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

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graciously granted Yet now we are ten thousand times more oppressed with them and if these quarterers offer violence or villanous usage to any man in his house or family or commit murder or felony they are protected against the Laws and Justice of the Land and Triable only by a Council of War at the Head-quarters where a man can neither obtain justice nor seek it with safety 59. Martial Law So that we live under the burthen of a perpetual Army of 30000. or 40000. men exempt from all but Martial Law which frequently oppresseth seldom righteth any man witness Oliver Cromwel's taking of Tompson being no Souldier from the House of Commons door with Souldiers imprisoning and condemning him at a Council of War where he sate Judg in his own cause there being a quarrel between them yet it was held Treason in the Earl of Strafford to condemn the Lord of Valentia so being a Member of his Army because it was in time of Peace as this was Many other examples we have of the like nature and of this Army enough to perswade us that these vindicative Saints will not govern by the known Laws of the Land for which they have made us spend our money and blood but by Martial Law and Committee Law grounded upon Arbitrary Ordinances of Parliament which themselves in the first part of exact Collections p. 727. confess are not laws without the Royal assent This Army hath been dayly recruited without any Authority far beyond the said number or pay established the supernumeraries living upon free-quarter and when complaints have been made thereof in the House the Army being quartered in several Brigades supernumeraries have been disbanded in one brigade their Arms taken by their Officers 60. Cheats put upon the State and shortly after they have been listed again in another Brigade and their Arms sold again to the State after a while to new Arm them And of this sort were those Arms which being found in a Magazin in Town by some Zealots and rumoured to belong to the City for the arming of Reformado's were upon examination found to belong to Oliver Cromwel so the business was buried in silence for though the Kings over sights must be tragically published to the world yet the haynous crimes of the godly must lye hid under the mask of Religion And though they have usually taken free-quarter in one place 61. Arrears secur'd although the State ows them nothing and taken Composition money for free-quarter in another place some of them in two or three places at once 3 s. a day some of them 5 s. for a Trooper and 1 s a day and 1 s. 6 d. for a foot souldier whereby no arrears are due to them but they owe money to the State yet they have compelled the Houses to settle upon them for pretended Arrears 1. The moity of the Excise that they may have the Souldiers help in leavying it although to flatter the peope the Army had formerly declared against the Excise 2. The moity of Goldsmiths-hall 3. Remainder of Bishops Lands 4. The Customes of some Garrisons 5. Forrest Lands This Army brags They are the Saviours nay Conquerours of the Kingdom Let them say when they saved it whether at the Fight at Nazeby or taking in of Oxford and we will pay them according to the then list And for all the recuits taken in since the reducing of Oxford it is fit they be disbanded without pay having been taken in without nay against Authority to drive on wicked designs and enthrall King Parliment City and Kingdom 24. Decemb. 1647. The two Houses by their Commissioners presented to the King at Carisbrook-Castle 4. 62 4. Dethroning Bils presented to the King at Carisbrook Castle Bills to be passed as Acts of Parliament and divers Propositions to be assented to They are all printed so is his Majestis Answers to them wherefore I shall need to say the less of them only a word or two to two of the Bills 1. The Act for raising setling 63. Acts for the Militia and maintaining Forces by Sea and Land within the Kingdoms of England and Ireland Wales c. though it seems to be but for 20. years devests the King his Heirs and Successors of the power of the Militia for ever without hope of recovery but by repealing the said Act which will never be in his nor in their power for First it saith That neither the King nor His Heirs or Successors nor any other shall exercise any power over the Militia by land or sea but such as shall Act by authority and approbation of the said Lords and Commons That is a Committee of State of twenty or thirty Grandees to whom the two Houses shall transfer this trust being over-awed by the Army for the ground-work of this Committee was laid by these words though the Committee be erected since And Secondly it prohibiteh the King His Heirs and Successors c. after the expiration of the said 20. years to exercise any of the said powers without the consent of the said Lords and Commons and in all cases wherein the said Lords and Commons shall declare the safety of the Kingdom to be concerned after the said 20. years expired and shall pass any Bills for raising Arming c. Forces by Land or Sea or concerning Leavying of Money c. if the Royal assent to such Bills shall not be given by such a time c. then such Bills so passed by the Lords and Commons shall have the force of Acts of Parliament without the Royal assent Lo here a foundation laid to make an Ordinance of both Houses equal to an Act of Parliament take away the King 's Negative Voice if this be granted in one case it will be taken in another and then these subverters of our Religion Laws and Liberties will turn their usurpations into a legal Tyranny 2. It gives an unlimited Power to the two Houses to raise what Forces and what numbers for Land and Sea and of what persons without exceptions they please and to imploy them as they shall judge fit 3. To raise what Money they please for maintaining them and in what sort they think fit out of any mans Estate This is a Tax far more Arbitrary and unlimited than Ship-money and the more terrible because it depends upon the will and pleasure of a multitude who to support their own tyranny and satisfie their own hunger after other mens goods may and do create a necessity and then make that necessity the law and rule of their actions and our sufferings besides they are but our fellow subjects that usurp this Dominion over us which aggravates the indignity If the 24 Conservators of the Peace in Hen. 3. time were thought a burden to the Commons and called totidem tyranni what will our Grandees prove when the Power of the sword is theirs by Act of Parliament Besides if the King give them his Sword they may take all
