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A83496 Speeches and passages of this great and happy Parliament: from the third of November, 1640, to this instant June, 1641. Collected into one volume, and according to the most perfect originalls, exactly published. England and Wales. Parliament.; Mervyn, Audley, Sir, d. 1675.; Pym, John, 1584-1643.; Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, 1593-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing E2309; Thomason E159_1; ESTC R212697 305,420 563

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but shew you a way of remedie by shewing you my cleer intentions and some marke that may hinder this good worke I shall willingly and cheerfully concur with you for the Reformation of all Innovations both in Church and Common-wealth and consequently that all Courts of Justice may be reformed according to Law For my intentions is cleerly to reduce all things to the best and purest times as they were in the time of Queen Elizabeth Moreover whatsoever part of my Revenue shall be found illegall or heavy to my Subjects I shall be willing to lay down trusting in their affections Having thus cleerly and shortly set down my intentions I will shew you some rubs and must needs take notice of some very strange I know not what terme to give them Petitions given in the name of divers Counties against the established government of the Church and of the great threatnings against the Bishops that they will make them to be but a Cipher or at least taken away If some of them have incroached too much upon the Temporaltie if it be so I shall not be unwilling these things should be redressed and reformed as all other abuses according to the wisdome of former times so farre I shall go with you no farther If upon serious debate you shall shew that Bishops have some Temporall Authority not so necessary for the government of the Church and upholding Episcopall Jurisdiction I shall not be unwilling to desire them to lay it down but this must not be understood that I shall any way consent that their voice in Parliament should be taken away for in all the times of my Predecessors since the Conquest and before they have enjoyed it I am bound to maintain them in i as one of the fundamentall Institutions of this Kingdome There is one other Rock you are on not in substance but in service and the forme is so essentiall that unlesse it be reformed will split you on that Rock There is a Bill lately put in concerning Parliaments The thing I like well to have frequent Parliaments but for Sheriffes and Constables to use my Authoritie I can no wayes consent unto But to shew that I desire to give you content in substance as well as in shew that you shall have a Bill for doing thereof so that it do not trench neither against my Honor neither against the ancient Prerogatives of the Crowns concerning Parliaments Ingeniously confesse often Parliaments is the fittest means to keep correspondencie betweene Me and my People that I doe so much desire To conclude now all that I have shewen you the state of my Affairs My own cleere intentions and the Rocks I would have you shun To give you all contentment you shall likewise finde by these Ministers I have or shall have about me for the effecting of these my good intentions which shall redouble the peace of the Kingdome and content you all Concerning the conference you shall have a direct answer on Monday which shall give you satisfaction The Kings speech to both Houses of Parliament in the Lords House at the passing of the Bill for a Trieniall Parliament the 16th of November 1640. MY Lords and you the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons you may remember when both Houses were with Me at the Banquetting House at Whitehall I did declare unto you two Rocks I wished you to eschew this is the one of them and of that consequence that I thinke never Bill passed here in this House of more favour to the Subjects then this is and if the other Rocke be as happily passed over as this shall be at this time I do not know what you can aske for ought I can see at this time that I can make any question to yeeld unto Therefore I mention this to shew unto you the sence that I have of this Bill and obligation as I may say that you have to me for it for hitherto to speake freely I have had no great incouragement to doe it if I should looke to the outward face of your actions or proceedings and not looke to the inward intentions of your hearts I might make question of doing it Hitherto you have gone on in that which concernes your selves to amend and yet those things that meerly concernes the strength of this Kingdom neither for the State nor my own particular This I mention not to reproach you but to shew you the state of things as they are you have taken the Government almost in peeces and I may say it is almost off the hinges A skilfull Watchmaker to make cleane his Watch he will take it a sunder and when it is put together it will go the better so that he leave not forth then one pin in it Now as I have done all this on my part you know what to do on your parts and I hope you shall see cleerly that I have performed really what I expressed to you at the beginning of this Parliament of the great trust I have of your affections to me and this is the great expression of trust that before you do any thing for me that I do put such a confidence in you HIS MAJESTIES Letter to the Lords on the behalf of the Earle of Strafford sent by the PRINCE My Lords I Did yesterday satisfie the Justice of the Kingdome by passing of the Bill of Attainder against the Earle of Strafford but mercie being as inherent and inseparable to a King as Justice I desire at this time in some measure to shew that likewise by suffering that unfortunate man to fulfill the naturall course of his life in a close imprisonment yet so that if ever he make the least offer to escape or offer directly or indirectly to meddle in any sort of Publique businesse especially with me either by Message or Letter it shall cost him his life without further Processe This if it may be done without the discontentment of my People will be an unspeakable contentment to me To which end as in the first place I by this Letter do earnestly desire your approbation and to endeare it the more have chosen him to carry it that of all your House is most dear to me So I desire that by a conference you will endeavour to give the House of Commons contentment Likewise assuring you that the excuse of mercy is no more pleasing to me then to see both Houses of Parliament consent for my sake that I should moderate the severity of the Law in so important a case I will not say that your complying with me in this my intended mercie shall make me more willing but certainly t' will make me more cheerfull in granting your just grievances But if no lesse than his life can satisfie my People I must say fiat justitia Thus again recommending the consideration of my intentions to you I rest Whitehall the 11th of May 1641. Your unalterable and affetionate Friend CHARLES R. If he must dye it were charity to
SPEECHES AND PASSAGES Of This GREAT and HAPPY Parliament From the third of November 1640 to this instant June 1641. Collected into One Volume and according to the most perfect Originalls exactly published LONDON Printed for William Cooke and are to be sold at his shop at Furnifalls-Inne-gate in Holbourne 1641. The Contents HIS Majesties first speech Novem. 3. 1640. His Majesties second speech Novem. 5. 1640. His Majesties third speech to both houses Jan. 25. 1640. His Majesties speech at the passing of the Bill for a Trieniall Parliament His Majesties Letter sent by the Prince in the behalf of the Earl of Strafford to the Lords The Lords Answer That Bishops ought not to have voyce in Parliament Lord Keepers speech in the upper house of Parliament Novem. 3. 1640. Master Speakers speech Fol. 1. Lord Digbyes speech Novem. 9. 1640. concerning grievances and the trieniall Parliament Lord Digbyes second speech for trieniall Parliament Fol. 12. The Honourable Nathaniels Fynes his speech Fol. 22 Master Rous his speech before the Lords against Doctor Cousins Doctor Mannering and Doctor Beale Fol. 45 The second speech of the Honourable Nathaniel Fynes Fol. 49 Lord D●gbyes speech concerning Bishops London petition Feb. 9. Fol. 65 Lord Finch his accusation Fol. 76 Lord Falklands speech after the reading the Articles of the Lord Finch Fol. 83 Sir Edward Deering first speech Fol. 88 His second speech Fol. 90 His third speech Fol. 93 His fo th speech Fol. 97 M●ster Bagshawes speech concerning Bishops and the London petition Fol. 99 Sir Benjamin Ruddyers first speech Fol. 103 His second speech Fol. 110 His third speech Fol. 113 Master Pyms Message for the commitment of my Lord Strafford Fol. 116 Articles against the Lord Strafford Fol. 117 Further impeachment of Thomas Earl of Strafford Fol. 120 Earl of Bristows speech D●cember 7 Fol. 143 Master Mynards speech in reply to the Lord Strafford Fol. 145 The Earl of Bristows speech upon the delivering of by him the Scottish Remonstrance Fol. 150 His Majesties speech to both Houses Feb. 3. 1640. Fol. 159 Londoners fi●st petition Fol. 161 Their grievances by the Prelates Fol. 162 Resolution of the sixt demand by the Commons Fol. 171 The Scots Answer to the resolution Ibid. The Peares demand upon the foresaid Answer Fol. 172 The Scots Commissioners Answer Ibid. Articles against Secretary Windibanck Fol. 174 A speech made by the Lord Finch in the Commons House N●vem 21. 1640. Fol. 169 Master Grimstons second speech Fol. 179 A messuage sent by the Queen to the House of Commons by Master Comproller Fol. 185 The report of the Kings messuage by the Lords to the House of Commons Jan. 29. 