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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

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namely the Marquess of Argyle whose dealing with his Kindred Friends and Confederates mentioned in the following discourse will be a warning to all religious Protestants how they trust such an Apostate Covenanter whose ambition and avarice hath ruined the KING Church and State or three flourishing Kingdoms Although it may seem a paradox to many I dare boldly aver that Argile and his Faction in Scotland have been and are the chief Malignants Incendiaries and evil Instruments who have been the Ruiners of these three flourishing Kingdoms and the Authors of the blood shed in all of them as I hope by this following Discourse will be made appear to every impartial and unprejudicate Reader who hath or may have the certain knowledge of every particular when time shall serve This Argile's Father after the Marriage of his English Lady having turned Roman Catholique and this his only Son by his first Lady being carefully educated by the Earl of Morton by whose means he obtained the possession of his Fathers whole Estate for a small Pension and by His Majesties special favour for out-quitting his pretended Title of Justice General of the Kingdom of Scotland did obtain an Heritable Justiciary of Argile Lorn Kintyre and many of the Western Isles which power he did execute with that cruelty that he disgusted all the Islanders and Highlands of Scotland who were never so tyrannized over by any of their Kings till his Fathers death still fearing his return he kept himself somewhat moderate for the engaging for the Covenant or keeping company sometimes with those that were against it but his Father being dead finding himself idolized by those who had taken the managing of all affairs into their hands and that by his power and policy he could prevail with them in any thing to indear himself the more to that party he did seem exceeding zealous for the Covenant and pretending great fears from Ireland which the then Lord Deputy Strafford his Greatnesse and known aversenesse from the Covenant did make the more easily to be beleeved whereas the true cause of his fears was for the loss of Kintyre whereof he cosened his Brother long before his death Isla and divers considerable Isles which were and ought to be the possessions of the Mackdonalds and his indiscreet provoking of Strafford who in revenge of him did use very hardly all the Scots in Ireland who would not renounce the National Covenant of Scotland he dis-arming them did Arm and Train many Irish who after his Head was off shed so much bloud in Ireland and upon pretence of divers of the Mackdonalds Argile's own Tenants for the time were accessary to the Plot fearing his Judiciary power where he was both Judge and Party they were inforced to flie to Ireland till their peace should be made to prevent which he sent their Wives and Children after them took possession of all their moveables and placed other Tenants in their Room but being grieved that Culkettough and his Sons who had goodly Possessions were not gone with the rest he caused cite them before the Council as accessary to an Invasion to be made by Antrum and some of their friends which citation as legal men and not guilty in the least they did obey and after some dayes stay in Edinburgh taking their walk daily before Argile's door they did humbly intreat his Secretary to plead for them that they might have a speedy hearing since they were weary of their attendance which the Secretary acquanting the Lord Argile returned them this Answer That since they had testifyed their obedience by their appearance they might go home and he have themselves civilly not medling with their Rebellious friends as he was pleased to term them and be ready upon any new citation they should be excused for that time they did humbly thank his Lordship and his Secretary for this courtesie and did presently depart from Edinburgh towards their home whereof my Lord by his Spies upon them having notice did immediately convene the Council and whereas in many dayes before during their stay in Town they could not be heard that day they were first Called and upon their not Answering my Lord aggravating their Accusation by their departure occasioned by his own and his Secretaries contriving procures a Warrant to make them prisoners till they should be Tried and to seize upon their Estates which out of his zeal to the Covenant God knows he did carefully perform and made Culkettough and his two Sons Prisoners before they were half way at home which Alexander Macdonald afterwards Sir Alexander Macdonald being fled to Ireland having no valuable possession to look to at home did associate himself with the Irish in the beginning of their Rebellion but so soon as the Scots Army came over he did apply himself to them assuring them that he would do them faithfull service against the Irish Rebels if they would release his old Father and his two Brethren unjustly detained prisoners or bring them to Legal Trial whereof having assurance given him he brought with him two hundred gallant men of his friends and did more execution upon the Irish than half of the Scots Army their horse being not able to follow through Bogs and their Foot not so swift as the Irish and did in one morning bring in six or seven thousand Cowes to the Scots Camp the like booty they did never take at any one time before or since for which good service the General did of new ingage for his Father and Brethrens releasment but when the Committee of Estates had consented Argile did reverse all and frustrate the Generals promise which Alexander Macdonald perceiving said no more but well I will yet cause my faithful service procure my Fathers inlargement and did continue without pay or hope of pay saving a very spare allowance of quarters until Argile sent over and caused him to be discharged of all quarters to the grief of all the Scots Officers who did wel know what faithful service he had done and was able to do them so that meer necessity did inforce him to make his peace with the Irish by whose help he did come over into Scotland meerly to be revenged on Argile and to relieve his Father hoping the Estates of Scotland would not blame him for suing the performance of what their General had promised unto him intending no more til Montrosse out of his desire to be revenged on Argile did enforce Alexander Macdonald to joyn his Majesties Interest as Montrosse pretended with the said Macdonald hoping he would find as indeed he did a great many discontented persons to joyn with them all which or the most considerable were parties and persons wronged oppressed and ruined by Argile as chiefly besides the forementioned Islanders and these Highlands that were under his lash the Atholl men twice or thrice plundered by him Montrosse himself provoked by many wel-known injuries which no Noble heart could endure as the death of Mr. James Stewart who
