Selected quad for the lemma: prince_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
prince_n king_n send_v wales_n 2,852 5 10.1148 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A50359 A breviary of the history of the Parliament of England expressed in three parts, 1. The causes and beginnings of the civil war of England, 2. A short mention of the progress of that civil war, 3. A compendious relation of the original and progress of the second civil war / first written in Latine, & after into English by Thomas May. May, Thomas, 1595-1650. 1655 (1655) Wing M1396; ESTC R31201 87,485 222

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in a miserable calamity While the King persisted in these courses the Kirk of Scotland from the Synod at Edinburgh sent Letters to him containing a serious admonition which because the admonition of a National Church may seem a thing of some moment shall be set down verbatim the Preface onely omitted because long though very humble THE troubles of our hearts are enlarged and our fears encreased in your Majesties behalf perceiving that your Peoples patience is above measure tempted is like a Cart pressed down with Sheaves and ready to break while as besides many former designs and endeavours to bring desolation and destruction upon us which were and we trust all of that kind shall be by the marvellous and merciful providence of God discovered and disappointed our Countrey is now infested the bloud of divers of our brethren spilt and other acts of most barbarous and horrid cruelty exercised by the cursed crew of the Irish Rebels and their complices in this Kingdom under the conduct of such as have Commission and Warrant from your Majesty and unless we prove unfaithful both to God and your Majesty we cannot conceal another danger which is infinitely greater than your Peoples displeasure Therefore we the servants of the most high God and your Majesties most loyal Subjects in the humility and grief of our hearts fall down before your Throne and in the name of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ who shall judge the World in Righteousness both great and small and in the name of this whole Nationall Kirk which we represent we make bold to warn your Majesty freely that the guilt which cleaveth fast to your Majesty and to your Throne is such as whatsoever flattering Preachers or unfaithful Counsellors may say to the contrary if not timely repented cannot but involve your self and your posterity under the wrath of the ever living God for your being guilty of the shedding of the bloud of many thousands of your Majesties best subjects for your permitting the Mass and other Idolatry both in your own Family in your Dominions for your authorizing by the book of sports the prophanation of the Lords day for your not punishing of publike scandals and much prophaneness in and about your Court for the shutting of your ears from the humble and just desires of your faithful subjects for your complying too much with the popish party many wayes and namely by concluding the cessation of Armes in Ireland and your embracing the councels of those who have not set God nor your good before their eyes for your resisting and opposing this cause which so much concerneth the glory of God your own honour and happiness and the peace and safety of your Kingdomes and for what other causes your Majesty is most conscious and may best judge and search your own conscience nor would we have mentioned any particulars if they had not been publike and known For all which it is high time for your Majesty to fall down at the foot-stool of the King of glory to acknowledge your offences to repent timely to make your peace with God through Jesus Christ whose bloud is able to wash away your great sins and to be no longer unwilling that the Son of God reign over you and your Kingdoms in his pure Ordinances of Church-government and Worship They conclude with a profession and protestation of their constancy in so just a cause against any opposition whatsoever This admonition of the generall Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland was sent first to the Scottish Commissioners at London and by them delivered to the Kings Secretary but Ecclesiastical admonition in the heat of War little availed When the Spring began the War with great heat and courage on both sides was renewed Generall Essex had laid down his Commission and Sir Thomas Fairfax went to Windsor to his new-modelled Army a new Army indeed made up of some remainders of the old ones and other raised forces in the Countries an Army seeming no way glorious either in the dignity of Commanders or antiquity of Souldiers never hardly did any Army go forth to War with less confidence of their own side or more contempt of their enemies and did more bravely deceive both and shew how far it was possible for humane conjectures to erre For in their following action and successes they proved such as would too much pose antiquity among all the Camps of their famed Heroes to find a parallel to this Army He that will seriously weigh their atchievements in the following year against potent and gallant Enemies and consider the greatness of things the number of Victories how many battels were woon how many Towns and Garrisons were taken he can hardly think them the work of one year or fit to be called one War But whosoever considers this must take heed that he do not attribute too much to them but give it wholly to Almighty God whose providence over this Army as it did afterwards miraculously appear so it might in some measure be hoped for at the first considering the behaviour and discipline of those Souldiers For the usual vices of Camps were here restrained the discipline was strict no theft no wantonness no oaths nor any prophane words could escape without the severest castigation by which it was brought to pass that in this Camp as in a well ordered City passage was safe and commerce free The first expedition of General Fairfax as it was ordered by the Committee of both Kingdomes was into the West to releive Taunton a Town that had long with incredible manhood and constancy under Blake their Governour endured a sharp siege by Sir Richard Greenvile and seemed to emulate though with more happiness the fidelity of old Sagunthum but this work was not done by the General himself but Colonel Welden who was sent thither with seven thousand of the new Army Fairfax himself was recalled by the Committee of both Kingdoms to go upon other action But because the King had sent for Prince Rupert from Wales to come to Oxford that he might joyn forces and march into the field General Fairfax before he went from Windsor sent Cromwell with a party of Horse to hinder the Kings designs who marching speedily from Windsor with great felicity vanquished a part of the Kings forces at Islip-bridge taking divers of the Commanders prisoners the remainder of that party flying into Bletchington House were there besieged and yeilded to Cromwell with the same success at Bampton-bush he took Vaughan and Littleton and defeated their forces The King when Prince Rupert and Maurice were come to him with their forces designed his march toward the East to take possession of the Isle of Ely which he hoped would be betrayed to him by some of his party there Cromwell and Major General Brown the Governor of Abington were commanded to follow the King but soon recalled as too weak in forces to encounter the King and to assist General Fairfax in besieging of Oxford
safety of the Kings person and defence of the Parliament Of which the Earl of Essex a man of eminent fidelity and worth was by an unanimous consent of both Houses chosen General Some Lords and Members of the Commons were sent down into the Counties to settle the Militia and raise Forces for defence of several Towns and places And divers Members of the Houses Listed themselves in the Lord General Essex his Army and took Commissions from him as Colonels But immediately after this time the Kings Commissions of Array were sent down into every County though often declared by the Parliament to be illegal and were obeyed in many places more than the Parliaments Ordinances for the Militia by reason that so many Lords and Gentlemen adhered to him now against the Parliament But there were scarce any Counties free from contention betwixt the Commissioners of the one and the Ordinances of the other which strugled together with great Nobility and Gentry on both sides Neither had the Kings Proclamations nor the Parliaments Ordinances obedience from all only as far as the now-drawing swords enforced it During these Divisions in several Counties London it self was not free for the Lord Major of London Sir Richard Gurney was by the Parliament committed prisoner to the Tower of London for moving sedition in the Kingdom by causing the Kings Commission of Array a thing declared illegal by both Houses to be proclaimed in the City and afterwards an additional impeachment was brought in against him by the Common-Councel of London for divers breaches of his Oath in that Office and contemning the Orders of Parliament After many days attendance concerning these Accusations on the twelfth day of August he received his Censure at the House of Lords which was That he should be turned out of his Majoralty That he should never bear any Office in the City or Common-wealth That he should be incapable of any Honor or Dignity to be conferred on him by the King and Committed Prisoner to the Tower during the pleasure of both Houses Many Proclamations about that time passed from the King and Declarations from the Parliament one from the King against the Earl of Essex as a Rebel and all that adhered unto him and a Declaration from the Parliament recounting all that the Kings evil counsel for so they call it had done illegally against them the Parliament likewise published what in particular had been done by his party against Ireland and how that unhappy Kingdome had been of late robbed of many Reliefes of Cloathes Victuals and Arms which the Parliament had sent them by the King and his party While these writings on both sides lasted the King removed often to gather strength and in several places made Speeches to the Countries with many Protestations of his affection to the people At last he came to Nottingham where about the middle of August he set up his Standard-Royal Very few People came to it nor had the King at that time any considerable strength nor if the Parliament would then have seized upon his person could he have kept himself out of their hands From Notingham on the twenty fifth of that Month he sent a Message to the Parliament by the Earls of Southampton and Dorset and Sir John Culpeper In that Message he signifieth a desire to compose the difference by a Treaty that a certain number of Persons sent and enabled by the Parliament may treat in some indifferent place with the like number authorized by him The Parliament answer That until he put them in a condition to treat that is until he take down his Standard and recall those Proclamations wherein he calleth a thing unheard of before both Houses of Parliament Traytors and Rebels they cannot by the Fundamental Priviledges of Parliament or by the publick trust reposed in them or with the general good of the Realm admit of any such Treaty The KING denied that he advanced his Standard against the Parliament or that he called them Rebels but within few dayes in his Instructions to his Commissioners of Array Marquess Harford the Earl of Cumberland and the Lord Strange he again called the Earl of Essex Rebel and Traytor Thus did they contend for some time by Declarations and Proclamations which proved all fruitless as to satisfying of the people nor could this lamentable War be averted Prince Rupert and Prince Maurice the the second and third Sons of the late King of Bohemia were now come into England the beginning of September to offer their service to the King their Uncle whom presently he put into Commands Prince Rupert the Elder and Fiercer by nature Commanding a Body of Horse flew with great fury through divers Counties raising men for the King's service in a rigorous way Committing outrages to those who favoured the Parliament upon which the Houses fell into a debate agreeing that a Charge of Treason should be drawn up against him for endeavouring the Destruction of this State and abusing that Court which represented it The King marched another way and passing through Derbyshire Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire he commanded the Trained Bands of those Counties to attend and Guard his Person and when they were met he disarmed the greatest part of them taking as many Arms as served for two thousand men besides good summs of Money which he borrowed by constraint protesting still as usually he did to maintain the Protestant Religion the Laws and Liberties of the Subject and the priviledges of Parliament The Parliament-Army raised under the Conduct of the General Essex was now grown into a considerable Bulk consisting of about fourteen thousand Horse and Foot their general Rendezvouz was at Northampton where many of the chief Commanders stayed with them expecting the presence of the General himself The Lord General Essex on the ninth of September taking his leave of the Parliament and City of London went towards Northampton and was waited on by the trained Bands and a great number of armed Gentlemen from Essex-house to the end of the City with great solemnity The Parliament sent a Petition to the General at Northampton to be by him presented to the King in a safe and honourable way the effect of which was humbly to entreat his Majesty to withdraw his presence from those wicked persons about him and not to mix his danger with theirs but that he would return to his Parliament and such-like things The King intending to seize upon Worcester sent Prince Rupert thither with some Horse which Essex fearing to prevent the King commanded part of his forces to march thither speedily himself following with his Army Some Skirmishes happened between that party of Parliamentarians and Prince Rupert before the coming of General Essex but Prince Rupert when the forerunners of Essex his Army were in sight with great speed fled out of Worcester General Essex leaving a Garison at Northampton marched to Coventry which Town he also garisoned as likewise Warwick and marched from thence with his
