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A83496 Speeches and passages of this great and happy Parliament: from the third of November, 1640, to this instant June, 1641. Collected into one volume, and according to the most perfect originalls, exactly published. England and Wales. Parliament.; Mervyn, Audley, Sir, d. 1675.; Pym, John, 1584-1643.; Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, 1593-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing E2309; Thomason E159_1; ESTC R212697 305,420 563

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Majesties government and intending the subversion of the fundamental Lawes and setled governement of that Realme and the distraction of his Majesties liege people there did upon the 30. day of September in the ninth yeare of his now Majesties Reigne in the Citie of Dublin the chiefe Citie of that Kingdome where his Majesties privie Counsell and Courts of Iustice doe ordinarily reside and whither the Nobility and Gentry of that Realme doe usually resort for Iustice in a publik● Speech before divers of the N●bility and Gentry and before the Major Aldermen and Recorder and many Citizens of Dublin and other his Majesties Liege people declare and publish that Ireland was a conquered Nation and that the King might doe with them what he pleased and speaking of the Charters of the former Kings of England made to that Citie he further said that their Charters were nothing worth and did binde the King no further then hee pleased 4. That Richard Earle of Corke having sued out processe in course of Law for recovery of his possessions from which he was put by colour of an order made by the said Earle of Strafford and the Counsell Table of the said Realme of Ireland The said Earle of Strafford upon a paper petition without legall proceeding did the 20 day of February in the 11. yeare of his n●w Majesties Reigne threaten the said Earle of Corke beeing then a Peere of the said Realme to imprison him unlesse he would surcease his suit and said That he would have neither Law nor Lawyers dispute or question any of his orders And the 20. d●y of March in the said 11. year of the said Earle of Strafford speaking of an order of the said Counsell Table of that Realme in the time of King James which concerned a Lease which the said Earle of Corke claimed in certaine rectories or tithes which the said Earle of Cork alleaged to be of no force said That he would make the said Earle and all Ireland know so long as hee had the government there any Act of State there made or to bee made should bee as binding to the Subjects of that Kingdome as an Act of Parliament And did question the said Earle of Corke in the Castle Chamber upon pretence of the breach of the said order of Counsell Table and did sundry other times and upon sundry other occasions by his words and speeches arrogate to himselfe a power above the fundementall Lawes and established Government of that Kingdome and scorned the said Lawes and established government 5 That according to such his Declarations and Speeches the said Earls of S r ffo●d did use and exercise a power above ●nd against and to the subversion of the said fundame tall Laws and established government of the said Realme of Ireland ex●ending such his power to the goods free holds inheritances liberties and lives of his Majesties Subjects in the said Realme viz. The said Earle of Sir●fford the twelfth day of December Anno Domini 1635. in the time of full peace did in the said Realme of Ireland give and procure to bee given against the Lord Mount Norris then and yet a Peere of Ireland and then Vice-Treasurer and receiver generall of the Realme of Ireland and one of the principall Secretaries of State and Keeper of the privy Signet of the said Kingdome a sentence of death by a Councell of warre called together by the said Earle of Strafford without any warrant or authority of Law or offence deserving any such punishment And hee the said Earle did also at Dublin within the said Realm of Ireland in the Month of March in the fourteenth yeare of his Majesties Reigne without any legall or due proceedings or tryall give or cause to bee given a sentence of death against one other of his Majesties Subjects whose name is yet unknowne and caused him to be put to death in execution of the said sentence 6 That the said Earle of Strafford without any legall proceedings and upon a paper Petition of Richard Ralstone did cause the said Lord Mount-Norris to be disseized and put out of possession of his free-hold and inheritance of his Mannor and Tymore in the Countrey of Armagh in the Kingdome of Ireland the said Lord Mount-Norris having beene two yeares before in quiet possession thereof 7 That the said Earle of Strafford in the Term● of holy Trinity in the thirteenth yeare of his now Majesties Reigne did cause a case commonly called the case of Tenures upon defective Titles to be made and drawne up without any ju●y or tryall or other legall processe and without the consent of parties and did then procure the ludges of the said Realme of Ireland to deliver their opinions and resolutions to that case and by colour of such opinion did without any legal proceeding cause Th●mas Lord Dillon a Pee●e of the said Realme of Ireland to be put out of possession of divers Lands and Tenements being his free-hold in the Countrey of Mago and Rosecomen in the said Kingdome and divers other of his Majesties Subjects to be also put out of possession disseized of their free hold by colour of the same resolution without legall proceedings whereby many hundreds of his Majesties subjects were undone and their families utterly ruinated 8 That the said Earle of Strafford upon a Petition of Sir Iohn Gifford Knight the first day of February in the said thirteenth yeare of his Majesties reigne without any regall Processe made a Decree or Order against Adam Viscount Lofts of Elie a Peere of the said Realme of Ireland and L Chancellor of Ireland did cause the said Viscount to bee imprisoned and kept close prisoner on pretence of disobedience to the said Decree or order And the said Earle without any authority and contrary to his Commission required and commanded the said Lord Viscount to yeeld unto him the great Seale of the Realme of Ireland which was then in his custody by his Majesties command and imprisoned the said Chancellour for not obeying such his command And without any legall proceedings did in the same thirteenth yeare imprison George Earle of Kildare a Peere of Ireland against Law thereby to enforce him to submit his Title to the Mannor and Lordship of Castle Leigh in the Queens County being of great yearely value to the said Earle of Straffords will and pleasure and kept him a yeare prisoner for the said cause two moneths whereof hee kept him close prisosoner and refused to enlarge him notwithstanding his Majesties Letters for his enlargement to the said Earle of Strafford directed And upon a Petition exhibited in October 1635. by Thomas Hibbots against dame Mary Hibbots widdow to him the said Earle of Strafford the said Earle of Strafford recommended the said Petition to the Counsell Table of Ireland where the most part of the Counsell gave their vote and opinion for the said Ladie but the said Earle finding fault herewith caused an order to be entred against the said Lady and threatned her
proceedings of the Assembly of which if those that were Officers and Ministers there had been come to Town upon whose help I rested for my particular instruction I should have been better able to have given you an accompt And His Maiesty was pleased to let you know that when there was an occasion of any particular you may be satisfied in it According to His Maiesties command 24. of September all the Peeres were summoned all except some few did meet where His Maiesty was In the first place pleased to declare unto us His resolution to call a Parliament and to all our ioyes and contents as he hath now done it to yours and ours declared that there was nothing he did more desire then to be rightly understood of His people And whosoever he be that shall go about effect it I am sure he cannot to attempt or indeavour to alter this gracious declaration and resolution of His Maiesty or whosoever shall go about to poyson the hearts of His good Subiects with an opinion that it can be so or lesson the affection of His loving Subiects for certainly never Subiects of the world better loved their King then the English nor ever did ever English-men better love a King then now if I say there be any suc● may acurse and punishment fall up 〈◊〉 But ●et the Royall Throne be for ever H●● Majesty was then pleased to tell us the cause for which 〈◊〉 had called us together In the first place it was touching an answer to a petition that had b●en since his coming to York And before His assembly sent unto him from those His Subiects of Scotland that were at Newcastle The first thing that His Maiesty desired their advice in was ●●e answer to that petition The next thing His Maiesty conceived And all that were there were of one opinion with one voyce and consent that it was not fit His Maiesty should disband His Army so long as the Scotch Army was on foot And His Maiesty wished them to take into their consideration what way to have maintenance for His Army in the mean time His Maiesty having opened the cause of calling them together was pleased to expresse himself that He would leave to the Lords their freedom of Debate and himself was ready to have been gone from the Councell but at the humble suite of the Lords he stayed And I am perswaded that nothing was of that ioy to them as His Maiesties presence with such freedome of discourse did every man deliver himself with such grace and sweetnesse did his Maiesty hear them and such content did they take in His moderating guiding and directing those Councells My Lords as holding it most necessary took the latter of those two considerations propounded by His Maiesty to their thoughts and that was the supplying and supporting His Maiesties Army till this Parliament might take some course in it His Maiesty and my Lords did declare themselves as before I have opened unto you that they could never attempt nor have the least thought to make by any Act or Order any thing tending to the Subiect but that it might be left wholly to the supream Jurisdiction And therefore not seeing any other way they resolved by letter to addresse themselves to the City of London And with their letters they sent half a dozen of my Lords My Lord Privy Seal my Lord of Clare who was appointed to go but his urgent occasions preven●ed him Viscount Cambden Lord Coventry Lord Goring and _____ And these Lords they did expresse the joy and content they took in the Kings grace and confidence they had of His gracious assistance was such that they did freely offer themselves and as I dare say there is none but is yet ready to enter into security with His Maie●ty And the City gave an answer fit for the Chamber of the King and part of the money is already lent and will be ready I assure my self to supply the rest For the other part the first thing propounded by His Majesty was touching the answer that was to be given to that petition and to the demands of the Subjects in Scotland upon which occasion His Majesty was pleased by those great Officers and Ministers of His that knew best and understood the laws and usages of that Kingdome to expound their demands particularly and to make appear unto their Lordships upon every one wherein they had expounded the Articles of pacification which His Majesty ever desired might be the Square and Rule of the treaty with them My Lords tooke into consideration what was fit to be done for his Majesty then professed as he did oft and as he hath done it during the time of that Councell to be wholy ruled guided and directed by their advice f r the honor of this Nation and saf●ty of it he did leave it to their wisedomes and considerations against whose advice and without whose judgements and advice he would do nothing My Lords howsoever they had received this information and explanation upon every particular of their demands yet in justice they thought it was fit to hear what could be said on the other side how the objection might be answered and what objection might be made by them against that which seemed to be plain enough For this purpose they were all of opinion and his Majesty was pleased to be of the same opinion that some Lords selected and trusted by that great Councell should Treate with those Subjects of Scotland upon all those particulars to the end that they might see what they did cleerly intend to the end that if a firm peace which was most desired from us might be had or a just Warre to be begun My Lords of the great Councell that were appointed for that purpose were the Earles of Bedford Hertford Essex Salisbury Warwick Bristow Holland and Barkeshire The Barons were the Lords Wharton Paget Rimbolton Brooke Pawlet Howard of Esaich Savile and Dunsmore After which choice some generall insurrections proceeding from the debate and discourses in that great Councell a Commission under the great Seale was given unto them to enable them to treate and conclude as they in their wisedomes and Judgements should thinke fit The place appointed for this treaty was at Rippon where the Lords Commissioners wanted the happinesse of that that they and we had at Yorke of his Maiesties presence And that might be the occasion that more time was spent in it then otherwise would have been yet my Lords omitted not their parts but were desirous to look into the depth to see the utmost extent of their demands But before those of Scotland could come to the maine treaty to explaine themselves touching their demands they made a preparatory demand of maintenance for their Armie and did go so high as to demand Forty thousand Pounds a moneth My Lords that were very unwilling to do any Act or make any order whatsoever as I have opened unto you for the sustenance maintenance and
My Lord Keeper did first let us know that his Majesty had commanded the Lords Commissioners of the great Councell to give an account of their Treaties at Yorke and Rippon to both Houses and of his Majesties gracious intentions in a businesse so much importing the honour and safety of the Kingdome that there might be made a faithfull relation with all candor and clearnesse which was the summe of his Majesties instructions His Lordship declaring that my Lords of the upper House for the saving of time had thought fit to give this account to a Committee of both Houses which hath occasioned the meeting at this Conference and election being made of the Earle of Bristoll by the Lords Commissioners he began his Narration directed to the Lords of the upper House and to the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the house of Commons and thus the Earle of Bristoll began That the Lords Commissioners intended not to looke further back into the businesse then the Acts of their own imployments They did intend to give no account of the pacification interrupted nor war renewed no account how the Armies in England Ireland and by Sea were designed nor of any occasion They purposed not to lay fault upon any man nor to enquire into the cause why the Scots as they pretended from necessity were drawne to enter this Kingdome nor why the Kings Army when service was to be done was out of the way But that those through whose hands these have passed might hereafter give their own account His Lordship told us that his Majesty was pleased to call his great Councell at Yorke to whom he made two propositions The first was how his Army which seemed to be in distresse for want of pay should be relieved and maintained To this to shew their duties to the King the Lords resolved to ingage themselves and to that purpose to send chosen Deputies to London to negotiate a supply The second proposition was that after the Scots had passed Northumberland taken Newcastle and possessed the Bishopricke of Duresme they sent a Petition to his Majesty which containeth in generall termes a desire to have their grievances taken into consideration Which Petition and Answer thereunto was read unto us A. N. A. and presented for our clearer understanding Upon receipt of his Majesties Answer the Scotish Lords sent his Majesty a second Petition directed in a Letter to the Earle of Lanrick K. Q. in which they made their particular demands and declared that according to his Majesties command they would advance no further and this Petition was also read and delivered unto us of which his Lordship desired that great Assembly to take especiall notice for that much of the future discourse would depend upon it The businesse thus stated at the great Councell the second proposition was what Answer should be made to that Petionary Letter and in what manner it should be carried In which his Majesty required their Councell Whereupon the Lords replyed that it was impossible for them to give any well grounded advice unlesse the true state of his affaires