was no Traitor either to King or Country save only to Argile The Earl of Airly having his estate plundered and his House thrown down in revenge of an antient quarrel amongst their Predecessors for the Earl of Airly having some Lands in the Bray of Angus out of which Argile's men did many times drive Heards of Cattle Sheep and other Beasts for which the Lord Ogilbee could have no remedy these Thieves being protected by the Earl of Argile by advice of his Lawyers he did Charge the Earl of Argile that he should find surety not to maintain or protect such Out-lawes but before he could obtain the same he was obliged according to the custome of Scotland to give his Oath he did fear bodily harm from Argile which he was unwilling to do alleging it were only a Beastly harm that he did fear for if he would not protect those that did steal his poor mens Beasts he was nothing afraid of his body This tart Answer after an age must under colour of service to the State be so revenged The Gourdons divers of whom he betrayed under trust and under pretence of securing his Neces Portions that he was ingaged for possessing himself of Badinoch and Lochabar and plundring friends and foes indifferently in his marches too and fro and the inexhaustible treasure of the Scots Exchequer must allow him eleven or twelve thousand pound sterling for every Voyage whereas his Breechlesse Souldiery were well content with their Beef and Bannocks and such convenient plunder as the Country could afford these as I conceive were the most considerable Forces Montrosse ever had unlesse some that were through fear compelled to yield for the time so that the bloud-shed in Scotland by Montrosse and Macdonald do properly fall upon Argiles score no other under Heaven having occasioned both their out-breakings and all their partakers who did see no other way to be revenged on him that had made himself Master of all the Estate having made Argile's quarrel their own than by heaving at all under the specious pretext of the Kings interest which if God in mercy had not prevented they had almost effectuate through Argile's misgovernment wherein it is to be remarked that when he was overthrown by Montrosse in Lochaber the second of February 1645. many of his friends being killed and others taken he who would not release Culkettough for his Sons good service nor the Generals ingagement or the Committee of Estates desire you must not speak of Command for Master James Hamilton a faithful Minister of the Gospel who found more kindnesse from Culkettough than from this Canibal Covenanter is now content to release all to get a poor Company of his Country-men leaving the Godly Minister in cruel bondage whom Culkettough did release upon his Paroll and promise to send him a Boy that was forgot behind This religious Covenanter out of his pious care for the education of his Sister in the true Religion as he pretended did by His Majesties special favour overthrow the last will and Testament of his Mother-in-law by getting himself made Administrator in the room of him who was nominated therein whereby he got the Gentlewoman his Sisters whole patrimony into his hands but before he could prevail in this his Majesty did take special care that sufficient Surety should be given that the Will of the Dead should be truly performed by payment of their respective portions when they were Married and sufficient maintenance until they were Married the Elder whose Portion was Five thousand pound sterling is presently sent for and one thousand pound or thereby given to a Gentleman for his second Wife the rest there being a clause that if any of them should enter into Nunneries they should only have 300 l. sterling for all being kept so scarce of their due maintenance the Gentleman who was surety having advanced of his own above 1000 l. whereof he is not as yet repaid were seduced to go to Monasteries all save one who is now ready to enter through his neglect so this 12000 l. of his Sisters Portions with the ruine of their Souls to boot is a part of Argile's wel-made purchase The great care taken by the Earl of Morton for Argile's education and preservation both of his life from the crafty designs of a Step-mother and recovery of his almost ruined Estate was so wel requited that notwithstanding he hath the Earl of Morton's Daughter in his bed in open Parliament he spake what became him not both of that noble Lords Person and Estate only as he pretended out of his zeal to the welfare of the Kingdom whereas the truth is it was meerly out of his ambition to have that Honourable place conferred upon himself which was intended by his Majesty upon that noble Lord but finding His Majesty not inclinable that way the next assault was for one of his own name a man truly wel-deserving for to say better deserving than himself is no great praise and if his two much favouring of him do not stain his reputation worthy to be beloved Thus having shortly viewed Argile's religious carriage towards his Vassals and Tenants Parents Friends and Allyes Brother and Sisters Neighbours and fellow-Patriots let us take a short view of his Loyal carriage towards his Soveraign and his due observation of the Solemn League and Covenant with his covenanted Brethren of England and then let the impartial Reader judge whether he be not such as is affirmed in the proposition the greatest incendiary in the three Kingdoms It cannot be denied but His Maiesty as is mentioned before did confer many great and Princely favours upon him at the Earl of Morton's desire when he was Lord of Lorn such whereof as required confirmation were approved and ratified in Parliament His Majesty being present anno 1641. with the addition of the honour and title of Marquesse and a full Pension well paid ever since whoever want together with not only an act of oblivion but an approbation of all his tyrannical proceedings against the Athol men the Earl of Airely and others though not particularly mentioned yet as done in obedience of Orders from the Committee of Estates obtained by his own procurement therefore to be no further questioned The first endeavour in requital of these and many other Royal favours was the entring in conspiracy with certain his Confederates whom I forbear to name to transform the Kingdom of Scotland into a Free State like the Estates of Holland and because some truly noble Lords did abhor such a disloyal motion after so many Acts of favour witnessing to all Posterity his Royal bounty both to Church and State whereof these chief Conspirators tasted not a little he did at that time forbear not so much to prosecute his design as to conceal their Counsel from all these that had thoughts of Loyalty though most faithfull to the true Religion and their Countrey according to the Covenant The Irish Rebellion breaking out fearing his own stake if
