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A38489 The second part of the svrvey of the articles of the late reiected peace wherein the invaliditie and nvllitie of the said peace is proved, I. by the revocation of the Marques of Ormands commission before any peace was legally concluded &c., 2. by the defect by Walt Enos ... Enos, Walter. 1646 (1646) Wing E3130; ESTC R3649 90,779 124

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Sapientiae my language is low my conceptions plaine my thoughts the best to Religion and Contry I doubt not many iudgements will pass vpon me some will terme me precipitant others hott and others bitter I can giue to all the answere of S. Paul si hominibus placerem Christi seruus non essem Nor are my lines to feede mens humour but with reasons to ouercome theire vnderstanding I may be precipitant out of weaknes of reason and hot out of frailtie of nature but bitter I am not out of malice If the purgation proue bitter the Patient may not blame the nature of his Phisician but the malignant nature of his owne disease Renowned Catholikes Religion and Ireland are vnder your hands you haue it in your power next God to kill or saue both I know you all intend to make a peace let it be a good one I haue remoued a blocke out of your way I meane that vniust inualid coloured peace vniō is the onely way to make a good peace or a good warre vnion will saue you and diuision will destroy you My prayers shall euer be ut pacis non dissentionis Deus may be euer with you I am your most humble seruant Walter Enos Aduertisments to the Reader Firstnote that the worke is compleat though the pages 36. and 41. meete not together because the worke was printed in seuerall places 2. the number of ministers Coates mentioned pag. 12. n. 11 are but. 4. surplisses 7. and so many Robes for Doctors they resolued to walke in station to possesse our Churches 3. the Lawyer mentioned pag. 117. n. 76. is not learned Mr. Darcy but Mr. T. T. 4. If lay men should take upon them to Censure this worke which hath beene approued by the Clergie thei are excommunicated in bulla caenae see Tolet. excom 9. Trid. sess 23. c. 23. de Reformat totam dist 96. 11. q. 1. authent vt Cleri proprios iudices conueniant collat 6. yet is it left free to any man to refute if he can the arguments produced by the Author THE SECOND PART OF THE SVRVEY OF THE Articles of the late rejected Peace wherein the invaliditie and nullitie of the said Peace is evidently proved out of many heads or causes 1. IN the first part of this Survey we proved the injustice and iniquitie of the said Peace by notable observations on cach or most of the Articles included in the same peace In this second part wee further proceede to prove also the invaliditie and nullitie thereof out of those heads or causes which are expressed in the lawes and accepted as generall Maximes among Divines and Lawyers to the end the Catholique Confederates may be rightly enformed how farre they are exempted from any obligation to embrace such a Peace in the contriving whereof injustice accompanied with nullitie had full and perfect concurrence As in other Contracts so in Contracts past by mandate or Comission the nullitie and invaliditie thereof is derived from many sources or heads Six are principally enumerated by Schoolemen in contractu mandati and among those six that nullitie or invaliditie which proceeds from the revocation of their Commission that have power to treate conclude the contract before they have concluded any such Contract hath a prime place That the like revocation of the Commissions or mandates given to the Marques of Ormond and to our Committee of the Treatie hath hapned in the concluding of this Peace before the same was concluded is the point among other which we are to prove in the following paragraphes In the. §. 1. The invaliditie of the foresaid Peace is proved by the revocation of the Marques of Ormonds Commission given him to conclude a Peace before the same was concluded 2 THis invalide and unjust Peace was indeed signed and sealed by five of our Committee on the 28. of March 1646. but never DELIVERED interchangeably by both parties untill the 29. of Iuly following during the interjacent time it lay as an Escroule or Scroule on the hands of the Marques of Clanrickard without any power or force to oblige in law either parties Though this be a truth confessed in private by the Committee of Treatie and well knowne to the then Supreme Councell and Committee of Instructions yet because the knowledge thereof is suppressed from the rest of the Confederate Catholiques and that the Peace hath beene published as if the same were absolutely concluded on the 28. of March I here thinke fit to discover the mysterie of iniquitie out of that which I sinde written by Mr. Darcyes owne hand one of the five that signed and delivered the said Peace on the out-side of the manuscript draught of the articles of Peace delivered by Mr. Plunket himselfe in VVaterford to the Congregation of both Clergies Signed and Sealed ONLY note the exclusive partticle ONLY 28. March 1646. anno 22. Regis Caroli in the presence of the Lord Digby Sir Maurice Eustace Doctor Fennell and George Lane and DEPOSITED on the Marques of Clanrickards hands till 1. May and untill the ten thousand be sent into England Thus farre one note In another note there written I reade thus This meaning the Articles of Peace was DELIVERED 29. Iuly 1646. in my Lords STVDY by my Lord Lieutenant on the one part Lord of Muskery Sir Robert Talbot Iohn Dillon Patricke Darcy and Geofrey Browne of the other part witnessed by the Marques of Clanrickard Lord Taaffe Lord Digby Monsieur du Moulin the French Agent and Daniel O Nealc Present besides the Earle of Roscoman Lord Dillon Colonell Trafford and George Lane c. on the same 29. day of Iuly and not before the defeasance which past betweene the Marques of Ormond and our Committee obliging the kingdome to send over 10000. men were cancelled and an Instrument avoyding the defeazance then perfected witnessed ut supra saith a third note written also by Mr. Darcyes owne hand on the foresaid manuscript Copie 3. By all which it appeareth that the Peace was never concluded untill the 29. of Iuly and that both parties did suppose the same for a certaintie aswell because they never cancelled the foresaid defeazance untill the foresaid 29. day of Iuly as also because the Marques of Ormond having before that day received His Majesties letter revoking his Commission supposing himselfe not to be obliged by any act that passed on the 28. of March rejected our Committee of Treatie and would by no meanes proceede to the conclusion of the foresaid peace affirming that his Commission was recalled and that he had no authoritie to treate further with them as you shall heare as yet more hereafter This is further confirmed by the letters of the late Supreme Councell and Committee of Instructions dated at Lymericke the first of Iune 1646. delivered unto the Lord Nuncius where they confesse the Peace was not then concluded but that shortly they expected the same to be both concludedand published 4. We presse the
Nicholas Plunket Sir Robert Talbot Sir Richard Everard Dermot O Brien Patricke Darcy Geofrey Browne Iohn Dillon and Richard Martins Esquires authorizing them or any five of them to treate agree and conclude with the Ma●ques of Ormond a firme lasting and setled peace in such manner as they in their iudgements should thinke fit and most available for the said Catholiques and generall good of this realme 34. For the Councells warrant to grant this commission they alleage in the same act an act past in the generall assembly held at Kilkenny the 20. of Iuly 1644. Where say they in the act of their Councell the said assembly authorized the foresaid 13. persons to treate agree and conclude with the Marques for setling and concluding of a sirme and perfect peace otherwise to conclude of a further Cessation Where the Reader is carefully to observe that the assembly according to the Councels own relation appoints indeed those 13. persons as a Committee of the Treatie but doth not limit the same unto any five of them as the act of the Councell hath done I have made search among the Acts of that assembly but could not finde any act dated the twentieth of Iuly 1644. I have indeed found an act of assembly made 10 Augusti 1644. where it is ordered that the undernamed shall be super added to the Commissioners lately authorized by Commission to goe to His Maiestie now to goe to the Lord Lieutenant to treate with his Honour for setling a firme peace within this Kingdome or a further Cessation of Armes The persons undenamed are the Lord Archbishop of Dublin Earle of Antrim Lord Viscount Mountgaret Sir Richard Everard Patricke Darcy and Iohn Dillon Esquires The Commissioners to goe to His Majestie were the Lord of Muskerie Nicholas Pluaket Alexander Mac Donnell Sir Robert Talbot Colonell Dermot O Brien Geoffrey Browne and Richard Martin The like Commission was made by the second and last Supreme Councell unto the same Committee of Treatie de verbo ad verbum as appeareth in the abridged registers of the Acts of the same Councell 35. To shew the insufficiencie defects and nullitie of the said commission wee neede not entertaine sharpe-sighted Lawyers the errors and defects thereof are so grosse and palpable as men meanly versant in that profession may without difficulty discover them Wee say then in the first place that it appeareth not by any act of assembly that I could light on that either of both Councells were ever authorized or enabled by the Kingdome to give any Commission to the foresaid Committee of Treatee either to treate of or conclude a peace with his Excellency Not in any act of assembly past the twentieth of May 1644. as the foresaid Commission given by the first Councell doth mention for no such act can I finde in the Records of the assembly notwithstanding I have together with the Clarke of the assembly made diligent soarch for the same As for the Act of assembly 10. Augusti 1644. even now mentioned number 34. you see the kingdome selected indeed the foresaid Committee of Treaty but never by that act authorized the Supreme Councell to give them a Commission to that effect Yet that such an authoritie is necessarie is supposed by the Councell it selfe which groundeth it selfe on the like authoritie as you have heard numb 34. for as the assembly onely in the name of the whole kingdome and not the Supreme Councell had power to send Commissioners to His Majestie so the Assembly onely and not the Councell had power to send Commissioners to His Lieutenaut to treate and conclude a peace Yet supposing such a Commission or power were given by the Assembly unto the first Supreme Councell wee say in the second place the same or the like commission and power ought to have beene renewed by act of Assembly and given unto the new Supreme Councell authorizing them to give Commission to the foresaid committee of Treaty to conclude a peace and to guide and direct them therein because if any such Commission was given by any assembly unto the first Supreme councell both that commission and any other commission given by the Councell in vertue thereof to the Committee of the Treaty is extinguished and dyes with the same Supreme Councell because as morte mandantis so morte mandatarij extinguitur mandatum saith the law as by the death of him that gives a Commission or mandat so by the death of him that receives it the Commission or mandat is extin guished If he for example that gives or receives a letter of Atturney to prosecute a cause or to doe any other service dyes the letter of Atturney dyes with him The same wee may say of Agents or Ambasladors sent from or to any P●inces or Prelates Accordingly wee say that the first Supreme Councell being removed from that office are civilly dead and therefore any authority given them in this particular or by them in vertue thereof given to the Committee of Treatie for in these two respects the Councell may be called Mandatarij and