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

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seeming Saints who have made the solemn League and Covenant intended for preservation of Religion His Majesties Honour and the just Liberties of the Subject to be the ruine of Religion the dishonour so far as in them lieth of His Majesty and the most absolute enslaving of all free Subjects not to Kings or Princes to Great men or Good men but to the very scum and off-scouring of both Kingdoms it being no● small grief to all that truly feared God that so many of the reputed honest Presbyterian party should out of base fear or other by-respects comply so long with these Stare-Juglers the Clergy being most active hastning thereby their own and the Kingdoms misery for they may be well assured if these Saints prevail they must as some of them have done already turn their Coats once more and become the Hirelings and tongue-tied Tenants at will to their Brethren of the Independency or be kicked out of their fat Benefices and possibly out of the Kingdom to prevent new Insurrections against them which they are cunning to procure having the power in their hand to repress all that dare appear against them may be ruined others by their example terrified and their Saints may enjoy the fatness of England but I would ask these violent Clergy-men of the Presbyterian Party that are unwilling His Majesty should be brought speedily to a Personal Treaty what their Assemblies of Divines have been doing for if that Confession of Faith set out in England approved of in Scotland be agreeable to the truth of Gods word as I know nothing to the contrary why should the chief Magistrate our dread Soveraign be any longer debard of his just dues is He worse than Infidel that you will assist those that deny His sacred Majesty that which they allow to Infidel Magistrates blush for shame and repent in time lest as they change their Votes every day according as the tide of their power ebbs and flows so they may soon force you to repeal that Article concerning the chief Magistrate or like the gloss of Orleans put an exposition upon it which destroyeth the text God send us peace and truth and preserve His sacred Majesty and his Posterity and confound the wicked counsels of all such as are enemies to Peace Truth and Monarchy Si quid novistirectius istis Candidus imperti Si non his utere mecum THE END ANARCHIA ANGLICANA OR THE HISTORY OF Independency THE SECOND PART BEING A Continuation of Relations and Observations Historicall and Politique upon this present PARLIAMENT Begun Anno 16. CAROLI PRIMI By THEODORUS VERAX PSAL. 8.8 Virum sanguinum dolosum abominabitur Dominus Printed in the Year M.DC.XL IX THE PROTESTATION AND DECLARATION THe premises considered I do hereby in the name and behalf of my selfe and of all the Free People of England Declare and protest That the Generall Councel of Warre and officers of the Army by their said violent and treasonable force upon the farre major more honest and moderate part of the House of Commons being above 250. and leaving only 50. or 60. Schismaticks of their own engaged party sitting and voting under their Command and almost all of them such as have and do make a prey of the Commonwealth to enrich themselves and their Faction have broken discontinued and waged War against this Parliament have forfeited their Commissions And the remaining Faction in the House of Commons by abetting aiding and concurring with the said Councel of War in the said rebellious Force by setting up new illegal and arbitrary Courts of Judicature to murder King Charles the First our Lawful King and Governour who by his Writ according to the Law summoned and authorized this Parliament to meet sit Principium Caput finis Parliamenti Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and Advise with Him and was the Fountain Head and Conclusion or consummatory End of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all Persons and in all Causes of this Kingdom and by Abolishing the House of Peers and the Kingly Office and dis-inheriting the Kings Children and Usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority and Legislative Power of this Nation in order to make and establish themselves a Councel of State Hogen Mogens or Lords States General and translate the said Supreme Power and Authority into the said Councel of State and then Dissolve this Parliament and perpetuate their said Tyranny and this Army and Govern Arbitrarily by the power of the Sword and raise what illegal Taxes they please and eat out consume and destroy whosoever will not basely submit to their Domination See 1. part sect 105 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17 18. and returne to sect 79 109 110. Stat. of Recognition 1. Iac. Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy have by the aforesaid ways and means totally subverted this Kingdome and destroyed the fundamental Laws Authority and Government thereof Dissolved and Abolished this and all future Parliaments so that there is now no visible lawful Authority left in England but the Authority of King CHARLS the Second who is actually KING of all his Dominions presently upon the Decease of the King his Father before any Proclamation made or Coronation solemnized notwithstanding that by his unjust Banishment caus●d by the interposition of the said traiterous combined Antimonarchical Faction He be eclipsed for the present and not suffered to perform any Acts of Government to his three Kingdoms and restore peace plenty justice mercy Religion Laws and Liberties to them again which no Hand but his own can bestow and therefore in vain do the people long for expect Figs from thistles Grapes from thornes This Kingdom of the Brambles now set up being only able to Scratch and Tear not to Protect and Govern them I farther Declare and Protest That this combined traiterous Faction have forced an Interregnum and a Justitium upon us an utter suspension of all lawful Government Magistracy Lawes and Judicatories so that we have not de jure any Laws in force to be executed any Magistrates or Judges lawfully constituted to execute them any Court of Justice wherin they can be judicially executed any such Instrument of the Law as a lawful Great Seal nor any Authority in England that can lawfully Condemn and Execute a Thief Murderer or other Offender without being themselves called Murderers by the Law all legal proceedings being now coram non Judice nor can this remaining Faction in the House of Commons shew any one President Law Reason or Authority whatsoever for their aforesaid doing but only their own irrational tyrannical Votes and the Swords of their Army Wherefore I do further Declare and Protest before God and the World That all free-born subjects of the Kingdom of England and Ireland are bound by the Stat. of Recognition 1. Jac. and by all our Lawes and Statutes By their Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy the Protestation and National Covenant by very many Declarations Remonstrances Petitions and Votes
let the Saints now voting in the House examine their pockets for I am confident their consciences had no hand in the businesse Resolved c. That the matters contained in these Papers are destructive to the beings of Parliaments and to the fundamental Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That a Letter should be sent to the General and those Papers inclosed together with the Vote of this House upon them and that he be desired to examine the proceedings of this businesse in the Army and returne an Account thereof to this House The General and Councel of Warre in pursuance of this Vote 37. The said Agreement damned by the General and Councel of War and a Souldier shot by sentence for promoting it condemned one of the Agitators who promoted it and shot him to death at Ware you see what it is to do a thing unseasonably this Designe of the Army and their Party was not yet ripe wherewith they acquainted the House yet they kept in the same fire in the City still where some of their Confederates 23. of the same Novem. sent the same Agreement c. inclosed in a Letter with a Petition into the House of Commons whereupon the House giving thanks to the General for the execution done at Ware and desiring him to examine that businesse to the bottome unanimously passed these Votes Die Martis 23. Nov. 1647. A Petition directed to the Supreme Authority of England 38. The said Agreement condemned by the House a second time 23. Nov. 1647. the Commons in Parliament assembled and entituled The humble Petition of many Free-borne People of England sent in a Letter directed to Mr. Speaker and opened by a Committee thereunto appointed was read the first and second time Resolved c. That this Petition is a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the People formerly adjudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamentall Government of the Kingdome c. Resolved c. That Tho. Prince Cheese-monger and Sam. Chidley be forthwith committed Prisoners to the Prison of the Gate-house there to remaine Prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the People formerly adjudged by this House destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamental Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Jeremy Ives Tho. Taylor and Will Larner be forthwith committed Prisoners to the Prison at New-gate c. as last aforesaid in Terminis Afterwards by an Ordinance Decemb. 17. 1647. for Electing Common-Councel-men and other Officers in London they expresly ordained That no Person who hath contrived abetted perswaded or entred into that engagement entituled The Agreement of the People declared to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamental Government of the Kingdome be elected chosen or put into the Office of the Lord Major of the City of London Sheriffe Alderman Deputy of a Ward or Common-Councel-man of the said City or shall have any voice in the election of any such Officers for the space of one whole yeare and be uncapable of any of the said Places yet now these petty Fellowes keep the whole City in awe 39. Yet this Agreement since inserted into the Remonstrance of the Army owned by the Generall and Councell of Warre and Nov. 20. 1648. obtruded upon the House These multiplied Votes and Ordinance laid this Agreement of the People asleep until the beginning of November 1648. when to hinder the peace of this Kingdome and reliefe of Ireland the Jesuits and Agitators prosecuted it againe in the Army and inserted it againe verbatim in the Remonstrance of the Army Novemb 20. 1648. to break off the Treaty with the King bring him to capitall punishment and cast the odium of all upon the Parliament And the General and his Councel of Officers though they had formerly shot a Souldier to death for prosecuting it unanimously approved it at Saint Albons November 16. 1648. and obtruded it upon the House the 20. Novemb. and when they found the House so resolute in the Treaty as to proceed they first seized the Person of the King and carried Him to Hurst-Castle as aforesaid and when the House at last closed up the Treaty with this Vote That the Kings Answers to the Propositions of both Houses were a ground for the Houses to proceed upon towards a settlement 40. Why they purged the House They seized upon 41. Members of Parliament secured them and villanously treated them secluded above 160. and frighted away at least 40. or 50. more leaving onely their owne Somerset-house Junto of 40. or 50. thriving Members sitting to unvote in a thin House under a force what had been voted in a full and free House To vote down the Kingly Office and House of Peers to vote the Supreme Authority to be in the People and in the House of Commons as their Representative clean contrary to their three last recited Votes To bring the King to capital punishment before a new invented illegal mixed Court consisting of engaged persons erected for that purpose that hath neither foundation by Prescription nor Law and to erect a Councel or Committee of States out of their number in the nature of Lords States General or Hogen Mogens with an unknown and therefore unlimited Authority to continue in being after the dissolution of this Parllament So farewel Kings Lords and Commons Religion Laws and Liberties and all Votes Declarations Remonstrances Protestation and Covenant made heretofore onely to gull the People and carry on their designe About 19. Decemb. 41. Diverse Lords doe homage to the General and wave their honours divers Lords went to do homage to the General to expresse their good affections to him and their concurrence with him for the Common good and their readinesse to wave their priviledges and Titles if they shall be found burdensome to the liberty of the People and had a gracious nod for their paines About this time the Lords and Commons passed an Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men and Officers in London for the yeare following to this effect 42. An Ordinance to curb the City in electing Officers That no Person that hath been imprisoned or sequestred rightfully or wrongfully or hath assisted the King against the Parliament in the first or second Warre or hath been aiding or assisting in bringing in the Scots Army to invade this Kingdome or did subscribe or abett the treasonable Engagement 1647. or that did ayde assist or abett the late Tumult within the Cities of London and Westminster or the Counties of Kent Essex Middlesex or Surrey shall be elected chosen or put into the Office or Place of Lord Mayor of London Alderman Aldermans Deputy Common-Councel-man or into any office or place of trust within the City for the yeare ensuing or be capable to give
onely in the Lords and Peers of the Realme being by Inheritance custome and Law in such case the Kings and Kingdoms great Councel to whose lawfull commands all other Subjects ought to yeeld ready Obedience 6. That every professed actuall endeavour by force or otherwise to alter the fundamentall Monarchicall Government Laws and legall Style and proceedings of this Realme and to introduce any new Government or Arbitrary proceedings contrary thereunto is no lesse then High Treason and so declared and resolved by the last Parliament in the cases of Strafford and Canterbury the losse of whose Heads yet fresh in memory should deterre all others from pursuing their pernitious courses and out-stripping them therein they being as great potent and as farre out of the reach of danger and justice in humane probability as any of our present Grandees 111. A New Stamp for Coyne That no Act of Rebellion and Treason might be unattempted by this Conventicle no part of the Regalities of the King or peoples Liberties unviolated they considered of a New Stamp to be given to all Coyne for the future of this Nation 112. Instructions for the Councel of State 13. Febr. They considered of Instructions and Power to be given by way of Commission to the said Committee or Councel of State 1. For the Government of the two Nations of England and Ireland appointing a Committee to bring in the Names of these Hogens Mogens and to perfect their Instructions for 1 Ordering the Militia 2 Governing the People they were wont to be Governed by knowne Lawes not by Arbitrary Instructions and by one King not by forty Tyrants most of them base Mechanicks whose education never taught them to aspire to more knowledge then the Office of a Constable 3 Setling of Trade most of them have driven a rich Trade in the work of Reformation for themselves 4 Execution of Lawes this was wont to be done by legall sworne Judges Juries and Officers 113. Powers given to the Councel of State 14. Eebr The Committee reported to the House the Names of the Committee of State or Lords States Generall Also the Power they were to have viz 1. Power to command and settle the Militia of England and Ireland 2. Power to set forth Ships and such a considerable Navy as they should think fit 3. Power to appoint Magazines and Stores for the Kingdoms of England and Ireland and dispose of them from time to time for the service of both Nations as they shall think fit 4. Power to fit and execute the severall powers given for the space of one whole yeare with many other powers not yet revealed and daily increased besides what improvements of Power they are able to make hereafter having the Militia of an Army that formidable Hob-goblin at their command They have two Seales appointed a Great Seale and a Signet Patents for Sheriffs and Commissions for Justices and Oaths for both were reformed according to the Godly cut When the Committtee of State was nominated in the House 114. An expurgatory Oath put upon the Councel of State scrupled by some of the Members and moderated by Cromwell ●n opposition of the Level●ers divers Gentlemen of the best quality were named whom they could not omit because they had sat with them and concurred in all their great debates although they had more confidence in those petty Fellows who had or would sell their soules for gain to make themselves Gentlemen to debarre the said Gentlemen of quality therefore and make them forbear they invented an expurgatory Oath or Shibeleth to be taken by every Member before his initiation whereby they should declare That they approved of what the House of Commons and their High Court of Justice had done against the KING and of their abolishing of Kingly Government and of the House of Peers and that the Legislative and Supreme power was wholly in the House of Commons 22. Febr. Cromwell Chairman of that Committee of State reported to the Commons That according to the Order of that House 19. of the said Members had subscribed to that forme of the Oath as it was originally penned but 22. of them scrupled it whereof all the Lords were part not but that they confessed except one The Commons of England to be the Supreme power of the Nation or that they would not live and die with them in what they should do for the future but could not confirm what they had done in relation to the King and Lords so it was referred to a Committee to consider of an expedient Cromwell having made use of the Levellers 115. Cromwells usurped power When the House of Commons opposed Cromwels and Iret●ns designes they cried up the Libertie of the People and decried the Authority of Parliament until they had made use of the Levellers to purge the House of Commons and make it subservient to their ends and abolish the House of Lords and then they cried up the Supreme Au●horitie of their House of Commons and decried the Liberty of the people and the Levellers who upheld it So Charles the 5. first made use of the Popes Authority to subdue the Protest●nts of Germany and then used an Army of Protestants to subdue and imprison ●he Pope Assertors of publique Liberty to purge the House of Commons and abolish the Lords House doth now endeavour to cast down the Levellers once more finding himself raised to so great an height that he cannot endure to think of a levelling equality he overswayes the Councel of Warre over-awes the House of Commons and is Chairman and Ring-leader of the Councel of State so that he hath engrossed all the power of England into his own hands and is become the Triple-King or Lord Paramount over all the Tyrants of England in opposition therefore to the Levelling party and for the upholding his own more Lordly Interest he procured an expedient to Alter and Reforme the said Oath which at last passed in this forme following February the 22. 1648. 116. The forme of the said reformed Oath I A. B. being nominated a Member of the Councel of State by this present Parliament do testify that I do adhere to this present Parliament in the maintenance and defence of the publique liberty and freedome of this Nation as it is now Declared by this Parliament by whose Authority I am constituted a Member of the said Councel and in the maintenance and defence of their resolutions concerning the setling of the Government of this Nation for the future in way of a Republique without King or House of Peers and I do promise in the sight of God that through his Grace I will be faithfull in performance of the trust committed to me as aforesaid and therin faithfully pursue the Instructions given to the said Councel by this present Parliament Mere you see a curtain drawn between the eyes of the people and the clandestine machinations and actings of this Councell and not reveale or
afteroon they having already in their wills and power to dispose of the Kings Queens Princes Dukes and the rest of the Childrens Revenue Deanes and Chapters Land Bishops Lands Sequestred Delinquents Lands Sequestred Papists Lands Compositions of all sorts amounting to Millions of money besides Excise and Customes yet this is not enough although if rightly husbanded it would constantly pay above one hundred thousand men and furnish an answerable Navy thereunto But the people must now after their Trade● are lost and their Estates spent to procure their Liberties and Freedoms be Assessed about 100000 l. a Moneth Master Boon a Member of the House lately a Tapster hath 6000 l. given him Sir Arth Hazelrig 3 great Manours Bishops-Aukland Ev●r-wood and another Col. B●rkstead the pitiful Thimble and Bodkin Gold-smith bought as much Bishops Lands as cost 10000 l. at two or three years purchase and hath already raised his money that so they may be able like so many Cheaters and State-thieves to give six eight ten twelve fourteen sixteen thousand pounds a piece over again to one another as they have done already to divers of themselves to buy the Common-wealths Lands one of another contrary to the duty of Trustees who by Law nor equity can neither give nor sell to one another at two or three years Purchase the true and valuable rate considered as they have already done and to give 4 or 5000 l. per annum over again to King Cromwell as they have done already out of the Earl of Worcesters Estate c. besides about 4 or 5 l. a day he hath by his Places of Lieu. Generall and Colonel of Horse in the Army although he were at the beginning of this Parliament but a poor Man yea little better than a Beggar to what he is now as well as others of his Neighbours 147. A Petition in behalf of Io Lylburn and his company 2. Aprill 1649. A Petition subscribed by divers Persons in behalf of John Lilburn and his company was presented to the Commons wherein amongst other things are contained these three just demands 1. That no man be censured condemned or molested but for the breach of some Law first made and published to the People whereby is avoided that uncertainty and howerly hazard that otherwise every man is subject to both in respect of his Estate Liberty and Life 2. That every crime have not onely its penaltie annexed hut together therewith the manner and method of proceedings ascertained 3. That the execution of Laws be referred to ordinary Magistrates and Officers by Law deputed thereto and that the Military power be not used but where the Civil is so resisted as that of its own strength it is deficient to enforce obedience 148. Itinerant Ministers an invention to undermine our Orthodox setled Ministers and infect the people with Schismes and Anarchicall principles sutable to the many-headed tyranny of the Grandees Aprill 12. 1649. It was referred to a Committee to consider of a way how to raise Pensions and Allowances out of Deans and Chapters Lands to maintain supernumeracy Itinerant Ministers who should be Authorized to go up and down compassing the earth and adulterate other Mens Pulpits and Congregations and put affronts and raise factions and scandals upon such orthodox and conscientious Ministers in order to their Sequestration as cannot frame their Doctrine to the damnable practises and Anarchicall principles of the times These wandering Apostles are to preach Antimonarchicall seditious doctrine to the people sutable to that they call the present Government to raise the rascall multitude and schismaticall rabble against all men of best quality in the Kingdom to draw them into Associations and Combinations with one another in every County and with the Army against all Lords Gentry Ministers Lawyers rich and peaceable men and all that are Lovers of the old Laws and Government for the better rooting of them out that themselves alone may inhabite the earth and establish their new tyranny or Kingdom of the Saints upon the ruines of our ancient Monarchy These men like Balaam shall bless and curse for hire and vent State-news State-doctrine and poison the people with such changeable and various principles as from time to time shall be dictated to them by those Pseudo-polititians as now sit at the Helm they shall cousen the people with pretended Illuminations Revelations and Inspirations and pour out all the Vials of Gods wrath amongst them Cromwel and Ireton and their Faction 149. A fraudulent Reconciliation and uniting of Interests attempted with a mock-fast for that purpose having formerly deluded all the Interests and Parties of this Kingdom were arrived to that height of impudence as to endeavour to cheat them all over again they had by murthering the King abolishing the House of Lords putting an execrable force upon the far major part of the House of Commons making themselves and their Party a tyrannical Councel of State to usurp the Supreme power and Government endeavouring a Toleration of all Religions attempting to take away Tithes See a Paper called Arguments against all Accommodation between the City of London and the engaged Grandees of the Parl. and Army And A seasonable Caution to the City of London printed at the latter end of Relation and Observations Hist and Pol. c. mocking and then tyrannizing over that part of the Army they please to miscall Levellers distracted and discontented all Parties within the Kingdom and stirred up all the Princes of Christendom to defend the common Interest of Kings now controverted in England This cloud threatned to pour down a new War upon them to provide a remedy therefore for this sore Cromwel moved in the House of Commons That the Presbyterian Government might be setled promising his endeavors thereto but whether he meant a Classical or Congregational Presbytery which differs little or nothing from Independency he did not declare● and here lyeth the fallacy he likewise moved That the secured and secluded Members might again be invited into the House they sent their Agents both Lay-men and Ministers amongst whom Mr. Marshal Nye Carrell Goodwin and Hugh Peters were chief to cajole and decoy the Ministers Citizens and the expulsed Members with discourses and propositions they told them The Presbyterians had differed from the King in point of civil Interest which was more irreconcileable than that Interest of Church-Government whatsoever shew was made to the contrary They will not endure to hear of the KING' 's exemplary patience and Christian charity to all nor of His precepts and strict injunctions to His Son of clemency and abstinency from revenge contained in His last Book The Pourtraicture of His Majestie These things will both apologize for our young King and condemn our bloody vindicative Saints That the Presbyterians as well as the Independents made War against the late King brought Him low and prepared Him to receive his late deadly Blow from the Independents and therefore the King would look upon
England although I dare say at least five hundred to one if they were free from the terrour of an Army would disavow these horrid Acts so little are the People pleased with these doings notwithstanding the new Title the Conventicle of Commons have gulled them withall Voting the People of England to be The Supreme Power and the Commons representing them in Parliament the Supreme Power of the Nation under them This was purposely so contrived to ingage the whole City and make them as desperately and impardonably guilty as themselves and certainly if this Tumult of the People amounting to a publick disclamour of the Act had not happened the whole City had been guilty by way of connivance as well as these Aldermen and the illegal Common Councel newly packed by the remaining Faction of Commons contrary to the Cities Charters to carry on these and such like Designs and intangle the whole City in their Crimes and Punishments * The Names of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the City of London that personally proclaimed the Act for abolishing Kingly Government Alderman Andrews Lord Mayor Alderman Pennington Ald. Wollaston Ald. Foulkes Ald. Kenrick Ald. Byde Ald. Edmonds Ald. Pack Alderman Bateman Ald. Atkins Ald. Viner Ald. Avery Ald. Wilson Ald. Dethick Ald. Foot The Pharisaical House of Commons voted an Act June 1. 171. A Thanks-giving Dinner in the City for the General c. for a day of Thanks-giving to set off K. Olivers Victory over the Levellers with the more lustre and to sing Hosanna to him for bringing the grand Delinquent to punishment The wise Lord Mayor and his Brethren in imitation invited the Parliament Councel of State the General and his Officers to a Thanks-giving Dinner upon that day The Commons appointed a Committee under pretence of drawing more money from Adventurers for the Relief of Ireland to ingage the City farther to them Cromwel had the Chair in that Committee the device was that the Common Councel should invite the Parliament Councel of State and Officers of the Army to Dinner and feast them as a Free-State and then move the Supplies for Ireland But if the Levellers had prevailed the Thanks-giving white-broth and custard had been bestowed upon those free-spirited Blades whom Oliver raised into a mutiny with one hand and by advantage of his Spies cast down with another for the glory of his own Name and that he might have occasion to purge the Army as he had done the Parliament of all free-born humours 172. The Councel of State sit in pomp at White-hall White-hall is now become the Palace of a Hydra of Tyrants instead of one King where our Hogens Mogens or Councel of State sit in as much state and splendour with their Rooms as richly hanged I wish they were so too and furnished if you will believe their licenced News-books as any Lords States in Europe yet many of these Mushromes of Maje●ty were but M●chanicks Gold-smiths Brewers Weavers Clothiers Brewers Clerks c. whom scornful Fortune in a spiteful merriment brought upon the Stage and promoted to act the parts of Kings to shew that Men are but her Tennis-balls and when she is weary with laughing at their disguises will turn them into the Tyring Room out of their borrowed cases and shew us that our Lions are but her Asses The Kings poor Creditors and Servants may gape long enough like Camelions to see the aforesaid Ordinance executed for sale of the Kings Goods to pay their Debts they poor Souls are left to starve while these Saints Triumphant revel in their Masters Goods and Houses 173. A general survey to be taken of the whole Kingdome that every mans Estate both real and personal may be taxed Orders about this time were sent forth into London and the Counties adjacent for certain Committees to enquire upon Oath and certifie the improved value and revenue of every mans estate real and personal wherein good progress hath been made already the like is to go forth throughout the Kingdome That our forty mechanick Kings now sitting in White-hall and the self-created supreme Authority of the Nation may take an exact survey in imitation of William the Conquerors Book of Survey called Domes-day remaining in the Exchequer of their new conquered Kingdome and know what they are like to get by their villanies and how to load us with Taxes and Free-quarter and what the value of their Estates are when they have compleated their Design of Sequestring the Presbyterians as they have done the Royalists The faction in the House are this beginning of June 174. An Act enabling Committees to give Oaths 1649. sitting abrood upon an Act to inable Committees to give Oaths in some cases and yet the House of Commons never had nor pretended to have power to give Oathes themselves though every Court of Py-p wders hath because the House of Commons is no Court of Judicature but only the Grand Inquest of the Kingdome to present to the King the grievance and the necessities of the People by way of humble Petition as appears by the Law-books and Statutes and therefore the Commons can grant no more than they have themselves But now the remaining faction of the House have voted themselves to be the supreme Authority of the Nation and have a Sword to maintain it they and we must be what they please yet I must affirm that to take illegal Oaths is never justifiable before God nor Man and no less than damnable But it may be that by accustoming the People to take these new-imposed illegal Oaths they hope to make them the more easily swallow their intended new Oath of Allegiance to their new State and their own Damnation together hereafter All the Scrivenors about the Town are commanded by the Supreme thing to produce their Shop-books 175. Scrivenors commanded to shew shop-books that notice may be taken who are guilty of having money in their purses that the fattest and fullest may be culled out and sequestred for Delinquents now that their almighty Saint-ships have occasion to use it for defence of their Free-State if they would but search one anothers private pockets they would finde money enough The like attempt onely in the Kings time was cried out upon as a high piece of tyranny but nothing can be tyranny under a Free-State The Supreme Authority being so full a Representative-glass of the People that it takes our very substance into it self and leaves us onely the shadow whilst we wander up and down like our own Ghosts who having lived under the Monarchy of Good King CHARLES are now dead and descended like shades into the Kingdome of Pluto The 7. June 176. The aforesaid Thanksgiving solemnized 1649. the Thanks-giving spoken of Sect. 172. was solemnized in the City The Lord Mayor meeting the Speaker resigned to him as formerly was used to the King the Sword of State as had been ordered by the House the day before and received it again from
their Obligations to God and Man violated all the Laws of this Land their own Protestations Covenants the Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy which themselves caused the People to take and their own Votes Declarations c. The illegality of their late erected High Court of Justice and their unjust proceedings therein the tyranny and usurpation of the Councel of State and Officers of the Army And proveth that Col. Prides new purged new pack●d House is neither a House of Commons nor Parliament their usurped Supreme Authority to be a meer nullity or fiction and especially That this Parliament is cleerly dissolved and ended which he proveth by the Death of the King and by many other solid Arguments and therefore all their Actings to be void and null with many other cosiderable passages where he ingeniously confesseth that being the Kings Prisoner at Oxford with many other of the Parliament Party the King did strictly observe the Laws of the Land in His proceedings against them which this Parliament doth not do in any their most legal proceedings for all their pretended Engagements Declarations Votes Protestations and Covenants to maintain and defend the Laws and Liberties of the People Ergo the King really the Faction in Parliament but pretendedly fought for our Laws and Liberties 186. Tythes to be Sequestred for the State The Faction are now contriving to seize all the Tythes of the Kingdome into their own hands yet they are the Ministers Freehold and to make all the Ministers their stipendiary Lecturers that they may preach and teach onely such Doctrine to the people as may bring them under a blinde and slavish obedience to our forty Tyrants of the new Councel of State presuming that all our Ministers carry their Consciences in their purses because the Independents do so Look to your wayes Christian Brethren you are likely hereafter to have Oracles of State obtruded upon you instead of the Oracles of God If the Ministers will not parret forth the new States Doctrine to you they shall be starved out of their Pulpits 187. An Adjournment of this pretended Parliament considered of The thing called a Parliament is now likely to have so general a purge as will leave neither life nor soul dung nor guts in the belly of it K. Oliver unwilling to go for Ireland and leave them fitting who may unvote all he hath compelled them to vote hath commanded his Journey-men to think of an Adjournment for some good time that they may take the air and grow wholesome again and then without some dire mischance they never meet more but this Supreme thing hath learned to use so much modesty to their Superiors as to refer it to the Hogens Mogens or Councel of State to consider what Votes and Acts they shall pass beforehand for establishing their Highnesses in their new Dominion And when out of their usurped Supreme Authority they have conferred as much upon the Councel of State as their ambitions aim at they good Boys shall have leave to break up School and go into the Country to see their Friends and visit their Foes that is all such as have full purses to be squeezed Thus you see the method of Divine vengeance observes a Degradation 1. Down went the King and His Authority lapsed into the two Houses 2. Down went the Peers House and all Authority fell down into the Commons House 3. Down goes the House of Commons and the Supreme Authority translates it self into a Councel of State And if my conjecture fail me not 4. Down will go the Councel of State and all Authority be grasped into the iron hands of Campson Gaurus and his Mamaluchy his Councel of War when they shall think fit to Act bare-faced without using a packt peece of a Parliament or Councel of State as a screen or vizard to cozen and befool the people In order to which Government by the Sword 188. Cromwel voted for Ireland with full power Civil and Military Cromwel is voted to go into Ireland with his own confiding Officers and Army with all power Civil and Military for three years what doth this import less than that he is to be K. of Ireland there to practise the first rudiments of Kings-craft and when he hath inured those Semi-barbarians to a Military Government he shall return with his Janisaries and subdue the English to the like obedience In the mean time his property Fairfax shall be under the observation of the Councel of State here and be beleagured both in his own house and Army with Olivers Creatures and in this dishonourable fickle condition he shall have the vain honour to keep Olivers Regalia the Crown sitting upon one side like a Fools Cap upon his head until he return and shall then be called to account for all odious and unfortunate accidents that shall happen for it is not for the Majesty of Oliver to bear the blame although they fall out by Cromwell's own oversights or Gods anger upon him thus Cromwell's shadow being removed himself may take substantial and actual possession of the Throne which he already enjoyes in all things but the Title And then let all true Saints and Subjects cry out with me God save K. Oliver and his brewing Vessels The Junto of Titular Supremists at Westminster especially so many as have not packt themselves into the Councel of State are very unwilling to quit their long-held Dominion 189. 13 Bills injoyned to be passed by the Commons before Adjournment and submit to their own Bastard-brood The Lords States at White-hall but there is no remedy Oliver is resolved to unyoke his Cattel and turn them to grass he knows they may unvote all they have voted at his Command if during his absence in Ireland or Scotland rather a new emergent power should overawe them the present fear being alwaies most terrible to Cowards But the Councel of State hath set them their task which they must speedily perform before they Adjourn consisting of 13 Points 1. That all Acts concerning the Loans of Monies Excise Sequestrations Goldsmiths-hall Haberdashers-hall Assesments for England and Ireland be passed These reprobate Saints will sooner forget their God than their Mammon money You see they mean to perpetuate our burthens as well as their own Army and domineer over us with an arbitrary military tyranny for ever 2. That an Act be passed for setling the Militia of the Nation This amounts to a new-invented Commission of Array lawful for usurping Saints though not for a lawful King by vertue of which the scum and dregs of the people base enough to associate with the Army shall be Armed all men of quality and fortunes unless such as owe their fortunes to their crimes dis-armed 3. Against exporting Wooll and Fullers Earth Unless it be for the benefit of the Saints 4. To prohibit exportation of Gold and Silver The Saints have exported all our Gold already and most of our Silver and will never give over the Trade
Part. 2. chap. 5. pag. 735. Seconded by Cooks 4. Instit pag. 1 4 5 46 47 49. As he should admit those to be lawful Members so he should assent to ex post facto some particulars against his Knowledge and against the Oathes of Allegiance Supremacy Protestation Solemn League and Covenant taken in the presence of God with a sincere heart and real intention to perform the same and persevere therein all the dayes of his life without suffering himself directly or indirectly by whatsoever Combination Perswasion or Terrour to be withdrawn therefrom As for example he should thereby acknowledge contrary to his knowledge and the said Oathes and Covenant 1. That there may be and now is a lawful Parliament of England actually in being and legally continuing after the Kings Death consisting only of a few late Members of the Commons House without either King Lords or most of their fellow Members 2. That this Parliament sitting under a force and so unduly Constituted and packed by power of an Army combining with them hath just and lawful Authority 1. To violate the Priviledges Rights Freedomes Customes and alter the Constitution of our Parliaments themselves 2. To Imprison Seclude and Expel most of their fellow Members the far major part of the House for Voting and according to their Consciences in favour of Peace and settlement of the Commonwealth 3. To Repeal all Votes Ordinances and Acts of Parliament they please 4. To Erect new Arbitrary Courts of War and Justice 5. To Arrain Condemn and Execute the King himself with the Peers and Commons of this Realm by a new kinde of Martial Law contrary to Magna Charta The Petition of Right 3. Car. and the known Laws of the Land 6. To Dis-inherit the Kings Posterity of the Crown 7. To extirpate Monarchy and the whole House of Peers 8. To Change and Subvert the Ancient Government Seals Laws Writs Legal proceedings Courts and Coyn of the Kingdome 9. To Sell and Dispose of all the Lands Revenues Jewels Goods of the Crown with the Lands of Deans and Chapters for thir own advantage not the easing of the people from Taxes 10. To absolve themselves by a Papal kinde of power and all the Subjects of England and Ireland from all the Oaths and Engagements they have made to the Kings Majesty His Heirs and Successours yea from the very Oath of Allegiance notwithstanding this express Clause in it fit to be laid to heart by all conscientious Christians I do beleeve and in conscience am resolved That neither the Pope nor any person whatsoever hath power to absolve me of this Oath or any part thereof which I acknowledge by good and full Authority to be lawfully Ministred to me and do renounce all Pardons and Dispensations to the contrary 11. To dispence with our Protestation and Covenant so Zealously enjoyned by both Houses on all sorts of people 12. To dispose of the Forts Ships Forces Offices and places of Honour Power Trust or Profit to whom they please to their own party 13. To Displace and Remove whom they please from their Offices Trusts Pensions Callings and Franchises at their pleasures without any Legal cause or Trial. 14. To make what New Acts Laws and Reverse what Old ones they think meet to insnare and inthral our Consciences Estates Liberties and Lives 15. To create new monstrous Treasons never heard of before and to declare Real Treasons against the King Kingdome and Parliament to be no Treasons and Loyalty Allegiance due obedience to our known Laws and a conscientious observing our Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the Covenant to be no less than High Treason for which they may take away our Lives and confiscate our Estates to their new Exchequer Thereby at once repealing Magna Charta c. 29. 5 Edw. 3. c. 6. 25 Edw. 3. c. 4. 28 Edw. 3. c. 3. 37 Edw. 3. c. 18. 42 Edw. 3. c. 3. 25 Edw. 3 c. 2. 11 Rich. 2. c. 4. 1 Hen. 4. c. 10. 2 Hen. 4. Rot. Parl. 11. n. 60. 1 Edw. 6. c. 12. 1 M. c. 1. The Petition of Right 3 Car. So much commended this Parliament and laying all our Laws Liberties Estates and Lives waste after they have drawn so much Blood and Treasure from us in defence of them 16. To raise and keep up what forces by Land and Sea they please and impose what Taxes they please and renew increase and perpetuate them to support their more than Regal or Parliamentary power 17. To pack and shuffle themselves into a Councel of Lords This 17. is added by the Abridger States General without any provincial States forty Hogens Mogens with Supream Regal and Arbitrary power in absence of Parliaments which are Abolished by these Usurpations as well as Monarchy 4. The principal ends proposed in the pretended Act for imposing this 90000 l. a months Tax oblige all men not to pay it viz. The keeping up this Army under the Lord Fairfax 1. Because this Army by rebelling against their Masters the Parliament and waging War upon them and by conspiring with their own party of the sitting Commons have occasioned all the Mischiefs last mentioned to the ruine of King Parliament and Kingdome Religion Laws Liberty and Property and daily threaten an utter dissolution both in their Deeds and Words Both Officers and Souldiers Boasting That the whole Kingdome and all we have is theirs by Conquest That we are but their conquered Slaves and Vassals and they Lords of the Kingdome That our Lives are at their Mercy and Courtesie That when they have gotten all we have from us by Taxes and Free-quarter they will seize our Lands and turn Vs and our Families out of Doors That there is no Law in England but the Sword as Hugh Peters the Rebels Apostle saith The present power must be obeyed saith parasitical John Goodwin that is the power of the Sword still More hath been raised by Taxes these last eight years than in all the Kings Reigns since the Conquest and no account given 2. No Tax ought to be imposed but upon necessity for good of the people 25 Edw. 1. chap. 6. Cooks 2. Instit pag. 528. But the keeping up this Army is the Bane of the people 1. Because they are already exhausted with war Plunder Taxes Free-quarter c. 2. Because the Souldiers have decayed Trade and brought a Dearth upon the Land 3. This Tax of 90000 l. a month destroyed Trade by Forestalling and Engrossing most of the Money now left in the Kingdome 4. There is no Enemy in the Kingdome visible nor no fear of any if we will beleeve our Grandees 5. When the King had two Armies in the Field and many Garrisons this whole Army consisted but of 22000. Men and had an Established pay but of 45000 l. a month See Ordinances 15. Feb. 1644. and 6. April 1646. Exact Collect. pag. 599 876. But when the Army by confederacy with their party in the House took the boldness to increase their number
