Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n robert_n sir_n william_n 59,764 5 8.6810 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A71223 The compleat History of independencie Upon the Parliament begun 1640. By Clem. Walker, Esq; Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth part was never before published.; History of independency. Walker, Clement, 1595-1651.; Theodorus Verax. aut; T. M., lover of his king and country. aut 1661 (1661) Wing W324B; ESTC R220805 504,530 690

There are 11 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

both Houses and now into Orders of a remaining Faction of one House 1. That the People that is their own faction according to their said Principle are under God the originall of all just power 2. That the Commons of England in Parliament assembled being chosen by and representing the People have the supreme power of this Nation 3. That whatsoever is enacted or declared for Law by the House of Commons assembled in Parliament hath the force of Law and all the People of this Nation are concluded therby although the consent or concurrence of the King or House of Peers be not had thereunto This chain-shot sweeps away King Lords Laws Liberties property and fundamentall Government of this Nation at once and deposites all that is or can be neer or deare unto us in scrinio pectoris in the bosomes and consciences of 50. or 60. factious covetous Saints the dregs and lees of the House of Commons sitting and acting under the power of an Army and yet the House of Commons never had any Power of Iudicature nor can legally administer an Oath but this in pursuance of their aforesaid Principle That they may pass through any form of Government to carry on their Design The Diurnall tells you there was not a Negative Voice this shews under what a terror they sit when in things so apparently untrue no man durst say No so the said Declaratory Vote and Ordinance for Triall of His Majesty by a Court Martiall if the Diurnall speak true and yet the King no Prisoner of War was passed onely in the name and by the Authority of the Commons Notwithstanding the Order of the House That the Clerk should not deliver a Copy of the said Ordinance to any man I here present the Reader with a Copy thereof * An Act of Parliament of the House of Commons for Tryall of Charls Stuart King of England 59. The Act for Triall of the King VVHeras it is notorious that Charles Stuart the now King of England was not content with the many incroachments which his Predecessors had made upon the People in their Rights and Freedom hath had a wicked Design to subvert the ancient and foundamentall Laws and Liberties of this Nation and in their place to introduce an Arbytrary and Tyrannicall Government Quaere Whether the Faction do not translate these Crimes from themselves to the King with many others and that besides all evil waies to bring His Design to pass He hath prosecuted it with fire and sword levied and maintained a Civill Warre in the Land against the Parliament and Kingdom whereby this Countrie hath been miserablie wasted the publique Treasure exhausted Trade decayed thousands of People murdered and infinite of other mischiefs committed for all which high offences the said Charls Stuart might long since have been brought to exemplary and condigne punishment Whereas also the Parliament well hoping that the restraint and imprisonment of His Person after it had pleased God to deliver Him into their hands would have quieted the distempers of the Kingdom did forbear to proceed judicially against Him but found by sad experience that such their remissness served onely to encourage Him and His Complices in the continuance of their evil practices and raising new Commotions Rebellions and Invasions For prevention of the like and greater inconveniences and to the end no chief Officer or Magistrate may hereafter presume Traiterously and maliciously to imagine or contrive the enslaving or destroying of the English Nation and to expect impunity Be it enacted and ordained by the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and it is hereby enacted and ordained that Thomas Ld. Fairfax Generall Oliver cromwel Lieu. Generall Com. Gen. Ireton Major Gen. Skippon Sir Hardresse Waller Col. Valentine Walton Col. Thomas Harrison Col. Edward Whalley Col. Thomas Pride Col. Isaac Ewer Col. Rich Ingolsby Sir Henry Mildmay Sir Tho Honywood Thomas Lord Grey Philip Lord Lisle Will Lord Munson Sir John Danvers Sir Tho Maleverer Sir Iohn Bowcher Sir Iames Harington Sir William Brereton Robert Wallop Esquire Will Henningham Es Isaas Pennington Alderman Thomas Atkins Ald Col. Rowland VVilson Sir Peter VVentworth Col. Henry Martyn Col. William Purefoy Col. Godfrey Bosvill Iohn Trencherd Esq Col. Harbottle Morley Col. Iohn Berkstead Col. Mat. Tomblinson Iohn Blackstone Esq Gilb Millington Esq Sir Will Cunstable Col Edward Ludlow Col. Iohn Lambert Col. Io. Hutchingson Sir Arth Hazlerigge Sir Michael Livesley Rich Saloway Esq Humph Saloway Esq Col. Rob Titchburn Col. Owen Roe Col. Rob Manwaring Col. Robert Lilburn Col. Adrian Scroop Col. Richard Dean Col. Iohn Okey Col. Robert Overton Col. Iohn Harrison Col. Iohn Desborough Col. William Goffe Col. Rob Dukenfield Cornelius Holland Esq Iohn Carne Esq Sir Will Armine Iohn Iones Esq Miles Corbet Esq Francis Allen Esq Thomas Lister Esq Ben Weston Esq Peregrin Pelham Esq Iohn Gourdon Esq Serj. Francis Thorp Iohn Nut Esq Tho Challoner Esq Col. Algern Sidney Iohn Anlaby Esq Col. Iohn Moore Richard Darley Esq William Saye Esq Iohn Aldred Esq Iohn Fagge Esq Iames Nelthrop Esq Sir Will Roberts Col. Francis Lassels Col. Alex Rixby Henry Smith Esq Edmond Wilde Esq Iames Chaloner Esq Iosias Barnes Esq Dennis Bond Esq Humph Edwards Esq Greg Clement Esq Iohn Fray Esq Tho Wogan Esq Sir Greg Norton Serj. Iohn Bradshaw Col. Edm Harvey Iohn Dove Esq Col. Iohn Venn Iohn Foulks Ald. Thomas Scot Alder. Tho Andrews Ald William Cawley Esq Abraham Burrell Esq Col Anthony Stapley Roger Gratwicke Esq Iohn Downs Esq Col. Thomas Horton Col. Tho Hammond Col. George Fenwick Serj. Robert Nichols Rohert Reynolds Esq Iohn Lisl Esq Nicholas Love Esq Vincent Potter Sir Gilbert Pickering Iohn Weaver Eq. Iohn Lenthall Esq Sir Edward Baynton Iohn Corbet Esq Thomas Blunt Esq Thomas Boone Esq Augustin Garland Esq Augustin Skinner Esq Iohn Dickswell Esq Col. George Fleetwood Simon Maine Esq Col. Iames Temple Col. Peter Temple Daniel Blagrave Esq Sir Peter Temple Col. Thomas Wayte Iohn Brown Esq Iohn Lowry Esq Mr. Bradshaw nominated President Counsellors assistant to this Court and to draw up the Charge against the KING are Doctor Dorislau Master Steel Master Aske Master Cooke Serjeant Dandy Serjeant at Arms. Mr. Philips Clerk to the Court. Messengers and door-keepers are Master Walford Master Radley Master Paine Master Powel Master Hull And Mr. King Crier shall be and are hereby appointed Commissioners and Judges for the hearing trying and Judging of the said Charles Stuart and the said Commissioners or any 20 or more of them shall be and are hereby Authorized and Constituted an High Court of Justice to meet at such convenient times and place as by the said Commissioners or the major part or 20. or more of them under their hand and seals shall be appointed and notified by publick Proclamation in the great Hall or Palace-yard of Westminster and to adjourn from time to time and from place to place as the said High Court or the major part thereof meeting shall hold fit
scrutiny and search into the lives and actions of the Presbyterian Party that sate in Parliament doing their duty when the engaged Party fled to the Army and brought them up in hostile manner against them The unreasonableness of this way of proceeding was much urged and farther alleged 47. Debate upon passing the Committee of Secret examinations that it was neither consonant to the customes of the House nor unto common reason that a Sub-committee should be chosen out of the Grand Committee of Examinations with more power then the Grand Committee it self had and excluding the rest of the Committee under the pretence of Secrecie Besides it was against the privilege of the House of Commons that the Lords should nominate the Commons in that Sub-committee as well as their own Members But the Independent Grandees would have it pass Breach of Privilege and all other considerations are easily swallowed when they are subservient to their present designs 48. The manner of prosecution proceeding upon the Tumult The party engaged were resolved to be Examiners Informers and Witnesses as well as Parties so active was their malice and had so well packed their Cards that eight or nine Schismatical Lords engaged likewise with them and the Army should be Judges of the Presbyterian Party that sate in absence of the two Speakers the better to give the two Houses a through Purge and make them of the same complexion with the Army without which they had no hopes to divide the power and profit of the Land between themselves by 10000 l. 20000 l. in