed Mr. Martin was expelled for words spoken against the King such as every mans Conscience told him were true but because he spoke those words unseasonably when the King was in good strength and the words whether true or false were in strictnesse of Law Treason the House especially the lukewa●n men considering the doubtfull events of War disabled and committed him lest the whole House might be drawn in compass of High Treason for conniving at them which was a prudential Act contrary to justice and contrary to the sense of the Godly and honest party of the House But afterwards the King growing weaker and the Parliament stronger the House restored Master Martin and thought fit to set every mans tongue at liberty to speak truth even against the King himself and now every day words of a higher nature are spoken against him by the well-affected Godly in the House After many threats used by Wentworth Ven Harvy Scot Gourdon Weaver c. The said disabling Order was repealed 93. Members added to the Committee of Safety at Darby house About the same time the Lords sent a Message to the Commons that they had named six Lords to be added to the Committee of safety and desired the House to adde twelve Commons to them This had five or six times been brought down from the Lords before and received so many denials but the Lords would not acquiesce the Message came down about one of the Clock the House being thin many argued against it saying that there were seven Lords and fourteen Commons of that Committee already enough if not too many to dispatch businesse with secrecy and expedition that to adde six Lords more to them was in effect to make
Orders of the House do permit were forced to be silent so the businesse was buried in silence I hear that some of the Lords called upon this businesse the Monday following being the 19 of June and that the Lord Wharton being asked why he did not impart Osburn's said Letters to the House Answered That as soon as he opened the said Letter he received from Osburn and saw his name at the bottom he looked upon the businesse as not considerable yet he sent the Letter to Hammond Upon Tuesday 20 June The Lords sent a Message to the Commons the first paper whereof concerned Osburns said Letters they desired that forty days might be assigned for Osburn to come and goe with safety to make good his information But Sir William Armine stood up and desired That the minutes of two Letters prepared to be sent into into Holland and Zealand concerning our Revolted ships might be first dispatched as being of present use And when the businesse was ended Mr. Pierpointe propounded another part of the said Message So Osburn's Information was left sine die for that time but since the Lords have quickned it and 40 days are given to Osburn to come and go with Freedom and Safety to make good his information who is come and avoucheth it and one Dowcett speaketh much in affirmation of a design of Rolfes to pistol the King Rolf presents himself at the Commons Bar with a Letter from Hammond which denies the Design and pleads Rolfes cause for him Rolf denied it at the Commons Bar with a trembling voice yet afterwards hid out of the way but being discovered upon search he was found to have a Byle upon him that disabled him from riding otherwise it is thought he would have fled far enough I do not hear that Hammond is yet sent for or questioned And for Osburn's indeavour to convey his Majestie from Carisbrook-Castle it is alledged he did it with a charitable intent to preserve his life and not of any disaffection to the Parliament to which he hath been affectionately serviceable Though many take offence at Master Walker as if his stirring of his businesse were onely to cast an aspersion upon the Army yet I conceive that what he did was commendable in discharge of the duty he owes to God his King and Country and of his trust as a Member of the Representative body of this Kingdom and in performance of the obligations which the Oath of Allegiance the Parliaments Protestation the National Covenant and the known Laws of the Land lay upon him which duty he was bound to perform though with the extremest hazard of his life and fortunes and though he may happily hope better things of this Army yet since neither the Laws of the Land nor common reason warrants him to presume upon his own private hopes and judgment things which often deceive the wisest men in matters of far lesse moment he could do no lesse than free his conscience by making the whole House Witnesses of the cleernesse of his actions and intentions Considering 1. The many high speeches and threats often used against the King in all places none excepted 2. The dangers the King escaped from this very Army which drove him from Hampton-Court to the Isle of Weight and may possibly pursue him thither 3. The Antimonarchical Principles wherewith many Members of this Army and their Chaplians and many elsewhere are seasoned who cannot govern this Kingdome at their pleasure by a military Olygarchy of Grandees of the Committee of Safety at derby-Derby-house and the Army and so establish the Kingdom of the Saints nor yet bring it to their own levell but by taking off summa papaverum capita all that is high and eminent There is a Crowned Head in their way which must be removed 4. The corrupted fantasies of many Antimonarchical Schismaticks with Revelations and Raptures who serve the Devil for Gods sake making him the Author and the doing of his will the pretence of all their crimes and villanies 5. The many desper●te guilty persons that fear peace and are resolved now the Sword is out to burn the Scabbard These look upon the King with an evil eye as the Centre in whom all Interests must unite before we can have Peace Despair tempts these men to make one sin a degree and step to a higher These three last fort of men having cast off all fear of God will as easily contemn Gods substitute the King as he that casts off all reverence to the King will contemn his substitute a Constable 6. The continual endeavours of the Grandees of derby-Derby-house and the Army to put all the Armes Garrisons Ships and Strengths of the Kingdom into the hands of Antimonarchical Schismatical Independents in order to which they are raising of new Forces and erecting new Garrisons in most Counties These men when they could not get a power from the House of Commons to raise what Forces they pleased for when it was moved they there ordered that no more motions should be made for raising new Forces but between the hours of ten and twelve yet what they could not get by their leave they now take without their leave the General granting Commissions for raising and listing Horse and Foot in almost all Counties for example Sir Hardresse Waller that one eyed Polyphemus of Pastebord lately sent forth Commissions in the County of Devon by virtue as his Commissions say of the power granted him from his Excellency for raising listing and training Horse and Foot which shall be no burden to the Country but be in pay with the rest of the army In these Commissions he stileth himself untruly Commander in cheif of all the forces of the five Western Associat Counties and gave authority and encouragement to the well affected that is to Independents Sectaries Antimonarchists and the more desperate forlorn sort of people to enter into and subscribe Engagements to live and die with the Army an imitation of the Members Engagement in defence of the Parliament that is of the ingaged faction of Independents Schismaticks and corrupt persons whom only the Army looks upon as the Parliament witnesse the Declaration of Sir Thomas Fairfax and his Council of War shewing the grounds of his advancing up to London This usurpation was complained of in the House of Commons Monday 19. June and prohibited then by Order 7. Peradventure the reason why this Letter was published so unseasonably in a thin House in so slight and surreptitious a way as aforesaid was in hope it would have been passed over in silence as it had like to have been and so the whole House should have been engaged in the crime if any such thing be intended as guilty of connivance and negligence though not as Actors guilty of the fact The main scope of this party hath ever been by Treaties of Accommodation uniting all Interests and other devices to involve others in their crimes to infect others with their diseases that all standing in need
himself and moderate his Actions the Army looking upon him as their onely Enemy and Opponent in the City lest they should seize upon him and carry him away or do him some other mischief This is conceived to be an Independent mouse-trap set up to catch a Presbyterian in for if the Major General had not discovered the said Letter and it had been found about him or in his House or if it had been testified that such a Letter was left at his house and concealed here had been matter enough for an Impeachment against him 104. Correspondency with Card. Mazerini The Grandees of Derby house and the Army solicit the detaining of the PRINCE in France and the delaying of his journey for England lest he trouble the yet unsetled Kingdom of the Saints To negotiate which they have an Agent lying Lieger with Cardinal Mazarini the great French instrument of State who is so well supplied with Money and so open handed That it hath been heard from Mazarin's own mouth That all the money the Queen and Prince hath cost the Crown of France hath come out of the Parliament Purse with a good advantage It is likewise said Mazarini hath an Agent here to drive on the Interests of France in England The Grandees in reference to the pulling down of Monarchy 105. Doleman's Antimonarchical Book printed and the establishing of their Olygarchy or Tyranny contrary to their Remonstrances Declarations the National Covenant and their late Vote That they would not alter the ancient form of Government by King Lords and Commons have caused the Book written by Parsons the Jesuit 1524 under the feigned Name of Doleman and called A Conference about the succession of the Crown to be published under the Title of Several Speeches delivered at a Conference concerning the power of Parliaments to proceed against their Kings for mis-government Parsons had made this Book a Dialogue these Men have made it into Speeches The Arguments and Presidents are meerly the same you see they can joyn Interests with France Doctrine with the Jesuits to carry on their design See the Conclusions 15 16 17. and reduce us to the condition of French Peasants or Slaves under the Kingdom of the Saints Doleman's Book was condemned by Act of Parliament 35 Eliz. But what care the Grandees for Acts of Parliament having fooled the people into a belief That both the Legislative and Judicative power is in the two Houses of Parliament without the King and that an over-powering party or Junto in the two Houses complying with an Army to keep the rest under force and awe is the Parliament 106. The Legislative Judicative power and the Militia where they reside See the Conclusions 15 16 17. The Parliament consisteth of 3 Estates 1. The King whom the Law calleth Principium Caput finis Parliamenti and therefore he only can Call He only can Dissolve a Parliament and is himself called and chosen by none being primus motor that animates all 2. The Lords who have their creation and vocation only from the Kings bounty 3. The Commons who have their summons onely from the Kings Writ though their election from the people and in that respect only the people being too diffused a Body to be Assembled they have something of Representation in them being the Epitome of the People These 3 Estates concurring have power to make news Laws to change or repeal old Lawes and in some doubtfull cases rarely hapning which the Judges dare not venture upon they have power to interpret the Laws This is a wise and politick constitution for if any one or any two of the said three Estates should make new Laws Change Repeal or Interpret old Laws arbitrarily and at pleasure without mutual agreement of all the three Estates it were in the power of that one or two to enslave the other Estate or Estates so omitted Besides the Law doth not favour the making of new Laws nor the changing and repealing of old Laws being an innovation that stirs too many humors in a body politick and indangers its health and brings contempt upon the Laws Leges priusquam latae sunt perpendendae quando latae sunt obediendae saith Arist Pol. But though all 3 Estates must assent to the making altering or repealing a Law yet any one of the 3 Estates hath a Negative Voice and may dissent from such making 2 H. 5. 4. H. 7. c. 18. 12. H. 7. c. 20. 1 Ja. c. 1. 2 Ch. c. 1. altering or repealing to avoid innovation as abovesaid How then can the two Houses of Parliament exercise the Legislative power and make change or repeal any Law by Ordinance without the King the first Estate and head of the Parliament and so deprive Him of His Negative Voice and the people of their Laws Liberties and Estates contrary to 9 H. 3. Magna Charta 1 part Instit sect 234. in fine 7. H. 7. 14. especially when this very Parliament declares in the Exact Col. 1 part p. 727. That the King hath a Negative Voice and that Bils are not Laws or Acts of Parliament without the Kings assent consequently nor Ordinances And as the two Houses take upon them the Legislative power without the King so in the case of the 4 Aldermen and Sir John Maynard they usurped a Judicative Power in case of Treason tryable in the Kings Bench yet it is most certain that when the 3 Estates in Parliament have passed any Act their power determines as to that Act and then the Authority of the Judges begins which is Judicative whose Office is upon cases brought before them to determine whether that Act be binding or no for Acts of Parliament against common right Repugnant or Impossible are Void Cook 8. f. 118. Dr. and Student l. 1. c. 6. and to expound the meaning and signification of the words of such Act. If therefore the 2. Houses usurp the Legislative and Judicative power or the Militia otherwise than hath been by the fundamental constitution of this Monarchy and the practice of all ages accustomed the Grandees of the two Houses and Army seem to lay claim to them all by the Sword for in the late Declaration against the Scots Papers p. 64. they say That they engaged in this war upon these principles viz. To keep the Legislative power and the exercise of the Militia without and against the Kings consent and p. 63. ibidem the Members tell us that in all matters concerning Church or State we have no judge upon Earth but themselves It follows then the Grandees do it to subvert the ancient Government Laws and Liberties of this Nation and establish a Military Olygarchy or the Kingdom of the Saints over us in themselves In order to which design they have put all things out of order and turned them upside down nay they have crucified the whole Kingdom with Saint Peters Crucifixion the head downwards and the Heels upwards When this King went into Scotland He compared the
