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A56182 The contra-replicant, his complaint to His Maiestie Parker, Henry, 1604-1652. 1643 (1643) Wing P400; ESTC R22502 28,940 31

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discovery to me as well what the papist as what the Delinquentis And this age must prove monstrously unnaturall in producing a wonder never heard of in all former ages ●f Iustice doe now rest on the Kings ●ide For surely no King ever till now having a iust cause was opposed therein by the maior and better part of his subiects much lesse was it ever seene or heard of that any King in a iust cause was deserted by the maiority of his Orthodox subiects and supported by the unanimous aid of such as hated his true protested Religion God send the King to lay these things seriously and pensively to heart for since none of his wise and worthy Ancestors ever yet had cause to wage war either with the Collective or Representative Body of the People so none at all ever in any warre ●ided with a false Religion or against the true till this unhappy day in the King Charles is the first and I hope will be the last and therefore this is worthy to make a sad impression upon his soule But our Replicant will tell us That the Kings Iustice may yet govern and awe both parties by the same Law whatsoever their antipathy be The King has Law and power by the Law to protect the better partie and to provide for the peace of both parties But notwithstanding that Law and that power the poore British Protestants in Ireland have beene left unprotected and lamentably exposed to a generall Assassination And had they not beene betrayed by their vaine confidence in the Law and in the Kings protection they perhaps might have found other meanes to defend themselves therefore it is no refuge or comfort to them now to hear the name of Law proclaimed reiterated when as things hapned there it has been the very shelfe and rock whereon the Protestants have been miserably bulyed and wricked ●hen pardon pray if the same name of Iustice also sound but harshly at this time in our eares when papists which have destroyed our religion in Ireland are raysed to preserve it in England and protestants which were sending succours and supplyes into Ireland are in the instant invaded here in England for the better suppression of Popery both here and in Ireland T is a strange kinde of assurance or ●oy to us to see the names of Religion Liberty and parliamentary priviledge stamped upon our coyne or interwoven in our Standard when at the same time we see the same Coyne imprested for the entertainment of a Popish Army and the same standard marching against the representative body of our Nation and the supreame Court of Iustice in our State Nay and the strange time that is taken for the righting of Religion Law and Liberty amongst us m●kes our assurance and joy the lesse triumphant for we plainely see that as the season now is no one Protestant falls here by the Kings sword but by the same stroak three Protestants at least are cut off in Ireland And lastly the manner of rightting Religion Law and Liberty is most strange of all for open warre is not now sufficiently destructive though it be spread all over the face of the Kingdom subterranean plots are brooded further in the dark and by privie intell●gence the whole City of London is to be engaged in a tragicall conspiracy to murder it selfe in one night What the benefit therefore is of Law and Power and Iustice for the disabling of Papist and Delinquents and for the safe guarding of loyall Protestants we all know But when papists and delinquents finde countenance and the true religion is abandoned and le●t obnoxious to mischiefe by the perversion of Law Power and Iustice the names alone will not availe us but our Replicant further saith Subjects must not give Lawes to Princes courtesies In matters of a private nature Princes are absolute but not so in publike affaires where the publike safety or liberty is touched In their own pallaces Princes may dispose of Offices but in the State if they make Patents prejudiciall to their revenues to their prerogatives or to the peoples interest the Iudges shall pronounce them deceived in their grants and make the deeds void and null in Law Princes cannot alien any parcells of their Crownes Hull may not bee transferred to the King of Denmark nor Portsmouth to France nor Falmouth to Spaine for Kings have no sole propriety in such things and the same reason is in the super intending Offices of Royalty i● s●lfe they are not transferible at pleasure Some Princes to use the words of Tacitus are so infirme and credulous that they remaine jussi● alienis obnoxii and non modo Imperii s●d libertatis etiam indigent they are so enslaved sometimes to their basest flatterers that their very D●adems are as it were aliend and made prostitute to seducers and these their flatterers and seducers in the ●xpressions of the same Tacitus Minoee metu majore praemio peccant The unhappy Protestants in Ireland were of late undone by the vast● power which was put into the hands of the Earl of Straff●rd and all the Ecclesiasticall if not Civill disturbances and distraction which have of late infested these three Kingdom● were in great part ●a●sed by excesse of power over the Church delegated to the Archbishop of Canterbury Without doubt when the foundation of Popery was first to be laid it did not prosper and advance so much in sixscore yeers under the first Popes as it did in six yeeres here under Canterbury And Ner● himselfe in his first three yeeres did not attaine to so much insolence and tyranny as Strafford did in one yeare The Kings freedom therefore in favours will ●ever justifie the preferring of such men to an unquestionable com●●nd nor the subjecting the lives liberties and soules of so many millions of Religious Protestants to their corrupted disaffected wills Neverthelesse for ought I can see we have since but changed one Strafford for another and one Canterbury for another Only to stop our complaints This Replicant tell us That the courtesies of Princes are not to be questioned by subjects The Queen has now attained to a great heigth of power as formidable as she is to us in regard of her sex in regard of her Nation in regard of her disposition in regard of her family in regard of her Religion and lastly in regard of her ingagments in these present troubles some think shee has an absolute unlimitable power over the Kings sword and Scepter which if it bee so no end of our feares and calamities can be no propositions can profit us no Accommodation can secure us If the King himselfe were a Papist he would yet look upon us as his naturall subjects but when his regall power is secondarily in the hands of a Papist to that Papist we appeare but as meere hereticks without any other relation of subjects By secondary power also a stroak is given with m●re secresie and security so that there is the
