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A92997 Several proposals for peace & freedom, by an agreement of the people, offered unto Commissary General Ireton for the concurrence of the Army, by the approbation and consent of many worthy persons of the Common Councel and others of the city of London, on the eleventh of this instant December, to be agreed unto, and subscribed by all the inhabitants of England & VVales. Jubbes, John.; Ireton, Henry, 1611-1651. 1648 (1648) Wing S2799; Thomason E477_18; ESTC R21362 5,987 11

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SEVERAL PROPOSALS FOR Peace Freedom BY AN AGREEMENT OF THE PEOPLE Offered unto Commissary General IRETON for the Concurrence of the Army by the Approbation and Consent of many worthy Persons of the Common Councel And others of the City of LONDON on the Eleventh of this instant December To be Agreed unto and Subscribed by all the Inhabitants OF England Wales LONDON Printed for J Hanes Decemb. 22. 1648. SEVERAL PROPOSALS FOR Peace Freedom BY AN AGREEMENT OF THE PEOPLE WHereas those His Majesties failings published to us and the World by the several Declarations and Remonstrances of Parliament cannot be denyed whereby through the violation of his Oath and Covenant made unto the People at his Coronation all our late and present Woe and Miseries of War both in England and Ireland have come as also the great Divisions amongst our most worthy and eminent persons of the Commonwealth with the great distempered and unconstant actings and high failings even in the Parliament it self And for that it is the due Right and Priviledge of the folk or People of this Nation to make and choose our and their Laws by an equal Representative in Parliament as by the aforesaid Coronation Oath and Covenant fully appeareth Therefore the Right Honorable the Lord Major Aldermen and Common-Councel of the City of London do in the Name of the City First Humbly offer unto the Right Honorable The High Court of Parliament assembled at Westminster this present intituled Paper called A Great Agreement of all the People of England and Wales for their Approbation and Subscription and that it may thence be dismissed and forth with sent into every part of the Land to be Agreed on Consented to and Subscribed by all the Free-born People of the same above the age of Sixteen on pain for the Refusers to be excluded and debarred the protection of the Law of the Land and that all the Subscriptions may be brought in to the present particular Representatives of Parliament to be Returned and Recorded there for a grand law forever First We Agree 1. THat the King by the Advice of his evil Councel through usurpring and incroaching upon our Freedoms and by leaving the Parliament and leavying a War against it is guilty of all the Blood vast expence of Treasure and Ruine that hath been occasioned by these Wars within the Kingdoms of England and Ireland II. That if any King of England shall hereafter challenge to himself a Negative Voyce to the Determinations of the Representative in Parliament and shall not according to the Duty of his Kingly Office Consent and Sign all such Laws as the People by their Representative The Commons of England from time to time assembling in Parliament after Confultation had with the Lords therein when sitting shall make and choose may be deposed by the same Parliament And that what Subject of the Nation that shall assist or side with him therein may upon good proof thereof not onely from thenceforth be deemed and taken for Enemies to the State and therefore not onely void of the protection of the Laws but dealt with as in a case of high Treason And that the particular Representatives do from time to time wholly prosecute and pursue in Parliament all such Instructions as the People for whom they are chosen and serve shall at the day of their Elections and afterwards be required unto And that no Officer of War or Member of the Committee of State shall be chosen into any first next following Parliament after their discharge thereof III. That in all Laws made or to be made every person may be bound alike and that no Degree of Lords Peers of Parliament now or hereafter assembled or others No Tenure Estate Charter or Office soever shall confer any exemption from the ordinary Course of Justice and Legal Proceedings whereunto others are subjected IV. That our meanings and intentions are Not to leave our selves lyable to the least of mercy touching our Freedoms either of the most Righteous or evil and unrighteous Princes disclaiming confidence in vain man But knowing that Justice of punishment ought never to be inflicted but where in Reason it will convert into mercy and seeing that it hath pleased God That a Covenant is passed between this Nation and our Brethren of Scotland whereby mercy is claimed by that Nation on his Majesties behalf Therefore if the King shall Assent unto this Agreement that then He may be Proclaimed and Crowned King again And who after the first four years in which the Kingdoms Debts may be paid may in a Parliamentary way have as great an Annual Revenue conferred upon him as one year with another of his Reign was yet ever brought into the Exchequer notwithstanding those vast illegal sums thereof raised by the multitude of Monopolies and destroying usurping Projects Except what shall be defalked for such Charges as henceforth shall be thought fit to be defrayed by the Parliament which formerly was done by the King V. That all or any person or persons that shall approve or any way allow of any thing which the King or any person by or under him have done in this late miserable and destructive War may be dealt with as in a case of high Treason And that neither any such who have assisted the King in person or otherwise and such as have approved of any thing done against the State in the said War may not sit or have place in the next Parliament or Voyces in the Elections thereof VI. That if any person or persons whatsoever that shall any way wilfully endeavor to disgrace by approbrious speeches any person or persons for assisting the King in his War against the Parliament may be bound to the good Behavior with great Surety for the same And that no man whatsoever be hereafter questioned for any thing done in reference to the late publique Differences since the year 1641. further then in execution of the Judgement of this present Parliament VII That a general Revisement may be had of all the Laws and Statutes now in force and that those intending and relating to the maintenance of Popery Prelacy Episcopacy Superstition and all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction or Government and whatsoever else that wil not best stand with the good of the nation according to this present age may be Repealed And that all those that shall be continued unto us may be put in execution according to the purity and truth thereof that the tediousness and long delays formerly exercised therein as also all undue practice thereof may be wholly taken away so as that intended chiefest good for the peaceable well-being of the Common-wealth may not henceforth be exercised to the great disquieting and wasting of the people as formerly even hitherto it hath done And that such sure provisions be speedily made not onely for the hinderance and avoiding of all Vagabonds and Beggars but for a conscientious and sufficient Relief for all the poor and indigent people that none