the Army and diverse other Symptomes of danger but especially Skippons secret Li●ting of Schismatiques in the City amongst the Congregations of Mr. Goodwin Mr. Patience and others with power given him to kill and slay his listing servants against their Masters and setting up a Power against a Power had provoked that dull beast the City to know their own strength to look into their Charter and the Customes of the City and to Counter-list in their own defence for which purpose they passed an Act of Common Council dated 27. July 1648. which was soon complained of in the House of Commons by Ven Harvey Pennington and other ill Birds of that Corporation who usually defile their own nests after many aggravations that after they had fought with the King for the Militia any power out of the Parliament should presume to exercise it a Committee was appointed to Treate with a Committee of the Common-Council to hear what they could say for themselves and by what authority they claimed the use of their own Militia The Committees met and amongst other things the said question was asked By what authority they listed men To which was answered That they did it by the Law of Self-defence warranted by the Law of God of nature and of the Land and by a farther Authority to question which would make lirtle for the advantage of the Parliament This mysterious Answer stopped the mouthes of the Parliament Committee If London should plead their Charter and usages other places might doe the like so this businesse was shut up in silence Note that many Sectaries of Westminster Southwark and the Hamlets have been invited and countenanced to petition the House of Commons against uniting their Militia's with London upon pretended cavils As that they desired to have equal number of Voices in the Militia with London But since London beareth 7. parts of 9. in the charge it is an unreasonable demand By Orders as is thought from Derby-house 115 The Governor of Dublyn seizeth and sendeth over Prisoners the Presbyterian Commanders Colonel Jones Governour of Dublyn hath seized upon most of the Presbyterian Commanders thereabouts and sent them Prisoners to Westchester as Sir Maurice Eustace Sir John Gyford Col. Willoughby Colonel Flower Major Stephens Major Capron c. to make room for Independent Officers in his Army that the Saints only may possesse the good things of this world but chiefly that his Army being Commanded by Antimonarchical Schismaticks may the better sympathize and unite with the Antimonarchical Papists in Owen Roe Oneal's Army against the Lord Inchiquin whereof the said Lord hath given some hint as I have aforesaid You see the predominant Principle is Antimonarchy which easily overswayes Religion on both sides 116. A Frigot of the Princes taken with many Letters and Commissions Sir Milles Levesey having casually taken a little Frigot of the Princes called the Chistopher manned with one Captain Green and 8. men took divers Commissions in her and a Letter of Mart granted to the said Captain to make prize of Rebels and Enemies Goods and a Paper of Instructions prohibiting Green to use any Hostility untill the Prince had published his Declaration and untill it were designed who were His Enemies other writings were then taken which were referred to a Committee of the House of Commons to peruse and report Mr. Lechmore reported from the said Committee That some of those writings were not fit to be published in the House hereby you see that the House is already divested of that Power and Authority which the People have Trusted only them with all is now usurped by confiding Sectary Committees so Mr. Lechmore reported That there was an Adjudication out of the Princes Admiralty held in the Isle of Jersey whereby a ship belonging to one Tucknell was adjudged against him upon this ground given in the Adjudication That Tucknell had taken that damnable Oath called The National Covenant I appeal to any man that doth not hastily beleeve all he hears whether it be probable the Prince in such a conjuncture of time when the Parliament it self says That the Prince invited the Scots to invade England and had declared for them would hazard the losing of the Scots by inserting such a clause in the Adjudication All is not Gold that glisters these Letters may be St. Martins ware counterfeit stuff 117. A design to seize on divers Presbyterian Aldermen Lords and Commons About this time it is reported by some that professe to know it there was a design for Skippon's new listed-men to seize upon Alderman Langham Alderman Bunce and some of the Lords and Members of the House of Commons in the night whereof notice being given some of the Members knowing that Treachery like the Basilisk dies if it be first seen to shew that it was discovered caused one of their Party in the House to move That Skippon might be Ordered not to seize on kill or slay any Member of either House An order passed the House of Commons for the Earl of Warwick to fight the Prince at Sea It was sent up to the Lords 118. An Ordinance for the Earl of Warwick to fight the Prince at Sea and passed that House too whereby it became an Ordinance Yet some of the Lords entred a protestation against it as the Earls of Lincoln Suffolk Lord North. 2. Of August The Zealots of the House of Commons fell again upon the businesse of Rolf 119. More endeavours of the Independents in favour of Rolf. at an unseasonable hour of the day and in a thin House They ordered a Conference with the Lords about him and that the Lords be desired to joyn with the Commons in Bayling of him and yet for Treason a man is not Baylable by Law I cannot hear that Mr. Osburn's time of staying with Freedom and Safety to prosecute Rolf is renewed by the Commons although it be expired you see the Iron-bound Saints of the Army are impregnable even against High Treason if this Puny Saint be so inviolable what hope have Major Huntington and John Lilbourn to be heard against Cromwell For if the man such freedom have What then must he that keeps the Knave Yet if Rolf had but bastinadoed Sir Henry Mildmay and that 's no great matter peradventure he had been prosecuted in earnest Thursday 3. August 120. A Letter from the Earl of Warwick for Martial Law at Sea a Letter from the Earl of Warwick was read in the House of Commons complaining of the Refractorinesse of the Sea-men and that he could not govern them without a Commission for Martial Law which was readily assented to as any thing that cries up Arbitrary power above the known Laws usually is But how this will agree with the discipline of the Sea and how they will fight being so yoaked I know not The same day a Letter passed the House of Commons 121. A Letter from the Parliament to the Assembly of the Kirk of
Scotland directed to the Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland setting forth what the Parliament had done in way of setling peace reforming the Church and Universities and maintaining the Covenant and union between the two Nations and complaining of Duke Hamilton's Invading England under the Authority of the Parliament of Scotland to the Kirk there How dangerous this president may prove to both Kingdoms to make a few ambitious paedantical Church-men supreme Judges over Parliament and State affairs in ordine ad Deum and how apt they are to lay hold upon such occasions and kindle their zeal into a consuming flame I leave to all wise men to judge 122. A Declaration and 2. Letters from the Prince to the City The Commons Debate upon them Thursday 3. August The Sheriffs of London and some of the Common Council brought to the House the Copies of two Letters they had received from the PRINCE one directed to the Common Council expressing his Highnesse good affection to Peace and to the whole City and his endeavours to vindicate his Fathers Liberty and just Prerogative and Rights to restore to the People their Laws Liberties and Property to free them from that bondage under which they were now held like a Conquered Nation to ease them of Excise and Taxes to settle Religion according to his Fathers Agreement made with the Scots and to reduce all things into their antient and proper Chanel This Letter was accompanied with his Declaration to the same purpose The other was to the Merchant Adventurers Informing them he had made stay of 3. of their ships but without any intent to make prize of them desiring to borrow 20000 l. of them to be repayed out of the Customes and requiring their speedy answer To which Col. Harvy first aggravating many faults in the King's Government according to the scandalous Declaration against him said The Prince was his Fathers own Son as like him as could be That he had invited the Scots to come in and declared for them and had been formerly in Arms against the Parliament That he was but a subject And moved the House to declare him a Rebell and a Traytor Sir Peter Wentworth Mr. Knightly and Mr. Blackstone seconded him with much earnestnesse so did Edward Ash who farther moved That the Common Council and Merchants should give no answer to his Letters saying there was no danger the Prince should make prize of their ships for that he had engaged to the States of the Low-Countries to do no act prejudicial to Trade At last the Debate was put off until the next day being Friday when the Speaker putting the House in mind of it again It was earnestly called upon by the younger Sir John Evelin Mr. Solicitors shadow Scot Weaver Holland Boys and almost all the Godly Gang. So the Debate was resumed and Weaver went very high to try the temper of the House But the Debate in Terminis That the Prince should be declared a Rebell and a Traytor was soon laid by though violently pressed chiefly upon these reasons 1. That they had not the Originals of the Princes Letter and Declaration which the Common-Council still kept but onely Copies not so much as attested upon Oath by any authentical Clerk therefore no legal proceedings could be upon them 2. To Vote the Prince a Traytor the same day when they sent Messengers to invite the King his Father to a Treaty of Peace would argue no peaceable inclination in them and would be so understood by the People 3. They were engaged by the Nationall Covenant to defend the King's Person Crown and Dignity but the Prince Heir apparent to His Crown was next under God the chief supporter of his Crown and Dignity therefore to Vote him a Traitor was to subvert his Crown and Dignity 4. By the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. it is High Treason to endeavour the destruction of the Prince the Kings eldest Son but to declare him a Rebel and a Traitor was to endeavour to destroy him and therefore High Treason 5. The people were already jealous that the KING and His Posterity should be laid by and in them the Monarchical Government of this Nation subverted and a new form of Government introduced they had already by the Votes of No Addresses to the KING and by their Declaration against Him wherein they say They can no longer confide in Him laid by the KING and now to Vote the PRINCE a Rebel and a Traytor was to lay by both him and his Brother the DUKE of YORK who adheres to him which would exceedingly confirm the people in their feares But what they could not do expresly All that adhere to the Prince declared Traytors they did implicitly by Voting All that should adhere to ayd or assist the PRINCE Rebels and Traytors Hereby they put a tie upon the City not to redeem their Ships by lending 20000 l. to the Prince and yet had a Pirat taken them it had been lawful to redeem them Saturday 5 August 123. The National Covenant The House of Commons went upon the Commissioners to judge of Scandals there was a Clause in the Ordinance forbidding the Nomination of such as refused the National Covenant which was strongly opposed by the Independents who argued That the National Covenant was but a League sworn mutually by the two Nations that the Scots by Invading England had first broke it and thereby set the English at liberty from it that the Covenant was not Jure divino no more than Presbytery was To which was Answered That the large Treaty containing the League between the two Nations so did not the Covenant which was a Vow made unto God with our hands lifted up to heaven for the maintenance and observation of the ends and principles expressed in the Covenant from which no power on Earth can absolve That though the Covenant was not Jure divino yet the keeping of it after we have taken it is Jure divino it being the revealed will of God that we should not offer to him the sacrifice of fools a Covenant to day and break it to morrow 124. A new Militia erected in every County in the hands of Sectaries Mondon 7 August A particular Ordinance to put the County of Wilts into a posture of defence was read many that were named to be Deputy Lieutenants or Commissioners were mean petty fellowes as one Read a Serving-man and others such as refuse to Act upon the Ordinances for setling Church Government and declare that our Ministery is Antichristian and are new dipped Brethren that have been re-baptized These to have power to raise what men and put arms into what hands they list to fine 10 l. and twenty days Imprisonment for every default and to levy 400 l. a week upon that poor County over and above the Taxes to Fairfax's Army and Ireland and Free-quarter The general Ordinance to trust the Counties with their own defence is obstructed to give way to these particular Ordinances
take in them whose miseries we foresee but cannot help When I consider the intricacy of this my undertaking how perplexed it is how intangled with various changings counterchangings revolutions revoltings and betrayings of Parties such are all Civil Wars but especially those where the most uncivil and barbarous sort of men the dregs and lees of the People swim a top how full of divisions and subdivisions insomuch that they who are Friends and hold together in one Interest or Faction are Opposites in another Methinks my labour is as vain as his that attempted to take the Picture of Proteus or his that endeavoured to shape a Garment for the Moon When God brought a confusion but of Lips and Tongues upon Babel what man was able to reduce them into order again But God hath brought upon us a Confusion a Babel not onely of Lips and Tongues but of Heads Hearts Hands c. What Historian can finde a method in so universal a Chaos can draw light out of so palpable a darkness Besides I foresee my reward to be envy hatred malice contempt slanders sequestration beggery imprisonment and at last an Arbitrary death without any legal trial proceedings Jury Judges or Court or any known established Law to judge by Obsequium amicos veritas odium parit I have already followed truth so near at the heels although but a private retainer to her that almost all my teeth are secretly stricken out what dare they not now do openly against me since by murdering our King dis-inheriting his Posterity subverting Monarchical Government abolishing the House of Lords and perverting the House of Commons setting up new Representatives with Supreme and Legislative Power and new Courts and Jurisdictions against all Laws they Proclaim themselves Conquerours of King Parliament and Kingdome Victors of our Religion Laws Liberties and Properties and Triumphers over our Persons Wives Children and Estates since they profess their will and power to be the onely Laws and Rules of their doings and our sufferings But when I consider that as no mans inncency so no mans reservedness can protect him but that some men must dye according to Catilines rule to make up the number others to multiply confiscations others to satisfie private suspicions malice and revenge and they must dye to cement and foment this new erected Tyranny with their blood I thought it as easie and more honourable to dye waking and working for my God my King and Country than to dye sleeping and have my throat cut in a Lethargy I know these Schismaticks thirst as much after blood as they hunger after money and I am sure to be involved in the common and inevitable ruine of my Country why should I not rather perish for it now then with it hereafter It is more manly more noble more Christian Dulce decorum est pro patria mori was the saying of an Heathen why not of a Christian Religion Laws and Liberties lye now at stake why should not I come in for a Gamester It is a mixt cause and he that dyes for it is a Martyr He that fears Death must be a slave to those Tyrants that carry the Sword he that fears Poverty must be a Villain to those Judasses that bear the Purse but hee that fears God will borrow strength from him to contemn them both Thus putting my trust in God I put Pen to Paper and put my life into the scales where God I know holds the ballance he whose providence takes notice of a Sparrow falling from the house-top will watch over me and either protect me against them or receive me from them 2 An Introductory Repetition See my 1 Part of the History of Independency sect 7 8 9 10 11 13 14. Cromwel and Ireton by advice of their thriving Junto of Independents in the two Houses having mutinied the Army against their Masters the Parliament found that crime could not be defended but by committing greater wherefore they seized the Kings person at Holdenby to gain Authority with the People that they might the better subdue the Parliament to their lusts for the better expediting whereof Sect. 18 119. they courted the City of London to sit Neuters and let them work their wills with the Parliament which Myne not taking