1640. Fol. 184 Sir Thomas Rows speech Fol. 185 Lord Falklands speech Fol. 188 Master Pyms speech after the Articles of Sir George Ratcliff Fol. 198 His second speech after the reading of the Articles Fol. 202 Master Speakers speech presenting these Bills for shortning of Michaelmas term pressing of Maryners for the remainder of sixe Subsidies Fol. 204 Master Pleadwels speech Fol. 206 Sir Thomas Rowes reports to the Committe Fol. 209 M●ster Rigbyes answer to the Lord ●ineb his last speech Fol. 221 Master Wallers speech Fol. 224 Master Hollis his speech delivered with the Protestation Fol. 232 Orders for the taking of the Protest●tion Fol. 236 Master Grimstons third speech Fol. 205 Lord Digbyes speech upon the Bill of attainder of the Lord Strafford Fol. 213 Lord Straffords speech on the Scaffold Sixteen queres Fol. 233 Captain Audleyes Mervirs speech Fol. 237 His speech at the peachment of Sir Richard Boulton Knight and others Fol. 249 Articles against Sir Richard Boulton 256 Sir Thomas Wentworths first speech March 22 1637 His second speech April 21 1628. Fol. 259 A petition to the Lord Deputy Fol. 262 A speech against the Judges Fol. 267 A discourse concerning the power of Pears in Parliament Fol. 275 Sir John Hollands speech Fol. 281 Sir Edward Hales speech Fol. 284 Sir Johns Wrayes speech concerning the Commons Fol. 288 Sir John Wrayes second speech Fol. 290 Preamble with the Protestation Fol. 300 Bill of Attainder against the Earl of Strafford Fol. 303 Vicount Newarks fi●st speech for the right of Bishops Fol. 305 His second speech for their Temporall affaires Master Peards against the oath Exofficio Fol. 313 Master Speakers letter to Sir Jacob Ashley Fol. 315 Articles against the Bishop of Bath and Wells Fol. 318 Sir B. Ruddyers speech Fol. 3●6 His Speech concerning the Queenes Joynture Fol. 317.321 Lord Andevers speech concerning the Star-Chamber An order May 10 1641. that no English shall frequent the Ambassadors to hear Masse Lord Finch his Lletter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 324 Lord Keepers speech to his Majesty in the name of both the Houses Fol. 325 Declaration of the Scots touching the maintenance of their Army Fol. 326 The humble Remonstrance delivered by the Lord Keeper Fol. 528 The Earl of Straffords Letters to his Majesty Fol. 332 E●●l of Straffords Petition before be died to both Houses Fol. 225 The Lord Falklands first speech in Parliament Fol. 336 Sir Jo. Culpeppers speech Fol. 342 Mr. Bagshawes speech 7 No. 1640. Fol. 545 Petition of the Earl of Straf for examination of witnesses Fol. 343 Order concerning the prices of Wine Fol. 350 Sir Tho. Rowes speech concerning B●asse mony Remonstrance of the Parliament in Ireland Fol. 321 A Message from the House of Commons to his Majesty His Majesties answer Fol. 328 Vote concerning the Cannons Ibidem Order concerning Monopolies Fol. 329 Order against Monopolies Ibidem The Scottish Commissioners thanks to his Majesty Fol. 330 The humble Remonstrance of the Mr. Wardens of Vintners Ibidem Petition of Oxford Fol. 383 Sergeant Glanvils speecd Fol. 388 Secretary Windebancks Letter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 393 Lord Andevers speech concerning pacification Fol. 327 An Order against drinking on the Sabbath day Fol. 401 Sir John Wrayes occasionall speeches 1 Concerning Religion Fol. 401 2. Vpon the Scottssh treaty Fol. 403 3. Impeachment of the Lord Strafford Fol. 404 4. Vpon the Strafford 〈◊〉 knot Fol. 406 5. Vpon the same 〈…〉 6. A seas●nable 〈◊〉 or a loyall Covenant Fol. 408 Mr. Hid●● Argument Fol. 409 Mr. White c●●cerning Episcopacy Fol. 417 Cities second ●●tition The Kentish Petition Sir John Wrayes ninth speech Lord Digbies speech Fol. 455 Mr. Pyms speech Fol. 458 Sir Thomas Barringtons speech Accusation of Sir George Ratcliffe Fol. 504 The charge of the Scottish Commissioners against Canterbury Fol. 505 Sir Henry Vanes speech against Bishops The Charge of the Scotch Commissioners against the Lievtenant of Ireland Fol. 519 The Scotch Commissioners demand concerning the six●h Article Fol. 525 The English Peeres demand concerning the preceding Articles Fol. 531 The Scotch Commissioners answer to the demand Ibid. Captain Audley Mervins speech concerning the Judicature of the Parliament The Speakers speech at the presenting of the bill of Tunnage and Poundage His Majesties speech concerning it Mr. Pyms Relation of the
Reprieve him till Satterday May 11th 1641. THis Letter all written with the Kings own hand the Peers this day received in Parliament delivered by the hand of the Prince It was twice read in the House and after serious and sad consideration the House resolved presently to send 12. of the Peers Messengers to the King humbly to signifie that neither of the two intentions expressed in the Letter could with duty in them or without danger to himselfe his dearest Consort the Queene and all the young Princes their Children possibly be advised With all which being done accordingly the reasons shewed to his Maiesty He suffered no more words to come from them but out of the fulnesse of his heart to the observance of Justice and for the contentment of his people told them that what he intended by his Letter was with an if if it may be done without discontentment of his People if that cannot be I say againe the same that I writ fiat justitia My other intention proceeding out of charity for a few dayes respite was upon certain information that his Estate was so distracted that it necessarily required some few dayes for setlement thereof Whereunto the Lords answered their purpose was to be Suitors to his Maiesty for favour to be shewed to his innocent Children and if himselfe had made any provision for them that the same might hold This was well liking to his Maiesty who thereupon departed from the Lords at his Maiesties parting they offered up into his hands the Letter it selfe which he had sent but He was pleased to say my Lords what I have written to you I shall content it be Registred by you in your House In it you see my minde I hope you will use it to my honor This upon returne of the Lords from the King was presently reported to the House by the Lord Privy Seal and ordered that these Lines should go out with the Kings Letter if any copy of the Letter were dispersed THAT BISHOPS ought not to have Votes in PARLIAMENT 1 BEcause it is a very great hinderance to the exercise of their Ministeriall Function 2 Because they doe vow and undertake at their Ordination when they enter into holy Orders that they will give themselves wholly to that Vocation 3. 4 Because Counsells and Canons in severall Ages do forbid them to meddle with secular affairs because 24 Bishops have dependancie on the two Archbishops and because of their Canonicall obedience to them 5 Because they are but for their lives and therefore are not fit to have legislative power over the honors inheritance persons and liberties of others 6 Because of Bishops dependancie and expecting translations to places of great profit 7 That severall Bishops have of late much incroached upon the consciēnces and liberties of the Subjects and they and their Successors will be much incouraged still to incroach and the Subjects will be much discouraged from complaining against such incouragements if 26 of that Order be to be Judges of those complaints the same reason extends to their legislative power in any Bill to passe for the regulation of their power upon any emergent inconveniencie by it 8 Because the whole number of them is interessed to maintaine the jurisdiction of Bishops which hath beene found so grievous to the three Kingdomes that Scotland hath utterly abolished it and multitudes in England and Ireland have petitioned against it 9 Because Bishops being Lords of Parliament it setteth too great a distance betweene them and the rest of their Brethren in the Ministry which occasioneth pride in them discontent in others and disquiet in the Church To their having Votes a long time Answ If inconvenient Time and usage are not to be considered with Law-makers some Abbots voted as anciently in Parliament as Bishops yet are taken away Therefore the Bishops Certificate to plenary of Benefice and loyalty of Marriage the Bill extends not to them For the secular Jurisdictions of the Deane of Westminster the Bishops of Durbam and Ely and the Archbishop of Yorke which they are to execute in their owne persons the former reasons shew the inconveniencies therein For their Temporall Courts and Jurisdictions which are executed by their Temporall Officers the Bill doth not concerne them The Lord Keepers Speech in the Upper House of Parliament Novemb. 3. 1640. My Lords ANd you the Knights Cittizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons you have been summoned by His Majesties Gracious Writ under the great Seal of England and you are here this day assembled for the holding of a Parliament The Writ tels you t is to treat and consult of the High Great and weighty affairs that concern the estate and safety of the Kingdom It tels you true that since the Conquest never was there a time that did more require and pray for the best advice and affection of the English people It is ill viewing of objects by viewing them in multiplying Glasse and it is almost as mischievous in the speech of such a broken Glasse which represents but to the half The onely and the perfect way is to look in a true Mirror I will not take upon me to be a good looker in it I will onely hold it to you to make use of it The Kingdom of England is this multiplying Glasse you may there see a State which hath flourished for divers hundred yeers famous for time of peace and warre glorious at home and ever considerable abroad A Nation to whom never yet any Conqueror gave new Laws nor abolished the old nor would this Nation ever suffer a Conqueror to meddle with their Laws no not the Romanes who yet when as they subdued all the people made it part of the Conquest to leave their Laws in triumph with them For the Saxons Danes and the Normans if this were a time to travell into such particulars it were an easie task to make it appear that it never changed the old established Lawes of England nor ever brought in any new so as you have the frame and constitution of a Common-wealth made glorious by antiquity And it is with States as with persons and families certainly an interrupted pedigree doth give lustre It is glorious in the whole frame wortth your looking upon long and your consideration in every part The King is the head of the Common-wealth the Fountain of Justice the life of the Law He is anima deliciae legis Behold Him in His glorious Ancestors that have so swayed the Scepter of the Kingdome Behold Him in the high attributes and the great prerogatives which so ancient and unalterable Laws have given and invested him with Behold Him in the happy times that we have so long lived under His Monarchiall government For His excellent Majesty that now is our most Gratious Soveraign you had need wipe the Glasse and wipe your eyes and then you shall truely behold him a King of exemplary Pietie and Justice and a King of rare endowments and
