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A50898 Eikonoklestēs in answer to a book intitl'd Eikōn basilikē the portrature His Sacred Majesty in his solitudes and sufferings the author J.M. Milton, John, 1608-1674. 1650 (1650) Wing M2113; ESTC R32096 139,697 248

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cannot but be farr short of spirit and autority without dores to govern a whole Nation Her tarrying heer he could not think safe among them who were shaking hands with Allegiance to lay faster hold on Religion and taxes them of a duty rather then a crime it being just to obey God rather then Man and impossible to serve two Maisters I would they had quite shak'n off what they stood shaking hands with the fault was in thir courage not in thir cause In his Prayer he prayes that The disloyaltie of his Protestant Subjects may not be a hindrance to her love of the true Religion and never prays that the dissoluteness of his Court the scandals of his Clergy the unsoundness of his own judgement the lukewarmness of his life his Letter of compliance to the Pope his permitting Agents at Rome the Popes Nuntio and her Jesuited Mother here may not be found in the sight of God farr greater hindrances to her conversion But this had bin a suttle Prayer indeed and well pray'd though as duely as a Pater-noster if it could have charm'd us to sit still and have Religion and our Liberties one by one snatch'd from us for fear least rising to defend our selves wee should fright the Queen a stiff Papist from turning Protestant As if the way to make his Queen a Protestant had bin to make his Subjects more then half way Papists He prays next That his constancy may be an antidote against the poyson of other mens example His constancy in what Not in Religion for it is op'nly known that her Religion wrought more upon him then his Religion upon her and his op'n favouring of Papists and his hatred of them call'd Puritants the ministers also that prayd in Churches for her Conversion being checkt from Court made most men suspect she had quite perverted him But what is it that the blindness of hypocrisy dares not doe It dares pray and thinks to hide that from the eyes of God which it cannot hide from the op'n view of man VIII Upon His repulse at Hull and the fate of the Hothams Hull a town of great strength and opportunitie both to sea and land affaires was at that time the Magazin of all those armes which the King had bought with mony most illegally extorted from his subjects of England to use in a causless and most unjust civil warr against his Subjects of Scotland The King in high discontent and anger had left the Parlament and was gon toward the North the Queen into Holland where she pawn'd and set to sale the Crown-Jewels a crime heretofore counted treasonable in Kings and to what intent these summs were rais'd the Parlament was not ignorant His going northward in so high a chafe they doubted was to possess himself of that strength which the storehouse and situation of Hull might add suddenly to his malignant party Having first therefore in many Petitions earnestly pray'd him to dispose and settle with consent of both Houses the military power in trusty hands and he as oft refusing they were necessitated by the turbulence and danger of those times to put the Kingdom by thir own autority into a posture ofdefence and very timely sent sir John Hotham a member of the House and Knight of that county to take Hull into his custody and some of the Train'd bands to his assistance For besides the General danger they had before the Kings going to York notice giv'n them of his privat Commissions to the Earl of Newcastle and to Colonel Legg one of those imploid to bring the Army up against the ParParlament who had already made som attempts the latter of them under a disguise to surprise that place for the Kings party And letters of the Lord Digby were intercepted wherin was wisht that the K. would declare himself and retire to some safe place other information came from abroad that Hull was the place design'd for some new enterprise And accordingly Digby himself not long after with many other Commanders and much forrain Ammunition landed in those parts But these attempts not succeeding and that Town being now in custody of the Parlament he sends a message to them that he had firmely resolv'd to go in person into Ireland to chastise those wicked Rebels for these and wors words he then gave them and that toward this work he intended forthwith to raise by his commissions in the Counties neere Westchester a guard for his own person consisting of 2000. foot and 200. horse that should be arm'd from his Magazin at Hull On the other side the Parlament forseeing the Kings drift about the same time send him a Petition that they might have leave for necessary causes to remoove the magazin of Hull to the Towre of London to which the King returnes his denial and soon after going to Hull attended with about 400. Horse requires the Governour to deliver him up the Town wherof the Governour besought humbly to be excus'd till he could send notice to the Parlament who had intrusted him wherat the King much incens'd proclaims him Traitor before the Town Walls and gives immediat order to stop all passages between him and the Parlament Yet he himself dispatches post after post to demand justice as upon a Traitor using a strange iniquitie to require justice upon him whom he then way layd and debari'd from his appearance The Parlament no sooner understood what had pass'd but they declare that Sir John Hotham had don no more then was his duty and was therfore no Traitor This relation being most true proves that which is affirm'd heer to be most fals seeing the Parlament whom he accounts his greatest Enemies had more confidence to abett and own what Sir John Hotham had don then the King had confidence to let him answer in his own behalf To speake of his patience and in that solemn manner he might better have forborne God knows saith he it affected me more with sorrow for others then with anger for my self nor did the affront trouble me so much as their sin This is read I doubt not and beleev'd and as there is some use of every thing so is there of this Book were it but to shew us what a miserable credulous deluded thing that creature is which is call'd the Vulgar who notwithstanding what they might know will beleeve such vain-glories as these Did not that choleric and vengefull act of proclaiming him Traitor before due process of Law having bin convinc'd so late before of his illegallity with the five Members declare his anger to be incens'd doth not his own relation confess as much and his second Message left him fuming three dayes after and in plaine words testifies bis impatience of delay till Hotham be severely punish'd for that which he there termes an insupportable affront Surely if his sorrow for Sir John Hothams sin were greater then his anger for the affront it was an exceeding great sorrow indeed and wondrous charitable But if it
