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A28914 Manifest truth, or, An inversion of truths manifest containing a narration of the proceedings of the Scottish army, and a vindication of the Parliament and kingdome of England from the false and injurious aspersions cast on them by the author of the said manifest. Bowles, Edward, 1613-1662. 1646 (1646) Wing B3873; ESTC R19508 56,538 84

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Gentleman who must not be mentioned without Honour for God hath honoured him and sir Iohn Meldrum whose faithfulnesse to this cause and diligence in it was very eminent made their first attempt upon Selby where God was pleased to give them great and seasonable successe in storming and taking that Towne and in it a number equall to those that assaulted notwithstanding the many Horse that were in it where also was the Governour of Yorke Mr. Iohn Bellasys who was taken prisoner This businesse has hardly been parallelled since this Warre save at Wakefield when Generall Goring was taken in like manner by sir Thomas Fairfax and his party rather then Army New-Castle hearing this newes and fearing lest Yorke also the receptacle of most of the Northerne Papists who were not in Armes whom he had most reason to respect should be surprized or surrendred thought best to move Southward with his Armie and did accordingly and getting start of the Scots Armie by a sudden march came to Yorke about the middle of Aprill and lodged the remainder of his Foot there for his Northerne expedition had lost him many men who were wearied out with the hardinesse of the Scots and sent sir Charles Lucas away Southward with his Horse which were followed by some Scottish and Yorkeshire Horse but not overtaken The Scottish Army followed Southward and joined with the Forces under command of my Lord Fairfax betwixt Wetherby and Selby where after consultation they draw neare to Yorke and if a sufficient strength could be made up by the accession of the Earle of Manchesters Forces which was desired and hoped they resolved to sit downe before Yorke which was accordingly done Generall Leven pitching his Quarter at Midlethorp my Lord Fairfax at Foulford and my Lord Manchester at Heslington the Scots Quarters kept in the Towne on the West-side of the River the Earle of Manchester and Lord Fairfax on the East-side and to my Lord Fairfax his assistance was sent a very noble Gentleman and able Commander sir Iames Lunsdaine with a Regiment or two of Foote who lay at Foulford the Horse of all the Armies in the meane time were sent towards the West of Yorkshire which was the onely way the Enemy had to come and interrupt the siege the other wayes by the advantage of Rivers being impassable upon opposition this siege was carried on with very commendable unanimity and correspondency of Counsels on all sides each acting their part The Scots tooke in a Fort on the South-side of the Town attempted another neare the great Fort but held it not and had severall skirmishes with the Enemies Horse in one of which they lost a gallant Gentleman Leiutenant Collonel Ballantine who not content with a little honour to gaine more lost his life my Lord Manchesters men made their approaches very neare at Bowden and Monk-barres my Lord Fairfax his men at Wolmsgate where they tooke a Church and divers prisoners in it onely Major Generall Crawfurd a valiant and forward man made an unhappy attempt upon the Mannor House without due notice to the other Forces and was beaten out with the losse of many men After this siege had continued two moneths or thereabouts towards the end of Iune Prince Rupert comes to the reliefe of Yorke by the way of Lancashire draining Garrisons and raising men with all diligence and severity and thereto added an act of cruelty at Boulton At this time upon the importunity of Lancashire sir Iohn Meldrum after that by his conduct the Castle of Cawood and the strong Fort of Airesmouth were taken which much advantaged our provisions from Hull by water was sent with a Party thither to doe what service he had opportunity howsoever to secure if possible the Town of Manchester which had been yet inviolate for the Parliament and accordingly did so The Prince after he had strengthned himselfe what he could drawes neare to Yorke by the way of Burrowbridge and comes upon the North-side of the River Owse whereupon the Armies resolve to joyne and fight him and so the last of Iune the siege was raised the Towne in some measure relieved but the Prince not satisfied with that he had done would needs draw over the River againe about three miles from Yorke to fight our Forces upon that side the River in which he made a desperate attempt and as I am informed was so told by Lieutenant Generall King in regard our Armie might fall upon him while he was passing the River But he was resolved and gave command to the Earle of New-Castle to draw his men out of Yorke to his assistance which