Mandantes is extinguished and dyes with the late removed Councell 36. It is true that the common power and authoritie given to the Supreme Councell by the Modell of Government may peradventure descend upon the succeeding Supreme Councells because by the Modell of Govurnment that common power is expresly declared to be conferred by the Kingdome on the Supreme Councell for the time being but the case is other wise in this weighty matter whereon depends the securitie and safetie of Religion King and Subject and therefore being transcendent and extraordinarie it must be acted by and concluded by transcendent and extraordinarie power and as the Commissioners appointed to goe to his Majestie must have beene established and appointed by the whole Kingdome because indeed their imployment concerned the whole Kingdome so for the same reason the Commissioners appointed to treate with His Majesties Lieutenant in this particular must be authorized either mediatly or immediatly by the whole Kingdome for as much as their imployment concernes the whole Kingdom If His Majestie did conferre any power or authoritie upon any Corporation which hee would have to continue in the succeeding Magistrats thereof hee is carefull in his patents or Charters to use these words to the Maior or to the Maior and Citizens for the time being to shew that his intention is not to make this power personall onely but in that commission which the first Supreme Councell pretend to have had from the assembly there are no such words used authorizing the Supreme Councell for the time being Much more may be here said which I leave to our learned Lawyers discussion whereof some vnto whom I have propounded this difficultie have assured me that for this respect the Commission given our Committee of Treaty by the Councell wassufficienr and inv●alid And when I admired that the Supreme Councell dared attempt such an enterprize without a full and
Church did positively recall all Commissions given to such Committees or Agents as the Clergy of Ireland hath done in this present peace How generall soever a Commission may be yet this exception is alwayes involved therein that nothing that is unlawfull may be done by vertue thereof mandatum si generale sit solum prohibet quae licita non sunt which the law exemplyfieth by this case if a Commission be given to elect any one in generall tearmes to any dignity office or benefice it is to be understood that a fit one be chosen Vnde mandatum de aliquo eligendo intelligitur de eligendo id●neo What could be done more unlawfull in the execution of any Commission than what hath beene done by our Committee of Treaty in the execu●ion of their commission they rejected the graces our Soveraigne granted unto us for gayning whereof they had a Commission and engaged the kingdome in matters of high concernment for which they had no commission Can that peace be a good peace wherein thereis no securitie for our Religion lives liberties or estates The limitation of our Committee of treaties Commission proved out of the Modell of government by which Magna Charta is to be maintayned and the Church livings granted to the Catholicke Clergy 39. In the very first Article of the Modell of Government I reade thus Inprimis That the Roman Catholicke Church in Ireland shall have and enioy its priviledges and immunities according t● the GREAT CHARTER enacted and declared within the Realme of England in the ninth yeare of the raigne of King Henry the second sometimes King of England and Lord of Ireland and ofterward enacted and confirmed in Ireland and that the common-law of England and all the statutes in force in this kingdome which are against the catholicke Roman Religion and liberties of the Natives Marke the resolution to procure the repeale of the penall lawes c and other subiects of this kingdow shal be observed c. That every branch of MAGNA CHARTA all other statutes confirming expounding or declaring the same shal be punctually observed Know yee saith the King in that Charter That we in the Honour of Almighty GOD the SALVATION of the SOVLES of our Progenitors and Successors Kings of England to the ADVANCEMENT of HOLY-CHVRCH and the amendment of our Realme of our meere and free-will have given and granted unto the Archbishps Abbots Pryors c. That the Churches of England shall be free and shall have all her whole rights and liberties inviolable Reserving to all Archbishops Abbots Pryors Templers Hospitlers Earles Barons and all persons aswell Spirituall as Temporall all their free liberties and free customes which they had-in times past and all these customes and liberties aforesaid which we have granted to be holden within this our Realme asmuch as pertayneth to us and our heires we shall observe And all men of this our Realme aswell Spirituall as Temporall asmuch as in them is shall observe the same against all persons in likewise This great Charter which contayneth the immunities of the Church and liberties of the Subject hath beene confirmed by thirty Parliaments in the succession of 18. Kings Edward the third in the 14. yeare of his raigne augmented the same by the addition of five speciall priviledges granted the Church and Clergy and in the 25. yeare of his raigne added a surplus of nine priviledges more And this is it which the Earle of Glamorgan hath in part granted unto us and which our Kings of England have sworne to maintayne unto us Henry the 8. indeed deprived us of the benefit thereof I wish our owne bosome friends at home had not too neerely imitated him In all the articles of peace there is not somuch as once mention made of this GREAT CHARTER though it be the first and prime article the kingdome resolved to insist upon 40. In the six and twentieth Article of the same Modell of Government It is ordered and established that the possessions of the Protestant Archbishops or Bishops Deanes Dignitaries and Pastors in the right of their respective Churches or their Tenants in the beginning of these troubles shall be deemed taken construed as the possessions of the Catholicke Archbishops Deanes Dignitaries Pastors and their Tenants respectively to all intents purposes and that those possessions are intended within the precedent order for setlement of possessions And this publicke order of the kingdome you see is conformable to MAGNA CHARTA for somuch and agreable to the publick Declarations of the kingdome and other acts of Assembly The like limitation of the same Commission is expressed in both our declarations made anno 1642. 41. In our Declaration printed in France 1642. we declared it to be a meanes to reduce Ireland to peace and quietnes among other things that by act of Parliament it be declared that the Parliament of Ireland hath no subordination to the Parliament of England that Poynings act the penall lawes be repealed That all Marks of nationall distrinction betweene English and Irish be taken away by act of Parliament That the Bishopricks Deaneries and all other spirituall promotions of this Kingdome and all Frieries and Nunneries may be restored to the Catholique owners and that Impropriations of ti●hes may be likewise restored and that the scity ambits and precincis of the Religious houses of the Mo●ks may be restored to thē but as to the residue of their temporall poss●ssions it is not desired to be taken from the present proprietareis but to be left to them untill that God shall otherwise encline their owne hearts That all Plantations made since a. 1610 may be avoyded by Parliament if the Parliament should hold this act ●ust and their possessions restored to those or their heires from whom the same was taken they neverthelesse answering to the Crowne the rents and services proportionably reserved upon the undertakers 42. In our Remonstrance delivered to His Majesties Commissioners at the towne of Trim 17. March 1642. among many other grievances we desired redresse against the penall lawes of 2. Eliz. imposing incapacities on the Catholiques in places of trust honour or profit both in Church and Commonwealth against false inquisitions taken upon feined titles of the Catholiques estates against many hundred yeares possession against the two impeached Iudges who illegally avoided 150. letters patents in one morning for securing the subjects lives liberties and estates for exempting the Parliament of Ireland from any dependency on the Parliam●nt of England and for the power and authoritie of the same Parliament of Ireland against the dismembred Parliament of Dublin against the Continuance of poynings ast the lawes and incapacitie to sit in the next Parliament While our Commissioners the Lord Viscount Gormanston Sir Luke Dillon Sir Robert Talbot and Iohn VValsh Esquire presented this Remonstrance to his Majesties commissioners at Trim 17. March 1642. with hopes of redresse for our grievances and a happy accommodation the Marques of
government but also entertaine him as their Lord and Master This I speake not God be my Iudge for disrespect to so noble a personage who if hee followed the steps of his noble Catholique progenitors and were disingaged from wicked Councell might well deserve such honour but to discharge my conscience in a matter of such importance as concerneth the securitie of Religion King and Countrey 7. As this letter was dated so was it delivered and communicated to the Lord Marques long before the 29. of Iuly when and not before the Peace was concluded wherein I call as witnesses the conscience of those very noble persons who concluded and joyned in concluding this peace Nay the same hath beene confessed unto me even by some of them that subscribed unto the peace But the accompt which Mr. Browne gave unto the late Supreme Councell at Limericke after his returne from Dublin in the month of Iune and his publicke narration or declaration of the answer received from the Lord Marques in Dublin puts the question out of all doubt wherein he declared that the Lord Marques his Commission was confessed by himselfe to have beene recalled and that therefore he could conclude no peace with us His returne then without effecting any thing and the very originall letter above mentioned shewne to Mr. Browne and others by the Lord Marques doth confirme it 8. It may be answered that the Lord Digby brought over some new Commission from France authorizing the Lord Marques to proceede in the peace But this is as easily denyed as it is affirmed without apparance of truth it being most certaine and so signified by letters from Paris to the Councell and Congregation that the Lord Digby never saw the king nor received letters from the king from the time he left Ireland untill he returned backe how then could the Lord Marques his Commission be renewed some letters are said to have been brought over by the Lord Digby in Cyphers the interpretation whereof must be received from the Lord Digby onely But this may carry asmuch truth as the former and though it were true yet have the Confederate Catholiques no reason to give credit in a matter of such high concernment to such Interpreters but supposing all were true it would never be able to render the peace concluded the 29. of Iuly valid forasmuch as the same peace is grounded on the Commission given unto the Lord Marques 24. Iunij 1644. and the 20. yeare of His Majesties Raigne which as you have heard was recalled before the foresaid 29. of Iuly and not on the new imaginarie Commission brought over by the Lord Digby wherefore if they would render the peace ought worth or of any validitie in law they ought to ground the same on this new Commission and not on the old or if this new Commission were a Continuation or a reintegration of the old both should be inserted in the Articles of peace if they intended to conclude any valid or solid peace Shall I speake the truth in simplicitate cordis mei as that peace alone was concluded which pleased the Marques of Ormond and all other peaces that pleased God and man king and Countrey were rejected so then was the peace concluded when it pleased Ormond namely when her and his pretended Protestants could no longer subsist their brethren the Scots and other Parliamentarie Rebells being reduced to nothing in Vlster and Connaught while these monsters could craule the conclusion of any peace was protracted while Bunratty was in dispaire Roscoman and other places in Connaught in defiance against the Confederate Catholiques then the Marques his Commission was recalled but when the Catholique Confederates recovered all these places and gained two glorious victories against the Enemie then this demortued Commission was suddenly revived and a peace was concluded upon maugre all the resistance of the Lord Nuncius and Clergie or the soundest part of the Councell and Committee of severall acts and protestations made by the whole kingdome in the assemblies held in August and February 1645. But qui habitat in coelis irridebit eos Eijce ancillam Heresie hath already too long tyranniz'd in Ireland more in the following paragraph and paragraph 3. numb 13. where the king by his Declaration or at least by that Declaration which was set forth under his name is content to leave the managing of the businesse of Ireland wholly to the two houses of England which if the Reader please to compare with the vote of the Commons above mentioned numb 6. Hee will finde that the Catholique Confederats are like to loose to their king and themselves all Ireland if they part with the government of such Cities Forts or Garrisons as are in their Quarters or with the Command of their armies c. to any that is not a swor●● Confederate Catholique §. 