lesse feare in the party striking to break and retard its violence It issues like a bullet whose line is not direct but with some elevation in the ayre or with some windings in the barrell of the gun whereby it doth more execution at a further distance Therefore our Kings many and dreadfull Oaths and Vowes of sincerity in the Protestant Religion are not satisfying if in the mean time any of his Kingly prerogative bee shared with such as are not sincere in the Protestant Religion it were farre safer for us that hee would sweare for his party then for himselfe But our Replicant will never have done with the Law hee still tells us That every man is to bee tryde by his Peeres the Lords in the Lords House and the Commons at the Kings Bench and though the House of Commons have no right of Iudicature yet there is another tryall for Treasons and our m●●●e p●int in difference at this time is concerning Treason The Parliament is nothing else but the whole Nation of England by its owne free choice and by vertue of representation united in a more narrow roome and better regulated and qualified for consultation then the collective body without this art and order could be The Lords and Commons make but one entire Court and this Court is vertually the whole Nation and we may truly say of it that by its consent Royalty it selfe was first founded and for its ends Royalty it selfe was so qualified and tempered as it is and from its supreame reason the nature of that qualification and temperature ought only to be still learnd and the determination thereof sought For who can better expound what Kings and lawes are and for what end they were both created then that unquestionable power which for its own advantage meerly gave creation to them both If Kings and nationall lawes had any humane beginning if they be {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} as the Scripture sayes they are they had not their being from themselves and from nations collectively taken they could not have their being for nations so are not congregable nor consultable nor redeemable from confusion pardon the hardnesse of words and therefore it must follow that both Kings and laws were first formed and created by such bodyes of men as our Parliaments now are that is such Councells as had in them the force of whole Nations by consent and deputation and the Maiesty of whole Nations by right and representation The enemies of Parliaments seeing this not to be gain-said and seeing that it must needs follow that that cause which first gave the being and prescribed the end of that being must needs have most right and skill to limit and direct the manner of that being they seek to divide the coactive from the representative body of the people they seek to divide between the two houses of Parliament and these seek to divide between the head and the body of the Parliament They perswade the multitude that they have entrusted the Parliament only with their purses to give away subsidies and replenish the Kings coffers but not to settle their rights and franchises and to make knowne the bounds of Prerogative and restraine the unnaturall encroachments or erruptions of the same If the community have beene agrieved to complaine or almost accuse is a sufficient priviledge of the house of Commons and this but to avoid further repining shall not be granted them T is pity that our Doctors doe not study the Law further for with a little more industry they might perhaps finde out that every private man as well as the house of Commons or the whole Community out of Parliament as well as our Knights and Burgesses in it may give the King money and if occasion be preferre an accusation against such a ●yrrannicall Lord or favourite well if such Rabbies and expounders can satisfie any of the unworthy vulgar and some Gentlemen and Lords who have spirits below the Yeomanry of England for such I have seene too many since 3. Novemb 1640 they shall be no further disabus'd by me In the next place They attempt to work a disunion between the Houses the Lords shall have a power of Judicature ●ver their Members so they will exclude the Commons from any part therin and upon condition that they will so farre disclaime them as to leav● them obnoxious for tryalls at the Kings bench This sitting of the Lords and Commons in severall Houses does not prove them severall Courts nor does the observance of particular Priviledges in either House and not laying all things common between both prove any independance of either doubtlesse they are like the twines of Hippocrates they both must live and die together In former ages judgement was so given upon the greatest Delinquents at that the Commons were parties in the judgement And sure whilst they were Judges over Lords themselves were not subjected to inferiour Courts the Lords then knew they could not indure any indignity to fall upon the Commons being but distinct parts of the same Court but it would reflect upon themselves and the Commons knew that the honour of the Lords was an addition to themselves whilst the Curiatii stand close together their three adverse Combatants are too weake for them but when they are divided by unwarinesse in the encounter they prove all three too weake for one of their enemies I will not make any comparisons or say whither the Lords or Commons deserted by the other suffer more I will only say that nothing but fatall want of policy can divide or diminish their mutuall love and correspondence In the last place division also is raised betwixt the King and Parliament there is a generation of men which se●ke not the good of King and Parliament nor could prosper if the King and Parliament were united as they ought to be These men because their suggestions cannot prevaile to alienate the Parliament from the King apply all their indevours to alienate the King from the Parliament their perp●tuall suggestion are That the greatnesse of Kings is eclipsed by Parliaments That there is in Lawes themselves a kind of enmity and something that is inconsistant with royalty That Kings are bound to seek nothing but themselves That Kings can seeke nothing in themselves so nobly as the satisfying of their wills especially when their wills are fixt upon things difficult and forbidden Neverthelesse there is nothing but falsety in all these suggestions For Princes are the Creatures and naturall productions of Parliaments and so are their Prerogatives as has been set forth and every rationall and naturall thing loveth its own off-spring and that love is rather ascending then descending it is liker the sap of the root then of the branch viz. The people are more inclinable to love Princes then Princes to love the People There is likewise a neare consanguinity and reflexive benevolence of aspects between Lawes and Princes they are both of the same descent and tend