was done though not so soone as was expected but soone enough to a bad bargaine Our united Armies were marching off thinking to prevent the Princes march Southward and were going towards Tadcaster on the day of the fight thinking to crosse some nearer way and meet him in his return but he saved them that labour and drew up in their Reare in a place called Hessey-Moore neare Long-Marston of which sir Thomas Fairfax having the Reare gave speedie notice and Orders were presently given to face about to the Enemy which was accordingly done and the Princes Army being drawne up in the Moore our Armies drew up into the fields adjoyning and so much of the heath as was left them Sir Thomas Fairfax commanded the right wing consisting of his owne Horse and some from Lancashire Lieutenant Generall Cromwell the left wing the Scots Horse were equally divided three Regiments on the right wing and three on the left on which wing also was there then Generall Major David Lesley My Lord Manchesters Foote were drawne on the left Wing next the Horse and the Scots Foote and my Lord Fairefaxes in the body and right wing the Battaile began about six or seven of the clock in the evening Iuly the 2. The right Wing commanded by sir Thomas Fairfax was disordered for he had among other disadvantages these two especially first the worst part of the ground being so full of Whinnes as that his Horse could not march up and was next the hedges possessed by the Enemy Secondly he had also many new raised Horse which had never seene service who did not play the part of Reserves as became them so that after his owne Regiment and Collonel Lamberts had charged with valour and good successe for want of supplies that wing was wholly routed himselfe stayed in the field where he received a marke of Honour on his face the Scots Horse also on that side quit the field and left the Earl of Lyndeseys Regiment of Foot standing bare which yet acquitted it selfe well for sir Charles Lucas coming up with Horse to charge them his owne Horse was shot in the head of his Regiment and he was taken Prisoner But whilest this was doing on the right our friends on the left wing sped very well through Gods mercy and wholly routed the Enemy and came about to the right and at last cleared the
possessed of the Towne the English thought it but reasonable to be trusted with Carlisle on the Scots borders as well as the Scots with Barwick on the English especially they having Garrisond Newcastle and foure other places besides the English Commissioners no Scotch Committee being there to joyne with them sent to Sir Tho Glenham that if he would surrender the Towne they would propound him conditions and the security of the Parliament for performance The Lord Kirkabright meets the Drum examines his businesse and gives way to his going in Sir Thomas Glenham desires the security of a Generall for the performance of Articles and thereupon a Messenger of his owne one Captaine Philipson is sent to my Lord Fairfax and the Earle of Leven to know their pleasure having a passe from the English Commissioners and the Lord Kirkabright and being accompanied with an English Captaine from the Commissioners and a Scotch Officer from the Lord Kirkabright he goes to my Lord Fairfax but finding my Lord of Leven to be gone out of Yorkeshire and the time for his returne well-nigh expired he durst not adventure to goe into Nottinghamshire to the Earle of Leven his Passe being limited onely to Yorkeshire and therefore he returned to Carlisle and my Lord Fairfax writes to the Earle of Leven about that businesse David Lesley in the meane time was sent with all speed towards Carlisle he comes thither before the Messenger returnes and forbids his going in whereupon Sir Thomas Glenham seeing his Messenger stopped by the Scots Commander notwithstanding the Passe of the English Commissioners and the Lord Kirkabright he supposes they had most power and falls to Treaty with him which Lieutenant Generall Lesley never acquainted our Commissioners with but notwithstanding their minding him of the Treaty and Covenant their Protestation against his proceedings without them he concludes the Treaty set Guards of Horse upon the English enters the Towne and puts a Garrison in it where it yet remaineth This is a true and briefe account of the siege and taking of Carlisle Some Annotations must be made upon the Narrative in Truths Manifest First he chargeth the English Souldiers that lay there of being false to the Service in shooting powder suffering Provisions to goe in entring into combination with the Enemy to fall upon the Scots and promising not to help them These accusations are as false as foule it is strange these things were never questioned nor complained of till now the Towne is taken We can assure that a Scottish Officer being desired to relieve Collonel Cholmleys men when the Enemy sallyed out he refused to stirre being at the next Post and neare at hand and