a morning shared amongst the Godly and to make the whole Kingdom to be Gibeonites hewers of wood and drawers of water to the faithfull 49. Miles Corbet makes report of Examinations taken at the Close Committee First against the Committee of Safety In order to the playing of this game Miles Corbet Interpreter to the State-puppet play behind the curtain commonly called The Close Committee of Examinations upon the 3. September stood up and began his Report from that Inquisition saying He would begin with the Committee of Safety wherein many Members were concerned and it was necessary to purge the Houses first But further said he would suppress the names of many of his Witnesses because the Depositions he should report were but preparatory Examinations and it would be for service of the State to conceal their names He first produced many Warrants signed at the Committee of Safety by the Earls of Pembroke Suffolk Middlesex Lincoln Lord Willoughby of Parham Maynard Mr. Hollis Sir Phi. Stapleton Sir Will. Waller Mr. Long Mr. Nichols Sir William Lewis Mr. Baynton Against Master Baynton Next Corbet reported he had a Witness who deposed that a Gentleman with a Red head had signed many Warrants supposed to be Master Edward Baynton at length after much wyer-drawing of the business one Warrant was shewn to Master Baynton which he confessed to be his hand And presently Haslerig moved that Master Baynton might forthwith Answer against which was objected That since these were but preparatory Examinations not legal proofs no man was bound to Answer them otherwise a man shall be but to as many several answers as several new matters of Charge come in against him and shall day by day be liable to new vexations and never know when he hath cleared himself But Corbet who of an examiner was now become the Kings Solicitor or Advocate Criminal moved to proceed to Judgement against him but first to aske him some preparatory questions But it was answered that it was illegal to squeese examinations out of a mans own mouth neither was a man bound to answer where his words may condemn but not absolve him for so much as depends upon the testimony of Witnesses against this Gentleman you cannot proceed unless he be by and have liberty to put cross questions to the Witnesses It is alleged Warrants were signed and all done in relation to a new War It is answered it was done in order to Self-defence allowed by the Laws Long before this occasion when the Army first mutinied and threatned to march up to London and use such extraordinary means against the Parliament and City as God had put into their hands you then in a full and free Parliament appointed a Committee of Safety for your defence who sate and acted This Committee was but the same revived and upon the like or worse threats and menaces as by the many printed papers from the Army will appear you have no Testimony against this Gentleman by name but only a character of his Hair and for signing the Warrant confessed by himself he is acquitted by the Proviso of the Ordinance 20 August last which excepted only such as acted upon the force but when the Committee of Safety was revived the Parliament was freer from force than it is now Mr. Baynton notwithstanding was adjudged to be suspended the House during pleasure of the House which is as much as to say So long as the Tyranny of this Domineering Faction lasteth The 4 of Sept. Corbet reported he had a Witness but named him not Against Mr. Walker because they were but preparatory examinations who deposed that an elderly Gentleman of low stature in a Gray suit with a little stick in his hand came forth of the House into the Lobby when the tumult was at the Parliament door and whispered some of the Apprentices in the ear and encouraged them supposed to be Mr. Walker Mr. Walker denyed he spake then with any man in the Lobby or saw any face that he knew there and so neglected the business as a thing not considerable But the next day Corbet moved that Mr. Walker might be ordered to put on his Gray suit again and appear before the Close Committee and the Witness who saith he knoweth him again if he see him I hear Mr. Walker desired to know seeing the Witness had not named him by what Authority the examiners should take such a Deposition and make application thereof to him And seeing there were many Gentlemen in the House that day with whom that Character agreed as well as with himself why the Reporter did not move that all to whom that Character was appliable might be put to that test as well as himself but single him out for a mark to shoot at complaining that he was not ignorant out of what quiver this Arrow came he had been threatned with a revenge by some of that Close Committee and had other Enemies amongst them that could bite without barking He told them that yesterday Mr. Corbet reported that the supposed old man whispered c. but desired those that were then in the House to call to mind that the noise was then so great in the Lobby that no whisper nay the loudest words he was able to speak could not be heard Then Corbet changed his Tale saying the words were What you do do quickly and were spoken aloud and said the
Principles for which the Parliament so often declared in print that they fought and for defence whereof they had entered into a covenant with their hands lifted up to God the other two principles were Religion and L●berties 1. The Lords were not Peers to the Commoners At the common Law they shall have sworn Judges for matter of Law of whom they may ask questions in doubtfull points nor can they be Judges in their own cases 2. They have sworn Jurors of the Neighbourhood for matter of fact whom they may challenge 3. The known Laws and Statutes for Rules to judg by which in case of Treason in the Stat. 25. Ed. 3. you cannot Vote nor declare a new Treason And if you could to do it Ex post facto is contraty to all rules of justice The Apostle saith sin is a breach of a Commandment or Law I had not known sin but by the Law the Law therefore must go before the Sin 4. At the Common Law They have Witnesses openly and newly examined upon Oath before the accused's face who may except against them and cross examine them 5. Even in Star-chamber and Chancery where only hearings are upon Testimonies the Examiners are sworn Officers 6. A man hath but one Tryal and Judgment upon one accusation so that he knows when he hath satisfied the Law In this way of proceeding all these necessary legalities are laid by and these Gentlemen have not so much fair play for their Lives and Estates as Naboth had for his Vineyard he had all the formalities of the Law yea he had Law it self yet he had not justice because they were the sons of Belial that were set before him what shall we conceive these Witnesses are that do not appear nay whose very names are concealed yet Naboth was murdered by the sword of Justice for the honour of Parliaments give not the people cause to suspect these Gentlemen shall be so too non recurrendum ad extraordinaria quando fieri potest per ordinaria But all this was but to charm a deaf Adder 52. Arguments proving the Lords to have no power of Judicature over the Commons the nine or ten engaged Lords that then possessed the House were thought to be fitter than a Jury of Middlesex to make work for the hang-man and yet they have no Judicature over the Commons as appears by the President of Sir Simon de Berisford William Talboys and the City of Cambridge Note that one president against the Jurisdiction of a Court is more valued than a hundred for it because the Court cannot be supposed ignorant of the Law and its own rights but a particular man or Client may see Sir John Maynard's Royal quarrel and his Laws subversion Lieutenant Col. Lilburn's Whip for the present House of Lords and Judge Jenkins Remonstrance to the Lords and Commons of the two Houses of Parliament dated 21 Feb. 1647. As for the cases of Weston Gomenes and Hall cited by Mr. Pryn they were for facts done beyond Sea and before the Stat. 1. Hen. 4. ch 14. whereof the Common Law could then have no connusance and therefore an extraordinary way of proceeding before the Lords was requisit and by the Kings special authority it was done without which I dare boldly affirm the Lords have no Judicature at all which thus I make appear 1. The King by delivering the Great Seal to the Lord Keeper 53. The House of Peers no Court of Judicature at all properly and per se makes him Keeper of his conscience for matter of equity By His Brevia patentia to the Judges of the two Benehes and the Exchequer the King makes them administrators and interpreters of his Laws But he never trust any but himself with the power of pardoning and dispensing with the rigor of the Law in Criminal cases And though the Lord Keeper is Speaker of the Lords House of course yet he is no Member of the Lords House virtute Officii the Judges are not Members but assistants only so that no man in the House of Peers as he is simply a Peer is trusted by the King either with dispensation