As for Delinquents he allowes them to be but the necessary consequences of his their withdrawing and defending A pretty shift to mince the name of a delinquent into a necessary consequent what is a Traitor but the necessary consequence of his Treason what a Rebell but of his Rebellion From this conceit he would inferr a pretext onely in the Parlament to fetch in Delinquents as if there had indeed bin no such cause but all the Delinquency in London Tumults Which is the overworn theme and stuffing of all his discourses This he thrice repeates to be the true State and reason of all that Warr and devastation in the Land and that of all the Treaties and Propositions offer'd him he was resolv'd never to grant the abolishing of Episcopal or the establishment of Presbyterian Government I would demand now of the Scots and Covnanteers For so I call them as misobservers of the Covnant how they will reconcile the preservation of Religion and their liberties and the bringing of delinquents to condign punishment with the freedom honour and safety of this vow'd resolution here that esteems all the Zeale of thir prostituted Covnant no better then a noise and shew of pietie a heat for Reformation filling them with prejudice and obstructing all equality and clearness of judgment in them With these principles who knows but that at length he might have come to take the Covnant as others whom they brotherly admitt have don before him and then all no doubt had gon well and ended in a happy peace His prayer is most of it borrow'd out of David but what if it be answerd him as the Jewes who trusted in Moses were answerd by our Saviour There is one that accuseth you eev'n David whom you misapply He tells God that his Enemies are many but tells the people when it serves his turn they are but a faction of some few prevailing over the Major part of both Houses God knows he had no passion designe or preparation to imbroyle his Kingdom in a civill Warr. True for he thought his Kingdom to be Issachar a strong Ass that would have couch'd downe betweene two burd'ns the one of prelatical superstition the other of civil tyrannie but what passion and designe what close and op'n preparation he had made to subdue us to both these by terror and preventive force all the Nation knows The confidence of som men had almost perswaded him to suspect his own innocence As the words of Saint Poul had almost perswaded Agrippa to be a Christian. But almost in the work of repentance is as good as not at all God saith he will find out bloody and deceitfull men many of whom have not liv'd out half thir days It behoov'd him to have bin more cautious how he tempted Gods finding out of blood and deceit till his own yeares had bin furder spent or that he had enjoy'd longer the fruits of his own violent Counsels But in stead of wariness he adds another temptation charging God To know that the chief designe of this Warr was either to destroy his Person or to force his judgement And thus his prayer from the evil practice of unjust accusing men to God arises to the hideous rashness of accusing God before Men to know that for truth which all Men know to be most fals He praies That God would forgive the people for they know not what they doe It is an easie matter to say over what our Saviour said but how he lov'd the People other Arguments then affected sayings must demonstrat He who so oft hath presum'd rashly to appeale the knowledge and testimony of God in things so evidently untrue may be doubted what beleif or esteem he had of his forgiveness either to himself or those for whom he would so fain that men should heare he pray'd X. Upon their seiziug the Magazins Forts c. TO put the matter soonest out of controversy who was the first beginner of this civil Warr since the begining of all Warr may be discern'd not onely by the first Act of hostilitie but by the Counsels and preparations foregoing it shall evidently appeare that the King was still formost in all these No King had ever at his first comming to the Crown more love and acclamation from a people never any people found wors requital of thir Loyaltie and good affection First by his extraordinary feare and mistrust that thir Liberties and Rights were the impairing and diminishing of his regal power the true Original of Tyranny Next by his hatred to all those who were esteem'd Religious doubting that thir principles too much asserted libertie This was quickly seen by the vehemence and the causes alleg'd of his persecuting the other by his frequent and opprobrious dissolution of Parlaments after he had demanded more Mony of them and they to obtain thir rights had granted him then would have bought the Turk out of Morea and set free all the Greeks But when he sought to extort from us by way of Tribute that which had bin offerd him conditionally in Parlament as by a free People and that those extortions were now consum'd and wasted by the luxurie of his Court he began then for still the more he did wrong the more he fear'd before any Tumult or insurrection of the People to take counsel how he might totally subdue them to his own will Then was the designe of German Horse while the Duke raignd and which was worst of all som thousands of the Irish Papists were in several parts billeted upon us while a Parlament was then sitting The Pulpits resounded with no other Doctrine then that which gave all property to the King and passive obedience to the Subject After which innumerable formes and shapes of new exactions and Exacters overspre●…d the Land Nor was it anough to be impoverish'd unless wee were disarm'd Our Train'd Bands which are the trustiest and most proper strength of a free Nation not at warr within it self had thir Arms in divers Counties tak'n from them other Ammunition by designe was ingross'd and kept in the Tower not to be bought without a Licence and at a high rate Thus farr and many other waies were his Counsels and preparations before hand with us either to a civil Warr if it should happ'n or to subdue us without a Warr which is all one untill the raising of his two Armies against the Scots and the latter of them rais'd to the most perfidious breaking of a solemn Pacification The articles wherof though subscrib'd with his own hand he commanded soon after to be burnt op'nly by the Hangman What enemy durst have don him that dishonour and affront which he did therin to himself After the beginning of this Parlament whom he saw so resolute and unanimous to releeve the Common-wealth and that the Earl of Strafford was condemn'd to die other of his evil Counselers impeach'd and imprison'd to shew there wanted not evil counsel within himself sufficient to begin a warr
Propositions were obtruded on him with the point of the Sword till he first with the point of the Sword thrust from him both the Propositions and the Propounders He never reck'ns those violent and merciless obtrusions which for almost twenty years he had bin forcing upon tender consciences by all sorts of Persecution till through the multitude of them that were to suffer it could no more be call'd a Persecution but a plain VVarr From which when first the Scots then the English were constrain'd to defend themselves this thir just defence is that which he cals heer Thir making Warr upon his soul. He grudges that So many things are requir'd of him and nothing offerd him in requital of those favours which he had granted What could satiate the desires of this man who being king of England and Maister of almost two millions yearly what by hook or crook was still in want and those acts of Justice which he was to doe in duty counts don as favours and such favors as were not don without the avaritious hope of other rewards besides supreme honour and the constant Revennue of his place This honour he saith they did him to put him on the giving part And spake truer then he intended it beeing meerly for honours sake that they did so not that it belong'd to him of right For what can he give to a Parlament who receaves all he hath from the People and for the Peoples good Yet now he brings his own conditional rights to contest and be preferr'd before the Peoples good and