they themselvss do require to be regulated by further Lawes No Nation can be free without a three-fold priviledge The first is in the framing and passing of Lawes The second is in declaring and interpreting Lawes And the third is in executing and preserving Lawes in force Where the King is sole Law-maker all things are subject to his meer discretion and a greater bondage then this never was nor can be the English lie not under such base servitude their King claimes but a part in the Leg●slative power and yet neverthelesse of late by discontinuing of Writs for the summoning of Parliaments and by the right of a Negative voyce in Parliaments and an untimely dissolving of Parliaments the peoples interest in this Legislative power has been much abridged and suspended In the like manner also if the sole power of declaring Lawes were so in the King as that he might himselfe give Judgement or create Judges at his pleasure without imposing Oathes of trust on them in behalfe of the people or should deny redresses upon Appeales from them our Legislative power would be vaine and uneffectuall to us For my part I hold it an equall thing whither just men make Lawes and unjust interpret them or unjust men make Lawes and just interpret them When it was just in the King of late to impose what taxes hee pleased and as often as he pleased upon us for the preparing of Armadoes all over England Our Nation was fallen into a most desperate thraldome yet the fault was not then in the Lawes but in the Judges and such as had a power over the Judges Lawes as they are deafe and by a strict inflexibility more righteous then living Judges so they are dumb also and by their want of Language more imperfect then the brests of men And indeed since the Lawes of God and Nature though knowne to all yet do not utter to all the same sense but remaine in many plaine points strangely controverted as to their intent and meaning how can we hope that any humane Lawes should satisfie all mens understanding in abstruse points without some living Key to open them the vast Pandects and digests of the Law sufficiently testifie that in the clearest Law which mankind could ever yet discover there are dark and endlesse Labyrinths wherein the weaker sort of lay men are presently lost the learnedst advocates are tediously perplext In the last place also if the sole power of inforcing and executing Lawes were so vested in the King as that he might use it to the cessation or perversion of all justice and the people were in such case remedilesse the interest in making and declaring of Law were invalid and frustrate in the people and the King might still inslave or destroy them at his pleasure The Replicant sayes That under a Monarchy much must be trusted to the King or else it will be debased into Democracie T is confessed much must but all must not be trusted the question then is how farre this much extends in a Monarchy of such a mixt nature as ours is in such times as ours now are In absolute Monarchies all is trusted to the King in absolute Democracies all is vested in the people in a mixt Monarchy more is trusted to the King then is reserved to the people and in a mixt Democracie more is reserved to the people then is derived to the Prince In all formes of Government the people passes by way of trust all that power which it retaines not and the difference of formes is only in degree and the degrees are almost as various as the severall states of the world are nay the same state admits of often changes many times sometimes the people gaines and sometimes looses sometimes to its prejudice sometimes not and sometimes injuriously sometimes not but the degrees of ordinary power consist in the making declaring and inforcing Law except when forraigne warre is and then it is expedient that a greater and more extraordinary trust be reposed in one and this we see in Holland the most exact Republicke and in England the most exact Monarchy in the world But it is a leud conceit of our Royalists now-adayes to attribute to our King an absolute power over the Militia of this Land at all times alike not distinguishing between Civill warres wherein he may be a party and suspected and between a forraigne warre where he is neither a party nor suspected for if our Kings will plead such a trust to our disadvantage 't is just that they produce some proofe for it and relye not upon meere Common use 't is true in case of Forraigne invasion 't is expedient that the King be farre trusted and yet even so if the King should conspire with forraigne forces or neglect to protect us against them contrary to the intent of his trust we might resume the common native Posse or Militia of the Land for our owne defence without his consent And much more reasonable is it in time of Peace or Civill warre if the King will deny his influences or withdraw his presence to obstruct Law or will by his Negative voyce or by force seeke to disable his highest Courts and Councels and reduce all to arbitrary government more reasonable is it that the people secure to themselves the Law their chiefest portion and best patrimony For as the King cannot by Law deny to the people their undoubted interest in passing of Lawes so neither can he defeat the same interest or destroy the benefit thereof by misinterpretations or by mis-executions of the same Lawes No Nation can injoy any freedome but by the right and share which it has in the Lawes and if that right and share doe not extend to the preservation of Lawes in their true vigour and meaning as well as to the Creation of them 't is emptie and defeasible at the Kings meere pleasure Much is to be trusted to the King true but all is not we see ●rusted some power we see is of Necessity to be reserved in free Nations such as the King allowes us to be and there is a difference also in the word Trust for there is an arbitrary and there is a necessary Trust and the one may be resumed the other not upon meere pleasure Without all question the wiser and juster Princes are esteemed the more the people ever trust them but this makes no difference in the Legall and fundamentall Trust of the Kingdome nor can infirme credulous and easie Princes pretend alwayes to the same degree of power as their Ancestors have held unlesse they can prescribe to their vertues also Queene Elizabeth might with safety and expedience be trusted further then King Iames even in those things where the Law did not trust her but this is the misery of subjects all goes from them but nothing must returne The Court of a Prince is like the Lions den in the Fable all the beasts leave prints and steps advorsum but none retrorsum But the