fire they united the schismatical party of the City and Country to them and all such as being guilty of publick cheats and sp●●ls desired the protection of the Sword to make good their rapines and accounted all men else as Enemies applying themselves to wooe and cajole the People easily wrought upon as being weary of the War and of the mis-government Factions confusions and oppressions of their new Masters the Parliament which indeed were very great but aggravated by them and their Agitators beyond the truth and the whole weight of them charged upon the more moderate and innocent party onely because they were their Opposites whereas had they set the saddle upon the right horse as sure as Judas bore the Bag the Independents must have rid before the Cloakbag they being the Publicans and Sinners that handled most publick treasure The Layers on Exactors Treasurers c. of Taxes the far more numerous and busie party in all Mony-Committees and gainful imployments Engrossers of all great Offices and the greatest sharers of publick money amongst themselves for Compensations for Losses and Rewards for Services pretended and consequently that Faction were the greatest Dilapidators of the Commonwealth Oppressors of the People and Authors of confusion though according to custome by an impudent fallacy called Translatio criminis the Independent Faction lay their Bastards at other mens doors making a shew to redress those faults in other men which themselves are chiefly guilty of wherefore the better to ingratiate themselves with King and People they printed and published Ingagements Declarations Remonstrances Manifestoes Proposals and Petitions of their own penning and sent them by their Agitators and sectary Priests into all Counties for concurrence and Subscriptions the better to steal the respects of the People from the Parliament to themselves like Absolom they flattered the People to make Addresses and Complaints against publick Grievances to them onely Boasting themselves for the sole Arbitrators of Peace Restorers of Laws Liberty and Property Setlers of Religion Maintainers of the Privileges of Parliament Reformers and Callers to Account of all Committees Sequestrators Treasurers c. Deliverers of the People from that intolerable Excise and other Taxes But above all Preservers of all just Interests and Restorers of the King to his just Rights and Prerogatives with honour freedome and safety to his Person originally their own words Book of Declarations of the Army pag. 112. Represent of the Army at S. Albons June 23. 1647. B Decl. again p 64. Sir Tho. Fairfaxs Letter to the Houses from Reading July 6. 1647. B. Decl. again p. 75. Proposals of the Army Aug. 1. 1647. Putney Projects p. 13 14 43. and my Animadversions upon the Armies
Garri●ons White-hall and the Mewes upon h●s owne head as if he meant to keep out the King in defiance of the Treaty he brought to Towne with him foure Foot Regiments and six Regiments of Horse part whereof quartered at White-Hall the rest in Yorke House and other great Houses the Horse turned the Reformado Horse Guards that attended the Houses and lodged in the Mewes by their order out of their Quarters without applying themselves to the Houses Upon Monday Decemb. 4. 21. T●e House inform'd that the King was surprized by the Army and ca●●ied Prisoner to Harst Castle News came to the House that by severall Orders from the Generall His Majesty was seized in His Bed-chamber and hurried away Prisoner to Hurst Castle a Block-house out of the Isle of Wight standing about a mile and a half in the Sea upon a Beache full of mud and stinking oaze upon low tydes having no fresh-water within two or three miles of it bitter cold and of a foggy and pestilent ayre so noysome that the Guards thereof are not able to endure it long without shifting their Quarter This was a torment beyond Pistoll and Poyson many spake against the insolency of this fact as being committed against the life of the King and against the honour and publique faith of the Parliament who had Voted He should Treat in Honour Freedome and Safety in Newport in the Isle of Wight and had accepted His Royall Word not to withdraw out of the Island during the Treaty nor in 20. daies after which were not yet expired and now to have the Houses debates and results fore-stalled and the Treaty made frustrate by such an act of violence and prevention committed upon the Person of the King was a presumtuous and rebellious act It was moved therefore that it might be Declared That his Majesty was removed out of the Isle of Wight by his Excellencies Warrant without the consent or privity of the House But those Members that Idolize that Bell and the Dragon the Army and are but Priests fatting themselves upon the Sacrifices of that Image insisted upon it to have two words amended in the Question 1. The word Declare would be construed to be a Declaring against the General and Army 2. The word Consent to be left out lest it argued a disagreement in opinion and practice between the Army and the House as if the Houses dissented from it And certainly those Gentlemen that stood upon these niceties could not say it was done with their consent for it was hatched in the Junto so it was barely voted To be done without privity of the House neverthelesse 22. The D●bate upon th● King● Answers resumed The same day they resolved to resume their last Saturdaies debate upon the Kings Answers to the Propositions of both Houses The first Question debated was Whether they were satisfactory or no The Army Party argued They were not satisfactory because the King had not granted all their Propositions in Terminis To this was Answered That these Propositions were not sent to his Majestie as Bills to be passed in Terminis without debate but as Propositions to be Personally Treated upon as the Votes of both Houses and the Instructions of their Gommissioners prove now it is against the nature of all Treaties Personall to tie up the Parties of either side so precisely that they shall have no liberty to vary in any circumstance or particular so that if all be not precisely granted the Condescentions shall not be satisfactory though all just things are yeilded to as appeares by all Treaties between Nation and Nation where their first demands are never fully granted but alwaies qualified and limited if not diminished the rule being Iniquum pitas ut justum feras so in all Treaties between Enemies Party and Party see Mr. Pryn's said Speech Decemb. 4. 1648. where to avoid cavils he waves this equivocall Question and propounds the Question anew in these termes Whether the Kings finall Answers to the Propositions of both Houses in this Treaty considered altogether be not so full and satisfactory in themselves that this House may and ought accept of and proceed upon them for the speedy setlement of a safe and wel-grounded Peace both in Church and Common-wealth rather than reject them as unsatisfactory and so hazard the losse of all and the perpetuating of our Wars and miseries This he held in the Affirmative with so many strong and solid Reasons Arguments and Presidents both out of Divinity Law History and policy and with so cleare a confutation of the opposite Arguments that no man took up the Bucklers against him to refute him the Arguments are too many and too long to be here repeated Nor doe I love to abridge that which hath little or nothing in it superfluous or to make that short-lined by epitomizing it such is the lazinesse of men to preferre Epitomies before Large works which I desire should be long-lined and passe through many hands This Debate lasted until Tuesday morning 5. Decemb. eight of the clock the Independents hopeing to tyre out and fright away the moderate men and then it was Resolved upon the Question notwithstanding the terrors and menaces of the Army That the Answers of the King to the Proposition of both Houses are a ground for the Houses to proceed upon for the settlement of the peace of the Kingdome It was carried affirmatively by 140 Voices against 104. that this Question should be put and the Question it selfe was carried cleerly Affirmative without dividing the House presently after this House appointed a Committee of 6. Members to attend the General to conferre with him and his Officers and keep a good correspondency between the House and the Army who had so much surly pride and so little manners as to give them leave to take a nap of three or four houres long after their nights watching before admittance and at last dismissed them with this churlish Answer That the way to correspond was to comply with the Armies Remonstrance The House adjourned until VVednesday following VVednesday Decemb. 6. 1648. 23. The Armies treasonable violence upon the House in s curing and secluding their Members The Saints militant being enraged that the House had recovered so much courage and honesty as to Vote according to their Consciences and neglect their wild Remonstrance and threatning Declaration after some private conference in the morning between Pride Hewson and other Officers and the Speaker in Westminster-hall with the dores shut they sent to the House of Commons a Paper requiring that the impeached Members and M. G. Browne who they belied to have called in Hamilton might be secured and brought to justice and that the 90. and odde Members who refused to Vote against the late Scotish Engagement and all that Voted for recalling the 4. Votes for Non-Addresses and Voted for a Treaty and concurred in Yesterdaies Vote That the Kings concessions were a ground for the H●●se to proceed to a
a Protestation might suddenly be drawn up and every Member to set his hand to it in detestation of those repealed Votes A Committee was appointed accordingly The 14 Decemb. the said new-found Shiboleth was brought in by Gourdon which caused divers that were not yet mad enough for Bedlam to forbear the House or rather Conventicle Decemb. 14. They repealed the Ordinance lately passed after mature debate for setling the Countie-Militias of the Kingdome 30. The Militia of the Counties new setled in Independent hands because there were some Presbyterians in it not well-affected to the Army and in that new sense Malignants And ordered that a new Ordinance with a List of new Names of Saints Militant sounding like a Jewish pedigree be brought in for through the indiscretion of the Presbyterians the Independents have had the custody of our Purses a long time and now must keep our Swords too and then Stand and deliver will be the only Law of the Land About this time Major General Brown one of the Sheriffs of London was fetched out of the City by a Party of Horse 31. Sheriff Brown carried away out of the City Prisoner to S. James's and carried before the mechanick Councel of War at Whitehall although a Member of Parliam●nt and consequently one of their Masters where he told them He knew they had nothing to charge him withall but his honest endeavours to preserve His Majesty and His Posterity together with the Parliament City and Kingdome with the Laws and Government thereof from being rooted up by them and that he feared them not Col. Hewson the one-eyed Cobler was so saw●y as to tell him He was too peremptory at last they committed him Prisoner to S. James's And that he might not want company 32. Sir Will. Waller c. removed to S. James's they sent a Warrant to Capt. Lawrence Marshal General to remove Sir Will. Waller Sir John Clotworthy Major Gen. Massey and Commissary General Copley from the Kings Head to him The Marshal shewing them the Warrant 33. They protest against the Generals Authority they protested against the Authority and offered the Protest to the Marshal in writing desiring him to shew it to the General which he refusing to receive Sir Will. Waller desired all the company to witness what Protestation they did make in behalf of themselves and all the Free-born people of England against the violent and illegal encroachments of the General and Councel of War against the Laws and Liberties and read it aloud as followeth A Declaration of the taking away of Sir Will. Waller Sir John Clotworthy Major Gen Massey and Colonel Copley Members of the House of Commons from the Kings Head in the Strand to S. James's Together with their Protestation read at their removal With a Copie of the L. Generals Order for the same Tuesday Decemb. 12. 1648. Marshal Laurence came and acquainted Sir William Waller Sir John Clotworthy Maj. Gen. Massey and M. Lionel Copley Members of the House of Commons That he had Orders from the Lord General and Councel of the Army to remove them from the other Prisoners to S. James's They replied to him That they desired to see his Orders The Marshal answered They were onely verbal but the Gentlemen insisting to see a Warrant for their remove the Marshal went to the General and from him about six a clock brought an Order a true Copie of which follows Viz. YOu are upon sight hereof to remove Sir Will. Waller Sir John Clotworthy Major General Massey and Colonel Copley from the Kings Head Inne where they are now in Custody to S. James's And for so doing this shall be your Warrant Given under my hand Decemb. 12. 1648. T. Fairfax To Marshal General Lawrence This Order being shewed unto the foresaid Gentlemen Sir Will. Waller produced a Paper desiring that the same might be presented to the General which Marshal Lawrence refused to receive Upon which the said Sir William Waller and the other three Gentlemen desired the said Marshal and all the Gentlemen there present to attend and witness to that Protestation which they did there make in behalf of themselves and all the Commons and Free-born Subjects of England so with a distinct and audible voice read their Protestation as followeth VVE whose Names are hereunto subscribed being Members of the House of Commons and Freemen of England do hereby declare and protest before God Angels and Men That the General and Officers of the Armie being raised by the Authoritie of Parliament and for defence and maintenance of the priviledges thereof have not or ought to have any power or jurisdiction to apprehend secure detein imprison or remove our persons from place to place by any colour or Authoritie whatsoever nor yet to question or try us or any of us by Martial Law or otherwise for any offence or crime whatsoever which can or shall be objected against us And that the present Imprisonment and removal of our persons is a high violation of the Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and of the Fundamental Laws of the Land and a higher usurpation and exercise of an Arbitrary and unlawfull power then hath been heretofore pretended to or attempted by this or any King or other power whatsoever within this Realme notwithstanding which We and every of us do Declare our readinesse to submit our selves to the Legall triall of a Free Parliament for any crime or misdemeanour that can or shall be objected against us At the Kings-head in the Strand In witnesse whereof we have hereto subscribed our Names the 12. of December 1648. William Waller Edward Massey John Clotworthy Lionell Copley About this time Mr. Pelham Mr. Lane Mr. Vaughan 34. Foure secured Members discha●ged Sir Simon Dewes Members secured were set at liberty without any engagement although at first it was demanded they should engage not to attempt any thing against the present actings of this Parliament and Army which they refused About Decemb. 11. 1648. 35. The Agreement of the People published and Answered was delivered into the world a monstrous Beggers Brat called The Agreement of the People It is very judiciously Answered by Mr. William Ashurst all the Contents thereof is in the Remonstrance of the Army 20. Nov. 1648. wherof I have spoken already 1. It proposeth That the People that is some small part of the People the Army and their faction without any colour of Law or Right should agree together to take away finally the present Government by King Lords and Commons which the Kings Party heretofore charged upon the Parliament as their Designe for which they fought whereupon the Parliament to vindicate themselves published many Declarations and passed sundry Votes That they would not alter the Government by King Lords and Commons it also takes away the legall right from Burroughs to chuse members of Parliament this admitted they may as well conspire to take away any Law or any mans Life or Estate by which rule