Humane shewing Him to be more then Conquerour of His Enemies in His rare Christian patience and charity the very reading of it aggravateth our loss of so Gracious and excellent a Prince that had learned the whole method of humane perfection in the schoole of adversity Herod and his Jews never persecuted Christ in his swadling-clouts with more industrious malice then the Antimonarchicall Independent Faction this Book in the Presses and shops that should bring it forth into the world knowing that as the remembrance of Heaven strikes a horror into us of Hell So the contemplation of his virtues will teach us to abhorre their vices March 8. 1648. 129. The form of Writs for Elections changed The Commons assented to a new Form of a Writ for election of Knights and Burgesses for the Parliament But three dayes before it was reported to the House from the Councell of State what number of Horse and Foot they thought fit to be kept up for the service of England and Ireland 130. A new establishment for the Army reported to the House from our new Masters the Councell of State and the Monthly charge which estimated come to 160000 l. per mensem You see we are likely to finde these our new Lords such gracious Masters to us that as the second part of Englands new Chains saith We shall have Taxes though we have neither Trade nor Bread In the Earle of Essex time when the Warre was at the highest the Monthly Tax came but to 54000 l. a Month yet had we then seven or eight Brigades besides his Army and Garrisons but that the Faction of Saints may carry on the work of a thorow Reformation in our purses as well as they have done in the Church and Common-wealth they first raised the Tax to 60000 l. a Month for England besides 20000 l. a Month pretended for Ireland but I believe little of it slips through their sanctified fingers to go thither And now to shew they can use double dealing against the Ungodly they would double the summ from 80000 l. to 160000 l. a Month this is to break our hearts with property and make them take what impressions of slavery they please to set upon them this Conventicle of State will engross all the Coyn and Treasure of the Land into their own hands and then subdue us therewith and make us like slavish Aegyptians sell our selves and our Lands for Bread or money to buy Bread when that inseparable companion of a long warre Famine approcheth which their barbarous and illegall Sequestrations unstocking mens Farms and laying them wast will inevitably bring upon us they have more hope to subdue and lessen the number of their Opposites by famine and want then by the Sword in order to which they have destroyed the Trade of the City and undone multitudes of Trades-men who being disabled to pay their Taxes the Army cause all their Arrears to be leavied upon the City by a new Tax upon the rest of the Inhabitants and the Outlandlords and when Cromwell was told this would undo the City He answered It was no matter the more were undone the more would clap Swords to their sides and come into the Army you see Souldiery is intended to be the chief Trade 131. An Act for Abolishing the Kingly Office c. March 17. 1648. The empty House of Commons in farther prosecution of their said Design and to please their Masters of the Army passed printed and published in the form and style of a Statute this Paper following intituled An Act for the Abolishing the Kingly Office in England WHereas Charles Stuart late King of England Ireland and the Territories and Dominions thereunto belonging hath by Authority derived from Parliament Since by the Law the Crown cures al defects how can the King's bloud be attainted been and is hereby declared to be justly condemned adjudged to die and put to death for many treasons murthers and other hainous offences committed by him by which Judgement he stood and is hereby declared to be attainted of High Treason whereby his Issue and Posterity and all others pretending Title under him are become uncapable of the said Crowns or of being King or Queen of the said Kingdom or Dominions or either or any of them Be it therefore Enacted and Ordained and it is Enacted We have sworn faith and Alleg●ance to K. Charls the First His lawfull Heirs and Successors and our Vow is recorded in Heaven from which no power on earth can absolve us See the Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy The Statute of Recognition 1. Iac. But the Commons are now Supreme as in imitation of the Pope to bring this Claus in practise Licet de jure non possumus tamen pro plenitudine potestatis nostra volumus c. Ordained and Declared by this present Parliament and by Authority thereof That all the People of England and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging of what degree or condition soever are discharged of all Fealty Homage and Allegiance which is or shall be pretended to be due unto any of the Issue and Posterity of the said late King or any claiming under him and that Charles Stuart eldest Sonne and James called Duke of Yorke second Sonne and all other the Issue and Posterity of him the said late King and all and every person and persons pretending Title from by or under him are and be disabled to hold or enjoy the said Crown of England or Ireland All our Laws cut off by the non obstante of an eighth part of the House of Commons sitting under a force After almost 1000 years experience it is now found to be dangerous The English were never one half-quarter so much enslaved since William the Conquerour subdued them as they have been since Oliver the Brewer subjugated them and other the Dominions thereunto belonging or any of them or to have the Name Title Stile or Dignity of King or Queen of England and Ireland Prince of Wales or any of them or to have and enjoy the power and Dominion of the said Kingdoms and Dominions or any of them or the Honours Manors Lands Tenements possessions and Hereditaments belonging or appertaining to the said Crown of England and Ireland and other the Dominions aforesaid or to any of them or to the Principality of Wales Dutchy of Lancaster or Cornwal or any or either of them Any Law Statute Ordinance Vsage or Custome to the contrary hereof in any wise notwithstanding And whereas it is and hath been found by experience that the Office of a King in this Nation and Ireland and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burthensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike interest of the people and that for the most part use hath been made of the Regal power and prerogative to oppress impoverish and enslave the Subject and that usually and naturally any one person in such power makes
