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A43890 The history and transactions of the English nation more especially by their representatives assembled in Parliament in the reign of King Charles, &c. ... : also the wonderful and most solemn manner and form of ratitifying [sic], confirming and pronouncing of that most dreadful curse and execration against the violaters and infringers of Magna Charta in the time of Henry the Third, King of England, &c / by a person of quality and true lover of his countrey. Person of quality and true lover of his countrey. 1689 (1689) Wing H2110; ESTC R12837 58,860 66

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House of Commons were Resolved into a Grand Committee when the Usher came from the Lords House with that Message and before they would permit the Solicitor then in the Chair to leave his seat they agreed upon a Protestation which Mr. Glanvill stood up and declared to this effect First To give his Majesty Thanks for his Gracious Answer to our Petition for Religion Next For his care of our health in giving us leave to depart this dangerous time Lastly A dutiful Declaration of our affections and loyalty and purpose to supply his Majesty in a Parliamentary-way in a fitting and convenient time This being done the Speaker took the Chair and admitting the Usher he declared his Message from the Lords concerning the Dissolution of the Parliament Now had the King an opportunity for his Summers past-time but that his own progress might not impede that of his affairs his Council were commanded to go along with him By whose general advice two things were most considerably resolved upon First That the Fleet should speedily be put to Sea. Secondly That a more strict Amity should be enter'd into with the States of the United Provinces Several were the Descants of such as pretended to judicious censure as fancy and affection swayed the ballance some blamed the Parliament for not supplying the Kings necessities whereby the Fleet put forth too late some reflected sinisterly upon the Duke saying It never was nor never will be well with England while the Sea is under the Command of an Admiral so young and withal so unexperienc'd others also made deduction from this miscarriage of Gades Voyage in reference to the King that because Commencements do often forespeak the qualification of future contingencies in the series and row of succeeding affairs they much feared this was but the earnest of some inauspiciousness which would attend the residue of his Reign Nor among the rest was Captain Brett's conjecture vain who told the Duke That the Fleet was never like to speed better wherein there went a long Bag without Money Cook without Meat and Love without Charity for so were the three Captains named and a great default there was doubtless of sufficient pay of wholesome meat and unanimity The Michaelmas Term was by reason of the infection at London translated to Reading from whence the King according to late Answer in Parliament issued out in November a Commission to the Judges to see the Laws against Recusants put in Execution This Commission was read in all the Courts of Judicature at Reading and withal a Letter was directed to the Archbishop of Canterbury enjoyning him to take special care within his Province for the discovery of Jesuits Seminary-Priests and other Recusants offenders against the Laws It was in truth high time for severe Proceedings against them they having contracted so much insolence and presuming upon protection by reason of the late Match that at Winchester and many other places they frequently passed through the Churches in time of Divine Service hooting and hallowing not only to the disturbance of that duty but to the scorn of our Religion yea and one Popish Lord when the King was at Chappel was heard to prate on purpose louder in a Gallery adjoyning than the Chaplain prayed whereat the King was so moved that he sent this Message too him viz. Either let him come and do as we do or else I will make him prate farther off On February the 2d this year Anno Domini 1625 the King was Crowned at Westminster with the usual though I cannot say Magnificent Ceremonies and Solemnities The Coronation being past the King prepareth for a Parliament now approaching the last he thought was somewhat uncivil towards the Duke and the Delinquents as he thought must be made examples Upon this account the Lord-Keeper Williams soon after the Dissolution of the late Parliament fell and his place was disposed of to Sir Thomas Coventry c. On the 16th of this February the Parliament met the Commons began their work where they last broke off at Oxford making Religion their first and which was their superlative care recollecting what a full and satisfactory Answer the King gave to their Petition against Recusants and his Commission issued out in pursuance of that Answer appointed a Committee for Religion impowring them most strictly to examine what abuses of his Majesties Grace had occurred since that time and who were the Authors and Abettors of the same The House of Commons being in expectation of some Discovery from their Committee at length Mr. Prin made a report of a Letter written to the Lord Mayor of York for reprieving some Jesuits Priests and other Recusants This Letter being under the Signet a sub-Committee was ordered to search the Signet-Office and compare it with the Original These Proceedings inwardly much displeased the King yet he smothered the indignity for a time though he did after intimate the same unto them among his other regrets And plying 〈◊〉 more important affairs with a most steady temper he sent a Message 〈◊〉 them by Sir Richard Weston to this effect viz. That his Fleet is returned and their Victuals spent the Men must of necessity be discharged and their wages paid them or else mutiny will follow which may be of dangerous consequence That he hath in readiness about 40 Ships to be set forth upon a second service which want a present supply of moneys That the Armies quartered on the Coasts want Victuals and Cloaths and they will Disband if not furnished The Companies of Ireland lately sent must speedily be provided for else they may be subject to rebel Lastly The season for providing healthful provision will be past if this Month of March be suffered through negligence to elapse And therefore he desired to know without more ado what present supplies he must depend upon from them that so accordingly he might shape his course Instead of a supply to his Message Mr. Clement Coke Son to Sir Edward Coke a Member of the House of Commons let fly this reply It is better to dye by a Foreign Enemy than to be destroyed at home and as if the Prerogative had not been sufficiently alarm'd by that expression one Turner a Doctor of Physick re-assaults it in these six Queries 1. Whether the King hath not lost the Regality of the Narrow Seas since the Duke became Admiral 2. Whether his going in the last Fleet as Admiral was not the cause of ill success 3. Whether the Kings Revenue hath not been impaired through his immense liberality 4. Whether he hath not ingrossed all Offices and preferred his kindred to unfit places 5. Whether he hath not made sale of places of Judicature 6. Whether Recusants have not dependance upon his Mother and Father-in-law This was uncouth language to a Princes Ear but who can expect that in so vast a Body and Mass of men all parcels should take salt alike and that no part should have rancidity in it Yet perhaps this clamour
and noise might be the rudeness of some few newly admitted into that great School of Wisdom the greater part continuing it's possible sincere and loyal therefore the King sends Sir Richard Weston to them requiring satisfaction But the House was slower in the work than was agreeable to his Majesties mind so intent upon some severe Proceedings against them Upon this he called the Lords and them together and by the Lord-Keeper his proper Speaker thus conveys his displeasure to them which being somewhat long and afterwards the Kings Speech also to them I shall refer you to the Book it self Page 24 25 26. The Commons nothing moved with those tart and vinacre expressions kept close to their proper stations and by way of Remonstrance replied the which you may peruse Page the 27th of the same Author To the Remonstrance the King answered briefly That he would have them in the first place consult about matters of the greatest importance and that they should have time enough for other things afterwards But the Parliament accounted nothing of so great importance as a vigorous proceeding against the Duke In order to which all encouragement is given by both Houses to any who would inform against him The Earl of Bristol vigilantly listned for this call and presently Petitioning the House he might be admitted to prefer an Accusation against him His request is readily granted The Duke alarm'd with this Petition Plots amain and high time either to divert or encounter him He perswades the King to send the Earl a Premonitary-Letter framed as a Memorial minding him of all the miscarriages relating to the Spanish Treaty and a Breviate of what became of his future charge and demanding withal his positive Answer Whether he would sit still from being questioned for any Errors past in his Spanish Negotiations and enjoy the benefit of the Pardon granted by the late Parliament or waving the advantage thereof put himself upon a Legal Tryal To this the Earl answered That it became him not as a Subject to urge a Tryal against himself but if His Majesty should call him to it he would willingly submit being confident his innocence would mediate for his future favour As for the Pardon he would not disclaim it though he was consident he should not need it for any Crime of Disloyalty to His Majesty or Treason against the State. The King perceiving by this Reply the Earl resolved to persist commanded the Attorney-General to Summon the Earl to the Lords Bar as a Delinquent May the 1st Bristol appearing the Attorney told the Peers That he came thither to accuse the Earl of High-Treason with that the Earl said My Lords I am a Freeman and a Peer of the Realm unattainted I have somewhat to say of high consequence for his Majesties Service I beseech your Lordships give me leave to speak The Lords bidding him go on Then said he I accuse that Man the Duke of Buckingham of High-Treason the Articles of his Charge you may read Page 28. ut supra When the Earl had ended his Charge up starts no upstart Lord the Lord Spencer Is this all said he you have to say against the Duke The Earl replied Yes my Lord and I am sorry it is so much Then quoth the Lord Spencer if this be all Ridiculus Mus and so sat down again Upon this a Crotchet took the Lord Cromwell in the Crown and out he goes to Mr. Richard Spencer a younger Son of that Lord and a great Zealot in the lower House against the Duke Dick said he what is done in your House to day against the Duke My Lord said he he is charged with no less than High-Treason Tush Dick quoth the Lord High-Treason if this be all Ridiculus Mus. This high and daring challenging by the Earl prompted the Attorney to speed his Accusation against him which having Modell'd into Eleven Articles he brought in the next day Vide page 28. ut supra The Commons having presented their Accusation presently after sent a Message to the Lords desiring that the Duke might be Committed declaring that it did mis-beseem their House to permit a man so deeply Impeacht to sit in Councel with them The Court-party who had nimble Intelligencers understood this design from the very first result and plotted to treat the Commons with uniform Proceedings for at that very time Sir Dudley Diggs and Sir John Elliot were sent for out of the House by two Messengers of the Chamber who upon their coming forth shewed them Warrants for their Commitment to the Tower but it was resolved by the Judges