yet unless it be in order to their good he hath no rights at all raigning by the Laws of the Land not by his own which Laws are in the hands of Parlament to change or abrogate as they shall see best for the Common-wealth eev'n to the taking away of King-ship it self when it grows too Maisterfull and Burd'nsome For every Common-wealth is in general defin'd a societie sufficient of it self in all things conducible to well being and commodious life Any of which requisit things if it cannot have without the gift and favour of a single person or without leave of his privat reason or his conscience it cannot be thought sufficient of it self and by consequence no Common-wealth nor free but a multitude of Vassalls in the Possession and domaine of one absolute Lord and wholly obnoxious to his will If the King have power to give or deny any thing to his Parlament he must doe it either as a Person several from them or as one greater neither of which will be allow'd him not to be consider'd severally from them for as the King of England can doe no wrong so neither can he doe right but in his Courts and by his Courts and what is legally don in them shall be deem'd the Kings assent though he as a several Person shall judge or endeavour the contrary So that indeed without his Courts or against them he is no King If therefore he obtrude upon us any public mischeif or withhold from us any general good which is wrong in the highest degree he must doe it as a Tyrant not as a King of England by the known Maxims of our Law Neither can he as one greater give aught to the Parlament which is not in thir own power but he must be greater also then the Kingdom which they represent So that to honour him with the giving part was a meer civility and may be well term'd the courtesie of England not the Kings due But the incommunicable Jewell of his conscience he will not give but reserve to himself It seemes that his conscience was none of the Crown Jewels for those we know were in Holland not incommunicable to buy Armes against his Subjects Being therfore but a privat Jewel he could not have don a greater pleasure to the Kingdom then by reserving it to himself But he contrary to what is heer profess'd would have his conscience not an incommunicable but a universal conscience the whole Kingdoms conscience Thus what he seemes to feare least we should ravish from him is our chief complaint that he obtruded upon us we never forc'd him to part with his conscience but it was he that would have forc'd us to part with ours Som things he taxes them to have offer'd him which while he had the maistery of his Reason he would never consent to Very likely but had his reason maisterd him as it ought and not bin maisterd long agoe by his sense and humour as the breeding of most Kings hath bin ever sensual and most humour'd perhaps he would have made no difficulty Mean while at what a fine pass is the Kingdom that must depend in greatest exigencies vpon the fantasie of a Kings reason be he wise or foole who arrogantly shall answer all the wisdom of the Land that what they offer seemes to him unreasonable He preferrs his love of Truth before his love of the People His love of Truth would have ledd him to the search of Truth and have taught him not to lean so much upon his own understanding He met at first with Doctrines of unaccountable Prerogative in them he rested because they pleas'd him they therfore pleas'd him because they gave him all and this he calls his love of Truth and preferrs it before the love of his peoples peace Som things they propos'd which would have wounded the inward peace of his conscience The more our evil happ that three Kingdoms should be thus pesterd with one Conscience who chiefly scrupl'd to grant us that which the parlament advis'd him to as the chief meanes of our public welfare and Reformation These scruples to many perhaps will seem pretended to others upon as good grounds may seem real and that it was the just judgement of God that he who was so cruel and so remorseless to other mens consciences should have a conscience within him as cruel to himself constraining him as he constrain'd others and insnaring him in such waies and counsels as were certain to be his destruction Other things though he could approve yet in honour and policy he thought fit to deny lest he should seem to dare aeny nothing By this meanes he will be sure what with reason conscience honour policy or puntilios to be found never unfurnisht of a denyal Whether it were his envy not to be over bounteous or that the submissness of our asking stirr'd up in him a certain pleasure of denying Good Princes have thought it thir chief happiness to be alwayes granting if good things for the things sake if things indifferent for the peoples sake while this man sits calculating varietie of excuses how he may grant least as if his whole strength and royaltie were plac'd in a meer negative Of one Proposition especially he laments him much that they would bind him to a generall and implicit consent for what ever they desir'd Which though I find not among the nineteene yet undoubtedly the Oath of his coronation
the Parlament and Citty finding no compliance answerable to his hope from the Protestant Armies betakes himself last to the Irish who had in readiness an Army of eight thousand Papists which he had refus'd so oft'n to disband and a Committy heer of the same Religion With them who thought the time now come which to bring about they had bin many yeares before not wishing only but with much industrie complotting to do som eminent service for the Church of Rome thir own perfidious natures against a Puritan Parlmt the hated English thir Masters he agrees concludes that so soon as both Armies in England were disbanded the Irish should appeare in Arms maister all the Protestants and help the King against his Parlament And we need not doubt that those five Counties were giv'n to the Irish for other reason then the four Northern Counties had bin a little before offerd to the Scots The King in August takes a journey into Scotland and overtaking the Scotch Army then on thir way home attempts the second time to pervert them but without success No sooner comm into Scotland but he laies a plot so saith the Scotch Author to remove out of the way such of the Nobility there as were most likely to withstand or not to furder his designes This being discover'd he sends from his side one Dillon a Papist Lord soon after a cheif Rebell with Letters into Ireland and dispatches a Commission under the great Seale of Scotland at that time in his own custody commanding that they should forthwith as had bin formerly agreed cause all the Irish to rise in Armes Who no sooner had receiv'd such command but obey'd and began in Massacher for they knew no other way to make sure the Protestants which was commanded them expressly and the way it seems left to thir discretion He who hath a mind to read the Commission it self and sound reason added why it was not likely to be forg'd besides the attestation of so many Irish themselves may have recourse to a Book intitl'd The Mysterie of Iniquity Besides what the Parlament it self in the Declaration of no more addresses hath affirm'd that they have one copy of that Commission in thir own hands attested by the Oathes of some that were ey-witnesses and had seen it under the Seale Others of the principal Rebels have confess'd that this Commission was the summer before promis'd at London to the Irish Commissioners to whom the King then discoverd in plain words his great desire to be reveng'd on the Parlament