This it was Master Speaker His advising the King to employ the Army of Ireland to reduce England This I was assured would be proved before I gave my consent to his accusation I was confirmed in the same beliefe during the prosecution and fortified in it most of all since Sir Henry Vaines preparatory examinations by the assurances which that worthy member Mr. Pymme gave me that his Testimony would be made convincing by some notes of what passed at the Junto concurrent with it which I ever understanding to be of some other Counsellour you see now prove but a Copie of the same Secretaries notes discover'd and produc't in the manner you have heard and those Such disioynted fragments of the venemous part of discourses no results no conclusions of Counsels which are the onely things that Secretaries should register there being no use at all of the other but to accuse and to bring men into danger But Sir this is not that which overthrowes the evidence with mee concerning the Army of Ireland nor yet that all the rest of the Iunto upon their oathes remember nothing of it But this Sir which I shall tell you is that which works with mee under favour to an utter overthrow of his evidence as unto that of the Army of Ireland Before whil'st I was a prosecutor and under tye of Secrecie I might not discover any weakenesse of the cause which now as a Judge I must Master Secretary was examined thrice upon Oath at the preparatory Committee The first time he was questioned to all the Interrogatories and to that part of the seventh which concernes the Army of Ireland he said positively in these words I cannot charge him with that But for the rest he desires time to recollect himselfe which was granted him Some dayes after he was examined a second time and then deposes these words concerning the Kings being absolved from rules of government and so forth very clearely But being prest to that part concerning the Irish Army againe can say nothing to that Here wee thought wee had done with him till divers weeks after my Lord of Northumberland and all others of the Junto denying to have heard any thing concerning those words of reducing England by the Irish Army it was thought fit to examine the Secretary once more and then he deposes these words to have beene said by the Earle of Strafford to his Majestie You have an Army in Ireland which you may imploy here to reduce or some word to that sence this Kingdome Mr. Speaker these are the circumstances which I confesse with my Conscience thrust quite out of dores that grand Article of our charge concerning his desperate advice to the King of employing the Irish Army here Let not this I beseech you be driven to an aspersion upon Master Secretary as if he should have sworn otherwise then he knew or beleeved hee is too worthy to doe that onely let thus much be inferr'd from it that hee who twice upon Oath with time of recollection could not remember any thing of such a businesse might well a third time misremember somewhat and in this businesse the difference of one Letter here for there or that for this quite alters the case the latter also being the more probable since it is confest of all hands that the debate then was concerning a warre with Scotland and you may remember that at the Bar he once said to employ there And thus Mr. Speaker I have faithfully given you an account what it is that hath blunted the edge of the Hatchet or Bill with me towards my Lord of Strafford This was that whereupon I accused him with a free heart prosecuted him with earnestnesse and had it to my understanding beene proved should have condemned him with innocence Whereas now I cannot satisfie my conscience to doe it I professe I can have no notion of any bodies intent to subvert the Lawes treasonably or by force and this designe of force not appearing all his other wicked practises cannot amount so high with me I can finde a more easie and more naturall spring from whence to derive all his other Crimes then from an intent to bring in Tyrannie and to make his owne posterity as well as us Slaves as from revenge from Pride from Avarice from Passion and insolence of Nature But had this of the Irish Army been proved it would have diffused a complexion of Treason over all it would have beene a With indeed to bind all those other scattered and lesser branches as it were into a Faggot of Treason I doe not say but the rest may represent him a man as worthy to dye and perhaps worthier then many a Traytor I doe not say but they may justly direct us to Enact that they shall be Treason for the future But God keepe mee from giving judgement of death on any Man and of ruine to his innocent Posterity upon a Law made â posteriori Let the mark be set on the dore where the Plague is and then let him that will enter dye I know Master Speaker there is in Parliament a double power of life and death by Bill a judiciall power and a Legislative the measure of the one is what 's Legally just of the other what is prudentially and politickly fit for the good and preservation of the whole But those two under favour are not to be confounded in Judgement Wee must not peece up want of Legality with matter of convenience nor the defailance of prudentiall fitnesse with a pretence of legall Justice To condemne my Lord of Strafford judicially as for Treason my conscience is not assured that the matter will bear it And to doe it by the Legislative power my reason consultively cannot agree to that since I am perswaded neither the Lords nor the King will passe the Bill and consequently that our passing it will be a cause of great divisions and combustions in the State And therefore my humble advice is that laying aside this Bill of Attainder we may think of another saving only life such as may secure the State from my Lord of Strafford without endangering it as much by division concerning his punishment as he hath endangered it by his practices If this may not be hearkned unto let me conclude in saying that unto you all which I have throughly inculcated to mine owne conscience upon this occasion Let every man lay his hand upon his heart and sadly consider what we are going to doe with a breath either justice or murther justice on the one side or murther heightned and aggravated to its supreamest extent For as the Casuists say that he who lyes with his sister commits incest but he that marries his sister sinnes higher by applying Gods Ordinance to his crime So doubtlesse he that commits murther with the sword of Justice heightens that crime to the utmost The danger being so great and the case so doubtfull that I see the best Lawyers in diametrall opposition concerning it
the making of this Act and as if this Act had never been had or made Saving alwayes unto all and singular persons and bodies politique and corporall their Heirs and Successors others than the said Earl and his heirs and such as claim by from or under him all such right title and interest of in and to all and singular such of the said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments as he they or any of them had before the first day of this present Parliament any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding Provided that the passing of this present Act and his Maiesties assent thereunto shall not be any determination of this present Sessions of Parliament but that this present Sessions of Parliament and all Bills and matters whatsoever depending in Parliament and not fully enacted or determined And all Statutes and Acts of Parliament which have their continuance untill the end of this present Session of Parliament shall remain continue and be in full force as if this Act had not been The first Speech concerning the the right of Bishops to sit in Parliament May 21. 1641. My Lords I Shall take the boldnesse to speak a word or two upon this subject first as it is in it self then as it is in the consequence For the former I think he is a great stranger in Antiquity that is not well acquainted with that of their sitting here they have done thus and in this manner almost since the conquest and by the same power and the same right the other Peers did and your Lordships now do and to be put from this their due so much their due by so many hundred yeers strengthned and confirmed and that without any offence nay pretence of any seems to me to be very severe if it be jus I dare boldly say it is summum That this hinders their Ecclefiasticall vocation an argument I heare much of hath in my apprehension more of shadow then in substance in it if this be a reason sure I am it might have been one six hundred yeers ago A Bishop my Lords is not so circumscribed within the circumference of his Diocesse that his sometimes absence can be termed not in the most strict sense a neglect or hindrance of his duty no more than that of a Zievetenant from his Count y they both have their subordinate Ministers upon which their influences fall though the distance be remote Besides my Lords the lesser must yeeld to the greater good to make wholesome and good Lawes for the happy and well regulating of the Church and Common-wealth is certainly more advantagious to both then the want of the personall execution of their office and that but once in three years and then peradventure but a moneth or two can be prejudiciall to either I will go no further to this which experience