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A66769 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.; History of independency. Part 2. Walker, Clement, 1595-1651. 1649 (1649) Wing W317B; ESTC R219912 224,193 273

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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 Diurnall from 1. Ian. to the 8. of Ian. 1648. Numb 286. c. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament doe declare and adjudge That by the fundamentall Lawes of the Realme it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levie War against the Parliament and Kingdome of England So together with this declaratory Vote the said Ordinance was carried up to the Lords by that Renegado Lord Gray of Grooby Ian 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 Traytour 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 leavie Warre first against the Houses we have no Law to make it Treason in Him so to doe And for us to declare Treson 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 daies Ian. 3. The Zealots of the Commons were very angry at the Lords and threatned to clap a Pad-lock on the Dore of their House but at last they sent up some of their Members to examine the Lords Book and see what they had 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 thereupon 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 wherein the Lords are joyned shall be empowred and enjoyned to sit and act and execute in the said severall 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 Iudges must either condemne Him or be condemned others thought it more prudence to touch their Priviledges and let alone their Persons Die Iovis 4. Ian. 1648. The Commons passed these 3. Votes A question in Divinity voted in Parliament never agreed to by Divines This we find de facto in the subversion of our Religion Lawes Liberties and Properties though not de jure You see that since both Houses ravish'd the Supremacy from the King and a petty Faction from the Houses our Lawes are first shrunke into arbitrary Ordinances of both Houses and now into Orders of a remaining Faction of one House 1. That the People that is their owne faction according to their said Principle are under God the originall of all just power 2. That the Commons of England in Parliament assembled being chosen by and representing the People have the Supreme power of this Nation 3. That whatsoever is enacted or declared for Law by the House of Commons assembled in Parliament hath the force of Law and all the People of this Nation are concluded thereby although the consent or concurrence of the King or House of Peers be not had thereunto This chain-shot sweeps away King Lords Laws Liberties property and fundamentall Government of this Nation at once and deposites all that is or can be neer or deare unto us in scrinio pectoris in the bosomes and consciences of 50. or 60. factious covetous Saints the dregs and lees of the House of Commons sitting and acting under the power of an Army and yet the House of Commons never had any Power of Iudicature nor can legally administer an Oath but this in pursuance of their aforesaid Principle That they may passe through any forme of Government to carry on their Designe The Diurnall tells you there was not a Negative Voice this shevves under vvhat a terror they sit vvhen in things so apparently untrue no man durst say No so the said Declaratory Vote and Ordinance for Triall of His Majesty by a Court Martiall if the Diurnall speake true and yet the King no Prisoner of VVar vvas passed onely in the name and by the Authority of the Commons Notvvithstanding the Order of the House That the Clerke should not deliver a Copy of the said Ordinance to any man I here present the Reader vvith a Copie thereof 59. The Act for Triall of the King An Act of Parliament of the House of Commons for Tryall of Charles Stuart King of England WHereas it is notorious that Charles Stuart the now King of England was not content with the many incroachments which his Predecessors had made upon the People in their Rights and Freedome hath had a wicked Designe to subvert the antient and fundamentall Lawes and Liberties of this Nation and in their place to introduce an Arbytrary and Tyrannicall Government and that besides all evill waies to bring His Design to passe He hath prosecuted it with fire and sword Quaere VVhether the Faction doe not translate these Crimes from themselves to the King with many others leavied and maintained a Civill VVarre in the Land against the Parliament and Kingdome whereby this Country hath been miserably wasted the publique Treasure exhausted Trade decayed thousands of People murdered and infinite of other mischiefs committed sor all which high offences the said Charles Stuart might long since have been brought to exemplary and condigne punishment VVhereas also
onely two months pay 2. They have taken away three parts of their Arreares for Free-quater without satisfaction to the Country And at last force them to sell their Debentures at the aforesaid rates that those Souldiers that are continued in Armes shall fare no better when they have served their turnes with them Pag. 10 they say Their engagements against the King was not out of any Personall enmity but simply against his Oppressions and Tyranny on the People but the use and advantage on all the successe God hath been pleased to give us is perverted to that end That by His removall the Ruling Sword men might intrude into His Throne set up a Martiall Monarchy more cruell arbitrary and tyrannicall than England ever tasted of that under the notion of a Free-State when as the People had no share at all in the constitution thereof but by the treachery and falsnesse of the Lieutenant Generall Cromwell and his Son-in-Law Ireton with their Faction was inforced and obtruded by meer Conquest on the People And a little after now rather then to be thus vassallized thus trampled and trod under soot by such as over our backs have stepped into the Chaire of this hatefull Kingship over us in despight of the consent choice and allowance of the Free-People of this Land the true fountaine and originall of all just Power as their owne Votes against Kingly Government confesse we will chuse subjection to the PRINCE chusing rather ten thousand times to be His Slaves than theirs c. Pag. 11. They Vote and Declare The People the Supreme Power the Originall of all just Authority pretend the promotion of the Agreement of the People stile this The first yeare of Englands Freedome entitle the Government A Free State and yet none more bloody violent and perverse Enemies thereto for not under paines of death and confiscation of Lands and Goods may any man challenge or promote those Rights of the Nation so lately pretended by themselves Nothing but their boundlesse lawlesse wills their naked Swords Armies Armes is now Law in England c. 16. August 1649. Col. 209. Col Morrice Governour of Pontefract for the King Endicted at the Assizes at York condemned and executed Morrcie who kept Pontefract-Castle for the KING was Endicted before Iudge Thorpe and Pulleston at Yorke Assizes upon the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. for leavying Warre against the late King and Parliament The Colonel challenged one Brooke Fore-man of the Iury for being his professed Enemy but the Court knowing Brooke to be the principall Verbe the Key of their worke answered Morrice He spake too late Brooke was sworne already Brooke being asked the Question Whether he were sworne or no replied He had not yet kissed the Booke The Court answered It was no matter that was but a Ceremony alleaging he was recorded Sworne there was no speaking against a Record Sure they made great haste to record him sworne before he could kisse the Booke so Brooke was kept in upon this cavill by whose obstinacy Morrice was condemned I cannot wonder that legall Formes Ceremonies are laid by although justice cannot subsist without those Legalities to ascertaine her proceedings which otherwaies would be left at large to the discretion of the Iudge when I see our knowne Lawes Magna Charta the Petition of Right 3. Carol. and the rest with the fundamentall Government of this Nation pulled up by the roots to carry on their Designes of enslaving the People to their lusts notwithstanding the Parliaments Declarations Remonstrances Protestations Covenants Oathes to the contrary and their late Vote in the Act for Abolishing Kingly Government That in all things concerning the Lives Liberties Properties and Estates of the People they would observe the knowne Lawes of the Land But to returne to our Relation Then Morrice challenged 16. more of the Iury whereat Pulleston was so pettish that he bade Morrice keep his compasse or else he would give him such a blow as should strike off his head Untill Morrice cited the Stat. 14 Hen 7. fol. 19. whereby he might challenge 35. men without shewing cause Here you see the Iudges which ought to be of Councell with the Prisoner in matter of Law endeavouring to out-face and blind the Prisoner with ignorance of the Law being a Martiall Man Then he desired a Copie of his Endictment that he might know what to answer saying he might plead Speciall as well as Generall which the Court denied him Next because there was point of Law in it he desired to have Councell citing the Stat. 1. Hen 7. fol. 23. which was likewise denied him yet I am deceived if Rolfe had not Councell allowed him being endicted at Winchester for an endeavour to Murder KING CHARLES the First and had many other favours denyed to Morrice Then Col. Morrice for his discharge produced the PRINCE'S Commission as Generalissimo to the KING his Father The Iudges answered The Prince was but a Subject as Morrice was and if He were present must be tried as he was and rejected the Commission without reading Morrice told them the Prince had His Authority from the King in whose name all Iudges Officers did then Act. The Court Answered the power was not in the King but the Kingdome Observe they endicted him for Leavying Warre against the King and Parliament The word Parliament was a surplusage for which no Indictment could lie no Allegiance no Treason and we owe Allegiance to the King alone whosoever Leavyeth Warre in England in the intendment of the Law is said to Leavy Warre against the King onely although he ayme not at His Person but at some other Person And if he that Leavyeth Warre against the King His Crowne Dignity be a Traitour how much more must they be Traitours that have actually Murdered the King and Dis-inherited and proscribed his lawfull and undoubted Heire and as much as in them lies have subverted the Monarchicall Government of the Land and consequently all Monarchicall Lawes whereof the Stat. of Treasons for Leavying Warre against the Kings Majesty is one and therefore Morrice under a Free-State ought not to be condemned or tried upon any Monarchicall Law So Morrice was found guilty by a Iury for that purpose And an illegall president begun to cut off whom the Faction pleaseth under a pretence forme of Law without help of a Councell of Warre or a private Slaughter-house or a Midnight-Coach guarded with Souldiers to Tyborne These Usurpers have got the old tyrannicall trick To rule the People by the Lawes but first to over-rule the Lawes by their Lawyers and therefore Vt rei innocentes pereant fiunt nocentes judices that true men may goe to the gallowes Thieves must sit on the bench but silent Leges inter arma and now silet Iustitia inter Leges silet Ius inter Iudices the mungrell hypocriticall three-headed conquest we live under hath dispoiled justice of her ballance Three-headed consisting of 1. Councell of Warre 2.
the King amongst them Againe they say That if the King come in to the Parliament He vvil be looked upon as the Repairer of breaches Restorer of trade peace plenty c. and if the Army should keep up as it must upon Taxes the Houses and Army vvill be looked upon as Oppressers and the jealousies and discontents of the People be increased against them and make them apt to joyne issue vvith the Kings interest and may yeild us up a sacrifice to appease the King and his Party out of these vvords and their ovvne practice I conclude for them ergo They may carry on their designe upon necessity for self-preservation against the Monarchicall Government and Lavv of the Land to murder the KING as they have since done Againe they say If the King vvere returned each Party vvould strive first and most to comply vvith Him ergo there is a necessity to subvert the Kingdome and murder the KING Behold vvhat use these covvardly Saints make of necessity and self-preservation 5. That they may appeale to their Svvord against the Authority of any their Governours in order to publique safety vvhich tvvo last conclusions set the dore vvide open to Faction and Rebellion since the People are ever floating and given to change and every turbulent ambitious Fellovv is apt to raise them into a storme against their Governours for their fabulous assertions vvherevvith these Saints usually guild over their foule actions 1. That the Houses were free vvhen they passed the 4. Votes for Non-Addresses 2. That they vvere not free vvhen they recalled them 3. That the People vvere quiet and contented untill the recalling those 4. Votes and aftervvards vvere untsetled and presented clamorous Petitions 4. That the Army did not apply themselves to the King untill he proffered Himselfe to them 5. That vvhen they made Addresses to Him it vvas but to prevent the Presbyterian Party But it appeares their ayme from the beginning vvas to suppresse the Presbyterian and advance their ovvne Party and lay by the King and domineer over Him and the Kingdome for vvhen Cromvvell had brought his Designe to perfection he said at Kingston That he vvas as fit to rule the Kingdome as Hollis 6. And then but hypocritically Sect. 65 66 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 88 89 97 98. All these are sufficiently confuted in my said Animadversions and in the said Plea for the King and Kingdome in Putny Projects and in my First part of the History of Independency After all this tedious stuffe aforesaid they make Propositions to the Parliament of tvvo sorts all founded upon the said live Antimonarchicall Principles The first for satisfying publique Iustice that is for the Hang man to teach the Iudges vvho they shall Sentence to execution 1. They demand the Person of the King may be brought to speedy Iustice this affront they put upon the Parliament vvhen they vvere neer conclusion of their Treaty vvith Him vvhen He had already granted more to his Subjects than ever any King condescended to The Kings Supremacy and from thence his indempnity proved this is through the sides of the King to give Monarchy the fundamentall Government and Lavves of this Land and consequently the Liberty and Property of the People their Deaths-vvond By the lavv of God nature reason and the Lavves of all Kingdomes impunity is an inseparable prerogative of Kings as they are Supreme in their Dominions See the Oathes of Allegiance Supremacy Stat of Recognition 1 Iac. Cokes Institut 5.1 Stamford's Pleas of the Crowne l. 1 ch 1 2 Stat. 25. Edvv. 3 42. E. 3. Read Mr. Pryns Memento to the unparliamentary Iunto his Speech in the House of Commons 4. Dec p. 72 73 74. 75 76 77. and my 1. part sect 106. The Conclusions sect 17. and my Animadversions p. 18. the Petition of Right 3. Caroli Declares That they had no povver to hurt the Kings Prerogative much lesse I thinke to hurt his Person the Lavves are the Kings Lavves Courts the Kings Courts Iudges his Iudges Great Seale his Seale the VVrits the Kings VVrits the Iustice and Peace of the Land are his consequently the VVars his VVarres he is the fountaine of all Authority as vvell as of all Honour Thou shalt not speake ill of the Governour of the People therefore not accuse him The King hath no Superior nor equall in England contrary to that false distinction of the Observator that he is Major singulis minor universis VVhen David vvould have gone forth to Battle his Army dissvvaded it using these reasons If vve flee they vvill not care for us neither if halfe of us die vvill they care for us But thou art vvorth ten thousand of us here you see the King is reckoned major universis more than all his Army and yet that Army vvas at that time in effect all the vvel-affected of the Land and therefore by the Anarchicall Principle aforesaid the onely people of the Land for further proofe hereof I appeale to all our Lavvs and Statutes hovv vvill they Trie him vvho shall Iudge him vvho are his Peeres that he may be Legally Tryed like a Freeborne man for sure they cannot deny him that right according to Magna Charta per legale iudicium parium suorum It is a grounded Maxime in our Lavves The King can doe no vvrong vvherefore then vvill they Trie Him for doing no vvrong The policy and civility therefore of our Lavves and of our Parliament too in all their Declarations Remonstrances so long as they continued in any state or degree of innocency alvvaies accused his Evill Counsellours and Ministers and freed Himselfe lest they gave advantages to ambitious men Absolon-like to scandalize and dishonour him and render him lovv and vilde in the eyes of the People to the disturbance of the peace of the King and Kingdoms and shaking of the Royall Throne vvhich is alvvaies accompanied vvith an earth-quake of the vvhole Land * 1. Pet. 2.13 Here the King is called Supreme not the People and though said to be an ordinance of man in some respects yet S. Paul Rom 13. saith He is ordain'd of God 2. Governours are distinguished the King is Supreme and Governors are sent by him his Com●ission Besides it appears Gen. 3.16 4.7 God gave not to all men that freedome which is supposed the foundation of supremacy in the people He made them not masters of their own liberty for even then he laid the foundations of obedience in Abel to Cain Eve to Adam If a people chuse a King it is the act of every particular man of vvhom the Commonalty consists and each individuall nor the whole Commonalty can give him more power then himselfe hath But no man hath power over his owne life neither arbitrarily nor judicially but onely over his liberty which he may so give away as to make himselfe a subject or a slave this makes him so chosen a Ruler or Protector of them who have parted with