of England After the Rebellion brok'n out which in words onely he detested but under hand favour'd and promoted by all the offices of freindship correspondence and what possible aide he could afford them the particulars wherof are too many to be inserted heer I suppose no understanding Man could longer doubt who was Author or Instigator of that Rebellion If there be who yet doubt I referr them especially to that Declaration of July 1643. with that of no addresses 1647. and another full volum of examinations to be sett out speedily concerning this matter Against all which testimonies likelyhoods evidences and apparent actions of his own being so abundant his bare deniall though with imprecation can no way countervaile and least of all in his own cause As for the Commission granted them he thinkes to evade that by retorting that some in England fight against him and yet pretend his authority But though a Parlament by the known Laws may affirme justly to have the Kings authority inseparable from that Court though divided from his Person it is not credible that the Irish Rebels who so much tenderd his Person above his Autoritie and were by him so well receavd at Oxford would be so farr from all humanitie as to slander him with a particular Commission sign'd and sent them by his own hand And of his good affection to the Rebels this Chapter it self is not without witness He holds them less in fault then the Scots as from whom they might allege to have fetch'd thir imitation making no difference between men that rose necessarily to defend themselves which no Protestant Doctrin ever disallow'd against them who threatn'd Warr and those who began a voluntary and causeless Rebellion with the Massacher of so many thousands who never meant them harme He falls next to flashes and a multitude of words in all which is contain'd no more then what might be the Plea of any guiltiest Offender He was not the Author because he hath the greatest share of loss and dishonour by what is committed Who is there that offends God or his Neighbour on whom the greatest share of loss and dishonour lights not in the end But in the act of doing evil men use not to consider the event of thir evil doing or if they doe have then no power to curb the sway of thir own wickedness So that the greatest share of loss and dishonour to happ'n upon themselves is no argument that they were not guilty This other is as weake that a Kings interest above that of any other man lies chiefly in the common welfare of his Subjects therfore no King will do aught against the Common welfare For by this evasion any tyrant might as well purge himself from the guilt of raising troubles or commotions among the people because undoubtedly his chief Interest lies in thir sitting still I said but now that eev'n this Chapter if nothing els might suffice to discover his good affection to the Rebels which in this that follows too notoriously appeares imputing this insurrection to the preposterous rigor and unreasonable severitie the covetous zeale and uncharitable fury of some men these some men by his continual paraphrase are meant the Parlament and lastly to the feare of utter extirpation If the whole Irishry of Rebells had fee'd som advocate to speak partially and sophistically in thir defence he could have hardly dazl'd better Yet never the less would have prov'd himself no other then a plausible deceiver And perhaps nay more then perhaps for it is affirm'd extant under good evidence that those fained terrors and jealousies were either by the King himself or the Popish Preists w ch were sent by him put into the head of that inquisitive people on set purpose to engage them For who had power to oppress them or to releive them being opprest but the King or his immediat Deputy This rather should have made them rise against the King then against the Parlament Who threat'nd or ever thought of thir extirpation till they themselves had begun it to the English As for preposterous riger covetous zeale and uncharitable fury they had more reason to suspect those evils first from his own commands whom they saw using daily no greater argument to prove the truth of his Religion then by enduring no other but his owne Prelatical and to force it upon others made Episcopal Ceremonial and common-Prayer-Book Warrs But the Papists
commends had rather bin in his way it would perhaps in som measure have perform'd the end for which they say Liturgie was first invented and have hinder'd him both heer and at other times from turning his notorious errors into his Praiers XVIII Upon the Uxbridge Treaty c. IF the way of Treaties be look'd upon in general as a retiring from bestial force to human reason his first Aphorism heer is in part deceav'd For men may Treat like Beasts as well as fight If som fighting were not mar-like then either fortitude were no vertue or no fortitude in fighting And as Politicians ofttimes through dilatory purposes and emulations handle the matter there hath bin no where found more bestialitie then in treating which hath no more commendation in it then from fighting to come to undermining from violence to craft and when they can no longer doe as Lions to doe as Foxes The sincerest end of Treating after War once Proclaim'd is either to part with more or to demand less then was at first fought for rather then to hazzard more lives or wors mischiefs What the Parlament in that point were willing to have don when first after the Warr begun they Petition'd him at Colebrook to voutsafe a treaty is unknown For after he had tak'n God to witness of his continual readiness to Treat or to offer Treaties to the avoiding of bloodshed had nam'd Windsor the place of Treaty and pass'd his royal word not to advance furder till Commissioners by such a time were speeded towards him taking the advantage of a thick Mist which fell that evening weather that soon invited him to a designe no less treacherous and obscure he follows at the heels those Me engers of Peace with a traine of covert Warr and with a bloody surprise falls on our secure Forces which lay quartering at Brentford in the thoughts and expectation of a Treaty And although in them who make a Trade of Warr and against a natural Enemy such an onset might in the rigor of Military Law have bin excus'd while Armes were not yet by agreement suspended yet by a King who seem'd so heartily to accept of treating with his subjects and professes heer He never wanted either desire or disposition to it professes to have greater confidence in his Reason then in his Sword and as a Christian to seek Peace and ensue it such bloody and deceitful advantages would have bin forborn one day at least if not much longer in whom there had not bin a thirst rather then a detestation of civil Warr and blood and a desire to subdue rather then to treat In the midst of a second Treaty not long after fought by the Parlament and after much adoe obtain'd with him at Oxford what suttle and unpeaceable designes he then had in chace his own Letters discover'd What attempts of treacherous hostility successful and unsuccessful he made against Bristow Scarborow and other places the proceedings of that Treaty will soon put us in mind and how he was so far from granting more of reason after so much of blood that he deny'd then to grant what before he had offerd making no other use of Treaties pretending Peace then to gaine advantages that might enable him to continue Warr. What marvel then if he thought it no diminution of himself as oft as he saw his time to be importunate for Treaties when hee sought them onely as by