of Law or Equity 2. When a Peer of Parliament or any man else is tried before the Lords in Parliament criminally he cannot be tryed by his Peers only because in acts of judicature there must be a Judge Superior who must have his inferiors ministerial to him therefore in the trial of the Earl of Strafford as in all other trials upon life and death in the Lords House the King grants his Commission to a Lord high Steward to sit as Judge and the rest of the Lords are but in the nature of Jurors So that it is the Kings Commission that Authoriseth and Distinguisheth them 3. When a Writ of Error issueth out of the Chancery to the House of Peers they derive their Authority meerly from that Writ For the three Reasons aforesaid the House of Peers is no Court of Judicature without the Kings special Authority granted to them either by his Writ or his Commission and the Lords by their four Votes having denied all further address or application to the King have cut off from themselves that fountain from which they derived all their power and all trials by Commission must be upon Bills or Acts of Attainder not by Articles of Impeachment a way never heard of before this Parliament and invented to carry on the designs of a restless impetuous faction Had the Faction had but so much wit as to try the Gentlemen by Commission of Oyer and Terminer before Sergeant Wild he would have borrowed a point of Law to hang a hundred of them for his own preferment Observe that almost all the cases cited by Mr. Pryn concerning the Peers trials of Commissioners were Authorised by the King upon the special instance of the House of Commons as for the House of Commons they never pretended to any power of Judicature and have not so much Authority as to Administer an Oath which every Court of Pye-Poulders hath 54. Blank Impeachments dormant But this way of tryal before the pre-ingaged Lords and upon Articles of Impeachment which they keep by them of all sorts and sizes fit for every man as in Birchin-lane they have suits ready made to fit every body was the apter means to bring men to death whom they feared living had not a doubt of the Scots comming in taught them more moderation than their nature is usually acquainted with and to fright away at least put to silence the rest of the Members with fear of having their names put in blank Impeachments and that it might be so apprehended Miles Corbet moved openly in the House of Commons that they should proceed with the Impeachments which were ready nothing wanted but to fill up the Blanks they might put in what names they pleased This Inquisitor General this Prologue to the Hang-man that looks more like a Hang-man than the Hang-man himself hath since gotten a
rich office of Register of the Chancery as a reward for his double diligence Oh Sergeant Wild and Mr. Steel despair not of a reward Friday 27 Sep. t the advice of Sir Thomas Fairfax and his Council of War was read in the House of Commons 55. Establishment for the Army What standing forces they ought to keep up in England and Wales and what Garrisons also what forces to send for Ireland namely for Ireland 6000 foot and 2400 horse out of the supernumerary loose forces being no part of the Army and for England upon established pay 18000 foot at 8 d. per diem 7200 horse at 2 s. per diem each Trooper 1000 Dragoons and 200 Fire locks Train of Artillery Arms and Ammunition to be supplied The foot to be kept in Garrisons yet so that 6000 may be readily drawn into the Field The Independent party argued that the Army were unwilling to go for Ireland pretending their engagement to the contrary If you divide or disband any part of your Army they will suspect you have taken up your old resolution against them to disband the whole Army it is now no time to discontent them when the Kings Answers to your Propositions tend to divide you and your Army and the people are generally disaffected to you The Presbyterian Party argued that the engagement of the Army ought to be no rule to the Counsels of the Parliament otherwise new engagements every day may prescribe the Parliament new Rules we must look two wayes 1 Upon the people unable to bear the burthen 2. Upon the Army Let us keep some power in our own hands and not descend so far below the dignity of a Parliament as to put all into the hands of the General and his Council of War You have almost given away all already The Army adviseth you to keep up your Garrisons then upon mature deliberation this House formerly Voted you have already made Garrisons manned with gallant and faithfull men to whom you owe Arrears to remove them and place new Souldiers in their rooms will neither please them nor the places whe●e they are quartered who being acquainted with their old guests will not willingly receive new in their rooms These men have done you as good and faithfull service as any in the Army and were ready to obey you and go for Ireland had they not been hindered by those who under pretence of an engagement to the contrary which they mutinously entred into will neither obey you nor go for Ireland nor suffer others to go Though you discharge these men without paying their Arrears which others of ●ther principles will not endure yet give them good words If you will be served by none but such as are of your new principles yet consider your Army are not all alike principled and peradventure the old principles may be as good as the new for publick though not so fit for private designs and purposes You have passed an Ordinance That none that have born Arms against the Parliament shall be imployed if you disband all such your Army will be very thin many have entred into pay there in order to do the King service and bring the Parliament low There is no reason you should keep up 1400 horse more than you last voted to keep up being but 5800 at which time 60000 l. a Month was thought an establishment sufficient both for England and Ireland But now the whole charge of England and Ireland will amount to 114000 l. a month which must be raised upon the people either directly and o●enly by way of sessement or indirectly and closely partly by sessements partly by free-quarter other devices nor will the pay of 2 s. per diem to each Trooper and 8 d. to each foot Souldier enable them to pay their quarters If you mean to govern by the Sword your Army is too little if by the Laws and justice of the Land and love of the people your Army is too great you can never pay them which will occasion mutinies in the Army and ruine to the Country Thus disputed the Presbyterians but to no purpose it was carried against them Observe that when the War was at the highest the monthly tax came but to 54000 l. yet had we then the Earl of Essex's Army Sir William Waller's My Lord of Denbigh's M. Gen. Poyntz's M. Gen. Massey's Maj. Gen. Laughorn's Sir William Brereton's Sir Th. Middleton's Brigades and other forces in the field besides Garrisons But now this Army hath 60000 l. a month 56. Monthly taxes and 20000 l. a month more pretended for Ireland which running all through the fingers of the Committee of the Army That Kingdom which is purposely kept in a starving condition to break the Lo. Inchequins Army 57. Ireland why kept in a starving condition that Ireland may be a receptacle for the Saints against England spews them forth hath nothing but the envy of it the sole benefit going to this Army This 20000 l. a month being a secret unknown to the common Souldiers the Grandees of the Army put it in their own purses Moreover this Army hath still a kind of free quarter under colour of lodging fire and candle for who sees not that these masterless guests upon that interest continued in our houses do and will become Masters of all the rest and who dares ask money for quarter of them or accept it when it is colourably offered without fear of farther harm besides the Army whose requests are now become Commands demanded that they might have the leavying of this Tax and that their accounts might be audited at the Head-quarters and though the Officers of this Army to catch the peoples affections encouraged them often to Petion the Houses against Free-quarter pretending they would forbear it after an establishment setled upon them the use their party in the House made of these Petitions was to move for an Addition of 20000 l. or 30000 l. a month and then they should pay their quarters lodging fire and candle nay stable-room too excepted Here it is not amiss to insert a word or two of this villanous oppression Free-quarter 58. Free-quarter whereby we are reduced to the condition of conquered Slaves no man being Master of his own Family but living like Bond-slaves in their own Houses under these Aegyptian Task-masters who are spies and intelligencers upon our words and deeds so that every mans table is become a snare to him In the third year of King CHARLS the Lords and Commons in their Petition of Right when not above 2000. or 3000. Souldiers were thinly quartered upon the people but for a month or two complained thereof to his Majesty as a great grievance contrary to the Laws and Customes of the Realm and humbly prayed as their right and Liberty according to the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom that he would remove them and that his people might not be so burchened in time to come which his Majesty