Part. 2. chap. 5. pag. 735. Seconded by Cooks 4. Instit pag. 1 4 5 46 47 49. As he should admit those to be lawful Members so he should assent to ex post facto some particulars against his Knowledge and against the Oathes of Allegiance Supremacy Protestation Solemn League and Covenant taken in the presence of God with a sincere heart and real intention to perform the same and persevere therein all the dayes of his life without suffering himself directly or indirectly by whatsoever Combination Perswasion or Terrour to be withdrawn therefrom As for example he should thereby acknowledge contrary to his knowledge and the said Oathes and Covenant 1. That there may be and now is a lawful Parliament of England actually in being and legally continuing after the Kings Death consisting only of a few late Members of the Commons House without either King Lords or most of their fellow Members 2. That this Parliament sitting under a force and so unduly Constituted and packed by power of an Army combining with them hath just and lawful Authority 1. To violate the Priviledges Rights Freedomes Customes and alter the Constitution of our Parliaments themselves 2. To Imprison Seclude and Expel most of their fellow Members the far major part of the House for Voting and according to their Consciences in favour of Peace and settlement of the Commonwealth 3. To Repeal all Votes Ordinances and Acts of Parliament they please 4. To Erect new Arbitrary Courts of War and Justice 5. To Arrain Condemn and Execute the King himself with the Peers and Commons of this Realm by a new kinde of Martial Law contrary to Magna Charta The Petition of Right 3. Car. and the known Laws of the Land 6. To Dis-inherit the Kings Posterity of the Crown 7. To extirpate Monarchy and the whole House of Peers 8. To Change and Subvert the Ancient Government Seals Laws Writs Legal proceedings Courts and Coyn of the Kingdome 9. To Sell and Dispose of all the Lands Revenues Jewels Goods of the Crown with the Lands of Deans and Chapters for thir own advantage not the easing of the people from Taxes 10. To absolve themselves by a Papal kinde of power and all the Subjects of England and Ireland from all the Oaths and Engagements they have made to the Kings Majesty His Heirs and Successours yea from the very Oath of Allegiance notwithstanding this express Clause in it fit to be laid to heart by all conscientious Christians I do beleeve and in conscience am resolved That neither the Pope nor any person whatsoever hath power to absolve me of this Oath or any part thereof which I acknowledge by good and full Authority to be lawfully Ministred to me and do renounce all Pardons and Dispensations to the contrary 11. To dispence with our Protestation and Covenant so Zealously enjoyned by both Houses on all sorts of people 12. To dispose of the Forts Ships Forces Offices and places of Honour Power Trust or Profit to whom they please to their own party 13. To Displace and Remove whom they please from their Offices Trusts Pensions Callings and Franchises at their pleasures without any Legal cause or Trial. 14. To make what New Acts Laws and Reverse what Old ones they think meet to insnare and inthral our Consciences Estates Liberties and Lives 15. To create new monstrous Treasons never heard of before and to declare Real Treasons against the King Kingdome and Parliament to be no Treasons and Loyalty Allegiance due obedience to our known Laws and a conscientious observing our Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the Covenant to be no less than High Treason for which they may take away our Lives and confiscate our Estates to their new Exchequer Thereby at once repealing Magna Charta c. 29. 5 Edw. 3. c. 6. 25 Edw. 3. c. 4. 28 Edw. 3. c. 3. 37 Edw. 3. c. 18. 42 Edw. 3. c. 3. 25 Edw. 3 c. 2. 11 Rich. 2. c. 4. 1 Hen. 4. c. 10. 2 Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. 11. n. 60. 1 Edw. 6. c. 12. 1 M. c. 1. The Petition of Right 3 Car. So much commended this Parliament and laying all our Laws Liberties Estates and Lives waste after they have drawn so much Blood and Treasure from us in defence of them 16. To raise and keep up what forces by Land and Sea they please and impose what Taxes they please and renew increase and perpetuate them to support their more than Regal or Parliamentary power 17. To pack and shuffle themselves into a Councel of Lords This 17. is added by the Abridger States General without any provincial States forty Hogens Mogens with Supream Regal and Arbitrary power in absence of Parliaments which are Abolished by these Usurpations as well as Monarchy 4. The principal ends proposed in the pretended Act for imposing this 90000 l. a months Tax oblige all men not to pay it viz. The keeping up this Army under the Lord Fairfax 1. Because this Army by rebelling against their Masters the Parliament and waging War upon them and by conspiring with their own party of the sitting Commons have occasioned all the Mischiefs last mentioned to the ruine of King Parliament and Kingdome Religion Laws Liberty and Property and daily threaten an utter dissolution both in their Deeds and Words Both Officers and Souldiers Boasting That the whole Kingdome and all we have is theirs by Conquest That we are but their conquered Slaves and Vassals and they Lords of the Kingdome That our Lives are at their Mercy and Courtesie That when they have gotten all we have from us by Taxes and Free-quarter they will seize our Lands and turn Vs and our Families out of Doors That there is no Law in England but the Sword as Hugh Peters the Rebels Apostle saith The present power must be obeyed saith parasitical John Goodwin that is the power of the Sword still More hath been raised by Taxes these last eight years than in all the Kings Reigns since the Conquest and no account given 2. No Tax ought to be imposed but upon necessity for good of the people 25 Edw. 1. chap. 6. Cooks 2. Instit pag. 528. But the keeping up this Army is the Bane of the people 1. Because they are already exhausted with war Plunder Taxes Free-quarter c. 2. Because the Souldiers have decayed Trade and brought a Dearth upon the Land 3. This Tax of 90000 l. a month destroyed Trade by Forestalling and Engrossing most of the Money now left in the Kingdome 4. There is no Enemy in the Kingdome visible nor no fear of any if we will beleeve our Grandees 5. When the King had two Armies in the Field and many Garrisons this whole Army consisted but of 22000. Men and had an Established pay but of 45000 l. a month See Ordinances 15. Feb. 1644. and 6. April 1646. Exact Collect. pag. 599 876. But when the Army by confederacy with their party in the House took the boldness to increase their number