lies if not answered did from their several and respective Counties as also in the Cities of London and Westminster declare The Gentry declare that they were far from any thoughts of revenge it belonging to God alone alluding to that text of Scripture Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord but as for Justice they would acquiesce in the judgment of the approaching Parliament This being done and the whole Parliament at the appointed time The Parliament begins beginning first with their duty to God they follow that golden Pythagorean rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giving him hearty thanks for that their freedome of meeting which when they had cordially done they fell in order to their Governour First They fear God then honour the King As the same Pythagoras goes on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The very Heathen we see by the meer light of Nature could dictate that which our Grand Enthusiasts of Religion would not for these many years by the ignis fatuus of their new lighted notion walk after But the Parliament were better principled for after their devotions regularly paid to God they in the very next place own their duty to their Prince upon the first day of May a happy day to be remembred to posterity voting the Government to be by King Kingly government voted Lords and Commons a constitution so incomparably mixed that it may rather be admired then envied neither were they satisfied to rest there but on the Eighth day of the same May caused his Majesty to be proclaimed King of England King proclaimed Scotland France and Ireland which was performed with so much Solemnity and Joy as I presume England I dare say hardly any Kingdome in the World ever saw or were sensible of the like the shouts and acclamations of the pleased people rending the very skies as a token of their extraordinary Thankfulnesse to Heaven and at night by the multitude of their bonfires turning the Darknesse into a kind of lightsome day This hapy beginning thus owned by the general consent of all honest men made the Parliament resolute to prosecute their begun endeavours which the more orderly to do for order befitteth men best both as Subjects and Christians they immediately prepared Commissioners Commissioners sent to the King who were persons choyce for their integrity and wisedome like those heads of the children of Issachar which were men that had understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do being intrusted to wait on his Majesty and to desire him to come to his Parliament and People with all convenient speed Before whose arrival his Majesty had withdrawn himself from Bruxels not upon any account as was by the ignorant and malicious insinuated but out of a design of safe guard to his own sacred Person as knowing those two principles of the Romanists si violandum est jus Regni causa violandum est and nulla fides servanda est haereticis might prove dangerous if not fatal to his interest as affairs then stood He well remembred Richard the first his case sirnamed Caeur-du-Lion and what his detention once cost England and therefore had no reason to cast himself into the like hazard Therefore having discharged all Accounts whatsosoever at Bruxels he as I said removes his Court to Breda As that first he might hold the more certain and quick intelligence with his friends in England where there hardly wanted any thing to complete his Restoration and the Kingdomes satisfaction but his Personal presence so in the second place he there knew himself safe being within the jurisdiction of his beloved sister the Princesse Royal Mary Princesse of Orange King at Breda whose tender love and zeal to him in his affliction deserves to be written in brasse and graven with the point of a Diamond During the time of his residence there to shew himself to be a second Solomon a Prince of Peace and not onely so but the most pious and merciful of Princes who was wise as a Serpent yet innocent as a Dove by the Honourable the Lord Viscount Mordant and Sir Richard Grenvile since by his Majesties special grace created Earl of Bath Gentleman of his Majesties Bedchamber He sent a most gracious Declaration with respective Letters to the Lords to the Commons to the City and to the Army Whetein His Majesties Declaration layes Independency dead His Majesty first offers a Pardon for all miscarriages and misdemeanors against his Father or himself to all persons such onely excepted as shall be excepted by the Parliament promising likewise securitie to all whose guilt might otherwise endanger them so as they laid hold on his Majesties Pardon within 40. dayes after the publication thereof 2. He refers the purchasers of Kings Queens and Bishops Lands to Justice to the Law and to the Parliament 3. He assures the Souldiery of their Arrears for past services although done against him and of incouragement and pay for the future under him This Declaration was received with no ordinary joy and solemnity the messenger Sr. Iohn Greenvil being rewarded with 500. pounds ro buy him a Jewell and upon reading thereof and a conference had with the Lords who had now reassumed their Native right by taking their places in the higher House they agree unanimously each in their several house That a Letter be sent in answer to his Majesties gracious Letter and Declaration superscribed To his most Excellent Majestie which were since more immediately drawn up and sent by Commissioners before prepared as is already mentioned sixe from each House who were in the name of both Houses 1. To give his Majesty most humble and hearty thanks for his gracious Letter and Declaration 2. To desire his Majesty to return to the exercise of his Regal Office and come to his Parliament and people with all speed possible And thirdly to that purpose to desire him to appoint a place for the Navy to attend him the Commissioners that went from the house of Peeres were these The Earl of Oxford Earl of VVarwick Earl of Middlesex Lord Brook Lord Berckley Commissioners names that went to the King Lord Visc Hereford Of the House of Commons were selected these following Lord Charleton Lord Bruce Lord Falkland Lord Mandevile Lord Herbert Lord Fairefax Sir George Booth Sir Iohn Holland Sir Antho. Ashly-Cooper Sir Horatio Townsend Sir Henry Cholmly Mr. Hollis The City of London having also received the like Letters and Declarations the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council appoint a loyal and humble answer to be returned wherein they give his Majesty thanks for his tender care grace and favour to their ancient and renowned City which was sent by these worthy Gentlemen For the City of London Alderman Adams Recorder VVilde Alderman Robinson Alderman Bateman Theophilus Biddolph Richard Ford Alderman Vincent Alderman Frederick Alderman VVale John Lewis Esquire William Bateman Esq Alderman Bludworth Major