hath done so fully so demonstratively And now my Lords by your Lordships good leave I shall speak to the consequence as it reflects both on your Lordships and my Lords the Bishops Dangers and inconveniencies are ever best prevented è longinquo this president comes neer to your Lordships and such a one mutato nomine de vobis Pretences are never wanting nay sometimes the greatest evils appeare in the most faire and specious out-sides witnesse the Shipmony the most abominable the most illegall thing that ever was and yet this was painted over with colour of the Law what Bench is secure if to alleage be to convine and which of your Lordships can say then he shall continue a member of this House when at one blow twenty six are cut off It then behoves the Neighbour to look about him cum proximus ardet Vcalegon And for the Bishops my Lords in what condition will you leave them The House of Commons represents the meanest person so did the Master his slave but they have none to do so much for them and what justice can tie them to the observation of those Lawes to whose constitution they give no consent the wisdome of former times gave proxies unto this House meerly upon this ground that every one might have a hand in the making of that which he had an obligation to obey This House could not represent therefore proxies in roome of persons were most justly allowed And now my Lords before I conclude I beseech your Lordships to cast your eyes upon the Church which I know is most dear and tender to your Lordships you will see her suffer in her principall members and deprived of that honor which here and throughout all the Christian World ever since Christianity she constantly hath enjoyed for what Nation or Kingdome is there in whose great and publike assemblies and that from her beginning she had not some of hers if I may not say as essentiall I am sure I may say as integrall parts thereof and truly my Lords Christianity cannot alone boast of this or challenge it only as hers even Heathenisme claims an equall share I never read of any of them Civill or Barbarous that gave not thus much to their Religion so that it seems to me to have no other originall to flow from no other spring than Nature it selfe But I have done and will trouble your Lordships no longer how it may stand with honor and justice of this House to passe this Bill I most humbly submit unto your Lordships the most proper and only Juges of them both The second Speech about the lawfulnesse and convenieny of their intermedling in Temorall Affaires My Lords I Shall not speake to the Preamble of the Bill that Bishops and Clergie men ought not to intermeddle in temporall offairs For truly my Lords I cannot bring it under any respect to be spoken of Ought is a word of relation and must either refer to humane or divine Law to prove the lawfulnesse of their intermedling by the former would be to no more purpose than to labour to convince that by reason which is evident to sense It is by all acknowledged The unlawfulnesse by the latter the bill by no means admits of for it excepts Universities and such persons as shall have honour descend upon them And your Lordships know that circumstance and chance alter not the nature and essence of a thing nor can except any particular from an universall proposition by God himself delivered I will therefore take these two as granted first that they ought by our Law to intermeddle in temporall affairs secondly that from doing so they are not inhibited by the Law of God it leaves it at least as a thing indifferent And now my Lords to apply my self to the businesse of the day I shall consider the conveniency and that in the severall habitudes thereof but very briefly first in that which it hath to them meerly as men qua tales then as parts of the Common-wealth Thirdly from the b●st manner of constituting laws and lastly from the practice of all times both Christian and Heathen Homo sum nihil humanum
My Lord Keeper did first let us know that his Majesty had commanded the Lords Commissioners of the great Councell to give an account of their Treaties at Yorke and Rippon to both Houses and of his Majesties gracious intentions in a businesse so much importing the honour and safety of the Kingdome that there might be made a faithfull relation with all candor and clearnesse which was the summe of his Majesties instructions His Lordship declaring that my Lords of the upper House for the saving of time had thought fit to give this account to a Committee of both Houses which hath occasioned the meeting at this Conference and election being made of the Earle of Bristoll by the Lords Commissioners he began his Narration directed to the Lords of the upper House and to the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the house of Commons and thus the Earle of Bristoll began That the Lords Commissioners intended not to looke further back into the businesse then the Acts of their own imployments They did intend to give no account of the pacification interrupted nor war renewed no account how the Armies in England Ireland and by Sea were designed nor of any occasion They purposed not to lay fault upon any man nor to enquire into the cause why the Scots as they pretended from necessity were drawne to enter this Kingdome nor why the Kings Army when service was to be done was out of the way But that those through whose hands these have passed might hereafter give their own account His Lordship told us that his Majesty was pleased to call his great Councell at Yorke to whom he made two propositions The first was how his Army which seemed to be in distresse for want of pay should be relieved and maintained To this to shew their duties to the King the Lords resolved to ingage themselves and to that purpose to send chosen Deputies to London to negotiate a supply The second proposition was that after the Scots had passed Northumberland taken Newcastle and possessed the Bishopricke of Duresme they sent a Petition to his Majesty which containeth in generall termes a desire to have their grievances taken into consideration Which Petition and Answer thereunto was read unto us A. N. A. and presented for our clearer understanding Upon receipt of his Majesties Answer the Scotish Lords sent his Majesty a second Petition directed in a Letter to the Earle of Lanrick K. Q. in which they made their particular demands and declared that according to his Majesties command they would advance no further and this Petition was also read and delivered unto us of which his Lordship desired that great Assembly to take especiall notice for that much of the future discourse would depend upon it The businesse thus stated at the great Councell the second proposition was what Answer should be made to that Petionary Letter and in what manner it should be carried In which his Majesty required their Councell Whereupon the Lords replyed that it was impossible for them to give any well grounded advice unlesse the true state of his affaires and the Condition of his Army were laid before them Whereupon his Majesty commanded the Earle of Traquaire N. L. to make the Narration of the Scotish businesse and their late Acts of Parliament and the Lord Lievtenant generall to give an account in what condition the Army stood and what was answered by my Lord Lievtenant was read in his owne words Besides this declaration the Earle of Bristoll delivered upon a further enquiry how the state of the businesse then stood That the Scots Army had passed Northumberland without resistance that they had disputed the passage of the River of Tyne at Newburne where our horse retyred in disorder that his Majesties foot Army consisting of twelve or fourteene thousand men in Newcastle likewise retired to Yorke whereby the Towne of Newcastle a place of great consideration was without one stroke strucken fallen into the Scots hands and the Bishopricke of Duresme drawn under Contribution That in this state the Gentry of the Bishopricke repayred to Master Treasurer who carryed them to his Majesty from whom they were referred to my Lord Lievtenant of the Army who gave them this answer positively That they could looke for no help nor protection from the King and therefore they might use the best meanes they could to preserve their lives and estates Whereby those distressed Provinces the ancient Bulwarks of this Kingdome full of brave and valiant men being now fallen into the power of an Army which of necessity must live were forced to consent to a contribution by Treaty and a very heavy one though such without which the Scotish Army could not subsist The agreement was 350. l. a day for the Bishopricke of Duresme 300. l. a day for Northumberland 200. a day for the Towne of Newcastle in all 850. l. a day which should it continue would amount unto 300000. l. for one yeare These Gentlemen much lamented their estates that the Scots should be irritated as they call it by being proclaimed Traytors His Lordship made a little digression and asked leave to speake truth in such language as the Scots had presented their state unto them That having proclamation made against them being threatned with a great Army of thirty or forty thousand men another of ten thousand out of Ireland and by Parliament declared Traytors and Rebels and having heard of another Army providing of eight or ten thousand by shipping to hinder their Trade at least their Commerce with England that they were drawne together by necessity as they pretended of defence further alledging that it was a common discourse of which they had seene papers that they should bee reduced into a Province which would be but one Summers worke and therefore they having drawne their power together as any Nation would doe and being assembled and their Country being poore taking advantage of the time and that all those Armies that should oppose them were out of the way and those unfortunate Provinces left like a list of Cloath they were forced to enter in England that thus they had lamented and thus the state stood before the Lords when it was examined in the great Councell Thus their Lordships found that the Scots had increased their confines neere fourescore miles in England and had passed the Rivers of Tweed and Tyne and that the River of Tees the boundary of Yorkeshire Duresme being possessed was not to be defended being foordable in many places by forty horse a front that if the Scots should passe that River there was no possibility to hinder them from comming to Yorke or to any part of England without hazarding a Battell which my Lord Lievtenant had declared unto them he would not advise for though the Kings Army consisted of seventeene or eighteene thousand good bodies of men yet being untrained and unused to Armes he would be loath to hazzard such an Adventure upon them but if they
