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A26767 Elenchus motuum nuperorum in Anglia, or, A short historical account of the rise and progress of the late troubles in England In two parts / written in Latin by Dr. George Bates. Motus compositi, or, The history of the composing the affairs of England by the restauration of K. Charles the second and the punishment of the regicides and other principal occurrents to the year 1669 / written in Latin by Tho. Skinner ; made English ; to which is added a preface by a person of quality ... Bate, George, 1608-1669.; Lovell, Archibald.; Skinner, Thomas, 1629?-1679. Motus compositi. 1685 (1685) Wing B1083; ESTC R29020 375,547 601

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commanding him to refrain from the execution of his power so long as the Conference and any hopes of Peace continued Whilst the Conference lasted the King that he might not still suffer so hard usage and that he might try how the Members of Parliament were affected towards him gave some very just and useful Proposals to be sent to the Parliament First he desires That he may have leave to repair forthwith to Westminster or any of his houses near London where he may treat with his Parliament at nearer distance with honour safety and freedom Which desire the Parliament having felt the pulse of the City and being encouraged under the hands of the most part and best of the Citizens promised so soon as the Propositions were granted should be allowed him Secondly the King demands That he may be restored to the possession of the Lands and Revenues of the Crown Thirdly That he may have compensation for his lawful Rights which the Parliament have thought fit to abolish To these also the Parliament willingly consent Fourthly That by an Act of Oblivion the memory of all things that had been done in time of the War might be abolished To this Proposal they did not consent but with cautions and limitations that gave liberty to the Parliamentarians to bring Actions against any almost of the Kings Party Matters being near composed beyond all mens expectation though perhaps not so as every one desired the Commissioners for Pacification full of thoughts of Peace promised the same to the King though in that they were false Prophets for they thought as well they might that the Parliament would in some measure abate in their rigid demands when the King to mollifie them had stript himself of the Government both of England and Ireland Nay the glad hopes of Concord begun to cherish the drooping minds of all people which without doubt would have followed had not factious and rebellious men who by clandestine arts had already driven us into a War now openly and with force of Arms disappointed the desired fruit of the Conference and the Peace that was ready to be concluded Now in what manner they accomplished that it will be necessary I should with all possible sincerity relate In the heat of the Conference that part of the Army which had prospered in the War and was returned home victorious commanded by Fairfax whom Ireton as a bad Genius haunted was encamped so near London that in half a days time they might march thither and suppress their unprovided Adversaries if any sudden occasion required In the mean time Fairfax Ireton and the rest of the Colonels behaved themselves very submissively in publick pretend that they will always obey the Ordinances of Parliament and that publick Peace will be to them of all men most acceptable that so being eased from the fatigues and labours of War they may mind their own affairs and after so much toil and danger at length enjoy rest and peace But privately having consulted with the Members of Parliament of their own Faction they suffer Consults to be held amongst the inferiour Officers and private Souldiers of the Army and at the instigation of their Emissaries Petitions to be framed wherein it was desired that the Treaty with the King should be broken up and all the Enemies of the Commonwealth indifferently thereby craftily glancing at the person of the King brought to condign punishment These also they caused to be printed and published that they might feel the pulse of the people Nor was it doubted but that the chief Commanders and Colonels were the Authors of those Petitions and that by their Emissaries and particularly by Hugh Peters a Renegado from and the reproach of the Ministery an impudent saucy fellow they were dispersed into all places whereby they wheadled the Souldiers who in their own nature were sufficiently prone to Booty and Innovations In the mean while the Country-people whom we mentioned before to have made some stirs being dispersed and Garrisons and Governours placed in the several Counties all the Souldiers of the Kingdom are commanded to repair to Fairfax's Camp who in great numbers many following the prevailing Party flocked together victorious and triumphant Ireton upon a rumour spread abroad amongst the people of a difference betwixt him and Fairfax lurking privately in Windsor-Castle and having called some of his Consorts of the Lower House publishes a Remonstrance with great ostentation of words and affected eloquence wherein in name of the Army by captious quirks and subtilties he argues against the Peace made