that by their restraint no reason being given to the House for it the whole House was arrested and a Remonstrance was made to the King of their Priviledg whereupon they were released The Commons having sped so well the House of Peers began to claim their immunities making an Order that nothing should be transacted in their House until the Earl of Arundel were restored upon which instantly ensued the Earls Postlimination and re-admittance Popular disgust began now to break in upon the Duke with such a running and sweeping-tide as drew along with it by way of Concomitancy the Peerage nor could his new Dependents and Allies keep the Ballance Horizontial and even much less sway it and because his fate must result from them but not by weight but tale the old Trick of the Council of Trent was thought upon and a new Summons of Persons former Considents to the Duke as the Lords Mandevil Grandison and Carlton into the row of Nobles But this project would not take for the House of Lords found an ancient Order That no Lords created sedente Parliamento shall have Voices during that Session but only shall have priviledg of sitting among the rest upon which their suffrage was excluded This gave the Duke a taste a bitter one of their inclinations so that finding but small favour to trust to he magnanimously stood upon his Justification And having his defence to his contentment June the 8th 1626 he presented it to the Lords who upon receipt thereof sequestred him from sitting any more as a Peer of the House until his Cause was determined whereupon he went away much dejected The Dukes Defence and the Commons Impeachment being long I shall not here insert but refer you to the Annals it self from whom I do transcribe this small Narrative This weighty Cause was managed by six Gentlemen viz. Mr. Glanvil Mr. Selden Mr. Pim Mr. VVansford Mr. Sherland to whom was added Sir Dudley Diggs as Foreman and Prolocutor and Sir John Elliot to bring up the rear Sir Dudley Diggs his Prologue for the extraordinary Elegancy of the frame and conciseness of his Metaphors I shall crave leave to insert as it was delivered unto the Lords before the Gentlemen of the House of Commons did present the 13 Grievances expresly this My LORDS THere are so many things of great importance to be said in a very little time this day that
Parliament dissolved May the fifth 1640. having sate about 3 weeks to such animosity as the King advising with his Juncto their complyance was represented to him so desperate as that May the fifth he ordered the Dissolution of the Parliament Thus expired this short-liv'd or rather thus ended this still-born Parliament although we have had a much shorter Anno Domini 1680. A Parliament I know not whether more unfortunate in beginning so late or ending so soon A Parliament which had Power and probably Will enough to impede the torrent of the late Civil War for the breaches between the King and People were grown so high as one might already discern all the lineaments of an Insurrection in Embrio but by my Authors good leave the wisest head could not foresee contingent actions for who could foretel but that his late Majesty might have been advised by his Grand Council and not by his Court Favourites whose abortion nothing could cause but a happy union in Parliament a thing not very difficult much less impossible at that time had the King yielded to a detrenching some luxuriances of his Prerogative to the reducing Episcopacy to its primitive institution that is to the frame by Divine Right a Root which had not sap enough to maintain so spreading and flourishing a Top as was contended for to a more frequent and sociable communication with the grand Representative In short so much fluent and spontaneous concessions as being resolved upon too late were in reference to his personal security lost and thrown away in the ensuing Parliament of the which we shall now very suddenly come to give a very succinct account as to their particular proceedings and transactions and compare both these Parliaments together with those that have been assembled of late Anno Domini 1680. and 1681. And after that shall draw towards a conclusion as I presume it will be high time lest my Multum in Parvo Vox Veritatis should prove at the long run Vox Contractitionis But this only by the way And moreover the dissolution of this Parliament was ascribed tho' perhaps wrongfully to the advice of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury Archbishop Laud beset by the Rabble in his House at Lambeth so that on the ninth of May a Paper was posted upon the Old Exchange by one John Lilburn exciting the Apprentices to rise and rifle his House at Lambeth on Monday following of which he having notice made provision against them for his own defence and many of them upon enquiry having been actors therein were apprehended and imprison'd in the White Lyon in Southwark but within three days after some of their Complices got together and came to the Prison and brake it open and set them free yet nevertheless one of the chief Ringleaders was Taken Arraigned Condemned and Drawn Hanged and Quartered on the 21 of May. This Convention was not more unhappily dissolved The Convocation fitteth than another was continued that is as a witty Gentleman said well A new Synod made of an old Convocation which by new Commissions from the King were impowered to sit still the Impulsives to it are very easily collected from what resulted from it as you read more at large in the aforesaid Author Pape 189. The Parliament being blown away without affording any thing in nature of a supply to the Kings wants All the wheels of the Prerogative are put into motion to carry on the War against Scotland First the City of London were invited to a Loan then all Knights and Gentlemen who held Lands in Capite of the King were summoned to send Men Horses and Arms agreeable to their abilities In September the Lords Mandevil and Edward Howard delivered to the King at York this Petition To the King 's Most Excellent Majesty The humble Petition of Your Majesties most Loyal and most Obedient Subjects whose names are underwritten in behalf of themselves and divers others Most Gracious Soveraign THe Zeal of that Duty and Service which we owe to your Sacred Majesty and our earnest affections to the good and welfare of this your Realm of England have moved us in all humility to beseech your Royal Majesty to give us leave to offer to your Princely wisdom the apprehension which we and others your faithful Subjects have conceived of the great distempers and dangers now threatning the Church and State and your Royal Person and of the fittest means by which they may be removed and prevented The evils and dangers which your Majesty may be pleased to take notice of are these viz. I. That your Majesties Sacred Person is exposed to hazard and danger in the present Expedition against the Scotish Army and by occasion of this War Your Majesties Revenue is much wasted your Subjects with Coat and conduct Money Billetting of Souldiers and other Military Charges and divers Rapines and Disorders committed in several parts of this your Realm by the Souldiers raised for that Service and your whole Kingdom become full of fears and discontents II. The sundry Innovations in matter of Religion the Oath and Canons lately imposed upon the Clergy and other your Majesties Subjects III. The great increase of Popery and the Employing of Popish Recusants and others ill affected to the Religion by Laws Established in places of Power and Trust especially in commanding of Men and Arms both in the Field and sundry Counties of this your Realm whereas by Law they are not permitted to have any Arms in their own Houses IV. The great mischiefs which may fall upon this Kingdom if the intententions which have been credibly reported of bringing in Irish and Foreign Forces should take effect V. The urging of Ship-money and prosecution of some Sheriffs in the Star-Chamber for not levying of it VI. The heavy charge upon Merchandize to the discouragement of Trade the multitude of Monopolies and other Patents whereby the Commodities and Manufactures of the Kingdom are much burthened to the great and universal grievance of your People VII The great grief of your People and Subjects by long intermission of Parliaments and the late and former Dissolving of such as have been called without the happy effects which otherwise they might have produced For remedy whereof and prevention of the Dangers that may arise to your Royal Person and to the whole State they do in all humility and faithfulness beseech your Most Excellent Majesty that you would be pleased to Summon a Parliament within some convenient time whereby the causes of these and other great Grievances which your People lie under may be taken away and the Authors and Counsellors of them may be brought to such legal and condign punishment as the nature of their several offences shall require And that the present War may be composed by your Majesty's wisdom without Blood in such manner as may conduce to the Honour and Safety of your Majesties Person the the comfort of your People and the uniting of both your Realms against the Common
Enemy of the Reformed Religion And your Majesty's Petitioners shall ever pray c. Concluded the 28th of August 1640. Francis Bedford Robert Essex Mulgrave Say and Seal Edward Howard William Hartford Warwick Bullingbrooke Mandevil Brook Paget The King's Answer BEfore the receipt of your Petition His Majesty well foresaw the danger that threatens himself and Crown and therefore resolved the 24th of this Instant to Summon all the Peers and with them to Consult what in this Case is fittest to be done for his own honour and safety of the Kingdom where they with the rest may offer any thing that may conduce to those ends According to this Resolution the Lord-Keeper had Directions from the King to issue out Writs of Summons for their appearing at York on the day prefixt which he punctually pursued Soon after the presenting of this Petition from the Lords came another from the Scots the substance whereof was a Desire That His Majesty would call a Parliament for setling a firm peace between the two Nations To this Petition the King replyed with signification of what he had ordered before in reference to himself and to the welfare of both Kingdoms And the Truth of it is it was high time for an Accommodation to be effected for Lesley now began to rant it in New-Castle and the parts adjacent as Brennus did at Rome with a Vae Victis He imposed a Tax of 350 pounds per diem upon the Bishoprick of Durham and 300 pounds upon Northumberland upon pain of Plundering and yet permitted Souldiers to rifle Houses break open Shops and act what insolencies they pleased seized upon four great English Ships laden with Corn as lawful prize they not knowing in whose possession the Town was till they enter'd the Haven The first day of the Lords Assembling at York it was resolved that a Parliament should be Summoned to convene at Westminster November the Third Then a Message was sent to the Scots desiring a speedy Treaty at York The Scots replied They held that no place of security for their Commissioners considering that the Lieutenant of Ireland who commanded His Majesties Army was one who had proclaimed them Traytors in Ireland before the King had done the same in England and who had threatned to destroy their Nation both Root and Branch and against whom as a chief Incendiary of the late Troubles they intended to complain whereupon it was concluded that the Treaty should be held at Rippon which accordingly took place The Parliament now approaching whose Convening was attended by this Kingdom with so much longing such impatience of desires as every moment which retarded it was interpreted as a kind of Grievance to the Subject for we began now to think that nothing could make us a happy People but a Parliament and that no