Endictment that he might know what to answer saying he might plead Speeial as well as General which the Court denied him Next because there was point of Law in it he desired to have Councel citing the Stat. 1 Hen. 7. fol. 23. which was likewise denied him yet I am deceived if Rolfe had not Councel allowed him being endicted at Winchester for an endeavour to murder King CHARLES the First and had many other favours denied to Morrice Then Col. Morrice for his discharge produced the PRINCES Commission as Generalissimo to the KING his Father The Judges answered The Prince was but a Subject as Morrice was and if he were present must be tried as he was and rejected the Gommission without reading Morrice told them the Prince had his Authority from the King in whose name all Judges and Officers did then Act. The Court answered the power was not in the King but the Kingdome Observe they endicted him for Leavying War against the King and Parliament The word Parliament was a surplusage for which no Indictment could lye no Allegiance no Treason and we owe Allegiance to the King alone whosoever Leavieth War in England in the intendment of the Law is said to Leavy War against the King onely although he aim not at his Person but at some other Person And if he that Leavieth War against the King his Crown and Dignity be a Traytor how much more must they be Traytors that have actually murthered the King and Dis-inherited and proscribed his lawful and undoubted Heir and as much as in them lies have subverted the Monarchical Government of the Land and consequently all Monarchical Laws whereof the Stat. of Treasons for Leavying War against the Kings Majesty is one and therefore Morrice under a free-Free-State ought not to be condemned or tried upon any Monarchical Law So Morrice was found guilty by a Jury for that purpose And an illegal president begun to cut off whom the Faction pleaseth under a pretence and form of Law without help of a Councel of War or a private Slaughter-house or a Midnight-Coach guarded with Souldiers to Tyborne These Usurpers have got the old tyrannical trick To rule the People by the Laws but first to over-rule the Laws by their Lawyers and therefore Vt rei innocentes pereant fiunt nocentes judices that true men may go to the Gallows Thieves must sit on the bench but silent Leges inter arma and now silet Justitia inter Leges Three headed consisting of 1 Councel of War 2 Councel of State 3 Parliament filet Jus inter Judices The mungrel hypocritical three-headed conquest we live under hath dispoyled Justice of her ballance and left her in a Military posture with a Sword to strike but no scales to weigh withall Our licenced News Books like Ill-Boading-Birds fore-told and fore-judged Morrice's death a month before He dyed resolutely Observe the thing aimed at in this new form of Endictment of High Treason for leavying War against the King and Parliament is first that the word King may hold in the Endictment which otherwise would be found to have errour in it and though the word for Leavying War against the Parliament be a vain surplusage signifying nothing yet at last by help of their own Judges and new-made presidents to leavy War against the Parliament shall stand alone be the onely Significator and take up the whole room in the Endictment and thrust the word King out of doors and then Treason shall be as frequent as Malignancy is now Morrice had moved he might be Tried like a Souldier by a Councel of War alleadging the inconvenience of such a president if the Kings Party should retaliate it which would not be granted yet Col. Bethel writ to the General and his Councel of War desiring he might be reprieved but Col. Pride opposed it urging That it would not stand with the justice of the Army you see now who is the foun of Justice nor the safety of the Commonwealth to let such Enemies live the Parliament having adjudged him worthy of death without hearing and given instructions to the Judges accordingly O serviceable Judges so the General was overborn by this Dray-man This fellow sitteth frequently at the Sessions house in the Old Bayly where the weight of his Slings turneth the scale of Justice which way he pleaseth 210. Cap. Plunkett and the Marquess of Ormonds brother voted to be Tryed Col. Pride's Dray-horses the Commons in Parliament assembled not yet satisfied with Blood because they are out of danger of bleeding themselves have voted that Capt. Plunckett and the Marquess of Ormond's Brother Prisoners in Ireland shall be brought to Trial. If the Kings Party in imitation of their Cruelty shall put to death the Prisoners they have taken the Parliament will save their Arreares for their own privy purse These two cases are examples of the greatest danger and the highest contempt of Souldiers that ever were set on foot in any Age or Nation 29. August 1649. came forth a Book called 211. An out-cry of the young men and Apprentices of London concurring with those falsly called Levellers An out-cry of the young Men and Apprentises of London Or An Inquisition after the lost fundamental Laws and Liberties of England truly and Pathetically setting forth the slavery misery and danger of the Common Souldiery and People of this Nation and the causes thereof well worth the reading About this time came forth an Act forsooth for the speedy raising and levying money upon the Excise that is as the Act telleth you upon all and every Commodities Merchandizes 212. Excise Manufactures as well imported or exported as made or growing and put to sale or consumed c. That is to lay impositions upon all we eat drink wear or use as well in private houses as victualling houses ware-houses cellars shops c. as well what the Souldier devours in Free-quarter upon us as otherwise under unheard-of penalties both pecuniary and personal to be paid and levied with rigour And to make every mans house lie open to be searched by every prowling Rascal as often as he or they please The Traytors Tyrants and Thieves 213. Forrain Plantations the Commons in Colonel Prides Parliament assembled are now again frighted into a consideration of Forraign Plantations And passing Acts That they shall all be subject to the new Babel or State of England for which purpose they are very busie to undermine divide and subject the old and first Planters that if need be these reprobate Saints may come in upon their labours and the better to accommodate themselvs there In the Act for the sale of Kings Queens and Princes Personal Estate they have given leave to their Agents the Commissioners to transport beyond sea that is to say to their own Plantations under pretence of sale the rarest and choisest of the Kings Goods they heap up abundance of wealth by Excise Taxes Goldsmiths-hall Haberdashers-hall Sequestrations cozening the Souldiers
Birkhead by Dures of Imprisonment with the connivance of the Commons Col. Bromfield Hooker Cox and Baynes Citizens who the last year were committed upon suspition of High Treason to which every offence against this new Babel-state is now wrested notwithstanding the Stat. 25 Edw. 3. for limitation of Treasons as in an infectious season all diseases turn to the plague and were then discharged for want of matter to make good the Charge are now again imprisoned in the first year of Englands Liberty at the request of Birkhead Sergeant at Armes to the Commons until they pay such unreasonable Fees as he pleases to exact from them This had been great Extortion and Tyranny in the KINGS time when this Nation enjoyed so much freedome as to call a Spade a Spade an Extortioner an Extortioner and a Tyrant a Tyrant And reason good for if such Fees be legally due Birkhead hath Legal means to recover them if not Legally due it is Extortion in him to demand them in so violent a way and Tyranny in his Masters the Commons to maintain him in it Sir Henry Mildmay lately coming to the Tower and perceiving the Countess of Carlisles window had some prospect to Col. Lilborns Grates out of his parasitical diligence told the Lievtenant of the Tower 219. Sir Har. Mildmay's Politick Observations Chaste Conversation and first initiation at Court That notwithstanding the distance was such as they could not communicate by speech yet they might signifie their intentions by signs upon their fingers to the prejudice of the tender infant State and accompanying this admonition with some grave and politick Nods hasted away to the Councel of State and being both out of breath and sense unloaded himself of his Observations there and was seconded by Tho. Scot the Demolisher of old Palaces and Deflowrer of young Mayden-heads before they are ripe who much aggravated the danger and applauded the Observator Sure Sir Henry hath not yet forgot the bawdy Language of the hand and fingers since he first in Court began to be Ambassadour of Love Procuror Pimp or Pandor to the Duke of Buckingham and laboured to betray the honour of a fair Lady his nearest Ally to his Lust had not she been as Vertuous as he is Vitious if it be possible for any Woman to be so and did actually betray others to him I can tell you that very lately Sir Harry pretending himself taken with the Wind-collick got an opportunity to insinuate himself into a Citizens house in Cheapside and tempted his Wife but had a shameful repulse but more of this I will not speak lest his Wife beat him and give an ill example to other Women to the prejudice of our other New States-men 220. Felons fetched out of Newgate to inform against Merchants for not paying Customes and their New erected Sodomes and Spintries at the Mulbury-garden at St. Jamses Master Gybs Master of a Ship having caused three fellows to be committed to New-gate upon Felony for Robbing him These Fellows sent to Col. Harvey That if he would procure their Liberty they would discover to him several Merchants who had lately stoln Customes Whereupon Harvey sends for those Rogues out of New-gate hears their Accusation approves it prosecutes the Merchants upon the Information of those Villains discharges them of their Imprisonment by his own power and recommends them to Col. Deane to be imployed in the Navy And one Master Lovel a Silk-man in Saint Lawrence-lane is committed to the Gate-house Prisoner because he refuseth to swear how many Bayl 's of Silk he hath come over If the first year of our Liberty make such presidents what Monsters will the Sixth and Seventh year produce All Princes begin with moderation The Elders gave good Councel to Rehoboam Serve the People one day and they will serve thee for ever hereafter Nero had a commendable Quinquennium But our Novice Statists are Tyrants ab incunabilis Oppressors with shels upon their heads from the Nest before they are fledge what will they be hereafter 221. Sommer-hill given to Bradshaw A sop for Cerberus Sommerhil a pleasant Seat worth 1000 l. a year belonging to the Earle of Saint Albans is given by the Juncto to their Blood-hound Bradshaw so he hath warned the Countess of Leicester who formerly had it in possession to raise a Debt of 3000 l. pretended due to her from the said Earle which she hath already raised four-fold to quit the possession against our Lady-day next The Protestation and Declaration THe Premises considered I do hereby in the name and behalf of my self and of all the Free people of England Declare and Protest That the General Councel of War and Officers of the Army by their said violent and treasonable force upon the far major more honest and moderate part of the House of Commons being above 250. and leaving only fifty or sixty Schimaticks of their own engaged Party sitting and voting under their Command and almost all of them such as have and do make a prey of the Commonwealth to enrich themselves and their Faction have broken discontinued and waged War against this Parliament and have forfeited their Commissions And the remaining Faction in the House of Commons by abetting ayding and concurring with the said Councel of War in the said rebellious Force and by setting up new illegal and arbitrary Courts of Judicature to Murther King CHARLES the First our lawful King and Governour who by his Writ according to the Law summoned and authorised this Parliament to meet sit Principium Caput fini● Parliamenti Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and advise with him and was the Fountain Head and conclusion or su●matory end of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all Persons and in all Causes of this Kingdome and by Abolishing the House of Peers and the Kingly Office and Dis-inheriting the Kings Children and Vsurping to themselves the Supreme Authority and Legislative P●wer of this Nation in order to make and establish themselves a Councel of State Hogen Mogens or Lords States General and translate the said Supreme Power and Authority into the said Councel of State and then Dissolve this Parliament and perpetute their said Tyranny and this Army and Govern Arbitrarily by the Power of the Sword and raise what illegal Taxes they please and eat out consume and destroy whosoever will not basely submit to their Domination See 1. part sect 105 106. and the Conclusions 15 16 17 18. and return to sect 79 109 110. Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. Oaths of Algiance and Supremacy Have by the aforesaid wayes and means totally subverted this Common-wealth and destroyed the fundamental Laws Authority and Government thereof Dissolved and Abolished this and all future Parliaments so that there is now no visible lawful Authority left in England but the Authority of King CHARLES the Second who is actually KING of all his Dominions presently upon the Decease of the King his Father before any Proclamation made
King James it was then only called An Act of high presumption and dangerous consequence in the Duke nor was there then the least reflection upon King Charles yet now because King Charles dissolved that Parliament the Independent party were willing to raise a suspition against him concerning His Fathers death wheras the accusation against the Duke of Buckingham 3. Caroli contained 7. or 8. Charges against him the least whereof might occasion the dissolving of that Parliament These desperate courses to dishonour the King 74. Why the independents went so high against the King To usurp the regal power into themselves either in the Houses purged or in the Committee of Safety at Derby house and make Him uncapable of Government to ruine His Person Crown and Dignity and extirpate Monarchy root and branch were taken in order to the usurping the Kingly power into the Grandees of the Parliament and Army and in case they could not purge the two Houses and make them wholly Independent which they now despair of then into the Hands of the Committee or Council of State at Derby-house and Grandees of the Army In order to which they are now contriving to strengthen the said Committee with more power and more Members and to adjourn the Parliament and sent down the Presbyterian Members into the Country upon pretence of service where if any Tumults happen for which their extortions will give sufficient provocation the said dissenting Members shall bear the blame and have blank Impeachments given them to purge them out of the Houses if not out of the world or at least be sequestred for now they have squeezed what they can out of the Kings party by Sequestrations the next fewel to their covetousness is to sequester the Presbyterians and then to sequester one another for they are already divided into Pure Independents and Mixed Independents and have feuds amongst themselves for this faction insatiate with money and blood are all beasts of prey and when they want prey will prey one upon another nor shall the Houses meet above one month or two in a year to ratifie and approve what Derby-house and the Junto of the Army shall dictate to them and to give an account to the domineering party how eath Member hath carried himself in the Country Thus instead of one King 75. Why the Grandees do still continue to truck with the King notwithstanding the said 4. Votes we shall have twenty or thirty tyrants in chief and as many subordinate Tyrants as they please to imploy under them with the Iron yoak of an Army to hold us in subjection to their Arbitrary Government Notwithstanding the aforesaid four Votes and Resolutions the Cabal of Grandees still keep Ashburnham and Barkley in the Army and have sent divers Turn-coat-Cavaliers and Emissaries under-hand disguised to the King who pretending that by Bribes they had bought their admission to Him after some insinuations endeavour with false and deceitfull news and arguments to shake His constancy and perswade him to pass the said 4. dethroning Bills for these Usurpers of Sovereign Authority long to turn their armed and violent Tyranny into a legal Tyranny or at least to make him declare against the Scots coming in In both which cases He will dis-hearten His Friends who endeavour to take the golden reigns of Government out of the gripes of these Phaetons and restore them again to His hand unking Himself and His Posterity for ever be carried up and down like a stalking Horse to their Designs and be Crowned Ludibrio Coronae with straw or thorns For who can think that at the end of twenty years these Usurpers will lay down what they have so unjustly contrary to all Laws Divine and Humane and contrary to their own Declarations Oathes and Covenants extorted And who can or dare wrest these powers out of their hands being once setled and grown customary in them the peoples spirits broken with an habitual servitude a numerous Army and Garrisons hovering over them and all places of Judicature filled with corrupt Judges who shall by constrained interpretations of the Law force bloody presidents out of them against whosoever shall dare to be so good a Patriot as to oppose their Tyranny They could make Steel sharp enough to cut Captain Burlies throat for attempting to rescue the King out of the hands of a Rebellious Army that neither obeys King nor Parliament will find gold and silver enough to corrupt all the Judges the mean to prefer and make them Wild and vild enough for their purposes But it is hoped He hath more of a King more of man in Him than to leese his Principles and stumble again at the same stone dash again upon the same Rock whatsoever Syrens sing upon it knowing He hath a Son at liberty to revenge His wrongs all the Princes of Christendom His Allies whose common cause is controverted in His sufferings the greatest men of England and Scotland of His blood and the People generally whose farthest design was to preserve their Laws and Liberties and to defend the Parliament from being conquered by the Sword looking with an angry aspect upon these Seducers who by insensible degrees and many forgeries have ingaged them further than they intended not to the Defence of Religion Laws and Liberties but to the setting up of Schism Committee Law and Martial Law Impeachments before the Lords and unlimitted slavery And I am confident this Faction despair of working upon the King who like a Rock is mediis tutissimus undis whatsoever reports they give out to the contrary having from the beginning made lies their refuge which being wisely foreseen by the King He sent a Message to both Houses by way of prevention delivered in the Painted-Chamber by the Lords of Louderdale one of the Scots Commissioners consisting of three heads 1 That He was taken from Holdenby against his will 2 That they should mantain the Honour and Privileges of Parliament 3 That they should believe no Message as coming from him during his Restraint in the Army but should only credit what they received from His own mouth These Grandees have cheated all the interests of the Kingdom and have lately attempted the City again and had the repulse But the King is their old Customer and hath been often cheated by them and having him in strict custody peradventure they may perswade Him it is for His safety to be deceived once more wherefore notwithstanding their many endeavours to root up Monarchy dethrone the King and His Posterity and usurp his power in order to which they have over-whelmed Him and all His with innumerable calamities and reproaches yet since the passing of the Declaration against the King their desperate condition hath enforced them to make new Addresses in private to Him notwithstanding their four Votes inflicting the penalitie of Treason upon the Infringers But Treason is as natural to Cromwel as false accusing protesting and lying he is so superlative a Traytor that the
Scotland directed to the Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland setting forth what the Parliament had done in way of setling peace reforming the Church and Universities and maintaining the Covenant and union between the two Nations and complaining of Duke Hamilton's Invading England under the Authority of the Parliament of Scotland to the Kirk there How dangerous this president may prove to both Kingdoms to make a few ambitious paedantical Church-men supreme Judges over Parliament and State affairs in ordine ad Deum and how apt they are to lay hold upon such occasions and kindle their zeal into a consuming flame I leave to all wise men to judge 122. A Declaration and 2. Letters from the Prince to the City The Commons Debate upon them Thursday 3. August The Sheriffs of London and some of the Common Council brought to the House the Copies of two Letters they had received from the PRINCE one directed to the Common Council expressing his Highnesse good affection to Peace and to the whole City and his endeavours to vindicate his Fathers Liberty and just Prerogative and Rights to restore to the People their Laws Liberties and Property to free them from that bondage under which they were now held like a Conquered Nation to ease them of Excise and Taxes to settle Religion according to his Fathers Agreement made with the Scots and to reduce all things into their antient and proper Chanel This Letter was accompanied with his Declaration to the same purpose The other was to the Merchant Adventurers Informing them he had made stay of 3. of their ships but without any intent to make prize of them desiring to borrow 20000 l. of them to be repayed out of the Customes and requiring their speedy answer To which Col. Harvy first aggravating many faults in the King's Government according to the scandalous Declaration against him said The Prince was his Fathers own Son as like him as could be That he had invited the Scots to come in and declared for them and had been formerly in Arms against the Parliament That he was but a subject And moved the House to declare him a Rebell and a Traytor Sir Peter Wentworth Mr. Knightly and Mr. Blackstone seconded him with much earnestnesse so did Edward Ash who farther moved That the Common Council and Merchants should give no answer to his Letters saying there was no danger the Prince should make prize of their ships for that he had engaged to the States of the Low-Countries to do no act prejudicial to Trade At last the Debate was put off until the next day being Friday when the Speaker putting the House in mind of it again It was earnestly called upon by the younger Sir John Evelin Mr. Solicitors shadow Scot Weaver Holland Boys and almost all the Godly Gang. So the Debate was resumed and Weaver went very high to try the temper of the House But the Debate in Terminis That the Prince should be declared a Rebell and a Traytor was soon laid by though violently pressed chiefly upon these reasons 1. That they had not the Originals of the Princes Letter and Declaration which the Common-Council still kept but onely Copies not so much as attested upon Oath by any authentical Clerk therefore no legal proceedings could be upon them 2. To Vote the Prince a Traytor the same day when they sent Messengers to invite the King his Father to a Treaty of Peace would argue no peaceable inclination in them and would be so understood by the People 3. They were engaged by the Nationall Covenant to defend the King's Person Crown and Dignity but the Prince Heir apparent to His Crown was next under God the chief supporter of his Crown and Dignity therefore to Vote him a Traitor was to subvert his Crown and Dignity 4. By the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. it is High Treason to endeavour the destruction of the Prince the Kings eldest Son but to declare him a Rebel and a Traitor was to endeavour to destroy him and therefore High Treason 5. The people were already jealous that the KING and His Posterity should be laid by and in them the Monarchical Government of this Nation subverted and a new form of Government introduced they had already by the Votes of No Addresses to the KING and by their Declaration against Him wherein they say They can no longer confide in Him laid by the KING and now to Vote the PRINCE a Rebel and a Traytor was to lay by both him and his Brother the DUKE of YORK who adheres to him which would exceedingly confirm the people in their feares But what they could not do expresly All that adhere to the Prince declared Traytors they did implicitly by Voting All that should adhere to ayd or assist the PRINCE Rebels and Traytors Hereby they put a tie upon the City not to redeem their Ships by lending 20000 l. to the Prince and yet had a Pirat taken them it had been lawful to redeem them Saturday 5 August 123. The National Covenant The House of Commons went upon the Commissioners to judge of Scandals there was a Clause in the Ordinance forbidding the Nomination of such as refused the National Covenant which was strongly opposed by the Independents who argued That the National Covenant was but a League sworn mutually by the two Nations that the Scots by Invading England had first broke it and thereby set the English at liberty from it that the Covenant was not Jure divino no more than Presbytery was To which was Answered That the large Treaty containing the League between the two Nations so did not the Covenant which was a Vow made unto God with our hands lifted up to heaven for the maintenance and observation of the ends and principles expressed in the Covenant from which no power on Earth can absolve That though the Covenant was not Jure divino yet the keeping of it after we have taken it is Jure divino it being the revealed will of God that we should not offer to him the sacrifice of fools a Covenant to day and break it to morrow 124. A new Militia erected in every County in the hands of Sectaries Mondon 7 August A particular Ordinance to put the County of Wilts into a posture of defence was read many that were named to be Deputy Lieutenants or Commissioners were mean petty fellowes as one Read a Serving-man and others such as refuse to Act upon the Ordinances for setling Church Government and declare that our Ministery is Antichristian and are new dipped Brethren that have been re-baptized These to have power to raise what men and put arms into what hands they list to fine 10 l. and twenty days Imprisonment for every default and to levy 400 l. a week upon that poor County over and above the Taxes to Fairfax's Army and Ireland and Free-quarter The general Ordinance to trust the Counties with their own defence is obstructed to give way to these particular Ordinances
of the Army and Houses of Parliament to purchase their compliance and Votes in all matters agitated in the Houses of Parliament by reason whereof all motions for His Majesties return to his Parliament the first step to our desired Peace have been either totally rejected or by them politickly delayed because Peace would determine both their power and profit 7. The Estates of Delinquents the Lands of Bishops Deans and Chapters designed by several Ordinances for discharge of publique Debts are by the Houses and power of the Army shared and divided amongst themselves while the publique debts be unsatisfied the common Souldier unpayed the mained unrelieved the Widdows and Children of the slain unprovided for and all left burdens to the Commonwealth 8. That the Army consisting of mean ignorant and illiterate men only gilt with hypocrisie divine and civil under pretence of tender Consciences the better to induce and tolerate all Heresies have expelled and supprest all learned Orthodox Divines and Church Government and crying Liberty Liberty have subjected our Persons and Estates to arbitrary Law and tyranny and by Rape imbracing the Legislative power cuckolds the body Politick giving Laws to the whole Kingdom and yet by Petitions and Remonstrances make both Houses father as their own the adulterous issue 9. That this Army assuming to themselves the modelling and settlement both of Church and State at Windsor in April last in their Council did consult these 3. Questions First Whether shall we joyn with the Levellers and new model both Church and State Next Whether with the moderate Party Treat and receive the KING with more qualified and limited Power Thirdly Whether Depose the KING Dis-inherit the PRINCE Crown the DUKE of YORK and appoint a Protector The first was held to promise most of liberty and profit but threatned greatest danger in effecting and difficulty in continuing The second was said to be easiest obtained and continued because nighest to the present frame and constitution already setled but would bring them little of profit and less of Soveraignty The third like Benjamin last in birth but first in the Parents affections was held not difficult to be acted but to be maintained for it would require both the expence of much blood and money and the Kingdom to re-act York and Lancaster under the names of Wales and York To this Lieut. Gen. Cromwel answered It was the better for that would necessitate the continuance of our Army which secures our persons will enforce our reasons make just our demands and facilitate their grant For the bloud that will flow from the cheapveins of Common Souldiers whereof England hath plenty and we will not want For the money London is our bank and from their Purses it shall drain to our Coffers Commissary Ireton L. Gen. Cromwel's Son-in-law said The work was half done for we have already Voted no Addresses to be made to the King and Him guilty of crimes enough to Depose Him and by Imprisoning His Person have fitted Him for a private life and by it taught the people that He is subject to the dispose of both Houses of Parliament whole Ordinances are only powerful by our Swords and therefore our Actions shall be legal by their Vote Further the Prince said he is link'd with his Father in crime and therefore cannot be severed in punishment he hath been General in a Western Army warring as his Father against the Parliament a crime that as it rendred the Father fit to be Deposed so doth it the Son unfit to succeed in the Government And that the descent of the Crown purge not him as it did Hen. 7. let us in the Fathers life time Crown the Duke of York now in our power whose tender years have preserved him innocent and presents him fitter for protection and our design and should any blame our severity towards the King and Prince others will commend our clemency towards the Duke of York Upon the result of this Council L. Gen. Cromwel in the House of Commons tels Mr. Speaker That it was time to set on foot our great design and that such as should not concur in Votes with us be not continued of us The motion being mis-timed and divers of his party absent it was only wondred at by Master Knightly and died with the words The Scene now alters from Westminster to Carisbrook-Castle and the King that could not be removed by Votes must now by Poyson the Actor Col. Hammond Major Rolf c. all Members of the Army yet must we by cursed Excise that insensibly devours the poor by insupportable Monthly Taxes that impoverish the rich contrary to Law and our Allegiance contrary to our Protestation and Covenant inforced upon us we must traiterously maintain and pay this Army that traiterously contrive and endeavour the deposal and murder of our Soveraign Lord the King the subversion of our Protestant Church our Fundamental and known Laws We therefore declare to the World that God blessing us we will with hazard of our lives and fortunes disband and dissipate this Army the Suppressors of the pure Protestant Religion the Imprisoners and would be the Murtherers of their Soveraign Lord the King and grand Oppressors of the Common-wealth then free from Imprisonment our said Soveraign and him God-willing restore to his lawfull Government just Rights and Throne in Parliament this done we shall joyfully and readily deposite our justly assumed Arms and on our knees beg what his Majesty hath often most graciously offered and will undoubtedly grant his most Royal and gracious pardon to all his mis-led Subjects will return to their Allegiance and forward to bring the King back to his own house We therefore hereby earnestly desire and request all loyal and wel-affected Subjects as well Members of both Houses of Parliament as others to be herein aiding and assisting to us First by not recruiting the Forces of the Lord Fairfax Next by withdrawing all aid and assistance from his Army by with-holding Excise and Monthly Taxes allotted for their pay and support and to give us with their prayers such assistance as their Allegiance and opportunity shall advise and we trust that the God that judgeth rightly will crown our loyal action with happy successe and our successe with a glorious peace which is heartily prayed for and shall God willing be resolutely fought for by us His Majecties loyal and faithfull Subjects in Colchester A List of the Names of the Members of the House of Commons Observing which are Officers of the Army contrary to the self-denying Ordinance Together with such summes of Money Offices and Lands as they have given to themselves for service done and to be done against the KING and Kingdom Corrected and augmented Note Reader that such as have this mark * comming immediately before their Names are Recruiters illegally elected by colour of the new Seal the power of the Army and voices of the Souldiers and are unduly returned and serve accordingly The first Century 1. WIlliam Lenthall
of this Parliament and all Souldiers are engaged also by their own Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals to defend assert and vindicate with their Lives and Fortunes the Person Authority Title of our aforesaid Lawful KING and Suprem Governour the undoubtful Heire of all his late Fathers Dominions CHARLS the Second by the Grace of God King of Great Britaine France and Ireland c. against all opposites and pretended Authorities whatsoever unlesse they will be guilty of the fowlest sinnes of Treason Rebellion Perjury and Perfidiousnesse against their God their King and Countrey and of prostituting the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Land their Wives Children and Estates to the lusts of an Armed Faction usurping a farre more Arbitrary and Tyrannical Power over our Consciences Persons Liberties and Estates then ever was known in England before or then is now used by the Russe Turk or Tartar or any the most enslaving and lawlesse Tyrants under Heaven An Exhortatory CONCLUSION to the English NATION Compare the Date of the K. Commissions with those of the Parliament and their Declarations on both sides TO conclude the series of Affaires and Action on both Parties especially of late rightly compared it appeareth by the sequel That KING CHARLES the First from the beginning took up Defensive Armes to maintain Religion Lawes Liberties and the Antient fundamental Being of Parliaments and this Kingdome and that there alwayes was and now especially is a predominant Faction in Parliament notwithstanding their frequent Declarations Remonstrances Petitions Protestations Covenant and Votes to the contrary conspiring with a Party especially of Commissioned Officers of the Army without the Houses to change the Fundamental Lawes and Government of the Church and Common-wealth to usurp into a few hands the Supreme Authority to enslave the People with an Oligarchical Military and Arb trary Government to raise what illegal Taxes they please to establish their Tyranny and enrich themselves and their Party to oppresse consume and devoure all Men of a judgement contrary to their Interest to Murder them by new declared arbitrary Treasons contrary to the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. for ascertaining Treasons to Disfranchise them of their birth-rights and make them Adscriptios Glebae Villains Regardante to their owne Lands which the Nobility Gentry and Yeomanry plough sowe and reap whilest Brewers Dray-men and Coblers eate drink and play upon the sweat of their Labours and are the Usufructuaries of their Estates All which they have lately brought to passe wherefore let all true Engl shmen as becomes good Christians good Patriots and gallant Men claim their Birth-rights and with one voice cry out 1. We will not Change our Ancient setled and well-approved Lawes to which we are sworne 2. We will not Change our Ancient and well-tempered Monarchy to wh ch we are sworne 3. We will not change our old Religion for New Lights and Inventions 4. We will not subject our selves to an eighth part of one Estate or House of Parliament sitting under a force and having expelled two hundred and fifty of their Fellows more Righteous then themselves by force and usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority 5. We will not be subjected to a new Supreme Authority usurped by fourty ambitious covetous Tyrants arrogating to themselves to be a Councel of State and designed to supply the room of Parliaments under what name or title soever they shall mask themselves 6. We will not submit our selves to a Military Government or Councel of Officers 7. We must and will have A KING See the Star of Recognition 1. Iac. and the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy and The KING whom the Lawes of God and this Land have designed to us we being by the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy sworne to beare faith and true Allegiance to KING CHARLES the First his lawful Heires and Successors Hic telum infigam moriarque in vulnere Postscript REader at the latter end of my First part of The History of Independency I have presented to thy consideration some General Conclusions arising out of the Premises the same Conclusions does naturally arise out of the Premises of this Second Part of the History and do as aptly serve to illustrate this Second as that First part wherefore to that First Part I send thee for opening thy understanding When our old Lawes run again into their Ancient Channel and the Sword of Murder is sheathed and the Sword of Justice drawn the Author engageth to publish his Name and Apology and shew what he hath done and suffered for the Parliament and Kingdom THE END TO THE READER READER having spoken to thee in the First Part I might have forborn thee in this Second did I not feare to seem guilty of the fullennesse and malignity of these times The subject-matter of my Book is a Combination or Faction of Pseudo-Polititians and Pseudo-Theologicians Hereticks and Schismaticks both in Divinity and Policy who having sacrificed to their Fancies Lusts Ambition and Avarice both their God and Religion their King and Country our Laws Liberties and Properties all duties Divine and Humane are grown so far in love with their prosperous Sins as to entitle God himself to be Father and Author of them from whose written Word and revealed Will held forth to us in the Scriptures as the only North Pole and Cynosure of our Actions where they find no warrant for their doing they appeal to the secret Will and Providence of God to which they most Turkishly and Heathenishly ascribe all their enormities only because they succeed and from that Abysse of Gods Providence draw secondary principles of Necessity and Honest Intentions to build the Babel of their confused Designes and Actions upon not considering that wicked Men perform the secret Will a God to their Damnition as good Men do the known Will of their Father to their Salvation If a Man lie sick to death and his Son wish him dead this is Sin in the Son although his desire concur with the Secret Will of God because the Son ought to desire the preservation of his Fathers life whereto the Will of God revealed in his Word obligeth him and vivendum secundùm Praecepta non secundùm Decreta Dei The secret Will and Providence of God can be no rule and law of our Actions because we know it not nor can search into it without presumption We must not therefore altum sapere think our selves too wise and well-gifted to tie our selves to the Scripture of God and lust after Revelations and Inspirations expecting God should rain Bread from Heaven for us Manna Exod 16.4 but be wise unto Sobriety But prosperum scelus virtus vocatur Thus casting off the written Word of God unless where by an enforced Interpretation they can squeeze Atheisme and Blasphemy out of it as they do somtimes rack Treason Murder and Non-sense out of our Laws and Parliament-Priviledges conducible to their ends they insensibly cast off God himself and make themselves both the
the good opinion of the people and City and to keep them from stirring and to stay the moderate Party of the two Houses from Declaring the Army Enemies recalling and Voting their Commissions and established Pay void which they might have done with ruine to the Army and their Party in that Conjuncture of Affairs and with safety to themselves and applause of all honest men of England that had taken part with the Parliament from the beginning had not some Grandees of the rigid Presbyterian party both within and without the Houses some cursed thing some Achans wedge in their bosomes which suggested Their sins were greater than could be forgiven and therefore they durst not cast down the partition-wall between them and the King this Army though it lean so hard upon them it is ready to overwhelm them War is necessary for some men of every Faction whose crying sins peace will lay open and naked to the scorn derision and detestation of the world How well these sanctimonious Sword-players of the Army have observed the Duties and Undertakings of their said Humiliation let the world judge Have they not returned again with the Dog to the Vomit have they not cozened God and their own Soules Sure they fasted from sin then that they might sin with the more greedy appetite now and asked God forgiveness of the old score that they might sin again upon a new score Thus you see the two Treaties in the Isle of Wight were begotten by fear and that Idol of the Independents to which they offer up all their knaveries necessity They were Cockatrice Eggs laid by their Grandees when they had been Crow-trodden by Armies from abroad and Tumults at home See my 1. part sect 65 66 105 106 107 and the Conclusions there Sect. 16 17 18. upon which they s●te abrood onely to hatch Scandals and new quarrels against the King Anarchy and confusion to the State and Tyranny and oppression of the People to set up the Olygarchy of the Saints or Councel of State the Kingdom of the Brambles which since doth scratch the wool from off the skin the skin from off the flesh and the flesh from off the bones I have been compelled to use some introductory Repetitions in this part of my discourse that I may give you the whole mystery of the 2. Treaties with the King in the Isle of Wight with the causes efficient and final of them under one view lest some one link of the Chain escaping your observation it become a Chain of errors to you My first part of the History of Independency ends with that which was but an unlucky preface to a Treaty with the King 3. Hamilton overthrowne See my 1. part sect 136. namely Cromwel's menacing Letters to the Speaker of the House of Commons dated August 20. 1648. Relating his easie purchase of a great Victory over Duke Hamilton and Lieut. Gen. Bayly wherein he relates the number of the Scotish Forces farre differing from the former Report of Lieut. Col. Osborne a Scottish Gentleman made in the House of Commons July 20. Sect. 110 111. whereof I have spoken in my first part who to take away the terror of them estimated Hamiltons and Langdales conjoyned forces to be but 10000. and it was then thought a note of disaffection to report them any more but this Letter for the greater glory of his sanctified Army multiplies them to be 21000. The manner of the Fight was very strange and Exceedingly to be suspected especially by any man who hath heard or read of Bayly's former demeanour in his own Country at Kylsythe and Auforte Kirke It was little better than a beating up of Quatters for 20. miles together for so far the Scots Army lay scattered in their Quarters the Horse so farre distant from their Foot they could bring them no seasonable reliefe Sir Marmaduke Langdale with his small Party drew forth and made an honourable resistance had he been timely and strongly seconded on the Scotish Party the Fight began at Preston in Lancashire where the Duke being worsted retreated to Wigon from thence to Warrington thorow Lanes and Fastnesses where Bayly Lieut. General of the Scotish Foot being strongly quartered upon a Bridg and Passe yeilded up 6000. Foot and Armes without fighting and so ruined his whole Infantry from Warrington the Duke fled with 4000. Horse to Namptwich from thence to Vtoxeter where his manner of yeilding himselfe to Colonel Wayte a Member of the House of Commons take out of Waytes owne report in the House who said the Duke yeilded simply and without any Articles of Surrender that he voluntarily gave him his Sword Scarfe Signet of Armes and his George that he hung upon him so that he could not get from him desiring him to secure him from the rage of the Souldiers saying He had not come into England but that he was invited by a greater part of Lords Commons Citizens and Covenanters then called in the last Scotish Army presently the Bloud-hounds of the Faction in the House sented this and called upon Wayte to know whether he named any Wayte Answered that Hamilton was ● s●btil● politique Lord and no doubt for the saving of his owne life would do that in more convenient time Hereupon a Committee all of Canibal Saints was presently packed and ordered to go downe and examine the Duke but no particulars could they get from him which was an honourable silence and made amends for his former lavish speech It was happy the Prince did not trust himself in the Head of this Army Had Hamilton marched immediately to Colchester or but to Pont●fract which he might easily have done Lambert his onely Opposite still retreating before him the whole Country had risen with him But he knew the Presbyterian party had rendred themselves contemptible and he as much contemned the Independents therefore he foreslowed his march willing Cromwell and Fairfax should subdue all other Parties and that he onely might have Armes in his hands to bring in the King upon his own tearmes this over-confidence undid him He was too much a States-man and too little a Souldier 4. The insolency of the schismaticall Members upon report of the Victory This Victory did worke like Botled-Ale with Scot Thomson Cornelius Holland Sir Henry Mildmay and many others of the light headed Saints who were so puffed up with the windinesse of it that they began to swell with disdaine and malice against the Personal Treaty and to threaten and insult over all that had either Petitioned for it from abroad or spoke for it in the House as the only meanes of peace and a settlement 5. The wiser sort subtilly continue a mock-Treaty But the wiser sort more crafty to doe mischiefe knowing that the people were weary of Taxes and the Army and had no hopes of peace but by a Personal Treaty and were resolved to purchase peace although at the price of a new VVarre that Colchester Pontefract Scarborough and