2. That neither obligation of law or honour utilitie to His Maiestie or necessitie of the kingdom did induce our Councell to conclude this Peace 9. THat no obligation of law did enforce our Committee to conclude this peace is evident by what even now we expressed in the foregoing paragraph for if the articles though signed and sealed on the 28. day of March yet remained still as a scrole untill the 29. of Iuly following at which time and not before they were delivered and begunne to oblige then is it certaine that during that intervall our Committee were free and at their owne libertie to perfect or not perfect conclude or not conclude the said Articles yea they could not with integritie of conscience and discharge of the trust imposed on them proceede to the deliverie or conclusion of the said Articles being enformed that His Majestie had now recalled the Marques his Commission authorizing him to conclude a peace it being a Maxime generally received aswell in the lawes of England as in the Cesarean or Common law extingui mandatum per revocationem mandantis that a Commission given to any is extinguished by the revocation thereof and out of the extinction of the Commission foloweth the extinction also of all obligation to pursue the contract nay wee shall shew hereafter that the Commission given to our Committee to conclude this rejected peace was not onely invalid but also sufficiently recalled before any such peace was concluded Wherefore wee may without difficultie conclude that no obligation of law did enforce our Partie to conclude this peace As then the Lord Lieutenant did recoyle from those articles which he himselfe signed and sealed esteeming himselfe not to be obliged by any such signing and sealing to deliver the same so hereafter in case wee were brought to that fooles Paradise to accept the peace and hee once possesse our Armies and garisons hee will likewise recoyle and tell us when wee looke for performance of the Articles Sirs my Commission was recalled when I concluded this peace with you what I have done therein was grounded upon no authoritie and therefore invalid
Ormond in his briefe of Concessions from which he shrunke in this peace limitteth this generall Commission vnto the penall lawes onely that concernes the exercise of our religion who is herein imitated by the Marques of Clanrichard or rather by the politike Contriuers of his engagment where a promise is made of a reuocation of any penaltie c imposed on vs for the free exercise of our riligion vnto what wofull dayes are we come when subjects doe presume not only to limitat theire kings commands as they please but also vtterlie to reiect them and by that disobedience to be the occasion of his present disasters and hazard of the losse of his kingdomes 29. By which letter and by these other two aboue mentioned the iudicious Reader may obserue what great confidencie his majestie reposeth in the aid and assistance of the Confederat Catholikes aswell at home as abroade in England and scotland by sea and by land and how earnestlie he presseth a speedie dispatch of the peace to that end Be it on them and theire posteritie that haue hindred the same Glamorgans articles do as yet further confirme aswell the kings confidence in our assistance as our alacritie willingnes and earnest desire to comply therein with his Majestie but the same authors who contemned the commands of his Majestie haue also laid obstacles to the assistance promised to his Majestie vpon the conclusion of Glamorgans peace It shal be euer verified what Iohn Dauies sometimes the kings Attutnie left written to posteritic that the Irish gladlie continue obedient subiects without defection or adhering to any other lord or king c and that there is noe nation or people vnder the sunne that doth loue equall and indifferent iustice better then the Irish and will better rest satisfied of the execution therof c farre different I wisse was the Censure of this well experienced lawyer and of many others whose testimonie for the present I omitt concerning the loyaltie of the Irish from the Censure of the present lord Chancellour of Ireland who hauing receiued in his Chamber in the Ins of Dublin from the Councell-table by the hands of a purseuant a printed booke setting forth the kings resolution to come for this kingdome said God forbid his maiestie should come vnto this kingdome for the Irish would massacre him as soone as any other wherunto his sonne sir Edward Bolton now chiefe Baron answered nay father I am confident if his Maiestie came hither that the Irish would lay downe theire armes at his feete and kisse the ground he went on The father admiring at the sonnes confidence in the fidelitie of the Irish the sonne confirmed his confidence by affirming he would lay his head at the stake if they would not doe it This dialoque past betweene the father and the sonne in the presence of the Lady Bolton Bently the Purseuant and R. S. a Cittizen of Dublin who is my author The sonne here proues the loyaltie of the Irish the father shewes his ingratitude towards the Irish that Nation that charitablie entertained him in his flight from England to shun the Censure of the Castle Chamber there who being raised from the lowest ebbe of fortune by Ireland now floateth in the highest spring of posteritie Qui reddit mala pro bonis non recedet malum a domo eius Such as repined at his Maiesties coming into Ireland repined at his happines and adhered in opinion and affection to the Parliament Histories recount and the present damnable Rebellion of England doth confirme more bloodie warres to haue beene raised in England by the English against theire naturall soueraignes and more horrid violence to haue beene offered to theire persons than euer hath beene raised in Ireland against them or offered by the Irish vnto them wherefore what the Chancellour affirmed of the Irish is more applicable to him and to his ill affected Contrymen wherin all Europe may be produced as witnesses who behould the present calamities wherunto the Rebellions Parliament haue reduced him what here might be more particularized concerning the ill-affected of that nation might be also particularized in the ill affected Scots Who are said to haue imbrued theire hands in the blood of many theire owne naturall Princes-from both I abstaine for the honour I beare vnto England the sister of Ireland and vnto Scotland the daughter of Ireland wishing with all the faculties of my soule the occasion of such recrimination among indeered fellow subjects were neuer giuen or being giuen might be totallie taken away Deus aeternetu scis quoniam falsum testimonium tulerunt contra Hibernos §. 7. The Marques of Ormonds Commission recalled as to somuch hy the Earle of Glamorgans Commission 30. Our Diuines and Canonists doe teach vs that the second mandat or Commission doth not indeed derogat vnto the first vnles it make mention therof yet that sometime the second preuaileth and not the first namely because the second is of a more strict obligation as tending to the publicke vtilitie and Commoditie wheras the first conduced to the priuat onely Ormonds Commission granted by his Majestie is in our case the first being giuen 24. Iunij 1644. Glamorgans is the second being giuen the 12. of March 1644. which was full eight months after In this later Commission mention is made of the first thus we giue you power to treate and conclude with the Confederat Roman Catholikes in our kingdome of Ireland if vpon necessitie any thing be to be condescended vnto wherein our lord lieutenant can not be so well seene as not fitt for vs at the present publickelie to owne c. loe mention made expresselie of the first Commissioner and implicitlie of his Commission and by consequence a reuocation as to so much at least of the Marques his Commission yea his Majestie did by his expresse letters signifie vnto the Marques of Ormond that he gaue vnto the Earle of Glamorgan this second Commission therein expressing the ends and causes wherefore he gaue the same and wherfore he would haue the matters and points committed to Glamorgans trust exempted from all other matters comprehended in the Marques of Ormonds Commission and these matters concerned the spiritualtie for example the free and publike exercise of our religion the securitie of our Churches the exemption of the Catholikes from the iurisdiction of the Protestant Clergie the repeal● of all penall lawes made against Catholikes c. This Commissio● being granted by his Majestie vpon the neglect of the Marques his obedience to his Majestiès Command requiring him to grant vnto vs the present taking away of the penall lawes and the suspension of Poynings act I admire how his Excellencie attempted to conclude a peace for these matters soe exempted out of his Commission and to referre those matters which were agreed and concluded by his Majesties speciall Commissioner namely the repeale of the penall lawes the free and publicke exercise of our religion c. vnto any new
