Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n earl_n john_n viscount_n 38,711 5 12.0935 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55774 The mystery and method of His Majesty's happy restauration laid open to publick view by John Price. Price, John, 1625?-1691. 1680 (1680) Wing P3335; ESTC R30537 81,380 190

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

The Illustrious GEORGE MONCK Duke of ALBEMARLE Captaine Generall of all his Majesties Land-forces etc. THE MYSTERY AND METHOD Of His Majesty's Happy Restauration Laid Open to PUBLICK VIEW By John Price D. D. one of the late Duke of Albemarle ' s Chaplains and Privy to all the Secret Passages and Particularities of that Glorious Revolution LONDON Printed for James Vade at the Cock and Sugar-Loaf near St. Dunstans Church in Fleet-street 1680. To the Right Honorable John Earl of Bath Viscount Greenvile of Lansdown Baron Greenvile of Biddiford and Kelkhampton Knight Groom of the Stole First Gentleman of the Bed-Chamber Lord Lieutenant of the Counties of Devon and Cornwall and one of the Lords of His Majesties Most Honorable Privy Council c. My Lord WHat I have here presented to your Lordships View I did once design to have transmitted to Posterity in a large Draught and in a Freer Style and to have reserved it as my last Testament to the care of my Executor in Confidence that it would Then have Entertainment with such as should not be tempted by Impulses of Prejudice Interest or Malevolence to asperse the Generous and successful Attempt of General Monk towards the Restoring of our Present Sovereign whom God preserve long among us But finding that of late his Loy●…lty to his Prince hath been day●…y more and more q●…estioned and traduced his Conduct aba●…ed nay and that my self have been charged to my F●…ce with the Rude 〈◊〉 of Forgery upon my undertaki●…g 〈◊〉 in ●…rivate Discourses to Vindic●…te and assert His Integrity and Sincer●…ty knowing so well as I did upon what Grounds he first Engag'd And this too by ●…uch Persons generally as of all men in the World had the least Re●…son t●… do it I am forced to alter my fi●…st Re●…olution as not being able to answer it t●… the Sacred A●…hes of my Deceased Lord and Patron the with-holding of th●…e Papers h●…w rude and Imperfect soever a●…y longer from the Publick It might po●…bly be one Grain in the Scale also the 〈◊〉 that there are none that I know of now Living but your Lordship and your Servant of this Memorial that were Pri●…y to the Motives of the Generals First Engagement when Sir George Booth was at the Head of some Confederates in Cheshire Now though true it be that that Combination took not effect and indeed it was well for the General nay and possibly for the King and Kingdom too that it did not yet from the time of Lamberts turning out of Doors his Masters at Westminster I do avouch that my Lord did all along with a direct Eye aim at the Kings Restauration Neither is it Improbable but that this second Attempt would have miscarry'd likewise had not the Conduct of it been in the hands of a Superior Providence For upon the Generals open Protesting in Scotland against the English A●…my for disturbing the Rump the Cavalier and Presbyterian the then two Royal Parties became Rampant in their hopes though neither of them altogether forgetting their old Animosities Wherefore the more discerning Independents fearing an approaching Ruin adjudging it Prudent to make advantage of these Heart-burnings began to make fresh Court to the Presbyterian he being of a nearer Allyance as having fought under the same Colours and pay with themselves again●…t the Late King These two g●…eat Part es comprehended in a manner the ●…dy of the Engli●…h a●…d Scotish Subjects though ●…th of them o●…eraw'd and kept under ●…y the then Domineering Faction of the Sectaries The former of these had been in the Field for Charles the First aga●…nst his Two Houses of Parliament whom He by a Law of his own making having ●…ermitted to conti●…ue The●…e as ●…uch whether for h●…m or 〈◊〉 him it was soon foun'd ●…y w●…ful experience that he had l●…st his Crown before a stroak was st●…uck The Cavaliers who were of the Nobility and Gentry of England and of whom y●…ur Lordship was one came in freely and generously adher'd to the King as the●…r Sovereign And yet which is dolorous to remember he lost his Life by a Mockery of Justice This was a Piece of Villany not to be Paralled in any H●…story And Bishop Andre●…s has delivered as much in his Notes up●…n the Sixth Commandment Cap. 2. In these w●…rds Yet never any People in the World sayes he pretended by any Colour of Legal proceedings or