and the Condition of his Army were laid before them Whereupon his Majesty commanded the Earle of Traquaire N. L. to make the Narration of the Scotish businesse and their late Acts of Parliament and the Lord Lievtenant generall to give an account in what condition the Army stood and what was answered by my Lord Lievtenant was read in his owne words Besides this declaration the Earle of Bristoll delivered upon a further enquiry how the state of the businesse then stood That the Scots Army had passed Northumberland without resistance that they had disputed the passage of the River of Tyne at Newburne where our horse retyred in disorder that his Majesties foot Army consisting of twelve or fourteene thousand men in Newcastle likewise retired to Yorke whereby the Towne of Newcastle a place of great consideration was without one stroke strucken fallen into the Scots hands and the Bishopricke of Duresme drawn under Contribution That in this state the Gentry of the Bishopricke repayred to Master Treasurer who carryed them to his Majesty from whom they were referred to my Lord Lievtenant of the Army who gave them this answer positively That they could looke for no help nor protection from the King and therefore they might use the best meanes they could to preserve their lives and estates Whereby those distressed Provinces the ancient Bulwarks of this Kingdome full of brave and valiant men being now fallen into the power of an Army which of necessity must live were forced to consent to a contribution by Treaty and a very heavy one though such without which the Scotish Army could not subsist The agreement was 350. l. a day for the Bishopricke of Duresme 300. l. a day for Northumberland 200. a day for the Towne of Newcastle in all 850. l. a day which should it continue would amount unto 300000. l. for one yeare These Gentlemen much lamented their estates that the Scots should be irritated as they call it by being proclaimed Traytors His Lordship made a little digression and asked leave to speake truth in such language as the Scots had presented their state unto them That having proclamation made against them being threatned with a great Army of thirty or forty thousand men another of ten thousand out of Ireland and by Parliament declared Traytors and Rebels and having heard of another Army providing of eight or ten thousand by shipping to hinder their Trade at least their Commerce with England that they were drawne together by necessity as they pretended of defence further alledging that it was a common discourse of which they had seene papers that they should bee reduced into a Province which would be but one Summers worke and therefore they having drawne their power together as any Nation would doe and being assembled and their Country being poore taking advantage of the time and that all those Armies that should oppose them were out of the way and those unfortunate Provinces left like a list of Cloath they were forced to enter in England that thus they had lamented and thus the state stood before the Lords when it was examined in the great Councell Thus their Lordships found that the Scots had increased their confines neere fourescore miles in England and had passed the Rivers of Tweed and Tyne and that the River of Tees the boundary of Yorkeshire Duresme being possessed was not to be defended being foordable in many places by forty horse a front that if the Scots should passe that River there was no possibility to hinder them from comming to Yorke or to any part of England without hazarding a Battell which my Lord Lievtenant had declared unto them he would not advise for though the Kings Army consisted of seventeene or eighteene thousand good bodies of men yet being untrained and unused to Armes he would be loath to hazzard such an Adventure upon them but if they
would scarce remunerat the iniuries repay the losses of this suffering Nation since the pronouncing of that fatall sentence What proportionable satisfaction then can this Common-wealth receive in the punishment of a few inconsiderable Delinquents But 't is a Rule valid in Law approved in equity that Qui non habent in crumen Luant in Corpore And 't is without all question in policy exemplar punishments conduce more to the safety of a State than pecuniary reparations Hope of impunity lulls every bad-great-officer into security for his time and who would not venture to raise a Fortune when the allurements of honour and wealth are so prevalent if the worst is can fall be but Restitution We see the bad effects of this bold-erroneous opinion what was at first but corrupt Law by encouragement taken from their impunity is since become false Doctrine the people taught in Pulpits they have no property Kings instructed in that destructive principle that all is theirs and is thence deduc'd into necessary state-policy whispered in counsell That he is no Monarch who is bounded by any Law By which bad consequences the best of Kings hath bin by the infusion of such poysonous positions diverted from the sweet inclinations of his own Naturall Equity and Justice the very essence of a King taken from him which is preservation of his people and whereas Salus populi is or should be Suprema Lex the power of undoing us is masqu'd under the stile of what should be Sacred Royall Prerogative And is it not high time for us to make examples of the first authors of this subverted Law bad Counsell worse Doctrine Let no man think to divert us from the pursuit of Iustice by poysoning the clear streams of our affections with jealous sears of his Majesties Interruption if we look too high Shall we therefore doubt of Iustice because we have need of great Justice We may be confident the King well knows That his Iustice is the Band of our Allegiance That 't is the staffe the proof of his Soveraignty 'T is a happy assurance of his intentions of grace to us that our loyalty hath at last won him to tender the safety of his people and certainly all our pressures weighed this 12 yeers last past it will be found the passive loyalty of this suffering Nation hath our-done the active duty of all Times and Stories As the Poet hath it fortiter ille facit qui miser esse potest I may as properly say Fideliter fecimus we have done loyally to suffer so patiently Then since our Royall Lord hath in mercy visited us let us not doubt but in his Justice he will redeem his people Qui timidè rogat docet negare But when Religion is innovated our Liberties violated our Fundamentall Laws abrogated our modern Laws already obsoleted the propriety of our Estates alienated Nothing left us we can call our own but our misery and our patience if ever any Nation might iustifiably this certainly may now now most properly most seasonably cry out and cry aloud vel Sacra Regnet Iustitia vel Ruat Coelum Mr. Speaker the summe of my humble motion is that a speciall Committee may be appointed to examine the whole carriage of that Extraiudiciall iudgement Who were the Counsellors Soliciters and subscribers to the same the reasons of their Subscription whether according to their opinions by importunity or pressure of others whether proforma tantum And upon report thereof to draw up a charge against the guilty and then Lex Currat Fiat Iustitia A brief Discourse concerning the power of the Peers and Commons of Parliament in point of Iudjcature SIR to give you as short an account of your desires as I can I must crave leave to lay you as a ground the frame or first modell of this State When after the period of the Saxon time Harold had lifted himself into the Royall Seat the Great men to whom but lately he was no more equall either in fortune or power disdaining this act of arrogancy called in William then Duke of Normandy a Prince more active than any in these Western parts and renowned for many victories he had fortunately atchieved against the French King then the most potent Monarch in Europe This Duke led along with him to this work of glory many of the younger sons of the best families of Normandy Picardy and Flanders who as undertakers accompanied the undertaking of this fortunate man The Usurper slain and the Crown by war gained to secure certain to his posterity what he had so suddenly gotten he shared out his purchase retaining in each County a portion to support the Dignity Soveraign which was styled Demenia Regni now the ancient Demeans and assigning to others his adventures such portions as suited to himself dependancy of their personall service except such Lands as in free Almes were the portion of the Church these were styled Barones Regis the Kings immediate Freeholders for the word Baro imported then no more As the King to these so these to their followers subdivided part of their shares into Knights fees and their Tenants were called Barones Comites or the like for we finde as in the Kings Writ in their Writs Baronibus suis Francois Anglois the Soveraigne gifts for the most part extending to whole Counties or Hundreds an Earl being Lord of the one and a Baron of the inferiour donations to Lords of Town-ships or Mannors And thus the Land so was all course of Iudicature divided even from the meanest to the highest portion each severall had his Court of Law preserving still the Mannor of our Ancestors the Saxons who jura per pages reddebant and these are still tearmed Court-Barons or the Freeholders Court twelve usually in number who with the Thame or chief Lord were Iudges The Hundred was next where the Hundredus or Aldermanus Lord of the Hundred with the chief Lord of each Township within their limits iudged Gods people observed this form in the publike Centureonis decam Judicabant plebem omni tempore The County or Generale placitum was the next this was so to supply the defect or remedy the corruption of the inferiour Vbi Curiae Dominorum probantur defecisse pertinet ad vice comitem Provinciarum the Iudges here were Comites vice comites Barones Comitatus qui liberas in hoc terras babeant The last and supreme and proper to our question was generale placitum apud London universalis Synodus in Charters of the Conquerour Capitalis curia by Glanvile Magnum Commune consilium coram Rege magnatibus suis In the Rolles of Henry the 3. It is not stative but summoned by Proclamation Edicitur generale placitum apud London saith the book of Abingdon whether Epium Duces principes Satrapae Rectores Causidici ex omni parte confluxerunt ad istam curiam saith Glanvile Causes were referred Propter aliquam dubitationem quae emergit in comitatu cum
SPEECHES AND PASSAGES Of This GREAT and HAPPY Parliament From the third of November 1640 to this instant June 1641. Collected into One Volume and according to the most perfect Originalls exactly published LONDON Printed for William Cooke and are to be sold at his shop at Furnifalls-Inne-gate in Holbourne 1641. The Contents HIS Majesties first speech Novem. 3. 1640. His Majesties second speech Novem. 5. 1640. His Majesties third speech to both houses Jan. 25. 1640. His Majesties speech at the passing of the Bill for a Trieniall Parliament His Majesties Letter sent by the Prince in the behalf of the Earl of Strafford to the Lords The Lords Answer That Bishops ought not to have voyce in Parliament Lord Keepers speech in the upper house of Parliament Novem. 3. 1640. Master Speakers speech Fol. 1. Lord Digbyes speech Novem. 9. 1640. concerning grievances and the trieniall Parliament Lord Digbyes second speech for trieniall Parliament Fol. 12. The Honourable Nathaniels Fynes his speech Fol. 22 Master Rous his speech before the Lords against Doctor Cousins Doctor Mannering and Doctor Beale Fol. 45 The second speech of the Honourable Nathaniel Fynes Fol. 49 Lord D●gbyes speech concerning Bishops London petition Feb. 9. Fol. 65 Lord Finch his accusation Fol. 76 Lord Falklands speech after the reading the Articles of the Lord Finch Fol. 83 Sir Edward Deering first speech Fol. 88 His second speech Fol. 90 His third speech Fol. 93 His fo th speech Fol. 97 M●ster Bagshawes speech concerning Bishops and the London petition Fol. 99 Sir Benjamin Ruddyers first speech Fol. 103 His second speech Fol. 110 His third speech Fol. 113 Master Pyms Message for the commitment of my Lord Strafford Fol. 116 Articles against the Lord Strafford Fol. 117 Further impeachment of Thomas Earl of Strafford Fol. 120 Earl of Bristows speech D●cember 7 Fol. 143 Master Mynards speech in reply to the Lord Strafford Fol. 145 The Earl of Bristows speech upon the delivering of by him the Scottish Remonstrance Fol. 150 His Majesties speech to both Houses Feb. 3. 1640. Fol. 159 Londoners fi●st petition Fol. 161 Their grievances by the Prelates Fol. 162 Resolution of the sixt demand by the Commons Fol. 171 The Scots Answer to the resolution Ibid. The Peares demand upon the foresaid Answer Fol. 172 The Scots Commissioners Answer Ibid. Articles against Secretary Windibanck Fol. 174 A speech made by the Lord Finch in the Commons House N●vem 21. 1640. Fol. 169 Master Grimstons second speech Fol. 179 A messuage sent by the Queen to the House of Commons by Master Comproller Fol. 185 The report of the Kings messuage by the Lords to the House of Commons Jan. 29. 1640. Fol. 184 Sir Thomas Rows speech Fol. 185 Lord Falklands speech Fol. 188 Master Pyms speech after the Articles of Sir George Ratcliff Fol. 198 His second speech after the reading of the Articles Fol. 202 Master Speakers speech presenting these Bills for shortning of Michaelmas term pressing of Maryners for the remainder of sixe Subsidies Fol. 204 Master Pleadwels speech Fol. 206 Sir Thomas Rowes reports to the Committe Fol. 209 M●ster Rigbyes answer to the Lord ●ineb his last speech Fol. 221 Master Wallers speech Fol. 224 Master Hollis his speech delivered with the Protestation Fol. 232 Orders for the taking of the Protest●tion Fol. 236 Master Grimstons third speech Fol. 205 Lord Digbyes speech upon the Bill of attainder of the Lord Strafford Fol. 213 Lord Straffords speech on the Scaffold Sixteen queres Fol. 233 Captain Audleyes Mervirs speech Fol. 237 His speech at the peachment of Sir Richard Boulton Knight and others Fol. 249 Articles against Sir Richard Boulton 256 Sir Thomas Wentworths first speech March 22 1637 His second speech April 21 1628. Fol. 259 A petition to the Lord Deputy Fol. 262 A speech against the Judges Fol. 267 A discourse concerning the power of Pears in Parliament Fol. 275 Sir John Hollands speech Fol. 281 Sir Edward Hales speech Fol. 284 Sir Johns Wrayes speech concerning the Commons Fol. 288 Sir John Wrayes second speech Fol. 290 Preamble with the Protestation Fol. 300 Bill of Attainder against the Earl of Strafford Fol. 303 Vicount Newarks fi●st speech for the right of Bishops Fol. 305 His second speech for their Temporall affaires Master Peards against the oath Exofficio Fol. 313 Master Speakers letter to Sir Jacob Ashley Fol. 315 Articles against the Bishop of Bath and Wells Fol. 318 Sir B. Ruddyers speech Fol. 3●6 His Speech concerning the Queenes Joynture Fol. 317.321 Lord Andevers speech concerning the Star-Chamber An order May 10 1641. that no English shall frequent the Ambassadors to hear Masse Lord Finch his Lletter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 324 Lord Keepers speech to his Majesty in the name of both the Houses Fol. 325 Declaration of the Scots touching the maintenance of their Army Fol. 326 The humble Remonstrance delivered by the Lord Keeper Fol. 528 The Earl of Straffords Letters to his Majesty Fol. 332 E●●l of Straffords Petition before be died to both Houses Fol. 225 The Lord Falklands first speech in Parliament Fol. 336 Sir Jo. Culpeppers speech Fol. 342 Mr. Bagshawes speech 7 No. 1640. Fol. 545 Petition of the Earl of Straf for examination of witnesses Fol. 343 Order concerning the prices of Wine Fol. 350 Sir Tho. Rowes speech concerning B●asse mony Remonstrance of the Parliament in Ireland Fol. 321 A Message from the House of Commons to his Majesty His Majesties answer Fol. 328 Vote concerning the Cannons Ibidem Order concerning Monopolies Fol. 329 Order against Monopolies Ibidem The Scottish Commissioners thanks to his Majesty Fol. 330 The humble Remonstrance of the Mr. Wardens of Vintners Ibidem Petition of Oxford Fol. 383 Sergeant Glanvils speecd Fol. 388 Secretary Windebancks Letter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 393 Lord Andevers speech concerning pacification Fol. 327 An Order against drinking on the Sabbath day Fol. 401 Sir John Wrayes occasionall speeches 1 Concerning Religion Fol. 401 2. Vpon the Scottssh treaty Fol. 403 3. Impeachment of the Lord Strafford Fol. 404 4. Vpon the Strafford 〈◊〉 knot Fol. 406 5. Vpon the same 〈…〉 6. A seas●nable 〈◊〉 or a loyall Covenant Fol. 408 Mr. Hid●● Argument Fol. 409 Mr. White c●●cerning Episcopacy Fol. 417 Cities second ●●tition The Kentish Petition Sir John Wrayes ninth speech Lord Digbies speech Fol. 455 Mr. Pyms speech Fol. 458 Sir Thomas Barringtons speech Accusation of Sir George Ratcliffe Fol. 504 The charge of the Scottish Commissioners against Canterbury Fol. 505 Sir Henry Vanes speech against Bishops The Charge of the Scotch Commissioners against the Lievtenant of Ireland Fol. 519 The Scotch Commissioners demand concerning the six●h Article Fol. 525 The English Peeres demand concerning the preceding Articles Fol. 531 The Scotch Commissioners answer to the demand Ibid. Captain Audley Mervins speech concerning the Judicature of the Parliament The Speakers speech at the presenting of the bill of Tunnage and Poundage His Majesties speech concerning it Mr. Pyms Relation of the