solid authoritie from the Kingdome my admiration was augmented by the answer I received from one affected to them to wit that the Councell made no doubt to conclude all things as they pleased by force 37. The last Supreme Councell was established the second of March 1645. Their Commission to the Committee of Treaty was given the sixt of March following After diligent search I found among the assembly acts of that second day of March this act It is ordered that the Supreme Councell and the Committee of Instructions as by former order in that behalfe appointed shall sit this afternoone and PREPARE all affaires conceaning the Treaty of peace and with all possible speed dispatch the Commissioners to Dublin But neither this order nor any other former order I could light on doth give power or authoritie to this new Supreme Councell to give any commission to the committee of Treatie either to treate or conclude a peace at all much lesse to conclude such a peace as the committee of Treaty in their Iudgement should thinke fit which is the commission the first Supreme Councell gave the committee of Treaty for which I am perswaded they never yet had authoritie from the Assembly It is one thing to sit and PREPARE all affaires concerning the treaty which alone this order imparts another thing to be authorized by the Assembly to give commission in the name of the Kingdome to the committee of Trea●y to conclude what peace they listed which is the point here questioned But here occurres unto the what I have beene often told even by members of some assemblyes past that such I will not say Factionists as precipi●a●ed into this abortive peace had their private cabinet Councels where they moulded what Orders they thought convenient● for their purpose which they ordinarlly presented about the perclose of the Assemblyes and when they saw such as they thought would oppose them absent and prepared such as they knew would adhere to them and set forth the matter with a specious glosse to be present and so caused such orders to passe surreptitiously without any deliberation or mature consideration by the house of such orders or of the ends the Moulders of them intended I suspect this order though it make little to the present purpose to be one of those surreptitious orders the cause of my suspition is that in the selfe same Assembly 19. February the whole Kingdome unanimously agreed and promised unto the Lord Nuncius that they would conclude nothing with the Marques of Ormond touching the peace untill the first of May following what appearance is there then that the same Kingdome in the same assembly should order that with all possible speed the Commissioners should be dispatched to Dublin and thereupon to signe and seale a peace the same moneth never expecting the first day of May as they promised and by that meanes so to entangle the businesse as whether the Popes peace came or no by the first day of May the Kingdome was obliged to embrace Ormonds peace though ever so unjust and indeed so some of the very Committee of Instructions were perswaded but the unfolding of this mysterie wee leave unto the assembly which I pray the God of truth to illuminate and preserve from faction and division §. 9. Other defects proving the insufficiency and invalidity of the said Commission 38. IN the Commission given by the first and last Supreme Councell they authorize the committee of Treaty nor onely to treate and agree but also to conclude a peace with the Marques of Or●n●nd their authotitie herein they father on the act of Assembly past 20. Iuly 1644. which kinde of act I could never finde among all the acts of Assembly nay the contrary is evident as well by both the Acts of assembly above specified numb 34. 37. as by other acts which hereafter I shall expresse that they had power onely to treate of the peace and to prepare matters conceruing the same but not to conclude i● I have indeed heard that our committee of Treatie laboured in severall Assemblyes to have absolute power given them not onely to treate of but also to conclude a peace but as yet I have not seene any such power granted neither ought any such power at any hand be granted to any particular men who by faction corruption or affection might be able to destroy Religion King and Countrey These men 〈◊〉 desired this absolute power are knowne to be either of allians with the Marques of Ormond or to depend of him or to have beene deluded by him with vaine hopes of promotion wherefore it is not secure for the Kingdome to give absolute power to such persons how honourable and faithfull soever they may be esteemed to be neither ought they if they would avoid the just suspicion of the people demand it We must not put the cause of God to compromise to Achitophel If then it appeares cleerely our committee of Treatie had no power to conclude but to treate of a peace onely who may doubt but their proceeding to a conclusion without commission is altogether in valid peradventure they may produce some act of assembly for an act of the Councell or committee of Instructions will not serve their turne to p●ove they had not onely power to treate but also to conclude such a peace as they thought fit but hetherto I have not seene any such and if any such shall be produced It rust the Kingdome will be so carefull of its owne honour and wellfare as to disqusse the validitie thereof and the wayes and meanes which were used in getting forth such an act It can hardly be exemplified that foure or five persons in a Kingdome had ever such absolute power given them as to conclude a peace within the same Kingdome for and concerning the most important affaires that ever could be agitated in a Kingdome even then when they might call upon an assembly of the whole Kingdome to try and examine the justice or injustice validitie or invaliditie of the said peace and that the power should be so unlimitted as their Commission had no expresse relation to any Instructions by which they ought to be regulated That five secular men should be made Supreme Iudges in a Catholique Kingdome of Prelate and Priest of Regular and secular of Religion Church and Church-livings of Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction administration of Sacraments celebration of divine service and office c. à seculo non est auditum no not in Henry the eights owne dayes Numquid omnes Crumvelli numquid omnes vicarij in spiritualibus temporalibus numquid omnes Braini And this is the third argument whereby wee prove the invaliditie of the said peace 39. The fourth argument may be deduced out of the number selected by the kingdome to be of the Committee of Treaty which was thirteene as you may observe out of the act of Assembly numb 34. by which act there was no power given the Councell
to reduce them to the number of five or to a lesse number than 13. This selected number of 13. did belong unto the substance and as it were essence of the commission or authoritie given by the Kingdome and therefore could not be altered without rendring the commission invalid When I reade in the commission given by the first Supreme Councell to the committee of Treaty that the number of thirteene was appointed and no power mentioned therein authorizing them to diminish that number I was indeed astonished and therefore laboured so much the more earnest to finde out if any act of Assembly there were giving them any such authoritie at length I lighted on an act past 23. August 1644. Wherein it is ordered by Assembly that the Supreme Councell shall grant Commissions under Seale from time to time unto such and so many of the Commissioners nominated and authorized by the house to TREATE with the Lord Marques of Ormond for establishing of a firme peace within this Kingdome or a further Cessation of armes as the said Supreme Councell and the additionall Committee of Instructions shall thinke fit This act of Assembly may seeme to quell the strength of my fourth argument Yet I cannot but resume and urge for my argument against this order 1. that it doth not so much warrant the Supreme Councell to diminish the number of the Committee of Treaty as it doth limit the power of the said committee for here as in the first act of Assembly no greater power is given them than to TREATE of a peace c. and no power at all to conclude a peace 2. This act seemeth to me very suspicious in as much as the same assembly not above thirteene dayes before supposing those seven Agents who were authori●ed to goe to His Majestie to be too little to treate with the Marques added positively six more as above you have seene insinuating thereby that they intended to have that full number alwayes in the Treatie and no lesse 3. Here my second argument may seeme to have force If this act of Assembly and that other of the tenth of August 1644. were not renewed upon the removall of the old Councell and institution of the new the power and authoritie given by those acts seemes to dye be extinguished with that old councell because ind●●e mandantis extinguit unmandarum 4. The Commission given the committee of the Treaty is not grounded on this act but on an act of the twentieth of Iuly 1644. above number 34. 5. It must be also grounded on an act of assembly authorizing them to reduce the number of 13 to 5. which act we finde not 6. ●ow ambiguously soever this act hath beene couched yet it may seeme to prove that the number should be full 13. for it ordereth that the Councell should grant commission to such and so many c. as were authorized The words as they shall thinke fit have relation either unto a treaty of peace or a Cessation of armes as they thinke fit and not unto any reduction of the number of 13. to the number of 5. 40. But here I must not omit to advertise the Reader of the cause of my suspition as soone as ever the foresaid number of 13. was chosen to be of the Committee of Treaty forthwith before they could be sent unto Dublin notice was sent in Post even by some of the Supreme Councell to Dublin that such persons were elected among whom there was one catholique Bishop The notice was sent by a letter to Sir Maurice Eustace inclosed in a letter to this Supreme Councellors Nephew then resident in Dublin upon which letter was written haste haste post haste Whereupon letters were return'd by the Marques of Ormond to the Councell or assembly that he would not treate of any peace with us if any Catholique Bishop were of the committee That ever the Marques obtained his desire herein by consent of the assembly I never heard nay I have heard the cleere contrarie that the assembly resolv'd never to change or diminish the number of that committee Howsoever I doe not know but this act of the 23. of August was hedg'd in upon this motion the circumstances whereof I could wish were diligently examined How his Excellency could deny to treate with any commissioners we sent without disobedience to the Kings command commission given I doe not know The summe is as he would have a peace of his owne moulding so would he have a committee pliable to his owne resolutions and it is remarkable that when any that was of that same small number of five which the Councell cul'd cut were suspected to stand constantly for the cause of God and the Countrey and not to yeeld to the Marques his abject conditions such art was used that such kind of persons were then kept from the Treatie when all things were upon conclusion Among these was worthy Mr. Nicholas Plunket whom for honour sake I nominate though hee also past not altogether free from blemish in subscribing to the command for the publication and acceptation of the peace wherein so well deserving a man might be excused having thought all remedy for redresse to be impossible Had our people Machabean spirits inflamed with Gods love and the advance of his holy Religion they would select no other out of that 13. but such Ormond rejected and chiefely the Arch bishop of Dublin and omit no other but such as Ormond would have admitted 41. Other argumen● against the sufficiencie of the Committee of Treatyes Commission may be thus briefely framed the commission given by the Supreme Councell was grounded on an act of Assembly made 20. Iuly 1644. no such act appeareth Ergo their commission given the Committee of Treaty may not subsist quia non posita causa necessaria non ponitur effectus non posito fundamento non ponitur tectum Againe in no act of assembly can I reade that the Councell was authorized to give this power to the Committee to treate agree conclude c. a firme and setled peace c. in such manner as they in their judgements should thinke fit and most availeable for the said Catholiques generall good of this realme Yet this is the power the Councell hath given them which how faithfully they have executed you have already and shall hereafter heare Moreover their Commission was to conclude a peace or a further Cessation they have done neither for in their reasons presented to the Congregation in Waterford they confesse they have made no peace but a pacification which they call a present union with expectancy of an absolute peace to follow For concluding such pacification you see their Commission authorizeth them not Furthermore by Commission the number of five at least were authorized to treate and conclude the peace the articles of peace in the Preface reduceth this number of five to foure telling us of a Commission authorizing them or any foure or