should hear of it and beget a slavish fear in the whole Kingdom to submit to the laying aside of the KING and his Negative Voice and the establishing of a tyrannical Oligarchy in the Grandees of the two Houses and Army for finding the whole Kingdom to hate them with a perfect hatred they have no hope to govern by Love but by Fear which according to the Turkish rule is more predominant and constant passion And certainly had not Goring's passing over at Greenwich into Essex compelled Fairfax to follow immediately after with his Army they had been used with much extremity insomuch that Weaver a Member fuller of zeal than wisdom though wise enough for his own profit as most Saints and knaves are moved in the House That all Kent might be sequestred because they had rebelled and all Essex because they would rebell And truly this is as good a way as Cromwel's selling his Welch Prisoners for 12 d. a head to be transported into barbarous Plantations whereby to expell the Canaanites and make new plantations in old England for the Godly the seed of the Faithfull for this faction like the Divell cry all is mine 91. Banbury-Castle obtruded upon the State 27. May A friend of my Lord Say's moved in the House of Commons That Banbury-Castle might be demolished to prevent any surprise thereof by Malignants saying it had already cost the State 200000 l. to reduce it and had undone the Country which was unable to pay for it it belonged to a Noble Godly person the L. Say and it was not fit to demolish it without his consent and recompence it was therefore desired the State should bear the charge his Lordship being willing to sell it for 2000 l. To which was answered That other well-affected Gentlemen had their Houses destroyed for service of the State without recompence not so well provided to bear the loss as my Lord Say as Mr. Charles Doyly two handsome habitable Houses Mr. Vachell some Houses in Reading and others well deserving of the State though not of themselves This Castle was unhabitable a rude heap of stones a publick nusance to the Country It cost his Lordship but 500 l. and now to obtrude it upon the State at 2000 l. price in so great a scarcity and want of mony the Kingdom graoning under Taxes was not reasonable So Divine providence not saying Amen to it this Cheat failed like the untimely birth of a Woman 92 The Impeached Lords Members and Aldermen About the beginning of June a debate hapned in the House of Commons about the four imprisoned Aldermen occasioned by a Petition from the City and concerning the impeached Lords and Commons Mr. Gewen spake modestly in their behalf saying That what they did was done by virtue of an Ordinance of Parliament made this very Sessions of Parliament and without any intent to raise a new war but only to defend the City against the menaces of the Army marching up against them and the Parliament But Mr. Gourdon a man hot enough for his zeal to set a Kingdom on fire Answered He thought they intended a new War and were encouraged thereto by the Gentleman that spake last when he said to them at their Common Council Vp and be doing Mr. Walker perceiving Mr. Gewen to be causlesly reflected upon replied that since this debate upon the City Petition tended towards a closing up of all differences it was unfit men that spake their consciences freely and modestly should be upbraided with Repetitions tending to dis-union and desired men might not be permitted to vent their malice under colour of shewing their zeal when presently Tho. Scot the Brewers Clerk he that hath a Tally of every mans faults but his own hanging at his Girdle by virtue of his Office being Deputy-Inquisitor or Hangman to Miles Corbet in the clandestine Committee of examinations replyed upon Mr. Walker That the Gent. that spake last was not so well-affected but that the close Committee of examinations would find cause to take an order with him shortly Mr. Walker offered to answer him and demanded the Justice of the House but could not be heard those that spake in behalf of the Aldermen were often affronted and threatned with the displeasure of the Army which they alleged would be apt to fall into distempers if we discharged them Notwithstanding these menaces it was Voted that the House would not prosecute their Impeachments against the said four Aldermen Sir John Maynard and the seven Lords and that they would proceed no faother upon their Order for impeaching Mr. Hollis Sir William Waller c. Two or three dayes after a motion was set on foot That the Order whereby the said Members were disabled from being of the House might be revoked many zealots argued fiercely and threatned against it amongst many arguments for them a President was insisted upon That Master Henry Martin was by Order disabled from being a Member yet was afterwards readmitted upon his old Election and desired these Gentlemen might find equall justice The House having freed them à Culpa could not in equity but free them à poena and put them in the remainder of all that belonged to them But Sir Peter Wentworth answered That Mr. Martins case and theirs differed Mr. Martin was expelled for words spoken against the King such as every mans Conscience told him were true but because he spoke those words unseasonably when the King was in good strength and the words whether true or false were in strictnesse of Law Treason the House especially the lukewa●n men considering the doubtfull events of War disabled and committed him lest the whole House might be drawn in compass of High Treason for conniving at them which was a prudential Act contrary to justice and contrary to the sense of the Godly and honest party of the House But afterwards the King growing weaker and the Parliament stronger the House restored Master Martin and thought fit to set every mans tongue at liberty to speak truth even against the King himself and now every day words of a higher nature are spoken against him by the well-affected Godly in the House After many threats used by Wentworth Ven Harvy Scot Gourdon Weaver c. The said disabling Order was repealed 93. Members added to the Committee of Safety at Darby house About the same time the Lords sent a Message to the Commons that they had named six Lords to be added to the Committee of safety and desired the House to adde twelve Commons to them This had five or six times been brought down from the Lords before and received so many denials but the Lords would not acquiesce the Message came down about one of the Clock the House being thin many argued against it saying that there were seven Lords and fourteen Commons of that Committee already enough if not too many to dispatch businesse with secrecy and expedition that to adde six Lords more to them was in effect to make
Orders of the House do permit were forced to be silent so the businesse was buried in silence I hear that some of the Lords called upon this businesse the Monday following being the 19 of June and that the Lord Wharton being asked why he did not impart Osburn's said Letters to the House Answered That as soon as he opened the said Letter he received from Osburn and saw his name at the bottom he looked upon the businesse as not considerable yet he sent the Letter to Hammond Upon Tuesday 20 June The Lords sent a Message to the Commons the first paper whereof concerned Osburns said Letters they desired that forty days might be assigned for Osburn to come and goe with safety to make good his information But Sir William Armine stood up and desired That the minutes of two Letters prepared to be sent into into Holland and Zealand concerning our Revolted ships might be first dispatched as being of present use And when the businesse was ended Mr. Pierpointe propounded another part of the said Message So Osburn's Information was left sine die for that time but since the Lords have quickned it and 40 days are given to Osburn to come and go with Freedom and Safety to make good his information who is come and avoucheth it and one Dowcett speaketh much in affirmation of a design of Rolfes to pistol the King Rolf presents himself at the Commons Bar with a Letter from Hammond which denies the Design and pleads Rolfes cause for him Rolf denied it at the Commons Bar with a trembling voice yet afterwards hid out of the way but being discovered upon search he was found to have a Byle upon him that disabled him from riding otherwise it is thought he would have fled far enough I do not hear that Hammond is yet sent for or questioned And for Osburn's indeavour to convey his Majestie from Carisbrook-Castle it is alledged he did it with a charitable intent to preserve his life and not of any disaffection to the Parliament to which he hath been affectionately serviceable Though many take