protect the 11. impeached Members from justice and with them to raise a new Warre To this we say See my 1. part sect 16.17,18 my said Animadversions pag. 2. neither vvere they legally impeached See Ardua regn● or tvvelve arduous doubts vvriten in defence of the expulsed Memb the said Members Ans to the Armies Charge we gave them no other protection than the Laws allowed them For the mispending 200000l designed for Ireland we say that 80000l thereof was paid to Nicholas Lo●tus and others for service of Ireland and above 50000l to the Treasurers at Warre for the Army which may more reasonably be said to be mis-imployed because the Army had an established pay another way than what the Reformado Officers and Souldiers who obeyed the Orders of the House for Disbanding received who neverthelesse pressed upon the House the more earnestly for their Arreares after the Declarations and Remonstrances published by the Army for paying the Arreares of all the Souldiers of England 4. Their countenancing abetting There vvas a close Inquisition of Godly Cut-throats purposely chose to examine this Tumult vvhich proceeded illegally used so much foule play as to accuse men upon characters of their clothes persons yet malice it selfe could find nothing See my 1. part sect 45 46. to sect 54. Return to sect 2. 5. and partaking with the Tumult of Apprentices and others against both Houses of Parliament To this we say that we wonder they should urge the force offered to the House then which they declared horrid and treasonable to justifie the violence acted upon the House by themselves of a much higher nature This is a meer fiction of the Pen-mans which we doe every one of us for ourselves respectively deny 5. The holding correspondency ingaging and assisting the tumultuous Petitioners last Spring the rebellious Insurrections in Kent the Revolted Ships Prince of Wales with the Scots Army We doe every one of us for our selves respectively deny these 6. That when the Army was dispensed and engaged in severall parts c. and many faithfull Members employed abroad upon publique services and others through Malignant Tumults about this City could not with safety attend the House Then the corrupt and Apostating Party taking advantage of these distractions which themselves had caused First recalled in those Members c. Then they recalled those Votes for Non-Addresses and voted a Personall Treaty To this we say that if the proceedings of the Treaty were surreptitiously gotten in a thin House why do they then complain in other parts of their Paper that the majority of the House is corrupt Return to sect 2. 5. there see the true grounds of these Tumults See vvhat use they make of providence in the 2. part of Englands nevv Chaines and formed to serve the Kings corrupt Interest why did they force from the House above 200. Members at once the Counties never expressed so high contempt of the Parliament untill the like had been first done by the Armies quartering upō them And now let us come to that Vote of the House 5. Dec. 1648. That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses are a ground to proceed upon to a setlement of Peace of which they say That though they advanced hither to attend providence for opening some way to avoid the present evils designed and introduce the desired good into the Kingdome yet they said nor acted nothing in relation to the Parliament nor any Member thereof untill by the Vote passed Decemb. 5. they found the corrupt majority so resolvedly bent to compleat their Designe in bringing in the King Doe they call their threatning Declaration Remonstrance a saying nothing and their marching up against the House contrary to the Order of the House a doing nothing in relation to the Parliament But by these words it appeares that this Vote 5. Decemb. is the very point of that necessity they now relie upon to justifie their force upon the House For before that passed they say They acted nothing c. we must now state the difference between the Houses Propositions See Mr. Pryn's said Speech in the House ● Decemb. 1648 more at large and the Kings Answers and see whether the King did not grant all those Propositions in which te maine security of the Kingdome resteth He granted the first Proposition for taking off all Declarations as was desired And the third Proposition for the Militia as was desired He assented to the Proposition for Ireland limiting the time of the Parliaments disposing Officers there to 20. yeares He consented to such Acts for publique Debts and Publique Vses as should be presented within 2. yeares and incurred within that time Hee granted the Proposition concerning Peeres as was desired Hee granted the Disposing Offices in England to the Parliament for 20. yeares He granted the taking away the Court of Wards having 100000 l. per ann in lieu thereof to be raised as the Parliament should thinke fit Hee granted to Declare against the Marquesse of Ormond's power and proceedings after an Agreement with the Parliament The onely difference therefore remained upon two Propositions 1. Delinquents 2. The Church For Delinquents though He doth not grant all His Majesty consented they shall submit to moderate Compositions according to such proportions as they and the two Houses shall agree 2. He disableth them to beare Offices of Publique Trust and removes then from the Kings Queens and Princes Court 3. For such as the Houses propounded to proceed capitally against He leaves them to a Legall Tryall and Declares He will not interpose to hinder it which satisfies the maine complaint of the Parliament which was in the beginning of the Warre That the King protected Delinquents from justice And all that the House desired in the Propositions presented to Him at Oxford Febr. 1642. was That His Majesty would leave Deliquents to a Legall Tryall and Iudgement of Parliament But that His Majesty should joyne in an Act for taking away the Lives or Estates of any that have adhered to Him He truly professeth He cannot with Iustice and Honour agree thereto 4. Nor doe we see how Delinquents being left to the Law can escape justice the King having granted the 1. proemiall Proposition so by a Law acknowledged the Parliaments Cause and Warre to be just For the Church The Houses propound the utter abolishing of Archbishops Bishops c. The Sale of their Lands that Reformation of Religion be setled by Act of Parliament as both Houses have or shall agree The Kings Answer takes away Church-Government be Archbishops Bishops c. by taking away their Courts and Officers and so farre takes away their power of Ordination that it can never be revived againe but by Act of Parliament so that Episcopacy is divested of any actuall being by the Law of the Land instead thereof the Presbyterian Government setled for three yeares by a Law● which is for so long a time as
thing I can see the higher House is totally excluded And for the House of Commons it is too well knowne that the major part of them are detained or deterr'd from sitting so as if I had no other this were sufficient for Me to protest against the lawfulnesse of your pretended Court. Besides all this the peace of the Kingdome is not the least in My thoughts and what hopes of setlement is there so long as power reigns without rule of Law changing the whole frame of that Government under which this Kingdom hath flourished for many hundred years nor will I say what will fall out in case this lawlesse unjust proceeding against Me doe go on believe it the Commons of England will not thank you for this change for they will remember how happy they have bin of late yeares under the Reigne of Queen Elizabeth the King my Father and My selfe untill the beginning of these unhappy troubles and will have cause to doubt that they shall never be so happy under any new And by this time it will be too sensibly evident that the Armes I took up were onely to defend the fundamentall Lawes of this Kingdome against those who have supposed My power hath totally changed the ancient Government Thus having shewed you briefly the Reasons why I cannot submit to your pretended Authority without violating the trust which I have from God for the welfare and liberty of My People I expect from you either cleare Reasons to convince My Judgement shewing Me that I am in an errour and then truely I will readily answer or that you will withdraw your proceedings This I intended to speake in Westminster-hall on Munday 22. Ianuary but against reason was hindered to shew My Reasons 87. Alteration of the formes and styles of VVrits and Legall proceedings The 27. Ian. The Commons read the Act for Altering the formes of Writs and other procedings in Courts of Iustice which according to all our knowne Lavvs the custome of all Ages and the fundamentall Government of this Kingdome ever ran in the King's Name This Act upon the Question vvas assented to and no concurrence of the Lords desired of this more hereafter 88. A Proclam to be brought in prohibiting the Pr of VVales or any of the Kings Issue to be proclaimed King of England The I unto of 50. or 60. Commons appointed a Committee to pen a Proclamation That if any man should go about to Proclaime Prince Charles or any of that line King of England after the removall of King Charles the Father out of this life as is usually ought to be done by all Mayors Bayliffs of Corporations High Sheriffs c. under high penalties of the Law for their neglect or shall proclaime any other vvithout the consent of the present Parliament the Commons declare it to be High Treason and that no man under paine of Imprisonment or such other arbitrary punishment as shall be thought sit to be inflicted on them shall speake or preach any thing contrary to the present proceedings of the Supreme Authority of this Nation the Commons of England assembled in Parliament Your hands feet liberties and consciences vvere long since tied up novv you are tongue-tied Upon motion the House ordered 89. The Bishop of London appointed by the Ho to administer spirituall comfort to the condemned King and the Kings usage by the Army See Mr. Io Geree's Book against Good-vvin called Might over-comming right And Mr. Pryn's Epistle to his Speech 6. Dec. 1648. That Doctor Iuxon Bishop of London should be permitted to be private vvith the King in His Chamber to preach and administer the Sacraments and other spirituall comforts to Him But notwithstanding their Masters of the Councell of Warre apointed that vveather-cocke Iohn Goodwin of Coleman-street the Balaam of the Army that curseth and blesseth for Hire to be Superintendent both over King and Bishop so that they could hardly speak a word together without being over-heard by the long-schismaticall-eares of black-mouthed Iohn Besides I heare that for some nights a Guard of Souldiers was kept within His Chamber who with talking clinking of pots opening and shutting of the dore and taking Tobacco there a thing very offensive to the Kings nature should keep Him watching that so by distempering amazing Him with want of sleep they might the easier bring Him to their bent 28. Ianuary being the last Sabbath the King kept in this life 90. A Paper-booke of Demands tendered to be Subscribed by the King the Sunday before He died See sect 94. some of the Grandees of the Army and Parliament tendered to the King a Paper-booke with promise of Life some shadow of Regality as I heare if He Subscribed it It contained many particulars destructive to the fundamentall Government Religion Lawes Liberties Property of the People One whereof was instanced to Me viz. That the KING should amongst many other demands passe an Act of Parliament for keeping on foot the Militia of this Army during the pleasure of the Grandees who should be trusted with that Militia and with power from time to time to recruit and continue them to the number of 40000. Horse and Foot under the same Generall and Officers with power notwithstanding in the Councell of Warre to chuse new Officers and Generals from time to time as occasion shall happen and they thinke fit and to settle a very great Tax upon the People by a Land Rate for an established pay for the Army to be collected and leavied by the Army themselves and a Court Martiall of an exorbitant extent and latitude His Majesty as I heare read some few of the Propositions throwing thē aside told them He would rather become a sacrifice for His People then betray their Lawes and Liberties Lives and Estates together with the Church and Common-wealth and the Honour of His Crowne to so intollerable a Bondage of an Armed faction Monday 29. Ianu. 1648. The legislative half-quarter of the House of Commons 91. The Stile and Title of Custodes libertatis Angliae voted to be used in legall proceedings instead of the style of the King These Goalers of the Liberties of England are Individuum vagum not yet named See a Continuation of this madnesse in an Act for better setling proceedings in 〈◊〉 of Iustice according to the present Government Dated 17. Feb. 1648. voted as followeth hearken with admiration Gentlemen be it enacted by this present Parliament and by Authority of the same that in all Courts of Law Justice equity and in all Writs Grants Patents Commissions Indictments Informations Suits Returnes of Writs and in all Fines Recoveries Exemplifications Recognizances Processe proceedings of Law Justice or Equity within the Kingdoms of England or Ireland Dominion of Wales c. instead of the Name Stile Teste or Title of the KING heretofore used that from henceforth the Name Stile Test or Title Custodes libertatis Angliae authoritate Parliamenti
the House and their Imprisonment vvithout Cause c. vvhich can no vvay 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 Lavves and Liberties vvhich vve hoped long ere this to have enjoyed from your hands Yet vvhen vve consider and herevvith compare many of your late carriages both tovvards the Souldiery and other Free People and principally your Cruell Exercise of Martiall Lavv even to the Sentence and Execution of Death upon such of your Soldiers as stand for the Rights of that Engagement c. And not onely so but against others not of the Army vve cannot but look upon your defection and Apostasie in such dealings as of most dangerous Consequence to all the Lavvs 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. vvhich vvith your Excellency in point of duty ought not to be of the meanest obligation VVe do protest against your Exercise of Martial Lavv against any vvhomsoever in times of Peace vvhere all Courts of Iustice are open as the greatest encroachment upon our Lavves Liberties that can be acted against us and particularly against the Tryall of the Souldiers of Captaine Savages Troup yesterday by a Court Martiall upon the Articles of VVarre and sentencing of tvvo of them to death and for no other end as vve 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 vvhich declareth That no person ought to be judged by Law Martiall except in times of VVarre And that all Commissions given to execute Martiall Law in time of Peace are contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of the Land And it vvas the Parliaments complaint That Martiall Lavv vvas then commanded to be executed upon Souldiers for Robbery Mutiny or Murder VVhich 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 Lavv in England and there promise to preserve inviolably it and all other the Fundamentall Lavves and Liberties concerning the preservation of the Lives Properties and Liberties of the people vvith all things incident thereunto And the Exercise of Martiall Lavv in Ireland in time of Peace vvas one of the chiefest Articles for vvhich 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 vvarrantably destroy the Fundamentall Liberties and Principles of the Common Lavv of England It being a Maxim in Lavv and Reason both that all such Acts and Ordinances are ipso facto null and void in Lavv and binds not all but ought to be resisted stood against to the death And if the Supreme Authority may not presume to doe this much lesse may You or Your Officers presume thereupon For vvhere Remedy may be had by an ordinary course in Lavv the Party grieved shall never have his recourse to extraordinaries VVhence 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 Iustice according to the Lavvs and Statutes of the Realme in the times of Peace as novv it is and the extraordinary vvay by Courts Martiall in no vvise to be used Yea the Parliaments Oracle Sir Edward Cooke Declares in the third part of his Institutes Chap. of Murder That for a Generall or other Officers of an Army in time of Peace to put any man although a Souldier to death by colour of Martiall Law it is absolute murder in that Generall c. Therefore erecting of Martiall Lavv novv vvhen all Courts of justice are open stopping the free current of Lavv vvhich sufficiently provides for the punishment of Soldiers as vvel as others as appears by 18 H. 6. c. 19. 2 3 E. 6. c. 2. 4 5 P. M. c. 3. 5. l. 5. 5 Iam. 25. is an absolute destroying of our Fundamentall Liberties and the razing of the Foundation of the Common Lavv of England the vvhich out of Duty and Conscience to the Rights and Freedoms of this Nation vvhich vve value above our lives and to leave You and Your Councell vvithout all excuse vve vvere moved to represent unto Your Excellency Earnestly pressing You vvell to consider vvhat You doe before you proceed to the taking avvay the Lives of those men by Martiall Lavv least the bloud of the Innocent and so palpable Subversion of the Lavves and Liberties of England bring the revvard of just vengeance after it upon You as it did upon the Earle of Strafford For Innocent bloud God vvill not pardon and vvhat the people may doe in case of such violent Subversion of their Rights vve shall leave to Your Excellency to judge and remaine Sir Your Excellencies humble Servants IOHN LILBURNE RICH OVERTON From our Canslesse and unjust and Tyrannicall Captivity in the Tovver of London April 27. 1649. Notvvithstanding vvhich Letter and much other meanes made the said Lockier vvas 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 vvith the honourable funerall pomp accompanying him to his Grave turned all the terror of his Tragedy into hatred and contempt of the Authors thereof 152. Arreares given to Col. A Popham H. Martin temptations put upon Lilburne and Ioyce 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 novv playing the Devils part shevving the Kingdomes of the earth and tempting Iohn Lilburne to fall dovvne and vvorship 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 vvho are confident he vvill as constantly resist false promises and vaine hopes as he hath vaine threats and terrors of Indictments and not cast avvay the hold he hath of immortality by hearking to such a Syren vvhose promises are but baits vvith a hooke hidden under them and his preferments but like Mahomets paradise he that hath cousened all the Interests of the Kingdome vvill not scruple to cheat his Enemy a free-spirited plaine meaning man This is to undermine and blovv up his credit vvith his party and make him liable to a revenge hereafter He that stoops to the lure of a knovvn Enemy is guilty of inexcusable folly and a Betrayer of himselfe especially having had so faire a Copie of Cons●●ncy set