but shew you a way of remedie by shewing you my cleer intentions and some marke that may hinder this good worke I shall willingly and cheerfully concur with you for the Reformation of all Innovations both in Church and Common-wealth and consequently that all Courts of Justice may be reformed according to Law For my intentions is cleerly to reduce all things to the best and purest times as they were in the time of Queen Elizabeth Moreover whatsoever part of my Revenue shall be found illegall or heavy to my Subjects I shall be willing to lay down trusting in their affections Having thus cleerly and shortly set down my intentions I will shew you some rubs and must needs take notice of some very strange I know not what terme to give them Petitions given in the name of divers Counties against the established government of the Church and of the great threatnings against the Bishops that they will make them to be but a Cipher or at least taken away If some of them have incroached too much upon the Temporaltie if it be so I shall not be unwilling these things should be redressed and reformed as all other abuses according to the wisdome of former times so farre I shall go with you no farther If upon serious debate you shall shew that Bishops have some Temporall Authority not so necessary for the government of the Church and upholding Episcopall Jurisdiction I shall not be unwilling to desire them to lay it down but this must not be understood that I shall any way consent that their voice in Parliament should be taken away for in all the times of my Predecessors since the Conquest and before they have enjoyed it I am bound to maintain them in i as one of the fundamentall Institutions of this Kingdome There is one other Rock you are on not in substance but in service and the forme is so essentiall that unlesse it be reformed will split you on that Rock There is a Bill lately put in concerning Parliaments The thing I like well to have frequent Parliaments but for Sheriffes and Constables to use my Authoritie I can no wayes consent unto But to shew that I desire to give you content in substance as well as in shew that you shall have a Bill for doing thereof so that it do not trench neither against my Honor neither against the ancient Prerogatives of the Crowns concerning Parliaments Ingeniously confesse often Parliaments is the fittest means to keep correspondencie betweene Me and my People that I doe so much desire To conclude now all that I have shewen you the state of my Affairs My own cleere intentions and the Rocks I would have you shun To give you all contentment you shall likewise finde by these Ministers I have or shall have about me for the effecting of these my good intentions which shall redouble the peace of the Kingdome and content you all Concerning the conference you shall have a direct answer on Monday which shall give you satisfaction The Kings speech to both Houses of Parliament in the Lords House at the passing of the Bill for a Trieniall Parliament the 16th of November 1640. MY Lords and you the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons you may remember when both Houses were with Me at the Banquetting House at Whitehall I did declare unto you two Rocks I wished you to eschew this is the one of them and of that consequence that I thinke never Bill passed here in this House of more favour to the Subjects then this is and if the other Rocke be as happily passed over as this shall be at this time I do not know what you can aske for ought I can see at this time that I can make any question to yeeld unto Therefore I mention this to shew unto you the sence that I have of this Bill and obligation as I may say that you have to me for it for hitherto to speake freely I have had no great incouragement to doe it if I should looke to the outward face of your actions or proceedings and not looke to the inward intentions of your hearts I might make question of doing it Hitherto you have gone on in that which concernes your selves to amend and yet those things that meerly concernes the strength of this Kingdom neither for the State nor my own particular This I mention not to reproach you but to shew you the state of things as they are you have taken the Government almost in peeces and I may say it is almost off the hinges A skilfull Watchmaker to make cleane his Watch he will take it a sunder and when it is put together it will go the better so that he leave not forth then one pin in it Now as I have done all this on my part you know what to do on your parts and I hope you shall see cleerly that I have performed really what I expressed to you at the beginning of this Parliament of the great trust I have of your affections to me and this is the great expression of trust that before you do any thing for me that I do put such a confidence in you HIS MAJESTIES Letter to the Lords on the behalf of the Earle of Strafford sent by the PRINCE My Lords I Did yesterday satisfie the Justice of the Kingdome by passing of the Bill of Attainder against the Earle of Strafford but mercie being as inherent and inseparable to a King as Justice I desire at this time in some measure to shew that likewise by suffering that unfortunate man to fulfill the naturall course of his life in a close imprisonment yet so that if ever he make the least offer to escape or offer directly or indirectly to meddle in any sort of Publique businesse especially with me either by Message or Letter it shall cost him his life without further Processe This if it may be done without the discontentment of my People will be an unspeakable contentment to me To which end as in the first place I by this Letter do earnestly desire your approbation and to endeare it the more have chosen him to carry it that of all your House is most dear to me So I desire that by a conference you will endeavour to give the House of Commons contentment Likewise assuring you that the excuse of mercy is no more pleasing to me then to see both Houses of Parliament consent for my sake that I should moderate the severity of the Law in so important a case I will not say that your complying with me in this my intended mercie shall make me more willing but certainly t' will make me more cheerfull in granting your just grievances But if no lesse than his life can satisfie my People I must say fiat justitia Thus again recommending the consideration of my intentions to you I rest Whitehall the 11th of May 1641. Your unalterable and affetionate Friend CHARLES R. If he must dye it were charity to
Realme of England might be engaged in a Nationall and irreconciliable quarrell with the Scots 7. That to preserve himselfe from being questioned for those and other his traiterous courses hee laboured to subvert the right of Parliaments and the ancient course of Parliamentarie proceedings and by false and malicious slanders to incense his Majestie against Parliaments By which words counsels and actions hee hath traiterously and contrary to his allegiance laboured to alienate the hearts of the Kings Liege people from his Majestie to set a division betweene them and to ruine and destroy his Majesties Kingdomes for which they impeach him of high Treason against our Soveraigne Lord the King his Crown and dignitie 8. And he the said Earle of Strafford was Lord Deputie of Ireland and Lieutenant Generall of the Army there viz. His most excellent Majestie for his Kingdomes both of England and Ireland and the L. President of the North during the time that all and everie the crimes and offences before set forth were done and committed and hee the said Earle was Lieutenant Generall of all his Majesties army in the North parts of England during the time that the crimes and offences in the fifth and sixth articles set forth were done and committed 9. And the said Commons by protestations saving to themselves the libertie of exhibiting at any time here after any other accusation or impeachment against the said Earle and also of replying to the answers that hee the said Earle shall make unto the said articles or to any of them and of offering proves also of the premisses or any of them or any other impeachment or accusation that shall be exhibited by them as the cause shall according to the course of Parliaments require doe pray that the said Earle may be put to answer for all and every the premisses that such proceedings examinations trials and judgements may be upon everie of them had and used as is agreeable to Law and Iustice The further impeachment of Thomas Earle of Strafford by the Commons assembled in Parliament 1640 WHereas the said Commons have already exhibited Articles against the said Earle formerly expressed c. Now the said Commons doe further impeach the said Earle as followeth c. 1. That he the said Earle of Strafford the 21. day of March in the 8. yeare of his now Majesties Reigne was president of the Kings Counsell in the Northerne parts of England That the said Earle being president of the said Counsell on the 21. day of March a Commission under the great Seal of England with certaine Schedules of instructions thereunto annexed was directed to the said Earle or others the Commissioners therein named wherby amongst other things power and authority is limited to the said Earle and others the Commissioners therein named to heare and determine all offences and misdemeanors suits debates controversies and demaunds causes things and matters whatsoever therein contained and within certaine precincts in the said Northerne parts therein specified and in such manner as by the said Schedule is limited and appointed That amongst other things in the said instructions it is directed that the said President and others therein appointed shall heare and determine according to the course of proceedings in the Court of Starchamber divers offences deceits and falsities therein mentioned whether the same be provided for by the Acts of Parliament or not so that the Fines imposed be not lesse then by Act or Acts of Parliament provided for by those offences is appointed That also amongst other things in the said instructions it is di●ected that the said president and others therein appointed have power to examine heare and determine according to the course of proceedings in the Court of Chancery al manner of complaints for any matter within the said precincts as well concerning lands tenements and hereditaments either free-hold customary or coppy-holde as Leases and oter things therein mentioned and to stay proceedings in the Court of Common Law by Injunction or otherwise by all wayes and meanes as is used in the Court of Chancery And although the former Presidents of the said Counsell had never put in practise such Instructions nor ha● they any such Instructions yet the said Earle in the moreth of May in the said 8. yeare and divers years following did put in practise exercise and use and caused to be used and put in practise the said Commission and Instructions and did direct and exercise an exorbitant and unlawfull power and jurisdiction on the persons and estates of his Majesties subjects in those parts and did disin-herit divers of his Majesties subjects in those parts of their inheritances sequestred their possessions and did fine ransome punish and imprison them and caused them to be fined ransomed punished and imprisoned to their ruine and destruction and namely Sir Conier Darcy Sir Iohn Bourcher and divers others against the Lawes and in subversion of the same And the said Commission and Instructions were procured and issued by the advice of the said Earle And he the said Earle to the intent that such illegall unjust power might be exercised with the greater licence and will did advise Counsell procure further directions in and by the said instructions to be given tha n● prohibition he granted at all but in cases where the said Counsell shall exceed the limits of the said instructions And that if any Writ of Habeas Corpus be granted the party be not discharged till the party performe the Decree and Order of the said Counsell And the said Earle in the 13. yeare of his now Majesties Reigne did procure a new Commission to himselfe and others therein appointed with the said Instructions and other unlawfull additions That the said Commission and Instructions were procured by the solicitation and advice of the said Earle of Strafford 2. That shortly after the obtaining of the said Commission dated the 21 of March in the 8 yeare of his now Majesties Reigne to wit the last day of August then next following he the said Earle to bring his Majesties liege people into a dislike of his Majestie and of his Governement and to terrifie the Iustices of the Peace from executing of the Lawes He the said Earle beeing then President as aforesaid and a Iustice of Peace did publiquely at the Assises held for the County of Yorke in the City of Yorke in and upon the said last day of August declare and publish before the people there attending for the administration of Iustice according to the Law in the presence of the Iustices sitting That some of the Justices were all for Law but they should finde that the Kings little finger should be heavier then the loynes of the Law 3. That the Realme of Ireland having been time out of minde anne xed to the Imperiall Crowne of England and governed by the same Lawes The said Earle being Lord Deputy of that Realme to bring his Majesties liege people of that Kingdome likewise into distike of his
that if shee refused to submit thereunto hee would imprison her and fine her five hundred pounds that if the continued obstinate hee would continue her imprisonment and dou●le her fine every moneth by moneth whereof shee was enforced to relinquish her estate in the land questioned in the said Petition which shortly was conveyed to Sir Robert Meredith to the use of the said Earle of Strafford And the said Earle in like manner did imprison divers others of his Majesties Subjects upon pretence of disobedience to his orders and decrees and other illegall command by him made for pretended debts titles of Lands and other causes in an arbitrary and extrajudiciall course upon Paper Petitions to him preferred and no other cause legally depending 9 That the said Earle of Strafford the sixteenth day of February in the twelfth yeare of his now Majesties Reigne assuming to himselfe a power above and against Law tooke upon him by a generall Warrant under his hand to give power to the Lord Bishop of Down and Connor his Chancellour or Chancellors to their severall Offices thereto to bee appoynted to attach and arrest the Bodies of all such of the meaner and poorer sort who after Citation should either refuse to appeare before them or appearing should omit or denie to performe or undergoe all lawfull Decrees Sentences and orders issued imposed or given out against them them to commit and keep in the next Goal untill they should either performe such sentences or put in sufficient Baile to shew some reason before the Counsell Table of such their contempt and neglect and the said Earle the day and yeare last mentioned signed and issued a Warrant to that effect and made the like Warrant to send to all other Bishops and their Chanc●llours in the said Realme of Ireland to the same effect 10 That the said Earle of Strafford being Lord Lieutenant or Deputy of Ireland procured the Customes of the Merchandize exported out and imported into that Realme to be firmed to his owne use And in the ninth yeare of his now Majesties Reigne hee having then interest in the said Customes to advance his owne gaine and lucre did cause and procure the native commodities of Ireland to bee rated in the booke of Rates for the Customes according to which the Customes were usually gathered at farre greater values and prices than in truth they were worth that is to say every Hide at twenty shillings which in truth was worth but five shillings every stone of Wooll at thirteene shillings four-pence though the same ordinarily were worth but five shillings at the utmost but nine shillings by which meanes the Custome which before was but a twentieth part of the true value of the commoditie was inhansed sometimes to a sift part and sometimes to a fourth and sometimes to a third part of the true value to the great oppression of the Subjects and decay of Merchandize 11 That the said Earle in the ninth yeare of his now Majesties reigne did by his owne will and pleasure and for his owne lucre restraine the exportation of the commodities of that Kingdome without his licence as namely Pipe-staves and other commodities and then raised great summes of