Parliament could make us miserable This was the Sence of the greater part of this Nation and if this Parliament succeeded not adequate to some Mens Vote perhaps the miscarriage of their hopes may be somewhat imputed to this Sence Over-ruling Providence delights oft to order the Operations of free and natural Agents counter to Mans Expectations to teach us the vanity of that Faith which is founded upon Causes subaltern And oh that I could here but express to the life the high Expectations of the People from this Parliament which came with such a terrible swing after so long an Interval and so many Dissolutions that put the whole Nation into such a Consternation as I presume the like President cannot be produced out of the Records of Antiquity since William the Conqueror did first invade our English Territories But however Courteous Readers for your present Divertisement I will here make a small Attempt to express the present Thoughts and Expectations of that Parliament which in process of time brake forth into a Civil War and I pray God I may never live to see the like again the which I shall represent under the Emblem of a new ●●ght and well-built Ship which upon the Launching was named The Bon Resolution although some would have it called The House of Commons others The Three Estates and others The Swiftsure and was immediately employ'd in His Majesties Service but being for some time wind-bound within the Harbor viz. about 12 days the Captain of the said Ship coming early out of his Cabin one morning and finding the Wind tackt about and blowing fair for his intended Voyage being upon the Quarter-Deck he knocks up his Seamen and salutes them after this manner viz. ARise you Mortals from your Dens of Sleep Neptune now calls to launch into the Deep The Wind blows fair it 's lately turn'd South-west And we must Sail directly to the East For Pearls and Diamonds Jewels of great Rate Which in the Acquest sometimes a broken Pate Hath been our Lot yet still we venture must You know our Shipwrights wherein so great a Trust Is now repos'd in us comes from Whitehall Our late Commission whence we may learn All Which way to steer our course and will direct Whom we must crush and whom we must protect In this our Voyage 'T is the Common-weal Of these Three Kingdoms That a Roaring Peal Of Small and Great Shot now aloud must Ring From this our Vessel To preserve the King In all His Legal Rights But to advance Against all those who have lead up a Dance As will in time if Heavens do not prevent Destroy both King and all the Parliament and in their stead set up a Scarlet Whore Of whose sweet Nature we have long before Known by Experience and now for to be cheated By their Sham-Plots again and to be defeated Huzza Brave Lads This thing shall never be We 'll rather chuse upon a Triple Tree To take our chance and now Heavens crown the Event And bless our Vessel and our good Intent Heavens bless us from the Sally Men of War Heavens bless us likewise that we do not jar Among our selves If such a thing should be And that our Seamen now should disagree And fight for Thimbles Bodkins and Gu-gaws Instead of fighting for the Good Old Cause Of Liberty and Property Oh! this Evil Would make us Zealots for the Pope and Devil More than for Christs true Church which now doth stand In danger much if these should have Command Within our British Isle which to prevent God bless our King and His next Parliament Which now approacheth whom we must defend And so our Ship the Lord Almighty send Into safe Harbor when that we shall bring Peace to the Church and Honor to the King And when our Pearls and Diamonds shall arrive We 'll fix them fast upon King CHARLES his Hive His Crown shall glister like the Rising Sun. Courage Brave Boys Our Wars shall then be done When we shall see those Fellows sent from hence With all their Tories to that place from whence They first did rise which was from that Grand Syre Who claims the Patent to be the great Lyar
And Forger of all Mischiefs both in Church and State But will at length get such a Broken Pate As will confound him and his Holy Church When as Old Nick shall leave him in the Lurch To him I 'll leave him and his Tory Crew And now proceed to what doth here ensue Tuesday Novemb. 3. being the day prefixt and the Parliament assembled His Majesty bespake them in these words My Lords THE knowledge that I have of the Scotish Subjects was the cause of my calling of the last Assembly of Parliament wherein if I had been believed I do most sincerely think that things had not fallen as We now see but it is no wonder that men are so slow to believe that so great a Sedition should be raised upon so little ground But now My Lords and Gentlemen the Honor and Safety of this Kingdom lying so heavily at stake And had His Majesty kept close to this resolution some think things had ne'er come to that extremity that afterwards they did I am resolved to put My Self freely upon the Love and Affections of my English Subjects as those of my Lords that waited upon me at York very well remember I there declared Therefore My Lords I shall not mention Mine own Interest or that Support I might justly expect from you till the Common Safety be secured though I must tell you I am not ashamed to say those Charges I have been at have been meerly for the securing the good of this Kingdom though the Success hath not been answerable to My desires Therefore I shall only desire you to consider the best way for the Security of this Kingdom wherein there are two things chiefly considerable 1. The chasing out the Rebells 2. That other in satisfying your just Grievances wherein I shall promote you to concur so heartily and clearly with you that all the World may see my intentions have ever been and shall be to make this a glorious and flourishing Kingdom There are onely two things more that I shall mention to you the one is to tell you That the Loan of Money which I lately had from the City of London wherein the Lords that waited on me at York assisted me will only maintain my Army for two months from the beginning of that time it was granted Now my Lords and Gentlemen I leave it to your Consideration what Dishonour and Mischief it might be in case for want of Money my Army be Disbanded before the Rebels be put out of this Kingdom Secondly The securing the Calamities the Northern People endure at this time and so long as the Treaty is on foot And in this I may say Not only they but all this Kingdom will suffer the harm therefore I leave this also to your Consideration for the ordering of the Great Affairs whereof you are to Treat at this time I am so confident of your Love to me and that your Care is such for the Honour and Safety of the Kingdom that I should freely leave to you where to begin Only this that you may know the better the State of all Affairs I have commanded my Lord Keeper to give you a short and free Account of those things that have happeued in this Interim with this Protestation That if his Account be not Satisfactory as it ought to be I shall whensoever you desire it give your Full and Perfect Account of every Particular One thing more I desire of you as one of the greatest means to make this an Happy Parliament That you on your part as I on mine lay aside Suspition one of another as I promised my Lords at York It shall not be my Fault if this be not a Happy and Good Parliament The King having ended the Lord Keeper in pursuance of His Majesty's Commands gave them a Summary Account and Relation of all Things relating to the Scottish Invasion I dare not say Rebellion for that the King represented them under that Disgustful Character was very ill resented by some considerable Peers whereof His Majesty having notice told the Parliament two days after He must needs call them Rebels so long as they have an Army that does invade England The remainder of this Week was spent partly in settling Committees for General Grievances and partly in set Speeches Rhetorically declaiming against and dissecting them The remainder of the particular Transactions of this year of the Commons of England Assembled in Parliament and of the year succeeding 1641. I shall not here relate at large but refer you to the Annals of King Charles the First written by this ingenious Author from whom I have borrowed and transcribed the major part of my precedent Relations who ends at the Death of the Earl of Strafford which was May the 12th 1641. And after that I must refer you for the remainder of that year unto Sir Richard Baker's Chronicle of the Kings of England c. But the particular heads of those Transactions as to matter of fact I shall be willing here to recite for your Courteous Readers present satisfaction in manner and form as followeth viz. 1. Several Petitions against Grievances 2. Priviledges of the Lords House Vindicated 3. The Lieutenant of Ireland Impeached of high Treason 4. The Northern Armies in want 5. Bishop of Lincoln Enlarged 6. Justice Howard assaulted by a Papist 7. Prinn and Bastwick enter London in Triumph 8. Secretary Windebanck flieth 9. Votes against Ship-money 10. The London Petition against Bishops 11. The late Canons damn'd 12. The Lord-Keeper Finch defends his Innocency 13. He is Voted Traitor upon four Considerations and thereupon he flyeth beyond Sea. 14. The Kings Speech for Bishops 15. One Goodman a Priest reprieved 16. A Remonstrance against Goodman the Priest 17. The Kings Answer to that Remonstrance 18. The Scottish Commissioners Demands and the Answer thereunto 19. A Match propounded between the Lady Mary and the Prince of Orange 20. The Kings Speech to the Lords concerning that Match 21. Some Plots of the Papists 22. The Earl Berkly Impeacht of High-Treason 23. The King passeth a Bill for Trienial Parliaments and his Speech concerning it 24. The Bill of Subsidies passeth at the same time and Bonefires and other tokens of joy were made that night in the City of London by Order of Parliament 25. William Laud Arch-Bishop of Canterbury accused of high Treason in fourteen Articles 26. The Lord Digbyes Speech for Episcopacy 27. The Charge against the Earl of Strafford is given and his Answers thereunto and Westminster-Hall is appointed for his Trial. 28. The Commons justifie their Charge by Law. 29. The Earl answereth by Councel 30. The Commons Vote him guilty of High-treason 31. The Commons Petition the King against Papists and the King's Answer 32. The Kings Speech to the Parliament in defence of the E. of Strafford 33. The Prince of Orange Marryeth the Lady Mary 34. A Tumult in Westminster crying for Justice against the Earl. 35. A Protestation framed by the Commons 36. A