suffered the men to be lost shew us such a carriage of the English If want of Orders be pretended as it was by him either the Orders were defective or the man The English desire also to put it to the issue who let most provision goe in Captaine Philipson indeed sallyed out with a Party of Horse on the Scottish Post and fetched fourty head of Cattell or thereabout and two Pieces of Ordnance out of their Sconce parallel that Act also As for the point of the treacherie they disclaim it and defie it why should you compell me to say that on the Scottish side Sir Iames Lesley and his Lady with her sister who were both Papists had ingresse and regresse into Carlisle by their meanes that Sir Timothy Fetherston was suffered to come to Penrith and there dranke the Parliaments confusion and yet was afterwards suffered to come forth againe at which time he broke his Paroll and went either to Ireland or the King that Denton and Carleton notorious Malignants were suffered to goe up and downe and disaffect the people and raile upon the Parliament and when sent for by the English Commissioners were protected against their power and justice The foulnesse of your imputations hath forced from me these things which no slight occasion should but by this you may judge who favoured Malignants most It is further charged that those double minded Leaders enter into a private Treaty with the Enemy and offer him great conditions This was a mistake or worse there was no Leaders medled but the English Commissioners who proceeded no further then the Narrative relates and never offered any conditions at all As for the Scots offering reasonable conditions lesse advantagious to the Enemy then the English You have heard the English offered no conditions let us see what the Scots offered they were such as they would never impart neither to our Commissioners nor the Parliament but a Copy was obtained which they deny not wherein was granted almost what was asked as Liberty to goe to any Garrison they should name to have a Convoy as they had to Worcester above a hundred miles distant the immunities of the Church and Church-men freedome to take the Covenant or not Libertie to goe with what they would except Towne and Ordnance whither they would and to have free Quarter in a word never so high Articles given to any Town never any Town had lesse reason to expect it had things been fairely carried for they were eating Dogs and Horses and could not subsist three dayes What followes is almost wholly false that the Enemy tooke the Scots Conditions because he could not trust the English Officers The English Officers medled not in the businesse because a Committee was present there of English Scil. Sir VVilliam Armine Mr. Darley Mr. Barwis whom the Generall would not much lesse should the Lieutenant Generall have dealt so with as not to acquaint them with the Treaty And as for the Commission given to Lieutenant Generall Lesley to take in the Towne upon what conditions he thought fit he shewed no such in writing if he had it had been unjust we having Commissioners upon the place And he concludes this strange story of Carlisle with the pretended reasons why the Scots put in a Garrison into Carlisle scil. Because they had found base and wicked dealings by some of the chiefe men in the Northerne Counties and to keep it out of the hands of Malignants and especially Sir VVilfrid Lawson who under the name of the chiefe Commander is no better then railed on consider the condtion of this Gentleman it 's true he cannot be justifyed throughout he lived in an ill aire and was infected with it but never stirred out of the County to doe any prejudice to the Parliament but suffered imprisonment for his not ready complyance with the Commissioners of Aray When it was to any purpose for him to appeare on the behalfe of the Parliament he raised a Regiment of Horse and another of Foot for the Service of the Parliament which he applyed himselfe to with all diligence and can produce testimonies of his care and fidelity under the hands of those you say distrusted him and was of very good reputation with the Scots till the time of the surrender drew neare and then his appearing for
right for my owne advantage And therefore though not without sense yet without feare of any danger that may spring from men impatient and mindfull of oppositions I enter upon the worke in which I shall observe this method First to give a true and short Narrative of the proceedings of the Scotch Army since they came into England wherein I shall endeavour to doe them all possible right And secondly make some Animadversions upon divers passages in Truths Manifest wherein though something may be said against the Manifest yet nothing against the Truth for we can doe nothing against the Truth THE NARRATIVE AFter that the Parliament of England had conflicted for the space of a yeare ' with the dangers and difficulties of this unhappy Warre God in his Wisdome