thereunto required by the House Or to adjourne the House upon any command whatsoever without the consent and approbation of the House it selfe were breaches and violations that highly impeached our priviledges And having passed the vote I conceive it were fit wee should now proceed a little further and consider of a way how to be repaired against them that have beene the violaters For Execution does animare Legem The putting of an old Law in Execution you know Mr. Speaker does oftentimes doe more good then the making of a new one As concerning the violations of the other sort done out of Parliament in Courts of Justice and at the Councell board where neither our persons nor our proceeding ought to have beene controlled or medled withall And as concerning matters of Religion and the property of our goods and estates there were divers things then likewise agreed upon by vote whereupon a conference was desired to have ●eene with the Lords But what interjections and rubs wee met withall by the way and how the Lords countervoted the precedency of our grievances and how our Speaker was taken away from amongst us and what an unhappy conclusion we had at the last the remembrance of it were a subject too sad to begin another Parliament wi hall Therefore Mr. Speaker I shall passe from what was done the last Parliament and come to what hath beene done since that Parliament ended M. Speaker there are some worthy Gentlemen now of this House that were members of the last Parliament that carried themselves in the matters and businesses then and there agitated and debated with great Wisedome and unexampled moderation But what had they at last for all their paines in attending the publique strince of the Common-wealth As soone as ever the Parliament was ended their Studies and Pockets were searched as if they had beene Fellons and Traytors and they committed to severall Goales with an intention I am confident of their utter ruine and destruction had they not fore-seene a danger approaching For Master Speaker if I be truly informed an information was drawne or at least directions given for the drawing of it against them in the Starre-Chamber Master Speaker there hath beene since the last Parliament a Synod and in that Synod a new Oath hath beene made and framed and enjoyned to be taken Master Speaker they might as wel have made a new Law and enjoyned the execution of that as enjoyned and urged the taking of the other not being established by Act of Parliament and in point of mischiefe the safety of the Common-wealth and the freedome and liberties of the Subject are more concerned in the doing of the one then if they had done the other The next exception I shall take to it is to the matter contained in the Oath it selfe Master Speaker they would have us at the very first dash sweare in a damnable Heresie that matters necessary to salvation are contained in the Discipline of our Church Whereas Master Speaker it hath ever beene the tenet of our Church that all things necessary to salvation are comprehended and contained in the Doctrine of our Church only And that hath alwayes beene used as an Argument untill this very present against Antidisciplinarians to stop their mouthes withall And therefore that for that reason they might with the lesse regret and offence conforme and submit themselves to the Discipline of our Church And Master Speaker for prevention in case the Wisedome of the State in this great Councell should at any time think fit to alter any thing in the government of our Church they would anticipate and fore-stall our judgements by making us sweare before-hand that wee would never give our consent to any alteration Nay Master Speaker they goe a little further for they would have us sweare that the government of the Church by Archbishops Bishops Deanes Archdeacons c. is Jure divino Their words are as of right it ought to stand Whereas Master Speaker wee meet not with the name of an Archbishop or a Deane or an Arch-deacon in all the new Testament And whatsoever may bee said of the Function of Bishops it is one thing But for their Jurisdiction it is meerely Humana institutione and they must thank the King for it As for their grosse absurd c. wherein they would have men sweare they know neither what nor how many fathome deepe There is neither Divinity nor charity in it and yet they would put that upon us Master Speaker what they meant and intended by this new Oath and their Booke of Canons and their Booke of Articles which they would have our Church-wardens sworne unto to enquire of and to present thereupon I must confesse I know not unlesse they had a purpose therein to blow up the Protestant Religion and all the faithfull professors of it and to advance their Hierarchie a step higher which I suppose we all feare is high enough already Master Speaker they have likewise in this Synod granted a benevolence but the nature of the things agrees not with the name for in plaine English it is six Subsidies to be paid by the Clergie in six yeares And the penalty they have imposed upon the refusers for none-payment is to be deprived of their Functions to be stripped of their free-hold and to be excommunicated and this Act of their Synod is not published amongst their Canons for which they might have some colourable seeming authority But it comes out in a Booke alone by it selfe in the Latine tongue supposing as I conceiue that Lay-men are as ignorant as they would have them And thus they think they dance in a Net And as in this so in most of their new Canons if they bee throughly considered any judicious man may easily discerne and perceive that they doe therein like Water-men that looke one way and rowe another they pretend one thing but intend nothing lesse And certainly Mr. Speaker in this they have flowne a high pitch For a Synod called together upon pretence of reconciling and setling Controversies and matters in Religion to take upon them the boldnesse thus out of Parliament to grant Subsidies and to meddle with mens Free-holds I dare say the like was never heard of before and they that durst doe this will doe worse if the current of their raging Tyrannie be not stopped in time Who are they Master Speaker that have countenanced and cherished Popery and Armianisme to that growth and height it is now come to in this Kingdome Who are they Master Speaker that have given encouragement to those that have boldly preached those damnable Heresies in our Pulpits Who are they Master Speaker that have given authoritry and licence to them that have published those Heresies in Print Who are they Master Speaker that of late dayes have beene advanced to any dignity or preferment in the Church but such as have beene notoriously suspitious in their Disciplines corrupt in their Doctrines and for the most part vitious in their
him with a kinde of compulsion the hearts of the multitude But that was the least part of my study which now makes me call to minde that the greater the persons are in authority the sooner they are catcht in any delinquency and their smallest crimes are striven to be made capitall the smallest spot seems great in the finest linnen and the least flaw is soonest found in the richest Diamond But high and noble spirits finding themselves wounded grieve not so much at their own pain and perplexity as at the deriding and scoffing of their enemy but for mine own part though I might have many in my life I hope to finde none in my death Amongst other things which pollute and contaminate the mindes of great spirits there is none more haynous than Ambition which is seldome unaccompanied without A varice Such to possesse their ends care not to violate the Laws of Religion and Reason and to break the bonds of modesty and equity which the neerest tyes of Consanguinity and Amity of which as I have been guilty so I crave at Gods hands forgivenesse It is a Maxime in Philosophy that ambitious men can be never good Counsellors to Princes the desire of having more is common to great Lords and a desire of Rule a great cause of their Ruine My Lords I am now the hopelesse President may I be to you all an huppy example For Ambition devoureth gold and drinketh blood and climbeth so high by other mens heads that at the length in the fall it breaketh its own neck therefore it is better to live in humble content than in high care and trouble For more precious is want with honesty than wealth with infamy For what are we but meer vapours which in a serene Element ascend high and upon an instant like smoke vanish into nothing or like Ships without Pilots ●ost up and down upon the Seas by contrary windes and tempests But the good husbandman thinks better of those ears of Corn which bow down and grow crooked than those which are straight and upright because he is assured to finde more store of grain in the one than in the other This all men know yet of this how few make use The defect whereof must be now my pain may my suffering prove to others profit For what hath now the favour of my Prince the familiarity with my Peers the volubility of a tongue the strength of my memory my learning or knowledge my honours or Offices my power and potency my riches and treasure all these especiall gifts both of Nature and Fortune what have all these profitted me Blessings I acknowledge though by God bestowed upon man yet not all of them together