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A88227 The oppressed mans oppressions declared: or An epistle written by Lieut. Col. Iohn Lilburne, prerogative-prisoner (by the illegall and arbitrary authority of the House of Lords) in the Tower of London, to Col. Francis West, lieutenant thereof in which the oppressing cruelty of all the gaolers of England is declared, and particularly the lieutenants of the Tower. As also, there is thrown unto Tho. Edwards, the author of the 3d. ulcerous gangræna, a bone or two to pick: in which also, divers things are handled, of speciall concernment to the present times. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1647 (1647) Wing L2149; ESTC R202786 33,231 28

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power of Parliaments and in the Assemblies exhortation to take the solemn League and Covenant and other Presbyterian bookes licenced by publicke authority and others fold without controule there be not more said to justifie and maintaine that which Gangraena calls Utoplan Anarchy then in any bookes whatsoever published by these be calls Sectaries Thirdly whether or no that out of my owne words in my booke called INNOCENCY AND TRVTH IVSTIFIED there can any thing be drawn to iustifie the Lords in that which now I condemne them in as Gangraen a affirmes pag. 159. 148. For the first see what the 29. Chapter of Magne Charta saith No free-man shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his free hold or Liberties or free Customes or be outlawed or exiled or any otherwise destroyed nor wee will not passe upon him nor condemn him but by lawfull judgement of his PEERS or by the Law of the Land See the 3. of E. 1. ch 6. And that no Citie Borough nor Town nor any man be amerced without reasonable cause and according to the quantity of his trespasse 9. H. 3. 14. that is to say every free man saving his free hold a Merchant saving his Merchandise a villain saving his waynage and that by his or their Peers Now here is the expresse Law of the land against the Lords jurisdiction over Commons in criminall cases Now in the second place let us see what one of the ablest expositors of the Law that ever writ in England saith of this very thing and that is Sir Edward Cooke in his exposition of Magna Charta 2. part institutes which booke is published by two speciall orders of the Present Houser of Commons as in the last page thereof you may read who in his expounding the 1● Chapter of Magna Charta pag. 28 saith Peers sign●…e E●…lls and pag. 29. be saith the generall div●sion of persons by the Law of England is either one that is noble and in respect of his nobility of the Lords House in Parliament or one of the Commons of the Realm and in respect thereof of the House of Commons in Parliament and as there be divers degrees of Nobility as Dukes Marquesses Earles Viscounts and Barrons and yet all of them are comprehended within this ward PARES so of the Commons of the Realme there be Knights Esquires Gentle-men Citizens Yeomen and Burgesses of sever all degrees and yet all of them of the COMMONS of the Realme and as every of the Nobles is one Peere to another though he be of a sever all degree so is it of the Commons and as it bath been said of men so doth it hold of Noble-women either by birth or by marriage but see hereof Chap. 29. And in Chap. 29. pag 46. Ibim he saith no man shall be disseised that is put out of season or disposed of his freehold that is Lands or livelihood or his liberties or free Customes that is of such franchises and freedomes and free Cusiomes as belong to him by his birth-right unlesse it be by lawfull judgement that is verdict of his equalls that is men of his owne condition or by the law of the Land that is to speak it once for all by the due course and processe of Law No man shall be in any sort destroyed to distroy id est what was first built and made wholly to overthrow and pull down unlesse it be by the verdict of his equalls or according to the law of the Land And so saith he is the sentence neither will wee passe upon him to be understood but by the judgement of his Peers that is equails or according to the Law of the Land see him pag. 48. upon this sentence per judicium Pacium suorum and page 50. he saith it was inacted that the Lords and Peers of the Realm should not give judgement upon any but their Peers cites Rot. Parl. 4. E. 3. nu 6. but making inquiry at the Reco●r Office in the Tower I had this which followes from under the hand of Mr. William Collet the Record-Keeper Out of the Roll of the Parlament of the fourth yeare of Edward the third The First Roll Records and Remembrances of those things which were done in the Parliament summoned at Westminster on Munday next after the Feast of Saint Katherine in the yeare of the reigne of King Edward the third from the Conquest the fourth delivered into the Chancery by Henry de Edenstone Clerk of the Parliament THese are the Treasons Felonies Wickednesses The judgement of Roger de Mortimer done to our Lord the King and his people by Roger de Mortimer and others of his confederacie First of all whereas it was ordained at the Parliament of our lord the King which was held next after his coronation at Westminster that four Bishops four Earles and six Barons should abide neere the King for to counsel him so alwayes that there may be foure of them viz. one Bishop one Earle and two Barons at the least And that no great businesse be done without their assent and that each of