the upshot appeard to get opportunities and once to a most cruel purpose if we remember May 1643. and that Messenger of Peace from Oxford whose secret Message and Commission had it bin effected would have drownd the innocence of our Treating in the blood of a designed Massacher Nay when treaties from the Parlament sought out him no less then seven times oft anough to testifie the willingness of thir obedience and too oft for the Majesty of a Parlament to court thir Subjection he in the confidence of his own strength or of our divisions returnd us nothing back but denials or delaies to thir most necessary demands and being at lowest kept up still and sustain'd his almost famishd hopes with the howrly expectation of raising up himself the higher by the greater heap which he sate promising himself of our sudden ruin through dissention But he inferrs as if the Parlament would have compell'd him to part with somthing of his honour as a King What honour could he have or call his joyn'd not onely with the offence or disturbance but with the bondage and destruction of three Nations wherof though he be careless and improvident yet the Parlament by our Laws and freedom ought to judge and use prevention our Laws els were but cobweb Laws And what were all his most rightful honours but the peoples gift and the investment of that lustre Majesty and honour which for the public good no otherwise redounds from a whole Nation into one person So far is any honour from being his to a common mischeif and calamity Yet still he talks on equal termes with the grand Representative of that people for whose sake he was a King as if the general welfare and his subservient Rights were of equal moment or consideration His aime indeed hath ever bin to magnifie and exalt his borrowd Rights and Prerogatives above the Parlament and Kingdom of whom he holds them But when a King setts himself to bandy against the highest Court and residence of all his Regal power he then in the single person of a Man fights against his own Majesty and Kingship and then indeed sets the first hand to his own deposing The Treaty at Uxbridge he saith gave the fairest hopes of a happy composure fairest indeed if his instructions to bribe our Commissioners with the promise of Security rewards and places were faire What other hopes it gave no man can tell There being but three maine heads whereon to be treated Ireland Episcopacy and the Militia the first was anticipated and forestall'd by a Peace at any rate to be hast'nd with the Irish Rebels ere the Treaty could begin that he might pretend his word and honour past against the specious and popular arguments he calls them no better which the Parlament would urge upon him for the continuance of that just Warr. Episcopacy he bids the Queen be confident he will never quitt which informes us by what Patronage it stood and the Sword he resolves to clutch as fast as if God with his own hand had put it into his This was the moderation which he brought this was as farr as Reason Honour Conscience and the Queen who was his Regent in all these would give him leave Lastly for composure in stead of happy how miserable it was more likely to have bin wise men could then judge when the English during Treaty were call'd Rebels the Irish good and Catholic Subjects and the Parlament before hand though for fashions sake call'd a Parlament yet by a Jesuitical slight not acknowledg'd though call'd
all of them agree in one song with this heer that they are sorry to see so little regard had to Laws establisht and the Religion settl'd Popular compliance dissolution of all order and goverment in the Church Scisms Opinions Undecencies Confusions Sacrilegious invasions contempt of the Clergie and thir Liturgie Diminution of Princes all these complaints are to be read in the Messages and Speeches almost of every Legat from the Pope to those States and Citties which began Reformation From whence he either learnt the same pretences or had them naturally in him from the same spirit Neither was there ever so sincere a Reformation that hath escap'd these clamours He offer'd a Synod or Convocation rightly chosen So offerd all those Popish Kings heertofore a cours the most unsatisfactory as matters have been long carried and found by experience in the Church liable to the greatest fraud and packing no solution or redress of evil but an increase rather detested therfore by Nazianzen and som other of the Fathers And let it bee produc'd what good hath bin don by Synods from the first times of Reformation Not to justifie what enormities the Vulgar may committ in the rudeness of thir zeal we need but onely instance how he bemoanes the pulling down of Crosses and other superstitious Monuments as the effect of a popular and deceitful Reformation How little this savours of a Protestant is too easily perceav'd What he charges in defect of Piety Charity and Morality hath bin also charg'd by Papists upon the best reformed Churches not as if they the accusers were not tenfold more to be accus'd but out of thir Malignity to all endeavour of amendment as we know who accus'd to God the sincerity of Job an accusation of all others the most easie when as there livs not any mortal man so excellent who in these things is not alwaies deficient But the infirmities of best men and the scandals of mixt Hypocrits in all times of reforming whose bold intrusion covets to bee ever seen in things most sacred as they are most specious can lay no just blemish upon the integritie of others much less upon the purpose of Reformation it self Neither can the evil doings of som be the excuse of our delaying or deserting that duty to the Church which for no respect of times or carnal policies can be at any time unseasonable He tells with great shew of piety what kinde of persons public Reformers ought to be and what they ought to doe T is strange that in above twenty years the Church growing still wors and wors under him he could neither be as he bids others be nor doe as he pretends heer so well to know nay which is worst of all after the greatest part of his Raign spent in neither knowing nor doing aught toward a Reformation either in Church or State should spend the residue in hindring those by a seven years Warr whom it concernd with his consent or without it to doe thir parts in that great performance T is true that the method of reforming may well subsist without perturbation of the State but that it falls out otherwise for the most part is the plaine Text of Scripture And if by his own rule hee had allow'd us to feare God first and the King in due order our Allegeance might have still follow'd our Religion in a fit subordination But if Christs Kingdom be tak'n for the true Discipline of the Church and by his Kingdom be meant the violence he us'd against it and to uphold an Antichristian Hierarchie then sure anough it is that Christs Kingdom could not be sett up without pulling down his And they were best Christians who were least subject to him Christs Goverment out of question meaning it Prelatical hee thought would confirm his and this was that which overthrew it He professes to own his Kingdom from Christ and to desire to rule for his glory and the Churches good The Pope and the King of Spain profess every where as much and both his practice and all his reasonings all his enmitie against the true Church we see hath bin the same with theirs since the time that in his Letter to the Pope he assur'd them both of his full compliance But evil beginnings never bring forth good conclusions they are his own words and he ratifi'd