what Spirit Haslerigge is known That some Northern Counties having petitioned the Commons for relief against the miserable famine raging there Haslerigge opposed their request saying The want of food would best defend those Counties from Scottish Invasions What man that had any sense of Christianity Courage Honesty or Iustice would have been the Authour of so barbarous and unjust a motion That six Gentlemen no way conscious nor privie to the fact should be offered up a sacrifice to revenge and malice nay to guilty fears and base cowardic● to keep off the like attempts from Haslerigge and his Party I wish this Gentleman would reade the Alcharon or new Independent Bible of the new Translation and from thence gather precepts of more Humanity Justice Honesty and Courage since he hath Read the Old and New Testament of Moses and Christ to so little purpose Yet the House 18. of May passed a Declaration That if more Acts of the like nature happened hereafter it should be retaliated upon such Gentlemen of the Kings Party as had not yet Compounded But this is but a device to fright them to Compound unlesse it be a forerunner to a Massacre heretofore taken into consideration at a Councell of Warre See Sect. 117. 161. An act declaring more new Treasons About this time came forth that prodigious Act declaring four new Treasons with many complicated Treasons in their bellies the like never heard of before in our Law nor in any Kingdom or Republike of Christendom Because I have formerly spoken of it the Act it self printed publisht and dreadfully notorious throughout the whole Kingdom I will refer you to the printed Copie onely one clause formerly debated was omitted in the Act viz. That to kill the Generall Lieuten Gen. any Members of this present Parl. or Counsel of State to be declared Treason this would have discovered their guilty cowardize so much they were ashamed of it besides it was thought fit to make the People take a new Oath of Allegiance to the new State First I will only give you some few Observations thereupon This Act declares to be Treason unto death and confiscation of Lands all Deeds Plots and Words 1. Against this present fagge end of a Parliament and against their never before heard-of Supream Authority and Government for when was this Kingdome ever governed by a Parliament or by any power constituted by them 2. All endeavours to subvert the Keepers of the Liberty of England and Councell of State constituted and to be from time to time constituted by Authority of Parliament who are to be under the said Representatives in Parliament if they please and not otherwise for the Sword and the Purse trusted in the power of the Councell of State yet the Keepers of the Liberties of England and the Councell of State of England to be hereafter constituted by Parliament are Individua vaga ayrie notions not yet named nor known and when they are known we owe them no Allegiance without which no Treason by the known Lawes of the Land which is onely due to the King His lawfull Heires and Successours thereto sworn nor any the particular Powers and Authorities granted to this Parliament by the said Keepers of the Liberties of England and Councell of State yet any where authentically published and made known to us by any one avowed Act unlesse we shall account their Licensed New Books to be such and therefore they may usurp what powers they please So that these men who involved us in a miserable Warre against the late Murdered KING pretending He would enslave us and they would set us free have brought us so far below the condition of the basest Slaves that they abuse us like brute Beasts and having deprived us of our Religion Lawes and Liberties and drawn from us our money and bloud they now deny us the use of reason and common sence belonging to us as Men and Govern us by Arbitrary irrationall Votes with which they bait Traps to catch us Woe be to that people whose Rulers set snares to catch them and are amari venatores contra Dominum Men-hunters against God nay to move any Person to stir up the People against their Authority is hereby declared Treason mark the ambiguity of these words like the Devils Oracles which he that hath Power and the Sword in his hands will interpret as he please If the Keeper of the Liberties of England or Councell of State shall extend too farre or abuse their Authority never so much contrary to the Lawes of the Land Reason Justice or the Lawes of God as hath been lately done in this Case of Lylburne Walwyn c. no Lawyer no Friend shall dare to performe that Christian duty of giving councell or help to the oppressed here Fathers and Children Husbands and Wives Brothers and all relations must forsake nay betray one another lest these Tyrants interpret these duties to be A moving of them to stirre up the People against their Authority 3. All endeavours to withdraw any Souldier or Officer from their obedience to their Superior Officer or from the present Government as aforesaid By which words it is Treason First if any mans Child or Servant be inticed into this Army and the Father or Master endeavour to withdraw him from so plundering and roguing a kinde of life back to his profession Secondly If any Commander or Officer shall command his Souldiers to violate wrong or rob any man for the party so aymed at or some wel-meaning Friend to set before the said Souldiers the sinne and shame of such actions and disswade them from obeying such unlawfull commands 4. If any man shall presume to counterfeit their counterfeit Great Seale It is declared Treason I wonder it is not Treason to counterfeit their counterfeit coyne Behold here new minted Treasons current in no time and place but this afflicted Age and Nation Edw. 3. anno 25. regni ch 2. passed an excellent Act to secure the People by reducing Treasons to a certainty as our New Legislative Tyrants labour to ensnare the People by making Treasons uncertaine and arbitrary Sic volo sic ju beo it shall be Treason be cause they will call and Vote it so what they please to call Treason shall be Treason though our knowne Lawes call it otherwise we have long held our Estates and Liberties and must now hold our Lives at the will of those Grand Seigniours one Vote of 40. or 50. factious Commons Servants and Members of the Army vacates all our Lawes Liberties Properties and destroys our Lives Behold here a short veiw of that Act which hath no Additions by any Act subsequent See stat 1. Mariae c. 10. Whereas diverse opinions have been before this time in what cases Treason shall be said and in what not The King at the request of the Lords and Commons Declares See 1. H. 4. c. 10. 11. H. 7. c. 1. 1. That to compasse or imagine the Death of the KING how