Replicant further assures us That t is very easie to assigne the bounds of these severall trusts for the Lawes and Customes of the Land determine both nor will his Maiestie he saies require any new trust to himselfe or deny any old trust to us Our great D●vines were to bee admi●ed for their profound knowledge in the mysteries of Law were they not Courtiers but now the King is presum'd to comprehend omnia jura in scrinio Pectoris and so they by their residence at Court discerne all the secrets of Law and State in speculo Imperii just as our heavenly Saints doe read all things else in speculo Trinitatis Our gravest Sages of the Law are much divided in points of lesse moment and intricacie and as for the precise metes and bounds where Soveraignty and Liberty are sever'd and the direct degrees of publike trust in all cases and at all times they looke upon them as grand difficulties scarce fit to be debated but in the sacred Court of Parliament and yet Clergie-men think them but the first rudiments of all knowledge obvious to very A. B. C-Darians C-Darians They alwayes boast of the knowne Lawes of the Kingdome in all disputes they referre us to the knowne Lawes and Customes of the Land as if Judges were things utterly needlesse and the study of Law meerely superfluous The Tresha●lt Court of Parliament of whose determination our learnedst Judges will not thinke dishonourably cannot pierce into these known obvious Lawes and yet every Sophister can the Fountaines of Justice are now exhausted and yet the Cisternes remaine full But saies the Replicant If you seeke further security then the knowne Lawes the people will see that under the name of free subiects you take upon you the power of Kings Sir we desire to have our Lawes themselves secured to us which you may turne like our owne Canons against our selves if righteous and prudent Iudges be not granted us and all over-awing violence so prevented as that the fruit of their Iudgements be clearely and intirely conveyed to us And such securance is not incompatible with Monarchy for it is no more impeachment to Monarchy that the people should injoy th●n make lawes that they should be sharers in the power of declaring and executing then in the power of passing framing lawes but it is on the contrary an evident impeachment to liberty if an equality of these three Priviledges be not at least shared with the people 3. As for the diametricall opposition in Religion and State betwixt us and our irreconciliable enemies of the Kings party The Replicant maintaines divers things and of the Papists and Delinquents he sayes That we have nothing against them but State Calumnies That the same justice may governe both if wee will submit to Law He beseeches us to tell what Religion we would have if that which the Martyrs sealed with their blood our Adversaries practise it and desire severe punishment upon all such as transgresse it he imputes to us a new Creed he sayes the King is to look upon friends or enemies in a Law notion only that Subjects must not give Lawes to Princes courtesies That our enemies if they be Traytors are to be tried at the Kings Bench the house of Commons having no right of Judicature The major part of our enemies are certainly either Papists or else such as are either over-awed or outwitted by Papists T is true some part of our enemies knowes the truth of the Protestant Religion and the desperate antipathy of Papistry yet having in them the true power of no Religion but serving Mammon only for their worldly interests sake with which severity of Parliaments will not square they adhere to Papists little regarding what Religion stands or what falls Another part out of meere ignorance is carried away with the name King and the Professions of the King not at all looking into reason of State nor being able to judge of the same but the last sort of men are not so considerable either for their number or power or malice and therefore I shall not insist upon them The maine Engineers in this Civill Warre are Papists the most poysonous serpentine Iesuited Papists of the world All the Papists in Europe either pray for the prosperity of this designe or have contributed some other influence and assistance to it This warre was not the production of these two last yeares nor was England alone the field wherein the Dragons teeth were sowd Scotland was first attempted but the Protestant party there was too strong for the Papists and such of the English as joyned with them The conspiracies next broke out in Ireland where the Popish party being too strong for the Protestants the Tragedy has been beseeming Papists it has proved beyond all paralell bloody and if shipping were not wanting they might spare some aids for their fellow Conspirators here in England England is now in its agony bleeding and sweating under the sad conflict of two parties equally almost poized in force and courage The Papists themselves in England amount not to the twentieth arithmeticall part of Protestants and yet one papist in geometricall proportion may stand against twenty Protestants considering the papists with together with their adherents and considering also what they are that act over them and who they are that act under them What power the Romish Vice-god has in the Queen is known what power the Queen has in the King and what power the King and Queen have in the prelaticall Clergy and the Clergy in them reciprocally and what power the King Queen and Clergy have on a great number of irreligious or luke-warm protestants now made Delinquents and so further engaged as also upon all papists how all these have interests divided intwined how restlesly active they al are in pursuing their interests is not unkown Besides Ireland is a weakness Scotland is no strength to us all popish countries France Spain c. are likely to annoy us and the protestants in Denmark Holland c. have not power to restrain their Princes from combining further against us In this deplorable condition we have no friends to complain to and yet this Replicant tels us we have no enemies to complain of our very condoling against papists and delinquents he tearms State calumnies and slanders that have lost their credit by time and are confuted by experience O thou black mouth more black then thy coat hast thou no more remorse for all that pretestant blood which delinquents have enabled papists to shed in Ireland and for all that protestant blood which armies of papists and delinquents are now ready to shed in England if all this blood finde no pity in thee yet is it an offence to thee that it extorts teares and lamentations from us O thou unbowelled sanguinary wretch if God be the God of protestants he will judge these cruelties of papists and their abettors and if he be the God of papists
