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A64903 True information of the beginning and cause of all our troubles how they have been hatched, and how prevented. Wherein vvee may see the manifold contrivances and attempts of forraigne and home-bred enemies, against the Parliament, kingdome, and purity of religion. And how all their endeavours whether by force or fraud, never prospered. A work worthy to be kept in record, and to bee communicated to posterity. Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652. 1648 (1648) Wing V331B; ESTC R221903 27,396 30

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47 For the advancing of which designe the Earle of Straford then prisoner in the Tower attempted an escape with Sir William Belfore then Leiutenant of the Tower promising and assuring him twenty thousand pound and the marriage of his daughter to Sir Williams Son if he would but consent unto and assist his escape but Sir William hated such bribes and so the neck of all that plot was broken 48 Then they attempted by foule and false scandals on the Parliament to intice the Army of the Scots then still in the North to a newtrality and to sit still whiles our English Army acted the farther designes hatched and hammered still in their heads and hearts but this plot prevailed not neither Anno 1641. Octob. 23. 49 About this time that inhumane bloody rebellion and monstrous massacring of almost 200000 innocent English Protestants men women and children brake out in Ireland namely about October 23. 1641. These accursed Rebels having had their principal encouragements and Commissions to authorize them in that horrid and hideous rebellion from the Court of England and of purpose to have made England the chiefe seat of the war and all the papists prelates and malignants utmost wrath and rage 50 For the still effecting of this designe the malignant party in private much prevailing still the designe now went on chiefly against the City of London for which purpose the Leivtenant of the Tower Sir William Belfore was for his loyalty displaced by the King from his Leivtenantship and popish Lord Cottington made Constable of the Tower but his dangerous designes being soone discovered he was as soone displaced and Collonell Lunsford was made Leivtenant of the Tower But he also by the Parliaments petition and importunity to the King was displaced and Sir John Byron a desperate malignant who afterward proved the most bloody Lord Byron in Cheshire was made Leivtenant of the Tower in Lunsfords stead but he also on many just jealousies being petitioned against was at length with much adoe removed and put out thence and Sir John Coyners by the power of the parliament was put in his place To the KINGS most excellent Majesty and the LORDS and PEERS now assembled in PARLIAMENT The humble Petition and Protestation of all the Bishops and prelates now called by His Majesties Writs to attend the Parliament and present about London and Westminster for that Service THat whereas the Petitioners are called up by severall and respective Writs and under great penalties to attend the Parliament and have a clear and indubitable right to vote in Bils and other matters whatsoever debatable in Parliament by the ancient customes Laws and Statutes of this Realm and ought to be protected by your Majesty quietly to attend and prosecute that great Service They humbly remonstrate and protest before God your Majesty and the Noble Lords and Peeres now assembled in Parliament that as they have an indubitate right to sit and Vote in the House of Lords so are they if they may be protected from force and violence most ready and willing to performe their duties accordingly And that they doe abhominate all actions or opinions tending to popery and the maintainance thereof as also all propension and inclination to any malignant party or any other side or party whatsoever to the which their own reasons and conscience shall not move them to adhere But whereas they have beene at severall times violently menaced affronted and assaulted by multitudes of people in their comming to perform their services in that honourable House and lately chased away and put in danger of their lives and can finde no redresse or protection upon sundry complaints made to both Houses in these particulars They likewise humbly protest before your maiesty and the Noble House of peers that saving unto themselves all their rights and interests of sitting and voting in that House at other times they dare not sit or vote in the House of peers untill your Maiesty shall further secure them from all affronts indignities and dangers in the premises Lastly whereas their feares are not built upon phantasies and conceits but upon such grounds and objects as may well terrifie men of good resolutions and much constancy They doe in all duty and humility protest before your majesty and the peers of that most honourable House of parliament against all Laws Orders Votes resolutions and determinations as in themselves null and of none effect which in their absence since the 27. of this instant month of December 1641 have already passed as likewise against all such as shall hereafter passe in that most