divides them amongst themselves self-respects makes them run along blind-fold with the Grandees in any designe or faction A good bargaine makes a bad Man Harvey needs no other president but himselfe nor no more visible monument then his exceeding cheap bargaine of Fulham-house and Manour which hath changed him from a furious Presbyter to a Bedlam Independent About this time it was Ordered 9. A Commission into the North to enquire what dammages they have sustained by the Scotish Invasion That Commissions should be issued forth into the Northerne Counties to enquire what Damages they have any waies sustained by Hamilton's Invasion This device was of a twofold use 1. To cut off the Scots demands for Mony due to them for their last Brotherly assistance and otherwise 2. To cajole the poor Country into a beliefe they shall have reparations against the Scots and raise them into a clamorous complaint against the Scots and at last a deadly feud when they shall finde their hopes denied by them and disappointed In the meane time they are patiently eaten up with Taxes and Free-quarter and while they looke for what they shall never have they lose what they have already This was the much applauded invention of Master St. J●hns of Lincolns-Inne 10. Col●hester surrend●ed with the sequele thereof About this time the newes of the Surrender of Colchester inflamed the Antimonarchical faction from a Feaver to a frantick Calenture They yeilded to mercy and within 4 hours after Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisle for the better explanation what Independent mercy is were shot to death some attribute it to an old quarrell between him and General Fairfax others think it was done to put an affront upon the King and the Treaty Colonel Farre was likewise condemned by the Councel of Warre at the same time but is reprieved as a witnesse against the Earle of Warwicke when time serves for when Warwicke long since waited at the Commons Door with some Ladies to petition for a Reprieve for the Earle of Holland a Souldier of the Guard insolently told him He had more need petition for himself 11. Instructions for the Commissioners to Treat with his Majesty Instructions for the Commissioners to Treat with the King were Debated The Independents propounded that those Propositions that were most advantagious to the Parliament should be first debated and if the King did not confirme them all the Treaty to break off But it was held unreasonable in any Treaty that one Party should bind himselfe before the conclusion and leave the other at large and himself in the lurch so it was Ordered They should be Treated of in order as they lay and according to His Majesties desire nothing binding to either Party untill all was agreed of The next stumbling block cast in the way was that seeing 40 daies onely were allowed for to Treat that they should limit how many daies and no more should be spent in Treating upon every several proposition But this was looked upon as a cavil to make void the Treaty and so over-ruled you see what use these men that gaine by VVar make of their Victories 12. A Debate what Gentl. should be allowed to attend his Majesty in the Treaty The next thing debated was the List of such Gentlemen as were named to attend the King in this Treaty The moderate Party excepted against Ashburnham a great man with Cromwell and Legge as being Prisoner to the Parliament The Independents excepted Dr. Shelden Hammond and Oldsworth for the same reason but the next day the Speaker moved that Legge and Ashburnham might go to the King and to satisfie such as had objected their Imprisonment against them the Independents alleaged they were unduly imprisoned and moved a Committee might be appointed to examine the cause of their Restraint but the moderate alleaging the same reason for the said three Doctors and making the same motion for them there was no farther proceedings therein 13. Master Pryns speech in the House proving the Kings con●essions to be a ground for a setlement Thus farre I have briefly set downe the Preparations towards a Treaty the Treaty it selfe between the King in the Isle of Wight and the Parliaments Commissioners their Reports of the Results to the Houses and the Houses Debates and Votes upon them took up almost all the time until the 6. December 1648. some few businesses of no great moment intervening many imperfect and partial Relations of them have been printed cum Privil gio but Mr. Will. Pryn in his excellent Speech made in the House of Commons 4. Decemb. 1648. and since printed hath set down all the most material Arguments on both sides with great candor and ingenuity and hath confuted the Enemies to Peace and Accommodation if strength of Reason can confute those men that follow only their own Interests of power and profit whose wills and lusts have alwayes bin their own Lawes and are now become the only Lawes of this Conquered Kingdome I love not actum agire I referre my Reader therefore to his Speech and will only trouble him with some Observations upon this Treaty I have said something of the Militia 14. The Militia and Negative Voice sect 62 63 64 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17. and the Kings Negative Voice in the 1. part of this History especially in the Conclusions at the latter end I will only say that without them the King cannot be a Governing King but a bare titular King a picture a shadow because the protection of the people depends upon the power of the Sword He cannot protect them and their Lawes with the Scabbard The Authority of the Scepter followes the power of the Sword wherefore to give away one is to lose both nor can the Subjects be any longer his Majesties Subjects but Slaves to their fellow Subjects when so many petty Kings not authorized by any Law of God or Man to protect the People shall hold the Sword over their Heads and distract them with different Opinions disagree in Commands according to the variety of their severall lusts factions and interests how can the King according to his Coronation Oath and duty to which God hath called him Governe and protect his People 1. part sect 40. 41 42. when he hath given away his Sword to a factious Parliament where one Party tyrannizeth over the other and threatens the other with the longest Sword how absurd and impossible it is for the Subject to expect protection from one hand and to sweare and pay Allegiance to another hand that hath divested it self of all power to protect them let our Lawes the practice of all Nations and times and the judgement of the learnedst Politicians tell you whose Maxime is Illa optima est Respublica ubi Princeps quàm maximum potest boni quàm minimum mali Primò ne nova Tributo indicere nova victigalia constituere possit inconsultâ Republicâ Deinde legum condendarum anti