offence at Master Walker as if his stirring of his businesse were onely to cast an aspersion upon the Army yet I conceive that what he did was commendable in discharge of the duty he owes to God his King and Country and of his trust as a Member of the Representative body of this Kingdom and in performance of the obligations which the Oath of Allegiance the Parliaments Protestation the National Covenant and the known Laws of the Land lay upon him which duty he was bound to perform though with the extremest hazard of his life and fortunes and though he may happily hope better things of this Army yet since neither the Laws of the Land nor common reason warrants him to presume upon his own private hopes and judgment things which often deceive the wisest men in matters of far lesse moment he could do no lesse than free his conscience by making the whole House Witnesses of the cleernesse of his actions and intentions Considering 1. The many high speeches and threats often used against the King in all places none excepted 2. The dangers the King escaped from this very Army which drove him from Hampton-Court to the Isle of Weight and may possibly pursue him thither 3. The Antimonarchical Principles wherewith many Members of this Army and their Chaplians and many elsewhere are seasoned who cannot govern this Kingdome at their pleasure by a military Olygarchy of Grandees of the Committee of Safety at Derby-house and the Army and so establish the Kingdom of the Saints nor yet bring it to their own levell but by taking off summa papaverum capita all that is high and eminent There is a Crowned Head in their way which must be removed 4. The corrupted fantasies of many Antimonarchical Schismaticks with Revelations and Raptures who serve the Devil for Gods sake making him the Author and the doing of his will the pretence of all their crimes and villanies 5. The many desper●te guilty persons that fear peace and are resolved now the Sword is out to burn the Scabbard These look upon the King with an evil eye as the Centre in whom all Interests must unite before we can have Peace Despair tempts these men to make one sin a degree and step to a higher These three last fort of men having cast off all fear of God will as easily contemn Gods substitute the King as he that casts off all reverence to the King will contemn his substitute a Constable 6. The continual endeavours of the Grandees of Derby-house and the Army to put all the Armes Garrisons Ships and Strengths of the Kingdom into the hands of Antimonarchical Schismatical Independents in order to which they are raising of new Forces and erecting new Garrisons in most Counties These men when they could not get a power from the House of Commons to raise what Forces they pleased for when it was moved they there ordered that no more motions should be made for raising new Forces but between the hours of ten and twelve yet what they could not get by their leave they now take without their leave the General granting Commissions for raising and listing Horse and Foot in almost all Counties for example Sir Hardresse Waller that one eyed Polyphemus of Pastebord lately sent forth Commissions in the County of Devon by virtue as his Commissions say of the power granted him from his Excellency for raising listing and training Horse and Foot which shall be no burden to the Country but be in pay with the rest of the army In these Commissions he stileth himself untruly Commander in cheif of all the forces of the five Western Associat Counties and gave authority and encouragement to the well affected that is to Independents Sectaries Antimonarchists and the more desperate forlorn sort of people to enter into and subscribe Engagements to live and die with the Army an imitation of the Members Engagement in defence of the Parliament that is of the ingaged faction of Independents Schismaticks and corrupt persons whom only the Army looks upon as the Parliament witnesse the Declaration of Sir Thomas Fairfax and his Council of War shewing the grounds of his advancing up to London This usurpation was complained of in the House of Commons Monday 19. June and prohibited then by Order 7. Peradventure the reason why this Letter was published so unseasonably in a thin House in so slight and surreptitious a way as aforesaid was in hope it would have been passed over in silence as it had like to have been and so the whole House should have been engaged in the crime if any such thing be intended as guilty of connivance and negligence though not as Actors guilty of the fact The main scope of this party hath ever been by Treaties of Accommodation uniting all Interests and other devices to involve others in their crimes to infect others with their diseases that all standing in need
That all the Arms and Garrisons of the Kingdom may be put into the hands of Antimonarchical Sectaries and the Militia of Godly Cut-throats established in every County towards the putting down of Monarchy and the erecting of the many-headed Tyranny of the Saints of Derby-house and the Army This Ordinance was commited 125. Letters uncharacterized a new invented net to catch Presbyterians in Tuesday 8 August Thomas Scot made report to the House of Commons of the private Letters brought out of Scotland by Master Haly-barton whereof I have formerly given you notice this Gentleman being a publique Messenger from the Kingdom of Scotland and not from Duke Hamilton or his Army whom only the House of Commons have declared Enemies without the concurrence of the Lords hath leave given him by the Lords to stay a Month in England yet the Commons have since Voted he shall be gone in twenty four hours or else he shall be sent home in Custody These Letters are most of them written in Characters yet this wel-gifted Brother Scot hath found out a New Light to Decipher them by and can tell by Inspiration or by Privilege of Parliament what Cypher or Character must signifie such a Letter of the Alphabet or such a mans name This engine added to the Schismatical High Commission or Committee of Clandestine Examinations is better than any spring or trap to catch any active Presbyterian that lies crosse to the design of the Godly They may suppose any mans name to lie hid under such or such Characters and Cyphers and so accuse him by virtue of this mysterious art of ayding or complying with the Scots or the Prince and pin whatsoever the Faction pleaseth to call Treason upon his sleeve these are the Arts of the Godly to make Innocency it self seem nocent and remove out of the way such as hinder the erecting the Kingdom of the Saints These Letters so decyphered were afterwards at a Conference reported to the Lords Wednesday 9 August 126. The City Petition answered The Answer to the City Petition the day before delivered to the House of Commons was reported to the House It was an Answer to some of the Prayers of that Petition only but gave no Answer to their desires for the Disbanding of all Armies to ease the people of their Burdens The restoring of the peoples Lawes and Liberties The enjoyning all Members to attend the House nor to the effectuall observation of the self-denying Ordinance this last is a noli me tangere if all Members should be enjoyned to be self-denying men there would be few Godly men left in the House How should the Saints possesse the good things of this world yet after some debate and divers expressions used by Weaver and Harvy That it appeared by the Petition that the City would desert the Parliament they gave an Answer to their desires concerning the union to be kept with Scotland and a Cessation of all acts of Hostility during the Treaty of Peace That they had Voted the Army under Duke Hamilton Enemies and Declared They would Act accordingly against them to which they would adhere Master Hugerford argued 127. The Commons debate to take away the Lords Negative voice and act without them That because the Lords had denyed to concur in the said Vote he conceived the House could make no such Declaration nor act therein without them This put the Zealous into a flame that any Member should argue against the Pr●vileges of their House so far as to deny them to be Almighty singly and per se Reynolds the Lawyer positively affirming that the Houses of Commons being the Representative of all the People had power to Act without the Lords for safety of the people in case the Lords deserted their trust you see in this doctrine as it hath been already and is likely to be practised hereafter a ground layd to subvert the foundation of all Parliaments for ever and to bring all degrees of men to a parity or levell For the Parliament by all the known Laws of the Land consisting of 3. Estates 1. King 2. Lords And 3. Commons Two of the Estates viz. the Lords and Commons have already laid by the King and His Negative Voice and now the Commons debate of laying by the Lords and their Negative Voice because in their judgement they desert their Trust And so the Commons alone shall act as a Parliament without KING or Lords until falling