Setlement may be immediately suspend t●e H●u●e and that all such faithfull Members who are inn●cent of 〈…〉 s would by Protestation acquit themselves from any 〈◊〉 in them that they may be distinguished This is ●o subv●●t the foundation of Parliaments and appeale to the judgement of the many-headed multitude without doors and put all into Tum●lts You see what kind of Parliament the Kingdome hath had ever since the Army Rebelled and Refused to Disband a ●eer ●ree-Schoole where Crommel is Head-school-master Ir●●n Us●e● and that cypher Fairfax a Prepositer surely these ●en are either the supreme Judges or the supreme Rebels and Tyrants of the Kingdome This Paper was delivered in but they scorning to s●ay for an Answer by advice of their Independent Grandees of the Junto upon Wednesday morning Decemb. 6. 16●8 Sent two or three Regiments of Horse and Foot to W●stminster set strong Guards at the Houses doors the Lobby c●aires and at every door leading towards the House admitting none but Parliament men to enter Westminster-hall where Col. Pride Col. H●wson and Hardres Waller sometimes a Cavalier then a violent Presbyterian and now a tyrannical ●ndependent violently seized upon divers Knights and Burgesses upon the ●arliament staires and elswhere going to the House and forcibly carried them away Prisoners to the Queens Court without any warrant shewed or cause assigned and there set strict Guards upon them Mr. Edward Stephens and Col. Birche being in the House of Commons were called forth by feigned Messages sent in by some Officers under other Mens Names and there violently pulled out of the door though they called to the Speaker to take notice of the force The House sent the Sergeant of the ●ace to command the Imprisoned Members attendance but the Guards would not let them come A second time the Sergeant was sent with his Mace upon the same Errand but Col. Pride in the Lobby would not let him passe which contempt was entred in the Journall Book Hereupon the House concluded not to proceed in businesse until their Members were restored and sent to the General about it yet afterwards when the Officers had several dayes secured secluded and frighted away more of the Members and made the House a Conventicle of their own Complexion then the House prevaricated and deserted their Members About three of the Clock afternoon Hugh Peters with a Sword by his side but not the Sword of Saint Peter came into the Queens Court to take a List of the Prisoners Names by order from the Generall as he said where being demanded by what Authority they were imprisoned he answered By the power of the Sword Night being come the Imprisoned Members 41. in number were conveyed away to a Victualling-House called HELL and there kept all Night without Beds or any fitting Accommodation when it grew late some of them had offers made them to go upon their Parolls to their own Lodgings and to appear the next morning at White-hall but this was but a jugling trick to make them acknowledge the Lord Fairfax Authority and become voluntary prisoners upon their own engagement● and was therefore refused The next morning being Thursday the Imprisoned Members had warning given them to meet the General and his Councel of Warr at White-hall whither they were guarded in Coaches tyred out with watching and fasting But the mechanick Councel took so much state upon them that after six or seven houres attendance until dark night and no admittance nor application to them they were led away from thence on foot with Guards of Musketiers like Thieves and Rogues and thorow the kennels like Col. Prides Dray-horses to the Swan and Kings-head two Innes in the Strand and there distributed under several Centinels The Souldiers making a stand with them sometimes half an houre together in the snow and raine until they had put their Guards into a ma●ching posture and reviling them See the 2. part of Englands Chaines discovered and the Hunting of the Foxes c. that they were the men that had cousened the State of their money and kept back their Pay Upon which scandalous provocation some of them Answered That it was the Committee of the Army and their owne Officers that had cousened them which some of the Foot-souldiers then acknowledged Besides the 41. Imprisoned Members the Officers standing several dayes with Lists of Names in their hands at the Parliament-door have turned back from the House and denied entrance unto above 160. other Members besides 40. or 50. Members who voluntarily withdrew to avoid their violence all whom they know to be Losers by the VVarre and therefore desirous of a safe and wel-grounded peace so that they have made warre against the majority of the House that is against the whole House for major pars obtinet rationem totius by all our Lawes and Customes The major part of the House is virtually the whole House which is Treason by their owne Declarations and Remonstrance farre higher than that whereof they accuse the King and for which they demand Justice against Him and the remaining faction of 40. or 50. engaged Members who now passe unpresidented Acts of Parliament of the House of Commons as they call them without the Lords ought not to sit Act nor take upon them the stile of a House under so visible actual and horrid a force both by the Lawes of the Land and their owne Ordinance passed August 20. 1647 To null and void al● Orders Votes and Acts passed under the Tumult of Apprentices from July 26. to the 6. August following and yet the said Tumult ended the said July 26. when it begun See the said Ordinance herewith printed The Army who now acknowledge no power but that of the Sword as Major White long since foretold at Putney and whose principle it is To break the Powers of the Earth to pieces as Will. Sedgewicke in his Justice upon the Army-Remonstrance saith And who as Joh. Lilburne in his Plea for Common Right p. 6. saith have by these extraordinary proceedings overturned all the visible supreme Authority of this Nation now suffer only their own party of 40. or 50. Members to sit and do journey-work under them who are Enemies to peace and have got well by fishing in troubled waters and hope to get better so that hardly a seventh or eight part of the Counties Cities and Burroughs that ought to have Members sitting have any body to represent them and therfore how they shall be bound by the Votes and Acts of this fagge end this Rump of a Parliament with corrupt Maggots in it I doe not see Friday Decemb. 8. a Message from the General was brought to Sir Robert Harlow that he might go home to his house giving his engagement not to oppose the actings and proceedings of this present Parliament and Army The like was offered to diverse others you see hereby what the offence of these Imprisoned Members is onely a feare that they will defend the fundamental Government the
strong armed Guards of Horse and Foot upon them without and against their Order is the highest and most detestable force and breach of Priviledge and Freedom ever offered to any Parliament of England and that all Acts Ordinances Votes and proceedings of the said House made since the 6. of Decemb. aforesaid or hereafter to be made during our restraint and forcille seclusion from the House and the continuance of the Armies force upon it are no way obligatorie but void and null to all intents and purposes And that all Contrivers of Actors in and Assistants to this unparallel'd force and treasonable armed violence are open Enemies to and professed Subverters of the Priviledges Rights and Freedom of Parliament and Disturbers of the pace and settlement of the Kingdom and ought to be proceeded against as such and that all Members of Parliament and Commoners of England by their solemn Covenant and dutie under paine of deepest perjurie and eternall infamie are obliged unanimouslie to oppose and endeavour to their utmost power to bring them to exemplarie and condigne punishment for this transcendent offence tending to the dissolution of the present and subversion of all future Parliaments and of the fundamentall Government and Laws of this Realm All which we held it our duties to declare and publish to the world for fear our stupid silence should give any tacit consent or approbation to this most detestable crime and make us guiltie of betraying the Priviledges Freedom and Honour of this Parliament to our perpatuall reproach and the prejudice of all succeeding Parliaments Dated at Westminster Decemb. 11. 1648. 27. The tame Lords and insolent Commons pass and print a Declaration against the said Declaration The said solemn Protestation of the secured Members being complained of was sufficiently barked at in the House of Commons and the Lords fell a barking at it too for company and at last that they might confute it with Authority instead of Reason both Houses passed this following declaration against it The Declaration of the Lords and Commons Against the first Declaration of the secured and secluded Members THe Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament taking into their consideration a printed Paper entituled A solemn Protestation of the Imprisoned and secluded Members c. wherein amongst other things it is Declared That all Acts Ordinances Votes and proceedings of the House of Commons made since the 6. of this instant Decemb. or hereafter to be made during their restraint and forcible seclusion from the House The present visible Government is the Power of the Sword in the hands of Rebels The fundamental Government of this Kingdom is destroyed by the Faction remaining in the House of Commons by their Acts For abolishing Kingly Government The House of Peers their putting down Trials by Jury of 12. men and setting up illegal High Courts of Justice their usurping the Supream Authority their m●k●ng Treason an Arbitrary crime their erecting a Councel of State o● Hogens mogens forty Tyrants in lieu of one King their altering the stile of Writs and Legal Proceedings c. Sentence given before any person accused or heard to speak for himself Oh the brutish understanding of men whose sins and fears have intoxicated their wits and the continuance of the Armies force upon it are no way obligatory but void and null to all intents and purposes The said Lords and Commons do thereupon judge and declare the said printed Paper to be false scandalous and seditious and tending to destroy the visible and fundamental Government of this Kingdome And do therefore order and ordain the said printed Paper to be suppressed and that all persons whatsoever that have had any hand in or given consent unto the contriving framing printing or publishing thereof shall be adjudged and hereby are adjudged uncapable to bear any Office or have any place of trust or authoritie in this Kingdome or to sit as Members of either House of Parliament And do further order and ordain That every Member of either House respectively now absent upon his first coming to sit in that House whereof he is a Member for the manifestation of his innocencie shall disavow and disclaim his having anie hand in or given consent unto the contriving framing printing or publishing of the said paper or the matter therein contained The 12. and 13. Decem●er 28. The Conventicle of Commons repeat ex tempore in a thin House under a force the Votes deliberately passed in a full and free House the Commons that they might purge their Journal Books of all State-Heresies as well as their House of all State-Hereticks voted this Index expurgatorius which in their own canting language I here present to you 1. Resolved c. That the Vote of this House Jan. 3. 1647. for revoking the Order Sept. 9. 1647. for suspending Commissary Lion●l Copley from being a Member of this House is of dangerous consequence and tending to the destruction of the justice and peace of the Kingdom and is hereby repealed The like for the rest of the Impeached Members mutatis mutandis 2. Resolved c. That the Vote of the House June 30. 1648. whereby this House did concur with the Lords for opening of a way to the Treaty with His Majesty for a safe and well-grounded Peace That the Votes Jan. 3. 1647. forbidding all Addresses to be made to or from the King be taken off was highly dishonourable to the proceedings of Parliament and apparently destructive to the good of the kingdom sure they meant the kingdom of the Saints They likewise by four several Votes revived the said 4. Votes Jan. 3. for no Addresses in terminis 3. Resolved c. That the Vote Iuly 28. 1648. That a Treaty be bad in the Isle of Wight with the King in person by a Committee appointed by both Houses upon the Propositions presented to him at Hampton-Court was highly dishonourable and apparently destructive to the good of the kingdome The House adjourned Good Boyes they can say their Lessons well and apace too when the Army whips them on they will shortly have a jubilee of play-days for their pains 40 or 50 new Lights snuffed by the Councel of War can better discover what is dishonourable and apparently destructive to their own kingdom then 340. or 244 could do at other times If you ask what Debates they had they could have none being now freed from the contradiction of sinners being all Birds of a feather taught the same tune by the same Masters and singing in the same cage 29. A Protest to be entred against the Votes That the Kings Grants were a ground for a settlement a Touch-stone of I. Gourdons See the Order Dec. 5. 1648. Yet the unanimous recalling those Votes was not thought by those that think one thing and say another a sufficient Test all were confidently for them that voted with them wherefore godly John Gourdon a Fellow that spits venome as naturally as a Toad moved That
but the designs projects of Jesuits Popish Priests and Recusants who bear chief sway in their Councels to destroy and subvert our Religion Laws Liberties Government Magistracy Ministry the present and all future Parl. the King his Posterity and our 3. Kingdoms yea the Generall Officers and Army themselves and that with speedy and inevitable certaint● to betray them all to our forreign Popish Enemies and give a just occasion to the Prince and Duke now in the Papists power to alter their Religion and engage them and all forreign Princes and Estates to exert all their power to suppresse and extirpate the Protestant Religion and Professors of it through all the world which these unchristian scandalous treacherous rebellious tyrannicall Jesuitical disloyall bloudy present Councels and exorbitances of this Army of Saints so much pretending to piety and justice have so deeply wounded scandalized and rendred detestable to all pious carnall morall men of all conditions All which I am and shall alwaies be ready to make good before God Angels Men and our whole three Kingdoms in a free and full Parliament upon all just occasions and seale the truth of it with the last drop of my dearest bloud In witnesse whereof I have hereunto subscribed my Name at the Signe of the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. 51. The Councell of War forbid all state and ceremony to the King From Dec. 25. to 1. January Num. 283. 27. Decemb. The Councel of VVarr who manage the businesse in relation to the King saith the Diurnal ordered That all state and ceremony should be forborne to the King and his Attendants lessened to mortifie him by degrees and work Him to their desires VVhen it was first moved in the House of Commons to proceed capitally against the King 52. Cromwels Sp. in the Ho. when it was first propounded to try the King Cromwell stood up and told them That if any man moved this up●n d●signe he should think him the greatest Traytour in the world but since providence and necessity had cast them upon it he should pray God to blesse their Councels though he were not provided on the suddaine to give them counsel this blessing of his proved a curse to the King 53. The Ordinance for electing Com Councel men confi●med 28. Decemb. was brought into and read in the House an Ordinance explaining the former Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men which confirmed the former Ordinance It was referred back againe to the said Committee to consider of taking away the illegal as they please to miscall them Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy and other Oaths usually administred to Officers Free-men c. of the City The 28. Decemb. Tho. Scot brought in the Ordinance for Trial of the King it was read and recommitted three severall times 54. The Ordinance for Trial of His Majesty passed the Commons and the Commissioners Names inserted consisting of diverse Lords Commons Aldermen Citizens Country Gentlemen and Souldiers that the more persons of all sorts might be engaged in so damnable and treasonable a designe and because this Ordinance and the proceedings thereupon had no foundation in Divinity Law reason nor practice The Commons to give it a foundation and ground from the authority of their Votes declared as followeth Resolved c. Diurnall from 1. Ian. to the 8. of Ian. 1648. Numb 286. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament doe declare and adjudge That by the fundamental Laws of the Realme it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levie War against the Parliament and Kingdom of England So together with this declaratory Vote the said Ordinance was carried up to the Lords by that Renegado Lord Gray of Grooby Jan. 2. 1648. 55. And sent up to the Lords The Lords met that day farre more than ordinary 16. in number and promising to send an Answer by Messengers of their owne The first Question started by some Lords who had rather have had a thinner House was 56. And Debated Whether it should be presently debated which passed Affirmatively The first Debate was upon the said Declaratory Vote The Earle of Manchester told them The Parliament of England by the fundamentall Laws of England consisted of three Estates 1. King 2. Lords 3. Commons the King is the first and chief Estate He calls and dissolves Parliaments and confirmes all their Acts and without him there can be no Parliament therefore it is absurd to say The King can be a Traitour against the Parliament The Earle of Northumberland said The greatest part at least twenty to one of the people of England were not yet satisfied whether the King levied war first against the Houses or the Houses against Him 57. The Zealots of the H. of Com offended with the Lords for casting forth the Ordin for Triall of the King And if the King did levie Warr first against the Houses we have no Law to make it Treason in Him so to doe And for us to declare Treason by an Ordinance when the matter of fact is not yet proved nor any Law extant to judge it by is very unreasonable so the Lords cast off the Debate and cast out the Ordinance and adjourned for seven dayes Jan. 3. The Zealots of the Commons were very angry at the Lords and threatned to clap a Pad-lock on the Door of their House but at last they sent up some of their Members to examine the Lords Book and see what they have done who brought word back that their Lordships had passed 2. Votes 1. That they doe not concurre to the said Declaratory Vote 2. That they had rejected the Ordinance for Triall of the King 58. Votes passed by them therupon Hereupon the Commons resolved to rid their hands of King and Lords together and presently they voted That all Members of the House of Commons and others appointed by order of that House or Ordinances of both Houses of Parliament to act in any Ordinance wherin the Lords are joyned shall be impowred and enjoyned to sit and act and execute in the said several Committees of themselves notwithstanding the House of Peers joyne not with them therein Upon the debate many hot-brain'd men insisted upon it That the Lords who rejected the Ordinance should be themselves Impeached for favouring the grand Delinquent of England you see the King was likely to have much justice when his Judges must either condemne Him or be condemned others thought it more prudence to touch their Priviledges and let alone their Persons Die Iovis 4. Jan. 1648. The Commons passed these 3. Votes A question in Divinity voted in Parliament never agreed to by Divines This we find de fact● in the subversion of our Religion Lawes Liberties and Properties though not de Jure You see that since both Houses ravished the Supremacy from the King and a petty faction from the Houses our Lawes are first shrunk into arbitrary Ordinances of
a force consulting in the House without their fellow Members advice or concurrence about speedie Deposing and executing CHARLES their lawfull Soveraign to please the Generall Officers and Counsell of the Army who have usurped to themselves the Supreme Authoritie both of King and Parliament or rather the Jesuits and Popish Priests among them 1. By the Common Law the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. Cok. 5. Inst 4. 1. Stamf. Pleas of the Crown l. 1. c. 1 2. and all other Acts concerning Treason It is High Treason for any man by overt act to compass the death of the King or his eldest Son though never executed and so adjudged by Parliament in the Earl of Arundels Case 21 Ric. 2. Plac. Coronae n. 4 6 7. 2. In the Oath of Allegiance which every man takes before he sits in Parliament you acknowledge him to be lawful and rightful King of this Realm and that the Pope neither of himself nor by any authority of the See of Rome or by any other means with any other hath any Power or Authority to depose the King c. Exact Collect. p. 16 19 21 59 66 83 102 103 118 123 125 141 142 143 173 180 195 219 259 281 307 380 312 360 376 457. A Collect c. p. 13 18 41 43 44 49 51 61 64 96 181 182 340 341 424 425 499 599 623 696 806 807 879. Appendix p. 15. 3. Your selves amongst other Members in above one hundred Remonstrances Declarations Petitions Ordinances c. in the name of the Parliament have professed You never intended the least hurt injury or violence to the Kings Person Crown Dignity or Posterity but intended to Him and His Posterity more Honour Happiness Glory and Greatness than ever any of His predecessors enjoyed That you would make good to the uttermost with your Lives and Fortunes the Faith and Allegiance you have alwaies born to him That all Contributions Loans should be imploied onely to maintain the Protestant Religion the Kings Authoritie Person Royal Dignitie Laws of the Land Peace of the Kingdome and Priviledges of Parliament That the Forces raised by the Parliament were for defence of the Kings Person and of both Houses That the Parliament will ever have a care to prevent any danger to his Person That they are resolved to expose their lives and fortunes for maintenance of the Kings Person Honour and Estate and the Power and Priviledges of Parliament when the King taxed the Houses for insinuating Exact Collect. p. 298 695 696 657 658 991. That if they should make the highest Presidents of other Parliaments their pattern that is depose the King there could be no cause to complain of them Both Houses by two Declarations protested against it saying That such thoughts never entred nor should enter into their loyal hearts Collect. of all Orders p. 8 13 41 43 44 49 51 61 64 96 99 623 696 879. Appendix p. 15. 4. By the Protestation They declare in the presence of God to defend the Kings Person and Estate and that their Armies under Essex and Fairfax were raised for that purpose inter alia 5. By the National Covenant They vowed to defend the Kings Person and Authoritie in preservation of true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdom and that they will all the daies of their lives continue in this Covenant against all opposition 6. You monopolize the Supreme power into your own hands robbing both King Lords and the rest of your fellow Members thereof whom you are content should be violently shut out by your Army who have leavied War against the Parliament to dissolve it till the removall of which force and restoring your Members with freedom and safety Also 15. E. 3. n. 5. 17 E. 3. n. 2 6. 18. E. 3 n 1. 2. 5. c. 1. R. 2. n. 1. 2. R. 2. n. 1. 3. R. 2. n. 1. 4. R. 2. n. 1. 5. R. 2. Parl. 1. n. 1. Parl. 2. n. 1. 8. H. 4. n. 28. you ought not to sit or Act in your Armies own doctrine in their Remonstrance Aug. 18. and by the Declaration and Ordinances of both Houses Aug. 20. 1647. Sec 21. R. 2. c. 12. 1. H. 4. c. 3. 31. H. 6. c. 1. 39. H. 6 c. 1. See the memorable Record 6. E. 3. Parl. apud Ebor. n. 1 2 dorso clauso 6. E. 3. m. 4. 6. E. apud Westm. Parl. 2. n. 1. 13. E. 3. Parl. 2. n. 4. many more Rolls where Parliaments when any considerable number of Members of either House were absent refused to sit though under no force till the House were full You have neither Law nor president for what you do Edw. 2. Rich. 2. were forced by Mortimer and H. 4. to resign their Crowns in a formall way one to his Son the other to his conquering Successor neither of them to the Parliament and at last Deposed by a subsequent Sentence of Parliament as unfit to Reign without any formall Triall * 72. The Armies party in the H approve the matter of the Co of Officers accusatory Ans against the secured Memb with out hearing them See Mr. Io Geerees Ans to that silly Sophister Io Goodwin called Might overcoming right Jan. 11. 1648. The House read the Answer of the Generall Counsell of the Army concerning the secured and secluded Members and as I have formerly said without hearing what the said Members could say for themselves approved the matter of it whereupon the secured and secluded Members 20. Jan. 1648. with much ado got printed their Vindication against the Aspersion cast upon them in The humble Answer of the Generall Counsell of the Officers of the Army concerning the securing secluding of the said Members The sum whereof is as followeth 73. The sec and secl Memb. Defence against the scandalous An of the C of W By the Preamble of this Answer and by the Proposals of the 6. Decemb. and the late Declaration and Remonstrance therein cited it appears this Design to break the House by force hath been long since plotted and contrived with action The Generall Councell of the Army in their said Answer say Is a course in it self irregular and not justifiable but by honest intentions and extraordinarie necessitie the weakness of which Answer we must examine but first must state the case b tween us They are an Army raised by Ordinance of Parliament of 15. Febr. 1644. for defence of King and Parliament the true Protestant Religion the Lawes and Liberties of the Kingdom and to be from time to time subject to such Orders and Directions as they shall receive from both Houses of Parliament and to this end they stand commissioned by them and receive pay from them to this day And besides this trust thus lying upon them they are under the obligation of a solemn Covenant sworn to God That they will in their place and callings with sincerity reality and constancy with their estates and lives preserve the Rights and Priviledges of
and reason captive and is almighty against all but the Councell of the Army The 8. Febr. came forth A Declaration and Protestation of the Peeres Lords and Barons of this Realm 99. A Protestation of the Peers against the late treasonable proceedings and tyrannicall usurpations of some Members of the Commons House who endeavour to subvert the fundamentall Laws and Regall Government of this Kingdom and enslave the People to their boundless Tyranny in stead of Freedom The Protestation followeth VVE the Peers Lords and Barons of this Realm of England for the present necessary vindication of the undoubted Rights and Priviledges of Parliament and more particularly of the House of Peers the just Prerogatives and Personall safety of our Kings the known Laws and Liberties of this Kingdom the Hereditary Freedom of all the Freemen of this Nation and our own affronted and contemned Honours and Authority against the many late unparallel'd dangerous Invasions and treasonable Vsurpations of a few insolent mis-advised Members of the late House of Commons whiles the greatest and ablest part of that House were forcibly detained or deterr'd from thence wherewith we find our selves and the whole Kingdom unsufferably injured and deeply afflicted Do after a long patient expectation of their own ingenious Retractions of such injustifiable Exorbitancies which their own judgements and consciences cannot but condemn whereof we now utterly despair being thereto engaged in point of Honour Loyalty Conscience Oath and love to our Native Country as also by our Solemn League and Covenant publikely declare and protest to all the world That by the Laws and Customes of this Realm and usage of Parliament time out of mind ever since there were Parliaments in this Island the principall Authority and Iudicatory of the Parliaments of England hath alwaies constantly resided and ought still to continue onely in the King and House of Peers wherein He alwaies sits and not in the Commons House who never had claimed nor ought to have any right or power to judge any Person or Cause civilly or criminally having no authority to examine any Witnesses upon Oath and being no Court of Record but onely to accuse and impeach Delinquents in and before the House of Peers where they alwaies have used to stand bare-beaded at their Barre but never yet to stand covered much less to sit vote or give Judgement And that the House of Commons without the concurrent assent of the House of Peers and Kings of England never heretofore challenged nor enjoyed nor can of right pretend to any lawfull power or Jurisdiction to make or publish any form or binding Ordinance Vote Act or Acts of Parliament whatsoever nor ever once presumed to pass any Act or Acts to erect a new High Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the meanest Subject least of all their own Soveraign Lord and King or any Peer of the Kingdome who by the Common and Statute Laws of this Realm and Magna Charta ought to be tried only by their Peers and not otherwise or to dis-inherit the right Heir to the Crown or to alter the Fundamental Government Laws Great Seal or ancient forms of process and legal proceedings of this Realm or to make or declare High Treason to be no Treason or any Act to be Treason which in it self or by the Law of the Land is no Treason or to dispose of any Offices or Places of Judicature or impose any Penalties Oaths or Taxes on the Subjects of this Realm And therefore we do here in the presence of Almighty God Angels and Men from our hearts disclaim abhor and protest against all Acts Votes Orders or Ordinances of the said Members of the Commons House lately made and published for setting up any new Court of Justice to try condemn or execute the King or any Peers or Subject of this Realm which for any Person or Persons to sit in or act as a Judge or Commissioner to the condemning or taking away the life of the King or any Peer or other Subject We declare to be High Treason and wilful Murther to disinherit the Prince of Wales of the Crown of England or against proclaiming him King after his Royal Fathers late most impious traiterous and barbarous murther or to alter the Monarchical Government Laws Great Seal Judicatories and ancient forms of Writs and legal process and proceedings or to keep up or make good any Commissions Judges or Officers made void by the Kings bloody execution or to continue any old or raise any new Forces or Armies or to impose any new Taxes Payments Oaths or forfeitures on the Subjects or to take away any of their Lives Liberties or Estates against the Fundamental Laws of the Realm or to make any new Judges Justices or Officers or set aside the House of Peers far ancienter than the Commons House and particularly this insolent and frantick Vote of theirs Feb. 6. That the House of Peers in Parliament is useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose to be not onely void null and illegal in themselves by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm but likewise treasonable detestable tyrannical and destructive to the Priviledges Rights and being of Parliaments the just Prerogatives and Personal safety of the Kings of England the Fundamental Government and Laws of the Realme the Lives Liberties Properties and Estates of the People and the most transcendent tyranny and usurpation over the King Kingdome Parliament Peers Commons and Freemen of England ever practised or attempted in any Age tending onely to dishonour enslave and destroy this antient flourishing Kingdom and set up Anarchy and confusion in all places All which exorbitant and trayterous Usurpations We and all free-born Englishmen are by all obligations bound to oppose to the uttermost with our ●●●es and fortunes lest We sh●uld be accessary to our own and our Posterities slavery and ruine for preventing whereof We have lately spent so much blood and treasure against the Mal●gnant Party whose Treasons and Insolencies they far exceed * 100. The Kingly Office voted down after almo●t 1000 years it is now discovered by these new Lights to be inconvenient to be in one hand therefore it must be in the Councel of State forty Tyrants for one King that is the Army and their Party The 7. Febru the Commons debated about the Kingly Office and passed this Vote Resolved c. By the Commons of England assembled in Parliament that it hath been found by experience and this House doth declare That the Office of a King in this Nation and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burdensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike Interest of the People of this Nation and therefore ought to be abolished and that an Act be brought in for that purpose 101. A Committee to bring in a list of Names for a Councel of State A Committee was named to bring in a list
be given of any Subject Tried but by Bill of Attainder in Parliament or by a Jury But all was but to charme a deaf Adder He was a gallant Gentleman and they durst not let him live The KING'S Library at St. James's was given I hear to that ignorant Stage player Hugh Peters 123. The Kings Library at Saint James's given to Hugh Peters 26. Febr. John Lylburne delivered to the Commons by the name of the Supreme Authority of England A Petition in the name of many thousand wel-affected with a Book annexed entituled Englands new Chaines discovered The most material points thereof are 124. L. C. Lylburnes Petition to the House with Englands new Chaines annexed See the Hunting the Foxes c. pag. 8. that they find fault with The Agreement of the People presented to the House by Lieu. Gen. Hammond from the Officers of the Army because 1. They like not there should be any intervals between the end of this Representative now sitting and the beginning of the next whereby during the said Intervall the Supreme power will be left in the new erected Councel of State a constitution of a new and unexperienced nature which may designe to perpetuate their power and keep off Parliaments and Representatives for ever 2. They conceive no lesse danger in that it is provided that Parliaments for the future are to continue but 6. months and the Councel of State 18. Months in which time having command of all the Forces by Sea and Land they will have great opportunities to make themselves absolute and unaccountable 3. They are not satisfied with that Clause in the said Agreement That the Representative shall extend to the erecting and abolishing Courts of Justice since the alteration of the usuall way of Trialls by 12. sworne men of the Neighbour-hood may be included therin as hath lately been done by erecting a new High Court of Justice criminall under a President and Commissioners or Tryers picked and chosen in an unusuall way all liberty of exceptions against them being over-ruled 4. They are not satisfied with that Clause in the Agreement That the Representative have the Highest finall Judgment since their Authority is onely to make Generall Laws Rules and Directions for Courts and Persons assigned by Law to execute them unto which the Representatives themselves are to be subject it being a great partiality and vexation to the People that the Law-makers should be Law-executors 5. They finde fault with the Excise calling it The great obstructor of all Trade farre surmounting Ship-money and all Patents Projects and Monopolies before this Parliament 6. The Act for Pressing of Sea-men 7. The General and Officers obstructing the Presse 8. The Chancery and Courts of Justice not regulated Hunting the Foxes p 8. sayes it was Iretons invention 9. They complaine That a Councel of State is hastily chosen as Guardians of the Peoples liberties with a vast and exorbitant power 1. To command order and dispose of all Forces by Sea and Land and all Magazines of Store in England and Ireland 2. To dispose all publique Treasure 3. To command any Person whatsoever before them to give Oath for discovery of Truth 4. To Imprison any that shall disobey their Commands and such as they shall Judge contumacious what now is become of Magna Charta and the Liberties of the People That no Mans Person shall be Attached or Imprisoned or Disseised of his Free-hold or Free-customes but by lawfull Judgement of his Equalls This Councel of State hath got all power into their hands a project long laboured and now their next motion will be pretending ease to the People to Dissolve this Parliament 10. The Petitioners complaine that in order to settle their Tyranny the Councel of Officers insisted upon it That a motion should be made to the House of Commons to enable them to put to death by Martial Law all such as they shall judge by Petitions or otherwise to disturbe the present proceedings whether Members of the Army or not And when it was urged That the Civil Magistrate should do it it was answered * The saying of Col. Hewson the one-eyed Cobler See Hunting the Foxes p. 10. They could hang twenty ere the Magistrate could hang one The prayer of their Petition is 1. That the Self-denying Ordinance be observed 2. That they would consider how dangerous it is to continue the Highest Military Commands so long in the same Persons especially acting so long distinct and of themselves as those now in being have done and in such extraordinary waies whereunto they have accustomed themselves which was the original of most Tyrannies 3. That they would appoint a Committee of Parliament-men to hear and determine all controversies between Officers and Officers Officers and Souldiers to mitigate the rigour of Martiall Law and to provide it be not executed upon any not Members of the Army 4. That they will open the Presses 5. That they will dissolve this Councel of State threatning so manifest Tyranny 6. That they will severely punish all such as acting upon any Order Ordinance or Act of Parliament shall exceed the power conferred on them After this came forth a second part of Englands new Chaines discovered 125. A second part of Englands New Chains setting forth the hypocrisie and perfidiousnesse of the Councel of the Army and the Grandees in cheating all Interests King Parliament People Souldiers City Agitators Levellers c. which tells you That the Grandees walk by no principles of Honesty or Conscience but as meer Polititians are governed altogether by occasion as they see a possibility of making progress to their Designs which course of theirs they ever termed A waiting upon Providence that under colour of Religion they might deceive the more securely It tells you their intent is to Garrison all great Towns to break the spirits of the People with oppression and poverty It farther Declares that these Grandees judge themselves loose when other men are bound all Obligations are to them Transitory and Ceremonial and that every thing is good and just as it conduceth to their Interests That the Grandees never intended an Agreement of the People but onely to amuse that party whilest they hastily set up a Councell of State to establish their Tyranny that to prepare the way to this they broke the House of Commons took away the House of Lords removed the King by an extrajudiciall way of proceedings and erected such a Court of Justice as had no place in the English Government That the remainder of the House of Commons is become a meer channell through which is conveyed all the Decrees and Determinations of a private Councell of some few Officers All these and the Votes That the Supreme power is in the people and the Supreme Authority in the Commons their Representative were onely in order to their Interests of will and power That they place their security in the divisions of the People That if the present House of
Commons should never so little crosse the ambition of these Grandees they would shew no more modesty to them then they have done to the excluded Members See the Hunting of the Foxes c. p. 6 7 8. And so it concludes with a Protestation against their breaking the Faith of the Army with all Parties their dissolving the Councel of Agitators and usurping a power of giving forth the sense of the Army against the Parliament and People against their shooting to death the Souldier at Ware Returne to sect 2. 5. and their cruelties exercised upon other Persons to the debasing of their Spirits and therby new-moulding the Army to their Designes against their playing fast and loose with the King and His Party till they had brought a new and dangerous Warre upon this Nation They also protest against their dissembled Repentances against their late extraordinary proceedings in Bringing the Army upon the City to the ruine of Trade their breaking the House of Commons in peices without charging the Members particularly and then judging and taking away mens lives in an extraordinary way as done for no other end but to make way for their owne absolute Domination They also protest against the Election and establishment of those High Courts of Justice as unjust in themselves and of dangerous precedent in time to come as likewise against the Councel of State and putting some of themselves therin contrary to their own Agreement They also protest against all other the like Meetings of those Officers that on Thursday 2. Feb. Voted for so bloody a Law as to hang whom they should judge disturbed the Army as having no power either by such Councels to give the sense of the Army or to judge any Person not of the Army or to do any thing in reference to the Common-wealth 126. The Hunting of the Foxes from Tryplo and New-market by 5. small Beagles p. 8. About this time also became publique a pretty Book entituled The Hunting of the Foxes from New-market and Triploe to White-hall by 5. small Beagles which tells you That the Grandee-Officers of the Army to keep the Souldiers quiet did formalize about an Agreement of the People whilst they carried on their platforme of absolute tyranny long since hatched by Ireton by erecting a Councel of State no sooner was this monster born but it devoured half the Parliament of England and now it is adorned it self with Regall magnificence and majesty of courtly Attendants and like the 30 Tyrants of Athens to head it self over the People this is and yet this is not our new intended King there is a King to succeed this is but his Viceroy O Cromwell whither art thou aspiring the word is already given out amongst their Of●●cers That this Nation must have one prime Magistrate or Ruler over them and that that the Generall hath power to make a Law to bind all the Commons of England This was most daringly and desperately avowed at White-hall and to this temper these Court-Officers are now a moulding He that runs may read and fore-see a new Regality thus by their Machivilian pretences and wicked practices they are become Masters and Usurpers of the name of the Army and of the name of the Parliament under which Visors they have levelled and destroyed all the Authority of this Nation for the Parliament indeed and in truth is no Parliament but a Representative Glass of the Councell of Warre and the Councell of Warre but a Representative of Cromwell Ireton and Harrison and these are the All in All of the Nation which under the guises and names of Parliament Army Generall Councell High Court and Councell of State play all the strange pranks that are played And further p. 13. The conclave of Officers have sucked in the venome of all former corrupt Courts and Interests the High Commission Starre-Chamber the House of Lords the King and his privy Councell The House by Votes 5. Dec. 1648. voted the King's Concessions a ground c. And the Army secured a d expelled 250. Members for using liberty to vote according to their consciences and over-ruled those few left sitting to unvote in a thin House what was voted in full House this is more then to usurp a Negative Voice over them return to sect 18.23.28 are all alive in that Court called The Generall Councell of the Army 1. The King stood upon it That he was accountable to none but God that He was above the Parliament and People and to whom will these men be accountable to none on earth and are they not above the Parliament they have even a Negative Voice thereover formerly the Commons could pass nothing without the House of Lords and now they dare pass nothing without the concurrence of the conclave of Officers we were formerly ruled by King Lords and Commons now by a Generall Court Martiall and House of Commons what is the difference the Lords were not Members both of the House of Peers and of the House of Commons but the Officers our martiall Lords are Members both in the House or Councell of Officers and in the House of Commons we have not the change of a Kingdom to a Common-wealth we are onely under the old cheat A transmutation of Names but with the addition of new Tyrannies for casting out one unclean Spirit they have broug●● with them in his stead seven other unclean Spirits more wicked than the former and they have entered in and dwell there and the last state of this Common-wealth is worse than the first Lastly they set down some illegall proceedings and Examinations before the Councell of Warre exceeding the High Commission and Star-Chamber 127. The Authors censure of the Levellers These three Books shew the late endeavours of the Agitators and that party which the Grandees politickly mis-call to cast an odium upon them Levellers they are the truest Assertors of humane Liberty and the most constant and faithfull to their Principles and party of any in the Army and though they have many redundancies and superfluous Opinions fit to be pruned off by conversing with discreet honest Men or rather by a discreet and just publique Authority which I am confident is feasible since their principles concenter in the publique not in their own private Interest and Opinions and are no other waies changeable than conduceth with the emergent occasions of the Common-wealth yet they are but like the water-boughs of a healthy fruit Tree rather troublesome than dangerous whereas the designs of their Antagonists like rocks under water or poyson in well-cooked meat destroy before they are discovered 128. The Authors censure of His Majesties Posthumus work I entituled The Pourtraicture of His Sacred M●jesty in His S●litudes and Sufferings About this time arose a Phoenix out of His Majesties Ashes that most excellent Issue of His Brayn entituled THE POURTRAICTURE OF HIS SACRED MAIESTY IN HIS SOLITUDES AND SUFFERINGS A Book full fraught with wisdom Divine and
Humane shewing Him to be more then Conquerour of His Enemies in His rare Christian patience and charity the very reading of it aggravateth our loss of so Gracious and excellent a Prince that had learned the whole method of humane perfection in the schoole of adversity Herod and his Jews never persecuted Christ in his swadling-clouts with more industrious malice then the Antimonarchicall Independent Faction this Book in the Presses and shops that should bring it forth into the world knowing that as the remembrance of Heaven strikes a horror into us of Hell So the contemplation of his virtues will teach us to abhorre their vices March 8. 1648. 129. The form of Writs for Elections changed The Commons assented to a new Form of a Writ for election of Knights and Burgesses for the Parliament But three dayes before it was reported to the House from the Councell of State what number of Horse and Foot they thought fit to be kept up for the service of England and Ireland 130. A new establishment for the Army reported to the House from our new Masters the Councell of State and the Monthly charge which estimated come to 160000 l. per mensem You see we are likely to finde these our new Lords such gracious Masters to us that as the second part of Englands new Chains saith We shall have Taxes though we have neither Trade nor Bread In the Earle of Essex time when the Warre was at the highest the Monthly Tax came but to 54000 l. a Month yet had we then seven or eight Brigades besides his Army and Garrisons but that the Faction of Saints may carry on the work of a thorow Reformation in our purses as well as they have done in the Church and Common-wealth they first raised the Tax to 60000 l. a Month for England besides 20000 l. a Month pretended for Ireland but I believe little of it slips through their sanctified fingers to go thither And now to shew they can use double dealing against the Ungodly they would double the summ from 80000 l. to 160000 l. a Month this is to break our hearts with property and make them take what impressions of slavery they please to set upon them this Conventicle of State will engross all the Coyn and Treasure of the Land into their own hands and then subdue us therewith and make us like slavish Aegyptians sell our selves and our Lands for Bread or money to buy Bread when that inseparable companion of a long warre Famine approcheth which their barbarous and illegall Sequestrations unstocking mens Farms and laying them wast will inevitably bring upon us they have more hope to subdue and lessen the number of their Opposites by famine and want then by the Sword in order to which they have destroyed the Trade of the City and undone multitudes of Trades-men who being disabled to pay their Taxes the Army cause all their Arrears to be leavied upon the City by a new Tax upon the rest of the Inhabitants and the Outlandlords and when Cromwell was told this would undo the City He answered It was no matter the more were undone the more would clap Swords to their sides and come into the Army you see Souldiery is intended to be the chief Trade 131. An Act for Abolishing the Kingly Office c. March 17. 1648. The empty House of Commons in farther prosecution of their said Design and to please their Masters of the Army passed printed and published in the form and style of a Statute this Paper following intituled An Act for the Abolishing the Kingly Office in England WHereas Charles Stuart late King of England Ireland and the Territories and Dominions thereunto belonging hath by Authority derived from Parliament Since by the Law the Crown cures al defects how can the King's bloud be attainted been and is hereby declared to be justly condemned adjudged to die and put to death for many treasons murthers and other hainous offences committed by him by which Judgement he stood and is hereby declared to be attainted of High Treason whereby his Issue and Posterity and all others pretending Title under him are become uncapable of the said Crowns or of being King or Queen of the said Kingdom or Dominions or either or any of them Be it therefore Enacted and Ordained and it is Enacted We have sworn faith and Alleg●ance to K. Charls the First His lawfull Heirs and Successors and our Vow is recorded in Heaven from which no power on earth can absolve us See the Oathes of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy The Statute of Recognition 1. Iac. But the Commons are now Supreme as in imitation of the Pope to bring this Claus in practise Licet de jure non possumus tamen pro plenitudine potestatis nostra volumus c. Ordained and Declared by this present Parliament and by Authority thereof That all the People of England and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging of what degree or condition soever are discharged of all Fealty Homage and Allegiance which is or shall be pretended to be due unto any of the Issue and Posterity of the said late King or any claiming under him and that Charles Stuart eldest Sonne and James called Duke of Yorke second Sonne and all other the Issue and Posterity of him the said late King and all and every person and persons pretending Title from by or under him are and be disabled to hold or enjoy the said Crown of England or Ireland All our Laws cut off by the non obstante of an eighth part of the House of Commons sitting under a force After almost 1000 years experience it is now found to be dangerous The English were never one half-quarter so much enslaved since William the Conquerour subdued them as they have been since Oliver the Brewer subjugated them and other the Dominions thereunto belonging or any of them or to have the Name Title Stile or Dignity of King or Queen of England and Ireland Prince of Wales or any of them or to have and enjoy the power and Dominion of the said Kingdoms and Dominions or any of them or the Honours Manors Lands Tenements possessions and Hereditaments belonging or appertaining to the said Crown of England and Ireland and other the Dominions aforesaid or to any of them or to the Principality of Wales Dutchy of Lancaster or Cornwal or any or either of them Any Law Statute Ordinance Vsage or Custome to the contrary hereof in any wise notwithstanding And whereas it is and hath been found by experience that the Office of a King in this Nation and Ireland and to have the power thereof in any single Person is unnecessary burthensome and dangerous to the liberty safety and publike interest of the people and that for the most part use hath been made of the Regal power and prerogative to oppress impoverish and enslave the Subject and that usually and naturally any one person in such power makes
