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A75644 Articles exhibited to the Honourable House of Commons assembled in Parliament, against the Lord Inchiquine Lord president of Munster, subscribed by the Lord Broghill and Sir Arthur Loftus Knight. Together with a full and cleare answer their unto made whereby it appeares that the said articles are false scandalous and full of groundlesse aspersions. Subscribed by Rich. Gething Secretary to the said Lord President. Inchiquin, Murrough O'Brien, Earl of, 1614-1674. 1647 (1647) Wing A3824; Thomason E402_19; ESTC R201828 12,975 20

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thereof till they were made Officers and then his Lordship being made acquainteed therewith convented them before a Councell of Warre and whether any new Collonels who had been long a coming were come over then or no is not materiall and it seemes the businesse was a while forborn in expectation that the Gentlemen might procure Ferriters return or to procure that Gunnes for which he ingaged him whereof they were confident to recover the one or the other in reasonable time the judgement of Crosby and the other to become bound for young Ferrtter being for that his father had been so friendly and effectuall a meanes for relieving Crosbies brother when besieged with the Rebels in the Fort of Ballingary at severall times To the sixth 5 That Lambard being an inhabitant in the City of Corke never acted any thing to the prejudice of the Parliament but on the contrary did give the Lord President intelligence and Caution of the ill affection born unto the English Army by many of the inhabitants of that town and of their practice and combinations with some of the Rebels abroad in that County whereupon he was at the expulsion of the Irish among some few others that have done service in the same kind promised by the Lord President that he should enjoy the benefit of his Estate in and about the City whilst he lived in our Quarters which he accordingly did receive by his Atturneyes whereof one of them might be the Lord President Steward for ought he knew after his removall towards the County of Limrick he did give the Lord President advertisement of what he would leave among the Rebels to the advantage of the service which when he ceased to do whereby the Lord President apprehended he was joyned with the Rebels his Lordship gave order that stay should be made of the profits of his estate and that they should be converted to the use of the Army To the Seventh 7 That Fitz Patrick pretending some negotiation that might much conduce to the good of the Parliaments Army was admitted by advice of the Councell into the Garison of Cork where he made an overture from Owen Ree Oneal on the behalf of the Popes Nuntio That the Lord President would stand Newtrall and suffer them that were of the Nuntio's party to dispute their differences with those that adhered to the peace with the Lord of Ormond by the sword used arguments to perswade the President not to incline to Ormonds party for that he and all the Butlers had ever hated the Lord Presidents family with much discourse to that purpose whereunto the Lord President and Councell gave such answer as they conceived would tend most to the aggravation of those differences betwixt the Rebels and yet keep them free from ingagement towards them And of this proceeding the Lord President did give an account by Letter to the Lord Lieutenant or Committee of Ireland and therefore it is a strange proceeding in the L. of Broghill and Sir Arthur Loftus who could not be ignorant thereof to charge this as a fault on the President After this about the space of a Moneth and after it had been long debated at the Councell and that Sir Piercy Smith and Lieutenant Colonell Cook had been nominated to go and desired to be excused Captain Alexander Pigoe whose father and family had no obligation to the Earl of Ormond was by his own desire having newly heard of the death of his father sent to Dub●●● with Letters to the Commissioners appointed by the Parliament there to treat and to the Lord Ormond with an answer to a Letter he received from him which was sent to the Lord President by Captaine Willoughby cheife Commander of the Parliament Ships then there wherein the Lord of Ormond declared to the President his intention to stand for the Parliament and did desire his assistance But upon Captaine Pigots comming to the Bay of Dublin he found the Commissioners not as in the Article is mentioned at the Harbours mouth to be gone the day before whereupon he communicated his directions and instructions to the Commanders at Sea Captaine Willoughby Captaine Moulton and such others as were there who did advise give way to and approve of his going into Dublin to see his disconsolate Mother and Sisters and sent to Dublin for a passe for him And thereupon his Letters to the Lord of Ormond and his instructions he left in Captaine Willoughbyes hands least he should be searcht his instructions being to communicate his Letters to the Lord of Ormond first with the Commissioners of the Parliament and all that he had in charge to negotiate with Ormond being that he would send some Agent into Munster with private directions to some that commanded severall places of strength in the Rebells quarters and were likely to comply with his Lordship to deliver up their Commands to the Parliaments Army upon signification of his intention unto them as also that his Lordship would cause the Sword and other Ensignes of the Majorality which the late Major of Corke stole away and presented to his Lordship to be sent downe But Captaine Pigot did not conferre with the Lord of Ormond about any thing as he is ready to depose being now in this City and that the maine cause which drew him thither was to relieve and visit his distressed Mother and Sisters who were sent to that Towne stripped by the Rebells even to nakednes being thirteene in family and his Father holding out a Castle of great importance against the Rebells called Disert in the Queenes County then lately was betrayed and surprized and in the most inhumane manner that hath been heard of murthered and his body cast forth into a ditch his sonne his Chaplyn and most of his men with him to the number of 42. being also fouly butchered in the presence of his Mother who with her daughters were stript and barbarously by them driven through the fire The Gentleman and his Father Sir Robert Pigot having been persons of faire estates and the greatest eminency for their zeale and affection to Religion that their times and those parts did produce as is generally known to all the well affected thereabouts And cannot be 〈…〉 to Sir Arthur Loftus being Cozen Iermaine to the said distressed widow now in this City To the eight 8. The words supposed to be spoken to Collonel Polland The Lord President doth in the first place deny to have uttered any word to that sense whereunto they are wrested to the said Collonel who denyeth that he ever heard the said Lord President use any words to that effect or that the said Collonel ever reported them to any person whatsoever from the Lord President in manner and forme and in the sense as they are charged in the said Article which may the more probably receive credit in reg●●a●d his Lordships practice hath bin utterly repugnant thereunto in the transaction of all his businesse To the ninth 9. The abuses in the