which favour they gave the King thirty thousand pounds This was that cessation of Arms so much spoken against by honest men in London for that reason especially that it was directly against a Law and the Kings faith for it was enacted by authority of Parliament the King also signing the Act in the year one thousand six hundred forty one That the War against those bloudy Irish Rebels should proceed untill it were declared by Parliament that Ireland were fully subdued and that no peace nor any cessation of Arms should be made with those Rebels without the consent of both Houses of Parliament Thus was assistance brought to either side to the King which he especially aimed at in this business that English Army which for almost a whole years space had fought valiantly and victoriously against those Rebels was now brought into England within five moneths after that cessation to fight against the Parliament of England but the cause being changed the fortune of those Souldiers was likewise changed for they had no success in England but within a short time after their arrival that whole Army was utterly defeated and all their cheif commanders with seventeen hundred common Souldiers were taken prisoners by Sir Thomas Fa●rfax The Scottish Army that Winter following about the middle of January passing over Tweed came into England The Earl of Leven was General his kinsman David Lesley commanded the Horse the snow that fell at that time covered the ground in an unusual depth and as great a frost had congealed all the rivers but the heat of fighting was greater than the rigor of the air and the patience of Souldiers overcame the hard weather The Earl of Leven marched with his forces against the Earl of Newcastle who with a great Army possessed the Northern parts of England for the King nor did the War goe on with less vigour in other parts In the beginning of the Spring great Armies were raised on both sides and filled all the countries with terrour all the following Summer which fell in the year one thousand six hundred forty four they fought with equal fury and almost equal fortunes insomuch as that England by the dubiousness of success on both sides and sad vicissitude of calamitous slaughters was made an unhappy Kingdom The Kings fortune was susteined by brave Armies in the West under the Princes Rupert and Maurice in Wales under Gerard and others in the midland Counties under Sir Jacob Ashley an old Souldier other Armies were commanded by Sir Ralph Hopton and Colonel Goring and in the North the Earl of Newcastles great Army Nor were the forces of Parliament inferiour the cheif Army under the General Essex Waller commanded another the Earl of Manchester to whom Crumwell a stout and successful Souldier was joyned led a strong Army toward the North where the Lord Fairfax and his Son had good forces and Sir John Meldrum not far off the Earl of Denbigh a stout Commander was with a fair Party about Strafford and besides these the great Scottish Army At the beginning of that Summer the Parliament attempted a thing of great moment to besiege Oxford or at least to block up the King within that Town which was endeavoured by two Armies Essex on the one side and Waller on the other but the King deceived them both and with a few light Horse escaping out of the Town went to joyn with his greater Armies General Essex marched farther into the West but the expedition proved unhappy both to himself and the Parliament Waller followed the King but in vain for he could not hinder his designed March onely some skirmishes happened between parts of their Forces but nothing was done of any great moment until Waller returned with his force to encounter enemies in other places Various were the successes this Summer in most parts of the Kingdom in the West South and midland Counties the Kings forces prevailed above the Parliament which perchance had been ruined if the North had not made them amends with some atchievements besides one great Victory For Leve with his Scottish forces coming the last Winter into England besides the taking of some Towns and Forts had much weakened Newcastles Army lessening their number not by fighting but enduring the sharpness of that weather which the other could not so well doe To Leven the Lord Fairfax after Selby was so miraculously taken by valiant Sir Thomas Fairfax joyned himself with all his forces to whom also the Earl of Manchester after his Lincoln expedition came with a gallant Army Three Parliament Armies under three Generals Leven Manchester and Fairfax with great concord and unanimity had marched together and with joyned forces had besieged the great City of York whereof the Earl of Newcastle was Governour to raise the siege Prince Rupert was come with a great Army out of the South the three Generals left their siege to fight the Prince under him also Newcastle having drawn his forces out of York served who on a great plain called Marston Moore gave battel to the three Generals This was the greatest battel of the whole civil war never did greater Armies both in number and strength encounter or drew more bloud in one fight The Victory at first was almost gotten by the Royalists whose left Wing Fairfax his men being disadvantaged by the inconvenience of the ground had routed and put to flight the right wing of the Parliamentarians but this loss was more than recompenced in the other Wing where Crumwell who fought under Manchester charged with such force and fury the right wing of the Royalists that he broke the best Regiments which Prince Rupert had and put them all to flight Crumwel together with David Lesley pursued them and wheeling about with his Horse came opportunely to the releif of his oppressed friends in the other Wing where they ceased not until they had gained a compleat Victory and all Prince Rupert his Ordnance his carriages and baggage were possessed by the Parliamentarians After this Victory Rupert with the remnant of his forces fled into the South some of the Victorious Armies Horse in vain pursuing him for some miles the Earl of Newcastle with some of his chosen friends leaving York of which City Sir Thomas Glenham took the government went to Scarborough where within a while after he took shipping and passed into Germany The three Generals Leven Manchester and Fairfax after this great Victory returned to besiege York to whom that City soon after upon conditions was rendered after which they divided their forces and Leven with his Scottish Army returning into the North about the end of that Summer took the rich Town of Newcastle about the same time that the General Essex unfortunately managed his business in the West and having lost all his Artillery returned to London This Summer the Queen passed into France and used great endeavour to raise aid for the King her husband among the Roman Catholikes but those endeavours proved fruitless yet
by no means consent to the abrogation of Episcopacy not in the second place would he suffer the Militia to be taken out of his hands which he conceived to be a cheif flower of his Crown Yet he was contented that for three yeares it should be governed by twenty equally chosen out of both sides Lastly to the prosecution of a War against the Irish he could not consent having made a cessation of Arms with them which in Honour he could not break Thus nothing at all being done toward peace the War must decide it The Parliament hasten the modelling of their new Army The Earls of Essex Warwick Manchester and Denbigh freely and voluntarily lay down their Commissions The new modelled Army of the Parliament consisted of twenty one thousand namely fourteen thousand foot six thousand Horse and one thousand Dragoneers Sir Thomas Fairfax was made General Philip Skippon an excellent souldier was made Major General Colonels of the Foot Regiments were Holborn Fortescue Barclay Craford Ingolesby Mountain Pickering Rainsborough Welden Aldridge of Horse Regiments Sir Michael Leves●y Sheffield Middleton Sidney Graves Vermuden Whaley Fleetwood Rossiter Py. The King on the other side had great Forces under divers Commanders to whom he distributed several Provinces the Princes Rupert and Maurice with numerous forces possessed some of the Northern parts of the Kingdom others were held by the Earl of Derby and Sir Marmaduke Langdale Sir John Biron and Gerard held Wales and some adjacent Counties The West was wholly possessed by three Armies of his under the several Commands of Sir Ralph Hopton Sir Richard Greenvile and Colonel Goring All these three though Generals by themselves yet served under the name of Charles Prince of Wales as their supreme General But the King not content with so great a force of English Souldiers was more earnest than before to get over the Irish Papists with whom he had before committed the business to Ormund to make an absolute peace but when the King perceived that those Irish made too high demands and that nothing was effected by Ormund toward the peace in so many Treaties and so long a time he thought of another way which was to the Lord Herbert of Ragland Son to Worcester whom he had created Earl of Glamorgan a zealous Papist and therefore most acceptable to those Irish Rebels the King gave full power by his Letters to make a peace with and indulge to the Irish whatsoever should seem needful It seemed strange to all men when these things were brought to light which was before the end of that year that such a business should be carried on and yet concealed from the Lord Digby Secretary for Ireland and Ormund the Lord Lieutenant to whom the whole matter of that peace had been before committed But the King when he saw it too hard a thing otherwise to make such a peace as would bring a certainty of assistance from them that he might throw all that Envy upon Glamorgan impowred him unknown to the rest for so the Rebels sweetened with large promises unknown to Ormund might the better admit of conditions just in shew and openly excusable and the King might draw from Ireland such Souldiers as would more firmly adhere to his side and he might trust as being the greatest haters of English Protestants and despairing of pardon against the Parliament of England He therefore gave Letters of authority to Glamorgan in these words CHARLES by the grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To our Trusty and Well beloved Cousin Edward Earl of Glamorgan Greeting Being confident of your wisdom and fidelity We do by these Letters as if under ●ur great Seal grant unto you full power and authority to Treat and conclude with the confe●erate Roman Catholikes of Ireland and to in●ulge to them all those things which necessity ●●all require and which we cannot so commodi●●sly do by our Lieutenant nor our Self publick-●own at present Therefore We command that 〈◊〉 do this business with as much secresie as can 〈◊〉 whatsoever you shall think fit to be prom●●●● in my name that do I attest upon the word of a King and a Christian to grant to those Confederate Catholikes who by their assistance have abundantly shewed their zeal to us and our Cause Given at Oxford under our Royal Seal the twelfth day of March and twentieth year of our Raign Nor into England onely did he endeavour to bring those Irish but into Scotland which he effected to the great damage of that unhappy Kingdom by Montross about the beginning of the year 1644. when the Scottish Covenanters came into England to assist the Parliament Montross went to Oxford to the King to offer his service against the Covenanters in Scotland The King to fit him for that purpose created him a Marquess and gave him his Commission to be Lord Governour of Scotland and General of all his forces the King then also sent for the Earl of Antrim to participate with Montross his Councels who entering into a confederacy with him before the King engaged himself there that he would send to Montross the next April into Arguile where the passage is short into Ireland ten thousand Irish This promise at the appointed time A●trim performed in part but was very deficient in the number of Souldiers for instead of ten thousand he sent scarce twelve hundred Irish into Scotland under the conduct of Macdonald Montross notwithstanding with these men with the addition of his Atholians made up a sufficient theeving Army and making sudden excursions he fell into the neighbouring Countries wasting all robbing houses and burning up the Corn where he came insomuch as that the State had need of great Armies to restrain his violence whilst the craggy Mountains of Atholia and rough woody places there gave safe retreat to his Highlanders and Irish In this manner did Montross for the space almost of two years lie within the bowels of his Country like a pestilent disease such were his retreats and so great his boldness in excursions that no less an Army than twelve thousand was thought sufficient to defend the Provinces against him But Montross was tossed with various turns of Fortune The first Summer after his arrival in Scotland he gave the Earl of Arguile a great blow through the negligence of his men where fifteen hundred were slain and taken by Montross whereupon the Parliament of Scotland raised an Army of ten thousand against him and the same parliament condemned Montross with some other Lords to be a Traitor and Enemy to his Country Montross afterwards received a great overthrow from Hurry and was enforced to fly to his craggy retreats and shortly after he was again beaten by Hurry near to Dundee and absolutely forced to hide himself in his old receptacles from whence notwithstanding on a sudden as shall be shewed anon he shewed himself and from a contemptible estate grown justly formidable he overwhelmed Scotland