them by his own ending To the Pope he ingag'd himself to hazard life and estate for the Roman Religion whether in complement he did it or in earnest and God who stood neerer then he for complementing minded writ down those words that according to his resolution so it should come to pass He praies against his hypocrisie and Pharisaical washings a Prayer to him most pertinent but choaks it straight with other words which pray him deeper into his old errors and delusions XXI Vpon His Letters tak'n and divulg'd THE Kings Letters taken at the Battell of Naesby being of greatest importance to let the people see what Faith there was in all his promises and solemn Protestations were transmitted to public view by special Order of the Parlament They discover'd his good affection to Papists and Irish Rebels the straight intelligence he held the pernitious dishonorable peace he made with them not solicited but rather soliciting w ch by all invocations that were holy he had in public abjur'd They reveal'd his endeavours to bring in forren Forces Irish French Dutch Lorrainers and our old Invaders the Danes upon us besides his suttleties and mysterious arts in treating to summ up all they shewd him govern'd by a Woman All which though suspected vehemently before and from good grounds beleev'd yet by him and his adherents peremptorily deny'd were by the op'ning of that Cabinet visible to all men under his own hand The Parlament therfore to cleer themselves of aspersing him without cause and that the people might no longer be abus'd and cajol'd as they call it by falsities and Court impudence in matters of so high concernment to let them know on what termes thir duty stood and the Kingdoms peace conceavd it most expedient and necessary that those Letters should be made public This the King affirmes was by them don without honour and civilitie words which if they contain not in them as in the language of a Courtier most commonly they do not more of substance and realitie then complement Ceremony Court fauning and dissembling enter not I suppose furder then the eare into any wise mans consideration Matters were not then between the Parlament and a King thir enemie in that state of trifling as to observ those superficial vanities But if honour and civilitie mean as they did of old discretion honesty prudence and plaine truth it will be then maintain'd against any Sect of those Cabalists that the Parlament in doing what they did with those Letters could suffer in thir honour and civilitie no diminution The reasons are already heard And that it is with none more familiar then with Kings
none of these things come upon me All these took the paines both to confess and to repent in thir own words and many of them in thir own tears not in Davids But transported with the vain ostentation of imitating Davids language not his life observe how he brings a curse upon himself and his Fathers house God so disposing it by his usurp'd and ill imitated prayer Let thy anger I beseech thee le against me and my Fathers house as for these Sheep what have they don For if David indeed sind in numbring the people of which fault he in earnest made that confession acquitted the whole people from the guilt of that sin then doth this King using the same words bear witness against himself to be the guilty person and either in his soule and conscience heer acquitts the Parlament and the people or els abuses the words of David and dissembles grossly to the very face of God which is apparent in the next line wherein he accuses eev'n the Church it self to God as if she were the Churches enemie for having overcom his Tyranny by the powerfull and miraculous might of Gods manifest arme For to other strength in the midst of our divisions and disorders who can attribute our Victories Thus had this miserable Man no worse enemies to sollicit and mature his own destruction from the hast'nd sentence of Divine Justice then the obdurat curses which proceeded against himself out of his own mouth Hitherto his Meditations now his Vowes which as the Vowes of hypocrits use to be are most commonly absurd and som wicked Jacob Vow'd that God should be his God if he granted him but what was necessary to perform that Vow life and subsistence but the obedience profferd heer is nothing so cheap He who took so hainously to be offer'd nineteen Propositions from the Parlament capitulates heer with God almost in as many Articles If he will continue that light or rather that darkness of the Gospel which is among his Prelats settle thir luxuries and make them gorgeous Bishops If he will restore the greevances and mische ifs of those obsolete and Popish Laws which the Parlament without his consent hath abrogated and will suffer Justice to be executed according to his sense If he will suppress the many Scisms in Church to contradict himself in that which he hath foretold must and shall come to pass and will remove Reformation as the greatest Scism of all and Factions in State by which he meanes in every leafe the Parlament If he will restore him to his negative voice and the Militia as much to say as arbitrary power which he wrongfully averrs to be the right of his Predecessors If he will turne the hearts of his people to thir old Cathedral and Parochial service in the Liturgie and thir passive obedience to the King If he will quench the Army and withdraw our Forces from withstanding the Piracy of Rupert and the plotted Irish invasion If he will bless him with the freedom of Bishops again in the House of Peers and of fugitive Delinquents in the House of Commons and deliver the honour of Parlament into his hands from the most natural and due protection of the people that entrusted them with the dangerous enterprize of being faithfull to thir Country against the rage and malice of his tyran nous opposition If he will keep him from that great offence of following the counsel of his Parlament and enacting what they advise him to which in all reason and by the known Law and Oath of his Coronation he ought to doe and not to call that Sacrilege which necessity through the continuance of his own civil Warr hath compelld them to necessity which made David eat the Shew-bread made Ezechiah take all the Silver which was found in Gods House and cut off the Gold which overlayd those dores and Pillars and give it to Sennacherib necessity which oft times made the Primitive Church to sell her sacred utensils eev'n to the Communion Chalice If he will restore him to a capacity of glorifying him by doing that both in Church and State which must needs dishonour and pollute his name If he will bring him again with peace honour and safety to his cheife Citty without repenting without satisfying for the blood spilt onely for a few politic concessions which are as good as nothing If he will put again the Sword into his hand to punish those that have deliverd us and to protect Delinquents against the Justice of Parlament Then if it be possible to reconcile contradictions he will praise him by displeasing him and serve him by disserving him His glory in the gaudy Copes and painted Windows Miters Rochets Altars and the chanted Service-Book shall be dearer to him then the establishing his Crowne in righteousness and the spiritual power of Religion He will pardon those that have offended him in particular but there shall want no suttle wayes to be eev'n with them upon another score of thir suppos'd offences against the Common-wealth wherby he may at once affect the glory of a seeming justice and destroy them pleasantly while he faines to forgive them as to his own