upon many yet by the Divine providence the most of them met in me of which had I made happy use I might still have flourish't who now am forc'd immaturely to fall I now could wish but that utinam is too late that God with his outward goodnesse towards me had so commixed his inward grace that I had chused the Medium path neither inclining to the right hand nor deviating to the left but like Icarus with my waxen wings fearing by too low a flight to moisten them with the Waves I soared too high and too neer the Sun by which they being melted I ayming at the highest am precipitated to the lowest and am made a wretched prey to the Waters But I who before built my house upon the sand have now setled my hopes upon the Rock my Saviour by whose onely merits my sole trust is that whatsoever becomes of my body yet in this bosome my soul may be Sanctuaried Nintrod would have built a Tower to reach up to heaven and call'd it Babel but God turned it to the confusion of Languages and dissipation of the people Pharaoh kept the Children of Israel in bondage and after having freed them in his great pride would have made them his prey but God gave them a dry and miraculous passage and Pharaoh and his boast a watry Sepulcher Belshazzer feasted his Princes and Prostitutes who drunk healths in the Vessels taken from the Temple but the hand of God writ upon the wall Mene Tekel Phoras and that night before morning was both his Kingdom and life taken from him Thus God lets men go on a great while in their own devices but in the end it prove their own ruine and destruction never suffering them to effect their desired purposes therefore let none presume upon his power glory in his greatnesse or be too confident in his riches These things were written for our Instruction of which the living may make use the dying cannot but wit and unfruitfull wisedome are the next neighbours to folly There can be no greater vanity in the world than to esteem the world which regardeth no man and to make slight account of God who greatly respecteth all men and there can be no greater folly in man than by much Travell to increase his goods and pamper his body and in the interim with vain delights and pleasures to lose his soul It is a great folly in any man to attempt a bad beginning in hope of a good ending and to make that proper to one which was before common to all is meer indiscretion and the beginning of discord which I positively wish may en● in this my punishment O how small a proportion of earth will contain my body when my high minde could not be confined within the spacious compasse of two Kingdoms But my hour draweth on and I conclude with the Psalmist not ayming at any one man in particular but speaking for all in generall How long will you Judges be corrupted how long will ye cease to give true judgement c. Blessed is the man that doth not walk in the Councell of the wicked nor stand in the way of sinners nor s●t in the seat of the scornfall therefore they shall not stand in the Judgement nor sinners in the Assembly of the righteous c. About the hours of 10 and 11 a Clock the foresaid Lord of Strafford was conveyed to the Scaffold on Tower-Hill where was a Court of Guard made by the severall Companies of Souldiers of the City of London and the Hamlets of the Tower on each side as he passed to the Scaffold before marched the Marshals men to make way then the Sheriffs of Londons Officers with their Halberds after them the Kings Guard or Warders of the Tower Next came one of his Gentlemen bare h●aded in mourning Habit the Lord Strafford following him clad in black cloth with divers others in the same habit which were his atten●●●ts then the Lord Bishop of Armagh and other good Divines with the Sheriffs of London and divers honorable personages When he came upon the Scaffold he there shewed himself on each side to all the people and made this short speech with as much alacrity of Spirit as could be expressed Viz. The Lord Wentworths speech on the Scaffold
MY Lord Primate of Ireland and my Lords and the rest of these noble Gentlemen It is a great comfort to me to have your Lordships by me this day because I have been known to yours long time and I now desire to be heard a few words I come here my Lords to pay my last debt to sin which is death and through the mercies of God to rise again in eternall glory My Lords if I may use a few words I shall take it as a great curtesie from you I am come here my Lords to submit to the judgement that is passed against me I do it with a very quiet and contented minde I do freely forgive all the world a forgivenesse not from the teeth outwards as they say but from my heart I speak it in the presence of Almighty God before whom I stand that there is not a displeasing thought that arifeth in me against any man I thank God I say truely my conscience bears me witnesse that in all the honour I had to serve his Majesty I had not any intention in my heart but did aime at the joynt and individuall prosperity of the King and his people although it be my ill hap to be misconstrued I am not the first man that hath suffered in this kinde it is a common portion that befalls men in this life righteous judgement shall be hereafter here we are subject to errors and misiudging one another One thing I desire that I might be heard and do hope that for Christian charities sake I shall be beleeved That I was so farre from being against Parliaments that I alwayes did think Parliaments in England to be the happy constitutions of the Kingdome and Nation and the best means under God to make the King and his people happy As for my death I do hear acquit all the world and beseech God to forgive them In particular I am very glad his Majesty conceives me not meriting so severe and heavy a punishment as the utmost execution of this sentence I do infinitely rejoyce in it and in the mercy of his and do beseech God to return to him the same that he may finde mercy when he hath most need of it I wish this Kingdom all prosperity and happinesse in the world I did it living and now dying it is my wish And I professe heartily and do humbly recommend it to you and wish that every man would lay his hand on his heart and consider seriously whether the beginning of the peoples happinesse should be written in letters of bloud I fear they are in a wrong way I desire Almighty God that no one drop of my bloud rise up in judgement against them I have but one word more and that is for my Religion My Lord of Armagh I do professe my self seriously faithfully and truly to be an obedient sonne of the Church of England in that Church I was borne and bred in that Religion I have lived and now in that I dye prosperity and happinesse be ever to it It hath been said I was inclined to Popery if it be an obiection worth the answering let me say truly from my heart that since the time that I was 21. yeers of age unto this day going on 49. yeers I never had thought or doubt of the truth of this Religion nor had ever any the boldnesse to suggest to me the contrary to my best remembrance and so being reconciled to the mercies of Christ Jesus my Saviour into whose bosome I hope shortly to be gathered to enioy eternall happinesse which shall never have end I desire heartily to be forgiven of every man if any rash or unadvised words or deeds hath passed and desire all your prayers and so my Lord farewell and farewell all things in this world The Lord strengthen my faith and give me confidence and assurance in the merits of Christ Jesus I trust in God we shall all meete to live eternally in Heaven and receive the accomplishment of all happinesse where every fear shall be wiped from our eyes and sad thought from our hearts And so God blesse this Kingdome and Jesus have meroy on my soul Then turning himself about he saluted all the Noblemen and took a solemne leave of all considerable persons on the Scaffold giving them his hand And after that he said Gentlemen I would say my prayers and I intreat you all to pray with me and for me then his Chaplain laid the book of Common-prayer upon the chair before him as he kneeled down on which he praied almost a quarter of an houre then he prayed as long or longer without a book and ended with the Lords prayer then standing up he spies his brother Sir George Wentworth and cals him to him and saith brother we must part remember me to my sister and to my wife and carry my blessing to my eld●st sonne and charge him from me that he fear God and continue an obedient sonne of the Church of England and that he should approve himself a faithfull subject to the King and tell him that he should not have any private grudge or revenge towards any concerning me and bid him beware that he medle not with Church livings for that will prove a moth and canker to him in his estate and wish him to content himself to be a servant to his Country as a Justice of peace in his County and not aiming at higher preferments carry my blessing also to my daughters Anne and Arrabella charge them to fear and serve God and he will blesse them not forgetting my little Infant that yet knowes neither good nor evill and cannot speak for it self God speak for it and blesse it then sayd he now I have nigh done one stroke will make my wife husbandlesse my dear children fatherles and my poore servants master lesse and seperate me from my dear brother and all my friends but let God be to you and them all in all After that going to take off his doublet and to make himselfe unready he sayd I thank God I am no more afraid of death nor daunted with any discouragements rising from any fears but do as cheerfully put off my doublet at this time or ever I did when I went to bed Then he put off his doublet and wound up his hair with his hands and put on a white cap. Then he called where is the man that should do this last office meaning the Executioner call him to me When he came and askt him forgivenesse he told him he forgave him and all the World Then kneeling down by the block he went to prayer again himself the Bishop of Armagh kneeling on the one side and the Minister on other to the which Minister after prayer he turned himself and spoke some few words softly having his hands lifted up this Minister closed his hands with his then bowing himself to the earth to lay his head on the blocke he told the Executioner that he would first lay down his h●ad to