and censures as by the rest of the Knights citizens and burgesses assembled in the Commons house of Parl. c. And the Sheriffs and other Officers and Persons to whom it appertaineth shall make returns and accept and receive the returns of such elections in like manner as if Writs of Summons had issued and been executed as hath been used and accustomed And in default of the Sheriffs and other Officers respectively in not accepting or making return of such elections it shall and may be lawful to and for the several Freeholders and other persons that have elected to make returns of the Knights c. which shall be as good and effectual to all intents and purposes as if the Sheriff or other Officers had received a Writ of summons for a Parliament and had made such returns any Writ c. to the contrary notwithstanding And in case any person shall be so hardy as to advise or put in execution any such Writs c. then he or they so offending shall incur the penalties contained in the Statute of Premunire made in the 16 year of Rich. the 2d. and be deprived of the benefit of the Law in any case c. And if any Sheriff Constable of the Castle of Dover or Lord Warden of the Cinque-Ports shall not perform his duty enjoyned by this Act then he shall lose and forfeit the sum of one thousand pounds and every county city cinque-port and borough that shall not make election of their knights citizens barons and burgesses respectively shall incur the penalties following that is to say every County the sum of one thousand pounds and every City which is no County two hundred pounds and every Cinque-Port and Borough the sum of one hundred pounds All and every of which several forfeitures and all other forfeitures in this Act mentioned shall and may be recovered in any of the Kings Courts of Record at Westminster by and in the Name of the Lord Major of the City of London for the time being by action of Debt Bill Plaint c. wherein no Essoin Protection c. shall be in any wise prayed granted or allowed And if any person after notice given that the Action depending is grounded or prosecuted upon or by vertue of this Statute shall cause or procure any such Action to be staid or delayed before judgment that then the said persons so offending shall incur and sustain all and every the pains penalties and forfeitures as aforesaid The fifth part of all and every the forfeitures in this Act mentioned shall go and be to and for the use and behoof of the City of London and the other four parts and residue to be employed and disposed to and for such only uses intents and purposes as by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in Parliament assembled shall be declared and appointed And be it further Enacted That the said Knights Citizens and Burgesses to be assembled at any Parliament by vertue of this Act shall and may from time to time at any time during such their assembly in Parliament choose and declare one of themselves to be Speaker for the said Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons assembled in the said Parliament as they shall think fit And it is further enacted That all Parliaments hereafter to be assembled by authority of this Act and every Member thereof shall have and enjoy all Rights Priviledges Jurisdictions and Immunities as any Parliament summoned by Writ under the great Seal of England or any Member thereof might or ought to have and have voices in such Parliament before and without the taking of the several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance or either of them any Law or Statute to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding For Signing of this Bill thanks were given to the King at White-hall the same afternoon by both Houses of Parliament By this time being the end of December that Cessation of Arms which was spoken of before between the English and Scotish Armies was expired and by the Parliament now renewed for a month longer for the Paliament although the King as is said before called them Rebels and desired to have them driven out of England had a better opinion of them and at this time of renewing the Cessation ordered that the Scots should be recompensed for all their charges and losses by that mischievous war which the King had raised against them and within few dayes after examination of those losses and charges the Parliament ordered that the Scotish Ships taken since that war should be restored to them and 4000. l. in money given them to rig those ships it was further resolved by both Houses that the full sum of 300000 l. should be given to them in these words Towards a supply of the losses and necessities of our brethren of Scotland And that the Parliament would in due time take into consideration the manner of raising daies of Paiment for which three daies after the Scotish Commissioners then Resident at London gave thanks to the Parliament not only for that great Sum of 300000. l. but for the stile of Brethren which so kindly they had used towards them The Parliament of England as a further strengthning of the Nations amity Ordained at that time That all Books Libels and Proclamations against the Scots should be called in and a thanksgiving to God should be in all Churches of England for that happy Peace The payment of two Armies for so long a time was a great charge to the poor people of England which they without any grudging or repining at the King as cause of that great burden in hope to gain him for the future bore with exceeding patience they willingly parted with six Subsidies and were content with the taxation of Poll-money a personal assessment of the whole Kingdom wherein every Duke was assessed at 100. l. a Marquess at 80. l. Earls at 60. l. Viscounts and Barons at 40. l. Knights of the Bath at 30. l. Other Knights at 20. l. Esquires at 10. l. Men of 100. l. per annum at 5. l. every common head at six pence The King in February had declared to the Houses his intention concerning a marriage for his eldest Daughter the Princess Mary who was then betwixt 9 and 10 yeers of age the husband appointed for her was the yong Prince William of Nassau Son to Henry Prince of Orange a youth about 16 yeers of age the matter was then in agitation and fair Propositions made upon it to the King by the Ambassadors of the States General The Parliament were pleased with the marriage and not long after the yong Prince arived in England and was by the King and Queen with all the Court joyfully received and entertained at London After convenient time spent in the English Court he was upon the second day of May with great solemnity Married at White-hall to the Princess Mary On the tenth day of May Thomas Earl of Strafford who had
were drawn up and read against them in the House of Commons for in December before when the debate had been concerning Ship-money and the offence of those Judges who had given their extrajudicial opinions for it was examined upon which the Lord Keeper Finch fled the thing was condemned as most illegal Three Judges had been honest Judge Crook Hutton and Baron Denham whose Arguments were very famous the other were examined by sixteen Members of the House of Commons who were appointed to present those particular Charges against every Judge who were Judge Bramston Baron Trever Baron Weston Baron Davenport and Judge Crawley for Judge Barclay was charged with high Treason Of this a certain Gent. spake as followeth The Root of most of our present mischiefs the ruine of all posterity do I hold to be that extrajudicial Judgment I cannot say but rather doom delivered by all the Judges under their hands out of Court yet recorded in all Courts to the subversion of all our Fundamental Lawes Liberties and Annihilation if not Confiscation of our Estates That in case of danger the King may impose upon his subjects that he is the sole Judge of the danger necessity and proportion which in brief is to take what when and where he will which though delivered in the time of a gracious merciful Prince who we hope will not wrest it beyond our abilities yet left to the interpretation of a succeeding Tyrant if ever this Nation be so fortunate to fall into the hands of such It is a Record wherein every man might read himself a slave that reads it having nothing he can call his own all prostitute to the will of another What to do in such a case we are not to seek for precedents our honorable Ancestors taught us in the just and exemplar punishments of chief Justice Tresilian and his Complices for giving their judgments out of Parliament against the established Laws of Parl. how tender they were of us how careful we ought to be to continue those Laws to preserve the Liberty of our Posterity Those Charges were now brought in about the beginning of August but little was afterwards done against any of them or almost any other offendor the King had designed a journey into Scotland and would go though the Houses earnestly entreated his stay for a while longer because the Kingdoms business required his presence the King alledged that the affairs of Scotland did necessarily require his presence and further told them that he would Pass any good Bill which they had for him before he went Which he accordingly did and signed a Commission for passing of Bills in his absence the Commissioners were the Lord-Keeper Littleton the Lord Privy-seal Earl of Manchester the Lord great Chamberlain Earl of Lindsey the Marquess of Harford Earl of Essex Earl of Bath Earl of Dorset The Earl of Essex also by a Bill which the King then signed was made General of all his forces on this side Trent with power to levy Arms in case of necessity But before the King went the Earl of Holland chosen both by him and the Parliament as General for that purpose was gone into the North to disband the English Army there The King departing from London the tenth of August made haste towards Scotland and passed by the Armies as they were disbanding Whether he did under-hand attempt any thing with the Scotish Army as a Scotish writer hath published to engage them against the Parliament of England with large promises of Spoil and offering Jewels of great value in pawn for performance of it I leave as uncertain for the reader to judge by what afterwards fell out But if he did it was a matter of great falsehood having as yet declared no enmity against the English Parliament But what the Kings design was of going into Scotland was not understood in England The same Author saies it was to make sure those Noble men of that Kingdom whom he doubted of as not willing to serve his turn against England And true it is that about September Letters came from Scotland to the standing Committee at Westminster for the two Houses had rejourned themselves from the eighth of September till the twentieth of October and appointed a standing Committee of fifty Members during that time that a Treasonable Plot was discovered there against the lives of some of the greatest Peers in the Kingdom upon which the standing Committee fearing some mischief from the same spring placed strong guards in divers parts of the City of London However the mischiefs might fall out by chance or by design the Kings journey into Scotland was sure to hinder the English business and to retard the cure of all their Grievances which was little less then a plain destruction For after the tenth of August the day of his departure little was done in the Parliament until the recess On the 23 of October whilst the King remained in Scotland broke forth that cursed conspiracy of the Irish Rebels and the inhumane butchery of Protestants through the whole Island more tragical then any effect of a calamitous War in which was put in execution whatsoever could be imagined from the licentious cruelty of a barbarous people so long kept under the English yoke or whatever the dire dictates of superstition or wicked exhortations of Priests could infuse into them It was wonderful that so devilish a design could so long be kept close whereby 200000 Protestants in two months space were murdered and many by exquisite torments and many more despoiled of all their wordly fortunes This divelish design was to be put in execution on the 23 of October upon which day not only the Castle of Dublin the Kingdoms chief Magazine a storehouse of ten thousand Arms at that time but all other Forts and Magazines in that Kingdom were to be surprised and all the English or Protestants that joyned not with them to be murdered The seizure of Dublin Castle to which purpose many of the chief Rebels came to the City the day before was prevented by timely discovery of the Plot to the two Lords Justices by one Owen O Conally a Servant to Sir John Clotworthy which discovery was but the very night before that fatal day and the occasion of it very accidental or rather a strange providence of God by Mac-Mahons unadvised trusting this Owen with some relations concerning it at a Tavern Upon which discovery Mac-Mahon and the Lord Maguire were presently apprehended by the Lords Justices and many Conspirators of great note escaped that night out of Dublin So was Dublin saved that all Ireland might not be lost in one day But the horrid design was past prevention as to the general for the Conspirators were up at the day in all Counties round about and poor English Protestants arrived at Dublin every day robbed and spoiled of all they had relating how their houses were seized how Towns and Villages in all parts were fired and cruel outrages
at last though too much time were lost was contented to admit of that Article as the Parliament had done But that way which the Parliament thought most powerful to Reduce Ireland was by adventuring for proportions of Land there to be shared amongst the English Adventurers according to those sums of money which they would disburse or subscribe That so whosoever in person or purse helped towards the conquest of those bloody Rebels might be recompensed if the Work were done Propositions were framed in Parliament to that purpose The King confirmed these Propositions though at first he laughed at them and was heard to say That they were like to him who sold the Bears skin before the Bear was killed At last an Act was made enabling the Parliament with power to carry on that War until Ireland should be declared wholly subdued and that no Peace or Cessation of Arms should be ever made with the Rebels unless both Houses of Parliament consented to it The King then offered to go in person over into Ireland But the Parliament thought it was not fit to hazard the Kings person in such an expedition The King was then at Hampton Court distasted at the City and pretending the reasons of his absence to be fear of Tumults for besides what was before spoken of the numbers which flocked to Petition at Westminster the King was advertised That the day after he retired to Hampton which was about a week after his going to the House of Commons divers Citizens with Boats and Guns in them brought the five Members to Westminster with many promises not to forsake the Parliament From thence upon the twentieth of January the King sent a Message to the Parliament desiring them that seeing particular grievances were so many as that it would be tedious to present them by themselves they would digest them into one Body that so a clear Judgement might be made upon them And then they should see how ready he would be to equal or exceed the greatest examples of most indulgent Princes in their Acts of Grace and Favor to the People The Parliament gave him thanks and resolved speedily to consider of it but desired the King in the mean time to give them a sure ground of security while they discharged their Trust by putting the Tower with