it his interest to incroach upon the just freedom and liberty of the people and to promote the setting up of their own will and power above the Laws that so they might enslave these Kingdoms to their own Lust * * But in a Councel of State of forty Tyrants sitting under the protection and awe of Oliver Be it therefore Enacted and Ordained by this present Parliament and by Authority of the same That the Office of a King in this Nation shall not henceforth reside in or be exercised by any one single Person and that no one person whatsoever shall or may have or hold the Office Stile Dignity Power or Authority of King of the said Kingdoms and Dominions or any of them or of the Prince of Wales Any Law Statute Vsage or Custome to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding And it is hereby Enacted That if any person or persons shall endeavour to attempt by force of Armes or otherwise or be aiding assisting c●mforting or abetting unto any person or persons that shall by any wayes or means whatsoever endeavour or attempt the reviving or setting up again of any pretended Right of the said Charles eldest Son to the said late King James called Duke of York or of any other the Issue and Posterity of the said late King or of any person or persons claiming under him or them to the said Regal Office Stile Dignity or Authority or to be Prince of Wales or the promoting of any one person whatsoever to the Name Stile Dignity Power Prerogative or Authority of King of England and Ireland and Dominions aforesaid or any of them That then every such offence shall be deemed and adjudged High-Treason High Treason is what these Legislative Thieves list to make it an Arbitary crime notwithstanding the Stat. 25 Ed. 3. for limiting and ascertaining of Treasons for security of the people Tiberius and Nero's days are fallen upon us Of which Tacitus Ingens crimen divitiae complementum omnium accusationum laesa majestas and the Offenders therein their Counsellors Procurers Aiders and Abettors being convicted of the said offence or any of them shall be deemed and adjudged Traytors against the Parliament and People of England and shall suffer lose and forfeit and have such like and the same pains forfeitures judgements and execution as is used in case of High Treason And whereas by the abolition of the Kingly Office provided for in this Act a most happy way is made for this Nation if God see it good to return to its just and antient right of being Governed by its own Representatives or National meetings in Councel * * When was England governed by their own Representative or had any other regliment then Kings But what the Legislative Conventicle declares we must believe though contrary to our knowledge They will lead our Faith and Reason in a string or have our necks in a halter A period to this Parliament and leave the Supream power in the Councel of State a design long since attempted See First and Second Part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting of the Foxes No obedience is due by Law to them which takes no notice of this form of Government from time to time chosen and entrusted for that purpose by the People It is therefore Resolved and Declared by the Commons assembled in Parliament that they will put a period to the sitting of this present Parliament and dissolve the same so soon as may possibly stand with the safety of the people that hath betrusted them and with what is absolutely necessary for the preserving and upholding the Government now setled in the way of a Common-wealth and that they will carefully provide for the certain chusing meeting and sitting of the next and future Representatives with such other circumstances of freedom in choice and equality in distribution of Members to be elected thereunto as shall most conduce to the lasting freedom and good of this Common-wealth And it is hereby further Enacted and Declared notwithstanding any thing contained in this Act no person or persons of what condition and quality soever within the Common-wealth of England and Ireland Dominion of Wales the Islands of Guernsey and Jersey and Town of Berwick upon Tweed shall be discharged from the obedience and subjection which he and they owe to the Government of this Nation as it is now Declared but all and every of them shall in all things render and perform the same as of right is due unto the Supreme Authority hereby declared to reside in this and the successive Representatives of the People of this Nation and in them onely 132. An Act for abolishing the House of Peers More New lights new discoveries made by forty or fifty Ignis satui gross fiery Meteors remaining in the House of Commons About the same time they passed another Act for Abolishing the House of Peers to this purpose THe Commons of England assembled in Parliam nt finding by too long experience that the House of Lords is useless and dangerous to the People of England to be continued have thought fit to Ordain and Enact and be it Ordained and Enacted by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same That from henceforth the House of Lords in Parliament shall be and is hereby wholly abolished and taken away and that the Lords shall not from henceforth meet or sit in the said House called the Lords House or i● any other House or place whatsoever as a House of Lords nor shall sit vote advise adjudge or determine of any matter or thing whatsoever as a House of Lords in Parliament Nevertheless it is hereby Declared That neither such Lords as have demeaned themselves with honour courage Fidelity to the Common wealth nor their Posterities who shall so continue shall be excluded from the publike Councels of the Nation but shall be admitted thereunto and have their free Vote in Parliament if they shall be thereunto elected as other persons of Interest elected and qualified thereunto ought to have And be it further Ordained and Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that no Peer of this Land not being elected qualified and sitting in Parliament as aforesaid shall claim have or make use of any Priviledge of Parliament either in relation to his person quality or estate any Laws Vsage or Custome to the contrary notwithstanding And to lessen the amazement of the People the same day they passed and ordered to be printed * 133. A Declaration of the Commons to shew the Reasons of their said proceedings The State is Free but the people Slaves as a Galley is free but the Rowers Slaves 1 part 72 73. See these Books A full Answer to an Infamous Pamphlet Intituled A Declaration of the Commons of England The Charge against the King discharged The Royal and Royalists Plea King Charles vindicated c. And his Majesties last Book or Pourtraicture and His Maj. Gracious Messages for
Peace a Book called A Declaration of the Parliament of England expressing the grounds of their late proceedings and of setling the present Government in the way of a Free State when they formerly passed the 4. Votes for no more Addresses to our late King they seconded it with a Declaration to shew the Reasons of those Votes wherein they set forth no new matter but what they had formerly in parcels objected against Him and yet they have since that time made Addresses to ●im and both taken and caused others to take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the Protestation Covenant to defend his person and Authority c. And in this Declaration there is no new Objection of moment but what is contained in the former Declarations against Him and as I looked upon the first Declaration as a Prologue so I look upon this last as the Epilogue to His Majesties Tragedy The whole matter of charge in both of them hath been sufficiently answered in several Books and either confuted or justified to which I refer the Reader whom I will only trouble with some few short Observations of my own upon it p. 5. The Parliament in imitation of their Masters the Councel of Officers pretend a necessity to change the fundamental Government into a free-Free-State to prevent Tyranny Injustice and War c. I doubt rather to promote them It affirmeth p. 15 16. That Offices of Inheritance are forfeited by Breach of Trust a condition annexed to every Office and seems to imply as much of the Kingly Office but this Pen-man had forgot that by the Law the Crown takes away all defects and the King being Supreme Head and Governour over all Persons and in all Causes it were absurd to make Him accountable to any Authority for in such case that Authority would be Supreme to Him and so erect two Supremes one jarring and interferring with the other which in Law and Policy is as absurd as to suppose two Almighties or Infinities in Divinity which cannot be for that one Infinity would terminate another Impossibile esse plura Infinite See Greg Th●losanus l. pol. 1. Keckerin Sistema pol. l. 1. Conezenii l. politic 1. à c. 17 ad c. 25. and many good Authors quoted by him Moecenalis orationem ad Augustum apud Dionem Cassium quoniam alterum esset in altero finitum saith Cusanus pag. 16. The Declarers play the Orators in behalf of the felicity of Government by Free-States rather than by Kings and Princes This is a spacious field to walk in I will onely cite some learned Authors living in Republiques of a contrary opinion and send my Readers to them for their Arguments It applauds the prosperitie and good Government of the Switz which I think was never comm●nded before a gross-witted People living in a confused way of Government where virtue and industry find no reward the Rich become a daily prey to the poor and their popular Tribunes who uphold their credits by calumniating the wealthy and confiscating or sequestring their Estates the best wealth of this Nation is Pensions from Neighbour Princes to whom they let their Bloud to Hire and become Mercenaries many times to the extream dammage and if their Country were worth subduing danger of the State For Venice it is an Aristocracie if not Oligarchy of many petty Kings so burdensome to all their Subjects upon Terra firma that they dare not trust them without Citadels to keep them under they never confide in any of their number or Natives to be Commander in Chief of their Land Forces fearing to be tyrannized over by a Cromwell or an Ireton or by some property subordinate to them in all but Title The Morlachy and many Inhabitants of Dalmatia and Candia have lately preferred the Turkish Government before theirs As for the Low-Countries their neerest example peruse Bernavelt's Apologie and many good Histories For Rome from their Regifugium they were never free from Civill Warres cecessious Tumults and changes of Government first to Patrician Consuls Regia potestate then to promiscuous Consuls Plebeyans as well as Patritians with popular Tribunes to controule them then to Decemviri legibus Scribendis then to Tribuni militares consulari potestate Dictators upon all speciall occasions sometimes an Aristocracy sometimes a Democracie between two Factions Patritian and Plebeyan And never could that unhappy Idoll of the multitude Libertie find any time of setled rest and Government untill their giddy Republique was overthrown by Julius Caesar and turned into a Monarchie by Augustus which approved Cratippus saying Vitiosum Reipub statum exigere Monarchiam and then and not till then Rome came to his height of Glory See some Authorities cited verbatim in the first Page and Dominion and continued so a long time sometimes empayred by the vices of some Emperors and sometimes repayred by the virtues of others he that reads Livy and Tully's Orations with many other Authors shall find how infinite corrupt the People were both in making and executing Laws in dispensing Justice both Distributive and Commutative what Complaints that their comitia were venalia what Bulwarks they were fain to erect against the ambition and covetousness of their Great men Leges Ambitus leges Repetundarum peculatus all to no purpose the great abuse of Solicitors and Undertakers in every Trybesto contracte for suffrages the Domestick use of their Nomenclators their Prehensations Invitations Client ships their kissings and shaking hands even from the greatest Personages prostituted to every Cobler and Tinker their costly publique Shews and spectacles to woe the Rabble he that reads observingly shall find that ambition and covetousness nurses of all corruption were the best part of the wisdom and industry of that Republique untill it came to be a Monarchie and shall farther find that those corrupt manners and customs which the People from the highest to the lowest had contracted during the severall licentious Alterations of their Common-wealth from one form of Republique to another were like a second nature not to be corrected by the better discipline of a Monarchie and at last occasioned the ruine of that Monarchie together with the desolation of that Nation which shews that Monarchie with which their Nation began was their naturall and genuine Government when it could not be taken away sine interitu subjecti without the ruine of the whole subject matter p. 11. It is said It hath been latelie computed that the Court purveyances notwithstanding many good Laws to the contrary cost the Countrie more in one year than their Assesments to the Army what above 100000 l. a month when the charge of the KING' 's House-keeping came but to 50000 l. a year I speak not of Wages and Pensions I know not who should make this computation unless old Sir Hen. Vane and his Man Cornelius Holland the latter of which was turned out of his Office in the Green-cloth for abusing this Place not in whose time of employment unless their
own such prodigious abuses should happen p. 19. It is said The Kings Revenue by a medium of 7 years was yearly 700000 l. The legall and justifiable Revenue of the Crown fell short of 100000 l. per annum I perceive this is all the Account the Common-wealth is likely to have from the Committee of the Kings Queens and Princes Revenue nor do I know what a pruning-hook that phrase legall Revenue may prove But I conceived all that Q. Elizabeth the Kings Father and Himself received had been His Revenue de jure I am sure it was de facto and the Parliament in their Declarations promised to settle a better Revenue upon Him than any of His Ancestors enjoyed neither did this nor any former Parliament complain that His Purse was grown too full or His Revenue too fulsome and if the Committe of the Revenues had enjoyed no more but their own legal and justifiable Revenue so many of the KING'S Servants and Creditors had not starved for want of their own p. 19. They very much aggravate Monopolies Patente and Projects I wonder they suffer so many Men guilty in that kind to sit in their House old Sir Henry Vane Sir Henry Myldmay Sir John Hypsley Cornelius Holland Laurence Whytakers c. p. 20. 2 Part of Englands New Chains discovered c and the Hunting the Foxes return to s 127. They speak against the Lords Negative Voice but not a word against the Councell of Warres Negative Voice who march up in hostile manner against Parliament and City and secure seclude and drive away 250 Members at one time if they vote any thing contrary to their Interest They speak likewise against the Lords Judiciall power over Commoners but have forgot what unjust and illegal use themselves attempted to make of the Lords jurisdiction against the 11 impeached Members the 4 Aldermen and Citizens p. 21. 1 Part. sect 45. 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54. They excuse their receding from their Declaration of April 1646. they might have minded you of a Vote of a later Date had it made for their turn for Governing the Kingdom by King Lords and Commons To this it is said the King nor Lords could take no advantage thereof being a contract they never consented unto indeed it was never presented to them but I shall ask whether the people may not take advantage thereof for whose satisfaction this was Declared a generall grudge being then amongst them that the Parliament and Army would subvert the ancient Fundamentall Government p. 22 23. They answer an Objection that these great matters ought to be determined in a full House not when many Members are excluded by force and the priviledges so highly broker and those who are permitted to sit do act under a force To this is answered how truly let any man that hath read our Histories tell That few Parliaments have acted but some force or other hath been upon them I wonder they did not argue thus for the silly Tumult of Apprentices for Breach of Priviledges of Parliament They Answer It will not be charged upon the remaining party or to have been within their power to prevent it or repair it to this I reply that it is doubted the remaining party being the Army party contrived it in their Junto at Somerset-house for p. 23. it is acknowledged they called and appointed the Army for their Guard which was not openly done by a full House it must be therefore secretly done by a party See many Reasons for this conjecture before Sect. 24. Farther they say That the safety of the Kingdom ought to be preferred before priviledge of Parliament and that if their House had declined their dutie viz by not Acting they had resigned up all to ruine and confusion from whence should this ruine and confusion come but from their own Army which they perpetuate to eat up the Kingdom and continue their own power and profit and I wonder they did not use the same moderation after that childish Tumult of Apprentices but Declared all Acts c. passed from 26. July which day the Tumult began and ended to the 6. August null and void And endeavoured to make the very sitting of the Members and the Citizens obeying to the said Orders though no Judges of the force Treasonable they deny they sit now under a force the Army being their best friends called by them for their safety Indeed it is generally thought the Army and this remnant of the House of Commons are as good Friends and Brethren as Simeon and Levi Pilate and Herod were and were called to secure the Members and purge the House yet if the remaining party should Vote contrary to the Dictates of the Councell of War Quaere 2 Part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting the Foxes c. Whether they will not be used as uncivilly as the secured Members nay worse by being called to account for cousening the State p. 24. They say There is a cleer consistencie of our Laws with the present Government of a Republique I desire to know who by our Law can call or bold a Parliament but the KING who is Principium Caput Finis Parliamenti who is the fountain of Justice Honour Peace when we have no King who is Conservator of the Laws and Protector of the people where is the Supreme Authority to Vote it in their own case to be in a Representative of 50 or 60 Commons without legall proofs or precedents is to lead Mens reason captive as well as their Persons and Estates to impose an implicite faith upon Man not to use discourse and reason against their Votes is to take Man out of Man to deny him his definition Animal rationale to whom doth the Subject owe Allegiance and where is the Majesty of England when there is no King for all Treason is Crimen laesae majestatis contra debitam ligeanciam Therefore where by the known Laws no Allegiance is there is no Treason Lastly if our present Laws be so consistent with the Republique I desire to know why they did not Trie the 4 Lords legally at the Common Law by their Peers and Sir John Owen by a Jury of 12 Men of the Neighbourhood according to Magna Charta and other good Laws but were faine to put a Legislative Trick upon them and erect such a Court for the Triall of them as was never heard of in England before nor hath no place in our Government They conclude p. 26. That as they have not intermedled with the affairs and Government of other States so they hope none will intermeddle with them This assertion is as true as the rest it being well known that for about 3. years last pass'd they have boasted That they have many Agents in France who under colour of Merchandise vent Antimonarchicall and Anarchicall Tenents and sow seeds of Popular Liberty amongst the poor Peasants and Huguenots of France which they brag prospered well there their very
declared principles and doctrine of their Pulpits and Army are That they must break the powers of the Earth in pieces Monarchy must down all the world over first in England then this Army must put over and manumit the Peasants of France the Boore of Germany c. And divers of this party have reported That they have supplied the Revolters of France with money their Licenced News-Books are full of this Doctrine and of many Invectives against the Tyranny of the French King 134. Harry Martin's Judgement of the King and Kingly Government Such were their proceedings against the King or rather against Kingly Government which was cut off by the same Axe that murthered the King and was indeed first in their intention though last in execution as appeareth by Harry Martin's Speech in the House upon the Debate Whether a King or no King That if they must have a King he had rather have had the last than any Gentleman in England he found no fault in His person but in his Office 135. The Councel of Officers endeavour to joyn Interest with the Papists in England and Ireland The King had offended the Papists in the last Treaty by granting so much to the Parliament for their suppression The Independents perceiving it and willing to joyn with any Interest to make good their design It was proposed at the Councel of Officers That the Papists should raise and pay about 10000 Additional Forces for this Army in recompence whereof all penal Laws concerning them should be repealed all Taxes and Contributions taken off and they to have the protection of this Parliament and Army Under the same notion they endeavoured to joyn Interests with Owen Roe Oneale Owen Roe Oneale that commanded the bloody party of massacring Irish with which they had formerly taxed the King they supplied him with Ammunition and admitted O Realy The Popes Nuntio the Popes Irish Nuntio to a Treaty here in England Sir John Winter was taken into imploiment and the Arrears of his Rents gathered for him by Souldiers to the regret of the Countrey Sir Kenelme Digbie had a pass to come into England and came as was foretold by a Letter from an Independent Agent for the Army from Paris to an Independent Member of the House of Commons a creature of the Army bearing date 28. Nov. 1648. and printed at the latter end of The true and full Relation of the Officers and Armies forcible seizing of divers eminent Members c. Walter Mountague let forth upon Bail what becomes of this Negotiation and whether those that have played fast and loose with all Interests in the Kingdom have not done the like with the Papists I cannot yet learn This Winter 136. Scarcity of Coals how occasioned and why Coals as well as other things had been at excessive rates in the City whereby many poor perished with cold and hunger what the reason thereof was besides unreasonable Taxes Excise and Souldiers quartering in and neer the City was diversly disputed most men imputed the blame to Sir Arthur Haslerigge Governour of Newcastle who without any publique Authority presumed to lay on a Tax of 4 s. a Chaldron upon the Coals there which is estimated to amount to 50000 l. a year what use that Money was put to was as variously whispered as likewise what design they had in bringing so pinching a want upon the City some said it was to inforce the poorer sort into Tumults and then to charge the wealthier sort with the crime and ensnare them others said it was to cast an odium upon the PRINCE as if His Ships had kept in the Colliers The 23. March 1648. The Commons ordered 137. The Lo. Major ordered to proclaim in person the Act for abolishing the Kingly Office and punished for neglect That the Lord Major of London in person be required to publish and proclaim in the City the aforesaid Act for dissolving Kingly Government and to give an account thereof to the House The Major refusing this service was by the Commons called to the Bar fined 2000 l. committed prisoner to the Tower and outed of his Majoralty and Alderman Andrews a man after their own heart chosen by a few Schismaticks in his place Ordered by the Commons upon a report from the Councel of State that Commissioners he appointed to make Sale of the Kings 138. The Kings Queens and Princes personal Estate ordered to be sold Queens and Princes personal estate upon Inventorie and Apprisal for satisfaction of all just Debts due to well-affected persons Viz. Men of their Faction in this Nation before the beginning of these Wars But first 30000 l. to be taken out of it for the use of this Summers Fleet and that it be referred back to the 40 Hogen Mogens or Councel of State to consider what they think fit to be sold and what they think fit to keep and reserve for the use and furniture of them and their Attendants Observe that by that time this gulph is stopped the whole remainder to be sold for payment of Debts aforesaid may be written with a Cypher 139. Crown Lands shar'd amongst the Godly I hear the House hath given away the Kings House Parks and Honour of Eltham to Sergeant Bradshaw their quondam President Greenwich to Bulstrode Whitlock The Lions Skin is now dividing amongst the party Thus have they killed and taken possession and the Kings Revenue hath proved as ominous to Him as Naboth's Vineyard was to his Master 140. Another Report for an establishment for the Army Diu●nal Mar. 30 31. 1649. This day another Report was made to the House from the Committee of the Army of the particular sums to be Monthly levied in each County to make up the whole sum of 90000 l. Monthly for the Armies of England and Ireland besides 20000 l. per mens out of Fee-farm Rents 28 March 1649. The Commons in pursuit of the advice given them by Monsieur Paw 141. An Order that no Preacher meddle with State affairs and according to the example cited by him of the Low Countries Ordered That no Minister in his Pulpit should meddle with any State affairs had this been observed from the beginning these Pulpit-Incendiaries had never kindled a War between the King and Parliament 142. The 5. Lights of Walton About the beginning of Lent last Master Faucet Minister of Walton upon the Thames in Surrey preached in his Parish Church after dinner when he came down out of his Pulpit it was twilight and into the Church came six Souldiers one of them with a Lanthorn in his hand and a Candle burning in it in the other hand they had four Candles not lighted He with the Lanthorn called to the Parishioners to stay a little for he had a Message to them from God and offered to go up into the Pulpit but the Parishioners would not let him then he would have delivered his errand in the Church but there
they would not hear him so he went forth into the Church-yard the people following him where he related to them That he had a Vision and received a command from God to deliver his will unto them which he was to deliver and they to receive upon pain of damnation It consisted of 5 Lights 1. That the Sabbath was abolished as unnecessary Jewish and meerly ceremonial And here quoth he I should put out my first Light but the wind is so high I cannot light it 2. Tythes are abolished as Jewish and Ceremonial a great burden to the Saints of God and a discouragement of industry and tillage And here I should put out my second Light c. as aforesaid which was the burden of his song 3. Ministers are abolished as Antichristian and of no longer use now Christ himself descends into the hearts of his Saints and his Spirit enlightneth them with Revelations and inspirations And here I should have put out my third Light c. 4. Magistrates are abolished as useless now that Christ himself is in puritie of Spirit come amongst us and hath erected the Kingdom of the Saints upon earth besides they are Tyrants and Oppressors of the Liberty of the Saints and tie them to Laws and Ordinances meer humane inventions And here I should have put c. 5. Then putting his hand into his pocket and pulling out a little Bible he shewed it open to the People saying Here is a Book you have in great veneration consisting of two parts the Old and New Testament I must tell you it is abolished It containeth beggarly rudiments milk for Babes But now Christ is in Glory amongst us and imparts a fuller measure of his Spirit to his Saints then this can afford and therefore I am commanded to burn it before your faces so taking the Candle out of his Lanthorn he set fire of the leaves And then putting out the Candle cryed And here my fifth Light is extinguished Upon a Report from the Councell of State 143. The Earle of Warwick's Commission recalled and 3 Admirals appointed the Commons Voted void the Earle of Warwick's Commission for Admirall and appointed three Commissioners to have and execute the Admirals Place with 3 l. a day a piece a Commission for Martiall Law and Land Souldiers aboard to keep under the Seamen The three Admirals are Col. Edw Popham Col. Rob Blake and Col Deane Sunday after Easter-day 144. Cromwell turned Preacher six Preachers militant at White-hall tried the patience of their Hearers one calling up another successively at last the Spirit of the Lord called up Oliver Cromwell who standing a good while with lifted up eyes as it were in a trance and his neck a little inclining to one side as if he had expected Mahomet's Dove to descend and murmure in his eare and sending forth abundantly the groans of the Spirit spent an hour in prayer and an hour and an half in a Sermon In his prayer he desired God to take off from him the Government of this mighty People of England as being too heavy for his shoulders to bear An audatious ambitious and hypocriticall imitation of Moses It is now reported of him that he pretendeth to Inspirations and that when any great or weighty matter is propounded he usually retireth for a quarter or half an hour and then returneth and delivereth out the Oracles of the Spirit surely the Spirit of John of Leyden will be doubled upon this Man 145. The last Retreat of the Faction by H. Martins report About this time the Palsgrave took his leave of the Parliament being much courted and complemented by them and his 8000 l. per annum with all Arrears confirmed to him since his departure Harry Martin in a jolly humour was heard to say If the worst hapned and that they should not he able to stand their ground in England yet the Palsgrave would afford them a place of retreat in the Palatinate the seeds of these Anarchicall Anabaptisticall humours upon the reducing of Munster spread themselves in England and now have a mind to return into Germany to kindle a fire there 146 Io. Lilburn's third Book called The Picture of the Councell of State About this time John Lilburn and his Company set forth a Book called The Picture of the Councell of State c. wherein they set forth the illegall and violent proceedings of the said Councell against them in seizing upon them with armed Bands of Souldiers and interrogating them against themselves c. where they have these words The Faction of a Traiterous Party of Officers of the Army hath twice rebelled against the Parliament and broke them in pieces and by force of Armes culled out whom they pleased and imprisoned divers of them and laied nothing to their charge and have left onely in a manner a few men besides 11 of themselves viz the Generall Cromwell Ireton Harrison Fleetwood Rich Ingolsby Hazelrigge Constable Fennick Walton and Allen Treasurer of their own Faction behind them that will like Spaniel dogs serve their lusts and wills yea some of the chiefest of them viz Ireton Harrison c. yea Mr. Holland himself styled them a Mock Parliament a Mock power at Windsor yea it is yet their expressions at London And if this be true that they are a Mock-power and a Mock Parliam●nt then Quare Whether in Law or Justice especially considering they have fallen from all their many glorious promises and have not done any one action that tends to the universall good of the people can those Gentlemen sitting at Westminster in the House called the House of Commons be any other than a factious company of Men trayte●ously combined together with Cromwell Ireton and Harrison to subdue the Laws Liberties and Freedoms of England for no one of them protests against the rest and to set up an absolute and perfect tyranny of the Sword will and pleasure and absolutely intend the destroying the Trade of the Nation and the absolute impoverishing the people thereof to sit them to be their Vassals and Slaves And again the three forementioned Men viz Cromwell Ireton and Harrison the Generall being but their stalking horse and a cypher and their trayterous Faction having by their wills and Swords got all the Swords of England under their command and the disposing of all the great Places in England by Sea and Land and also the pretended Law making power and the pretended Law executing power by making among themselves contrary to the Laws and Liberties of England all Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs Bayliffs Committee-men c. to execute their wils and tyranny walking by no limits or bounds but their own wills and pleasures and trayterously assume unto themselves a power to leavy upon the people what money they please and dispose of it as they please yea even to buy knives to cut the peoples throats that pay the money to them and to give no account for it till Dooms-day in the
both parties as equally guilty and was deeply engaged in point of Interest to cut off both Parties Endeavouring by these discourses to put the Presbyterians into despaire their own and Judas's sin and then to work upon that base and cowardly principle of self-preservation and invite them to joyn with them in point of civil Interest and common Defence But their kindness was but like that of a malicious Man who having plague-sores upon him embraceth his friend rather to infect then cherish him they know that by sitting voting acting and complying with them whose actions the Laws of God and the Land have damned and anathematized with the highest condemnation they should contract the guilt of all their forepassed crimes and treasons in the mean time the Presbyterians should sit and act but as a suspected Party and should be baffled and turned out again when the danger is past the Independents keeping in their own hands all the power profits and preferments of the Land and using the Presbyterian party but as Gibeonites Hewers of wood and Drawers of water under them they invited them therefore to share with them in their sins shames and punishments but would keep Achans Wedge and the Babilonish garment the profit of their crimes to themselves And as if it were not sufficient to cousen Man without mocking God the House of Commons Ordered a strict Fast to be kept upon Thursday 19 April 1649. as a day of Humiliation to implore Gods forgiveness for the ingratitude of the people who did not sufficiently acknowledge with thankfulness Gods great mercies upon this Land in freeing them from Monarchie and bestowing libertie upon them by changing Kingly Government into a Free-State or Republique The Faction knew that to partake with them in these prayers was to partake of their sins God deliver us from those deceitful lips whose prayers are snares whose kisses prove curses and whose devotion leads to damnation Never was Fast injoyned with more severity nor neglected with more contempt and horror men shunning it like the sins of Rebellion and Witchcraft Besides their Consciences told them that they never suffered the thousandth part of the oppressions they now groan under About this time it was debated to send supplies for Ireland 150. The jugling design of sending part of the Army for Ireland the predominannt Grandees were desirous to purge the Army as they had done the House and send the Levellers Assertors of Liberty thither the Levellers were desirous to keep their ground here and send the more mercenary enslaving and enslaved part of the Army the better to colour the design Cromwel undertook to be Conductor of this expedition and light them the way into Ireland with his Illuminated Nose having taken Order before hand that his precious self should be recalled time enough to keep up his party in England from sinking by his longer absence and the better to accommodate the business Lots were several times cast what Regiments should go but the Lots not falling out to the minds of the General Councel of Officers they cast Lots again and again untill fortune agreed with their desires This being discovered a printed Paper was scattered about the streets 26. April 1649. as followeth ALL worthy Officers and Souldiers who are yet mindfull that you engaged not as a meer mercenarie Armie hired to serve the Arbitrarie ends of a Councel of State but took up Arms in Judgment and Conscience in behalf of your own and the peoples just Rights and Liberties you may see plainly by the proceedings of Col. Hewson with his Regiment that the design of your grand Officers is to reduce the Army to a meer mercenary and servile temper that shall obey all their commands without so much as asking a question for Conscience sake Intending by this blind obedience in you to make you be whatsoever they shall find requisite to establish their own absolute power over the Common-wealth yea though it be to cut off your best friends or perpetuate this their own Parliament and Councel of State things so evidently destructive to your own and the peoples just Rights and Liberties as nothing can be more And for compassing whereof you know they have long since dissolved the Agitators and erected a Councel amongst themselves by which they have moulded the Parliament and a Councel of State to their own wills both which are to be as a screen between the People and your Grandees to make the world beleeve they do nothing but by Order of Parliament and Councel of State when they order all things themselves and indeed are confederated together to defend and protect each others in their defrauding and enslaving the Common-wealth This they have long aimed at but cannot possibly effect it untill they reduce the Army to a servile and base temper which they have been laboring to bring to pass along time as by picking quarrels with most Officers and Souldiers that have manifested any sence of Common Right and so vexing them and wearying them out of Troops and Companie And you know they have bin more than once disbanding twenty of a Troop upon pretence of easing the publike charge all their mischief being ever done after either fasting and prayer or upon some very specious pretence but the care and resolution of the honest Ofificers and Souldiers ever prevented this But now the business for Ireland it seems must doe the deed that being a service that must be preferred before the setling of the Liberties and Freedoms of this Nation and all that are not for this service must be esteemed no better than Enemies and Traitors and therefore an Ahab-like Fast goeth before the Lots are cast And Col. Hewson falls to worke and disbands all those Souldiers and Officers that refused to engage for the service of Ireland before the Liberties of England which we never trod under foot be restored to the people The end of this being to be a leading case to all other Regiments both Horse and Foot not that they certainly intend for Ireland but by such mans to be rid of all such as are apt to desire to be satisfied in their Consciences of the justice of the Cause before they engage in the killing and slaying of men any more or before they see some fruits answerable to the blood that hath been spilt And being rid of this kind of Officers and Souldiers then to fill the Regiments as this Hewson doth with such ignorant needy or servile men as these miserable times through loss of Trade have begotten And this being done then to make more strict enquiry after this sort of People in the Army and all other places suppresse meetings and if that will not doe then to disarme all from whom they suspect the least repining or opposition And therfore all those Officers and Souldiers and all people in all places are concerned in a very high nature even as much as the freedom of the Nation is worth yea as they tender the good of
their Wives Children Families and Posterity to venture their lives and all they have to make opposition against this the greatest mischief that ever was attempted the greatest Treason that ever was committed against the liberties of the People and not to stand any longer in a mix-maze between hope and feare for if this designe take place your great Officers and their Confederates in Parliament and Councel of State will be as so many Kings Princes and Lords and your selves and all the people their Slaves and Vassals Therefore keep every man his place and post and stir not but immediately chuse you a Councel of Agitators once more to judge of these things without which we shall never see a new Parliament or ever be quit of these intolerable burdens oppressions and cruelties by which the people are like to be beggered and destroyed About this time Master Robert Lockier 151. M. Lockier condemned by a Councel of Warr with his honourable death and burial and Lilburns Letter to the General and five or six other Troopers of Captaine Savages Troop were condemned for a supposed mutiny in behalf of whom Lieut. C. John Lilburne writ this Letter following to the General dated 27. April 1649. May it please your Excellency WE have not yet forgot your Solemne Engagement of June 5. 1647. wherby the Armies Continuance as an Army was in no wise by the will of the State but by their owne mutuall Agreement And if their standing were removed from one Foundation to another as is undeniable then with the same they removed from one Authority to another and the Ligaments and Bonds of the First were Dissolved and gave place to the Second and under and from the head of their first Station viz By the Will of the State the Army derived their Government by Martiall Law which in Judgment and Reason could be no longer binding then the Authority which gave being thereto was binding to the Army For the deniall of the Authority is an Abrogation and Nullment of all Acts Orders or Ordinances by that Authority as to them And upon this Account your Excellency with the Army long proceeded upon the Constitution of a new Councel and Government contrary to all Martial Law and Discipline by whom only the Army engaged to be Ordered in their prosecution of the Ends to wit Their several Rights both as Souldiers and Commoners for which they associated Declaring Agreeing and Promising each other not to Disband Divide or suffer themselves to be Disbanded or Divided without satisfaction and security in relation to their Grievances and Desires in behalf of themselves and the Common-wealth as should be agreed unto by their Councel of Agitators And by vertue and under colour of this Establishment all the Extraordinary Actions by your Excellency your Officers and the Army have past Your refusal to disband disputing the Orders of Parliament Impeachment and Ejection of Eleven Members your first and second march up to London your late violent Exclusion of the major part of Members out of the House and their Imprisonment without cause c. which can no way be justified from the guilt of the highest Treason but in the accomplishment of a righteous end viz. The enjoyment of the benefit of our Lawes and Liberties which we hoped long ere this to have enjoyed from your hands Yet when we consider and herewith compare many of your late carriages both towards the Souldiery and other free people and principally your cruell Exercise of Martial Law even to the Sentence and Execution of Death upon such of your Souldiers as stand for the Rights of that Engagement c. And not onely so but against others not of the Army we cannot but look upon your defection and Apostacy in such dealings as of most dangerous Consequence to all the Laws and Freedoms of the People And therefore although there had never been any such solemn Engagement by the Army as that of Iune 5. 1647. which with your Excellency in point of duty ought not to be of the meanest obligation We do protest against your Exercise of Martial Law against any whomsoever in times of Peace where all Courts of Iustice are open as the greatest encroachment upon our Lawes and Liberties that can be acted against us and particularly against the Tryall of the Souldiers of Captaine Savages Troop yesterday by a Court Martial upon the Articles of Warre and sentencing of two of them to death and for no other end as we understand but for some dispute about their Pay And the reason of this our Protestation is from the Petition of Right made in the third yeare of the late King which declareth That no person ought to be judged by Law Martial except in times of Warre And that all Commissions given to execute Martial Law in time of Peace are contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of the Land And it was the Parliaments complaint That Martial Law was then Commanded to be executed upon Souldiers for Robbery Mutiny or Murder Which Petition of Right this present Parliament in their late Declarations of the 9. of February and the 17. of March 1648. commend as the most excellentest Law in England and there promise to preserve inviolably it and all other the Fundamental Lawes and Liberties concerning the preservation of the Lives Properties and Liberties of the People with all things incident therunto And the Exercise of Martial Law in Ireland in time of Peace was one of the chiefest Articles for which the E. of Strafford lost his Head The same by this present Parl. being judged High Treason And the Parliament it self neither by Act nor Ordinance can justly or warrantably destroy the Fundamental Liberties and Principles of the Common Law of England It being a Maxim in Law and Reason both that all such Acts and Ordinances are ipso facto null and void in Law and binds not all but ought to be resisted and stood against to the death And if the Supreme Authority may not presume to do this much lesse may You or Your Officers presume thereupon For where Remedy may be had by an ordinary course in Law the Party greived shall never have his recourse to extraordinaries Whence it is evident That it is the undoubted Right of every Englishman Souldier or other that he should be punishable onely in the ordinary Courts of Justice according to the Lawes and Statutes of the Realme in the times of Peace as now it is and the extraordinary way by Courts Martial in no wise to be used Yea the Parliaments Oracle Sir Edward Cooke Declares in the third part of his Institutes Chap. of Murder That for a General or other Officers of an Army in time of Peace to put any man although a Souldier to death by colour of Martial Law it is absolute murder in that General c. Therfore erecting of Martial Law now when all Courts of justice are open and stopping the free current of Law which sufficiently provides for the punishment