particular and outwardly bewailes them These are the conditions of his treating with God to whom he bates nothing of what he stood upon with the Parlament as if Commissions of Array could deale with him also But of all these conditions as it is now evident in our eyes God accepted none but that final Petition which he so oft no doubt but by the secret judgement of God importunes against his own head praying God That his mercies might be so toward him as his resolutions of Truth and Peace were toward his People It follows then God having cutt him off without granting any of these mercies that his resolutions were as fained as his Vows were frustrat XXVI Vpon the Armies surprisall of the King at Holmeby TO give account to Royalists what was don with thir vanquisht King yeilded up into our hands is not to be expected from them whom God hath made his Conquerors And for brethren to debate rippe up thir falling out in the eare of a common enemy thereby making him the judge or at least the wel pleas'd auditor of thir disagreement is neither wise nor comely To the King therfore were he living or to his Party yet remaining as to this action there belongs no answer Aemulations all men know are incident among Military men and are if they exceed not pardonable But som of the former Army eminent anough for thir own martial deeds and prevalent in the House of Commons touch'd with envy to be so farr outdon by a new modell which they contemn'd took advantage of Presbyterian and Independent names and the virulence of som Ministers to raise disturbance And the Warr being then ended thought slightly to have discarded them who had faithfully don the work without thir due pay and the reward of thir invincible valour But
What remaines then He appeales to God and is cast lik'ning his punishments to Jobs trials before he saw them to have Jobs ending But how could Charity her self beleive ther was at all in him any Religion so much as but to fear ther is a God when as by what is noted in the Declaration of no more addresses he vowd solemnly to the Parlament with imprecations upon himself and his Posterity if ever he consented to the abolishing of those Lawes which were in force against Papists and at the same time as appeard plainly by the very date of his own Letters to the Queen and Ormond consented to the abolishing of all Penal Lawes against them both in Ireland and England If these were acts of a Religious Prince what memory of man writt'nor unwritt'n can tell us newes of any Prince that ever was irreligious He cannot stand to make prolix Apologies Then surely those long Pamphlets set out for Declarations and Protestations in his Name were none of his and how they should be his indeed being so repugnant to the whole cours of his actions augments the difficulty But he usurps a common saying That it is Kingly to doe well and heare ill That may be sometimes true but farr more frequently to doe ill and heare well so great is the multitude of Flatterers and them that deifie the name of King Yet not content with these neighbours we have him still a perpetual preacher of his own vertues and of that especially which who knows not to bee Patience perforce He beleives it will at last appeare that they who first began to embroyle his other kingdoms are also guilty of the blood of Ireland And wee beleive so too for now the Cessation is become a Peace by publishd Articles and Commission to bring them over against England first only ten thousand by the Earl of Glamorgan next all of them if possible under Ormond which was the last of all his transactions don as a public Person And no wonder for he lookt upon the blood spilt whether of Subjects or of Rebels with an indifferent eye as exhausted out of his own veines without distinguishing as he ought which was good blood and which corrup the not letting-out wherof endangers the whole body And what the Doctrin is ye may perceave also by the Prayer which after a short ejaculation for the poore Protestants prayes at large for the Irish Rebels that God would not give them over or thir Children to the covetousness cruelty fierce and cursed anger of the Parlament He finishes with a deliberat and solemn curse upon himself and his Fathers House Which how farr God hath alreadie brought to pass is to the end that men by so eminent an example should learn to tremble at his judgements and not play with Imprecations XIII Upon the calling in of the Scots and thir comming IT must needs seem strange where Men accustom themselves to ponder and contemplat things in thir first original and institution that Kings who as all other Officers of the Public were at first chos'n and install'd onely by consent and suffrage of the People to govern them as Freemen by Laws of thir own framing and to be in consideration of that dignity and riches bestow'd upon them the entrusted Servants of the Common-wealth should notwithstanding grow up to that dishonest encroachment as to esteem themselves Maisters both of that great trust which they serve and of the People that betrusted them counting what they ought to doe both in discharge of thir public duty and for the great reward of honour and revennue which they receave as don all of meer grace and favour as if thir power over us were by nature and from themselves or that God had sould us into thir hands Indeed if the race of Kings were eminently the best of men as the breed at 〈◊〉 is of ●…orse it would in some reason then be their part onely to command ours always to obey But Kings by generation no way excelling others and most commonly not being the wisest or the worthiest by far of whom they claime to have the governing that we should yeild them subjection to our own ruin or hold of them the right of our common safety and our natural freedom by meer gift as when the Conduit pisses Wine at Coronations from the superfluity of thir royal grace and beneficence we may be sure was never the intent of God whose ways are just and equal never the intent of Nature whose works are also regular never of any People not wholly barbarous whom prudence or no more but human sense would have better guided when they first created Kings then so to nullifie and tread to durt the rest of mankind by exalting one person and his Linage without other merit lookt after but the meer contingencie of a begetting into an absolute and unaccountable dominion over them and thir posterity Yet this ignorant or wilfull mistake of the whole matter had tak'n so deep root in the imagination of this King that whether to the English or to the Scot mentioning what acts of his Regal Office though God knows how un willingly he had pass'd he calls them as in other places Acts of grace and bounty so heer special obligations favours to gratifie active spirits and the desires of that party Words not onely sounding pride and Lordly usurpation but Injustice Partiality and Corruption For to the Irish he so farr condiscended as first to tolerate in privat then to covnant op'nly the tolerating of Popery So farr to the Scot as to remove Bishops establish Presbytery and the Militia in thir own hands preferring as some thought the desires of Scotland before his own interest and Honour But being once on this side Tweed his reason his conscience and his honour became so streitn'd with a kind of fals Virginity that to the English neither one nor other of the same demands could be granted wherwith the Scots were gratifi'd as if our aire and climat on a sudden had chang'd the property and the nature both of Conscience Honour and Reason or that he found none so fit as English to be the subjects of his arbitrary power Ireland was as Ephraim the strength of his head Scotland as Iudah was his Law-giver but over England as over Edom he meant to cast his Shoo and yet so many sober Englishmen not sufficiently awake to consider this like men inchanted with the Circaean cup of servitude will not be held back from running thir own heads into the Yoke of Bondage The summ of his discours is against setling of Religion by violent meanes which whether it were the Scots designe upon England they are best able to cleare themselves But this of all may seem strangest that the King who while it was permitted him never did thing more eagerly then to molest and persecute the consciences of most Religious men he who had made a Warr and lost all rather then not uphold a Hierarchie of persecuting