money for licensing of exportation of those Commo ities and dispensation of the said restraints impose on them by which meanes the Pipe-staves were raised from foure pound ten shillings or five pound per thousand to ten poun● and sometimes eleven pound per thousand and other commodities were inhanced in the like proportion and by the same meanes by him the said Earle 12 That the said Earle being Lord Deputy of Ireland on the ninth day of Ianuary in the thirteenth yeare of his Majesties Reigne ●id then under colour to Regulate the Importation of Tobacco into the said Realme of Ireland issue a Proclamation in his Majesties Name prohi iting the importati●n of Tobacco w● h●ut lice●ce of h m and the Counsell there from an● after the first day of May Anno Dom. 1638. after which restraint the said Earle notwithstan ing the said restraint caused divers great q●antitie● of Tobacco to bee imported to his owne use and fraughted divers ships with Tobacco which he ●mported to hi own use and that if any ship brought To acco int● any Port there the said Earle and his Agents used to buy the same to his owne use at their ow●e price And ●f that the owners refused to let him have the same at under-values then they were not permitted to vent the same by which un ue meanes the Earle having gotten the whole Trade of Tobacco into his owne hands he sold it at great and excessive prizes such as he l●st to impose for hi owne profit And the more to assure the said Monopoly of Tobacco he the said Earle on the th ee and twentieth day of February in the thirteenth yeare aforesaid did issue another Proclamation commanding that none should put to sale any To acco by whole-sale from and after the last day of May then next following but what should be made up into Rolls and the same Sealed with two Seales by himselfe appoynted one at each end of the Roll. And such was not sealed to be seized appoynting sixe pence the pound for a reward to such persons as should seize the same and the persons in whose custody the unsealed Tobacco should bee found to bee committed to Goale which last Proclamation was covered by a pretence for the restraining of the seale of unwholsome Tobacco but it was truely to advance the said Monopoly Which Proclamation the said Earle did rigorcusly put in execution by seizing the goods fining imprisoning whipping and putting the offenders against the same Proclamation on the Pillory as namely Barnaby Hubbard Edward Covena Iohn Tumen and divers others and made the Officers of State and Iustices of Peace and other Officers to serve him in compassing and executing these unjust and undue courses by which Cruelties and unjust Monopolies the said Earl raised 100000 li. per annum gain to himself And yet the said Earle though he inhanced the Customes where it concerned the Merchants in general yet drew down the impost formerly taken on Tobacco from sixe pence the pound to three pence the pound it being for his owne profit so to doe And the said Earle by the same and other rigorous and undue meanes raised severall other Monopolies and unlawfull exactions for his owne gaine viz. on Starch Iron-pots Glasses Tobacco-pipes and severall other commodities 13 That flaxe being one of the principall and native Commodities of that Kingdome of Ireland the said Earle having gotten great quantities thereof into his hands and growing on his owne Lands did issue out severall Proclamations viz. one dated the one and twentieth day of May in the eleventh of his Majesties raigne and the other dated the one and thirtieth day of January in the same yeare thereby prescribing and injoyning the working of Flaxe into Yearne and Thread and the ordering of the same
the said Earle did raise an Armie in the said Realme of England consisting of eight thousand foot all of which except one thousand or thereabouts were Papists and the said one thousand were drawne out of the old Army there consisting of two thousand foote and in their places there were a thousand Papists or thereabouts put into the said old Army by the said Earle And the more to ingage and tye the new Army of Papists to himselfe and to incourage them and to discourage and weare out the old Armie the said Earle did so provide That the said new Army of Papists were du●ly paye● and had all necessaries provided for them and permitted the exercise of their Religion but the said old Army were for the space of one whole yeare and upwards unpaid And that the said Earle being appoynted a Commissioner with eleven severall Counties in the Northern parts of England for compounding with Recusants for their forfeitures due to his Majesty which Commission beareth date the eighth day of Iuly in the fifth yeare of his Majesties Reigne that now is and being also Receiver of the Composition Money thereby arising and of other debts Duties and penalties for his Majesties use by Letters Patents dated the 9. day of the said Iuly he to engage the said Recusants to him did compound with with them at low and under rates and provided that they should bee discharged of all proceedings against them in all his Majesties Courts both temporall and Ecclesiasticall in manifest breach of and contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme in that behalfe established 19 That the said Earle having taxed and levied the said impositions and raised the said Monopolies and committed the said oppressions in his Majesties name and as by his Majesties Royall command he the said Earle in May the 15 yeare of his Majesties Reigne did of his owne authority contrive and frame a new and unusuall oath by the purport whereof among many other things the party taking the said oath was to sweare that he should not protest against any of his Majesties royall commands but submit themselves in all obedience thereunto Which oath he so contrived to enforce the same on the subjects of the Scottish Nation inhabiting in Ireland and out of a hatred to the said Nation and to put them to a discontent with his Majesty his government there and compelled divers of his Majesties said subjects there to take the said oath some he grievously fined and imprisoned and others he destroyed and exiled and namely the 10 of October Anno Dom. 1639. He fined Henry Steward and his wife who refused to take the said oath 5000. pounds a piece and their 2. daughters and Iames Gray 3000. pounds a piece and imprisoned them for not paying the said fines The said Henry Stewards wife and daughters and Iames Gray being the Kings liege people of the Scottish Nation and divers others he used in like manner and the said Earle upon that occasion did declare that the said oath did not onely oblige them in point of allegiance to his Majesty and acknowledgement of his Supremacie only but to the Ceremonies and governement of the Church established or to be established by his Majesties Royall authoritie and said that the refusers to obey he would prosecute to the blood 20 That the said Earle in the 15. and 16. yeares of his Majesties Reigne and divers yeares past laboured and endevoured to beget in his Majestie an ill opinion of his subjects namely those of the Scottish Nation and diverse and sundry times and especially since the Pacification made by his Majestie with his said Subjects of Scotland in Summer in the 15 yeare of his Majesties Reigne he the said Earle did labour and endeavour to perswade incite and provoke his Majestie to an offensive warre against his said Subjects of the Scottish Nation And the said Earle by his counsell actions and endeavours hath beene and is a principall and chiefe incend●ary of the warre and discord betweene his Majestie and his Subjects of England and the said Subjects of Scotland and hath declared and advised his Majesty that the demand made by the Scots in this Parliament were a sufficient cause of warre against them The said Earle having formerly expressed the height rancor of his minde towards his Subjects of the Scottish Nation viz. the tenth day of October in the 15. yeare of his Majesties Re●gne he said that the Nation of the Scots were ●●b●●s and traytors and hee beeing then about to come to England he then further said that if it pleased his Master meaning his Majesty to send him backe againe hee would root cut of the said Kingdome meaning the Kingdom of Ireland the Scottish Nation both root and branch Some Lords and others who had taken the said oath in the precedent Article onely excepted and the sayd Earle hath caused divers of the said ships and goods of the Scots to bee stayed seized and molested to the intent to set on the said warre 21. That the said Earle of Strafford shortly after his speeches mentioned in the last precedent Article to wit in the fifteenth yeare of his Majesties Reigne came into this Realme of England and was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and continued his government of that Kingdome by a Deputy At his arrivall here finding that his Majestie with much wisedome and goodnesse had composed the troubles in the North and had made a Pacification with his Subjects of Scotland he laboured by all meanes to procure his Majesty to breake that Pacification incensing his Majesty against his Subjects of that Kingdome and the proceedings of the Parliament there And having incensed his Majestie to an offensive war against his said Subjects of Scotland by Sea and by Land and by pretext thereof to raise Forces for the maintenance of that war he counselled his Majesty to call a Parlament in England yet the said Earle intended if the said proceedings of that Parliament should not be such as would stand with the said Earle of Straffords mischievous designes he would then procure his Majestie to breake the same and by wayes of force and power to raise monies upon the said subjects of this Kingdome And for the incouragement of his Majestie to hearken to his advice he did before his Majesty and his privie Counsell then sitting in Counsell make a large Declaration that he would serve his Majesty in any other way incase the Parliament should not supply him 22 That in the moneth of March before the beginning of the last Parliament the said Earle of Stafford went into Ireland and procured the Parliament of that Kingdome to declare their assistance in a war against the Scots And gave directions for the raising of an Army consisting of 8000. foot and 1000. horse being for the most part Papists as aforesaid And confederating with one Sir George R●dcliffe did together with him the said Sir George trayterously conspire to employ the said Army for the
to the Lord Conttington then present said That this was a poynt worthy his Lordships consideration 27 That in or about the Moneth of August last he was made Lieutenant Generall of all his Majesties Forces in the Northerne parts against the Scots and being at York did in the Moneth of September by his owne authority and without any lawfull warrant impose a Taxe on his Majesties Subjects in the County of Yorke of eight pence per●iem for maintenance of every Souldier of the Trayned bands of that County which Summes of money hee caused to bee leavied by force And to the end to compell his Majesties Subjects out of feare and terrour to yeeld to the payment of the same He did declare that hee would commit them that refused the payment thereof and the Souldiers should be satisfied out of their estates and they that refused it were in very little better condition than of High Treason 28 That in the Moneth of September and October last he the said Earle of Strafford being certesild of the Scottish Army comming into the Kingdome and hee the said Earle of Strafford being Lieutenant Generall of his Majesties Armie did not provide to the defence of the Towne of New-Castle as he ought to have done but suffred the same to be lost that so hee might the more incence the English against the Scots And for the same wicked purpose and out of a malicious desire to ingage the Kings kingdoms of England and Scotland in a Nationall and bloody Warre he did write to the Lord Conway the Generall of the Horse and under the said Earles command that hee should fight with the Scottish Army at the passage over the Tyne whatsoever should follow notwithstanding that the said Lord Conway had formerly by Letters informed him the said Earle that his Majesties Armie then under his command was not of force sufficient to encounter the Scots by which advice of his hee did contrary to the duty of his place betray his Majesties Armie then under his command to apparent danger and losse All and every which Words Counsells and Actions of the said Earle of Strafford traiterously and contrary to his allegeance to our Soveraigne Lord the King and with an intention and endeavour to alienate and withdraw the hearts and affections of the Kings Liege people of all his Realmes from his Majesty and to set a division betweene them and to ruine and destroy his Majesties said Kingdomes For which they doe further impeach him the said Thomas Earle of Strafford of High Treason against our Soveraigne Lord the King his Crowne and Dignity The Earle of Bristowes Speech the 7th of Decemb. 1640. MAY this dayes Resolution be as happy as the Proposition which now moves me to rise seasonable and necessary for whether wee shall looke upon the King or the people it did never more behoove us the great Physitian the Parliament to effect a true consent towards all parts than now This debate carries with it a double aspect towards the Soveraigne and towards the Subject though both innocent both injured both to be cured In the representation of Injuries I shall crave your attention In the Cures I shall beseech your equall cares and better Iudgements surely in the greatest humility I speake it their illegall wayes are works and punishments of indignation The raising of Leavies strengthened by Commission with un-heard of instructions the billiting of Souldiers and by Lieutenants and their Deputies without leave have beene as if they would have perswaded Princes nay worlds the right of Empire had beene had to take away what they please by strong hands and they have endeavoured as farre as it was possible for them to doe it This hath not beene done by the King under the pleasing shade of whose Crowne I hope we shall ever gather the fruits of Iustice but the Projectors have extended the Prerogative of the King beyond the limits which mars that sweete harmony They have rent from us the light of our eyes enforced Companies of guests upon us worse than the Ordinary of France vitiated of wives and daughters before our faces brought the Crowne to greater want than ever it was by anticipating the Revenue And can the shepheard be thus smitten and the sheepe not scattered They have introduced a Privie Councell ravishing at once the spheares of all ancient government imprisoning without Bayle or Bond. They have taken from us what shall I say indeed what have they left us All meanes of supplying the King and ingratiating our selves with him taking the rootes of all propriety which if it be seasonably set into the ground by his owne hand we shall have instead of beauty baldnesse To the making of them whole I shall apply my selfe and propound a remedy to all these diseasis by one and the same thing Hath King and People beene hurt and by one and the same thing must they be cured to vindicate what new things no our ancient sober vitall libertie by reinforming our ancient Lawes made by our Ancestors by setting such a Charter upon them as no licentious spirits should dare hereafter to enter upon them And shall wee thinke that a way to breake a Parliament no our desires are modest and just I speake truely both for the interest of the King and people if we enjoy not this it will bee impossible to relieve him Therefore let us feare they shall not bee accepted by his goodnesse Therefore I shall discend unto my motions which consists of foure parts two of which have relation to the persons two to the properties of goods For the persons the freedome of them from imprisonment and from imployment abroad contrary to the ancient customes for our goods that no leavies be made but in Parliament Secondly no billiting of Souldiers It is most necessary that these be resolved that the subject be secured in both Then the manner in the second place be fit to det-ermine it by a grand Committee Mr. MAINARDS Speech before both Houses in Parliament on Wednesday 24 th of March in reply upon the Earle of Straffords answer to his Articles at the Barre My Lords I Shall repeat little of that which hath beene said onely this That whereas my Lord of Strafford did answer to many particulars yet hee did not answer to that which was particularly objected against him that is that you were to heare the complaints of the whole Kingdome now the particular of our aime is to take off the vizard which my Lord hath put on wherein the truth and honour which is due to his Majestie he would attribute to himselfe My Lords there is one thing which I desire your Lordships to remember it being the maine of our complaints The alteration of the face of government and tradacing of his owne Lawes and this is the burthen upon all the Lords and Commons of Ireland Concerning the breach of Parliament he would put it on Sir George Ratcliffe but i●me sure he cannot put off himselfe for Sir George