with the King and the Remonstrance of his Majesty nay and desires Justice against the King himself That those Members who the year before had been impeached of High-Treason by the Army might be brought to tryal and that all who staid in Parliament heretofore when the Speakers and rest of the Members of their Faction fled to the Army should be excluded That the Souldiers Arrears should be paid out of the Kings Revenue and the Deans and Chapters Lands to be distributed for this use especially and also for other publick charges That the present Parliament should be dissolved and a better course taken for the future that the people should chuse a Representative which should have the supreme administration of the Government These and several other things of that nature he very imperiously demands The end of the Conference now approaching which the Republicans of both sorts in the Parliament endeavoured by all Arts to stave off and protract that the Army might more conveniently joyn the Commanders of the Army being informed from the Isle of Wight of the progress of affairs and of the opportunities that were proper for their turn call a Field-Council wherein all the Colonels and inferiour Officers meet and there they give themselves to fasting and prayer For we must know that these Sons of the Earth had great intimacy and correspondence with Heaven as they pretended and when they were about to act any thing contrary to the Law of Nature the Light of Reason or the Laws of God and man they used to begin the work with Prayers to Almighty God in a doubtful manner proposing the case and the matter being first discussed between the Majesty of Heaven and themselves they then by turning and winding their Prayers shape an Answer to their designes which like a divine Oracle rendered to the praying inquirers they impose upon the common Souldiers as an Article of Faith though the matter had been long before hatched in their thoughts nor durst any man gainsay it who had not a mind to have his name dasht out of the Roll of the Saints And hence it was that the people dreaded their Fasts and Prayers as ominous Prodigies The Pageantry of their Devotion being over Ireton's Remonstrance was read and applauded too by the Souldiers as if it dropt from Heaven they prefix to it the formidable title
some time prevail with them to delay the execution of the Villany Nor was Bradshaw the bloudy President secure from violent hands for one Burghill armed with sword and pistol watched him one night behind Gray's Inn-gate when he was to come home late but missing of his designe that night because Bradshaw did not come home next day being betrayed by one Cooke to whom he had discovered the matter he was brought before the Parricides However his Guards being drunk finding an occasion of an escape he saved his own life having onely laid in wait for another mans But all was in vain for the Rebels slighting these things pretend Gods providence and the motions of the Holy Ghost for their warrant and security Peters a brazen-faced Hypocrite who being disgracefully whipt out of Cambridge ever after that clove close to the Schismaticks bids them from the Pulpit Go on and prosper that now was the time When the Saints should bind Princes in chains and their Nobles with fetters of iron so lewdly did that profane Knave interpret holy Scripture telling them That they need not question but this Prophecy was to be fulfilled by them and in the Sermon he addresses himself to the holy Judges the title he thought fit to give them and protests that he was certain there were in the Army five thousand men no less Saints than those that conversed with God himself in Heaven Then kneeling in the Pulpit with flouds of forced tears and lifted up hands he earnestly begs in the name of the People of England That they would do Justice against CHARLES and not suffer Benhadad the enemy to escape Nay he most insolently inveighed against Monarchy it self and straining his virulent wit he relates the History How the Trees chusing a King and the Vine and Olive-tree refusing the office they submitted themselves to the sharper government of the bramble and compared Kingly government to briars By such kind of Arguments he stirs up and confirms those new Judges who of their own nature were already but too much enraged and fiercely bent against the King There was another besides Peters the Preacher an Herald one Serjeant Dendy also employed who being environed with a Guard of Horse for fear of being stoned by sound of Trumpet cited all those to appear who had any crime to object against the King and this he did first in Westminster-hall and then in the most publick places of the City Before these Judges of the new Court the most August Charles already stript of three most flourishing Kingdoms by the Rebels and having now no more but Life to be deprived of is brought without the least signe in his countenance of any discomposure of mind His indictment is read wherein he is accused In the name of the People of England of Treason Tyranny Murders and of all Rapines that were occasioned by the War with the highest aggravations of the Crimes But the whole stress of the Indictment lay in this That he had made War against the Parliament which the Army under the