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

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and reason captive and is almighty against all but the Councell of the Army The 8. Febr. came forth A Declaration and Protestation of the Peeres Lords and Barons of this Realm 99. A Protestation of the Peers against the late treasonable proceedings and tyrannicall usurpations of some Members of the Commons House who endeavour to subvert the fundamentall Laws and Regall Government of this Kingdom and enslave the People to their boundless Tyranny in stead of Freedom The Protestation followeth VVE the Peers Lords and Barons of this Realm of England for the present necessary vindication of the undoubted Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and more particularly of the House of Peers the just Prerogatives and Personall safety of our Kings the known Laws and Liberties of this Kingdom the Hereditary Freedom of all the Freemen of this Nation and our own affronted and contemned Honours and Authority against the many late unparallel'd dangerous Invasions and treasonable Vsurpations of a few insolent mis-advised Members of the late House of Commons whiles the greatest and ablest part of that House were forcibly detained or deterr'd from thence wherewith we find our selves and the whole Kingdom unsufferably injured and deeply afflicted Do after a long patient expectation of their own ingenious Retractions of such injustifiable Exorbitancies which their own judgements and consciences cannot but condemn whereof we now utterly despair being thereto engaged in point of Honour Loyalty Conscience Oath and love to our Native Country as also by our Solemn League and Covenant publikely declare and protest to all the world That by the Laws and Customes of this Realm and usage of Parliament time out of mind ever since there were Parliaments in this Island the principall Authority and Iudicatory of the Parliaments of England hath alwaies constantly resided and ought still to continue onely in the King and House of Peers wherein He alwaies sits and not in the Commons House who never had claimed nor ought to have any right or power to judge any Person or Cause civilly or criminally having no authority to examine any Witnesses upon Oath and being no Court of Record but onely to accuse and impeach Delinquents in and before the House of Peers where they alwaies have used to stand bare-beaded at their Barre but never yet to stand covered much less to sit vote or give Judgement And that the House of Commons without the concurrent assent of the House of Peers and Kings of England never heretofore challenged nor enjoyed nor can of right pretend to any lawfull power or Jurisdiction to make or publish any form or binding Ordinance Vote Act or Acts of Parliament whatsoever nor ever once presumed to pass any Act or Acts to erect a new High Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the meanest Subject least of all their own Soveraign Lord and King or any Peer of the Kingdome who by the Common and Statute Laws of this Realm and Magna Charta ought to be tried only by their Peers and not otherwise or to dis-inherit the right Heir to the Crown or to alter the Fundamental Government Laws Great Seal or ancient forms of process and legal proceedings of this Realm or to make or declare High Treason to be no Treason or any Act to be Treason which in it self or by the Law of the Land is no Treason or to dispose of any Offices or Places of Judicature or impose any Penalties Oaths or Taxes on the Subjects of this Realm And therefore we do here in the presence of Almighty God Angels and Men from our hearts disclaim abhor and protest against all Acts Votes Orders or Ordinances of the said Members of the Commons House lately made and published for setting up any new Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the King or any Peers or Subject of this Realm which for any Person or Persons to sit in or act as a Judge or Commissioner to the condemning or taking away the life of the King or any Peer or other Subject We declare to be High Treason and wilful Murther to disinherit the Prince of Wales of the Crown of England or against proclaiming him King after his Royal Fathers late most impious traiterous and barbarous murther or to alter the Monarchical Government Laws Great Seal Judicatories and ancient forms of Writs and legal process and proceedings or to keep up or make good any Commissions Judges or Officers made void by the Kings bloody execution or to continue any old or raise any new Forces or Armies or to impose any new Taxes Payments Oaths or forfeitures on the Subjects or to take away any of their Lives Liberties or Estates against the Fundamental Laws of the Realm or to make any new Judges Justices or Officers or set aside the House of Peers far ancienter than the Commons House and particularly this insolent and frantick Vote of theirs Feb. 6. That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose to be not onely void null and illegal in themselves by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm but likewise treasonable detestable tyrannical and destructive to the Priviledges Rights and being of Parliaments the just Prerogatives and Personal safety of the Kings of England the Fundamental Government and Laws of the Realme the Lives Liberties Properties and Estates of the People and the most transcendent tyranny and usurpation over the King Kingdome Parliament Peers Commons and Freemen of England ever practised or attempted in any Age tending onely to dishonour enslave and destroy this antient flourishing Kingdom and set up Anarchy and confusion in all places All which exorbitant and trayterous Usurpations We and all free-born Englishmen are by all obligations bound to oppose to the uttermost with our ●●●es and fortunes lest We sh●uld be accessary to our own and our Posterities slavery and ruine for preventing whereof We have lately spent so much blood and treasure against the Mal●gnant Party whose Treasons and Insolencies they far exceed * 100. The Kingly Office voted down after almo●t 1000 years it is now discovered by these new Lights to be inconvenient to be in one hand therefore it must be in the Councel of State forty Tyrants for one King that is the Army and their Party The 7. Febru the Commons debated about the Kingly Office and passed this Vote Resolved c. By the Commons of England assembled in Parliament that it hath been found by experience and this House doth declare That the Office of a King in this Nation and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burdensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike Interest of the People of this Nation and therefore ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose 101. A Committee to bring in a list of Names for a Councel of State A Committee was named to bring in a list
People of England And whereas the said confederated Commons have likewise tyrannically and audaciously presumed contrary to their Oathes and Engagements aforesaid to take upon them to make Acts of Parliament as they terme them without our privity or assents or the joynt consent of the King and House of Lords contrary to the Use and Priviledges of Parliament and knowne Lawes of the Land and by pretext thereof have trayterously and wickedly endeavoured to Dis-inherit the Illustrious CHARLES Prince of Wales next Heire to the Crowne and actuall KING of England Scotland France and Ireland immediately after His said Royall Fathers barbarous Murther by Right of descent and proclaimed it Treason for any Person to Proclaime him KING whereas it is high Treason in them thus to prohibit His proclaiming and have likewise trayterously and impudently encroached a tyrannicall and lawlesse power to themselves to Vote down our antient Kingly and Monarchicall Government and the House of Peers and to make a new Great Seale of England without the Kings Portraicture or Stile and to alter the antient Regall and Legall Stile of Writs and proceedings in the Courts of Justice and to create new Judges and Commissioners of the Great Seale and to dispense with their Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance and to prescribe new Oaths unto them contrary to Law though they have no Authority by any Law Statute or custome to administer or injoyne an Oath to any man and thereby have trayterously attempted to alter the fundamentall Laws and Government of this Kingdome and to subvert the freedome priviledges and being of Parliaments for which Treasons Strafford and Canterbury though least criminall lost their Heads this last Parliament by some of their owne prosecutions and the judgment of both Houses We in discharge of our respective duties and obligations both to God the King our owne Consciences our bleeding dying Kingdomes and the severall Counties Cities and Burrroughs for which we serve do by this present Writing in our owne Names and in the Names of all the Counties Cities and Burroughs which we represented in Parliament publickly declare and solemnly protest before the all-seeing God the whole Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland and the world that We do from the bottome of our hearts abominate renounce and disclaime all the said pretended Acts Votes and proceedings of the said confederate Members acted under the Armies power against our consents as treasonable wicked illegall unparliamentary tyrannical and pernitious both to the King Parliament Kingdomes and all the free-borne People of this Realme extreamly disadvantagious and dishonourable to our Nation scandalous to our Religion and meer forcible Usurpations and Nullities void in Law to all intents and purposes which we and all the Freemen of this Kingdome and all the Kingdomes and Dominions thereto belonging are bound openly to disavow oppugne and resist as such with our purses armes lives to the last drop of our blouds and to which neither We nor any other can ought or dare to submit or assent in the least degree without incurring the guilt of High Treason and the highest perjury infamy and disloyalty And in case the said confederates shall not speedily retract and desist from those their treasonable practises and tyrannicall usurpations which We cordially desire and entreat them by all obligations of love and respect they have to God Religion their King Country and Posterity timely to do We do hereby denounce and declare them to be Traytors and publique Enemies both to the King and Kingdome and shall esteem and prosecute them with all their wilfull Adherents and voluntary Assistants as such and endeavour to bring them to speedy and condigne Punishment according to the Solemne League and Covenant wherein We trust the whole Kingdome all those for whom We serve and the Lord of Hosts himself to whom We have sworne and lifted up our hands hearts and fervent prayers will be aiding and assisting to us and all our Bretheren of Scotland and Ireland who are united and conjoyned with us in covenant to our GOD and Allegiance to our Soveraigne King CHARLES the Second who we trust will make good all His destroyed Fathers concessions which really concerne our peace or safety and secure Us against all force and tyranny of our Fellow-subjects who now contrary to their Trusts and former Engagements endeavour by the meer power of that Sword which was purposely raised for the protection of our Persons Government Religion Laws Liberties the KING 's Royall Person and Posterity and the Priviledges of Parliament to Lord it over Us at their pleasure and enthrall and enslave Us to their armed violence and lawlesse martial wills which we can no longer tolerate nor undergoe after so long fruitlesse and abused patience in hope of their repentance About the same time came out another Paper entituled 109. A Paper entituled Foure true Positions c. ¶ Foure true and considerable Positions for the sitting Members the new Courts of Justice and new Judges Sheriffs Officers Lawyers Justices and others to ruminate upon 1. THat the whole House of Commons in no Age had any Power Right or Lawfull Authority to make any Valid or binding Act or Ordinance of Parliament or to impose any Tax Oath Forfeiture or capitall punishment upon any Person or Free-men of this Realme without the Lords or Kings concurrent assents much lesse then can a small remnant onely of the Members of that House do it sitting under an armed force which nulls and vacates all their Votes and proceedings as the Ordinance of 20. August 1647. declares whilst most of their Fellow-Members are forcibly detained and driven thence as Mr. St. John proves in his Speech concerning Ship-mony p. 33. and in his Argument concerning the Earle of Strafford's Attainder p. 70 71 76 77 78. and Sir Edw. Coke in his 4. Instit c. 1. 2. That the few Members now sitting in and the House of Commons being no Court of Justice of it selfe and having no power to hear and determine any civill or criminall causes nor to give an Oath in any case whatsoever cannot by the Lawes and Statutes of the Realm nor by any pretext of authority whatsover erect any new Court of Justice nor give power or authority to any new Judges Justices or Commissioners to arraigne try condemn or execute any Subject of meanest quality for any reall or pretended crime whatsoever much less their own Soveraign Lord the King or any Peers of this Realme who ought to be tryed by their Peers and by the Law of the Land alone and not otherwise And that the condemning and executing the King or any Peere or other Subject by pretext of such an illegall Authority is no lesse than High Treason and wilfull Murther both in the Members and Commissioners Judges or Justices giving and executing Sentence of Death in any such arbitrary and lawlesse void Court or by vertue of any such void and illegall Commissions 3. That the House of Commons and Members now sitting
Humane shewing Him to be more then Conquerour of His Enemies in His rare Christian patience and charity the very reading of it aggravateth our loss of so Gracious and excellent a Prince that had learned the whole method of humane perfection in the schoole of adversity Herod and his Jews never persecuted Christ in his swadling-clouts with more industrious malice then the Antimonarchicall Independent Faction this Book in the Presses and shops that should bring it forth into the world knowing that as the remembrance of Heaven strikes a horror into us of Hell So the contemplation of his virtues will teach us to abhorre their vices March 8. 1648. 129. The form of Writs for Elections changed The Commons assented to a new Form of a Writ for election of Knights and Burgesses for the Parliament But three dayes before it was reported to the House from the Councell of State what number of Horse and Foot they thought fit to be kept up for the service of England and Ireland 130. A new establishment for the Army reported to the House from our new Masters the Councell of State and the Monthly charge which estimated come to 160000 l. per mensem You see we are likely to finde these our new Lords such gracious Masters to us that as the second part of Englands new Chains saith We shall have Taxes though we have neither Trade nor Bread In the Earle of Essex time when the Warre was at the highest the Monthly Tax came but to 54000 l. a Month yet had we then seven or eight Brigades besides his Army and Garrisons but that the Faction of Saints may carry on the work of a thorow Reformation in our purses as well as they have done in the Church and Common-wealth they first raised the Tax to 60000 l. a Month for England besides 20000 l. a Month pretended for Ireland but I believe little of it slips through their sanctified fingers to go thither And now to shew they can use double dealing against the Ungodly they would double the summ from 80000 l. to 160000 l. a Month this is to break our hearts with property and make them take what impressions of slavery they please to set upon them this Conventicle of State will engross all the Coyn and Treasure of the Land into their own hands and then subdue us therewith and make us like slavish Aegyptians sell our selves and our Lands for Bread or money to buy Bread when that inseparable companion of a long warre Famine approcheth which their barbarous and illegall Sequestrations unstocking mens Farms and laying them wast will inevitably bring upon us they have more hope to subdue and lessen the number of their Opposites by famine and want then by the Sword in order to which they have destroyed the Trade of the City and undone multitudes of Trades-men who being disabled to pay their Taxes the Army cause all their Arrears to be leavied upon the City by a new Tax upon the rest of the Inhabitants and the Outlandlords and when Cromwell was told this would undo the City He answered It was no matter the more were undone the more would clap Swords to their sides and come into the Army you see Souldiery is intended to be the chief Trade 131. An Act for Abolishing the Kingly Office c. March 17. 1648. The empty House of Commons in farther prosecution of their said Design and to please their Masters of the Army passed printed and published in the form and style of a Statute this Paper following intituled An Act for the Abolishing the Kingly Office in England WHereas Charles Stuart late King of England Ireland and the Territories and Dominions thereunto belonging hath by Authority derived from Parliament Since by the Law the Crown cures al defects how can the King's bloud be attainted been and is hereby declared to be justly condemned adjudged to die and put to death for many treasons murthers and other hainous offences committed by him by which Judgement he stood and is hereby declared to be attainted of High Treason whereby his Issue and Posterity and all others pretending Title under him are become uncapable of the said Crowns or of being King or Queen of the said Kingdom or Dominions or either or any of them Be it therefore Enacted and Ordained and it is Enacted We have sworn faith and Alleg●ance to K. Charls the First His lawfull Heirs and Successors and our Vow is recorded in Heaven from which no power on earth can absolve us See the Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy The Statute of Recognition 1. Iac. But the Commons are now Supreme as in imitation of the Pope to bring this Claus in practise Licet de jure non possumus tamen pro plenitudine potestatis nostra volumus c. Ordained and Declared by this present Parliament and by Authority thereof That all the People of England and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging of what degree or condition soever are discharged of all Fealty Homage and Allegiance which is or shall be pretended to be due unto any of the Issue and Posterity of the said late King or any claiming under him and that Charles Stuart eldest Sonne and James called Duke of Yorke second Sonne and all other the Issue and Posterity of him the said late King and all and every person and persons pretending Title from by or under him are and be disabled to hold or enjoy the said Crown of England or Ireland All our Laws cut off by the non obstante of an eighth part of the House of Commons sitting under a force After almost 1000 years experience it is now found to be dangerous The English were never one half-quarter so much enslaved since William the Conquerour subdued them as they have been since Oliver the Brewer subjugated them and other the Dominions thereunto belonging or any of them or to have the Name Title Stile or Dignity of King or Queen of England and Ireland Prince of Wales or any of them or to have and enjoy the power and Dominion of the said Kingdoms and Dominions or any of them or the Honours Manors Lands Tenements possessions and Hereditaments belonging or appertaining to the said Crown of England and Ireland and other the Dominions aforesaid or to any of them or to the Principality of Wales Dutchy of Lancaster or Cornwal or any or either of them Any Law Statute Ordinance Vsage or Custome to the contrary hereof in any wise notwithstanding And whereas it is and hath been found by experience that the Office of a King in this Nation and Ireland and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burthensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike interest of the people and that for the most part use hath been made of the Regal power and prerogative to oppress impoverish and enslave the Subject and that usually and naturally any one person in such power makes
it his interest to incroach upon the just freedom and liberty of the people and to promote the setting up of their own will and power above the Laws that so they might enslave these Kingdoms to their own Lust * * But in a Councel of State of forty Tyrants sitting under the protection and awe of Oliver Be it therefore Enacted and Ordained by this present Parliament and by Authority of the same That the Office of a King in this Nation shall not henceforth reside in or be exercised by any one single Person and that no one person whatsoever shall or may have or hold the Office Stile Dignity Power or Authority of King of the said Kingdoms and Dominions or any of them or of the Prince of Wales Any Law Statute Vsage or Custome to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding And it is hereby Enacted That if any person or persons shall endeavour to attempt by force of Armes or otherwise or be aiding assisting c●mforting or abetting unto any person or persons that shall by any wayes or means whatsoever endeavour or attempt the reviving or setting up again of any pretended Right of the said Charles eldest Son to the said late King James called Duke of York or of any other the Issue and Posterity of the said late King or of any person or persons claiming under him or them to the said Regal Office Stile Dignity or Authority or to be Prince of Wales or the promoting of any one person whatsoever to the Name Stile Dignity Power Prerogative or Authority of King of England and Ireland and Dominions aforesaid or any of them That then every such offence shall be deemed and adjudged High-Treason High Treason is what these Legislative Thieves list to make it an Arbitary crime notwithstanding the Stat. 25 Ed. 3. for limiting and ascertaining of Treasons for security of the people Tiberius and Nero's days are fallen upon us Of which Tacitus Ingens crimen divitiae complementum omnium accusationum laesa majestas and the Offenders therein their Counsellors Procurers Aiders and Abettors being convicted of the said offence or any of them shall be deemed and adjudged Traytors against the Parliament and People of England and shall suffer lose and forfeit and have such like and the same pains forfeitures judgements and execution as is used in case of High Treason And whereas by the abolition of the Kingly Office provided for in this Act a most happy way is made for this Nation if God see it good to return to its just and antient right of being Governed by its own Representatives or National meetings in Councel * * When was England governed by their own Representative or had any other regliment then Kings But what the Legislative Conventicle declares we must believe though contrary to our knowledge They will lead our Faith and Reason in a string or have our necks in a halter A period to this Parliament and leave the Supream power in the Councel of State a design long since attempted See First and Second Part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting of the Foxes No obedience is due by Law to them which takes no notice of this form of Government from time to time chosen and entrusted for that purpose by the People It is therefore Resolved and Declared by the Commons assembled in Parliament that they will put a period to the sitting of this present Parliament and dissolve the same so soon as may possibly stand with the safety of the people that hath betrusted them and with what is absolutely necessary for the preserving and upholding the Government now setled in the way of a Common-wealth and that they will carefully provide for the certain chusing meeting and sitting of the next and future Representatives with such other circumstances of freedom in choice and equality in distribution of Members to be elected thereunto as shall most conduce to the lasting freedom and good of this Common-wealth And it is hereby further Enacted and Declared notwithstanding any thing contained in this Act no person or persons of what condition and quality soever within the Common-wealth of England and Ireland Dominion of Wales the Islands of Guernsey and Jersey and Town of Berwick upon Tweed shall be discharged from the obedience and subjection which he and they owe to the Government of this Nation as it is now Declared but all and every of them shall in all things render and perform the same as of right is due unto the Supreme Authority hereby declared to reside in this and the successive Representatives of the People of this Nation and in them onely 132. An Act for abolishing the House of Peers More New lights new discoveries made by forty or fifty Ignis satui gross fiery Meteors remaining in the House of Commons About the same time they passed another Act for Abolishing the House of Peers to this purpose THe Commons of England assembled in Parliam nt finding by too long experience that the House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the People of England to be continued have thought fit to Ordain and Enact and be it Ordained and Enacted by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same That from henceforth the House of Lords in Parliament shall be and is hereby wholly abolished and taken away and that the Lords shall not from henceforth meet or sit in the said House called the Lords House or i● any other House or place whatsoever as a House of Lords nor shall sit vote advise adjudge or determine of any matter or thing whatsoever as a House of Lords in Parliament Nevertheless it is hereby Declared That neither such Lords as have demeaned themselves with honour courage Fidelity to the Common wealth nor their Posterities who shall so continue shall be excluded from the publike Councels of the Nation but shall be admitted thereunto and have their free Vote in Parliament if they shall be thereunto elected as other persons of Interest elected and qualified thereunto ought to have And be it further Ordained and Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that no Peer of this Land not being elected qualified and sitting in Parliament as aforesaid shall claim have or make use of any Priviledge of Parliament either in relation to his person quality or estate any Laws Vsage or Custome to the contrary notwithstanding And to lessen the amazement of the People the same day they passed and ordered to be printed * 133. A Declaration of the Commons to shew the Reasons of their said proceedings The State is Free but the people Slaves as a Galley is free but the Rowers Slaves 1 part 72 73. See these Books A full Answer to an Infamous Pamphlet Intituled A Declaration of the Commons of England The Charge against the King discharged The Royal and Royalists Plea King Charles vindicated c. And his Majesties last Book or Pourtraicture and His Maj. Gracious Messages for
whereby multitudes of you are undone and yet the Armies Arrears and all other Taxes are exacted from you with as much cruelty as you lost nothing Remember that Butchery committed upon the unarmed Apprentices when Cromwel cried to the Souldiers to kill man woman and child and fire the City at which time his Nose looked as prodigiously upon you as a Comet Remember the scorn put upon you by a Grandee when you were enabled to put up your Chains again That the House had consented your Posts should have Chains as well as your Aldermen and did as well deserve them And Weaver's word when your Guards came to attend the House that 60 of the Army should beat 3000 of them Remember how unwillingly and juglingly they restored unto you the Tower first plundered of all its ammunition you formerly had in it and part only of your Militia and that clogged with many restrictions they that bestow gifts so grudgingly upon you when they are weak will deprive you of them again when they are strong Adversity makes them your false friends Prosperity your real Enemies Necessity only ties them to you have a care therefore you do not relieve their necessities lest you lose them like the frozen Snake in the bosome when they grow warm they will bite and sting You seem to have forgotten the unjust imprisonment of your Aldermen the unfaithfulnesse and inconstancy of their Votes and Ordinances even for security of Money and Land bought the several Informations and Testimonies you had of their good intentions to borrow more of your Money not by way of Loan nor upon the Publique Faith but by way of plunder Notwithstanding all these injuries and many more as if God had infatuated you to destroy you you suffer a corrupt Faction within you to List men to the amazement of your neighbour Counties whose principles you first examine and if they be not Independents you trust them not with Arms. I hear of a young man who being asked of what principles he was he answered That in these doubtfull times he professed no principles but gain to whom was replied then we are of one principle for we are resolved to keep what we have got Behold the Principles of these men that obstruct our peace consider that Heaven and Earth have denounced war against these men and that God himself hath touched the hearts of all men as one man to rise against them and demand to have Peace Religion and Justice restored When the whole Kingdom shall rise in a flame what will be your lot but smoak in your eyes and at last a consuming fire in your bowels when you only shall be left to maintain this domineering Army with your money and to recruit them with your blood many of their Officers say already That the Country is exhausted of Money and you shall be their purse-bearers but because you are a curst Cow they must keep the Army about you that the Souldiers may hold you by the horns whilst their friends milk you Consider how absolute a necessity and how general a resolution there is that all things should return to their old channel If you stop the violence of this Torrent it will swell untill it overwhelm and drown you You that are guiltless joyn not with the guilty you that are guilty sin no more there will be mercy for you if you repent and amend in time The very multitude of offenders will help to excuse your offences let not despair hu●● you from one sin to another until you fall into destruction as ●●aid Judas whose Despair by all Divines is held to be a greater i●piety than his Treachery by the first he sinned against the God-head of Christ by the second against his Manhood only The Remonstrance and Declaration of the Knights Esquires Gentlemen and Freeholders in COLCHESTER PEtitions the birth-right of Subjects are by Law our addresses to our King Gods Vicegerent by custom our approaches to the Houses of Parliament His Majesties great Council by them we used humbly to present our modest desires and were wont to receive answers as Gideons fleece the dew without noise yet satisfactory but that was denied our first Petition and before our second could be ready our brethren of Surrey by theirs ecchoed our prayer to both Houses of Parliament but received their answer as the Jews their Law in thunder and lightning a two-edged sword the tongue and the report of Muskets the voice which spake nothing but wounds and death We therefore thus admonished resolved thus to present our grievances to the World and our Petitions to Heaven for a blessing upon our intended indeavours Our grievances are these 1. First the distraction and threatned ruine of our glorious Protestant Church the neglect and abuse of Religion the destruction of our Universities the springs of all Learning Divine and Humane occasioned by the fierce and ignorant Separatists set up and maintained as Rulers both in Church and State by the prevalency and violence of a rebellious and destructive Army under the command of the L. Fairfax and countenanced by the seeming Authority of a pact unfree and over-awed House of Parliament 2. Next that contrary to the Oath and duty of Allegiance from which no power can nor yet hath pretended to absolve us our Soveraign Lord the King is by the design of the said Army drawn from His House at Hampton Court to the Isle of Wight and there by the power of Col. Hammond and others of the Army Imprisoned and detained from His Parliament by which act the said Hammond and all adhering to him are according to the Votes passed in both Houses 16. March 1641. Enemies to the peace of the Kingdom 3. A third is the violent and unchristian separation of the King His Royal Consort and Children at once depriving His Majesty of the two first blessings bestowed on Man 4. The forcing the Queen and Prince of Wales to seek in a forein Nation what in their own they could not enjoy liberty safety and support 5. The exercise of Martial Law while the Courts of Justice are open and sitting at Westminster the obstructing justice in our Courts of Judicature and by the privat Committee of Indemnity perverting judgment and exercising arbitrary power which is a subversion of our ancient Laws and an introducing of a tyrannical government as was resolved by both Houses in the Cases of the E. of Strafford and Archb. of Canterbury and writ in their bloud 6. Sixtly the present mischief and future danger to the whole Kingdom by reason that the publique affairs of highest concern are managed and carried on by a few particular men in a private Committee at Derby-house wherein contrary to the self-denying Ordinance the prime actors are chief Officers of the Army and have by our unhappy differences possest themselves of the most beneficial offices and imployments of the Kingdom and the other Places of profit and commodity are by their design conferred on others Members