consummated 2. That He might when He pleased inlarge cleer the truth with the reservednesse of His meaning herein by publique Declaration Now the Treaty being powerfully carried on without Debate or receiving any Proposition from the King as was capitulated and reciprocall Proposalls are of the Essence of all Treaties this Grant could never bind Him This Grant was a meer Preambulatory Proposition not of the Essence of the Treaty Philosophers and School-men tell us Proems to Laws are condemned by many Lawyers Polititians Est nihil frigidius Lege cum Prologo jubeat lex non suadet No valid proof can be drawn out of Proems and Introductions but out of the Body of the Text. So in the Lawes of England and in all Accusations and Charges Prefaces and Preambles are not pleadable They are the last in penning of Lawes least in account nor never had the force of Lawes There 's not a syllable in this Preface which Repeales any former Law inflicting a Penalty upon such Subjects as beare or raise Armes against their KING nor those Laws which è contrario exempts from punishment all Subjects adhering to the Person of the KING in any Cause or Quarrell Whereas the said Preface saith the two Houses were necessitated to make a Warre c. This may relate to a necessity à parte post not à parte ante self-defence is the universall Law of nature extending to all Creatures it is non Scripta sed nata Lex Therefore when the two Houses or rather a schismaticall Party in them had brought upon themselves a necessity of Self-defence By raising Tumults c. His Majesty was contented to acknowledge that necessity If one Man assault anothar upon the High-way and the Assailed furiously pursue the Assailant putting him to the defensive part the Assailant is now necessitated to fight in his owne defence although he drew that necessity upon himself yet is he now excusable à posteriori not à priori And as Civilians say of clandestine Marriages Quod fieri non debuit factum valet for multa sunt quae non nisi peracta approbantur Lewis the 13. of France had many Civill Warres with his own Subjects amongst other Treaties to compose them upon the Treaty of Lodun he was enforced to publish an Edict approving of all that had been done by his Opposites as done for his service The like Extenuations are not unusuall at the close of Civill Warres and the onely use made of them was never other than to make the adverse Party more capable of pardon to secure them against the brunt of the Lawes to salve their credits and pave the way for an Act of Oblivion and restore a setled peace Peace and Warre like Water and Ice being apt to beget one another But never was use made of such Grants to ruine the King that Granted them or His Party Thus having confuted that misprision That the King by Granting that Introductory Proposition had taken all the Bloud upon His score my Author having cleered his way to his farther Inquisition after Bloud proceeds and tells you Belw Cap was the first that opened the Issue of Bloud by entering England and shewing Subjects the way of representing Petitions to the King upon their Pikes points That the Irish took their rise from him And whereas occasion was taken to calumniate His Majesty for having a foreknowledge thereof amongst many other convincing Arguments to cleer him my Lord Macquire upon the Ladder and another upon the Scaffold did freely and cleerly acquit Him And in regard great use was made of the Irish Rebellion to imbitter the People against the King the Authour winds up the causes there of upon one bottome Telling you 1. They who complied with the Scots in their first and second Insurrection 2. They who dismissed the Irish Commissioners sent to present some grievances to the Parliament with a short unpolitique harsh Answer 3. They who tooke off Straffords Head the onely Obstructor of that Rebellion and afterwards retarded the Earle of Leicesters going into Ireland 4. They who hindered part of the Disbanded Army of 8000. Men raised by the Earle of Strafford being Solders of Fortune to go serve the Spaniard as His Majesty had promised the two Spanish Ambassadours the Marquesses of Velada and Maluezzi which cashiered discontented men first put fire to the Tumult They who did all this are guilty of the Irish Rebellion and of the Bloud of above 10000 Protestants who perished in that Warre Adde They who importuned the King contrary to His judgment to make the Irish desperate by passing an Act to confiscate their Estates and grant them away to such as should advance Monies upon Irish Adventures Touching the Warre kindled in England the Authour confesseth it was a fatall thing there should be a withdrawing of the Kings Person from the Parliament But averreth it was a barbarous thing that the King with above foure parts in five of the Lords and two parts in three of the Commons should be frighted away by Tumults raised by Ven and Burges and a Designe to seize the Kings Person yet its fit it should be remembred 1. What reiterated Messages His Majesty sent offering to returne if there might be a course taken to secure His Person with those Peeres and Commons rioted away 2. That there was not the least motion towards Warre untill Hotham shut the Gates of Hull against the King attended onely with some few of His houshold Servants which Act of his was approved of afterwards by the House of Commons Vote as if he had done it by their warrant 3. That a while after there was an Army of 16000. men effective inrolled about London to fetch Him to His Parliament and remove ill Counsellours under the Earl of Essex long before the King began to set up His Standard 4. That the same Army so raised to bring the King to His Parliament was continued two yeares after to keep Him from His Parliament 5. Who interdicted Trade first and brought in Forraigne Force to help them and whose Commissions of Warre were near upon two yeares date before the Kings 6. That in all His Declarations He alwayes protested He waged not Warre against the Parliament but against some Seditious Members against whom He could not obtaine Common Iustice 7. That upon all good Successes the King still courted the Parliament and City to an Accommodation 8. That upon the Treaty of Vxbridge The King moved that to prepare mens mindes to Peace there might be freedom of Trade from Town to Town Acessation of all Acts of Hostility for the time that the inflamation being allayed the wound might be cured the sooner 9. That this present Army remember how often in their Proposalls and Declarations they protested That their aime was to restore His Majesty with Honour Freedome and Safety whereunto they were formerly bound by their Protestation and Covenant and that the two Commanders in Cbief pawn'd their Souls to Him
Councell of State 3. Parliament 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 died resolutely Observe the thing aimed at in this new forme of Endictment of High Treason for leavying warre against the King and Parliament is first that the word King may hold in the Edictment which otherwise would be found to have errour in it and though the word for Leavying Warre against the Parliament be a vaine surplusage signifying nothing yet at last by help of their owne Iudges new-made presidents to leavy warre against the Parliament shall stand alone be the onely Significator and take up the whole roome in the Edictment and thrust the word King out of dores and then Treason shall be as frequent as Malignancy is now Morrice had moved he might be Tryed like a Soldier by a Councell of Warre alleaging the inconvenience of such a president if the Kings Party should retaliate it which would not be granted yet Col. Bethel writ to the Generall and his Councell of Warre 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 fountaine of Iustice nor the safety of the Common-wealth to let such Enemies live the Parliament having adjudged him worthy of death without hearing and given instructions to the Iudges accordingly O serviceable Iudges so the Generall was overborne 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 Iustice which way he pleaseth Col. Prides's Dray-horses 210. Capt. Plunkett and the Marquesse of Ormonds Brother voted to be Tryed the Commons in Parliament assembled not yet satisfied with Blood because they are out of danger of bleeding themselves have Voted that Capt. Plunkett and the Marquesse of of Ormond's Brother Prisoners in Ireland shall be brought to Tryall If the King's Party in imitation of their Cruelty shall put to death the Prisoners they have taken the Parliament will save their Arreares for their owne 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 Booke called 211. An Our crie of the young Men and Apprentises London concurring with those fasly called Levellors An outcrie of the young Men and Apprentises of London Or An Inquisition after the lost fundamentall Lawes and Liberties of England truly Pathetically setting forth the slavery misery danger of the Common Souldiery People of this Nation and the causes thereof well worth the reading About this time came forth an Act for sooth for the speedy raising and leavying money upon the Excite 212. Excise that is as the Act telleth you upon all and every Commodities Merchandizes 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 eate drinke weare or use as well in private houses as victualling houses ware-houses cellars shops c. as well what the Souldier devoures in Free-quarter upon us as otherwise under unheard-of penalties both pecuniary and personall to be paid and leavied with rigor And to make every mans house lie open to be searched by every prowling Rascall as often as he or they please 213. Foraigne Plantations The Traytors Tyrants and Thieves the Commons in Colonel Prides Parliament assembled are now againe frighted into a consideration of Foraigne 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 devide and subject the old and first Planters that if need be these reprobate Saints may come in upon their labors the better to accommodate themselves there In the Act for sale of the Kings Queens and Princes personall Estate they have given leave to their Agents the Commissioners to transport beyond sea that is to say to their owne Plantations under pretence of sale the rarest and choicest of the Kings Gods they heap up abundance of wealth by Excise Taxes Goldsmiths-hall Haberdashers-hall Sequestrations cousening the Souldiers c. That they may transport the whole wealth of the Land with them and leave England naked disarmed and oppressed with famine and disabled to pursue them for revenge or recovery of their losses 214. More Guifts to the Faction The said Commons are never wearied with exercising their bounty amongst their owne Faction out of the publique purse about 1300 l. to Col. Fielder to Scobell their Clerke heretofore a poore under-Clerke in the Chauncery who writ for 2d. a sheet besides an employment he hath already in the sale of publique Lands worth 1000 l. a yeare a Pension of 500 l. a yeare and a Noble Fee for every Copie of an Order taken forth toties quoties although most of their Orders containe not above three or four lines an extortion farre surmounting the Starre Chamber or Councell Table of which themselves so much complained the Diurnall tells you Numb 319. from Monday Sept. 3. to Monday Sept. 10. an Act was read for satisfying the sufferings of two Members who have been in the late Warre damnified many thousands these I conceive to be Sir Tho Iervys and Mr. Robert Wallope this satisfaction must be made out of the publique purse which must be filled by Taxes againe out of their private purses who have lost as well as they without satisfaction or hopes of satisfaction notwithstanding many Votes that all should be satisfied O Cromwell hath reduced the Officers in Col. Jones his Regiment and other Dublin Regiments 215. O Cromwell reduceth Iones own Regiment and other Regiments in Dublin Let Sir C. Coote and his Regiment in London-derry expect the like notwithstanding their valour fidelity shewne in raising the Siege of Dublin you see he will trust none but his owne immediate Creatures this Faction casts out all other men as Quicksilver spues out all other mettals Gold excepted so that by this and many other examples they may see that all their faithfull services and bloodshed are poured into the bottomlesse tub of oblivion as their Arreares are cast into the bottomlesse bagge of the Publique faith Sunday 9. Sept. 1649. 216. A violent irruption of the Parl Ianisaries upon the Protestants at Church in St. Peters Pauls-wharfe Sunday morne 9. Sept. 1649. At the Church of Saint Peters Pauls-wharfe Master Williams reading Morning Service out of the Booke of Common-prayer and having prayed for the KING as in that Liturgy established by Act of Parliament he is enjoyned Six Souldiers from Saint Pauls Church where they quarter came with Swords and Pistols cocked into the Church commanding him to come downe out of the Pulpit which Williams immediately did
after his Royall assent might have made themselves Masters of all the other Propositions vvithout his Consent so that this Treaty vvas but a flourish to dazle the eyes of the vvorld His Majesty therefore denied the 4. said Bills and thereby preserved the legall Interests of King Parliament People yet the Faction presently tooke a pretence and occasion thereupon to lay aside the King Ibidem sect 65 66 68 69 70 71 72 74 75. And my said Animadvers p. 10. And the 2 part of Englands new Ch by passing 4. Votes for no more Addresses to him and a Declaration against him vvhich vvere not passed vvithout many threats and more shevv of force then stood vvith the nature of a free Parliament the Army lying neere the Tovvne to back their Party the designe having been layd before hand betvveen Sir Henry Vane Iunior Sir Iohn ●velyn of VVilts Nath ●●●nnes Solicitor Saint Iohns and a select Committee of the Army I told you before the People had been throughly instructed formerly by the Army and their Agitators 2. part of England's new Ch discovered p. 4 5. That there could be no peace nor happinesse in England vvithout restoring the King to his just Rights and Prerogatives c. notvvithstanding vvhich the People novv found their hopes that vvay deluded by the Army and their Party vvho had cast off the King upon private discontents the true grounds vvhereof did not appeare and had obstructed all vvayes to Peace and Accommodation and made them dangerous and destructive to such as travailed peaceably in them vvitnesse the sad example of the Surrey-men Kent Essex and all to perpetuate their great Places of povver and profit The minds of the People therefore troubled vvith apprehension that our old Lavves and laudable forme of Government should be subverted and nevv obtruded by the povver of the Svvord sutable to the lusts and Intrests of these ambitious covetous Men and finding besides evident symptomes of a nevv VVarre approaching to consume that small Remainder vvhich the last VVarres had left grevv so impatient of vvhat they feared for the future and felt at present insupportable Taxes Free-quarter insolency of Souldiers Martiall Lavv Arbitrary Government by Committees and by Ordinances of Parliament changed and executed at the vvill and pleasure of the Grandees in stead of our setled and vvell approved Lavves that despaire thrust them head long into Armes in VVales Kent Essex Pontefract c and at the same time a cloud arising in Ireland a storme povvred in from Scotland and the Prince threatning a tempest from Sea these concurrences looked so black upon the Independent Grandees that they gave vvay to a second mock-Treaty in the Isle of VVight 2 Treaty in the Isle of VVight vvhich vvas the fruit of their covvardise and subtilty as appeares by Sergeant Nickolas a Creature of theirs vvho upon Saturday Octob. 28. 1648. moved in the House That the Lord Goring might be proceeded against as a new Delinquent out of mercy because he had Cudgelled them into a Treaty though novv they attribute all to the Kings corrupt Party in the tvvo Houses the Army likevvise kept a mock-fast or day of Humiliatîon at VVindsor to acknovvledge their sinnes and implore Gods mercy for their former disobedience to the Parliament in not Disbanding and their insolent Rebellion in Marching up in a Hostile and Triumphant posture against the Parliament and City August 6. 1647. promising more obedience hereafter and to acquiesce in the judgement of the Parliament and Declared Decl. Iune 14. 1647. That it was proper for them to act in their owne sphere as Souldiers and leave State affairs to the Parliament but this vvas done but to recover the good opinion of the people and City and to keep them from stirring and to stay the moderate Party of the tvvo Houses from Declaring the Army Enemies recalling and Voting their Commissions and established Pay voyde vvhich they might have done vvith ruine to the Army and their Party in that Conjuncture of Affaires and vvith safety to themselves and applause of all honest men of England that had taken part vvith the Parliament from the beginning had not some Grandees of the rigid Presbyterian party both vvithin and vvithout the Houses some cursed thing some Achans vvedge in their bosomes vvhich suggested Their sinnes vvere greater than could be forgiven and therefore they durst not cast dovvne the partition vvall betvveen them and the King this Army though it leane so hard upon them it is ready to overvvhelme them VVarre is necessary for some men of every Faction vvhose crying sinnes peace vvill lay open and naked to the scorne derision and detestation of the vvorld Hovv vvel these sanctimonious Svvord-players of the Army have observed the Duties Undertakings of their said Humiliation let the vvorld judge Have they not returned againe vvith the Dogge to the Vomit have they not cousened God and their ovvne Soules Sure they fasted from sinne then that they might sinne vvith the more greedy appetite novv and asked God forgivenesse of the old score that they might sinne againe upon a nevv score Thus you see the 2. Treaties in the Isle of VVight vvere begotten by feare and that Idol of the Independents to vvhich they offer up all their knaveries necessity They vvere Cocatrice Eggs layd by their Grandees vvhen they had been Crovv-trodden by Armies from abroad Tumults at home See my 1. part sect 65 66 105 106 107. and the Conclusions there Sect. 16 17 18 upon vvhich they sate abrood onely to hatch Scandals and nevv 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 Kingdome of the Brambles vvhich since doth scratch the vvool from off the skin the skin from off the flesh 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 vvhole mystery of the 2. Treaties vvith the King in the Isle of VVight vvith the causes efficient and finall of them under one vievv lest some one link of the chaine escaping your observation it become a Chaine of errors to you My first part of the History of Independency ends vvith that vvhich vvas but an unlucky preface to a Treaty vvith the King 3. Hamilton overthrovvne 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 vvherein he relates the number of the Scotish Forces farre differing from the former Report of Lieut. Col. Osborne a Scotish Gentleman made in the House of Commons Iuly 20. Sect. 110 111. vvhere of I have spocten in my first part vvho to take avvay the terror of them estimated Hamiltons and Langdales conjoyned Forces to be but 10000.