into contempt and hatred of the people which will soon happen the Grandees of Derby-house and the Army shall take advantage to lay the House of Commons by and usurp the Kings supreme Governing Power the Parliaments Legislative Power yea and the Judges Judicative Power to themselves and establish the many-headed Kingdom Tyranny or Oligarchy of the Saints so much contended for in themselves O populum in servitutem paratum as Tyberius said of the Romans This is the tail of the Viper here lies his venom 128. Dead men Sequestred and the Sanctuary of the Grave violated Saturday 12 August A Message was sent to the Commons from the House of Lords in the behalf of Commissary Generall Copley who had bought and had a grant of the Wardship of the Heir of Sir William Hansby for which he paid Fine and Rent and was outed of it by a Sequestration laid upon Hansby's Estate after his death he having been never questioned for Delinquency during his life-time and this was maliciously done about the time when Master Copley was Imprisoned by the power of the Independent Faction whereof I have already said something Master Copley desired the Sequestration might be taken off and he permitted to enjoy his Contract made with the Court of Wards alleging that to Sequester or condemn a man after his death when he could not answer for himself was against the Laws of the Land even in the highest crimes of Felony and Treason and produced a President That the Committee of Lords and Commons for Sequestrations had taken off a Sequestration from the Lands of Andrew Wall for no other reason but because Andrew Wall was Sequestred after his death The case was diversly argued it was alleged that in cases of the highest Treason no man was condemned after death because he was not then in being to answer for himself there could be no proceeding in Law against a non ens In Felony if a man will stand mute he forfeits not his lands because there wants an Answer and yet it was his own fault not to answer The Parliament is bound by all their Declarations made both to KING and People and by the Nationall Covenant which contains all the first and just Principles of the Parliament to defend the Laws and Liberties of the Land and not to subvert them Take heed of giving so dangerous a President for Kings to act by hereafter against the People and against this Parliament and their friends since no man yet knows which way the tide may turn But
of the people of England to which charge being required to Answer He hath been so far from obeying the commands of the Court by submitting to their Justice as He began to take upon Him Reasoning and Debate unto the Authority of the Court And to the Highest Court that appointed them to Trie and to Judge Him but being over-ruled in that and required to make His Answer He still continued contumacious and refused to submit to Answer Hereupon the Court that they may not be wanting to themselves nor the Trust reposed in them nor that any mans willfulnesse prevent Justice they have considered of the charge of the contumacy and of that confession which in Law doth arise on that contumacy they have likewise considered the notiority of the Fact charged upon this Prisoner and upon the whole matter they are resolved and have agreed upon a Sentence to be pronounced against this Prisoner but in respect He doth desire to be heard before the Sentence be Read and pronounced the Court hath resolved to hear Him yet Sir thus much I must tell you beforehand which you have been minded of at other Courts that if that which you have to say be to offer any debate concerning the Jurisdiction You are not to be heard in it You have offered it formerly and you have struck at the root that is the Power and Supreme Authority of the Commons of England which this Court will not admit a Debate of and which indeed is an irrationall thing in them to do being a Court that act upon Authority derived from them But Sir if you have any thing to say in defence of your self concerning the matter charged the Court hath given me in commands to hear You. King Since I see that you will not heare any thing of debate concerning that which I confesse I thought most materiall for the peace of the Kingdome and for the liberty of the Subject I shall wave it but only I must tell you that this many a day all things have been taken away from Me but that that I call dearer to Me than My life which is My Conscience and Mine Honour and if I had a respect of my life more than the peace of the Kingdome and the liberty of the Subject certainly I should have made a particular defence for My life for by that at leastwise I might have delayed an ugly Sentence which I believe will passe upon Me therefore certainly Sir as a man that hath some understanding some knowledge of the world if that my true zeale to my Country had not overborne the care that I have for My owne preservation I should have gone another way to worke than that I have done Now Sir I conceive that a hasty Sentence once passed may sooner be repented of than recalled and truely the self-same desire that I have for the peace of the Kingdome and the liberty of the Subject more than My owne particular ends makes Me n●w at last desire that I having something to say that concerns both I desire before Sentence be given that I may be heard in the Painted-Chamber before the Lords and Commons this delay cannot be prejudiciall to you whatsoever I say if that I say no reason those that heare Me must be Judges I cannot be Judge of that that I have if it be reason and really for the welfare of the Kingdome and the liberty of the Subject I am sure its very well worth the hearing therefore I do conjure you as you love that which you pretend I hope its reall the Liberty of the Subject and peace of the Kingdome that you will grant Me this hearing before any Sentence passed but if I cannot get this Liberty I do protest that your faire shewes of Liberty and Peace are pure shewes and that you will not heare your King The President said This was a declining the Jurisdiction of the Court and delay Yet the Court withdrew for half an hower advised upon it and sat againe Bradshaw said to the King That the Court had considered what He had moved and of their owne Authority the returne from the Court is this That they have been too much delayed by You already and they are Judges appointed by the highest Authority and Judges are no more to delay than they are to deny Justice and notwithstanding what You have offered they are resolved to proceed to Sentence and to Judgement that is their unanimous resolution The King pressed again and again that He might be heard by the Lords and Commons in the Painted Chamber with great earnestnesse and was as often denied by Bradshaw at last the King desired that this Motion of His might be entered Bradshaw began in a long Speech to declare the Grounds of the Sentence much aggravating the Kings offences and misapplying both Law and History to his present purpose When Bradshaw had done speaking the Clerke read the Sentence drawn up in Parchment to this effect 84. The Sentence against His Majesty THat wheras the Commons of England in Parliament had appointed them an high Court of Justice for the Trial of Charls Stuart King of England before whom He had been three times convented and at the first time a charge of High Treason and other high crimes and misdemeanors was read in behalfe of the Kingdome of England c. * * Here the Clerk read the aforesaid Charge Which charge being read unto Him as aforesaid He the said Charls Stuart was required to give His Answer but He repused so to do and so expressed the severall passages at His Tryall in refusing to Answer For all which Treasons and crimes this Court doth adjudge That He the said Charls Stuart as a Tyrant Traytour Murtherer and a publique Enemy shall be put to Death by severing of His Head from His Body After the Sentence read the President said This Sentence now read and published it is the Act Sentence Judgment and resolution of the whole Court Here the whole Court stood up as assenting to what the President said King Will you heare Me a word Sir Bradshaw Sir You are not to be heard after the Sentence King No Sir Bradshaw No. Sir by your favour Sir Guard withdraw our Prisoner King I am not suffered to speak expect what Justice other people will have These are the Names of such Persons as did actually sit as Judges upon the Tryall of His Majesty with the Councel and Attendance of the Court. Oliver Cromwel L. Gen. Com. Gen Ireton Major Gen. Skippon Sir Hardresse Waller Col. Thomas Harrison Col. Edward Whalley Col. Thomas Pride Col. Isaac Ewer Col. Rich. Ingelsby Sir Henry Mildmay Thomas Lord Grey Philip Lord Lisle Will. Lord Munson Sir John Danvers Sir Tho. Maleverer Sir John Bowcher Sir James Harrington Sir William Brereton Will. Henningham Esq Isaac Pennington Ald. Thomas Atkins Ald. Col. Rowland Wilson Sir Peter Weentworth Col. Henry Martyn Col. William Purefoy Col. Godfrey Bosvill Col. John Berkstead Sir Will. Cunstable Col.