a Castle or two in Kent were not yet reduced the people in Wales Kent Essex the North not yet setled in such a calme but that a new storme might arise a considerable party of the Scots yet unbroken in England and fronting Cromwell and Lambert under the Command of Monroe a daring knowing and uncorrupted Commander Scotland it selfe not yet assured to them and above all the Prince of Wales with a strong Fleet at Sea likely to raise new tempests at Land had he landed some men ●n Kent or Essex to gather up the male-contents there but newly sc●●tered and broken and ready to adhere to any Party to defend themselves from the fury and rapines of their Committee Warwick but a fresh-water Admiral lying in the Thames under Protection of the Block-houses and relying upon Land-souldiers to awe the Mariners from mutinying a cloud arising in Ireland ready to break into a storme upon these considerations the Cabal or close Junto of Grandees thought fit to dally on the Treaty the better to keep the Prince quiet in expectation thereof and gain time to work upon his Seamen already corrupted with want of work and pay and to gull and pacifie the rest of the Members and People not patient of a sharper remedy until Oliver had quite finished his Northerne work a●d marched nearer London Colchester reduced and the Princes Fleet retired to Harbour to avoid Winter and then to break off the Treaty and purge the House of those Members that sought Peace by an accord with the King under the notion of the Kings corrupt party to blinde their eyes therefore the Speaker Lenthall though at this time the Fore-man of Olivers shop when it was debated in the House Whether a Treaty should be had with the King in the Isle of Wight upon the Propositions of Hampton-Court The Question much opposed and at last put the Noes and the Yeas were equal 57. to 57. insomuch that the Speakers voice was put in to turn the Scales he gave his voice in the affirmative that time following his conscience against his Interest and my Lord Say openly in the House of Lords said God forbid that any man should take advantage of this Victory to break off the Treaty and the Armies Scout from Tuesday Novemb. 14. to Novemb. 21. 1648. propounds three Riddles to the Reader 1. Why the Grandees of the Junto that use to rule the Army are the most active Solicitors for an Agreement of the Parliament with His Majesty when then the Army are acting to the contrary 2. Why His Majesty stumbles only at the matters wherein the Presbyterian Interest are concerned when that Faction is the only visible prop to His Life Crown Dignity and dying Interest 3. Why the Souldiers Petitions for Justice upon his Majesty were ill resented and they thought worthy to be tried by a Councel of Warre as Offendors yet a Remonstrance was then framing by the Grandee-Officers to the same purpose and much more against the present Authority and in this the Generall concurres 6. New Instructions to Hammond in order to the Treaty sect 132. The next thing taken into consideration in relation to the Treaty was the giving new instructions to Hammond the Head-Goaler how to demeane himself in the Treaty which had formerly been Voted to be in the Isle of Wight with honour freedome and safety to his Majesty The Instructions were 1. That the King should enjoy the same liberty during this Treaty that He had at Hampton-Court 2. That no person excepted out of mercy none now Imprisoned by the Parliament nor none now in actuall Armes against the Parliament should be admitted to come to the King 3. That no forreign Agent should make any Addresse to him without leave of both Houses Against these Instructions it was argued That some of them contradicted the former Votes That the King should Treat in Honour and Freedome and that He should enjoy the same Liberty He had at Hampton-Court which could not be so long as He was denyed to correspond with other Princes His Allyes with whom He was in league and amity by their Ambassadors and Agents a Royalty inseparable from the Crowne allowed Him at Hampton-Court and to deny it was implicitely to dethrone Him To which was answered That this was true of a King in actuall exercise of his Regall power which this King neither is nor ought to be untill He hath given satisfaction to His Parliament That it was a great condescention in them and below the Dignity of a Parliament to recal their Votes of Non-Addresse and put the businesse of the Treaty thus forward and if He would not accept of a Treaty upon such conditions as the Parliament thought fit then things would be but where they were The peaceable moderate Party perceiving what operation the Scotish Victory had already upon the fancies of those hot-headed Men knew they must speak mannerly and modestly for feare of correction and must take what they could since they could not have what they would 4. That the King should give His Royall word not to remove out of the Island during the Treaty nor in 20. daies after without consent of the two Houses this was to make his chaines a linke or two longer 7. The Earle of Warwicks Letter to Derby-ho complaining of his Sea-men yet the King did give His Royall word accordingly Thursday Aug. 24. a Letter came to the Committee of Safety at Derby-House from the Earle of Warwicke complaining of the perversnesse of his owne Sea-men and that those with the Prince would not yet stoop to the Gods of Gold his owne words That some other way must be thought of besides force to undermine the Prince that since they had subdued their Enemies by Land it would be a good preparative to work upon their Enemies by Sea with the same Engine You see these Saints having gotten a publique Purse into their hands are at the peoples cost and charges bountifull Corrupters of other mens faith having none of their owne About this time a new kind of pick-lock was invented to open the iron Chests and Counter-Boards of the City 8. A Committee to make effectuall the Sale of Bishops Lands and cajole the City and invite them to throw more money after that they had cast away already in purchase of Bishops Lands namely a Committee to consider of a way to secure unto the Purchasers the Mony they had already disbursed upon the said Lands and to remove all impediments in the Sale for time to come To which Col. Harvy said That he had experience in the late defection of the City when the Men most backwards in the Parliaments service were such of the Presbyterians as had no engagement upon Bishops Lands wheras others of the same Party that have interest in the same Lands are as forward as any the best affected Here you see what it is that chaines the affections of the City to this Parliament and what it is that
Deposing or taking away the Kings life be not really guilty of High Treason and all those who were aiding or assenting to the erection thereof in such an irregular manner by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm 5. Whether those who are professed Enemies to the King and by their Remonstrances Speeches and actions profess they desire his blood and seek his life can either in Law or Conscience be reputed competent Judges to try him for his life It being a just exception to any Jury man who is to try the basest or poorest Felon and a legal challenge for which he must be withdrawn that he is a professed Enemy and Prosecutor who seeks his life and therefore no lawfull nor indifferent trier of him for it 6. Whether the triall and taking away of the Kings life by such an illegal and arbitrary High Court of Justice as this will not prove a most dangerous inlet to the absolutest tyranny and bloodiest butchery ever yet heard of or practised in this or any other Nation and a ready way to teach us how to chop off one anothers heads till we are all destroyed For if they may take away the Kings head in it without and against all rules of Law then by the same or stronger reason they may in like manner chop off the heads of any Nobleman Peer Member Gentleman or inferiour Subject for any imaginary Treason or offence and confiscate their Estates there being no assurance they will stop at the Kings The Answer of the Generall Councel of Officers touching the secluded Members Jan. 3. 1648. And if those who are confessed to be the Majority of the Com. House and therefore excluded or the Prince of Wales next Heir to the Crown or the Malignant party or any oher Faction whatsoever which may arise should at any time hereafter get the upper hand by the peoples general adhering to them or any divisions of the Army or by any means Gods providence should administer who hath thousands of ways to pull down the proudest Tyrants and dissipate the strongest Armies in a moment as he did Senacheribs the Midianites the Moabites and Ammonites with sundry others recorded in sacred Writ and prophane Stories and the Scots Army but few months since they may by like authority and president erect the like new Court to cut off the heads of all the Members now sitting and of the present General Councel of the Army and all the Commissioners acting in this new Court and so fall a murthering and butchering one another till we were all destroyed one by another and made a spectacle of most unnatural tyranny and cruelty to the whole world Angels and Men and a prey to our common Enemies Upon which consideration let every man now seriously lay his hand upon his own breast and sadly consider what the bloody tragical issue of this new Phaleris Bull may prove to him or his and whether every Free-born English-man especially of Noblest birth and amplest Estate be not deeply obliged in point of prudence and conscience to use his utmost endeavour with hazard of life and estate to prevent the erection of such an exorbitant and illegal Authority in the very rise and foundation ere it be over-late and not patiently suffer a rash inconsiderate number of Hotspurs of mean condition and broken desperate fortunes for the most part out of private malice fear or designs to secure and enrich themselves by the ruines of others of better fortunes and quality to set up such a new shambles to butcher and quarter the King Nobles Parliament-men Gentlemen and persons of all conditions as was never heard of among Pagans or Christians from the Creation to this present and will no way suit with our English soil already overmuch watred with English blood and so deeply ingaged against all arbitrary and tyrannical usurpations and proceedings especially capital in any hands whatsoever which have cost us so much blood and treasure to oppose and fight against for seven years last past Saturday Ian. 20. 1648. 80. The first days Trial of his Majesty The new thing called The High Court of Justice sate Bradshaw being President who had the Mace and Sword carried before him and 20 Gentlemen forsooth with Partizans for his Guard under the command of Colonel Fox the Tinker An O yes being made and silence commanded the said Act of the Commons for erecting the said Court was read and the Court called there being about 70 of the Commissioners present Then the King was brought to the Bar by Col. Hacker with Halberdiers the Mace of the Court conducting him to his chair within the Bar where he sate And then Pres Bradshaw said to the King Charles Stuart King of England The Commons of England assembled in Parliament being sensible of the great calamities brought upon this Nation Prove this power and trust The whole Kingdom in effect deny it So do all our Law-Books and the practice of all Ages and of the innocent blood shed which are referred to you as the Author of it according to that duty which they owne to God the Nation and themselves and according to that power and fundamental trust reposed in them by the People have constituted this High Court of Justice before which you are now brought and you are to hear your Charge upon which the Court will proceed Solicitor Cook My Lord in behalf of the Commons of England and of all the People thereof I do accuse Charles Stuart here present of High Treason and misdemeanours and I doe in the name of the Commons of England desire the Charge may be read unto him The King Hold a little President Sir the Court commands the Charge to be read afterwards you may be heard The Charge was read as followeth The Charge against King Charles the First January 20. 1648. The Charge read THat the said CHARLES STUART being admitted King of England and therein trusted with a limited power to govern by and according to the Laws of the Land and not otherwise And by his Trust Oath and Office being obliged to use the power committed to him For the good and benefit of the People and for the preservation of their Rights and Liberties yet nevertheless out of a wicked design to erect and uphold in himself an unlimited and tyrannical power to rule according to his Will and to overthrow the Rights and Liberties of the People Yea to take away and make void the foundations thereof and of all redress and remedy of mis-government which by the fundamental Constitutions of this Kingdom were reserved on the peoples behalf in the right and power of frequent and successive Parliaments or National meetings in Councel He the said Charles Stuart for accomplishment of such his Designs and for the protecting of himself and his Adherents in his and their wicked Practises to the same Ends hath traiterously and malitiously levied War against the present Parliament and the People therein Represented Particularly upon or
this when that every opinion is freely and clearly heard 2. For the King the Lawes of the Land will freely instruct you and because it concernes My self I will only give you a touch of it 3. For the people and truly I desire their Liberty and Freedom as much as any man whatsoever I must tell you their Liberty and Freedom consists in having such a Government whereby their Lives and Goods may be most their own it lies not in having a Share in the Government that is nothing pertinent to them a Subject and a Soveraign are clean different things and therefore until you restore the People to such a Liberty they will never enjoy themselves Sirs it was for this I now come hither if I would have given way to an Arbitrary sway to have all Lawes changed according to the power of the Sword I needed not to have come here See Sect. 90. and therefore I tell you and I pray God it be not laid to your charge that I am the Martyr of the People c. The House had the Impudence to answer the Dutch Ambassadours that what they had done to the King was according to the Law of the Land They mean that their Lusts are the Laws of the Land for other Law they can shew none This was the effect of his Majesties Speech who shewed much Magnanimity and Christian patience during all the time of His Trial and Death notwithstanding many barbarous affronts put by way of tentation upon Him He had his Head severed from his Body at one stroak the Souldiers and Schismaticks giving a great shout presently Thus this noble Prince a Gentleman sanctified by many afflictions after He had escaped Pistoll Poyson and Pestilent ayre could not escape the more venemous tongues of Lawyers and Pettyfoggers Bra●shaw Cooke Steele Aske and Dorislaus thus the Shepherd is smitten and the Sheep scattered THe said High Court of Justice with the downfall of King CHARLES the I. thereby and in Him of the Regall Government Religion Lawes and Liberties of this ancient Kingdom is Emblematically presented to the Readers view See the Figure before the Title page Presently after this dissolution of the King 94. Proclamations published against proclaiming the King the Commons sent abroad Proclamations into London and all England over reciting That whereas severall pretences might be made to this Crown and Title to the Kingly Office set on foot to the apparent hazard of the publique peace Be it enacted and ordained by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same that no Person whatsoever do presume to proclaime declare publish or any waies to promote Charles Stuart Sonne of the said Charles commonly called Prince of Wales or any other Person to be King or Chief Magistrate of England or Ireland or of any Dominions belonging to them by colour of Inheritance Succession Election or any other claime whatsoever without the free consent of the people in Parliament first had and signified by a particular Act or Ordinance for that purpose any Law Stat Usage or custome to the contrary notwithstanding Who shall judg● when these Fellows will be thought free and when not and whosoever shall contrary to this Act Proclaim c. Shall be deemed and adjudged a Traytor and suffer accordingly 95. A Proclamation privately printed and scattered proclaiming CHARLS the second Notwithstanding which inhibition the 2. February 1648. was printed and scattered about London-streets this following Proclamation * A Proclamation proclaiming CHARLES Prince of Wales King of Great Britaine France and Ireland VVEE the Noblemen Judges Knights Lawyers Gentlemen Freeholders Merchants Citizens Yeomen Seamen and other freemen of England do according to our Allegiance and Covenant by these presents heartily joyfully and unanimously acknowledge and proclaim the Illustrious CHARLES Prince of Wales next heir of the blood Royall to his Father King CHARLES whose late wicked and trayterous murther we do from our souls abominate and all parties consenters thereunto to be by herditary Birthright and lawfull succession rightfull and undoubted King of Great Britaine France and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging And that we will faithfully constantly and sincerely in our severall places and callings defend and maintaine his Royal Person Crown and Dignity with our Estates Lives and last drop of our Bloods against all Opposers thereof whom we do hereby declare to be Traytours and Enemies to his Majesty and his Kingdoms In testimony whereof we have caused these to be published and proclaimed throughout all Counties and Corporations of this Realm the first day of February in the first year of His Majesties Reign God save King CHARLES the Second The fag end of the House of Commons Febr. 1. 1648. 96. A V●te that such Members a● had assented to the Vote 5. Dec shall sit no more others to enter their d s●e●● and disappro all passed a thing they call an Act That such Members as had assented to the Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. That the Kings Concessions were a ground for the House to proceed to a settlement should not be re-admitted to sit as Members such as were then in the House and voted in the negative should first enter their dissent to the said Vote such as were ab●ent should declare their disapprovall before they sit You see the cheating Godly are resolved to keep all to themselves This day their tame Lordships sent a Message to the House of Commons but they were too surly to call the Messengers in 97. The Lords send a Message to the Commons but the messenger not called in the substance of the Message was That their Lordships had appointed 7. of their House to joyn with a proportionable number of Commons to consider of a way how to settle this Nation Munday 5. Febr. 1648. 98. The house of Lords voted down The Commons debated whether they should continue the House of Lords as a Court Judicatory or Consultory onely And the day following they put this Question Whether this House shall take the advise of the House of Lords in the exercise of the Legislative power of the Kingdom in pur●uance of the Votes of this House 4 Janu last This was carried in the Negative by many Voices in farther pursuance of which Vote they farther voted That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose and voted down their Priviledge of being exempt from Arrests yet they graciously condescended they shall be capable of being elected knights of Shires and Burgesses if any will be so mad as to chuse them yet my Lord of Pembroke is as much overjoyed with gay Priviledge as if they had bestowed a new Cap with a Bell and a Bable upon him who will not now conclude that the Votes of this Legislative this supreme piece of the House of Commons is the onely Law and reason of the Land which leads all our Laws
have no power nor authority to make or alter the Great Seale of England or grant any Commissions to any Commissioners Judges Sheriffs Justices of the Peace or any other That all the Commissions granted by them under their New or any other Seale are meerly void and illegall and all the new Writs and proceedings in Law or Equity before any Judges Justices Sheriffs or other Officers made by them meerly void in Law to all intents coram non judice 4. That the deniall of the KING's Title to the Crowne and plotting the meanes to deprive Him of it or to set it upon anothers Head is High Treason within the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. ch 2. And that the endeavouring to subvert the Fundamentall Lawes and Government of the Realme of England by King Lords and Commons and to introduce a tyrannicall or arbitrary Government against Law is High Treason at the Common Law especially in Judges and Lawyers not taken away by any Statute Both which Mr. St. John in his Argument at Law concerning the Bill of attainder of high Treason of Tho. E. of Stafford published by order of the Com. House An. 1641. p. 8. 14. to 33. and 64. to 78. And in his Speech as a conference of both Houses of Parl. concerning Ship-mony An. 1640. hath proved very fully by many reasons and presidents and Coke in his 7. Report f. 10 11 12 and 3. Instit c. 1. That the Commons now sitting in making a new Great Seale without the Kings Image or Style in granting new illegall Commissions to Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs and other Officers in the name of Custodes Angliae in the generall in omitting and altering the Kings Name Style and Title in Writs Processe Indictments and proceedings at the Common Law and thereby indeavouring to Dis-inherit the Prince now lawfull King by and since his Fathers bloudy murther and to alter and subvert the Fundamentall Lawes and Government of the Realme by such commissions and proceedings and by the power of an Army to enforce them and the Judges Justices Sheriffs and other Officers who accept of such Commissions and all those especially Lawyers who voluntarily assist consent and submit to such Commissions and Alterations by such usurped illegall Authority and the Commissioners sitting in the new Courts of Justice are most really guilty of both these high * * Whereupon six Judges refused to accept any new Commissions or to act as Judges Treasons in which there are no Accessories and lesse excusable than Strafford or Canterbury whom some of these new Judges and sitting Members impeached and prosecuted to death for those very Treasons themselves now act in a more apparent and higher degree than they and in respect of their oaths covenant callings and places are more obliged to maintaine the Kings Title the Fundamentall Lawes and Government the Rights and Liberties of the Kingdome and Parliament then they and therefore if they persevere therein may justly expect the self-same capitall punishments they underwent if not farre worse especially since they attempt to reduce the antientest Kingdome of all Christendom into the puniest and most contemptible State in all the World and thereby to render us the most infamous perfidious and dishonourable Nation under Heaven both to the present and all succeeding Ages which must needs make the contrivers and Abetters thereof the most detestable Traytors and publique Enemies to their King and native Country that ever this Realme brought forth in any Age. Repent therefore of these your Treasons and amend your lives if you expect the least hope of pardon from God or Man and expiate all your former high misdemeanours by engaging all your power and endeavours to settle all things in Church and State according to your primitive engagements instead of accumulating one sin and Treason to another which will prove your certaine ruine in conclusion not your safety About the same time and it is thought from the same Author came forth a Paper bearing the Title of 110. Six propositions of undoubted verity Another Paper Every Act of Parliament relateth to the first day of the same Parliam but it cannot be that any Act passed in the Reigne of King Charles the second should relate to the first day of this Parliament which happened in the sixteenth yeare of Charles the First ergo this Parliament is determined by the death of King Charles the first ¶ Six Propositions of undoubted verity fit to be considered in our present exigency by all loyall Subjects and conscientious Christians 1. THat this Parliament is ipso facto Dissolved by the King's death He being the Head Beginning and End of the Parliament called onely by his Writ to confer with Him as His Parliament and Councel about urgent affaires concerning Him and His Kingdome and so was it resolved in 1. Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. n. 1. 14 H. 4. Coke 4. Instit p. 46. 4. c. 4. f. 44. b. 2. That immediately upon this Parliaments dissolution by the Kings death all Commissions granted by the King or by one or both Houses to the Generall or Officers of the Army the Commissioners of the great Seale of England Judges of the Kings Courts Justices of Peace Sheriffs Excise-men Customers and the like with all Committees and ordinances of one or both Houses made this Parliament did actually determine expire and become meerly void in Law to all intents and purposes and cannot be continued as good and valid by any Power whatsoever 3. That instantly after the Kings decease the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme of England and of the Kingdomes Dominions and Rights thereunto belonging was by inherent Birth-right and Lawfull undoubted succession and descent actually vested in the most Illustrious Charles Prince of Wales being next lineall Heire of the bloud Royall to his Father King CHARLES and that He is actuall KING thereof before any ceremony of Coronation as is resolved in full Parliament by the Statute of 1. Jacobi ch 1. and by all the Judges of England since Coke 7. Report f. 10 11. in Calvins case Whose Royall Person and Title to the Crowne all loyall Subjects are bound by their Oaths of Supremacy Allegiance and Solemne League and Covenant with their Estates Lives and last drop of their blouds to maintaine against all Opposers 4. That all Peers of the Realme Mayors Sheriffs chief Officers of Cities and Corporations in this Kingdome are obliged by their Places and Allegiance without any delayes or excuses to declare and proclaime Prince Charles to be rightfull King of England and of all Kingdomes and Rights thereunto belonging notwithstanding any illegall prohibitions or menaces to the contrary by any usurped Power whatsoever under paine of being guilty of High Treason and forfeiting their City and Corporation Charters in case of supine neglect or refusall thereof through fear terror or any sinister respect 5. That till King Charles be setled in his Throne or give other Order the present Government of the Kingdome is legally vested