have conduc'd in nothing to our late innovations but in their silence some who in an unexpected and mighty place and power have expressed an equall moderation and humility being neither ambitious before nor proud after either of the Crosiers staffe or white staffe some who have beene learned opposers of Popery and zealous opposers of Arminianisme betweene whom and their inferiour Clergy in frequency of preaching hath been no distinction whose lives are untouched not onely by guilt but by malice scarce to be equall'd by those of any condition or to be excell'd by those in any Calendar I doubt not I say but if wee consider this this consideration will bring forth this conclusion That Bishops may be good men and let us give but good men good rules we shall have both good governours and good times Master Speaker I am content to take away all those things from them which to any considerable degree of probability may againe beget the like mischiefes if they be not taken away If their temporall titles power and employment appeare likely to distract them from the care of or make them looke downe with contempt upon their Spirituall duty and that the too great distance betweene them and those they governe will hinder the free and fit recourse of their inferiours to them and occasion insolence from them to their inferiours let that be considered and car'd for I am sure neither their Lordships their judging of tythes wills and marriages no nor their voyces in Parliaments are Jure divino and I am as sure that these titles and this power are not necessary to their authority as appeares by the little they have had with us by them and the much that others have had without them If their revenew shall appeare likely to produce the same effects for it hath beene anciently observ'd that Religio peperit divitias Filia devoravit matrem let so much of that as was in all probability intended for an attendant upon their temporall dignities wait upon them out of the doors Let us onely take care to leave them such proportions as may serve in some good degree to the dignity of learning and the encouragement of students and let us not invert that of Jeroboam and as he made the meanest of the people Priests make the highest of the Priests the meanest of the people If it be feared that they will againe employ some of our Lawes with a severity beyond the intention of those Lawes against some of their weaker Brethren that we may be sure to take away that power let us take away those Lawes and let no ceremonies which any number counts unlawfull and no man counts necessary against the rules of Policy and Saint Paul be imposed upon them Let us consider that part of the rule they have hitherto gone by that is such Canons of their owne making as are not confirm'd by Parliament have beene or no doubt shortly will bee by Parliament taken away that the other part of the rule such Canons as were here received before the reformation and not contrary to any law is too doubtfull to be a fit rule exacting an exact knowledge of the Canon-law of the Common-law of the Statute-law knowledges which those who are thus to governe have not and it is scarce fit they should have Since therefore wee are to make new rules and shall no doubt make those new rules strict rules and bee infallibly certaine of a trienniall Parliament to see those rules observ'd as strictly as they are made and to encrease or change them upon all occasions wee shall have no reason to feare any innovation from their tyranny or to doubt any defect in the discharge of their duty I am confident they will not dare either ordaine suspend silence excommunicate or deprive otherwise then we would have them And if this be beleeved I am as confident we shall not think it fit to abolish upon a few dayes debate an Order which hath lasted as appeares by story in most Churches these sixteene hundred yeares and in all from Christ to Calvin or in an instant change the whole face of the Church like the scene of a Maske Master Speake● I doe not beleeve them to be Jure divino nay I beleeve them not to be Jure divino but neither doe I beleeve them to be Injuriâ humariâ I neither consider them as necessary nor as unlawfull but as convenient or inconvenient but since all great mutations in government are dangerous even where what is introduc'd by that mutation is such as would have beene very profitable upon a primary foundation and since the greatest danger of mutations is that all the dangers and inconveniences they may bring are not to be foreseene and since no wise man will undergoe great danger but for great necessity my opinion is that we should not root up this ancient tree as dead as it appeares till we have tryed whether by this or the like lopping of the branches the sap which was unable to feed the whole may not serve to make what is left both grow and flourish And certainely if we may at once take away both the inconveniences of Bishops and the inconvenience of no Bishops that is of an almost universall mutation this course can onely bee opposed by those who love mutation for mutations sake Master Speaker to be short as I have reason to be after having bin so long that this triall may be suddenly made let us commit as much of the Ministers remonstrance as we have read that those heads both of abuses and grievances which are there fully collected may be marshal'd and ordered for our debate if upon that debate it shall appeare that those may be taken away and yet the Order stand wee shall not need to commit the London Petition at all for the cause of it will be ended if it shall appeare that the abolition of the one cannot be but by the destruction of the other then let us not commit the London Petition but let us grant it Mr. PYM His SPEECH After the Articles of the Charge against the Earle of STRAFFORD were read My LORDS THese Articles have exprest the Character of a great and dangerous Treason such a one as is advanced to the highest degree of malice and of mischiefe It is enlarged beyond the limits of any description or definition it is so hainous in it selfe as that it is capable of no aggravation a Treason against God betraying his Truth and Worship against the King obscuring the glory and weakning the foundation of his Throne against the Common-wealth by destroying the principles of Safetie and Prosperitie Other Treasons are against the Rule of the Law this is against the beeing of the Law It is the Law that u●●es the King and his People and the Author of this Treason hath endeavoured to dissolve that Union even to breake the mutuall irreversall indissoluble band of protection and Allegiance whereby they are and I hope ever will
Let every man wipe his heart as he does his eyes when hee would judge of a nice and subtile object The eye if it be pretincted with any colour is vitiated in its discerning Let us take heed of a blood-shotten-eye of Judgement Let every man purge his heart cleare of all passions I know this great and wise body politick can have none but I speak to inviduals from the weaknesse which I finde in my selfe Away with personall animosities away with all flatteries to the people in being the sharper against him because he is odious to them away with all feares lest by the sparing his bloud they may be incenst away with all such considerations as that it is not fit for a Parliament that one accused by it of Treason should escape with life Let not former vehemence of any against him nor feare from thence that he cannot be safe while that man lives be an ingredient in the sentence of any one of us Of all these corruptives of judgement Mr. Speaker I doe before God discharge my self to the uttermost of my power And doe with a cleare Conscience wash my hands of this mans blood by this solemne protestation that my Vote goes not to the taking of the Earle of Straffords life FINIS The Two last SPEECHES of Thomas Wentworth Late Earle of Strafford and Deputy of Ireland His speech in the Tower to the Lords RIght Honourable and the rest you are now come to convey me to my death I am willing to dye which is a thing no more than all our Predecessors have done and a debt that our Posterity must in their due time discharge which since it can be no way avoyded it ought the lesse to be feared for that which is common to all ought not to be intollerable to any It is the Law of Nature the tribute of the flesh a remedie from all worldly cares and troubles and to the truly penitent a perfect path to blessednesse And there is but one death though severall wayes unto it mine is not naturall but inforced by the Law and Iustice it hath been sayd that the Lawes vex only the meaner sort of people but the mighty are able to withstand them it is not so with me for to the Law I submit my self and confesse that I receive nothing but Iustice for he that politikly intendeth good to a Common-weale may be called a just man but he that practiseth either for his own profit or any other sinister ends may be well termed 2 delinquent person neither is delay in punishment any privilege for pardon And moreover I ingenuously confesse with Cicero That the death of the bad is the safety of the good that be alive Let no man trust either in the favour of his Prince the friendship and consanguinity of his Peeres much lesse in his own wisedome and knowledge of which I ingeniously confesse I have been too confident Kings as they are men before God so they are Gods before men and I may say with a great man once in this kingdome Had I strived to obey my God as faithfully as I sought to honour my King fraudulently I had stood and not fallen Most happie and fortunate is that Prince who is as much for his justice feared as for his goodnes beloved For the greater that Princes are in power above other the more they ought in verrue to excell other and such is the royall Soveraign whom I late served For my Peeres the correspondence that I had with them during my prosperity was to me very delightfull and pleasing and here they have commiserated my ruine I have plentifully found who for the most generous of them I may boldly say though they have detested the fact yet they have pitied the person delinquent the first in their loyaltie the last in their charitie ingenuously confessing that never any Subject or Peere of my rank had ever that help of Counsell that benefit of time or a more free and legall tryall than I have had of the like to which none of my Predecessors hath had so much favor from his Prince so much sufferance from the people in which I comprehend the understanding Commons not the many headed monster Multitude but I have offended and sentenced and must now suffer me And for my too much confidence in my supposed wisdome and knowledge therein have been the most deceived For he that is wise to himself and knowes by others faults to correct his own offences to be truly wise is to be Secretaries to our selves for it is meere folly to reveale and intimate thoughts to strangers wisdome is the most precious Gem with which the minde can be adorned and learning the most famous thing for which a man ought to be esteemed and true wisedome teacheth us to do well as to speak well in the first I have failed for the wisedome of man in foolishnesse with God For knowledge it is a thing indifferent both to good and evill but the best knowledge is for a man to know himself he that doth so shall esteem of himself but little for he considereth from whence he came and whereto he must he regardeth not the vain pleasures of this life he exaiteth God and strives to live in his fear but he that knoweth not himself is wilfull in his own wayes unprofitable in his life unfortunate in his death and so am I. But the reason why I sought to attain unto it was this I have read that he th●t knoweth not that which he ought to know is a bruit beast amongst men he that knoweth more then he ought to know is a man amongst beasts but he that knoweth all that may be known is a God amongst men To this I much aspired in this I much failed Vanitie of Vanities all is but vanity I have heard the people clamour and cry out saying That through my occasion the times are bad I wish that when I am dead they may prove better most true it is that there is at this time a great storm in ending God in his mercie avert it And since it is my particular lot lik Jonab to be cast into the sea I shall think my life well spent to appease Gods wrath and satisfie the peoples malice O what is eloquence more than air fashioned with an articulate and distinct sound when it is a speciall vertue to speak little and well and silence is oft the best oratory for sools in their dumbnesse may be accounted wise It hath power to make a good matter seem bad and a bad cause appear good but mine was to me unprofitable and like the Cypresse trees which are great and tall but altogether without fruit What is honour but the first step to disquietnesse and power is still waited on by envy neither hath it any priviledge against infamy It is held to be the chiefe part of honour for a man to joyn to his office and calling courtesie and affability commiseration and pity for thereby he draweth to
offences were contrived committed perpetrated and done at such time as the said Sir Richard Bolton Sir Gerard Lowther and Sir George Radcliffe Knights were privy Counsellors of State within this Kingdom and against their and every of their oathes of the same at such times as the said Sir R. Bolton Kt. was Lord Chancellor of Ireland or chief Baron of his Majesties Court of Exchequer within this Kingdom and Sir Gerard Lowther Knight was Lord chief Justice of the said Court of Common Pleas and against their Oathes of the same and at such time as the said John L. Bishop of Derry was actuall Bishop of Derry within this Kingdom and were done and speciated contrary to their and every of their allegiance severall and respective oathes taken in that behalf IV. For which the said Knights Citizens and Burgesses do impeach the said Sir Richard Bolton Lord Chancellor of Ireland Iohn L. B. of Derry Sir Gerard Lowther Kt. L. chief Justice of his Majesties said Court of Common Pleas and Sir George Radcliffe Kt. aforesaid and every of them of high Treason against our Soveraign Lord the King his Crown and Dignity The said Knights Citizens and Burgesses by Protestation saving to themselves the liberty of exhibiting at any time hereafter any accusation or impeachment against the said Sir Rich. Bolton Iohn L. Bishop of Derry Sir Gerard Lowther and Sir George Radcliffe aforesaid and every of them and also of replying to them and every of their answers which they and every of them shall make to the said Articles or any of them and of offering proof also of the premisses or of any other impeachment or accusation as shall be by them exhibited as the case shall according to the course of Parliament require And the said Knights Citizens and Burgesses do pray that the said Sir Richard Bolton Knight Lord Chancellor of Ireland Iohn Lord Bishop of Derry Sir Gerard Lowther Knight Lord chief Justice of his Majesties said Court of Common Pleas and Sir George Radcliffe Knight and every of them be put to answer to all and every of the premisses and that all such Proceedings Examinations Triall and Iudgement may be upon them and every of them had and used as is agreeable to Law and Justice Copia vera Signed PHILIP PHERNESLY Cler. Parliamenti Sir Thomas Wentworths speech XXij d. Martij 1627. MAy this dayes resolution be as happy as I conceive the proposition which now moves me to rise is seasonable and necessary for whether we shall look upon the King or the people it did never more behove this great Physitian the Parliament to effect a true consent towards the parties then now This debate carryes with it a double aspect towards the Soveraign towards the Subject though both innocent both injured both to be cured In the representation of injuries I shall crave your attention in the Cures I shall beseech your equall cares and better judgements surely in the greatest humility I speak it these illegall waies are marks and punishments of indignation The raising of Leavies strengthned by Commission with unheard of instructions the billetting of Souldiers by Lievetenants without leave have been as if they could have perswaded Christian Princes nay Worlds the right of Empire had been to take a way by strong hand and they have endeavoured as far as was possible for them to do it This hath not been done by the King under the pleasing shade of whose Crown I hope we shall ever gather the fruits of Justice but by Projectors They have extended the prerogative of the King beyond the just Center which was the sweet harmony of the whole They have rent from us the light of our eyes inforced a company of Guests worse than the Ordinaries of France vitiated our wives and daughters before our faces brought the Crown to greater want