shew of M●…ck-Justice to touch the Life of a Prince c. Neither p●…ssibly could This have enter'd his Phansie had not the fresh death of Mary Queen of Scots and the Monumental Lines of a Prophetical Poet to be found in Arch-Bishop Spotwood's History suggested the C●…nsequences to his thoughts thus that since one Sovereign Prince had executed another equal to her self in Regalities the case might be when a People would do the like to their Prince Now the Cavaliers had not only lost their Estates by the Fortune of War but e●…en their Hopes also of ever being in a Condition to appear again by themselves for the Recovery of their own Losses or the Crown of England which fell with their Masters Head My Charity induce●… me to believe that the soberer part of the Presbyteri●…ns had been decoyed into a War with the In●…cription of Loyalty upon their Armes and under the plausible pretenc●… of Fighting for King and Parliament But however they lived to repent of the Felicities of them for having acted their parts too far they were forced to yield to more su●…til Enginiers of State who had a further game to play Bishops Lands not being Booty enough for so many sharers Thus themselves suffer'd as well as acted a Reformation and so went of the Stage Now though their Name was not so offensive to the then Parliament and Army as was that of the Cavaliere yet they still kept an Eye equally wakefull over them both Especially now upon their finding that they were neither of them capable of concealing their inward satisfaction at General Monk's Remonstrating against the Army in England And indeed their Hopes upon this Occasion were so luxuriant that some of them durst pray for his Success others not only Drink His Health but the Kings too and that Publickly Nay he had not Marched many days from h●…s cold Quarters on the North of Tweede his March being without orders too before the sound of Bells that welcomed us into England had filled the Ears even of his very Officers with the noise of Jealousies and Apprehensions touching the end of his making this long Journey And though they had learned the Duty of Soldiers not to Mutiny no nor so much as to expostulate with him yet it was evident that several of them deemed there was more in the Action then did openly appear But though the General was able to deal well enough with these yet could he not overcome those of his Masters at Westminster who did not well relish this hasty March even of their Restorer Yet they could not
even above the Temptation of Sovereignty it self as did after wards fully appear Nay and so glorious was the atchievment also that there was more in it then the single Restauration of Charles the Second even the recovery of lost Monarchy to the Royal Family it self to whom the Diadem of Right belonged though at that time it was left a prey to Usurpers as they could play their Game He Lov'd his Prince and he lov'd his Country and as a True English-man judged them to have one and the same Interest And thus his Actions justified his Declarations which were to reduce the Military Power in obedience to the Civil The Soldiers of England having then Erected a distinct Interest from the People of it Nor was it an easy matter to have reduced them had not the Army by His most Excellent conduct I will rather say by a Divine been divided and set at odds It now only remains my Lord t●…at I deliver this Memorial to Posterity under your Patronage In which I purpose not to touch upon things known and allow'd any otherwise then barely for Method sake the stress of the Controversy not depending upon Them but upon General Monks designed Loyalty to restore our Sovereign and our Laws to us Now because he was short sighted and could not discern at a Distance it has been suggested to me more sarcastically then wittily as if that Imperfection had reached his understanding also and that he could not see so far as to the Restoring of the King Let others who are as tender of the honor of the late Duke of Albemarle as I am and ought to be contribute to the vindicating of his Memory from this Calumny in what proportion and with what solemnity of attestation they please to gain Credit As for my self being of an Inferior rank I do foresee that what I shall deliver will not by a great many easily be believed yea I am before hand threatned that it shall not whether it be upon the Score of my fidelity and secresie in that great affair or of the prosperous close and Issue of it in my deceased Lord I shall not trouble my self to determine against spite and Prejudice But contenting my self with the answer of a good Conscience that I have not forged things either to greaten his Honor and Loyalty or to lessen it by relating some few passages to which I was privy or in which I acted Envy having pursu'd even a Fly upon this fortunate Wheel of Revolution though not making the noise of a Qualem or Quantem pulverem I shall presume to pray your Lordships protection of the ensuing Narrative and of the unworthy Author of it who is My Lord Your Lordships Obliged and Devoted Servant John Price THE MYSTERY AND METHOD Of His MAJESTIE' 's Happy Restauration c. AUGUST 1. 