THE COMPLEAT HISTORY OF Independencie UPON THE PARLIAMENT Begun 1640. By CLEM. WALKER Esq Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth Part was never before published Horat. Spe Metuque procul LONDON Printed for Iohn Wiliams at the Crown in St. Paul's Church-yard 1661. RELATIONS AND OBSERVATIONS HISTORICAL and POLITICK upon the PARLIAMENT begun Anno Dom. 1640. Divided into II. Books 1. The Mystery of the two Junto's Presbyterian and Independent 2. The History of Independency c. TOGETHER WITH An APPENDIX touching the Proceedings of the Independent Faction in SCOTLAND POLIB Historici est Ne quid falsi audeat dicere Ne quid veri non audeat HORAT Spe metuque procul Printed in the Year 1648. To my dread Soveraign Royal Sir YOU have Drunk deep in the Cup of Affliction and we have all Pledged you it is wholsome though bitter but let us pray to God to remove this Cup in time for the dregs and lees are poyson You have learned by over-winding the strings of Authority how to tune the People of this Monarchy without breaking their Patience hereafter Most Princes desire unlimited power which is a Sail too great for any Vessel of Mortality to bear though it be never so well Ballasted with Justice Wisdome Moderation and Piety yet one flarb or other will endanger the over-setting it Those Commonwealths are most stable and pleasing where the State is so mixed that every man according to his degree and capacity hath some interest therein to content him The KING Sovereign Command and Power The Nobility and Gentry a derivative Authority and Magistracy and all enjoy their Laws Liberties and Properties God hath cursed him that removeth the Bound-marks of his neighbour this is a comprehensive curse Kings enlarging their Prerogatives beyond their limits are not excepted from it You may be pleas'd to take heed therefore of two sorts of men most likely to mis-lead you in this point Ambitious Lawyers who teach the Law to speak not what the Legislators meant but what you shall seem to desire To avoyd this snare suffer your Parliament to nominate 3. men for every Judges place out of which you may please to choose one as in pricking of Sheriffs For it is the people that are obnoxious to their wickedness you are above the reach of their malice The second sort is Parasitical Divines These Ear-wigs are alwayes hovering in Princes Courts hanging in their ears They take upon them to make Princes beholding to their violent wresting of the Text to bestow upon them whatever Prerogative the Kings of Juda or Israel used or usurped as if the judicials of Moses were appointed by God for all Common-wealths all Kings as a good Bishoprick or Living is fit for every Priest that can catch it These men having their best hopes of preferment from Princes make Divinity to be but Organon Politicum an instrument of Government and harden the hearts of Princes Pharaoh-like Kings delight to be tickled by such venerable warrantable flattery Sir you have more means to prefer them than other men therefore they apply themselves more to you than other men do Tu facis hunc Dominum te facit ille Deum The King makes the poor Priest a Lord and rather than he will be behind with the King in courtesie he will flatter him above the condition of a Mortal and make him a God Royal. Sir permit me to give you this Antidote against this poyson let an Act be past That all such Divines as either by Preaching Writing or discoursing shall advance your Prerogative and Power above the known Laws and Liberties of the Land forfeit all his Ecclesiastical preferments ipso facto and be incapable ever after and for ever banished your Court. But above all learn to trust in your Judgment Plus aliis de te quàm tu tibi credere noli God hath enabled you to remember things past to observe things present and by comparing them together to conjecture things to come which are the three parts of Wisdom that will much honor and advantage you God keep your Majesty so prayes Your humble Subject THEOPH VERAX To his Excellency Sir THOMAS FAIRFAX and the ARMY under his Command MY Lord and Gentlemen I have here by way of Preparation laid open to your view those Vlcers which you have undertaken to cure viz. The 2 Factions in Parliament Authors of Schismes and Divisions in the two Houses from whence they are derived to the whole Kingdome to the obstructing of justice and of the establishment of our Laws Rights Liberties and Peace the enslaving of the Parliament it self and the dilapidating of the Publick Treasure whereby the whole Kingdom may be enfranchised secured and united and the King and his Posterity setled in His due Rights which is the sum of all your undertakings in your many reiterated Papers I confess a Herculean labour and far beyond his clensing of the Augaean Stable That was performed by an Arm of flesh this cannot be effected without an extraordinary calling for ordinary calling thereto you have none and God seldome blesseth a man out of his calling and though an heroick heat and zeal may go far yet it will tire many miles on this side the work unless it be blown and inspired with divine breath And as Alchymists say of the Philosophers Stone so I of this work which is the Philosophers Stone in our English Politicks it cannot be effected but by a man of wonderfull and unspotted Integrity and Innocency free from all Fraud Self-seeking and Partiality In order to this great work you have already begun to sift and winnow the House of commons by charging 11 Presbyterian Grandees who if they be proved guilty must needs have their counterpanes equally faulty even to a syllable in the opposite Junto of Independents for when two factions shall conspire to toss keep up the golden ball of Government Profit Preferment between them neither can be innocent unless therefore you apply your corrosive to one Vlcer as well as the other you will never work a compleat cure nor will be free from scandal and appearance of faction or design that I may use your own words to weaken onely one party under the notion of unjust or oppressive that you may advance another more than your own Representation p. 6. sect 2. Besides it is observed that you speak but coldly to have the publick accounts of the Kingdom Stated putting it off with a wish only as if you did secretly fear what the Presbyterians openly say That the Independents are guilty of more Millions than their party your own words are p. 14. sect 7. We could wish the Kingdom might both be righted publickly satisfied in point of Accounts for the vast sums that have been Leavied as also for many other things c. But we are loath to press any thing that may lengthen dispute Are so many Millions to be cursorily passed over without dispute were they not the
King James it was then only called An Act of high presumption and dangerous consequence in the Duke nor was there then the least reflection upon King Charles yet now because King Charles dissolved that Parliament the Independent party were willing to raise a suspition against him concerning His Fathers death wheras the accusation against the Duke of Buckingham 3. Caroli contained 7. or 8. Charges against him the least whereof might occasion the dissolving of that Parliament These desperate courses to dishonour the King 74. Why the independents went so high against the King To usurp the regal power into themselves either in the Houses purged or in the Committee of Safety at Derby house and make Him uncapable of Government to ruine His Person Crown and Dignity and extirpate Monarchy root and branch were taken in order to the usurping the Kingly power into the Grandees of the Parliament and Army and in case they could not purge the two Houses and make them wholly Independent which they now despair of then into the Hands of the Committee or Council of State at Derby-house and Grandees of the Army In order to which they are now contriving to strengthen the said Committee with more power and more Members and to adjourn the Parliament and sent down the Presbyterian Members into the Country upon pretence of service where if any Tumults happen for which their extortions will give sufficient provocation the said dissenting Members shall bear the blame and have blank Impeachments given them to purge them out of the Houses if not out of the world or at least be sequestred for now they have squeezed what they can out of the Kings party by Sequestrations the next fewel to their covetousness is to sequester the Presbyterians and then to sequester one another for they are already divided into Pure Independents and Mixed Independents and have feuds amongst themselves for this faction insatiate with money and blood are all beasts of prey and when they want prey will prey one upon another nor shall the Houses meet above one month or two in a year to ratifie and approve what Derby-house and the Junto of the Army shall dictate to them and to give an account to the domineering party how eath Member hath carried himself in the Country Thus instead of one King 75. Why the Grandees do still continue to truck with the King notwithstanding the said 4. Votes we shall have twenty or thirty tyrants in chief and as many subordinate Tyrants as they please to imploy under them with the Iron yoak of an Army to hold us in subjection to their Arbitrary Government Notwithstanding the aforesaid four Votes and Resolutions the Cabal of Grandees still keep Ashburnham and Barkley in the Army and have sent divers Turn-coat-Cavaliers and Emissaries under-hand disguised to the King who pretending that by Bribes they had bought their admission to Him after some insinuations endeavour with false and deceitfull news and arguments to shake His constancy and perswade him to pass the said 4. dethroning Bills for these Usurpers of Sovereign Authority long to turn their armed and violent Tyranny into a legal Tyranny or at least to make him declare against the Scots coming in In both which cases He will dis-hearten His Friends who endeavour to take the golden reigns of Government out of the gripes of these Phaetons and restore them again to His hand unking Himself and His Posterity for ever be carried up and down like a stalking Horse to their Designs and be Crowned Ludibrio Coronae with straw or thorns For who can think that at the end of twenty years these Usurpers will lay down what they have so unjustly contrary to all Laws Divine and Humane and contrary to their own Declarations Oathes and Covenants extorted And who can or dare wrest these powers out of their hands being once setled and grown customary in them the peoples spirits broken with an habitual servitude a numerous Army and Garrisons hovering over them and all places of Judicature filled with corrupt Judges who shall by constrained interpretations of the Law force bloody presidents out of them against whosoever shall dare to be so good a Patriot as to oppose their Tyranny They could make Steel sharp enough to cut Captain Burlies throat for attempting to rescue the King out of the hands of a Rebellious Army that neither obeys King nor Parliament will find gold and silver enough to corrupt all the Judges the mean to prefer and make them Wild and vild enough for their purposes But it is hoped He hath more of a King more of man in Him than to leese his Principles and stumble again at the same stone dash again upon the same Rock whatsoever Syrens sing upon it knowing He hath a Son at liberty to revenge His wrongs all the Princes of Christendom His Allies whose common cause is controverted in His sufferings the greatest men of England and Scotland of His blood and the People generally whose farthest design was to preserve their Laws and Liberties and to defend the Parliament from being conquered by the Sword looking with an angry aspect upon these Seducers who by insensible degrees and many forgeries have ingaged them further than they intended not to the Defence of Religion Laws and Liberties but to the setting up of Schism Committee Law and Martial Law Impeachments before the Lords and unlimitted slavery And I am confident this Faction despair of working upon the King who like a Rock is mediis tutissimus undis whatsoever reports they give out to the contrary having from the beginning made lies their refuge which being wisely foreseen by the King He sent a Message to both Houses by way of prevention delivered in the Painted-Chamber by the Lords of Louderdale one of the Scots Commissioners consisting of three heads 1 That He was taken from Holdenby against his will 2 That they should mantain the Honour and Privileges of Parliament 3 That they should believe no Message as coming from him during his Restraint in the Army but should only credit what they received from His own mouth These Grandees have cheated all the interests of the Kingdom and have lately attempted the City again and had the repulse But the King is their old Customer and hath been often cheated by them and having him in strict custody peradventure they may perswade Him it is for His safety to be deceived once more wherefore notwithstanding their many endeavours to root up Monarchy dethrone the King and His Posterity and usurp his power in order to which they have over-whelmed Him and all His with innumerable calamities and reproaches yet since the passing of the Declaration against the King their desperate condition hath enforced them to make new Addresses in private to Him notwithstanding their four Votes inflicting the penalitie of Treason upon the Infringers But Treason is as natural to Cromwel as false accusing protesting and lying he is so superlative a Traytor that the
of one and the same desperate way of cure may joyntly have the same friends and foes and the same sins and quarrels to defend 8. Friday 16 June 1648. I was told the Committee of Derby house had lately received a Letter from Col. Hammond Governour of Carisbrook Castle informing them That unlesse they supplied him with Mony and Men he could give no good account of the King in case the Revolted ships should attempt his rescue and farther That he had matters of great importance to communicate to them but durst not commit them to Paper but if they would send for him up or send a Confident of theirs to him he would impart them This may probably be the businesse whereof Osburne gives information in his said Letters and it may be Mr. Walker had heard of this report in the Hall as well as my self and might have the same conceit of it that I have if it be lawfull for me to take measure of another mans judgement by my own 9. Lastly who knows whether a powerfull desperate party may have a design to take away the Kings life and then declare his two eldest Sons uncapable of Government supposing they deserted the Kingdom and invited forreign States to invade it and then Crown the Duke of Gloucester and so abusing his tender years usurp the protection of him and under colour of that authority establish by degrees their own usurpation and the peoples slavery having subdued their spirits by a long and customary bondage under them and having filled all places of power profit and preferment in the Kingdom with men of their own principles and Interests their own creatures and Confidents This Army last April in their Council amongst other things debated The Deposing of the KING why not murdering as well since few Kings are deposed and not murdered Dis-inheriting the PRINCE and Crowning the DVKE of YORK which was then approved of by Cromwell and Ireton Why may they not now dis-inherit both the elder Sons and Crown the Duke of Gloucester as well See the excellent Remonstrance of the Colchester Knights and Gentlemen 1648. which I have Printed herewith for your satisfaction That some such design might be to make away the KING and dis-inherit the PRINCE may well be suspected because the 12. day of July upon information That the Prince had sent into England some Blank Commissions to List men Weaver an Implement of the Army and Son to an Ale-house-keeper in Wilish moved the House of Commons to Vote the Prince a Traytor c. And I hear that Mr. Solicitor contrary to his Oath and duty of his place refuseth to be of Council against the said Rolf this Gentleman the Solicitor hath got above 300000 l. by keeping open shop to sell the cruell mercies of the new Great Seal to the Royalists 97. Trinity-house Petition for a Personal Treaty The 29. June A Petition was delivered the House of Commons from the Masters of Trinity-house Masters and Captains of Ships and Sea-men for a Personal Treaty with the KING declaring the great decay of trade to the undoing of many thousand families and that they would not fight against the revolted ships their Brethren who desired but the same things with th●● Tho. Scot said That the Surrey-men first delivered a Petition for a Personal Treaty which was seconded by the Kentish-men in Armes and they by the City of London that all this was a design to ruine the Godly party That he had read of a Man who being asked when he was young Why he did not marry Answered It was too soon and being asked the same question when he was old Answered it was too late So he was of opinion there could be no time seasonable for a personal Treaty or a Peace with so perfidious and implacable a Prince but it would always be too soon or too late He that draws his sword upon his King must throw his Scabbard into the fire All peace with him will prove the spoil of the Godly To which was Answered That some men got well by fishing in troubled waters and accounted peace their spoil because war was their gain and they looked upon a Personal Treaty as a design against them under the notion of the Godly Honest Confiding party because a Personal Treaty was the high way to peace But the generality of the people who were despoyled of their Estates by the War resolved upon a Personal Treaty without which there is no hope of Peace they would no longer be made fuel to that fire wherein these Salamanders live nor any longer feed those Horse-leeches the Army their engaged party and Servants with their blood and marrow It now appears who desire a new War namely those Zealots who supply their indigent fortunes by War These men fear peace doubting they shall be forced to disgorge what they have swallowed in time of War Ven Miles Corbet Hill the petty Lawyer of Haberdashers hall the two Ashes Col. Harvy and many other thriving Saints opposed a Personal Treaty so their Petition had no successe I hear that not many days after the Committee of Derby house to take off this affront imployed Col. Rainsborough the quondam Neptune of our Seas to go up and down and solicit the Common sort of Marriners to subscribe and present the House of Commons with a counter Petition wherein they offered to live and die with the Parliament c. and that Rainsborough gave 12 d. a piece to as many as subscribed it This Petition was delivered The 2 of July 98. The City Petitions for a personal Treaty and after that upon occasion of the City Petition for a Personal Treaty in London upon the 5 of July the House of Commons again took into debate a Personal Treaty They spent much time upon the place where 1. Whether in the Isle of Wight which the Independents principally affected 2. Holdenby which they next inclined unto 3. Or any his Houses not nearer than 10 miles of London at his own choice 4. Or in the City of London Which two last places the Presbyterians approved of but chiefly London for London it was argued That the Common Council and Officers of the Souldiery would undertake for His safety against all Tumults In any other place he would be within the power of the Army who might probably take him away again as they did at Holdenby if they liked not the manner and matter of the Treaty London was a place of most Honor Safety and Freedom and would best satisfie the KING the Scots the people In all other places especially the Isle of Wight He would be still a prisoner to the Army and therefore all he should agree to would be void by reason of Dures Sergeant Wylde Answered That Custodia did not always in Law signifie Imprisonment Though He was under restraint of the Army He was not in Prison making a wyld kind of nonsense difference between Restraint and Legal Imprisonment which all but himself laughed at
The King cannot plead Dures no man can imprison or hurt the King in his politick capacity as King though in his natural capacity as man he is as passive as other men To which was replyed That it had been frequently said in the House the King was a prisoner That there was no difference in Law between a restraint and an imprisonment whether legal or illegal A tortious restraint is called in Law a false Imprisonment That former Kings have avoided their own Acts by pleading Restraint or Imprisonment and Constraint as R. 2. H. 3. That the King may as well plead Imprisonment as the Parliament plead a Force which they have lately done That the Kings Restraint in Law is Arcta custodia God grant it be salva custodia we have lately had Information to the contrary The distinction between the Kings natural and politique capacity was Treason in the Spencers and so declared by 2 Acts of Parliament in the time of Edw. 2. and Edw. 3. See Calvins case in my Lord Cook they are unseparable by the Law Tho. Scot argued That the City was as obnoxious to the Kings anger as any part of the Kingdom and if the Treaty should be in London who shall secure us that the City will not make their Peace with the inraged King by delivering up our Heads to Him for a sacrifice as the men of Samaria did the heads of the 70 sons of Ahab It was farther moved That if the King came not to London but to one of his houses about 10 miles from London That He might be desired to give His Royal word to reside there untill the Conclusion of the Treaty Col. Harvy slighted this motion vilifying the Kings Royal word and saying There was no trust in Princes he alleged the Kings promises had been frequently broken as when he protested the safety and privileges of Parliament should be as precious to Him as the safety of His Wife and Children and within three or four dayes after came with armed Guards to force the House and other instances which have been too often remembred and shall be here omitted At last they fell upon a report that the Committee of Lords and Commons had Voted They would not insist upon the 3 Votes preparatory to a Treaty viz. Presbytery the Militia and recalling all Declar Procla c. This was long argued to and fro At last it was Voted That the King be desired to assent to the said 3 preparatory Propositions 99 My Lord Say's discourse about a Personal Treaty and sign them with his hand to be passed as acts of Parliament when the King shall come to Westminster My Lord of Warwick had moved in the Lords House about this time for a Personal Treaty and was seconded by the Earl of Northumberland but my Lord Say opposed it and prevailed against it afterwards my Lord Say in his way home visited the Duke of Richmond and amongst other discourse told the Duke He was sorry to find so great an indisposition to peace saying he had moved for a Personal Treaty but could not prevail this was done upon hopes the Duke would have writ so much to the Queen or Prince But the Earl of Holland coming that day to see the Duke and the Duke relating to the Earl what the Lord Say had told him the Earl of Holland discovered the truth to him and so spoiled the design you see the Devil doth not always own the endeavours of his servants The said 5 July the Speaker as soon as he sate in his Chair 100. The news of the D. of Buck. taking Arms. alarmed the house of Commons with the news of the Duke of Buckingham's and the Earl of Holland's drawing into an hostile posture relating they were 2000. that they intended to take Lambeth-house that the Bullets would presently be about their ears if they did not rise which put the zealots into such a rout that they presently cried Adjourn adjourn until Monday and had hardly so much patience as to hear any reasons to the contrary but this was but a counterfeit fear the design hid under it was to prevent the City from bringing in that day their Petition for a Personal Treaty and to leave the whole power of the House during the Adjournment to the Committee of Derby house to raise what Horse and Foot they pleased under colour of suppressing this Insurrection For when they found they could not prevail to Adjourn 101. Skippon authorized to raise 1000 Horse they moved for power to be given to Maj. Gen. Skippon to raise Horse whether to possess the Avenues and passages from the City to the Earl of Hollands Army or to keep the City under the terror of a Horse Guard is doubtfull And the same day Mr. Swynfin reported from the Committee of Safety That they offered to the Consideration of that House 102. A Report from Derby house that the Members should underwrite for maintaining of Horse that it was fit the House should have a Horse Guard and that every Member should underwrite how many Horse he will pay for 10 days This is refused by some Gentlemen upon these grounds 1. It bears the aspect of an Imposition or Tax set upon the House by their Committee 2. The Members have not suffered alike and therefore cannot do alike some have lost much and got nothing others have got much and lost nothing and it is not equal that Losers should bear equall burthens with Getters and contribute out of their Losses to maintain other mens Gains and preserve them in their rich Offices and Bishops Lands purchased for little or nothing Gentlemen are made Beggers and Beggers Gentlemen 3. It is a dividing motion tending to lay an imputation of Malignancy and dis-affection upon those that cannot as well as those that will not subscr●be and so gives a great advantage to the Gainers over the Losers which the Losers have no reason to submit to 4. A Personal Treaty being now in debate this motion makes many Members forbear the House who cannot grant and dare not deny It carries with it therefore something of design and terror and so takes away the liberty of Parliament which when so weighty a business is handling is ought to be If this Horse Guard be raised how shall we assure our selves they shall be Disbanded after ten days being once under Command It is therefore a subtile malicious tyrannous act for the Committee of Safety to put so tempting a motion upon the House and give men cause to suspect that something of Design and Danger lies hid under it 103. The device of a forged letter About this time a Letter without any name subscribed was left at Major General Brown's house in his absence consisting of two parts 1. A Preamble of great respect and love born to him by the Epistoler for his fair carriage to the King and good affection to peace and reconcilement with the King 2. An Admonition to look to
Skippon when he had spoken any thing in the House prejudicial to the King or City about a Week after when the venom he hath spet hath wrought its effect and is past remedy usually complains in the House that his words are carried forth of the House and maliciously and falsly reported in the City to his disgrace and danger and repeating in a more mild and qualified way some part of what he had formerly said appealed to the House Whether that were not the full truth of his words When the House having forgotten his former words no man can and for fear of the envy and malice of a powerfull Faction no man will contradict him this is his way of Apologizing and clearing himself He hath got above 30000 l. in his purse besides 1000 l. a year land of Inheritance given him by the Parliament He hath secured his personal Estate beyond Sea and his Wife and Children and thereby withdrawn all pawns and pledges of his Fidelity both out of the power of the Parliament and City and is here amongst us but in the nature of a souldier of fortune Note that upon the said 15 day of July when the debate was for Voting the Scots that were come in Enemies c. the first question was put 106. D. Hamiltons Army Voted Enemies that all such Scots as are or shall come into England in hostile manner without consent of both Houses of the Parliament of England were Enemies c. but upon farther debate the words or shall were left out upon this Consideration that the Earl of Argyle might happily come into England with a Party and fall upon Duke Hamilton in the rear to divert him July the 20. The Speaker told the Commons 110. D. Hamilton's Letter and Decaration brought to the House that Major General Lambert had made stay of a Scottish Gentleman one Mr. Haly-barton who passed through his quarters with Letters from D. Hamilton to the two Houses and the King that he found about Mr. Haly-barton divers private Letters for the carrying of which he had publick on Authority and therefore Lambert made bold to seal those private Letters in a packet by themselves with his own seal and Mr. Haly-bartons That Lambert had sent up Mr. Haly-barton with one Lieut. Col. Osburn a Godly Scottish Gent. and another Keeper in nature of a Prisoner 111. L. Col. Osburn a fugitive Scot. This Osburn delivered that private packet to the Speaker so a Committee was named to peruse that private packet and Osburn was called into speak what he knew who delivered at the Bar that the Godly party in Scotland were oppressed and trodden under foot by Duke Hamilton's party that their very souls we afflicted at his proceedings that the Kirk of Scotland with one mouth proclaimed in their faces their engagement and proceeding thereupon to be damnable and destructive he desired the House not to look upon these proceedings as the Act of the Nation of Scotland since there were a great many Godly men who hoped the Lord would enable them in his good time to march into England with the Marquesse of Argyle and fall into the rear of Duke Hamilton with a diversion He reported the Scots that came in to be but 8000 Horse and Foot and Langdale but 2000. Then was read the Letters of D. Hamilton wherein He complaineth no answer had been given to the Parliament of Scotlands just desires of the 26 April last that by authority of the Scottish Parliament he was necessitated to come into England according to the Covenant and not without the invitation of divers wel-affected English who had taken the Covenant There was a Declaration inclosed in the Letters which the prevailing party obstructed the reading of yet the Lords having printed it they have since read it in the House and presently the question was put that all such English as have invited the Scots under D. Hamilton to come in hostile manner into England shall be declared Traytors and carried in the Affirmative I formerly told you that about 12 July Weaver moved that the Prince of Wales might be Voted a Traitor what they could not then carry with a fore-wind they now brought in again with a side wind but who doubts but the Prince invited in the Scots to the relief of his Father and himself oppressed and imprisoned contrary to the Solemn League and Covenant by a Rebellious Army and a schismatical party of both Houses engaged with the said Army And that the Scots are come in according to the Covenant only 112. A motion in the House of Commons to Bayl Rolf. A little before this time Tho. Scot Sir P. Wentworth Blackstone C. Harvy Hill the Lawyer and others pressed the House with much earnestness to Bayl Rolf committed Prisoner to the Gate-house upon the Complaint of Mr. Osburn for endeavouring to make away the KING u●ing many words in his commendation for his godliness and faithfulness and complaining of his hard usage in Prison where he lay amongst Rogues It was opposed by many because High Treason is not baylable by the Law neither is the House of Commons a Court of Judicature and therefore can neither Imprison nor Bayle any but their own Members At last Mr. Sam. Brown moved that a Committee might examine the businesse for matter of Fact and report to the House and then the House if they saw cause might Bayle him and bind over Master Osburn to prosecute him next term in the Kings-bench This motion took effect and great care was taken for the present that Rolf might have better entertainment in the Gate-house according to his quality having been not long since a Shoo-maker one of the Gentle-craft 113. The Speakers Warrant to search for the Foot-boy that beat Sir Hen. Mildmay About this time 2 Files of Musketiers by warrant from the Speaker of the House of Commons came in the dead time of the night to the Houses of Sir Paul Pynder and Alderman Langham pretending to search for the Foot-boy that beat Sir H. Mildmay They forced open the doors of Sir Pauls house and searched with great diligence but could not do the like at Alderman Langham's who being guilty of having some Money in his House durst not adventure to obey the Warrant and open his doors nor had he reason to do it his House by the Law being his Castle of Defence the privilege thereof not to be violated but in case of Felony or treason Compare the diligent prosecutions in the behalf of Sir Harry Mildmay with the slack and negligent proceedings in the behalf of the King and you will find a new practical Law contrary to the old known established Law that a trespasse against a Grandee though but a Subject is more than a treason against a King Fears and Iealousies arising from several Informations as that of Croply and Hyde called 114. Fears and jealousies cause the City to resume the power of their own Militia The Resolutions of