with him to refrain from weeping coming to the front of the Scaffold Lo. Capell his speech before his death he spoke to this purpose That he would pray for those that sent him thither and were the cause of his violent Death it being an effect of the Religion he professed being a Protestant with the profession whereof he was very much in love after the manner as it was established in England by the 39. Articles That he abhorred Papistry relying only on Christs merits That he was condemned to dye contrary to the Law that governs all the World that is by the Law of the Sword the Protection whereof he had for his Life yet among Englishmen he an Englishman acknowledged Peer condemned to dye contrary to all the laws of England That he dyed as to the cause he fought in for maintaining the fifth Commandement injoyned by God himself the Father of the Country the King as well as the natural Parent being to be obeyed thereby That he was guilty of Voting against the Earl of Strafford but he hoped God had washed off the guilt of his blood with the more precious blood of his Son That his late Majesty was the most vertuous and sufficient known Prince in the World God preserve the King that now is his Son God send him more fortunate and longer dayes God restore him to this Kingdom that that family may reign till thy Kingdom come that is while all Temporal power is consummated God give much happiness to this your King and to you that in it shall be his subjects That he did again forgive those that were the causers of his coming thither from his very soul so praying again for the King and his restoration and for the peace of the Kingdom he finished his speech L. C. his carri●ge Then turning about to the Executioner he pulled off his doublet when the Heads-man kneeling down Lord Capell said I forgive thee from my soul and shall pray for thee There is five pounds for thee and if any thing be due for my cloaths you shall be fully recompenced And when I ly down give me a short time for a prayer then again blessing the People very earnestly and desiring their prayers at the moment of death he said to the Executioner you are ready when I am ready are you not then as he stood putting up his hair with hands and eyes lift up he said O God I do with a perfect and a willing heart submit to thy will O God I do most willingly humble my self so kneeling down and fitting his neck to the block as he lay with both his hands stretched out he said When I lift up my Right hand then strike When after he had said a short prayer L. Capell beheaded he lifted up his right hand and the Executioner at one blow severed his head from his body which was taken up by his servants and put into a Coffin Having thus brought to pass their bloody purpose shortly after they acquitted the Lord Goring and Sir John Owen as to their lives but seized upon all they had according as they did upon most of the Estates of the Nobility and Gentry throughout England for such now was their unsatiable malice that they thought it not enough to ruine and destroy the heads of Families but The barbarousness of the faction with divellish rancor endeavour to blot out the name and memoriall of Posterity by such unheard of cruelties and barbarous actions as would make a Savage Scithian or Barbarian blush to think on so that we may say with Cicero in the like case Rem vides quomodo se habeat orbem terrarum Imperiis distributis ardere bello urbem sine legibus sine judiciis sine jure sine fide relictam direptioni incendiis Which indeed is the very present case Thus did they grow from bad to worse acting rather like butchers then Men each one of them proving to all about him a devouring wolfe whose insatiate gorge was never filled with his pray so that having in effect the mastery of them whom they called their Enemies like true thieves they fall out about parting the stakes The Army and Independent close the Presbyterian faction will brook no superior the Independent no equall upon these terms stands the Kingdom divided when the later grown now more powerfull by the additon of the Army whose guilt in the murther of the King had suggested to them that the only way to save and raise themselves was to confound and reduce all things else to an Anarchy In pursuance of which Principle they at last proceed against the very root of Monarchy and after many uncouth debates resolved that the Nation should be setled in the way of a free State Free-state appointed and Kingly government be utterly abolished Now was the stile in all proceedings at the law altered the seals changed and the Kings armes and statues in all places taken down that so their seared consciences might not at the sight thereof be terrified with the sad remembrance of their committed crimes And that no sparke or attendant of antient Majesty might be left remaining soon after they vote the house of Lords to be burdensome and useless Lords house voted useless and that the People might understand their meaning also on the 21th of February they proclaim at Westminster and send it to the City the next Day to the like purpose but the then Lord Mayor refusing to do it as being contrary to his honour conscience and Oath rather chose to suffer an unjust imprisonment which he did in the Tower Any honest Man would have thought this example would have put a stop to the attempt of any villain for the making that proclamation but so farr were they from being deterred that they rather grow more implacable and having found some hair brained and half decayed Cittizens out of them one is set up as a mock-Mayor who being a fellow fit for their turns after a short complement or two with the Juncto The Proclamation against Kingship he enters the Stage and Proclaims the abolishing of Kingship and the House of Lords Having thus brought their design to some kind of maturity they find another invention to be as a Shibboleth a mark of distinction between themselves and other men The engagement a mark of distinction and that was the engagement forsooth whereby every man should promise to be true and faithfull to the Common-wealth of England without a King or house of Lords and he that would not subscribe to this was forced either to fly or which was as bad to stay at home and have neither the benefit nor the protection of the law of the land nor any advantage either of his liberty or Estate Now might you have seen Vice regnand and nothing but Schisme and faction Countenanced now might you have beheld England sometime the Glory of the World now become its by words the name of