to the same end and both are inviolable whilst they are assistant each to other the enemy of both has no hope to prevaile Si attribuat Rex legi quod lex attribuit ●i T is retrograde also to nature that Princes whom God has set to feed his people and not without the creation of the people should think themselves more valuable then that people or that they should confine their thoughts to themselves as Gods despising the universality when God has called particular subjects their brethren and forbidden them to lift up their hearts above any of them Lastly that Princes which have as other men sinfull affections and are subject more then other men to sinfull temptations and are accountable to God therefore in a higher degree then other men should think it inglorious to deny their own irregular wills and to submit to Lawes Parliaments and the Publike prayers and advice of their subjects 't is a thing scarce credible The most expert Navigator preferres the guidance of his Needle before his own conceit the most tried Engineer wholly relies upon the certainty of his rule All Artists how rare soever apply themselves to their Instruments absolutely renouncing their skill and experience in comparison of Mechanick directions Only Princes chuse rather to erre with their own fancies and fancy feeding flatterers then to go right with publick advice and no mischiefe which can happen to themselves and millions of others by their error seems so unkingly to be suffered as a retractation from error But our Replicant has more particular objections against Parliaments As ●irst That they have no cognizance of matters of State secondly That in matters of grace and pardon th●y have no power or right the King in those has an Arbitary sole authority Lawes ayme at Iustice Reason of state aimes at safety Law secures one subject from another Law protects subjects from insolence of Princes and Princes from sedition of Subjects so far as certaine rules may be given and written but reason of State goes b●yond all particular formes and pacts and looks rather to the being then well-being of a State and seeks to prevent mischiefe ●orraign as well as Domestick by emergent Counsels and unwritten resolutions Reason of State is something more sublime and imperiall then Law it may be rightly said that the Statesman begins where the Lawyer ceaseth for when warre has silenced Law as it often does Policy is to bee observed as the only true Law a kind of a dictatorian power is to be allowed to her whatsoeever has any right to defend it selfe in time of danger is to resort to policy in stead of Law and it is the same thing in the Replicant To deny to Parliaments recourse to reason of State in these miserable times of warre and danger as to deny them self-defence Many men especially Lawyers would fain have Law alone take place in all times but for my part I think it equally destructive to renounce reason of State and adhere to Law in times of great extremity as to renounce Law adhere to Policy in times of tranquillity Nothing has done us more harme of late then this opinion of adhering to Law only for our preservation the King and his party though they are too wise themselves to observe Law at all yet have wrought much upon the simpler sort of our side by objecting against us neglect of Law Certainly as our dangers now are it would bee good for us to adde more power to the Earle of Essex if he be thought the worthiest man of Trust amongst us as he has deserved no lesse estimation for till I see him look● upon and served as a temporary Dictator and the bounds of his Commission to bee only this ne quid detrimenti capiat Respublica cavere I shall never think the Parliaments safety sufficiently provided for To frame any Arguments or reasons or to offer p●ooses that the Representative body of the Kingdome is a Counsell of State rather th●n a Court of Justice would shew me as foolish as the Replicant t is impossible any man should doubt of it that does think the being is to bee preserred before the well being or that whole Nations have any imterests either in their owne being or well being Let our Adv●rsa●ies triumph in their owne conceits and when in the same case there is both matter of Law and State as in the case of Hull where the King had ●n interest rather in State then Law let them upbraid us for declining of Law I shall like that best which they dislike most in us I wish we had not observed Law too farre for they would never so farre recommend it to us did they not know it might be sometimes unseasonable As for acts of grace and pardon I shall not much quarrel thereabout the Parliament can best advise the King how far it is fit to passe a Law of oblivion in these generall times of confusion And the Answerer of the London Petition affirmed ●othing but that their advise therein was likely to be most wholsome which can hardly be contradicted And the Law is cleare enough that though the execution of Law be farre intrusted to the King and there is a dispensing power in Him so farre as he is supposed to be damn●fied or to be interested in the penalty yet where crimes have been committed against the whole State the King ought not and where particular men have been injured the King cannot suffocate frustrate or deny Justice 'T is against his Oath 't is against publike Liberty to deny satisfaction by stopping execution 4. But London is the most considerable part of the Kingdome and the Petitioners the best part of London and the most to bee valued in other parts are inclined to the same request for peace therefore the Parliament ought to yeeld When our Adversaries please they can alledge numbers for their advantage as if the Major part of the people were cordially on the Kings side when they please they can give you reasons why the major part of the people are inchanted and therfore cannot be on the Kings side yet we all know the major part cannot be both for and against the King at the same time in the same case Besides divide England into 3. parts and we doe not allow London to be the major of those three and divide London into 3. parts and the Petitioners cannot make it appear that they are full one third part this must be attributed to our Replicants boldnesse meerly That which is manifest is that most of the faulty and decayed Nobility and Gentry are of the Kings party and so are the Lees of the people but almost all of the Yeomenry which is the most considerable ranke of any Nation and a very choyse part both of Nobility and Gentry at this time side against the King and the Papists And it is impossible for any rationall man to imagine that the King has not infinite advantages