Scotland directed to the Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland setting forth what the Parliament had done in way of setling peace reforming the Church and Universities and maintaining the Covenant and union between the two Nations and complaining of Duke Hamilton's Invading England under the Authority of the Parliament of Scotland to the Kirk there How dangerous this president may prove to both Kingdoms to make a few ambitious paedantical Church-men supreme Judges over Parliament and State affairs in ordine ad Deum and how apt they are to lay hold upon such occasions and kindle their zeal into a consuming flame I leave to all wise men to judge 122. A Declaration and 2. Letters from the Prince to the City The Commons Debate upon them Thursday 3. August The Sheriffs of London and some of the Common Council brought to the House the Copies of two Letters they had received from the PRINCE one directed to the Common Council expressing his Highnesse good affection to Peace and to the whole City and his endeavours to vindicate his Fathers Liberty and just Prerogative and Rights to restore to the People their Laws Liberties and Property to free them from that bondage under which they were now held like a Conquered Nation to ease them of Excise and Taxes to settle Religion according to his Fathers Agreement made with the Scots and to reduce all things into their antient and proper Chanel This Letter was accompanied with his Declaration to the same purpose The other was to the Merchant Adventurers Informing them he had made stay of 3. of their ships but without any intent to make prize of them desiring to borrow 20000 l. of them to be repayed out of the Customes and requiring their speedy answer To which Col. Harvy first aggravating many faults in the King's Government according to the scandalous Declaration against him said The Prince was his Fathers own Son as like him as could be That he had invited the Scots to come in and declared for them and had been formerly in Arms against the Parliament That he was but a subject And moved the House to declare him a Rebell and a Traytor Sir Peter Wentworth Mr. Knightly and Mr. Blackstone seconded him with much earnestnesse so did Edward Ash who farther moved That the Common Council and Merchants should give no answer to his Letters saying there was no danger the Prince should make prize of their ships for that he had engaged to the States of the Low-Countries to do no act prejudicial to Trade At last the Debate was put off until the next day being Friday when the Speaker putting the House in mind of it again It was earnestly called upon by the younger Sir John Evelin Mr. Solicitors shadow Scot Weaver Holland Boys and almost all the Godly Gang. So the Debate was resumed and Weaver went very high to try the temper of the House But the Debate in Terminis That the Prince should be declared a Rebell and a Traytor was soon laid by though violently pressed chiefly upon these reasons 1. That they had not the Originals of the Princes Letter and Declaration which the Common-Council still kept but onely Copies not so much as attested upon Oath by any authentical Clerk therefore no legal proceedings could be upon them 2. To Vote the Prince a Traytor the same day when they sent Messengers to invite the King his Father to a Treaty of Peace would argue no peaceable inclination in them and would be so understood by the People 3. They were engaged by the Nationall Covenant to defend the King's Person Crown and Dignity but the Prince Heir apparent to His Crown was next under God the chief supporter of his Crown and Dignity therefore to Vote him a Traitor was to subvert his Crown and Dignity 4. By the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. it is High Treason to endeavour the destruction of the Prince the Kings eldest Son but to declare him a Rebel and a Traitor was to endeavour to destroy him and therefore High Treason 5. The people were already jealous that the KING and His Posterity should be laid by and in them the Monarchical Government of this Nation subverted and a new form of Government introduced they had already by the Votes of No Addresses to the KING and by their Declaration against Him wherein they say They can no longer confide in Him laid by the KING and now to Vote the PRINCE a Rebel and a Traytor was to lay by both him and his Brother the DUKE of YORK who adheres to him which would exceedingly confirm the people in their feares But what they could not do expresly All that adhere to the Prince declared Traytors they did implicitly by Voting All that should adhere to ayd or assist the PRINCE Rebels and Traytors Hereby they put a tie upon the City not to redeem their Ships by lending 20000 l. to the Prince and yet had a Pirat taken them it had been lawful to redeem them Saturday 5 August 123. The National Covenant The House of Commons went upon the Commissioners to judge of Scandals there was a Clause in the Ordinance forbidding the Nomination of such as refused the National Covenant which was strongly opposed by the Independents who argued That the National Covenant was but a League sworn mutually by the two Nations that the Scots by Invading England had first broke it and thereby set the English at liberty from it that the Covenant was not Jure divino no more than Presbytery was To which was Answered That the large Treaty containing the League between the two Nations so did not the Covenant which was a Vow made unto God with our hands lifted up to heaven for the maintenance and observation of the ends and principles expressed in the Covenant from which no power on Earth can absolve That though the Covenant was not Jure divino yet the keeping of it after we have taken it is Jure divino it being the revealed will of God that we should not offer to him the sacrifice of fools a Covenant to day and break it to morrow 124. A new Militia erected in every County in the hands of Sectaries Mondon 7 August A particular Ordinance to put the County of Wilts into a posture of defence was read many that were named to be Deputy Lieutenants or Commissioners were mean petty fellowes as one Read a Serving-man and others such as refuse to Act upon the Ordinances for setling Church Government and declare that our Ministery is Antichristian and are new dipped Brethren that have been re-baptized These to have power to raise what men and put arms into what hands they list to fine 10 l. and twenty days Imprisonment for every default and to levy 400 l. a week upon that poor County over and above the Taxes to Fairfax's Army and Ireland and Free-quarter The general Ordinance to trust the Counties with their own defence is obstructed to give way to these particular Ordinances
they left few honest moderate men in them to oppose their projects still bringing in Schismaticks and men of their own interests by enforced and undue Elections into their rooms and so by insensible degrees new modelled the House suitable to their own corrupt desires and new modelled the Army accordingly so that the people who had no intention to be interested so far were step by step so far ingaged before they were aware that they could not draw their feet back and do now find to their grief that the Bit is in their mouths the Saddle fast girt on their galled backs and these Rank riders mounted who will spur them not only out of their Estates Laws and Liberties but into Hell with renewed Treasons new Oathes Covenants and Engagements if they take not the more heed and be not the more resolute they have changed their old honest principles and their old friends who bore the first brunt of the business and have taken new principles and friends in their room suitable to their present desperate designs and now that they have squeezed what they can out of the Kings party they think of sequestring their old friends because they adhere to their old principles 10. Who are the Kings bitterest enemies 10. Amongst those that are most bitter against the King His own Servants especially the Judasses of the Committee of the Revenue that carry His purse and have fingered more of His Money and Goods than they can or dare give an account for are the greatest Zealots those that take upon them imployments about His Revenue and share what allowances to themselves they please for their pains those that buy in for trifles old sleeping Pensions that have not been payed nor allowed this thirty years and pay themselves all arrears those that Rent parcels of the Kings Revenue for the eighth or tenth part of the worth as Cor. Holland who renteth for 200 l. per ann as much of his Estate as is worth 1600 l. or 1800 l. per annum Thus you see the Lion Lord of the Forest growing sick and weak become a prey and is goared by the Ox bitten by the Dog yea and kicked by the Asse Look upon this president you Kings and Princes and call to mind examples of old that of Nebuchadnezzer and others lest by exalting your selves too high you provoke God to cast you too low When the Grandee Independents have a desire to raise new forces or erect new Garrisons or use any extremity against the City 11. Forged Conspiracies and false News or Royal party they commonly usher in their design with reporting to the House the discovery of some new-invented conspiracy or plot full of danger and destructinn such as was that of many thousond consecrated Knives and then propound their own forelaid design as a counsellable way to prevent it and he that doth not hastily believe their Informations or doth argue against the remedies they propound though he shew never so great inconveniency in them is presently cried out upon as a Malignant that doth not take the danger of the Parliament to heart and branded by the black tongues of the Godly and when any great business is to be treated of in Parliament or City which they either desire to promote or to obstruct they commonly publish counterfeit News and Letters of great victories and successes gotten by their Party in parts so remote that they cannot in a short time be confuted this serves to credit and animate their Party to go on boldly with their worke and to dishearten their Opponents and though the profit and reputation of a lie is seldom long-lived yet if it last some few dayes untill they have carried on their present business they care not herein they imitate a skilfull Architector who building an Arch supports it in the beginning with circular props and pieces of Timber untill he hath closed it and enabled it to support it self and then throws away the props When they have a design to ruine any man 12. The Art of Slander and Calumny before they fall openly upon his person they secretly undermine his credit and reputation that afterwards they may oppress him with applause and they are so excellently well fitted with Agents and Instruments for this purpose that they can prove what they list The close Committee of Examinations is an excellent forge for these contrivances they know where to find the sonnes of Belial now commonly called Knights of the Post who will trust God with their souls to advance the good Cause they have secret Examinations of several sorts some preparatory only amounting but to suspitions and presumptions to wound a mans good name and make him liable to more deadly blows hereafter and some consummatory laying the Axe to the root at the first blow nor is it a small Artifice of theirs boldly to accuse other men of those crimes they themselves are guilty of as they did the 11. Members of trucking with the King being their own fault by this means it doth constare de re presently it appears such offences are committed and if they can but fix them upon the persons of other men by bold Accusations close Examinations and false Witnesses then constat de persona they have found men to personate them deputies to bear the ignominy and punishment of their sinnes so some lascivious persons free themselves bestowing their diseases upon others 13. What a Confiding man is They account no man a Godly faithfull confiding man but he that engages as far in sin and makes himself as hopeless of reconciliation as themselves Quis nunc diligitur nisi conscius 14. The last Retreat and Refuge of the Godly Since the revolt of some of their Ships hath almost made them hopeless of transportation to foreign Plantations the schismatical Grandees have made Col. Walton Brother-in-law to Cromwel Governour of Lyn Boston and Crowland and of all that level of morasse Ground in the Isles of Ely Holland and Marshland which they can lay under water at pleasure it is a plentifull and strong Fastness able to feed 40000. men besides the ordinary Inhabitants there are but three passes to enter it over three Bridges upon which they have or may build Forts for their defence and may from thence invade the adjacent Country at pleasure being themselves free from incursions or they may if they list break down the said Bridges These places already strong by nature they daily fortifie by art for which purpose great sums of money have been sent to him and much Arms Powder Ammunition and Ordnance from Windsor Castle Here when all other helps fail the Godly mean to take Sanctuary this shall be their last retreat from whence they will draw the whole Kingdom to Parly upon Articles of treaty and enforce their peace from them at last These are the stratagems of the Godly These are our Saints no where canonized but in the Devils Calendar As the Church of Rome
of their own making but when the King had neither Army nor Garrison in the Kingdom and thereby this necessity was removed why did they not to prevent Tumults Insurrections and a new war content the People and return all things into their old Chanel and restore to the people their Religion Laws and Liberties being their first principles for which they engaged them to spend their blood and treasure and for defence whereof they engaged themselves and us in a Covenant with Hands lifted up to the High God Why did they then provoke the Scots to a new War but that they might have occasion to keep up their Army still and inthrall the Kingdom look upon their Doctrine as well as their aforesaid practices and you will find that all they do is but to carry on a fore-laid design to lay by the King and enslave the People under the new erected Kingdom of the Saints the Grandees of Derby-house and the Army In the Declaration against the Scots Papers p. 67. They have adjudged the King unfit to Govern and p. 70. they say the power of the Militia was the principal cause of their War and quarrel with the King and in their Declaration against the King they say they cannot confide in Him It hath been commonly spoken in the House of Commons that the two Houses nay the House of Commons alone is the Supreme power of this Nation under God 16. Mach 1642. Both Houses Voted it a High Breach of Privilege of Parliament for any Person not excepting King or Judge to oppose their Commands or to deny that to be Law which the two Houses declared to be so In their Declaration against the Scots Papers p. 63. The Members say That in all matters either concerning Church or State we have no Judge upon Earth but themselves Who will account the Popes plenitude of power monstrous hereafter that shall observe this Doctrine and practice of Subjects in Parliaments claiming and exercising a Supreme Government whereof the Militia is a part a Legislative and Judicative power over the Consciences Lives Liberties and estates of their Fellow Subjects And all this under colour of a necessity raised by themselves out of a dispute they set on foot against the King which they have affirmatively adjudged and determine for themselves against Him without consulting the Laws Statues and usages of the Realm Nay the very Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance which all with one voice speak against them Who would think that a faction in Parliament or any pest lesse than an Earth-quake or Deluge should in seven years time reduce so well-formed a Common-wealth into such a Chaos Yet even now the People are promised to be governed by the known Laws and Judges are appointed to determine sutes according to the Laws Surely There never was Tyrant that deprived his Vassals of a known Law amongst themselves this were to disable them to acquire wealth and so lose his own benefit of Taxes and Confiscations By the Laws of England a villain was protected in his goods against all men his Lord excepted The Turkish Vassals heap up much wealth and are protected against their fellow slaves though not against their Grand Seigneor who may seize their estates and take their lives at pleasure And this is all the protection the people of England have now by the Laws We have the benefit of Law one against another unless some Powerfull Member interpose but against the two Houses or either of them or any Grandee what Law what Justice can protect our lives liberties or estates and yet we were allowed heretofore to make our defence in Law against the King And until the King be again restored to his Right expect no better Right to be done you by this heedless head-strong Faction in Parliament The summe of all their endeavours is no more but this 18. The final scope of the Grandees endeavours The Grandees of Derby-house and the Army have already by their Votes of No Addresses and their scandalous Declaration laid by the King and in Him Monarchy notwithstanding they delay and fool the people with tedious debates of a Personall Treaty And when this innovation is digested by the people their next step will be to make use of the Schismatical Antimonarchical party in the House of Commons Army and City to cast off the House of Peers as Prerogative creatures and rags of Royalty some Schismatical Plebeian Lords excepted who shall recruit the Power they lose in the House of Lords by being of the Committee of Derby-house and when the people are well inured to this change and the grievance of it worn out by custom then to lay by the House of Commons and usurp the full Power of the King and Parliament into the Committee of safety at Derby-house who by way of preparation doe already stile themselves in all forein Negotiations The STATES Nay they doe already act all matters of moment at home and assume unto themselves all the properties of a State the Parliament being but a Sub-Committee to them upon whom they put what Impositions and Injunctions they please witnesse the design put upon the House of Commons for every Member to subscribe what number of Horse he would maintain for a Guard I know not whether to the Parliament or to the Committee of Derby-house This disease being now come to its Crisis 19. The Prognostick of this Disease it is no hard matter to pronosticat That nature that is the King our natural liege Lord must inevitably prevail at last against this Antimonarchical Faction for these reasons 1. The King can never want a Party the Parliament or rather Antimonarchical faction in Parliament can never manage a party without faction and confusion 2. The King may hushand his treasure to His best advantage the faction in Parliament cannot but must necessarily be cheated that they may be followed and befriended since only common crimes and common profit glues and cements them together and only such are found to be confiding men to them 3. The King is now discovered to every common capacity to have all the known Laws on His side the Parliament all known Laws against them and the people will no longer be governed without Law by new Arbitrary inventions 4. The King hath recovered all the peoples affections the Parliament hath lost them a privation which can never be reduced into habit again 5. The King is allyed both in Consanguinity of Blood and affinity of Cause with all the Princes of Christendom the faction in Parliament are terrae filii faterculi Gigantum Mushromes 6. The Kings Army will obey Him and His Interest the Parliaments Army will command them and their Interests besides they are men of different Principles and Interests only held together by profit and when that fails they fall in sunder Nothing therefore but a free Personal Treaty in London can prevent a Conquest whatsoever desperate forlorn people say to the contrary The Epilogue I Am not Ignorant
they share among themselves This war is not like to be of any continuance considering there being in the Army many conscientious men who have had such ample experiment of the falshood of their Grand Officers that they are not like to hazard their lives again under the command of such Grand Impostors as they are also knowing the General hatred of the Kingdom to them under whose insupportable burthens and oppressions it groaneth Nor have we any way to break the power of the said Grandees of this Army but by the Scots whereby the just rights and Interests of all the three Kingdoms may be setled and Ireland relieved All which the Scots have declared in their former Papers delivered to both Houses of Parliament 4. If you accommodate with this faction you must have the same friends and foes with them as well as the same sins and quarrels and then it will grow to a Nationall quarrel between England and Scotland which will be of long continuance and misery and the Interest of the King and his Children and of all Princes of Christendom concerned in the example will be carried on in the Kingdom of Scotland against you if you joyn with those beggarly Grandees who have inriched themselves and their fellow-Impostors by the ruines of the Kingdom You will lose your credit and interests with your friends and brethren of Scotland the only fear and terror of whose coming into England kept this Faction which all men know is never satisfied with money and blood from taking many of your innocent heads from off your shoulders and confiscating your Estates to pay the arrears of the Army witnesse their often speeches to this purpose in the house of Commons and their illegal and violent proceedings against you you will likewise lose all the people of England I have shewed you your losses let me shew you your gains by this accommodation that by comparing one with the other you may cast up your account whether you shall be gainers or losers by it 1. They offer you the Tower of London and your Militia to be restored things of no great consideration and your Aldermen and Citizens to be set at liberty they do not offer to disband their Army which makes them Lord it over you and over-power both Tower and Militia and when they have divided you from all your friends and destroyed your reputation and are secure from the Scots the same violence which at first took your Tower your Militia and your most honest Citizens from you can deprive you of them all again at pleasure when you shall have none to stick by you your obligation to them shall be of steel theirs to you but of straw he that gives me that he can deprive me of at pleasure gives me nothing 2. Cromwell and his party knew your City to be the entire strength of England In Rich. 2. dayes when it was not half so great and populous as now it slew Wat Tyler and routed his rabble six times as many in number as the Army They therefore fear you and consequently hate you and labour nothing more than to divide and weaken you which is their proper interest For which purpose to divide the City in it self they caused the Parliament to change your Militia into other hands they cut off Westminster Southwark and the Hamlets from your Militia to weaken it they have divided you from the Parliament they have endeavoured to divide the Countrey from you Ut dividendo singula imperent universis Wherefore the Army in their Remonstrance 7. December 1647. Insolently demand Reparations from the City to the Countrey adjacent for above 100000 l. losse sustained through the Armies attendance on the Cities defaults which was a device only to make the Country quarrell with the City and to make the Army Umpiers 3. Consider you shall joyn with them that never kept Faith longer than they may gain by it whereof you have many examples Any honest man may be deceived once but he is a fool that will be deceived twice by one man 4. Nay you cannot treat with these men nor give them a Common Council or Hall without losse and danger they have always made lies their refuge and built their Designs upon the sandy foundations of Rumors and Fables Cromwel and Glover already give out that they and you are as good as agreed that you differ only upon a puntilio of honour which will soon be reconciled what is the meaning of this but that they having creatures of their own Commissioners in Scotland have advertisement to spread the same reports there thereby to take off the edge of your friends affections to lay an imputation of inconstancy upon you and make you inconsiderable in the judgements of your best friends and retard all indeavours for your succour In the mean time this party hath blocked up all passages to Scotland that truth can have no accesse to you and you have only such news as Derby-house doth please to impart to you These men have committed those crimes that cannot be safe without committing greater they must on headlong go not with them for company they desire to bestow their plague-sores upon others Let it not trouble you that the Parliament hath approved their subscription of the Ingagement with the Army it was a Vote extorted in a thin house many Members having been driven away by threats of the Army before and there were many dissenting Members A little patience and constancy will settle you in a lasting peace To petition the Houses to repeal their four Votes against the King is to save their reputation that seek to destroy yours A seasonable Caution to the City of London Gentlemen of the City YOur Neighbours of Kent and other Counties wishing well to them take it unkindly that notwithstanding all these former admonitions you should let down your chains and give a free march to this bloody cheating schismatical Army at all hours of the night through your City to cut their throats and lend them 6000 l. to enable them to march when they had no other design but in a peaceable way to deliver a Petition to the Houses demanding nothing but what the Parliament by their Declarations Covenant the Oaths of Supremacy and allegiance and the known Laws of the Land ought to grant Onely being fore-warned by the inhumane assassination of the Surrey Petitioners they had some men in Armes a sufficient distance from the Town to secure their Messengers They have by their Letters to your selves and the Houses manifested the clearnesse of their intentions to you all They are known to be men of setled habitations and fortunes for the most part not vagabonds and Souldiers of Fortune like the Army Their commerce with you help you both to trade and feed whereas the Armies insolent march in triumph through your City so far lessened your reputation ever since that you constantly lose in your trading 200000 l. a Week and no Bullion comes into the Mint
of the Army and Houses of Parliament to purchase their compliance and Votes in all matters agitated in the Houses of Parliament by reason whereof all motions for His Majesties return to his Parliament the first step to our desired Peace have been either totally rejected or by them politickly delayed because Peace would determine both their power and profit 7. The Estates of Delinquents the Lands of Bishops Deans and Chapters designed by several Ordinances for discharge of publique Debts are by the Houses and power of the Army shared and divided amongst themselves while the publique debts be unsatisfied the common Souldier unpayed the mained unrelieved the Widdows and Children of the slain unprovided for and all left burdens to the Commonwealth 8. That the Army consisting of mean ignorant and illiterate men only gilt with hypocrisie divine and civil under pretence of tender Consciences the better to induce and tolerate all Heresies have expelled and supprest all learned Orthodox Divines and Church Government and crying Liberty Liberty have subjected our Persons and Estates to arbitrary Law and tyranny and by Rape imbracing the Legislative power cuckolds the body Politick giving Laws to the whole Kingdom and yet by Petitions and Remonstrances make both Houses father as their own the adulterous issue 9. That this Army assuming to themselves the modelling and settlement both of Church and State at Windsor in April last in their Council did consult these 3. Questions First Whether shall we joyn with the Levellers and new model both Church and State Next Whether with the moderate Party Treat and receive the KING with more qualified and limited Power Thirdly Whether Depose the KING Dis-inherit the PRINCE Crown the DUKE of YORK and appoint a Protector The first was held to promise most of liberty and profit but threatned greatest danger in effecting and difficulty in continuing The second was said to be easiest obtained and continued because nighest to the present frame and constitution already setled but would bring them little of profit and less of Soveraignty The third like Benjamin last in birth but first in the Parents affections was held not difficult to be acted but to be maintained for it would require both the expence of much blood and money and the Kingdom to re-act York and Lancaster under the names of Wales and York To this Lieut. Gen. Cromwel answered It was the better for that would necessitate the continuance of our Army which secures our persons will enforce our reasons make just our demands and facilitate their grant For the bloud that will flow from the cheapveins of Common Souldiers whereof England hath plenty and we will not want For the money London is our bank and from their Purses it shall drain to our Coffers Commissary Ireton L. Gen. Cromwel's Son-in-law said The work was half done for we have already Voted no Addresses to be made to the King and Him guilty of crimes enough to Depose Him and by Imprisoning His Person have fitted Him for a private life and by it taught the people that He is subject to the dispose of both Houses of Parliament whole Ordinances are only powerful by our Swords and therefore our Actions shall be legal by their Vote Further the Prince said he is link'd with his Father in crime and therefore cannot be severed in punishment he hath been General in a Western Army warring as his Father against the Parliament a crime that as it rendred the Father fit to be Deposed so doth it the Son unfit to succeed in the Government And that the descent of the Crown purge not him as it did Hen. 7. let us in the Fathers life time Crown the Duke of York now in our power whose tender years have preserved him innocent and presents him fitter for protection and our design and should any blame our severity towards the King and Prince others will commend our clemency towards the Duke of York Upon the result of this Council L. Gen. Cromwel in the House of Commons tels Mr. Speaker That it was time to set on foot our great design and that such as should not concur in Votes with us be not continued of us The motion being mis-timed and divers of his party absent it was only wondred at by Master Knightly and died with the words The Scene now alters from Westminster to Carisbrook-Castle and the King that could not be removed by Votes must now by Poyson the Actor Col. Hammond Major Rolf c. all Members of the Army yet must we by cursed Excise that insensibly devours the poor by insupportable Monthly Taxes that impoverish the rich contrary to Law and our Allegiance contrary to our Protestation and Covenant inforced upon us we must traiterously maintain and pay this Army that traiterously contrive and endeavour the deposal and murder of our Soveraign Lord the King the subversion of our Protestant Church our Fundamental and known Laws We therefore declare to the World that God blessing us we will with hazard of our lives and fortunes disband and dissipate this Army the Suppressors of the pure Protestant Religion the Imprisoners and would be the Murtherers of their Soveraign Lord the King and grand Oppressors of the Common-wealth then free from Imprisonment our said Soveraign and him God-willing restore to his lawfull Government just Rights and Throne in Parliament this done we shall joyfully and readily deposite our justly assumed Arms and on our knees beg what his Majesty hath often most graciously offered and will undoubtedly grant his most Royal and gracious pardon to all his mis-led Subjects will return to their Allegiance and forward to bring the King back to his own house We therefore hereby earnestly desire and request all loyal and wel-affected Subjects as well Members of both Houses of Parliament as others to be herein aiding and assisting to us First by not recruiting the Forces of the Lord Fairfax Next by withdrawing all aid and assistance from his Army by with-holding Excise and Monthly Taxes allotted for their pay and support and to give us with their prayers such assistance as their Allegiance and opportunity shall advise and we trust that the God that judgeth rightly will crown our loyal action with happy successe and our successe with a glorious peace which is heartily prayed for and shall God willing be resolutely fought for by us His Majecties loyal and faithfull Subjects in Colchester A List of the Names of the Members of the House of Commons Observing which are Officers of the Army contrary to the self-denying Ordinance Together with such summes of Money Offices and Lands as they have given to themselves for service done and to be done against the KING and Kingdom Corrected and augmented Note Reader that such as have this mark * comming immediately before their Names are Recruiters illegally elected by colour of the new Seal the power of the Army and voices of the Souldiers and are unduly returned and serve accordingly The first Century 1. WIlliam Lenthall