and Justice not seeing fit to direct us to the right improvement of our owne strength they dispatch Commissioners to the Kingdome of Scotland to treat with them about the raising and bringing in an Army to their assistance against the combination of Papists Prelates and Malignants endeavouring to subvert Religion and Liberty The Commissioners being foure Members of the House of Commons accompanyed with two Reverend Divines of the Assembly went from London towards the latter end of Iuly 1643. and in the beginning of August came to Edenburgh where they were expected before they came and when they came welcome The Commissioners upon their coming addresse themselves to the convention of Estates then sitting as also to the generall Assembly that they would contribute their help so farre as they were concerned after few dayes a Covenant was propounded and agreed on by the Commissioners and a Committee appointed to consider of that businesse with them which was sent immediately into England for approbation and received it with little or no materiall alteration and was returned to Scotland in a short time and so was generally taken in both Kingdomes while this was in hand a Treaty also was offered and debated about bringing an Army for the assistance of the Parliament of England which was also mutually agreed betwixt the Kingdomes and is of late published After this foundation laid though the time of year was something unseasonable for building upon it being winter the Estates of Scotland having received 50000 l. of the 100000 l. mentioned in the Treaty bestowed their power and diligence in levying men so that about the middle of Ianuary an Army well cloathed and armed was brought to the Borders of England which they entred about the twentieth of that moneth at which time Lieutenant Generall Lesley passed over Barwick bridge with some Troopes of Horse for the Towne of Barwick by the care of the Commissioners of Parliament then in Scotland who sent one of their owne number for that purpose was happily made a Garrison for the Parliament and after that by Treaty betwixt the Kingdomes assigned to the Scots for a Magazine and retreat while there should be use of their Army in England A little after the entrance of those Horse and Foot that came in by the way of Barwick the Lieutenant Generall of Foot Baly passed the water at Kelsey by the advantage of a great Frost which bore the Ordnance and met the noble Generall the Earle of Leven about Alnwick The Enemy commanded by Sir Thomas Glenham made no opposition in Northumberland but retreated from the borders to Alnwick and so to Morpeth and then to New-Castle where the Earl of New-Castle met him with more Forces so that the Scottish Army had a free passage to the workes and wals of New-Castle which they came to about the beginning of February At their approach after some slight Skirmishes of Horse there was an attempt made upon a strong Fort at the East-side of the Towne but without successe a little after it was thought fit to dispose the Army to some Quarters neare the Towne on the North-side of the River Tyne During the time of their lying there nothing of moment fell out but the fight at Corbridge where there was not much hurt done but the Scots had the worse losing some Prisoners and retreating yet not so hastily but they tooke Collonel Brandling in their returne who after that became a Proselyte this was all that passed on the North-side Tyne saving that the Castle of Warkworth was surrendred to the Marquesse of Argyle who marched by the way of the Sea with some Forces to the Army of which Castle he made one Captain Lysle Governour after some time spent on the North-side Trent the lying of the Army there was found uselesse and inconvenient and a resolution was taken towards the end of February to passe the Tyne leaving onely some Forces at Bedlington and Blythesnooke to secure that little Harbour being very convenient for Provisions The Enemy at the passing over Tyne made no opposition but were so kind as to let them march over Newbridge a very inconvenient passage had it beene disputed and so take possession of Sunderland a place which proved full of advantages to the Army afterwards in respect of provisions which were brought thither in great plenty from London and other places and exchanged for Coale During the aboade of the Army about Sunderland in the moneth of March ending the yeare 1643. they fortifyed Sunderland as well as the place was capable and tooke a strong Fort at Southshields over against Tynmouth Castle at the second attempt In the meane time the Enemies head Quarter was at Durham where were the Earle of New-Castle Lieutenant Generall King sir Charles Lucas lately come from the South with a supply of Horse and a very considerable Army they came and faced the Scots Army twice within two miles of Sunderland first on the South side then on the North-side the River Were At first we heard of nothing