more of them to treate conclude a peace such a Commission is not nor never was extant in rerum natura Ergo the peace grounded thereupon is void In the same preface it is said articles of peace concluded c. betweene the Marques on the one part and these 7. Mountgaret Muskery Sir Robert Talbot Dermot O Brien Patricke Darcy Geffrey Browne and Iohn Dillon on the other part yet five onely of these 7. concluded the peace Mountgaret and Dermot O Brien never signed sealed or delivered the peace Yea Mr. Dermot O Brien made publique protestation against it and manifested unto the world aswell his aversion against the proceedings of the rest of the Committee in that treaty as against the iniquitie of the said peace for which hee deserves from his Countrey immortall praise How then is it true that those 7. concluded the peace when as 5. onely concluded it These I trow are errors and defects sufficient enough to prove the insufficiencie and invaliditie of the committee of the treatyes Commission and consequently the nullitie of the peace thereupon concluded which we pray all our learned and disinterelled Lawyers to discusse together with those other arguments we produce in the rest of the paragraphes and to strengthen the same by their approbation apposition of the authoritie of our Lawes of England which I could not well peruse for want of leasure and commoditie § 10. The invaliditie of the said peace proved by the revocation of our Committees Commission namely by the protestation of the principall part of the Body politicke of the kingdome other Inhibitions 1. BEsides the nullitie of the foresaid peace by the insufficiencie of our committees commission wee prove the same by the revocation of the same commission if it were ought worth before the peace was concluded Heare then the Lord Nuncius his protestation THE LORD NVNCIVS HIS PROTESTATION MOst Illustrious and Reverend Lords VVhere as before the imprisonment of the Earle of Glamorgan I abundantly represented unto your honours that the peace which then was in agibation was 〈◊〉 on any Fitles neyther honest nor secure but scand alous in the opinion of his Holyneisse the rest of the Catholicke ●rine●sland that for that cause ●● would in no sort ●●ndescend thereunto and whereas the same peace after the release of the said Earle is as yet lessei secure by reason of many accidents that befell seeing his Holynesse hath sent 〈◊〉 me the heads of the peace agreed upon at Rome between his Holynesse and her Majesty the Queenes Agent with promise of the Kings information thereof which heads are both honest by reason of the persons more ample then all the points hitherto treated of and doe promise all the security which may be had in these circumstances I urge with your Honours that you expect the Originals of the said heads that in the interim no other peace be concluded but that the Treaty of peace be deferred least you wrong his Holynes his benignity towards this kingdom your Honors incur his indignation together with the aversion of all Princes chiefly seing that the Instrument signed by your selves remaynes in my custody which before my coming over your Honours delivered as an answer to Master Spinola of happy memory wherein you promised to doe in this affaire whatsoever I upon consideration of the state of the kingdome should thinke fit to be done If otherwise you proceed I doe besides the breach of your promise protest that I doe not neyther will I consent unto any peace or change of things or government in this kingdome untill upon view consideration of the foresaid heads of the Popes peace it shal be maturely established what shal be more profitable to this kingdome And if ●hings be otherwise carried I protest though with sadnesse of heart that all damages which by this acceleration of peace shall befall the Kings Maiesty and this miserable kingdome proceeded not from the faults of any other but of those who having pos●posed the reverence and gratitude due to his Holynesse doe abuse their owne private affections and interest to the destruction of the Commonwealth From the Pallace of our residence the sixt day of February 1645. stylo veteri Your Honours most addicted Servant Ioan. Baptist Archiepiscop Firman Nuncius 2. According to this protestation the Lord Nuncius the very next day following to wit the seventh of February and againe the ninth of February came personally to the assembly and having decla●ed the affection and care the See Apostolique had of this Nation sometime for learning and sanctity called the Iland of Saints declared that his Holynes to succour the Catholique Confederates neglected and postposed the warres by the Turkes against the Christians by the Swelande● against the Emperor and other warres neerer home that he laboured and at length prevailed with His Majestie that the Roman Catholiques should not onely have and quietly possesse their Church and Church-livings but also that the Catholique Natives should be made capable of all places of command honour p●ofit or trust in the civill marshall or Ecclesiastique government together with many other extraordinary graces and concessions that he daily expected the articles of this peace and therefore prayed seriously that the conclusion of any peace with Ormond which was the worst of all other peaces might be protracted at least till May assuring us if we pers●vered constantly in the cause of God that the Popes Holynes and other Catholique Princes would never be wanting to supply the Confederate Catholiques with sufficient meanes and money to maintaine the warre and that he himselfe in the interim would defend Leinster against Ormond in case he condescended not to a cessation for so long a time This motion was seconded by noble Glamorgan by two severall speeches delivered by him in the Assembly 12. and 19 February which was accepted and entertained by the whole house with such joy and alacrity as you might descry in their outward gesture their inward consolation 3. Our councell and committees contrarie to the resolution of the whole house would not expect so long they were not foure dayes chosen when they gave a new commission to the committee of Treaty to conclude a peace with his Excellency which was signed and sealed 28. March as you have heard It was a businesse long before concluded as you may gather by Iustice VValsh one of the purchasers above mentioned his speech delivered in the house 10. February wherein he affirmed that he himselfe brought all things points and matters to a full period according our wishes with the Lord Marques but said he the imprisonment of Glam●rgan hindred the sig●ing thereof Yet I reade in the diurnall of that day that the chaire-man Mr. Thomas Tyrell informed the house that our Agents were in Dublin eleven weeks and yet were not able to conclude any thing And Mr. Geofrey Browne declared in publicke assembly 15. February that the
Marques was resolved not to conclude a peace untill we complyed in sending over 10000. men wherein the Marques might have spared his labour the contract for sending over 10000. men being made by us with Glamorgan and not with him whose peace was not in it selfe worthy the acceptance onely much lesse worthy the reward of sending over 10000. men for getting it To be briefe thus stands the question how dared the Committee of Treatie to signe and seale a peace before the first of May contrary to the Assemblyes resolution and how dared the new supreme Councell without consent of the assembly to grant them a commission to that effects By the relation of Mr. Browne and Mr. VValsh you see our committees were not engaged by all the Treaties past to conclude a peace with the Marques they might without difficultie comply with the Popes Holynes and the Kings speciall commissioners request And this request was made by them even then when Glamorgans articles were in full power because they held it not altogether so secure and profitable when they afterward understood that his Majestie protested against Glamorgans articles doe you thinke that either they or the assembly would ever yeeld to accept of Ormonds fordid articles apart either the May following or for ever he had more need to beg a peace of us than we of him Had not the countrey beene betrayed by licencing him to receive his rents he had beene glad to come off with better conditions according his Majesties commands and provided better for His Majestie and himselfe The Clergies subscription to the Nuncius his Protestation 4. Wee also the underwritten Prelates and Clergie of Ireland doe adhere unto the opinion of the most illustrious Lord Nuncius confirming what are above expressed And we doe resolve unanimously to insist upon the same protestation Dated at Kilkenney the foresaid sixt day of February 1645. stylo veteri Hugo Ardmachanus Fr. Thomas Dubliniensis Thomas Casseliensis David Ossoriensis Gulielmus Cor●agiens Duan Io. Clonfertens Emerus Clogherens Io. Laonens Fr. Patrie VVaterford Lismor Fr. Edmund Laghliniens Nicholaus Fernensis Richardus Ardsertensis Accadensis Edmund Calamens Episcopus Coaedjutor Linericens Fr. Albertus O Brien Provincial Ordin Praedicatorum Robertus Nugentius Societatis Iesu Superior VValterus Linchaeus Vicar General Tuamens Iacobus Fallonus Vicar Apostolic Accadens Fr. Oliverus de Burgo Vicar Duaceus Donaldus O Gripha Vicar Apostolic Finiburensis Iacobus Dempsy Vicar General Kildar Cornelius Gafnus Ardaghader Vicar Oliver Deise vicarius Procurator Reverendissimi Medensis Episcopi Carolus Coghla● Vicar General Cluanensis §. 11. An abridgement in English of the Lord Nuncius his Latin letter dated the 5. of May 1646. sent unto the Supreme Councell and committee in the prosecution of the said Protestation 5. In this letter the Lord Nuncius doth elegantly distinguish in the Marques of Ormond a double qualitie the one of a Lieutenant for his Majestie the other of a chiefe Peere of the realme In the qualitie of Lieutenant hee proves no firme and solide peace can be made with him forasmuch as his authoritie depends of the King and by how much the more or the lesse the securitie and power of his Majestie increaseth or decreaseth it necessariiy followeth that the authoritie also of the Lieutenant increaseth and decreaseth and that the safetie and authoritie of the King being uncertaine the authoritie also of Lieutenant becometh void and uncertaine c. and if this be true in those articles which belong to the politicke state of the Kingdome how much more in the Ecclesiasticall state and things belonging to the Catholique Faith against which he being a Protestant hath an aversion of minde besides the want of authoritie VVherefore the Confederate Catholiques ought not by any meanes choose any other way than by laying aside in the interim any treatie of peace c. untill the Kings most excellent Majestie be restored to that state and condition as he may confirme by Parliament the Articles which His Holynes agreed upon with Digby in Rome which thing seemes not onely profitable and necessarie for the affaires of Ireland in the present state but also honourable to the King himselfe seeing all things are reserved to his authoritie untill that time when he shall be in the full libertie of dominion and the loyaltie of the Irish shall be able to merit somewhat with his Majestie c. which shall be augmented by the Catholiques publique protestation that whatsoever they possesse or acquire shall be with all loyaltie and fidelitie preserved for his Majestie who otherwise may be wash'd out of all if Parliamentarie Harpies once fix their Tallons in them 6. Hee proceedeth further shewing how glorious it shall be unto the Confederate Catholiques that the advance of the Catholique cause the splendour libertie lawes rites and publike exercise of Religion proceeded rather from themselves and from the innate love they beare to true Religion than from any treaty with the Marques whose authoritie lyes a bleeding c. All Christian Princes and chiefely the Pope would be offended that any peace and that of abject conditions should be here treated of while the peace containing honourable and good conditions concluded upon in Rome doth expect only our Kings approbation as if particular men and those Procestants to could better provide for Ireland and the Catholique Church than His Holynes can doe 7. If the Marques be considered as a Peere of the Realme in that respect he may have all things common to the rest of the Irish and therefore I hold he may be a defender of his countrey against the common enemies And if he will as an Irish man and a Servant to his Majestie gather all his forces against the Scots and Parliamentaries he ought to be received yea and to be assisted by money and other subsidies so as the Catholique Religion by such kinde of conjunction receive no detriment for effecting whereof he layeth downe among other these conditions if it shall ever happen that the forces of the Marquis be joyned with the Catholique forces that then he may by no meanes establish any other Religion than the Catholique Religion in all places which shall happen to be gained by the same armies ioynt together otherwise the Popes aides aswell present as future may by no meanes be employed for the advance of Protestanisme which were impious That the Consederates so treate with the Marques at our hopes of having or obtayning a Catholique Vice-Roy after the expiration of his time be not frustrated which the securitie of Religion doth chiefly require and His Holynesse doth vehemently desire Therefore to this end we must be warie least in the interim while the affaires of England doe waver wee doe any thing which may compell the Nuncius Apostolicus in the behalfe of His Holynesse to protest against it as by his private letters he hath protested a few dayes past Hee addeth further that Dublin be delivered to the possession of