seeming Saints who have made the solemn League and Covenant intended for preservation of Religion His Majesties Honour and the just Liberties of the Subject to be the ruine of Religion the dishonour so far as in them lieth of His Majesty and the most absolute enslaving of all free Subjects not to Kings or Princes to Great men or Good men but to the very scum and off-scouring of both Kingdoms it being no● small grief to all that truly feared God that so many of the reputed honest Presbyterian party should out of base fear or other by-respects comply so long with these Stare-Juglers the Clergy being most active hastning thereby their own and the Kingdoms misery for they may be well assured if these Saints prevail they must as some of them have done already turn their Coats once more and become the Hirelings and tongue-tied Tenants at will to their Brethren of the Independency or be kicked out of their fat Benefices and possibly out of the Kingdom to prevent new Insurrections against them which they are cunning to procure having the power in their hand to repress all that dare appear against them may be ruined others by their example terrified and their Saints may enjoy the fatness of England but I would ask these violent Clergy-men of the Presbyterian Party that are unwilling His Majesty should be brought speedily to a Personal Treaty what their Assemblies of Divines have been doing for if that Confession of Faith set out in England approved of in Scotland be agreeable to the truth of Gods word as I know nothing to the contrary why should the chief Magistrate our dread Soveraign be any longer debard of his just dues is He worse than Infidel that you will assist those that deny His sacred Majesty that which they allow to Infidel Magistrates blush for shame and repent in time lest as they change their Votes every day according as the tide of their power ebbs and flows so they may soon force you to repeal that Article concerning the chief Magistrate or like the gloss of Orleans put an exposition upon it which destroyeth the text God send us peace and truth and preserve His sacred Majesty and his Posterity and confound the wicked counsels of all such as are enemies to Peace Truth and Monarchy Si quid novistirectius istis Candidus imperti Si non his utere mecum THE END ANARCHIA ANGLICANA OR THE HISTORY OF Independency THE SECOND PART BEING A Continuation of Relations and Observations Historicall and Politique upon this present PARLIAMENT Begun Anno 16. CAROLI PRIMI By THEODORUS VERAX PSAL. 8.8 Virum sanguinum dolosum abominabitur Dominus Printed in the Year M.DC.XL IX THE PROTESTATION AND DECLARATION THe premises considered I do hereby in the name and behalf of my selfe and of all the Free People of England Declare and protest That the Generall Councel of Warre and officers of the Army by their said violent and treasonable force upon the farre major more honest and moderate part of the House of Commons being above 250. and leaving only 50. or 60. Schismaticks of their own engaged party sitting and voting under their Command and almost all of them such as have and do make a prey of the Commonwealth to enrich themselves and their Faction have broken discontinued and waged War against this Parliament have forfeited their Commissions And the remaining Faction in the House of Commons by abetting aiding and concurring with the said Councel of War in the said rebellious Force by setting up new illegal and arbitrary Courts of Judicature to murder King Charles the First our Lawful King and Governour who by his Writ according to the Law summoned and authorized this Parliament to meet sit Principium Caput finis Parliamenti Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Advise with Him and was the Fountain Head and Conclusion or consummatory End of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all Persons and in all Causes of this Kingdom and by Abolishing the House of Peers and the Kingly Office and dis-inheriting the Kings Children and Usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority and Legislative Power of this Nation in order to make and establish themselves a Councel of State Hogen Mogens or Lords States General and translate the said Supreme Power and Authority into the said Councel of State and then Dissolve this Parliament and perpetuate their said Tyranny and this Army and Govern Arbitrarily by the power of the Sword and raise what illegal Taxes they please and eat out consume and destroy whosoever will not basely submit to their Domination See 1. part sect 105 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17 18. and returne to sect 79 109 110. Stat. of Recognition 1. Iac. Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy have by the aforesaid ways and means totally subverted this Kingdome and destroyed the fundamental Laws Authority and Government thereof Dissolved and Abolished this and all future Parliaments so that there is now no visible lawful Authority left in England but the Authority of King CHARLS the Second who is actually KING of all his Dominions presently upon the Decease of the King his Father before any Proclamation made or Coronation solemnized notwithstanding that by his unjust Banishment caus●d by the interposition of the said traiterous combined Antimonarchical Faction He be eclipsed for the present and not suffered to perform any Acts of Government to his three Kingdoms and restore peace plenty justice mercy Religion Laws and Liberties to them again which no Hand but his own can bestow and therefore in vain do the people long for expect Figs from thistles Grapes from thornes This Kingdom of the Brambles now set up being only able to Scratch and Tear not to Protect and Govern them I farther Declare and Protest That this combined traiterous Faction have forced an Interregnum and a Justitium upon us an utter suspension of all lawful Government Magistracy Lawes and Judicatories so that we have not de jure any Laws in force to be executed any Magistrates or Judges lawfully constituted to execute them any Court of Justice wherin they can be judicially executed any such Instrument of the Law as a lawful Great Seal nor any Authority in England that can lawfully Condemn and Execute a Thief Murderer or other Offender without being themselves called Murderers by the Law all legal proceedings being now coram non Judice nor can this remaining Faction in the House of Commons shew any one President Law Reason or Authority whatsoever for their aforesaid doing but only their own irrational tyrannical Votes and the Swords of their Army Wherefore I do further Declare and Protest before God and the World That all free-born subjects of the Kingdom of England and Ireland are bound by the Stat. of Recognition 1. Jac. and by all our Lawes and Statutes By their Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy the Protestation and National Covenant by very many Declarations Remonstrances Petitions and Votes
lesse I think to hurt his Person the Lawes are the Kings Lawes Courts the Kings Courts Judges his Judges Great Seale his Seale Writs the Kings Writs the Justice and Peace of the Land are his consequently the Warrs his Warrs he is the fountain of all Authority as well as of all Honour * 1 Pet. ● 13 H●●e the King is called Sup●e●e not the People and tho●gh said to be an ordinance of man in some respects yet St. Paul R●m 13. saith He is ordain'd of God 2. Governours are distinguished the King is supreme and Governors are sent by him and his Commission Besides it appears Gen. 3.16 and 4.7 God gave not to all men that freedom which is supposed the foundation of supremacie in the people He made them not Masters of their own liberty for even then he laid the foundations of obedience in Abel to Cain Eve to Adam If a people chuse a King it is the act of every particular man of whom the Commonalty consists and each individual nor the whole Commona●ty can give him more power then himself hath But no man hath power over his own life neither arbitrarily nor judicially but on●y over his liberty which he may so give away as to make himselfe a subject or a slave this makes him so chosen a Ruler or Protector of them who have parted with their liberty and subjected to him and then God who only hath power of life and death invests the King with power to be the Minister of God to exec●te vengeance not bearing the Sword in vain Rom. 13. See Dr. Hammonds Letter to the L. Fairfax Jan. 5. 1648. Thou shalt not speak ill of the Governour of the People therefore not accuse him The King hath no Superiour nor equal in England contrary to that false distinction of the Observator that he is Major singulis minor universis When David would have gone forth to Battel his Army disswaded it using these reasons If we flee they will not care for us n●ither if halfe of us die will they care for us But thou art worth ten thousand of us Here you see the King is reckoned major universis more than all his Army and yet that Army was at that time in effect all the well-affected of the Land and therefore by the Anarchical Principle aforesaid the only People of the La●d for further proof hereof I appeal to all our Laws and Statutes how will they Try him Who shall Judge him who are his Peers that he may be Legally Tryed like a Freeborn man for sure they cannot deny him that right according to Magna Charta per legale judicium parium suorum It is a grounded Maxime in our Lawes The King can do no wrong wherefore then will they Try him for doing no wrong The policy and civility therefore of our Lawes and of our Parliament too in all their Declarations Remonstrances so long as they continued in any state or degree of innocency always accused his Evil Counsellours and Ministers and freed Himself lest they gave advantages to ambitious men Absalom-like to scandalize and dishonour him and render him low and vile in the eyes of the People to the disturbance of the peace of the King and Kingdoms and shaking of the Royal Throne which is alwayes accompanied with an earth-quake of the whole Land Saint Peter bids us Submit to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as those that are sent by him As free and not using your liberty for a cloake of malitiousnesse but Feare God Honour the King But these rebellious Saints abusing Christian liberty for a cloake of malitiousnesse will according to their 4th Antimonarchical Principle make the giddy ignorant tumultuous many-headed multitude Judges of their King and make the confused Rabble his Superiours thereby setting up two Superiours one contradictory to the other and so turn the Kingly Government into a popular Military Government abolish our Lawes and leave all to the power of the Sword in an Arbitrary way to carry on their designe to which purpose they have lately caused their Journey-men the present House of Commons to Vote contrary to our knowne Lawes That the Supreme Authority of this Nation is in the People of England and therefore in themselves as their Representative This is a 6. Anarchical Principle of the Army and their Party who wanting reason to prove it assert it by the Authority of their Mock-Parliament and must now make it good by the Sword to justifie their proceedings against the King and People These popular principles are meer empty notions whereby the Grandees draw the Supreme Authority thorow the People to themselves the better to enslave them for the liberty of the Commons doth not consist in a licentiousnesse to interrupt the Government of their Superiours and change the Government according to their fancies but the liberty of the People consists in the enjoying the fruits of their labours their goods possessions estates and their personal liberty according to the knowne Lawes of the Land When Harry Martyn in Barkshire forbade the People to stand bare at the Sessions and doe homage and fealty to their Lords he gulled them and gave them that which was not their due to rob them of that which was their due their Horses Goods Money plundred from them for service of the State forsooth and beat them that defended their owne so that while he flattered them to be the Supreme Authority and Lords Paramount and the Parliament to be their Servants he used them like Slaves conquered by the Parliament Besides it is not all the People nor the thousandth part of them but a few covetous ambitious men that desire to bring the King to capital punishment and subvert our fundamental Government and Lawes that have usurped the power of the Kingdome into the hands of their Faction and now require this to keep themselves from being called to account The second Demand tends to disinherit his Posterity viz. That the Prince and Duke of Yorke come in by a day appointed and acquit themselves of their capitall Delinquency or else to be Declared incapable of Government and to die without mercy if afterwards found in the Kingdome th●s Summons is but to insinuate their guilt if they refuse to appeare as reason tells us they must and will This is to shut the door after Monarchy and keep it out for ever in farther pursuance they demand the Revenue of the Crowne to continue still in Hucksters hands to pay publique Debts and repaire the Losses of the People that is themselves The second sort of Propositions are for setling of the Kingdome upon their owne Grounds and Interest That a certaine period be set to this Parliament by which time the Supreme trust in them may returne unto the People that is still to themselves and their Faction the new erected Committee of State the hogen mogens at White-hall Thus you see having removed
but the designs projects of Jesuits Popish Priests and Recusants who bear chief sway in their Councels to destroy and subvert our Religion Laws Liberties Government Magistracy Ministry the present and all future Parl. the King his Posterity and our 3. Kingdoms yea the Generall Officers and Army themselves and that with speedy and inevitable certaint● to betray them all to our forreign Popish Enemies and give a just occasion to the Prince and Duke now in the Papists power to alter their Religion and engage them and all forreign Princes and Estates to exert all their power to suppresse and extirpate the Protestant Religion and Professors of it through all the world which these unchristian scandalous treacherous rebellious tyrannicall Jesuitical disloyall bloudy present Councels and exorbitances of this Army of Saints so much pretending to piety and justice have so deeply wounded scandalized and rendred detestable to all pious carnall morall men of all conditions All which I am and shall alwaies be ready to make good before God Angels Men and our whole three Kingdoms in a free and full Parliament upon all just occasions and seale the truth of it with the last drop of my dearest bloud In witnesse whereof I have hereunto subscribed my Name at the Signe of the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. 51. The Councell of War forbid all state and ceremony to the King From Dec. 25. to 1. January Num. 283. 27. Decemb. The Councel of VVarr who manage the businesse in relation to the King saith the Diurnal ordered That all state and ceremony should be forborne to the King and his Attendants lessened to mortifie him by degrees and work Him to their desires VVhen it was first moved in the House of Commons to proceed capitally against the King 52. Cromwels Sp. in the Ho. when it was first propounded to try the King Cromwell stood up and told them That if any man moved this up●n d●signe he should think him the greatest Traytour in the world but since providence and necessity had cast them upon it he should pray God to blesse their Councels though he were not provided on the suddaine to give them counsel this blessing of his proved a curse to the King 53. The Ordinance for electing Com Councel men confi●med 28. Decemb. was brought into and read in the House an Ordinance explaining the former Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men which confirmed the former Ordinance It was referred back againe to the said Committee to consider of taking away the illegal as they please to miscall them Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy and other Oaths usually administred to Officers Free-men c. of the City The 28. Decemb. Tho. Scot brought in the Ordinance for Trial of the King it was read and recommitted three severall times 54. The Ordinance for Trial of His Majesty passed the Commons and the Commissioners Names inserted consisting of diverse Lords Commons Aldermen Citizens Country Gentlemen and Souldiers that the more persons of all sorts might be engaged in so damnable and treasonable a designe and because this Ordinance and the proceedings thereupon had no foundation in Divinity Law reason nor practice The Commons to give it a foundation and ground from the authority of their Votes declared as followeth Resolved c. Diurnall from 1. Ian. to the 8. of Ian. 1648. Numb 286. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament doe declare and adjudge That by the fundamental Laws of the Realme it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levie War against the Parliament and Kingdom of England So together with this declaratory Vote the said Ordinance was carried up to the Lords by that Renegado Lord Gray of Grooby Jan. 2. 1648. 55. And sent up to the Lords The Lords met that day farre more than ordinary 16. in number and promising to send an Answer by Messengers of their owne The first Question started by some Lords who had rather have had a thinner House was 56. And Debated Whether it should be presently debated which passed Affirmatively The first Debate was upon the said Declaratory Vote The Earle of Manchester told them The Parliament of England by the fundamentall Laws of England consisted of three Estates 1. King 2. Lords 3. Commons the King is the first and chief Estate He calls and dissolves Parliaments and confirmes all their Acts and without him there can be no Parliament therefore it is absurd to say The King can be a Traitour against the Parliament The Earle of Northumberland said The greatest part at least twenty to one of the people of England were not yet satisfied whether the King levied war first against the Houses or the Houses against Him 57. The Zealots of the H. of Com offended with the Lords for casting forth the Ordin for Triall of the King And if the King did levie Warr first against the Houses we have no Law to make it Treason in Him so to doe And for us to declare Treason by an Ordinance when the matter of fact is not yet proved nor any Law extant to judge it by is very unreasonable so the Lords cast off the Debate and cast out the Ordinance and adjourned for seven dayes Jan. 3. The Zealots of the Commons were very angry at the Lords and threatned to clap a Pad-lock on the Door of their House but at last they sent up some of their Members to examine the Lords Book and see what they have done who brought word back that their Lordships had passed 2. Votes 1. That they doe not concurre to the said Declaratory Vote 2. That they had rejected the Ordinance for Triall of the King 58. Votes passed by them therupon Hereupon the Commons resolved to rid their hands of King and Lords together and presently they voted That all Members of the House of Commons and others appointed by order of that House or Ordinances of both Houses of Parliament to act in any Ordinance wherin the Lords are joyned shall be impowred and enjoyned to sit and act and execute in the said several Committees of themselves notwithstanding the House of Peers joyne not with them therein Upon the debate many hot-brain'd men insisted upon it That the Lords who rejected the Ordinance should be themselves Impeached for favouring the grand Delinquent of England you see the King was likely to have much justice when his Judges must either condemne Him or be condemned others thought it more prudence to touch their Priviledges and let alone their Persons Die Iovis 4. Jan. 1648. The Commons passed these 3. Votes A question in Divinity voted in Parliament never agreed to by Divines This we find de fact● in the subversion of our Religion Lawes Liberties and Properties though not de Jure You see that since both Houses ravished the Supremacy from the King and a petty faction from the Houses our Lawes are first shrunk into arbitrary Ordinances of
the Parliament and the Liberties of the Kingdom and defend the Kings Person and Authority in defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdom they being under the said trusts and Oath march up to Westminster contrary to order in a hostile way forcibly secured secluded and drove away many of the Members the Question is Whether this Action be Justifiable upon pretence of Honest intentions and Necessity Their good intentions cannot be known but by their expressions and actions and they referre us to their Proposals Declarations and Remonstrances where we find their desires are 1. To take away the Kings life 2. To take away the lives of the Prince and the Duke of Yorke at least to dis-inherit both them and all the Kings Children 3. To put a period to thi● Parliament 4. To set up a new Representative of their own which takes away all Parliaments 5. To have an Elective King if any These are their Honest intentions for publick good which must come in to justice their waging warre against their Masters this Parliament To name them is to confute them as being apparently against the Laws of God and the Land under which they live and which they are engaged to maintain we shall produce no other Witnesses to prove this but themselves On the 15. of Novemb. 1647. The agreeement of the People which is lower in demands than these which they call Honest intentions for publick good was condemned by the Army The promoting it in the Army judged mutinous and capital Col. Rainsborough and Major Scot complained of in the House for appearing in it and-the Paper it self adjudged by the House destructive to Government and the being of Parliaments The second pretence or principle is Extraordinarie Necessity for the same end To this we say 1. The Armie made the same plea of necessity in their Remon●●rance June 23. 1647. upon quite contrary grounds to what they exp ess now and both to justifie the same viol nt proceedings against the Parliament then when the King was seized upon by a party of the Armie without Order from the House and the Army advanced against the Parliament They say in their Letter to the House July 8. 1647. There have been several Officers of the Army upon several occasions sent to his Majestie The first to present to Him a Copie of the Representations and after that some others to tender Him a Copie of the Remonstrance Vpon both which the Officers sent were appointed to clear the sence and intentions of any thing in either paper Turn back to sect 2. and see my Animadvers upon the Army 20 Nov. 1648. p. 4 5 6 7. whereupon his Majestie might make any Question There the Army treated with the King yet now they offer violence to the Parliament for treating with the King Then in their Remonstrance 25 June 1647. they say We clearly profess we do not see how there can be any peace to this Kingdom firm and lasting without a due consideration of and provision for the rights quiet and immunities of His Majesties Royall Family and his late partakers now they judge the majority of the House corrupt for moving one step towards a peace with the King The Parliament thought it not reasonable the King should be sole Judge of publike necessity in case of shipmony Return to sect 18. where I set down six of their Principles though he hath now granted more to them then all the Armies Proposals then demanded of Him Thus they make this general plea of Necessity serve to justifie the considerations which they are put to by making themselves Judges of those things they have no calling to meddle with for by what Authority are they Judges of publike Necessity 2. This principle Necessity is destructive to all Government for as the General Officer urgeth necessity for acting against the Commands and Persons of his Superiours and arrogates to be Judge of that Necessity the Inferiour may urge the same Necessity in his judgement to act against the Commands of his General The Souldiers ' gainst their Officers any other 20000. men in this Kingdom against this Army and this Army as against this Parliament so against any other Representative or Government and so in infinitum 3. The Commons have their Authority from the Writ of Election though their election from the people See the Writ Cromton's Jurisdict of Court Tit Parliamen The Commons in Parliament are not accountable for the use of their trust to any but the House being Trustees of the People not by Delegation but by translation all the power of the people being transferred to them for advising voting and assenting according to their judgements not according to the judgements of those that sent them for otherwise the parties electing and those elected differing in judgement one might protest against what the other had done and so make void all Acts of Parliament But if their Acts were valid or void at the Electors judgements yet were the Members onely accountable to them that sent them not to Strangers and in no case to the Army who are themselves but in subordinate trust to the Parliament for their defence 4. This violence upon the Members is not onely contrary to the Armies trust but against their Covenant and Protestation the breach whereof being a morrall evill cannot be made good by honest intentions and necessity The particulars of the said Generall Officers Answer upon which this pretended Necessity is grounded are six but we must first take notice what is said from the end of the 2. pag. to the end of the 5 before we enter upon them the summe is In all new Elections there were 2. Independents chosen for one of any other principles Independents were then Commissioners for the Great Seal and delivered Writs to men of their own Party who had the advantage to keep them and chuse their own time to deliver them and Souldiers under colour of keeping the peace became great Sticklers in Elections That by the endeavours of some old Malignant Members and by practises used in new Elections there came in a floud of new Burgesses that either are Malignant or Neuters To this we say what is done by the majority is the Act of the whole House and what is done against the majority is done against the whole House nor was the Ordinance for New Elections carried on by old Malignants unless the major part of the House were alwaies such and before the new Elections It is not hard to shew that many of the Officers of the Army came in upon the last Elections and were chosen by those places where they are scarce known upon what influence therefore they came in let the world judge And now for the said 6. particulars objected The Army betrayed Ireland by their disobedience They would neither go for Ireland themselves nor suffer others to go 1 part sect 16. 55.57 1. The betraying of Ireland into the Enemies hands by
recalling the Lord Lysle from his command there and putting the best part of the said Kingdom and where the Parliament had the strongest footing Munster into the hands of Inchiquine a Native Irish who hath since Revolted from the Parliament hath lately united with the Irish Rebels and with them and Ormond for the King To this we ●ay the Lord Inchiquine came in and brought Munster to the Parliament and preserved their Interest in Ireland in all the heat of their Warres in England when they had little other Interest there and less means to relieve them the Lord Lysle was not recalled from his Command there This Lo went late caried over 160000 l. for which he hath not yet accounted began a quarrell with Inchiqueen and put him into discontent and then returned See the Irish Letters and Papers to the the House in print but his Commission for Lord Lieutenant expiring 15. April 1647. on the 17. April he hoysed sayle for England after the Lord Lysles return for England the Lord Inchiquine did gallant service against the Rebels took many strong Holds from them and won the Battel of Knocke-knowes one of the greatest that ever was gotten of the Rebels The House therefore approved of his behaviour untill 3. April 1648. when the Army having led the way the Lord Inchiquine taking distast thereat by way of imitation began to enter into Engagements and Remonstrances against the Parliament as it was then constituted for which he made the Remonstrances Engagements and Declarations of the Army the Summer before both the cause and precedent as by the printed Relation doth appear 2. Their endeavours to bring in the King upon His own Tearms without satisfaction and security to the Kingdom v●z upon His Message of the 12. of May 1647. and to this end to Disband this Army before any peace made or assured To this we say the House of Commons upon the first notice thereof voted the said Engagement of the 12. of May Treasonable and by Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. put an incapacity upon such Citizens as had any hand in it which evidenceth we were here in a right majority as in other parts of their Paper they take the Votes of the House to prove us a corrupt majority The charge here lying in generall and not fixed upon any particular Concerning Disbanding the Army we say the House voted 8. Regiments of Foot 4. of Horse and 1. of Dragoones to be sent out of the Army for Ireland and resolved to keep 10000. Foot and 5400. Horse under Command of the Lord Fairfax for defence of England This was 1. For Relieving Ireland 2. For easing the heavy pressures of the poor People in England And 3. an honorable employment for the Forces of the Army to prevent such high distempers as have since ensued See my 1. part sect 16. 17. 18. and my said Animadversions pag. 2. neither were they legally impeached See Ardua regni or twelve arduous doubts written in defence of the expulsed Memb and the sa d Members Ans to the Armies Charge 3. That they endeavoured to protect the 11. impeached Members from justice and with them to raise a new Warre To this we say we gave them no other protection than the Laws allowed them For the mispending 200000 l. designed for Ireland we say that 80000 l. thereof was paid to Nicholas Loftus and others for service of Ireland and above 50000 l. to the Treasurers at Warre for the Army which may more reasonably be said to be mis-imployed because the Army had an established pay another way than what the Reformado Officers and Souldiers who obeyed the Orders of the House for Disbanding received who nevertheless pressed upon the House the more earnestly for their Arrears after the Declarations and Remonstrances published by the Army for paying the Arrears of all the Souldiers of England 4. Their countenancing abetting There was a close Inquisition of Godly Cut-throats purposely chosen to examine this Tumult which proceeded illegally and used so much foul play as to accuse men upon characters of their clothes persons yet malice it self could find nothing See my 1. part sect 45 46. to sect 54. Return to sect 2. 5. and partaking with the Tumult of Apprentices and others against both Houses of Parliament To this we say that we wonder they should urge the force offered to the House then which they declared horrid and treasonable to justifie the violence acted upon the House by themselves of a much higher nature This is a meer fiction of the Pen-mans which we do every one of us for our selves respectively deny 5. The holding correspondency engaging and assisting the tumultuous Petitioners last Spring the rebellious Insurrections in Kent the Revolted Ships Prince of Wales with the Scots Army We do every one of us for our selves respectively deny these 6. That when the Army was dispensed and engaged in severall parts c. and many faithfull Members employed abroad upon publique services and others through Malignant Tumults about this City could not with safety attend the House Then the corrupt and Apostating Party taking advantage of these distractions which themselves had caused First recalled in those Members c. Then they recalled those Votes for Non-Addresses and voted a Personall Treaty To this we say that if the proceedings of the Treaty were surreptitiously gotten in a thin House why do they then complain in other parts of their Paper that the majority of the House is corrupt Return to sect 2. 5. there see the true grounds of these Tumults See wh t u●e they make of provid nce in the 1. part of Englands new Chains and formed to serve the Kings corrupt Interest why did they force from the House above 200 Members at once the Counties never expressed so high contempt of the Parliament untill the like had been first done by the Armies quartering upon them And now let us come to that Vote of the House 5. Dec. 1648. That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses are a ground to proceed upon to a settlement of Peace of which they say That though they advanced hither to attend providence for opening some way to avoid the present evils designed and introduce the desired good into the Kingdom yet they said nor acted nothing in relation to the Parliament nor any Member thereof untill by the Vote passed Decemb. 5. they found the corrupt majority so resolvedly bent to compleat their Design in bringing in the King Do they call their threatning Declaration and Remonstrance a saying nothing and their marching up against the House contrary to the Order of the House a doing nothing in relation to the Parliament But by these words it appears that this Vote 5. Decemb. is the very point of that necessity they now relie upon to justifie their force upon the House For before that passed they say They acted nothing c. we must now state the difference between the