crime goes not beyond the person that commits it nor can anothers fault be mine offence If they have contracted any filth or corruption through their own or the vice of the times cleanse and purge them thorowly But still remember the great difference between reformation and extirpation And he pleased to think of your Triennall Bill which will save you this labour for the time to come fear of punishment will keep them in order if they should not themselves through the love of vertue I have now my Lords according to my poor ability both shewed the conveniences and answered those inconveniences that seem to make against them I should now propose those that make for them As their falling into a condition worse than slaves not represented by any and then the dangers and inconveniences that may happen to your Lordships but I haue done this heretofore and will not offer your Lordships Grambenbis coctam A Speech in Parliament delivered by Mr. PEARD against the Oath Ex Officio 1640. Mr. SPEAKER I Assure my selfe we are here met to discover and reforme as much as in us lyeth all abuses of the Church and Common-wealth many and great ones have been spoken against some contrary to all Law and some established by new Lawes contrary to all Law The Wolfe having put on the Lions skinne and rapine presuming to passe undiscovered under the robe of Justice But I shall not neede to light a candle to search out that which already the sunne hath made manifest That which I shall speak hath not been spoken but if I shall speak that that shall seeme to be against Law I humbly crave the pardon of this House since if it be law it is summum jus Law without conscience That which I shall speake against is the Oath Ex Officio It is acknowledged by themselves that Administer this Oath that it is unjustly done to tender it to any man unlesse there be a publique Fame or particular Presentment or Articles testified against him I make no question but the practice of this confest Injunction wil be found cōmon amongst them And I hope it shal be severely censured since unjust proceedings upon unjust grounds are double Injustice I shall therefore leave that as a plaine case and examine their best grounds First Fame they say is a just cause for them to take Cognizance of a matter to proceed against it Fame we know may arise upon very small and groundlesse suspitions by secret whisperings creeping at first but quickly gets it wings And as the Poët saith Creseit eundo This is the manner of all Fame if this be Fame their Court shall never want worke as long as a Promooter hath an ill tongue or a knave can slander an honest man Therefore I thinke Fame no good ground to proceed upon If Fame be just what most men speake certainly some men will testifie No man will testifie it is false Let no accusation then stand but out of the mouthes of two or three witnesses of Presentments are a just ground of proceedings in all Courts and upon all causes But neither witnesses nor presentments are or can be a just ground of the Oath Ex officio For if the partie accused be examined no further then is testified then the Oath Ex Officio is superfluous If he be examined further or upon other matters then is testified then a man is made to betray himselfe which is unjust Mr. Speaker such is the Mercy of the Common Law that Murderers and Poysoners are not examined upon the rack but the Civill law upon every occasion racketh the Conscience These are the Lyme-twigs which were set to catch the poore Martyrs in Queene Maries daies And in our daies I dare beleeve it will appeare that some good men are fallen into this snare Mr. Speaker If the foundations faile what shall the buildings doe If the conformity of good men shall undoe them who shall stand I desire nothing but that evill men may suffer I desire the Law may punish not make offenders I desire that our words and actions at this time and at other times may be subject to the Law I would have thought free Mr. Speakers Letter to Sir Jacob Ashley SIR WEE have had cause to doubt that some ill affected persons have endeavoured to make a mis-understanding in the Army of the intentions of the Parliament towards them To take away all mistaking in that kinde the house of Commons have Commanded me to assure you that they have taken the affaires of the Army into their serious Care And though for the present their moneys have not come as they wished and as was due by reason of the many distractions and other Impediments which this House could no wayes avoid yet they rest most assured that they shall not onely have their full pay but the House will take their merits into their further consideration in regard they take notice that notwithstanding their want and endeavours of those ill-affected persons they have not demeaned themselves otherwise then as men of honor and well affected to the Common-wealth which this House takes in so good part that we have already found out a way to get money for a good part of their pay and will take the most speedy course we possibly may for the rest From my house at Charing-Crosse the 4th of this present Moneth of May. 1641. So I remain Your very Loving Friend SIR 'T is the pleasure of the House that this Letter be Communicated to the Army to the end their Intentions may be cleerly understood by them Sir BENJAMIN RUDYERDS Speech Tuesday the 29. Decem. Mr. SPEAKER THe principall part of this businesse is Moneys and now we are about it I shall be glad we may give so much as will not only serve the turn for the present but likewise to provide that it come not quick upon us againe I beleeve that the two subsidies are spent already Wee know how much time this businesse hath cost us if we be but halfe as long about another it may cost more then money For if two Armies should be driven to extreame necessitie and they will be Judges of their owne necessitie we shall not be able to sit here and give more though we would Believe it Sir this is the businesse of all the businesses in the House of all the businesses in the Kingdom If we stand hacking for a little money wee may very thriftily lose all we have this being a businesse of so peremptory and destructive a nature Wherefore Mr. Speaker my humble and earnest motion is that we may dispatch it fully and at once If there should be an overplus of money remaining wee can soone resolve how to dispose of it Foure subsidies will doe the worke if they be given presently for every day tells us that we are not so much Masters of our owne time and occasions as to doe nothing when we would Let us doe this whilest we may though I dwell not
and Liberties were of late more pressing than we were able to bear That our Complaints and Supplications for redresse were answered at last with the terrors of an Army That after a pacification greater preparations were made for war whereby many Acts of Hostility were done against us both by Sea and Land The Kingdome wanted administration of Justice and we constrained to take Arms for our defence That we were brought to this extreme and intolerable necessity either to maintain divers Armies upon our Borders against Invasion from England or Ireland still to be deprived of the benefit of all the Courts of Justice and not onely to maintain so many thousands as were spoyled of their ships and goods but to want all Commerce by Sea to the undoing of Merchants of Saylors and many other who lived by Fishing and whose Callings are upholden from hand to mouth by Sea trade Any one of which evils is able in a short time to bring the most potent Kingdome to Confusion Ruine and Desolation how much more all the three at one time combined to bring the Kingdome of Scotland to be no more a Kingdome Yet all these behoved We either to endure and under no other hope than of the perfect slavery of our selves and our posterity in our souls Lives and means Or to resolve to come into England not to make any Invasion or with any purpose to fight except we were forced God is our Judge our actions are our witnesses and England doth now acknowledge the truth against all suspicions to the contrary and against the impudent lies of our enemies but for our relief defence and preservation which we could finde by no other means when we had essayed all means and had at large expressed our pungent and pressing necessities to the Kingdome and Parliament of England Since therefore the war on our part which is no other but our coming into England with a Guard is defensive and all men do acknowledge that in common equity the defendant should not be suffered to perish in his just and necessary defence but that the persuer whether by way of Legall processe in the time of Peace or by way of violence and unjust invasion in the time of war ought to bear the charges of the defendant We trust that your Lordships will think that it is not against reason for us to demand some reparation of this kinde and that the Parliament of England by whose wisedome and justice we have expected the redresse of our wrongs will take such course as both may in reason give us satisfaction and may in the notable demonstration of their Justice serve most for their own honour Our earnestnesse in following this our Demand doth not so far wrong our fight and make us so undiscerning as not to make a difference between the Kingdome and Parliament of England which did neither discerne nor set forward a Warre against us And that prevalent faction of Prelates and Papists who have moved every stone against us and used all sorts of means not onely their Counsells Subsidies and Forces but their Church Canons and Prayers for our utter ruine which maketh them obnoxious to our just accusations and guilty of all the losses and wrongs which this time past we have sustained Yet this we desire your Lordships to consider That the States of the