Neighbours sure it was by the malevolent aspect and influence of some auspicious male-contented Planets to form and word their Humble Addresses and Petitions according to the pattern in the Mount and of these Loyal persons that had been of the forlorn hope and had marched in the front of the battel and being weighed in the ballance of the Sanctuary I do not neither dare I say in the ballance of the Scriptures and right reason they were found too light and for the which they have a mark and a stamp put upon them by way of distinction I had almost said like unto that Revel 13.15 16 17. whereby they are branded and stigmatized as factious and disloyal Subjects Sed affirmantis est probare and are therefore registred and recorded to be conveyed down by the Pens Militant to future posterity as persons disloyal and disaffected to the present Government and to all those Noble Emoluments and Priviledges which our Forefathers never yet saw nor did enjoy as some of the Addresses do most happily and emphatically word it in so plentiful a measure as under the present Reign of His most Sacred Majesty whom God long preserve The which I must needs say is a very hard case to those poor Petitioners and many of them good Gentlemen able Citizens and Persons of Quality who peradventure did all mean well though their luck was bad and therefore all the comfort that I can give them in this particular in regard Solamen miseriis is a very acceptable companion is only this That they would be pleased to consider That if their hearts and hands went together and had no base nor rebellious nor factious design therein whatsoever and that they were conscious to themselves that they did their King and Country good service in their late Humble Addresses and Petitions although misconstrued and misinterpreted That our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ when he was upon Earth although the best person that ever breathed in the common air yet he could not escape reflections and hard censures from his Countreymen the Jews upon the like account For some of them said and but a few God knows in comparison of the whole Nation that he was a good man when others of a more dissolute and loose conversation said Nay but he was a Mountebank and an Impostor and deceived the people therefore what shall we say to all things but only Monstrum horrendum c. But to proceed and come yet a little nearer unto the matter in hand according to the Contents of the Title-page viz. most faithfully and impartially to examine and compare together the Principles Practices and Transactions of the English Nation but more especially by their Representatives Assembled in Parliament Anno Domini 1640 and 1641. and Anno Domini 1680 and 1681. The compleat and exact distance of time the Children of Israel the peculiar People of God were wandring rebelling and provoking his Divine Majesty in the Wilderness before they were actually possessed of the land of Canaan And wherein persons and things do now look and represent themselves almost with the very same face nay I had almost said with a Ten-times more ominous ill-featured and dismal aspect than formerly But yet notwithstanding I can by no means apprehend the same dreadful fate and consequence will ensue now as did de facto in those preceding years viz. a Nation wading and wallowing over head and ears in hot Christian blood and sheathing the naked sword in each others bowels and appealing to Law of Arms to decide the grand Controversie in those days which so unfortunately hapned between the Commons of England Assembled in Parliament and his late Majesty of deplorable Memory the chief Magistrate thereof although the true Phanatick Tory and Tantivy-men of the Age both in Press and Pulpit do endeavour Might and Main and leave no stone unturn'd in order thereunto to possess our Governours and those that sit at the Helm with this vain frivolous and I hope ridiculous belief But blessed be God there are yet some few Wise men among us who are of the contrary perswasion and can penetrate as far into a Millstone as themselves and who understand their black designs and meanings herein well enough and how that they would willingly and with all their hearts and souls be warming themselves at such a fire And there is a just and righteous God above who will at the last as he hath in some good measure done already countermine bring to light destroy and confound all their Plots and Sham-plots of this and the like nature whatsoever and will make them to be rendred in his own good time the very off-scum scorn contempt and derision of our English Israel and shall be handled and translated down to future posterity as the firebrands and principal fomentors of all our animosities and unhappy divisions And here to come to a right understanding of those precedent Transactions we must make a Digression and by a retrograde step take a transient view of the many Precursors of our late unhappy Troubles and Revolutions and which were engendring and fomenting in the Body Politique from the time of the Death of King James until the beginning of those years wherein by reason of a Long long long Interval of Parliements or rather as some would have it a long interregnum of two vital parts of the Constitution it self our English Monarchy although the best and well-temper'd Government when the exercise of the vital parts thereof be not obstructed in its due circulation this day in the Christian World received for some time among us its Mortal wound And herein as I would not for my right hand vindicate or justifie any Illegal Unwarrantable or any Tyrannical Proceedings of any particular Number or numbers of men whatsoever and who were actually concern'd in those late most dismal and most deplorable revolutions so on the other side I would not altogether condemn all them who were then in the Vogue of the people the esteemed Patriots of their Lives Liberties and Properties and the grand Assertors of the Kings Majesties most Legal and Just Prerogatives both in Church and State and those that are yet inter vivos of them do most solemnly protest and declare That in process of time Persons and Transactions were stretched forth to preternatural Dimensions and Diametrically opposite to the primary intentions and inclinations of the House of Commons themselves and His present Majesty that now Reigneth whom God long preserve in the midst of us was pleased from Breda most graciously to observe viz. That through mistakes and misunderstandings many inconveniencies were produced which were not intended And that the Long Parliament so called although there hath been a much longer since had no design in the least measure in their primary thoughts and intentions to shake off the Monarchy although there are some particular men at this present conjuncture of time in the Pulpit that make them to be all King Ahab's and
Between this disaffection and contempt in his People there was generated a general disposition to turbulent and boisterous darings and expostulations even against his darling Prerogative And though those dismal calamities which after befel his Son were ampliated doubtless by a superfetation of causes yet was their first and main existency derivative from those recited grounds Let Court-Pens extol the calmness of his Halcion Reign with all the artifice of Rhetorick Let them conclude the Parable and tell us God gave King James also as he did Solomon rest from all his enemies round about yet can they never truly deny but that admired severity had its set in a cloud and that he lest to his Successor a Crown of Thorns as being engaged to contend with two puissant Enemies First the mighty Monarch of the West the King of Spain Secondly the more invincible of the two an empty purse For that King who hath this Enemy to encounter shall never atchieve any thing of glorious production The death of this Famous Monarch caused no other interregnum than of joy his Son Charles being immediately by Sir Edward Zouch then Knight Marshal proclaimed at the Court-gate King of Great Britain France and Ireland His first Act of Regality was to dispatch Aviso's of his Fathers decease to Foreign Princes and States his Correspondents with whom he was in Amity Next he took into care the becoming Obsequies of the Royal Corps which removed from Theobalds to Denmark-house in London April the 23d was thence the 7th of May conveyed to Westminster and there inhum'd with the greatest Solemnities and most stately Ritualities could be devised Though grief had taken up the principal Lodgings of King Charles his heart yet did it not quite turn love out of doors but he had still an eye to France and held himself concern'd to let his Agents know he was mindful of the stock he had going there and to rear a firm assurance of his serious intentions He sent over Letters of Procuration for the Duke of Chevereux to espouse the Lady Henrietta Maria only he added this especial precaution That those Letters should not be resigned up until May the 8th when the Celebrities of his Fathers Funeral would be over for he would not that grief and joy things incompatible should justle But these instructions for what cause I know not were not in all points precisely observed for on May the 11th as others and the first as we compute six days before King James his Obsequies the Espousals were solemnized in the Church of Nostredame in Paris the Queen being given by her two Brothers the King and Monsieur the Nuptials past the Royal Bride prepared for England and to wait upon her with the greater splendor his Majesty dispatcheth over the Duke of Buckingham with the Earl of Montgomery and other Persons of Quality May the 24th they arrived at Paris and June the 2d the Queen after the iteration of most affectionate adieux reciprocated and interchanged between the King and her self set forward for Amiens where being attended with a most Princely retinue she was under the restraint of a Magnificent Entertainment till the 16 of that Month thence she dis-lodged for Bulloigne where she was to Embarque for England the Contagion then being much at Calais there she found ready to receive her 21 tall Ships sent from her dearest with a gallant Convoy of the Dutchess of Buckingham and other Ladies of Honour and Eminence to serve her June the 22d she set Sail for England and Landed safe at Dover after a turbulent and tempestuous passage His Majesty lay that night at Canterbury and next morning with joy incredible greeted his Royal Consort and conducted her to Canterbury where the Marriage was finally compleated the Duke of Chevereux his Majesties former Representative consigning up his precious charge to the King c. I have heard some who undertake to mate all events with their proper causes passionately ascribe Englands Calamities to those Internuptials and fetch that ireful stroke of Divine vengeance upon his late Majesty from his Marrying a Lady of mis-belief Grant I do that both England's and his Majesties Sufferings may in some sort be reductive to the casualty of that Match but that there was any intrinsick noxiousness in it either as French or Popish I am not yet convinced The same time while His Majesty was thus busied in his Amorous Negotiation abroad he plyed as well his Interest at home and while he Wooed his Royal Mistriss there he made Love to his People here by Summoning a Parliament that League being not more important to him as Man than this as King for as Man is without a female Consort so is a King without his Supreme Council an half-form'd steril thing the natural Extracts of the one procreated without a Wife are not more spurious than the Laws the politick Descendents of the other without the coition of a Representative The solemnity of this grand Match was commenced at VVestminster June the 18th At first interview it appeared under the scheme and fashion of a Money-Wedding and in truth the publick affairs did then implore no less Upon the opening the Parliament the King imparted his mind to the Lords and Commons to this effect My Lords and Centlemen YOV are not ignorant that at your earnest intreaty March 23. 1623 my Father of happy Memory first took up Arms for the recovery of the Palatinate for which purpose by your assistance he began to form a considerable Army and to prepare a goodly Armado and Navy-Royal But death intervening between him and the atchievement the War with the Crown is devolved upon me To the prosecution whereof as I am obliged both in Nature and Honour so I question not but the same necessity continuing you will cherish the action with the like affection and farther it with a ready contribution True it is you furnished my Father with affectionate supplies but they held no symmetry or proportion with the charge of so great an enterprize for those your Donatives are all disburs'd to a penny and I am enforced to summon you hither to tell you That neither can the Army advance nor the Fleet set forth without your aid Consider I pray you the Eyes of all Europe are defixt upon me to whom I shall appear ridiculous as though I were unable to out-go Muster and Ostentation if you now desert me it is my first attempt wherein if I sustain a foil it will blemish all my future Honour If mine cannot let your Reputations move deliver and expedite me fairly out of this War wherewith you have becumbred let it never be said whereininto you have betrayed me I desire therefore your speedy supply speedy I call it for else it will prove no supply The Sun you know is entring into his declining point so it will be soon too late to set forth when it will be rather not too soon to return Again I must mind you of the
