Selected quad for the lemma: war_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
war_n king_n kingdom_n lord_n 5,635 5 4.2218 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A67911 An ansvver to a pamphlet intituled the Lord George Digby his apologie for himselfe; plainly discovering the cunning untruths, and implicit malice in the said pamphlet against the just and legall proceedings of the Honourable the High Court of Parliament. 1643 (1643) Wing A3326; ESTC R12927 3,537 10

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

AN ANSVVER TO A PAMPHLET INTITVLED The Lord George Digby His Apologie for himselfe Plainly discovering the cunning untruths and implicit Malice in the said Pamphlet against the Just and Legall proceedings of the Honourable the High Court of Parliament London Printed for Thomas Iohnson Anno Dom. 1643. An Answer to a Pamphlet intituled The Lord George Digbyes Apologie for himselfe MEeting with a Pamphlet intituled the Lord George Digbies Apologie for himselfe and being well acquainted with the excellent gifts and naturall indowments of the man I could not choose but with a great deale of desire venter on the perusall of the said Pamphlet which indeed began with so much modesty and harmelesnesse that I did begin to entertaine a very good opinion of the rest but therein the said Lord plaid his master-piece of craft to make his sufferings as it were the preamble to that Discourse so to beguile the mindes of the vulgar Readers and allure them to commiserate his misfortunes by the displaying and protesting his innocency and consequently his injuries and surely so subject is mans nature especially the wavering multitudes to pity misfortunes even in the most desperate malefactors whom before in their wishes they had devoted to a thousand deaths and torments that when they evidently see them suffer they are very apt to compassionate their dist●●●● So I believe it is with this young Lord who having with his faire andspecious Apologie as the ancient used even their capitall offenders provare ad populam appealed to the peoples censure hee ho●es hee shall by the winning and imploring language of his said Apologie intice and perswade them to an absolute beliefe of his innocence nothing being more uncertaine then the mindes and votes of that giddie and blatant beast the multitude But to judicious and discerning eyes who weigh every circumstance by judgement not passion this his Apologeticall discourse will rather appeare an absolute accusation then a disingagement of him from his crimes that goodly and verdant grasse being not of heigth enough to hide the swelling and invenomed Serpent that lurks under it which in spight of my Lords fained modestie will breake out and declare the rankour of his heart towards the good of the Common-wealth and the proceedings of the honourable the High Court of Parliament of which hee sayes hee was once a Member and demeaned himselfe with that free and just deportment for the good and advancement of the publique affaires that hee had gained a very good opinion whilest hee was in the lower House still associating himselfe with such of the said House as were most forward in the Common-wealths cause That he did all this is confessed For men can never gaine any thing by detracting from an enemy and that hee did proceed with much zeale and diligence in that which befitted him in the publique affaires in especiall about the trienniall Parliament and the businesse of my Lord of S●●fford against whom hee declaimed with much judgement and discretion but afterwards in that very businesse which with so much acrimony and and courage he had pursued to wit the att●inder of the said Earle he fell off even against his owne conscience being then touched with that first some of the Angells ambition which makes men like poysoned Rats who when they have once swallowed the pleasing bane rest not untill they drinke and then can rest much lesse untill they burst with it For about this time divers of those subtill Malignants taking speciall notice of the growing vertues and admirable abilities of that young L●rd thought it advantagious for their purpose by drawing him with the line of honour to their purpose to withdraw him from the service of his Countrey which he had so couragiously undertaken and therefore intimating to his Majesty his abilities hee was instantly by writ called out of the lower House where he was by election a Burgesse into the upper House where by that new creation hee was to sit as a Baron and a Peere of the Realme Besides as himselfe confesses in his Apologie there was notice taken and advisement given him by a friend that hee was lost in the opinion of many by his frequenting the Court and indeed hee was so for then the young mans nature being wrought upon by the perswasions and promises of those subtile Malignants and puft up by their manifesting his immense deserts and hopes of a signall and sudden preferment hee then turned recreant to his former vertue and care of the Common-wealth declining it in regard of his private advancement and profit and then to the wonder of all and griefe of most good men hee fell off from his opinion in that case of which hee had formerly beene so great a patron and then made that infamous and unhonourable Speech so much detested