the Duke of Buckingham and the Lord Generall bareheaded and then his Majesty rid between his two brothers the Duke of York on the right hand and the Duke of Glocester on the other after whom followed his Excellencies Life-guard and then the Regiments of the Army all completely accoutred with back breast and Pot. In this order they came to Saint Georges fields in a part of which towards Newington was a Tent erected in which the Lord Mayor King rides through the Citie and Aldermen in their most solemne Formalities with their Officers Servants Livery-men and Lackeyes innumerable waited to which place when his Majesty came the Lord Mayor presented him on his knees with all the Insignia of the City viz. Sword Mace Charter c. Which he immediately returned with promise of Confirmation and conferred the Honour of Knighthood on the Lord Mayor in the place whereafter a short refreshment three hundred in Velvet Coats and Chains representing the several Companies passing on before the Lord Mayor bearing the Sword before the King they proceeded in an excellent order and equipage into and through the City which was all hung with Tapistry and the Streets lined on the one side with Livery men on the other side with the Trained Bands both taking and giving great satisfaction until at last even tyred with the tedious pleasure of his Welcome Journey he came to the Gate of his Pallace of Whitehall which struck such an impression of greif into his sacred heart by the Remembrance of his Fathers horrid Murther there as had almost burst forth if not stopt or recalled by the Joy he received from the acclamations of the people and the thought that he was peaceably returned after so many years unto His own House The King being come in went presently to the Banqueting House where the Houses of Parliament attended for him to whom the two Speakers severally made an incomparable Speech wherein with great eloquence they set forth the many years misery under which the Nation laboured then repeated the Kingdomes Joyes at present for their hoped happinesse in the future by his Majesties Restauration and so commended to his Princely care his three Kingdomes and people with their Laws and priviledges whereto the King in a Majestick style made this short but full return That he was so disordered by his Journey and the Acclamations of the people still in his Ears which yet pleased him as they were demonstrations of Affection and Loyalty that he could not express himself so full as he wished yet promised them that looking first to Heaven with a Thank-ful heart for his Restoration he would have a careful Eye of especial grace and favour towards his Three Kingdomes protesting that he would as well be a Defendor of their Laws liberties properties as of their faith Having thus received and taken several Congratulations and Entertaiments and dismissed his Noble Honourable Worshipful and Reverend Guard of the Nobility Gentry Citizens and Ministry he retired to Supper and afterwards having devoutly offered the Sacrifice of Prayer and Praise to the most high for his safe return he went to his Repose and Bed The first Beam that darted from our Royal Sun infused such a sense of piety into the peoples Affection that it even made them break into an Excess of Joy it was that happy Omen of a vertuous Government the admirable Proclamation against debauchednesse wherein such is his Majesties zeal he takes no notice of his Enemies but our sin which had so long occasioned his exile not sparing therein those who pretended to be his friends yet by their prophanenesse disserved him A happy Prince and happy people sure where the Extremity of Justice endevoureth to take nothing from the Subject but a Liberty to offend which so highly pleased the people that their Joyes rather increased then diminished according to that of the Poet. Littora cum plausu clamor superasque Deorum Implevere Domos gaudent generumque salutant Auxiliumque Domus servatoremque fatentur The Shores ring with applause the Heavens abound With grateful Clamours which therein resound All men salute him Father Prince and King That home again their banish'd peace doth bring Which is further also expressed by the Poet in these words Largis satiantur odoribus ignes Sertaque dependent tectis ubique lyraeque Tibiaque cantus animi felicia laeti Argumenta sonant reseratis aurea valvis Atria tota patent pulchroque instructa paratu Proceres ineunt convivia Regis The Bonfires light the Skie Garlands adorn The Streets and Houses Nothing is forborn That might express full joy while to his Court The King by Nobles follow'd doth resort And in their Feasts Gods wondrous Acts report So restless were the Nights of our pious King that he began to account all time spent in vain and amisse wherein he did not do or offer some good to his Kingdome to this purpose on the first of June the very next day but one after his Arrival accompanied with his two Brothers and Sir Edward Hide Lord Chancellour of England with many other honourable persons went by water to the House of Lords where having seated himself in his Royal seat the Black Rod was sent to the Commons to inform them of his being there They immediately adjourned and with their Speaker waited his Majesties pleasure who in a short speech acquainted them with the Occasion and Cause of his present sending for them viz. To pass those Bills which he understood were prepared for him the said Bills being therefore read according to ancient form by the Clerk of the Crown were passed by his Majesty First The Bill constituting the present Convention to be a Parliament Secondly For authorizing the Act of Parliament for 70000. l. per mens for 3 moneths Thirdly For Continuance of Easter Term and all proceedings at Law which done the Lord Chancellor Hide in a pithy Speech told both Houses with how much readinesse his Majesty had passed these Acts and how willing they should at all times hereafter find him to pass any other that might tend to the advantage and benefit of the people desiring in his Majesties behalf the Bill of Oblivion to be speeded that the people might see and know his Majesties extraordinary gracious care to ease and free them from their doubts and fears and that he had not forgotten his gracious Declaration made at Breda but that he would in all points make good the same Things being brought to that happy issue the King wholly intends to settle the Kingdome and because that in the multitude of Counsellors there is both peace and safety he nominates and elects to himself a Privy Councel whereof were The Duke of York The Duke of Glocester The Duke of Somerset The Duke of Albemarle The Marquiss of Ormond The Earl of Manchester The Earl of Oxford The Earl of Northampton Lord Seymour Lord Say Lord Howard Sir Atho Ashly Cooper Sir William Morris Mr. Hollis Mr.
present missed their design resolve no longer to dally whereupon they lay aside their new Mr. Richard and all the Officers great and small with one consent take the Government into their own hands having shut up the house of Commons door whither when the Members came on Munday entrance was denyed them by the Souldiers who had possessed themselves of the Court of requests and all avenues in all places giving no other account to the Members than this Viz. They must sit no more The Army new modelled The next meeting of Officers new modelleth themselves some they casheire as Whaly Ingoldsby Goffe c. others they re-admit as Lambert Haselrig Okey and others in which time not knowing how to behave themselves in such a condition and weary of the perpetuall toyle they foresaw they must still with ceasing undergo they mean to cast the burthen off from their own shoulders and to that purpose they send to some of their old hackney drudges of the long Parliament The Rump comes in as they then did call it at that time about London whose consciences they knew would digest any thing and did not care how per fas aut nefas so they might again be suffered to sit with severall of these I say upon the fifth and sixth dayes of May they had conference the last of which was at their never failing Speakers the Master of the Rowles house in Chancery-Lane where both Officers of the Army and pretended Members to the number of twenty sollicited William Lenthall Esquire to sit Speaker again but he objected diverse scruples in judgment and conscience But O how soon had the sweet ambition of domineering obliterated all such idle fancies yet nevertheless instantly fifteen Articles being agreed upon among themselves they conclude to meet in the house on Saturday the 7th day of May and the better to compass their ends by a base and clandestine surprise they gave out that they would not sit till Tuesday the tenth of May yet surreptitiously as I say they met early on Saturday in the painted Chamber at Westminster and wanting of their number to make up a house they sent for those two debauched lustfull Devills the Lord Munson and Harry Martin out of prison where they were in Execution for debt with Whitelock and Lisle of the Chancery Court making in all forty two the Chancery Mace also for hast being carried before them William Lenthall Esq their tender conscienc'd Speaker together with the said Names of the Rumpers L. Munson Henry Martin Mr. Whitlock Mr. Lisle Mr. Thomas Chaloner Alderman Atkins Alderman Penington Thomas Scot. Cornelius Holland Sir Henry Jane Mr. ●rideaux Att. Ge Sir James Harrington L. G. Ludlow Michael Oldsworth Sir Arthur Haselrig Mr. Jones Col. Purefoy Col. White Harry Nevill Mr. Say Mr. Blagrave Col. Bennet M. Brewster Sergeant Wilde John Goodwin Mr. Nich. Lechmore Augustine Skinner Mr. Downes Mr. Dove Mr. John Lenthall Mr. Saloway Mr. John Corbet Mr. Walton Gilbert Willington Mr. Gold Col. Sydenham Col. Bingham Col. Ayre Mr. Smith Col. Ingoldsby And Lieutenant Generall Fleetwood Stole on a sudden into the house the invitation of the Army for sitting of the long Parliament being first published in westminster-Hall Upon notice of this surprise of the house by so few there being more than double the like number of members of the same Parliament there and about town some of them at the same instant in the Hall they to prevent future mischief whereof