Houses Propositions See Mr. Pryn's said Speech in the House 2 Decemb. 1648. more at large and the Kings Answers and see whether the King did not grant all those Propositions in which the main security of the Kingdom resteth He granted the first Proposition for taking off all Declarations as was desired And the third Proposition for the Militia as was desired He assented to the Proposition for Ireland limiting the time of the Parliaments disposing Officers there to 20 years He consented to such Acts for publique Debts and Publique Uses as should be presented within 2. years and incurred within that time He granted the Proposition concerning Peers as was desired He granted the Disposing Offices in England to the Parliament for 20. years He granted the taking away the Court of Wards having 100000 l. per ann in lieu thereof to be raised as the Parliament should think fit He granted to declare against the Marquess of Ormond's power and proceedings after an Agreement with the Parliament The onely difference therefore remained upon two Propositions 1. Delinquents 2. The Church For Delinquents though He doth not grant all His Majesty consented they shall submit to moderate Compositions according to such Proportions as they and the two Houses shall agree 2. He disableth them to bear Offices of publike Trust and removes them from the Kings Queens and Princes Court 3. For such as the Houses propounded to proceed capitally against He leaves them to a Legal Tryal and declares He will not interpose to hinder it which satisfies the main complaint of the Parliament which was in the beginning of the War That the King protected Delinquents from justice And all that the House desired in the Propositions presented to him at Oxford Febr. 1642. was That His Majesty would leave Delinquents to a Legal Tryal and judgement of Parliament But that his Majestie should joyn in an Act for taking away the Lives or Estates of any that have adhered to Him He truly professeth He cannot with Justice and Honour agree thereto 4. Nor do we see how Delinquents being left to the Law can escape justice the King having granted the 1. proemial Proposition and so by a Law acknowledged the Parliaments Cause and War to be just For the Church The Houses propound the utter abolishing of Archbishops Bishops c. The sale of their Lands that Reformation of Religion be setled by Act of Parliament as both Houses have or shall agree The Kings Answer takes away Church-Government by Arch-bishops Bishops c. by taking away their Courts and Officers and so far takes away their power of Ordination that it can never be revived again but by Act of Parliament so that Episcopacy is divested of any actual being by the Law of the Land and instead thereof the Presbyterian Government setled for three years by a Law which is for so long a time as the Houses formerly in their Ordinances presented to Him at New-castle did themselves think fit to settle it For the Sale of Bishops Lands upon the publike F●ith Every cheating Saint of the Faction must have the Publike Faith exactly kept though he bought the Lands but at 2 or 3. years just value and with such monies as he had formerly cheated the State of when other men who have lost the best part of their Estates by and for the Pa li●ment for compensation whereof they have the publike Faith engaged by Ordinances are consumed by Taxes and repaied with reproaches onely we say That although the Purchasers might well have afforded to have given the same rates for their Purchases which they now give if they might have had them assured by Act of Parliament for 99 years and such moderate Rents reserved as the King intimates in his Answer yet in His Answer he expresseth a farther satisfaction to be given them upon which we should have insis●ed n●●with● anding the said Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. We farther alledge That the King having granted the rest of the Propositions ●●d ●o much in these 2. Delinquents and the Church the Natio●●l Covenant doth not oblige us to make War upon this poi●● nothing can make Presbytery nor the Purchasers of Bishops L●● is more odious nor endanger them more than to make them the sole obstacle of Peace nor could any thing more work the King to comply with our desires herein than for us to draw a little neerer Him The Considerations leading us to pass the said Vote 5 Dec. 1648. come next to be considered 1. The saving of Ireland 2. The regaining the revolted Navy and freedom of the Seas 3. The support of the Ancient Government of the Kingdome 4. The putting the people into a secure possession of their Laws and Liberties 5. The avoiding such evill consequences as were apparently to follow a breach with the King As 1. the Deposing the King if not the depriving Him of life Return to Sect. 71. whereupon floods of misery will follow and scandal to the Protestant Religion which we from our hearts detest and abhor See the many Declarations of Parliament against it 2. The necessitating of the Prince to cast himself into the Armes of Forreign Popish Princes and embrace Popish Alliances for his succour 3. It may beget a change of Government and a laying aside of Monarchy here and so a Breach with Scotland and this Kingdome being the more rich likely to be the Seat of the War 4. The vast Debts of this Kingdom upon the publike Faith will never be paid in War but increased and multiplied multitudes of Sufferers by and for the Parliament like to be repayed onely with new sufferings and every years War destroies more Families and makes more Malignants through discontenting pressures until at last the Souldier seeing no hope of pay the People no hope of peace and ease fall together into a general and desperate tumultuousness the power of the Sword apparently threatning a dissolution of Government both in Church and Common-wealth To that scandalous Objection which saith The corrupt majority will not l●nd an ear to admit a thought towards the laying down their own power or rendring it back to the People from whom they received it We say this Objection is unreasonable from men who endeavour to perpetuate an Army upon the Kingdome nor is the continuance of this Parliament singly objected but that they will not render it back to the People Viz. To a new Representative invented and made by the Army that is We will not render our power into the hands of the Army Another Objection is That whatsoever the King granted He might plead Force to break it and spoil us by policy This Objection might have been made against all our Treaties If there be any Force it is from the Army for spoiling us by policy The Kings of this Land could never encroach upon our good Laws but by corrupt Judges and Ministers who though they could not abrogate the Law made it speak against it self and the intended good of the
Reason seek to impose a beliefe upon My Subjects * * 93. Hereabout I was stopt and not suffered to speak any more concerning Reasons There is no proceeding just against any man but what is warranted either by Gods Lawes or the municipall Lawes of the Country where he lives Now I am most confident that this daies proceeding cannot be warranted by Gods Law for on the contrary the authority of obedience unto Kings is clearly warranted and strictly commanded both in the Old and New Testament which if denyed I am ready instantly to prove and for the question now in hand there it is said That where the word of a King is there is Power and who may say unto him what doest thou Eccles 8.4 Then for the Lawes of the Land I am no lesse confident that no learned Lawyer will affirme that an Impeachment can lye against the KING they all going in His Name and one of their Maxims is That the King can do no wrong Besides the Law upon which you ground your proceedings must either be old or new if old shew it if new tell what authority warranted by the fundamental Lawes of the Land hath made it and when But how the House of Commons can erect a Court of Judicature which was never one it self as is well known to all Lawyers I leave to God and the World to judge And it were full as strange that they should pretend to make Lawes without King or Lords House to any that have heard speak of the Lawes of England And admitting but not granting that the People of Englands Commission could grant your pretended power I see nothing you can shew for that for certainly you never asked the question of the tenth man of the Kingdome and in this way you manifestly wrong even the poorest Plough-man if you demand not his free consent nor can you pretend any colour for this your pretended Commission without the consent at least of the major part of every man in England of whatsoever quality or condition which I am sure you never went about to seek so farre are you from having it Thus you see that I speak not for My owne right alone as I am your King but also for the true Liberty of all My Subjects which consists not in sharing the power of Government but in living under such Lawes such a Government as may give themselves the best assurance of their lives and propriety of their goods Nor in this must or do I forget the priviledges of both Houses of Parliament which this daies proceedings doth not only violate but likewise occasion the greatest breach of their publike Faith I believe ever was heard of with which I am farre from charging the two Houses for all the pretended crimes laid against Me beare date long before this late Treaty at Newport in which I having concluded as much as in Me lay and hopefully expecting the two Houses agreement thereunto I was suddenly surprised and hurried from thence as a Prisoner upon which accompt I am against my will brought hither where since I am come I cannot but to My power defend the ancient Laws and Liberties of this Kingdome together with My owne just Right then for any thing I can see the higher House is totally excluded And for the House of Commons it is too well knowne that the major part of them are detained or deterr'd from sitting so as if I had no other this were sufficient for Me to protest against the lawfullnesse of your pretended Court. Besides all this the peace of the Kingdome is not the least in My thoughts and what hopes of Settlement is there so long as power reigns without rule of Law changing the whole frame of that Government under which this Kingdome hath flourished for many hundred years nor will I say what will fall out in case this lawlesse unjust proceeding against Me do go on and believe it the Commons of England will not thank you for this change for they will remember how happy they have been of late yeares under the Reign of Queen Elizabeth the King my Father and My self until the beginning of there unhappy troubles and will have cause to doubt that they shall never be so happy under any new And by this time it will be too sensibly evident that the Armes I took up were onely to defend the fundamental Lawes of this Kingdom against those who have supposed My power hath totally changed the ancient Government Thus having shewed you briefly the Reasons why I cannot submit to your pretended Authority without violating the trust which I have from God for the welfare and liberty of My People I expect from you either clear Reasons to convince My judgment shewing Me that I am in an errour and then truly I will readily answer or that you will withdraw your proceedings This I intended to speak in Westminster-hall on Munday 22. January but against reason was hindered to shew My Reasons 87. Alteration of the formes and styles of Writs and Legall proceedings The 27. Jan. The Commons read the Act for Altering the formes of Writs and other proceedings in Courts of Justice which according to all our known Laws the custome of all Ages and the fundamental Government of this Kingdome ever ran in the Kings Name This Act upon the Question was assented to and no concurrence of the Lords desired of this more hereafter 88. A Proclam to be brought in prohibiting the Pr. of Wales or any of the Kings Issue to be proclaimed King of England The Junto of 50. or 60. Commons appointed a Committee to pen a Proclamation That if any man should go about to Proclaim Prince Charles or any of that line King of England after the removal of King Charles the Father out of this life as is usually and ought to be done by all Mayors Bayliffs of Corporations High-Sheriffs c. under high penalties of the Law for their neglect or shall proclaim any other without the consent of the present Parliament the Commons declare it to be High Treason and that no man under paine of Imprisonment or such other arbitrary punishment as shall be thought fit to be inflicted on them shall speak or preach any thing contrary to the present proceedings of the Supreme Authority of this Nation the Commons of England assembled in Parliament Your hands and feet liberties and consciences were long since tied up 89. The Bishop of London appointed by the Ho. to administer spiritual comfort to the cond●mned King and the Kings usage by the Army See Mr. Jo Geree's Book against Goodwin called Might overcoming right And Mr. Pryns Epistle to his Speech 6. Dec. 1648. now you are tongue-tied Upon motion the House ordered That Doctor Juxon Bishop of London should be permitted to he private with the King in His Chamber to preach and Administer the Sacraments and other spirituall comforts to Him But notwithstanding their Masters of the Councel of Warre appointed that
Peace a Book called A Declaration of the Parliament of England expressing the grounds of their late proceedings and of setling the present Government in the way of a Free State when they formerly passed the 4. Votes for no more Addresses to our late King they seconded it with a Declaration to shew the Reasons of those Votes wherein they set forth no new matter but what they had formerly in parcels objected against Him and yet they have since that time made Addresses to ●im and both taken and caused others to take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the Protestation Covenant to defend his person and Authority c. And in this Declaration there is no new Objection of moment but what is contained in the former Declarations against Him and as I looked upon the first Declaration as a Prologue so I look upon this last as the Epilogue to His Majesties Tragedy The whole matter of charge in both of them hath been sufficiently answered in several Books and either confuted or justified to which I refer the Reader whom I will only trouble with some few short Observations of my own upon it p. 5. The Parliament in imitation of their Masters the Councel of Officers pretend a necessity to change the fundamental Government into a Free-State to prevent Tyranny Injustice and War c. I doubt rather to promote them It affirmeth p. 15 16. That Offices of Inheritance are forfeited by Breach of Trust a condition annexed to every Office and seems to imply as much of the Kingly Office but this Pen-man had forgot that by the Law the Crown takes away all defects and the King being Supreme Head and Governour over all Persons and in all Causes it were absurd to make Him accountable to any Authority for in such case that Authority would be Supreme to Him and so erect two Supremes one jarring and interferring with the other which in Law and Policy is as absurd as to suppose two Almighties or Infinities in Divinity which cannot be for that one Infinity would terminate another Impossibile esse plura Infinite See Greg Th●losanus l. pol. 1. Keckerin Sistema pol. l. 1. Conezenii l. politic 1. à c. 17 ad c. 25. and many good Authors quoted by him Moecenalis orationem ad Augustum apud Dionem Cassium quoniam alterum esset in altero finitum saith Cusanus pag. 16. The Declarers play the Orators in behalf of the felicity of Government by Free-States rather than by Kings and Princes This is a spacious field to walk in I will onely cite some learned Authors living in Republiques of a contrary opinion and send my Readers to them for their Arguments It applauds the prosperitie and good Government of the Switz which I think was never comm●nded before a gross-witted People living in a confused way of Government where virtue and industry find no reward the Rich become a daily prey to the poor and their popular Tribunes who uphold their credits by calumniating the wealthy and confiscating or sequestring their Estates the best wealth of this Nation is Pensions from Neighbour Princes to whom they let their Bloud to Hire and become Mercenaries many times to the extream dammage and if their Country were worth subduing danger of the State For Venice it is an Aristocracie if not Oligarchy of many petty Kings so burdensome to all their Subjects upon Terra firma that they dare not trust them without Citadels to keep them under they never confide in any of their number or Natives to be Commander in Chief of their Land Forces fearing to be tyrannized over by a Cromwell or an Ireton or by some property subordinate to them in all but Title The Morlachy and many Inhabitants of Dalmatia and Candia have lately preferred the Turkish Government before theirs As for the Low-Countries their neerest example peruse Bernavelt's Apologie and many good Histories For Rome from their Regifugium they were never free from Civill Warres cecessious Tumults and changes of Government first to Patrician Consuls Regia potestate then to promiscuous Consuls Plebeyans as well as Patritians with popular Tribunes to controule them then to Decemviri legibus Scribendis then to Tribuni militares consulari potestate Dictators upon all speciall occasions sometimes an Aristocracy sometimes a Democracie between two Factions Patritian and Plebeyan And never could that unhappy Idoll of the multitude Libertie find any time of setled rest and Government untill their giddy Republique was overthrown by Julius Caesar and turned into a Monarchie by Augustus which approved Cratippus saying Vitiosum Reipub statum exigere Monarchiam and then and not till then Rome came to his height of Glory See some Authorities cited verbatim in the first Page and Dominion and continued so a long time sometimes empayred by the vices of some Emperors and sometimes repayred by the virtues of others he that reads Livy and Tully's Orations with many other Authors shall find how infinite corrupt the People were both in making and executing Laws in dispensing Justice both Distributive and Commutative what Complaints that their comitia were venalia what Bulwarks they were fain to erect against the ambition and covetousness of their Great men Leges Ambitus leges Repetundarum peculatus all to no purpose the great abuse of Solicitors and Undertakers in every Trybesto contracte for suffrages the Domestick use of their Nomenclators their Prehensations Invitations Client ships their kissings and shaking hands even from the greatest Personages prostituted to every Cobler and Tinker their costly publique Shews and spectacles to woe the Rabble he that reads observingly shall find that ambition and covetousness nurses of all corruption were the best part of the wisdom and industry of that Republique untill it came to be a Monarchie and shall farther find that those corrupt manners and customs which the People from the highest to the lowest had contracted during the severall licentious Alterations of their Common-wealth from one form of Republique to another were like a second nature not to be corrected by the better discipline of a Monarchie and at last occasioned the ruine of that Monarchie together with the desolation of that Nation which shews that Monarchie with which their Nation began was their naturall and genuine Government when it could not be taken away sine interitu subjecti without the ruine of the whole subject matter p. 11. It is said It hath been latelie computed that the Court purveyances notwithstanding many good Laws to the contrary cost the Countrie more in one year than their Assesments to the Army what above 100000 l. a month when the charge of the KING' 's House-keeping came but to 50000 l. a year I speak not of Wages and Pensions I know not who should make this computation unless old Sir Hen. Vane and his Man Cornelius Holland the latter of which was turned out of his Office in the Green-cloth for abusing this Place not in whose time of employment unless their
own such prodigious abuses should happen p. 19. It is said The Kings Revenue by a medium of 7 years was yearly 700000 l. The legall and justifiable Revenue of the Crown fell short of 100000 l. per annum I perceive this is all the Account the Common-wealth is likely to have from the Committee of the Kings Queens and Princes Revenue nor do I know what a pruning-hook that phrase legall Revenue may prove But I conceived all that Q. Elizabeth the Kings Father and Himself received had been His Revenue de jure I am sure it was de facto and the Parliament in their Declarations promised to settle a better Revenue upon Him than any of His Ancestors enjoyed neither did this nor any former Parliament complain that His Purse was grown too full or His Revenue too fulsome and if the Committe of the Revenues had enjoyed no more but their own legal and justifiable Revenue so many of the KING'S Servants and Creditors had not starved for want of their own p. 19. They very much aggravate Monopolies Patente and Projects I wonder they suffer so many Men guilty in that kind to sit in their House old Sir Henry Vane Sir Henry Myldmay Sir John Hypsley Cornelius Holland Laurence Whytakers c. p. 20. 2 Part of Englands New Chains discovered c and the Hunting the Foxes return to s 127. They speak against the Lords Negative Voice but not a word against the Councell of Warres Negative Voice who march up in hostile manner against Parliament and City and secure seclude and drive away 250 Members at one time if they vote any thing contrary to their Interest They speak likewise against the Lords Judiciall power over Commoners but have forgot what unjust and illegal use themselves attempted to make of the Lords jurisdiction against the 11 impeached Members the 4 Aldermen and Citizens p. 21. 1 Part. sect 45. 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54. They excuse their receding from their Declaration of April 1646. they might have minded you of a Vote of a later Date had it made for their turn for Governing the Kingdom by King Lords and Commons To this it is said the King nor Lords could take no advantage thereof being a contract they never consented unto indeed it was never presented to them but I shall ask whether the people may not take advantage thereof for whose satisfaction this was Declared a generall grudge being then amongst them that the Parliament and Army would subvert the ancient Fundamentall Government p. 22 23. They answer an Objection that these great matters ought to be determined in a full House not when many Members are excluded by force and the priviledges so highly broker and those who are permitted to sit do act under a force To this is answered how truly let any man that hath read our Histories tell That few Parliaments have acted but some force or other hath been upon them I wonder they did not argue thus for the silly Tumult of Apprentices for Breach of Priviledges of Parliament They Answer It will not be charged upon the remaining party or to have been within their power to prevent it or repair it to this I reply that it is doubted the remaining party being the Army party contrived it in their Junto at Somerset-house for p. 23. it is acknowledged they called and appointed the Army for their Guard which was not openly done by a full House it must be therefore secretly done by a party See many Reasons for this conjecture before Sect. 24. Farther they say That the safety of the Kingdom ought to be preferred before priviledge of Parliament and that if their House had declined their dutie viz by not Acting they had resigned up all to ruine and confusion from whence should this ruine and confusion come but from their own Army which they perpetuate to eat up the Kingdom and continue their own power and profit and I wonder they did not use the same moderation after that childish Tumult of Apprentices but Declared all Acts c. passed from 26. July which day the Tumult began and ended to the 6. August null and void And endeavoured to make the very sitting of the Members and the Citizens obeying to the said Orders though no Judges of the force Treasonable they deny they sit now under a force the Army being their best friends called by them for their safety Indeed it is generally thought the Army and this remnant of the House of Commons are as good Friends and Brethren as Simeon and Levi Pilate and Herod were and were called to secure the Members and purge the House yet if the remaining party should Vote contrary to the Dictates of the Councell of War Quaere 2 Part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting the Foxes c. Whether they will not be used as uncivilly as the secured Members nay worse by being called to account for cousening the State p. 24. They say There is a cleer consistencie of our Laws with the present Government of a Republique I desire to know who by our Law can call or bold a Parliament but the KING who is Principium Caput Finis Parliamenti who is the fountain of Justice Honour Peace when we have no King who is Conservator of the Laws and Protector of the people where is the Supreme Authority to Vote it in their own case to be in a Representative of 50 or 60 Commons without legall proofs or precedents is to lead Mens reason captive as well as their Persons and Estates to impose an implicite faith upon Man not to use discourse and reason against their Votes is to take Man out of Man to deny him his definition Animal rationale to whom doth the Subject owe Allegiance and where is the Majesty of England when there is no King for all Treason is Crimen laesae majestatis contra debitam ligeanciam Therefore where by the known Laws no Allegiance is there is no Treason Lastly if our present Laws be so consistent with the Republique I desire to know why they did not Trie the 4 Lords legally at the Common Law by their Peers and Sir John Owen by a Jury of 12 Men of the Neighbourhood according to Magna Charta and other good Laws but were faine to put a Legislative Trick upon them and erect such a Court for the Triall of them as was never heard of in England before nor hath no place in our Government They conclude p. 26. That as they have not intermedled with the affairs and Government of other States so they hope none will intermeddle with them This assertion is as true as the rest it being well known that for about 3. years last pass'd they have boasted That they have many Agents in France who under colour of Merchandise vent Antimonarchicall and Anarchicall Tenents and sow seeds of Popular Liberty amongst the poor Peasants and Huguenots of France which they brag prospered well there their very