memorable but very cold nights in which the Scots Army had good advantage of the Kings and made good use of it for by keeping close to them many of the Enemies Horses were reported to be strayed and their souldiers courage cooled which was found true at their next appearance Shortly after when they drew up about Hilton and Bowdon at which time also the Scottish Army was drawn out against them but no ingagement of consequence each Army kept its advantage onely there was some slight skirmishing amongst the hedges where for ought I ever heard the number of the slaine was equall or little different but at last the Kings Army drew off and being discerned so to doe by the Scottish Armie they fell upon their Reare and tooke some Prisoners but killed very few not the tenth part of the number mentioned in Truths manifest and so they parted After this the Scottish Army not being well able to endure their straitnesse of Quarters tooke a resolution to march towards the Enemy and either fight with him or enlarge their Quarters about this my Lord Fairefax who had beene long confined to Hull tooke the field againe and with sir Thomas Fairfax a
this coming to the Army after some consultation had they raised their siege to which they were induced as by the condition of their owne Country so by the report of the Kings coming towards them with a strength of Horse which might endanger them they having sent Lieutenant generall Lesley away towards the North where he stayed with respect to Scotland as also to interrupt the Kings intentions Northward whither he most applyed himselfe When sir Thomas Fairfax was gone Westward with his Army it was expected that the Partie with Lieutenant Generall Lesley and the English with him should have pursued or fallen upon the Enemie at that time but the King marching Southward towards Huntington and the Scottish Horse being bound Northward it could not be At this time the necessities of Scotland so requiring the Lieutenant Generall marched into Scotland where suddenly after his arrivall he happily fals upon Montrosse now divided from Kilketto and not looking for him so soone and obtaines a happy victory over him and seasonably through Gods mercy alters the face of things in Scotland This newes meets the Scottish Armie marching Northwards in Yorkshire and staies their journey further and gives them libertie to repose in the North and West ridings of that County which by the calamitie of these Warres are now almost wasted and will be brought either to utter ruine or some dangerous way of preventing it unlesse the Parliament afford timely reliefe While the Army was quartering here the Lord Digby comes with a Party of Horse as is said for Scotland he surprizes the English Foot quartered at Sherburne but by the seasonable pursuit of Collonel Copley and Collonel Lilburne was defeated lost his booty and his baggage with divers Letters of moment into the bargaine and was forced to take a hilly way to Cumberland where sir Iohn Browne got an advantage of him as his remnant was passing over a water where the tyde hindered one part from the reliefe of the other and so he was forced to the Isle of Man and thence hath betaken himselfe into Ireland from whence we daily heare from him This passage concerning my Lord Digby though his greatest blow was by the Yorkeshire Forces I thought fit to insert that I might not omit that action of sir Iohn Brownes which the Parliament was pleas'd to take notice of After the Scottish Army had lyen sometime in Yorkeshire about November at the desire of the Parliament and the Committee of both Kingdomes they marched to block up Newarke on the North-side where they had possession given them of Muskham Bridge which the Enemy had intended to burne but did it not and the Fort in the Island that commands it which makes their worke on the North-side Trent very easie in regard the Towne Forts and Castle stand on the South-side the River Since their blocking up Newarke there hath not beene much of action once the Enemy by the advantage of the Ice fell into their Quarters killed the Adjutant Generall of Foot but received as well as did hurts since that the Enemy made a sally upon the Scots who were making a Fort in the Island but after some little losse on each part were very well repelled and beaten in And let me not forget the readinesse of the Lieutenant Generall to send some Foot to Collonel Poyntz for the strengthning his Quarters at Stoake And so have we followed the Scots Army consisting now of about seven or eight thousand Horse and Foote most Horse according to a Muster lately taken by the English Commissioners to the siege of Newarke where also is a Committee of Lords and Commons from the Parliament contributing their best assistance to the carrying on the Service against Newarke who have above these three moneths expected a Committee from Scotland to joyne with them according to the Treaty but they are not yet come It is