Honourable House during the time of this their forced and violent absence from the said most The High Commission-Court and Starr-Chamber voted down and pluralities non residencies damned by Parliament Honourable House not denying but if their absenting of themselves were wilfull and voluntary that most Honourable House might proceed in all their premises their absence or this protestation notwithstanding And humbly beseeching your most Excellent maiesty to command the Clerke of that House of peers to enter this their petition and protestation among their Records They will ever pray to God to blesse c. Jo. Eborac Tho. Duresme Rob. Co Lich. Jos. Norw. Jo. Asa. Guli Ba. Wells Gco. Heref. Rob. Oxon. Ma. Ely Golfr Glouc. Jo. Peterburg Morris Landaff 52 The Bishops also had a pestilent plot about this time to subvert and overthrow the Parliament by indeavouring to get the King to protest against their proceedings in it But twelve of them were thereupon presently impeached of high treason and ten of them imprisoned in the Towre of London and afterward they were all disabled from ever sitting againe in the Parliament Bishops Voted downe root and branch Nullo contradicente insomuch that the Citizens of London the same night made bonfires and had ringing of bels And for the better securing the City within as well as without the Parliament published an Ordinance thereby injoyning all Popish Recusants inhabiting in and about the City all disaffected persons and such as being able men would not lend any money for the defence of the Commonwealth should forth with confine themselves to their owne houses and not to go forth without speciall licence as they would answer it at their perills to the Parliament Another Ordinance was sent to the Lord Major by which the Trained Bands were authorised to apprehend many of the prime and richest malignants disaffected affected persons in the City whereof were four● Alderman put in safe custody in Crosby house and some in Gressam Colledge 53. About which time a Letter was sent to Mr. John Pym a most eminent Member of the House of Commons a most reviling Letter therein calling him Traytor and in the said Letter inclosed a plague-sore plaister thinking thereby to have destroyed him But God mightily preserved him from the infection of it 54. After this the King himselfe being guarded with about 500. armed ruffianly desperate Cavaliers
or Souldiers violently rushed into the House of Commons accused five of their most eminent Members of Treason demanded their persons to be delivered up unto him intending to destroy all that resisted him therein but c●ost by the happy absence of the Gentlemen this plot was attempted Januar. 4. 1641. Anno 1642. 55. After this one Binion a Silkman of London and the Kentish malignants wherein Sir Edward Deering had a principall hand framed dangerous and destructive petitions against the proceedings of the Parliament but were both most justly rejected and themselves fined and imprisoned for them 56. Immediately after this things grew still worse and worse among the malignants the King himselfe in unjust discontent by the desperate counsell of the young Lord Digby forsakes the parliament and getting the Prince to him leaves London and presently posts into the North and there attempts to get Hull into his hands but was happily prevented and bravely opposed by Sir John Hotham then in that time of his outward and seeming fidelity 57. The King being at Yorke interdicts the Militia then set on foot by the Parliament for their iust safety and defence and endeavouring to remove the Terme from the City of London but in both is opposed by the Parliament and the messenger hanged At Ege-hill 16 peeces of Can̄on shot against 80 of E of Essex Liffegard not one man hurts those 80 brake in vpon 1600 of the Kings 4 of the Parliā Reg ran away 16 troops of Horse so wee wayre 6000 they 18000 yet wee tooke the Standerd Cleste Sr Ed Varney Standerbearer in the head Slew the Lord Lindsey Generall of the Fielde The Queene when shee went ouer beyond Seas one of her Shipes where shee had a greate Tresury Sprung a Leake much was last and Spoyled and when shee returned for England she had a mighty Storme at Sea brake the Mast of van Trumpe-Ship and after 8 dayes boystrus turmoyle she was driuēn backe againe there was broke and last ● Ships of Amunition and they that were driuen bake uere almost starved 59. The King set on foot a most illegall Commission of Array to clash against the parliaments Mili ia which occasioned much mischief and misery over the whole Kingdome but the parliaments Militia prevailed in most places and parts of the land 60. Three letters were intercepted discovering a most desperate plot against the parliament by the royalists Commissary Wilmot Ligby Jermine Crofts and others which by Gods mercy failed them and came to nothing but we in taking some of their ships were advantaged thereby 61. Sir Richard Gurney then Lord Major of the City of London proving a desperate malignant and Array man was crost in his desires and clapt up prisoner in the Tower of London by the power of the Parliament 62. Proclamations and Declarations against the Parliaments proceedings were Printed and published