Parliaments pay had long ago trampled under foot scarcely any shadow of it remaining Great was the company of Spectators who with groans sighs and tears lamented the condition of the best of Princes Nor without injustice can I pass over the brave action of the heroick Lady Fairfax Daughter to the Lord Vere who out of a Belcony that lookt into the Court cried out publickly That that was a lye that the tenth part of the People was not guilty of that Villany but that it was a contrivance of the Traytor Cromwel And this she did with great danger of her life The King having heard this Indictment with a majesty in his looks and words that cannot be exprest puts the question to those new Judges By what Authority they brought their King to the Bar contrary to the publick Faith which was very lately made to him when he entered into a Conference with the Members of both Houses By what lawful Authority said he emphatically He knew indeed there were many unlawful and powerful Combinations of men in the world as of Thieves and Robbers by the High-ways He desires they would tell him by what Authority they had taken that Power such as it was upon them and he would be willing to answer but if they could not he bids them think well upon it before they go farther from one sin to a greater That he had a Trust committed to him by God by an ancient and lawful Descent and that he would not betray it by answering to a new and unlawful Authority The President replying That he was brought to answer in the name of the People of England of which he was elected King The King made answer That England was never an Elective Kingdom but an Hereditary Kingdom for near these thousand years That he did stand more for the liberty of the People by rejecting their usurped Power than any of them that came to be his pretended Judges did by supporting it That he did not come there as submitting to the Court That he would stand as much for the Priviledge of the House of Commons as any man there whatsoever but that he saw no House of Lords there that might together with a King constitute a Parliament That if they would shew him a legal authority warranted by the Word of God the Scriptures or warranted by the Constitutions of the Kingdom he would answer for that he did avow that it was as great a sin to withstand lawful Authority as it is to submit to a tyrannical or any ways unlawful Authority The President in the mean time often interrupted him and at length commanding him to be carried back to Prison Yet was the good King a second and a third time brought before the Bar of the Common People where the President puts him in mind of his Indictment and commands him to answer to the Articles brought against him or otherways to listen to his sentence But the King still protested against the Authority of the Court affirming That his life was not so dear to him as his Honour Conscience the Laws and the Liberties of the People which that they might not perish all at once there were great reasons why he could not make his defence before those Judges nor acknowledge a new form of Judicature for what power had ever Subjects or by what Laws was it granted them to erect a Court against their King That it could not be warranted by Gods Laws which on the contrary command obedience to Princes not by the Laws of the Land since by them no Impeachment can lie against the King they all going in his name nor do they allow the House of Commons the power of judging the meanest Subject of England And that lastly that pretended Power could not flow from any Authority or Commission from the People since they had never asked the question of the
interposeth and very often whilst the Presbyterians were at the helm disturb the religious meetings of the other Sectarians by hurling of Stones amongst them The liberty of a great many being contrary to expectation restrained the Parliament settle the Presbyterian government onely for three years that in that time they might have a tryal how it would fadge This Novelty set mens humours wonderfully a working The Politicians and Lawyers were highly offended that there were as many Judicatures established as there were Parishes in England and these almost arbitrary putting the Rule into the hands of unskilful men and for the most part incapable of government and began to foresee at a distance I know not what calamities ready to spring from thence in Families Parishes Counties nay and in the whole Kingdom also Most part of the people grumble to be put again to School and to be taught the Rudiments and Principles of their Religion wherein they thought themselves already very well instructed Those that were zealous for Episcopal government and the Service-book bite the bit But none repined more than the Independants Anabaptists and the other Sects who saw their beloved liberty of Conscience in danger for which they had at first taken up Arms against the King hazarded their lives in so many battels and suffered so much labour cost watchings and danger Nevertheless the Government went bravely on in London but so and so in the other Cities and populous Towns and but very coldly in the Country so that the triennial Essay being over and no new Act made to confirm it it had much ado to keep life And thus far concerning