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A31823 The Kings answer to the propositions for peace as was pretended in the club-mens petition to His Majesty with the copie of a letter from Sir Lewis Dives, and another from Colonell Butler, governour of Wareham, sent to them and read in their quarters : also a copie of articles and directions, and divers other passages of their proceedings and intentions, and a list of their chiefe leaders names and which of them are taken and who not : with other papers brought by our scouts from the army. Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1645 (1645) Wing C2141; ESTC R200206 10,924 17

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to extirpate Popery Schism 〈…〉 Errors and Superstition Why will you plead for Baal will you●o to keepe up that which God hath promised and hee will have downe or is it because you feare wee will take away the Kings Crowne and Dignitie Looke upon the Parliaments Declarations to the contrary sent to all Princes and States Looke upon our solemne Vow and Covenant to the contrary and doe not thinke us a people gréedie of periurie and of hatred and infamie from all posterity or is it because we endeavour for Reformation in Church and State I desire you to consider whether it bee not 〈…〉 e to endeavour to be better when God is punishing us because we are so bad Whether the Reformation aymed at will not make us walke more pleasing before God and make us more conformable to all other reformed Protestant Churches who have long looked and prayed for such a Reformation amongst us whither this be not to thwart and oppose what God will have brought to passe If you canot apprehend the great necessities of it yet I advise you at least to stand still and not to lift up your hand against it for if it be of God it will stand if it bee not of him it will fall of it selfe to the ground Take heede then good Neighbours and fellow Protestants of ioyning and associating your 〈◊〉 with bloodie Papists and Irish Rebbels lest you partake of their 〈…〉 ments for God will shortly bring them to an account of all the innocent blood shed here and in Ireland Take heed of setting your selves against them that earnestly pray and endeavour for the true good of your soules bodies and estates and the Lord give you a right understauding in all things and guide you into those wayes and counsels which will most conduce to his glorie and your true good Pardon mee for being so tedious I have not troubled you often I should be glad to heare from you what your resolutions are and shall rest Warham Iune 30. 1645. Your truly wel-wishing friend and Neighbour Robert Butler 4. For His Majesties promise of a Cessation of Armes and nomination of a Treaty the late printed Letters between the King and Queen it is hoped have given full satisfaction to every rationall man and yet such is the Parliaments desire of Peace if it may be that the Lords and Commons have both agreed to send Propositions to the King for Peace and that without any Treaty but forthwith by Bill to require a positive answer to which if it shall please His Majesty to give his Royall Assent an end will bee of the Wars and the kingdom setled in peace and he received with joy and honoured with the love and loyalty of all his Subjects 5. The reading of the malignant booke printed at Oxford about the Treaty hath giv●n little satisfaction to reasonable men who will without doubt be fully satisfied in the Declartion which the Parliament are putting out concerning the same 6. What faithfull Protestant can be so blinded as not to understand and in his conscience confesse that the sins of the Kings Army are exceeding great both in drinking swearying whoring robbing plundering killing and idolatry and all manner of wickednesse and barbarous cruelties daily exercised in all parts where they come And what redresse is here promised for the reliefe of His Majesties Subjects herein To the third you may see the answer is that Taxes and Free-quarter shall be done with moderation and severe justice is promised for plunder but should that be fulfilled the King would soone hang up all his souldiers 7. For the trusting of any to keepe the Garrisons for the King it is notoriously knowne that the Queen must approve of them and none but Papists must bee entrusted there with is it not so in all parts of the kings quarters 8. For the want of Iustice the kingdome is very sensible that that very thing hath beene a great cause of these Wars which Papists Iesuits and Delinquents were the fomenters of to be a Protection for them from the power of the Parliament Now because the very Club-men themselves are sufficiently sensible how they have suffered under the kings forces therefore they have framed directions for the security of their estates the Copies whereof follow The desires and Resolutions of the Inhabitants of Dorset WE the miserable Jnhabitants of the said Countie being too too deeply touched with the apprehension and sense of our past and present sufferings occasioned onely by these Civill and vnaturall warrs within this Kingdome and finding by sad experience that by meanes thereof the true worship of almighty God and our religion are almost forgotten and that our ancient Lawes and liberties are alltogether swallowed up in the arbitrarie power of the sword and foreseeing that famine and utter Desolation will imediatly fall upon us our wives and children unlesse God of his in finit mercy shall looke upon our true humilation be graciously pleasd spedily to put a period to these sad distractions are unanimously resolved to joyne in Petitioning His Majestie and the two Houses of Parliament for a happie peace and accommodatin of the present differences without future effusion of Christian bloud without which accommodation we cannot expect the enjoyment either of our Religion Liberties or proprieties meane while that we whose names are under written Resolve and doe here Declare 1. To defend and maintain with our lives and fortunes the true reformed Protestant Religion 2. To joyne with and assist one another in the mutuall defence of our Lawes liberties and properties against all plunderers all other unlawful violence whatsoever 3. Wee doe faithfully promise each to other that the damage or losse which in the execution hereof shall happen to any one be accounted as the losse of the generality and that reparation be made to such party or parties by the whole County and in case of losse of life provision be made for his wife and children by the County 4. To declare all such unworthy of the generall assistance as shall refuse or delay to joyne with us in the prosecution of these our just intentions Some directions for present behaviour made and agreed on at a meeting of the Inhabitants of the Counties of Dorset and Wilts at Gorhead corner the 28th of May 1645. VVHereas by the Articles of our Association wee challenge unto our selues no other freedome for the present from the burthen of the Warres then to preserue our selues from plder and all other unlawfull violence It is therefore advised by the generality that untill such time as we receiue answer to our petitions from his Maiesty and the two Houses of parliament 1. Euery Towne Tything-parish great Hamlet make present choice of thrée or more or the ablest men for Wisedome Valour and estate Inhabitants in the same unto whom at all times they may repayre for assistance and direction 2. That the Constable Tything-man or other officer of the Tawne Tything-parish or liberty