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A56219 A true and perfect narrative of what was acted, spoken by Mr. Prynne, other formerly and freshly secluded members, the army-officers, and some now sitting in the lobby, house, elsewhere, the 7th. and 9th. of May last ... by William Prynne, Esq. ... Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1659 (1659) Wing P4112; ESTC R19484 104,478 113

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A true and perfect NARRATIVE OF What was acted spoken by Mr. Prynne other formerly and freshly secluded Members the Army-Officers and some now sitting in the Lobby House elsewhere the 7th and 9th of May last The grounds inducing Mr. Pr. to go into the House The Evidences Reasons by which he intended to demonstrate to them That their New-Common Wealth or Good Old Cause was originally projected by the Iesuites and other forein Popish Enemies erected by the Army Officers and those now convened as their seduced Instruments to destroy our Protestant Religion Church King Kingdoms Parliaments Laws Liberties with the visible effects thereof since its erection That the Old Parliament was absolutely dissolved by the Kings beheading notwithstanding 17 Car. c. 7. That the Commons sitting since 1648. and now neither are nor can be the House of Commons much lesse the Parliament within that Act. That our hereditary Monarchy is the divinest best happyest durablest of all other Governments and its speedy restitution the only means to prevent impendent ruine and restore our Pristine Peace Safety Honour Vnity Prosperity both in Church and State With some seasonable Applications to the Army the sitting secluded Members Lords and all Well wishers to the Publick By WILLIAM PRYNNE Esq a Bencher of Lincolns Inne Printed and published to rectifie the various Reports Censures of this Action to give publick satisfaction to all Members of the Old Parliament the whole English Nation especially those Vianders and free Burgesses of the Borough of Newport in Cornwall who without Mr. P. his Privity or liking unanimously elected him for their Burgesse Anno 1648. though soon after forcibly secluded secured and now twice re-secluded in like manner by the Army-Officers Of his sincere Endeavours to the uttermost of his power to preserve OUR RELIGION fundamental LAWS LIBERTIES GOVERNMENT the Essential Rights Privileges Freedom of Parliament and all we yet enjoy according to his Oaths Covenant Trust as a Parliament-Member against the utter Subverters of them by a NEW REPUBLICK meer armed force arbitrary will and tyrannical power through the apparent Plots Seductions of our professed forein Popish Adversaries and their Instruments here clearly detected in their native Colours fruits Psal. 3.6 I will not be afraid of ten Thousands of men who have set themselves against me round about Psal. 27.3 Though an Host should encamp against me my heart shall not fear though war should rise against me in this will I be confident London Printed for Edw. Thomas at the Adam and Eve in Little Britaine 1659. A true and full Narrative of what was done and spoken by and between Mr. Prynne other secluded Members Army Officers c. ON the 7th day of this instant May Mr. Prynne walking to Westminster Hall where he had not been six daies before meeting with some old secured and secluded Members of Parliament summoned by King Charles his Writ and Authority for these only ends expressed in all writs of Summons to the Lords and of Elections issued to Sheriffs of Counties for electing Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament and in the Indentures themselves by which they were retorned Members To confer and treat of certain great and ard●ous affairs concerning the defence of the King Kingdom and Church of England and to do and consent to those things which shall happen to be therein ordained by Common counsel of the King Lords and Commons touching the aforesaid businesses which Parliament began at Westminster the third day of November 1640. They shewed him a Declaration of the Officers and Counsel of the Army made in such hast and confusion that they mistook the Month wherein they made it dating it April 6. instead of May 6. published by them that morning which Declaration the day before was presented to the Speaker of the said Parliament at the Rolls by divers Officers of the Army in the name of Col Fleetwood and the Counsel of Officers of the Army in presence of many Members of the said Parliament containing their earnest desire That those Members who continued to sit since the year 