than ever it was by anticipating the Revenue and can the Shephard be thus smitten and the flock not scattered They have introduced a Privie Counsell ravishing at once the Spheers of all ancient government imprisoning us without Bail or Bond. They have taken from us what shall I say indeed what have ●hey left us all mean of supplying the King and ingratiating our selves with him taking up the roots of all propriety which if it be not seasonably set into the ground by his Maiesties hand we sh●ll have instead of beauty baldnesse To the making of them whole I shall apply my self and propound a remedy to all these diseases by one and the same thing hath the King and people been hurt and by the same must they be cured to vindicate what New things No. Our ancient sober vitall liberties by reinforcing of the ancient Lawes made by our Ancestors by setting such a Character upon them as no licentious spirit shall dare hereafter to enter upon them And shall we thinke this away to break a Parliament N● Our desires are modest and iust I speak truly both for the interest of the King and People If we enjoy not those it will be impossible to relieve him Therefore let us never fear that they shall not be accepted by his goodnesse Wherefore I shall descend to my motions which conconsists of four parts two of which have relation to the persons two to the propriety of goods for the persons the freedome of them from imprisoning Secondly from employments abroad contrary to the ancient customes for our goods that no leavies may be made but in Parliament Secondly no billetting of Souldiers It is most necessary that these be resolved that the Subiects may be secured in both Then for the manner in the second place it will be fit to determine it by a Grand Committee Sir Thomas Wentworths Speech 21. of Aprill Anno 1628. Right wise Right worthy TOo many instigations importune the sequell of my words First the equitie of your proceedings Secondly the honesty of my request for I behold in all your intendments a singularity grounded upon discretion and goodnesse and your consultations steered as well by Charity as extremity of justice This order and method I say of your procedings together with the importunity offered of the Subject in hand have emboldned me to solicite an extension of the late granted protections in generall The lawfulnesse and honesty of the propositions depends upon these two particulars I. The present troubles of the parties protected having run themselves into a further and almost irrecoverable hazards by presuming upon and feeding themselves with the hopes of a long continuing Parliament II. Let the second be this consequence That that which is prejudiciall to most ought to minister matter of advantage to the rest sith then our interpellations and disturbances amongst our selves are displeasing almost to all if any benefit may be collected let it fall upon those for I think the breach of our Session can befriend none but such nor such neither but by means of the grant before hand And because it is probable that his Majesty may cause a Remeeting
this next Michaelmas Let thither also reach their prescribed time for liberty And that till then their protections shall remain in as full vertue and authority as if the Parliament were actually sitting To the Right Honorable the LORD Deputie SHewing that in all ages past since the happy subiection of this Kingdome to the imperiall Crown of England it was and is a principall study and Princely care of his Maiesty and his most Noble Progenitors Kings and Queens of England and Ireland to the vast expence of Treasure and bloud that their loyall and dutifull people of this land of Ireland being now for the most part derived from the Brittish Ancestor should be governed according to the municipiall and fundamentall lawes of England that the Statute of Magna Charta or the great Charter for the liberties of England and other laudable lawes and Statutes were in severall Parliaments here enacted and declared that by the means thereof and of the most prudent and benigne government of his Maiestie and his royall Progenitors this Kingdome was untill of late in its growth to a flourishing estate whereby the said people were hertofore enabled to answer their humble and naturall desires to comply with his Maiesties Royall and Princely occasions by the free gift of 150000 l. ster and likewise by another gift of 120000 l. ster more during the government of the Lord Viscount Faulk-land and after by the gift of 40000. l. and their free and chearfull gift of 6. entire Subsidies in the 10. year of his Maiesties Reign which to comply with his Maiesties then occasions signified to the then H. of Commons they did allow should amount in the collections unto 250000. l. although as they confidently beleeve if the sayd Subsidies had not been levied in a moderate Parliamentary way they would not have amounted to much more than half the said sum besides the four entire Subsidies granted in this present Parliament So it is may it please your Lordship that by the occasion of the ensuing and other grievances and innovations though to his Maiestie no considerable profit this Kingdome is reduced to that extreme and universall poverty that the same is now lesse able to pay a Subsidie then it was heretofore to satisfie all the before recited great payments and his Maiesties most faithfull people of the same do conceive great fears that the grievances and the consequences therof may hereafter be drawn into precedents to be perpetuated upon their posterity which in their great hopes and strong belief they are perswaded is contrary to his Maiesties Royall and Princely intention towards his said people some of which said grievances are as followeth I. First the generall and apparent decay of Trades occcasioned by the new and illegall raysing of the book of Rates and Impositions as xii d. a piece custome for Hides bought for 3.4 or 5. s. and many other heavie Impositions upon native and other commodities exported and imported by reason thereof and of the extream usage and sensures Marchants are beggered and both disinabled and discouraged to trade and some of the honorable persons who gain thereby are often Iudges and parties and that in conclusion his Maiesties profit therby is not considerably advanced II. Secondly the arbitrary decision of all civill causes and controversies by paper petitions before the Lord Lievetenant and Lord Deputy and infinite other Iudicators upon references from them derived in the nature of all actions determinable at the Common-law not limited unto certain times seasons causes and things whatsoever and the consequence of such proceedings by receiving imomoderate and unlawfull fees by Secretaries Clerkes Pursivants Serjants at Armes and otherwise by which kinde of proceedings his Majesty loseth a considerable part of his Revenue upon originall writs and otherwise and the Subject loseth the benefit of his writ of error Bill of reversall vouchers and other legall and just advantages and the ordinary course and Courts of Justice declined III. Thirdly the proceedings in civill causes at the Councell boord contrary to the law and great Charter and not mitted to any certain time or season IV. Fourthly that the Subject is in all the materiall parts thereof denyed the benefit of the principall graces and more especially of the Statute of Limitations of the 21. Jan. granted by his Majesty in the 4 year of this Reign upon great advice of the Counsell of England and Ireland and for great consideration and th n published in all the Courts of Dublin and in all the Courts of this Kingdome in open Assizes whereby all persons do take notice that contrary to his Majesties plous intention his Subiects of this Land have not enioyed the benefit of his Maiesties Princely promise thereby made V. Fiftly the extraiudiciall avoyding of Letters Patents of estates of a very great part of his Maiesties Subiects under the great Seale the publique faith of the Kingdome by private opinions delivered at Councell Boord without legall Evictions of their estates contrary to the Law and without precedent or example of any former age VI. Sixtly the Proclamation for the sole exemption and uttering of Tobacco which is bought at very low Rates and uttered at high and excessive Rates by means wherof thousands of Families within this Kingdome and of his Maiesties subiects in severall Islands and other parts of the West Judies as your Petitioners are informed are destroyed and the most part of 〈◊〉 Coyne of this Kingdome is ingrossed into particular hands Insomuch that your Petitioners do conceive that the profit arising and ingrossed thereby doth surmount his Maiesties Revenues certaine and casuall within this Kingdome and yet his Maiestie receiveth but very little profit by the same VII Seventhly the unusuall and unlawfull increasing of Monopolies to the advantage of few to the disprofit of his Maiesty and the impoverishment of his people VIII Eighthly the extream and cruell usage of certain late Commissioners and other towards the Brittish Farmers and Inhabitants of the City and County of London-derry by meanes whereof the worthy plantation of that Country is almost destroyed and the Inhabitants are reduced to great poverty and many of them forced to forsake the Country the same being the first and most usefull Plantation in the large Province of Vlster to the great weakning of the Kingdome in this time of danger the sayd Plantation being the principall strength of those parts IX Ninthly the late erection of the Court of high Commission for causes Ecclesiasticall in these necessitous times the proceedings of the sayd Court in many causes without legall warrant and yet so supported as prohibitions have not been obtained though legally sought for and the excessive fees exacted by the ministers thereof and the incroaching of the same upon the iurisdiction of other Ecclesiasticall Courts of this Kingdome X. Tenthly the exorbitant and Barbarous Fees and pretended Customes exacted by the Clergie against the Law some of which have beene formerly represented to your Lordship XI Eleventhly the
Comitatus nescit dijudicare Thus did Ethelweld Bishop of Winchester transferre his suit against Leostine from the County ad generale placitum in the time of King Etheldred Queen Edgine against Goda from the County appealed to King Etheldred at London Congregatis principibus sapientibus Angliae a suit between the Bishops of Winchester and Durham in the time of Saint Edward Coram Episcopis principibus Regni inpresentia Regis ventilate finita In the tenth yeer of the Conqueror Episcopi Comites Barones Regni potestate adversis provinciis ad universalem Synodum pro causis audiendis tractandis Convocati saith the book of Westminster And this continued all along in the succeeding Kings raigne untill towards the end of Henry the third AS this great Court or Councell consisting of the King and Barons ruled the great affairs of State and controlled all inferiour Courts so were there certain Officers whose transcendent power seemed to be set to bound in the execution of Princes wills as the Steward Constable and Marshall fixed upon Families in Fee for many ages They as Tribunes of the people or explori among the Athenians grown by unmanly courage fearfull to Monarchy fell at the feet and mercie of the King when the daring Earle of Leicester was slain at Evesham This chance and the deare experience H the 3. himselfe had made at the Parliament at Oxford in the 40. yeare of his Raign and the memory of the many straights his Father was driven unto especially at Rumny-mead neere Stanes brought this King wisely to begin what his Successour fortunately finished in lessoning the strength and power of his great Lords and this was wrought by searching into the Regality they had usurped over their peculiar Soveraigns whereby they were as the booke of St. Albans termeth them Quot Domini tot Tiranni And by the weakning that hand of power which they carried in the Parliaments by commanding the service of many Knights Citizens and Burgesses to that great Councell Now began the frequent sending of Writs to the Commons their assent not only used in money charge and making Lawes for before all ordinances passed by the King and Peeres but their consent in judgements of all natures whether civill or criminall In proofe-whereof I will produce some few succeeding Presidents out of Record When Adamor that proud Prelate of Winchester the Kings half brother had grieved the State by his daring power Liber S. Alban fol. 20.7 An 44. H. 3. he was exiled by joynt sentence of the King the Lords and Commons and this appeareth expressely by the Letter sent to Pope Alexander the fourth expostulating a revocation of him from banishment because be was a Church-man and so not subject to any censure in this the answer is Si Dominus Rex Regnimajores hoc vellent meaning his revocation Communit as tamen ipsius ingressum in Angliam jam nullatenus sustineret The Peers subsign this answer with their names and Petrus de Mountford vice totius Communitatis as Speaker or Proctor of the Commons For by that stile Sir John Tiptofe Prolocutor Charta orig sub figil An. 8. H. 4. affirmeth under his Arms the Deed of Intaile of the Crowns by King Henry the 4. in the 8. year of his Raign for all the Commons The banishment of the two Spencers in the 15. of Edward the second Prelati Comites Barones les autres Peeres de la terre Communes de Roialme give consent and sentence to the revocation and reversement of the former sentence the Lords and Commons accord and so it is expressed in the Roll. In the first of Edw. the 3. when Elizabeth the widdow of Sir John de Burgo complained in Parliament Rot. Parl. 15. E. 3 vel 2. that Hugh Spencer the younger Robert Boldock and William Cliffe his instruments had by duresse forced to make a Writing to the King wherby she was dispoyled of all her inheritance sentence is given for her in these words Pur ceo que avis est al Evesques Counts Barones autres grandes a tout Cominalte de la terre que le dit escript est fait contre ley tout manere de raison si fuist le det escript per agard del Parliam dampue elloquens al livre a ladit Eliz. In An. 4. Edw. 3. it appeareth by a Letter to the Pope Prel● Parliam 1. Ed. 3. Rot. 11 that to the sentence given against the Earle of Kent the Commons were parties as well as the Lords and Peeres for the King directed their proceedings in these words Comitibus Magnatibus Baronibus aliis de Communitate dicti Regni ad Parliamentum illud congregatis injunximus ut super his discernerent judicarent quod rationi justitiae conveniret habere prae oculis solum Deum qui eum concordi unanimi sententia tanquam reum criminis laesae Majestatis morti adjudicarent ejus sententia c. When in the 50 yeere of Edw. 3. the Lords had pronounced the sentence against Richard Lions Parl An. 5. Edw. 3. otherwise then the Commons agreed they appealed to the King and had redresse and the sentence entred to their desires When in the first yeere of Richard the second William Weston Parl. An. 1. Rich. 2 11 3.8 3.5 and John Jennings were arraigned in Parliament for surrendring certain Forts of the Kings the Commons were parties to the sentence against them given as appeareth by a Memorandum annexed to that Record In the first of Hen. the 4. although the Commons refer by protestation the pronouncing of the sentence of deposition against King Rich. the 2. unto the Lords yet are they equally interessed in it as it appeareth by the Record for there are made Proctors or Commissioners for the whole Parliament one B. one Abbot one E. one Baron and 2. Knights Gray and Erpingham for the Commons and to infer that because the Lords pronounced the sentence the point of judgement should be only theirs were as absurd as to conclude that no authority was best in any other Commissioner of Oyer and Terminer then in the person of that man solely that speaketh the sentence In 2. Hen. 5. the Petition of the Commons importeth no lesse than a right they had to act and assent to all things in Parliament Rot. Parl. An. 2. H 6. and so it is answered by the King and had not the adjourned Roll of the higher House beene left to the sole entry of the Clark of the upper House who either out of the neglect to observe due forme or out of purpose to obscure the Commons right and to flatter the power of those who immediately served there would have been frequent examples of all times to cleere this doubt and to preserve a just interest to the Common-wealth and how conveniently it suites with Monarchy to maintaine this forme lest others of that well framed bodie knit under one
