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A35948 Complaints and queries vpon Englands misery acted Octob. 13, 1659, by some officers of the army, against the Parliament of the common-wealth of England / by a true lover of the lawes and liberties of England, E.D. E. D., True lover of the lawes and liberties of England. 1659 (1659) Wing D14; ESTC R12374 8,590 9

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COMPLAINTS AND QUERIES VPON ENGLANDS Misery Acted Octob. 13 1659. BY SOME OFFICERS OF THE ARMY AGAINST The Parliament of the Common-wealth of ENGLAND By a true Lover of the LAWES and LIBERTIES of ENGLAND E. D. LONDON Printed by J. C. 1659. COMPLAINTS and QUERIES upon Englands Misery acted Octob. 13 1659. Complaint O How dolefully different is this day from this day sevennight when Parliament and Councel os State Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council of the City of London with the Officers of the Army met at their sacred Solemn devotions of singing praying praysing and preaching the praises of God for the late deliverance from the Northwest Insurrection marching afterwards in great State with sound of Trumpets atrendance of Armed Souldiers and aspect of innumerable people to a most sumptious Dinner where they eat and drank of all choise varieties and rarities with great welcome and rare Musick and all interchangeable signs and significations of integrated unity and amity But now the Army hath they say dissolved the Parliament And is not this daies sorrow far greater then that daies joy sad enough to break more hearts then on that day were made merry Query Say ye the Parliament is dissolved How can that be when by an Act of the people in Parliament this Parliament was never to be dissolved without an Act of their own Nor did those Representatives of the the people of England ever consent to their dissolution So that let come never so many pretended Parliaments Conventions Forms pretending Supream Power yet will not the supremacy of this Parlliament still impend over them Will not the Authority of this Parliament be still in force to call all the said Pretentioners to an accompt and to stick in their sides when ever the free people of England continually watching their opportunitys shall bring them back to sit in Parliament Compl. However if the Army have not dissolved yet sure enough they have interrupted and put off the Parliament which is sad enough It being all one with not having a remedy as not to have Liberty to use it So that the cry of the good people is The Parliament is gone and we in probability for ever undone Quaere Whether we shall do well so to conclude For did they not so once afore in Olivers time some of them assisting him in that evil others of the Army afterwards strengthning him keeping out the Parliament till many of the Commander and some of the Souldiers troubled in Conscience left the Army and others so manifested their dissatisfaction that they were lifted out by Oliver And is not this last evil in this second interruption greater then the former And therefore like to cry lowder against their Consciences to cause them if God please to return I say I Query whether this second interruption be not greater then the former all things considered For did not the remaining Officets of the Army pretending to godliness refuse to take warning of treasuring up an evil Conscience by the trouble of Conscience that befel the others Did they not assist in the Proclaiming Richard Protector not knowing any sufficient ground And had they not the patience and connivance at least if not giving some assistance to the said Richads callin a Free Pauliament as they named it so free that besides through notorious patching and shuffling the most of them were English Cavelleers arch Royalists there were called in 60 Scottish and Irish Representatives against all Law Custome Ordinance or shew of Authority whatsoever to the dangerous prejudice of this Nation of England they being a third part more then the Quorum of an English Parliament able to make Lawes upon us without our consents if at any time 40 of ours should not be in the House And moreover did not the complexion of that Parliament as they call it appear as looking towards a Kings At least did not the Army suspect so much whereby they feared the reverting of Kings Queens Lands and Fee-FarmRents And did not the Officers of the Army upon these and the like considerations set forth in Print their repentance for all their aforesaid evils of May 6 1659. Saying The publick concernment of this Commonwealth being through a vicisitude of dangers and back-slidings of many brought into that state and posture wherein they now stand AND OUR SELVES also contributing thereunto by wandering divers wayes from righteous and equal paths and also observing to our great grief that the good SPIRIT which formerly appeared amongst us in the carrying on of this great work did daily decline so as the GOOD OLD CAUSE became a reproach c. And did not they and some of the former Commanders troubled in Conscience as aforesaid joyning with them earnestly intreat in the said Printed Declaration That this Parliament formerly interrupted by Oliver would return to the exercise and discharge of their trust promising them in the said Declaration that they would be ready in their places as becomes them to yield them their utmost assistance to sit in safety in setling and securing the peace and freedom of this Commonwealth And when this Parliament with much self-denial ventured themselves divers ways to sit and act and now the conscentious Officers that afore relinquished or were ejected out of Command are restored to their respective Commands did not the generallity of both sorts of the Officers aforesaid all pretending to godliness now again stop this Parliament from going to the House and therein seem to vomit up their repentance repenting of that repentance and to lick up that Vomit which formerly they had spewed out And did not the Same men herein fare worse then before not onely in transgressing against their former self-conviction former examples of Conscience former repentings former repentance of their indangering the whole Commonwealth but against the Sage Patriots of their Countrey and pious for the Generallity towards God and some of them brave Soldiers and that after they had sat half a year mainly doing their Drudgery getting Laws of Excise and Custom raising Taxes and paying Souldiers by Sea and Land Yea in the very Act of stopping the Speaker in Kings-street when a Lieut. Col. busling in the business was asked why he did these things Did he give any other answer but this That he had received a Command so to do And doth not such an answer as this make a considered man astonished what might be the GODLINESS so much cryed up of a Souldier that out of the business of War and resistance of the Supream Legislative Power obey an unrighteous command his Conscience being witness without dispute Compl. They were necessiated they say thus to stop the Parliament for self-preservation Quaery Is there any doubt but that self was mainly in it But is there any necessity Can there be any necessity if we believe that GOD Governs the World of sinning Or was there such a stress to be put upon Nine Mens losing their Commissions wherein were imbarked onely a little future ayry