them should answer for his deeds during his time After which Parliament the said Roger Mortimer not having regard to the said assent tooke upon himselfe Royall power and the government of the Realme and encroacht upon the State of the King and ousted and caused to be ousted and placed Officers in the Kings House and else where throughout the Realm at his pleasure of such which were of his minde and placed John Wyàrd and others over the King to espy his actions and sayings so that our Lord the King was in such manner environed of such as that hee could not doe any thing at his pleasure but was as a man which is kept in ward Also whereas the Father of our LORD the KING was at Kenilwarth by ordinance and assent of the Peers of the Land there to stay at his pleasure for to be served as becommeth such a Lord the said Roger by Royall power taken unto himselfe did not permit him to have any money at his will and ordered that he was sent to Rarkly Castle where by him and his he was traitorously and falsly murthered and slain But that which is this to my purpose is Roll the second being the judgement of Sir Samon de Bereford which verbatim followeth thus The Second Roll. ALso in the same Parliament our Lord the King did charge the said Earles and Barons to give right and lawfull judgement as appertained to Simon de Bereford Knight who was aiding and counselling the said Roger de Mortimer in all the treasons felonies and wickednesses for the which the âforesaid Roger so was awarded and ajudged to death as it is a known and notorious thing to the said Peers as to that which the King intends The which Earles Barons and Peers came before our Lord the King in the same Parliament and said all with one voice that the foresaid Simon was not their Peer wherefore they were
not bound to judge him as a Peer of the Land But because it is a notorious thing and known to all that the aforesaid Simon was aiding and counselling the said Roger in all the treasons felonies and wickednesses abovesaid the which things are in usurpation of Royall power Murther of the Liege Lord and distruction of Blood-Royall and that he was also guilty of divers other felonies and Roberies and a principall maintainner of Robbers and felons and the said Earles Barons and Peers did award and adjudge as judges of Parliament by the assent of the KING in the same Parliament that the said Simon as a Traytor and enemy of the Realm be drawn and hanged And thereupon it was commanded to the Martiall to doe execution of the said judgement The which execution was done and performed the Munday next after the Feast of St. Thomas the Apostle In the same Roll. And it is assented and agreed by our Lord the King Agreement not to bee drawn into example and all the Grandees in full Parliament that albeit the said Peers as Judges of Parliament took upon them in the presence of our Lord the King to make and give the said judgement by the assent of the King upon some of them which were not their Peers and that by reason of the murther of the Liege Lord and distinction of him which was so new of the blood-Royall and Sonne of the King that therefore the said Peers which now are or the Peers which shall be for the time to come be not bound or charged to give judgement upon others then upon their Peers nor shall doe it But let the Peers of the Land have power but of that for ever they be discharged and aquit and that the aforesaid judgement now given be not drawn into example or consequent for the time to come by which the said Peers may be charged hereafter to judge others then their Peers against the Law of the Land if any such case happen which God defend Agreeth with the Record William Colet It is the saying of the spirit of God Eccle. 4.9.12 two are better then one and a threefold cord is not easily broken so that to prove my position true for all the Rabsh●ka Language of Gangraena I have first the fundament all Law point blank on my side and secondly the judgement of on of the ablest Lawyers that ever writ in England and his Iudgement authorised as good and sound by the present House of Commons to be published to the view of the whole Kingdome and thirdly the Lords owne confession for if you marke well the two last lines of the fore-cited record you shall find they ingeniously confesse and declare that it is against the Law of the Land for them to judge a Commoner and for further confirmation of this read Vox Plebis pag. 18 19. 36. 37 38. 39 40. 41 42 44 45. But if the Vicerous Gangraena please to read a late printed booke called Regall tyranny discovered he shall find that the Author of that Book in his 43 44 45 46 47 86. pages layes downne many strong a guments to prove That the house of Lords have no legislative power at all And in his 94. 95 96. 