could not be carried on by any private designe in Conventicles and corners as are all the bloudy Petitions for justice justice against capital Delinquents and the most High which being penned and solicited by the Army or sectary Committee-men 48. Somersetshire encouraged by the House to associate all the wel-affected i. e. all the Anarchists and Cheaters and subscribed and prosecuted by some few beggerly Schismaticks without Cloaks in the Names of whole Counties whom they had the impudence to belie were entertained in state and they and that wel-affected County though they abhorred the villany thanked for their paines * 25. Decemb. The House voted a Letter to be sent by way of encouragement to the County of Somerset to go on with setling their association with the wel-affected and forces of the Counties adjacent this is to associate and Arme all the Schismaticks Committee-men guilty and desperate Persons Antimonarchists and Anarchists against all the peaceable and honest men of the Kingdome 26. Decemb. Mr. Pryn sent a Letter to the General 49. Mr. Pryns Letter to the General demanding his liberty demanding his liberty and seconded it with a Declaration as followeth Mr. Pryn's Demand of his Liberty to the Generall Decemb. 26. 1648. with his Answer thereto And his Declaration and Protestation thereupon For the Honourable Lord Fairfax Generall of the present Army THese are to acquaint your Lordship 50. Mr. Pryns Declaration seconding his said Letter That I being a Member of the Commons House of Parliament a Free-man of England a great Sufferer for and an Assertor of the Subjects Liberties against all Regal and Prelatical tyranny and no way subject to your owne your Councel of Warrs or Officers military power or jurisdiction going to the House to discharge my duty on the 6 of this instant December was on the staires next the Commons House door forcibly kept back entring the House seized on and carried away thence without any pretext of Lawfull Authority therto assigned by Colonel Pride and other Officers and Souldiers of the Army under your Command And notwithstanding the Houses demand of my enlargement both by their Sergeant and otherwise ever since unjustly detained under your Marshals custody and tossed from place to place contrary to the known Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject and fundamental Laws of the Land which you are engaged to maintaine against all violation And therefore do hereby demand from your Lordship my present enlargement and just liberty with your Answer hereunto From the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. This was delivered to the Generals own hands at his House in Queen-street about three of the clock the same day it beares date by Doctor Bastwijcke VVho returned this Answer by him upon the reading therof THat he knew not but Mr. Pryn was already released and that he would send to his Officers to know what they had against him VVho it seems act all things without his privity and steer all the Armies present counsels and designes according to their absolute wills The Publique Declaration and Protestation of William Pryn of Lincolnes Inne Esquire Against his present Restraint and the present destructive Councels and Jesuiticall proceedings of the Generall Officers and Army I VVilliam Pryn a Member of the House of Commons and Freeman of England who have formerly suffer'd 8. years Imprisonment four of them close three in exile three Pillories the losse of my Ears Calling Estate for the vindicating of the Subjects just Rights and Liberties against the arbitrary tyranny injustice of King and Prelats and defence of the Protestant Religion here established spent most of my strength and studies in asserting the Peoples just freedom and the power and priviledges of Parliament against all Opposers and never received one farthing by way of damages gift or recompence or the smallest benefit or preferment whatsoever for all my sufferings and publicke services Do here solemnly declare before the most just and righteous God of Heaven and Earth the Searcher of all hearts the whole Kingdome English Nation and the World that having according to the best of my skill and judgment faithfully discharged my trust and duty in the Commons House upon real grounds of Religion Conscience Justice Law prudence and right reason for the speedy and effectual setlement of the peace and safety of our three distracted bleeding dying Kingdoms on Monday Dec. 4. I was on Wednesday morning following the 6 of this instant going to the House to discharoe my duty on the Parliament staires next the Commons door forcibly seized upon by Col. Pride Sir Hardress VValler and other Officers of the Army who had then beset the House with strong Guards and whole Reg of Horse and Foote haled violently thence into Queens Court notwithstanding my Protestation of breach of priviledge both as a Member and a Freeman by a meere usurped tyrannicall power without any lawfull Authority or cause assigned and there forceibly detained Prisoner with other Members there restrained by them notwithstanding the Houses double demand of my present enlargement to attend its service by the Sergeant and that night contrary to faith and promise carried Prisoner to Hell and there shut up all night with 40. other Members without any lodging or any other accommodations contrary to the known Priviledges of Parl. the fundamental Laws of the Realm and Liberty of the subject which both Houses the 3. Kingdoms the General with all Officers and Soldiers of the Army are by solemn Covenant and duty obliged inviolably to maintain Since which I have without any lawful power or authority bin removed and kept prisoner in several places put to great expences debar'd the liberty of my person calling denied that hereditary freedom which belongs to me of right both as a Freeman a Member an eminent sufferer for the publick and a Christian by these who have not the least shadow of authority or justice to restrain me and never yet objected the least cause for this my unjust restraint I do therfore hereby publickly protest against all these their proceedings as the highest usurpation of an arbitrary and tyrannical power the greatest breach of faith trust Covenant priviledges of Parl. and most dangerous encroachment on the Subjects liberties and Laws of the Land ever practised in this Kingdome by any King or Tyrant especially by pretended Saints who hold forth nothing but justice righteousnesse liberty of conscience and publick freedom in all their Remonstrances whils they are triumphantly trampling them all under their armed iron feet And do further herby appeal to summon them before all the Tribunals and powers in heaven and earth for exemplary justice against them who cry out so much for it against others less tyrannical oppressive unjust and fedifragus to God and men than themselves And do moreover remonstrat that all their present exorbitant actings against the King Parl. present Government and their new modled representative are nothing else
but the designs projects of Jesuits Popish Priests and Recusants who bear chief sway in their Councels to destroy and subvert our Religion Laws Liberties Government Magistracy Ministry the present and all future Parl. the King his Posterity and our 3. Kingdoms yea the Generall Officers and Army themselves and that with speedy and inevitable certaint● to betray them all to our forreign Popish Enemies and give a just occasion to the Prince and Duke now in the Papists power to alter their Religion and engage them and all forreign Princes and Estates to exert all their power to suppresse and extirpate the Protestant Religion and Professors of it through all the world which these unchristian scandalous treacherous rebellious tyrannicall Jesuitical disloyall bloudy present Councels and exorbitances of this Army of Saints so much pretending to piety and justice have so deeply wounded scandalized and rendred detestable to all pious carnall morall men of all conditions All which I am and shall alwaies be ready to make good before God Angels Men and our whole three Kingdoms in a free and full Parliament upon all just occasions and seale the truth of it with the last drop of my dearest bloud In witnesse whereof I have hereunto subscribed my Name at the Signe of the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. 51. The Councell of War forbid all state and ceremony to the King From Dec. 25. to 1. January Num. 283. 27. Decemb. The Councel of VVarr who manage the businesse in relation to the King saith the Diurnal ordered That all state and ceremony should be forborne to the King and his Attendants lessened to mortifie him by degrees and work Him to their desires VVhen it was first moved in the House of Commons to proceed capitally against the King 52. Cromwels Sp. in the Ho. when it was first propounded to try the King Cromwell stood up and told them That if any man moved this up●n d●signe he should think him the greatest Traytour in the world but since providence and necessity had cast them upon it he should pray God to blesse their Councels though he were not provided on the suddaine to give them counsel this blessing of his proved a curse to the King 53. The Ordinance for electing Com Councel men confi●med 28. Decemb. was brought into and read in the House an Ordinance explaining the former Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men which confirmed the former Ordinance It was referred back againe to the said Committee to consider of taking away the illegal as they please to miscall them Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy and other Oaths usually administred to Officers Free-men c. of the City The 28. Decemb. Tho. Scot brought in the Ordinance for Trial of the King it was read and recommitted three severall times 54. The Ordinance for Trial of His Majesty passed the Commons and the Commissioners Names inserted consisting of diverse Lords Commons Aldermen Citizens Country Gentlemen and Souldiers that the more persons of all sorts might be engaged in so damnable and treasonable a designe and because this Ordinance and the proceedings thereupon had no foundation in Divinity Law reason nor practice The Commons to give it a foundation and ground from the authority of their Votes declared as followeth Resolved c. Diurnall from 1. Ian. to the 8. of Ian. 1648. Numb 286. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament doe declare and adjudge That by the fundamental Laws of the Realme it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levie War against the Parliament and Kingdom of England So together with this declaratory Vote the said Ordinance was carried up to the Lords by that Renegado Lord Gray of Grooby Jan. 2. 1648. 55. And sent up to the Lords The Lords met that day farre more than ordinary 16. in number and promising to send an Answer by Messengers of their owne The first Question started by some Lords who had rather have had a thinner House was 56. And Debated Whether it should be presently debated which passed Affirmatively The first Debate was upon the said Declaratory Vote The Earle of Manchester told them The Parliament of England by the fundamentall Laws of England consisted of three Estates 1. King 2. Lords 3. Commons the King is the first and chief Estate He calls and dissolves Parliaments and confirmes all their Acts and without him there can be no Parliament therefore it is absurd to say The King can be a Traitour against the Parliament The Earle of Northumberland said The greatest part at least twenty to one of the people of England were not yet satisfied whether the King levied war first against the Houses or the Houses against Him 57. The Zealots of the H. of Com offended with the Lords for casting forth the Ordin for Triall of the King And if the King did levie Warr first against the Houses we have no Law to make it Treason in Him so to doe And for us to declare Treason by an Ordinance when the matter of fact is not yet proved nor any Law extant to judge it by is very unreasonable so the Lords cast off the Debate and cast out the Ordinance and adjourned for seven dayes Jan. 3. The Zealots of the Commons were very angry at the Lords and threatned to clap a Pad-lock on the Door of their House but at last they sent up some of their Members to examine the Lords Book and see what they have done who brought word back that their Lordships had passed 2. Votes 1. That they doe not concurre to the said Declaratory Vote 2. That they had rejected the Ordinance for Triall of the King 58. Votes passed by them therupon Hereupon the Commons resolved to rid their hands of King and Lords together and presently they voted That all Members of the House of Commons and others appointed by order of that House or Ordinances of both Houses of Parliament to act in any Ordinance wherin the Lords are joyned shall be impowred and enjoyned to sit and act and execute in the said several Committees of themselves notwithstanding the House of Peers joyne not with them therein Upon the debate many hot-brain'd men insisted upon it That the Lords who rejected the Ordinance should be themselves Impeached for favouring the grand Delinquent of England you see the King was likely to have much justice when his Judges must either condemne Him or be condemned others thought it more prudence to touch their Priviledges and let alone their Persons Die Iovis 4. Jan. 1648. The Commons passed these 3. Votes A question in Divinity voted in Parliament never agreed to by Divines This we find de fact● in the subversion of our Religion Lawes Liberties and Properties though not de Jure You see that since both Houses ravished the Supremacy from the King and a petty faction from the Houses our Lawes are first shrunk into arbitrary Ordinances of