hoped notwithstanding that there shall be such mutuall care and concurrence betwixt the Forces as that strong Garrison shall in due time be reduced to the great advantage of the North and happinesse of the whole Kingdome which is very much concerned in the successe of it And thus have you a true Narrative of the entrance and proceedings of the Scottish Army since it came into England where I have not willingly nor I hope negligently omitted any thing materiall more circumstances might have been brought in to attend the substance of this discourse but many of them being not acceptable it was thought best to omit them or at least referre them to the second part which containes Animadversions upon some passages of the Manifest and other Papers printed to the disadvantage of Truth and reflecting upon the Parliament of England THE Animadversions FIRST the whole Booke and the printing of it to me deserves an Animadversion Who is this man that makes so bold an adventure to intermeddle in things of highest consequence betwixt the two Kingdomes their Parliaments and Armies which their Wisdome and tendernesse made them forbeare Me thinks their silence might have prompted reverence to the Author He calls indeed his booke An Answer pag. 4. and alleadges Scripture for it but to whom is it An Answer none had put pen to paper in this businesse it came not into the thought of any wise man to meddle and the very Diurnals which bespatter every body were very modest as to the Scots and their Army Therefore is the Gentleman constrained for want of work to make himselfe an Adversary which he calls by the name of Sinisirous Reports in the second line of his Relation Had it not been better to have suffered these Reports to have vanished in the ayre then to give them the advantage of an Eccho I feare lest the work prove unprofitable as unnecessary works use to doe forward vindications sometimes occason untoward Questions and controverted things have sometimes more advantage by silence then debate But well meaning men as they are styled must be undeceived Let that be put to the issue whether so or rather whether those that have been before deceived by Reports be not now cousned in Print If it be found so it is a double fault the falshood in the Booke is one Truth in the title another Per amici fallere nomen Tuta frequensque via est sed via crimen habet But to the particulars The first thing is his Animadversions upon the Commissioners of Scotland for not being so popular in their applications and satisfactions to the multitude as he thinks fit In which notice may be taken of his expressions and of his charge the expressions to mee seeme disproportionable to the honour and employment of so Honourable and worthy persons He tells them pag. 3 That he cannot esteeme their prudence in this Pag. 4. You have mistaken the right way sirs ibid. you are hugely mistaken Pag. 11. He chargeth them with being meale-mouth'd and with remissenesse and concludes with his Magisteriall hopes pag. 13. that being freely admonished they will
12. neither their own power or holinesse much lesse the profession of holinesse hath done any thing but the name of Christ in which they have troden downe their Enemies As for the passage concerning the Generall that he is little spoken of for doing much he sees the hooke and neglects the baite God and all good men love and honour him He proceeds in this 76. page to shew how fit it is to employ fit men lest God be tempted It 's granted and was practised the Gentlemen imployed were fit men they were many of them godly men slight not that Godlinesse is profitable for all things They were and have approved themselves diligent men Another speciall requisite in a Souldier they were as hath often appeared stout and valiant men But what shall we doe for experience I answer some men gaine more experience in two yeares then others in ten because they are more advertent and have better parts And for our English Warres our English experience is as good as any and we have had more experimentall Service in these three or foure yeares warre in England then falls out in other parts in a farre longer time But we desired men of forraigne experience and they refused therefore we must take English Let me here adde an advertisement to my Countrey-man for I suppose I am taken to be an English-man It hath been as the usuall disposition so no small fault of this Nation contrary to the good example of their neighbours to depresse one another admire and adore strangers for unknowne vertues which hath kept this Kingdome lower in its Reputation then it deserved I shall not doubt to deliver it for a Position that you have at this time especially for our English affaires Souldiers of your own Nation so able and active in Service that if you goe further for ought I know you may fare worse and if God give us but grace to imbrace union instead of faction wee may doe him a great deale of Service and ourselves and Neighbours right A word more Pag. 77. The Author accounts it a misery why in the framing an Army there should be more regard had of the Piety and honesty of the Officers then the Souldiers This mystery is very clear in Scripture and Reason First God lookes more at Commanders then inferiours Ier. 5. 