97 pages he declares and proves That before Will the Conquerer subdued the rights and Priviledges of Parliaments that the King and the Commons held and kept Parliaments without temporall Lords Bishops or Abbets The two last of which he proves had as true and goed right to sit in Parliament as any of the present Lords now sitting at westminster either now have or ever had For the second thing which is Whether or no there be not in the present Parliaments Declarations and in the Assemblies exhortation to take the Covenant and in Mr. Prynns Soveraign power of Parliaments and other Presbyterian books publickly licenced and others sold without controll as much if not more said to set-up or maintain that which Gangrena cals Vtopian Anarchy then in any Books what ever published by those he calls Sectaries And I averre it positively There is and shall joyn issue with Gangraena to prove it in every particular Therefore let him publish an exact Catalogue of any of our Positions when he pleaseth and I doubt not but to make it evident that it cannot justly by them be counted any vice in us to tread in their steps especially seeing they have accounted them so full of piety truth and honesty as they have done Now first for the Parliaments Declarations read but the Kings answers to them and you shall easily see he layes it as deeply to their charge of endeavon ring to set up Anarchy as Gangraena doth either to mine or Mr Overtons yea and instances the particulars and tells them plainly The Arguments they use against him will very well in time serve the people to turn against themselves And as for Mr. Prynnes Soveraigne power of Parliaments I never read more of that Doctrine in any Book in all my life that Gangraena so much condemnes in me c. then in that very Book which is licenced by Mr White a member of the House of Commons and in his dayes as stiffe a Presbyterian as Gangraena himselfe See his 1. part Sover pag. 5 7 8 9 19 26 29 34 35 36 37. But especially 42 43 44. 47 57 92. And 2. part pag. 41 42 43 44 45 46. and 73 74 75 76. and 3. part 11 12 13 14 15 16 17. and 61 62 63 64 65. and 131 132 133. And 4. part pag. 10 11. 15 16. See his Appendix there unto pag. 1 2 3 4 5. 11 13 13 c. Besides these see the first and second part of the Observations Maximes unfolded the case of Ship-money briefly discoursed A new Plea for the Parlement A fuller Answer to a Treatife written by Dr. Fern with divers others Now for the third thing which is the tyrumph Gangrena makes in his 3 part Gangrena pag. 1●8 which is that in my Book called Innocency and truth justified which I published the last yeare 1645 I give that to the Lords which now I in 1646 in many wicked Pamplets would take a way from them such new light saith he hath the successe of the new modell and the recruit of the house of Commons brough to the Sectaries Well! will the man stand to this if hee will then I desire the impartiall Reader to judge betwixt us and turne to the 11 12. 36 37. 74 pages of that Book in which pages is contained all that any way makes to his purpose or esle turne to the 157 pag. of his book and see if in all my words there quoted by him there is any thing that carryes the shaddow of giving that to the Lords that now I would take from them for there I am areasoning with Mr Pryn or the House of Commons not upon my principles but their own And therefore I say a Committee of the House of Commons is not the
lighted was for your own security I shall now take liberty to return you a more full answer to this then I did before to you which is this That I for my part for all the gold in London would not give just cause to be counted so base and unworthy to do upon deliberation that action that I would not justifie to the death But if I should in the least step afide I should contract unto my selfe that guilt which I am confident all the enemies I have in England are not able in the least to fixe upon me For I understand by the Law of this Kingdome that he that is committed to prison for Felony or Treason although really and truly he be guilty of neither yet if he break prison and be taken again he shall dye like a Fellon or Fraytor that is legally convicted 1. E. 2. de frangentibus prisonam See Cookes 2. part instit fol. 590. 591. For his flight in the eye of the Law argues guiltinesse And besides my friend and I had a horn Lanthorn and Candle which put all out of suspition of going out in the dark But thirdly what ground have you upon any pretence whatever framed by your selfe to lock me up in my chamber as soon as candles are lighted seeing I am in a moated and double walled Prison where you have not only a Train-band but also great store of your owne Warders to secure me And therefore I tell you plainly I shall never condiscend to be locked up sooner then that convenient houre of 8. a clock the accustomed hour of the place which is much sooner then they are in other prisons that I have been in Fourthly if under pretence of your security I should give way for you to confine or lock me up in my chamber at candlelight which then was before five a clock may not you as well and as groundedly upon the same pretence if you please to say it is for your security keep me locked up in my chamber till 12. a clocke yea the whole day if you please And if I should suffer this in the least what am I lesse then traiterous to my selfe and to my liberties to give you a power by your own meer will to make and impose a law upon me whensoever you shall please to say that it s for your security when the Law provides and enjoynes you nomore but to keepe me in safe custodie within your prison and to use me and all that come to me civillie and with all humanitie and leaves me not in the least to your will but only in some extraordinarie case as in doing or offring violence to the Goaler or Goalers or to my fellow-prisoners to the apparent breach of the peace of the prison and yet in this I have not in the least done either to you or the poorest boy belonging to you nor by Gods assistance will not but yet on the contrarie before you shall make me a slave to your will you shall have the heart-blood our of my body Now in the last place I will compare the fees taken and demanded in the