Mortality now Regnant in this City which should it and so it may and no breach of priviledge neither arrest any one Member of either House it soon would put a period both to Consultation and Session so that your own periclitation necessitates an early resolution In sum three of the best Rhetoricians Honour Opportunity and Safety are all of a plot and plead you see for expedition Perhaps it may be expected I should say something in way of Account of my Religion as also of the Temper and Tenure of my future Government But as I hope I have not been guilty of any thing which may justly start the least question in either so I would desire you to repose in this assurance That I will in neither very from those principles wherein I have been instituted at the feet of that Eminent Gamaliel my late Father The Speech being ended the King Vailed his Crown a thing rare in any of his Predecessors Though denied it could not be but this Speech was elemented of very rational materials and ponderous arguments yet it did not cause such a precipitation of resolution but that the Parliament did descend to the consideration thereof by degrees That which retarded the Debate was this They had in store by them two Petitions one for Religion the other against Grievances to which having been moulded in King James his time and preferr'd to him at the close of the last Sessions of the last Parliament they as yet never received answer They said it was the ancient and as they conceived a most prudential practice to present Petitions at the Commencement of Parliaments or so long before their Dissolutions as the King might have time to return a deliberate Answer That the same course they were resolved strictly to pursue and give priority of dispatch to those Petitions before any other business whatsoever which accordingly they did To the several Heads against Grievances His Majesty gave a distinct and satisfactory answer and promised largely upon the Petition for Religion and the better to draw on Supplies he did audit unto them the several Disbursements both relating to the Army and Navy that so all jealousies of mis-employment might be removed which produced so good effects as that the Laity gave him freely and without condition two Subsidies from Protestants and four from Papists as a mulct from the House upon their Recusancy and the Clergy three This was upon July the 8th and the next day the King signified That he took notice of the slender appearance in the House by reason of contagion and that therefore having a tender regard to their healths he declared his intention of Adjournig them upon Monday next being the 11th of that Month which accordingly was performed to the 1st of August and Oxford named for the place which gave disgust to some Members of the House In this Sessions of Parliament was Mr. Montague questioned for Publishing certain Books prejudicial to the Protestant Cause for which he was ordered to be brought to the Bar to whom the Speaker declared the pleasure of the House That they would refer his Censure to the next Meeting and in the interim in respect of his notorious contempt he should stand committed to the Serjeants Ward entring Bail for his then appearance But Mr. Mountague had by the cunning artifice of his Court-friends crept into the Kings service undiscern'd and the King signified to the Parliament two days after That he thought his Servants whereof Mountague was one might have as much Protection as the Servant of an ordinary Burgess nevertheless his Bond of 2000 l. whereupon he was Bailed continued uncancell'd August the 1st the Parliament met again at Oxford the Divinity-School was appointed for the House of Commons and the Galleries above for the House of Lords The 4th of the same Month both Houses were called together to Christ-Church-Hall by the King where he laid open unto them his wants for setting forth the Fleet but the Parliament before they would return any Answer presented him with a Petition against Recusants to this effect Most Gracious Soveraign IT being infallibly true that nothing can more establish your Throne and assure the peace and prosperity of your People than the unity and sincerity of Religion We your Majesties most humble and loyal Subjects and Commons in this present Parliament assembled observing that of late there is an apparent mischievous increase of Papists within your Dominions hold our selves bound in conscience and duty to present the same unto your Sacred Majesty together with the dangerous consequences and what we conceive to be the most principal causes and what may be the remedies thereof 1. Their desperate ends being the Subversion both of Church and State and the restlesness of their spirits to attain those ends the Doctrines of their Teachers and Leaders perswading them that therein they shall do God good service 2. Their evident and strict dependance upon such Foreign Princes as no way affect the good of your Majesty and State. 3. An opening a way of Popularity to the ambition of any who shall adventure to make himself Head of so great a party The principal causes of the increase of Papists in those times and the remedies proposed by the Parliament I shall refer you to the Book it self for your farther satisfaction To all the several branches thereof the King August the 7th gave such a plausible and satisfactory answer as nothing could be desired more One good turn requires another And as the King had given the Parliament ample content by this Answer so he hoped they would be as cheerful in supplying him with Moneys for which he earnestly importun'd them and more especially for his great Naval preparation whereupon ensued a great Debate in the House some were very prompt to give without delay some would give but in convenient time but not then others would give but they complained that the design was managed by young and single Councel that Sir Robert Mansell a man of singular judgment and experience had declared against the Plot and had tender'd to the Council of War a project of much greater advantage and less expence which was approved by the Lord of Chichester to the which the Solicitor replied in the Dukes behalf That the Council of War for the generality much disliked the project of Sir Robert and concluded upon what was then intended but the greater part agreed not to give and to make an humble Remonstrance declaring the Causes and Reasons of their not giving Most of the Voters of this Remonstrance flew high and impetuously prest in upon the Duke some would divest him of his Offices the Admiralty especially others of his Revenue by resuming what he possest of the Crown-demeans others demanded an account of what publick Moneys he had been entrusted with This being signified to the King he soon prognosticated of what quality the Remonstrance would prove therefore immediately in distaste he determined to Dissolve the Parliament The
from the Kings great affection to the Duke I find him charged with deep imprudence and high oversight to hazard the Love of Millions for him only On Monday before this doleful disaster there happened a terrible and prodigious spectacle upon the Thames The Water near Lambeth-Marsh began about Three of the Clock in the afternoon to be very turbulent and after a while arising like a Mist it appeared in a Circular form about Ten yards Diameter and about Ten foot elevated from the River This Cataract or Spout of Waters was carried impetuously cross the River and made a very furious Assault upon the Garden-Walls of T●●● house where the Duke was then building his new Water-Stain at length after a fierce attempt it brake asunder sending up a 〈◊〉 and dusky smoak like that issuing out of a Brewers Chimney which ascended as high as was well discernable and so vanisht and at the very same instant there was in the City of London so dreadful a storm of Rain and Hail with Thunder and Lightning as a great part of the Church-Yard Wall of St. Andrews Church in Holbourn fell down and divers Craves being thereby discovered many Coffins tumbled into the middle of the Channel Not long after this there fell out a difference between England and France and his Majesty in process of time being on every side on the ●●●ing hand he was much distressed in mind what course to take to discharge himself of those impendent Calamities should he call a Parliament the time whose every moment was precious unto him would not permit to stay for their Convention and when met The King in great want should they prove as it was odds they would as Dilatory and disgustful as the former he were in a worse condition than before In this perplexed difficulty at 〈◊〉 his Council agreed to set that great Engine his Prerogative at work Many projects were hammered on that forge but they came all to small effect First they moved for a Contribution by way of Benevolence but this was soon dasht Then a resolution was taken to advance the value of Coyn Two shillings in the pound but this also was soon argued down by Sir Robert Cotton But that which the Council stuck closest to was the issuing of a Commission dated October the 13th Raiseth money by Loan for raising almost Two hundred thousand younds by way of Loan and the more to expedite and facilitate this Levy the Commissioners were instructed to represent to the Subject the deplorable estate of Rochel then closely beleaguer'd by the Duke of Guise and if not speedily relieved would fall irrecoverably into the hands of the Enemies of the Protestant Religion These were plausible insinuations For Rochel though scituated in another Countrey yet was looked upon as in the same parallel Belief with us And what will nor men suffer for others of the same perswasion especially when Fame reports them sufferers because of the same perswasion But all would not smooth the asperity of this most Illegal Tax Rochel and all other Foreign Considerations must stand by and aloof off when homebred Liberty is disputed so thought the almost Majority of the Kingdom who opposed it to Durance Upon this account of refusal Many refuse Prisoners some of the Nobility and most of the prime Gentry were daily brought in by scores I might almost say by Counties so that the Council Table had almost as much work to provide Prisons as to supply the Kings necessities This year Learning lost two Luminaries of the greatest Magnitude that ever this Nation enjoyed viz. Dr. Andrews Bishop of VVinchester and Sir Francis Bacon Vicount St. Albans Lord High Chancellor of England The Commission of Loan not answering in its product his Majesties expectation the Papists began now to plot their own advantage from the Kings wants and under pretence of Loyalty they of Ireland propounded to him That upon consideration of a Toleration of their Religion they would at their own charge furnish him with a constant Army of five thousand Foot and five hundred Horse But this project to their great regret proved Dow-baked the Protestants countermining them For in the next Spring Doctor Downham Bishop of London-Derry Preaching before the Lord Deputy and the whole State April 22. 1627. taking for his Text Luke 1. 