other principal Forts and the whole Militia of the Kingdom into such hands as the Parliament might trust and recommend to him The King refused to grant that Petition alleaging that he would reserve to himself the disposal of all those places as a principal and inseparable Flower of his Crown nevertheless he promised to entrust none but faithful Persons in any of those places Many reasons were shewed on both sides and many Petitions and Answers passed they still pressing for this Grant of the Militia and the King still denying it The King then residing at Hampton Court had found out a new way to weaken the Parliament in their number by sending for some who were his Servants to leave their sitting in the House to attend him Especially he aimed at the Earl of Essex his Lord Chamberlain and the Earl of Holland Groom of the Stool both whom he sent for but they chose rather to obey his Parliament-Writ than his private Command and continued sitting For which he sent a Messenger to demand the Staffe of the one and the Key of the other being the Ensigns of their Offices which they willingly resigned The Lord George Digby about that time had written a Letter to the Queen from Midleborough in Zealand whither he had fled from England when the Lords in Parliament had sent for him upon some Misdemeanors and if he appeared not in twenty days had proclaimed him Traytor in which he intimates That if the King will declare himself and retire to a safe place he should be able to wait upon him from thence as well as from any part of England over and above the service which he might do for him there in the mean time This Letter was intercepted and brought to the Parliament whereby they began to understand that the King had some design in hand against them which they more plainly afterwards discerned The King and Queen about the middle of February with their eldest Daughter Mary Princess of Orange went to Canterbury From which place while some of the Members of both Houses went between London and that City upon divers businesses the King signed the Bill for taking away Bishops Votes in Parliament From Canterbury they went to Dover from whence the Queen passed into Holland under pretext of keeping her Daughter company to her Husband But she carried with her the Crown-Jewels of England and pawned them there whereby she bought Arms for that War which ensued and was it seems then designed by the King against the Parliament After her departure the King taking the Prince and Duke of York with him went to Theobalds there he received a Petition from the Parliament on the first of March one thousand six hundred forty one wherein they desired him to Grant the Militia to abide neer London and not to carry the Prince away All which he denied and went immediately to New-Market There he was presented with a Declaration drawn by both Houses The Earls of Pembrook and Holland with some Commoners carried it In which they repeat the old Grievances his wicked War against Scotland the Irish Rebellion raised here by many presumptions his attempt of engaging the English Army against the Parliament his entring the House of Commons with the like and that his fear to reside neer London is without ground and pretended for nothing but to perplex the Common-wealth to hinder the relief of Ireland and encourage the ill-affected party in this Kingdom to which the King Answered with great indignation and afterwards answered it by a long Declaration of his own endeavoring to clear himself of some things and extenuate or excuse others accusing them for coining to themselves needless Fears and Jealousies and so these Commissioners departed from Theobalds while the Parliament suffered him without any real hinderance to the Peoples great griefs he passed to the City of York The Parliament in the mean time sit and Vote only against the Kings evil Counsel and make three Votes 1. That the Kings absence so far remote from his Parliament is not only an obstruction but may be a destruction to the Affairs in Ireland 2. That when the Lord and Commons in Parliament shall declare what the Law of the Land is to have this not only questioned and controverted but contradicted and a command that it should not be obeyed is an high breach of the Priviledge of Parliament 3. That they which advised the King to absent himself from the Parliament are enemies to the peace of this Kingdom and justly to be suspected as favorers of the Rebellion in Ireland From York the King sent a Message to the Parliament on the eighth of April 1642. that he would
main Army to Worcester where he made some stay The King at that time with a small Body of Horse went to Shrewsbury to which place he caused a Mint to be brought and Coined his Plate for many Gentlemen about that time had besides Money and Arms brought Plate in unto him At Shrewsbury he grew wonderful in strength so that within three weeks after his coming thither from a small inconsiderable Body of Horse he was grown into an Army consisting of about six thousand Foot and three thousand Horse and two thousand Dragoneirs From Shrewsbury the King marched along by Coventry and came to Southam being but a small distance from the Lord General Essex his Army from whence he struck a terror though so far off into the City of London it self for he was then neerer to London by a dayes march then the General was insomuch as that London made great provisions to Guard it self and the Parliament sent twelve Companies to possess and Guard Windsor-Castle The General thought it his chief work to follow the King's Army for fear he should march toward London and by reason of that haste left behinde him a great part of his Forces and great Artillery The King perceiving that and loath to lose so good an advantage of fighting before the Parliament-Forces were conjoyned turned back against General Essex who was also resolved to give battel A fair Champion Ground there is neer Keynton a Village in Warwickshire and not above twenty furlongs from that Village a great and steep hill upon which the King's Army had spread themselves and at the foot of that Hill a large Plain called The Vale of the Red-Horse here first the battel joyned the Royalists descending cheerfully down the hill and the Parliamentarians from Keynton approaching toward them The fight was begun with great courage and much slaughter on both parts on one side the Earl of Lindsey on the other the Earl of Essex manfully discharging the parts both of Generals and Souldiers But presently after the Battel was begun Prince Rupert who commanded the Horse in the King 's right Wing fell in with so furious a Charge upon the Parliaments left Wing where most of their Horse were placed that immediately he put to flight all those Parliament-Horse whose Foot likewise being left by the Horse betook themselves to flight Prince Rupert following the chase far and greedy of pillage whilest he was busie in seizing the Carriages and Baggage of his Enemies spent so much time therein that the King's Victory which was almost gotten was by that means quite lost for in the King 's left Wing the fortune was nor equal whom Sir William Balfore charged so roundly that he broke the best Foot-Regiments and seized upon the King's Artillery There was a bloody fight in that place the Kings Standard was taken but soon lost again there were slain and taken Prisoners many brave men among whom Lindsey the King's General was taken Prisoner who died within few hours of his wounds Night parted the fight and gave a safe retreat to both sides both sides challenged the Victory to themselves for which thanks were publickly given to God both by the Parliament and the King for on both sides appeared some marks of Victory as Ensigns Canons and Prisoners taken Concerning the number of the slain was no agreement both partyes reporting too falsly but it was thought that of both Armies though more of the King's side then the other were slain in that battel above five thousand General Essex marched to Coventry to refresh his Army the King to Oxford as to his Winter-Quarters Prince Rupert with a Body of Horse flew up and down the Countrey Night and Day plundering and robbing Towns and Villages and made his Excursions so far out of Oxford that he struck a terrour into the City of London it self insomuch as that they desired General Essex who had designed to follow the King that he would bring his Army neerer to London Essex on the seventh Day of November came to Westminster quartering his Forces in the adjacent Villages and was received with great Honour by both Houses of Parliament and was presented with five thousand pounds as a gratuity with a large acknowledgement of his valour and pains undergone for the Commonwealth Before the General departed from London another bloody Battel was fought about Brainford And so happened the occasion the Parliament grieved for this unnatural War desirous to save the Kingdom and recover Ireland had agreed upon a Petition for Accommodation to be presented to the King being then at Colebrook by the Earls of Northumberland and Pembrook the Lord Wainman Master Perpoint and Sir John Ipsley The King gave a fair Answer protesting before God That he was grieved for his peoples sufferings and in order to peace was willing to reside neer London and receive such Propositions as they would send and treat with them As soon as the Commissioners were gone with this Answer the King's Artillery for so all Relations agree advanced forward with the Horse thorow Colebrook after them toward London and taking advantage of a great Mist which happened that Night they marched to Brainford and fell upon the Parliaments Forces that were quartered there which was a broken Regiment of Colonel Hollis's The King's Army killed many of them and had in likelihood utterly destroyed them all if the Lord Brook's and Colonel Hamden's Regiments that were billeted not far off had not come in to their relief who maintained a great and bloody fight against the King's Army till both sides at Night retreated many were slain and taken Prisoners on both sides and both reported themselves Conquerers as before it happened at Keynton Battel News of this unexpected Fight was soon at London where the General was sitting in Parliament whither also the noise of their great Artillery was easily heard he took Horse immediately to get strength together and relieve his engaged men but Night had parted them and the King was retired to his best advantages All that Night Forces came out of London thither so that on the Sunday Morning being the fourteenth of November a wonderful number of armed men were met and had so far encompast the King's Army small in comparison of them that many hoped for an end of the War but God was nor so pleased for the King escaped by reason of this error Three thousand Parliament Souldiers were then at Kingston they were commanded to leave that Town and march speedily thorow Surrey and over London-Bridge so thorow the City to Brainford to stop the Enemies passage to London A reason of that Command was afterwards given because the Lord General was not assured of strength enough to stop the Enemy from going to London nor could he be beforehand sure of so great a Force as he afterwards perceived to be come to him before morning Thus did the enclosed King escape and retreated thorow that Town of Kingston being so abandon'd by the Parliaments souldiers
and after he had plundered the country thereabouts retired safely to his Winter-Quarters at Oxford The Parliament considering this action of the King began to hope little upon any Treaty resolving That the General should speedily pursue the King's Forces and fall upon them and the City of London to encourage the Parliament made a Petition to them wherein they entreated That they would proceed no further in the business of Accommodation because evil counsel was so prevalent with the King that he would but delude them that they had heard his Forces are weak and entreat that his Excellency would follow and fall upon them the City as heretofore being ready to spend with all willingness their lives and fortunes to assist the Parliament For which Petition and Protestation the Parliament returned thanks to the City and according as they desired it was decreed in Parliament FINIS Book II. A Short mention of the Progress of this Civil War THe beginnings of the Civil war together with the Series of causes from whence it sprung as likewise the degrees by which it grew have been already breifly and clearly shewed The things which remain to be unfolded are of so great a weight of so various a nature and of so many peices that scarce any Historian I might say History it self is sufficient to weave fully together so many particulars my intention therefore is to make onely a short mention not a full Narration of that Variety For the War went on with horrid rage in many places at one time and the fire once kindled cast forth through every corner of the land not onely sparks but devouring flames insomuch as the kingdom of England was divided into more Wars than Counties nor had she more fields than skirmishes nor Cities than Sieges and almost all the Palaces of Lords and great Houses were turned every where into Garrisons of War they fought at once by Sea and Land and through all England who could but lament the miseries of his Country sad spectacles were of plundering and firing Villages and the fields otherwise wast and desolate were rich onely and terribly glorious in Camps and Armies The following Summer namely in the year one thousand six hundred forty three proved for a long time fatal to the Parliament and Fortune seemed to have condemned the cause of liberty so exceedingly did the Kings party flourish in successes and Victories and the Parliaments condition every where low so that they were neer to ruine who in the end prevailed In the West Sir William Waller a Parliament-chieftain who had gotten divers Victories and then almost quite vanquished Sir Ralph Hopton was at last namely in July utterly defeated by the Lord Wilmot who came from Oxford with an Army of the Kings and having lost all his Army returned to London and such as the fortune of the Field was was the condition of Towns and Garrisons for immediately after Wallers defeat the two greatest Cities of all the West were yeilded up Bristol to Prince Rupert and Excester to Prince Maurice At the same time in the North of England was the like success where the Lord Fairfax who with his valiant Son had long and prosperously maintained the cause of the Parliament being now over-powred by a puissant Enemy the Earl of Newcastle