of Soldiers as well as others as appeares by 18. H. 6. c. 19. 2 3 E. 6. c. 2. 4. 5 P. M. c. 3. 5 El. 5 5 Jam. 25. is an absolute destroying of our Fundamental Liberties and the razing of the Foundation of the Common Law of England the which out of Duty and Conscience to the Rights and Freedoms of this Nation which we value above our lives and to leave You and Your Councel without all excuse we were moved to represent unto Your Excellency Earnestly pressing You well to consider what You do before you proceed to the taking away the lives of those men by Martial Law least the bloud of the Innocent and so palpable Subversion of the Lawes and Liberties of England bring the reward of just vengeance after it upon You as it did upon the Earle of Strafford For Innocent bloud God will not pardon and what the people may do in case of such violent Subversion of their Rights we shall leave to Your Excellency to judge and remaine Sir Your Excellencies humble Servants IOHN LILBURNE RICH. OVERTON From our Causlesse and unjust and Tyrannica● Captivity in the Tower of London April 17. 1649. Notwithstanding which Letter and much other meanes made the said Lockier was Shot to Death in Saint Paul's Church-yard the same day to strike a terror and slavish feare into such other Souldiers as shall dare to take notice of their approaching slavery but his Christian and gallant deportment at his death with the honourable funerall pomp accompanying him to his Grave turned all the error of his Tragedy into hatred and contempt of the Authors thereof 152. Arreares given to Col. A. P●pham H. Martin temptations put upon Lilburne and Joyce About this time the House of Commons gave to Col. Alexander Popham all his Arreares and to Harry Martyn 3000 l. to put him on upon the holy Sisters and take him off from the Levellers And Cromwell is now playing the Devils part shewing the Kingdomes of the earth and tempting John Lilburn to fall down and worship him to forsake his good principles and engagements and betray the liberties of the people but L. Col. Lilburne is higher seated in the good opinion of the People than to be suspected of so much basenesse who are confident he will as constantly resist false promises and vain hopes as he hath vain threats and terrors of Indictments and not cast away the hold he hath of immortality by hearkning to such a Syrene whose promises are but baits with a hook hidden under them and his preferments but like Mahomets paradise he that hath cousened all the Interests of the Kingdome will not scruple to cheat his enemy a free-spirited plaine meaning man This is to undermine and blow up his credit with his party and make him liable to a revenge hereafter He that stoops to the lure of a known enemy is guilty of inexcusable folly and a Betrayer of himselfe especially having had so faire a Copie of Constancy set him by Coronet Joyce who hath with much faithfulnesse resisted the like allurements and so foule a Copy of Inconstancy by Reynolds The Commons have ordered 153. The design of making Members of Parliament liable Arrests That upon Complaint made to any Judge of the three Benches the Judges shall send a Letter of Summons t●●● ch Member of their House as shall be complained of to give an appearance and submit to legal proceedings otherwise his person to be liable to Arrests But our present Judges are Creatures to the House of Commons and know before-hand what Members are Babes of Grace in favour and must be priviledged and who are out of favour and must not be priviledged they have an Index tells them when to grant and when to deny Sinners must not be partakers of the same Laws with Saints This is a Whip and a Bell to drive such dogged Members out of the Hall as will not hunt in pack with the Grandees in pursuit of their designe and are quick-sented enough to smell out their Knavery if they come too near their door It is thought the tyrannical Hocas Pocasses had an aime hereby to lash Harry Martin off from the Levellers and make him come in to them 154. Women Petition the House for L. Col. Lilburne and his Company About this time some thousands of well-affected Women of London Westminster Southwarke and the Hamlets stormed the House of Commons with two Petitions in behalf of Jo. Lilburne and his Company They complain of the Councel of States violent and illegal proceedings against them in seizing them in the night by Souldiers of Lockiers being shot to death by Martial Law of their Arbitrary Government Taxes Excise Monopolies c. That there was a designe to fetch Lilburne and his Fellow Prisoners out of the Tower at midnight to White-hall Second part of Englands new Chaines discovered and there murder them That the House by Declaring the Abettors of the Book laid to those Prisoners charge Traytors have laid a snare for people when as hardly any discourse can be touching the affaires of the present times but falls within the compasse of that Book so that all liberty of discourse is thereby utterly taken away then which there can be no greater slavery They received not so good Answers to these Petitions as they were wont to receive when they had Money Plate Rings Bodkins and Thymbles to sacrifice to these Legislative Idols they were bid Go home and wash their dishes to which some replied They had neither Dishes nor Meat left Note that the Commons have returned answer to some Petitioners that Lilburne shall be Legally Tried by Laws preceding the fact 155. Observations upon the Commons Answer to those that petitioned for Lilburne c. and yet by their Order 11. April 1649 it is Ordered That the Atturney General be required to take speedy course for prosecution of Lieu. Col. John Lilburne c. in the Vpper Bench this Terme upon the Declaration of this House touching the Book entituled The second part of Englands new Chaines discovered if this Order be not a Law and preceding the fact too then our suprene Saints have told a Legislative Lie In the latter end of the said Answer they are angry the Petitioners should discover so much of their basenesse That Cromwell and Ireton rides them and therefore contrary to all mens knowledge and their owne Consciences they terme those Intimations seditious Suggestions and Ordered that Cromwell and Ireton should draw up a Declaration to prevent the people from being mis-led by Sowers of sedition Humiliter servivunt aut superbe dominantur such are the degenerous Spirits of under-Tyrants who are Asses to their Superiors and Lyons to their Inferiors Cromwell and Ireton that have subverted all civill Authority murdered the KING possessed themselves of what they please and enslaved the Kingdome with a Military tyranny must draw up a Declaration according to their
fancy for their owne vindication and the Commons must Father the Bastard and set the stamp of their Authority and priviledge upon it least any man should confute it and beat back the Authors lies into their throats But this is no new invention for formerly when the Councel of Officers set forth their Answer to the House of Commons Demands concerning their secured Members Ireton penned this scandalous Answer of the said Officers Cromwell and Ireton caused their Journey-men of that Conventicle to Vote That the House did approve the matter of the said Answer therby owning all the grosse lies therin contained to deterre the imprisoned Members from replying to it and so by a tacite confession to acknowledge themselves guilty About this time appeared out of the East a New Light in our Horizon 156. The Turkish Alchoran taught to speak English the Alchoran of Mahomet Predecessor to Cromwell and of Sergius forerunner of Hugh Peters naturalized and turned English Now the Jewes Professed Enemies to Christ which Mahomet is not are accepted of it is beleived that their Thalmude and Caball will shortly be made English too that this Island may be rendred a compleat Pantheon a Temple and Oracle for all Gods and all Religions our light-headed innovating People being like Reeds as apt to be shaken by and bend unto every wind every breath of pretended Inspiration as the antient Arabians were May 1. 1649. The frighted Conventicle of Commons considered of an Act forsooth to fortifie themselves and their usurpations with a Scar-crow of new-declared Treasons 157. New-declared Treasons to defend tyranny and usurpation and ensnare the People to the purpose following 1. If any man shall malitiously this is a word of qualification a back-door to let out such as they shall think fit Affirme the present Government to be tyrannical usurped or unlawfull or that the Commons in Parliament are not the supreme Authority of the Nation or endeavour to alter the present Government 2. If any affirme the Councel of State or Parliament to be Tyrannicall or unlawfull or endeavour to subvert them or stirre up sedition against them For Souldiers of the Army to contrive the death of the Generall or Lieutenant Generall or endeavour to raise mutinies in the Army Quere whether Cromwell be Lieutenant Generall or no or to leavy Warre against the Parliament to joyne with any to invade England or Ireland counterfeit the Great Seale kill any Member of Parliament or Judge or Minister of Justice in their duty All these several cases to be Declared Treason You see the terrors of Caine pursue these guilty Cowards This Fools Bolt is chiefly aymed at the honest Levellers this Junto of Commons have made themselves legall Traytors already and would now make all the Kingdome legislative Traytors but I hope none of those that arrogate the Reverend Title of Judges of the Law although against Law will be so lawlesse as to give Sentence of Death upon any such illegal Act of the House of Commons nay this very Act denounceth slavery and bondage to the Nation and therefore is an Act of the highest tyranny and a snare 158. The Levellers Randezvouz in Oxfordshire May 6. 1649. The honest Levellers of the Army for that is the Nick-name which Cromwell falsly and unchristianly hath christned them withal Enemies to Arbitrary Government tyranny and oppression whether they finde it in the Government of one or many whether in a Councel of Officers a Councel of State or a fag end of a House of Commons whether it vaile it selfe with the Title of a Supreme Authority or a Legislative power drew together to a Randezvouz about Banbury in Oxfordshire to the number of 4000 or 5000. others resorting to them dayly from other parts This gave an Alarme to our Grandees fearing the downfall of their domination Cromwell not knowing what Party to draw out against them that would be stedfast to him shunned the danger and put his property the General upon it to oppose the Randezvouz and looking as wan as the guilles of a sick Turkey-cock marched forth himself Westward to intercept such as drew to the Randezvouz In the meane time the said Levellers printed and published this ensuing Paper entituled Englands Standard advanced or A Declaration from Mr. Will. Thompson and the oppressed People of this Nation now under his conduct in Oxfordshire Dated at their Randezvouz May 6. 1649. WHereas it is notorious to the whole world that neither the Faith of the Parliament nor yet the Faith of the Army formerly made to the people of this Nation in behalf of their Common Right Freedom and Safety hath bin at all observed or made good but both absolutely declined and broken and the people only served with bare words and faire promising Papers and left utterly destitute of all help or delivery And that this hath principally been by the prevalency and treachery of some eminent persons now domineering over the people is most evident The Solemn Engagement of the Army at New-market and Triploe-heaths by them destroyed the Councel of Agitators dissolved the blood of Warr shed in time of Peace Petitioners for Common Freedom suppressed by force of Arms and Petitioners abused and terrified the lawful Trial by 12. sworn men of the Neighbourhood subverted and denied bloody and tyrannical Courts called an High Court of Justice and a Council of State erected the power of the Sword advanced and set in the Seat of the Magistrates the Civil Lawes stopt and subverted and the Military Introduced even to the hostile seizure imprisonment triall sentence and execution of death upon divers of the Free people of this Nation leaving no visible Authority devolving all into a Factious Juncto and Councel of State usurping and assuming the name stamp and authority of Parliament to oppresse torment and vex the People whereby all the lives liberties and estates are all subdued to the Wills of those Men no Law no Justice no Right or Freedome no Case of Grievances no removal of unjust barbarous Taxes no regard to the cries and groans of the poore to be had while utter beggery and famine like a mighty terrent hath broken in upon us and already seized upon several parts of the Nation Wherefore through an inavoidable necessity no other meanes left under Heaven we are enforced to betake our selves to the Law of Nature to defend and preserve our selves and Native Rights and therefore are resolved as one Man even to the hazard and expence of our Lives and Fortunes to endeavour the Redemption of the Magistracy of England from under the force of the Sword to vindicate the Petition of Right to set the unjustly imprisoned free to relieve the poore and settle this Common-wealth upon the grounds of Common Right Freedome and Safety Be it therefore known to all the free people of England and to the whole world that chusing rather to die for Freedome then live as Slaves We are gathered and associated together
upon the bare Accompt of Englishmen with our Swords in our hands to redeem our selves and the Land of our Nativity from slavery and oppression to avenge the blood of Warr shed in the time of Peace to have Justice for the blood of M. Arnold shot to death at Ware and for the blood of M. Robert Lockier and divers others who of late by Martial Law were murthered at London And upon this our Engagement in behalf of the Common-wealth We do solemnly agree and protest That we will faithfully laying all self-respects aside endeavour the actual relief and settlement of this distressed Nation And that all the world may know particularly what wee intend and wherein particularly to center and acquiesce for ever not to recede or exceed the least punctilio We do declare from the integrity of our hearts that by the help and might of God we will endeavour the absolute settlement of this distracted Nation upon that Forme and Method by way of an Agreement of the people tendered as a peace-offering by Lieuten Collonel John Lilburne Mr. William Walwyn Mr. Thomas Prince and Mr. Richard Overton bearing date May 1. 1649. the which we have annexed to this our Declaration as the Standard of our Engagement thereby owning every part and particular of the Premises of the Agreement promising and resolving to the utmost hazard of our Lives and Abilities to pursue the speedy and full accomplishment thereof and to our power to protect and defend all such as shall Assent or Adhere thereunto And particularly for the Preservation and Deliverance of L. Col. John Lilburn M. Will. Walwin Mr. Thomas Prince Mr. Richard Overton Captain Bray and Mr. William Sawyer from their barbarous and illegal Imprisonments And we Declare That if a haire of their heads perish in the hands of those Tyrants that restrain them That if God shall enable us we will avenge it seventie times seven fold upon the heads of the Tyrants themselves and their Creatures And that till such time as by Gods Assistance we have procured to this Nation the Declared purpose of this our Engagement we will not Divide nor Disband nor suffer our selves to be Divided or Disbanded resolving with sobernesse and civility to behave our selves to the Countrey to wrong nor abuse any man to protect all to our power from violence and oppression in all places where we come resolving to stop the payment of all Taxes or Sessements whatsoever as of Excise Tythes and the Tax of Ninety thousand pounds per mensem And having once obtained a New Representative according to the said Agreement upon such Terms and Limitations therein expressed We shall then freely lay down our Armes and return to our several Habitations and Callings And concerning the equity necessity and justice of our undertaking We appeal to the judgment of the oppressed betwixt their Destroyers and Us Whether by the Law of God of Nature and Nations it be not equally justifiable in us to engage for the Safetie and Deliverance of this Nation as it was with the Netherlanders and other People for theirs and upon the same Principles that the Army engaged at New-market and Triploe-heaths both Parliament and Army declaring That it is no resistance of Magistracy to side with just Principles and Law of Nature and Nations And that the Souldiery may Lawfully hold the hands of that General who will turn his Cannon against his Army on purpose to destroy them The Sea men the hands of that Pilot who wilfully runs his Ship upon a Rock And therefore the condition of this Commonwealth considered we cannot see how it can be otherwise esteemed in us And upon that Account we Declare that we do owne and are resolved to owne all such persons either of the Army or Countreys that have already or shall hereafter rise up and stand for the Liberties of England according to the said Agreement of the people And in particular We do own and avow the late proceedings in Colonel Scroops Col. Harrisons and Major General Skippons Regiments declared in their Resolutions published in print As One Man Resolving to live and die with them in their and our just and mutual defence And we do implore and invite all such as have any sense of the Bonds and Miseries upon the people any Bowels of Compassion in them any Piety Justice Honour or Courage in their Breasts any Affections to the Freedomes of England any love to his Neighbour or Native Countrey to rise up and come in to help a distressed miserable Nation to break the Bonds of Crueltie Tyranny and Oppression and set the people Free In which Service Trusting to the undoubted goodnesse of a just and righteous Cause We shall faithfully discharge the utmost of our Endeavours Not sparing the venture of all hardships and hazards whatsoever and leave the Successe to God Signed by me WILLIAM THOMPSON at our Randezvouz in Oxfordshire neer Banbury in behalf of my Self and the Rest Engaged with me May 6. 1649. For a New Parliament By the Agreement of the People About this time Doctor Dorislaus a Civill Lawyer 159. Doct. Dorislaus stabbed to death in Holland sometimes Judge Advocate to the Earle of Essex and Lord Fairfax and lately one of the Councel in the High Court of Justice against the KING and the 4. Lords was sent from the Parliament Agent into Holland where about 18. Scots-men repayring to his lodging 6. of them went up the stayres to his Chamber whilst 12. of them made good the stayre-foot they stabb'd him to death and escaped About the 14. day of May 1649. 160. Hasleriggs barbarous motion to murder six Royalists of the best quality in revenge of Dorislaus Report was made from the Councel of State to the House of the examination of 3. Servants of Doctor Dorislaus concerning the Death of their Master and what allowances were fit to be given to his Children out of the Kings Revenue thereby to lay an aspersion upon the King as if He having had an influence upon that Fact His Estate must make the recompence notwithstanding Scotish-men did the deed in revenge of Hamiltons death Dorislaus had been a poor Schoolmaster in the Low Countries formerly from whence he was translated to read the History-Lecture at Oxford where he decried Monarchy in his first Lecture was complained of and forgiven by the benignity of the King Then he became Judge Advocate in the Kings Army in his expedition against the Scots afterwards he had the like imployment under the Earle of Essex and lastly under Sir Tho. Fairfax a great Gainer by his employments but withall a great Antimonarchist and a Saint in Cromwells Rubrick and therefore had a magnetique vertue both living and dead to draw money to him in abundance Upon occasion of this Debate Haslerigge moved That 6. Gentlemen of the best quality Royalists might be put to Death as a revenge for Dorislaus and to deterre men from the like attempts hereafter That you may the better see of
what Spirit Haslerigge is known That some Northern Counties having petitioned the Commons for relief against the miserable famine raging there Haslerigge opposed their request saying The want of food would best defend those Counties from Scottish Invasions What man that had any sense of Christianity Courage Honesty or Iustice would have been the Authour of so barbarous and unjust a motion That six Gentlemen no way conscious nor privie to the fact should be offered up a sacrifice to revenge and malice nay to guilty fears and base cowardic● to keep off the like attempts from Haslerigge and his Party I wish this Gentleman would reade the Alcharon or new Independent Bible of the new Translation and from thence gather precepts of more Humanity Justice Honesty and Courage since he hath Read the Old and New Testament of Moses and Christ to so little purpose Yet the House 18. of May passed a Declaration That if more Acts of the like nature happened hereafter it should be retaliated upon such Gentlemen of the Kings Party as had not yet Compounded But this is but a device to fright them to Compound unlesse it be a forerunner to a Massacre heretofore taken into consideration at a Councell of Warre See Sect. 117. 161. An act declaring more new Treasons About this time came forth that prodigious Act declaring four new Treasons with many complicated Treasons in their bellies the like never heard of before in our Law nor in any Kingdom or Republike of Christendom Because I have formerly spoken of it the Act it self printed publisht and dreadfully notorious throughout the whole Kingdom I will refer you to the printed Copie onely one clause formerly debated was omitted in the Act viz. That to kill the Generall Lieuten Gen. any Members of this present Parl. or Counsel of State to be declared Treason this would have discovered their guilty cowardize so much they were ashamed of it besides it was thought fit to make the People take a new Oath of Allegiance to the new State First I will only give you some few Observations thereupon This Act declares to be Treason unto death and confiscation of Lands all Deeds Plots and Words 1. Against this present fagge end of a Parliament and against their never before heard-of Supream Authority and Government for when was this Kingdome ever governed by a Parliament or by any power constituted by them 2. All endeavours to subvert the Keepers of the Liberty of England and Councell of State constituted and to be from time to time constituted by Authority of Parliament who are to be under the said Representatives in Parliament if they please and not otherwise for the Sword and the Purse trusted in the power of the Councell of State yet the Keepers of the Liberties of England and the Councell of State of England to be hereafter constituted by Parliament are Individua vaga ayrie notions not yet named nor known and when they are known we owe them no Allegiance without which no Treason by the known Lawes of the Land which is onely due to the King His lawfull Heires and Successours thereto sworn nor any the particular Powers and Authorities granted to this Parliament by the said Keepers of the Liberties of England and Councell of State yet any where authentically published and made known to us by any one avowed Act unlesse we shall account their Licensed New Books to be such and therefore they may usurp what powers they please So that these men who involved us in a miserable Warre against the late Murdered KING pretending He would enslave us and they would set us free have brought us so far below the condition of the basest Slaves that they abuse us like brute Beasts and having deprived us of our Religion Lawes and Liberties and drawn from us our money and bloud they now deny us the use of reason and common sence belonging to us as Men and Govern us by Arbitrary irrationall Votes with which they bait Traps to catch us Woe be to that people whose Rulers set snares to catch them and are amari venatores contra Dominum Men-hunters against God nay to move any Person to stir up the People against their Authority is hereby declared Treason mark the ambiguity of these words like the Devils Oracles which he that hath Power and the Sword in his hands will interpret as he please If the Keeper of the Liberties of England or Councell of State shall extend too farre or abuse their Authority never so much contrary to the Lawes of the Land Reason Justice or the Lawes of God as hath been lately done in this Case of Lylburne Walwyn c. no Lawyer no Friend shall dare to performe that Christian duty of giving councell or help to the oppressed here Fathers and Children Husbands and Wives Brothers and all relations must forsake nay betray one another lest these Tyrants interpret these duties to be A moving of them to stirre up the People against their Authority 3. All endeavours to withdraw any Souldier or Officer from their obedience to their Superior Officer or from the present Government as aforesaid By which words it is Treason First if any mans Child or Servant be inticed into this Army and the Father or Master endeavour to withdraw him from so plundering and roguing a kinde of life back to his profession Secondly If any Commander or Officer shall command his Souldiers to violate wrong or rob any man for the party so aymed at or some wel-meaning Friend to set before the said Souldiers the sinne and shame of such actions and disswade them from obeying such unlawfull commands 4. If any man shall presume to counterfeit their counterfeit Great Seale It is declared Treason I wonder it is not Treason to counterfeit their counterfeit coyne Behold here new minted Treasons current in no time and place but this afflicted Age and Nation Edw. 3. anno 25. regni ch 2. passed an excellent Act to secure the People by reducing Treasons to a certainty as our New Legislative Tyrants labour to ensnare the People by making Treasons uncertaine and arbitrary Sic volo sic ju beo it shall be Treason be cause they will call and Vote it so what they please to call Treason shall be Treason though our knowne Lawes call it otherwise we have long held our Estates and Liberties and must now hold our Lives at the will of those Grand Seigniours one Vote of 40. or 50. factious Commons Servants and Members of the Army vacates all our Lawes Liberties Properties and destroys our Lives Behold here a short veiw of that Act which hath no Additions by any Act subsequent See stat 1. Mariae c. 10. Whereas diverse opinions have been before this time in what cases Treason shall be said and in what not The King at the request of the Lords and Commons Declares See 1. H. 4. c. 10. 11. H. 7. c. 1. 1. That to compasse or imagine the Death of the KING how
much more to act it Queen or their eldest Son and Heyre 2. To violate the KING'S Companion eldest Daughter unmarried or the Wife of the KING' 's eldest Son and Heyre 3. To leavy War against the King or adhere to his Enemies in his Realm and thereof be proveably attained of open deed by people of their condition 4. To counterfeit the King 's Great or Privy Seal 5. Or his M ney 6. To slay the King's Chancellor Treasurer Justices of one Bench or other Justices in Eyre Justices in Assize and all other Justices assigned to hear and determine being in their Places doing their Offices If any other case supposed Treason which is not above specified So the four Lords ought to have been Tried not by a new shambles of Justice doth happen before any Justices the Justices shall tarry without any going to Judgement of the Treason till the Cause be shewed and declared before the King and his Parliament not before the House of Commons only or before both Houses without the King whether it ought to be adjudged Treason You see how few in number these Treasons specified are and that they must be attained of open deed by their Peers our words were free under Monarchy though not free under our Free-State so were they under the Romans Tacitus An. 1. sub finem seaking of Treasons facia arguebantut dicta impune erant These horrible tyrannies considered and being destitute of all other less desperate relief I do here solemnly declare and protest before that God that hath made mee a Man and not a Beast a Free-man and not a Slave that if any man whatsoever that taketh upon him the reverend name and title of a Judge or Justice shall give Sentence of Death upon any friend of mine upon this or any other illegal Act of this piece of a House of Commons I will and lawfully may the enslaving scar-crow doctrine of all time-serving State-flattering Priests and Ministers notwithstanding follow the examples of Sampson Judith Jael and Ehud and by Ponyard Pistol Poyson or any other means whatsoever secret or open prosecute to the Death the said Judge and Justice and all their principal Abettors And I do here invite and exhort all generous free-born English-men to the like resolutions and to enter into Leagues defensive and offensive and sacramental associations seven or eight in a company or as many as can well confide in one another to defend and revenge mutually one anothers Persons Lives Limbs and Liberties as aforesaid against this and all other illegal and tyrannous Usurpations 162. A motion to inlarge Sir Will. Waller c. And the Generals Answer intimating the securing of the Members to be done by confederacy with the Army-party in the House About this time or a little before the General was moved to enlarge Sir William Waller and the other Members illegally kept Prisoners in Windsor He answered They were no longer his but the Parliaments prisoners It should seem the Brute hath made a private deed of gift of them to his Journy-men of the House The Generals Warrant seized and imprisoned them and notwithstanding the Councel of Officers declared in Print that they were preparing a Charge against them yet the Knaves lyed like Saints they were then so far from having matter to accuse them of that they have ever since hunted after a Charge against them and endeavoured to suborn Witnesses but after 24 weeks restraint whereas by the Law no man ought to be committed without an accusation they have found nothing against them This turning over of these Prisoners to the House of Commons proves what I formerly asserted in Sect. 24. That the violence of the Army in securing and secluding the Members was by consent of their Somerset-house Junto now sitting in the House of Commons 163 The General sends forth Warrants to all Justices of the Peace to attach those Levellers that he had routed The honest Levellers most of them Country-men endeavouring to draw to a Randezvouz about 600. or 700. of them marched from Banbury to Burford in Oxfordshire where lying securely because they were upon treaty with the Enemy their Quarters were beaten up and about 180. of them taken Prisoners which their enemies according to their usual custome to gain reputation by lying reported to be so many Hundreds And the General as if they had been all routed sent forth his Warrants to all Justices of the Peace in the adjacent Counties requiring them to apprehend and secure all such of them as shall be found I desire to know by what Authority the General takes upon him to command Justices of the Peace who are not under his Power and what tame Animals these Justices are that will submit to his commands and whether he thinks the Civil Magistrate to be obnoxious to the Power of the Sword and the Councel of Officers See the Vote and Act for abolishing the Kingly office 164. and his single self the Supreme Magistrate or Tyrant Paramount notwitstanding the Vote of his Journey-men Commons That no single Man should be trusted with the Supreme Power The Levellers having possessed themselves of Northampton the General it is said thought fit to take hold of the Horns of the Altar The General sends to the City for additional Forces and wrote to his vassals of the City to send their Trained Bands to his relief that he might the better domineer over them and continue their slavery hereafter But if the Citizens have no more wit I wish their Horns may be as visible in their fore-heads as the Nose in Olivers face To cozen the honest Levellers 165. The Commons colourably debate to dissolve this Parl. and settle a succeeding Representative the Commons in order to the ending this present Parliament are debating how to pack a succeeding Representative as wicked as themselves and of the same leaven whose Election shall not be free but bounded with such Orders of limitation and restriction as shall shut out all men from electing or being elected as are not precisely of the same principles and practices and as deep engaged in their tyrannical trayterous cheating bloody designs as themselves guilty Committee-men and Accountants to the State shall be the next Representative and for the better lengthening of the businesse that they may see what success in the mean time the Levellers will have they wire-draw it through a Committee and refer it to be debated by a Committee of the whole House And at last if they must dissolve having packed themselves into a Councel of State they will usurp the Supreme Authority there to prepare the way to which design they have passed another Act May 19. That the People shall be Governed as a Free-state by Representatives and by such as they shall constitute and then consider what kind of Representatives we are like to have Great care is taken that the State or rather our States-mens private pockets might not be prejudiced by Judgments
166. A debate how to defeat Judgments Extents c. upon Delinquents lands sect Extents c. lying upon Delinquents Estates you see notwithstanding their Declaratory Vote That in things concerning the Lives Liberties and Prop●rties of the People they would maintain the known Laws of the Land yet this Vote as well as all others hath a condition implied that is do no wayes hinder the Gains of our godly Grandees otherwise they would not consider how to defeat Creditors of their legal assurance John Lilburne being ordered a close Prisoner in the Tower by the Commons without Pen Ink or Paper 167. John Lilburne starving imprisonment in the Tower which was tyranny under King Charls but not under K. Oliver a Petition was presented to the Commons by many well-affected that John might have the allowance usually and legally due to Prisoners in the like case for his support The allowance is 4 l. a Week as I conceive which was rejected insomuch that John was kept 3 whole dayes with one half meales meat this is to condemn men unheard to be murdered by famine in their private slaughter-houses when they cannot or dare not murder them in their pretended Courts of Judicature or publick shambles yet afterwards when the drawing together of the Levellers and discontents of Newcastle affrighted the Commons they Voted him the short allowance of 20 s. a week Thus you see nothing but feares and dangers can kindle the least spark of goodness and compassion in their woolvish breasts wherefore Lord I beseech thee heap fears and terrors upon their guilty pates till with Judas Iscariot they cry out We have sinned in that we have betrayed innocent blood 168. Why Ireton laid down his Commission Cromwel being to march against the Levellers left Ireton behind him like a hobby daring of larks to over-awe the Conventicle at Westminster and see they chaunt no tune but of their setting the better to keep himself in a neutral reconciling posture Ireton laid down his Commission which he can take up again at pleasure whereby he puts off all addresses to him from the levelling party for the present This poor fellow now keepeth his golden Coach which cost 200 l. and 4 gallant Horses The world is well altered with such petty Companions and hereby the Souldiers may see what becomes of their Arrears There hath been a seeming falling out between Cromwel and Ireton 169. Hugh Peters ●isits J. Lil●urne in the Tower and ●he sum of ●heir Conse●ence Witness his ●ampering with Hamil●on c. John Lilburne being a close Prisoner in the Tower as hath been said Hugh Peters Chaplain in Ordinary to-two great Potentates Lucifer and Oliver came about dinner-time May 25. 1649. to visit him and though admittance be denied to other men yet to him the Gates flew open as sure as Saint Peter keeps the keyes of Heaven Hugh Peters keeps the keyes of our Hell and our Grandees Consciences and openeth and shutteth at pleasure he is Confessor at Tyburn and hath a great power over damned Spirits or rather over such Spirits as not submitting basely to the tyranny of our State-Mountebanks incur their condemnation in this world by Gods permission in order to their salvation in the next world the tyranny of these Usurpers implying at once their cruelties over our bodies and Gods mercy to our souls Hugh's first salute was That he came meerly to give John a visit without any design his guilty conscience prompting him to a voluntary Apology John answered I know you wel enough you are one of the setting Dogs of the great Men of the Army with fair and plausible pretences to intimate into men when they have done them wrong and to workout their designs when they are in a strait and cover over the blots that they have made Then John complained of the ‖ Compare this Act of the Kings with the violent act of those Traytors and Tyrants Fairfax and his Councel of War in imprisoning and secluding above 200. Members at once without cause shewn and leaving only 40 or 50 of their cheating Faction in the House to carry on their bloody Anarchical designs some of which secured Members with barbarous usage were almost brought to death and their murder since attempted by Souldiers illegal and violent seizing upon him by Souldiers and carrying him before that new erected thing called A Councel of State who committed him without any Accusor Accusation Prosecutor or Witness or any due process of Law and yet when the King impeached the five Members and preferred a Charge of high Treason against them Recorded 1. part Book of Decl. p. 35. and only failed in a single punctilio of due process of Law they cryed outs it was an invasion of the Peoples Liberties so that four or five Recantations from him recorded in their own Declarations would not serve his turn Peters half out of countenance if so prostituted a Villain that practises impudence amongst common Whores and whose Pulpit is more shameful than another mans Pillory can be out of countenance takes up one of Coke's Institutions and pofessed Lilburn was meerly gulled in reading or trusting to those Books for there were no Laws in England John answered he did beleeve him for that his great Masters Cromwel Fairfax c. had destroyed them all Nay quoth Hugh there never were any in England with that John shewed him the Petition of Right asking him whether that were Law which Peters had the impudence to deny asking what Law was John replied * The Law is now taken away and all things in confusion by turning our Monarchy without or consent into a Free-State of Slaves governed by Tyrants out of the Parliaments own Declarations The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt good and evil just and unjust If you take away the Law all things will fall into confusion every man will become a law unto himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce great enormities Lust will become a law Envy a law Covetousness and Ambition will become laws and what dictates what decisions such laws will produce may easily be discerned This Mr. Peters is a Definition of Law by the Parliament in the dayes of their primitive purity before they had corrupted themselves with the Commonwealths money And elsewhere the Law is called The safeguard the custody of all private Interests your honours lives liberties and estates are all in the keeping of the Law without this every man hath a like Right to any thing It is the best birth-right the Subject hath It is a miserable servitude or bondage where the Law is uncertain or unknown To this the Comick Priest replied I tell you for all this there is no Law in this Nation but the Sword and what it gives neither was there any Law or Government in the world This doctrine of Devils that it is lawful to submit to any present power that is strongest is
broached in a Pamphlet by old Rowse the illiterate Jew of Eaton-Colledge And by John Goodwin the sophistical Divine which is fully con●uted in A Religious Demurrer concerning submission to the present power an excellent peece but what the Sword gave To this the honest Lievtenant Colonel answered Mr. Peters You are one of the Guides of the Army used by the chief Leaders to trumpet their Principles and Tenents and if your reasoning be good then if six Theeves meet three or four honest men and rob them that act is righteous because they are the stronger Party And if any power be a just power that is uppermost I wonder how the Army and Parliament can acquit themselves of being Rebels and Traytors before God and man in resisting and fighting against a just power in the King who was a power up and visible fenced about with abundance of Laws so reputed in the common acceptation of Men by the express letter of which all th●se that fought against him are ipso facto Traytors and if it were not for the preservation of our Laws and Liberties why did the Parliament fight against Him a present power in being and if there be no Laws in England nor never was then you and your great M●sters Cromwel Fairfax and the Parliament are a pack of bloody Rogues and Villains to set the People to murder one an●ther in fighting for preservation of their Laws in which their Liberties were included which was the principal declared Cause of the War from the beginning to the end I thought quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I had been safe when I made the known Laws the rules of my actions which you have all sworn and declared to Defend and make as the standard and touchstone between you and the People * The Laws are now no protection to us nor the rule of our actions but the arbitrary wills and lusts of the Grandees I but replied Hugh I will shew that your safety lyes not therein their minds may change and then where are you I but quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I cannot take notice of what is in their minds to obey that but the constant Declaration of their minds never contradicted in any of their Declarations as That they will maintain the Petition of Right and Laws of the Land c. This was the substance of their discourse saving that John pinched upon his great Masters large fingring of the Common-wealths money calling it Theft and State-Robbery and saying That Cromwel and Ireton pissed both in one quill though they seem sometime to go one against another yet it is but that they may the more easily carry on their main design To enslave the People Reader I was the more willing to present the summ of this Debate to thee that by comparing their doctrine and principles with their daily practices thou mayst perfectly see to what condition of slavery these beggarly upstart Tyrants and Traytors have reduced us by cheating us into a War against our lawful Soveraign under pretence of defending our Laws and Liberties and the Priviledges of Parliament which themselves onely with a concurring faction in the House have now openly and in the face of the Sun pulled up by the roots and now they stop our mouths and silence our just complaints with horrid Sect. 162. illegal and bloody Acts Declaring words and deeds against their usurpations and tyranny to be High Treason nothing is now Treason but what the remaining faction of the House of Commons please to call so To murder the King break the Parliament by hostile force put down the House of Lords erect extrajudicial High Courts of Justice to murder Men without Trial by Peers or Jury or any legal proceeding to subvert the fundamental Government by Monarchy and dispossess the right Heir of the Crown and to usurp his Supreme Authority in a factious fagg-end of the House of Commons to put the Kingly Government into a packed Junto of forty Tyrants called A Councel of State to exercise Martial Law in times of peace and upon persons no Members of the Army to raise what unnecessary illegal Taxes they please and share them and the Crown Lands and Revenues amongst themselves leaving the Souldiers unpaid to live upon Free-quarter whilst they abuse the People with pretended Orders against Free-quarter to alter the Styles of Commissions Patents Processe and all Legal proceedings and intoduce a forraign Jurisdiction to Counterfeit the Great Seal and Coin of the Kingdome and to keep up Armies of Rebels to make good these and other Tyrannies and Treasons is High Treason by the known Lawes but now by the Votes of the Conventicle of Commons it is High Treason to speak against these crimes Good God! how long will thy patience suffer these Fools to say in their hearts there is no God and yet profess thee with their mouths to break all Oathes Covenants and Protestations made in thy Name to cloak and promote their Designes with dayes of impious fasting and thanksgiving how often have thy Thunderbolts rived sensless Trees and torn brute Beasts that serve thee according to their Creation yet thou passest over these men who contemn thee contrary to their knowledge and professions Scatter the People that delight in War Turn the Councels of the wise into folly let the crafty be taken in their own net and now at last let the Oppressed taste of thy mercies and the Oppressor of thy justice throw thy rod into the fire and let it no longer be a bundle bound together in thy right hand They appeal to thee as Author of their prosperous sins become Lord Author of their just punishments bestow upon them the rewards of Hypocrites and teach them to know the difference between the saving strength of Magistrates and the destroying violence of Hang-men But what am I that argue against thy long-suffering whereof my self stand in need and seek to ripen thy vengeance before thy time Shall the Pot ask the Potter what he doth I beheld the prosperity of the wicked and my feet had slipped Lord amend all in thy good time and teach us heartily to pray Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven 170. The Act for Abolishing Monarchy proclaimed in London May 30. 1649. The aforesaid Trayterous Act for abolishing Kingly Government and converting England into a Free-State consisting of forty Tyrants and many millions of slaves was proclaimed in London by the newly intruded illegal Lord Mayor Andrewes accompanied with 14 Aldermen of the same pack the People in great abundance crying out Away with it away with it GOD save King CHARLES the Second and bitterly reviling and cursing it and them until some Troops of Horse ready prepared in secret were sent to disperse beat and wound them and yet the Trial of the King and the subverting of our well-formed Monarchy under which we lived so happily heretofore with all other Acts of the like high nature was done in the name of the People of