Tower with those the Law gives and what they are you may fully read before Now by the Author of Vox plebis who to me seemes to be a knowing man in the practises of the Lieutenants of the Tower who in his 48 49. pages saith That there is demanded for the admittance of an Ecrl 100. l for a Baron 80. l for a Knight and Baroner 70. l. for a Baronet 60. l. for a Knight 50 l and for an Esqui●… 40. pound and 30. s. a week of every prisoner for liberty to but and drosse his owne diet and 10. s. 15 s. 20. s. per week for his Chamber rent and of some more For Sir Richard Garney sometimes Lord Mayor of London and now prisoner in the Tower hath paid as I have beard him aver it 3. l. a week for his Chamber-rent and in the time of a Predecessour of yours dieted 3 weeks at the Lievtenants table for which he had the impudencie to demand for it 25 l. per week ô horrible and monstrous extortion and oppression and yet this is not all for the last mentioned author in his 48. page saith There is a new erected Office and an intruded Officer called the Gentleman Goaler one Yates a bufie fellow who pretends to a fee of 50 s 10 he paid him at the going away of every prisoner pag. 51. ibim But yet this is not all for in p. 49 of the late printed book called Regall Tyranny discovered he saith that the Gentleman Porter demands for his fee 5. l. and a mans upper garment 40. s. to the Warders 10. s. to the Lievtenants Clarke 10. s. to the Minister and divers of any fellow prisoners tell me that their Keepers have and doe demand of them either their diet or 5. s. a week for locking them up at night in their Chamber and opening their chamber-dores O horrible and monstrous injustice oppression and crueltie to demand and take these fees whereas by Law there is not one farthing token of all these fees due to be paid by the prisoner but one bare groat at most and that given away by an oppressing and incroaching law upon our ancient and just liberties as is before truly observed And yet prisoners are destined in prison by your will after they are legally discharged because they will not paythese undue and unjust fees which at this very day is Sir Henry Andersons case and hath formetly beene others as the Author of Vox Plebis truly observes although the arrantest Rogue and thiefe that ever breathed had or hath as true aright to any purse that ever he did or shall take from an honest man upon the high way by force and violence as you or any other hath to any of the fore-mentioned fees O yee proud and impuden man that dare assume unto your selfe of your owne head more then a regal power to levie and raise mony by the Law of your own will upon the free people of England Sir let me tell you this very thing was one of those things that was the Earl of Straffords great crimes for which he paid very dear and is it not impossible but you and others that use it may pay as deare for it in conclusion therefore looke to it and thinke of it And if you please to read the Petition of Right made by the Lords and Commons unto this King in the 3. of his Raign you shall find in the beginning of it they shew him that by the statute of the 34. E. 1. called Stdtutum de tailigio non concedend● that no tallage or aid shall be la●d or levied by the King or his Heires in this Realme withaut the good will and assent of the Arch-Bishops Bishops Earles Barons Knights Burgesses and other the free-men of the Commonalty of this Kealme and by authority of Parliament holden in the 25. E. 3. it is declared and enacted
whole Parliament no nor the whole House of Commons it selfe according to their own principles which is the only clause he can fix upon And good Mr. Gangrena is it not as just and as man-like in me if I be set upon by you when I have no better weapons to cudgell you with then your own to take them from you and knockt your pate as to make use of my owne propper weapons to cut you soundly or any other man that shall assault me to the hazzard of my being and this is just my case that you count such a disgrace untome But say you there I have owned their legislative power and their judicative power over commons Therefore you draw an inference to condemn me from mine own practice Alas man may not I Lawfully seeke or receive a good turn from the hands of any man yet as lawfully doe my best to refuse a mischief from him But secondly I answer what though the 4. of May. 1641. I stooped to arryall at the Lords Barre upon an impeachment against me by the King doth that ever the more justifie their Authority or declare me to be mutable and unstable no not in the least for you cannot but know the saying of that most excellent Apostle Paul 1 Co. 13 11 ' When J was a child J spake as a child I under stood as a child I thought as a child but when I became a man I put away childesh things So say I to you five or six yeares ago I knew nothing but the Lords Jurisdiction was as much more above the House of commons over Commons as their Robes and Grandeur in which they sat was above them especially seeing at all conferences betwix both Houses I sec the members of the house of commons stand bare before the Lords for which action I now see no ground for especially having of late read so many bookes which discourseth upon the Lords jurisdiction which was upon this ground about a moneth or six weeks before the Lords cast me in prison A Gentleman a Member of the house of Commons and one that I believe which wisheth me well bid me look to my selfe for to his knowledg there was a