and almost all his Forces scattered was driven into Hull and there besieged Essex himself the great General at the same time his Army decreasing suddainly some dying of sickness others for want forsaking their colours was constrained to leave the field and return to London quartering the sick and weak remnant of his Army at Kingston and other adjacent places until a Recruit could be made for him The Parliamentarians were now in a desperate condition and their strengths every where broken on the other side the Royalists strong and dreadful in Arms Men and Horses conquerours of all the West of Wales and the North of England as far as the very borders of Scotland One onely Town of Note in the Midland Country Glocester stood out yet faithful and constant to the Parliament and much desired by the King who in great disdain that this Town after Bristol and Excester were yeilded should stand out came in person to besiedge it with a great Army The Queen was now arrived in England and had brought with her great store of Armes bought in Holland with the money which she had raised by pawning the Crown-Jewels there whose coming at this time seemed rather to a Triumph than a War Glocester not onely staid the career of the Kings Victories but made a great change in the Conditions of the sides The City was gallantly defended against a great and flourishing Army wherein Massey the Governour justly gained a wonderful renown so long did he defend the City until General Essex could be recruited with an Army great enough to raise the Siege and march thither from London eighty miles Famous and honourable in the judement of all men was that expedition of General Essex who by solong a March fighting often with great bodies of the Kings Horse by the way brought notwithstanding his whole Army safe to Glocester raised the Siege relieved that Town and in his retreat from thence encountered and vanquished the Kings Army in that memorable Battel of Newberry After this time the parliament revived of whose condition Wise men might justly have doubted if the King leaving Glocester had marched directly with his Victorious Army to London which was then not at all fortified and miserably distracted with factions within it Or besides if the Earl of Newcastle letting alone the besieg●ng of Hull which likewise proved fruitless had powred out his numerous forces upon the Eastern associated Counties but it otherwise pleased God who is the onely Lord of Hoasts and by whose providence all things are guided Both sides now by this Victory of Essex seemed to be put into an equal ballance both of strength and reputation and this sad War not onely likely to be continued but extended to a greater latitude on one side the Parliament inviting to their assistance their brethren of Scotland on the other side the King calling in his Irish The Scots by a Covenant to be taken by both Nations for conservation of Religion Laws and Liberties the Irish by a cessation of Armes granted by the King a peace being also promised were drawn in The Scots promised to the Parliament from whom Commissioners were sent to Edinburgh about that business that they would bring into England to their assistance an Army consisting of one and twenty thousand Horse and Foot the Parliament engaged themselves to pay the Scots one hundred thousand pounds toward the charge of raising that Army But the King dealt not so openly with those bloudy Irish in bargaining for their assistance but by a pretence of cessation of Arms for the behoof of the English Protestants in that Kingdom which cessation notwithstanding was for the benefit of the Irish Rebels in lieu of
notwithstanding the War in England without strangers help went on with rage and bloud enough In midst of these calamities of War some hope of peace began to appear though it soon vanished again and conditions were proposed both by King and Parliament upon which in the following February as hereafter shall be said they both treated The end of this year and beginning of the next were notably tragical in the punishment and death of eminent men the two Hothams Father and Son having been condemned for Treason for breaking the trust of Parliament and conspiring with the enemy to betray Hull with other crimes after they had been imprisoned above a whole year in the Tower of London were this December both beheaded and Sir Alexander Carew not many dayes before who was condemned for the same crime suffered the same punishment Famous also at that time was the death of William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury the crimes objected against him were too many and of too various a nature to be here related four years almost had this unhappy old man been a prisoner yet not enjoyed so much as the quiet of a prison for oftentimes about fourscore several dayes he was carried from the Tower to Westminster and there arraigned in the House of Lords so the Fates were pleased in a sad compensation to equal his adversity even in time with his prosperity This January he was beheaded his life being spun out so long till he might see which was the observation of many some few daies before his death the book of Liturgy abolished and the Directory composed by the Sinod at Westminster established Though the King and Parliament were both thinking of a Treaty for Peace yet the care of War was not neglected the King being solicitous about getting of forreign aid and the Parliament about new modelling their own Army About this business which seemed of the highest concern there was some debate between the Lords and Commons the Lords were against that Change alleagïng that there was no need of new Commanders where the old ones could be accused of no fault that men of the noblest rank were fittest to command Armies the contrary whereof might breed confusion in the Common-wealth The House of Commons on the other side though they made a noble mention of the Earl of Essex and those other Peers which commanded in the Armies alleaged notwithstanding that the Parliament forces had been often distracted through the emulation of Commanders from whence it proceeded that some things very well designed had not had a prosperous issue that the Army would be better disciplined under one sole Commander At last when they were agreed a General was chosen to command the new Army which was Sir Thomas Fairfax a man of eminent valour and as much modesty who was then absent in the North but so great a business could not suddainly be finished and now the time approached for the Treaty of Vxbridge in which three heads were to be debated 1. Of Religion and Church government 2. Of the Militia of England 3. Concerning the business of Ireland But the King before this Treaty began used all meanes to assure himself of forreign aid by Letters he urged the Queen who was then in France to solicite that King and other Catholikes to assist him and that the Queen Regent would detain the Parliaments Ships in France He was very earnest likewise for assistance from the Duke of Lorraign that he might get into England that wicked Army of his so notorious through Germany and Flanders for all Villany of which Army as of that of Marius when the entred Rome it may be said Nulli gestanda dabantur Signa Ducis nisi qui scelerum jam fecerat usum Attuleratque in Castra nefas No man his Ensigns bore But who the badge of some known mischeif wore And brought guilt to the Camp At last hope was given him from the Duke of Lorraign of ten thousand men and for bringing of these Souldiers into England Goffe was sent into Holland to negotiate for shipping and other necessaries The King likewise desired assistance at that time from the bloudy Irish Rebels and by his Letters commanded Ormond to make a peace with those Rebels and to promise and grant to them a free exercise of their popish Religion and to assure them that if by their assistance he could but finish his War in England he would abrogate all those Laws heretofore made against the Papists there he gave thanks likewise to Muskery Plunket and other of those Rebels promising a pardon for all that was past But they were much troubled at the Treaty for peace with the Parliament not being ignorant that one necessary condition of such a peace must be that the War in Ireland against them should be continued and prosecuted The King therefore to remove this their scrupulous fear wrote to Ormond to this effect That he could not refuse to make a peace with his Parliament onely in favour of those Irish yet notwithstanding from that very consideration if Ormund handled the matter wisely he might raise an advantage to hasten a peace with those Irish in letting them know their own danger how they were excluded from all hope of pardon by the Parliament For saith he if we agree upon all other conditions it will not be convenient for me to disagree onely concerning those Irish therefore let them take what I offer while time is and hasten the Peace and when once my faith is passed no humane force shall make me break it The Queen also remaining in France writing to her husband seemed to grieve much that at Vxbridge they were to treat of Religion in the first place affirming That if any thing severe against the Catholikes should be concluded and yet a peace not be made the King could not hope hereafter for any assistance from the Catholike Princes or from the Irish who must needs think that after they had done their best they should at last be forsaken She often entreats the King that he would never forsake the Bishops the Catholikes nor those faithful friends of his that served him in his Wars the King promiseth her that he would never forsake his friends for a peace onely perswades her to hasten as much as she can the aides from France saying That whilest London is distracted between the Presbiterians and Independents both may be ruined In February the Commissioners on both sides met at Vxbridge to treat for peace For the King came the Duke of Richmond the Marquess of Hartford the Earls of Southampton Dorset and Chichester the Lords Dunsmore and Capel with Seimour Culpeper Gardiner Hide Lane Bridgman Palmer and others For the Parliament the Earls of Northumberland Pembrooke Salisbury and Denbigh of the House of Commons Wainmar Vane Perpoint Hollis Prideaux Saint John Whitlock and Crew and besides these six Commissioners of the Nobility and Gentry of Scotland But nothing at all was concluded at that Treaty The King would
for then Fairfax was ordered to besiege Oxford but the design was not good and the Commmittee of both Kingdoms though too late repented it For in the mean time the King securely marched Northward with his Army and took the considerable Town of Leicester Fairfax recalled from the siege of Oxford while Cromwell was sent away to strengthen the Eastern Counties with all his forces followed the King nor was the famous battel long deserred in which all men conjectured what the liberties and Laws of England and what the Kings power should he must be tried by the sword Naseby fields not far from Northampton were the place where the fate of England was to be determined The fourteenth of June was the memorable day nor was the number of the Armies very unequal the Royalists onely were strongest in Horse nor the ordering of their Battaliaes much unlike The Kings Front was filled with brave Troops of Horse the Foot stood in the second Body The right wing was commanded by the Princes Rupert and Maurice the left by Sir Jacob Ashley other Commanders of great quality susteining their parts The Parliamentarian Foot made a firm Body in the midst The wings were guarded by the Horse the right wing was commanded by Cromwell who to the exceeding joy of the whole Army that very night before the battel was fought arrived there the left wing by Ireton Colonel Rossiter a brave Commander but a little before the battel began came with his Horse and took his place with Cromwell on the right wing the Foot was commanded by Major Generall Skippon and divided into two Bodies The Parliamentarians word was God with us The Roialists God and Queen Mary Fortune at the first as in some other battels seemed a while to slatter the Kings side for the left wing of the Parliament was worsted and the Commander Ireton receiving two wounds was taken Prisoner and kept so during the fight Prince Rupert with great fury fell in and pursued that routed wing insomuch that the day had been lost if Cromwell who came on with as great force had not in like manner routed and overthrown the Kings left wing the business now seemed in an equal ballance and the wings on both sides being thus scattered they fought some time upon dubious hopes magnanimous Skippon was grievously wounded yet would not forsake the battel but with all possible endeavours discharged his part till the Victory was obtained the Fairfaxians at last charged so fiercely upon the Roialists that they no longer could endure the brunt the Horse in all disordered hast fled toward Leicester and forsook the whole body of their Foot with their Artillery and carriages who being surrounded by the Fairfaxians threw down their Arms crying for Quarter and were all taken Prisoners This battel was the happiest of all other to the Parliament the Victory absolute and undoubted and almost five thousand prisoners carried to London the Kings Standard and one hundred other colours were taken with all their Ordnance and a very rich booty a great quantity of gold and silver and all the secret Letters of the King came by this meanes into the Conquerous hands but so few were slain in this battel that a reader may justly wonder how so many prisoners should be taken and so much wealth purchased with the loss of so little bloud for on the Kings side scarce four hundred were slain on the Parliaments scarce an hundred Cromwell with his Horse pursued the vanquished Roialists who fled apace and betook themselves to divers of their own Garrisons and bringing back a great number of Prisoners returned to the General who now marched with his Victorious Army to Leicester which was soon rendred to him Fairfax leaving a Garrison in Leicester that he might make use of his Victory to the good of the Common-wealth and hinder the King from recruiting himself to protract this sad War resolved to follow him close he therefore marched Westward that he might both pursue the King and raise the Siege of Taunton The Kings letters taken at Naseby were publikely read in London before a great Assembly of Citizens where many of both Houses of Parliament were present and leave was given to as many as pleased or knew the Kings hand to refute the