74. That we being delivered from the hands of our Enemies might serve him without fear In the midst of his Sermon he openly read this Protestation subscribed by the Archbishops and all the Bishops of that Kingdom 1. That the Religion of the Papists is Superstitious and Idolatrous 2. Their Faith and Doctrine Erroneous and Heretical 3. Their Church in respect of both Apostatical To give them therefore a Toleration is to make our selves accessary to their abominations and to the perdition of their Souls But to sell them a Toleration is to set Religion to sale and with that their Souls which Christ hath redeemed with his most precious blood The Bishop having ended this Protestation added And let all the People say Amen which they did so as the Church almost shook with the noise The Deputy required of the Bishop a Copy of both his Sermon and Protestation who answered he would most willingly justifie it before his Majesty and feared not to read it And now although moneys came in but slowly yet was the Naval Force completed for expedition about Midsummer whereof the Duke appeared Admiral as ambitious of some meritorious service to earn a better gust or to correct the universal odium against him June the 27th he set Sail from Pertsmouth with about six thousand Horse and Foot and July the eleventh he published a Manifesto declaring the impulsive causes of his Majesties present Arming But the Duke had very ill success in this expedition for the English were routed at the Isle of Rhe The English routed at the Isle of Rhe. the sum of their loss were about fifty Officers but the greatest loss was that gallant man Sir John Burroughs who was slain by a Musquet Bullet from the Citadel while he was viewing the English works of Common Soldiers few less than two thousand Prisoners of Note thirty five Colours taken forty four hung up as Anthems at Paris in the Church of Nostredame our Honour lost The Prisoners Lewis graciously dismist home as an affectionate offertory to his Sister the Queen of England which made up another Victory superadded to the former and a conquest over us as well in the exercise of civilities as in feat of Arms only the Lord Montjoy was ransomed for the which he offering to the French King a round sum No my Lord. it is said the King replied your Redemption shall be only two couple of Hounds from England Some interpreted this a slender value of that Lord to be exchanged for a couple of Dogs but it was only in the King a modest estimate of his courtesie The Rechellers being besieged by the French King The Rochelers
the Subjects grievances and the Kings supplies they make an order that both should proceed pari passu cheek by joul Upon full consideration of the Kings wants The Parliament grant liberally they presently and cheerfully agreed to give him five Subsidies whereof Secretary Coke was the first Evangelist and Porter of that good news to the King who received it with wondrous joy and asked the Secretary by how many Voices it was carried Sir John replyed but by one At which perceiving the Kings countenance to change Sir said he your Majesty hath the greater cause to rejoyce for the House was so unanimous therein as that they made but one voice whereupon the King wept and bad the Secretary tell them He would deny them nothing of their Liberties which any of his Predecessors had granted The stream of affairs running thus smoothly The Subjects Libetty under debate without the least wrinkle of discontent on either side the House of Commons first insisted upon the Personal Freedom of the People and resolved for Law That no Freeman ought to be imprisoned either by the King or Council without a legal Cause alledged This opinion of the House was reported to the Lords at a Conference by Sir Edward Coke Sir Dudley Diggs Mr. Selden and Mr. Littleton Sir Dudley Diggs citing Acts 25. vers 27. It seemeth an unreasonable thing to send a Prisoner and not withal to signifie the Crimes laid against him This business stuck very much in the Lords House The Lords nice in the business who were willing that the Nails should be pared not the hands tyed of the Prerogative several and great Debates there were about it The Attorney pleading eagerly though impertinently for the King and the ancient Records were so direct for the People and so strongly enforced as the Attorney had no more to say but only I refer my self to the Judgment of the Lords and when these Lords were to give Judgment concerning it the Ducal or Royal party for they were both one were so prevalent as they who leaned the other way durst not abide the Tryal by Vote but calling the Lord-Keeper down moulded the House into a Committee until the Lord Say made a motion That they who stood for the Liberties being effective about fifty might make their Protestation and that to be upon Record And that the other opposite party should also with Subscriptions of their Names enter their Reasons to remain also upon Record that so Posterity might not be to seek who they were who so ignobly betrayed the Freedom of our Nation and that this done they should proceed to a Vote At which the Court-party were so daunted as that they durst not mutter one syllable against it Personal Liberty being thus setled next they fall upon Liberty of Goods the unbilleting of Soldiers and nulling of Martial Law in times of Peace and finding Magna Charta and six other Statutes explanatory of it to be expresly on their side they Petitioned the King to grant them the benefit of them whereupon he declared Himself by the Lord-Keeper unto them in his Verbis That He did hold the Statutes of Magna Charta and the six other insisted upon for the Subjects Liberty to be all in force and assured them that he would maintain all his Subjects in the just freedom of their Persons and safety of Estates and that he would govern according to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm and that his People should find as much security in his Royal Word and Promise as in any Laws they could make so that hereafter they should have no cause to complain and therefore he desired no doubt nor distrust might possess any man but that they would proceed speedily and unanimously on with their business This Message begat a new Question Whether or no his Majesty should be trusted upon his Royal Word Some thought it needless because of his Coronation-Oath binding him to maintain the Laws of the Land That Oath was as strong as any Royal Word could be Others were of opinion That should it be put to Vote and carried in the Negative it would be infinitely dishonourable unto him in Foreign parts who would be ready to say The People of England would not trust their King upon his Royal Promise At length in the height of this Dispute stands up Sir Edward Coke and thus informed the House We sit now in Parliament and therefore must take his Majesties Word no otherwise than in a Parliamentary-way that is The King sitting on his Throne in his Royal Robes his Crown on his Head his Scepter in his Hand in full Parliament both Houses being present all these Circumstances observed and his Assent being entred upon a Record make his Royal Word the Word of a King in Parliament and not a word delivered in a Chamber or at second hand by the mouth of a Secretary or Lord-Keeper therefore his Motion was That the House should More Majorum according to the custom of their Predecessors draw a Petition De Droict of Right to His Majesty which being confirmed by both Houses and assented unto by the King would be as firm an Act as any This Judgment of so great a Father in the Law The Petition of Right presented by this Parliament at this time ruled all the House and accordingly a Petition was framed and at a Conference presented unto the Lords the substance whereof after the recital of several Statutes relating to the Priviledge of the Subject was reduced to four Heads The Petition being presented to his Majesty after two several Answers thereunto which did not please the Parliament he did the third time give them this Answer the Petition being read thereunto Le droict soit faict comme il est desire This I am sure is full yet no more than I granted you in my first Answer you see now how ready I have shewed my self to satisfie your Demands so that I have done my part wherefore if this Parliament have not an happy conclusion the sin is yours I am free The King having ended the Houses testified their joy with a mighty shout and presently the Bells rung and Bonefires were kindled all the City over Nor was the true cause so distinctly known for many apprehended at first that the King had delivered the Duke up to them to be sent to the Tower on which misprision some said the Scaffold on Tower-hill was instantly pulled down the People said his Grace should have a new one It is said that the House of Lords made Suit to the King upon this happy accord That he would be pleased to receive into Grace those Lords who were in former disfavour which he readily yielded unto And admitted the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury Bishop of Lincoln the Earls of Essex Warwick Bristol and the Lord Say to kiss his hand The Petition thus granted the Commissions of Loan and Excise were instantly out-lawed and at the entreaty of the House of Peers
cancell'd in the Kings presence Having thus secured the faults they removed the faulty and resolved upon a large Remonstrance to the King ripping up the Grievances themselves and the Authors of them This Remonstrance consisted of six Branches in sum these 1. The danger of Innovation and Alteration in Religion The Parliaments Remonstrance This occasioned by 1. The great esteem and favour many Professors of the Romish Religion receive at Court. 2. Their publick resort to Mass at Denmark-house contrary to his Majesties Answer to the Parliaments Petition at Oxford 3. The Letters for stay of Proceedings against them Lastly The daily growth of the Arminian-Faction favoured and protected by Neal Bishop of Winchester and Laud Bishop of Bath-and-Wells whilest the Orthodox party are silenced or discountenanced 2. The danger of Innovation and Alteration in Government occasioned by Billeting of Soldiers by the Commission of procuring One thousand German-Horse and Riders for the defence of the Kingdom by a standing-Commission granted to the Duke to be General at Land in times of Peace 3. Disasters of our Designs as the expedition to the Isle of Rhe and that lately of Rochel wherein the English have purchased their dishonour with the waste of a Million of Treasure 4. The want of Ammunition occasioned by the late selling away of 36 Last of Powder 5. The decay of Trade by the loss of Three hundred Ships taken by the Dunkirkers and Pirates within these three last years 6. The not Guarding the Narrow Seas whereby his Majesty hath almost lost the Regality Of all which Evils and Dangers the principal cause is the Duke of Buckingham his excessive power and abuse of that power and therefore they humbly submit it to his Majesties Wisdom whether it can be safe for Himself or his Kingdom that so great Power should be trusted in the hands of any one Subject whatsoever This Remonstrance being finished on Tuesday June the 17th they presented it as an Appendix with a Bill of Subsidies to the King in the Banqueting-house who having heard it out He told them That he little expected such a Remonstrance after he had so Graciously passed the Petition of Right As for their Grievances he would consider of them as they should deserve Some say that at his passing out the King gave the Duke his hand to kiss which others only suppose was no more than the Dukes low congy to his Majesties hand It is also reported That the King being informed that Mr. Denzil Hollis had an hand in this Remonstrance he replied in the words of Julius Caesar Et tu Brute I wonder at it for we two were fellow-Revellers in a Masquerade Three days before this Dr. Manwaring was questioned for some Seditious passages in two Sermons preached one before the King and the other at his own Parochial Church wherein he asserted viz. 1. That the Kings Royal Command in imposing without common consent in Parliament Taxes and Loans doth so far bind the Conscience of the Subjects of this Kingdom that they cannot refuse the payment of them without peril of Eternal damnation 2. That the Authority of Parliament is not necessary for the raising of Aids and Subsidies These things being too evident to be denied and too gross to admit of qualification his Sentence was 1. Imprisonment during the pleasure of the House 2. One thousand pound Fine to the King. 3. To make such submission and acknowledgment of his offence as shall be set down by a Committee in Writing both at the Bar of the Lords House and at the House of Commons 4 To be suspended for three years from the exercise of the Ministry 5. To be disabled from ever Preaching at Court hereafter 6. To be disabled for ever from having any Ecclesiastical Dignity or Secular Office. 