Bishops should have the confidence heer to profess himself so much an Enemie of those that force the conscience For was it not he who upon the English obtruded new Ceremonies upon the Scots a new Liturgie with his Sword went about to score a bloody Rubric on thir backs Did he not forbidd and hinder all effectual search of Truth nay like a beseiging Enemy stopd all her passages both by Word and Writing Yet heer can talk of faire and equall disputations Where notwithstanding if all submit not to his judgement as not being rationally convicted they must submitt and he conceales it not to his penaltie as counted obstinate But what if he himself and those his learned Churchmen were the convicted or the ostinate part long agoe should Reformation suffer them to sit Lording over the Church in thir fatt Bishoprics and Pluralities like the great Whore that sitteth upon many Waters till they would voutsafe to be disputed out Or should we sit disputitg while they sate plotting and persecuting Those Clergimen were not to be driv'n into the fold like Sheep as his Simily runs but to be driv'n out of the Fold like Wolves or Theeves where they sat Fleecing those Flocks which they never fed He beleeves that Presbytery though prov'd to be the onely Institution of Iesus Christ were not by the Sword to be set up without his consent which is contrary both to the Doctrin and the known practice of all Protestant Churches if his Sword threat'n those who of thir own accord imbrace it And although Christ and his Apostles being to civil affairs but privat men contended not with Magistrats yet when Magistrats themselves and especially Parlaments who have greatest right to dispose of the civil Sword come to know Religion they ought in conscience to defend all those who receave it willingly against the violence of any King or Tyrant whatsoever Neither is it therefore true That Christianity is planted or watred with Christian blood for there is a large difference between forcing men by the Sword to turne Presbyterians and defending those who willingly are so from a r fiousfu inroad o bloody Bishops arm'd with the Militia of a King thir Pupill And if covetousness and ambition be an argument that Presbytery hath not much of Christ it argues more strongly against Episcopacy which from the time of her first mounting to an order above the Presbyters had no other Parents then Covetousness Ambition And those Sects Scisms and Heresies which he speaks of if they get but strength and numbers need no other pattern then Episcopacie and himself to set up their ways by the like method of violence Nor is ther any thing that hath more marks of Scism and Sectarism then English Episcopacy whether we look at Apostolic times or at reformed Churches for the universall way of Church goverment before may as soon lead us into gross error as thir universally corrupted Doctrin And Goverment by reason of ambition was likeliest to be corrupted much the sooner of the two However nothing can be to us Catholic or universal in Religion but what the Scripture teaches whatsoever without Scripture pleads to be universal in the Church in being universal is but the more Scismatical Much less can particular Laws and Constitutions impart to the Church of England any power of consistory or tribunal above other Churches to be the sole Judge of what is Sect or Scism as with much rigor and without Scripture they took upon them Yet these the King resolves heer to defend and maintain to his last pretending after all those conferences offer'd or had with him not to see more rationall and religious motives then Soldiers carry in thir Knapsacks with one thus resolv'd it was but folly to stand disputing He imagins his own judicious zeal to be most concernd in his tuition of the Church So thought Saul when he presum'd to offer Sacrifice for which he lost his Kingdom So thought Uzziah when he went into the Temple but was thrust out with a Leprosie for his opinion'd zeal which he thought judicious It is not the part of a King because he ought to defend the Church therfore to set himself supreme Head over the Church or to meddle with Ecclesial Goverment or to defend the Church otherwise then the Church would be defended for such defence is bondage nor to defend abuses and stop all Reformation under the name of New moulds fanct'd and fashion'd to privat designes The holy things of Church are in the power of other keys then were deliverd to his keeping Christian libertie purchas'd with the death of our Redeemer and establish'd by the sending of his free Spirit to inhabit in us is not now to depend upon the doubtful consent of any earthly Monarch nor to be again fetter'd with a presumptuous negative voice tyrannical to the Parlament but much more tyrannical to the Church of God which was compell'd to implore the aid of Parlament to remove his force and heavy hands frō off our consciēces who therfore complains now of that most just defensive force because onely it remov'd his violence and persecution If this be a violation to his conscience that it was hinderd by the Parlament from violating the more tender consciences of so many thousand good Christians let the usurping conscience of all Tyrants be ever so violated He wonders Fox wonder how we could so much distrust Gods assistance as to call in the Protestant aid of our Brethren in Scotland why then did he if his trust were in God and the justice of his Cause not scruple to sollicit and invite earnestly the assistance both of Papists and of Irish Rebels If the Scots were by us at length sent home they were not call'd to stay heer always neither was it for the peoples ease to feed so many Legions longer then thir help was needfull The Goverment of thir Kirk we despis'd not but thir imposing of that Goverment upon us not Presbytery but Arch-Presbytery Classical Provincial and Diocesan Prebytery claiming to it self a Lordly power and Superintendency both over Flocks and Pastors over Persons and Congregations no way thir own But these debates in his judgement would have bin ended better by the best Divines in Christ'ndom in a full and free Synod A most improbable way and such as never yet was us'd at least with good success by any Protestant Kingdom or State since the Reformation Every true Church having wherewithall from Heav'n and the assisting Spirit of Christ implor'd to be complete and perfet within it self And the whole Nation is not easily to be thought so raw and so perpetually a novice after all this light as to need the help and direction of other Nations more then what they write in public of thir opinion in a matter so familiar as Church Goverment In fine he accuses Piety with the want of Loyalty and Religion with the breach of Allegeance as if God and he were one Maister whose commands were