Brook Comission 19. 21. It appears by the Writs of Summons to the Lords Crompt Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 1. Cooks 4. Instit p. 9. 10. and of Elections Quere How a Parliament Summoned by the Writ of K. Charles I. and called Parliamentum Nostrum ad tractandum nobiscum super arduis negotiis regni nostri can be continued one and the same Parl. after the Kings death that called it and the Monarchy changed into a Commonwealth formally it cannot be the same the Head thereof being gone The Lords House and Monarchy being abolished and the State not the same materially it cannot be the same so many of the ancient Members being thrown out and new ones unduly elected brought in But there are some pragmatical Taylors in the House who can make a garment fit for all states of the Moon and a Parl. fit for all changes of the State and leavying their Wages That the Parliament was only Parliamentum nostrum the Parliament of the Kings that is Dead not of his Heirs and Successors They are all Summoned to come to his Parliament to advise with him nobiscum not with his Heirs and Successors of great and weighty Affairs concerning Nos Regnum nostrum Him and his Kingdome 5 Edw. 3. 6. part 2. Dors Claus Regist fol. 192 200. So the King being dead and his Writ and Authority by which they were Summoned and the end for which they were Called Ad Tractandum ibidem nobiscum super arduis negotiis nos statum Regni nostri tangentibus being thereby absolutely determined without any hope of revival The Parliament is determined thereby especially as those who have Dis-inherited his Heirs and Successors and Voted down Monarchy it self and the Remnant now sitting are no longer Members of Parliament as all Judges Justices of the Peace Sheriffs made onely by the Kings Writ or Commission and not by Patent Cease and become void by the Kings death for this very reason because they are constituted Justitiarios Vicecomites nostros ad pacem nostram c. custodiendum The King being dead his Writs and Commissions expire with Him 4 Ed. 4. 43. 44. Brook Office and Officer 25. Commission 19. 21. Dyer 195. Cook 7. Rep. 30 31. 1 Ed. 6. c. 7. Daltons Justice of Peace chap. 3. pag. 13. Lambert pag. 71. Object If any object the Act of continuance of the Parliament 17 Car. That this present Parliament shall not be dissolved unless it be by Act of Parliament for that purpose Answ It is Answered That it is a Maxim in Law That every Statute ought to be expounded according to the intent of those that made it and the mischiefes it intended onely to prevent 4 Edw. 4. 12. 12 Edw. 4. 18. 1 Hen. 7. 12 13. Plowdens Comment fol. 369. Cooks 4. Institutes pag. 329 330. Now the intent of the Makers of this Act was not to prevent the Parliaments dissolution by the Kings Death no wayes intimated in any clause thereof although it be a clear dissolution of it to all intents not provided for by this Act but by any Writ or Proclamation of the Kings by his Regal Power without the consent of both Houses which I shall prove by the Arguments following 1. From the principal occasion of making the said Act. The Commons in their Remonstrance 15. Decemb. 1642. complain That the King had dissolved all former Parliaments against approbation of both Houses of Parliament Wherefore to prevent the Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment of this present Parl. by the Kings Regal Power after the Scots Army should be disbanded and before the things mentioned in the Preamble could be effected was the ground and occasion of this Law and not any fear of Dissolving the Parliament by the Kings death Natural or Violent which is confessed by the Commons in the said Remonstrance Exact Collect. pag. 5 6. 14 17. compared together where they Affirm The abrupt dissolution of this Parliament is prevented by another Bill c. In the Bill for continuance of this Parliament there seemes to be some restraint of the Royal power in Dissolving of Parliaments not to take it out of the Crown but to suspend the execution of it for this time and occasion onely which was so necessary for the Kings own Security and the Publick Peace that without it we could not have undertaken any of those great Charges but must have left both Armies to disorder and confusion c. 2. The very Title of this Act an Act to prevent inconveniences which may happen by the untimely Adjourning Proroguing or Dissolution of this present Parliament intimates as much compared with the body of it which provides as well against the Adjourning or Proroguing without an Act as against a Dissolution Now the Parliament cannot be said to be Adjourned or Prorogued untimely by the Kings Death which never Adjourned or Prorogued any Parliament but onely by his Proclamation Writ or Royal Command to the Houses or their Speaker executed during his life-time See Parl. Rolls 6 Edw. 3. 2. Rot. Parl. 3. 6. 5 Ric. 2. n. 64 65. 11 Ric. 2. nu 14 16 20. 8 Hen. 4. nu 2 7. 27 Hen. 6. nu 12. 28 Hen. 6. nu 8 9 11. 29 Hen. 6. nu 10 11. 31 Hen. 6. nu 22 30 49. and Cooks 4. Instit p. 25. Dyer fol. 203. 3. The Prologue of the Act implies as much whereas great summs of Money must of necessity be speedily advanced for relief of His Majesties Army not his Heir or Successor and for supplying other His Majesties not his Heires nor Successors occasions which cannot be so timely effected as is requisite without credit for raising the said Monies which credit cannot be attained until such Obstacles be first removed as are occasioned by Fears and Jealousies That this Parliament may be Adjourned Prorogued or Dissolved before Justice shall be duly executed upon Delinquents then in being as Strafford Canterbury not since made Publique Grievances then complained of as Star-chamber High Commission Ship-money Knighthood-money Tonnage and Poundage c. redressed Peace concluded between the two Nations sufficient provisions made for repayment of the said monies not others since so to be raised All which expressions related onely to His late Majesty as to His Acts of Royal Power not to His Heires and Successors after His Natural much less Violent death which was not then thought on but publickly Detested and Protested against no Man being so hardy as to mention it for fear of the Law not then subdued by the Sword And the several Principal Scopes of this Act are fully satisfied long before the late Kings death 4. It is clear by the Body of this Act And be it declared c. That this present Parliament c. shall not be dissolved unless it be by Act of Parliament to be passed for that purpose nor shall at any time or times during this present Parliament be Adjourned or Prorogued unless it be by Act of Parliament to be passed for