latter grindeth the needy and poor Yet these are thy Gods O London these are the Idol Calves the People have set up and do worship these be the Molec to whom ye sacrifice Sons and Servants by Troops Regiments and Armies to maintain their soveraignty rebellion and profit And that these and other their actions may never be questioned they His Majesties loyal and obedient subjects will always Imprison their King continue their Army perpetuate their Parliament and intail their Member-ships as the Priesthood on Levi upon confiding Families to furnish them with Votes as Mr. Gilbert Gerrard and his 2 Sons Brampton Guidon and his 2 Sons Sir Robert Harley and his 2 Sons 3 Fines 2 Ashes 4 Stephens 4 Pelhams 4 Herberts 4 Temples it were endlesse to name the Father and the Son Brother and Brother that fils the House they come in couples more than unclean Beasts to the Ark 2 Vanes 2 Puries 2 Chaloners 2 Bacons 2 Pierpoints 2 Bonds 2 Onslowes 2 Lenthals c. And that our Ecclesiasticks may comply with our Temporal Governors the Houses abolish as superstitious because Legal the Convocation of learned Divines regularly summoned by the King 's Writ and duly elected by the Clergy and the House of Commons nominates an assembly of gifted Divines indeed wicked Simons that slander the Godly Onias 2. Mac. 4. to out him of his Priests place so that at this day there is not one Assembly-man but is illegally thrust into anothers Benefice a Catalogue of whose names and Preferments expect shortly and with them a view of the Militia and Common-Council-men of London observing what Places Offices and salaries they have from the Houses of Parliament and then thou wilt know the reasons of their Votes and Actions in the City You see in part what the Grandees have done for themselves Consider after 8 years sitting what they have done for the people when amongst all their Propositions to the King for Peace hardly any one respects the good of the People but their own grandeur and profit They demand a Militia to keep up this Army upon us which is not the Kings to give No King of England ever governed by a standing Army They demand likewise power to raise what Forces for Land and Sea consisting of what Persons they please to presse and to raise what money to maintain them out of all mens Estates to be laid on at their discretion and as partially as they please so that they may favour one Faction and oppresse the other at pleasure for so much the Act for the Militia as it is penned imports and this is more than his Majesty hath power to grant The late Militia of Trained Bands and the Posse Comitatus under Sheriffs being the only legal Militia of England will not serve their turnes It hath always been the Policy of England to trust the Militia and sword in one hand viz. the KINGS and the Purse that should pay them in another viz. the PARLIAMENTS whereby one power might bound and limit the other For to put the Sword and the Purse into one hand is to make that hand absolute Master of our Persons and Estates and so reduced us to absolute slavery under the Arbitrary power of one man without appeal or redresse Awake and look about you good People THE END AN APPENDIX TO The History of Independency BEING A brief description of some few of ARGYLE'S proceedings before and since he joyned in Confederacy with the Independent Junto in ENGLAND With a Parallel betwixt him and Cromwell AND A Caveat to all his seduced Adherents CICERO Totius injustitia nulla capitalior est quam eorum qui cum maximè fallunt id tamen agunt ut viri boni esse videantur LONDON Printed in the Year 1648. AN APPENDIX TO The History of Independency BEING A brief description of some few of Argyle's proceedings before and since he joyned in confederacy with the Independent Junto in ENGLAND With a Parallel betwixt him and Cromwell AND A Caveat to all his seduced Adherents THe Covenant being at the first taking held to be the true Touchstone whereby the Religious Royal Subjects were discerned from all those who were unwilling to submit to the yoke of Christ in matters of Religion or to the just and lawfull Government of our dread Soveraign his Vicegerent now a subtil generation of men or rather Vipers in both Kingdomes who did take the Covenant and did magnifie it so long as it could serve them for a Ladder to mount to their intended Greatness being now at the top have kick'd away the Ladder and standing as it were on the pinacle look with disdain on all their old friends who out of the integrity of their hearts did for the good of Religion and His Majesties honour joyn in that solemn engagement it being far from their thoughts that their modest and humble desires for the Reformation of some abuses both in Church and State all which His Majesty in the respective Kingdoms did or was willing to cure should have struck so deep as to endeavour the overthrow of all lawfull Governments Civil and Ecclesiastical bringing instead of a promised Reformation in Religion a cursed Toleration of the most damnable Sects Errors and Heresies that ever Hell did send forth and for the Civil State instead of a well-setled Monarchy a most confused tyrannical Anarchy quite contrary to the words and meaning of the Covenant and the honest intentions of all true-hearted Religious and loyall Subjects in the three Kingdoms who did take that solemn Covenant with a purpose to keep it and of very many thousands who did never take the Covenant yet very good Protestants and loyall Subjects being more affrighted with the compulsory way of enforcing it on all than unsatisfied in the matter being introduced in a legal way none of these deserving the name of Malignants or to be so cruelly dealt with either for their persons or Estates as hath been too too common in both Kingdoms but the Covenant it self doth best decypher who are Incendiaries Malignants and evil Instruments viz. those who hinder the reformation of Religion who divide the King from His People or one Kingdom from another or make any Faction or Parties amongst the people contrary to the League and Covenant Yet by our new tenets none must be called Malignants but those that have loyall hearts towards their Soveraign though otherwise never so Religious and all of them with Master Martin would gladly make the Covenant an old Almanack that they might be rid of that tie of preserving His Majesties Person and Authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms that the world may bear witness with their consciences of their loyalties and that they have no thoughts or intentions to diminish His Majesties just Power and Greatnesse As the History of Independency hath discovered the practices of the Independent Junto so this Appendix will discover their chief Confederate in Scotland