unanimously endeavour to oppose and prevent the Counsels and Counsellours which have brought upon us all these miseries and the fears of greater to prevent the ends and bring the Authors of them to condigne punishment and thereby discharge themselves better before God and man The Protestation your Lordships shall have read unto you together with ground and reasons which have induced the House of Commons to make it which are prefixed before it by way of Preamble Then the Protestation was read by Master Maynard Die Mercurii 5 May 1641. IT is this day ordered by the House of Commons now assembled in Parliament that the Preamble togtheer with the Protestation which the Members of this House made the third of May shall be forthwith Printed and the Copies printed brought to the Cleark of the said House to Attest under his hand to the end that the Knights Citizens and Burgesses may send them down to the Sheriffes and Justices of Peace of the severall Shires and to the Citizens and Burgesses of the severall Cities Boroughes and Cinque Ports respectively And the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are to intimate unto the Shires Cities and Boroughes and Cinque Ports with what willingnesse all the Members of this House made this Protestation And further to signifie that as they justifie the taking of it in themselves so the cannot but approve it in all such as shall take it A Preamble with the Protestation made by the whole House of Commons the third of May 1641. and assented unto by the Lords of the upper House the fourth of May last past WE the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House in Parliament finding to the griefe of our hearts that the designes of the Priests and Jesuits and other adherents to the See of Rome have of late more boldly and frequently put in practice then formerly to the undermining and danger of the Ruine of the true reformed Religion in his Majesties Dominions established and finding also that there hath bin and having cause to suspect there still are even during the sitting in Parliament endeavours to subvert the fundamentall Lawes of England and Ireland and to introduce the exercise of an Arbitrary and tyrannicall government by most pernicious and wicked counsells practises plots and conspiracies and that the long intermision and unhappier breach of Parliaments hath occasioned many illegall Taxations whereupon the Subjects have beene prosecuted and grieved and that divers Innovations and Superstitions have been brought into the Church Multitudes driven out of his Maiesties Dominions Jealousies raised and Fomented between the King and his people a Popish Armie leavied in Ireland and two Armies brought into the bowels of this Kingdome to the hazard of his Majesties Royall Person the Consumption of the Revenue of the Crown and the treasure of this Realme And lastly finding the great causes of Jealousie endeavours have beene and are used to bring the English Armie into mis-understanding of this Parliament thereby to encline that Armie by force to bring to passe those wicked counsells have therefore thought good to ioyn our selves in a Declaration of our united affections and resolutions and to make this ensuing Protestation The Protestation I A.B. Do in the presence of Almighty God promise vow and protest to maintain and defend as farre as lawfully I may with my life power and estate the true Reformed Protestant Religion expressed in the Doctrine of the Church of England against all popery and popish Innovation within this Realm contrary to the said Doctrine and according to the duty of my Allegiance I will maintain and defend his Majesties Royall Person Honor and Estate As also the power and priviledge of Parliaments the lawfull Rights and Liberties of the Subjects And every person that shall make this Protestation in whatsoever he shall do in the lawfull pursuance of the same and to my power as farre as lawfully I may I will oppose and by all good wayes and means endeavour to bring condigne punishment on all such as shall by force practice counsels plots conspiraces or otherwise do any thing to the contrary in this present protestation contained and further that I shall in all Just and Honorable wayes endeavour to preserve the union and peace betwixt the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland And neither for hope fear or any other respects shall relinquish this promise vow and Protestation The Bill of Attainder that passed against Thomas Earl of STAFFORD WHereas the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons in this present Parliament assembled have in the name of themselves and of all the Commons of England impeached Thomas Earl of Strafford of high Treason for endeavouring to subvert the Ancient and Fundamentall Laws and Government of his Majesties Realms of England and Ireland and to introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against Law in the said Kingdoms and for exercising a Tyrannous and exorbitant power over and against the Laws of the said Kingdoms over the Liberties Estates and Lives of his Majesties Subjects and likewise for having by his own authority commanded the laying and asseising of souldiers upon his Majesties Subjects in Ireland against their consents to compell them to obey his unlawfull commands and orders made upon pap●r Petitions in causes between party and party which accordingly was executed upon divers of his Majesties Subjects in a Warlike manner within the said Realm of Ireland and in so doing did levie Warre against the Kings Majesty and his liege people in that Kingdome And also for that he upon the unhappy Dissolution of the last Parliament did slander the House of Commons to his Majesty and did counsell and advise his Majesty that he was loose and absolved from the rules of Government and that he had an Army in Ireland by which he might reduce this Kingdom for which he deserves to undergo the pains and forfeitures of high Treason And the said Earl hath been also an Incendiary of the Warres between the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland all which offences have been sufficiently proved against the said Earl upon his impeachment Be it therefore enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the same That the said Earl of Strafford for the haynous crimes and offences aforesaid stand and be adjudged and attainted of high Treason and shall suffer such pain of death and incurre the forfeitures of his Goods and Chattels Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of any estate of Free-hold or Inheritance in the said Kingdoms of England and Ireland which the said Earl or any other to his use or in trust for him have or had the day of the first sitting of this present Parliament or at any time since Provided that no Judge or Judges Justice or Iustices whatsoever shall adiudge or interpret any Act or thing to be Treason nor in any other manner than he or they should or ought to have done before
the levying of the Subsidies the houses leave to your Majesties consideration It is found that Goodman the Priest hath been twice formerly committed and discharged That his residence now about London was in absolute contempt of your Majesties Proclamation as the Houses are credibly informed that he hath been sometimes a Minister in the Church of England and consequently is an Apostate both Houses are very sensible that any man should presume to intercede with your Majesty in a case of so high a nature They humbly desire that a speedy course may be taken for the due execution of the laws against the Priests and Jesuits that all mischiefes before mentioned may be timely remedied by your Majesties great wisdome And lastly that Goodman the Priest be left to the justice of the law The Earle of Straffords Letter to his most Excellent Majesty dated from the Tower the 4th of May 1641. May it please your sacred Majesty IT hath been my greatest griefe in all these troubles to be taken as a person which should endeavour to represent and set things amisse between your Majesty and your People and to give counsels tending to the disquiet of the three Kingdomes Most true it is that this mine own private Condition considered it had been a great madnesse since through your grations favour I was so provided as not to expect in any kind to mend my fortune or please my mind more then by resting where your bounteous hands had placed me Nay it is most mightily mistaken for unto your Majesty it is well known my poore and humble advises concluded still in this That your Majesty and your people could never be happy till there were a right understanding betwixt you and them no other means to effect and settle this happinesse but by the Counsell and assent of the Parliament or to prevent the growing Evils upon this state but by intirely putting your self in the last resort upon the loyalty and good affections of your English subjects Yet such is my misfortune this truth findeth little credit the contrary seemeth generally to be believed and my selfe reputed as some thing of Separation between you and your people under a heavier censure then which I am perswaded no Gentleman can suffer Now I understand the minds of men are more incensed against me notwithstanding your Majesty hath declared that in your princely opinion I am not guilty of Treason nor are you satisfied in your conscience to passe the Bill This bringeth me into a very great straight there is before me the ruine of my Children and family hitherto untouched in all the branches of it with any foule Crimes Here is before me the many ills which may befall your Sacred person and the whole Kingdome should your selfe and Parliament part lesse satisfied one with the other then is necessary for the preservation both of King and People Here are before me the things most valued most feared by mortall man Life or Death To say Sir that there hath not been a strife in me were to make me lesse man then God knoweth my infirmities give me And to call a destruction upon my selfe and young Children where the intentions of my heart at least have been innocent of this great offence may be believed will find no easie consent from Flesh and blood But with much sadnesse I am come to a resolution of that which I take to be best becomming me to look upon that which is most principall in it selfe which doubtlesse is the prosperity of Your sacred Person and the Common-Wealth infinitely before any private mans interest And therefore in few words as I put my selfe wholly upon the honour and justice of my Peers so clearly as to beseech your Majesty might please to have spared that declaration of yours on Saturday last and intirely to have left me to their Lordships so now to set your Majesties conscience at liberty I doe most humbly beseech your Majesty in prevention of mistakes which may happen by your refusall to passe this Bill And by this means remove praised be God I cannot say this accursed but I confesse this unfortunate thing forth of the way towards that blessed agreement which God I trust shall ever Establish between you and your subjects Sir my consent shall more acquit you herein to God then al ●he world can do besides To a willing man there is no injury done And as by Go●s grace I forgive all the world with a calmnes and meeknes of infinite Contentment to my dislodging soule So Sir to you can I give the life of this world with all the cheerfulnesse imaginable in the just acknowledgement of your exceeding favours And only beg that in your goodnesse you would vouchsafe to cast your gratious regard upon my poor Sonne and his three Sisters lesse or more and no otherwise then as their in present unfortunate Father may hereafter appeare more or lesse guilty of this death God long preserve your Majesty Your Majesties most faithfull and humble Subject and Servant STRAFFORD Tower 4 May 1641. The Petition of the EARLE of STRAFFORD unto the Lords before he Dyed To the Right Honourable the Lords Spirituall and Temporall in this present Parliament assembled THE humble Petition of Thomas late Earle of Strafford Sheweth that seeing it is the good will and pleasure of God that your Petitioner is now shortly to pay that duty which we allow to our fraile nature He shall in all Christian Patience and Charity conform and submit himselfe to your Justice in a comfortable assurance of the great Hope laid up for us in the Mercy and Merits of our Saviour blessed for ever Only he humbly craves to return your Lordships most humble thanks for your Noble Compassion towards those innocent Children whom now with his last blessing he must commit to the protection of Almighty GOD beseeching Your Lord-ships to finish your Pious intentions towards them And desiring that the reward thereof may be fulfill'd in You by him that is able to give above all we are able either to aske or think Wherein I trust the Honourable House of Commons will afford their Christian assistance And so beseeching your Lord-ships charitably to forgive all his omissions and infirmities he doth very heartily and truly recommend Your Lordships to the Mercies of Our Heavenly Father and that for his goodnesse he may perfect you in every good work Amen Tho. Wentworth Lord FAULKLANDS first speech in Parliament I Rejoyce very much to see this day and the want hath not lain in my affections but my lungs If to all that hath bind past I have not been as loud with my voice as any mans in the house yet truly my opinion is we have yet done nothing if we doe no more I shall add what I humbly conceive ought to be added as soone as I have said something with references to him that saies it I will first desire the forgivenesse of the House if ought I say seem to entrench upon anothers
price of moneys must rise and fall to fit their occasions we see this by raising the Exchange of Franckford and other places of their usuall time of the Marts This frequent and daily change in the Low-Countries of their moneys is no such injustice to any there as it would be here for there they being all Merchants or mechanicks they can rate accordingly their labour and their Ware whether it be Coyne or other merchandize to the present condition of their own money in Exchange And our English Merchants to whose profession it properly belongeth do so according to their just intrinsique valew of their forreign Coyn in all barter of commodities or Exchange except usance which we that are rated and tyed by the extrinsiques measure of moneys in all our constant reckonigs and annuall bargains at home cannot do And for us then to raise our Coyn at this time to equall their proportions were but to render our selves to a perpetuall incertainty for they will raise upon us daily them again which we of course shall follow else receive no profit by this present change and so destroy the Policie Justice honor and tranquilitie of our State for ever To the Right Honourable the Lord Deputy The ●●mble and just Remonstrance of the Knights Cittizens and Burgesses in Parliament assembled SHewing that in all ages since the happy subjection of this Kingdome to the Imperiall Crowne of England it was and is a principall study and Princely care of his Majesty and his most noble Progenitors Kings and Queens of England and Ireland to the vast expence of treasure and blood That their loyall and dutifull people of this Land of Ireland beeing now for the most part derived from Brittish Ancestors should be governed according to the municipall and fundamentall Lawes of England That the statute of Magna Charta or the great Charter of the liberties of England and other laudable lawes and statutes were in severall Parliaments heere enacted and declared that by the means thereof of the most prudent benign government of his Majestie his Royall Progenitors this Kingdome was untill of late in its growth a flourishing estate whereby the said people were heretofore enab●ed to a●●iver their humble and naturall desires to comply with his Majesties Princely and royall occasions by their free gift of 150. thousand pounds sterling and likewise by another free gift of 120. thousand pounds more during the government of the Lord Viscount Faulkland and after by the gift of 40. thousand pounds and their free and cheerefull gift of si●● intire Subsidies in the tenth yeare of his Majesties Reign● which to comply with his Majesties then occasions signified to the then house of Commons they did allow should ammount in the Collections unto 2 hundred and fifty thousand pounds although as they confidently believe if the Subsidies had been levyed in a moderate Parliamentary way they would not have amounted to much more then halfe the sum aforesaid besides the foure intire Subsidies graunted in this present Parliament Soe it is may it please your Lordship by the occasion of insuing and other grievances and Innovations though to his Majesty no considerable profit this Kingdome is reduced to that extreame and universall poverty that the same is lesse able to pay 2 Subsidies then it was hertofore to satisfie all the before-recyted great payments his Majesties most faithfull people of the Land do conceive great fears that the said grievances and consequences thereof may be hereafter drawne into presidents to be perpetuated upon their posterity which in their great hopes and strong beliefe they are perswaded is contrary to his Royall and Princely intention towards his said people of which greivances are as followeth 1 First the generall apparant decay of Trades occasioned