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A91207 A legal vindication of the liberties of England, against illegal taxes and pretended Acts of Parliament, lately enforced on the people: or, Reasons assigned by William Prynne of Swainswick in the county of Sommerset, esquire, why he can neither in conscience, law, nor prudence, submit to the new illegal tax or contribution of ninety thousand pounds the month; imposed on the kingdom by a pretended Act of some Commons in (or rather out of) Parliament, April 7 1649. (when this was first penned and printed,) nor to the one hundred thousand pound per mensem, newly laid upon England, Scotland and Ireland, Jan. 26. 1659 by a fragment of the old Commons House, ... Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1660 (1660) Wing P3998; Thomason E772_4; ESTC R207282 74,956 90

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by the particulars so fully clearly expressed in the Declaration of the army may appear shal receive condigne punishment or at least the Parliament put in such a condition as that they may be able to bring them thereunto And 10 we trust in God through his accustomed blessing up●n this Army and their Assistants in their honest and just undertakings the Parliament shall speedily be put into a condition to sit like a Parl. of England and we hope that 11 every true hearted Englishman will put his helping hand to so necessary so publick and so honourable a work as is the vindicating the freedom and honour of Parliament wherein the freedome and honour of all the free born people of this Nation are involved Manchester Speaker of the House of Peers * Sarisbury Denbigh Northumberland Gray of Wark Mulgrave Kent Howard Say and Seal 1 William Lenthal Speaker of the House of Commons 2 Lord Lisle Tho. Gray Will. Pierpoint 3 Henry Mildmay Nathaniel Fiennes John Fiennes 4 Arthur Haslerigg William Armyn 5 James Temple Edm. Prideaux 6 Miles Corbet John Danvers Francis Allin John Evelin 7 George Fleetwood George Fennick John Blackstone 8 Tho. Scot Tho. Scot Major 9 Roger Hill 10 Henry Martin 11 Cornelius Holland 12 Oliver Saint-Johns 13 William Lemmon 14 William Mounson Humphry Edwards 15 John Weaver 16 John Corbett 17 Thomas Lister 18 Henry Smith 19 Nich. Love Francis Pierpoint Henry Lawrence 20 Tho. Ougain Godfrey Boswell 21 Henry Darley 22 Tho. Boon 23 Peter Temple 24 Philip Smith 25 Michael Livesey Henry Hamond Gregory Norton Thomas Jarvice William Constable 26 William Say 27 Edward Ludlow 28 Edward Dunce 29 John Bingham 30 Augustine Skinner 31 John Trenchard 32 Sam. Mayn Benjamine Weston Francis Thurnow Rowland Wilson Laurence Whitacr● John Crowder 33 George Piggots John Bamfield In all but 58. Some 10 or more of which sate in the House in the Speakers absence and went not to the Army Of these 33. are yet living and sitting now and then excluding the Majority of the House by force and voting them out 5. of them now living are secluded who subscribed this engagement the rest since dead How these Subscribers and secluders can look God or men in the face or justify Taxes Knacks and Proceedings to be legal and Parliamentary whiles most of the Members are kept out by force after this their subscription and publication to the contrary under their own hands let themselves resolve It will be also worth the Enquiry who was the Pen-man and Contriver of this Engagement Whether it be not more dangerous and treasonable in those Members who have since confederated with the Army to seclude the Lords House and their own Members than that Engagement of the Citizens which the subfcribers hereof voted to be Treasonable And whether it makes not these sitting Members who subscribed it pre-ingaged parties and incompetent Judges of the secluded ejected and imprisoned Members who continued sitting in the House according to their trust and duty and of the accused and imprisoned Citizens who did but defend the Parliament then sitting according to their own Votes Ordinances Covenant and their duty 3ly By Sir Thomas Fairfax Letter to the Right Honourable the Lord Maior Aldermen and Common-council of the City of London My Lord and Gentlemen YOu may please to remember the former complyance of this Army with your desires to remove to this distance and that upon the assurance you gave them of your concurrence with their declared desires for the setling the liberty and peace of the Kingdom against which you never yet offered us one exception or anie ground of dissent as also of your great tendernesse and resolution to secure the Parliament and their privileges from any violence or attempt the reason given us of your late listing of new forces and wherein we did most acquiesce That upon this confidence we had disposed the Armie into several parts of the Kingdom for the ease of the whole to above 100. miles distance we had given up our selves to the effecting of such Proposals as might tend to the comfortable settlement of this poor Kingdom and a hopefull way for the speedy relief of Ireland We cannot then but be deeply sensible of the 1 unparalleld violation acted upon the Parliament upon Mondy last by a rude multitude from your City because therein the Guards sent from the City did not only neglect their duty for the security of the Parliament from such violence and the whole Citie to yield anie relief to the Houses in that extremity but I am assured from eye and ear-witnesses that divers of the Common-council gave great encouragement to it which doth not only 2 gain-say your former professions but doth violence to those many Obligations that by your Charter Protestation and sundry other waies lye upon you to protect the Parliament For my part I cannot but look on your selves who are in authoritie as accountable to the Kingdom for your present interruptions of that hopefull way of peace and settlement things were in for this Nation and of relieving Ireland occasioned by the late Treasonable and destructive Engagement Especially the lately prodigious and horrid force done upon the Parliament 3 tending to dissolve all Government upon which score we and the whole Kingdom shall have cause to put every thing of the like nature that may happen to the Parliament or to any who are friends to them and this Armie except by your wisdom care and industry the chief actors may be detected 4 secured and given up to the procuring of justice for the same and the best endeavors used to prevent the like for the future And so I rest Your most assured friend to serve you Tho. Fairfax Bedford 29 July 1647. 4ly By a Declaration of Sir Tho. Fairfax * and his Council of War August 3. 1647. concerning the Apprentices force upon the Houses wherein are these observable passages Monday July the six and twentieth the Common-Council of the City presents their Petitions to both Houses for changing the Militia whereon the House of Lords refuse to alter their resolutions the House of Commons answered they would take it into consideration the next morning Notwithstanding which the City and Kingdome cannot be ignorant with what rage and insolency the tumult of Apprentices the same day forced both Houses They 1 blockt up their doors swearing they would keep them in till they had passed what Votes they pleased they threatned the Houses if they granted not their desires knocking whooting and hallowing so at the Parliament-doors that many times the Members could not be heard to speak or debate not suffering the House of Commons to divide for determining such Questions as w●●e put crying out 2 That those that gave their Votes against them should be sent out to them very often and loudly saying Agree agree dispatch we 'l stay no longer and in this outragious manner they continued at the