designe amongst some of the Lords the grounds of reasons of which he then told me to clap me by the heeles and to fall so heavie upon me as to crush me in pieces or else make me at least an example to terrisie others that they should not dare to stand for their Rights And being thus fore-warned I was halfe a med which made me discours upon every opportunity with any that I though knew any thing of the Lords Jurisdiction and I found by a generall concurence that the 29. Ch. of Magna Charta was expresly against the Lords jurisdiction over Commoners in all criminall cases And upon that ground I protested against them and then upon further inquiry I found Sir Edward Cooks Judgement expresly against them as is before recited which book Mr Gangraena I must tell you is published since my first tryall before the Lords and was not publikely in being when I then stooped unto their jurisdiction and then comming prisoner to the Tower one of my fellow-prisones very honestly told me of the fore-mentioned Record of Sir Simon de Bereford which presently with all speed under Mr. Collets hand I got out of the Records office All which just and legall authorities and testimonies makes me so stiffe against the Lords as I am and I hope I shall continue to the death against them in the thing in question betwixt us as unmoveable as a brazen Wall come hanging come burning or cutting in pieces or starving or the worst that all their malice and ulcerous Gangraena Priests put together can inflict for all that I principally care for is to see if the thing I engage in be just and if my conscience upon solid and mature deliberation tell me it is I will not by the strength of God if once I be engaged in it either goe through with it or dye in them dest of it though there be not one man in the world absolutely of my mind to back me in it But lastly admit in former times I had been as absolute a Pleader for the Lords jurisdiction over Commoners as now I am against them Yet truly a man of Mr. Gangraenes coat is the unfittest man in the Kingdome to reprove mee for it For his Tribe I meane of Priests and Deacons those littie toes of Antichrist now called reformed Presbyters are such a Weather-cock unstabled generation of wavering minded men as the like are not in the whole Kingdom For their predecessors in Henry the 8. dayes were first for the Pope al bis Drudgeries and then for the King and his new Religion and then 3. in his time returned to their vomit againe and then fourthly in Edward the 6. dayes became by his proclamation godly reformed Protestants and then 5. in Queen Maries dayes by the authority of her and her Parliament which Parliament I doe aver it and will maintaine had as true a ground to set up compulsive Popery as this present Parliament hath to set up compulsive Presbytery became for the generality of them bloody and persecuting Papists and then 6. by the authority of Queen Elizabeth and her Parliament who had no power at all no more then this present Parliament to wrest the Scepter of Christ out of his hands and usurpedly to assume the Legislative power of Christ to make Lawes to governe the Consciences of his people which they have nothing at all to doe with He having made perfect compleat and unchangeable Lawes himselfe Esay 9.6.7 and 33.20 22. Act 1.3 and 3.22 23. and 20.26 27. 1 Cor. 11.1.2.1 Tim. 6.13.18 Heb. 3.2 3 6. became againe a Generation of pure and reformed Protestants and have so continued to this present Parliament But now like a company of notorious forsworne men who will be of any Religion in the world so it carry along with it profit and power after they have for the generallity of them taken and sworn six or seven Oaths that the Bishops were the only true Church-government and that they would be true to them to the death Yet have now turned the 7. time and engaged the Parliament and Kingdome in an impossible-to-be-kept oath and Covenant to root up their ghostly Fathers the Bishops as Antichristian from whom as Ministers they received their life and Being Yea and now the 8th time have turned and falne from that Covenant and Oath by which they mode all swear that took it not onely to root out Bisheps but all Officers whatsoever that dependeth upon them In the number of which are all the m●…lves having no other ordination to their Ministery but what they had from them and so are properly really and truly dependents upon them and yet now of late have by themselves and instruments as it were forced the House of Commons to passe a vote to declare
people of God under pretence of hereticall Opinions I will upon the hazard of my life justifie and prove it against you and the present Parliament that you and they therby justifie Queen Mary in murdering and burning the Saints in her dayes yea and all the bloudy persecuring Roman Emperors that caused to be murthered thousanes of the Saints for bearing witnesse to the restimony of Iesus yea and all the persecutions of the Iewes against Christ and his Apostles yea and the putting them to death and so bring upon your owne heads all the righteous blood shed upon the Earth from the dayes of righteous Abel to this present day Matth. 