1648. untill the 20 th of April 1653. would return to the exercise and discharge of their trust expressed in the foresaid Writs and Indentures alone by those who impowred elected entrusted them as their Representativs without any other forged new trust whatsoever inconsistent with or repugnant to it Promising their readiness in their places as became them to yield their utmost Assistance to them to sit in safety for improving the present opportunity for setling and securing the peace and freedom of this Common-wealth praying for the presence and blessing of God upon their endeavours who after they had sate many years in performance of the trust reposed in them by the people and being in the prosecution of that Duty assembled in Parliament at Westminster upon the 20 th day of April 1653. were then interrupted and forced out of the House from that time untill this very day Of which force they seemed in this Declaration unfeinedly to repent by an actual restitution of the Members formerly forced thence much more then of that greater and more apparent force of whole Regiments of Horse and Foot drawn up to the house it self in a violent maner Dec. 6. 1648. where they seised secured Mr. Pr. with above forty and secluded forced away above 300 Members more of the Commons House only for the faithfull discharge of their Trusts and Duties therein according to their Oaths Protestations Vows Covenants Consciences wherin most think they first turned out of the way by wandring into other wayes from righteous equal paths which Members though they do not particularly invite to sit again yet they having proved no breach of trust against them do not in the least measure intimate that they would forcibly seclude them from sitting if that Parliament should be publickly voted still in being by vertue of the Statute of 17 Carol● c. 7. as they in their Counsel of the Army have actually resolved by their invitation of the Members thereof to sit again as Mr. P. those Members who shewed it to him conceived upon their perusal thereof Mr. P. being after informed that the Old Speaker and sundry Members of the long Parliament were then met in the painted Chamber to consult together in order to their meeting again in the House was moved to go thither to them which he refused because it was no place where the House of Commons ever used to meet or sit as an House but only as a Committe upon conferences with the Lords Soon after Mr. P. heard by some Members and others that the old Speaker and about forty Members more with the Mace carried before them were gon from the Lords House into the Ho. of Com. there sate as an House by vertue of the Stat. of 17 Car. c. 7. and their old Elections by the Kings Writs Vpon which there being then above 30 of the old secluded Members in
History of the Independency part 2. Salmatius Bochartus * Hab. 2.12 Objection 2. Answ. Nota. * Better Acts than ever the Republicans made or intend to make for the peoples ease and benefit who only doubled trebled all their Taxes Grievances insteed of removeing them n Brooke Perkins Fitzherbert Ash. Tit. Condition 29. o Serj. Finch his Maximes of the Law Cook and others d Exact Col. p. 41. e Exact Col. p. 203. f Exact Col. p. 260. g Exact Col. p. 704. h Exact Collect p. 250. i Exact Collection p. 323. k Exact Collect p. 364. * Some of them Prisoners in execution sent for out of Goal to make up an House * 2 Kin. 21.23 24 c. 14.5.6 1 1 King 16.16 to 21. * See Exact Col. p. 135 148 317 to 314. a Alexand. ab Alexandro Gen. Dierum lib. 3. c 2 10. 2 Sam. 16 18. c. 19.41 42 43.8 11.6 c. 7.33 H. 8. c. 27. Exact Collect. p. 146. b Page 23. sect 4. printed by the Armies special order 1649. * Ol. Cromwell Ireton Corn. Holland and others of them stiled themselves a Mock-Parliament as Iohn Lilburn affirms c Grotius de Jure Belli l. 2. c. 15. sect 3.16 d Plowdons Comentaries f. 10.107 108 350 364. 4 E. 4.4 a Watsons Quodlibets ● 144 332. b Quodlibets p. 322 323 333 334 39.209.305 306 306 307 309. b Quodlibets p. 322 323 333 334 39.209.305 306 306 307 309. Nota. c Quodlibets p. 27 28 169. d Quodlibet 9. p. 286 430 332. Nota. e Here p. 19. f Imaginū Antwerp an 1940. Speculum Jesuiticum p. 210. g See his Epistle before his Historical and legal Vindication c. An. 1655. h Romes Master piece Hidden works of Darknesse c. A Collection of Ordinances p. 245 i A Collect. of Ordinances p. 245. k A Collect. p. 151 852 858 Vid Wekye of Durb A Collect. p. 906. l Romes Masterpiece m A Collect. p. 267. The History of Independency part 2. n The History of the Independency p. 2. o See Mr. Prynnes Speech Memento Epistle to his Historical legal Vindication Ludovicus Lucius Hist. Iesuitica p. 144 156 170. p See the false Iew and his examination Printed 1653. q See his Epistle before his printed Book 1652. * See his Iustice ō the Armies Remonstrance 1649. a See the Prositions to the King and Mr. Prynnes Speech p. 57 58. His Discovery of Free-state tyranny p. 18. b See their Votes in Feb. 1648. And Act for taking the Engagement Sep. 6. 