to demeane himselfe in the Treaty vvhich had formerly been Voted to be in the Isle of VVight vvith honour freedome and safety to His Majesty The Instructions vvere 1. That the King shouly enjoy the same liberty during this Treaty that He had at Hampton-Court 2. That no person excepted out of mercy none novv Imprisoned by the Parliament nor none novv in actuall Armes against the Parliament should be admitted to come to the King 3. That no foraine Agent should make any Addresse to Him without leave of both Houses Against these Instructions it vvas argued That some of them contradicted the former Votes That the King should Treat in Honour and Freedome and that He should enjoy the same Liberty He had at Hampton-Court which could not be so long as He was denied to correspond with other Princes His Allyes with vvhom He Vvas in league and amity by their Ambassadors and Agents a Royalty inseperable from the Crowne allovved Him at Hampton-Court and to deny it vvas implicitely to dethrone Him To vvhich vvas ansvvered That this vvas true of a King in actuall exercise of his Regall povver vvhich this King neither is nor ought to be untill He hath given satisfaction to His Parliament That it vvas agreat condescention in them and belovv the Dignity of a Parliament to recall their Votes of Non Addresse and put the businesse of the Treaty thus forvvard and if He vvould not accept of a Treaty upon such conditions as the Parliament thought fit then things vvould be but vvhere thy vvere The peaceable moderate Party perceiving vvhat operattion the Schotish Victory had already upon the fancies of those hot-headed Men Knevv they must speake mannerly and modestly for feare of correctson and must take vvhat they could since they could not have vvhat they vvould 4. That the King should give His Royall vvord not to remove out of the Island during the Treaty nor in 20. 7. The Earle of Warvvicks Letter to Derby-ho complaining of his Sea-men daies after vvithout consent of the tvvo Houses this vvas to make his chaines a linke or tvvo longer yet the King did give His Royall vvord accordingly Thursday Aug. 24. a Letter came to the Committee of Safety at Derby-house from the Earle of VVarvvicke complaining of the perversnesse of his ovvne Sea-men and that those vvith the Prince vvould not yet stoop to the Gods of Gold his ovvne vvords That some other vvay must be thought of besides force to undermine the Prince that since they had subdued their Enemies by Land it vvould be a good preparative to vvorke upon their Enemies by Sea vvith the same Engine You see these Saints having gotten the publique Purse into their hands are at the peoples costs and charges bountifull Corrupters of other mens faith having none of their ovvne About this time a nevv kind of pick-lock vvas invented to open the iron Chests and Counter Boards of the City 8. A Committee to make effectuall the Sale of Bishops-Lands and cajole the City and invite them to throvv more money after that they had cast avvay already in purchase of Bishops Lands namely a Committee to consider of a vvay to secure unto the Purchasers the Money they had already disbursed upon the said Lands and to remove all impediments in the Sale for time to come To vvhich Col. Harvey said That he had experience in the late defection of the City that the Men most backvvards in the Parliaments service vvere such of the Presbyterians as had no engagement upon Bishops Lands vvhereas others of the same Party that have interest in the same Lands are as forvvard as any the best affected Here you see vvhat it is that chaines the affections of the Cite to this Parliament and vvhat it is that divides them amongst themselves self-respects makes them run along blind fold vvith the Grandees in any designe or faction A good bargaine makes a bad Man Harvey needs no other president but himself nor no more visible monument then his exceeding cheap bargaine of Fulham-house and Manour vvhich hath changed him from a furious Presbyter to a Bedlam Independent About this time it vvas Ordered 9. A Commission into the North to enquire what dammages they have sustained by the Scotish Invasion That Commissions should be issued forth into the Northerne Counties to enquire vvhat Damages they have anny vvaies sustained by Hamilton's Invasion This device vvas of a tvvofold use 1. To cut off the Scots demands for Mony due to them for their last Brotherly assistance and otherwise 2. To cajole the poore Country into a beliefe they shall have reparations against the Scots and raise them into a clamorous complaint against the Scots and at last a deadly seude vvhen they shall find their hopes denied by them and disappointed In the meane time they are patiently eaten up vvith Taxes and Free-quarter and vvhile they looke for vvhat they shall never have they lose vvhat they have already This vvas the much applauded invention of Master St. Iohns of Lincolns-Inne 10. Colchester surrendred vvith the sequele thereof About this time the nevves of the Surrender of Colchester inflamed the Antimonarchicall faction from a Feaver to a frantick Calenture They yeilded to mercy and vvithin 4 hovvers after Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisle for the better explanation vvhat Independent mercy is vvere shot to death some attribute it to an old quarrell betvveen him and Generall Fairfax others think it vvas done to put an affront upon the King and the Treaty Colonel Farre vvas likevvise condemned by the Councell of VVarre at the same time but is reprieved as a vvitnesse against the Earle of VVarvvicke vvhen time serves for vvhen VVarvvicke long since vvaited at the Commons Dore vvith some Ladies to petition for a Reprieve for the Earle of Holland a Souldier of the Guard insolently told him He had more need petition for himselfe 11. Instructions for the Commissioners to Treat with his Majesty Instructions for the Commissioners to Treat vvith the King vvere Debated The Independents propounded that those Propositions that were most advantagious to the Parliament should be first debated and if the King did not confirme them all the Treaty to breake off But it vvas held unreasonable in any Treaty that one Party should bind himselfe before the Conclusion and leave the other at large and himselfe in the lurch so it vvas Ordered They should be Treated of in order as they lay and according to His Majesties desire nothing binding to either Party untill all was agreed of The next stumbling block cast in the vvay vvas that seeing 40 daies only were allowed for to Treat that thy should limit how many daies and no more should be spent in Treating upon every severall Proposition But this vvas looked upon as a cavill to make void the Treaty and so over-ruled you see vvhat use these men that gaine by VVarre make of their Victories 12. A Debate what Gentl should be allowed to
their liberty and subjected to him and then God who only hath power of life death invests the King with power to be the Minister of God to execute vengeance not bearing the Sword in vain Rom 13. See Dr. Hammonds Letter to the L. Fairfax Ian. 5. 1648. Saint Peter bids us Submit to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake vvhether it be to the King as supreme or unto Governours as those that are sent by him As free and not using your liberty for a cloake of malitiousnesse but Feare God Honour the King But these rebellious Saints abusing Christian liberty for a cloake of malitiousnesse vvill according to their 4th Antimonarchicall Principle make the giddy ignorant tumultuous many-headed multitude Iudges of their King and make the confused Rabble his Superiours thereby setting up tvvo Superiours one contradictory to the other and so turn the Kingly Government into a popular Military Government abolish our Lavves and leave all to the povver of the Svvord in an Arbitrary vvay to carry on their designe to vvhich purpose they have lately caused their Iourney-men the present House of Commons to Vote contrary to our knovvne Lavves That the Supreme Authority of this Nation is in the People of England and therefore in themselves as their Representative This is a 6. Anarchicall Principle of the Army and their Party vvho vvanting reason to prove it assert it by the Authority of their Mock-Parliament and must novv make it good by the Svvord to justifie their proceedings against the King and People These popular principles are meer empty notions vvhereby the Grandees dravv the Supreme Authority thorovv the People to themselves the better to enslave them for the liberty of the Commons doth not consist in a licentiousnesse to interrupt the Government of their Superiours and change the Government according to their fancies but the liberty of the People consists in enjoying the fruits of their labours their goods possessions estates and their personall liberty according to the knovvne Lavves of the Land VVhen Harry Martyn in Berksh forbade the People to stand bare at the Sessions and doe homage and fealty to their Lords he gulled them and gave them that vvhich vvas not their due to rob them of that vvhich vvas their due their Horses Goods Money plundered from them for service of the State forsooth and beat them that defended their ovvn so that vvhile he flattered them to be the supreme Authority and Lords Paramount and the Parliament to be their Servants he used them like Slaves conquered by the Parliament Besides it is not all the People nor the thousandth part of them but a fevv covetous ambitious men that desire to bring the King to capitall punishment and subvert our fundamentall Government and Lavves that have usurped the povver of the Kingdome into the hands of their Faction and novv require this to keep themselves from being called to account The second demand tends to Dis-inherit his Posterity viz. That the Prince and Duke of Yorke come in by a day appointed and acquite themselves of their capitall Delinquency or else to be Declared incapable of Government and to die without mercy if afterwards found in the Kingdome this Summons is but to insinuate their guilt if they refuse to appeare as reason tells us they must and vvill This is to shut the dore after Monarchy and keep it out for ever in farther pursuance they demand the Revenue of the Crowne to continue still in Hucksters hands to pay publique Debts and repaire the Losses of the People that is themselves The second sort of Propositions are for setling of the Kingdome upon their ovvne Grounds and Interest That a certaine period be set to this Parliament by which time the Supreme trust in them may returne unto the People that is still to themselves and their Faction the nevv erected Committee of State the hogen mogens at VVhite-hall Thus you see having removed out of the vvay the King the first and most visible legall Authority they vvil novv put dovvne the Parliament the second visible Authority of England vvho are novv the onely Bulvvarke against the Tyranny of the Svvord and then as Major VVhite said at Putney long since there vvil be no visible Authority left in England but the povver of the Svvord vvich vvil introduce a nevv Parliament or rather fantasticall nevv invented Representative destructive to Parliaments all of their ovvne Creatures as appeares by their next Proposition concerning succession of Parliaments 2. That none shall be capable of Electing This is so exdlained by the Moderate one of the raling Pen men of the faction who hath a large share in the 500. or 600 l. a yeare allowed to these Pamphletiers for divulging State lies and slanders amongst the People who from Novemb. 14. to Novemb. 21. 1648. Number 19. defineth the People of England to be onely such as have not engaged for the King and such as shal signe to the Agreement of the People vvhich is to be above Law and all the rest are to be Disfranchised or being Elected that have engaged against the publique Interest that is the Interest of them and their Party as appeares by their 5. Anarchicall Principles in the beginning of this Paragraph nor any that oppose this Agreement By vvhat Authority but the arbitrary svvay of the Svvord shall Free-men be Disfranchised and lose their Birth-rights for not changing the fundamentals of Parliaments Government and Lavv and yeilding them up to the lusts of an Army of Rebels that bragge they have Conquered the Kingdome and vve are their Slaves 3 That Elections may be so distributed as to render the House of Commons a Representtative of the vvhole People that is tagge and ragge and Canting Beggers vvho have nothing to give or lose as vvell as Free-holders so farevvel VVrits of Summons and all orderly legall formes if all men vvithout any distinction may Elect and be Elected all vvill fall into confusion the Rabble vvill never agree all things vvill tend to Riots and Tumults so that the better and soberer sort vvill and must forbeare and leave all in the hands of the Rascallity and at last no Representative vvill be chosen or such an one as the People vvill be ashamed to ovvne and vvill desert them and leave them to be ordered at the pleasure of the Army 4. Prop. That our Kings hereafter may be Elective and disclaime a Negative Voice hovv frequent Civill VVarres are in all Elective Kingdomes during the interregnum or space betvveen the death of the old and choice of the nevv King hovv obnoxious to the Souldiery let the old Emperours of Rome those later of Germany the Kingdome of Poland heretofore Bohemia and Hungary tell all Histories are full of examples yet if our Elective Kings shall have neither the Militia nor a Negative Voice in Councels and the Crovvne Revenues be othervvise disposed of as is inferred and their Heads exposed to the humours ol the People or their Representative
and fundamentall 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 VVard 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 vvhole yeare and be uncapable of any of the said Places yet novv these petty Fellovves keepe the vvhole City in avve 39. Yet this Agreement since inserted into the Remonstrance of the Army owned by the Generall and Councell of VVarre and Nov. 20. 1648. obtruded upon the House These multiplied Votes and Ordinance laid this Agreement of the People asleep untill the beginning of November 1648. vvhen to hinder the peace of this Kingdome and reliefe of Ireland the Iesuits and Agitators prosecuted it againe in the Army and inserted it againe verbatim in the Remonstrance of the Army Novemb 20. 1648. to breake off the Treaty with the King bring him to capitall punishment and cast the odium of all upon the Parliament And the Generall and his Councell 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 vvhen 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 vvhen the House at last closed up the Treaty vvith this Vote That the Kings Answers to the Propositions of both Houses were a ground for the Houses to proceed upon towards a setlement 40. VVhy they purged the House They seized upon 41. Members of Parliament secured them and villanously treated them secluded above 160. and frighted avvay at least 40. or 50. more leaving onely their ovvne Somerset-house Iunto of 40. or 50. thriving Members sitting to Vnvote in a thin House under a force vvhat had been voted in a full and free House To vote dovvne 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 capitall punishment before a nevv invented illegall mixed Court consisting of engaged Persons erected for that purpose that hath neither foundation by prescription nor Lavv and to erect a Councell or Committee of States out of their number in the nature of Lords States Generall or Hogen Mogens vvith an unknovvn and therefore unlimited Authority to continue in being after the dissolution of this Parliament So farevvel Kings Lords and Commons Religion Lavves and Liberties and all Votes Declarations Remonstrances Protestation and Covenant made heretofore only to gull the People and carry on their designe About 19. 41. Diverse Lords doe homage to the Generall and wave their honours Decemb. divers Lords vvent to doe homage to the Generall to expresse their good affections to him and their concurrence vvith him for the common good and their readinesse to vvave 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 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 vvrongfully or hath assisted the King against the Parliament in the first or second VVarre or hath been aiding or assisting in bringing 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 vvithin the Cities of London and VVestminster or the Counties of Kent Essex Middlesex or Surrey shall he 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 vvithin the City for the yeare ensuing or be capable to give his voice for chusing any Person to any the Offices aforesaid And that if any Persons comprehended under the aforesaid exceptions being chosen shall presume to sit in the Court of Aldermen Common-Councell or execute any of the aforesaid Offices he shall forfeit 200. And all such Elections to be null and void the Lord Mayor to take order that this Ordinance be read at all Elections and punctually observed and also to afford the liberty of the Pole it being required by any of the Electors present But this Ordinance not giving full satisfaction to the Zealots Skippon stood up Skippon moveth for an Addition to the said Ordinance and looking as demurely as if he meant to say Grace he told the House That the late Ordinance was not sufficient to keep Malignants out of Office in London for Mr. Speaker said he It is not enough to exclude Delinquents or the Abettors of the late Insurrections c. for there are a more dangerous sort of men amongst them They which promoted the Treaty and endeavoured to have the King brought to London except these be made incapable of Authority it will be a great discouragement to the Godly party of the City So an additionall Ordinance to this end vvas ordered to be brougth in you see to endeavour peace and setlement is accounted by these Saints militant a sufficient crime to forfeit a mans Brith-right 43. The Members subscribe Iohn Gourdons Protestation sect 29. I formerly told you of Iohn Gourdons motion That all Members might subscribe a Protestation against the Votes for a Treaty with the King in the Isle of VVight and especially against the Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. vvhich declareth That His Majesties Answers to the Propositions of both Houses were a ground for the two Houses to proceed to a setlement and untill such dissent or disapprovall to forbeare the House This vvas done in obedience to the demands of the Army in their Remonstrance presented 20. Sect. 23. Novemb. 1648. And although it be so clearly against the Orders and Priviledges of Parliament that divers Members formerly and some this Parliament have been suspended the House and committed to the Tovver for offering it because it tends to breed factions and divisions in the House and Tumults vvithout dores yet every request from an Armed man is a Command and must be obeyed The List of the Names of these nevv Protestants follovveth and it is hoped they vvill in time give better Reasons then the power of the Swo●d for it 20. December 1648. subscribed The Lord L●ste Col. Boswell Io Gourdon Lord Gray Peregrine Pelham Col. Iones Col. Temple Col. Ven Sir Tho Malevourer Sir Thomas VVrot●e Sir Io Bourcher Col. Peter Temple Humphry E wards vvho vvaited on the King to the House vvhen he demanded the 5 Members and his Election is adjudged void by a Committee Mr Tho Challoner Sir Gregory Norton