and commanded to be read in all the Churches and Chappels over the whole Kingdome within the Kings power 63. Sir John penington a brave Sea-man but a desperate malignant was constituted Admirall of the Seas for the Kings service but displaced and dispossessed thereof by the parliament and the most noble and loyall Earle of Warwicke notwithstanding the Kings Letters and command to interdict him therein and to give way to penington being put in by the power of the parliament and possessed of the Ships kept and continued in the place and office for the parliaments service 64. Hull besieged by the Marquesse of Newcastle for the King and in that interim one Beckwich a knowne papist plotting to have betrayed it by firing it in foure severall places and then assaulting it yet Hull by Gods mighty providence was preserved and the King after much losse of men and money enforced to forsake it The Citizens of London voluntarily proffered their service to attend and guard the parliament by land to Westminster to secure them from danger By Water also the stout Shipmasters and marriners likewise made ready a great number of long-boats furnished with Ordnance muskets and other Sea-like warlike instruments their vessels also gallantly adorned with Flagges and Stremers together with martiall musicke Drums and Trumpets so as it was a rare sight and when they came to White hall and understood that the parliament Worthies were safely arrived the Trained Bands by Land and the valiant Sea-men by Water let flye their thundering shot both small and great their Trumpets sounding and their Drums beating in a triumphing and congratulating manner a singular testimony of their cordiall affections The very same day a numerous company of Buckinghamshire men both Gentlemen Ministers and others of that County on horsebacke with their protestations in their hats partly in behalfe of their Knight of the Shire but especially to petition the parliament for Reformation of evills in Church and State and to assure their best services and assistance to the parliament on all just occasions and out of Essex Hartford Berkshire Surrey and other Counties of the Kingdome came one after another 65. The Earle of Essex was ordained Lord Generall over all the parliaments Forces for the preservation of the Kingdome which he faithfully managed especially at Edge bill and Newbery and other places can abundantly witnesse 66. A plot to have blowne up all the Lord Generalis Magazine of powder and another at Beverley in Yorkshire to have slaine Sir John Hotham both intended by one David Alexander and hired thereunto but both timely prevented 67. Commissions granted to Popish Recusants to leavy men and armes against the Parliament but the Parliament published a Declaration or Protestation to the whole world of their just proceedings therein 68. The King received the most bloody Irish Rebels petition and permitted their persons with great favour and allowance about him calling and counting them good Catholicke Subjects but utterly rejecting the petition exhibited by the Lord Generall desiring peace and reconciliation with him 69. A Treaty of peace was really intended by the Parliament but meerly pretended for a while transacted by the Royalists in which interim that most bloody bickering at Brainford was committed by the Kings party a piece of villany carried on therein but though with much losse on both sides but especially on theirs by Gods great mercy the mischiefe prevented and the City of London mightily preserved 70. A dangerous plot against the Kingdome in new High-Sheriffes for the better collecting of the 400000 li Subsidies intended to have been confirmed to the King in a former Parliament but that plot crost by providence and an Ordinance set on foot for the successefull association of Counties for mutuall defence one of another against regall injurious taxations and oppressions on them a Letter sent to Mr Pym Mr: Pym doe not think that a guard of men can protect you if you persist in your traiterous Courses and wiked designes I have sent a Paper-messenger to you and if this does not touch your heart a
bound from Newcastle to Holland laden with Sea-coale but in the midst thereof was found between 3 or 4000 livre. hid in the coales sent to buy armes for the King a third great Ship called the Fellowship of at least 400 tun carrying 24 peeces of Ordn●nce all these ● ships taken by the parliaments ships and made prize of 83 The comming in of our brethren of Scotland with an army of at least 20000 horse and foot invited thereunto by the parl. in the bitter depth of winter when they marched up to the middle in snow and were forced to bring their Artillery over the Ice of the frozen river of Tyne and the Citizens of London lent the Parliament a 100000 li. for the Scots first pay to encourage their advance to helpe us against the Kings forces On Tuesday the 23 of May 1643. The House of Commons diving into the depth and searching to the root of the Kingdomes great and grievous distractions and deepe distempers and finding that all Papists in the Kingdome have for the most part been main and most eminent yea and most virulent actors and abetters of this present most unnaturall