that purpose and that the House of Peers shall not at any time or times during this present Parliament be Adjourned unless it be by themselves or by their own Order And in like manner That the House of Commons shall not at any time or times be Adjourned c. as aforesaid From whence it is undeniable 1. That this Act was onely to prevent untimely Dissolving Proroguing and Adjourning of that present Parliament then assembled and no other by Acts of Royal Power 2. That the King was the Principal Estate and Member yea our Soveraign Lord the sole Declarer and Enacter of this Law by Assent of the Lords and Commons 3. That neither this Act nor any other for Dissolving Proroguing or Adjourning this Parl. could be made without the Kings Royal Assent which the Lords and Commons in their Remonstrance 26. May 1642. often acknowledge together with His Negative Voice to Bills exact Collect. p. 69 70. 736. 709. 722. 4. That it was not the Kings intent in passing this Act to shut Himself out of Parliament or create Members of Parliament without a King as He professeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● 5. Nor the Lords and Commons intent to Dis-member Him from His Parliament and make themselves a Parliament without Him as their said Remonstrance testifies and the words of the Act import much less was it their intent to pack a Parliament of 40 or 50 Commons onely selected by Colonel Pride to Vote according to the Dictates of a Councel of War after they had destroyed the King and House of Peers Against which transcendent usurpation this very Act provides That the House of Peers shall not be so much as Adjourned or Prorogued but by themselves or their own Order 5. Neither did King Lords and Commons in passing this Act intend That by Murdering the King Abolishing the House of Lords and expelling by power of the Sword eight parts of ten of the Commons the remaining Faction should con titute themselves their Heires and Successours a perpetual Parliament It is against the nature and essence of a Parl. to be Perpetual and against the Liberty of the People which would Crosse and Repeal the Act for a Triennial Parliament made on the same day in Law Brook Parliament 80. Relation 85. Dyer 85. 6. The last Clause of this Act concludes as much And that all and every thing or things whatsoever done or to be done to wit by the King or his Authority for the Adjournment Proroguing or Dissolving of this Parliament contrary to this present Act shall be utterly void and of none effect Now Death of the King and Dissolution of this Parliament thereby cannot properly be stiled a thing done or to be done by the King if by those words things done or to be done for the dissolving c. they shall say they related to the Kings Natural Death Natural Death is the Act of God which these Saints cannot make void if they related to His violent Death it could not then be said a thing done or to be done for the unlawfulness and injustice of it This Act passed long before any War or Bloodshed The onely pretence they have since found out for the Kings Murder 2. If this Parliament were not Dissolved by the Kings Death Yet the House of Peeres formerly Voted down by the Commons gave no consent to the passing this Act Entituled An Act of the House of Commons who without the concurring Assent of the Lords and the Kings Royal Assent have no power to passe any Act Make or Declare any Law or impose any Tax as appeares by the fore-recited Acts The Petition of Right The Act for the Triennial Parliament and this very Act against Dissolving Proroguing c. with all our Printed Statutes Parliament Rolls and Law-Books The Commons being so far from claiming the sole Legislative power heretofore as that they were not Summoned to our Ancient Parliaments which consisted onely of King Lords Temporal and Spiritual until 47 Hen. 3. nor had they so much as a House of Commons or Speaker until the Reign of Edw. 3. nor never tendred any Acts or Bills to the King but Petitions onely of Grievances until long after Rich. 2. time See the Printed Prologues to the Stat. 1 4 5 9 10 20 23 36 37. 50 Edw. 3. 1 Ric. 2. 1 2 4 5 7 9 11. 13 H●n 4. 1 2 3 4 8. 9 Hen. 5. 1 2 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 14 15 28 29. 39 Hen. 6. 1 4 7 8 12 17. 22 Edw. 4. 1 Rich. 3. 3. But suppose the Commons alone had p wer to impose Taxes yet it must be in a full and free House whereas when this Act for 90000 l. a Moneth passed the House was neither Full nor Free The Major part of the House who by Law are the House to wit 8. parts of 10. at tht least being Secured or Secluded by Col. Pride and his Souldiers by Confederacy with those 40 or 50 then sitting when this Act passed and passing the Wills of the Councel of Officers to the subversion of Parliaments and the great wrong of those Counties and Burroughs for whom they served Object If it be objected that by usage of Parliament 40 Members make a House of Commons Answ 1. I Answer not to all intents and purposes Not to grant Subsidies nor pass Lawes or matters of greatest moment Modus tenendi Parl. Cooks 4. Instit pag. 1 2 26 35 36. Cromptons Juris of Courts fol. 1. 39 Edw. 3. 7. Brook Parl. 27. 1 Jac. 1. 2. 40 Members make not a House when the rest are Excluded by force without doors and fraud of their Fellow-members within doors on purpose that being the Major number they may not over-vote them The Commons not having power to expel any of their Members without consent of King and Lords in whom onely the Judicial Power resides Paribus in Pares non est Potestas Claus Dors 7 Rich. 2. M. 27. Seldens Title of Honour pag. 737 Baron Camoyes case discharged by the Kings Writ and Judgment from serving amongst the Commons because a Peer of the Realm The practice for Members to Expel and Sequester their Fellow-members being a late dangerous innovation to pack a Factious Conventicle instead of a Parliament If the King should send forth no more Writs than would Summon forty or fifty Commons it were no House Added by the Abridger So Mr. Pryn concludes That if he should voluntarily submit to pay this Tax by vertue of the said pretended Act of Parliament Dated 7. of April 1649. made by those now sitting some of whose Elections have been Voted void others of them Elected by new Illegal Writs under a new kinde of Seal since the Kings Beheading as the Earl of Pembroke and Lord Edward Howard uncapable of being Knights or Burgesses by the Common Law because Peers of the Realm as was adjudged in the Lord Cannoyes case Claus Dors 7 Rich. 2. M. 32. and asserted by Mr. Seldens Titles of Honour