4. 5. Loe these are poore tnd foolish I will get me to the great men if they breake the bands a Lyon out of the Forest comes in Secondly in reason good Officers may reclaime and restraine Souldiers by authority and example and so cannot good Souldiers ill Officers But I have done a businesse of moment followes concerning Carlisle Pag. 77. The Author of the Manifest enters upon the businesse of the Siege and reduction of Carlile and to make this businesse cleare since I omitted the Relation of it in the Narrative I must adde it here Carlisle was in the possession of the Enemy when the Scots entred After Yorke was taken it being thought a considerable place to hold footing in the North Sir Thomas Glenham was sent thither to command the Towne In September about the beginning of it the Commonalty of Cumberland and Westmorland laying downe their Armes upon the desire of Mr. Barwis Sir Wilfrid Lawson and others the Scots Horse being six Regiments and one of Dragoones commanded by Lieutenant Generall Lesley went into those parts yet went not direct to Carlisle but stayed at Penrith in which time Carlisle was further victualled after that they draw neare and with the assistance of Sir Wilfrid Lawson who had raised some strength of Horse and foot blocked up the Towne After this in the latter end of October some Regiments of the Scots Horse were removed and onely two and the Dragoones remaining which with the Forces of the County were thought sufficient for the Service and as many as the Country could well beare Thus was Carlisle straitned in which Service the English kept five and sometimes six Posts and the Scots but two all that Winter Toward the beginning of Aprill those two Counties of Cumberland and Westmorland having lyen under heavie burthens amounting to 80000. l. or thereabouts which the Scots Horse had received besides the charge of maintaining their owne Forces began to grow impatient of their burthen and after they saw that notwithstanding the Ordinances of Parliament forbidding all Arbitrary assessements and appointing a way of provision for the Scots Army and the order of the Generall to forbid all taxes from the first of March their oppressions were still continued the Westmorland men resisted the collection of them thereupon the Committee of both Kingdomes at Newcastle sent a letter to the Committees of those Counties dated Aprill 21. 1645. subscribed Leven Callander William Armine declaring that if those two Counties would undertake to raise and maintaine sufficient Forces to keepe in the Garrison of Carlisle the Scots Horse should be removed hereupon the Committees of Cumberland and Westmorland consulted and agreed to undertake the Service and gave notice thereof to the Committee at Newcastle and the Scots Generall in a Lotter dated Aprill the 25. 1645. and provided three thousand Foote and six hundred Horse which with the advantage of the workes they had made were sufficient to the worke but in stead of removing the Scots Horse a Regiment of Foote were sent to Carlisle with three peeces of Ordnance when the Scots marched Southward from Newcastle and Sir Iohn Browne sent word to the Westmorland men coming up according to agreement to the Service against Carlisle that he would fight with them if they came on After this the whole Army marches into Westmorland and sends more commanded men to Carlisle and impose seven thousand pound a moneth upon these two Counties for the maintenance of their Force before Carlisle besides the maintenance of their owne and that after Declaration made under the hands of the Earle of Leven Calander and Armyne dated Aprill 25. 1645. that no Taxe should be laid upon them but by Authority of Parliament About this time the Lord Kirkbright who commanded the Scots Force therefor that present sent orders to Lieutenant Collonel Beecher Sir Wilfrid Lawsons Lieutenant Collonel to quit a Fort which he had made at Bockerby Mount and to resigne it to three hundred commanded Foot of the Scots Army the Lieutenant Collonel refused unlesse his Collonel gave consent thereupon the noble Lord replied he desired no better occasion to cut them all in pieces and said he would command my Lord Fairfax if there and sent his Foot and some Horse to beleager the Sconce instead of the Towne which was not well After this about the middle of Iune when the time of Carlisles surrender drew neare the English Commissioners having received instructions from the Parliament concerning the place and the Government of it when it should be reduced went thither but no Scottish Commissioners to joyne with them the English and Scots were both desirous to be