which being observed by Catholique Princes and Prelates abroad gave occasion unto them to subtract the aid and succours they resolved to give unto the Confederate Catholiques for the advance of Religion and conservation of Monarchie Our frequent missions to Dublin were knowne to have corrupted men of integritie increased division multiplied faction Conversi sunt in arcum pravum Besides the extraordinarie summes bestowed on the Lord Marques of Ormond our late Councell licenced him yea were active Instruments for him to receive all his rents and revenues out of the Confederate Catholiques Quarters and whereas the confederate Catholiques themselves contributed to the publicke the fourth part of their rents the Marques of Ormond had so great favour with our Councell as not only himselfe but many of his friends also contributed no more but the eight part of such rents as they had within the confederate Catholiques Quarters This was not all they licenced him also to take up in mortage lone and otherwise upwards of twentie thousand pounds worth great yearely rents were given by them unto those very persons who were knowne to have beene husband men for his Excellency in sowing division among the confederate Catholiques those that affected that partie were preferred to places of honour command and profit others that affected the publicke rejected p●mphelets made by the enemies against the justice of our war entertained and admitted books made even by advise and command of Councell and convocation suppressed so powerfull were Factionists among our councell and committees Were the rents due to the Marques of Ormond employed with fidelitie for the Catholique cause well nigh a thousand men might be maintained thereby every day in the yeare or if the same were charitably dispensed among those Catholique noble men and Gentlemen whom the Marques burned wasted and banished then had they been provided for with competencie to relieve themselves and not necessitated to fawne on the Marques for any desperate peace who otherwise would be glad to fawne on them and the rest of the confederate Catholiques being reduced to their necessitie if his meanes were substracted from him Our owne subsidies subministred unto the Marques have beene the chiefe occasion why his Excellency hitherto disobeyed his Majesties commands in not yeelding to such a peace as he commanded The sending of suspected Generals whose Treacherie is now discovered unto Vlster Mounster where they did little service and wasted upwards of threescore thousand pounds did concurre to this necessitie and weakenesse which was augmented by decrying the p●ice of Bullion procured by privat men for their particular interest contrary to the act of the first generall assembly whereby Marchants others doe now make it a trade to export Bullion out of the Kingdome who before made it a trade to import Bullion into the kingdome I passe by the lamentable division which if daily fomented among our selves and causeth many to be more tenacious of their moneys and lesse free in their contributions to the advance of the catholicke cause lesse service irdone and yet our necessity increased what we gayned by Gods powerfull hand wee are like to loose by our owne facall division In a word not out enemies forces but our selves have brought upon us all the necessity and weakenesse the late Councell and Committees have thus complayned of Sed tantum confidenter state videbitis auxilium Domini super vos 33. Our third answer is that our necessity or weakenesse is not so great for all that as they seeme to aggravate First because we received from catholicke Princes and Prelates abroad in money and money-worth well nigh an hundred thousand pounds Secondly we had the assistance of the Excise Thirdly of Customes Fourthly of the Kings Rents Fiftly of the tenths of prizes gotten at sea Sixtly the estats of the fugitive Parliamentary Rebels Seventhly two thirds of the Church livings Eightly the fourth part of our owne catholicke Confederats rents Ninthly severall grand applotments which amounted to large summes of money Tenthly other great summes borrowed by way of Ione c. Certes these subsidies are farre greater than those which our enemies in all the Provinces of Ireland have had and being well managed had maintayned yearely in the field a greater army than ever hath beene maintayned by the late councell committee but when great pensions are given to many who doe but little service to the cause or who may well serve for nothing being other wise rich enough what mervayle is it that the meanes appointed to relieve the souldiers are thus eaten up Yet are many of those men who thus heavily complaine of necessity so farre from being really necessit●ted as among them they have made purchases of twenty thousand pounds worth and many of them who had not where withall to subsist are now furnished with many thousand Trepidaverunt timore ubi non erat timor VVhen we contributed large summes of money to the enemy wee never complayned of necessity but when we are to contribute to the maintenance of the catholicke cause then are our complaynts multiplyed To maintayne heresie against God and treason against our Soveraigne the London heretickes contributed in one morning welnigh a Million of money and since that time have contributed many Millions more and yet never complayned of necessity shall Catholickes to maintayne Religion towards God and loyaltie towards their Soveraigne be inferiour to such miscreants Were our necessityes relieved or our warre diminished and the Catholicke faith in some sort secured by the late rejected peace some colourable excuse these men might have for their complaint of necessity But when by such a peace our necessities are rather augmented our warre increased and which is worse of all our religion extinguished what just cause of complaint may they pretend You will say having peace with Ormond we have lesse enemies to oppose the warre is by so much diminished I answer the catholicke Confederats gaine not somuch tranquility by that peace as they gayne woe and misery infamy among Christian Princes on earth and the indignation of God and his Angels in heaven Seeing they are tyed to maintayne all the heretickes of the kingdome and all the armies garisons belonging to their enemies wheras before they had onely the Catholickes and the armies and garisons in their owne quarters to be maintained and besides that by that peace they loose all the subsidies above mentioned which hitherto they had to maintayne such armies and garisons so as they are like to be reduced to the most miserable condition that ever any Nation hath been reduced unto Adde hereunto that in very deed when we suppose by this peace that wee have peace yet wee have no true peace but the Marquesle is at his owne liberty to breake off when he finds his best opportunity seing the peace is invalid and grounded on no Commission Et curabant contri●i●nem f●liae p●puli mei cum ignominia dicentes pax pax non erat
pax Ierem. 6. 14. See 1. part art 15. c. And p. 2. § 2. See hereafter numb 35. The danger of the kingdome aggravated by the foresaid Councels Letter unto the Nuncius taken away before they concluded any peace 33. IN that Letter you have heard the Councell and Committee aggravat vehemently the dangerous state and condition wherein then 1. Iunij 1646. the kingdome was and to avoyde this danger they would needs make any peàce upon what conditions soever This was the chiefe pretence they had to make this unhappy peace Now marke the just judgement of God discovering the corruption of this pretence before ever they concluded this peace this dangerous state and condition wherein the kingdome then stood was quite taken away by the wonderfull hand of God insomuch as Ireland was never in a better posture or condition than it was when they concluded this peace Marke it well I pray you the peace was never concluded untill the 29 of Iuly 1646. neyther were they by vertue of any anteriour contract bound then to conclude that contract as above I have proved but they remayned still in their full liberty till the foresaid 29. day of Iuly to conclude or not conclude a peace Before that 29. day of Iuly namely the sift day of Iune the glorious victory against the Scots in Vister was obtayned by the Confederate Catholickes under the conduct of the renowned Commander Eugenius O Neyle and by that meanes the dangerous state and condition of that part of the kingdome quite taken away On the 7. of Iuly which was 22. dayes before the peace with Ormond was concluded the noble and vigilant Commander Preston after deleating all the power strength of the Scots-horse which was upwards of 600. reduced to the obedience of the Confederate catholickes for his Majesties ufe Roscoman Abbey of Boyle c. and immediatly freed all that Province of Connaght Slygo onely excepted from the infesture of the rebellious Scot and had cleerely chased them out of Slygo also had not this wret ched peace given interruption to his fortunat endevours S● as the dangerbus condition wherein that Province was likewise taken away before the foresaid 29. of Iuly On the 13. of Iuly which was 16. day●s before the foresaid peace was concluded Bunratty was taken in the enemies chased out of that part of the Province of M●unster so as the greatest danger which might be there feared was also taken away Et persecuti sunt filios superbiae prosperatum est opus in mamb●● eoru● This expedition was done by the army commanded by the Lord Viscount Muskry seconded by the auspicious accesse of the most Illustrious Iohn Baptist Archbishop Prince of Firmo Nuncius Apostolicke by whose largesses the foresaid armies of Vlster and Connaght were maintayned 34. Compare these with the Lord Nuncius his answer judicious Reader and judge whether our intrusted councell and committees have proceeded bona side in concluding this unwarrantable peace whether they have with that integritie which is sutable to the qualitie of such noble Catholiques discharged the trust imposed in them by the whole Kingdome in the weightiest affaires that ever concerned a Nation After that the God of Hosts had prodigiously rescued Ireland from those dangers and calamities which were imminent after that those great clouds which were feared to burst into a terrible storme had beene in a moment dissipated after the revocation of the Marques of Ormonds commission and of the commission given unto our committee of treatie after so many advertisments given unto them by the Nuncius and Clergie not to conclude any peace after so many exclamations of the Catholique confederates at home and of Christian Princes and Prelats abroad against the oblique proceedings of our intrusted partie and after the opposition made by the soundest part of the councell and committee It pleased the rest of them notwithstanding all this to conclude without power or commission this fatall peace whereby they have stopped our happy progresse in further victories and given occasion of the greatest division that ever yet hath been in Ireland Whereas if they were pleased to abstaine from concluding this fantasticall peace with our Enemie in one part of the Kingdome we had ere now had a true peace with all our enemie in all parts of the kingdome for indeed by Gods blessi●g we had either chased them out of the kingdome or we had forced them to such conditions as would secure Religion King and Countrey So as in very deed the making of this peace hath made a warre and no peace increased our da●g●rs necessities weakenesse and calamities but tooke no●e away Deceperunt populum meum dicentes pax non est pax Ezech 13 10. 