1659. Sir George Booth now Lord De la Mere by compact at his day appeared in Arms be it Recorded to his Eternal Honour and ●…ent forth a brisk Declaration manifesting the justice and necessity of them For at that time the whole Nation groaned under the insupportable Servitude of the Tyrannical Oligarchy sitting at Westminster under the notion of a Parliament against whom a very powerful Combination was then made Many of those who had sormerly fought under them complained that they w●…e deceived nay and diverse even then actually in their service were so ingenuous as to confess that That could not be their Countries Freedom where the worst of Tyrannies under the 〈◊〉 of a Commonwealth a●…d the good old ●…use were like to be perpetuated And however the great Officers might thrive whilst they were in powe●… yet they saw full well that their Posterity would be forced to pay back to t●…ose li●…entious Usurpers whatever their 〈◊〉 had got should the Government still rest●… an Oligarchy which is the corruption of the worst of Governments a Democrasie and consequently the worst of Tyrannies Thus we ●…ee tha●… the State o●… Three Kingdoms was then most deplorable The King compassionated their condition for him●…elf had the greatest share in the calamity and though his Royal Person was safe from the fury of his Enemies yet was he so nea●… that by his authority he was still ready to contribute to the vindicating the just rights of his Subjects and his own To this end there were constantly residing at London some Noble Persons of great Honour and 〈◊〉 Loyal●…y in spight of Axes an Gibbets a●…ter they had lost the Field who were commissioned by his Majesty both to hold correspondence with him and to issue forth such commands from time to time as occasion should offer for his Majesties Service And the occasion was eminent now upon the return of that Thing called a Parliament who had been respited from their Power by the Monarc●…ical Interposition of their General Oliver Cromwel and his Son and that too by the space of about five years This Restitution was mostly procured by the Army who feared that a National Interest like a Deluge would have broken in upon them had they suffered Cromwel's Son and his MockParlia●…ent to sit longer in Authority And the Armie's pretences being for Commonwealth they had no nearer a Sanctuary to flye unto then this Long Parlia●…ent as they called it whose guilt they knew to be at least equal with Theirs and distasted and abhorred by all tha●… were not their own and even by ●…ome of Them too wherefore the Presbyterian Party began now at last to awaken into Loyalty and chose ●…ather to joyn with the Cavaliers as they pretended then to see their Country ●…o enslaved and indeed the Cavaliers 〈◊〉 quieted their Jelousies for his Majesties Commissioners consented that the Presbyterians should have the chief command in all places and that their Declaration should only be for a Free Parliament and against publick grievances And now Sir George Booth Lord De la mere undertook ●…or Cheshire and the Counties adjacent Sir Thomas Middleton for North Wales Major General Massy for Glocester and South Wales The Lord Fairfax for the North The Lord Roberts now Earl of Radnor and President of the Council for the West Colonel Alexander Popham and Col. Robert Rolles for Wiltshire Somersetshire and Devonshire Col. Norton for Portsmouth and Hantshire and Sir Horatio now Lord Townsend for the associated Counties and in like manner diverse others in all places through out England solemn Protestations and Assurances being given that they would not fail each other Not long before this Sir John Greenvile the now Earl o●… Bath who was one of those Honourable Commi●…sioners residing at London for his Majesties Service had received a particular Commission to treat secretly and privately with General Monk in Scotland The King it seems having these thoughts about him that if a dexterous Application could be made to him he might be gained to his Service as having been in his Fathers in which he was taken Prisoner and his Releasement neglected But the Parliament having experienced