warre against the Parliament and that therefore they should be proceeded against as traytors to the State and Kingdome and thereupon also having just cause to search and see into the prime and principall head or leader of that perfideous faction fell necessirily 23 May 1643. Voted that the Queene Pawning the Iewells of the Crowne in Holland there with buying Armes to assist the Warr against the Parlamt her owne actuall performances with her popish army in the North was high Treason transmited to the Lords images Crucifixes papistorall bookes in Somerset and Jameses ware burnt and Caphuchin friers sent away May 1643 an ordinance for the makeing of Fortes Tronches and Bull workes about the Cittie Iuly-1-43 the Assembly of Diuines mett Dr. Jwiss Prolocutor 120 the totall May ●● Challen or and Tomkins were hangd for seekeing to betray the Cittie into a long and serious debate touching the proceedings of the Queen in her late being in Holland and since her late coming back into the north of England not onely in her countenancing and incouraging her aiding and assisting the present civill war but in her actuall performance in the same to foment and advance it to the utmost ruine as much as in her was of our Religion and whole Realine for all which and many other such like misdemeanours it was debated and at last fully agreed that she was as liable to the censure of the Law as any Subject in the Kingdome whereupon it was put to the question whether the Queenes pawning the Jewels of the Crown in Holland and therewith buying Armes and Ammunition to be sent into England to assist the said war against the Parliament and her own actuall performances with her Popish Army in the North were not high Treason and it was resolved most unanimously by the whole House for the affirmative afterward it being also put to the question whether they should forthwith declare their intentions to proceed against her by impeachment of high Treason this also was immediatly resolved for the affirmative and Voted that Articles of impeachment should be speedily drawne up against her which Votes the House of Commons transmitted to the Lords for their assent The Bishop of Canterburies first prayer on the Scaffold 10 Jan. 1644. O Eternall God and mercifull Father looke downe upon me in mercy in the riches and fullnesse of all thy mercies look upon me but not till thou hast nailed my sins to the crosse of Christ looke upon me but not till thou hast bathed me in the blood of Christ not till I have hid my selfe in the wounds of Christ that so the punishment that is due to my sins may passe away and go over 〈◊〉 and since thou art pleased to try me to the uttermost I humbly beseech th●e give me now in this great instant full patience proportionable comfort a heart ready to dye for thine honour and the Kings happinesse and this Churches preservation and my zeale to these far from arrogancy be it spoken is all the sin h●mane fralty excepted and all incidents thereunto which is yet known of me in this particular for which I now come to suffer I say in this particular of Treason but otherwise my sins are many and great Lord pardon them all and those especially whatsoever they be which have drawn down this present judgement upon me and when thou hast given me strength to ●eare it then doe with me as seemes best in thine owne eyes and carry me through death that I may look upon it in what visage soever it shall appear to me and that there may be a stop of this issue of blood in this more then miserable Kingdome I shall desire that I may pray for the people too as well as for my selfe O Lord I beseech thee give grace of repentance to all people that have a thirst for blood but if they will not repent then scatter their devices so and such as are or shall be contrary to the glory of thy great name the truth and sincerity of Religion the establishment of the King and his posterity after him in their just rights and priviledges the honour and conservation of Parliaments ●● their ancient and just power the preservation of this poore Church in her truth peace and patrimony and the settlement of this distracted and distressed people under the ancient laws and in their native liberties and when thou hast done all this in mercy for them O Lord fill their hearts with thankfullnesse and with religious dutifull obedience to thee and thy Commandements all their dayes So Amen Lord Jesus and I beseech thee receive my soul to mercy Our Father c. The Bishop of Canterburies last prayer on the Scaffold Lord I am comming as fast as I can I know I must passe through the shadow of death before I 〈◊〉 come to see thee but it is but um●ra mortis a meere shadow of death a little darknesse upon nature but thou by thy merits and passion hast broke through the jaws of death so Lord receive my soule and have mercy on me Sr. Alexander Carow Sr. Iohn Hotham Captin Hotham the Arch Bishop of Canterbury beheaded on Jowerhill for Treason against the Parliament 1645. The Great Seale broken before the Lords and Commons on Tusday the 11 August 1646 and blesse this Kingdome with peace and plenty and with brotherly love and charity that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them for Jesus Christ his sake if it be thy will And when he said Lord receive my soule which was his sign the Executioner did his office 84 A desperate plot of the Royalists to starve up the City of London by breaking into Surry Sussex Kent and the other associated Counties but disappointed by the Parliaments Victories at Aulton and Alsford fought by Sir Walliam