Kingdome of Scotland being assembled did endeavour by their Declarations Informations and Remonstrances and by the proceedings of their Commissioners to make known unto the Councell Kingdome and Parliament of England and to forewarn them of the mischief intended against both Kingdomes in their Religion and Liberties by the Prelates and papists to the end that our Invasion from England might have been prevented if by the prevalency of the faction it had been possible And therefore we may now with the greater reason and confidence presse our Demand that your Lordships the Parliament the Kingdome and the King himself may see us repaired in our losses at the cost of that faction by whose means we have sustained so much dammage And which except they repent we finde sorrow recompenced for our grief torments for our toyl and an infinite greater losse for the Temporall losses they have brought upon a whole Kingdome which was dwelling by them in peace All the devices and doings of our common enemies were to bear down the truth of Religion and the just liberties of the Subjects in both Kingdomes They were confident to bring this about one of two wayes Either by blocking us up by Sea and Land to constrain us to admit their will for a law both in Church and Policy and thus to make us a precedent for the like misery in England or by their Invasion of our Kingdome to compell us furiously and without order to break into England That the two Nations once entred into a bloody Warre they might fish in our troubled waters and catch their desired prey But as we declared before our coming We trusted that God would turn their wisedome into foolishnesse and bring their devices upon their own pares by our Intentions and Resolutions to come into England as among our Brethren in the most peaceable way that could stand with our safety in respect of our common enemies to present our petitions for setling our peace by a Parliament in England wherein the intentions and actions both of our adversaries and ours might be brought to light The Kings Majesty and the Kingdome right informed The Authors and Instruments of our divisions and troubles punished All the mischiefs of a Nationall and doubtfull warre prevented and Religion and Liberty with greater peace and amity than ever before established against all the craft and violence of our enemies This was our Declaration before we set our England from which our deportments since have not varied And it hath been the Lords wonderfull doing by the wise counsels and just proceedings of the Parliament to bring it in a great part to passe and to give us lively hopes of a happy conclusion And therefore we will never doubt but that the Parliament in their wisedom and iustice will provide that a proportionable part of the cost and charges of a work so great and so comfortable to both Nations be born by the Delinquents there that with the better conscience the good people of England may sit under their own Vines and Fig-trees refreshing themselves although upon our great pains and hazard yet not altogether upon our cost and charges which we are not able to bear The Kingdome of England doth know and confesse that the innovation of religion and liberties in Scotland were not the principall designe of our common enemies but that both in the intention of the workers whose zeal was hottest for setling their devices at home and in the condition so the work making us whom they conceived to be the weaker for opposition to be nothing else but a leading case for England And that although by the power of God which
whole matter of my Lord of Stafford Mr. St. Johns Argvment The KINGS Majesties First Speech in Parliament the third of November 1640. My Lords THe knowledge I had of the desires of my Scottish Subjects was the cause of my calling the last Assembly of Parliament wherein had I beene beleeved I sincerely thinke that things had not fallen out as now we see But it is no wonder that men are so slow to beleeve that so great a sedition should be raised on so little ground But now my Lords and Gentlemen the honour and safety of this Kingdome lying so neerely at the stake I am resolved to put my self freely and cleerly on the love and affections of my English Subjects as these of my Lords that did wait on me at York very well remember I there declared Therefore my Lords I shall not mention mine own interest or that support I might justly expect from you till the common safety be secured though I must tell you I am not ashamed to say those charges I have been at have been meerly for the securing and good of this Kingdome though the successe hath not been answerable to my desires Therefore I shall only desire you to consider the best way both for the safety and security of this Kingdome wherein their are two parts chiefly considerable First the chastifing out of the Rebells And secondly that other in satisfying your just grievances wherein I shall promise you to concurre so heartily and cleerely with you that all the World may see my int●ntions have ever beene and shall be to make this a glorious and flourishing Kingdome There are only two things that I shall mention to you First the one is to tell you that the Loane of money which I lately had from the City of London wherein the Lords that waited on me at Yorke assisted me will only maintain my Armie for two mone●hs from the beginning of that time it was granted Now my Lords and Gentlemen I leave it to your considerations what dishonour and mischiefe it might be in case for want of money my Armie be disbanded before the Rebells be put out of this Kingdome Secondly the securing the calamities the Northern people endure at this time and so long as the treaty is on foot And in this I may say not only they but all this Kingdome will suffer the harme therefore I leave this also to your consideration for the ordering of these great affairs whereof you are to treat at this time I am so confident of your love to me and that your care is for the honour and safety of the Kingdome that I sh●ll freely and willingly leave to you where to begin only this that you may the better know the state of all the Affairs I have commanded my Lord Keeper to give you a short and free accompt of these things that have happened in this interim wi●h this Protestation tha● if this accompt be not satisfactory as it ought to be I shall whensoever you desire give you a full and perfect accompt of every particular One thing more I desire of you as one of the greatest means to make this a happy Parliament That you on your parts as I on Mine lay aside all suspition one of another as I promised my Lords at Yorke It shall not be my fault if this be not a happie and good Parliament The Kings speech in Parliament the fift of November 1640. My Lords I do expect that you will hastily make relation to the House of Commons of those great affairs for which I have called you hither at this time and for the trust I have reposed in them and how freely I put my selfe on their love and affections at that time and that you may know the better how to do so I shall explaine my selfe concerning one thing I spake the last day I told you the Rebells must be put out of this Kingdome it 's true I must needs call them so so long as they have an Armie that do invade us and although I am under treaty with them and I under my great Seale do call them Subjects and so they are too but the state of my Affairs in short is this It 's true I did expect when I did will my Lords and great ones at Yorke to have given a gracious answer to all your grievances for I was in good hope by their wisedomes and assistances to have made an end of that businesse but I must tell you that my Subjects of Scotland did so delay them that it was not possible to end there Therefore I can no wayes blame my Lords that were at Rippon that the treaty was not ended but must thanke them for their pains and industry and certainly had they as much power as affections I should by that time have brought these distempers to a happy period so that now the treaty is transported from Rippon to London where I shall conclude nothing without your knowledge and I doubt not but by your approbation for I do not desire to have this great work done in a corner for I shall lay open all the steps of this mis-understanding and causes of the great differences between Me and my Subjects of Scotland And I doubt not but by your assistance to make them know their duty and also by your assistance to make them return whether they will or no. The Kings Speech to both the Houses Ianuary 25. 1640. My Lords THe Knights Citizens Burgesses The principall cause of my comming here at this time is by reason of the slow proceedings in Parliament touching which is a great deale of inconvenience Therefore I think it very necessary to lay before you the state of my affairs as now they stand therby to hasten not interrupt your proceedings First I must remember you that there are two Armies in the Kingdome in a manner maintained by you the very naming of which doth more cleerly shew the inconvenience thereof then a better tongue then mine can expresse Therfore in the first place I shall recommend unto you the quick dispatch of that businesse assuring you that it cannot rest upon me In the next place I must recommend unto you the State of my Navie and Forts the condition of both which is so well known unto you that I need not tell you the particulars only thus much they are the Walls and defence of this Kingdome which if out of order all men may easily judge what incouragement it will be to Our enemies and what disheartning to our friends Last of all and not of the least to be considered I must lay before you the distractions that are at this present occasioned through the cause of Parliament for there are some men that more maliciously than ignorantly will put no difference betweene Reformation and alteration of government Hence it commech that divine Service is irreverently interrupted and Petitions in an ill way given in neither disputed nor denied But I will enter into no more particulars