Selected quad for the lemma: power_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
power_n king_n parliament_n writ_n 2,706 5 9.7417 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A33904 The desertion discuss'd in a letter to a country gentleman Collier, Jeremy, 1650-1726. 1689 (1689) Wing C5249; ESTC R18889 10,218 8

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE DESERTION DISCUSS'D In a Letter to a Country Gentleman SIR I Don't wonder to find a Person of your Sense and Integrity so much surprised at the Report of the Throne 's being declared Vacant by the lower House of the Convention For how say you can the Seat of the Government b● Empty while the King who all grant had an unquestionable Title is still Living and his Absence forced and involuntary I thought our Laws as well as our Religion had been against the Deposing Doctrine therefore I desire you would Expound this State Riddle to me and give me the Ground of this late exeraordinary Revolution In answer to your Question you may please to take notice That those Gentlemen of the Convention and the rest of their Sentiments who declare a Vacancy in the Government lay the main stress of their Opinion upon his Majesties withdrawing himself For now especially since the Story of the French Leagu● and the Business of the Prince of Wales are passed over in Silence most Men believe that the pretended Breach of that which they call Th● Original Contract was designed for no more than a popular Flourish And that you may be not be shocked by seeing the Votes of so considerable and publick a Meeting debated by a private hand give me leave to remind you That a Parliament and a Convention are two very different Things The latter for want of the King's Writs and Concurrence having no share in the Legislative Power If it 's urged That the present Posture and Exigence of Affairs is a sufficient Dispensation with the usual Preliminaries and Forms of Parliament To this I am obliged to answer That this pretended Necessity is either of their own Making or of their own Submitting to which is the same thing and therefore ought not to be pleaded in Justification of their Proceedings For if his Majesty had either not been driven out of his Dominions or invited back upon honorable Terms they needed not to have had recourse to these singular Methods And since they have neither the Authority of Law or Necessity to support their Determinations I hope they will not think themselves disobliged if they are inquired into and some part of that Liberty which they have taken with his Majesty be returned upon themselves For all private and unauthorised Opinions are to be regarded no farther than they prove their point Like Plate without the Royal Impression they ought not to be obtruded for currant Coin nor rated any higher than the intrinsick Value of the Mettal Le● us examin therefore if his Majesty has done any thing which imports either in it self or by necessary consequence That he has voluntarily Resigned his Crown and Discharged his Subjects of their Allegiance Now the Author of The Enquiry into the present State of Affairs c. for whose Judgment the Commons seem to have a very great Regard as appears from their concurrence with him For their most considerable Votes are in a manner transcribed from his 11th Paragraph This Author tells us Pag. 5. That when a King withdraws himself and his Seals without naming any Persons to represent him the Government is certainly laid down and forsaken by him Though afterwards he is so good natured as to add That if any imminent present Danger or just Fear though indeed a King can never be decently suspected of that I suppose his Reason is because Kings are invulnerable had driven his Majesty away it might seem a little too hard to urge this too much In order to the confuting this Notion I shall prove in the First place That his Majesty before his withdrawing had sufficient Grounds to make him apprehensive of Danger and therefore It cannot be called an Abdication Secondly That the leaving any Representatives behind him was impracticable at this Juncture Thirdly That we have no Grounds either from the Laws of the Realm or those of Nature to pronounce the Throne void upon such a Retreat of a King. But before I do this it s not improper to observe That this pretence of a Demise if it signified any thing cannot affect Scotland or Ireland Not the first For there his Majesty's Commissioners acted in the usual Manner till they were disturbed Nor the second For that Kingdom continues still under the Regular Administration of the Lord Lieutenant Neither is it sufficient to say That Ireland is an Appendage to the Crown of England and therefore it must follow its Revolution For allowing a Demise was really consequent upon a Failure of Seals and Representatives yet there would be no colour to apply it to a Case where there was no such Omission For no Forfeiture ought to be stretched beyond the Reason upon which it is grounded But this only by the way I shall proceed to prove the first thing propounded viz. That his Majesty before his withdrawing had sufficient Grounds to make him apprehensive of imminent Danger We are now fallen upon Times in which the most extravagant and almost impossible Things are swallowed without Chewing and the plainest Truths outfaced and denyed as if Evidence was an Argument against Proof and Absurdities the only Motives of Credibility So that now if ever we seem fit for Transubstantiation Had not some Men believed this true in a great Measure they would never have disputed against matter of Fact which was done almost in the Face of the whole Kingdom To speak to the present Case Had not his Majesty great Reason to retire to secure his Person and his Honor at his first withdrawing from W●itehall which is the time from which our Author dates his pretended Desertion for he will not allow him to be King at his return I say had not his Majesty great Reason to retire when he had met with so many unfortunate Disappointments with so many surprising and unparallel'd Accidents When part of the Army was revolted and the Remainder too apparently unserviceable When the People had such fatal and unremovable Prejudices against his Majesty's Service When there were such terrible Disorders in the Kingdom and all Places were either Flaming or ready to take Fire What should a Prince do when he had scarce any thing left him to lose but himself but consult his Safety and give way to the irresistable Evil But our Author pretends the King's Affairs had a much better Aspect Let us observe how he proves it Why he tells us That when the Prince of Orange ' s Proposals came to his Majesty the Army and the Fleet were left in his Hands They were so that he might pay them for the Prince's Service for they owned his Majesty's Authority scarce any other way than by receiving his Mony and eating up his Meat It 's to be hoped they have since repented of their Actions But the Enquirer goes on with his Inventory of Forts and Revenues which the King was to have still He may know if he pleases that we have but Four considerable Forts in the Kingdom Now Hull