and leaving no Money to content the Generals remaining part of the Army the turning the odium of seizing and secluding the Members and Murdering the KING upon the General were not sufficient diminutions of the General and augmentations of his Lievtenant General The Welch Counties are set on work to desire Harry Martin for their Commander in Chief and the Western Garrisons the most considerable of England are to be taken from the General and put into the hands of Cromwel and his Party for his retreat from Ireland so that if all this do not enable him to ruine the General it will at least enable him to divide the Army and cantonize the Kingdome and turn the General into the dangers and troubles of the starving forlorn North Counties bordering upon Scotland And if Cromwel find Ireland too hard a bone for him it is thought he will endeavour to surprize the Isle of Man and from thence infest Scotland and Ireland 202. An Inquisition for blood an ingenious piece newly come to light About the 18. July 1649. was presented to the world an ingenious ●ce entituled An Inquisition for Blood to the Parliament instatu quo nunc And to the Army Regnante wherein the Author proves That the KING did not take the guilt of blood Himself by granting the Preambulatory Proposition in the late Treaty in the Isle of Wight in these words viz. That he acknowledged that the two Houses of Parliament● were necessitated to undertake a War in their own just and lawful Defence c. And that therefore all Oathes Declarations or other publique Instruments against the two Houses of Parliament or any for adhering to them c. be Declared null suppressed and forbidden His Majesty in yielding to this Grant had reference to two ends 1. To prepare the way to peace which without this had been hopeless 2. To secure and indempnifie the two Houses with all their Adherents and rid them from those despairing feares and jealousies which made them adversaries to Peace For the words of the Preamble they were not of His penning He was not Author of them but an Assentor to them nor was He or his Party accused or so much as mentioned in them He made this Concession sub stricta novacula when the Razor was as it were at his throat 1. An Army of 30000. Horse and Foot effective against Him 2. When He was endangered and tired out with a long and close Imprisonment 3. When many dangerous and menacing Petitions against His life had been encouraged and entertained so that the King may seem to have been necessitated to yield to this Grant for His own just and lawful defence His Majesty passed this Concession with these two Provisoes 1. That it should be of no validity until the whole Treaty were intirely consummated 2. That He might when he pleased enlarge and clear the truth with the reservedness of his meaning herein with publick Declarations Now the Treaty being powerfully carried on without Debate or receiving any Proposition from the King as was capitulated and reciprocal Proposals are of the Essence of all Treaties this Grant could never bind Him This Grant was a meer Preambulatory Proposition not of the Essence of the Treaty Philosophers and School-men tell us Proems to Lawes are condemned by many Lawyers and Polititians Est nihil frigidius Lege cum Prologe jubeo lex non suadet No valid proof can be drawn out of Proems and Introductions but out of the body of the Text. So in the Laws of England and in all Accusations and Charges Prefaces and Preambles are not pleadable They are the last in penning of Laws least in account nor never had the force of Laws There 's not a syllable in this Preface which Repeals any former Law inflicting a Penalty upon such Subjects as bear or raise Arms against their KING nor those Laws which è contrario exempts from punishment all subjects adhering to the Person of the KING in any Cause or Quarrel Whereas the said Preface saith the two Houses were necessitated to make a War c. This may relate to a necessity à parte post not à parte ante self-defence is the universal Law of nature extending to all Creatures it is non scripta sed nata Lex By raising Tumults c. Therefore when the two Houses or rather a schismatical Party in them had brought upon themselves a necessity of Self-defence His Majesty was content to acknowledge that necessity If one man assault another upon the High-way and the Assailed furiously pursue the Assailant putting him to the defensive part the Assailant is now necessitated to fight in his own defence although he drew that necessity upon himself yet is he now excusable à posteriori not à priori And as Civilians say of clandestine Marriges Quod fieri non debuit factum valet for multa sunt quae non nisi peracta approbantur Lewis the 13. of France had many Civil Wars with his own Subjects amongst other Treaties to compose them upon the Treaty of Lodun he was enforced to publish an Edict approving of all that had been done by his Opposites as done for his service The like extenuations are not unusual at the close of Civil Wars and the only use made of them was never other than to make the adverse Party more capable of pardon to secure them against the brunt of the Laws to salve their credits and pave the way for an Act of Oblivion and restore a setled peace Peace and War like Water and Ice being apt to beget one another But never was use made of such Grants to ruine the King that Granted them or his Party Thus having confuted that misprision That the King by Granting that Introductory Proposition had taken all the Blood upon His score my Author having cleared his way to his farther Inquisition after Blood proceeds and tells you Blew-Cap was the first that opened the Issue of Blood by entering England and shewing Subjects the way of representing Petitions to the King upon their Pikes points That the Irish took their rise from him And whereas occasion was taken to calumniate His Majesty for having a foreknowledge thereof amongst many other convincing Arguments to clear him my Lord Macguire upon the Ladder and another upon the Scaffold did freely and clearly acquit Him And in regard great use was made of the Irish Rebellion to imbitter the People against the King the Author winds up the causes thereof upon one bottom Telling you 1. They who complied with the Scots in their first and second Insurrection 2. They who dismissed the Irish Commissioners sent to present some grievances to the Parliament with a short unpolitick harsh Answer 3. They who took off Straffords Head the onely Obstructor of that Rebellion and afterwards retarded the Earl of Leicesters going into Ireland 4. They who hindered part of the disbanded Army of 8000. Men raised by the Earl of Strafford being Souldiers of Fortune