Houses Propositions See Mr. Pryn's said Speech in the House 2 Decemb. 1648. more at large and the Kings Answers and see whether the King did not grant all those Propositions in which the main security of the Kingdom resteth He granted the first Proposition for taking off all Declarations as was desired And the third Proposition for the Militia as was desired He assented to the Proposition for Ireland limiting the time of the Parliaments disposing Officers there to 20 years He consented to such Acts for publique Debts and Publique Uses as should be presented within 2. years and incurred within that time He granted the Proposition concerning Peers as was desired He granted the Disposing Offices in England to the Parliament for 20. years He granted the taking away the Court of Wards having 100000 l. per ann in lieu thereof to be raised as the Parliament should think fit He granted to declare against the Marquess of Ormond's power and proceedings after an Agreement with the Parliament The onely difference therefore remained upon two Propositions 1. Delinquents 2. The Church For Delinquents though He doth not grant all His Majesty consented they shall submit to moderate Compositions according to such Proportions as they and the two Houses shall agree 2. He disableth them to bear Offices of publike Trust and removes them from the Kings Queens and Princes Court 3. For such as the Houses propounded to proceed capitally against He leaves them to a Legal Tryal and declares He will not interpose to hinder it which satisfies the main complaint of the Parliament which was in the beginning of the War That the King protected Delinquents from justice And all that the House desired in the Propositions presented to him at Oxford Febr. 1642. was That His Majesty would leave Delinquents to a Legal Tryal and judgement of Parliament But that his Majestie should joyn in an Act for taking away the Lives or Estates of any that have adhered to Him He truly professeth He cannot with Justice and Honour agree thereto 4. Nor do we see how Delinquents being left to the Law can escape justice the King having granted the 1. proemial Proposition and so by a Law acknowledged the Parliaments Cause and War to be just For the Church The Houses propound the utter abolishing of Archbishops Bishops c. The sale of their Lands that Reformation of Religion be setled by Act of Parliament as both Houses have or shall agree The Kings Answer takes away Church-Government by Arch-bishops Bishops c. by taking away their Courts and Officers and so far takes away their power of Ordination that it can never be revived again but by Act of Parliament so that Episcopacy is divested of any actual being by the Law of the Land and instead thereof the Presbyterian Government setled for three years by a Law which is for so long a time as the Houses formerly in their Ordinances presented to Him at New-castle did themselves think fit to settle it For the Sale of Bishops Lands upon the publike F●ith Every cheating Saint of the Faction must have the Publike Faith exactly kept though he bought the Lands but at 2 or 3. years just value and with such monies as he had formerly cheated the State of when other men who have lost the best part of their Estates by and for the Pa li●ment for compensation whereof they have the publike Faith engaged by Ordinances are consumed by Taxes and repaied with reproaches onely we say That although the Purchasers might well have afforded to have given the same rates for their Purchases which they now give if they might have had them assured by Act of Parliament for 99 years and such moderate Rents reserved as the King intimates in his Answer yet in His Answer he expresseth a farther satisfaction to be given them upon which we should have insis●ed n●●with● anding the said Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. We farther alledge That the King having granted the rest of the Propositions ●●d ●o much in these 2. Delinquents and the Church the Natio●●l Covenant doth not oblige us to make War upon this poi●● nothing can make Presbytery nor the Purchasers of Bishops L●● is more odious nor endanger them more than to make them the sole obstacle of Peace nor could any thing more work the King to comply with our desires herein than for us to draw a little neerer Him The Considerations leading us to pass the said Vote 5 Dec. 1648. come next to be considered 1. The saving of Ireland 2. The regaining the revolted Navy and freedom of the Seas 3. The support of the Ancient Government of the Kingdome 4. The putting the people into a secure possession of their Laws and Liberties 5. The avoiding such evill consequences as were apparently to follow a breach with the King As 1. the Deposing the King if not the depriving Him of life Return to Sect. 71. whereupon floods of misery will follow and scandal to the Protestant Religion which we from our hearts detest and abhor See the many Declarations of Parliament against it 2. The necessitating of the Prince to cast himself into the Armes of Forreign Popish Princes and embrace Popish Alliances for his succour 3. It may beget a change of Government and a laying aside of Monarchy here and so a Breach with Scotland and this Kingdome being the more rich likely to be the Seat of the War 4. The vast Debts of this Kingdom upon the publike Faith will never be paid in War but increased and multiplied multitudes of Sufferers by and for the Parliament like to be repayed onely with new sufferings and every years War destroies more Families and makes more Malignants through discontenting pressures until at last the Souldier seeing no hope of pay the People no hope of peace and ease fall together into a general and desperate tumultuousness the power of the Sword apparently threatning a dissolution of Government both in Church and Common-wealth To that scandalous Objection which saith The corrupt majority will not l●nd an ear to admit a thought towards the laying down their own power or rendring it back to the People from whom they received it We say this Objection is unreasonable from men who endeavour to perpetuate an Army upon the Kingdome nor is the continuance of this Parliament singly objected but that they will not render it back to the People Viz. To a new Representative invented and made by the Army that is We will not render our power into the hands of the Army Another Objection is That whatsoever the King granted He might plead Force to break it and spoil us by policy This Objection might have been made against all our Treaties If there be any Force it is from the Army for spoiling us by policy The Kings of this Land could never encroach upon our good Laws but by corrupt Judges and Ministers who though they could not abrogate the Law made it speak against it self and the intended good of the
Reason seek to impose a beliefe upon My Subjects * * 93. Hereabout I was stopt and not suffered to speak any more concerning Reasons There is no proceeding just against any man but what is warranted either by Gods Lawes or the municipall Lawes of the Country where he lives Now I am most confident that this daies proceeding cannot be warranted by Gods Law for on the contrary the authority of obedience unto Kings is clearly warranted and strictly commanded both in the Old and New Testament which if denyed I am ready instantly to prove and for the question now in hand there it is said That where the word of a King is there is Power and who may say unto him what doest thou Eccles 8.4 Then for the Lawes of the Land I am no lesse confident that no learned Lawyer will affirme that an Impeachment can lye against the KING they all going in His Name and one of their Maxims is That the King can do no wrong Besides the Law upon which you ground your proceedings must either be old or new if old shew it if new tell what authority warranted by the fundamental Lawes of the Land hath made it and when But how the House of Commons can erect a Court of Judicature which was never one it self as is well known to all Lawyers I leave to God and the World to judge And it were full as strange that they should pretend to make Lawes without King or Lords House to any that have heard speak of the Lawes of England And admitting but not granting that the People of Englands Commission could grant your pretended power I see nothing you can shew for that for certainly you never asked the question of the tenth man of the Kingdome and in this way you manifestly wrong even the poorest Plough-man if you demand not his free consent nor can you pretend any colour for this your pretended Commission without the consent at least of the major part of every man in England of whatsoever quality or condition which I am sure you never went about to seek so farre are you from having it Thus you see that I speak not for My owne right alone as I am your King but also for the true Liberty of all My Subjects which consists not in sharing the power of Government but in living under such Lawes such a Government as may give themselves the best assurance of their lives and propriety of their goods Nor in this must or do I forget the priviledges of both Houses of Parliament which this daies proceedings doth not only violate but likewise occasion the greatest breach of their publike Faith I believe ever was heard of with which I am farre from charging the two Houses for all the pretended crimes laid against Me beare date long before this late Treaty at Newport in which I having concluded as much as in Me lay and hopefully expecting the two Houses agreement thereunto I was suddenly surprised and hurried from thence as a Prisoner upon which accompt I am against my will brought hither where since I am come I cannot but to My power defend the ancient Laws and Liberties of this Kingdome together with My owne just Right then for any thing I can see the higher House is totally excluded And for the House of Commons it is too well knowne that the major part of them are detained or deterr'd from sitting so as if I had no other this were sufficient for Me to protest against the lawfullnesse of your pretended Court. Besides all this the peace of the Kingdome is not the least in My thoughts and what hopes of Settlement is there so long as power reigns without rule of Law changing the whole frame of that Government under which this Kingdome hath flourished for many hundred years nor will I say what will fall out in case this lawlesse unjust proceeding against Me do go on and believe it the Commons of England will not thank you for this change for they will remember how happy they have been of late yeares under the Reign of Queen Elizabeth the King my Father and My self until the beginning of there unhappy troubles and will have cause to doubt that they shall never be so happy under any new And by this time it will be too sensibly evident that the Armes I took up were onely to defend the fundamental Lawes of this Kingdom against those who have supposed My power hath totally changed the ancient Government Thus having shewed you briefly the Reasons why I cannot submit to your pretended Authority without violating the trust which I have from God for the welfare and liberty of My People I expect from you either clear Reasons to convince My judgment shewing Me that I am in an errour and then truly I will readily answer or that you will withdraw your proceedings This I intended to speak in Westminster-hall on Munday 22. January but against reason was hindered to shew My Reasons 87. Alteration of the formes and styles of Writs and Legall proceedings The 27. Jan. The Commons read the Act for Altering the formes of Writs and other proceedings in Courts of Justice which according to all our known Laws the custome of all Ages and the fundamental Government of this Kingdome ever ran in the Kings Name This Act upon the Question was assented to and no concurrence of the Lords desired of this more hereafter 88. A Proclam to be brought in prohibiting the Pr. of Wales or any of the Kings Issue to be proclaimed King of England The Junto of 50. or 60. Commons appointed a Committee to pen a Proclamation That if any man should go about to Proclaim Prince Charles or any of that line King of England after the removal of King Charles the Father out of this life as is usually and ought to be done by all Mayors Bayliffs of Corporations High-Sheriffs c. under high penalties of the Law for their neglect or shall proclaim any other without the consent of the present Parliament the Commons declare it to be High Treason and that no man under paine of Imprisonment or such other arbitrary punishment as shall be thought fit to be inflicted on them shall speak or preach any thing contrary to the present proceedings of the Supreme Authority of this Nation the Commons of England assembled in Parliament Your hands and feet liberties and consciences were long since tied up 89. The Bishop of London appointed by the Ho. to administer spiritual comfort to the cond●mned King and the Kings usage by the Army See Mr. Jo Geree's Book against Goodwin called Might overcoming right And Mr. Pryns Epistle to his Speech 6. Dec. 1648. now you are tongue-tied Upon motion the House ordered That Doctor Juxon Bishop of London should be permitted to he private with the King in His Chamber to preach and Administer the Sacraments and other spirituall comforts to Him But notwithstanding their Masters of the Councel of Warre appointed that
Commons should never so little crosse the ambition of these Grandees they would shew no more modesty to them then they have done to the excluded Members See the Hunting of the Foxes c. p. 6 7 8. And so it concludes with a Protestation against their breaking the Faith of the Army with all Parties their dissolving the Councel of Agitators and usurping a power of giving forth the sense of the Army against the Parliament and People against their shooting to death the Souldier at Ware Returne to sect 2. 5. and their cruelties exercised upon other Persons to the debasing of their Spirits and therby new-moulding the Army to their Designes against their playing fast and loose with the King and His Party till they had brought a new and dangerous Warre upon this Nation They also protest against their dissembled Repentances against their late extraordinary proceedings in Bringing the Army upon the City to the ruine of Trade their breaking the House of Commons in peices without charging the Members particularly and then judging and taking away mens lives in an extraordinary way as done for no other end but to make way for their owne absolute Domination They also protest against the Election and establishment of those High Courts of Justice as unjust in themselves and of dangerous precedent in time to come as likewise against the Councel of State and putting some of themselves therin contrary to their own Agreement They also protest against all other the like Meetings of those Officers that on Thursday 2. Feb. Voted for so bloody a Law as to hang whom they should judge disturbed the Army as having no power either by such Councels to give the sense of the Army or to judge any Person not of the Army or to do any thing in reference to the Common-wealth 126. The Hunting of the Foxes from Tryplo and New-market by 5. small Beagles p. 8. About this time also became publique a pretty Book entituled The Hunting of the Foxes from New-market and Triploe to White-hall by 5. small Beagles which tells you That the Grandee-Officers of the Army to keep the Souldiers quiet did formalize about an Agreement of the People whilst they carried on their platforme of absolute tyranny long since hatched by Ireton by erecting a Councel of State no sooner was this monster born but it devoured half the Parliament of England and now it is adorned it self with Regall magnificence and majesty of courtly Attendants and like the 30 Tyrants of Athens to head it self over the People this is and yet this is not our new intended King there is a King to succeed this is but his Viceroy O Cromwell whither art thou aspiring the word is already given out amongst their Of●●cers That this Nation must have one prime Magistrate or Ruler over them and that that the Generall hath power to make a Law to bind all the Commons of England This was most daringly and desperately avowed at White-hall and to this temper these Court-Officers are now a moulding He that runs may read and fore-see a new Regality thus by their Machivilian pretences and wicked practices they are become Masters and Usurpers of the name of the Army and of the name of the Parliament under which Visors they have levelled and destroyed all the Authority of this Nation for the Parliament indeed and in truth is no Parliament but a Representative Glass of the Councell of Warre and the Councell of Warre but a Representative of Cromwell Ireton and Harrison and these are the All in All of the Nation which under the guises and names of Parliament Army Generall Councell High Court and Councell of State play all the strange pranks that are played And further p. 13. The conclave of Officers have sucked in the venome of all former corrupt Courts and Interests the High Commission Starre-Chamber the House of Lords the King and his privy Councell The House by Votes 5. Dec. 1648. voted the King's Concessions a ground c. And the Army secured a d expelled 250. Members for using liberty to vote according to their consciences and over-ruled those few left sitting to unvote in a thin House what was voted in full House this is more then to usurp a Negative Voice over them return to sect 18.23.28 are all alive in that Court called The Generall Councell of the Army 1. The King stood upon it That he was accountable to none but God that He was above the Parliament and People and to whom will these men be accountable to none on earth and are they not above the Parliament they have even a Negative Voice thereover formerly the Commons could pass nothing without the House of Lords and now they dare pass nothing without the concurrence of the conclave of Officers we were formerly ruled by King Lords and Commons now by a Generall Court Martiall and House of Commons what is the difference the Lords were not Members both of the House of Peers and of the House of Commons but the Officers our martiall Lords are Members both in the House or Councell of Officers and in the House of Commons we have not the change of a Kingdom to a Common-wealth we are onely under the old cheat A transmutation of Names but with the addition of new Tyrannies for casting out one unclean Spirit they have broug●● with them in his stead seven other unclean Spirits more wicked than the former and they have entered in and dwell there and the last state of this Common-wealth is worse than the first Lastly they set down some illegall proceedings and Examinations before the Councell of Warre exceeding the High Commission and Star-Chamber 127. The Authors censure of the Levellers These three Books shew the late endeavours of the Agitators and that party which the Grandees politickly mis-call to cast an odium upon them Levellers they are the truest Assertors of humane Liberty and the most constant and faithfull to their Principles and party of any in the Army and though they have many redundancies and superfluous Opinions fit to be pruned off by conversing with discreet honest Men or rather by a discreet and just publique Authority which I am confident is feasible since their principles concenter in the publique not in their own private Interest and Opinions and are no other waies changeable than conduceth with the emergent occasions of the Common-wealth yet they are but like the water-boughs of a healthy fruit Tree rather troublesome than dangerous whereas the designs of their Antagonists like rocks under water or poyson in well-cooked meat destroy before they are discovered 128. The Authors censure of His Majesties Posthumus work I entituled The Pourtraicture of His Sacred M●jesty in His S●litudes and Sufferings About this time arose a Phoenix out of His Majesties Ashes that most excellent Issue of His Brayn entituled THE POURTRAICTURE OF HIS SACRED MAIESTY IN HIS SOLITUDES AND SUFFERINGS A Book full fraught with wisdom Divine and