7. That as his Book is worthy to be burnt so his Majesty may be moved to Grant a Proclamation for the calling of it in as also for the burning of it According to the third particular of which Sentence two days after he made his submission on his knees Whilest the Parliament was busie about this Doctor the King was as busie about the late Remonstrance to which he formed a formal Answer traversing and denying all their charge wherewith the Commons being somewhat irritated for it was a smart one fell downright upon another Remonstrance against Tonnage and Poundage But the King was unwilling to hear of any more Remonstrances of that nature and therefore resolved to frustrate it by Proroguing of the Parliament unto October the 20th And June the 26. 1628 being the last of this Session his Majesty calling both Houses together before his Royal Assent to the Bills delivered his mind unto them as you may read Page the 84th of the aforesaid Narrative The Parliament being thus Prorogued the Commons were exceedingly Male-content for they desired only a Recess and Adjournment whereby all matters then depending might be found in the same station and condition as at their next meeting wherein they at present left them In this Month Dr. Lamb a creature of the Dukes Dr. Lamb his Exemplary Death commended to him by Bishop Williams suffer'd for the testimony of a lewd conversation Having been at a Play-house at his return some boys began to affront him and call him the Dukes Devil whereupon he hired some to guard him home and taking in at a Cooks shop where he supt the people watcht his coming out but he was so strongly guarded as they durst not venture on him Then he went to the Windmill-Tavern in Lothoury and at length coming forth the tumult being much increased gave the onset and assaulted him so as he was forced to take refuge in the next house but the enraged multitude threatned to pull down the house unless Lamb were speedily delivered unto them The Master of the House was a Lawyer and fearing some sad consequence of this uproar discreetly sends for four Constables to guard him out but the furious multitude flew at him in the midst of his Auxiliaries struck him down and mauled him so as that they beat out one of his eyes and left him half dead upon the place In this plight he was carried into the Counter in the Poultrey no other house being willing to receive him where the next morning he changed this life either for a better or for a worse On August the 23d following The Duke of Buchingham Murdered the Duke of Buckingham by one John Felt●● was stabbed at Portsmouth who being at breakfa●● with Soubire and others of principal quality this Felton sometimes a Lieutenant to a Foot-Company in the Regiment of Sir John Ramsey who had but about a week before meditated the Act but had not yet contrived the means sneaks into the Chamber vigilantly to observe every opportunity serviceable for his purpose and finding the Duke ready to rise from the Table he withdraws into an Entry through which the Duke was to pass who coming by with Sir Thomas Fryer
of his Justice Mr. Hollis replyed I say of his Majesties Power my Lord. Sir John Elliot was next called in who was questioned for words he spake in the lower House of Parliament and for producing the late Remonstrance To this he answered That whatsoever was said or done by him in that place and at that time was performed by him as a publick Man and a Member of that House and that he was and ever will be ready to give an account of his Sayings and Doings in that place whenever he should be called unto it by that House where as he taketh it he is only to be questioned and in the mean time being now but a private man he would not now trouble himself to remember what he said or did in that place as a publick Man. Sir Miles Hobart was also questioned for locking the Parliament House Door and putting the Key in his Pocket to which he pleaded the Command of the House The other Gentlemen were questioned for reproving the Speaker and not permitting him to do that the King commanded him who all alledged in defence the Priviledg of the House After this they were committed some to the Tower and some to the Gatehouse and some to the Fleet And May the first the Attorney sent a Process out against them to appear in the Star-Chamber and to answer an information to be entred there against them but they refused as denying the Jurisdiction of that Court over offences done in Parliament which created the greatest and longest Controversie in Law that had been started in many years April the tenth Anno Domini 1630. dyed William Earl of Pembroke Lord High Steward of England of an Apoplexy He was the very Picture and vive Effigies of Nobility His Character His Person rather Majestick than Elegant his presence whether quiet or in motion full of stately gravity his mind generous and purely heroick often stout but never disloyal so vehement an opponent of the Spaniard as when that Match fell under consideration he would sometimes rowze even to the trepidation of King James yet kept in favour still for that King knew well enough that plain dealing was a Jewel in all men so in a Privy Councellor was an ornamental duty and the same true-heartedness commended him to King Charles with whom he kept a most admirable Correspondence and yet stood the firm confident of the Commonalty and not by a sneaking cunning but by an erect and generous prudence such as rendred him unsuspected of Ambition on the one side or of Faction on the other This universality of Affection made his loss most deplorable but men are lost when all turns to forgotten-dust That affection would not that he should be so nonpluss'd but kept his noble Fame emergent and alost and if this History shall bear it up I shall esteem it not more his felicity than my own April the twenty fifth of this year was Arraigned Convicted Anno 1631. Condemned and on May the fourteenth Executed upon Tower-Hill Mervin Lord Studley Earl of Castle-Haven for Rape and Sodomy In England fell two great Favourites of different parties Anno 1634. of the Commonalties one and of the Kings another Of the Commonalties Sir Edward Coke who died about the latter end of this Summer Sir Edward Coke departeth this life full of days he died most whereof he had spent in eminent place and honour His abilities in the Common Law whereof he passed for an Oracle raised him first to the dignity of Attorney-General to Queen Elizabeth Then of Lord Chief Justice of the Kings-Bench under King James His advancement he lost the same way he got it viz. by his Tongue so rare it is for a man very eloquent not to be over loquent long lived he in that retirement to which Court-Indignation had remitted him yet was not his recess inglorious for at improving a disgrace to the best advantage he was so excellent as King James said of him he was like a Cat throw her which way you will she will light upon her feet And finding a Cloud at Court he made sure of fair weather in the Country applying himself so devoutly to popular Interests as in succeeding Parliaments the Prerogative felt him as her ablest so her most active Opponent upon which account he was 1 Caroli made High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire on purpose to exclude him the ensuing Parliament there being an especial Nolumus and clause in his Commission prohibiting his Election notwithstanding which Elected he was in Norfolk and those words of Restraint upon the debate of the Question in the House of Commons Voted void On the Kings the Great Lord Treasurer Sir Richard Weston Sir Richard Weston Lord Treasurer of England dieth Earl of Portland this year and he almost expiring together he ending this life March the thirteenth a sad loss to the King and the sadder because he thought it irreparable The truth is he was a Person very able for the Office and the Exchequer was in the mending hand while he enjoyed that place for he had a most singular Artifice both in improving the incomes and in a frugal moderation of his Masters expence But the Kings sorrow was not so extreme for him but the Peoples joy was full as great for there was now grown so sad an antipathy between his Majesty and his Subjects that like those two Emperors Antonine and Geta they were always of contrary Senses and Minds rarely agreeing in any one particular The deportment whereby he so much disobliged the Commonalty was his promoting Monopolies and other advantages of Regality The Archbishop and he were usually at great odds this vacant place was at present entrusted to Commissioners until the King should otherwise dispose thereof September the 29th the Earl of Arundel brought up to London out of Shropshire one Robert Parr as the wonder of our times for long life he having attained to the age of near 160 and probably might have continued longer had not so tedious a journey and over-violent agitation of his aged Body accellerated his end so that it may be said he sacrificed some years to others curiosity In Michaelmas-Term was canvassed and debated the grand Controversie between the King and Subject about Ship-Money Anno 1635. The great Debate about Ship-money for the Ship-Writs having been issued out August the 11 to divers Counties many Inhabitants and among the rest Mr. Hambden of Buckingham-shire assessed by the Sheriff made default of payment whereupon the King equally hating to be either flattered into or frighted from the belief of its Legality wrote a Letter to the Judges demanding their Opinions upon the case stated To which the Judges delivered their Opinions as followeth May it please your most Excellent Majesty WE have according to your Majesties Command severally and every Man by himself and all of us together taken into our serious consideration the Case and Questions signed by your Majesty and inclosed in your