declared principles and doctrine of their Pulpits and Army are That they must break the powers of the Earth in pieces Monarchy must down all the world over first in England then this Army must put over and manumit the Peasants of France the Boore of Germany c. And divers of this party have reported That they have supplied the Revolters of France with money their Licenced News-Books are full of this Doctrine and of many Invectives against the Tyranny of the French King 134. Harry Martin's Judgement of the King and Kingly Government Such were their proceedings against the King or rather against Kingly Government which was cut off by the same Axe that murthered the King and was indeed first in their intention though last in execution as appeareth by Harry Martin's Speech in the House upon the Debate Whether a King or no King That if they must have a King he had rather have had the last than any Gentleman in England he found no fault in His person but in his Office 135. The Councel of Officers endeavour to joyn Interest with the Papists in England and Ireland The King had offended the Papists in the last Treaty by granting so much to the Parliament for their suppression The Independents perceiving it and willing to joyn with any Interest to make good their design It was proposed at the Councel of Officers That the Papists should raise and pay about 10000 Additional Forces for this Army in recompence whereof all penal Laws concerning them should be repealed all Taxes and Contributions taken off and they to have the protection of this Parliament and Army Under the same notion they endeavoured to joyn Interests with Owen Roe Oneale Owen Roe Oneale that commanded the bloody party of massacring Irish with which they had formerly taxed the King they supplied him with Ammunition and admitted O Realy The Popes Nuntio the Popes Irish Nuntio to a Treaty here in England Sir John Winter was taken into imploiment and the Arrears of his Rents gathered for him by Souldiers to the regret of the Countrey Sir Kenelme Digbie had a pass to come into England and came as was foretold by a Letter from an Independent Agent for the Army from Paris to an Independent Member of the House of Commons a creature of the Army bearing date 28. Nov. 1648. and printed at the latter end of The true and full Relation of the Officers and Armies forcible seizing of divers eminent Members c. Walter Mountague let forth upon Bail what becomes of this Negotiation and whether those that have played fast and loose with all Interests in the Kingdom have not done the like with the Papists I cannot yet learn This Winter 136. Scarcity of Coals how occasioned and why Coals as well as other things had been at excessive rates in the City whereby many poor perished with cold and hunger what the reason thereof was besides unreasonable Taxes Excise and Souldiers quartering in and neer the City was diversly disputed most men imputed the blame to Sir Arthur Haslerigge Governour of Newcastle who without any publique Authority presumed to lay on a Tax of 4 s. a Chaldron upon the Coals there which is estimated to amount to 50000 l. a year what use that Money was put to was as variously whispered as likewise what design they had in bringing so pinching a want upon the City some said it was to inforce the poorer sort into Tumults and then to charge the wealthier sort with the crime and ensnare them others said it was to cast an odium upon the PRINCE as if His Ships had kept in the Colliers The 23. March 1648. The Commons ordered 137. The Lo. Major ordered to proclaim in person the Act for abolishing the Kingly Office and punished for neglect That the Lord Major of London in person be required to publish and proclaim in the City the aforesaid Act for dissolving Kingly Government and to give an account thereof to the House The Major refusing this service was by the Commons called to the Bar fined 2000 l. committed prisoner to the Tower and outed of his Majoralty and Alderman Andrews a man after their own heart chosen by a few Schismaticks in his place Ordered by the Commons upon a report from the Councel of State that Commissioners he appointed to make Sale of the Kings 138. The Kings Queens and Princes personal Estate ordered to be sold Queens and Princes personal estate upon Inventorie and Apprisal for satisfaction of all just Debts due to well-affected persons Viz. Men of their Faction in this Nation before the beginning of these Wars But first 30000 l. to be taken out of it for the use of this Summers Fleet and that it be referred back to the 40 Hogen Mogens or Councel of State to consider what they think fit to be sold and what they think fit to keep and reserve for the use and furniture of them and their Attendants Observe that by that time this gulph is stopped the whole remainder to be sold for payment of Debts aforesaid may be written with a Cypher 139. Crown Lands shar'd amongst the Godly I hear the House hath given away the Kings House Parks and Honour of Eltham to Sergeant Bradshaw their quondam President Greenwich to Bulstrode Whitlock The Lions Skin is now dividing amongst the party Thus have they killed and taken possession and the Kings Revenue hath proved as ominous to Him as Naboth's Vineyard was to his Master 140. Another Report for an establishment for the Army Diu●nal Mar. 30 31. 1649. This day another Report was made to the House from the Committee of the Army of the particular sums to be Monthly levied in each County to make up the whole sum of 90000 l. Monthly for the Armies of England and Ireland besides 20000 l. per mens out of Fee-farm Rents 28 March 1649. The Commons in pursuit of the advice given them by Monsieur Paw 141. An Order that no Preacher meddle with State affairs and according to the example cited by him of the Low Countries Ordered That no Minister in his Pulpit should meddle with any State affairs had this been observed from the beginning these Pulpit-Incendiaries had never kindled a War between the King and Parliament 142. The 5. Lights of Walton About the beginning of Lent last Master Faucet Minister of Walton upon the Thames in Surrey preached in his Parish Church after dinner when he came down out of his Pulpit it was twilight and into the Church came six Souldiers one of them with a Lanthorn in his hand and a Candle burning in it in the other hand they had four Candles not lighted He with the Lanthorn called to the Parishioners to stay a little for he had a Message to them from God and offered to go up into the Pulpit but the Parishioners would not let him then he would have delivered his errand in the Church but there
afteroon they having already in their wills and power to dispose of the Kings Queens Princes Dukes and the rest of the Childrens Revenue Deanes and Chapters Land Bishops Lands Sequestred Delinquents Lands Sequestred Papists Lands Compositions of all sorts amounting to Millions of money besides Excise and Customes yet this is not enough although if rightly husbanded it would constantly pay above one hundred thousand men and furnish an answerable Navy thereunto But the people must now after their Trade● are lost and their Estates spent to procure their Liberties and Freedoms be Assessed about 100000 l. a Moneth Master Boon a Member of the House lately a Tapster hath 6000 l. given him Sir Arth Hazelrig 3 great Manours Bishops-Aukland Ev●r-wood and another Col. B●rkstead the pitiful Thimble and Bodkin Gold-smith bought as much Bishops Lands as cost 10000 l. at two or three years purchase and hath already raised his money that so they may be able like so many Cheaters and State-thieves to give six eight ten twelve fourteen sixteen thousand pounds a piece over again to one another as they have done already to divers of themselves to buy the Common-wealths Lands one of another contrary to the duty of Trustees who by Law nor equity can neither give nor sell to one another at two or three years Purchase the true and valuable rate considered as they have already done and to give 4 or 5000 l. per annum over again to King Cromwell as they have done already out of the Earl of Worcesters Estate c. besides about 4 or 5 l. a day he hath by his Places of Lieu. Generall and Colonel of Horse in the Army although he were at the beginning of this Parliament but a poor Man yea little better than a Beggar to what he is now as well as others of his Neighbours 147. A Petition in behalf of Io Lylburn and his company 2. Aprill 1649. A Petition subscribed by divers Persons in behalf of John Lilburn and his company was presented to the Commons wherein amongst other things are contained these three just demands 1. That no man be censured condemned or molested but for the breach of some Law first made and published to the People whereby is avoided that uncertainty and howerly hazard that otherwise every man is subject to both in respect of his Estate Liberty and Life 2. That every crime have not onely its penaltie annexed hut together therewith the manner and method of proceedings ascertained 3. That the execution of Laws be referred to ordinary Magistrates and Officers by Law deputed thereto and that the Military power be not used but where the Civil is so resisted as that of its own strength it is deficient to enforce obedience 148. Itinerant Ministers an invention to undermine our Orthodox setled Ministers and infect the people with Schismes and Anarchicall principles sutable to the many-headed tyranny of the Grandees Aprill 12. 1649. It was referred to a Committee to consider of a way how to raise Pensions and Allowances out of Deans and Chapters Lands to maintain supernumeracy Itinerant Ministers who should be Authorized to go up and down compassing the earth and adulterate other Mens Pulpits and Congregations and put affronts and raise factions and scandals upon such orthodox and conscientious Ministers in order to their Sequestration as cannot frame their Doctrine to the damnable practises and Anarchicall principles of the times These wandering Apostles are to preach Antimonarchicall seditious doctrine to the people sutable to that they call the present Government to raise the rascall multitude and schismaticall rabble against all men of best quality in the Kingdom to draw them into Associations and Combinations with one another in every County and with the Army against all Lords Gentry Ministers Lawyers rich and peaceable men and all that are Lovers of the old Laws and Government for the better rooting of them out that themselves alone may inhabite the earth and establish their new tyranny or Kingdom of the Saints upon the ruines of our ancient Monarchy These men like Balaam shall bless and curse for hire and vent State-news State-doctrine and poison the people with such changeable and various principles as from time to time shall be dictated to them by those Pseudo-polititians as now sit at the Helm they shall cousen the people with pretended Illuminations Revelations and Inspirations and pour out all the Vials of Gods wrath amongst them Cromwel and Ireton and their Faction 149. A fraudulent Reconciliation and uniting of Interests attempted with a mock-fast for that purpose having formerly deluded all the Interests and Parties of this Kingdom were arrived to that height of impudence as to endeavour to cheat them all over again they had by murthering the King abolishing the House of Lords putting an execrable force upon the far major part of the House of Commons making themselves and their Party a tyrannical Councel of State to usurp the Supreme power and Government endeavouring a Toleration of all Religions attempting to take away Tithes See a Paper called Arguments against all Accommodation between the City of London and the engaged Grandees of the Parl. and Army And A seasonable Caution to the City of London printed at the latter end of Relation and Observations Hist and Pol. c. mocking and then tyrannizing over that part of the Army they please to miscall Levellers distracted and discontented all Parties within the Kingdom and stirred up all the Princes of Christendom to defend the common Interest of Kings now controverted in England This cloud threatned to pour down a new War upon them to provide a remedy therefore for this sore Cromwel moved in the House of Commons That the Presbyterian Government might be setled promising his endeavors thereto but whether he meant a Classical or Congregational Presbytery which differs little or nothing from Independency he did not declare● and here lyeth the fallacy he likewise moved That the secured and secluded Members might again be invited into the House they sent their Agents both Lay-men and Ministers amongst whom Mr. Marshal Nye Carrell Goodwin and Hugh Peters were chief to cajole and decoy the Ministers Citizens and the expulsed Members with discourses and propositions they told them The Presbyterians had differed from the King in point of civil Interest which was more irreconcileable than that Interest of Church-Government whatsoever shew was made to the contrary They will not endure to hear of the KING' 's exemplary patience and Christian charity to all nor of His precepts and strict injunctions to His Son of clemency and abstinency from revenge contained in His last Book The Pourtraicture of His Majestie These things will both apologize for our young King and condemn our bloody vindicative Saints That the Presbyterians as well as the Independents made War against the late King brought Him low and prepared Him to receive his late deadly Blow from the Independents and therefore the King would look upon
their Wives Children Families and Posterity to venture their lives and all they have to make opposition against this the greatest mischief that ever was attempted the greatest Treason that ever was committed against the liberties of the People and not to stand any longer in a mix-maze between hope and feare for if this designe take place your great Officers and their Confederates in Parliament and Councel of State will be as so many Kings Princes and Lords and your selves and all the people their Slaves and Vassals Therefore keep every man his place and post and stir not but immediately chuse you a Councel of Agitators once more to judge of these things without which we shall never see a new Parliament or ever be quit of these intolerable burdens oppressions and cruelties by which the people are like to be beggered and destroyed About this time Master Robert Lockier 151. M. Lockier condemned by a Councel of Warr with his honourable death and burial and Lilburns Letter to the General and five or six other Troopers of Captaine Savages Troop were condemned for a supposed mutiny in behalf of whom Lieut. C. John Lilburne writ this Letter following to the General dated 27. April 1649. May it please your Excellency WE have not yet forgot your Solemne Engagement of June 5. 1647. wherby the Armies Continuance as an Army was in no wise by the will of the State but by their owne mutuall Agreement And if their standing were removed from one Foundation to another as is undeniable then with the same they removed from one Authority to another and the Ligaments and Bonds of the First were Dissolved and gave place to the Second and under and from the head of their first Station viz By the Will of the State the Army derived their Government by Martiall Law which in Judgment and Reason could be no longer binding then the Authority which gave being thereto was binding to the Army For the deniall of the Authority is an Abrogation and Nullment of all Acts Orders or Ordinances by that Authority as to them And upon this Account your Excellency with the Army long proceeded upon the Constitution of a new Councel and Government contrary to all Martial Law and Discipline by whom only the Army engaged to be Ordered in their prosecution of the Ends to wit Their several Rights both as Souldiers and Commoners for which they associated Declaring Agreeing and Promising each other not to Disband Divide or suffer themselves to be Disbanded or Divided without satisfaction and security in relation to their Grievances and Desires in behalf of themselves and the Common-wealth as should be agreed unto by their Councel of Agitators And by vertue and under colour of this Establishment all the Extraordinary Actions by your Excellency your Officers and the Army have past Your refusal to disband disputing the Orders of Parliament Impeachment and Ejection of Eleven Members your first and second march up to London your late violent Exclusion of the major part of Members out of the House and their Imprisonment without cause c. which can no way be justified from the guilt of the highest Treason but in the accomplishment of a righteous end viz. The enjoyment of the benefit of our Lawes and Liberties which we hoped long ere this to have enjoyed from your hands Yet when we consider and herewith compare many of your late carriages both towards the Souldiery and other free people and principally your cruell Exercise of Martial Law even to the Sentence and Execution of Death upon such of your Souldiers as stand for the Rights of that Engagement c. And not onely so but against others not of the Army we cannot but look upon your defection and Apostacy in such dealings as of most dangerous Consequence to all the Laws and Freedoms of the People And therefore although there had never been any such solemn Engagement by the Army as that of Iune 5. 1647. which with your Excellency in point of duty ought not to be of the meanest obligation We do protest against your Exercise of Martial Law against any whomsoever in times of Peace where all Courts of Iustice are open as the greatest encroachment upon our Lawes and Liberties that can be acted against us and particularly against the Tryall of the Souldiers of Captaine Savages Troop yesterday by a Court Martial upon the Articles of Warre and sentencing of two of them to death and for no other end as we understand but for some dispute about their Pay And the reason of this our Protestation is from the Petition of Right made in the third yeare of the late King which declareth That no person ought to be judged by Law Martial except in times of Warre And that all Commissions given to execute Martial Law in time of Peace are contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of the Land And it was the Parliaments complaint That Martial Law was then Commanded to be executed upon Souldiers for Robbery Mutiny or Murder Which Petition of Right this present Parliament in their late Declarations of the 9. of February and the 17. of March 1648. commend as the most excellentest Law in England and there promise to preserve inviolably it and all other the Fundamental Lawes and Liberties concerning the preservation of the Lives Properties and Liberties of the People with all things incident therunto And the Exercise of Martial Law in Ireland in time of Peace was one of the chiefest Articles for which the E. of Strafford lost his Head The same by this present Parl. being judged High Treason And the Parliament it self neither by Act nor Ordinance can justly or warrantably destroy the Fundamental Liberties and Principles of the Common Law of England It being a Maxim in Law and Reason both that all such Acts and Ordinances are ipso facto null and void in Law and binds not all but ought to be resisted and stood against to the death And if the Supreme Authority may not presume to do this much lesse may You or Your Officers presume thereupon For where Remedy may be had by an ordinary course in Law the Party greived shall never have his recourse to extraordinaries Whence it is evident That it is the undoubted Right of every Englishman Souldier or other that he should be punishable onely in the ordinary Courts of Justice according to the Lawes and Statutes of the Realme in the times of Peace as now it is and the extraordinary way by Courts Martial in no wise to be used Yea the Parliaments Oracle Sir Edward Cooke Declares in the third part of his Institutes Chap. of Murder That for a General or other Officers of an Army in time of Peace to put any man although a Souldier to death by colour of Martial Law it is absolute murder in that General c. Therfore erecting of Martial Law now when all Courts of justice are open and stopping the free current of Law which sufficiently provides for the punishment
him and then the Mayor conducted them all to Christ-Church where the Commons Councel of State General and his Officers together with the Mayor Aldermen and Common Councel c. mocked God with their Devotions where Mr. Tho. Goodwin and Mr. Owen preached out of the Politicks to them from thence they were conducted to a great Dinner at Grocers-hall and entertained in the quality of a Free State no man bring admitted without delivering his Ticket They were all strongly guarded with Souldiers and every Cook had an Oath given to be true to them which sh●wed they had more of fear and guilt thah of confidence and innocency within them Great Presents of Plate given to his Excellency Fairfax and to his Super-excellency Cromw l and to others fit to be chronicled in Stow● and Hollingsheads Volumes 177. A necessary advertisement to all honest Presbyterians See K. Charles the first his book The Portraicture of his Majesty in his solitudes sufferings Some over-hastily expect the King should satisfie the Presbyterians by his Declaration but the height of the Independents malice their guilty fears are such as may endanger the d awing on a Massac●e upon them by such a course amongst other solemn Fooleries let it not be omitted that Hugh Peter and many other Saints were too full of the Creature anglice Drunk I am to give a necessary advertisement to all men that though the young King shews much respect and a desire of reconcilement according to his dead Fathers never-dying precepts to all moderate men and Presbyterians that make Addresses to Him yet it is complained of by some who look not into the undermining practises of our new Statists that some few of His Counsellors and Followers are as violent against the more moderate and honest Presbyterians as against the Independents who murdered his Father but these zealous Royalist are either some passionate light-brain'd men of little discretion and less power with him or else some false-hearted Pen●ioners to our new State and such as have under-hand an Indemnity for their own Estates in England who stand like Scar-crows about His Majesty to fright away such as return to their Loyalty and tender their due Allegiance to Him thereby to weaken the hands of his Majesty and cut off the hopes of this Nation from depending upon him who as our undoubted Sovereign both by the Laws of God and the Land and Gods Vice-geren● in His three Kingdomes onely can and will if we forsake not him and our selves free and protect us from the many-headed miserable arbitrary tyranny we now starve and bleed under and restore unto us again our Religion Laws and Liberties our Wives Children and Estates Trading Husbandry peace and plen●y now held in more than Aegyptian bondage by our cruel bloody and thievish Task-masters See a Book entituted His Majesties gracious Messages for peace Mr. Pryns Speech 5. Dec. 1648. in the House And the secured Members Reply to the Councel of War Remember his deceased Majesties gracious Messages frequently sent for peace and reconcilement Remember His Concessions to His Parliament upon the last Treaty more than ever any King granted to His People Remember His pious meek and Christian Martyrdome suffered for His People which bitter Cup had passed from Him if He would have built up and established this Babel of Tyranny now insulting over us and have turned our wel-mixed Monarchy into an Olygarchical legal Tyranny by adding His Royal Assent to their wicked Demands tendered to Him but two dayes before His Translation from this valley of teares Remember His Posthumus Book to His Son full of Prec●pts savouring meerly of piety Christian wisdom charitie and forgiveness to His very Enemies and then judge whether our late King or our usurping Kinglings now scratching and tearing us making one War beget another 1 King 3. perpetuating an Army and domineering over us by the power of the Sword were the natural Parent whose bowels yearned upon this now Orphan Child the English Nation dying and expiring under this new Corporation of Tyrants Oath of Allegiance and Stat. of Recognition 1 Jacobi the putative Patent which overlayed it He that acknowledged Allegiance to the Father cannot deny it to his Son as having sworn to hear faith and true Allegiance to the King his Father and to his lawful Heirs and Successors which our usurping Hogens Mogens cannot pretend to be so that as well for duty and conscience to God and their own Souls as for a necessary and just protection of their lives and estates all honest and wise men ought to cast themselves into the Arms of his D●ead Majesty our present KING as the only sanctuary of their salvation and not suffer themselves to be so far mis-led by vain reports as to be more afraid of their cure than of their disease Stultorum incurata pudor malas ulcera celat S●lomon hath shewed you out of the Cabinet of Nature the difference between a Natural-mother and a Step-mother Dictum de Kennelworth and that you may see the difference between a natural King correcting his own people with fatherly compassion for examples sake and a Usurper wounding killing and robbing those which are none of his own his fellow-servants for his lust and lucre sake I will set down a short Abridgement of our own famous Dictum de Kennelworth and first the occasion thereof which was thus Simon de Montford Earl of Leicester conspiring with many other great men rebelled against Henry 3. pretending after the manner of all Rebels Reformation of publick Grievances He overthrew the King in battel took Him and his Son Prince Edward Prisoners the Prince after a while escaped out of Prison raised an Army overthrew and slew in the Battel of Evesham Simon Montford subdued the whole Party rescued and re-inthroned his Father Cummissions were sent forth to prevent future troubles and settle mem minds grown desperate with fear what horrid punishents so horrible a Rebellion would bring upon them The result of all is contained in the said Dictum de Kennelworth as I find it in Magna Charta veteri fol. 60. part 2. observe the moderation pf it No man bled to death for it but in the field the blood of war was not shed in time of peace the King did not slay those whom he had taken with his Sword and with his Bow but reasonably fined them not unto destruction though the known Laws called them Traitors See the late History of the Marquess of Montross what gentle use he made of his Victory after he had subdued the strength of Scotland at Battel of Kylsythe and put them into his power for life lands and goods they were but once punished not always tormented and kept upon the rack after the late custom of our fellow-Servants and Subjects who will never suffer the partition-wall between us to be thrown down England once more to become one Nation and one people and our broken bones to
be again set and knit together Dictum de Kennelworth None to be Dis-inherited but onely fined As namely Those 1. That began and continued in War 2. That held Northampton against the King 3. That fought against him at Lewis Evesham Chesterfeild 4. That were taken at Kenilworth 5. That sacked Winchester being yet unpardoned 6. That voluntary sent against him or the Prince 7. The officers of the Earl of Leicesters who molested their Neighbours with Rapine Fire Murder or otherwise to pay in three years five years value and half their estates of Land If they sell it such as are by the Kings grant possessed of them to have them giving as any other c. and so if it be to be Let those who pay the whole to have all instantly and that pay half to have half If in three years the whole be unpaid the Land to be divided between him that ows it and him to whom the King hath given it If any have Woods by sale of which he would pay his Fine the money to be paid by two of which either side to chuse one 2. Knights and Esquires who during the War have enriched themselves by Rapine having no Land to pay half their goods and be bound with Sureties to the peace if no goods be acquitted by Oath exceptis bannitis quibus solus Rex potest remittere 3. Lords of Wards to pay for them and be answered by their Wards when they come to age which if they accept not the Wardship to accrue to such as the King hath given the Ransome to and they to be so answered 4. The Kings Wards to remain where they are placed and be Ransomed as others but without destruction 5. Such as were with the King before the battel of Lewis and since are Dis-inherited His Majesty to declare his pleasure touching them 6. No man possest of wood to fell any but onely for repair till the last day of payment be passed and not observed 7. The King and the Popes Legate to send beyond sea for a time such as are likely to trouble the peace of the Kingdome which if it hindered the paying of their Ransome not for that to be Dis-inherited 8. Such as were grieved with this Agreement might appeal to the Kings Court before S. Hilary and such as were beyond sea to have inducias transmarinas 9. Because the King was to reward many and some had too much the King out of the Fines to provide for them 10. The Legate King and Henry d'Almain to Elect twelve who should eause these Articles to be executed and to see performed what they ordain according to the estimates already taken or if not to have new rates taken reasonable and true 11. Tenents that were against the King to lose their Leases but at the expiration of their time the Land to return to the true owner 12. Forts built by the assent of the King but without that of the Person dis-inherited after the Fine paid in three years to pay the costs of building of it in six years or receive a reasonable exchange in Land 13. Such of the Lay as apparently drew any to the part of the Earl of Leicester to pay two years Revenue 14. The Buyers of other mens goods wittingly to restore the value of that they have bought and be at the Kings mercy because that they did was against justice 15. Those that at the Earls command entred Northampton yet fought not but entred the Church 16. Such as held not of the Earl yet at his command entred to the action with him to pay half one years Revenue 17. Such as held of the Earl to be only at the Kings mercy 18. Impotent persons and such as did nothing to be restored to their Possessions and by justice recover their damages their Accusers punish'd by Law yet without loss of life or limb 19. Maliciously accused to have their Estates immediately restored 20. Women to have their own Lands and what they had of their first Husbands if their late Husbands were against the King to be restored according to Law or Fined 21. None to be fined but such as were against the King 22. Such as have been pardoned to remain so 23. Those that are fined to answer no Loss done to any but all damages to be remitted on every side except those that intermedled not and of the Church whose actions are saved 24. The King by reasonable Exchange to receive the Castles of Erdsley-Bishop and Chartley it seeming dangerous to leave Forts in their hands who have carried themselves ill towards the King 25. Those that in the future shall commit any outrages to be punished by Law 26. An Oath to be taken where it shall be held convenient not to pursue each other with revenge and if any shall attempt the contrary to be punished according to Law 27. The Church to be satisfied by those that injured it 28. Such of the Dis-inherited as refuse this Composition to have no Title to their Estates and to be esteemed publick Enemies to the King and Kingdome 29. Prisoners to be freed by the advice of the King and Legate 30. No Person to be Dis-inherited by reason of these Troubles by any to whom he ought to Succeed You see what great care was here taken to prevent spoyl and waste of Woods c. whereas in this latter Age the first thing taken into consideration is how to raise ready Money by destruction of Woods Housing and selling of the Stock to lay the Lands waste and decay Husbandry to the endangering of a Famine for the present and the Dis-inheriting our innocent Posterity for the future so little care is taken to keep that well which is so ill and illegally gotten And how much regard was had to preserve innocent Persons from suffering wrong in any just claim or Title they could make to any Land possessed by a guilty Person whether they claimed by Dower Joynture Title or Estate in Reversion or Remainder or otherwise I wish the like justice were now observed Monday night 4. June 178. The loss of Ships at Kingsale suppressed and misreported in the House and why 1649. that third part of a Lord Admiral Col. Edw. ●opham came to Westminster and presently made his Addresses to the high and mighty Estates in White-hall giving them a dismal Relation of his ill success in tampering with the Governour of Kingsale in Ireland who proving honester than the Saints expected took a summe of money of him to betray the Town Forts and Ships in the Road but when Popham came in to the Haven to take possession of his new purchase gave him such a Gun-powder welcome that he lost most of his Men landed to take livery and seisin and divers Ships he was commanded to conceal this ill news lest it discouraged the City to engage so far with them as to entertain them in the condition of a Free-State and surrender the Sword to them and so spoil the Design of