calumny of those who said the Letters were counterfeit to peruse them all out of which a selected bundle were printed by command of the Parliament From the reading of these Letters many discourses of the people arose for there appeared his transactions with the Irish Rebels and with the Queen for assistance from France and the Duke of Lorraign of which before is spoken Many good men were sorry that the Kings actions agreed no better with his words that he openly protested before God with horrid imprecations that he endeavoured nothing so much as the preservation of Protestant Religion and rooting out of Popery yet in the mean time under hand he promised to the Irish Rebels an abrogation of those Laws against them which was contrary to his late expressed promises in these words I will never abrogate the Law against the Papists and again I abhor to think of bringing forraign Souldiers into the Kingdom and yet he solicited the Duke of Lorraign the French the Danes and the very Irish for assistance they were vexed also that the King was so much ruled by the will of his wife as to do every thing by her prescript that Peace War Religion and Parliament should be at her disposal It appeared besides out of those Letters with what mind the King treated with the Parliament at Vxbridge and what could be hoped by that Treaty when writing to the Queen he affirms that if he could have had but two more donsenting to his Vote he would not have given the name of Parliament to them at Westminster at last he agreed to it in this sense That it was not all one to call them a Parliament and to acknowledge them so to be and upon that reason which might have displeased his own side he calls those with him at Oxford a mungrel Parliament The King after his overthrow at Naseby fled to Lichfield and from thence he went to Hereford to raise forces especially Foot for he had still store of brave Horse that came to him after that Battel in Wales in Cornwall and in other places but nothing at all that following year prospered with the King Fortune enclining wholly to the Parliaments side whose cause it appeared that God approved by the grant of so many strange and signal Victories to them the valour of the Roialists availed not and all their endeavours fell to nothing General Fairfax after the Battel of Naseby by long Marches passed into the West Taunton was releived onely by the fame of his approach for Goring raised his Siege and went away That constant Town had been reduced to great extremities it had suffered much and done great things against strong Enemies and could not at this time in
possibility have held out long without some releif The Parliament rejoyced much at the delivery of that Town three Parliament Garrisons about that time and the foregoing year behaved themselves with such courage and constancy as might deserve to be celebrated in a larger History viz. Lime Plimouth and Taunton all which having been often besieged by Prince Maurice Greenvile Goring and other Commanders had not onely held out against those strong Enemies but much broken their Forces The things which that new Army under the conduct of Fairfax did that following year taking no rest all that sharp and bitter Winter were much to be wondred at how many strong Towns and Forts they took how many field Victories they obtained the stories of evey several moneth will declare of which because they are more acurately described by other pens I shall here onely make a short mention for within the space of one year all the Western Counties of England great Armies under the conduct of Prince Rupert Greenvile Hopton and Goring being utterly vanquished and brought to nothing were reduced to the obedience of Parliament In the moneths of August and September were taken Bath and Sherburn and Bristol it self the greatest and most wealthiest City of the whole West was by Prince Rupert surrendred to General Fairfax The Army also when it was divided by reason of the multiplicity of their work was not less successful in the parts of it Winchester and Basing taken by Cromwel the Devizes and Barclay by other Commanders Fairfax himself marching that cold December into Devonshire took Tiverton and with strange felicity stormed and took Dartmouth and afterwards drove the Kings Armies into Cornwall whom Fairfax pursuing at Torrington gave Hopton a great overthrow In the moneth of February with his Victorious Army he entred Cornwall for fear of whom Prince Charles fled into the Islands of Silly and in March following all Hoptons forces by the Command of the Conquerour Fairfax were disbanded and sent away and the whole County of Cornwall reduced to the obedience of Parliament In the following April Excester and Barnstable were surrendred to Fairfax and Bridgewater stormed but when they yeilded taken to mercy S. Michaels Mount the farthest angle of Cornwall was also surrendred to Collonel Hamond Thus Fairfax the Conquerour of the West having fitted all things for his expedition to make an end of the War is marching to besiege Oxford Woodstock was already taken by Colonel Rainsborough but in all these moneths that the General had done such great things in the West the other Commanders of Parliament were not unfortunate the Fates seeming to conspire at that side in the North and midland Counties of England about the midst of Summer Carlise was surrendered by Glenham the Governour to the Scottish Army a Garrison of Scots was put into that Town of which the English complained as being against the Covenant the Parliament also wrote to Leven to restore Carlisle to the English not that they did suspect any evil from their Brethren but that conditions might be observed and the mouths of ill-affected people stopped who were too apt to say that The Scots came into England not as friends but Freebooters From that time the Parliament ordained to have their Commissioners as the Scots had theirs at London resident in Edinburgh to be present with the Parliament of Scotland and to that purpose the Earl of Rutband the Lord Wharton and of the Commons Sir Henry Vane the Elder Sir William Armin Mr. Hatcher and Mr. Goodwin were chosen Glenham with his men after the surrender of Carlisle went to Newarke The Scottish Army about that time marched under Leven to Newark to besiege that Town but the Scottish horse staid not long there being forced to return into the North to the assistance of their distressed Countrey For the English Parliament at that time in midst of their own prosperity were notwithstanding mourners for the calamity of Scotland a great unexpected and wonderful calamity in which the frailty of humane affairs and the mutable condition of Kingdoms was set forth by a memorable example all Scotland within the space of one moneth was lost and recovered quite sunk and again emergent The man that thus plagued Scotland was the Earl of Montross one on whom the Kings hopes so much then depended that out of an earnest desire to joyn his forces to Montross the King with a body of good horse marched Northward but by the forces of Pointz Gell Rossiter and others the Kings expedition was stopped that he could not meet Montross for it had been agreed betwixt the King and Montross that at the same time he from the South should march Northward and the other from the North to meet him should come Southward that the Kings horse joyned to his foot might make a considerable Army in those parts but the Kings passage though he tryed many wayes was as beforesaid stopped Montross mindful of his promise broke out into the Southern parts of Scotland with greater success than could be hoped having scarce 4000. Highlanders and Irish A place there was neer to Kilsithe which the craggy Mountains and straitened passages had made fit for ambushes where Montross had seated himself thither the Army of the State confident of their number whilest unadvisedly they pursued the theeving Highlanders fell into the cunningly-disposed ambushes and were cut off with a miserable slaughter above five thousand were slain and none almost escaped but whom the wearied Conquerours had not strength to kill for cruel Montross spared none crying out They had no need of Prisoners This overthrow of Kilsithe at one battle had utterly ruined the State of Scotland if David Lesley about a moneth after giving an absolute overthrow to Montross had not restored it for after this so unexpected a defeat the State of Scotland had no Army for a Reserve or Force to stop the passage of the Conquerour to whom almost all their Towns presently yeilded The papists and Malignants and all neuters with those that had before dissembled their affections now joyned with him the rest were cut off all the chief Nobility of the Covenanters were forced to fly into England A publike Fast and Humiliation was kept by the English for the calamity of their brethren of Scotland General Fairfax and other of the chief Commanders wrote to Leven That they accounted the Calamity of Scotland to be their own and that if their affairs at home would permit and the Parliament would command it they would earnestly undertake that War and venture their blouds as freely for the Scots as for the English till the Enemies of the three Kingdoms were fully vanquished But Montross his cruell raign lasted not long scarce a whole moneth to vindicate Scotland David Lesley was sufficient who with his Horse coming thither at Selkirk gave Montross so total a defeat that it seemed fully to recompence Kilsithe the Victory was gotten in an hours space and as it was observed by
their Army had not satisfied the expectation of the English but had lyen idle in the best time of the year if they were so precise in observation of the Covenant why then contrary to the Covenant did the Scots put Garrisons into Newcastle Tinmouth and Carlisle neither was it just in the Scots to object any thing in the case of Religion seeing the Parliament are now labouring in it being a business which requires time and mature deliberation From these jarrs the King hoped for some advantage to himself and now Oxford began to be blocked up by Ireton and Fleetwood and every day the coming of Fairfax himself and a straiter Siege of that City was expected therefore before this should happen the King resolved to go out of Oxford and communicating his mind to some inward Councellors above all other places he pitched upon the Scottish Camp to the Scots therefore as they lay before Newark the King sent Montruel the French Ambassador and himself soon after as Ashburnhams man with a Cloak-back behind him escaped unknown out of Oxford and came to Newark From this enterprise the King was disswaded by some who loved the safety of their Country and entreated rather to deliver himself to Fairfax which might in prohability put an end to the War but the King was obstinate in his design not doubting but that dissentions daily growing between the two Nations he should be the more welcome to the Scots safe from harm and be able by this means either to make a peace upon his own conditions or kindle a new war The King came first to Montruels house and from thence to Southwell into the Scottish Camp the besieged Newarkers understanding of the Kings coming and being brought into great straits harkned to conditions and surrendred the Town The Scots seemed to be amazed at the Kings unexpected coming to them and so signified the matter to the English Commissioners then present with them upon the place Letters were immediately written of it to London and to Edinburgh the English Parliament required the Scots to detain the King at Southwell but they contrary to that Order carried him away to Kelham where a greater part of their Army lay and soon after without expecting any further Orders from the Parliament of England removed their Camp marched Northward and carried away the King with them to Newcastle The Scots excused their departure because Newark being yeilded no work was left for them but alleadged That as the King came to them of his own accord unexpected so he followed their Army neither being entreated nor fobidden by them but they seemed to hasten their departure by reason of a rumor whether true or falsly pretended that Cromwell with all his Horse was marching toward them But the English upon this complained much both against the Scots and the King To the Scots they objected the breach of Covenant and Treaty To the King they imputed it As a great obstinacy and despight toward the English Nation whom he had so long injured that now in his low ebb he should in England leaving the Parliament of England go to the Scots their Mercenaries if he desired peace why did he not embrace it being offered upon such conditions as besides his necessities the common safety of his People invited him to rather than go about to kindle new fire between the two confederate Nations In the beginning of May General Fairfax with his whole Army came within sight of Oxford and disposing his quarters round about the City summoned the Governour Glenham to surrender it Glenham answered that he would first send to the King and when he knew his mind would do what was fitting this answer was not allowed Nevertheless Fairfax considering with himself which was also the opinion of all his Commanders that it was likely to prove a long Siege being a City excellent well fortified and a strong Garrison in it consisting of at least five thousand most of them old souldiers stored with provisions arms and ammunition for a great while yet was put into hope of sooner obtaining it by intelligence which he had gotten out of Letters and by some Spies that within they were much divided in their opinions and the greater part especially those of the Nobility desired it should be surrendred that they might have while time was honorable conditions Therefore they began to Treat and not onely between the Army and the City but in Parliament at London it was debated and at last decreed That the besieged should rather have the best conditions than that their precious Army should be consumed before so strong a place whilst in the mean time many things might fall out ill to the Common-wealth But the chief reason of granting such large conditions was that the conquering Army it being now Mid-summer might be transported into Ireland to vindicate that afflicted Country against the barbarous and bloudy Rebels but that so pious an intention of the Parliament was quite frustrated by the Kings going to the Scots of whom at that time there were some jealousies and that the King went to the Scots for that very purpose it was believed by Letters which were intercepted afterward written to Ormund before he went out of Oxford We hope that this design of ours though it may seem dangerous to our person will prove advantagious for Ireland in hindering the Rebels meaning the Parliament from transporting any forces into that Kingdom Thus Oxford was surrendred and at the appointed day all the souldiers of that Garrison marched away by Fairfax his Army with great quiet and modesty on both sides The Duke of York was honorably conducted to London where two of the Kings children remained thither also went all the Noble men nor was it denied to any of the Besieged to go to London but the Princes Rupert and Maurice being commanded to go out of England prepared for their departure The great Seal of England with other Ensigns of Majesty were layed up in the Library which afterward carried to London was by the command of Parliament for the Parliament when the great Seal three years before was carried away to the King had made a new one broken in pieces together with the other smaller Seals Prince Charles about that time distrusting the condition of his side fled from Silly with a few of his inward Counsellors and went to Jersey that from thence he might pass into France to the Queen his Mother While the Prince remained in Jersey the Commissioners both of England and Scotland intreated the King that the Prince his Son might continue within his Dominions lest if he should go into France it might be inconvenient at this time and an obstruction to the desired peace but the King promising them that he would think of it wrote in the mean time this short letter to the Prince CHarles I write to you onely that you should know where I am and that I am in health not to direct you at this time