him and then the Mayor conducted them all to Christ-Church where the Commons Councel of State General and his Officers together with the Mayor Aldermen and Common Councel c. mocked God with their Devotions where Mr. Tho. Goodwin and Mr. Owen preached out of the Politicks to them from thence they were conducted to a great Dinner at Grocers-hall and entertained in the quality of a Free State no man bring admitted without delivering his Ticket They were all strongly guarded with Souldiers and every Cook had an Oath given to be true to them which sh●wed they had more of fear and guilt thah of confidence and innocency within them Great Presents of Plate given to his Excellency Fairfax and to his Super-excellency Cromw l and to others fit to be chronicled in Stow● and Hollingsheads Volumes 177. A necessary advertisement to all honest Presbyterians See K. Charles the first his book The Portraicture of his Majesty in his solitudes sufferings Some over-hastily expect the King should satisfie the Presbyterians by his Declaration but the height of the Independents malice their guilty fears are such as may endanger the d awing on a Massac●e upon them by such a course amongst other solemn Fooleries let it not be omitted that Hugh Peter and many other Saints were too full of the Creature anglice Drunk I am to give a necessary advertisement to all men that though the young King shews much respect and a desire of reconcilement according to his dead Fathers never-dying precepts to all moderate men and Presbyterians that make Addresses to Him yet it is complained of by some who look not into the undermining practises of our new Statists that some few of His Counsellors and Followers are as violent against the more moderate and honest Presbyterians as against the Independents who murdered his Father but these zealous Royalist are either some passionate light-brain'd men of little discretion and less power with him or else some false-hearted Pen●ioners to our new State and such as have under-hand an Indemnity for their own Estates in England who stand like Scar-crows about His Majesty to fright away such as return to their Loyalty and tender their due Allegiance to Him thereby to weaken the hands of his Majesty and cut off the hopes of this Nation from depending upon him who as our undoubted Sovereign both by the Laws of God and the Land and Gods Vice-geren● in His three Kingdomes onely can and will if we forsake not him and our selves free and protect us from the many-headed miserable arbitrary tyranny we now starve and bleed under and restore unto us again our Religion Laws and Liberties our Wives Children and Estates Trading Husbandry peace and plen●y now held in more than Aegyptian bondage by our cruel bloody and thievish Task-masters See a Book entituted His Majesties gracious Messages for peace Mr. Pryns Speech 5. Dec. 1648. in the House And the secured Members Reply to the Councel of War Remember his deceased Majesties gracious Messages frequently sent for peace and reconcilement Remember His Concessions to His Parliament upon the last Treaty more than ever any King granted to His People Remember His pious meek and Christian Martyrdome suffered for His People which bitter Cup had passed from Him if He would have built up and established this Babel of Tyranny now insulting over us and have turned our wel-mixed Monarchy into an Olygarchical legal Tyranny by adding His Royal Assent to their wicked Demands tendered to Him but two dayes before His Translation from this valley of teares Remember His Posthumus Book to His Son full of Prec●pts savouring meerly of piety Christian wisdom charitie and forgiveness to His very Enemies and then judge whether our late King or our usurping Kinglings now scratching and tearing us making one War beget another 1 King 3. perpetuating an Army and domineering over us by the power of the Sword were the natural Parent whose bowels yearned upon this now Orphan Child the English Nation dying and expiring under this new Corporation of Tyrants Oath of Allegiance and Stat. of Recognition 1 Jacobi the putative Patent which overlayed it He that acknowledged Allegiance to the Father cannot deny it to his Son as having sworn to hear faith and true Allegiance to the King his Father and to his lawful Heirs and Successors which our usurping Hogens Mogens cannot pretend to be so that as well for duty and conscience to God and their own Souls as for a necessary and just protection of their lives and estates all honest and wise men ought to cast themselves into the Arms of his D●ead Majesty our present KING as the only sanctuary of their salvation and not suffer themselves to be so far mis-led by vain reports as to be more afraid of their cure than of their disease Stultorum incurata pudor malas ulcera celat S●lomon hath shewed you out of the Cabinet of Nature the difference between a Natural-mother and a Step-mother Dictum de Kennelworth and that you may see the difference between a natural King correcting his own people with fatherly compassion for examples sake and a Usurper wounding killing and robbing those which are none of his own his fellow-servants for his lust and lucre sake I will set down a short Abridgement of our own famous Dictum de Kennelworth and first the occasion thereof which was thus Simon de Montford Earl of Leicester conspiring with many other great men rebelled against Henry 3. pretending after the manner of all Rebels Reformation of publick Grievances He overthrew the King in battel took Him and his Son Prince Edward Prisoners the Prince after a while escaped out of Prison raised an Army overthrew and slew in the Battel of Evesham Simon Montford subdued the whole Party rescued and re-inthroned his Father Cummissions were sent forth to prevent future troubles and settle mem minds grown desperate with fear what horrid punishents so horrible a Rebellion would bring upon them The result of all is contained in the said Dictum de Kennelworth as I find it in Magna Charta veteri fol. 60. part 2. observe the moderation pf it No man bled to death for it but in the field the blood of war was not shed in time of peace the King did not slay those whom he had taken with his Sword and with his Bow but reasonably fined them not unto destruction though the known Laws called them Traitors See the late History of the Marquess of Montross what gentle use he made of his Victory after he had subdued the strength of Scotland at Battel of Kylsythe and put them into his power for life lands and goods they were but once punished not always tormented and kept upon the rack after the late custom of our fellow-Servants and Subjects who will never suffer the partition-wall between us to be thrown down England once more to become one Nation and one people and our broken bones to
their Thanksgiving Devotions and Dinner to be celebrated together in and with the City upon Thursday ensuing the 7. of June and lest it should dishearten more secluded Members from comming to sit in the House with them again knowing that Tyrants are followed for their fortunes not for themselves wherefore upon Tuesday following being the 5. Jun Popham made another kinde of Report to the Plebeians of the Commons House who must not be trusted with the truth of State-mysteries but like Wood-cocks must be led in a mist That he had left Kingsale blocked up with ten Ships and the Seas secured in peace and quietness and the better to adorn the fable and suppress the truth from approaching the ears of the people the House that day 15. June passed an Order That for this remarkable additional mercy bestowed upon them in the prosperous success given to their Fleet at Sea upon Thursday next 7. June the day set apart for publick Thanksgiving the Ministers should praise God Lord since there audacious Saints are so thankful to thee for one beating bestow many more beatings upon there for they stand in need of all thy corrections The like attempt hath been upon Scilly with the like success Scout from June the 8. to 15. 1649. 179. Gifts given amongst the Faction since which time forty sail of Ships are pressed in the Thames to recruit the shattered Navy given forth to be a Winter Guard at Midsummer John Blackiston is packed away to the other world and the House upon 6. June voted to Wife and Children 3000 l. out of the Earle of Newcastle's and Lord Wytherington's Estates in compensation of the loss of his Pedlery Ware in his Shop at Newcastle he had formerly given to him 14000 l. you see the insatiate hunger of Gold and Silver survives in the very Ghost of a Saint after he is dead 500 l. more was given to Johns Brother an Estate out of the Rectory and Demesnes of Burford was setled upon the Speaker 400 l. per ann Lands are be setled upon the General out of the Duke of Buckinghams and his Brother the Lord Francis Villers Estates 400 l. per ann out of Claringdon Park upon the Earle of Pembroke 1000 l. was bestowed upon an eminent Member of Parliament for his many good Services 4868 l. to the Lord Lisle out of the Monthly Assesment for Ireland for his penny-worth of good service done there you see to what purpose we pay Taxes 2000 l. Land per an and 1000 l. Money given to Bradshaw the price of Bood And 400 l. more given to the Poor of the City to stop their mouths from cursing upon the Thanksgiving-day out of the 2000 l. Fine set upon the Lord Mayor Reynoldson for not proclaiming the Act for abolishing Kingly Government this is according to the Spanish Proverb To steal a Sheep and give away the Trotters for Gods sake You see the Saints can finde Money to give Gifts though not to pay Debts although the Publick Faith lye at pawn for them A Committee is appointed to consider how to prefer Mr. Tho. Goodwin and Mr. Owen to he Heads of Colledges in Oxford as a Reward for asserting the late proceedings of Parliament upon the aforesaid Thanksgiving-day It is not fit such men should serve God for nothing in the times of S. Peter and S. Paul Godliness was great Gain but in the daies of our modern Saints Gain is great Godliness The thing that miscalls its self a Parliament 180. The Kxcise enlarged upon Salt hath set an Excise of 1 d. the Gallon upon all forraign salt imported which is in effect upon all the salt we use our home-made salt being inconsiderable you see our Cups our Spits our powdring-Tubs our washing-bowles our Kettles our Hats Dublets Breeches Stockings Shooes nothing we use eat drink or wear is free from being devoured by these sanctified Locusts of the Free-State who complained of the King for that petty inconsiderable Tax of Ship-m●ney which His Majesty spent in maintaining Guards of Ships upon our Seas so much to the Honour of our Nation that the King of Spain trusted all those vast summs of Bullion he sent to the Low-C●untries to be Coined in our Mint and above a third part yearly to be laid out here in English Cloth and Commodities which with the residue of the Spanish Treasure was afterwards wafted over into Flaunders in English Bottomes for which they were liberally payed whereby every mans estate was increased 10 l. in the hundred England infinitely abounded with Coin and Plate as appeares by those many vast summs that have been constantly extorted from the People since the beginning of these Wars more I dare say than all our Kings since the Conquest excluding William the Conqueror and Henry the Eighth ever raised upon the People and by those many vast summs our seeming Saints have sent into banks beyond Sea and buried in their private Coffers Reader let me admonish thee 181. A Vindication of the Levellers in some things and a further design to garble and enslave the Army That the Levellers for so they are mis-called onely for endeavouring to Level the exorbitant usurpations of the Councel of Officers and Councel of State are much abused by some Books lately printed and published in their names much differing from their declared Principles Tenets and Practices but forged in Cromw●ls and Ir●tons shops to cast an odium upon them These State-wolves by such forgeries endeavour to make the Sheep forsake and betray the Dogs that faithfully guard them that they may with more security fleece them flay them and eat them hereafter Ireton H●slerig and Postmaster-Attorney Prideaux by themselves and their Blood-hounds Spies and Intelligencers have been very diligent to draw dry-foot after Mr. Lilburne Walwine c. and suborn witnesses against them but not having yet quite extinguished all sparks of truth and honesty unless it be in their own breasts failed of their purposes Yet they go on to purge the Army as they have done the Parliament and Conventicle of State of all free-born humours in order to their destruction that the Army may consist of meer mercenary brutish spirits such as will so far neglect the duties of men and Christians as to execute all their tyrannous bloody illegal Commands with a blind obedience and implicite faith without asking a question for Conscience sake the better to enslave both the Kingdom and Common Souldiers In farther prosecution of this Design they have projected to levy seven new Regiments which by way of Gullery they call Presbyterian Regiments and shall be raised by Presbyterian Commanders but those Commanders shall only be imployed to countenance the work for a time and then for pretended offences be purged out of the Army if not out of this world by the Councel of Officers and more confiding men put in their rooms and then shall these new Officers and Regiments be used as Catch-poles and Hangmen contrary to the honour of Souldiers
to persecute and execute such Members of the Army as retain any sense or memory of their old Engagements and Principles * 182. The pretended Parliaments Councel of State and Officers confederated with Oneale See An After-game at Irish c. 1649. and the Propositions p●inted at Cork and reprinted at London From June 6. 1649. June 8. 1649. I formerly told you of an underhand combination between the domineering Independent party here and Owen Roe Oneale which is now openly declared and avowed by their own licenced News-books Owen Roe and Colonel Monk are joyned saith the M●dest Narrative our Party have permitted 300. of Oneals own Regiment to Quarter in our parts amongst the Creats within two miles of Dundalke saith the Scout Owen Roe and Berne are come towards Col. Jones and Col. M nks Quarters he is so fair as to pay Contribution his Quarters are to the Scots side of Dublin to prevent their giving aid to Ormond in his attempt upon Dublin Moderate Intelligencer from June 7. to 14. 1649. num 221. who can blame necessity nor doe our Grandees now deny this Confederacy with the bloody Popish massacring Rebels although they had the impudence to make the only supposition thereof one of the principal Charges against the late King and to raise a great out-cry against the Marquess of Ormond and Lord Inchiquine for their conjunction with Pr ston yet they joyned but to prevent the Cromwelists who offered to associate with him upon conditions much more prejudicial to the Protestant Religion and English Interests than Ormond hath given them They have offered this Oneale all the Lands in Vlster forfeited by his Grandfather Tyrone Shane Oneale and others attainted thereby destroying the British Planters there and this is the reason they imploy so few old Irish Commanders into those parts lest the Oneals should doubt they came to recover their own lands again But our Atheistical Saints account themselves loose when other men are bound nothing but a halter can hold them all obligations to men all duties and vowes to God See the Councel of Wars Answer concerning the secured and secluded Members from 6. June to 13. num 3. they break upon pretended necessity and honest intentions Their Metropolitan Nuntio Judas Haclet tells you Their Party will not joyn with the bloody Irish until they are brought to such a pinch as to say Flectere sinequeo superos Acheronta movebo If God will not be the Author and Patron of their Designs the Devil shall you see these Independents hang between God and the Devil Michael and the Dragon not resolved which part to take Be it known unto all men by these presents 183. Parker the Observator that Harry Parker the Observator is returned from Hamborough and highly preferred to be Brewers Clerk alias Secretary to Cromw●l to whose Designs he hath prostituted his pen. There is lately come forth a Book of John Meltons a Libertine that thinketh his Wife a Manacle 184. Meltons Book the Tenure of Kings and Magistrates c. and his very Garters to be Shackles and Fetters to him one that after the Independent fashion will be tied to no obligation to God or man wherein he undertaketh to prove That it is lawful for any that have power to call to account Depose and put to Death wicked Kings and Tyrants after due c●nviction if the ordinary Magistrate neglect it I hope then it is lawful to put to death wicked Cromwels Councels of State corrupt Factions in Parliament for I know no prerogative that usurpation can bestow upon them He likewise asserteth That those who of late so much blame Deposing are the men that did it themselves meaning the Presbyterians I shall invite some man of more leisure and abilities than my self to Answer these two Paradoxes But shall first give him these cautions 1. That for the Polemick part he turn all his Arguments into Syllogismes and then he will find them to be all Fallacie● the froth of wit and fancy not the D●ctates of true and solid Reason 2. That for the Historical or narrative part he would throughly examine them and he will find few of them consonant to the plumb-line of truth 3. That he would consider that from the beginning of this Parliament there were three Parties or Factions in it 1. The Royalists 2. The Presbyterians 3. The Independents For though they were not then notorious by their name yet the Persons confederated were then extant and active being a complication of all Antimonarchical Anarchical heresies and s●hismes Anabaptists See the Mystery of the two Junto's Presbyterian and Independent Brownists Barrowists Adamites Familists Libertines of all sorts the true Heires and Successors of John of Leyden and Knipperdolling in all their principles aad practices united under the general Title of Independent and these were originally the men that by their close insinuations solicitations and actings began and carried on the War against the KING with an intent from the beginning to pull down Monarchy and set up Anarchy notwithstanding the many Declarations Remonstrances abortive Treaties Protestations and Covenants to the contrary which were Obligations from time to time extorted from them by the Presbyterians although not strong enough to hold such subtile Sampsons whose strengths to break such Withes lay not in their Bushes of Hair but in the Ambushes of their Hearts wherein there always lay hid some evasion equivocation or mental reservation which like a back-door gave them leave to make an escape In the beginning almost of this Parl. the Independents that is the Schismaticks in the Parliament insisted openly upon it to have the Papists in Ireland rooted out and their Lands sold to Adventurers and passing an Act to that purpose necessitated the Irish Papists to massacre the English Protestants which was purposely done by the Independents that both Papists and Protestants might destroy one another there that they might the better subvert Protestancy in England which is now in hand And though it be true that the first General the Earle of Essex was a Presbyterian yet he was acted by Independents as the L. Sa● and others of the like stamp and had a clause in his Commission to forbear the King's Person which clause upon the Independents new Modelling the Army under Fairfax was omitted at their especial instance Monday 18. June 185. L.C. Lilburns Book The Legal fundamental Liberties of the People c. 1649. came forth that most useful Book of John Lilburns called The Legal fundamental Liberties of the People of England Revived c. wherein he excellently well sets forth the new usurped tyranny of that Hydra of Nimrods now subverting our Laws Liberties and Property consuming us with illegal Taxes Excise Free-quarter Monopolies and sharing Land Money Goods and Offices amongst themselves perpetuating an Army to enslave us and overthrow the fundamental Government of this Nation in order to which they have complied with and cheated all Interests broken all
themselves though they prohibit others But Gold and Silver are drawn out of Mines Royal and belong to the Saints by their Prerogative 5. An Act to be passed for punishment of Revolted Sea-men and Mariners None against traiterous tyrannous theevish Saints 6. An Act for relief of wel-affected Tenants against Malignant Land-lords who have compounded for their Estates rack their Tenants Rents or turn them out of doors This is a device First to make work for such Members as not being of the Councel of State would become as contemptible as they are hateful being devested of all power to play the Tyrants after Adjournment And secondly to stir up all the Tenants of England especially Schismaticks to combine with them against their Land-lords and deprive them of the legal use of their Estates and the benefit of their Compositions for to what purpose shall Gentlemen compound for their Estates when they must let and set them at the discretion of domineering Committees or Commissioners conspiring with the high Shoos to oppress make a prey of enslave and unspirit all the Nobility and Gentry of England here aimed at under the general Title of Malignants Oh perfidious Tyrants keep your money Gentlemen or turn it into Iron and Gun-powder 7. An Act to suppress Malignant Pamphlets aspersing the present proceedings of the Parliament Councel of State and the Army and prevent Printing as much as may be This is to set truth in the pillory whilst her counterfeit impudent lying and slandering sits in state in Parliament Councel of State and Councel of Officers and rides triumphantly Coached into the City to Thansgiving Devotions and Dinners 8. That the Pulpits being as scandalous as the Press against their proceedings they enjoyn that a more strict course be taken to stop the mouthes of the Preachers hereafter You see how Ahab-like these Subverters of Church and Common-wealth 1 King 18.17 accuse our Prophets for troubling our Israel being their own sin and seek occasion to bring a spiritual as well as a corporal famine upon the Land cutting off the staff of bread as well from our souls as bodies by stopping the mouths of Gods Ministers But I hope they will remember the duty they owe to the honour of him that sent them upon his Embassage to his people and fearing God more than Man every man cry out to his own soul and conscience with S. Paul 1 Cor. 9.16 Vae mihi si non praedicavero Woe be to me if I do not Preach 9. That an Act be passed that that clause of the Stat. 23. Eliz. 25. Eliz. 1 Jac. against Sectaries should be repealed that none may be questioned thereby in the vacancy of Parl. What is this but to pray in aid of Turks Jewes Anabaptists of Munster nay the Devil himself to joyn with them as they have already joyned with Owen Roe Oneale and his bloody massacring Irish Papists against the Protestant Religion which was part of the designe of the schismatical Party in Parliament in waging war against the King from the beginning See Sect. 184. the Marginal notes there This impious Liberty of Conscience to destroy the Protestant Religion is all the liberty we are like to enjoy under the Kingdom of these bloody cheating Saints in all things else we are meer and absolute slaves 10. That an Act for a General Pardon be passed to all Persons except such as are particularly named therein and declaring no Pardon to any that shall for the future raise War in this Nation against the present Authority thereof This is a project 1. To pardon themselves and their Party for their transcendent villanies and to stop the mouthes of the Countrey from complaining of them after their Adjournment and this shall be effectually done 2. To befool silly weak-spirited people with general words of a Pardon which shall be made ineffectual by many exceptions and limitations 3. This is principally intended to fright men from attempting any thing against the usurped Supremacy and Tyranny of the Councel of State and therefore all Pardons to such Attemptors are before-hand declared against This with them is as a sin against the Holy Ghost unpardonable to deny their Supreme Arbitrary Authority 11. That the Act for relief of poor Prisoners for Debt may be passed Though I can with as much Charity as any Man wish a relief to them yet I like not that Charity should be made a cloak to ambitious Knavery and all the Creditors of the Kingdom be made liable to the vexation of a covetous Committee who under colour of Charity shall raise up all the indebted Men of the Kingdom against all the monied Men if they will not sacrifice their purses to the Foh-Gods of the new State and be bountiful to the Committee which is the full scope of this Proposition 12. That the Souldiers may be secured their Arreares out of the late Kings Lands This is to tie all the Souldiery by the purse-strings which is Saints Tenure to make good that horrid trayterous Murther 13. That an Act be passed for Probate of Wills Granting Administrations and investing of Ministers presented These lunatique Saints should have thought upon a new way to be set up before they throw down the old one and not have left men in an uncertainty how to dispose of their Estates and a Justitium a vacancy of Justice upon the Kingdom you see what Mountebanks our new State-Juglers are The good Boyes began to learn these Lessons upon Monday 25. June 190. Things undertaken by the Councel of State during the Recess The Councel of State likewise reported to their said Free-School of Commons several things which they in order to their future greatness would put into a way during the Recess against the Houses next meeting when two Sundays come together 1. That Commissioners be appointed in every County to make an estimate of all Tythes to the end they may be taken away for the future and some other provision designed for Ministers This is a whip and a Bell to lash Ministers to Preach State-Divinity 2. That the Councel of State consider of setling future Parliaments and the constant time of their calling sitting and ending after this Parliament shal think fit to dissolve themselves If they are not dissolved already which is the constant opinion of many great learned Lawyers well-affected to the Parl. they will never be dissolved without the help of a Hangman But I would gladly know by what Authority a Pack of forty Knaves calling themselves a Councel of State and usurping Regal power shall take upon them to abolish our ancient form of Parliaments contrary to the fundamental Laws of the Land their own Declarations Protestations and Covenants and to pack and shuffle new Parliaments to dispose of our Religion Laws Liberties Lives and Estates against the consent of the far major part of the people 3. That they shall consider of an Act for regulating proceedings in Law and prevent tediousness of Suits There are too many
Lawyers in the Councel of State to do any thing effectual that way but it may be they will consider how to make the Lawes of the Land more sutable to an Olygarchical tyranny and lesse agreeing with Monarchy 4. That they will consider what Lawes are fit to be repealed That is all Lawes enjoyning uniformity in Gods Worship all Monarchical Lawes and all Lawes allowing more civil Liberty and Priviledges to the People and to several Degrees of men than squares with the Designes of our new upstart State So many men have been cheated with Publique Faith 191. Dean and Chapters Lands purchased by the Godly Irish Adventures and Bishops Lands that the Market is spoiled for sale of Dean and Chapters Lands wherefore the Saints being the onely monied men left in the Kingdome have now agreed to buy them themselves considering that since they hold their Heads and all that they have in Capite of their Lords Paramount the Councel of Officers they may as well buy dog-cheap and hold Deanes Lands by the same Tenure For which purpose they have their Broakers abroad to buy in Souldiers and Officers Debentures for Arrears at 5 s. and 6 s. in the pound though they are allowed the whole summ of the Debentures in the Purchase which doubling in ready money they purchase upon such easie particulars as brings it down from ten years purchase to two or three years purchase They are not seen in the business themselves but buy them in other mens names and to the secret use of their Wives and Children The Lord Munson Hump●rey Edwards and Sir Greg. Norton who hath sold his own Land to purchase new upon this Title and many other Saints have lately trod this obscure path 192. Souldiers insolencies remediless Great complaints are made by the Countrey of the Souldiers insolency amongst many other things in putting their Horses into mowing Grasse The General hath ordered the next Officer in chief to cause double damages to be given by the Souldier and if the said Officer neglect he is to answer it at a Councel of War at the Head Quarters This remedy is worse than the disease and as meer a gullery as the Act for taking off Free quarter The chief Officer will laugh at the Complainant the Head Quarters are far off and the Councel of War will tire him with delays and expose him to more injuries of the angry Souldiers The Officers will not nor dare not keep a strict discipline 193. The Earl of Denbigh and Henry Martin referred to Committees The Earl of Denbigh referred to the Committee of the Revenue to consider the Arreares of his Embassie in Italy and of his 1000. Marks per ann pension bestowed upon him by the late King If his deserts had been better his Reward had been worse and worse paid Also Henry Martins Losses and Arreares referred to the consideration of a Committee If the Committee would know what Harry hath lost they must examine his Barber-Surgeon Rowland Wilsons Arrears and Losses and the L. Gray's Charges and Arreares to be considered and reported you see charity begins at home and the Members exercise it for the most part in their own House 194. The Councel of State authorized to grant Letters of Marque June 25. An Act passed to enable the Councel of State with absolute power to grant special and particular Letters of Marque or Reprisal in the name of the Keepers of the Liberties of England by Authority of Parliament what is this but to empower the Councel of State to make War at Sea with all Princes and States at their discretion they have already so far decayed all the Trade of this Nation that ere long Traffique will be totally destroyed whereby our Sea-men with their Ships will be necessitated for want of employment to revolt to the PRINCE to prevent which inconvenience they will find work for them by granting so many particular Letters of Marque to all such as shall but pretend themselves wronged by Foreign Nations as will amount to a General practice and profession of Pyracy and turn England into a second Argires whereby all Princes and States will be provoked to make a Pyratical War upon England as against a Den of Theeves and Robbers Common Enemies to Traffick and humane Society as the Romans did under the Conduct of Pompey against the Cilician and other Asiatick Pyrats Captain Younge hath blown up with Gun-powder a Ship of the Princes called the Antilope 195. Cap. Yongue's blowing up the Antilope in Helversluce with a Caution lying at Anchor in Helversluce under the protection of the States of Holland whereby the Chamber of Holland and the honour of their Inland Sea is ravished from them By this and by some former actions of the like insolency as the firing upon their Ships and killing their men for not striking Sail to them you may see what good Neighbourhood the Dutch are like to have of their younger brother State when they are once setled and confirmed in their yet infant Government even the very same which the Carthaginians found after the new erected Commonwealth of Rome grew up to maturity which proved so dangerous a Competitor in point of power profit and honour as buried the more antient Free-State of Carthage in its Ruines Free-states especially Aristocracies are very quarrelsome with their Neighbours and never want many of their Patrician most potent Families ambitious to increase their own power and glory by Wars and therefore seek occasions of quarrel with their Neighbours such was the whole Family of the Barchines at Carthage the Scipio's Fabii Camilli Crassi Pompeii Casares and many more at Rome Thus was Greece torn in pieces by its Free-states The Commons have bestowed St. Crosses Hospital upon Cooke for acting the part of an Attorney General against the late King It is fit every Judas should have his reward 196. More Gifts to the Godly the New Park in Surry bestowed upon the City in reward of their Thanksgiving Dinner that the new-packed Court of Aldermen and Common-councel may not want Venyson to fill their Wives Bellies nor they Brow Antlers to hang their Hats on 197. Order 9. June 1649. referring all secured and secluded Members to be examined before a Committee The 9. June the Commons about 46 in number had passed an Order concerning their secured secluded and absented Members and referred all such as had not already entred their dissent to the Vote 5. Decem. 1648. to a Committee to give such satisfaction to them as the House should approve of before the 30. of June instant or else the House would take order for New Elections This was to bring the said Members 300 in number at least to the winnowing that they might admit such as were for their turn to recruit their thin House and expel the rest few repaired to them and of those very few were chosen the Speakers Son Sir John Treavor who hath a Monopoly of 1500 l. per
annum out of Newcastle Coles for which he was many Months kept out of the House and at last admitted onely to comply with the Faction and his said Monopoly continued Sir Henry Haymonde and two Sons of the Earl of Pembroke were received This was thought very unreasonable that so many Gentlemen either kept out or driven away by force should by a far less number sitting and acting under the same force be sent to attend a Committee to stand with their Hatts off to Holland Scott c. and be examined and expelled for giving their Votes Yea or No in the House according to their Consciences This was to subvert the Liberty of all Parliaments for the future and to make this House which calls it self a Parliament a meer packed Junto to carry on forelaid Designs Besides to expect they should approve all that the sitting Party in the House had done in the absence of these non-sitting Members who neither heard the Debate nor reasons whereupon they grounded their Votes against the King and House of Peers nor for the abolishing Monarchy and turning it into a Free-state erecting a Councel of State for that purpose voting the Supreme Authority to be in themselves and many other matters of the like high nature which have no place in the Laws of England was such an imposition as neither agreed with the known Parliament Priviledges Liberty of Conscience so loudly professed by these sanctified Members which sit nor with humane reason and sense And at last to sit under those Armed Guards that put a force upon them the 6. Decemb. before promised as little of safety unless they would renounce their own Consciences and Act the wills of their Janisaries and their Party and would render them contemptible to all the world especially to those men who put this insolency upon them I formerly told you how unwilling the Members were to adjourn and resign their more than Kingly Power to the Councel of State 168. Articles of Impeachment against the Speaker wherefore Cromwel finding he could not obtain that of them by a Vote projected another way to work his Design not the old way of a violent purge by securing and secluding the Members with his Myrmidons that is already infamous Note that Oliver before he left the Town erected a Committee of Officers of the Army to prosecute and bring to punishment grand Delinquents This is a new kinde of Star-Chamber o● military Nobles held like a Rod over the Mock-Parliament Councel of State and the General in case they shall oppose Olivers Designs and would savour too grosly of the Power of the Sword and would shew Oliver to be rather a Quack-salving Doctor of Physick than a Doctor of the Civil Law He caused the Officers therefore to frame certain Articles of Impeachment against Mr. Lenthal their Spearker as followeth 1. FOr releasing out of New-gate three of the Queens Priests and Jesuits by his Warrant 2. For maintaining and protecting several Spies and Agents for the late King within the Line of Communication during the late War 3. For conveying divers remarkable prisoners of War out of the Line of Communication unto the late King 4. For assisting and protecting several Plotters on the behalf of the late King to destroy the City of London 5. For suffering above 30000 l. to be conveyed to the late King out of the Line of Communication wittingly and willingly 6. For sending Horses of War with Men and Arms to the late King 7. For holding an intercourse of Letters with the late King 8. For maintaining and keeping an Agent in the Garrison of Oxford for expediting the foregoing Treacheries 9. For corrupting many Members of the Parliament some lately excluded and some now sitting in the House to conceal and smother the foreging Treacheries 10. For endeavouring to take away the Lives of several the Prosecutors and Witnesses unto the foregoing Treacheries You see there is not one word in them of Cousening the Commonwealth which is now become the Private wealth of every particular Saint because this would have broken universally the whole communion of Saints and would have set them all together by the ears to defend themselves by recriminating one another The device was by taking off the Speaker to Dissolve them since they cannot by the Priviledges of the House chuse themselves a new Speaker without the consent of a power higher than their own to wit the Kings and though they will be so much Masters of their own Priviledges as to coyn new every day upon emergent occasions yet those irregularities are alwayes done under the power and protection of the Sword which they could not expect against their own Visier Basha Oliver This trick being smelt out was so highly resented that it perished in the birth only I hear the Speaker bled in private 15000 l. towards Olivers expedition 199. 50000 l Ad●nce mony ●r Cromwels ●xpedition All the sinks of tyranny and oppression about the Town the Committee of the Revenue Goldsmiths hall Haberdashers hall the Excise Office c. are all emptied into that Common-Sewer Olivers expedition into Ireland or rather Scotland or engaged as a security to furnish him with 150000. part whereof onely he is accountable for the residue is left to his discretion and conscience to buy Towns and Victories with and to be offered upon an Altar to be erected Deo ignoto At Olivers request the House admitted Sir Edward Ford to compound upon the Articles of Oxon notwithstanding his lapse of time Forde married Ireton's Sister and the Lord Culpepper's Son married Forde's Daughter Observe how the General is lessened to advance Cromwel 1. The Command o●●e Irish Forces taken from him and Cromwel sent with a Higher power than ever any went with into that Nation 2. All Souldiers that will are enabled to leave their Regiments and List under Cromwel so that the discontented and Levelling Party onely are left under the command of Fairfax Col. Martin's Accounts brought into the House 3. July 200. More Gifts to the Godly 1649. his Arrears came to 25000 l. and 1000 l. per ann Land ordered to be setled upon him and his Heirs The Lord Gray of Grooby's Arrears for the last Summer only against Duke Hamilton 1500 l. These things considered I cannot wonder at the Petition presented to the General by Captain Jubbs in the name of Col. Hus●n's Regiment about July 6. wherein amongst other things they complain The Moderate from July 3. to July 10. 1649. That the House doe weekly bestow 1000 l. per an upon themselves out of the publique Treasury of the Nation when as the Souldiers wants are great and all the people are in great necessity As if the dividing of the Army 201. Endeavors to lessen the General and putting the most confiding men under Cromwel the taking the whole command of Ireland from the General and conferring it upon Cromwel the drawing dry all Treasuries of Money to furnish Cromwel
without Order 60000 l. a month was thought abundantly sufficient to pay the Army and take off Free-quarter And why this Tax should now be raised to 90000 l. a month when sundry Regiments of it are Assigned for Ireland and yet Free-quarter continued is a mystery of Iniquity which fills the Saints pockets with Mony and all the World with Wonder 6. The Counties Militia so much contended for with the King would better defend the Kingdome from Forreign Invasions than a Mercinary Army Therefore there is neither necessity nor publick utility in keeping up this Army or raising Taxes to maintain them or pay their pretended Arrears The Free-quarter they have taken in kinde and leavied in money will treble their Arrears and make them much indebted to the Country Thus far and much farther Master Pryn whose whole Book at large I commend to all mens serious perusal The Marquess of Ormond's happy atchievments in Ireland beginning to look formidably 204. Cromwel sets sail for Ireland had cooled the heat of K. Oliver's courage though not of his Liver insomuch that he and his intimate friends began to project how without loss of reputation to take him off from so desperate an Engagement as at that time that seemed to be unnecessary delays were used in Shipping his Men. Haslerig and his Party reported great terrours from Scotland Oliver and his Blood-hounds of the Faction made a shift to smell out a silly Plot in Dorsetshire for surprisal of Weymouth and Portland for the KING now laughed at and exploded by their own News-books And the tender-conscienced Brethren were prompted to apprehend their own dangers and put into a Petitioning posture That such a Worthy of Israel such a chosen Instrument of Gods mercy might not in a time of danger leave the Land of his Nativity the Habitation of the Saints to seek forraign adventures in a Heathen Land Whilst these preparations were making to withdraw Olivers stake he appeared not openly in them but making more shew of the Lions skin than the Foxes had written to Col. Jones how heartless his Souldiers were and that unless Jones did by some successeful Sally lessen their terrour he should not be able to get them on Ship-board This was like the Monkey to rake Chessenuts out of the fire with the Cats foot to take a presage of his own successe at Col. Jones hazard Jones makes an attempt with better luck than he expected though not with half so good successe as was reported Saturday 12. August when the news first came to Town the Lion is not so terrible as he is painted it is a peculiar priviledge of the Saints to lie without sin or at least without imputation of sin for the good Cause either in Re or in modo Rei in the matter or manner in the thing or the extent thereof yet this success was enough to invite Cromwel over to pursue the Victory and partake of the spoils if not to usurp the whole Honour of the Atchievment to himself by his accustomed special prerogative So upon the 16 or 17. of August K. Nol set sail towards his new Principality carrying contrary to the custome of the Sea his Lanthorn in his Proawe not in his Poop where we will leave him for the present to his adventures 205. The Association between O Neale and C. Monck See the Paper at large I have formerly hinted to you the Agreement made between Colonel Monck in behalf of the Parliament of England and Owen Roe O Neale the massacring Irish Rebel I have now occasion to speak more at large of it and examine the truth of a Paper called The true state of the Transactions of Col. George Monck with Owen Roe Oneale as it was reported to the Parliament by the Councel of State c. Printed by Edward Husbands 15. August 1649. The said agreement made between the Antimonarchical Independent Party in Ireland and the massacring Antimonarchical Popish party under Owen Roe O Neale being a meer conspiracy to root out Monarchy and Protestancy first in Ireland and then in England and a second crucifying of Christ in his members between two Thieves the Schismatick and the Papist was so generally abhorred by the English Souldiery that many there took occasion to forsake the English Parliament and many here disbanded rather than they would accompany Cromwel in so wicked an expedition Wherefore Cromwel writ Letters to his Creatures of the Councel of State by Monck himself complaining how much the miscarriage of that Agreement had retarded his said Voyage desiring them for satisfaction of the Souldiery and People to Treat with Monck to take the whole businesse upon himself and to clear the Councel of State the Parliament and Cromwel himself from having any hand at all in it which upon Terms of safety and advantage he said he already found him inclinable to do The better to carry on the scene this Agreement was with much heat of zeal complained of in the Apocryphal House of Commons by a Brother who had his cue before-hand and by the Juncto was referred to the Councel of State as was forelaid where their High and Mightinesses after some private conference with Monck to accommodate the business voted their dislike of it Scot having studied the Politiques in a Brewers Tally is become a great States-man in our new Babel See the said Paper The true state c. Bradshaw reprehending Monck in jest therefore And at last they Ordered That the whole business with Moncks Reasons for his justification should be reported by Thomas Scot to the House of Commons which was accordingly done Upon Friday 10. August Monck was called in to the Bar where amongst other things the Speaker asked him What Persons he meant in his Letter to the L. Lievtenant of Ireland wherein he saith He made the Agreement with O Neale with the advice of some others Monk answered that he did it upon his own score without advice of any other person onely having discourse with Colonel Jones Jones told him if he could keep Owen Roe and Ormond from joyning it would be a good service This Answer such as it is was taken for satisfactory in so Comick an Interlude The next demand was Whether he had any Advice or Directions from the Parliament Councel of State Lord Lievtenant of Ireland or any other Person here to do the same which he did expresly deny saying he did it upon his own score Hereupon the House voted as followeth Resolved c. That the House doth utterly disapprove of the proceedings of Col. Monck in the Treaty and Cessation as they please to call it made between him and Owen Roe O Neal and that this House doth detest the thoughts of any closing with any Party of Popish Rebels there who have had their hands in shedding English blood Nevertheless the House being satisfied that what the said Col. Monk did therein was in his apprehension necessary for the preservation of the Parliament of Englands Interest
goes on with the Relation of the said Treaty and Agreement but conceals what farther Transactions passed between Monke and O Neal upon the last recited Propositions Wherefore I shall be bold to continue the Story of a paper The Story of the father Transactions between O Neale and Monke continued and enlarged out of the Propositions printed at Cork entituled The Propositions of Owen Roe O Neal sent to Col. Monke and a Cessation for three Months concluded between them Together with a Letter thereupon sent by a Gentleman at Dundalk to his Friend at Cork Printed at Cork 1649. The last recited Propositions were sent to Monke 25. day of April 1649. who perused them and made some considerable Alterations in them as appears by Monks Letter of Answer thereupon to Owen O Neale dated from Dundalke 26. April 1649. as I finde it in the said paper printed at Cork in these words SIR I Have received yours of the 25. April and I have seen your Order given to Captain Hugh Mac Patricke Mac Mahon to Treat and conclude a peace with me in the behalf of your self and the Forces under your Command I have perused your Propositions and conceiving there are some particulars in them which at first view the Parliament of England may scruple to grant I have made a small alteration in some of them being well assured by it you will not receive the least disadvantage but it will rather prove a means to beget an increase of their good opinion towards you and your party which I believe your reality fidelity and action in their Service will sufficiently merit and in case you approve of them as I have revised and altered them I desire you to send them to me Signed and Sealed by you that I may present them to the Parliament of England to obtain their favourable Answer in return of them And in the mean time I desire that according to this inclosed paper three Months Cessation between us to be condescended unto and inviolably kept between our Forces during the same time Dundalk 26. April 1649. George Monke 1. Observations upon Monks letter 1. Col. Monke in his said Letter to O Neale 26. April answereth him 1. That he had perused his Propositions and conceiving there are some particulars which at first view the Parliament of England may scruple to grant c. A gentle phrase to nourish hopes in O Neale even of obtaining all his Demands if need be upon debate and deliberation though not at first view That he hath made a small alteration in some of them I confess very small being well assured he should not receive the least disadvantage by it c. From whom had Monke this Assurance unless from those Men by whose Authority and Directions private or publick he presumed to Treat with that Enemy he was Commissioned to fight with and whose Names he doth conceal That it yeilding to M●nks amendments would rather prove a means to beget an increase of their the Parliaments good opinion of Owen Roe O Neale and his party c. It should seem then the Parliament had entertained a good opinion of O Neale and his party before hand for every thing must have a being before it can have an increase of being In case you approve of them the amended Articles I desire you to send them to be signed and sealed by you that I may present them to the Parliament of England to obtain their favourable Answer in return of them c. You see all Monke did was in reference to the Parliaments ratification and therefore reason tells us the Parliament was originally privy to the Treaty It is not likely Monke should Treat upon his own head and abruptly send the result of the Treaty to be confirmed by the Parliament without any warning foregoing to prepare them 2. Observations upon the Propositions amended See the said Paper printed at Corke especially Monks Letter O Neale sent his Letter and Propositions to Monke Dated 25. April 1649. Monke answered his Letter and corrected O Neales Proposition the day after being the 26. April And the last mentioned Propositions of Gen. Owen O Neal the Lords Gentry and Commons of the Confederate Catholiques of Vlster c. as well as the first mentioned Articles for three Months Cessation c. bear Date 8. May 1649. which I conceive to be the Date given them when they were ratified by the Parliament or Councel of State See the said Paper The true state of the Transactions c. Then follows A second Copie of Owen Roe Oneales Propositions as they were corrected by Col. Monck Paper printed at Cork and sont to Oneale to be subseribed And then sent by Monck to the Parliament to be granted as followeth verbatim 1. INprimis That such as shall joyn with General O-Neal in the Service of the Parliament of England in this Kingdome may have Liberty of Conscience for themselves and their issue 2. The said General O Neale desireth an Act of Oblivion be passed to extend to all and every of his Party for all things done since the beginning of the Year 1641. 3. They desire that General O Neale be provided for a competent Command in the Army befitting his worth place and qualitie 4. They desire that they may enjoy all those Lands that were in their possession at the beginning of this War for themselves and Heirs during their fidelity to the Interest of England 5. That all incapacity inhability distrust hitherto by Act of State or otherwise against the said Party be taken off 6. That on both sides all Jealousies hate and aversion be laid aside unity love and amity renewed and practised between both Parties 7. That Gen. O Neale may be restored and put in possession of his Ancestors Estate or some other Estate equivalent to it in regard of his merit and the good Service that he shall perform in the Parliament of Englands Service in the preservation of their Interest in this Kingdom 8. That the Army belonging to the Gen. O Neale and his Party be provided for in all points as the rest of the Army shall be 9. That the said Party be provided with and possessed of a convenient Sea-port in the Province of Ulster See the Date in The true state of Transactions c. It seems to be 8. May 1649. And I do upon receiving a Confirmation of those Desires undertake and promise in the behalf of my self and the whole Party under my Command faithfully firmly to adhere to the Parliament of Englands Service in this Kingdom and to maintain their Interest hereafter with the hazard of our Lives and Estates against all Opposers whatsoever Given under my Hand and Seal In the said Paper printed at Corke is also contained A Letter from a Gentleman in Dundalke dated May 20. 1649. which take kere verbatim that you may see what opinion Men there upon the place had of that business at Corke in Munster To my