this packing of Parliament men was an ill Omen to the number of fourteen went immediately into the Lobby and the persons that did so were these Viz. Mr. Anslewy Sr. George Booth Mr. James Harbet Mr. Prinne Mr. George Montague Sir John Evelin Mr. John Harbert Mr. Gewen Mr. Evelin Secluded members Mr. Knightly Mr. Clive Mr. Hungerford Mr. Harbey Mr. Pecke But assoon as they came near the door they were not suffered by the Officers of the Army to go into the house though they disputed their priviledge of sitting if the Parliament were not dissolved but reason not prevailing after they had thus fairly made their claim they retired resolving to acquaint the Speaker by letter of their usage And accordingly on Munday the 9th of May they went to Westminster where the guards being not yet come Mr. Ansley Mr. Prinne and Mr. Hungerford went freely into the house receiving the Declaration of the 7th of May at the door But Mr. Ansley walking down into the Hall the house not being ready to sit at his return was by one Capt. Lewson of Goffes Regiment and other officers denyed entrance Mr. Prinne continued within and resolved so to do Vote against the secluded members since he saw there a new force upon the house whose only staying so guilty were the rest of their evill actions made them loose that morning and adjourn without the Speakers taking the chair And to prevent his or any other honest mans coming in among them after that they barred the door by the following Vote Ordered That such persons heretofore Members of this Parliament as have not sate in this Parliament since the year 1648. And have not subscribed the engagement in the R●ll of engagement of this House shall not sit in this house till further order of the Parliament Thus to the griefe of all honest and true hearted Christians the same pretended Parliament that was sitting in 1653. till Oliver disseized them sitting again in 1659. upon a Declaration of the Army with the same resolutions they had before minding nothing but prefering one another The good old cause what and their friends into good Offices and commands and Counsellors places as appear by their Vote of the 29th of May Viz. The Parliament doth declare that all such as shall be employed in any place of trust or power in the Common-wealth be able for the discharge of such trust and that they be persons fearing God and that have given testimony to all the people of God and of their faithfulness to this Common-wealth according to the Declaration of Parliament of the 7th of May. Now who they mean by persons fearing God in their canting language by their very next work you shall see which is the nominating a Councill of State Councill of State nominated into whose hands is given the dispose of all places of trust and profit yea and the command of the wealth of the Kingdom those of the house are as follow Sir Arthur Haselrig Sir Henry Vane Ludlow Jo. Jones Sydenham Scot. Saloway Fleetwood Sir James Harrington Col. Walton Nevill Chaloner Downes Whitlock Harb Morley Sydney Col. Thomson Col. Dixwell Mr. Reignolds Oliver St. Johns Mr. Wallop Of Persons without the house Ten. Viz. John Bradshaw Col. Lambert Desborow Fairfax Berry Sir Anthony Ashley-Cooper Sir Horatio Townsend Sir Robert Honywood Sir Archibald Johnson And Josia Berners Who under the mask of the good old cause began now to act as high villains as ever before having
Annesley On several such men he bestowed great offices as Marquess of Ormond to be Lord Steward of His Honourable Houshold The Earl of Manchester Lord Chamberlain The Duke of Albemarle to be Master of the Horse and Knight of the Garter Sir Will. Morris one of the Secretaries of State which took up some time in which the Parliament according to the Kings desire proceeded in the Act of Oblivion which at last after many tedious and strong debates passed both Houses and on the _____ day of _____ in the Twelfth year of his Majesties Reign had his Royal assent and was confirmed wherein were excepted from pardon both as to Life and Estate Iohn Lisle VVilliam Say Sir Hardresse VValler Valentine VVauton Thomas Harrison Edward Whalley John Hewson VVilliam Goffe Cornelius Holland Thomas Chaloner John Carew John Jones Miles Corbet Henry Smith Gregory Clement Thomas VVogan William Heveningham Isaac Pennington Henry Martin Iohn Barkstead Gilbert Millington Edmund Ludlow Edmund Harvey Thomas Scot VVilliam Cauley John Downes Nicholas Love Vincent Potter Augustine Garland John Dixwell George Fleetwood Simon Meyne Sir Michael Livesey Robert Titchburn Owen Row Robert Lilburn Adrian Scroop Iohn Okey James Temple Peter Temple Daniel Blagrave Thomas VVayte John Cooke Andrew Broughton Edward Dendy VVilliam Hewlet Hugh Peters Francis Hacker and Daniel Axtell Who had sate in judgement on sentenced to death and did sign the instrument for the horrid murther and taking away the precious Life of our late Soveraign Lord King Charles the First of Glorious memory several of whom have by divers means in sundry places been taken and others have surrendred themselves according to a Proclamation of summons set out by the King for that purpose the persons that surrendred themselves were these Owen Row Augustine Garland Edmund Harvey Henry Smith Henry Marten Simon Meyne VVilliam Heveningham Isaac Pennington Sir Hardress Valler Robert Titchborn George Fleetwood James Temple Thomas VVayte Peter Temple Robert Lilburn Gilbert Millingon Vincent Potter Thomas VVogan and Iohn Downes And therefore though they be all attainted convicted of High Treason by the Law of the Land at a fair and legal Trial by a special Commission of Oyer and Terminer directed to several of the Judges learned in the Law and to divers other worthy and honourable persons yet they are not to suffer the pains of death but their executions are to be suspended until his Majesty by the advice and assent of the Lords and Commons in Parliament shall order the execution by Act of Parliament to be passed to that purpose The persons that have been taken were Thomas Harrison Adrian Scroop Iohn Carew Iohn Iones Francis Hacker Gregory Clement Thomas Scot Iohn Cooke Hugh Peters Daniel Axtel and VVilliam Heulet Thomas Harrison having received his Tryal and being condemned to be hanged drawn and quartered accordingly on Saturday betwixt nine and ten of the clock in the morning the thirteenth of October 1660 he was drawn upon a hurdle from Newgate to the place that is rayled in by Charing-cross where a Gibbet was erected and he hanged with his face looking towards the Banqueting-house at White-hall the fatal place pitched upon by those infernal Regicides for the solemn murther of our late Soveraign Charles the first of glorious memory when he was half dead the common Hangman cut him down cut off his privy members before his eyes then burned his bowels severed his head from his body and divided his body into four quarters which were sent back upon the same sledge that carried it to the prison of Newgate from thence his head was brought and set on a pole at the South end of Westminster-hall looking toward the City of London but his Quarters are exposed to view as a publick example upon some of the Gates of the same City His pleading at his arraignment were nothing but treasonable and seditious speeches rather justifying the crime he had committed then any whit relenting and so he continued a desperate Schismatick to the Church of England to the last moment of his breath 2. John Carew was the next that followed who at the time of his tryal endevoured onely to justify the late Rump and their actings but that would not serve his turn for it was proved that he did consult and meet together with others how to put the King to death that he sate at the time of the sentence and signed the Warrant for execution so that the Jury found him guilty of compassing and imagining the Kings death for which he was also condemned to be hanged drawn and quartered c. which sentence on Monday the fifteenth of October in the morning was put in execution on the body of the said Carew his Quarters being likewise carried back on the Hurdle to Newgate but such was the goodness of his Majesty that upon the humble intercession of his friends he was graciously pleased to give them his body to be buried though his execrable treasons had merited the contrary 3 4. The next in order were Mr. John Coke the Solicitor and Mr. Hugh Peters that Carnal Prophet and Jesuitical Chaplain to the trayterous High Court upon Cooke's Trial it was proved against him that he examined witnesses against the King that he was at the drawing of the Charge that he exhibited it in the name of the Commons assembled in Parliament and the good people of England that this Charge was of High Treason that he complained of delayes prayed that the Charge might be taken pro Confesso and at last that it was not so much he as innocent blood that demanded Justice and that notwithstanding all this he acknowledged the King to be a gracious and wise King upon which the Jury found him guilty 2. Then Peters was set to the Bar against whom was proved that he did at five several places consult about the Kings death at Windsor at Ware in Coleman-street in the Painted Chamber and in Bradshaw's house that he compared the King to Barrabas and preached to binde their Kings in chaines c. That he had been in New England that he came thence to destroy the King and foment war that he had been in arms and called the day of his Majesties Tryal a glorious day resembling the judging of the world by the Saints that he prayed for it in the Painted Chamber preached for it at White-hall St. James's Chappel St. Sepulchres and other places upon which proofes the Jury finding him guilty also of compassing and imagining the Kings death the Court sentenced them viz. Cooke and Peters both to be led back to the place from whence they came and from thence to be drawn upon a Hurdle to the place of execution c. On Tuesday following being the sixteenth of October they were drawn upon two Hurles to the rayled place near Charing-cross and executed in the same manner as the former and their Quarters returned to the place whence they came since which the head of Iohn Cooke is set on a Pole on the