34. It s remarkable how in then foresaid answer they aggravate only the present state condition of the kingdome in the temporallitie as if they weighe●● not the staie and condition of the kingdom in the spirituallitie which was the point the Nuncius urged and the whole kingdome in their severall decla●a●ions resolved to rectifie They ●ffi●me that obedience due to his Majestre enforced them to any peace with what Divines did they consult to informe them how farre the subjects obedience to his Prince did extend Is it not knowne the divines that sa●e in the same councell with them were against them can not wee render due obedience to our King without dis●b●ying our God they ought to rem●mber that lesson of the Aposties Oportet obedire Deo magis quam hominibus How shall we give to God what is due to God if we give all to Cefar and leave nothing for God But this was a worke of supererogation of theirs the Kings Majestie looked for no such blind obedience from them He gave them the repea●e of the penall lawes they rejected them he gave them by publicke contract their Churches Church-livings jurisdiction and free exercise of Religion they contemned them Yet if they would needs appeare such obedient subjects why did they disobey the Kings let●er of the eleventh of Iune commanding no peace should be made with them I wish it appeare not their obedience was to the subject and disobedience to the Prince The Lord Nuncius in his Letters exhorteth them to fidelitie to their Prince and yet diswadeth them to m●ke any peace with the Marques protesting that all the damage that should befall the King and this kingdome by concluding that unjust peace should be imputed to them as to men who abuse their private affection and lucre to the destruction of the Common-wealth So as in the Lord Nuncius his opinion by whom our councell and committee should be directed if they stood to the principles of Catholique doctrine and their owne covenant with him its disobedience to the King to obey Ormond and to disobey him is obedience to the King 35. But the councell and committee in their foresaid letter to the Nuncius say they will ratify
Ormond taking advantage of the time and occasion marched out of Dublin with his forces tooke in Timolin and attempted Rosse where he lost his shipping was frustrated of his expedition and his army so infeebled as he was not able to make any considerable Excursions in halfe a yeare after wherein God shewed his indignation against perfidie and remunerated the innocencie and integritie of the confederate Catholiques by giving into their possession thirty or fourty of the enemies garrisons within few monethes after in so much as the Marques of Ormond was glad to make a speedy cessation with them otherwise they had gone to the very gates of Dublin there being no considerable resistance against them 43. The limitation of their commission according to the 17. propositions propounded unto his Majestie in Aprill 1644. and the 14. additionall propositions thereunto annexed whereunto the 30. Articles of the late rejected peace are answerable is sufficiently explicated in the first part particularlarly § 14. Numb 26. whereunto we referre the Reader The limitation of the foresaid Commission by severall Acts of Assembly 44. Quarto Iunij 1645. It is ordered saith the kingdome then in publicke Assembly upon the question nemine contradicente that the Committee of Instructions shall draw an act that as to the Catholiques of Ireland whether Clergie or La●y all penalties pressures incapacities prejudice and inconvenience laid on the professors of the Roman Catholique Religion by the statute of 2. Elizabeth or any other Act or Law in force in this Kingdome should be taken away and repealed This act was concluded and agreed upon after mature deliberation and serious debate had of this matter by the committees of Instructions whose opinion the Chaire-man reported unto the house at two severall sessions to wit the second and fourth of Iune 1645. It was likewise unanimously ordered by the said Assembly 9. Iunij 1645. That as to the demand made by the Lord Marques of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to the commissioners of the Treaty of peace for the restoring of the Churchesto the Protestant clergie the commissioners shall give an absolute denyall th● committee of Instructions are to prepare an Instruction to that effect 11. Iunij 1645. the article concerning Ecclesiasticall and spirituall Iurisdiction saith my diurnall received in publicke Assembly a long and learned debate concerning the severall statuts of premunire and provision and concerning excommunications fulminated by Protestant Prelats against Catholiques whereby they were perpetually forced to repaire to the Protestants Tribunall to obtaine absolutions from them or else to be imprisoned by a writ de Excommunicate capiendo also concerning the maine difference betweene our Religion and protestancie in dispensing with mariage within degrees c. much more appertaining to the Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction was then debated and at length generally referred that day unto the comissioners with instructions from the committee of Instructions The Marques of Ormond in his abridgement of concessions reade in assembly 14 Augusti propounded three manner of remedies for that g●ievance none pleased the assemby because the cure was worse than the discease tandem 28. Augusti 1645. it was unanimously agreed upon by the Lords Spirituall and Temporall in full Assembly nullo discrepante that the Catholique confederates of Ireland should never submit or be subordinate to the Protestant Clergie or to any their jurisdiction See also for this the councells letter numb 51. 45. What dispensation our committee of the Treatie had to conclude a peace without procuring a repeale of the penall lawes assurances for our Churches and exemption from the Protestant Clergies Iurisdiction we have not read or heard of So great were the pressures suffered by the Catholiques in Ireland by the Exorbitant power of the Protestant Prelates as many of our Cathliques breathed their last in miserable captivitie others were forced to keepe their owne dwelling houses as if they were in restraint to shun the greedy Parators and hapshares whereof some namely Alderman Doud and Alderman Goodwing Mr. Thomas Long Mr. Iames VValsh Mr. Robert Hacket and others continued in such restraint for the space of seaven yeares or thereabouts Alderman Francis Tayler was prisoner in the Castle of Dublin 18. whole yeares if my memorie faile me not and Alderman Patricke B●owne after so many yeares also imprisonment in the Castle dyed in the prison But hereof much more might be said which I am forced to omit Shall we shall we wilfully fall againe into the same servitude and incurre the malediction of Chanaan to be servi servorum fratribus nostris The learned debate in the assembly and convocation house touching this question whether the confederate Catholiques be bound in conscience by vertue of the oath of Association or other tye to make an expresse article with the Protestant partie for keeping in our hands such Chuches Abbeyes c. now in our possession 46 For the negative part it was suggested that if any such article be made his Maiesty will breake off and consent to no peace betweene us and the above specified party to the great danger of the estates lives and liberties of all our party And it was further urged that in not demanding such an article as above his Maiesty will grant us toleration of Religion For the affirmative part it was likewise suggested that without an expresse article Gods patrimony was not secured that however men might be prodigall in the dispensation of their owne goods yet without danger of Gods indignation they ought not to be prodigall in the dispensation of Gods goods that this his Majesties Kingdome of Ireland had beene more securely preserved for him and his Royall issue by preserving the Churches in the Catholiques hands than in suffering the seeming Protestants to pos●esse the same who indeed have as great an antipathy against the Protestant doctrine established in England as they have against the Catholique doctrine and therefore might be justly feared to so journe in such places where the Churches Church-livings are as Intelligentiers for the Parliament 47. For these reasons and many more the house of Convocation wholly inclined to the affirmative part The integrity of the whole Kingdome in this particular appeares by their act of assembly of the 9. of Iune one thousand six hundred fourty and five above mentioned They debated indeed learnedly for a long time how they might observe that Divine lecture of CHRIST IESUS Give unto Cesar what is due unto Cesar and unto God what is due unto God Some feared if the Catholicke Confederats had demanded an expresse article for their Churches they had not Given to Cesar what was due unto Cesar and therefore thought a negative act that is to say an act of our owne assembly denying to give unto the Lord Lieutenant our Churches might serve the turne others thought they had not given unto God what was due unto God If the kingdome had concluded a peace without an expresse article for conservation of their Churches God