Waller with the help of the City of Londons Regiments and the Royalists plots to hinder our brethren of Scotlands comming in to our helpe by letters and Embassadors sent from France and messengers from King Charles to inveagle them to help from us but all in vaine by Gods good providence and 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 85 The King granted a cessation of armes with the bloody rebels of Ireland and afterward justified it by a Declaration of his printed and published at Oxford but it was remarkeably observed that he never prospered in any of his great designs after that 86 A Solemn League and Covenant taken by the Lords and Commons in Parliament and by the City of London and all parts of the Kingdome in the Parliaments power for a pure reformation of Religion and Church Government and a mutuall defence betwixt us and our brethren of Scotland 87 A notable plot by the Royalists to have Nottingham Town and Castle betrayed unto them the Officers therein being proffered above 10000 livre. to consent to it but prevented by Colonell Hutchinson who was the Governour thereof 88 A Generall plot against the Protestant Religion over all Christendome and the Danes and Hollanders also but God wrought a mighty overture therein by the sudden breaking out of the Danes plot against the Swedes and their over-running almost all Denmark thereupon that he could do nothing 89 A desperate plot against the City of London under a pretence of petitioning for peace acted by Sir Basil Brook Colonell Read and one Mr. Ripley Vilet 2 Citizens of London and others but discovered and prevented 1645. 90 Two desperate plots for the betraying of Alsbury into the Royalists hands and another against Southampton but all three timely discovered also and prevented 91 One Mr. Edward Stanford a Papist plotted with Captain Backhouse a Capt. of Horse under Colonell Massie for the betraying of the city of Glocester into the Enemies hands and proffered 5000 livre. for a reward thereof 200 li whereof was paid in hand to the said captaine but by Gods providence the plot frustrated and Gloucester safely preserved 92 Englands great wonder to Gods glory there being about May 30 1644. six brave armies in this Kingdome on the Parl. side and other forces for defence of the city of London besides ●3 A plot to have betrayed our whole Army in Cornwall in the West but by Gods blessing most of the Souldiers lives were preserved though with the losse of our Artillery 95 Sir Alexander Carew Sir John Ho ham captain Hotham and the Arch prelate of Canterbury beheaded on Tower-Hill for treason against the Parliament 95. A peace onely pretended by the Royalists at Uxbridge and a treacherous petition framed by the malignants of Buckingham shire wherein one Sir John Lawrence of that County was a great stickler but the mischiefe of both was frustrated 96. A desperate assault on Melcomb-Regis to have betrayed it into the Royalists hands wherein divers of the malignant Townsmen had a principall hand and Colonell Goring and Sir Lewis Dives were agents therein but the plot was frustrated the Towne and Forts recovered and two ships with rich prize from Rhoan in France were seized on to make amends for their trouble 1645. 97. Divers Earles and Lords forsooke Oxford and came in and submitted themselves to the Parliament 98. A desperate plot in the West against the Parliament by the Clubmen but by Gods providence turned to the Enemies greatest hurt in the issue 99. A devillish sudden plot upon Scotland which was almost over-run by traiterous Montrosse but as suddenly recovered againe by Gods blessing on Generall David Lesley and Montrosse discomfited and beaten away into the mountaines 1646. 100. A Discovery of grosse impiety in the Oxonians pretending a desired Treaty with the Parliament for a well-grounded peace and yet at that time the Earle of Glamorgan had a Commission to the ruine of all the Protestants in Ireland and so consequently of us in England also 101. The Great Seale broken before the Lords and Commons on Tuesday the 11. of August 1646. Die Sabbati 5. April 1645. Be it Ordained by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled That all and every person of what degree or quality soever that hath lived or shall live within the Kings Quarters or been aiding assisting or adhering unto the forces raised against the Parliament and hath or shall come to inhabit or reside under the power and protection of the Parliament shall sweare upon the holy Evangelist in manner following The Negative Oath I A. B. Doe swear from my heart that I will not directly nor indirectly adhere unto or willingly assist the King in this Warre or in this Cause against the Parliament nor any Forces raised with the consent of the two Houses of Parliament in this Cause or Warre And I do likewise sweare that my comming and submitting my