1649. c 7 Iac. c. 6. Ro. Bellar. Responsio ad Apol. pro Iuramento Fidelitatis d See the Lord William Hewards and Prestons books in defence of the Oath Mr. Rushworths Historical Collections p. 347. e See the 2d part of the History of Independency f 3 Iac. c. 4. g See Grotius De lure Belli l. 2. c. 13. Dr. Sanderson of Oaths h See their Knack Sept. 6. 1649. ●●peculum ●●uit p. 40. ●●7 218. Lu●●vicus Luci●● Hist. Iesuit 〈◊〉 c. 2 p. 237 ●●3 288.300 ●●9 Near two ●●ndred thou●●d pounds a 〈◊〉 more 〈◊〉 all the ●● venues and ●●xes ●●ount to 〈◊〉 good ●●bands are k See the Diuruals and Almanacks from 1648. to 1653. v See Mr. Prynnes di●scovery of Free state Tyranny p. 19 20. See Prynnes ●pistle before 〈◊〉 Legal and ●●storical ●ollections ● 1655. ●ee the 2d ●t of the ●●story of In●●pendancy n See his Book and Description of the West-Indies o See Romes Master-piece and Hidden works of Darkness brought to publick light * Herep. 19. p See Mr. Prynnes 3d. part of his Legal Historical Vindication Collection c. p. 343. to 397. q Ibid. p. 391 392. Flor. Wigorn Sim. Dunelm Hoveden Mat. Westm. Mat. Pa●is Bromton Anno 1066 1067. r Malm. de Gest. Reg. l. 3. p. 103. s Malm. ibid. sim. Dunelm Col. 213. Brompton Col. 976. t Flor. Wigorn p. 556. Sim. Dunelm Col. 216 217. u Flor. Wigorn p. 464. Sim. Dunelm Col. 223. Hov. Annal pars 1. p. 466. * Malm. de Gestis Reg. l. 3. p. 103. * Mat 25.41 42 42. * See August Tom 10. Ser. 21. * 1 Pet. 4.18 z Epistola 4● Tom. 2. See Homil. 50. set 21. Tom. 10. Peter Lumbard sent l. 4. dist 16. and the schoolmen on him Alex. Alensis sum Theol. pars 4. quaest 24. mem 5. * Sodainly takē frō his Son by his nearest Relations and Army-Officers notwithstanding their proclaiming him his successor and all Addresses to live and dye with him and that without one drawn sword * August Ep. 44. * Ferdinandus Imperator subegis Austriam Bonemiam Moraviam S●●siam Hurgatiam Palatinatum utr●mque ex lisque Hae●eticutum Patriarch●s Hus●itas REBELLIONUM FACES CALVINISTAS expulit prostigavit Agit● pri●cipes generosi pargit● magnis animis opu● foericibus adeo auspiciis caeptum confi●●● 〈◊〉 paribus studi●● REBELLEM CALVINI CHAERESIN paene ●vulsam STIRPITU● UBILIBET ERADICATE ut p●tti●●● pestiferis memb●i● dissectis Germania redinteg●ati revalescere pristinasque vires et robut queat collige●e c. Cornelius Cornelli Jesu●●● Praes●t 24 S. Trini●a●●● Commenta●iis in M●●ores Propherus praefix So● Militiere his Victory of Truth * Rom. 3.8 a De Monarchia Hisp. c. 25 2● 27. b See his Instructions c Paulus Windeck de Extirpandis Haeresibus Antid 10.11 p 408.412.480 244. Hospinian Hist. Jesuit l. 3. l. 4. p. 212 213 214. Lud. Lucius Hist. Jesuit l. 1. p. 175. l. 2. p. 186 187 188. Johan Cambilhonus de Rebus Jesuitarum Abstrusio●ib us An. 1608. d See my 1. 2. Demurrer to the Jews long discontinued Remitter into England * see hete p. 42 43. My Quakers Vnmasked 1655. And New Discovery of Romish Emissaries 1656. f See his Whitehall Ordinances for Excise and Taxes 14 Decemb 17 March 1653. May 4. June 8. 1654 The 1. Part of my Legal and Historical Vindication c. p. 66.10 90. a Exact Collection p. 7.10.267 268 340 342.376.459.491 to 495.503.573 575 660.665 666 825.832.839.907 to 916.932.951 b A Collection of Ordinances p. 13.30.34.42 43.98 99.161.167 168 169.185.199.203 204 211.227.275.282.294.305.313.317.340.363 371.380.417.420 423 425.432.451 to 460.504.513.537 539.616.623.666.679.877 878. Appendix P. 4.15 * Here p. 42. c See their impeachments Trials The Act Ordinance for their Attainders Mr. Pyms speech Mr. St. Iohns Declaration Argument ●gainst them ●nd first part ●f my Legal ●nd Historical ●indication ●c Lilly and ●ulpepper Nota. t See Hospinian Hist. Iesuitica l. 3. 4. speculum Iesuiticum p. 119. Ludovicus Lucius Histor Iesuit l. 4 c 5 where it is printed at large Thuanus Hist l 138. k Hist. Gallica Belgica l ● f. 151 152. Speculum Iesuiticum p. 75.80 The general History of France in H. 4. and Lewis 13. Hospinian Historia Iesuit l. 3.153 to 159. Lud. Lucius Histor. Iesuit l. 3. c 2. * Nota. * Watsons Quodlibets p. 92 94 95. Dialogue p. 95. a Ps. 115.1 b Ps. 46.7 11. Ps.