to his Officers to know what they had against him Who it seemes act all things without his privity and steere all the Armies present counsels and designes according to their absolute wills The publique Declaration and Protestation of William Pryn of Lincolnes Iune Esquire Against his present Restraint and the present destructive Councels and Iesuiticall proceedings of the Generall Officers and Army I William Pryn a Member of the House of Commons and Free-man of England who have formerly suffer'd 8. years Imprisonment four of them close three in exile three Pillories the losse of my Eares Calling Estate for the vindicating of the Subjects just Rights and Liberties against the arbitrary tyranny and injustice of King and Prelats and defence of the Protestant Religion here established spent most of my strength and studies in asserting the Peoples just freedome and the power and priviledges of Parliament against all Opposers and never received one farthing by way of damages gift or recompence or the smallest benefit or preferment whatsoever for all my sufferings and publick services Doe here solemely declare before the most just and righteous God of Heaven and Earth the Searcher of all hearts the whole Kingdome English Nation and the World that having according to the best of my skill and judgment faithfully discharged my trust and duty in the Commons House upon reall grounds of Religion Conscience Iustice Law prudence and right reason for the speedy and effectuall setlement of the peace and safety of our three distracted bleeding dying Kingdomes on Monday Dec. 4. I was on Wednesday morning following the 6 of this instant going to the House to discharge my duty on the Parliament staires next the Commons dore forcibly seized upon by Col. Pride Sir Hardresse Waller and other Officers of the Army who had then beset the House with strong Guards and whole Reg of Horse and Foot haled violently thence into the Queens Court notwithstanding my Protestation of breach of priviledge both as a Member and a Freeman by a meere usurped tyrannicall power without any lawfull Authority or cause assigned and there forcibly detained Prisoner with other Members there restained by them notwithstanding the Houses double demand of my present enlargement to attend its service by the Sergeant and that night contrary to faith and promise carried Prisoner to Hell and there shut up all night with 40. other Members without any lodging or other accommodations contrary to the known Priviledges of Parl. the fundamentall Laws of the Realm and liberty of the Subject which both Houses the 3. Kingdoms the Generall with all Officers and Soldiers of the Army are by soleme Covenant and duty obliged inviolably to maintaine Since which I have without any lawfull power or authority been removed and kept Prisoner in severall places put to great expences debarred the liberty of my Person calling and denied that hereditary freedome which belongs to me of right both as a Free-man a Member an eminent sufferer for the publike a Christian by these who have not the least shadow of authority or justice to restraine me and never yet objected the least cause for this my unjust restraint I do therefore hereby publickly protest against all these their proceedings as the highest usurpation of an arbitrary and tyrannicall power the greatest breach of faith trust Covenant priviledges of Parliam and most dangerous encroachment on the Subjects liberties and Law of the Land ever practised in this Kingdome by any King or Tyrant especially by pretended Saints who hold forth nothing but justice righteousnesse liberty of conscience and publick freedome in all their Remonstrances whiles they are triumphantly trampling them all under their armed iron feet And doe further hereby appeal to and summon them before all the Tribunals and powers in heaven and earth for exemplary justice against them who cry out so much for it against others lesse tyrannicall oppressive unjust and fedifragus to God and men than themselves And doe moreover remonstrate that all their present exorbitant actings against the King Parl. present Government their new modled Representative are nothing else but the designs projects of Iesuits Popish Priests and Recusants who bear chief sway in their Councels to destroy and subvert our Religion Lawes Liberties Government Magistracy Ministry the present and all future Parl. the King his Posterity and our 3. Kingdomes yea the Generall Officers and Army themselves and that with speedy and inevitable certainty to betray them all to our forraigne 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 forraigne 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 Iesuiticall disloyall bloudy present Counsels 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 Kingdomes 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. Ianuary Num. 283. 27. Decemb. The Councell of Warre who manage the businesse in relation to the King saith the Diurnall ordered That all state and ceremony should be forborne to the King and his Attendants lessened to mortifie him by degrees and worke Him to their desires 52. Cromwels Sp. in the Ho when it was first propounded to trie the King When it was first moved in the House of Commons to proceed capitally against the King Cromwell stood up and told them That if any man moved this upon designe he should thinke 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 sudaine to give them counsel this blessing of his proved a curse to the King 53. The Ordinance for electing Com Councel men confirmed 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 illegall as they please to miscall them Oathes of Allegiance Supremacy and other Oathes usually administred to Officers Free-men c. of the City The 28. Decemb. Tho Scot brought in the Ordinance for Triall of the King it was read and recommitted three severall times 54. The Ordinance for Triall of His Majesty passed
the Iewes Petition The last damnable Designe of Cromwel and Ireton and their junto or Caball intended to be carried on in their Generall Councell of the Army and by journey-men in the House of Commons vvhen they have engaged them desperately in sinne past all hope of retreat by murdering the King MAjor VVhite a Member of the Army long since at Putney fortetold That shortly there vvould be no other povver in England but the povver of tee Svvord and VVil Sedgvvick in his Booke called justice upon the Armies Remonstrance saith The Principle of this Army is To breake the Powers of the Earth to pieces and Iohn Lilburne in his Plea for Common Right pag. 6. saith The Army by these extraordinary proceedings have overturned all the visible Supreme Authority of this Nation that is they have and vvill by seizing upon the Members of Par dissolving it and setting up a nevv invented Representative and bring the King to capitall punishment and dis-inheriting His Posterity subvert the Monachicall Government and Parliaments of this Kingdome the Lavves and Liberties of the People and so by bringing all to Anarchy and confusion put the vvhole Government of the Land under the Arbitrary povver of the Svvord In order to vvhich they have and vvill overturne the Government of the City of London by a Lord Mayor and Aldermen and Governerne it by Commissioners and a schismaticall Common Councell of Anabaptists illegally chosen and deprive them of their Charter of Incorporation and Franchises and this shall be a leading case to all the Corporations of England Their next designe is to Plunder and Dis-arme the City of London and all the Country round about thereby to disable them to rise vvhen the Army removes but not to the use of the Souldiers although they greedi●y expect the first VVeek in February the time appointed from vvhom they vvill reedeeme the Plunder at an easie rate and so sell it in bulk to the Ievves vvhom they have lately admitted to set up their banks and magazins of Trade amongst us contrary to an Act of Parliament for their banishment and these shall be their Merchants to buy off for ready money to maintaine such VVarres as their violent proceedings will inevitably bring upon them not onely all Sequestred and Plundred goods but also the very Bodies of Men VVomen and Children whole Families taken Prisoners for sale of whom these Iewish Merchants shall keep a constant traffique with the Turks Moores and other Mahometans the Barbadus and other English Plantations being already cloyed with VVelch Scottish Colchester and other Prisoners imposed by way of sale upon the Adventurers and this is the meaning of Hugh Peters threat to the London Ministers That if another VVarre followed they will spare neither Man VVoman nor Child For the better carrying on of which Designe the said Caball or Iunto keep a strict correspondency with Ovven Roe Oneale the bloudy Popish Antimonarchicall Rebell in Ireland and the Popes Nuntio there The Antimonarchicall Marquesse of Argyle in Scotland the Parisian Norman and Picarde Rebels in France and the Rebel King of Portugall If danger be not held so close to your eyes that you cannot discerne it looke about you English But this Kingdome is not to be saved by Men that will saue themselves Nothing but a Private hand and a Publique spirit can redeeme it 63. Master Pryns second Letter to the Generall The 3. Ian. 1648. Master Pryn sent a Letter to the Generall demanding vvhat kind of Prisoner and vvhose he vvas as follovveth * To the Honourable Thomas Lord Fairfax Generall of the present Army these present My Lord IT is novv a full Months space since I vvith other Members of the Commons House have been forcibly apprehended and kept Prisoner by some of your Officers and Marshall against the Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject the Lavves and Statutes of the Realme and all rules of justice conscience and right reason vvithout the least shadovv of Authority or any cause at all yet made knovvne to me of vvhich vvere there any neither God nor man ever yet made your Lordship or your Officers Iudges I therefore desire to knovv from your Lordship vvhat kind of Prisoner I am and vvhose If a Prisoner of peace neither your Lordship nor your Officers are any Iustices of peace or Civill Magistrates in this place to restraine me for any civil crime vvere I guilty of it much lesse vvithout proof or hearing in case I vvere no Member but being neither guilty nor accused of any such crime and a Member too no Magistrate can nor ought to imprison me upon any pretext at least vvithout the Houses licence first obtained If a Prisonner of VVarre vvhich I cannot probably be being never in Arms and apprehended neer the Commons House dore going peaceably and unarmed thither to discharge my duty then you and your Officers thereby acknovvledge That you have levied VVarre against the Parliament and its Members and vvhat capitall offence this is and vvhat a punishment it deserves I need not informe your Lordship or your Councell vvho have for this very crime condemned and shot some to death as Traytours and demanded speedy justice and execution for it upon the King himselfe I have but one thing more to trouble your Lordship vvith and that is to demand vvhose Prisoner I am having yet seen no VVarrant nor Order from your selfe or your Officers for my restraint though I have oft demanded it of your Marshall If your Lordships Prisoner there appearing yet no legall Authority cause or VVarrant for my restraint I must then crave so much justice from your Lordship being but a Subject and not yet paramount all Lavves to order your Attourney to give an Appearance for you in the Kings bench the first returne of the next Tearme to an action of false Imprisonment for this my unjust restraint vvhich I intend by Gods assistance effectually to prosecute If your Officers Prisoner onely and not yours vvhich I conceive vvho yet abuse your name and authority herein though it be a rule in Lavv Divinity too Qui non prohibet malum quod potest jubet yet I shall be so just as to set the saddle upon the right horse and commence my action onely against such of your Officers vvho have been most active in my Imprisonment for damage and reparations vvhich if there be any justice remaining under Heaven I doubt not but I shall recover in Gods due time in this publique cause vvhich so highly concernes the honour fredome and Priviledges of Parliament and Subjects Liberties for defence and maintenance vvhereof as I have hitherto spent my strength adventured my life body liberty and estate so shall I novv againe engage them all and all the friends and interests I have in heaven and earth rather then they shall suffer the least diminution prejudice or eclipse by my stupid patience under this unjust captivity though I can as vvillingly forgive and put up private injuries
vvhen the publique is not concerned as any man All vvhich I thought meet to informe your Lordship of vvhom I am heartily sorry to see so much dishonoured abused and misled by rash ill-advised Officers and dangerous destructive and I dare say jesuiticall councels to the Parliaments dissipation the Kingdomes prejudice Irelands losse most good mens and Ministers grief your best Friends astonishment your Enemies and the Papists triumph our Religions scandall and your ovvne dishonour vvhich I beseech you as an English-man a Christian a Professor of piety and Religion a Souldier a Generall to lay sadly to your heart as the earnest request of From my Prison at the Sign of the Kings-head in the Strand 3 Ianu 1648. Your Lordships faithfull Friend and Monitor VVilliam Pryn. * An additionall Postscript WE read Luke 3.14 that vvhen the Souldiers demanded of Iohn Baptist saying and what shall we doe he said unto them Doe violence to no man or put no man in feares neither accuse any falsly and be content with your allowance not imprison depose or murther Kings pull dovvne Parliaments imprison violently shut out and drive avvay Parliament-men and then lay all false accusations and scandals upon them to colour your violence subvert Kingdomes alter States breake all bonds of Lavves Oaths Covenants Obligations Engagements to God and Men usurp all civill military and Ecclesiasticall povver and the Kings Royall Palaces into your ovvne hands as supreme Lords and Kings raise vvhat nevv forces and leavie vvhat nevv Taxes you please take up vvhat Free-quarters and Houses seize and plunder vvhat publick Treasuries monies you please without Commission or Authority obey niether God nor Man neither Parliament nor Magistrate and be content with nothing but alter and subvert all things These are Saint Peters new Doctrines and Revelations to our Officers and Souldiers now those Jesuits who lurk amongst them not Iohn the Baptist whose Canonicall advice is now rejected as Apocryphall even among the Army Saints who preferre every ignis fatuus though from Doway or Rome it selfe before this burning and shining old light and are guided onely by a new minted law of pretended providence or necessity of their owne forging and not by the revealed will law of God the sacred light whereof their present works of darknesse dare not approach lest they should be reproved condemned by them But some 43. Actions of false imprisonment by the imprisoned 150. Actions of the Case by the secluded Members brought against these domineering lawlesse Officers Grandees of the Army wherein good Damages will be recovered some 12. Indictm of High Treason against them for laying violent hands upon the Kings Person the Members and leavying Warre against the Parliament will teach them more obedience humility modesty than either Iohn Baptist Saint Paul Saint Peter or Saint Peters will doe and be like Gideon thornes and briars of discipline to these men of Succoth with whom no faire meanes will prevaile who might have learned so much law and justice from an Heathen Souldier and Governour Festus Acts 25.27 It seemeth unto me unreasonable to send much more to commit a Prisoner and not withall to signifie the crimes layd against him and come short of that ingenuity of the heathenish chief Captaine who seized upon Paul thereby to appease the Tumult at Hierusalem Acts 22.27 29. who as soone as ever Paul told him he was a Roman Free-borne then straight way they departed from him who should have examined him and the chiefe Captaine also was affraid after he knew that he was a Roman and because he had bound him And should not false imprisoning of a Parliament-man Free-born English-man be as formidable to our chiefe Captaines being a Christian I say sworne and vowed to defend the Houses Priviledges and Members Persons as the Imprisonment of a Roman was to this chiefe Captaine they as ingenious and just as he who shall rise up in judgement against them and condemn them at the last I shall close up all with this observation That as the most glorious Angels in Heaven when they fell through pride and ambition as most conceive became the very foulest Devils in Hell so the most resplendent seeming hypocriticall Saints when they fall through the like sinnes and have power in their hands become the most incarnate Devils and Monsters of treachery and tyranny upon earth exceeding Turkes and Pagans therein of which we have now sad experience in our Army-Saints who every day aggravate and yet justifie their impieties exorbitances 2 Chron. 28.11 Now heare me therefore and deliver the Captives again which ye have taken Captives of your Brethren for the fierce wrath of God is upon you Will Pryn. 64. Another forg'd Letter endeavoured to be fastned upon Sheriff Brovvne The Saints having nothing to say against Major Gen Browne unlesse they should accuse him for being true to King Parliament City Kingdome to all the first declared Principles of this Parliament fell to their old trick to fasten another counterfeit Letter upon him wherefore a Man coming to S. Iames's where he was then imprisoned desired in the hearing of all present to speake with him in private Major G. Browne told him He was not for private conference bade him speake openly then the Fellow presented a Letter to him saying It was from the Prince but Maj G. Browne remembring the like trick put upon him before called for the Guard to apprehend him when presently the Messenger threw te Letters into the fire and the Marshall catching them out halve burnt affirmeth He saw Charles Prince written upon them Sanctified eyes may see through the spectacles of their owne fantasie what they please to accomplish their Designe therefore they have a new principle or light which as the 7. May be added to the aforesaid 6. that though they have no proofs nor evidence against a man yet if in their cōsciences they think him guilty they may condemne him upon the testimony of their owne consciences this is to condemn by Revelation such whose bloud they desire to sucke This supposed Messenger from the Prince was seized by the Guard but no proceedings against him heard of which argues it was but a snare set to catch the Major About this time to second this device a Man gallantly clothed and mounted comes to the Beare in the Strand 65. Another more generall forgery to endanger vvhom the Faction please It vvill be proved that divers VVitnesses have beē practised tampered vvith against Mr. Brovvne and others gives the Hostler a Peece bids him have a care of his Horse then goes into the City the plot being forelayd was taken there with Letters subscribed with the Princes name to divers Citizens Members against whom they want matter of accusation I heare no more of this matter yet this is a device dormant to be awakened hereafter if any shall oppose the present actings of the