fellow Courtiers use the King cannot be happy but by the uncertainty of war that is by making his subjects miserable but such Traytors as I am if our advise bee entertained propose to the King a more certaine way to happinesse by Peace that is by making his subjects yet more happy but our Replicant ●●ith the King is willing to condescend to any thing but you will admit of no reconciliation except the King will remove those servants whom he had found most honest and faithfull in his afflictions and prefer you undeserving in their place Here is the grand knot indeed we oppose such as have been the Counsellors or instruments of such and such designes the King saith they are his friends and he cannot abandon his friends 't is confest the King ought not to abandon his friends but the King m●y erre in the knowledge of friends and as he ought to protect his friends in whom he cannot err so he is not bound to protect such as he meerly thinks his friends and in whom if he will beleeve the voyce of the people he is very much deceived We have as much interest in the Kings friends and Counsellors as we have in our Laws Liberties lifes any thing for we know we can enjoy nothing if the King shall owne those for his friends whom we know to be our enemies and account of these as good Couns●●ls which we know to be treasons against the State that Prince that will be arbitrary and rely upon his owne meer opinion and discretion in the imployment of Counsellors and Ministers of State having no regard to publique approbation therein is as injurious altogether as he that will admit of no other Law judge nor rule in the propriety and liberty of his subjects but his owne brest only It will be replyed not fancy but sense teaches this that he that obeyes the Kings commands and fights under the Kings Standart is more a friend than he that disobeyes and fight against the King this is demonstration no error can be in it I answer no 't is most false Scripture and reason manifest it to be most false Doeg did obey Saul when all his other servants denyed obedience yet even in that obedience he made himselfe culpable and his master abominable whereas the other servants of Saul were dutifull in withholding an unlawfull duty So those 3000 Souldiers which marched out after Saul to take away the life of just and uncondemned David they were instruments in a base disservice to Saul they are not to be justified for this service whereas those 600 valiant men which accompanied David in his dangers and afflictions and were ready with their sword drawn to guard that innocence which Saul himself should have guarded are not to be accounted false to Saul but true to David And the meere presence of Saul on the one side did not make the cause unjust on the other side nor if himself had fallen by rushing oftentimes upon defensive weapons could that horrid guilt of his death have been imputed to any but to himself Cursed therefore yea thrice cursed be these miscreants which ingage the King in this war against the Parliam not without hazard of his sac●ed Person if they be private persons and have not sufficiency to decide this great controversie betwixt the King and Parliament For my part I dare not pronounce sentence neither for nor against the Parliament as the Replicant without all scruples doth in all places but I may safely say that if the King does though in person unjustly wage war against the Parliament the E of Essex and his Army may far more lawfully fight in defence of that supreame Court than David and his followers did for the protection of one innocent private man And taking the controversie as undecided 't is not apparent who fight for or against the King and the King may himself as lawfully claime to be sole supreme judge over all single and universal persons and over all Laws and Courts and in all cases whatsoever as to claime any man a Traitor for serving the Parliament in this war and this if he claimes what Priviledge remaines to Parliament what limits remaine to the Prince what liberty remain●s to the Subjects 'T is not only then trayterous but ridicul●u● in the Replicant to assume that su●rem●cy to himself which is d●nyed to the King by condemning the Parliament and justifying the Kings party in all passages of this War we wh●n we except against the K●ngs party asperse not at all the Kings person and the Law it ●elf makes ever a distinctio● betwixt the King and his agents th●ugh our Replicant will not allow any such severance but betwixt the P●rl●am and its instrumen●s no such severance is except for the worse for there pejor ●st author quam actor but sayes the Replic●nt 'T is the unhappinesse of the King that he hath a par●y 't is the fault of the Parliament he desires and ought to have the whole See here 't is the Parliaments fault that Per●y Digby Winter Mountague Cro●●s Killegrew and many other of the Quee●s devoted Creatures are preferred in the Kings favour before the Parliament And 't is the Parliaments fault that Rivers King and the Titular Cou●t of the ●alatinate with s●me other Irish Papists ●●●ly come over have the honour of the Court command of the Cam● and spoyle of the Kingdom to reward them whilst Manchester Hambd●n H●llis ●im Strod Haselrig are designed for the ●l●ck and that u●on such charges as shall intangle almost all the most eminent Gentry and Nobility as well as them That this is the Kings unhappinesse is aggreed but that this is the Parliaments fault is not proved by the Replicant and we are not bound alwayes to abate him proofes in matters of this consequence D●ubtlesse we are likely to expect great performances from ●arliaments hereafter if it shall be guilt in them that they are rejected and if they shall be rejected only because other more favoring Cou●●iers pretend better affection to the Kings private advantage The actions of Popish and Malignant Courtyers cannot represent them more friendly to the K. than the Parliaments No honour or prosperity has followed hitherto therupon all their diff●rence is that their single professions of Love are more credited than such as are credited by the Votes of the Generality and attestations of Parliament Howsoever though many men do think private advise and testimony to be more valuable and sit for Princes to hearken too then publick I never till now heard that it was a fault or blam● i● Parliaments to be lesse valued or accepted then priva●e p●rsons To what purpose is it said that the King ●ught to have the whole it is our c●mplaint that the King will not accept of the whole and it is the Replicants complaint that the King is not suffered to injoy the whole This shall reconcile all let the whole be received as the whole and every part as