actions increase in horror and beget new afflictions to all honest English hearts So praying you to forbear further writing to me because I mean speedily to see you I rest Dundalk May 20. 1649. Your assured Friend and Servant Upon which Propositions so corrected by Monke and the close carriage of this business I shall trouble my Reader with these following Observations 1. Article You see the Counterfeit Alchymy Saints are content to joyn covertly with Massacring Irish Parpists to carry on their Antimonarchical Designs and to make a false Religion and corrupt worship of God the wages and hyre of righteousness 2. Article You see those Men that are so bloodily zealous to bring Protestant Delinquents nay the King himself under the notion of the Grand Delinquent the Man of Blood to punishment and pretend themselves engaged by Oath so to do can dispense with the Massacre of two hundred thousand English Protestants barbarously and inhumanely slaughtered in Ireland in time of full peace and can grant an Act of Oblivion to whole Armies of their Murderers thereby at once making their Antimonarchical interest the price for which they sell the innocent blood of their Brethren and defrauding the Irish Adventurers of that Money which the Parliament perswaded them to lay forth to purchase Rebels Lands in Ireland for which they have an Act of this Sessions of Parliament The like may be said of the 4. and 7. Articles whereby Rebels attainted and convict are restored to their confiscated Lands and the English Protestant planters that purchased them of the Crown are expelled out of their Inheritance what is this but a design to root out Protestancy as well as Monarchy 5. Article Taketh off all Incapacity Inability and distrust from O Neal and his party at that very time when with much counterfeit zeal they pretend great severity against the English Papists I think because they are not so very Rebels as the Schismaticks According to their usual custome to accuse other Men of their own Crimes they charged King CHARLES the First upon light surmises with complying with the bloody Irish Papists and do themselves actually combine with them to root out Monarchy and Protestancy giving them a Toleration of their Religion and the possession of the English Protestants Etates for their Hyre And it now appears by Letters newly come to London the 24. August notwithstanding the said Votes of the Commons against all association with the Irish Murderers That Sir Charles Coote and O Neale are associated See the Perfect Occurrences nu 17. 138. from Aug. 17. to the 24. 1649. and that the Siege from Londonderry was raised by O Neales help which plainly proves that the Treaty and Conjunction was not only between Monke and O Neale but between O Neale and the Parliament or Councel of State and that the said Propositions so altered by Monke are confirmed by the Parliament or Councel of State 206. Cromwell's Souldiers desert him at Milford-haven and upon his complain his House of Commons vote their Debentures void and do still serve for a foundation for O Neale to assist the Parliament upon who have turned out O Neale at the Fore-door to gull the People and taken him in again at the Back-door Many of K. Olivers Officers and Souldiers abhorring the said Association with O Neale deserted him at Milford-haven as I have related and came to London whither they were pursued at the heels by a Letter from his Mushrome Majesty directed to his Vice-Royes at Westminster willing his Parliament that since to encourage the Souldiers to undertake the Irish expedition onely their Accounts had been Audited and Debentures granted for their Arrears they should recall and null their said Debentures In obedience to which Command a thing like an Act of Parliament is drawn up and order taken that the Commissioners that attend Cromwel into Ireland should certifie the Names of them all to the Parliament that they may be punished in purse for not prostituting their Consciences and shedding more innocent blood with an implicite faith and blinde obedience to K. Olivers unquestionable commands in maintenance of usurpation and lawless tyranny The rest of the Army may see by this precedent they may as well hope to recover a damned Soul out of Hell as their Arrears out of this bottomless Gulph the New State notwithstanding all their fair promises Orders weather-cock Acts and Debentures which are all written in waste-paper and as changeable as Tickets and Securities for the Publick Faith It being their constant resolution and best policy to feed them from time to time with vain hopes and a little spending-mony for which they are never the better now a bit of mony and then a bob of Martial Law and alwaies to promise never to pay their Arrears thereby to keep them together from Disbanding and going to their own homes and callings whilst the Councel of Officers who only are accounted the rational part of the Army receive duly the hire of unrighteousness and whatsoever else they can shark from the private Souldiers who are looked upon but as the Brutish part of the Army in whom it is become a capital Crime to question whether their Superiors deal justly with them or no as is proved to Lockyer The Common Souldiers as well as the Common People paying for the Ryot of their Colonels and superior Officers who Lord it in their gilt Coaches rich Apparel costly Feastings though some of them led Dray-horses wore Leather-pelts and were never able to name their own fathers or mothers I and for the Lands they purchase too yet the Officers have one device more to keep the Souldiers together which is They make them believe they are so generally hated they cannot with safety Disband and go home whereas it is the Superiours onely that are looked upon with hatred as the Authors of Tyranny and Oppression The Private Souldier being esteemed but their Instruments and such as in their kind and way are sufferers under the hand of oppression as well as other men many Souldiers have been purged out of the Army others have voluntarily quitted the Army and returned to their callings without being endangered or injured after their retirement which shewes this objection is but a Scar-crow For the clear manifestation of the Association between O Neale and the Parliament 207. A League Defensive Offensive concluded between O Neal and Sir Charls Coote Governour of Connaught for the Parliament See the last Section save one there are lately come to the Councel of State two Letters out of Connaught from Sir Charls Coote one Dated the 14. the other the 15. of August 1649. informing them with how much zeal to the Parliaments Interest Owen O Neale had freely raised the Siege of London-Derry Upon which Letters and the Votes and proceedings of Col. Pride's Parliament thereupon I shall commend to my Readers observation these following particulars 1. The 15. August Letters inform that O Neale freely offered his assistance
to Coote professing much affection to the Parliament of England and an earnest desire to maintain their Interest c. which is his own Interest you may remember that this bloody Rebel O Neale heretofore when the Parliament was not half so corrupt as now stiled it Monstr●sum Parliamentum the Parliament of Monsters but now that he sees them act his way and concur with him to destroy Monarchy and Protestancy he stiles them The Honourable Parliament aids and affects them 2. The 14. August Sir Charles Coote informes that he hath found O Neale and his Army very punctual and faithful in all their Promises and Engagements and he makes no doubt but they will continue so unto the end c. The reason is becruse they aym all at one end and interest Subversion of Monarchy and Protestancy and go one way to effect it by a Conjunction of Forces and Councels 3. The 16. August that O Neale in his Express to Coote enclosed some Letters he had received from Monck and amongst the rest a ●opie of a Letter from Monck in Answer to a Letter of the Lord Inchiquine charging Monck with joyning with O Neale and his Party wherein Monck insinuated as if Oneale's submission to use the Parliaments Power were already accepted by them c. Monck needed not insinuate it but might have spoken it plainly as he hath done to sundry of his Friends in England who reprehended him for joyning with O Neale to whom he Answered That he had the Authority of his Superiors to warrant his doings therein But this was before he went to Milford-haven to Cromwel who then taught him the art of Cromwellizing to carry on their design Why did they cry out upon King Charls I. upon a surmise that He used the help of the more innocent Irish Papists being His own Subjects under His Allegiance and Protection but we find the Godly are above all laws 4. The 15. August Coote's Letter to justifie his doings delivers a piece of Doctrine to the Councel of State the Use whereof they were very perfect in before viz. Calling to minde that it is no new thing for the most wise God to make use of wicked Instruments to bring about a good Designe for the advancement of his glory c. This Casuist in Buff had forgotten That we must not doe evil that good may come thereof and that both the just and the unjust the righteous and the unrighteous man being all of Gods Creation and making he hath the same prerogative over them all jure creationis that a Potter hath over his pots he may use them and doe with them what seemeth best to his most holy will and it is therefore good holy just because he willeth it His Divine pleasure being the rule and Standard of goodness holiness justice Mistake me not I doe not mean his bare providence or permissive will which no man can take notice of and Traytors Tyrants Thieves and Reprobate Saints execute and boast of to their own assured damnation Therefore Gods imploying wicked Instruments can be no president for our Alchimy Saints to do the like unless Cromwels * Councel of Officers of State and Parliament three Juntoes and Faction will usurp Gods prerogative as they have done the Kings 5. The 15. August the Letter saith that Coote called a Councel of War and resolved It was better to accept of the assistance of those who proclamed themselves Friends to us and the Interest we fight for c. Here you see O Neales bloody Party and those Parliament Champions united and friendly conspiring to uphold one Common Interest which can be nothing but the downfal of Monarchy and Protestancy 6. The 15. August the Letter further saith that we Coote and his Councel of War added to the Article this wary Proviso not to use their assistance longer than the approbation of the State of England should goe along with us therein c. It should seem by this wariness that for the time they had used their help which was ever since the 22. of May last the approbation of the said State as they call it hath gone along therewith And for the time they mean to use their assistance hereafter it is left indefinite no longer than the approbation of the State shall goe along with us therein which may happily be until Dooms-day notwithstanding the Order Dated the 24. August 1649. voting That their Vote of the 10. August in the Case of Col. Monck be communicated to Sir Ch. Coote as the Resolution of the House c. For who knows whether the Copies of that Vote may miscarry or be stayed by the way either accidentally or purposely 7. The 14. August the Letter saith See Monk's Letter of Answer to O Neale Dated 26. April 1649. from Dundalk contained in the last foregoing Section but one See tie said Paper entituled The Propositions of Owen Roe O Neale sent to Col. Monck c. Printed at Cork 1649. O Neale was pleased to communicate to him certain Proposals which he saith were long since transmitied into England to the Parliament by Col. Monck and though for his own part and the prime Officers with him these are privy to the secret carriage of the businesse and therefore may well be satisfied with what is done already they do not doubt but the Proposals are already yielded to by the State yet in regard their Army and Party in all other parts of the Kingdome these are ignorant of the juggle and causes thereof cannot be satisfied therewith until the Parliament be pleased to declare themselves more publiquely therein it should seem they have done it privately already for satisfaction of O Neale and his said prime Officers he hath therefore desired me humbly to intraat your Lordships to declare your resolutions therein with as much speed as may be Here you see O Neale and his prime Officers who know the juggle satisfied already with a private confirmation of the Articles But to satisfie the rest of his Army and Party to whom this mystery is not yet revealed a publick Declaration thereof is desired that they may unanimously and cheerfully endeavour the preservation of the Parliaments Interest The Articles of Agrement between O Neale and Coote conclude clearly a League or War Offensive and Defensive against the Enemies of both or either until a more absolute Agreement be made and condescended unto by the Parliament of England This more absolute Agreement is now agitation and private Directions sent to Coote how to behave himself in the Transaction thereof See the 1 Vote die veneris 24. Aug. 1649. See the Relation of the Transactions between Sir Charles Coote and Owen Roe O Neale printed by Order 28. Aug. 1649. The Votes upon these Letters and Articles were two Upon part in the first Vote I have observed something already in the 6. branch of this Section viz. that their Votes of the 10. Aug. in Case of Col. Monck be communicated
or Coronation solemnized notwithstanding that by his unjust Banishment caused by the interposition of the said trayterous combined Antimonarchical Faction He be eclipsed for the present and not suffered to perform any Acts of Government to his three Kingdomes and restore Peace Plenty Justice Mercy Religion Laws and Liberties to them again which no hand but his own can bestow and therefore in vain do the people long for and expect Figgs from Thistles Grapes from Thorns This Kingdome of the Brambles now set up being onely able to Scrath and Tear not to Protect and Govern them I farther Declare and Protest That this combined trayterous Faction have forced an Interregnum and a Justitium upon us an utter suspension of all Lawful Government Magistracy Laws and Judicatories so that we have not de jure any Laws in force to be executed any Magistrates or Judges Lawfully constituted to execute them any Court of Justice wherein they can be judicially executed any such Instrument of the Law as a lawful Great Seal nor any Authority in England that can lawfully Condemn and Execute a Thief Murderer or other Offender without being themselves called Murtherers by the Law all legal proceedings being now coram non Judice nor can this remaining Faction in the House of Commons shew any one President Law Reason or Authority whatsoever for their aforesaid doings but onely their own tyrannical Votes and the Swords of their Army Wherefore I do further Declare and Protest before God and the World That all Free-born Subjects of the Kingdomes of England and Ireland are bound by the Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. and by all our Laws and Statutes By their Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy the Protestation and National Covenant by very many Declarations Remonstrances Petitions and Votes of this Parliament and all Souldiers are engaged also by their own Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals to defend assert and vindicate with their lives and fortunes the Person Authority and Title of our aforesaid lawful KING and Supreme Governour the undoubted Heir of all His late Fathers Dominions CHARLES the Second by the Grace of God King of Great Britain France and Ireland c. against all Opposites and pretended Authorities whatsoever unless they will be guilty of the fowlest sins of Treason Rebellion Perjury and perfidiousness against their God their King and Country and of prostituting the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Land their Wives Children and Estates to the lusts of an Armed Faction usurping a far more Arbitrary and Tyrannical power over our Consciences Persons Liberties and Estates than ever was known in England before or then is now used by the Russe Turk or Tartar or any the most enslaving and lawless Tyrants under Heaven 223. Compare the date of the K. Commissions with those of the Parliament and their Declarations on both sides An Exhortatory Conclusion to the English Nation TO conclude the series of Affairs and Action on both Parties especially of late rightly compared it appeareth by the sequel That King CHARLES the First from the beginning took up defensive Armes to maintain Religion Lawes Liberties and the antient fundamental being of Parliaments and this Kingdom and that there alwayes was and now especially is a predominant Faction in Parliament notwithstanding their frequent Declarations Remonstrances Petitions Protestations Covenant and Votes to the contrary conspiring with a Party especially of Commissioned Officers of the Army without the Houses to Change the fundamental Lawes and Government of the Church and Common-wealth to usurp into a few hands the Supream Authority to enslave the People with an Olygarchical Military and Arbitrary Government to raise what illegal Taxes they please to establish their tyranny and enrich themselves and their Party to oppresse consume and devour all men of a judgment contrary to their Interest to Murder them by new-declared arbitrary Treasons contrary to the Stat. 25 Edw. 3. for ascertaining Treasons to Disfranchise them of their Birth-rights and make them Adscriptios Glebae Villains Regardant to their own Lands which the Nobility Gentry and Yeomanry plough sow and reap whilst Brewers Dray-men and Coblers eat drink and play upon the sweat of their labours and are the Usufructuaries of their Estates All which they have lately brought to pass wherefore let all true Englishmen as becomes good Christians good Patriots and gallant Men claim their Birth-rights and with own voice cry out 1. We will not Change our Antient setled and well approved Laws to which we are Sworn 2. We will not Change our Antient and well-tempered Monarchy to which we are Sworn 3. We will not Change our old Religion for New Lights and Inventions 4. We will not subject our selves to an eighth part of one Estate or House of Parliament sitting under a force and having expelled two hundred and fifty of their Fellows more Righteous than themselves by force and usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority 5. We will not be subjected to a new Supreme Authority usurped by forty ambitious covetous Tyrants arrogating to themselves to be a Councel of State and designed to supply the room of Parliaments under what name or Title soever they mask themselves 6. We will not submit our selves to a Military Government or Councel of Officers 7. We must and will have A KING and The KING whom the Lawes of God and this Land have Designed to us See the Stat. of Recognition 1 Jac. and the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy we being by the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy sworn to ●ear Faith and true Allegiance to King CHARLES the First his lawful Heirs and Successors Hic telum infigam moriarque in vulnere Postscript REader at the latter end of my First part of The Historie of Independency I have presented to thy consideration some General Conclusions arising out of the Premises the same Conclusions do as naturally arise out of the Premises of this Second part of the History and doe as aptly serve to illustrate this Second as that First part wherefore to that First part I send thee for opening thy understanding When our old Lawes run again into their Antient Channel and the Sword of Murder is sheathed and the Sword of Justice drawn the Author engageth to publish his Name and Apologie and shew what he hath done and suffered for the Parliament and Kingdome THE END THE High Court OF JUSTICE OR CROMWELS New Slaughter-House in ENGLAND With the Authority that Constituted and Ordained it Arraigned Convicted and Condemned FOR Usurpation Treason Tyranny Theft and Murther Being the Third Part of the History of INDEPENDENCY Written by the same Authour Printed Anno Domini 1660. In the second Year of the States Liberty and the Peoples Slavery Plin. Paneg. ad Trajanum Olim criminibus jam legibus laboratur metuendum est ne legibus fundata Respublica sit legibus eversa Isaiah 59. vers 3 4. Your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with iniquity your lips have
Christendome with vast summes raised by publick Theft and Rapines Pressings and Leavying of Souldiers Sequestrations Plundering of Houses and Horse and many other oppressions more than the Turke Russe or Tartar ever heard of of all which our Grandees are free and lay them upon others as partially as they please purposely to consume them To make Religion but a stalking horse to their Designs and the Ministers thereof but Hostlers to rub down curry and dress it for their riding to whom they send Commands what they shall and shall not preach to the people as if preaching were the Ordinance of man not of God At last by way of preparative to their machinations they pass these following Votes 1. That all Supreme power is in the people 2. That the Supreme Authority under them is in the peoples Representatives or delegates in Parliament assembled Meaning themselves you may be sure the Quintessence and Elixar of the House of Commons extracted by those learned Chimcks Doctour Fairfax Doctour Cromwel and the rest graduated at that degraded University of Oxford Here note they voted the Supreme power to be in the people that they might use those Gulles as Conduit pipes or Trunks to convey the Supreme Authority into themselves the better to enslave the people And tickle them whilest they fasten about their necks the Iron yoke of a Military Oligarchy wearing the Mask of a perpetual Parliament 3. That whatsoever the Commons in Parliament shall enact shall have the power and force of an Act of Parliament or Law without the consent of the House of Lords or the Kings Royal Assent any statute law custome or usage to the contrary notwithstanding they might have said all our statutes laws customes c. notwithstanding This one vote hath more of Dissolution and more of Vsurpation and Innovation in it than any I yet ever read of This is universally Arbitrary and layes the Ax to the root of all our Laws Liberties Lives and properties at once What these men will they vote What they vote is Law Therefore what they will is Law 4. That to wage war or to bear Arms against the Representative body of the People or Parliament is high Treason By the Law all Treasons are committed against the King his Crown and Dignity 5. That the King hath taken up Arms against this Parliament and is therefore guilty of all the blood shed this War and should expiate those crimes with his blood If the King were not guilty these men are And therefore they passed this Vote Se defendendo Yet observe that herein they became Judges in their own cause and forejudged his Majesty before his Trial if that may be called a Trial that was carried on by men who were both Accusers Prosecuters parties and Judges and had neither Law president formality of proceedings nor any other foundation of Justice or Reason to warrant them nor were delegated by any lawful Authority These Votes thus passed and by this kinde of men were the foundation upon which they built their great Engine to destroy the King and Kingly Government together with the Religion Laws Liberties Lives and properties of the people all condemned in that deadly sentence given against the King For having as aforesaid created by their own Votes themselves as absolute a power as they pleased and cast the people and all they have into that bottomless Chaos of their Arbitrary Domination They erect an Extrajudicial unpresidented High Court of Justice to Try or rather to condemn without Trial the King consisting of 150. Commissioners Souldiers Parliament men Trades men the most violent engaged and factious incendiaries of all the Antimonarchical faction Amongst whom were many low conditioned Mechanicks and Banquerouts whose Fortunes are since repaired out of the Kings Estate and other publick Lands Goods and Offices See Stat. Recognition 1 Jac. The Oaths of Algiance Obedience and Supremacy and all our Law-books as a reward for that Royal Blood they spilt The King the Fountain of Law Justice Mercy Honour War and Peace the Head of the Parliament and Supreme Governour over all persons and in all causes thus violently removed presently as if the Mounds and banks of the Sea had been overturned an impetuous inundation of bloody thievish Tyranny and Oppression brake in upon us So that no man can call his life liberty house lands goods or any other his Rights or Franchises his own longer than the gracious aspect of some of our Grandees shine favourably upon him In the next place contrary to their own Declarations of the 9. Feb. and 17. March 1648. Wherein they promise that in all things concerning the lives liberties and properties of the people they will observe the known laws of the Land with all things incident thereto They pass misbegotten Acts of Parliament This Stat. 25 Ed. 3. c. 2. S. Johns against Strafford cals the security of the people And the Stat. 1 Hen. 4. cap. 10. Ed. 6. cap. 12. 1. Mariae 1. ratifie and highly commend one of the 14. of May another of the 17. of July 1649. whereby in derogation and annihilation of that excellent Stat. 25 Ed. 3. Chap. 2. Ascertaining Treasons and reducing them to a small number and leaving nothing to the interpretation of the Judges that the people might not be ensnared they exceeding by multiplying Treasons bringing bare words as well as deeds within the compass of that offence and making many duties to which the laws of God the land the Protestation Covenant the oaths of allegiance obedience supremacy oblige us to be high treason these new acts of treason penned in obscure ambiguous terms purposely to leave a latitude of Interpretation in their own creatures the Judges that the People may be ensnared The King thus taken out of their way They passe pretended Acts. 1. To Disinherit his Children 2. To abolish Kingly Government for ever 3. To convert our ancient well-tempered Monarchy into that which they call a Common-wealth They have converted our ancient Monarchy into a Free-state and tell us they are the State They tell us they have bestowed Liberty upon the people but they and their faction onely are the people All the rest of the English Nation are annihilated and reduced to nothing that these fellows may become all things Meer ciphers serving onely to make them of more account And this gross fallacy must not be disputed against lest their New Acts of Parliament call it Treason or Free-State although nothing be therein free but their lusts nor hath it any form or face of Civil and just Government wherein a confused Multitude rule by their own Wills without Law and for their own benefit no consideration being had of the good and happinesse of the people in general 4. They Constitute a Senate or Councel of State of 40 men amongst which some Trades-men Souldiers illiterate Lawyers Parliament-Members men already engaged over head and eares in sin therefore to be confided in to these
1650. as I find it in Politicus speaking of his new purchased victory over the Scots Cromwel saith God puts it more and more into your hands to improve your power viz. your absolute Authority we pray own his People more and more that is the Army they are the Chariots and Horsmen of Israel of the Kingdom of the Saints disown your selves but own your Authority which you enjoy under the Protection of the Army your Lords Paramount and improve it to Curb the Proud and Insolent c. That is all men of different opinions and parties from them that will not engage to be true and owe Allegiance to the Kingdom of the Saints and resign their Laws Liberties and properties to their lusts and wills That I have not misconstrued the contents of Cromwels mystical letter will appear by a Discourse in the same Politicus Numb 17. from Thursday Sept. 26. to Octob. 3. 1650. Where according to his custom delivering forth State-Oracles to the people He tels them in plain English That after the Confusions of a Civil War there is a necessity of some settlement and it cannot be imagined the Controversie being determined by the Sword that the Conquerours should submit to the conquered though more in number than themselves Nor are they obliged to settle the Government again according to the former Laws and Constitutions but may erect such a form as they themselves conceive most convenient for their own preservation For after a Civil War the written Laws viz. established Laws of the Nation are of no force but onely those which are not written And a little after the King having by Right of war lost his share and interest in Authority and power being conquered by Right of war the whole must needs reside in that part of the People which prevailed over him There being no middle power to make any claim and so the whole Right of Kingly Authority in England being by Military Decision resolved into the prevailing Party what Government soever it pleaseth them to erect is as valid de Jure as if it had the consent of the whole Body of the People That he should affirm That after a Civil War the Established Laws cease is so gross a piece of ignorance that there is hardly any History extant but confutes it After our Barons war and the Civil War between York and Lancaster Our Established Laws flourished so did they after the Norman Conquest How many Civil Wars in France have left their Laws untouched That of the Holy Leage lasted 40 years Belgia keeps her Laws maugre her intestine Wars What is now become of the Parliaments declared Supreme Power and Soveraign Lord the People the Original and Fountain of all just power are they not all here proclamed Ear-bored slaves for ever But I had thought that an Army of Mercenary Saints raised payed and commissioned by the Parliament to defend the Religion Laws Liberties and Properties of the people and the Kings Crown and Dignity according to the Protestation and Covenant and the Parliaments Declarations would not have made such carnal and hypocritical use of their Victories gotten by Gods providence and the peoples money as to destroy our known Laws Liberties and Properties and claim by Conquest and impose their own lusts for Laws vpon us thereby rendring themselves Rebels against their God their King and Countrey Nor was it ever the State of the Quarrel between the King and Parliament whose slaves the people should be Or whether we should have one King Governing by the known established Laws or 40 Tyrants Governing by their own lusts and arbitrary votes against our written Laws Nor can the success make n Conquest just unless the cause of the war were originally just and rhe prosecution thereof justly managed As 1. To vindicate a Just Claim and Title 2. Ad res repetendas To recover Damages wrongfully sustained 3. To repel an injury done to your self or to your Ally in league with you The ultimate end of these wicked endeavors is To establish and cement with the blood of their adversaries the Kingdom of the Brambles or Saints already founded in blood by cutting of all such by their said New Acts of Treason and High Court of Justice as will not bow their Necks to their Iron yoke Which appears more clearly in an Additional Act giving farther power to the said High Court dated 27. Aug. 1650. To hear and determine all Misprisions or Concealments of Treasons mentioned or contained in any of the said Articles or Acts of Parliaments And to inflict such punishments and award such execution as by the Laws and Statutes have been or may be inflicted This Law if I miscal it not considering how they have multiplied Treasons by their said 3 New Statutes 14. May 17 July 1649. and 26. March 1650. Whereby bare words without Act are made High Treason contrary to those well approved Statutes 25 Edw. 3. chap. 2. 1 Hen. 4. chap. 10. 1 Edw. 6. chap. 12. 1 Mariae chap. 1. Cook 3 Instit saith That words may make an Heretick not a Traitor Chap. High Treason And the Scripture denounceth a woe to him That maketh a man an Offender for a word is one of the cruelst and most generally dangerous and entrapping that ever was made For hereby all relations Husband and Wife Parents and Children Brothers and Sisters Masters and Servants are all injoyned to be informers against and accusers of one another which is to take upon them the Devils office and be Accusatores Fratrum for light and vain words spoken only in passion or ignorantly or else they fall into the jaws of this all-devouring Court from whence no more then from hell there is no redemption for Misprision of Treason the Penalty whereof is loss of liberty and lands for life and of goods for ever Who can imagine lesse hereby but that our Statists intend to raise a yearly revenue by this Court by Forfeitures and Confiscations and to erect an Office of Master of the States Forfeitures like Empsons and Dudleys in Hen. VII time aforesaid And so continue this Court 10. Decemb. 1650. A New Act passed for establish ng an High Court Justice in N●●folk Suffolk Huntington Camb idge Lincoln and the Isl● of Ely c. And so by degrees this gangrene shall enlarge it self all the Kingdom over to weede out the Ancient Inhabitants Canaanites and Amalekites The said Additional Act 27. Aug. 1650. concludes That the said High Court shall not Examine Try or proceed against any person other then such as shall be first by name appoin●ed by the Parliament or Councel of State It should seem the Parliament and Councel of State supply the want of a Grand Inquest and their Appointment is in stead of a Bill of Enditement found and presented As Assuredly as the High Inquisition was erected in Spain by Ferdinando and Isabella to extirpate the Mahometan Moors And the said Councel of Blood in the Lowe Countreys by the Duke D' Alva
to weed out the Lutherans Calvinists and Anabaptists So is this High Court set up in England to root out the Royallists Presbyterians and Levellers and generally all that will not wholly concur with our Independents in Practice and Opinions As will manifestly appear when their work is done in Scotland which will soon be effected the more zealous Scots being now as ready to sell their Kingdom as they were formerly to sell their King I. Conclude therefore upon the Reasons aforesaid That because the Commissioners or Judges are not sworn to do Justice according to the Laws and are parties pre ingaged as well as their Masters and pay Masters that named them ignorant men and of vild base professions uncapable of places of Judicature Necessitous Persons and some of them Scandalous and the High Court it self hath neither Law President nor any just Authority for constituting thereof or the Judges therein And all proceedings before them are directly Contrary to Magna Charta the Statute 25. Edw. III. chap. 2. The Petition of Right and all other known and Established Laws and the continual Practice of our Nations and in many points contrary to the Law of God and the Dictates of Right Reason That these Commissioners are Incompetent Judges Their Court an Extrajudicial Conventicle tending to disinherit disfranchise and enslave all the Freemen of the Nation and all Proceedings before them are void and coram non Judice See Col. Andrews 3. Answers The said High Court of Iustice to be a meer bloody Theater of Murder and Oppression It being against Common Reason and all Laws divine and humane That any man should be Iudge in his own Cause Neminem posse in sua causa Iudicem esse Is the Rule in Law But this Parliament and Councel of State know they cannot establish and confirm their usurped Tyranny The Kingdom of the Saints eate up the People with Taxes and share publike Lands Offices and Mony amongst themselves enslave the Nation to their Lawless wills and pleasures but by cutting off the most able and active men of all opposite parties by some such expedient as this Arbitrary Lawless High Court is The old Legal way by Iuries being found by Iohn Lilbourns Trial to be neither sure enough nor speedy enough to do their work A Butcher-Rowe of Iudges being easier packed then a Jury who may be challenged So that it fareth with the People of England as with a Traveller fallen into the hands of Thieves First they take away his Purse And then to secure themselves they take away his life So they Robbe him by Providence And then Murder him by Necessity And to bring in their third insisting Principle they may alleage They did all this upon Honest intentions to enrich the Saints and rob the Egyptians With these 3. Principles they Iustifie all their Villanies Which is an Invention so meerly their own That the Devil must acknowledge They have propagated his Kingdom of Sinne and Death more by their impudent Iustifications then by their Turbulent Actions An Additional Postscript SInce the Conclusion of the Premises hath hapned the Trial of that worthy Knight Sir Iohn Stowell of the County of Sommerset Who having bin often before this Court hath so well defended himself and wiped off all Objections and made such good use of the Articles of the Rendition of Excester that in the Opinion of all men and in despite of their ensnaring Acts for New Treasons he cannot be adjudged guilty of any Treason Old or New which was the Sum and Complement of the Charge against him Wherefore the Court put off his Trial for a longer time to hunt for New Crimes and Witnesses against him At last came into the Court as a witness Iohn Ashe notwithstanding he is a Party many wayes engaged against him 1. Ashe is a Parliament-man in which capacity Sir Iohn Stowel bore Arms for the King against him 2. Ashe as a Parliament-man is one of the constitutors of this murderous Court and the Judges thereof and therefore their Creatures who expect rewards from them bear a more awful respect to his testimony then a witnes ought to have from Iudges 3. It is publickly known that Ashe hath begged of the House a great summe of mony out of the Composition for or Confiscation of Sir Iohns Estate And 4ly It is known to many That during Sir Iohns many years Imprisonment Ashe often laboured with Sir Iohn to sell unto him for 4000. l. a Parcel of Land which cost Sir Iohn above 10000 l. promising him to passe his Composition at an easie rate to procure his enlargement from Prison and send him home in peace and quiet if he granted his desire But although with all their malicious diligence they cannot finde him guilty of High Treason yet their Articles of Impeachment Charge him in general Tearms with Treason Murder Felony and other High Crimes and Misdemeanors and amasse together such a Sozites and an Accumulation of Offences as if one fail another shall hit right to make him punishable in one kinde or other such an hailshot charge cannot wholly misse either they will have life estate or both Contrary to the nature of all Enditements and Criminal Charges whatsoever which ought to be particular clear and certain Lamb. page 487. that the accused may know for what Crime he puts himself upon issue But this Court as High as it is not being Constituted a Court of Record the Prisoner and those that are concerned in him can have no Record to resort to either 1. To demand a Writ of Errour in Case of Erroneous Judgment 2. To ground a plea of Auterfois Acquite in case of New Question for the same fact 3ly Or to demand an enlargement upon Acquital Or 4ly To demand a writ of conspiracy against such as have combined to betray the life of an innocent man Whereby it follows That this prodigious Court hath power only to Condemn and Execute not to Acquit and give Enlargement Contrary to the Nature of all Courts of Judicature and of Justice it self it is therefore a meer Slaughter-house to Commit Free-State Murders in without nay against Law and Justice and not a Court of Judicature to condemne the Nocent and absolve the Innocent And the Iudges of this Court runne Parallel with their Father the Devill who is ever the Minister of Gods wrath and fury never of his Mercy The humble Answer of Coll. Eusebius Andrews Esquire to the Proceedings against him before the Honourable The high Court of Justice 1650. THe said Respondent with favour of this Honourable Court reserving praying to be allowed the benefit and liberty of making farther Answer if it shall be adjudged necessary offereth to this Honorable Court That by the Stat. or Charter stiled Magna Charta which is the Fundamental Law and ought to be the Standard of the Laws of England Confirmed above 30. times and yet unrepealed it is in the 29. Chapter thereof granted and enacted 1. That no
present missed their design resolve no longer to dally whereupon they lay aside their new Mr. Richard and all the Officers great and small with one consent take the Government into their own hands having shut up the house of Commons door whither when the Members came on Munday entrance was denyed them by the Souldiers who had possessed themselves of the Court of requests and all avenues in all places giving no other account to the Members than this Viz. They must sit no more The Army new modelled The next meeting of Officers new modelleth themselves some they casheire as Whaly Ingoldsby Goffe c. others they re-admit as Lambert Haselrig Okey and others in which time not knowing how to behave themselves in such a condition and weary of the perpetuall toyle they foresaw they must still with ceasing undergo they mean to cast the burthen off from their own shoulders and to that purpose they send to some of their old hackney drudges of the long Parliament The Rump comes in as they then did call it at that time about London whose consciences they knew would digest any thing and did not care how per fas aut nefas so they might again be suffered to sit with severall of these I say upon the fifth and sixth dayes of May they had conference the last of which was at their never failing Speakers the Master of the Rowles house in Chancery-Lane where both Officers of the Army and pretended Members to the number of twenty sollicited William Lenthall Esquire to sit Speaker again but he objected diverse scruples in judgment and conscience But O how soon had the sweet ambition of domineering obliterated all such idle fancies yet nevertheless instantly fifteen Articles being agreed upon among themselves they conclude to meet in the house on Saturday the 7th day of May and the better to compass their ends by a base and clandestine surprise they gave out that they would not sit till Tuesday the tenth of May yet surreptitiously as I say they met early on Saturday in the painted Chamber at Westminster and wanting of their number to make up a house they sent for those two debauched lustfull Devills the Lord Munson and Harry Martin out of prison where they were in Execution for debt with Whitelock and Lisle of the Chancery Court making in all forty two the Chancery Mace also for hast being carried before them William Lenthall Esq their tender conscienc'd Speaker together with the said Names of the Rumpers L. Munson Henry Martin Mr. Whitlock Mr. Lisle Mr. Thomas Chaloner Alderman Atkins Alderman Penington Thomas Scot. Cornelius Holland Sir Henry Jane Mr. ●rideaux Att. Ge Sir James Harrington L. G. Ludlow Michael Oldsworth Sir Arthur Haselrig Mr. Jones Col. Purefoy Col. White Harry Nevill Mr. Say Mr. Blagrave Col. Bennet M. Brewster Sergeant Wilde John Goodwin Mr. Nich. Lechmore Augustine Skinner Mr. Downes Mr. Dove Mr. John Lenthall Mr. Saloway Mr. John Corbet Mr. Walton Gilbert Willington Mr. Gold Col. Sydenham Col. Bingham Col. Ayre Mr. Smith Col. Ingoldsby And Lieutenant Generall Fleetwood Stole on a sudden into the house the invitation of the Army for sitting of the long Parliament being first published in westminster-Hall Upon notice of this surprise of the house by so few there being more than double the like number of members of the same Parliament there and about town some of them at the same instant in the Hall they to prevent future mischief whereof this packing of Parliament men was an ill Omen to the number of fourteen went immediately into the Lobby and the persons that did so were these Viz. Mr. Anslewy Sr. George Booth Mr. James Harbet Mr. Prinne Mr. George Montague Sir John Evelin Mr. John Harbert Mr. Gewen Mr. Evelin Secluded members Mr. Knightly Mr. Clive Mr. Hungerford Mr. Harbey Mr. Pecke But assoon as they came near the door they were not suffered by the Officers of the Army to go into the house though they disputed their priviledge of sitting if the Parliament were not dissolved but reason not prevailing after they had thus fairly made their claim they retired resolving to acquaint the Speaker by letter of their usage And accordingly on Munday the 9th of May they went to Westminster where the guards being not yet come Mr. Ansley Mr. Prinne and Mr. Hungerford went freely into the house receiving the Declaration of the 7th of May at the door But Mr. Ansley walking down into the Hall the house not being ready to sit at his return was by one Capt. Lewson of Goffes Regiment and other officers denyed entrance Mr. Prinne continued within and resolved so to do Vote against the secluded members since he saw there a new force upon the house whose only staying so guilty were the rest of their evill actions made them loose that morning and adjourn without the Speakers taking the chair And to prevent his or any other honest mans coming in among them after that they barred the door by the following Vote Ordered That such persons heretofore Members of this Parliament as have not sate in this Parliament since the year 1648. And have not subscribed the engagement in the R●ll of engagement of this House shall not sit in this house till further order of the Parliament Thus to the griefe of all honest and true hearted Christians the same pretended Parliament that was sitting in 1653. till Oliver disseized them sitting again in 1659. upon a Declaration of the Army with the same resolutions they had before minding nothing but prefering one another The good old cause what and their friends into good Offices and commands and Counsellors places as appear by their Vote of the 29th of May Viz. The Parliament doth declare that all such as shall be employed in any place of trust or power in the Common-wealth be able for the discharge of such trust and that they be persons fearing God and that have given testimony to all the people of God and of their faithfulness to this Common-wealth according to the Declaration of Parliament of the 7th of May. Now who they mean by persons fearing God in their canting language by their very next work you shall see which is the nominating a Councill of State Councill of State nominated into whose hands is given the dispose of all places of trust and profit yea and the command of the wealth of the Kingdom those of the house are as follow Sir Arthur Haselrig Sir Henry Vane Ludlow Jo. Jones Sydenham Scot. Saloway Fleetwood Sir James Harrington Col. Walton Nevill Chaloner Downes Whitlock Harb Morley Sydney Col. Thomson Col. Dixwell Mr. Reignolds Oliver St. Johns Mr. Wallop Of Persons without the house Ten. Viz. John Bradshaw Col. Lambert Desborow Fairfax Berry Sir Anthony Ashley-Cooper Sir Horatio Townsend Sir Robert Honywood Sir Archibald Johnson And Josia Berners Who under the mask of the good old cause began now to act as high villains as ever before having