all Orders p. 8. 13. 41. 43. 44. 49. 51. 61 64. ●6 9● 623. 69● 879. Appendix pag. 15. 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 Nationall Covenant they vowed to defend the Kings Person and Authority in preservation of true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdome 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 owne hands robbing both King Lords the rest of your fellow Members thereof whom you are content should be violently shut out by your Army who have leavied Warre against the Parliament to dissolve it till the removall of which force and restoring your Members with freedome and safety you ought not to sit or Act by your Armies owne doctrine in their Remonstrance Aug. 18. by the Declaration and Ordinance of both Houses Aug. 20. 1647. Also 15. E. 3. n 5. 17. E. 3. n. 2. 6. 18. E. 3. n. 1. 2. 5. c. ● 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. 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. 3. 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 Houses were full 7. You have neither Law nor president for what you doe Edw. 2. Rich. 2. were forced by Mortimer and H. 4. to resigne their Crowns in a formall way one to his Sonne 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 Reigne 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 vvithout hearing them See Mr. Io Grere●s Ans to that silly Sophister Io Goodvvin called Might overcomming right Ian. 11. 1648. The House read the Answer of the Generall Counsell of the Army concerning the secured 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. Ian. 1648. with much adoe got printed their Vindication against the Aspersions 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 summe whereof is as followeth By the Preamble of this Answer by the Proposals of the 6. Decemb. and the late Declaration and Remonstrance therein cited 73. The sec secl Mem. Defence aginst the scandalous An of the C of VV it appeares this designe to breake 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 selfe irregular and not justifiable but by honest intentions and extraordinary necessity the weaknesse of which Answer we must examine but first must state the case between 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 Kingdome 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 solemne 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 the Parliament and the Liberties of the Kingdome and defend the Kings Person and Authority in defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdome they being under the said trusts and Oath march up to Westminster contrary to order in a hostile way forcibly secured secluded drove away many of the Members the Question is Whether this Action be Iustifiable upon pretence of Honest intentions and Necessity Their good intentions cannot be known but by their expressions and actions and they referre us to their Proposals Declarations and Remonstrances where we find their desires are 1. To take away the Kings life 2. To take away the lives of the Prince and the Duke of Yorke at least to dis-inherit both them and all the Kings Children 3. To put a period to this Parliament 4. To set up a new Representative of their owne which takes away all Parliaments 5. To have an Elective King if any These are their Honest intentiōs for publique good which must come in to justice their waging warre against their Masters this Parliament To name them is to confute them as being apparently against the Lawes of God and the Land under which they live which they are engaged to maintaine we shall produce no other Witnesses to prove this but themselves On the 15. of Novemb. 1647. The Agreement of the People which is lower in demands than these which they call Honest intentions for publique good was condemned by the Army The promoting it in the Army judged mutinous and capitall Col Rainsborough and Major Scot complained of in the House for appearing in it and the Paper it self adjudged by the House destructive to Government and the being of Parliaments The second pretence or Principle is Extraordinary Necessity for the same end To this we say 1. The Army made the same plea of necessity in their Remonstrance Iune 23. 1647. upon quite contrary grounds to what they expresse now both to justifie the same violent proceedings against the Parliament then when the King was seized upon by a Party of the Army without Order from the House the Army advanced against the Parliament They say in their Letter to the House Iuly 8. 1647. There have been several Officers of the Army upon severall occasions sent to his Majesty the first to present to Him a Copy of the Representations and after that same others to tender Him a Copy of the Remonstrance upon both which the Officers sent were appointed to cleer the Sence and intentions of any thing in either Turne back to sect 2 and see my Aniadvers upon the Army 20. Nov 1648. p. 4 5 6 7. Paper whereupon His Majesty might make any Question There the Army Treated with the King yet now they offer violence to the Parliament for Treating with the King Then in their Remonstrance 25. Iune
1647. they say We clearly professe we doe not see how there can be any peace to this Kingdome firme and lasting without a due consideration of and provision for the Rights quiet and immunities of His Majesties Royall Family and His late Partakers now they judge the majority of the House corrupt for moving one step towards a peace with the King The Parliam thought it not reasona●le the King should be sole Iudge of publick necessity in case of Ship-mony Return to sect is where I set downe 6. of their Principles though He hath now granted more to them then all the Armies Proposals then demanded of Him Thus they make this generall plea of necessity serve to justifie the considerations which they are put to by making themselves Judges of those things they have no calling to meddle with for by what Authority are they Judges of publique Necessity 2. This Principle Necessity is destructive to all Government for as the Generall Officer urgeth necessity for acting against the commands and Persons of his Superiours and arrogates to be Judge of that Necessity the Inferiour may urge the same Necessity in his judgement to act against the commands of his Generall The Souldiers gainst their Officers any other 20000. men in this Kingdome against this Army and this Army as against this Parliament so against any other Representative or Government and so in infinitum 3. The Commons in Parliament are not accountable for the use of their trust to any but the House The Commons have their Authority from the VVrit of Election though their electiō from the people See the VVrit Crompton's Iurisdict of Courts Tit Parliament being Trustees of the People not by Delegation but by translation all the power of the people being transferred to them for advising votinq assenting according to their judgments not according to the judgments of those that sent them for otherwise the parties electing and those elected differing in judgement one might protest against what the other had done and so make void all Acts of Parliament But if their Acts were valid or void at the Electors judgements yet were the Members onely accountable to them that sent them not to Strangers and in no case to the Army who are themselves but in subordinate trust to the Parliament for their defence 4. This violence upon the Members is not onely contrary to the Armies trust but against their Covenant and Protestation the breach whereof being a morrall evill cannot be made good by honest intentions and necessity The particulars of the said Generall Officers Answer upon which this pretended Necessity is grounded are six but we must first take notice what is said from the end of the 2. pag. to the end of the 5. before we enter upon them the summe is That by the endevors of some old Malignant Members In all nevv Elections there were 2. Indepēdents chosen for one of any other principles Indepēdents vvere thē Commissioners for the Great Seale ●●d livered VVrits to men of their ovvne Party vvho had the adv●ntage to keep them and chuse their ovvne time to deliver them and Souldiers under colour of keeping the peace became great Sticklers in Elections and by practises used in new Elections there came in a floud of new Burgesses that either are Malignant or Neuters To this we say what is done by the majority is the Act of the whole House and what is done against the majority is done against the whole House nor was the Ordinance for New Elections carried on by old Malignants unlesse the major part of the House were alwaies such before the new Elections It is not hard to shew that many of the Officers of the Army came in upon the last Elections where chosen by those places where they are scarce known upon what influence therefore they came in let the world judge And now for the said 6. particulars objected The Army betrayed Ireland by their disobedience They vvould neither go for Ireland themselves nor suffer others to go 1. part sect 16. 55.57 1. The betraying of Ireland into the Enemies hands by recalling the Lord Lysle from his command there and putting the best part of the said Kingdome and where the Parliament had the strongest footing Munster into the hands of Inchiquine a Natavi Irish who hath since Revolted from the Parliament hath lately united with the Irish Rebels and with them and Ormond for the King To this we say the Lord Inchiquine came in and brought Munster to the Parliament and preserved their Interest in Ireland in all the heat of their Warres in England when they had little other Interest there This Lo vvent late carried over 160000 l. for vvhich he hath not yet accounted began a quarrell vvith In hiquine put him into discontent then returned See the Irish Letters Papers to the House in print and lesse meanes to relieve them the Lord Lysle was not recalled from his Command there but his Commission for Lord Lieutenant expiring 15. April 1647. on the 17. April he hoysed sayle for England after the Lord Lysles returne for England the Lord Inchiquine did gallant service against the Rebels tooke many strong Holds from them and won the Battle of Knocke-knowes one of the greatest that ever was gotten of the Rebels The House therefore approved of his behaviour untill 3. April 1648. when the Army having led the way the Lord Inchiquine taking distast thereat by way of imitation began to enter into Engagements and Remonstrances against the Parliament as it was then constituded for which he made the Remonstrances Engagements and Declarations of the Army the Summer before both the cause and precedent as by the printed Relation doth appeare 2. Their endeavours to bring in the King upon His owne Tearms without satisfaction and security to the Kingdome viz upon His Message of the 12. of May 1647. and to this end to Disband this Army before any peace made or assured To this we say the House of Commons upon the first notice thereof voted the said Engagement of the 12. of May Treasonable by Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. put an incapaciti upon such Citizens as had any hand in it which evidenceth we were here in a right majority as in other parts of their Paper they take the Votes of the House to prove us a corrupt majority The charge here lying in generall and not fixed upon any particular Concerning Disbanding the Army we say the House voted 8. Regiments of Foot 4. of Horse and 1. of Dragoones to be sent out of the Army for Ireland and resolved to keep 10000. Foot and 5400. Horse under Command of the Lord Fairfax for defence of England This was 1. For Relieving Ireland 2. For easing the heavy pressures of the poor People in England And 3. an honourable employment for the Forces of the Army to prevent such higst distempers as have since ensued 3. That they endeavoured to
the Houses formerly in their Ordinances presented to Him at New-castle did themselves thinke fit to settle it For the Sale of Bishops Lands upō the Publique Faith we say Every cheating Saint of the Faction must have the Publique Faith exactly kept though he bought the Lands but at 2. or 3. yeares just value and vvith such monies as he thad formerly cheated the State off vvhen other men vvho have lost the best part of their Estates by and for the Parliament for compensation vvhereof they have the Publique Faith engaged by Ordinances are consumed by Taxes and repayed vvith reproaches onely That although the Purchagers might well have afforded to have given the same rates for their purchases which they now give if they might have had them assured by Act of Parliament for 99. yeares and such moderate Rents reserved as the King intimates in his Answer yet in His Answer He expresseth a farther satisfaction to be given them upon which we should have insisted notwithstanding the said Vote 5. Decemb. 1648. We farther alleage That the King having granted the rest of the Propositions and so much in these 2. Delinquents and the Church the Nationall Covenant doth not oblige us to make Warre upon this point nothing can make Presbytery nor the Purchasers of Bishops Lands more ordious nor endanger them more than to make them the sole obstacle of peace nor could any thing more worke the King to comply with our desires herein than for us to draw a little neerer Him The Considerations leading us to passe the said Vote 5. Dec. 1648. come next to be considered 1. The saving of Ireland 2. The Regaining the Revolted Navy and freedome of the Seas 3. The support of the Auncient Government of the Kingdome 4. The putting the people into a secure possession of their Laws and Liberties 5. The avoiding such evill consequences as were apparently to follow a Breach with the King Returne to sect 71. As 1. the Deposing the King if not the depriving Him of life whereupon flouds of misery will follow and schandall to the Protestant Religion which we from our hearts detest abhorre see the many Declarations of Parliament against it 2. The necessitating of the Prince to cast himselfe into the Armes of forreigne Popish Princes embrace Popish Allyances for his succour 3. It may beget a change of Government and a laying aside of Monarchy here and so a Breach with Scotland and this Kingdome being the more rich likely to be the Seate of the Warre 4. The vast Debts of this Kingdome upon the Publique Faith will never be paid in Warre but increased and multiplied multitudes of Sufferers by and for the Parliament like to be repayed onely with new sufferings every years Warre destroies more Families and makes more Malignants through discontenting pressures untill at last the Souldier seeing no hope of pay the People no hope of peace and case fall together into a generall and desperate tumultuousnesse the power of the Sword apparently thereatning a dissolution of Governement both in Church and Common-wealth To that scandalous Objection which saith The corrupt majority will not lend an eare to admit a thought towards the laying downe their owne power or rendring it back to the People from whom they received it We say this Objection is unreasonable from men who endeavour to perpetuate an Army upon the Kingdome nor is the continuance of this Parliament singly objected but that they will not render it back to the People viz To a new Representative invented and made by the Army that is We will not render our power into the hands of the Army Another Objection is That watsoever the King granted He might plead Force to breake it and spoyle us by policy This Objection might have been made against all our Treaties If there be any Force it is from the Army for spoyling us by policy The Kings of this Land could never encroach upon our good Lawes but by corrupt Iudges and Ministers who though they could not abrogate the Law made it speake against it selfe and the intended good of the People or else by the power of Courtiers stopping the course of justice at the Councell Table and in other Arbitrary Courts both which are taken away by the Kings Concessions 1. That the Nomination of Iudges and Officers be in the Parliament 2. That the King make no new Parliament Lords for the future to Vote there Another Objection is That they had intelligence that had they been suffered to meet all in the House once more For this you must take the faith of the mysty brayned Pen-man vvho had this as vvel as many other grosse Lies by Revelation The Army had had the King in their povver and had the Parliament adjourned the sole povver of the Kingdom had been left in the Army vvhich is a thing aymed at by them it was designed to have passed some higher resolutions to lay farther foundations of a new quarrell so as to carry therein the name and countenance of Parliamentary Authority together with the Kings upon an acceptable pretence of Peace to draw men in and then to have adjourned the Parliament for a long time excluding all remedy in this case but by another Warre To this we say the House immediatly upon passing the Vote 5. Decemb. Sent a Committee to the Generall to conferre with him and his Officers and keep a good correspondency with them To which the Generall promised his readinesse howsoever it was hindred afterwards And then they seized upon one of the Commissioners appointed to Treat affronted another and left no way free for a Conference which shewes they were resolved to doe what they had designed The last Obj. is That those Members that are yet detained in Custody are either such as have been formerly Impeached and in part judged by the House for Treason and other Crimes and never acquitted and against whom they can and very shortly will produce new matter of no l●sse crime or else such who have appeared most active and united in Councels with them against whom also they are preparing and shall shortly give matter of particular Impeachment To this we say that when it appeares what those crimes are and what persons are charged with them we doubt not but they will sufficiently acquit themselves if things may be Legally carried in a judiciall way by competent Judges not preingaged In the meane time we conclude That Souldiers whose advantages arise by Warre are not fit to judge of the Peace of the Nation 74. A Declaratiō by Mr. VValker and Mr. Pryn. The 19. Ian. 1648. Mr. Pryn and Mr. Walker two of the secured Members published in print their Declaration and Protestation against the Actings and proceedings of the Army and their Faction now remaining in the House of Commons as followeth A Declaration and Protestation of Will Pryn and Clem Walker Esquires Members of the House of Commons Against the present Actings and Proceedings of the
Generall and Generall Councell of the Army and their Faction now remaining and sitting in the said House WHereas long since for ease of the People both Houses in a full free Parliament Voted the Disbanding of this Army in opposition to which some great Officers of the said Army to continue their rich Commands with some Members of the House of Commons who daily inrich themselves by the troubles of the times secretly mutinied the Army against the Parliament And whereas lately the farre major part of the House of Commons pitying the bleeding condition and teares of the oppressed People Voted and entred into a Personall Treaty with the King without which by the Armies own confession in their Remonstrance at Saint Albons p. 64. there can be no peace which the Army interrupted by obtruding upon the Commons a treasonable Remonstrance 20. Novemb. 1648. tending to destroy the King and His Posterity and wholly to subvert all Parliaments Religion Lawes Liberties for ever whereby the Commons in Parliament found it absolutely necessary to prevent such pernitious innovations by cōcluding a safe peace with His Majesty whereupon after mature debate the House of Commons the 5. Decemb. 1648. Voted That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses upon the Treaty were a ground for the Houses to proceed to the setlement of a safe and well-grounded Peace Upon which the Generall and Councell of Warre Wednesday morning 6. December 1648. Seized Imprisoned 41 of the Members going to the House of Commons to doe their Duty secluded above 160. other Members besides 40. or 50. Members who voluntarily withdrew themselves to avoid their violence leaving onely their owne engaged party of 40. or 50. Members sitting who now passe Acts of Parliament of the House of Commons as they call them without the Lords and comply with the said Councell of Warre to carry on the said Remonstrance To which purpose this present remnant of the Commons have unvoted in a thin House under the force of the Army what was deliberately Voted in a full and free House whereas by their owne Ordinance passed upon the Tumult of Apprentices 20. August 1647. to null and make void ab initio all Acts Orders Votes c. passed under the said force This remaining Party ought not to sit act nor take upon them the style af a House under so visible actuall and horrid a Force The premises considered We whose names are hereunto subscribed Members of the House of Commons doe declare protest That the said Generall Commissioned Officers Generall Councell of the Army by the said act of violence upon the major part of the House which legally and virtually is the whole House have waged Warre and Rebelled against the Parliament their Masters who raised them to defend the Priviledges of Parliament the Kings Person Authority in defence of Religion Lawes Liberties and have thereby forfeited their Commissions and have broken and dis-continued this Parliament so that untill this force be removed punished the Honour of the Parliament and their wronged Members vindicated and all the Members resummoned all the Votes Orders Actings Passed and to be Passed by this nominall House of Commons are and will be void ab initio and all such as doe or shall obey them are and will be punishable both by the Armies owne judgment in their Remonstrance August 18. and by the Houses Declaration and the said Ordinance 20. August 1647. We doe farther declare protest against this present House of Commons illegall Acts Order or Ordinance for erecting a High Court of Justice usurping a power without any Law or president to Trie Depose and bring to capitall punishment the King and to Dis-inherit His Posterity or any of them and against the said Generall Councell of Officers aiding and abetting them therein as highly impious against the Law of God Nations the Protestant Profession Traytors against the Stat. of Treasons 25. Edw. 3. and against all Lawes and our Statutes perjurious and perfidious against the Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy Nationall Covenant and Protestation all the Parliaments Declarations Remonstrances held forth to the world their Treaties and promises made to the Scots when they delivered the Kings Person into our hands against our promises made to the Hollanders and other Nations and against all the Professions Declarations Remonstrances and Proposalls made by this Army when they made their Addresses to the King at New-market Hampton-Court and other places Ianuary 19. 1648. William Pryn. Clem Walker About this time the Generall Councell of Officers at White-Hall ordered 75. The Coun of Officers order 2. Petit for the Com House 1. against Tyths 2. against the Stat. for Banishing the Ievvs 76. Col. Tichburnes Pet and Complaint against the Ld. Mayor their Orders thereupon The like Petitiōs vvere invited from most Counties vvhere a dozen Schismaticks and two or three Cloaks represēted a vvhole County That two Petitions or mandates rather should be drawn and presented to their House of Commons One against Payment of Tythes the other for Repealing the Act for Banishment of the Iewes Here you see they shake hands with the Jewes and crucifie Christ in his Ministers as well as in his Anointed the King About this time Col Tichburne some schismaticall Common-Councell-men presented a Petition to the supreme Authority the Commons in Parliament demanding justice against all grand and capitall Actors in the late Warres against the Parliament from the highest to the lowest the Militia Navy and all Places of power to be in faithfull hands that is in their owne Faction all others being displaced under the generall notion of Disaffected to settle the Votes That the supreme Authority is in the Commons in Parliament assembled They complained That the Lord Mayor and some Aldermen denied to put their Petition to the Question at the Common Councell and departed the Court with the Sergeant and Town-Clerke That the Court afterwards passed it Nemine contradicente The Commons thanked the Petitioners for the tender of their assistance and Ordered That the Petition should be entered amongst the Acts of the Common Councell and owned them for a Common Councell notwithstanding the departure of the Lord Mayor c. And about foure or five daies after the Commons Ordered * See a just solemne Protest of the free Citizens of London against the Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. disabling such as had any hand in the City Engagement to beare Offices That any six of the Common Councell upon emergent occasions might send for the Lord Mayor to call a Common Councell themselves and any forty of them to have power to Act as a Common Councell without the Lord Mayor any thing in their Charter to the contrary notwithstanding Thus you see the Votes of this supreme thing the House of Commons are now become the onely Lawes and Reason of all our actions 77. An Act passed for adjournment of part of Hillary Terme