or any nine of these they entrust the Administration of this Utopian Common-wealth and these they would have us believe without telling us so are the Keepers or Gaolers of the Liberties of England These things being but Introductions to the Usurpation of these Kinglings and having been already shewed to the world by many pens I content my self to give a cursory view of them and haste to my intended task to shew that this Usurped power is kept and administred by as wicked and violent policies as it was gotten by The first endeavour of all Tyrannical Usurpers is To lessen the number of their Enemies either by flattering and deceiving them or by violently extirpating and rooting them out And such have been the attempts of our new Cromwellian Statists ever since without any calling from God or the people they took upon them the Supreme Authority of the Nation subverted our well-mixed Monarchy and created themselves a Free-State 1. They endeavoured to sweeten and allure to act with them 1. A Collusive Accommodation as many of the Secured and Secluded Members Ministers and other Presbyterians as they could to the end that ex post facto being guilty of their sins they might be engaged in one common defence and go halfs with them in their ignominy and punishment though not in their power profit and preferments in which the Godly will admit no Rivals but like their Patron the Devil cry all 's mine But this Design failed for the most part 2. Their second Endeavour was how to diminish the number of their Opposites 2. An intended Massacre Royalists and Presbyterians by a Massacre for which purpose many Dark Lanthorns and Poniards were provided last Winter 1649. But fame prevented this plot which coming to be the common rumour of the Town put them in mind of the danger infamy and hatred that would overwhelm them So this was laid aside At last they invented two other Engins no less bloody then and as effectual as a Massacre 3. The Engagement is the first of these two Gins which all persons are enjoyned to subscribe by their Act 2 Jan. 1649. 3. The Engagement To be true to the Common-wealth of England as it is now established without a King or House of Peeres And this is obtruded under no lesse penalty than To be totally deprived of all Benefit of Law whatsoever Now the Lawes of the Land being the only Conservators of our Lives Liberties and Estates without which Lawes all men have a like property to all things and the strongest have right to all is possest by the weaker since the Law onely distinguisheth Meum and Tuum what is this but to expose the Liberties of the Non-Engagers to false Imprisonments our Estates to rapine spoil and injustice and our Lives and Persons to wounds and murders at the will and pleasure of such as will engage with our Usurpers but especially at the pleasure of their own Souldiers to whom I conceive this Outlawry was intended as an Alarm or Invitation to plunder and massacre the Non-Engagers and to pay themselves their Arreares of which these Parliamennt men have cousened them out of their Estates and though the Souldiers were not so wicked as their Masters yet we daily see many good Families in England despoiled of their Estates for want of protection of the Lawes brought to miserable beggery rather than they will wrong their consciences by subscribing this damnable Engagement contrary to the Protestation and Covenant imposed by this Parliament contrary to the known Law of this Land which this Parliament hath declared to observe and keep in all things concerning the lives liberties and properties of the people with all things incident thereto contrary to this Parliaments reiterated Votes that they would not change the Ancient Government by a King Lords and Commons And contrary to the Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy whereby and by the Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. our Allegiance is tied onely to the King his Heirs and lawful Suceessors from which no power on earth can absolve us and so much we attest in the Oath of Supremacy Politicus Interpreter to our new State-puppet play Numb 19. from Sept. 19. to Sept. 26. out of the dictates of his Masters tells us that in Answer to the Kings Act of oblivion granted the Parliament intends to pass an Act of General pardon for which they expect in future a General obedience and submission to the Government you see though they will not be the Kings subjects they will be his Apes and in the beginning of the said Pamphlet Politicus saith That Protection implies obedience otherwise they may be handled as publick Enemies and Out-laws and ought to be destroyed as Traitors Here you have the end to which this general pardon is intended it is but a shooing-horn to draw on the utmost penalty upon Non-engagers appointed by the said pretended Act 2. Jan. 1649. to weed them out of this good Land that the Saints only may enjoy the earth and the fulness thereof to which purpose all their new coyned Acts and Laws are directed The Scripture points forth these kind of men when it saith The Mercies of the wicked are cruel The sum of all is If we will not acknowledge Allegiance to these Mushromes we shall be Traitors without Allegiance a Treason never yet heard of in any Law If we will acknowledge Allegiance we put our selves in a capacity to be Traitors when they shall please to make us such But let them know That we are all Englishmen Free-born alike under the protection of an ancient legal Monarchy to which we owe Allegeance and how we come to forfeit that legal Protection our setled Laws and Government and be subjected to a New unknown protection obtruded upon us by a company of upstarts Mushromes of Majesty so mean in birth and breeding for the most part that the place of a Constable equalls the highest of their education imposing what Laws and conditions upon us they please I would be glad to hear without being hindred by Guns Drums High Courts of Justice and other Instruments of Violence and Murther But the greatest Mystery in this cheat is That our Self-created Supremists having voted the original power to be in the people and but a derivative Authority to be in themselves as the Representative of the people should notwithstanding so yoak their Sovereign Lord the people and make them pay Allegiance to their own Delegates the eighth part of a House of Commons under the penalty unless they subscribe as the far major part have not of out-lawing and depriving all the people of this Land of all benefit of the Laws they were born to and consequently of annihilating and making them no longer a Nation or people As if they were meer Salvages newly conquered collected and formed into a politick body or Commonwealth and endowed with Laws newly invented by the Novice Statists But the unlawfulness of the said Engagement with the