Endictment that he might know what to answer saying he might plead Speeial as well as General which the Court denied him Next because there was point of Law in it he desired to have Councel citing the Stat. 1 Hen. 7. fol. 23. which was likewise denied him yet I am deceived if Rolfe had not Councel allowed him being endicted at Winchester for an endeavour to murder King CHARLES the First and had many other favours denied to Morrice Then Col. Morrice for his discharge produced the PRINCES Commission as Generalissimo to the KING his Father The Judges answered The Prince was but a Subject as Morrice was and if he were present must be tried as he was and rejected the Gommission without reading Morrice told them the Prince had his Authority from the King in whose name all Judges and Officers did then Act. The Court answered the power was not in the King but the Kingdome Observe they endicted him for Leavying War against the King and Parliament The word Parliament was a surplusage for which no Indictment could lye no Allegiance no Treason and we owe Allegiance to the King alone whosoever Leavieth War in England in the intendment of the Law is said to Leavy War against the King onely although he aim not at his Person but at some other Person And if he that Leavieth War against the King his Crown and Dignity be a Traytor how much more must they be Traytors that have actually murthered the King and Dis-inherited and proscribed his lawful and undoubted Heir and as much as in them lies have subverted the Monarchical Government of the Land and consequently all Monarchical Laws whereof the Stat. of Treasons for Leavying War against the Kings Majesty is one and therefore Morrice under a Free-State ought not to be condemned or tried upon any Monarchical Law So Morrice was found guilty by a Jury for that purpose And an illegal president begun to cut off whom the Faction pleaseth under a pretence and form of Law without help of a Councel of War or a private Slaughter-house or a Midnight-Coach guarded with Souldiers to Tyborne These Usurpers have got the old tyrannical trick To rule the People by the Laws but first to over-rule the Laws by their Lawyers and therefore Vt rei innocentes pereant fiunt nocentes judices that true men may go to the Gallows Thieves must sit on the bench but silent Leges inter arma and now silet Justitia inter Leges Three headed consisting of 1 Councel of War 2 Councel of State 3 Parliament filet Jus inter Judices The mungrel hypocritical three-headed conquest we live under hath dispoyled Justice of her ballance and left her in a Military posture with a Sword to strike but no scales to weigh withall Our licenced News Books like Ill-Boading-Birds fore-told and fore-judged Morrice's death a month before He dyed resolutely Observe the thing aimed at in this new form of Endictment of High Treason for leavying War against the King and Parliament is first that the word King may hold in the Endictment which otherwise would be found to have errour in it and though the word for Leavying War against the Parliament be a vain surplusage signifying nothing yet at last by help of their own Judges and new-made presidents to leavy War against the Parliament shall stand alone be the onely Significator and take up the whole room in the Endictment and thrust the word King out of doors and then Treason shall be as frequent as Malignancy is now Morrice had moved he might be Tried like a Souldier by a Councel of War alleadging the inconvenience of such a president if the Kings Party should retaliate it which would not be granted yet Col. Bethel writ to the General and his Councel of War desiring he might be reprieved but Col. Pride opposed it urging That it would not stand with the justice of the Army you see now who is the foun of Justice nor the safety of the Commonwealth to let such Enemies live the Parliament having adjudged him worthy of death without hearing and given instructions to the Judges accordingly O serviceable Judges so the General was overborn by this Dray-man This fellow sitteth frequently at the Sessions house in the Old Bayly where the weight of his Slings turneth the scale of Justice which way he pleaseth 210. Cap. Plunkett and the Marquess of Ormonds brother voted to be Tryed Col. Pride's Dray-horses the Commons in Parliament assembled not yet satisfied with Blood because they are out of danger of bleeding themselves have voted that Capt. Plunckett and the Marquess of Ormond's Brother Prisoners in Ireland shall be brought to Trial. If the Kings Party in imitation of their Cruelty shall put to death the Prisoners they have taken the Parliament will save their Arreares for their own privy purse These two cases are examples of the greatest danger and the highest contempt of Souldiers that ever were set on foot in any Age or Nation 29. August 1649. came forth a Book called 211. An out-cry of the young men and Apprentices of London concurring with those falsly called Levellers An out-cry of the young Men and Apprentises of London Or An Inquisition after the lost fundamental Laws and Liberties of England truly and Pathetically setting forth the slavery misery and danger of the Common Souldiery and People of this Nation and the causes thereof well worth the reading About this time came forth an Act forsooth for the speedy raising and levying money upon the Excise that is as the Act telleth you upon all and every Commodities Merchandizes 212. Excise Manufactures as well imported or exported as made or growing and put to sale or consumed c. That is to lay impositions upon all we eat drink wear or use as well in private houses as victualling houses ware-houses cellars shops c. as well what the Souldier devours in Free-quarter upon us as otherwise under unheard-of penalties both pecuniary and personal to be paid and levied with rigour And to make every mans house lie open to be searched by every prowling Rascal as often as he or they please The Traytors Tyrants and Thieves 213. Forrain Plantations the Commons in Colonel Prides Parliament assembled are now again frighted into a consideration of Forraign Plantations And passing Acts That they shall all be subject to the new Babel or State of England for which purpose they are very busie to undermine divide and subject the old and first Planters that if need be these reprobate Saints may come in upon their labours and the better to accommodate themselvs there In the Act for the sale of Kings Queens and Princes Personal Estate they have given leave to their Agents the Commissioners to transport beyond sea that is to say to their own Plantations under pretence of sale the rarest and choisest of the Kings Goods they heap up abundance of wealth by Excise Taxes Goldsmiths-hall Haberdashers-hall Sequestrations cozening the Souldiers
happy Omen surely was this promise and undertaking hoped to be and so indeed it might have proved if it had been gained from any but the worst of Scotch-men the Presbyterians for at the very same time as it were when they had concluded the Treaty and thus highly promised the King as is before mentioned I say at the same time having gotten the famous Marquess of Montross into their hand whose only fault was Loyalty to his Prince having brought him with as much ignominy as they could devise to Edenburgh they there charge him for keeping away the King observe the King was now upon the point of coming to them from his subjects 2. For the invading that Kingdom 3. For all the murders in the war and for wast upon Argiles Estate c. Mark here I pray Montross murthered and the reasons thereof Montross must be murthered the best subject the King had in Scotland and just when the King is ready to come thither as if it were done in despight to him but why for keeping away the King No he had promised to be with them with all speed which Montross in prison could not have hindred Was it for invasion alas neither for he had none but his own Countrymen and of them but a very few and they quickly and easily defeated what was it for then for muder alas neither what then O! here 's the Divel that murthered the famous Montross for waste upon Argiles Estate Argile I say that underminer of his Soveraign who in a short time after upon his arrival was by the means and instigation of him upon pretence of non-performance by the King left destitute either of friends whom they banished from his Court The K. in Scotland held to hard meat means which they curtailed him of and strength allowing him neither a Souldier nor a garison nay not a town where he might with safety repose his head things being at this pass and his Majesty with much adoe gotten into Scotland as aforesaid which the Juncto at Westminster having perfect intelligence of and weighing with themselves that promise of the Scots to bring the murtherers of the Kings Father to condign punishment they begin to think it high time to provide for their own safety in consulting whereof after much time spent it is resolved the safest wisest and to them least chargeable course to wait on the Enemy in his own Country whereby they carried the war from home and not to stay for him to bring it to their own doors As a strong motive to this just at the instant they discover that many of the Presbyterians of England had by their agents agreed with the Scots at Bredah to re-establish his Majesty in all his Dominions Whereupon many eminent persons are seized on and among them Mr. Case Mr. Jenkins Mr. Jackson Mr. Love c. Which Mr. Love together with one Mr. Gibbons suffered death together on Towerhill Mr. Love and Gibbons beheaded at the earnest sute of Cromwell protesting he would not march into Scotland unless they were cut off Being moved hereby as well as by their own fear and guilt Cromwell invades Scotland his Majesty is scarce in Scotland but Cromwell is at the borders with 16000. Horse and Foot on their behalf to whom Leslly L. G. of the horse which were now raised after some expostulations by Letters and Declarations sends word that he is in armes upon the account of the good old cause and not upon the account of the King Scots divided among themselves whom he cleerly disowned Straughan and Ker not only disown the King but say positively they will fight against him so that now it was not Bellum Regale a war to maintain the Kings honour and the points of the treaty but bellum Presbyteriale a war for the Kirke of Scotland against the Independent faction of England those two great parties being come now to a second contest for superiority for Leven commanded the Foot and Leslly as I said before the horse and these two unaminously drew out against Cromwell and fought him within six miles of Edenburgh though to little purpose for he immediately after became Master of the field 1. Fight at Edenburgh and took Garririsons as fast as he came to them defeating them at Musselbourgh and pursuing them to Pentlan-hills 2. Fight at Musselbourgh where the Scots had him in a straight and might have destroyed him but the certainty as they thought of the victory caused them to delay by which and the fatal necessities of sickness hunger and cold pressing upon Cromwells Army made them choose rather at one fight desperately to hazard all then timourously to become the scorn of an insulting foe which they knew they should find following this resolve with diligence they whisper about the word to each other in the midst of a dark and rainy night they crept up the hill and fell on the Scots so suddenly and beyond expectation that they were disordered by the first attempt yet by reason of their multitudes 3. Dunbar fight and totall defeat and a little courage they held up a while till surrounded on the back by Cromwells horse the Scots horse affrighted begin to retreat and soon after to flie in good earnest leaving their foot to mercy who were taken in greater numbers then the English Army consisted of the Independent power by this victory being absolute conquerors King in the North of Scotl. private and the Presbyterian pride laid groveling in the dust During this quarrell between the said two factions the King as disowned so not interested therein retires first to St. Johnstons and after that privately into the North of Scotland where he continued expecting what God would do for him assuring himself that this defeat at Dunbar as things then stood could not be for his prejudice King sent to and returnes which indeed quickly fell out according to his expectation for the Scots upon that overthrow were somwhat humbled in Spirit and now began again to think of their late abused King wishing in their hearts he were among them fearing to speake the truth least he would have joyned with Northern and loyal Highlanders to prevent which they send M. G. Montgomery with forces to intreat his Majesties return who finds him out and affectionately delivers his message which the King received even with joyfull tears as minding the justice of God upon those perfidious Scots whose pride in success carried them beyond all bounds of allegiance and like a stubborn child must be soundly whipt ere they will kneell and the good manners they obtain must be beaten into them Yet he accepts of their request and accordingly goes towards them Who but so good a King would have exposed himself to such mens trust in so dangerous a time Innocentia est sibi munimentum for he resolves to return King crowned Upon notice hereof and his arrivall the Parliament address themselves to
forgotten how justly they formerly had been laid aside but they are like the dog that returnes to his vomit and with the sow that is washed to her wallowing in the mire The good old cause what it is And the better to cast a seeming gloss over the foulness of their actions and their clandestine intrusion into the Government they send forth a Declaration in print the particulars whereof might very well have been here observable if they had not already been so cleerly demonstrated by the laborious pen of learned Mr. William Prinne in his book entituled The Republicans good old cause stated having therein so fully detected them Remainder of Crown lands to be sold that there remains nothing more to be said in the same matter And now as if already they had not wasted enough by exposing to sale the Kings Queens Princes Nobles and Gentries Lands and Goods being very quick sighted and of a long and large memory whereby they knew all was not sold therefore about the beginning of June to shew us further what they meant by the good old cause they ordered the bill for publick sales to be brought in A sweet act to enrich the saints as they in their canting language called themselves but their necessities by the long deteining of the publick purse from them being grown very pressing and though they thought the money arising from those sales would be sure yet for their present urgencies not being able to stay till that could be raised they appointed the same afternoon to consider of a more speedy way for raising money for that was all they ever aimed at or hoped for and to this purpose a bill of Assessement is concluded the most fitting Qua●enda pecunia primum est And because they would leave no stone unturned from which they might hope gain see how ingeniously they can project making an order to the Committee of inspection a precious crew to take speciall care that such persons who have assumed the titles of Honour Dignities and precedencies heretofore conferred on them by the late King since the same were taken away by act of this present Parliament do pay the severall summes of money by them forfeited Honours g●ven by the late King or his Son to be null and that the said Committee do also examine whether they have brought in their Patents and to report how the said monies may be employed to the best advantage of the Common-wealth and to offer an act to take away all honours conferred by the late Kings Son Was there ever such a piece of unseemly inconsistency that the Fountain of honour should be debarred of its spring by a company of peasants whose Acts were no better than of an assembly of rogues at beggars bush but would you know why they were so much troubled 't was precedency that stuck in their stomachs those noble souls went before them both in honour and honesty therefore seeing they could not hinder them from being called Lords by others yea the generality they lay it as a crime of pride upon them that they did assume such titles for which imaginary fault they must pay the summes forfeited for such insolence against their Rumpships O this Auri sacra fames quid non mortalia pectora cogit what will it not make them do They first must pay then bring in their Patents otherwise pay again thus the Divel rangeth fiercest when his time is most short for so generall was theirs hoped to be in regard they and their Masters of the Army could not cotton together The Army fright the Grandees being already alarumed from them by a petition and address yet they grew a little more confident upon the newes of Harry Cromwells submission and falling down to worship the image which they had set up Moncke also having about the same time sent them the resolutions of himself and his Army to adhere to them as a testimony whereof he informed them of a design of an Agent from the King of Scots as they called him which his diligence and care in the Highlands had prevented These newes so animated our Juncto that thinking all cocksure Money matters only taken notice of they fall to their old Trade of raising money First by assessements then by continuing the Excise and Customes untill the first of October and lastly by ordering the Trustees for sale of Crown Lands forthwith to proceed to the sale of all computed within the Act for sale thereof and that they take care of the profits arising from the same for the use of the Common-wealth till sale thereof be made Money being thus taken care for to be raised by all means suddenly after by a Vote they revive the Committee for plundered Ministers or rather for plundering Ministers that so they may also provide them of hacknies who shall infuse into the people strange Enthusiastick wayes of Government Plundered Ministers and Tythes It was not enough with Jeroboam to cause a generall rebellion but with him also to uphold it they make of the lowest and basest of the people Priests of their high places for whom the old way of tythes is not thought good enough it was consulted how a more equall and comfortable maintenance might be setled on the ministry for satisfaction of the people whom thus intending to lull asleep they resolve to advance their own safety by colloguing with the land forces with promises of sudden pay Seamen to be impressed and strengthening the Navy by impressing Seamen which about this time in June they were about And lest they should be wanting to themselves in any thing mercenary drudges of the Juncto begin to take upon them as may appear by this order 22. June 1659 By the Contractors for sale of Crown Lands Crown lands exposed These are to give you notice that Somerset-house with the Appertenances and Hampton-Court with the parkes c. Thereunto belonging are speedily to be exposed to sale and that the Contractors intend to sit on Wednesday next the 29. instant to take in desires of such as intend the purchase of any part of Somerset-House and on VVednesday the 6th of July the desires of any that intend the purchase of any part of Hampton-Court the premises are to be sold for ready money Will. Tayler Clark attending the said Contractors Indeed the last clause for ready money was very nenessary as affairs then stood for the Grandees at Westminster having only wasted and imbezelled the rest by divisions and sharings among themselves and friends with no advantage to the publick Exchequer they would now seem to begin to amend but it is according to the Proverbe like sowre ale in Summer for they intended nothing less than increasing the publick stock but rather by augmenting and converting it to their own use make a hoped provision against an ensuing storm which they foresaw would ere long fall upon them without any means of prevention yet resolving to share the
papers the house was so highly incensed and flew into such a sudden heat of passion that without any more adoe they resolved That the severall Commissions of 9. great Officers displ●ced and voted out of commission Col. John Lambert Col. John Desborow Col. James Berry Col. Thomas Kelsey Col. Richard Ashfield Col. Ralfe Cobbet Major Richard Creed Col. William Packer and Col. Rob. Barrow were null and void and every of them discharged from military imployment And that the Army should be governed by seven Commissioners Commissioners to govern the Army Viz. L. G. Charles Fleetwood L. G. Edm. Ludlow Generall George Monck Sir Arthur Haslelrig Barronet Col Valentine Walton Col. Harb Morley and Col. Robert Overton or any three or more of them which said Commissioners were to give notice to the said nine Officers of the discharge of their Commissions which being accordingly communicated now might you have seen the smoaking embers of dissembled friendship break out into an open flame of violent enmity this great and so long domineering faction being divided in it self and each side prepairing for its own The feud betwixt the rump and the Souldiery breaks out both defence and elevation for now a Quorum of the Commissioners which were appointed to govern the army being gotten together and sitting all night in the Speakers chamber which was within rhe Parliament house to issue forth orders part of the army with most of the discharged Principall Officers presently drew down to Westminster in a warlike order where they possessed themselves of the great Hall the Palace yard and all avenues and passages leading thereunto having before given out that they found it absolutely necessary for the good of the Nation to break up this Parliament for the maintaining whereof another part of the army were as active in drawing together the same night also marching down to Westminster and planting themselves in Kingstreet and in and about the Abbey Church and Yard This unusuall assembly at such an unaccustomed hour caused a generall terrour in the hearts and minds of the Inhabitants who dreaded some greater mischief than they were sensible of but the night being past in the morning the Speaker Mr. W. Lenthall at his usuall time came along Kingstreet and had passage through the ranks of Souldiers till he came to the new Palace gate The Rump turned out of doors where his Coach was stopped and himself compelled to return home as wise as he went whereby the house was interrupted from sitting which was the chief thing that Lambert aimed at yet though he had thus wrought his purpose he durst not withdraw but make good his station against the other faction the greatest part of the day each of the Phanatick leaders for so indeed they were both expecting who should give the first blow of which meekness the then council of State taking notice required both to draw off to their quarters which motion was willingly accepted on all hands and so both sides marched away Observe Thus have we seen that rump of pretended authority which in May was with much solliciting many intreaties and not a few specious pretences courted to come into play now again in October with as great scorn and malice laid a side and trampled on Nec lex est justior ulla quam necis artifices arte perire sua It hath been a generall Observation that Treason is alwayes the greatest punishment to it self like the Viper it breeds young with her own destruction and as the Poet speaketh of envy sit licet injustus livor so may I say of it though it be unjust to others yet is it very just to destroy them first that would destroy others The Councill of Officers having thus seized the Government into their hands Officers meet played with it for certain dayes till with the old Philosopher in the question about God finding the more they studyed the less they understood and that they were led by an Ignis fatuus which only trained them to the sight but would never bring them to the certenty of a settlement and pondering their own many weaknesses and infirmities with the exigency of affairs they fell into consideration of what was fit to be done In the debate whereof after many frivolous essayes they agreed at length among themselves to nominate some persons to be a Councill of State which device being applauded and a new name devised for them for they will be called forsooth the Committee of safety these following persons were pitch'd upon They erect a Committee of safety their names and characters Viz. Fleetwood whose folly would have exempted but they were affraid he would have cryed Knowing also that the best play ever hath a fool in it Lambert a seeming Saint but chief Engenier of the modell Desborow a drunken Clown skill'd in Harrassing the land steel once a sneaking petty fogger now Lord Chancellour of Ireland and a Traytor Whitlock a lump of ingratitude and deceit Sir Henry Vane chief secretary to the seven deadly sins Ludlow once a Gentleman but since by himself Levelled into the plebeyan rank Sydenham nothing good in him but his name Upstart Saloway Strickland once a rumper after a Lord of Nolls edition then a convert to the good old cause Berry pedum nequissimus the wickedst villain among 10000. Lawrence once an upstart privy Counceller now scarce a Gentleman Sir James Harrington Per risum multum possis cognoscere Wareston a mickle knave geud faw Sir Ireton and Tichborn two of the City Puckfoists who lye leger in the Common Council to discover plots for the getting of money Henry Brandrith fit for mischief else he had not been here Thompson a dull fellow but a soaking Committee-man Hewson the Common-wealths upright setter Sniveling Col. Clarke Factious Col. Lilburn preaching Col. Bennet and Cornelius Holland a most damnable Apostate both to God and his King To these fellowes thus fitly accoutred is the Government committed Com safety their power and not only so but they have power to call Delinquents to account to oppose and suppress all insurrections to treat with forreign States and Princes to raise the militia's in the severall Counties To dispose of all places of trust with many other things by which may be seen what an unlimited arbitrary power they assumed to themselves over the lives and estates of all Englishmen And that all England might take notice hereof they send out a Declaration in print Armies declaration entitled a Declaration of the General Council of the Officers of the Army wherein they say they have lodged the civil and executive part of Government in the Committee of safety whom they have obliged to prepare such a form of Government as may best sute with a Free-State without a single person Kingship or house of Peers with many equivocating though Saint-like expressions to the like effect with which they hoped to delude the World and continnue their usurpation but Sera
lies if not answered did from their several and respective Counties as also in the Cities of London and Westminster declare The Gentry declare that they were far from any thoughts of revenge it belonging to God alone alluding to that text of Scripture Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord but as for Justice they would acquiesce in the judgment of the approaching Parliament This being done and the whole Parliament at the appointed time The Parliament begins beginning first with their duty to God they follow that golden Pythagorean rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giving him hearty thanks for that their freedome of meeting which when they had cordially done they fell in order to their Governour First They fear God then honour the King As the same Pythagoras goes on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The very Heathen we see by the meer light of Nature could dictate that which our Grand Enthusiasts of Religion would not for these many years by the ignis fatuus of their new lighted notion walk after But the Parliament were better principled for after their devotions regularly paid to God they in the very next place own their duty to their Prince upon the first day of May a happy day to be remembred to posterity voting the Government to be by King Kingly government voted Lords and Commons a constitution so incomparably mixed that it may rather be admired then envied neither were they satisfied to rest there but on the Eighth day of the same May caused his Majesty to be proclaimed King of England King proclaimed Scotland France and Ireland which was performed with so much Solemnity and Joy as I presume England I dare say hardly any Kingdome in the World ever saw or were sensible of the like the shouts and acclamations of the pleased people rending the very skies as a token of their extraordinary Thankfulnesse to Heaven and at night by the multitude of their bonfires turning the Darknesse into a kind of lightsome day This hapy beginning thus owned by the general consent of all honest men made the Parliament resolute to prosecute their begun endeavours which the more orderly to do for order befitteth men best both as Subjects and Christians they immediately prepared Commissioners Commissioners sent to the King who were persons choyce for their integrity and wisedome like those heads of the children of Issachar which were men that had understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do being intrusted to wait on his Majesty and to desire him to come to his Parliament and People with all convenient speed Before whose arrival his Majesty had withdrawn himself from Bruxels not upon any account as was by the ignorant and malicious insinuated but out of a design of safe guard to his own sacred Person as knowing those two principles of the Romanists si violandum est jus Regni causa violandum est and nulla fides servanda est haereticis might prove dangerous if not fatal to his interest as affairs then stood He well remembred Richard the first his case sirnamed Caeur-du-Lion and what his detention once cost England and therefore had no reason to cast himself into the like hazard Therefore having discharged all Accounts whatsosoever at Bruxels he as I said removes his Court to Breda As that first he might hold the more certain and quick intelligence with his friends in England where there hardly wanted any thing to complete his Restoration and the Kingdomes satisfaction but his Personal presence so in the second place he there knew himself safe being within the jurisdiction of his beloved sister the Princesse Royal Mary Princesse of Orange King at Breda whose tender love and zeal to him in his affliction deserves to be written in brasse and graven with the point of a Diamond During the time of his residence there to shew himself to be a second Solomon a Prince of Peace and not onely so but the most pious and merciful of Princes who was wise as a Serpent yet innocent as a Dove by the Honourable the Lord Viscount Mordant and Sir Richard Grenvile since by his Majesties special grace created Earl of Bath Gentleman of his Majesties Bedchamber He sent a most gracious Declaration with respective Letters to the Lords to the Commons to the City and to the Army Whetein His Majesties Declaration layes Independency dead His Majesty first offers a Pardon for all miscarriages and misdemeanors against his Father or himself to all persons such onely excepted as shall be excepted by the Parliament promising likewise securitie to all whose guilt might otherwise endanger them so as they laid hold on his Majesties Pardon within 40. dayes after the publication thereof 2. He refers the purchasers of Kings Queens and Bishops Lands to Justice to the Law and to the Parliament 3. He assures the Souldiery of their Arrears for past services although done against him and of incouragement and pay for the future under him This Declaration was received with no ordinary joy and solemnity the messenger Sr. Iohn Greenvil being rewarded with 500. pounds ro buy him a Jewell and upon reading thereof and a conference had with the Lords who had now reassumed their Native right by taking their places in the higher House they agree unanimously each in their several house That a Letter be sent in answer to his Majesties gracious Letter and Declaration superscribed To his most Excellent Majestie which were since more immediately drawn up and sent by Commissioners before prepared as is already mentioned sixe from each House who were in the name of both Houses 1. To give his Majesty most humble and hearty thanks for his gracious Letter and Declaration 2. To desire his Majesty to return to the exercise of his Regal Office and come to his Parliament and people with all speed possible And thirdly to that purpose to desire him to appoint a place for the Navy to attend him the Commissioners that went from the house of Peeres were these The Earl of Oxford Earl of VVarwick Earl of Middlesex Lord Brook Lord Berckley Commissioners names that went to the King Lord Visc Hereford Of the House of Commons were selected these following Lord Charleton Lord Bruce Lord Falkland Lord Mandevile Lord Herbert Lord Fairefax Sir George Booth Sir Iohn Holland Sir Antho. Ashly-Cooper Sir Horatio Townsend Sir Henry Cholmly Mr. Hollis The City of London having also received the like Letters and Declarations the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council appoint a loyal and humble answer to be returned wherein they give his Majesty thanks for his tender care grace and favour to their ancient and renowned City which was sent by these worthy Gentlemen For the City of London Alderman Adams Recorder VVilde Alderman Robinson Alderman Bateman Theophilus Biddolph Richard Ford Alderman Vincent Alderman Frederick Alderman VVale John Lewis Esquire William Bateman Esq Alderman Bludworth Major