spoil as long as they could at Midsummer they re-made their everlasting Speaker Offices bestowed and on whom Custos rotulorum of Oxford and Berkshires And that worshipfull Judas Sir H. Mildmay Custos rotulorum for Essex with severall other the like places to diverse of their leading members as the Government of Jersey to Col. Mason and severall Regiments in Ireland to Col. Cooper Col. Zankey Col. Sadler H. Cro mwell leaves I eland and Col. Laurence Having proceeded on thus far succesfully they now begin to clap their wings as invincible Ireland being delivered up wholly and quietly into their power by that pitifull cowardly Impe H. Cromwell who had already attended their pleasure at the Commons bar for which good service they stroaked him on the head told him he was a good boy for which kindness he bussed his hand made a leg and Exit But leave we him to stupid folly and let us see what rates Crown land bears the Contractors lately were very busie and behold the product June 29. 1659. By the Trustees and Contractors appointed by Act of Parliament for sale of the Castles parkes c. exempted from sale by a former Act. These are to give notice that there are Competitors for the purchase of Somerset-House Sommerset-house set to sale ctc. with the Appurtenances in the Strand Middlesex which therefore is to be exposed to sale for ready money by the box to be opened on Friday the eight of July next The annuall value being 233. l. the gross value of materialls c. 5545. l. 1. s 3. d. At which time such as desire to purchase the same may put in their papers with their name subscribed into the box aforesaid at VVorsester-House conteining how many years purchase not under 13. they will give for the annuall value c. and he that offers most is to have the purchase VVill. Tayler Clarke c. At the same time they appointed to sell ten brace of Buckes or more out of Hampton-Court Parkes and so from time to time Thus did they strive to make havock of whatever belonged to the King which indeed and no other was the good or rather cursed old cause that these miscreants so lustily fought for and so loudly cryed up And now lest they should seem ingratefull to Richard Cromwell who had so tamely left the chair of State to these Mountebanks to sit in they vote him an exemption from all arrests for any debt whatsoever for six moneths and appoint a Committee to examine what was due for mourning for the late Lord Generall Cromwell R. Cromwell protected and to consider how it may be paid for without charge to the Common-wealth Kind Gentlemen surely they are they take all he hath from him and then allow him a pension they rob him of a pound and give him a farthing not a feather of his own bird and well so too for his ambitious stepping into the royall seat deserved a greater punishment which 't was a wonder how he escaped since Usurpation and Tyranny in different hands are generally vehement scourges to each other and alwayes torments to themselves as will appear by the sequel For these godly great ones being now newly warm in their seats New plots and jealousies begin as of old to dream of Jealousies and fears Plots Plots nothing but Cavaleer plots rings either in their ears or mouths if two Gentlemen do but meet accidentally in the Street and talk together straight there is a confederacy and they must be committed to prison for doing nothing so that we might say with that Noble Romane Cicero Circumspice omnia membra Reipublicae quae nobilissima sunt nullum reperitur profecto quod non fractum debilitatumve sit O rem miseram dominum ferre non potuimus conservis vero jam servimus A sad cause of complaint to live in such a slavery but our Taskmasters would fain seem mercifull witness their Act of Indemnity Act of indemnity pardons all but Cavaliers which came out in print about July wherein they except none from pardon but only such whose consciences are not large enough to approve of open Rebellion as the last clause of their said mock-Act will shew wherein all are debarred the benefit of the same even from sixteen years of age unless they subscribe against a single person Kingship or house of Peers all sins can be digested by these fellowes except lawfull obedience to magistracy which they so abominate that all persons that are tainted therewith must not only depart out of London but out of England in either whereof if they be taken they shall be proceeded against as Traytors and all persons are impouered to take and apprehend them for encouragement of which roguery every one that discovers or takes such a person was to have ten pounds from the Councill of State Surely they are in a great fear else what should they make all this noise and bustle so furiously on a sudden to settle and raise a new militia but latet anguis in herba for now it being the Dog-dayes the house grew so hot that diverse members withdrew whereby the rest in regard of their fewness being become incapable to act because not enough to make up a house according to their own phantasticall modell on Friday 22. of July did Resolve Members to attend That the Members of Parliament who have had Letters to attend the service of the Parliament or have actually attended since the 7th of May 1659. be hereby injoyned to give their attendance in Parliament every Morning at eight of the clock for fourteen dayes and if employed by Parliament within a fourtnight Alas poor men the harvest truly was great but the labourers few therefore it was time to call for more help for which now they are so put to it that they hardly know which way to turn themselves they complain of designes of buying up of Armes to disturbe the peace which made a great one among them say this restless Spirit of the common Enemy should excite the friends of the Common-wealth to diligence and to study unity that advantage may not be given by divisions but that we may be all of one Spirit to uphold and promote the common cause that hath been contended for And the better to colour their villanies according to their usuall custome in like cases when they had mischief to do they set apart a day of fasting and humiliation A fasting day set a part for mischief and to shew that they were the same men and of the same if not worse mind than formerly for rapine and blood they proclaim J. Mordant Esquire with severall others traytors and order the Lady Howard Sr. E. Byron and Mr. Sumner to be brought to a speedy triall for dangerous and trayterous designes of bringing this Nation into blood and confusion again that is for endeavouring to restore his Sacred Majesty to his lawfull birth-right and dominions for which the
whole current of the law is constant encourager although these mens effrontery is such that they dare say any thing by an infallible Spirit as they imagine and the World is bound to believe them But their vizor being now ready to fall off Commoti●ns and the people not willing to be any longer blinded begin to move in most parts of England which so mads the Phanatick faction that they seaze upon persons horses and armes all about London increase and double their guards stop passengers even on the Road the Councill of State so called sits night and day without intermission whereby the City militia and all the forces throughout England were drawn into a body to prevent the danger Yea so generall was the fear that they begin to court the people in their canting way And because you shall see their desperate fear of and divellish malice to the King and his Friends take the words of one of themselves as they pass Viz. A canting lye The Lord stir up the hearts of his people to prayer and sincere humiliation and fill them with unanimity and courage in this evill time and make the People to see that whatever fair pretences may be made use of by the common Enemy to get power into their hands yet should they prevail no man that hath been of a party against them heretofore yea no man that hath been a meer Neuter but must expect that his private Estate as well as the publick Liberty shall become a prey to a desperate crew of ravenous and unreasonable men for saith he like an irreverent Villain let but CHALES STUART get in and then to satisfie the rable of followers and the payment of forreyners to enslave you you shall soon see them entailed upon your selves and your Posterity to maintain the pompe and pride of a luxurious Court and an absolute Tyranny Thus far he which how much truth yea or but probability thereof is therein I dare appeal to the greatest Enthusiast among their whole gange for if there were nothing in it else but the rayling besides all the falsity and Scandall it were sufficient to convince the Speaker to be a Son of Beliall as having so far forgotten grace and laid a side all honesty that he durst rail against the Lords anointed concerning whom the Scripture forbiddeth to have an evill thought but t is the custom of rebells to go on from bad to worse and when they have once drawn the sword against their Prince to throw away the scabbard and never entertain a thought of return or repentance like the bold Usurper in the Poet. The more we are opposed the more wee 'le spread And make our foes our fuell To be head Wee 'l cut off any member and condemn Vertue of folly for a Diadem Banish Religion c. The use of the Juncto's fasting And such was their practice though sometimes especially when encompassed with dangers they hang their head like a bull rush and even but mock God with a fast while they only pray to be prosperous in their villany About this time the whole Nation of England began to grow sick of the abhorred fag end of a Parliament endeavouring to make head against them in Kent Sussex Surrey Hartford Hereford Glocester Bristoll in Cheshire especially where many of the Gentry were actually engaged correspondence maintained England sick of the Rump a rendevous appointed and the antient City of Ches●er surprised this indeed was the most formidable appearance in all England for the only appeasing whereof most of the County forces in those parts and several Regiments of the Army from London did speedily march under the command of a hot-spur zealot Mr. G. Lambert whose ambition made old Nol lay him aside as dangerous and that dishonourable discarding created him a desperate Enemy to the Cromwelian name and family which made the Juncto think him the fitter man for their service A rising in Ch●shire by Sir G. B. Sir G. B. appeared commander in chief in Cheshire though many other Noble Gentlemen were present so that this seemed to be the most likely place for Action Lambert according to Order being upon his march thither with three Regiments of horse and three Regiments of Foot and one Regiment of Dragoones besides a train of Artillery and the Juncto for his encouragement shot a paper gun by them called a Proclamation after him against Sir George Booth Sir Thomas Middleton Randolph Egerton proclaiming them and their adherents to be Rebells and Traytors and all else that should any way assist abet or conceal the carrying on of their design backed thus he marcheth furiously and in a fourtnight or three weekes time draweth neer to Cheshire in the mean and during his absence the congregated Churches of Schismaticks and Sectaries in and about London raise three Regiments for the security of those parts in the intervalls of which time Sir George Booths Declaration came out in print the contents whereof was setting forth how the Westminster Statesmen had violated all lawes of God and Men that the defence of the lawes and lib●rties was the chief things he and his aimed at which would never by these self seekers be setled and therefore desired a new free Parliament This as it carried nothing in it but what was reall true so it gave very great satisfaction to all understanding people though by the Phanatick rout it was descanted upon otherwise but Gods time was not yet come for Lambert no sooner arrived with his Army neer Sir George Booth and his forces Sir G. B. ●●u ed. but he fell on them with valour and violence which produced a very sharp engagement but the Country not being acquainted nor used to such hot furious work quickly yielded ground Sr. Georges whole body being afterwards drawn forth neer Northwich and possessed of the bridge they drew up their foot in the meadowes yet Lamberts Men being commanded to attempt the pass did it with such resolution that they soon beat the Enemy from them and made way for the whole Army who having passed the river immediately gave them a totall rout The newes of this victory so fleshed our bloodhounds that they began to boast above measure vaunting the Lords mercy to them his own people forsooth but Justice to their adversaries in so apparently blasting their Trayterous undertakings in every corner of the land like the turkes reckoning the goodness of their cause by the keenness of their sword Their maxime to make good their cause and denying that any thing may properly be called Nefas if it can but win the Epithete of Prosperum The Juncto upon this set forth a Declaration to invite all the people to thanksgiving for this great deliverance to the Parliament and Common-wealth as they stiled themselves Lamberts policy but Lambert intends to make use of his success against the loyall party for himself and to that end in a seeming slighting and neglect of himself writes
examine the Leases that have been made and the fines that have been paid thereupon and how disposed and by what authority with power to give reliefe and allowance to the said poor Knights and other poor people not exceeding their former allowance Oh take heed of too much charity and also to take a Catalogue of all Hospitalls within this Common-wealth and the revenewes of them they are sure to mind that And that the Masters and Governours do return to this Committee the constitution of the respective hospitalls and how the profits thereof have been and are disposed of and by what authority before the first of December 1659. And to report the whole matter to the house Ordered That all Masters and Governours of hospitalls be and are hereby prohibited to grant or renew any Leases of any Lands Tenements and hereditaments belonging unto any of the said respective hospitalls untill this house take further Order Notice of which is to be given to the respective concerned persons by the Councill of State See here how greedy is the zeal of these devouring Statists which yet is clothed in the garbe of a seeming Sanctimonious care but this hypocrisie must not go long unpunished neither does it for now begins to appear the result of Lamberts designments abroad in a remonstrative address from the Army at the very first newes whereof the Parliament is so startled that fearing to be whipped with their own rod they ordered Col. Ashfield Col. Cobbet and Lieutenant Col. Duckenfield Armies remonstrate the Juncto send for ●ome Officers three of the chief promoters of it to bring to them the original paper intended to be presented upon notice of which order given immediately a letter was delivered into the house signed by many persons of the Army superscribed to the said three summoned persons by whose hands they desired the inclosed paper might be presented to the Lord Fleetwood and after to the generall Councill which inclosed paper was intituled to the supream authority of these Nations the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England The humble Petition and proposalls of the Officers under the Command of the Right Honourable the Lord Lambert in the late Northern expedition the manner and method of which paper the Juncto so highly resented as supposing it to strike at their very root that they presentely voted That this house doth declare Observe this crack that to have any more Generall Officers in the Army than are already setled by Parliament is needless chargeable and dangerous to the Common-wealth Here was the first step to that division which afterwards grew into a flame but the Army Officers finding their design was not yet ripe enough by a dissembled acquiescency seemed to lay aside their proposalls by signifying to the Parliament that they would adhere to their authority in opposition to the common Enemy and that they would stand by them in the settlement of the Common-wealth against all disturbances whatsoever which lulled the Juncto into a kind of security the City also at this time seeming to claw them by an invitation to a Thanksgiving dinner whereat the field Officers of the Army were also to be present Thanksgiving dinner in the City so that now being in a manner rid of their fear they fall upon sequestring the Gentry about Sir George Booths business settle the Excise and revive the Assessements for the Militia using all their skill and power for amassing together the wealth of the Nation into their private purses concluding with the Epicureans ede lude bibe post mortem nulla voluptas so sottishly stupid were they grown in their high flown ambition But now least they should forget their duty the Officers of the Army present a new address requiring answer thereto Armies new address which made them take it into the several pieces wherein it was proposed wherein among other things to shew you the harmony that was then between them they give to their third proposall this answer Juncto angry there with Viz. The Parliament declares that every Member of the Army as free Men of England have a right of petitioning the Parliament but withall thinks fit to let them know that the Petitioners ought to be very carefull both in the manner and in the matter of what they desire that the way of promoting and presenting the same may be peaceable and the things petitioned for not tending to the disturbance of the Common-wealth nor to the dishonour of the Parliament And that it is the duty of petitioners to submit their desires to the Parliament and acquiesce in the judgment thereof By this Declaration they intended to curb the Wallingford party by teaching them manners and to know their distance but they being Men of another spirit and knowing they had the power of the sword in their own hands would not be so put off which the Juncto perceiving and beginning to grow jealous of their own safety and satisfyed that the Army could not subsist without money which is the Nerve of War to engage the People to themselves and to dis-inable the Officers from raising any money in case they should which they now much doubted interrupt them in their sitting they passed an Act against raising of monies upon the people without their consent in Parliament Part whereof take as followeth Be it enacted c. That all Orders Act against raising money without consent of Parliament makes the Souldiery mad Ordinances and Acts made by any single person and his Councill or both or either of them or otherwise or by any assembly or convention pretending to have Authority of Parliament from and after the 19th Day of April 1653. and before the 7th of May 1659. And which have not been or shall not be enacted allowed or confirmed by this present Parliament be and are hereby declared deemed taken and adjudged to be of no force and effect from and after the said seventh day of May 1659. And be it further enacted that no person or persons shall after the eleventh of October 1659. Assess Levy Collect gather or receive any Custom Impost Excise Assessment contribution Tax Tallage or any summe or summs of money or other imposition whatsoever upon the people of this Common-wealth without their consent in Parliament or as by law might have been done before the third of November 1640. And that every person offending contrary to this Act shall be and is hereby adjudged to be guilty of high Treason and shall forfeit and suffer as in case of high Treason When the Juncto had thrown abroad this killing thunderbolt to shew that they durst own the power which they yet conceived themselves Masters off they took into consideration a Letter dated October the 5th and signed by diverse Officers of the Army and directed to Col. Okey and also a printed paper called the humble representation and Petition of the Officers of the Army to the Parliament c. Upon the reading of which two
papers the house was so highly incensed and flew into such a sudden heat of passion that without any more adoe they resolved That the severall Commissions of 9. great Officers displ●ced and voted out of commission Col. John Lambert Col. John Desborow Col. James Berry Col. Thomas Kelsey Col. Richard Ashfield Col. Ralfe Cobbet Major Richard Creed Col. William Packer and Col. Rob. Barrow were null and void and every of them discharged from military imployment And that the Army should be governed by seven Commissioners Commissioners to govern the Army Viz. L. G. Charles Fleetwood L. G. Edm. Ludlow Generall George Monck Sir Arthur Haslelrig Barronet Col Valentine Walton Col. Harb Morley and Col. Robert Overton or any three or more of them which said Commissioners were to give notice to the said nine Officers of the discharge of their Commissions which being accordingly communicated now might you have seen the smoaking embers of dissembled friendship break out into an open flame of violent enmity this great and so long domineering faction being divided in it self and each side prepairing for its own The feud betwixt the rump and the Souldiery breaks out both defence and elevation for now a Quorum of the Commissioners which were appointed to govern the army being gotten together and sitting all night in the Speakers chamber which was within rhe Parliament house to issue forth orders part of the army with most of the discharged Principall Officers presently drew down to Westminster in a warlike order where they possessed themselves of the great Hall the Palace yard and all avenues and passages leading thereunto having before given out that they found it absolutely necessary for the good of the Nation to break up this Parliament for the maintaining whereof another part of the army were as active in drawing together the same night also marching down to Westminster and planting themselves in Kingstreet and in and about the Abbey Church and Yard This unusuall assembly at such an unaccustomed hour caused a generall terrour in the hearts and minds of the Inhabitants who dreaded some greater mischief than they were sensible of but the night being past in the morning the Speaker Mr. W. Lenthall at his usuall time came along Kingstreet and had passage through the ranks of Souldiers till he came to the new Palace gate The Rump turned out of doors where his Coach was stopped and himself compelled to return home as wise as he went whereby the house was interrupted from sitting which was the chief thing that Lambert aimed at yet though he had thus wrought his purpose he durst not withdraw but make good his station against the other faction the greatest part of the day each of the Phanatick leaders for so indeed they were both expecting who should give the first blow of which meekness the then council of State taking notice required both to draw off to their quarters which motion was willingly accepted on all hands and so both sides marched away Observe Thus have we seen that rump of pretended authority which in May was with much solliciting many intreaties and not a few specious pretences courted to come into play now again in October with as great scorn and malice laid a side and trampled on Nec lex est justior ulla quam necis artifices arte perire sua It hath been a generall Observation that Treason is alwayes the greatest punishment to it self like the Viper it breeds young with her own destruction and as the Poet speaketh of envy sit licet injustus livor so may I say of it though it be unjust to others yet is it very just to destroy them first that would destroy others The Councill of Officers having thus seized the Government into their hands Officers meet played with it for certain dayes till with the old Philosopher in the question about God finding the more they studyed the less they understood and that they were led by an Ignis fatuus which only trained them to the sight but would never bring them to the certenty of a settlement and pondering their own many weaknesses and infirmities with the exigency of affairs they fell into consideration of what was fit to be done In the debate whereof after many frivolous essayes they agreed at length among themselves to nominate some persons to be a Councill of State which device being applauded and a new name devised for them for they will be called forsooth the Committee of safety these following persons were pitch'd upon They erect a Committee of safety their names and characters Viz. Fleetwood whose folly would have exempted but they were affraid he would have cryed Knowing also that the best play ever hath a fool in it Lambert a seeming Saint but chief Engenier of the modell Desborow a drunken Clown skill'd in Harrassing the land steel once a sneaking petty fogger now Lord Chancellour of Ireland and a Traytor Whitlock a lump of ingratitude and deceit Sir Henry Vane chief secretary to the seven deadly sins Ludlow once a Gentleman but since by himself Levelled into the plebeyan rank Sydenham nothing good in him but his name Upstart Saloway Strickland once a rumper after a Lord of Nolls edition then a convert to the good old cause Berry pedum nequissimus the wickedst villain among 10000. Lawrence once an upstart privy Counceller now scarce a Gentleman Sir James Harrington Per risum multum possis cognoscere Wareston a mickle knave geud faw Sir Ireton and Tichborn two of the City Puckfoists who lye leger in the Common Council to discover plots for the getting of money Henry Brandrith fit for mischief else he had not been here Thompson a dull fellow but a soaking Committee-man Hewson the Common-wealths upright setter Sniveling Col. Clarke Factious Col. Lilburn preaching Col. Bennet and Cornelius Holland a most damnable Apostate both to God and his King To these fellowes thus fitly accoutred is the Government committed Com safety their power and not only so but they have power to call Delinquents to account to oppose and suppress all insurrections to treat with forreign States and Princes to raise the militia's in the severall Counties To dispose of all places of trust with many other things by which may be seen what an unlimited arbitrary power they assumed to themselves over the lives and estates of all Englishmen And that all England might take notice hereof they send out a Declaration in print Armies declaration entitled a Declaration of the General Council of the Officers of the Army wherein they say they have lodged the civil and executive part of Government in the Committee of safety whom they have obliged to prepare such a form of Government as may best sute with a free-Free-State without a single person Kingship or house of Peers with many equivocating though Saint-like expressions to the like effect with which they hoped to delude the World and continnue their usurpation but Sera
perswade them to reason and Justice in the mean time wishing them to acquiesce in what they should order thus he marcheth with his whole Army modelling to his own mind all Garisons and forces in his way This and his number of men that he brought with him being far beyond allowance for they ordered only three hundred put our Rumpers to a stand and they could not be satisfied untill they send the subtilest couple in the house Scot and Robinson are sent to Monck Scot and Robinson to sound his intention under pretence of congratulating his coming to England and complementing him to whom he carried himself with so much gravity and reservedness that they could not catch one dropping syllable that might betray him About this time the City by their Sword-bearer The City Cou●t him send to him to whom he returnes that he is for the Parliament as aforesaid yet assures them that when he came to the City he would satisfie their desires and hopes conceived of him thus owning the authority then in being he keeps close to his commission notwitstanding all the addresses of the Countries for a free Parliament promising nothing more but that he would see all force removed from the Parliament 2. The House filled and 3. That there should be good provision made for future Parliaments Thus with a slow and orderly march attended by the prayers and wishes of the whole Nation he comes at length to St. Albans He comes to St. Albans In this interval of time the Rumpers minding to ingross the whole power both Legislative and Executive into their own hands and to share all places of trust and profit among themselves on the fifth of January pass this following vote Resolved Observe this Touching absent Members that the Parliament doth adjudge and declare that the Members who stand discharged from voting or fitting in the years 1648 and 1649. do stand duly discharged by judgment of Parliament from sitting as Members of this Parliament during this Parliament and that writs do issue forth for electing of new Members in their places Thus did they intend to have perpetuated themselves for their l●ves and to have bequeathed their villany in succession to such as were to be new chosen having already concluded Oath of abjurai●on that the Oath of renunciation of the title of CHARLES STUART as these unmannerly mungrels were pleased to stile their Soveraign and the whole line of the late King James should be taken by every member that hereafter shall sit in Parliament nay so high were they now grown that they committed diverse for but Petitioning for a free Parliament M. comes to London This made his Excellency hast up to London where his Lady and Family were come before him by Sea into which City he comes about the beginning of February and takes up his lodging at White-Hall as the Parliament had appointed him contrary to the thoughts of many and after two or three dayes refreshment taking no notice of his resentment of the aforesaid insolencies he solemnly attends the house according to their order Goes to the house and with much modesty gives them an account of his undertakings refusing the chair offered him for his ease and honour but leaning on the back of it he delivered himself to this effect H●s speech then That he deserved not the thanks they gave him having done no more than his duty but wished them rather to praise God for his mercy then he humbly desired them to satisfie the expectation of the Nation in the establishment of their laws liberties properties c. God having restored them not so much that they should seek their own as the publick good He desired them in particular to take away the jealousie men had of their perpetuity by determining their own sessions and providing for future Parliaments wishing them to use the Nobility and Gentry civilly intimating that it was their wisdom rather to enlarge than contract their interest he told them that the fewer qualifications they put upon succeeding Parliaments the better and desired them to be tender in imposing new oaths for he had heard of the oath of abrenunciation alledging there was more reason to repent of those already taken than to take new ones so warning them to take heed of Cavaliers and Phanaticks he concluded commending Scotland to their care and assuring them of Ireland and hinting at a Free-State This done and he retired loaden with thanks How the P. employ him he withdrawes to his place in the Councill of State where the first that he finds under consideration is the reducing of the City which to make a short digression was now grown unruly being stifly resolved to own no power but that of a full and Free Parliament whereto they had been encouraged by the Country in severall Declarations but especially that of Devonshire which in regard it gives the sence of all in one and was that chiefly stuck to by the City I shall give it you at large as Mr. Bamfield the Recorder of Exon sent it to the Speaker January the 14th The Declaration We the Gentry of Devon finding ourselves without a Regular Government after your last interruption designed a publick meeting to consult remedies which we could not so conveniently effect till this weeke at our general quarter Sessions at Exon where we found diverse of the Inhabitants groaning under high oppressions and a general defect of trade to the utter ruine of many and fear of the like to others which is so visible in the whole Country that it occasioned such disorders as were no small trouble and disturbance to us which by Gods blessing upon our endeavours were soon supprest without blood And though we find since our last purposes an alteration in the State of affairs by the re-assembling you at the helme of Government yet we conceive that we are but in part redrest of our grievances and that the chief expedient to amend the whole will be the recalling all those Members that were secluded in 1648. And sate before the first force upon the Parliament and also by filling up vacant places and all to be admitted without any Oath and engagement previous to their entrance for which things if you please to take a speedy course we shall defend you against all opposers and future interrupters with our Lives and fortunes for the accomplishment whereof we shall use all lawfull means which we humbly conceive may best conduce to the peace and safety of this Nation This was signed by most of the chief gentry of the Country Now the City owning the purport of this Declation by one of their own and refusing to pay taxes had drawn the Councill of State to that violent ebulliency of reducing it to a submission which was as I said before the point upon which they fell when first General Monck came first among them for they had rather bring the whole World into a combustion than their usurped
power either to equals or superiours Mo. goes into the City and demands taxes they were so in love with power that they would not have left pilling as long as there had remained any matter either to satisfie their ambition or covetousness wherefore they resolve to drive on furiously and therefore give order to the Generall to march into the City with so many horse and foot as should reduce them to an obedience and compell them to pay the Assessment His excellency according to their command being then their servant went to the City and at Guildhall peremptorily demandeth by order from the Parliament and Councell of State the payment of their taxes this so sudden demand coming from him from whom they hoped better things and quite contrary to their expectation drove the Citizens to such a non-plus that for a time they were as extasied not knowing what to say but at last recollecting somewhat of an English temper they return this answer That in Magna Charta confirmed by the Petition of right and renewed by the present Parliament a day before their forceable dissolution upon the 11 of October they were to pay no taxes c. but by their consent in Parliament which now they had not yet to avoid giving any offence they desire time to consider of it which the Generall grants but in the mean time writes to the house to know their pleasure to which they presently answer that 1. he should imprison Col. Bromfield Alderman Bludworth L. C. Jackson Major Cox Col. Vincent c. Some of which had waited upon him from the City but a little before 2. that he should remove their chains dig up their posts and break their gates M. his carriage in that exigent of affairs These strange orders being brought to him did a litle startle him knowing they were sent as well to try his patience and obedience as to breed an open enmity between him and the City thereby to compell him to serve them perpetually by being assured that they were mortall enemies yet not willing since he had gone so farr with success to loose all now by passion he with silence obeyes them readily and thereby cleerly finds the temper of the City to be positively resolute for Liberty and right so that being sensible they might be trusted he hopes shortly to make them an amends which he had an occasion offered to do soone than he expected Is ungenerall'd for the Parliament had a double design upon him first to weaken him in his interest and credit by an imployment which they knew would so incense the City and then while he is acting their unreasonable commands they are busie in undermining him in his power for when he had done their design as they thought to the enraging of the Citizens and breeding in their hearts revengefull thoughts He joynes with the City he returnes to White-Hall upon Friday the 10th Day of February upon which day his Commission did expire instead of the renewing whereof which he might with much justice have expected as the reward of his merit he is made a Colonel again and only made equal in command with six men more as short of him in desert as in honesty wherewith when he had acquainted the Officers of his Army who were much unsatisfied with such a reward for their late abominated imployment agreed unanimously among themselves that the Parliament intended to lay them aside notwithstanding their former faithfull service to them and to perpetuate the Nations slavery by their datelesness and therefore they resolved to march with their General into the City to joyn with them and declare for a free Parliament to this purpose a conference is had at the Three Tunnes near Guild-hall where the City and Army strike hands at which time his Excellencies Officers remonstrate the resent they had of the violence they were commanded to offer that famous City which was of a stamp unparalleled in the most horrid rage of former ages whose barbarousness even spared that when they harassed the whole Nation beside then give warning of several persons both within and without the City whose tyrannous minds they feared abhorring in an especiall manner a late petition delivered in the house by one Praise-God Barebone being a treasonous libell subversive of all order and Government dangerous to religion both in discipline and worship and destructive to all Lawes Statutes and Customes even in fundamentalls wishing at last the Parliament to think of determining their Session and provide for future Parliaments This being by his Officers I say presented to his Excellency and by him in a letter communicated to the Speaker he marcheth into London and taketh quarters declaring for a free Parliament and this blow was it Free P. promised made Independency stagger for so highly were both City and Country pleased with this Declaration that they did hardly know in what manner to express their joy ringing their bells making bonfires the air resounding nothing but the name and prayses of Monck and the Streets filled with gratefull hearts who on bended knees prayed for blessings on the head of the hoped restorer both of the Church and Common-wealth and in this resolution he persisted notwithstanding all the flatteries threatnings and snares of the house who now studied nothing more than his ruine as in him foreseeing their own nevertheless he waits for the Parliaments answer to his last letters to them but finding they neither minded him nor them and thought of nothing but setling their own interest and continuing themselves in power he procures a conference between some sitting members of the house and some of the honourable Gentlemen and worthy Patriots that were excluded from it at which himself being in person present and weighing judiciously the reasons and arguments formed on both sides which he heard with a deep and reserved silence after all were withdrawn he concluded with himself upon result from the whole that the pretended settlement proposed by the house was of compass too narrow and too weak of foundation to bear up the Nation and repair its breaches Secluded members admitted he resolved therefore to withdraw all manner of force from the house and to admit men of more sober moderate and less byassed judgments whose Spirits being more apt for publick good would establish the Kingdom upon termes comprehensive of every considerable interest therein hereupon on the one and twentyeth day of February meeting the secluded members at White-hall and expressing himself to them in a speech not delivered by himself but by his Secretary wherein he commended to their care 1. Religion that great primum mobile unum necessarium without which to live rather befits beasts than men and this was proposed in the most sober and moderate way imaginable yet neither countenancing errour nor allowing libertinisme 2. He commended to them the State desiring them to be good Physitians to its crazed body by applying suteable Physick which he said
he supposed would be a full and a free Parliament upon whose resolves as himself so he doubted not but the whole Nation would acquiesce he told them the house was open for them to enter and prayed for their good success The secluded members being thus admitted How they begin and wherein proceed fall immediately to work where they were abruptly forced to break of in December 1648. Confirming their Vote made then by another now that the concessions of the late King were a sufficient ground to proceed on for setling the peace of the Kingdom hereby not only vindicating themselves but as it were at once disanulling all that had been done as dissonant thereto during the whole time of their recess This began to infuse a new spirit of life into the Kingdom in whom at this springing season of the year began a new to bud and peep out the bloomes of a too long frost-nipped loyalty so that one now might have seen what twenty years before could never shew countenances that lately were dejected through the cruell tyranny of their Aegipitian task masters now gather cheerfull looks and like fresh blown roses yield a fragant savour The Parliament thus sitting freely vote his Excellency Lord Generall of all the forces in England Scotland and Ireland by vertue of which Commission he disarmes all the Phanatick party both in City and Country the Parliament in the mean time providing to secure the Nation by two seasonable Acts the one of Assessment and the other of the Militia the last impowering and arming Gentlemen and Men of worth and power to stand up for their Liberties and Priviledges and put the Country into a posture of defence against all encroaching pretenders whatsoever and the former enabling them to raise moneyes which are the sineues of war for maintaining of the forces so raised to assert their and our rights Thus setling the ancient Government of the City and vacating the Phanatick power in the Country they commend the establishment of the Nation to a full and free Parliament to be called the 25th of Aprill 1660. Issuing out writs to that purpose in the name of the keepers of the Liberty of England by authority of Parliament and setling a Councell of State of most discreet and moderate men to whom the affairs of the three Nations in the intervall and untill the meeting of the Parliament on the aforesaid 25th of Aprill was committed who with much discretion managed their power to the satisfaction of all sober minded men and so saving to the house of Lords their rights notwithstanding the Commons were in this Juncture of time put upon necessity to act without them commending the Souldiery once more to his Excellency upon the sixteenth day of March in the year of our Lord 1659. a day worthy to be remembred they dissolved themselves Lorg P. legally ended and so at last put a legall period to that fatall long-Parliament which could not be dissolved by any but by it self And thus we see Independency laid in the dust and ready to give up the ghost and indeed not long after we shall see fully to expire the Prodromi of whose miserable end might be these and the like The Councel of State in this intervall of power The intervall with very great caution and wariness manage their affairs turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but keeping a direct course as knowing in medio ibunt tutissimi they set out a Proclamation against all disturbers of the peace under what pretence or name soever sparing none that in a time of such hopes durst either move a hand or tongue to work a disturbance taking care also that the order of the last Parliament touching elections should be duly and punctually observed as considering that the peace or ruine of the Nation would lye in their hands Elections for a new Parl. His Excellency the Lord Generall in this interregnum accepts of severall invitations and treatments in the City by several of the worthy companies yet still having an eye to the main he keeps close to his Officers who were not yet fully resolved and often confers with them in a more familiar manner than ordinary whereby he so wrought on them that at last he brought them to declare that they would acquiesce in the resolves of the approaching Parliament and indeed this was a shrewd forerunner of the fall of Independency as I said before whose only hope was builded on the averseness of these men to lawfull power which when they saw frustrated they might well depair yet endeavour once more to endeavour a confusion which being observed by the Councell and that a discontented Spirit possessed some of the old Officers and Grandees according to the power given them to that purpose they send for all suspected persons confining them unless they subscribed an engagement to demean themselves quietly and peaceably under the present Government and acquiesce submissively in the determination of the Parliament next ensuing which reasonable engagment Lambert and some others refusing were carefully confined to several prisons by which means the peace was wonderfully preserved but notwitstanding all this care such were the restless endeavours of that divellish faction that whether by the neglect or treachery of his keepers is not yet known Lambert gets out of prison cuningly who being a man of loose principles and desperate fortunes so encouraged the Phanatick party and stirred up their drooping Spirits that they began to threaten great matters and for perfecting their wicked design begin to gather to an head near Edg-hill which they hoped would prove to them an auspicious Omen for the beginning of a Second war but Heaven would no longer wink at such intollerable villanies for the sins of these Amorites were fully ripe for judgment so that they were discovered and quickly nipped in the bud Lambert and his accomplices being so eagerly pursued by Col. R. Ingoldsby that they were suddenly forc'd to scatter and shift for themselves by flight Taken and sent to the Tower neither was that so swift or secure but that Lambert was taken prisoner by the said Col. Ingoldsby and sent prisoner up to London at which time passing by Hide park on the twenty fourth of Ayril he saw all the City Regiments both of horse and foot Trayned Band and Auxiliaries complered armed and trayned and ready to hazard their Lives and Fortunes against all seditious and factious Traitors to their King and Country The news of this first appearance of armed loyalty being spred abroad into the Countreys The first loyal muster did so animate and encourage the old oppressed that casting off their fetters and fears together they begin to appear in their wonted guise and because they were by the Phanaticks traduced as men of blood and full of revenge not to be satisfied but with the utter ruine of their adversaries thereupon to undeceive the vulgar who might possibly have been misled by such