by the new and illegall raising of the booke of rates and impositions upon native and other Commodities exported and imported by reason whereof and of extreame usage and censures Merchants are beggered both and disinabled and discouraged to Trade and some of the honourable persons who gaine thereby often Iudges and parties And that in the conclusion his Majesties profit thereby is not considerably advanced 2. The arbitrary decision of all civill causes and controversies by paper petitions before the Lord Lieutenant and Lord Deputy and infinite other Iudicatories upon references from them derived in the nature of all actions determinable at the Common Law not limited into certaine time cause season or thing whatsoever And the consequences of such exceeding by immoderate and unlawfull fees by Secretaries Clarkes Pursivants Serjeants at Armes and otherwise by which kinde of proceedings his Majesty looseth a considerable part of his revenue upon originall writs and other wise and the Subject looseth the benefit of his writ of Error bill of reversall vouchees and other legall and just advantages and the ordinary course and Courts of Iustice declined 3. The proceedings in civill causes at Counsell board contrary to the Law and great Charter not limited to any certaine time or season 4 That the Subject is in all the materiall parts thereof denyed the benefit of the Princely graces and more especially of the statute of limitations of 21. of Iac. Graunted by his Majesty in the fourth yeare of his Raigne upon great advice of Counsell of England and Ireland and for great consideration and then published in all the Courts of Dublin and in all the Counties of this Kingdome in open assizes whereby all persons doe take notice that contrary to his Majesties pious intentions his Subjects of this land have not enjoyed the benefit of his Majesties Princelie promise thereby made 5. The extrajudiciall avoyding of Letters Pattents of estates of a very great part of his Majesties subjects under the great Seale the publique faith of the Kingdome by private opinions delivered at the Counsell board without legall evictions of their estates contrary to the law and without president or example of any former age 6. The Proclamation for the sole emption and uttering of Tobacco which is bought at every low rates and uttered at high and excessive rates by meanes whereof thousands of families within this Kingdome and of his Majesties Subjects in severall Ilands and other parts of the West Indies as your Petitioners are informed are destroyed and the most part of the coyn of this Kingdome is ingross ed into particular hands Insomuch as the petitioners do conceive that the proffit arising and engrossed thereby doth surmount his Majestyes revenue certain or cosuall within this Kingdome and yet his Majesty receiveth but very little profit by the same 7. The universall and unlawfull increasing of Monopolies to the advantage of a few to the disprofit of his Majesty and Impoverishment of his people 8. The extream and cruell usage of certain late Commissioners and other stewards the Brittish Farmers and Inhabitants of the City and County of London Derry by meanes whereof the worthy Plantation of that Country is almost destroyed and the
sometimes to the great discomfort of many poore soules who for want of money can get no absolution 12 They claim their Office and Jurisdiction to be jure divino and doe exercise the same contrary to Law in their own names and under their own Seals 13 They receive and take upon them temporall Honours Dignities Places and Offices in the Common wealth as if it were lawfull for them to use both swords 14 They cognizance in their Courts and elswhere of matters determinable at the Common Law 15 They put Ministers upon Parishes without the Patrons and without the peoples consent 16 They doe yearly impose Oaths upon Churchwardens to the most apparent danger of filling the land with perjuries 17 They doe exercise Oaths Ex Officio in the Nature of an inquisition even unto the thoughts of mens 18 They have apprehended men by Pursevants without ciration or missives first sent they break up mens houses and studies taking away what they please 19 They doe aw the Judges of the Land with their greatnesse to the inhibiting of prohibition and hindering of Habeas Corpus when it is due 20 They are strongly suspected to be confederated with the Roman party in this Land and with them to be Authors Contrivers or Consenters to the present Commotions in the North and the rather because of a Contribution by the Clergy and by the Papists in the last year 1639. and because of an ill-named benevolence of six Subfidies granted or intended to be granted this yeare 1640. thereby and with these monies to ingage as much as in them lay the two Nations into blood It is therefore our humble and earnest prayer that all this Hierarchicall power may be totally abrogated if the wisdome of this Honourable House shall finde that it cannot be maintained by Gods word and to his glory And your Petitioners shall ever pray c. The Petition of the Citizens of London to both house of Parliament wherein is a Demonstration of their grievances together with their desires for Justice to be excuted upon the Earle of Strafford and other DELINQUENTS To the most Honorable Assembly of the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament The humble Petition of divers Citizens of London SHeweth that notwithstanding his Majesties gracious Answer to the humble Petition of his Loyall Subjects in summoning this Parliament with the great care and endeavoured pains taken by both Houses for the removing the heavy Grievances in Church and Commonwealth whereof the Petitioners have already received some fruit for which they desire to return their most humble and utmost thanks yet neverthelesse they are inforced with all Humility to represent to this most Honourable assemblly some of these Obstructions which doe still hinder that freedome and fulnesse of Trade in this City they have formerly had which considering the numerous Multitude thereupon depending they conceive it not able comfortably to subsist As the unsetled Condition of the Kingdome even since the troubles in Scotland hath caused both strangers and also of our own who did furnish great summs of money to Use to call it in and remit much of it by Exchange unto Forraine pars and stands now in Expectation of what the issue of things may be The stopping money in the Mint which till then was accompted the safest place and surest staple in these parts in the world still doth hinder the importation of Bullyon the Scots now disabled to pay such debts as they owe to the Petitioners and others in the City and by reason of the oppressions exercised in Ireland their debts also are detained there The English Trade by reason of our generall distractions and fears is so much decayed that Country tradesmen can not pay their debts in London as formerly The great summs of money unduly taken by his Majesties Officers and Farmers for impositions upon Merchandize exported and imported and the want of reliefe in Courts of Justice against them The drawing out from the City great summs of money which is the life and spirit of Trade for his Majesties service in the North and being there imployed is not yet returned Besides all which from what strong and secret opposition the Petitioners know not they have not received what so much time and pains might give and cause to hope but still incendiaries of the Kingdoms and other notorious offenders remain unpunished the affaires of the Church notwithstanding many Petitions concerning it and long debate about it remains unsettled the Papists still armed the Laws against them not executed some of the most active of them still at Court Priests and Jesnits not yet banished the Irish Popish army not yet disbanded Courts of Justice not yet reformed and the Earle of Strafford who as now appears hath counselled the plundering of this City and putting it to fine ransome and said it would never be well till some of the Aldermen were banged up because they would not yeeld to illegall levies of moneys hath so drawn out and spent his time in his businesse to the very great charge of the whol Kingdome and his endeavour to obtain yet more all which makes us fear there may be practices now in hand to hinder the birth of your great endeavours and that we lie under some more dangerous plot then we can discover All which premisses with their fears and distractions growing there-from and from things of the like nature the Petitioners humbly offer to the most grave consideration of this most honorable assembly as being the true causes of decay of Trade discouragement of Tradesmen and of the great scarcity of monies with the consequences they labour under And do humbly pray that their said grievances may be redressed the causes of their fears removed Justice executed upon the said Earle and other incendiaries and offenders the rather in regard till then the Petitioners humbly conceive neither Religion nor their lives liberties or estates can besecured And as in duty bound they shall ever pray c. Subscribed to this Petition 20000. all men of good ranke and quality Sir John Wrayes Speech concerning Bishops 1641. THE first challenge for Lordly Primacy hath of old been grounded out of the great Charter by which they hold an Episcopall Primacy or Jurisdiction to be long to their state of Prelacy this is their temporall soundation and main object Here I demand of them unto what Church this great Charter was granted and whether it were not granted unto the Church of GOD in England Let the words of the Magna Charta decide this which are these Concessimus Deo pro●nobis in perpetuum quod Ecclesia Anglicana libera sit habeat omnia Jura sua iutegra libertates suas illaesas Now by this Charter if it be rightly interpreted there is first provision made that honour and worship be yeelded unto God as truly and indeed belong unto him Secondly that not only such Rights and Liberties as the King and his Progenitors but also that such as
into the mouth of the Prophet to Abab to speak delusions to subvert the host of God The most vehement and trayterous encounter of Sathan is lively deci hered in the true example of Job where first I observe the dismologie he overthrowes not Jobs Magna Charta he d●sseizes him not of his inheritance nor dispossesses him of his Leases but only disrobes him of some part of his personall estate when he proceeds to infringe Jobs liberty he doth not pillorie him nor cut off his ears nor bore him through the tongue he only spots him with some ulcers here Sathan stains when these persons by their traiterous combinations envie the very bloud that runs unspilt in our veines and by obtruding bloody Acts damn'd in the last Parliament will give Sathan size ace and the Dice at Irish in inthralling the lives of the Subjects by their arbitrary Judicature I would not my Lords be understood to impute to the Judges and infallibilitie of error nor in impeaching these to traduce those whose candor and integrity shine with more admired lustre then their white furres who like trophees of virgin-justice stood fixt and unmov'd in the rapid torrent of the times while these like strawes and chips plai'd in the streams untill they are devolv'd in the Ocean of their deserved ruine No my Lords humanum est errare and the Law allowes Writs of Error and arrest of Judgement but where there is crassa ignorantia against their Oath against the Fundamentall Elementary and known Lawes of the Kingdome Nay my Lords where it is rather praemedita●a malitia where there is an emulating policie who should raze and embessell the Records in the practique that are for the tender preservation of our liberties estates and lives seeking only to be glorious in a nationall destruction as if their safety were only involved in our ruine there I have command to pitty but not excuse them To kill a Judge quatenus a Judge is not Treason but to kill a Judge sitting in the place of Iudicature is Treason not for that the Law intends it out of any malice against the party but for the malice against the Law where then can an intensive or an extensive malice be exprest or implyed against the Law then the practicall dialect of these persons impeach't speaks with a known and crying accent The Benjamites slang stones with their left hands yet they would not misse a hairs breadth these extrajudiciall proceedings are slung with the left I meane they are sinistrious and imprint their blacke and blew marks more certaine and more fatall for that they may say Quae regio in terris nostri non plena laboris Though these things be familiar unto us yet I cannot but admire how this unproportionable body of Iudicature should swell up into such a vast and ulcerous dimension but why should I considering this excentrick motion of the body of the Law had his birth obscure resembling the tares that were sowed in the night time but here is the difference they were sowne by the enemy in the absence of the Master but these are sowne by the Grand-masters themselves purposely to overtop and choak the expected Harvest Innovations in Law and consequently in government creep in like heresies in Religion slily and slowly pleading it the end a sawcy and usurp't legitimacy by uncontrol'd prescription My Lords this is the first sitting and I have onely chalked out this deformed body of high Treason I have not drawn it at length least it might fright you from the further view thereof in conclusion it is the humble defire of the Commons that the parties impeached may be secured in their persons sequestred from this House from the Counsell Table and all places of Iudicature as being Civiliter mortui that they may put in their answers to the Articles ready now to be exhibited against them and that all such further proceedings may be secretly expedited as may be sutable to Iustice and the precedents of Parliaments so his Majesty may appeare in his triumphant goodnesse and indulgency to his people and his people may be ravisht in their dutifull and cheerefull obedience and loyalty to his Maiesty your Lordships may live in Records to Posterity as the instrumentall reformers of those corrupted times and that the Kingdome and Common-wealth may pay an amiable sacrifice in retribution and acknowledgement of his Maiesties multiplyed providence for our preservation herein Articles of the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in the Parliament assembled against Sir Ric Bolton Kt. Lord Chancellor of Ireland John Lord B. of Derry and Sir Gerard Lowther Kt. L. Chief Justice of his Majesties Court of Common-Pleas and Sir George Radcliffe Kt. in maintenance of the accusation whereby they and every of them stand charged with high Treason FIrst that they the said Sir Richard Bolton Knight Lord Chancellor of Ireland John L. Bishop of Derry Sir Ger. Lowther Kt. Lord Chief Justice of his Majesties Court of Common-Pleas and Sir George Radcliffe Knight intending the destruction of the Common-wealth of this Realm have trayterously confederated and conspired together to subvert the Fundamentall Laws and Government of this Kingdom and in pursuance thereof they and every of them have trayterously contrived introduced and exercised an arbitrary and tyrannicall Government against Law thorowout this Kingdom by the countenance and assistance of Thomas Earl of Strafford then chief Governour of this Kingdom II. That they and every of them the said Sir Richard Bolton Kt. L. Chancellor of Ireland John L. Bishop of Derry Sir Gerard Lowther Kt. L. chief Justice of the Common Pleas and Sir George Radcliffe Kt. have trayterously assumed to themselves and every one of them regall power over the goods persons lands and liberties of his Majesties Subjects in this Realm and likewise have maliciously perfidiously and trayterously given declared pronounced and published many false unjust and erroneous opinions Judgements Sentences and Decrees in extrajudiciall manner against Law and have perpetrated practised and done many other trayterous and unlawfull acts and things whereby as well divers mutinies seditions and rebellions have been raised as also many thousands of his Majesties liege people of this Kingdom have been ruined in their goods lands liberties and lives and many of them being of good quality and reputation have been utterly defamed by Pillory mutilation of members and other infamous punishments By means whereof his Majesty and the Kingdom have been deprived of their service in Juries and other publike imployments and the generall trade and traffique of this Island for the most part destroyed and his Majesty highly damnified in his customes and other revenues III. That they the said Sir Rich. Bolton John L.B. of Derry Sir Ger. Lowther K. and Sir G. Radcliffe and every of them the better to preserve themselves and the said Earl of Strafford in these and other trayterous courses have laboured to subvert the rights of Parliament and the ancient course of Parliamentary proceedings all which