by the Parliament intrusted and employed for the safety of the Nation being by Him or is Agents corrupted to the betraying of their Trust and revolting from the Parliament have had entertainement and commission for the continuing and renewing of Warre and Hostility against the said Parliament and People as aforesaid By which cruell and unnaturall Warres by Him the said Charles Stuart levyed continued and renewed as aforesaid much Innocent bloud of the Free-pople of this Nation hath been spilt many Families have been undone the Publique Treasury wasted and exhausted Trade obstructed and miserably decayed vast expence and damage to the Nation incurred and many parts of the Land spoyled some of them even to desolation And for further prosecution of His said evill Designes He the said Charles Stuart doth still continue his Commissions to the said Prince and other Rebels and Revolters both English and Forraigners and to the Earle of Ormond and to the Irish Rebels and Revolters associated with him from whom further Invasions upon this Land are threatned upon the procurement and on the behalf of the said Charles Stuart All which wicked Designes Warres and evill practises of Him the said Charles Stuart have been and are carried on for the advancing and upholding of the Personall Interest of Will and Power and pretended Prerogative to Himself and his Family against the publique Interest Common Right Liberty Justice and Peace of the People of this Nation by and for whom He was entrusted as aforesaid By all which it appeareth that He the said Charles Stuart hath been and is the Occasioner Author and Contriver of the said unnaturall cruell and bloudy Warres and therein guilty of all the treasons murthers rapines burnings spoiles desolations damage and mischiefe to this Nation acted or committed in the said Warres or occasioned thereby And the said Iohn Cooke by Protestation saving on the behalf of the People of England the liberty of Exhibiting at any time hereafter any other Charge against the said Charles Stuart and also of replying to the Answers which the said Charles Stuart shall make to the premises or any of them or any other Charge that shall be so exhibited doth for the said treasons crimes on the behalfe of the said People of England Impeach the said Charles Stuart as a Tyrant Traytor Murtherer and a publique and implacable Enemy to the Common-wealth of England And pray That the said Charles Stuart King of England may be put to answer all every the premises That such Proceedings Examinations Tryals Sentence and Judgement may be thereupon had or shall be agreeable to Justice The King smiled often during the reading of the Charge especially at these words Tyrant Traytor Murderer and publique Enemy of the Common-wealth President Sir you have now heard your Charge you find that in the close of it it is prayed to the Court in the behalfe of the Commons of England that you answer to your Charge which the Court expects King I would know by what power I am called hither I was not long agoe in the Isle of Wight how I came there is a longer story than I thinke fit at this time for Me to speake But there I entered into a Treaty with both Houses of Parliament with as much faith as is possible to be had of any People in the world I Treated there with a number of Honourable Lords and Gentlemen an treated honestly and uprightly I cannot say but they did very nobly with Me We were upon a Conclusion of the Treaty Now I would know by what lawfull Authority there are many unlawfull Authorities Thieves and Robbers on the Highway I was brought from thence and carried from place to place and I know not what and when I knew by what lawfull Authority I shall Answer Remember I am your King your lawfull King and what sinnes you bring upon your owne heads and the judgment of God upon this Land think well upon it thinke well upon it I say before you go on from one sinne to a greater therefore let Me know by what lawfull Authority I am seated here and I shall not be unwilling to Answer In the meane time I shall not betray My trust I have a trust committed to Me by God by old and lawfull discent I will not betray it to Answer to a new unlawfull Authority Bradshaw Pres If you had been pleased to have observed what was hinted to you by the Court at your first coming hither you would have knowne by what Authority which Authority requires you in the name of the People of England of whom you are Elected KING to answer them King I deny that Bradsh If you acknowledge not the Authority of the Court they must proceed King I doe tell them so England was never an Elective Kingdome but an Hereditary Kingdome for neer these thousand yeares Therefore let Me know by what lawfull Authority I am called hither I doe stand more for the Liberty of My People then any here that come to be My pretended Iudges and therefore let Me know by what lawfull Authority and I will Answer otherwise I will not Answer Brash Sir How really you have managed your trust is known your way of Answer is to interrogate the Court which beseemes not you in this condition you have been told of it twice or thrice King Here is Lieut. Colonell Cobbet aske him if he did not bring Me from the Isle of Wight by force I doe not come here as submitting to the Court I will stand as much for the Priviledge of the House of Commons rightly understood as any man here whatsoever I see no House of Lords here that may constitute a Parliament and the King too should have been Is this the bringing the King to His Parliament Is this the bringing an end to the Treaty on the publique Faith Let Me see a Lawfull Authority warranted by the Word of God the Scriptures or by the Constitutions of the Kingdome I will not betray My Trust nor the Liberties of the People I am sworne to keep the Peace by that duty I owe to God and My Country and I will doe it to the last breath in My body As it is a sinne to with stand Lawfull Authority so it is to submit to a Tyrannicall or any otherwise unlawfull Authority Bradsh Brutish The Court expects your finall Answer and will adjourne till Munday next we are satisfied with our Authority that are your Iudges and it is upon Gods Authority and the Kingdomes and that peace you spake of will be kept in doing Iustice and that 's our present work Note So the Court Adjourned and the King was conducted back They had so contrived it that diverse Schismaticall Souldiers and Fellowes were placed round about the Court to cry Iustice Iustice when the King was remanded thinking all the rest of the People would have bleated to the same tune but they almost all cryed God blesse Him and were some of them well cudgelled
shall be used and no other and the Date of the yeare of the Lord and none other and that all Duties Profits Penalties Fines Amerciaments Issues and Forfeitures whatsoever which heretofore were sued for in the name of the KING shall from henceforth be sued for in the name of Custodes libertatis Angliae authoritate Parliamenti and where the words were Iuratores pro Domino Rege they shall be Iuratores pro Republica and where the words are contra pacem dignitatem coronam nostram the words from henceforth shall be contra pacem Publicam All Judges Justices Ministers Officers are to take notice thereof c. and whatsoever henceforth shall be done contrary to this Act shall be and is hereby declared to be null and void the death of the King or any Law usage or custome to the contrary notwithstanding c. 92. Another device to mortifie the King The King lay in White-hall Saturday the day of his Sentence and Sunday night so neer the place appointed for the separation of His Soule Body that He might heare every stroke the Worke-men gave upon the Scaffold where they wrought all night this is a new device to mortifie Him but it would not doe 93. Tuesday 30. Ian. 1648. was the day appointed for the Kings Death He came on Foot from Saint Iames's to White-hall that morning His Majesty coming upō the Scaffold made a Speech to the People which could onely be heard by some few Souldiers and Schismaticks of the Faction who were suffered to possesse the Scaffold and all parts neare it and from their Pennes onely we have our informations His Majesties Speech upon the Scaffold and His Death or Apotheosis The KING told them THat all the world knew He never began the Warre with the two Houses of Parliament and He called God to witnesse to whom He must shortly give an account He never intended to encroach upon their Priviledges They began upon Me it was the Militia they began with they confessed the Militia was Mine but they thought fit to have it from Me and to be short if any body will look to the Dates of the Commissions Theirs and Mine and likewise to the Declarations will see cleerly that They began these unhappy Troubles And a little after He said I pray God they may take the right way to the peace of the Kingdome Souldiers Rebelling against their Master or Soveraigne though they prevaile cannot claime by conquest because their quarell vvas perfidious base and sinfull from the beginning But I must first shew you how you are out of the way and then put you into the right way First you are out of the way for all the way you ever had yet by any thing I could ever find was the way of Conquest which is a very ill way for Conquest is never just except there be a good just Cause either for matter of wrong or just Title and then if you go beyond the first Quarrell that you have that makes it unjust in the end that was just in the beginning but if it be onely matter of Conquest then it is a great Robbery as the Pyrate said to Alexander and so I think the way that you are in hath much of that way Now Sirs to put you in the way believe it you will never doe right nor God will never prosper you untill you give him his due the King that is My Successor his due and the People for whom I am as much as any of you their due 1. You must give God his due by regulating rightly his Church according to his Scripture which is now out of order to set you in a way particularly now I cannot but onely a Nationall Synod freely called freely debating amongst themselves must settle this when that every opinion is freely and clearly heard 2. For the King the Lawes of the Land will freely instruct you and because it concernes My selfe I will onely give you a touch of it 3. For the people and truely I desire their Liberty and Freedome as much as any man whatsoever I must tell you their Liberty and Freedome consists in having such a Government whereby their Lives and Goods may be most their own it lies not in having a share in the Government that is nothing pertinent to them a Subject and a Soveraigne are cleane different things and therefore untill you restore the People to such a Liberty they will never enjoy themselves Sirs it was for this I now come hither if I would have given way to an Arbitrary sway to have all Lawes changed according to the power of the Sword I needed not to have come here See sect 90. and therefore I tell you and I pray God it be not laid to your charge that I am the Martyr of the People c. The House had the impudence to ansvver the Dutch Ambassadours That vvat they had done to the King vvas according to the Lavv of the Land They meant that their Lusts are the Lavvs of the Land for other Lavv they can shevv none This was the effect of His Majesties Speech who shewed much magnanimity and Christian Patience during all the time of His Triall and Death notwithstanding many barbarous affronts put by way of tentation upon Him He had His. Head severed from His Body at one stroak the Souldiers and Schismaticks giving a great shout presently Thus this noble Prince a Gentleman sanctified by many afflictions after He had escaped Pistoll Poyson and Pestilent ayre could not escape the more venemous tongues of Lawyers and Petty foggers Bradshaw Cooke Steele Aske and Dorislaus thus the Shepherd is smitten and the Sheep scattered THe said High Court of Justice with the downfall of King CHARLES the I. thereby and in Him of the Regall Government Religion Lawes and Liberties of this auntient Kingdome is Emblematically presented to the Readers view See the Figure before the Title page Presently after this dissolution of the King the Commons sent abroad Proclamations into London and all England over reciting 94. Proclamations published against proclaiming the King That whereas severall pretences might be made to this Crowne and Title to the Kingly Office set on foot to the apparent hazard of the publique peace Be it enacted and ordained by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same that no Person whatsoever doe presume to proclaime declare publish or any waies to promote Charles Stuart Sonne of the said Charles commonly called Prince of Wales or any other Person to be King or Chiefe Magistrate of England or Ireland or of any Dominions belonging to them by colour of Inheritance Succession Election or any other claime whatsoever without the free consent of the people in Parliament first had and signified by a particular Act or Ordinance for that purpose any Law Stat vsage or custome to the contrary notwithstanding Who shal judge whē these Fellowes wil be thougt free and whē not and whosoever
Gentlemen of the best quality vvere named vvhom they could not omit because they had sate vvith them and concurred in all their great debates although they had more confidence in those petty Fellovves vvho had or vvould sell their soules for gain to make themselves Gentlemen to debarre the said Gentlemen of quality therefore and make them forbeare they invented an expurgatory Oath or Shibeleth to be taken by every Member before his initiation vvhereby they should Declare That they approved of vvhat the House of Commons and their High Court of Iustice 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 Chair-man 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 shall doe for the future but could not confirme what they had done in relation to the King and Lords so it vvas referred to a Committee to consider of an expedient Cromwell having made use of the Levellers Assertors of publique Liberty to purge the House of Commons 115. Cromvvels usurped povver VVhen the House of Commons opposed Cromvvells and … on s designs they cried up the Liberty of the People and decried the Authority of Parliament untill 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 Authority 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 Protestants of Germany and then used an Army of Protestants to subdue and imprison the Pope and abolish the Lords House doth novv endeavour to cast dovvne the Levellers once more finding himselfe raised to so great an height that he cannot endure to thinke of a levelling equality he oversvvaies the Councell of VVarre over-avves the House of Commons and is Chair-man and Ring-leader of the Councell of State so that he hath engrossed all the povver of England into his ovvne 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 ovvne more Lordly Interest he procured an expedient to Alter and Reforme the said Oath vvhich at last passed in this forme follovving February the 22. 1648. 116. The forme of the said reformed Oath I A.B. being nominated a Member of the Councell of State by this present Parliament doe testifie that I doe 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 Councell 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 doe 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 therein faithfully pursue the Instructions given to the said Councell by this present Parliament Here you see a curtaine drawn between the eys of the people the clandestine machinations and actings of this Councell and not reveale or disclose any thing in whole or in part directly or indirectly that shall be debated or resolved upon in the Councell without the command or direction of the Parliament or without the order or allowance of the major part of the Councell or of the major part of them that shall be present at such Debates or Resolutions In confirmation of the premises I have hereto subscribed my Name 117. The C of VVar debate to massacre the Kings party See Will Sedgvvicks Iustice upon the Armies Remonstrance About this time it vvas debated at the Councell of VVarre to Massacre and put to the Sword all the KING's Party The Question put vvas carried in the Negative but by tvvo Voices You see vvhat Furies pursue these sinfull VVretches and vvhat dangerous rocks they dash upon in order to that base and covvardly principle of Self-preservation 118. Schismaticall Petitions for 2. or 3. principall Gentlemen in each Country to be brought to justice The Army hath in every County of England packs of schismaticall Beagles vvhom they hollovv on to hunt in full crie by Petitions to the House after the bloud of such vvhom they design for slaughter Many Petitions have been lately presented That two or three principall Gentlemen of the KING's Party by name in each County might be sacrificed to Iustice whereby the Land might be freed from bloud-guiltinesse Divers Merchants have contracted to send forth severall Ships for the next Summers Fleet at their ovvne charge 119. Marchants arming Ships for this Summers Fleet. The prodigious High Court of Iustice vvas revived in order to the Triall of the Earle of Holland the Earle of Cambridge the Earl of Norwich the Lord Capel and Sir Iohn Owens 120. The High Court of Iustice revived the Commissioners vvere changed that they may engage as many men in arbitrary illegall tyranny and bloud-shed as they can Hamilton vvas exceedingly importuned by Cromwell vvho tooke a journey to VVindsor purposely to name such Members of Parliament and Citizens as had any hand in calling him in 121. The History of Hamiltons imprisonment and death See digitus Dei upon Duke Hamilton this he either could not or vvould not doe he had in order to his ovvn ambition first exasperated the Independent party against the KING and aftervvards sought their ruine by engaging for the KING and he doubted that to undertake so odious an office as to play the Devils part and be an Accuser of his Brethren vvould but set a glosse upon the Independents intended severity against him Being brought to St. Iames's in order to his Tryall Cromwell hoping to traine him to a confession caused all his Creatures to carry a favourable countenance to him Bradshaw smoothed him up vvith soft language at the Barre the Lord Gray of Grooby Col VVayte and Hugh Peters gave him hopes that they vvould not much obstruct his pretended Plea of Quarter from Lambert upon Articles Peters avouched Quarter so given by Lambert notvvithstanding Colonel VVayte vvhen he made Report to the House of Commons hovv he took him affirmed He yeilded at discretion and Lambert was not then neer him after this Peters gives Hamilton a Visit