of Soldiers as well as others as appeares by 18. H. 6. c. 19. 2 3 E. 6. c. 2. 4. 5 P. M. c. 3. 5 El. 5 5 Jam. 25. is an absolute destroying of our Fundamental Liberties and the razing of the Foundation of the Common Law of England the which out of Duty and Conscience to the Rights and Freedoms of this Nation which we value above our lives and to leave You and Your Councel without all excuse we were moved to represent unto Your Excellency Earnestly pressing You well to consider what You do before you proceed to the taking away the lives of those men by Martial Law least the bloud of the Innocent and so palpable Subversion of the Lawes and Liberties of England bring the reward of just vengeance after it upon You as it did upon the Earle of Strafford For Innocent bloud God will not pardon and what the people may do in case of such violent Subversion of their Rights we shall leave to Your Excellency to judge and remaine Sir Your Excellencies humble Servants IOHN LILBURNE RICH. OVERTON From our Causlesse and unjust and Tyrannica● Captivity in the Tower of London April 17. 1649. Notwithstanding which Letter and much other meanes made the said Lockier was Shot to Death in Saint Paul's Church-yard the same day to strike a terror and slavish feare into such other Souldiers as shall dare to take notice of their approaching slavery but his Christian and gallant deportment at his death with the honourable funerall pomp accompanying him to his Grave turned all the error of his Tragedy into hatred and contempt of the Authors thereof 152. Arreares given to Col. A. P●pham H. Martin temptations put upon Lilburne and Joyce About this time the House of Commons gave to Col. Alexander Popham all his Arreares and to Harry Martyn 3000 l. to put him on upon the holy Sisters and take him off from the Levellers And Cromwell is now playing the Devils part shewing the Kingdomes of the earth and tempting John Lilburn to fall down and worship him to forsake his good principles and engagements and betray the liberties of the people but L. Col. Lilburne is higher seated in the good opinion of the People than to be suspected of so much basenesse who are confident he will as constantly resist false promises and vain hopes as he hath vain threats and terrors of Indictments and not cast away the hold he hath of immortality by hearkning to such a Syrene whose promises are but baits with a hook hidden under them and his preferments but like Mahomets paradise he that hath cousened all the Interests of the Kingdome will not scruple to cheat his enemy a free-spirited plaine meaning man This is to undermine and blow up his credit with his party and make him liable to a revenge hereafter He that stoops to the lure of a known enemy is guilty of inexcusable folly and a Betrayer of himselfe especially having had so faire a Copie of Constancy set him by Coronet Joyce who hath with much faithfulnesse resisted the like allurements and so foule a Copy of Inconstancy by Reynolds The Commons have ordered 153. The design of making Members of Parliament liable Arrests That upon Complaint made to any Judge of the three Benches the Judges shall send a Letter of Summons t●●● ch Member of their House as shall be complained of to give an appearance and submit to legal proceedings otherwise his person to be liable to Arrests But our present Judges are Creatures to the House of Commons and know before-hand what Members are Babes of Grace in favour and must be priviledged and who are out of favour and must not be priviledged they have an Index tells them when to grant and when to deny Sinners must not be partakers of the same Laws with Saints This is a Whip and a Bell to drive such dogged Members out of the Hall as will not hunt in pack with the Grandees in pursuit of their designe and are quick-sented enough to smell out their Knavery if they come too near their door It is thought the tyrannical Hocas Pocasses had an aime hereby to lash Harry Martin off from the Levellers and make him come in to them 154. Women Petition the House for L. Col. Lilburne and his Company About this time some thousands of well-affected Women of London Westminster Southwarke and the Hamlets stormed the House of Commons with two Petitions in behalf of Jo. Lilburne and his Company They complain of the Councel of States violent and illegal proceedings against them in seizing them in the night by Souldiers of Lockiers being shot to death by Martial Law of their Arbitrary Government Taxes Excise Monopolies c. That there was a designe to fetch Lilburne and his Fellow Prisoners out of the Tower at midnight to White-hall Second part of Englands new Chaines discovered and there murder them That the House by Declaring the Abettors of the Book laid to those Prisoners charge Traytors have laid a snare for people when as hardly any discourse can be touching the affaires of the present times but falls within the compasse of that Book so that all liberty of discourse is thereby utterly taken away then which there can be no greater slavery They received not so good Answers to these Petitions as they were wont to receive when they had Money Plate Rings Bodkins and Thymbles to sacrifice to these Legislative Idols they were bid Go home and wash their dishes to which some replied They had neither Dishes nor Meat left Note that the Commons have returned answer to some Petitioners that Lilburne shall be Legally Tried by Laws preceding the fact 155. Observations upon the Commons Answer to those that petitioned for Lilburne c. and yet by their Order 11. April 1649 it is Ordered That the Atturney General be required to take speedy course for prosecution of Lieu. Col. John Lilburne c. in the Vpper Bench this Terme upon the Declaration of this House touching the Book entituled The second part of Englands new Chaines discovered if this Order be not a Law and preceding the fact too then our suprene Saints have told a Legislative Lie In the latter end of the said Answer they are angry the Petitioners should discover so much of their basenesse That Cromwell and Ireton rides them and therefore contrary to all mens knowledge and their owne Consciences they terme those Intimations seditious Suggestions and Ordered that Cromwell and Ireton should draw up a Declaration to prevent the people from being mis-led by Sowers of sedition Humiliter servivunt aut superbe dominantur such are the degenerous Spirits of under-Tyrants who are Asses to their Superiors and Lyons to their Inferiors Cromwell and Ireton that have subverted all civill Authority murdered the KING possessed themselves of what they please and enslaved the Kingdome with a Military tyranny must draw up a Declaration according to their
broached in a Pamphlet by old Rowse the illiterate Jew of Eaton-Colledge And by John Goodwin the sophistical Divine which is fully con●uted in A Religious Demurrer concerning submission to the present power an excellent peece but what the Sword gave To this the honest Lievtenant Colonel answered Mr. Peters You are one of the Guides of the Army used by the chief Leaders to trumpet their Principles and Tenents and if your reasoning be good then if six Theeves meet three or four honest men and rob them that act is righteous because they are the stronger Party And if any power be a just power that is uppermost I wonder how the Army and Parliament can acquit themselves of being Rebels and Traytors before God and man in resisting and fighting against a just power in the King who was a power up and visible fenced about with abundance of Laws so reputed in the common acceptation of Men by the express letter of which all th●se that fought against him are ipso facto Traytors and if it were not for the preservation of our Laws and Liberties why did the Parliament fight against Him a present power in being and if there be no Laws in England nor never was then you and your great M●sters Cromwel Fairfax and the Parliament are a pack of bloody Rogues and Villains to set the People to murder one an●ther in fighting for preservation of their Laws in which their Liberties were included which was the principal declared Cause of the War from the beginning to the end I thought quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I had been safe when I made the known Laws the rules of my actions which you have all sworn and declared to Defend and make as the standard and touchstone between you and the People * The Laws are now no protection to us nor the rule of our actions but the arbitrary wills and lusts of the Grandees I but replied Hugh I will shew that your safety lyes not therein their minds may change and then where are you I but quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I cannot take notice of what is in their minds to obey that but the constant Declaration of their minds never contradicted in any of their Declarations as That they will maintain the Petition of Right and Laws of the Land c. This was the substance of their discourse saving that John pinched upon his great Masters large fingring of the Common-wealths money calling it Theft and State-Robbery and saying That Cromwel and Ireton pissed both in one quill though they seem sometime to go one against another yet it is but that they may the more easily carry on their main design To enslave the People Reader I was the more willing to present the summ of this Debate to thee that by comparing their doctrine and principles with their daily practices thou mayst perfectly see to what condition of slavery these beggarly upstart Tyrants and Traytors have reduced us by cheating us into a War against our lawful Soveraign under pretence of defending our Laws and Liberties and the Priviledges of Parliament which themselves onely with a concurring faction in the House have now openly and in the face of the Sun pulled up by the roots and now they stop our mouths and silence our just complaints with horrid Sect. 162. illegal and bloody Acts Declaring words and deeds against their usurpations and tyranny to be High Treason nothing is now Treason but what the remaining faction of the House of Commons please to call so To murder the King break the Parliament by hostile force put down the House of Lords erect extrajudicial High Courts of Justice to murder Men without Trial by Peers or Jury or any legal proceeding to subvert the fundamental Government by Monarchy and dispossess the right Heir of the Crown and to usurp his Supreme Authority in a factious fagg-end of the House of Commons to put the Kingly Government into a packed Junto of forty Tyrants called A Councel of State to exercise Martial Law in times of peace and upon persons no Members of the Army to raise what unnecessary illegal Taxes they please and share them and the Crown Lands and Revenues amongst themselves leaving the Souldiers unpaid to live upon Free-quarter whilst they abuse the People with pretended Orders against Free-quarter to alter the Styles of Commissions Patents Processe and all Legal proceedings and intoduce a forraign Jurisdiction to Counterfeit the Great Seal and Coin of the Kingdome and to keep up Armies of Rebels to make good these and other Tyrannies and Treasons is High Treason by the known Lawes but now by the Votes of the Conventicle of Commons it is High Treason to speak against these crimes Good God! how long will thy patience suffer these Fools to say in their hearts there is no God and yet profess thee with their mouths to break all Oathes Covenants and Protestations made in thy Name to cloak and promote their Designes with dayes of impious fasting and thanksgiving how often have thy Thunderbolts rived sensless Trees and torn brute Beasts that serve thee according to their Creation yet thou passest over these men who contemn thee contrary to their knowledge and professions Scatter the People that delight in War Turn the Councels of the wise into folly let the crafty be taken in their own net and now at last let the Oppressed taste of thy mercies and the Oppressor of thy justice throw thy rod into the fire and let it no longer be a bundle bound together in thy right hand They appeal to thee as Author of their prosperous sins become Lord Author of their just punishments bestow upon them the rewards of Hypocrites and teach them to know the difference between the saving strength of Magistrates and the destroying violence of Hang-men But what am I that argue against thy long-suffering whereof my self stand in need and seek to ripen thy vengeance before thy time Shall the Pot ask the Potter what he doth I beheld the prosperity of the wicked and my feet had slipped Lord amend all in thy good time and teach us heartily to pray Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven 170. The Act for Abolishing Monarchy proclaimed in London May 30. 1649. The aforesaid Trayterous Act for abolishing Kingly Government and converting England into a Free-State consisting of forty Tyrants and many millions of slaves was proclaimed in London by the newly intruded illegal Lord Mayor Andrewes accompanied with 14 Aldermen of the same pack the People in great abundance crying out Away with it away with it GOD save King CHARLES the Second and bitterly reviling and cursing it and them until some Troops of Horse ready prepared in secret were sent to disperse beat and wound them and yet the Trial of the King and the subverting of our well-formed Monarchy under which we lived so happily heretofore with all other Acts of the like high nature was done in the name of the People of