by leave of the Parliament made a voluntary Secession for six moneths Concerning that Order of Parliament that the King should go to Richmond the General desired to be excused intreating them not to command that untill things were more quiet and that they would appoint no Residence for the King nearer to London than they would allow the Quarter of the Army to be After which the King was conveied to Roiston thence to Hatfield no long after to Causum while the Army quartered at Reading From whence when the General with his Army marched to Bedford the King went to the Earl of Bedfords House neer Ouborn About that time was rumoured a very dangerous conspiracy in London of Citizens Apprentices and others against the Army namely that many Citizens and Apprentices and other people had privately listed themselves to make a Force against the Army The General hearing this certified the Cities Commissioners who were then with him at the Head-quarters of it Who made hast to London to examine and quiet those troubles but at that time between the two embittered Factions nothing but suspitions and tumults could be These Jealousies daily encreasing on July 22. the Parliament made an Order to change that Militia of the City which had been established upon the fourth of May and put others which were better affected to the Army in their rooms Upon which Order the Citizens of that faction were wonderfully incensed and petitioned the House on the twenty six of July which being read seemed rather a command than a petition This was carried and followed by a dissolute multitude of Citizens Apprentises and other unruly persons who pressed to the very doors of the Parliament and cried out in a threatning way that before the House rise they must order according to their Petition and so far did their violence prevail that they extorted an Order for the re-establishing of the former Militia But not content with that when the House was rising they took the Speaker and rudely thrust him again into his chair detaining both him and the rest of the Members there an unheard of violation of Parliament until they enforced from them another Order which was That the King should come to London After this rude violation the Houses adjourned until Fryday next which was the thirtieth of July Upon which day both the Speakers being absent for they with the greatest part of the Members had left London and withdrawn themselves to the Army new Speakers were chosen the Lord Hunsdon and Mr. Henry Pelham a Barrester by whom Orders were made that day 1. That the King should come to London 2. That the Militia of London should be authorized to raise Forces for defence of the City 3. Power was given to the same Militia to choose a General for those Forces It was likewise Ordered that the aforesaid eleven Members Impeached by the Army should return to their seats in Parliament The Citizens armed with these Orders presently proceed to raising of Forces of which they Elected Massey to be their General In the mean time the Lords and Commons who had left London consulting with the General and chief Commanders of the Army made an Order That all Acts and Decrees that had passed on the 26. of July and since should be accounted null and void and that they did adhere to the Declaration of the General and Councel of the Army It was likewise Decreed that the General with his Army should march to London But when the Citizens heard of the Armies approach their stomacks being somewhat abated and their opinions so much divided in Common-Councel that it appeared impossible for them suddenly to raise any forces to oppose the Army they sent to the General for a Pacification which by the consent of the Members of parliament then with him was granted to them upon these conditions 1. That they should desert the Parliament now sitting and the Eleven Impeached Members 2. That they should recall their Declaration lately divulged 3. They should relinquish their present Militia 4. They should deliver up to the General all their Forts and the Tower of London 5. They should disband all the Forces they had raised And do all things else which were necessary for the publick tranquillity All which things none of them daring to deny were presently ratified On the sixt day of August the General with his Army came to Westminster and with him the Speakers of both Houses together with the rest of the Lords and Commons whom he restored all to their former Seats Both the Speakers in the name of the whole Parliament gave thanks to the General they made him Commander of all the Forces in England and in Wales and Constable of the Tower of London a moneths pay was likewise given as a gratuity to the Army The next day General Fairfax Lieutenant General Cromwel Major General Skippon and the rest of the Commanders with the whole Army marched through London from the Western part thereof to the Tower where some Commands were changed and the Militia otherwise setled Then least the City should swell with too much power her Militia by Order of Parliament was divided and Authority given to Westminster Southwark and the Hamblets about the Tower to exercise and command their own Militiaes Thus was the Presbyterian faction depressed and the Parliament thus restored were very intent upon the business of annulling all those Acts which in their absence and by that tumultuous violence had been made and in punishing the Authors of those Seditions FINIS Book III. A short mention of the Originall and Progress of the Second War THe Parliament restored the Militia of London setled and the other Commands fitly disposed the General Fairfax marched out of London and quartered his Army in the Towns and Villages adjacent onely leaving some Regiments about White-Hall and the Mews to guard the Parliament his Head-Quarters being at Putney the King about the middle of August was brought to the most stately of all his Palaces Hampton Court While the King remained at Hampton Court he seemed not at all a restrained man But a Prince living in the splendor of a Court so freely to his presence were all sorts of people admitted to kiss his hands and do all obeysances whatsoever None were forbidden to wait upon him Nor did the people from London onely and the adjacent Towns resort to the King but his Servants also from beyond the Seas even those who by Order of Parliament had been forbidden and Voted Delinquents such as Ashburnham Barkley and the rest who now by the permission of the Army had safe recourse to him But upon what reasons or design this permission was many wondred Stirred up by these examples if not sent for by the King the Lords formerly of his Councel at Oxford the Duke of Richmond Marquess Hartford the Earls of Southampton and Dorset with the Lord Seymor about the beginning of October came to the King as if to consult and give their
settlement to the Kingdom we have expressed our real wishes that if the King would in things necessary and essential to the clearing setling and securing of those publick interests give his concurrence to put them past future disputes then his Rights should be considered and setled so far as might be consistent with those superior interests of the publick and the security thereof for future And that by an Address to the King upon things so purely essential to those publick ends it might once more come to a clear trial whether we could with the preservation of the King's person and in particular interests have a security to the other hath been our earnest desire our great expectation and our endeavour that we and others might be in a patient waiting for such an issue Now in the Parliaments last Addresses to the King we finde they have insisted onely upon some few things so essential to that interest of the Kingdom which they have hitherto engaged for as that without betraying the safety of the Kingdom and themselves and all that engaged with them in that cause without denying that which God in the issue of the war hath been such a Testimony unto they could not go lower and those things granted they have offered to treat for all the rest Thus we account that great business of a settlement to the Kingdom and security to the publick interest thereof by and with the King's Concurrence to be brought unto so clear a trial as that upon the King's denial of those things we can see no further hopes of settlement or security that way And therefore understanding that upon the consideration of that denial added to so many other the Honourable House of Commons by several Votes upon munday last have resolved not to make any further address or application to the King nor receive any from him nor to suffer either in others We do freely declare for our selves and the Army That we are resolved through the grace of God firmly to adhere with and stand by the Parliament in the things voted last munday concerning the King and in what shall be further necessary for prosecution thereof and for setling and securing of the Parliament and Kingdom without the King and against him or any other that shall hereafter partake with him Windsor Jan. 9. 1647. The Parliament also made a publick Declaration about the beginning of February for satisfaction of all men in general concerning the causes of their Votes in which besides the Kings former misdeeds related before in other Remonstrances they declare how often they had treated with him That although they were never forced to any Treaty yet no less then seven times they had applied themselves to the King with Propositions containing nothing but what was necessary to the peace and security of the Kingdom How they had offered him Propositions at Oxford afterwards at Uxbridge and then after he was quite vanquished in war at Newcastle and lastly after the departure of the Scots at Hampton Court All which hath been perpetually denied by him By such a Declaration did the Parliament endeavour to appease the unquiet mindes of people but no Arguments nor Decrees could serve to asswage their fury nor prevent the storms which were then arising Force onely was required and wise Councel to search out conspiracies and suppress the Tumults which were feared Therefore part of the Army was quartered about Westminster the Mews and other places of the City And the month before these high transactions some Lords and Commons were chosen out of both Houses to be a Committee for the safety of the Commonwealth and sate together at Derby-house in the same place where the Committee of both Kingdoms England and Scotland had sitten before To this Committee power was given to suppress Tumults and Insurrections and to that purpose to raise Forces as they saw occasion The Members of this Committee were seven Lords namely the Earls of Northumberland Kent Warwick and Manchester the-Lords Say Wharton and Roberts and thirteen of the House of Commons Mr. Perpoint Mr. Fines Sir Henry Vane Senior and Junior Sir William Armin Sir Arthur Hazlerig Sir Gilbert Gerrard Sir John Evelin Lieutenant General Cromwel Mr. St. John Mr. Wallop Mr. Crew Mr. Brown The Parliament though victorious though guarded with a gallant Army no forces visibly appearing against it yet was never in more danger All men began in the Spring to prophecy that the Summer would be a hot one in respect of Wars seeing how the Countries were divided in Factions the Scots full of threats the city of London as full of unquietness And more sad things were feared where least was seen rumours every day frightning the people of secret Plots and treasonable meetings From whence every man began to foresee slaughter and war as Mariners use to foresee a rising Tempest Cum longo per multa volumina tractu Aestuat unda minax flatusque incerta futuri Turbida testantur conceptos aequora ventos The threatning waves in tracks voluminous Boil up the Seas by blasts uncertain blown Betoken many windes conception The King's Party began to swell with great hopes and look upon themselves not as vanquish'd but Conquerors nor could they forbear vaunting everywhere but talked of the Kings rising and ruine of the Parliament The same thing seemed to be the wish of those whom they called Presbyterians who were ready to sacrifice themselves and their Cause to their hatred against the Independents who wished that quite undone which themselves could not do and desired that liberty might be quite taken away by the King rather then vindicated by the Independents The King himself though set aside and confined within the Isle of Wight was more formidable this Summer then in any other when he was followed by his strongest Armies The name of King had now a further operation and pity of the Vulgar gave a greater Majesty to his Person Prince Charls also by his absence and the name of banishment was more desireable by those Vulgar people and by his Commissions which his Father privately sent him as if armed with lawful power did easily command those that were willing and by commands under his name was able to raise as will afterward appear not onely Tumults but Wars The beginning was by Tumults and in the City from whence also the following Insurrections in the neer Counties had their original and was by Apprentices and loose young people playing in More-fields upon a Sunday the ninth day of April who dispising the authority of Magistrates set upon a Captain of the trained Bands and with stones beat him out of the fields and taking away his colours with them they marched a disorderly rout gathering up many of the scum of the people as they passed to Westminster crying out as they went that they were for King Charls But they by a Troop of Horse out of the Mews were quickly scattered But running back and getting into London while other