wherein so many Papists are predominant That though the Parliament might submit yet a faire Accommodation it could not obtaine except the King would equally condescend thereunto That if the Petitioners had found out a more safe and honourable Accommodation then the Parliament had yet discovered for that was possible the Parliament would embrace it That if none such could be found out the affections and Judgements of the Parliament ought not to becensur'd or distrusted That it behooved the Petitioners to addresse themselves by the like petition to the King if no want of affection to peace were apparent in the Parliament as certainly none was In contradiction and opposition to all the severall poynts in this A●alysis what the Replicant hath set forth wee shall now see in the same order 1. The great contrivers of our sad divisions which abuse the weake reason of the people to keepe up an unfortunate misunderstanding between King and Subject are not named by the Replicant but they are clearely pointed out to be the Chiefe Lords and Commons in Parliament for he saith Every new Vote of late hath been a new affliction and he makes Pennington and the Citty Lecturers to be but Iourney-men Rebels under them and even this Hellish slander he venteth under the name of the Petitioners whom he stiles the most considerable persons of the Citty and at the same time affirmeth that the people generally are of honest affections And the Answer to the Petition in which the words he saies are softer then oyle though the matter of it be poison of Aspes he attributes only to some Chiefe Engineers of mischiefe in the House though it carry in it the Authority of the whole House Here is a wonder beyond all wonders A few factious persons in Parliament over-awe the major better and wiser part in Parliament and by a few factious Instruments in Citty and Countrey abuse the major better and wiser part there also into the most miserable distempers and calamities that ever were and though the honest generality begin to grow wiser and are instructed by the sence of their miseries and by other advertisements from loyall Papists and Prelates and other pious Courtiers and souldiers to shake off their few Tormentors Nay and though the King himself has not onely publisht the most eloquent and subtill Declarations to disabuse the people that ever were himselfe being the most beloved and honoured Prince that ever was for his indulgence to Liberty and Religion but ha●h also advanced a most puissant and victorious Army to releeve these undeceived wretches yet the incantation holds no humane force either of Arm●s or Art● can dissolve it The miracles of Moses had an impression of divine vertue upon them and did therefore triumph overall the Egyptians spels bu● in this case Mr Pym with I know not what infernall engines distorts and wrests all the Orbes of a Kingdome from their naturall motions and yet no divine Art can resist him 'T was never beleev'd before that any but God could work contrary to nature but now it must be beleeved But is it so apparent that the Parliament is averse from peace yet saies the Replicant For withdraw the fuell and the fire is soon extinguisht Let the Parliament not foment the ill humour by supplyes of men Armes and Ammunition and the wound will heale of it selfe In the petition nothing but an Accommodation safe and honourable was pretended but now we see a meere submission is intended in this replication T is not prooved That the Armes of the Parliament are unjust 't is not prooved that it may be safe for the Kingdome to prostrate and subject Parliamen●s to the discretion of that faction which now has bereav'd us of the Kings presence and favour yet because the Replicant will take upon him to condemne Parliaments we must also allow of his Judgement But ' its further say'd by the Replicant that even Accommodation it selfe is not pleasing in Parliament witnesse that sp●ech of one I like not daubing and that of another I hat●●●● name of Accommodation Hee which hates the name of an Accommodation as it has bee● used of late to signifie a totall submission may love a true Accommodation in it selfe and he that likes not the daubing of those which under the colour of Accommodation ayme at nothing but division and dissention amongst the people may more heartily affect a safe and honourable agreement then the Replicant himselfe Can the Parliament expresse zeale to peace better then by contracting all its rights and priviledges into one compendious proposition for the setling of union To purchase true peace the Parliament desires nothing but to retain the meere being of a Parliament that is to be the supreme Court of King and Kingdome And if it can stand with the essence of such a Court to be arraign'd tryed and sentenced by a faction of Papists Prelates Delinquents and Souldiers the Parliament will submit to that Condition also 2. When we expresse our feares of the Kings party and therefore deny submission thereunto as dangerous and dishonourable the Replicant tels us further we are required not to submit to our fellow subiects but to the King only and he tels us further that the Lawes are the best security and those we shall enioy and to claime any higher securitie is to assume the power of Kings How farre the Lawes of the Land have been sufficient to preserve to Parliaments and the be●ter part of loyall Protestant subjects their rightfull portion and interest in the Kings favour for these 17. yeares last past is knowne to all The Lawes of Scotland could not secure the better and greater part there The Lawes of Ireland have not saved the Brittaines and Protestants from Massacres there and yet certainly both those Kingdomes are intitled to Lawes of as ample benefit and vigour as ours now is But what speake we of Common Lawes when even at this instant such a free subjects house is burnt and plundered by the Kings party in derision and despight of the Kings owne Proclamation and particular Placard granted for the safegard of himselfe and his family As our Judges preyed upon us heretofore in matters of State and Divines oppressed us in matters of Religion so our Martialists now have a power of spoyling above the generall Law or any particular protection If the King thinke fit to grant safety to such a person or such a Towne it must be provided alwayes that such a Dutch or Scotch Commander who conceives himselfe more skilfull in war then the King give his approbation withall for my part I conceive it more honourable for the King to say that he cannot then that he would not save his people from all those cursed indignities and cruelties which have been multiplyed upon us during this warre and before by his adherents As for Lawes therefore we must take notice that they may be imployed either to the benefit or prejudice of any Nation and that