Letter And we are of opinion That when the good and safety of the Kingdom in general is concerned and the whole Kingdom in danger Your Majesty may by Writ under your Great Seal of England Command all the Subjects of this your Kingdom at their charge to provide and furnish such number of Ships with Men Victual Munition and for such time as your Majesty shall think fit for the defence and safeguard of the Kingdom from such peril and danger and that by Law your Majesty may compel the doing thereof in case of refusal or refractoriness And we are also of opinion That in such case your Majesty is the sole Judg. both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided John Bramston John Finch Humphrey Davenport John Denham Richard Hotton William Jones George Crook Thomas Trever George Vernon Robert Barkley Francis Crauly Richard Weston These Opinions being subscribed by all the Judges and inrolled in all the Courts in Westminster-Hall the King thought he had now warrant sufficient to proceed against all defaulters and especially against Mr. Hambden who being summoned by process appeared and required Oyer of the Ship Writs which being read he demurred in Law and demanded the Opinion of all the Judges upon the Legal sufficiency of those Writs This great Case coming to be argued in the Exchequer the Major part of the Judges delivered their Opinions in favour of the Writs and accordingly gave Judgment against Mr. Hambden yet did not the question altogether so repose but Mr. Hambden observing some Judges viz. Crook and Hatton of a contrary sense held up the Contest still though all in vain all his inquietude not gaining him the least acquittal until an higher Power interposed About the beginning of January this year Anno 1639. Sir Thomas Coventry dyeth dyed Sir Thomas Coventry Lord-Keeper of the Great Seal of England a Dignity he had Fifteen years enjoyed if it be not more proper to say That Dignity had enjoyed him so long this latter affording not one every way of more apt qualifications for the place His front and presence bespake a venerable regard not inferior to that of any of his Ancestors His train and suit of followers was disposed agreeably to shun both envy and contempt not like that of the Viscount St. Albans or the Bishop of Lincoln whom he succeeded ambitious and vain His port was State their 's Ostentation they were indeed the more knowng men but their Learning was extravagant to their Office of what concerned his Place he knew well enough and which is the main acted according to his knowledg for in the administration of Justice he was so erect and so incorrupt as captious malice stands mute in the blemish of his same a miracle the greater when we consider that he was also a Privy Councellor A Trust wherein he served his Master the King most faithfully and the more faithfully because of all those Councils which in those times did so much deceive his Majesty and I pray God there were fewer at this juncture of time than there is he was an earnest disswader and did much disaffect those Sticklers who rather laboured to make the Prerogative tall and great as knowing that such men loved the King better than Charles Stuart so that although he was a Courtier and had for his Master a passion most intense yet had he also always of passion some reserve for the publick welfare An Argument of a free noble and right principled mind for what both Court and Country have always held as inconsistent is in truth erroneous and no man can be truly Loyal who is not also a good Patriot nor any a good Patriot the Ballance indispensably ought to be kept even who is not truly Loyal To this worthy Gentleman succeeded Sir John Finch formerly Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. The Heer Somerdick An Embassador from the States of Holland Embassador from the States of Holland in the Month of January had Audience of the King He had with him Count William of Nassaw and the Rhine-Grave with a very splendid train his business was to give his Majesty satisfaction concerning the late Attack made upon the Spaniards by the Dutch Fleet in the Downs and the Embassy was sweetned by some overture of Marriage between the young Prince of Orange and the Kings Eldest Daughter On the Thirteenth of April A Parliament sits in England after near 12 years interval April 1640. A Parliament met and sate and the Deputy of Ireland being not long before Created Earl of Strafford and made Lord Lieutenant of that Kingdom was lead into the upper House by two Noblemen where he gave an account of his service in Ireland where he had obtained the grant of four Subsidies for the maintenance of an Army Mr. John Glanvil was chosen Speaker of the House of Commons and generally the choice of Members to that House was so good that great probabilitles were given of a happy Union betwixt the King and the Parliament Some few days after a Report was made to the Lords by the Lord Cottington who with Windebank and the Attorney General were sent by the King to the Lord Lowden to examine him concerning a Letter before mentioned that the Lord did acknowledge the Hand-Writing to be his and that it was framed before the pacification at Berwick and was never sent to the King but only prepared in a readiness should need require and that it was supprest upon that pacification nevertheless it was thought fit he should continue in the same state until clearer Evidence should be given either for or against him Soon after the King sent a message to the Lower House about Supplies representing unto them the intolerable indignities and injuries wherewith the Scots had treated him and withal declared unto them that if they would assist him sutable to the exigency of his sad occasion he would for ever quit his claim of Shipmoney and into the bargain give them full content in all their just demands But they replied as being somewhat deliberate in this affair of Money that they expected first security from his Majesty in these three particulars viz. 1. For the clearing the Subjects Property 2. For the Establishment of Religion 3. For the Priviledg of Parliament Many Conferences there was had between the Lords and Commons as to this old Contest which should precede The Lords after a strong division among themselves at length Voted for the King and the Commons for the Subject But it was not long before this unhappy difference was unhappily decided For Secretary Vane who was employed to declare the particulars of the Kings desires required twelve Subsidies whereas it was said his express order was for only six some there are who suspect this mistake to have been not involuntary but industrious in him as to his Majesties service but leaving that undetermined the House of Commons was raised by this Proposition The
Brittain should be this Person of Quality here intimated and described in this most wonder ful and Antient Prophecy a Prediction I must needs Confess most proper for such wonderful times as we now live in would you not all unanimously and with loud Acclamations throw up your Caps and Beavers into the Air and cry Vive le Roy or Currat Lex vivat Rex And if so for my own part I should yet hope to see if it shall please my Gracious God to lend me a little longer time of health and strength many Halcyon and most happy days in the Land and Nation of my Nativity before I go away hence and shall be seen no more And that an happy union and good correspondence between his present Majesty and his future Parliaments without the least suspition or jealousie one of another may yet come to pass in our days I do most humbly beseech thy Divine Majesty who art the Lord God Almighty to grant for thy great names-sake and for thy Vicegerents sake and for his Peoples sake who are truly Loyal and obedient Subjects in and through thy most dear and well beloved Son the Lord Jesus Christ in whom thou art well pleased and whom by thy free grace goodness and most stupendious mercy and compassion to thy poor creatures is the Lord and giver of everlasting Life to all those who shall most faithfully and most sincerely though but imperfectly obey him And now to him with thy eternal Majesty who art King Immortal Invisible and only wise God by the assistance of thy holy and for ever blessed Spirit of Grace I do most humbly desire to render give and ascribe all honour glory laud and praise might Majesty reverential fear and all humble adoration from this time forth and for evermore Amen And now in the close of all Whereas in my Title-Page I have there intimated how Magna Charta was most solemnly and most wonderfully even to the astonishment of the Spectators ratified pronounced and proclaimed and therefore must not now leave you in the dark as to that particular but refer you to the Packet of Advice from Rome Number 50. the which in my slender apprehension deserves to be written in Letters of Gold upon the Walls of both Houses of Parliament And for your present and I hope pleasant satisfaction I have here inserted and presented you with the same at large HAving presented the Reader with the most remarkable Transactions of Papal Tyranny in Foreign Parts down to the year 1254 't is time to look homewards and observe Ecclesiastic Occurrences in England our last Discourse of that kind terminating with the death of King John to whom succeeded his Son Henry the third of that name for though by reason of the Fewds between John and his Barons they had invited over Lewis the French King's Son and many had to him sworn Allegiance yet the Father being dead and his faults buried with him they did not think fit to yield up themselves to the French Man's Yoak who already began to exercise an insufferable Tyranny wherever he had Power And although the Pope had at first encourag'd the Barons in their Rebellion yet when once he had hector'd King John into a Resignation of his Crown he became his Patron and forbad Lewis from intermedling with the Kingdom as being then forsooth part of S. Peter's Patrimony and therefore excommunicated Lewis for the Invasion which engag'd most of the Clergy to oppose him And so Henry on the 28th of October 1216. was Crown'd being then in the 10th year of his Age and Lewis being routed at Lincoln was glad to come to a Treaty quit his Pretensions and most dishonourably retreat into France Yet 't is observable that the Clergy were then such fast Friends to their Head the Pope and so little regardful of the Descent in the Right Line that they would not accept Henry for their King without making him first do Homage to the Holy Church of Rome and Pope Innocent for his Kingdoms of England and Ireland and swearing to pay the 1000 Marks per Annum which his Father had promised to that See. Matth. Paris fol. 278. And besides to bring Grists to the Roman Mill the Pope's Legate at that time in England immediately on the Departure of Prince Lewis sent his Inquisitors all over the Realm and whomsoever they would discover to have sided with him Consensu etiam Levissimo Though in the least degree must atone the Crime with a large Sum insomuch as the Bishop of Lincoln before he could be restored to his Bishoprick was forc'd to pay 1000 Marks to the Pope's use and 1000 to the Legate for the little Rogue would have snips in the prey with the great One and many other Bishops and Religious Men were glad to empty their Pockets to him at the same rate Matth. Paris fol. 218. In the year 1220. the Pope was pleased to make Hugh formerly Bishop of Lincoln a Saint and since the manner of his Vn-Holiness's declaring the same may be Divertive to the common English Reader I shall give you the very words of his Letter Translated as I find it in Matth. Paris fol. 298. Honorius Servant of the Servants of God to all our well-beloved Sons the Faithful of Christ that shall inspect these Presents Greeting and Apostolick Benediction The worthiness of Divine Piety does make famous his Holy Ones and Elect placed in the Bliss of the Celestial Kingdom by the shining forth of their Miracles still upon Earth that the Devotion of the Faithful being thereby stirred up may with due Veneration implore their Aid and Suffrages since therefore we are fully satisfied that the Bounty of Heaven hath illustrated Hugh Bishop of Lincoln as well in his Life as after his Death with a multitude of Famous Miracles We have thought fit to Enroll him in the Catalogue of Saints and admonish and exhort you all in the Lord That you devoutly implore his Patronage and Intercession for you with Almighty God farther Commanding That the day of his Decease be henceforwards every year devoutly Celebrated as a Holyday Dated at Viterbium the 13th Calend of March in the fourth year of our Popedom But how much a Saint soever he was we meet with another Bishop as very a Devil for about this time a Quarrel happening between Richard Bishop of Durham and the Monks of the same Church they complain'd of him to the Pope who seem'd much concern'd at his many horrid Crimes and presently sent over a Letter in these Terms Honorius Bishop c. to the Bishops of Salisbury Ely c. Greeting and Aposlolick Benediction It is fit for us to be so delighted in the sweet Savour of a good opinion of our Brethren and Fellow-Labourers as not to connive at Vices in those that are Pestilent since it becomes not us for the Reverence of the Order to bear with Sinners whose Guilt renders them as worthy of as many Deaths as they transinit Examples of