Church-affairs which we thought fit to relate together though they happened not all at the same time Let us now return to the other arts whereby they wheadled the Scots Amongst which it was of greatest moment no less for endearing the Scots to them than for raising their power and authority amongst the Natives to sell the Bishops Lands at very easie rates so that Purchasers flocked in from all quarters who with the materials of demolished Palaces and the Timber they cut down having paid for their Purchases got large and entire Mannors almost for nothing And that once for all I may tell it they lay Excise Customs and such heavy and continual Taxes and Impositions upon the people as none of all the Kings that ever sat upon the Throne of England durst ever before that time impose and such as were not onely sufficient to defray all publick expenses but in some measure also the insatiable avarice and voraciousness of their Factors and Agents besides what they got by plundering sequestration and other ways The Scots being allured by these Morsels are tooth and nail for the interests of the Parliament The Scots the declared enemies of Episcopacy fearing the worst if the King should obtain the victory over the Parliament and being drawn in by the aforementioned baits enter into Articles of a Confederacy among which to give a colour of honesty and integrity to the rest the chief was That no hurt be attempted against his Majesties person nor prejudice done to the Rights or Heirs of the Crown an Oath being likewise taken by the Members of both Houses and all the Inhabitants of both Kingdoms being forced to do the same This they call the Solemn League and Covenant and in it promise That according to their Places and Callings they shall endeavour the preservation of the reformed Religion in the Church of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government The reformation of Religion in the Kingdoms of England and Ireland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government according to the Word of God and the example of the best reformed Churches and shall endeavour to bring the Churches of God in the three Kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in Religion c. That they shall also endeavour the extirpation of Popery Prelacy Superstition Heresie Schism Profaneness c. That they shall mutually endeavour to preserve the Rights and Priviledges of the Parliaments and the Liberties of the Kingdoms and to preserve and defend the Kings Majesties person and authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms That the World may bear witness with their Consciences of their Loyalty that they have no thoughts or intentions to diminish his Majesties just power and greatness That they shall endeavour to discover all Incendiaries and Malignants branding with those aspersions all that favoured the Kings Party that they may be brought to publick tryal and receive condign punishment That they shall endeavour that the Kingdoms may remain conjoyned in a firm Peace and Vnion to Posterity shall assist and defend all those that enter into that League and Covenant and shall zealously and constantly all the days of their lives continue therein No inconsiderable Authors of entering into this Covenant were the Independents Anabaptists and Republicans and the chief and most severe in forcing it upon others who were unwilling to take the same though many of themselves purposely refrained from swearing it lest upon that account they should oblige themselves to the defence of the Kings person It is also to be observed that the clause of defending the Kings Majesties person and authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms was by their artifices foisted in contrary to the sence and tenour of the Covenant under colour forsooth that the safety of his Majesties person was sufficiently secured by other Oaths that the repetition of the same promise would but harden the Kings mind against the Parliament and make the People scrupulous in obeying the same But in reality as appeared afterward that all obstacles being as much as might be removed they might make way for the murther of the King These things being contrived and carried on betwixt the factious Scots and English those who took that Covenant with an honest purpose as many good men did being won over by fear delusion or false hope called themselves Presbyterians other Factious of less note as Independents Anabaptists and other Fanaticks not disdaining to list themselves in the same Cause These cruelly persecute all Dissenters who will not engage in that holy Covenant though they had acted nothing before against the Parliamentary Faction though they had not refused to pay any Taxes and Impositions nay though they had freely contributed for the pay of the Parliament-forces The Parsons especially who enjoyed fat Benefices are sequestrated and deprived of their Houses Goods and Livings put into Prisons and Dungeons for many years together nay and put on board of Ships upon the Thames in the heat of Summer in order to transportation without being either accused or heard where they suffered all the incommodities of hunger watching and nastiness By the Religion of this Covenant Children were taught to persecute inform against and