selfe under the power and protection of the Parliament is without any manner of designe whatsoever to the prejudice of the proceedings of the two Houses of this present Parliament and without the direction privity and advice of the King or any of his Councell or Officers other then what I have now made knowne So helpe me God and the Contents of this Book And it is further Ordained by the authority aforesaid that the Commissioners for keeping of the Great Seale of England for the time being shall have power and are hereby authorised to render and administer the said Oath unto any Peere or Wife or Widow of any Peere so comming to inhabit as abovesaid And it shall be lawfull to and for the Committee of the House of Commons for Examinations the Committee for the Militia in London and all Committees of Parliament in the severall Counties and Cities of the Kingdome to tender and administer the said Oath unto every person so comming to inhabit as abovesaid And if any person not being a Member of or Assistant unto either of the Houses of Parliament shall refuse or neglect to take the said Oath so duly tendered unto him or her as abovesaid the said Commissioners and Committees respectively shall and may commit the same person to some prison there to remaine without Baile or Mainprize untill he shall conforme thereunto Jo. Brown Cler. Parliamentorum 1646. The King escaped out of Oxford in a disguised manner with two onely in his company one of which was Mr. Ashburnham the King and the other Party going for the said Ashburnham's men The King carried a Cloak-bagge or Portmantle behind him like a serving man Ordered that it be declared and it is hereby declared by the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled that what person soever shall harbour or conceale or know of the harbouring or concealing of the Kings person and shall not reveale it immediately to the Speakers of both Houses shall bee proceeded against as a Traytor to the Common-wealth forfeit his whole estate and dye without mercy A Letter from the Commissioners of Scotland
dagger shall so soon as I am recouered of my plague-sore In the meane time you may be forborn because no better man may be endangered for you Repent Traitor Anno 1643. 72. A notable plot against the City of London imediately upon the Cities preferring a petition to the King by the hands of two Aldermen and foure Commoners of the said City in reply to which petition the King sending as his messenger one Captaine H●rn to the City and the whole body of the City assembling at a Common Hall this Hern desires Faire play above board of them But the businesse being found to be a notable designe of the malignant-Citizens against the Parliament and the then Lord Major of London and the Government of their City the major cry out in the hearing of Hern they would live and dye with the parliament and so sent Hern away with a flea in his care 73. Another plot contrived at Oxford by a Letter sent to all the Freemen Iourneymen and Apprentices of the said City to assemble at their severall Hills and there the Masters and Wardens of all Companies to read the Kings Letter to them and to perswade them to yeeld to all the Kings commands against the City but this Letter was crost in the necke and nicke of it and voted to be evill and scandalous 74. A plot also to betray Bristol into the Royalists hands by one Yeomans and Bowcher and divers other their associates but discovered two principall conspirators were by Martiall Law condemned and hanged 75. Cheapside-crosse Charing crosse and all other Crosses in and about London utterly demolished and pulled downe and that abominable and blasphemous booke of tolerating sports and pastimes on the Lords dayes voted to be burnt and shortly after accordingly burnt together with many Crucifixes and popish trinckets and trumperies in the very same place where Cheapside-crosse stood and at the Exchange 76. Mr. Pryn sent by the Parliament to the Towre of London to search the Arch prelate of Canterburies chamber and study there where he was prisoner who accordingly searching his study and his pockets of his wearing cloaths a just requitall of his dealing with Mr. Pryn and others found the originall Scotch Service booke with the Arch-bishops owne hand-writings in it the cause of all the Scots wars and his Diary Devotions and discoveries under his own hands of matters of high concernment 77. The City of London to have been betrayed into the hands of the Royalists under a pretence of a petition for peace plotted by Mr. Waller a Member of the House of Commons M. Tompkins M. Challenor and others and this plot termed by King Charles in his Letter to the Queen one of his Fine Designes But Waller one of the prime complotters was by the sentence of the Parliament fined 10000 l. in his estate and sent out of the Kingdome into perpetuall banishment and Tompkins and Challenor hanged in London 78. The breaking of Sir John Hothams rotten heart and infidelity to the Parliament in his attempted plot for the betraying of that mighty strong Town of Hull into the Queens hands which treachery was plotted and contrived between Sir John the father Captaine Hotham his son and Sir Edward Roades and