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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A88031 A letter to a noble lord at London from a friend at Oxford: vpon occasion of the late covenant taken by both houses. Friend at Oxford. 1643 (1643) Wing L1690; Thomason E60_20; ESTC R10956 10,238 16

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Papists are will best be found in the Muster-Rolls of both Armies you have had whole Troopes of that Profession and no fault found with their Religion till they have given over being Rebells whilest they are with you they defend the true Reformed Protestant Religion but when they revolt to their Allegiance they are Papists and ought to be disbanded indeed you take the course to compell the King to doe His duty by driving them to Him for Protection which he cannot deny to His Subjects but you keepe them from performing their duty in assisting their Prince by stripping and plundering and leaving them naked to the World In good faith I ask Pardon of Discretion and Truth for being startled your confident discourses of Popish Armies and Supplies from Papists made me once imagin the King might in truth receive some notable supplies from the persons of that profession and it was not hard for mee to believe that that party which felt so much rigour and cruelty from you and were sure to suffer an utter extirpation if you prevailed should willingly sacrifice all they had to that Sovereigne Power which might mercifully allay that fury and preserve them still in the number of his Subjects but I find there is a narrownesse a vulgar spiritednesse and a scandalou● par●imony in all Religions even these men will have the comfort of being starved with money in their purses for I am a●…red by those who are conversant with those Accounts that all the money His Majesty hath received from all the Papists of England since He hath beene put to rayse and continue these Forces is not halfe so much as is in truth due to Him by the Law upon those moderate Compositions made with them And for any assistance Hee hath by their personall service you have long ago heard and I have reason enough to believe that the Papists in all His Armies will not make one Regiment how many more you have and how many more you would be glad to have your Lordship can better judge then I. Well there hath beene a treacherous and horrid Designe lately discovered to surprize the Cities of London and Westminster and God knowes what and you doe abhorre and detest that wicked and treacherous Designe T is well done whether you know it or not but what may this treacherous Designe be that Mr. Pym sayes would have destroyed the City and the Kingdome and in their Ruines have buried Religion and Liberty Another Gunpowder Treason like that of the Protestation against the first Remonstrance The King hath sent a Commission for now it is printed all the World knowes what it is to certaine persons to use their utmost power to suppresse those who are in Rebellion against Him and assist those who are oppressed by them Is there one Popish or popishly affected person in that Commission or to be imployed in the whole Designe Is there one clause in it on the behalfe of Papists or against the Liberty of the Subiect Indeed it may seeme strange that the King should so much consider that Apostate City where the rage of some and the tamenesse of others have made up one generall Guilt as to offer them any countenance to relieve themselves but that it should be a horrid and treacherous Designe when you have in all the Counties of England Commanders of your Militia and Commissioners even at this present to assesse rate and collect Money for the maintenance of your Rebellious Army for the King to be willing to have an Army in London or Middlesex whereby all other Armies and that too might be speedily disbanded will need an Orator no lesse powerfull then Mr. Pym or his Excellency himselfe who in in these nice Arguments is the better Orator to make evident to the World Believe it my Lord whilest there is one honest man left in that City there will be alwayes a Plot to reduce it to its Loyalty and to destroy this wicked Rebellion neither will that unparaleld Act of inhumanity executed upon the two famous Citizens of Bristol who will live gloriously in the Annals of this Nation as the stout Champions and Martyrs of Allegiance when the name of their Murtherer Fienes shall not be mentioned but with infamy so far fright good men from their Duty that your wilde fury will rage long uncontrould Another of your Propositions is that you doe believe in your conscience that the Forces raised by the two Houses of Parliament are raised and continued for their just defence and for the defence of the true Protestant Reformed Religion and Liberty of the Subject against the forces raised by the King Does your Lordship in truth beleeve this Take it in peeces The two Houses of Parliament being convened by the Kings sole Writ to advise with Him about the great Affayres of the Kingdome formed their Coursels with such successe that in above fifteene Moneths time enough to have reformed and repayred all former mistakes and irregularities in Church and State they never found the least nonconcurrence with them from His Majesty in any particular proposed for the ease or benefit of the Common wealth what was during that time done by His singular Justice and excesse of Bounty is so well and particularly known to all the World that if your Treason and Rebellion were away there would be ingratitude enough left to make you odious to the present and infamous to succeeding Ages When did the first Act of your defence begin Not till you came to Edgehill then I must confesse you were put to it for it cannot bee denied the King went eight Miles out of His way to finde you from thence you tooke your stile of defensive Arms except you will needs date them from the tenth of January when you had been overun by the Law if that defensive Army of the City had not been raised to rescue and preserve the good Lord of Kimbolton and his five pretious Members from a legall proceeding In this sense you have I confesse beene much upon the defensive part otherwise you never pretended ground or Argument for your taking Armes but Feares and Jealousies no danger of an assault from an active Enemy except some few Papists under ground whom your vigilancy hath kept still there When you first voted your great Generall and raysed your wanton Army it was to fetch up the King to you from Yorke not to defend your selves against him and you cannot but know you were so farre from being in danger to be assaulted that setting aside your acts of hostility in your Votes and Ordinances by which you had surprised Forts Townes and the whole Navy when you had a formed Army of Horse and Foot I beleeve much greater then you have now the King had not so many Muskets as you had Cannon nor so many Swords as you had Companies and on my Conscience I will so farre excuse you from intending it should come to this if you had thought He could have got any your