the Replicant is very reasonable for we freely submit to both his propositions but he is not so Politick as he thinks ● for a submission to th●se generall propositions will not determine any one of our Particular debates Let us be safe as wee were in Queen Elizabeths dayes and let us be secured of our safety by the same meanes as Queen Elizabeth secured us That is by shewing no countenance to Papists much less● admitting them as Counsellors least of all as Governors in her highest Councells let wise men generally loved and revered sit at the Councell Table and let the Publick advise of Parliament sway above all private let our Lawes be in the Custody of learned and uncorrupt Iudges and let our Militia be under the Command of such renowned Patriots as shee preferred in her dayes and our Accommodation is more ample and beneficiall then any we have yet desired But our Replicant will suggest Be you such Subjects as Queen Elizabeth ruled and King Charles will treat you as Queen Elizabeth did her Subjects doe you right first to the King and the King will not faile to doe right to you Here is now the maine Question indeed which rightly solved would solve all whether these deplorable miseries which have of late vexed and grieved our three Nations have rather hapned from the Change of the People or from the Change of the Prince And most certaine it is future Ages will conceive no great doubt or difficulty to be in this Question but now it is mortall to dispute it it is scarce lawfull to suppose any thing herein Though supponere be not ponere but by way of supposition I will only plead thus if the three Nations have by I know not what fatall posture and Congresse of stars or superior Causes declined from their allegiance and degenerated into unnaturall obstinacy and turned recreant and contrary to the sweet Genius which was ever in their Ancestors they are bound to submit to the King to put in him as full and absolute a Trust as our Parents did in Queen Elizabeth but on the contrary if miscarriages in government and the pernicious Counsells whereby our Princes have been guided have overwhelmed us in these inundations of blood and mischiefes the Alteration and Reformation ought to begin first in the King and He cannot expect that we should trust him so farre as we did Queen Elizabeth untill we are assured as fully of his protection as we were of Queen Elizabeths but suppose there have been ●aults on both sides can nothing but the sword rectifie our faults I never yet heard that any Prince was forced to a warre with any considerable part of his own Subjects but that he had an unjust cause or might have determined the strife without bloud by some Politick Comply●nce if he pleased It is not so common or probable in nature for Nations causlesly to rebell as for Princes wickedly to oppresse and when armes are taken up on both sides it is not so safe for Subjects to yeeld as for Kings nor can Subjects so easily reduce Kings to a peaceable agreement and cessation of Armes as Kings may Subjects for the sparing of blood Kings can make no composition almost dishonourable or disadvantagious but Subjects being fa●●e into the indignation of revengfull Princes are necessitated commonly to this choyce either to come forth with halters about their necks or to fight upon great disadvantages as Rebellious as the Subjects of Rehoboam were a kind ●ay a Civill Answer might have retayned them in their allegiance and yet if their termes had been full of insolence and their Capitulations more unreasonable yet Salomon's Councellors would have perswaded Rehoboam to yeild to necessity and to master that multitude by some finenesse of wit which he could not Tame for the present by violence And certainly he shewed not himself the Son of Salomon that wo●ld not purchase an heredit●ry Empire over a gallant Nation by being a Servant for one day that would quit ●is own policy because the multitude had quitted their civil●tie that thought that Complyance which should gaine a scepter more dishonourable than that Contestation which should absolutly forfeit one How easy had it been for the great the wise the terrible Philip of Spaine to have prevented the totall defection of so many goodly Provinces in the Netherlands and if it could not have been done without something which is ordinarily accounted below a K. would not that have been more honourably done by him then the casting away o● so brave a Dominion a●d the casting after that so much blood treasure That King of France was far wiser and sped better which satisfied himselfe in his strugling through many difficulties with this Maxime That a Prince can loose no honour by any Treaty which addes to his Dominion Infinite instances might here bee alleadged but they are needlesse God send our King truly to represent these things to himselfe and rather to trust plain then pleasing advice God open his eyes that he may see how honorably and easily he might h●ve preuented these calamities and may yet stanch our bleeding wounds and how much m●re difficult it is and u●safe for the Parliament to compose things u●lesse he or rather his Party be equally disposed to hearken to peace H●● the 4. was as wi●e as vali●nt and as just a Prince as ever was Crowned in Eng●and and no Prince ever had by experience a more perfect understanding of the English Genius yet he in his death be● where dissimulation uses to be laid aside in his last advice to his own son an ●heire whom it was not likely he wo●ld willingly deceive ●●ciph●red the English Nation to be generally observant of their Princes and whilst they were well treated and preserved in Peace and plenty most incomparable for their per●ect inviolable loyalty but of all nations the most unquiet under such a ha●sh rule which should render them servile poore and miserable This he had abundantly prooved and found true by the wofull deposition of his unpolitick Kinsman and predecessor Rich the 2. and his own prosperous and glorious Raigne and many strange traverses of Fortune which throughout his whole Raigne He was forced to encounter withall His scope therefore was to recommend to his sons charge this Nation both as duti●ul● and as generous of whose loyalty he needs not to doubt so long as his Iustice was not to be doubted O that this most Excellent Prince could bee againe summoned from his peacefull Monument to repeate the ●ame advertissements in our Soveraignes eares and to justle out of his presence these bloud thirsty Papists and Malignants which use all possible art to staine the peopl●s loyalty and to candy over all his actions intending thereby not to reconcile the people by procuring grace from the King but to confound both King and people by fostering enmity between both I will only adde this by such instigations as our Replicant and his