furnished Leiutenant General Cromwel with great Guns with provisions of all sorts from Bristol and other places and every thing necessary for a Siege While these things were acting in Wales General Fairfax sent as before was said with seven Regiments to suppress the Kenrish Risers pursued them towards Rochester A great number of Kentish men not far from Gravesend were gotten together into an Army with whom were above twenty Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the County and among them divers commanders formerly of the King Armies though they were more in number they durst not give the General battel but some marched away to Maidstone a few kept together about Rochester another part of them went to Dover and besieged that Castle to raise that Siege the General sent Colonel Rich and Sir Michael Levesy who very happily performed that work The General himself marched with his Army to Maidstone Into that Town about two thousand of the Risers were gotten and resolved to make good the place The General likewise prepared to besiege them In no chance of War before was the vertue of Fairfax and his Souldiers more tryed nor a Victory bought with greater danger For after that the Souldiers had broke into the Town which was done with great difficulty they found a War in every street and Ordnance planted against them and were put to fight for every corner of it At last the General with the loss of forty of his men took the Town two hundred of the Enemies being slain and about fourteen hundred taken prisoners four hundred Horse and two thousand Arms were taken One thing was wonderful that an Army of many thousand Kentish men more in number then the Generals Army coming from Rochester to the aid of their friends yet notwithstanding when they came neer durst not venture to assist them but stood in sight while the General took the Town Publike thanks were given to God by order of Parliament for this great victory Now all Kent seemed to be quieted except some Castles which also within a short time were taken or yielded to the Parliament when suddenly a new head of this Hydra sprung up the Lord Goring gathering together a remnant of the Kentish Army with about two thousand men had marched as far as Greenwich from whence he sent some to see how the Citizens of London stood affected to the business but whilst he staid expecting an answer some Troops of the Army came in sight upon which Goring and all his company fled the Horsemen pursuing took some Booty and divers prisoners the Kentish men for the most part fled to their own Houses The Lord Goring with about five hundred horse flying from Greenwich and getting Boats crossed the Thames into Essex where as if the Fates sought out new Victories for Fairfax every where the Lord Capel with Forces out of Hartfortshire and Sir Charles Lucas with a body of Horse at Chensford in Essex joyned themselves to Goring to whom within a short time divers that formerly had been the King Souldiers and many Londoners with others flocked Some also of higher rank as Mr. Hastings brother to Huntingdon and Compton brother to the Earl of Northampton The General Fairfax crossing the Thames at Gravesend passed with a part of his Army into Essex and sending for the rest of his Forces out of Kent and London pursued the Enemies whom at last he drove into Colchester and in that Town besieged them where because it proved a long siege we leave him for a time and pass to other actions The greatest of all dangers which threatned the Parliament was from the North not contained within the bounds of England onely but from the Kingdom of Scotland Major General Lambert the chief Commander in the North labouring to suppress Glenham and Langdale wrought so much that he kept them within the bounds of Cumberland and Westmerland but they expected the march of the Scotish Army to which they intended to joyn themselves Lambert too weak to oppose so great a Force omitted no diligence in strengthening himself from the neighbour-Counties who were very forward to his assistance especially Lancashire who raised two Regiments of Horse and four of Foot to be conducted by Major General Ashton and joyn with Lambert in Yorkeshire The English Malignants alone were not very formidable in the North but that the Kingdome of Scotland joyned with them against the Parliament Wars were made from another Kingdome that Cromwel might be victorious as well against Forraigners as Englishmen The faction of Duke Hamliton was then prevalent in the Parliament of Scotland by whom Designs were hatched dangerous to both Kingdoms contrary to peace and contrary for so it was judged by the Church of Scotland even to the Covenant it self England was to be invaded and a great Army raised under the Command of Duke Hamliton a man ambitious and subtle The English Malignants for it was given out that they took Arms for the King were invited to joyn with them and pay promised to those that would serve all this was done though Arguile Louden and the honester Lords protested against their proceedings and the Kirk of Scotland cursed that War as impious But the greater part prevailed who therefore stiled themselves the Parliament of Scotland by a kinde of right and to curb men of the adverse faction a Commitee was made with power given to them to punish all those who should attempt any thing against the Decrees of the Parliament and a penalty set down to be inflicted upon all Ministers who should from their Pulpits teach the people otherwise by which means it was brought to pass that many Ministers were silenced others punished and some Lords of the other faction retired themselves to their own strengths yet could they not stop the mouths of all the Ministers some with a constant Zeal denounced the wrath of God against that Army of Hamilton and by the wretched success of that unfortuneate Army the curses of the Kirk seemed not in vain no more then of old the Tribunes curse upon the Parthian Expedition of Marcus Crassin Conspiracies by Land though over the whole Iland against the Parliament of England seemed not enough unless the Sea also had rebelled against them Divers of the chief Ships in the Royal Fleet revolted from the Parliament about the beginning of June and set the Vice-Admiral Rainsborough ashore affirming they were for the King and would serve Prince Charles sailing towards Holland where the Prince then was and with him his brother the Duke of York who not long before fled privately being perswaded thereto by Letters from the King his Father out of London where he had been kept with great observance and state by the Parliament The Parliament were much troubled at the revolt of these Ships as a thing of extream danger and sent to the Earl of Warwick to take the Command of their remaining Navy and reduce the rest if he could Warwick cheerfully accepted the employment and was
by the Parliament created which Title he had born at the beginning of these Wars Lord High Admiral of England Whilest Warwick was serving the Parliament his Brother the Earl of Holland unhappily rise in Arms against it Relying as it seems upon the opportunity of time while the Navy was revolted whilest Fairfax in Kent Cromwel in Wales were busied he built likewise upon the affections of the Citizens of London of whom he made tryal and joyning the young Duke of Buckingham and his Brother with others to him he appeared in Arms by Kingston with five hundred Horse but by Sir Michael Levesey and others who took occasion by the fore-sock he was thereput to flight the Lord Francis Villiers was slain Holland flying with the remainder of his Horse was within few dayes after at the Town of St. Needs by Col. Scroop whom the General had sent from Colchester for that purpose altogether subdued Dalbeer and some other Gentlemen slain Holland himself was taken and by the Parliament committed prisoner to Warwick-Castle At the same time Rossiter also obtained for the Parliament a gallant victory over the forces of Pomfret-Castle whom as they were pillaging the Country and plundering up and down being a thousand Horse Rossiter fell upon vanquished and took prisoners all their Commanders took all their Arms and Baggage Rossiter himself which for a time abated the joy of this victory was grievously wounded but he recovered These victories obtained everywhere by the Parliament though some of them may seem small yet will appear great and worthy of commemoration to all those who consider how much the Commonwealth if but one of these fights had miscarried had been endangered and the Parliament it self weighing the number and variety of their hazards may the better acknowledge the continuance of Gods providence and his very hand with them By these little victories also a way was made for higher Trophies and an absolute subjugation of all their Enemies which about this time miraculously happened For now most opportunely was Pembrook-Castle surrendred to Cromwel which Poyer and Laughorn confiding in the strength of the place had so long stifly maintained But at last brought to extremities they delivered it without conditions rendring themselves Prisoners at mercy Which fell out at the same time Fates calling Cromwel to a greater atcheivement that Duke Hamilton with a numerous Army of Scots had entred England about the beginning of of July was further strengthned by the addition of Langdales Forces Hamilton marched above five and twenty thousand stong striking a great terror every-where scarce in the whole time of these wars did any Army exercise greater cruelty toward the poor inhabitants of England And yet when the Parliament debated concerning this Army the House of Peers could hardly be brought to declare them Enemies For the House of Commons had declared That the Scots that under Duke Hamilton Invaded England were Enemies and that all the English which joyned with them were Traitors to their Country To which Vote the Lords at last after much debate assented The chief Citizens of London and others called Presbyterians though the Presbyterian Scots abominated this Scotish Army wished good success to these Scots no less then the Malignants did Whence let the Reader judge of the times Lambert though too weak in all probability for so potent an enemy was not discouraged but resolved to oppose the present danger and if need required to fight the Scots but he daily expected the coming of Cromwel to whose conduct this victory was reserved In the mean time with prudent retreates some Skirmishes not onely with Langdale but Hamilton himself he spun out the time so long until that Hamilton's great Army having on the twentieth of August entred into Lancashire Cromwel was arrived with his forces who with the addition of Lambert's strength made an Army of almost ten thousand This famous battel was fought neer to Preston in Lancashire in which all the forces of Hamilton and Langdale were vanquished and put to flight whom the Conqueror pursuing as far as Warrington about twenty miles and killing many in the chase took Lieutenant General Baily prisoner with a great part of the Scottish Army granting them onely quarter for their lives In this battel were slain three thousand Scots and taken prisoners about nine thousand Duke Hamilton himself within few dayes after having fled with a good party of Horse to Uttoxeter was there taken prisoner by the Lord Grey and Colonel Wait with Hamilton were taken about three thousand Horse Langdale also not long after was taken prisoner in a little Village by Widmerpool a Parliament-Captain This was the success of Hamilton's invading England Presently after this famous victory of Cromwel Colchester was surrendred to General Fairfax three months almost had the General lien before that Town with a small Army in respect of the number of the besieged in a lamentable rainy season where the Souldiers patience no less then their valour was tried Goring Capel Hastings Lucas and the other Commanders until they were reduced to extream necessity would not hear of yielding but despised all conditions their courages were long upheld by vain hopes besides the smalness of the General 's Army of aid by insurrections at London and of the success of Hamilton Langdale or the E. of Holland and more especially of succor by Sea from Prince Charls who was now possessed of those Ships which had revolted from the Parliament and having taken divers Merchants Ships besides was himself in person with no contemptible Fleet come into the narrow Seas But about the end of August the besieged in Colchester despairing of any relief and reduc'd to extremities for they had long fed upon Horse-flesh yielded themselves to the mercy of the Conqueror Two onely suffered Sir Ch. Lucas and Sir George Lisle who were shot to death Goring Capel and Hastings were sent to prison to abide the doom of Parliament Thus was the Parliament everywhere victorious by Land nor were they unhappy by Sea For considering that revolt of the Navy it was to be accounted a great felicity that no more revolted after them or no farther mischief ensued But the Earl of Warwick was very careful and it pleased God by this fright rather then loss to let the Parliament know the frailty of their own condition About the end of August Warwick with a good Fleet was in the River Thames when Prince Charls with a greater force about twenty sail was come upon the River against him and sent a command to Warwick to take down his Flag and yield obedience to him as supream Admiral having the King's Commission to that purpose But Warwick true to the Parliament obeyed not the Summons nor was there any convenient place in that narrow Channel especially for the larger Vessels to make a naval fight and Warwick's Fleet not strong enough to encounter the Prince stayed for the coming of their friends the Porchmouth-Fleet The government and bringing