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A56152 The curtaine drawne, or, The Parliament exposed to view the names of the members yet living of both houses of Parliament forceably secluded by the army in 1648, or since excluded by a few of their fellow members, confirming that force which they formerly disowned. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1659 (1659) Wing P3935; ESTC R21828 3,802 8

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Northumberland Burg. Sir Thomas Widdrington Oxfordshire Burg. William Lenthall Esq. Rutlandshire Knights Sir James Harrington Thomas VVaite Esq. Surry Burg. George Thompson Lord Mouns●n John Goodwin Esq. Staffordshire Knight Thomas Crompton Esq. Burg. Sir Peter VVentworth John Corbet Esq. Southampton Burg. John Lisle Esq. Nicholas Love Esq Lord Lis●le VVilliam Hevingham Robert VVallop Esq. S●ffolk Burg John Gurdon Brampton Gu●don Somersettshire Burg. James Ash Esq. Sir Thomas VVorth VValter St●ickl●n Dr Palmer Sussex Burg. William Cawley Esq. Harbert Morley Esq. Robert Goodwin Esq. John Baker Esq. John Downes Harbert Hayes Wiltshire Knight Edmund Ludlow Citt. Michaell Oldsworth John Dove Burg. Robert Reynolds Robert ●icell Esq Worcestersheire John Wild Serj●nt at Lavv Yorkshire Burg. Luke Robinson Esq. Sir John Bourcher Thomas Chaloner Franeis Thorpe James Nelthorp VVilliam VVhite Henry Darley Richard Darly Cinque Ports John Fagg Esq. Benjamin VVilson Esq. VVales Cardigan Thomas VV●gan Burg. Glamorganshire Algernon Sidney Burg. Merione●hshire John Jones Knight By this List of the Members of both Houses it appears that the Members now sitting or having liberty to sit which call themselves the Parliament are in number but eighty nine viz. Sixteen Knights of Shires Six Citizens Sixty seven Burgesses wherof for Kn● Citt. Burg. Buckinghamshire 2 0 5 Berkshire 1 0 3 Cornwall 0 0 4 Cam●ri●g 0 0 1 Cheshire 1 0 0 Derby 0 0 1 Devonshire 0 0 2 Dorse●shire 0 0 4 Essex Sir Henry Mildmay●lone 1 Gloucester 0 2 0 Huntingtonshire 1 0 0 Kent 1 0 3 Lincolnshire 0 0 2 Leicestershire 1 0 1 London 0 1 0 Northamptonshire 0 1 0 Nottinghamshire 2 2 0 Norfolk Norwich 0 0 1 Northumberland 0 0 1 Oxfordshire 0 0 1 Ru●landshire 2 2 0 Surrey 0 0 3 Staffordshire 1 1 2 Sou●●ampton 0 0 5 Suffolke 0 0 2 Sumersetshire 0 0 4 Sussex 0 0 6 Wiltshire Salsbury 1 2 2 VVorcestershire 1 0 0 Yorkshire 0 0 8 Cinqu● Ports 0 0 2 Wales Marioneth 1 0 0 Cardigan 0 0 1 Glamorgan 0 0 1 So that th●●● are dead or excluded or vvithdravvn by reason of the Secl●sion Seventy foure Knights of Shires thirty tvvo Citizens three hundred and fourteen Burgesses Wh●rof Bedfordshire Knights 2 Berkshire 1 Cornwall 2 Cambridgeshire 2 Cheshire 1 Darbyshire 2 Devonshire 2 Do●setshire 2 Essex 2 Gloucestershire 2 H●ntingtons●ire 2 Hartfordshire 2 Herefordshire 2 Kent 1 Lincolnshire 2 Leicest●rshire 2 La●cashire 2 Middlesex 2 Monmouthshir● 2 Northamptonshire 1 Norf●lk 2 Northumberland 2 Oxfordshire 2 Surrey 2 Staffordshir● 1 Shropshire 2 Southampton 2 Suffolke 2 Somersetshire 2 Sussex 2 Westmerland 2 Wiltshire 1 Worcestershire 1 Warwickshire 2 Yorkshire 2 Walor Anglesey 1 Breaknock 1 Cardiganshire 1 Carmarthenshire 1 Carnarvanshire 1 Denbighshire 1 Flintshire 1 Glam●rganshire 1 Pembrockshire 1 Mongomeryshire 1 Radnashire 1 Citiz●ns Dead or Excluded of the Citties of London 3 Yorke 2 Bristoll 2 Norwich 1 Chester 2 Ex●ester 2 Oxford 2 Lincoln 2 Worcester 2 Chicester 2 Carlisle 2 Cantorbury 2 Rochester 2 Bath c. 1 Winchester 2 Coventry c. 2 Westminster 2 So that all the Cities and Countreys almost in England and Wales have no Knights nor Citizens to represent them in Parliament ●●t the affairs of the three Kingdoms are carried by the Burgesses of a fevv inconsiderable Burroughs vvho have excluded the rest of the Members of both Houses They have also discharged the Parliament of Scotland and the Parliament of Ireland give Lavvs to impose Taxes on both vvhich no English Parliament did in former times nor they novv do by Lavv By vvhich means instead of three famous Parliaments of th●se three renovvned Kingdomes vve have nothing left if the vvill and force of a fevv men may prevail but a small piece of the Parliament of England Observations upon the afore mentioned List 1. That in former times and in the Primitive condition of this Parliament upon the death or disabling of any Member the Keeper or Speaker gave his Warrant for a nevv Writ that no place might vvant some to represent them 2. Former Ages never knevv that vvay or rather counted it dishonest as vvell as unjust and illegal for a fevv and those not the chief of the House of Commons to make use of a mercenary force of inva●e●al and Apostate Englishmen to possesse themselves of the Legislative Povver to the injurie of the vvhole Parliament vvhich should consist of above six hundred and all the people 3. The Major part of the House of Commons vvhich are excluded by force are so used for over-voting the House from the minor part Whereas till this Iron Age though bin for dissenting in the House never any that attended vvere hindred from sitting or excluded from free voting 4. If those fevv vvho sit had convenient modestie they vvould not think the vvisdom of these three Kingdoms vvere under their Hoods vvhen there are so many and vvise Personages in them nor Judge their own forcible exclusion by the Arm ●●min●ions vvhen so fevv vvhen themselves by force seclude and eject so many LONDON Printed for Henry Brome at the Gun in Ivy-lane 1659. FINIS