to go serve the Spaniard as his Majesty had promised the two Spanish Ambassadors the Marquesses of Velada and Maluezzi which cashiered discontented men first put fire to the Tumult They who did all this are guilty of the Irish Rebellion and of the blood of above 100000 Protestants who perished in that War Adde They who importuned the King contrary to His judgment to make the Irish desperate by passing an Act to confiscate their estates and grant them away to such as should advance Monies upon Irish Adventures Touching the War kindled in England the Author confesseth it was a fatal thing there should be a withdrawing of the Kings Person from the Parliament But averreth it was a barbarous thing that the King with above four parts in five of the Lords and two parts in three of the Commons should be frighted away by Tumults raised by Ven and Bourges and a Design to seize the Kings Person yet it is fit it should be remembred 1. What reiterated Messages his Majesty sent offering to return if there might be a course taken to secure his Person with those Peers and Commons rioted away 2. That there was not the least motion towards War until Hotham shut the Gates of Hull against the King attended onely with some few of his houshold servants which Act of his was approved of afterwards by the House of Commons Vote as if he had done it by their warrant 3. That a while after there was an Army of 16000. men effective inrolled about London to fetch Him to His Parliament and remove ill Counsellors under the Earl of Essex long before the King began to set up His Standard 4. That the same Army so raised to bring the King to His Parliament was continued two years after to keep Him from His Parliament 5. Who interdicted Trade first and brought in Forreign Force to help them and whose Commissions of War were near upon two years date before the Kings 6. That in all His Declarations He alwayes protested He waged not War against the Parliament but against some Seditious Members against whom He could not obtain Common Justice 7. That upon all good Successes the King still courted the Parliament and City to an Accommodation 8. That upon the Treaty of Vxbridge The King moved that to prepare mens mindes to Peace there might be freedome of Trade from Town to Town A cessation of all Acts of Hostility for the time that the inflamation being allayed the wound might be cured the sooner 9. That this present Army remember how often in their Proposalls and Declarations they protested That their aim was to restore His Majesty with Honour Freedome and Safety whereunto they were formerly bound by their Protestation and Covenant and that the two Commanders in Chief pawn'd their Souls to Him thereupon 10. That to settle Peace the King did in effect by His Concessions part with His Sword Scepter and Crown and every thing that was personal to Him 11. With what admired Temper Prudence Constancy He comported Himself in His Afflictions and how many of His engaged Enemies became His Converts thereby speaking Panegyricks in His praise 12. That though there be some precedents in our Histories for Deposing Kings in point of Competition for the Crown yet it is unexampled That a King of England of an undoubted Title should be Summoned Arraigned Tryed Condemned and Executed at His own Door by His own Subjects and by the Name of their King to whom they had sworn Allegiance Contrary to the whole Current of the Law which saith The King can do no wrong The Crown takes away all defects Wherefore it was adjudged superfluous to take off Attainders under which Hen. 7. and Queen Eliz. lay because the Crown wiped off all Blots Rex non habet Parem in suis Dominiis nec Superiorem satis habet Rex ad poenam quod Deum expectat ultorem If therefore by the Laws of the Land all men must be Tried by their Peers and the King have no Peer what power had these Men to Arraign their King to be both His engaged Enemies Accusors and Judges and to Erect an unpresidented Tribunal without the least Foundation in Law with power and purpose to condemn all that came before it and that Sentence of Death should pass without conviction or Law against the Head and Protector of our Laws and Fountain of Justice and Mercy 13. That they who by their own Confession represent but the Common People should assume power to cut him off who immediately represented God 203. Mr. Pryns excellent Book entituled A legal Vindication of the Liberties of England illegal axes and pretended Acts of Parliament abridged in part but the whole commended to be seriously read by all men About the same time Mr. William Pryn Assigned his Reasons why he could neither in Conscience Law nor Prudence voluntarily submit to pay the Arbitrary illegal Tax of 90000 l. a Month imposed upon the People by a pretended Act of the Commons bearing Date 7. of April 1649. towards the maintenance of Forces to be continued in England and Ireland Because by the Fundamental Laws and known Statutes of this Land No Tax c. ought to be Imposed or Leavied but by the Will and common Assent of the Earls Barons Knights Burgesses Commons and whole Realm in a free and full Parliament See Magna Charta 29 30. Stat. 25 Edw. 1. chap. 5 6. 34 Edw. 1. De Tallagio non concedendo c. 1. 21 Edw. 3. Rot. Parl. nu 16. 25 Edw. 3. c. 8. 36 Edw. 3 Rot. Parl. nu 26. 45 Edw. 3. Rot. Parl. nu 42. 11 Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. nu 10. 1 Rich. 3. c. 2. The Petition of Right and Resolutions of both Houses against Loans 3 Car. The Votes and Acts against Ship-money Knighthood Tonnage and Poundage and the Star-chamber this Parliament 17 18. Car. agreed to by Mr. William Hackwel in his Argument against Impositions Judge Hutton and Crock in their Arguments Mr. Saint Johns in his Argument and Speech against Ship-money with others Arguments and Discourses upon that subject Sir Ed. Cock in his 2 Instit pag. 59. 60 527 528 529 532 533. But this Assessement was not so legally imposed Ergo I nor no man else ought to pay it 1. This Tax was not imposed by any Parliament The late Parliament being actually dissolved above two months before this pretended Act was passed for imposing it by the Murder of the King as is resolved by the Parliament 1 Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. nu 1. 4 Hen. 4. and 1 Hen. 5. Rot. Parl. nu 26. Cooks 4. Institutes p 46. 4 Edw. 4. 44. 6. For the King being both the Beginning End and Foundation of Parliaments according to Modus tenendi Parliamentum and Sir Edw. Cook 4. Instit p. 3. which are Summoned and Constituted only by his Writ the Writ is actually abated by his Death 1 Edw. 6. c. 7. Cooks 7. Rep. 30 31. Dyer 165. 4 Ed. 4. 43 44. 1 Ed. 5. 1