England although I dare say at least five hundred to one if they were free from the terrour of an Army would disavow these horrid Acts so little are the People pleased with these doings notwithstanding the new Title the Conventicle of Commons have gulled them withall Voting the People of England to be The Supreme Power and the Commons representing them in Parliament the Supreme Power of the Nation under them This was purposely so contrived to ingage the whole City and make them as desperately and impardonably guilty as themselves and certainly if this Tumult of the People amounting to a publick disclamour of the Act had not happened the whole City had been guilty by way of connivance as well as these Aldermen and the illegal Common Councel newly packed by the remaining Faction of Commons contrary to the Cities Charters to carry on these and such like Designs and intangle the whole City in their Crimes and Punishments * The Names of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London that personally proclaimed the Act for abolishing Kingly Government Alderman Andrews Lord Mayor Alderman Pennington Ald. Wollaston Ald. Foulkes Ald. Kenrick Ald. Byde Ald. Edmonds Ald. Pack Alderman Bateman Ald. Atkins Ald. Viner Ald. Avery Ald. Wilson Ald. Dethick Ald. Foot The Pharisaical House of Commons voted an Act June 1. 171. A Thanks-giving Dinner in the City for the General c. for a day of Thanks-giving to set off K. Olivers Victory over the Levellers with the more lustre and to sing Hosanna to him for bringing the grand Delinquent to punishment The wise Lord Mayor and his Brethren in imitation invited the Parliament Councel of State the General and his Officers to a Thanks-giving Dinner upon that day The Commons appointed a Committee under pretence of drawing more money from Adventurers for the Relief of Ireland to ingage the City farther to them Cromwel had the Chair in that Committee the device was that the Common Councel should invite the Parliament Councel of State and Officers of the Army to Dinner and feast them as a Free-State and then move the Supplies for Ireland But if the Levellers had prevailed the Thanks-giving white-broth and custard had been bestowed upon those free-spirited Blades whom Oliver raised into a mutiny with one hand and by advantage of his Spies cast down with another for the glory of his own Name and that he might have occasion to purge the Army as he had done the Parliament of all free-born humours 172. The Councel of State sit in pomp at White-hall White-hall is now become the Palace of a Hydra of Tyrants instead of one King where our Hogens Mogens or Councel of State sit in as much state and splendour with their Rooms as richly hanged I wish they were so too and furnished if you will believe their licenced News-books as any Lords States in Europe yet many of these Mushromes of Maje●ty were but M●chanicks Gold-smiths Brewers Weavers Clothiers Brewers Clerks c. whom scornful Fortune in a spiteful merriment brought upon the Stage and promoted to act the parts of Kings to shew that Men are but her Tennis-balls and when she is weary with laughing at their disguises will turn them into the Tyring Room out of their borrowed cases and shew us that our Lions are but her Asses The Kings poor Creditors and Servants may gape long enough like Camelions to see the aforesaid Ordinance executed for sale of the Kings Goods to pay their Debts they poor Souls are left to starve while these Saints Triumphant revel in their Masters Goods and Houses 173. A general survey to be taken of the whole Kingdome that every mans Estate both real and personal may be taxed Orders about this time were sent forth into London and the Counties adjacent for certain Committees to enquire upon Oath and certifie the improved value and revenue of every mans estate real and personal wherein good progress hath been made already the like is to go forth throughout the Kingdome That our forty mechanick Kings now sitting in White-hall and the self-created supreme Authority of the Nation may take an exact survey in imitation of William the Conquerors Book of Survey called Domes-day remaining in the Exchequer of their new conquered Kingdome and know what they are like to get by their villanies and how to load us with Taxes and Free-quarter and what the value of their Estates are when they have compleated their Design of Sequestring the Presbyterians as they have done the Royalists The faction in the House are this beginning of June 174. An Act enabling Committees to give Oaths 1649. sitting abrood upon an Act to inable Committees to give Oaths in some cases and yet the House of Commons never had nor pretended to have power to give Oathes themselves though every Court of Py-p wders hath because the House of Commons is no Court of Judicature but only the Grand Inquest of the Kingdome to present to the King the grievance and the necessities of the People by way of humble Petition as appears by the Law-books and Statutes and therefore the Commons can grant no more than they have themselves But now the remaining faction of the House have voted themselves to be the supreme Authority of the Nation and have a Sword to maintain it they and we must be what they please yet I must affirm that to take illegal Oaths is never justifiable before God nor Man and no less than damnable But it may be that by accustoming the People to take these new-imposed illegal Oaths they hope to make them the more easily swallow their intended new Oath of Allegiance to their new State and their own Damnation together hereafter All the Scrivenors about the Town are commanded by the Supreme thing to produce their Shop-books 175. Scrivenors commanded to shew shop-books that notice may be taken who are guilty of having money in their purses that the fattest and fullest may be culled out and sequestred for Delinquents now that their almighty Saint-ships have occasion to use it for defence of their Free-State if they would but search one anothers private pockets they would finde money enough The like attempt onely in the Kings time was cried out upon as a high piece of tyranny but nothing can be tyranny under a Free-State The Supreme Authority being so full a Representative-glass of the People that it takes our very substance into it self and leaves us onely the shadow whilst we wander up and down like our own Ghosts who having lived under the Monarchy of Good King CHARLES are now dead and descended like shades into the Kingdome of Pluto The 7. June 176. The aforesaid Thanksgiving solemnized 1649. the Thanks-giving spoken of Sect. 172. was solemnized in the City The Lord Mayor meeting the Speaker resigned to him as formerly was used to the King the Sword of State as had been ordered by the House the day before and received it again from
Part. 2. chap. 5. pag. 735. Seconded by Cooks 4. Instit pag. 1 4 5 46 47 49. As he should admit those to be lawful Members so he should assent to ex post facto some particulars against his Knowledge and against the Oathes of Allegiance Supremacy Protestation Solemn League and Covenant taken in the presence of God with a sincere heart and real intention to perform the same and persevere therein all the dayes of his life without suffering himself directly or indirectly by whatsoever Combination Perswasion or Terrour to be withdrawn therefrom As for example he should thereby acknowledge contrary to his knowledge and the said Oathes and Covenant 1. That there may be and now is a lawful Parliament of England actually in being and legally continuing after the Kings Death consisting only of a few late Members of the Commons House without either King Lords or most of their fellow Members 2. That this Parliament sitting under a force and so unduly Constituted and packed by power of an Army combining with them hath just and lawful Authority 1. To violate the Priviledges Rights Freedomes Customes and alter the Constitution of our Parliaments themselves 2. To Imprison Seclude and Expel most of their fellow Members the far major part of the House for Voting and according to their Consciences in favour of Peace and settlement of the Commonwealth 3. To Repeal all Votes Ordinances and Acts of Parliament they please 4. To Erect new Arbitrary Courts of War and Justice 5. To Arrain Condemn and Execute the King himself with the Peers and Commons of this Realm by a new kinde of Martial Law contrary to Magna Charta The Petition of Right 3. Car. and the known Laws of the Land 6. To Dis-inherit the Kings Posterity of the Crown 7. To extirpate Monarchy and the whole House of Peers 8. To Change and Subvert the Ancient Government Seals Laws Writs Legal proceedings Courts and Coyn of the Kingdome 9. To Sell and Dispose of all the Lands Revenues Jewels Goods of the Crown with the Lands of Deans and Chapters for thir own advantage not the easing of the people from Taxes 10. To absolve themselves by a Papal kinde of power and all the Subjects of England and Ireland from all the Oaths and Engagements they have made to the Kings Majesty His Heirs and Successours yea from the very Oath of Allegiance notwithstanding this express Clause in it fit to be laid to heart by all conscientious Christians I do beleeve and in conscience am resolved That neither the Pope nor any person whatsoever hath power to absolve me of this Oath or any part thereof which I acknowledge by good and full Authority to be lawfully Ministred to me and do renounce all Pardons and Dispensations to the contrary 11. To dispence with our Protestation and Covenant so Zealously enjoyned by both Houses on all sorts of people 12. To dispose of the Forts Ships Forces Offices and places of Honour Power Trust or Profit to whom they please to their own party 13. To Displace and Remove whom they please from their Offices Trusts Pensions Callings and Franchises at their pleasures without any Legal cause or Trial. 14. To make what New Acts Laws and Reverse what Old ones they think meet to insnare and inthral our Consciences Estates Liberties and Lives 15. To create new monstrous Treasons never heard of before and to declare Real Treasons against the King Kingdome and Parliament to be no Treasons and Loyalty Allegiance due obedience to our known Laws and a conscientious observing our Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the Covenant to be no less than High Treason for which they may take away our Lives and confiscate our Estates to their new Exchequer Thereby at once repealing Magna Charta c. 29. 5 Edw. 3. c. 6. 25 Edw. 3. c. 4. 28 Edw. 3. c. 3. 37 Edw. 3. c. 18. 42 Edw. 3. c. 3. 25 Edw. 3 c. 2. 11 Rich. 2. c. 4. 1 Hen. 4. c. 10. 2 Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. 11. n. 60. 1 Edw. 6. c. 12. 1 M. c. 1. The Petition of Right 3 Car. So much commended this Parliament and laying all our Laws Liberties Estates and Lives waste after they have drawn so much Blood and Treasure from us in defence of them 16. To raise and keep up what forces by Land and Sea they please and impose what Taxes they please and renew increase and perpetuate them to support their more than Regal or Parliamentary power 17. To pack and shuffle themselves into a Councel of Lords This 17. is added by the Abridger States General without any provincial States forty Hogens Mogens with Supream Regal and Arbitrary power in absence of Parliaments which are Abolished by these Usurpations as well as Monarchy 4. The principal ends proposed in the pretended Act for imposing this 90000 l. a months Tax oblige all men not to pay it viz. The keeping up this Army under the Lord Fairfax 1. Because this Army by rebelling against their Masters the Parliament and waging War upon them and by conspiring with their own party of the sitting Commons have occasioned all the Mischiefs last mentioned to the ruine of King Parliament and Kingdome Religion Laws Liberty and Property and daily threaten an utter dissolution both in their Deeds and Words Both Officers and Souldiers Boasting That the whole Kingdome and all we have is theirs by Conquest That we are but their conquered Slaves and Vassals and they Lords of the Kingdome That our Lives are at their Mercy and Courtesie That when they have gotten all we have from us by Taxes and Free-quarter they will seize our Lands and turn Vs and our Families out of Doors That there is no Law in England but the Sword as Hugh Peters the Rebels Apostle saith The present power must be obeyed saith parasitical John Goodwin that is the power of the Sword still More hath been raised by Taxes these last eight years than in all the Kings Reigns since the Conquest and no account given 2. No Tax ought to be imposed but upon necessity for good of the people 25 Edw. 1. chap. 6. Cooks 2. Instit pag. 528. But the keeping up this Army is the Bane of the people 1. Because they are already exhausted with war Plunder Taxes Free-quarter c. 2. Because the Souldiers have decayed Trade and brought a Dearth upon the Land 3. This Tax of 90000 l. a month destroyed Trade by Forestalling and Engrossing most of the Money now left in the Kingdome 4. There is no Enemy in the Kingdome visible nor no fear of any if we will beleeve our Grandees 5. When the King had two Armies in the Field and many Garrisons this whole Army consisted but of 22000. Men and had an Established pay but of 45000 l. a month See Ordinances 15. Feb. 1644. and 6. April 1646. Exact Collect. pag. 599 876. But when the Army by confederacy with their party in the House took the boldness to increase their number
power either to equals or superiours Mo. goes into the City and demands taxes they were so in love with power that they would not have left pilling as long as there had remained any matter either to satisfie their ambition or covetousness wherefore they resolve to drive on furiously and therefore give order to the Generall to march into the City with so many horse and foot as should reduce them to an obedience and compell them to pay the Assessment His excellency according to their command being then their servant went to the City and at Guildhall peremptorily demandeth by order from the Parliament and Councell of State the payment of their taxes this so sudden demand coming from him from whom they hoped better things and quite contrary to their expectation drove the Citizens to such a non-plus that for a time they were as extasied not knowing what to say but at last recollecting somewhat of an English temper they return this answer That in Magna Charta confirmed by the Petition of right and renewed by the present Parliament a day before their forceable dissolution upon the 11 of October they were to pay no taxes c. but by their consent in Parliament which now they had not yet to avoid giving any offence they desire time to consider of it which the Generall grants but in the mean time writes to the house to know their pleasure to which they presently answer that 1. he should imprison Col. Bromfield Alderman Bludworth L. C. Jackson Major Cox Col. Vincent c. Some of which had waited upon him from the City but a little before 2. that he should remove their chains dig up their posts and break their gates M. his carriage in that exigent of affairs These strange orders being brought to him did a litle startle him knowing they were sent as well to try his patience and obedience as to breed an open enmity between him and the City thereby to compell him to serve them perpetually by being assured that they were mortall enemies yet not willing since he had gone so farr with success to loose all now by passion he with silence obeyes them readily and thereby cleerly finds the temper of the City to be positively resolute for Liberty and right so that being sensible they might be trusted he hopes shortly to make them an amends which he had an occasion offered to do soone than he expected Is ungenerall'd for the Parliament had a double design upon him first to weaken him in his interest and credit by an imployment which they knew would so incense the City and then while he is acting their unreasonable commands they are busie in undermining him in his power for when he had done their design as they thought to the enraging of the Citizens and breeding in their hearts revengefull thoughts He joynes with the City he returnes to White-Hall upon Friday the 10th Day of February upon which day his Commission did expire instead of the renewing whereof which he might with much justice have expected as the reward of his merit he is made a Colonel again and only made equal in command with six men more as short of him in desert as in honesty wherewith when he had acquainted the Officers of his Army who were much unsatisfied with such a reward for their late abominated imployment agreed unanimously among themselves that the Parliament intended to lay them aside notwithstanding their former faithfull service to them and to perpetuate the Nations slavery by their datelesness and therefore they resolved to march with their General into the City to joyn with them and declare for a free Parliament to this purpose a conference is had at the Three Tunnes near Guild-hall where the City and Army strike hands at which time his Excellencies Officers remonstrate the resent they had of the violence they were commanded to offer that famous City which was of a stamp unparalleled in the most horrid rage of former ages whose barbarousness even spared that when they harassed the whole Nation beside then give warning of several persons both within and without the City whose tyrannous minds they feared abhorring in an especiall manner a late petition delivered in the house by one Praise-God Barebone being a treasonous libell subversive of all order and