of all true lovers of the Common-wealth which by order from the honourable the high Court of PARLIAMENT was publikely burned by the common Hang-man a Speech indeed deserving no better destiny then to be sacrificed by the fire to oblivion and neither the finenesse of my Lord Digbyes wit nor the comptnesse of his phrase can by both their endevours excise that Speech of absolute apostasie to his former integrity nor incite to believe that so many honourable and wise men as were then resident in the House of Commons would have condemned that Speech to so much infamy and proscribed the Author incapable of honour and office in the common-wealth had it not beene stuft with unpardonable and apparent abuses both to the honour and utility of the State and therefore to no reasonable man can my Lords Vindication of that Speech appeare valid But not to insist too long upon this Article let us descend to the examination of that which declared him a professed enemy to the State namely the businesse at Kingston whither he protests hee onely went by his Majesties command to deliver a message to some Souldiers and Cavaliers not with any intention or act of hostility or rankour against the Parliament Let us but rightly consider the men with whom he went to treat and out of that will appeare my Lords equivocation at least if not absolute falshood in this point First these forty men hee talkes of were at least eight score all of them of the Commanders that were in the Northerne expedition men for the most part of as desperate soules as fortunes and that these men were drawne thither either by the Lord Digby's perswasions or some others of his stampe and condition is evident in that the said Commanders were destined as a leife guard to his Majesty into whose head my Lord Digby and such other Malignants had subtilly instilled feares and jealousies of his sacred persons securitie against which no man would ever be so audacious as to have a thought of harme and so got his Majestie to entertaine those Cavaliers being indeed aptly to be resembled to those desperate Gladiators among the Romans And whereas my Lord excuses himselfe or at least thinks hee does so of all these machinations and practises by alledging hee is not of his Majesties Councell grant it yet having his Majesties eare as well as Master Porter and the rest of his Cabinet-councellors it is cer●●ine his Lordship might give as dangerous advices as the most perverse Malignant among them Vertuous men when they once decline to vice are of all others the most vicious as among the Turkes none are so deadly and desperate enemies to the Christians as Christian Runnegadoes and whereas my Lord sayes if hee had been of the Councell he could have detected divers who said the King was not worthy to live and words of the like barbarous and disloyall consequence why did not his Lordship declare and appeach those persons that they might have beene given up to the Lawes punishment which certainly the honourable the High Court of Parliament would have seene with all severity inflicted on them And though his Lordship does so much stomack his being called and declared Traytor to the King if he had committed nothing else cerrainly this concealment so long of the author of such words is safficient to convince him of Treason but if actually to levie warre against the Kings people be Treason against the King as my Lord apparently did at Kingston then is my Lord Digby guilty of Treason not otherwise if to be the author and abetter of ill counsells to the King and dangerous and destructive to the peace of the Kingdome as is evident my Lord is by his intercepted Letters wherein hee required his Majesty to withdraw to some place of strength and safety from this Parliament be to be a Traytor then is my Lord so otherwise innocent And for his Lordships withdrawing by the Kings licence out of his discontents into Holland in hope that tract of time might reconcile him to the good opinion of the people and abolish the memory of his disgraces the falshood of this pretension is more apparent them any of the former and that my Lord went over meerely as an agent to promote and advance the distractions betweene his Majesty and his Parliament by procuring forraigne ayds which by his owne Letters is testified against him that hee endevoured both in the Netherlands and in other parts as also by the information of sundry Merchants of good credit from thence my Lord desiring to have himselfe written unto by the name of Baron of Sherburne Next from whence came all those supplies of ammunition and armes to Newcastle but from my Lord Digby and his accomplices Finally there is nothing in all my Lords well-penned Apologie that is worthy any judicious mans beliefe or pity unlesse they may in Christian charity grieve that so many rare● and excellent parts as are in the man should be so mis-imployed for past question by this that is here set downe in answer to his said Apologie it is manifested perspicuously how ill a title my Lord can lay to innocence and how evidently malicious guilt hath beene contiguated with all his actions since his revolt from his duty to his mother the Common-wealth from whom hee can deserve no better a● stile then that which the honourable the High Court of Parliament hath affixed upon him FINIS