23.29 30.32.33.34 35. which I warrant you will bring wrath and vengeance enough upon you Now Mr. Lieutenant a few words more to you and so conclude I desire you in the next place not only to provide me gratis a prison Lodging for I can pay Chamber tent no longer but also to provide me my diet according to the custome of the place for you cannot but know and if you doe not I now tell you that the King was alwayes so noble and iust as to doe it to all the Prisoners be committed to this place of what qualitie soever of the truth of which * Who as I have lately heard confessed hee spent his Maiesty 1500. l. while hee was a prisoner here Col. Long Col. Hollis and Mr. Selden c. now members of the house of Commons can informe you and how that themselves when they were the Kings prisoners here in the 3. of His Raign for speaking and acting freely in the Parliament were maintained by the King according to their qualities though some of them had great estates of their owne in their owne possessions and enjoyments and now as the newes books tell me are voted 5000. l. pece for their then illegall sufferings And Sir the Lords who committed me hither have in gareat measure the Kings Revenue in their hands at their dispose and therefore I expect now I seek for it they shall be as just as their Master whom they have so much condemned for injustice and provide for me according to my quality And Sir I must tell you that I am very confident I have as many noble qualities in me and as much of a man in every respect as any of those that sent me hither For Titles of Honour without Honesty and Iustice are no excellenter then a gold ring in a Swines snout Yea and have given as large a declaration of it to the view of the world as any of them whatever hath done And therefore Sir if they shall deny me this piece of justice and equity I will by Gods assistance tell them as well of it as ever they were told in their lives But fir in the third place if this faile me I desire you to speake to them to allow me interest for my two thousand pounds it being scarce twice so much as I have spent since I first became a suiter for it that they the last yeare decreed me for my illegall bloody barbarous and inhuman sufferings by the Star-Chamber which I dare confidently say were more tormenting then all the sufferings of the above mentioned Gentlemen and their co-partners See my printed Relation of it made at the Lords Barre 13. Feb. 1645. For which as I understand there is 50000. l. reparations voted them by the House of Commons that so I may have something of my owne to live upon For without all or most of the three fore-mentioned things be done for me I must either perish or run exceedingly into debt which I confesse I am very loath to doe or lastly live upon the almes of my friends which I professe is not pleasant unto me And besides the freest horse or horses in the world with continuall riding thay not only be weatied but also jaded and tyred But if they will not yeeld that I shall have my lodging gratis and my diet found by them nor interest for my many yeares expected and long-looked for 2000 l. that last yeare they decreed me nor the remainder of my just arreares which yet is divels hundreds of pounds that I faithfully valiantly and dearly earned with the losse of my blood to maintain and keep me alive and my wife and small children Then as my last request I intreat from you to desire them to call me out to alegall tryall and by the law of the Kingdome but not their arbitrary wills either to be Justified or condemned And here under my hand I professe I crave nor desire neither mercy nor favour at their hands but bid defiance to all the adversarie I have in England both great and small to doe the worst their malice can unto me alwayes provided I may have a legall tryall by my Peeres my Equalls men of my own condition according to the just established unrepealed fundamentall law of the Land contained in Magna Charta and the Petition of Right And truly Sir if upon these tearmes they will not call me out but resolve to keep me here still I will by Gods assistance before many moneths be expired give them cause with a witnesse to call me out for here if I can helpe it I will not be destroyed with a languishing death though it cost me hewing to peeces as small as flesh to the pot For if it had not been that my report hath lain so long dormant in the hand of Col. Henry Martin the glory of his age amongst Parliament men for a lover of his Country whose credit and reputation I ingeniously confesse I should be very loath in the least if I could avoid it to bespatter But in regard by all the meanes and friends I can use to him I cannot get him to make my report though I desire nothing at his hands but a bate endeavour of the discharge of his duty to quit himselfe of it let the issue be good or bad all is one to me so it were but done or endevoured to be done I had long since made a formal appeal to the people but in regard of my constant hard usage both from divers Lords and Commons and their laylors and other instruments and the many unresistable prickings forward of my own spirit which presseth me rather to hazzard the undergoing of Sampsons portion Judg. 16.21 then to be forced to degenerate from the principles of Reason the King or chiefe of all creatures into the habit of a bruit beast and so to live a slave or vassal under any power under the Cope of Heaven whether Regall or Parliamentary or what ever it be And therefore having now with a long deliberated delibertation committed my wife and children to the tuition care and protection of a powerfull God whom for above these ten yeares I have feelingly and sensibly known as my God in Jesus Christ who with a mighty protection and preservation hath been with me in six troubles and in seven and from the very day of