part thereof is it yet con●luded neither is i● knowne when any conclusion shal be Certes if peace were concluded nothing else thence followeth than rep●se and as it were a certaine cessation untill it receive sull perfection and accomplishment by parliament and when this Parliament shal be yea whether it shall ever be seeing it de pendson very many accidents it s altogether uncertaine and when the Parliament shal be assembled we have recourse to armes if any d●ssention arise meane while the government of their owne Quarters as hetherto and of their Churches of their Emoluments and of the passessions of all their things doth remaine in the hands of the confederate Catholiques 53. Out of which and out of many more reasons which in the same Epistle the councell doth alleage they prove the necessirie of the Nuncius his p●esence in Ireland and to that end doe not onely invite but also u●ge and presse him as well by this and other letters as also by speciall messengers sent into France to come into Ireland as●●ing him further that the Ecclesiasticall ●urisdiction in the conditions of peace deman ded and derived from His Holinesse is and shall be in the hands of the Catholiques independent of the Protestants to the promotion pro pagation and secure preservation whereof the presence of the Nuncius Apostolicke is necessarily required c. having promised unto him a place of Residence where the supreme government of the kingdome should be together with a guard to wait on his person they shew the constancie of the Catholiques of Ireland in their Religion their Christian fortitude in attempting this holy warre even without armes ammunition or other provision against he enemies of Religion King and Countrey and unto the difficulties propaunded by the most noble Spinola concerning the oath of ●upremacie the admission of Catholique Bishops to the next Parliament and the governement whither the same should remaine in the hands of the Protestant Vice Roy they answer that the Irish Nation by no meanes dangers or hazard of life and fortunes for these hundred yeares past could ever be induced to acknowledge the temporall Prince to be S●p●eme head of the Church or to submit themselves to such an Oath much lesse doe they meane hereafter to submit themselves thereunto and that in the last assembly by universall voice and vo●e●t was concluded that they would perpetually insist upō the taking away of the same oath that they believed the pseudo Bishops would not dare appeare in the next Parliament that they had great hopes and grounds to exclude them from thence and though they were present yet may ●ot they prejudice our affaires s●eing it is extant in our conditions that they are to have no ●urisdiction in causes appertaining to the Catholique Religion and the professors thereof c. 54. Vnto the third difficultie concerning the government of the Kingdome by a Prot●stant Vice Roy they answer that neither the whole govermn●nt nor the government of all the sorts or cities shall be in the hands of the Vice-Roy there shall be catholiques in the councell of state and they ●hall be governours of many cities the Ecclesiasticall hierarch●e shall be the catholique clergie out of all these there shall be a body politicke composed of catholiques c. the chiefe member of which body shall be the Nunoius of the See Apostolique who shall make choice of the most secure citie wherein he may keepe his residence and that body politicke of catholiques shall defend his dignitie and securitie with the hazard of life and fortunes so we in the name of all the conf●derate catholiques ex nunc ●unc doe promise and therein oblige the publicke faith of the whole Kingdome And this meane and this remedy is sufficient c. to secure the Apostolicke Nuncius being in this Kingdome from any disgrace or danger Adde hereunto presently upon the arivall of the most illustrious and most Reverend Nuncius having considered the conveniences and inconveniences of our-state and affaire VVE VVILD DOE VVHATSOEVER HE SHALL THINKE expedient Observations on the foresaid Letter or obligation 55. The Reader is first prudently to observe that the postulations mentioned number 51. are the seaventeene propositions and the 14. additionall propositions whereof wee have made frequent mention in the first part those acts of assembly and other orders above mentioned VVhich Unlesse they were obtained and by Parliament confirmed the warre was still to be continued Our committee have concluded the rejected peace and the same councell that made this promise in the name of the Kingdome two onely excepted hath confirmed the same and yet the conditions or postulations above mentioned nor the tenth part of them have been by our committee of treaty obtained as the Reader may cleerely behold in our observations on the articles of peace part 1. 2. The councell numb 52. doe acknowledge they know not when the Parliament will be and doe informe the Nunc●us that untill t●e Pa●liament be the government and jurildiction Church●s possessions c. must still remaine in their owne hands a●d yet by the articles of the peace they are taken frō us before not the least appearance of securitie for our Churches or church-livings much lesse of exemption from the Iurisdiction of the Protestans clergie It is true that when this obligation was made Glamorgans peace was in force by which our Churches and Church-livings Iurisdiction and exemption from the power of the Protestant clergie was in some sort secured unto us but that peace being recall'd by his Majestie before Ormonds peace was concluded and the condition on our part upon which tha● peace was grounded being not performed it w●s a notab●e breach of publicke faith in our councell inexcusable ever to approve or condescend to ●he Marques of Ormonds peace and the matter is so much the more to be aggravated that the councell themselves did seeme to wave the b●nefit of Glamorgans peace upon the Protestation made against it by the Marques of Ormond 3. By our observations on the first article in our first part it appeareth that neither Ecclesiasticall ●or Secular is exempted from the Oath of Suprem●cie so as in this particular also whereof numb 53 publicke faith is broken with the Nuncius Touching the Protestant Bishops sitting in Parliament and the continuation of a Protestant Vice-Roy see our observations on the 10. 12. and 14. article part 1. 4. Nothing that is promised numb 54. is performed or true and if the rejected peace were accepted the body politicke of the confederate Catholiques had beene dissolved the Nuncius forced with disgrace to fly the countrey and no confederate catholique secured of his Religion life libertie or estate 5. By the last particle our councell obliged the Kingdome upon the arrivall of the Lord Nuncius not to rely upon the Earle of Glamorgans owne peace if the Lord Nuncius thought any other peace more expedient which is the matter which
he so earnestly urgeth in his letters above mentioned And herein we charge the councell and committees with notable breach who contrarie to their promise and vow and contrarie to the severall protestations and inhibitions of the said Lord Nuncius concluded a peace which he thought not expedient and whereunto he would never yeeld consent See our observations on the 14. article numb 26. 27. §. 19. A publicke Contract made by the kingdome with the Lord Nuncius not to conclude any peace untill he and Glamorgan concluded on a peace for the Spiritualtie c. 56. Articles agreed upon betwixt the most Illustrious and most Reverend Lord Iohn B●●●ist Lord ●rchbishop and Prince of ●●rmo extraordinary ●postolicke Nunc●o to the Confederate Catholickes of Ireland and the Nobility imployed by the said Consederate Catholickes together with the Earle of Glamorgan to the said Illustrious Nuncius at Kilkenny the 19 of February 1645. Inprimis a Cessation shal be continued till the first of May by which time or sooner if the most ●llustrious Lord Nuncius doe not bring the Originall agreements under hand and Seale betwixt his Helynesse and the Queene of great Britaine the said most illustrious Lord Nuncius shall ratifie whatsoever shall seeme meete to him on the behalfe of his Holynesse and the Earle of Glamorgan in the behalfe of the King of England that an honourable and wished peace be not any longer deferred 57. Secondly In the meane time if the Confederate Catholickes doe send from hence to treate with the Vice-roy about politicall affaires and differences it is declared that no prejudice shall be inferred by that treaty to this Treaty that is to be betwixt the most illustrious and most Reverend Lord Nuncius and the Earle of Glamorgan that untill there be a conclusion and publication of it the other also may not be concluded or published And that there be no change in the in●erim of the Politicall or Civill government so that both may be at once and together concluded and published by the approbation of the generall assembly if it shall be seene necessary to the said Lord Nuncio and Earle of Glamorgan to call it Thomas Tyrell Emerus Clogherensis Nich. Plunket Gerald Fenell Richard Bellings Patricke Darcy Thomas Cashell Castle-haven Audly Net ●ervile Muskry Thomas Preston Daniell O Brien Lucas Dillon Terlagh O Neyle George Comin 58. Here we are to note First the circumstance of time to wit the 19. of February which was when the assembly of the kingdome was fully gathered together Within 12. dayes after namely the second of March an order was conceived by the same assembly to Treate with the Marquesse of Ormond and to prepare things for a peace with his Excellency but not one word authorizing the Committee to conclude a peace for that had been a manifest violation of this contract made with the Nuncius nay by this very act of assembly and solemne contract whereunto the whole kingdome condescended i● before then eyther Conncell or Committees had any power communicated unto them by any former act of assembly which I could never yet reade it was now sufficiently recalled Secondly we are to note the persons that subscribed to the contract in the behalfe of the Confederate Catholickes are the persons chiefly intrusted by the kingdome M Tyrell chayreman of the committee of Instructions the Lord Viscount Muskry and M. Darcy are two of th● five that subscribed to the peace contrary to their owne contract here agreed upon the rest were then of the Supreme Councell or Committee whereof most of them being of the following Supreme Councell or Committee of Instructions approved also the peace contrary to this their own contract wherein they engaged themselves and the kingdome never to conclude or publish any peace untill the peace to be agreed upon betweene the Nuncius and Clamorgan were concluded and published together with it Th●●d●y this contract cleerely discovers how frivolous that part of the Councell and Committees answer to the Nuncius 1. of Iune was wherein they say they expected untill the first of May according the Nuncius his pleasure before they concluded any peace for they were indeed to expect VNTILL a conclusion or publication were made of the peace to be agreed upon between him and Glamorgan in the behalfe of his Holynesse and his Maiestie and if the Orig●nals came not from Rome by May they were to expect untill the Nuncius did ratifie whatsoever should seeme meete unto him c. which was agreable to the publicke Faith of the kingdome past by them unto him before his coming unto the kingdome by the above mentioned Letter sent unto him in October 1645. wherein they promised to doe nothing but what should seeme expedient unto him So as if I had ●●●ely seene this contract I might well have spared the twelve answers I made above to this objection wherefore the Nuncius and the Clergy did justly protest against all their proceedings in the late rejected peace as being without ground or Commission and in violation of the publicke Faith given Fourthly no withstanding this contract they changed the government by concluding that peace and contrary to the same contract they would not dayne to call together a generall assembly as the Nuncius desired and as by this contract they were bound before they concluded the peace How herein they may be excusable I understand not §. 20. The Oath of Association which being compared to what we have delivered in this Survay proves the iustice of the Clergies Decree of periury c. 59. I A. B doe promise sweare protest before God his Saints his Angels that I will during my life beare true faith and allegeance to my Soveraigne Lord CHARLES by the grace of God King of great Brittaine France and Ireland and to his Heires and lawfull Successors and that I will to my power during my life defend uphold and maintayne all his and their just prerogatives estate rights the power and priviledge of the Parliament of this Realme the fundamentall Lawes of Ireland the free exercise of the Roman catholicke faith and Religion throughout this Land and the lives iust liberties possessions estates and rights of all those that have taken or shall take this Oath and performe the contents thereof and that I will obey and ratifye all the orders and decrees made and to bee made by the Supreme Councell of the Confederate Catholickes of this kingdome concernig the said publicke cause and that I will not seeke directly or indirectly any pardon or protection for any act don or to be don touching this Generall cause without the consent of the Major part of the said Councell and that I will not directly or indirectly doe any act or acts that shall preiudice the said cause but will to the hazzard of my life and estate assist prosecute and maintayne the same So helpe me God and his holy Gospel 60. This Oath was established for preservation of union among the Confederate Catholickes