began to be suspected by Sir John Hothams deserting of the noble Lord Fairfax by an intercepted letter of the Queens to the King and divers other sumptomes of it but especially by Captaine Moyers letter to Mr. Ripley and Mr. Ripley's faithfull acquainting the Major of Hull therewith and their first seizing on the Block-houses Castles and Commanders of them and at length their apprehending of the persons of Sir John Hotham and Sir Edward Roades for which treachery Sir John Hotham and Captaine Hotham his Son was also apprehended and both of them beheaded at the Tower of London The 2 of May 1643. the Crosse in Cheapeside was pulled downe a Troope of Horse 2 Companies of foote wayted to garde it at the fall of the tope Crosse drom̄es beat trūpets blew multitudes of Capes wayre throwne in the Ayre a greate Shoute of People with ioy the 2 of May the Almanake sayeth was the invention of the Crosse 6 day at night was the Leaden Popes burnt in the place where it stood with ringinge of Bells a greate Acclamation no hurt done in all these actions 10 of May the Boncke of Sports upon the Lords day was burut by the Hangman in the place where the Crosse stoode at Exchange Die Mercurij May 10. 1643 By vertue of an Order of the House of Commons and agreeable to a Bill passed by both Houses of parliament for suppressing of divers innovations in Churches and Chappels this Committee doth require you and every of you to take away and demolish every Alter or Table of Stone within your Church or Chappell and to remove the Communion Table from the East end of the said Church or Chappell and to place the same in some other convenient place of the body of the said Church or Chappell and to remove and take away all Tapers Candlesticks and Basons from the Communion Table and to take away and demolish all crucifixes crosses and all Images and pictures of any one or more persons of the Trinity or of the Virgin Mary and this Committee doth further require you to demolish all crucifixes crosses Images or pictures of any one or more persons of the Trinity or of the Virgin Mary upon the outside of your said Church or Chappell or any open place within your parish Whereof you are to give an account to this Committee before the 20 day of this moneth To the Church-Wardens of the parish of c. and every of them 79 A desperate plot for the betraying of the City and Towne of Lincolne by the two Purfries two Captains of Hull who let in 60 Cavaliers by night in disguised habits and who issuing out about 12 of the clocke that night to act their designe where a plain fellow of the Town discharging a peece of Canon upon them slew 10 of them at one shot the rest slaine and taken by the cen●inels and Sou●●ers of the Towne and so by Gods mercy the City preserved 80 The Queen wrote a dangerous letter to the King to come with all his force to surprize London but by Gods over power wisdome and good providence the King refusing that councell resolved to take Gloucester first which he fiercely assaulted but was as bravely repulsed and by Gods blessing on Major Gener●l Massies fidelity timely aide comming to relieve the Towne it was admirably freed and by the Lord Generalls Army and the City of London Regiamen●● delivered 81 A desperate rebellion raised by the Kentish malignants but by Gods mercy timely suppressed about Tunbridge by the valour of Collonell Brown and the wel-affected Gentry of the County of Kent 82 A Ship bound from Denmark to the King of about 300 tun richly laden with armes and ammunition another Ship
order of adjournment July 30. but neither of the Speakers At length they proceeded to a new election and voted Mr. Pelham a Counsellour and Member of the Commons House Speaker pro tempore The Lords made choice of the Lord Grey to be Speaker of their House pro tempore The Sergeant at Armes being absent with the Mace when the Commons chose their Speaker had the City Mace and chose Mr. Norfolke Sergeant at Armes After which proceeding to debate the great affaires touching the City and Kingdome they voted as followes 1. That the King come to London 2. That the Militia of the City shall have full power to raise what Forces they shall thinke fit to the same 3. That they may make choice of a Commander in chiefe to be approved of by the House and such Commanders to present other officers to be approved of by the Militia The Common-councell made choice of Major Generall Massie to command in chiefe all the City Forces Ordered by the Militia that all Reformadoes and other officers should the next day at two of the clocke beli●ted in St. Jamses fields And that the forces already listed should be put in a Regimentall way A great appearance in St. Jamses fields of officers and Reformadoes that were listed Order given for staying of horses in the City and many listed Most of the eleven Members sate in the House and in the afternoone M. Gen. Massie Sir William Waller and Col. Gen. Poyntz were at listing the Reformadoes Command given that all shops be shut up by sound of the Trumpet throughout the City The Declaration of the Lord Major Aldermen and Common-councell published A briefe of which that his Majesty was surprised at Holdenby and no place for his Majesties residence