Government dangerous to religion both in discipline and worship and destructive to all Lawes Statutes and Customes even in fundamentalls wishing at last the Parliament to think of determining their Session and provide for future Parliaments This being by his Officers I say presented to his Excellency and by him in a letter communicated to the Speaker he marcheth into London and taketh quarters declaring for a free Parliament and this blow was it Free P. promised made Independency stagger for so highly were both City and Country pleased with this Declaration that they did hardly know in what manner to express their joy ringing their bells making bonfires the air resounding nothing but the name and prayses of Monck and the Streets filled with gratefull hearts who on bended knees prayed for blessings on the head of the hoped restorer both of the Church and Common-wealth and in this resolution he persisted notwithstanding all the flatteries threatnings and snares of the house who now studied nothing more than his ruine as in him foreseeing their own nevertheless he waits for the Parliaments answer to his last letters to them but finding they neither minded him nor them and thought of nothing but setling their own interest and continuing themselves in power he procures a conference between some sitting members of the house and some of the honourable Gentlemen and worthy Patriots that were excluded from it at which himself being in person present and weighing judiciously the reasons and arguments formed on both sides which he heard with a deep and reserved silence after all were withdrawn he concluded with himself upon result from the whole that the pretended settlement proposed by the house was of compass too narrow and too weak of foundation to bear up the Nation and repair its breaches Secluded members admitted he resolved therefore to withdraw all manner of force from the house and to admit men of more sober moderate and less byassed judgments whose Spirits being more apt for publick good would establish the Kingdom upon termes comprehensive of every considerable interest therein hereupon on the one and twentyeth day of February meeting the secluded members at White-hall and expressing himself to them in a speech not delivered by himself but by his Secretary wherein he commended to their care 1. Religion that great primum mobile unum necessarium without which to live rather befits beasts than men and this was proposed in the most sober and moderate way imaginable yet neither countenancing errour nor allowing libertinisme 2. He commended to them the State desiring them to be good Physitians to its crazed body by applying suteable Physick which he said
we could enjoy nothing but as the will of any number of men that shall call themselves The People And upon the same ground that those that shall subscribe this Agreement may call themselves the People may those that shall refuse to subscribe call themselves the People and upon far better grounds as being farre the more numerous and standing for defence of those ancient Lawes which do constitute the People and Common-wealth of England which will breed infinite confusions and divisions and what those that call themselves the People now agree to they may alter upon the next change of humour or interest 2. The inconveniences of the present Government have not yet been plainly discovered nor no Trial hath been made by the present knowne legal power of England whether those inconveniences may not be removed without subverting the present Government and introducing so totall a change as will be very dangerous and grievous to all sorts and conditions of men 3. In the Protestation May 5. 1641. and the Covenant Septemb. 27. 1643. we are bound to defend Parliaments and to oppose and bring to punishment all such as shall endeavour the subversion of Parliaments which this Agreement cleerly doth 4. This Agreement encroacheth desperately upon the liberty of the People of England in the Election of this Representative depriving them that have constantly adhered to this Parliament as wel as the Kings Party if they cannot in conscience subscribe it from Electing or being Elected yet they shall have Laws and Taxes imposed upon them by Subscribers who are the least and the least considerable party of the Kingdome and upon whom they conferre no trust which is to disfranchise the Nonsubscribers and reduce them to the condition of Conquered Slaves It is a knowne Maxime in Law Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus tractaeni debet what concernes all men must be debated and agreed to by all men either personally or representatively 5. It will raise factions and feuds between the Subscribers and Non-subscribers of the Parliament party 6. It takes away Magistracy and Government not onely by placing such a Supreme power over them as is disputable nay apparently illegal But by making the heady multitude the People supreme Judges over the said Representative for although it inflicts the penalty of death upon the Resisters of their Orders yet is with this salvo except such Representative shall expresly violate this Agreement which makes every man or number of men that shall get power into their hands Judges of it nor is there any other Judge designed and if there were who shall judge that Judge sic in infinitum the legal supreme Trust of all publique interests being taken away our vagabond thoughts wander in a circle not knowing where to repose our trust all Judges all Councels may erre but the rascal multitude are the very sinke of errors and corruptions If therefore the Supreme the Representative have so unstable an authority what shall the subordinate Magistrate acting under them have 7. It smels so much of the Jesuite that it tolerateth Popery in private Houses contrary to the knowne Lawes of the Land Popery like the old Serpent if it once get in the head will soon insinuate the whole body being so well backed by Potent Princes and Councels from beyond Sea And truly I know not what to say against Popery where Heresie Schisme Atheisme and Blasphemie are openly tolerated and exempted from the power of the civil Magistrate as in this Agreement 8. It will lose Ireland the managing of the Warre there being legally in this Parliament by Act passed not in this newfangled Representative 9. It divides us from Scotland 10. It destroyes the Cause for which the Parliament so often Declared Voted Protested and Covenanted that they fought viz. Defence of Parliaments Religion Lawes and Liberties and bestowes the Cause upon the King as if He only from the beginning had fought for them which all men have reason to believe when they shall see the Parliament make such ill use of their Victory as to root them all up And this and all other Parliament-Armies were Commissioned to preserve this Parliament by this Authority they have their Pay and Indemnity without which they are Thieves Rebels and Murderers 11. It demands that there be no Lawyers nor Lawes but new Rules in English to be made from time to time by the new Representative who are to be chosen and trusted onely by a small faction of Subscribers as hath been said according to which justice shall be administred not by Mayors Sheriffs Justices of the peace Officers alwaies ready but by hundred Courts who are to supply the roome of all the Judges and Lawyers of the Kingdome and all this to lie in the brests of 12. Men in every Hundred of the Tribe of the Godly be sure who peradventure can neither write nor read nor have responsible Estates to satisfie wrongs done these shall doe justice by providence and revelation 12. It destroyeth all great and publique Interests and therefore cannot stand Kings Lords Souldiers Magistrates Parliaments Lawyers Ministers who will oppose it because it confounds and destroyes Religion and depriveth the Ministery of its lot Tythes stopping their mouthes with famine purposely to cast them off and generally all men of quality and discretion will withstand it because it gives no security for enjoyment of liberty and property nor for increase of learning civility and piety who then are left to owne and subscribe it but desperate forlorne Persons who because they cannot bring their actions under the protection of our present Laws and Government will bring the Laws and Government to their own corrupt wills and interests and therefore will signe this Agreement no obedience being given to this Representative but upon condition that they kept this Agreement and their being no other Judges of their keeping it but the Subscribers who in the result of all hath the Law in their owne Wills 36. This Agreement of the People was condemned by the House of Commons 9. Nov. 1647. This Agreement of the People is the same which was subscribed by 9. Regiments of Horse and 7. of Foot and presented with a Petition to the House of Commons Novemb. 5. 1647 by the Agitators Gifforde the Jesuite being then in the Lobby with them and very active therein Upon reading and debate hereof the House then declared their judgements against it by passing these Votes Die Martis 9. Nov. 1647. A Paper directed to the Supreme Authority of the Nation the Commons in Parliament assembled The just and earnest Petition of those whose Names are subscribed in behalfe of themselves and all the Free-borne people of England Together with a Paper annexed intituled An Agreement of the people for present and future peace upon grounds of Common Right avowed How these Papers come now to be owned those that oppose them violenrly secured by the Army by the connivance at least of the dregs of the House now sitting
these proceedings nor amongst such Judges and this rod of Iron is provided to bruise his Country as well as himself Lieutenant Collonel Lilbornes Trial hath taught them That it is an easier Matter for them to pack a Butcher-Rowe of confiding partiall Judges then a Jury who are liable to be challenged if suspected of partiality When Collonel Andrewes claimed to be tried legally as a Freeman by a Jury and vouched Great Charter and many other Statutes whereof see his aforesaid 3. Answers that sneaking Bloud-sucker illiterate Keeble answered Those Statutes were out of date now meaning They were taken away by conquest So that this Shamble Rowe of Judges take upon them to be both Judges of the Law without acknowledging the Fundamentall Lawes of the Land or taking any Oath of Indifferency to the People Triors of the Fact or Jurates of life and death without being sworn to find according to Evidence as well as Parties and Prosecutors Theeves upon the high way may as justly arraign a True man before them because he brought no more Mony in his purse offered to draw his sword and hid his mony about him in contempt of their Jurisdiction and Authority and condemn him upon such a Mock Triall and Mummery or Enterlude of Justice as these Fellows If they allow him Counsel his Counsel must apprehend the mindes of his Judges at his perill and not be so faithfull and diligent as to help his client in earnest Lest the Counsel of State or some other power whose will is a Law interpose and banish him 20. miles from London as they did Master Sprat Sir John Gells Solicitor before Sir Johns businesse was ended whereby Sir John was left destitute of meanes to follow his businesse himself being Close Prisoner If they permit any witnesse to speak on the prisoners part He comes at his perill Sir John Gells first witnesse was so baffled in Court that the rest stole away and durst not appear I have not heard whether they give any Copy of their Aricles of Impeachment to the Prisoner for they cover all their doings with such a Plaguy Egyptian Darknesse that we cannot see a glimpse of light or whether they go a Starre Chamber way and make him Answer Ore tenus and ex tempore for his life and Estate But if they give him any Copy or any time to answer it is not above four or five daies or a week nor do they allow him Counsell or any other Clearing of the way to his defence untill he have ensnared himself by owning their Jurisdiction and pleaded the Generall Plea Not Guilty If he pleade not an Issuable Plea and yield to their Jurisdiction quitting all benefit of the Law and Legall proceedings the Razor is at his throat they thirst after his Bloud and they presently sentence him guilty of contumacy and take it pro confesso And if he do submit and plead His plea will have the operation but of a Psalm of Mercy prolonging his life but for a short time in the interim Keeble and his Court plays with him as a Cat with a Mouse and then devours him For no man is sent to this Court to be Tried but to be condemned In hac arena dimicatur sine missione Herein they shew themselves much more Tyrannous and bloudy then the Duke D' Alva when he erected his said Counsel of Troubles called Concilium Sanguinis or the Bloudy conventicle as this will shortly be For saith Strada Declar. 1. lib. 7. Procurator reginus menses 4. Conficiendae Accusationi accipiens sibi 5. Concedebat ad Defensionem regis Egmontio Hornano c. The Kings Atturney took 4. Moneths time to draw up the charge or accusation and gave 5. Months time to the Respondents to make their defence And had he given less then 5. Moneths time To Instruct Counsel Pen their Answers produce and summon witesses inquire into the lives and conversation of their Accusors his feet had been swift to shed bloud Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa est But our Inquisitors take whole yeares to themselves to hunt for Matter of Accusation and hire and engage witnesses against men kept in ignorance and want with close Imprisonment and allow not them so many daies to make their Defence All manner of Accusors and witnesses though apparently suborned and forsworn in the same cause and proofes without exceptions offered to the Court that they are of infamous life and conversation are in this Court the Object of whose desires are Bloud and Confiscations not Justice lawfull witnesses such witnesses were the said Bernard and Pits Monsters of men See Sir John Gells case stated Printed about August 1650. To cite any antient known Laws or Statutes or any other then their own new coined Acts passed by this 8th Parts of a House of Commons since they became elect Members chosen by Thomas Pride is to incur the High Indignation of the Court expressed abundantly in their words and looks But to put them in mind of the Parliaments many Declarations To maintain the antient known Laws Liberties and Properties of the People is to scandall the present Government and incur the Censure of that unknown Mysterious Crime which knaves call Malignancy The witnesses and Judges being thus irrefragable the first may swear what they will the second may judge what they will since they are left at large and have all things in scrinio pectoris and Book Law must give place to Bench Law The Jurisdiction and Authority of this New unparalled Court is such a Mistery of iniquity so unscrutable and unquestionable that if a Prisoner scruple in the least either it or any of the uncouth proceedings of it it is a Mortall Sinne to him and he is presently interrupted See the Trial of King Char. I. in the History of Independency 2. Part. pag. 91. c. and affronted both with disdainfull words and looks And told We are satisfied with our Authority that are your Judges So are Theeves upon the high way satisfied with their Authority that rob and murder us by Gods Providence and permission It is upon Gods Authority and the Kingdoms yet what they do is against the will of God revealed in his Scriptures and against the known established Lawes Statutes and continuall Practise of the Kingdom Which Authority commands you in the name of the People of England to answer them Yet at least 9. Parts of 10. of the People so much abhor these and other their Practises that every mans mouth speakes against them with bitter curses and reproaches to restrain which they have minted Acts of New Treasons to make men Offenders nay Traitors even for bare words and erected this bloudy illegall Theater The High Court so called for its High Injustice as a Spanish Inquisition over them and every mans hand would be about their eares did they not keep an Army of Janisaries to suppresse them Their Authority they do avow to the whole World that the whole Kingdom are