to rest satisfied therewith You see here a Whip and a Bell provided to keep the whole Kingdom in awe the declared Supreme power of their Soveraign Lord the People must resign their known Lawes to their Trustees their Representatives in Parliament and take New Lawes from their Arbitrary votes or woe to be to their Necks and Shoulders I must interrupt you what you do is not agreeable to the Proceedings of any Court of Justice You are about to enter into Argument and dispute concerning the Authority of this Court before whom you appear as a Prisoner you may not dispute the Authority of this Court nor will any Court give way to it you are to submit to it It is not safe to confute a lie told with Authority Yet if a man be Endited of Treason or Felony in the Court of Common Pleas a man may Demur to and dispute the Jurisdiction of that Court because it is not in Criminall Causes Competens Forum nor the Judges Competent Judges every man and every cause must be tried Suo Foro non Alieno So if a Peer be arraigned in the Kings Bench. And for this upstart unpresidented High Court it is no Court of Judicature at all as being erected without lawfull Authority Consisting of Incompetent Judges no Records belonging to it and tending to disinherit and disfranchise all the People of England and to murder them You may not dispute the Jurisdiction of the Supreme and Highest Authority of England from which there is no Appeal The votes of the Commons of England assembled in Parliament is the Reason of the Kingdom Oh Brutish irrationall Kigdom Where 40. or 50. Anabaptisticall Members the Dregs and lees of the House of Commons after all the best and sincerest 7. Parts of 8. had been racked and purged out at the Bunghole by Cromwell the Bruer and Pride his Dray-man shall be called the Reason and Law of the Land This confirmes the truth of what King Charles I. Objected to the Parliament whereof I have formerly spoken That they disposed of the Subjects Lives and Fortunes by their own Votes against the known Lawes of the Land But that there should be no Appeal to their declared Soveraign Lord the People from their subordinate Trustees in Parliament is wonderfull Considering that in all Governments the last Appeal is ever the Highest and most Absolute power But it may be they will be the Peoples Trustees in spight of their Teeth and by the power of the Sword and so free themselves from rendring any account of their Stewardship You may not demu●re to the Jurisdiction of the Court. If you do they let you know that they over-rule your Demurrer and affirm their own Jurisdiction Reason is not to be heard against the Highest Jurisdiction the Commons of Engl. make a direct and positive Answer either by denying or confessing and put in immediately an issuable Plea Guilty or Not Guilty of the Charge or we will record your Default and Contumacy and by an implicite confession take you Guilty proconfesso and immediately give Judgement against you This as I told you before is it that blanches the Deer into the Toile But God deliver us from that Jurisdiction that is too high to hear Reason and that overrules Demurrers before they be heard I have told you as much of the proceedings of this Court as the Novelty Obscurity Uncertainty and confusion thereof will give me leave Let me now by way of overplus give you the great dangers and Slavery that will befall all sorts of People if they tamely and cowardly suffer themselves to be deprived of their antient Legall Trialls by Enditement and Juries of the Neighbourhood then which the whole world cannot boast of a more equall way and suffer their Lives Liberties Estates and Honours to be subject to an Arbitrary Extrajudiciall conventicle of Bloud Cromwells New Slaughterhouse which hath neither Law Justice Conscience Reason Presisident or Authority Divine or Humane but onely the pretended Parliaments irrationall Votes and the Power of the Sword to maintain it which will prove a Cittadell over their Liberties a Snare to their Estates a Deadfall to their Lives and Scandall to their honors and Families if not timely opposed 1. By the Law The Enditement must specifie what the Treason is and against what Person committed As against our Soveraign Lord the King his Crown and Dignity But in the said Articles of Impeachment it is alleaged that the Treason is committed against the present Government or against the Keepers of the Libe●ties of England but in this dead-water our turning Tide between the old Regall and this New unknown Government no man knows how to do look or speak for fear of contradicting the guilt of an Interpretative Treason upon the said two Statutes for New Treasons and before this boundless lawless New Court And to say that Treason is committed against a Government in abstracto is Non-sence it must be said that Treason is committed against the Governors in Concreto naming them For there being no Treason without Allegeance And Allegeance being a personall Obligation must be due from a certain known Person to a certain known Person or Persons And therefore the Keepers of the Liberties of England not being yet made particularly known to us who they are or where to be found or what their power Duty or Office is and being not tied by any set Oath to deal well and truly with the People as Kings are by their Coronation Oath for if the stipulation be not mutuall the People are Slaves not Subjects Since the Duties of Allegeance and Protection Obedience and Command being reciprocall as they must needs be the Parliament having declared the Supreme power to be in the People they must not govern them Mero Imperio by Lawless votes like Turkish Tartarian and Russian Slaves I cannot owe nor perform Allegiance to those Individua vaga the Keepers or Gaolers of our Liberties nor to an Utopian Commonwealth And without Allegeance no Treason for in all Enditements of High Treason it must be alleaged That the Accused did Proditoriè perpetrate such and such Crimes Contra debitam Allegantiam suam And the word Proditoriè signifies the betraying of a Trust According to the Proverb In Trust is Treason Now where there is no profession of Allegeance there is no Acceptance of a Trust no man can trust me against my will I was born under a Regall Government have read the Stat. Recognition 1. Jac. Have taken as well as others the Legall Oathes of Allegeance Obedience and Supremacy to the King his Heires and Lawfull Successors imposed upon me by lawfull Authority and from which no power on Earth can absolve me and so much I attest in the Oath of Supremacy And how I should now come after the New Moduling of the Parliament and Kingdom by Souldiers to owe Allegeance to Cromwell the Bruer Scot the Bruers Clerk Bradshaw the Murderous Petty fogger Sir Henry Mildmay the Court Pander and