allowed by the Army nearer then their Quarters therefore to settle peace and establish true Religion ease the Kingdomes burden establish his Majesties just rights maintaine the Parliaments Priviledges and relieve bleeding Ireland they professe the maine of their enterprise c. A Petition in the names of many thousands well-affected Citizens for some way of composure c. At which time Col. Gen. Poyntz and other officers of the new list attending for their orders upon the Militia came into Guild-hall yard and most cruelly hackt and hew'd many of the aforesaid Petitioners divers whereof were mortally wounded whereof some since dyed The Earle of Warwicke and Earle of Manchester having quit the Houses retired into Essex and sent word to the Generall they had cast themselves upon his protection The Lord Say Lord Mogrene and divers other Lords with many of the House of Commons came to the Head quarters desiring the Generalls protection Six Aldermen and twelve Common-councell men are sent with a letter to the Generall from the City wherein they declare their unwillingnesse to a new War desiring his Excellency to receive the sense they apprehend the Army hath taken against the City A letter presented to the Generall from the inhabitants of Southwarke relating their withstanding the designe of raising a new War desiring some aid from his Excellency for their protection Generall Massie sends out Scouts but neare Brainford thirty of his men were chased by ten of his Excellencies and tooke foure of Gen. Massies A letter from the City to the Generall shewing their readinesse to joyn with his Excellency and according to his direction to receive those honourable Members that were forc'd to retire by reason of the tumultuous affront and willingly submit to be determined by both Houses as they shall thinke fit having recalled their late Declaration against the Armies proceedings c. About two of the clocke in the morning Col. Rainsborough Col. Huson Col. Pride and Col. Thistel●el with their severall Regiments of Horse and Foot marched into the Borrough of Southwarke the great Fort was presently yeelded up to them without opposition His Majesty in a letter sent to the Generall acquits himselfe of the great scandall of having a hand in the late tumult testifying his dislike thereof accounting it a very dishonourable way to be brought to London in a tumultuous way The Members that were forced away returne to sit in Westminster againe guarded by the souldiers The Houses being sat with their old Speakers The House of Peers upon debate passed an Ordinance for making his Excellency Thomas Lord Fairfax high Constable of the Tower of London The House ordered a gratuity of a months pay to be given to all the Non-commission officers and private Souldiers for their great service A Committee appointed to finde out the chiefe promoters of the late designe of the Tumult at Westminster and raising a new War His Excellency marches through the city with his Army Horse and Foot and traine of Artillery without the least affront or prejudice to any they were marching through the city from eleven of the clocke untill eight at night By many thousands young men and Apprentices of London there was presented a humble acknowledgement and congratulation to his Excellency for his many great services to the Kingdome and City of London resolving to live and dye with his Excellency An Ordinance past both Houses for declaring all Votes Orders and Ordinances past both Houses since the forcing both Houses July 26. untill the 6. of this present August 1647. to be null and void The Lords and Commons make a new Militia consisting of 36. in number The line of Communication and workes about the City demolished and the Ordnance drawne off Upon information of the eleven late impeached Members who had been very active in the late designe it was ordered that they appeare at Westminster 16. Octob. A letter from Lieu. Gen. Crumwel to the House of Commons acquainting Mr. Speaker that his Majesty had withdrawne himselfe at 9. the last night his Majesty having left his cloake behinde him and some letters in his withdrawing roome His Majesties letter Hampton-Court Novem. 11. 1647. Liberty being that which in all times hath been but especially now is the condition the aime and desire of all men Common reason shews that Kings lesse then any should endure captivity yet I call God to witnesse with what patience I have endured a tedious restraint which so long as I had any hopes that this sort of my suffering might conduce to the peace of these three Kingdomes or the hindring of more effusion of blood I did willingly undergoe but now finding by two certaine proofes that this my continued patience would not onely turne to my personall ruine but likewise be of much more prejudice then furtherance to the publique good I thought I was bound as well by naturall as politicall obligations to feeke my safety by retyring my self for some time from publique view both of my friends and enemies and I appeale to all indifferent men to judge if I have not cause to free my selfe from the hands of those who change their principles with their condition and who are not ashamed openly to intend the destruction of