for discovery of Truth 4. To Imprison any that shall disobey their Commands and such as they shall Iudge contumacious vvhat novv is become of Magna Charta and the Liberties of the People That no Mans Person shall be Attached or Imprisoned or Dissersed of his Free-hold or Free-customes but by Lawfull Iudgement of his Equalls This Councell of State hath got all Povver into their hands a project long laboured and novv their next motion vvill be pretending ease to the People to Dissolve this Parliament 10. The Petitioners complaine that in order to settle their Tyranny the Councell of Officers insisted upon it That a motion should be made to the House of Commons to enable them to put to death by Martiall Lavv all such as they shall judge by Petitions or othervvise to disturbe the present proceedings vvhether Members of the Army or not And vvhen it vvas urged That the Civill Magistrate should doe it it vvas ansvvered * The saying of Col. Hevvson the one-eyed Cobler See Hunting the Foxes p. 10. They could hang tvventy 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 hovv 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 novv in being have done and in such extraordinary vvaies vvhereunto they have accustomed themselves vvhich vvas the originall 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 Councell 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 125. A second part of Englands Nevv Chains came forth a second part of Englands new Chaines discovered setting forth the hypocrisie and perfidiousnesse of the Councell of the Army and the Grandees in cheating all Interests King Parliament People Souldiers City Agitators Levellers c. vvhich tells you That the Grandees walke by no principles of honesty or Conscience but as meer Polititians are governed altogether by occasion as they see a possibility of making progresse to their Designes vvhich 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 Tovvns to break the spirits of the People vvith oppression and poverty It farther Declares that these Grandees judge themselves loose vvhen other men are bound all Obligations are to them Transitory and Ceremoniall 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 vvhilst they hastily set up a Councell of State to establish their tyranny that to prepare the vvay to this they broke the House of Commons tooke avvay the House of Lords removed the King by an extrajudiciall vvay of proceedings and erected such a Court of Iustice as had no place in the English Government That the remainder of the House of Commons is become a meer channell through vvhich is conveyed all the Decrees and Determinations of a private Councell of some fevv Officers All these and the Votes That the Supreme Power is in the People and the Supreme Authority in the Commons their Representative vvere 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 vvould shevv no more modesty to them than they have done to the excluded Members See the Hunting of the Foxes c. p. 6 7 8. And so it concludes vvith a Protestation against their breaking the Faith of the Army vvith all Parties their dissolving the Councell of Agitators and usurping a povver of giving forth the sense of the Army against the Parliament and People against their shooting to death ●he Souldier at VVare Returne to sect 2. 5. and their cruelties exercised upon other Persons to the debasing of their Spirits and thereby nevv-moulding the Army to their Designes against their playing fast and loose vvith the King and His Party till they had brought a nevv and dangerous VVarre 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 pieces vvithout Charging the Members particularly and then judging and taking avvay mens lives in an extraordinary vvay as done for no other end but to make vvay for their ovvne absolute Domination They also protest against the Election and establishment of those High Courts of Iustice as unjust in themselves and of dangerous precedent in time to come as likevvise against the Councell of State and putting some of themselves therein contrary to their ovvne Agreement They also protest against all other the like Meetings of those officers that on Thursday 2. Feb. Voted for so bloody a Lavv as to hang vvhom they should judge disturbed the Army as having no povver either by such Councels to give the sense of the Army or to judge any Person not of the Army or to doe any thing in reference to the Common-vvealth 126. The Hunting of the Foxes from Tryplo and Nevvmarket 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 vvhich tells you That the Grandee-Officers of the Army to keep the Souldiers quiet did formalize about an Agreement of the People vvhilst they carried on their platforme of absolute tyranny long since hatched by Ireton by erecting a Councell of State no sooner vvas this monster borne but it devoured half the Parliament of England now it is adorning 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 Officers That this Nation must have one prime Magistrate or Ruler over them and 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 fore-see a new Regality thus by their Machivilian pretences wicked practises
Sir Arthur Haslerigge Governour of New Castle vvho vvithout any publique Authority presumed to lay on a Tax of 4 s. a Chaldron upon the Coales there vvhich is estimated to amount to 50000 l. a yeare vvhat use that Money vvas put to vvas as variously vvhispered as likevvise vvhat designe they had in bringing so pinching a vvant upon the City some said it vvas to enforce the poorer sort into Tumults and then to charge the vvealthier sort vvith the crime and ensnare them others said it vvas 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 Mayor ordered to proclaim in person the Act for Abolishing the Kingly Office and punished for neglect That the Lord Mayor of London in Person be required to publish and proclaime in the City the aforesaid Act for dissolving Kingly Government and to give an account thereof to the House The Mayor refusing this service vvas by the Commons called to the Barre fined 2000 l. committed Prisoner to the Tovver and outed of his Mayoralty and Alderman Andrewes a Man after their ovvne heart chosen by a fevv Schismaticks in his Place Ordered by the Commons upon a report from the Councell of State that Commissioners be appointed to make Sale of the Kings 138. The Kings Queens and Princes personall Estate ordered to be sold Queens and Princes Personall Estate upon Inventory and Apprisall for satisfaction of all just Debts due to well-affected Persons viz Men of their Faction in this Nation before the beginning of these VVarres But first 30000 l. to be taken out of it for the use of this Summers Fleet and that it be reserved back to the 40 Hogen Mogens or Councell of State to consider what they think sit to be sold and what they thinko sit to keep and reserve for the use and furniture of them and their Attendants Observe that by that time this gulph is stopped the vvhole remainder to be sold for payment of Debts aforesaid may be vvritten vvith a Cypher 139. Crown Lands shar'd amongst the Godly I heare the House hath given away the KING's House Parks and Honour of Eltham to Sergeant Bradshaw their quondam President Greenwich to Bolstrode VVhitlocke The Lyons Skin is novv dividing amongst the Party Thus have they killed and taken possion and the King's Revenue hath proved as ominous to Him as Naboth's Vineyard vvas to his Master 140. Another Report for an establishment for the Army Diurnall Mar 30 31 1649. This day another Report vvas made to the House from the Committee of the Army of the particular summes to be Monthly leavied in each County to make up the vvhole summe of 90000 l. Monthly fot the Armies of England and Ireland besides 20000 l. per mens out of Fee-farme 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 Countrios 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 VVar betvveen the King and Parliament 142. The 5. Lights of Walton About the beginning of Lent last Master Faucett Minister of VValton upon the Thames in Surrey preached in his Parish Church after dinner vvhen he came dovvne out of his Pulpit it vvas tvvylight and into the Church came six Souldiers one of them vvith a Lanthorne in his hand and a Candle burning in it in the other hand the had foure Candles not lighted He vvith the Lanthorne called to the Parishoners to stay a little for he had a Message to them from God and offered to go up into the Pulpit but the Parishioners vvould not let him then he vvould have delivered his errand in the Church but there they vvould not heare him so he vvent forth into the Church-yard the people follovving him vvhere 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 paine of damnation It consisted of 5 Lights 1. That the Sabbath was abolished as unnecessary Iewish and meerly ceremoniall 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 Iewish and ceremoniall 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 vvich vvas the burden of his song 3. Ministers are abolished as Antichristian and of no longer use now Christ himselfe descends into the hearts of his Saints and his Spirt enlighteneth them with Revelations and Inspirations And here I should have put out my third Light c. 4. Magistrates are abolished as uselesse now that Christ himself is in purity 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 Lawes 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 Booke 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 milke 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 burne it before your faces so taking the Candle out of his Lanthorne he set fire of the leaves And then putting out the Candle cryed And here my fift Light is extinguished Upon a Report from the Councell of State 143. The Earle of Warwicke'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 aborad to keep under the Seamen The three Admirals are Col. Edw Popham Col. Rob Blake and Col. Deane Sunday after Easter-day 144. Cormvvell 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 groanes of the Spirit spent an hower in prayer and an hower and an halfe in a Sermon In his prayer he desired God to take off from him the Government of this mighty People
Lands to maintaine supernumerary Itinerant Ministers who should be Authorized to go up and downe 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 raskall multitude and schismaticall rabble against all men of best quality in the Kingdome 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 Lawes and Government for the better rooting of them out that themselves alone may inhabite the earth and establish their new tyranny or Kingdome of the Saints upon the ruines of our antient Monarchy These men like Balaam shall blesse and curse for hire and vent State-news State-doctrine and poyson 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 Helme they shall cousen the people with pretended illuminations Revelations and Inspirations and powre out all the Vials of Gods wrath amongst them Cromwell 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 Kingdome were arrived to that highth of impudence as to endeavour to cheat them all over againe they had by murdering the King abolishing the House of Lords putting an execrable force upon the farre major part of the House of Commons making themselves and their Party a tyrannicall Councell of State to usurp the Supreme power and Government 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 Observations Hist Pol. c. endeavouring a toleration of all Religions attempting to take away Tythes 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 Christendome to defend the common interest of Kings now controverted in England This cloud threatned to poure downe a new Warre upon them to provide a remedy therefore for this soare Cromwell moved in the House of Commons That the Presbyterian Government might be setled promising his endeuours thereto but whether he meant a Classicall or Congregationall 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 againe be invited into the House they sent their Agents both Lay-men and Ministers amongst whom Mr. Marshall 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 civill Interest which was more irreconcilable than that interest of Church-Government whatsoever shew was made to the contrary They will not endure to heare of the KING 's exemplary patience and Christian charity to all nor of His precepts and strict injunctions to His Sonne of clemency and abstinency from revenge contained in His last Booke The Pourtraicture of His Majesty These things will both apologize for our young King and condemne our bloudy vindicative Saints That the Presbyterians as well as the Independents made Warre against the late King brought Him low and prepared Him to receive his late deadly Blow from the Independents and therefore the King would looke upon both Parties as equally guilty and was deeply engaged in point of interest to cut off both Parties Endevouring by these discourses to put the Presbyterians into despaire their own and Iudas's sinne and then to work upon that base and cowardly principle of self-preservation and invite them to joyne with them in point of civill Interest and common Defence But their kindness was but like that of a malitious Man who having plague-soars upon him embraceth his Friend rather to infect than 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 meane 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 owne 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 sinnes shames and punishments but would keep Achans Wedge and the Babylonish Carment 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 forgivenesse for the ingratitude of the people who did not sufficiently acknowledge with thankefulnesse Gods great mercies upon this Land in freeing them from Monarchy and bestowing liberty 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 sinnes God deliver us from those deceitfull lips whose prayers are snares whose kisses prove curses and whose devotion leads to damnation Neuer was Fast injoyned with more severity nor neglected with more contempt and horror men shunning it like the sinnes of Rebellion and Witchcraft Besides their consciences told them that they never suffered the thousandth part of the oppressions they now groane under About this time it was debated to send Supplies for Ireland 150. The jugling designe of sending part of the Army for Ireland the predominant Grandees were desirous to purge the Army as they had done the House and send the Levellers Assertors of Liberty thether the Levellers were desirous to keep their ground here and send the more mercinary enslaving and enslaved part of the Army the better to colour the designe Cromwell undertooke 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 selfe should be recalled time enough to keep up his party in England from sinking by his longer absence and the better to accommodate the businesse Lots were severall times cast what Regiments should goe but the Lots not falling out to the minds of the Generall Councell of
this Nation as it was with the Netherlanders and other People for theirs and that 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 Law of Nature and Nations And that the Souldiery may Lawfully hold the hands of that Generall 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 Commom-wealth considered we cannot see how it can be otherwise esteemed in us And upon that account we Declare that we doe owne and are resolved to owne all such Persons either of the Army or Countries 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 doe owne 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 our just and mutuall defence And we doe 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 Brests any Affections to the Freedomes of England any love to his Neighbour or Native Country to rise up and come in to help a distressed miserable Nation to breake the Bands of Cruelty Tyranny and Oppression and set the People Free In which Servise 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 Oxford-shire 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 Councell 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 ix Royalists of the best quality in revenge of Dorislaus Report was made from the Councell of State to the House of the examination of 3. Servāts of Doctor Dorislaus concerning the Death of their Master what allowances were fit to be given to his Children out of the Kings Revenue thereby to lay an aspertion 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 Histori 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 a Saint in Cromwells Rubrick therefore had a magnetique virtue 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 knowne That some Northerne Counties having petitioned the Commons for reliefe against the miserable famine raging there Haslerigge opposed their request saying That want of food would best defend these Counties from Scotish Invasions What man that had any sense of Christianity Courage Honesty or Justice would have been the Authour of so barbarous and unjust a motion That 6. Gentlemen no way conscious nor privie to the fact should be offered up a sacrifice to revenge malice nay to guilty feares and base cowardize to keep off the like attempts from Haslerigge and his Party I wish this Gentleman would read the Alchoran 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 New Testament of Moses and Christ to so little purpose Yet the House 18. 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 devise to fright them to Compound unlesse it be a forerunner to a Massacre heretofore taken into consideration at a Councell of Warre See § 161. An Act declaring more nevv Treasons About this time came forth that prodigious Act declaring 4. new Treasons with many cōplicated Treasons in their bellies the like never heard of before in our Law nor in any Kingdome or Republike of Christendō Because I have formerly spokē of it the Act it self printed publisht dreadfully notorious throughout the whole Kingdō I wil refer you to the printed Copie only one clause formerly debated was omitted in the Act viz. That to kill the Generall Lieu. Gen any Members of this present Parl or Councel 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 wil only give you some few Observations thereupon This Act declares to be Treason unto death and confiscation of Lands all Deeds Plots Words 1. Against this present fagge end of a Parliament against their never-before heard-of Supreme 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 Liberties 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 not otherwise for the Sword and the Purse is 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 when they are known we owe them no Allegiance without which no Treason by the
knowne Lawes of the Land which is onely due to the King His lawfull Heires Successours thereto we are sworne nor are the particular Powers Authorities granted by this Parliament to the said Keepers of the Liberties of England Councell of State yet any where authentically published made knowne to us by any avowed Act unlesse we shall account their Licenced 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 enstave us they would set us free have brought us so farre 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 drawne from us our money and bloud they now deny us the use of reason and common sense belonging to us as Men Governe us by arbitrary irrationall Votes with which they baite 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 stirre up the People against their Authority is hereby declared Treason marke 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 Keepers of the Liberties of England or Councell of State shal 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 the Case of Lilburne 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 Wives Brothers 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 the Father or Master endeavour to withdraw him from so plundering and roguing a kind 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 Soldiers the sinne and shame of such actions and disswade them from obeying such unlawfull commands 4. If any man shall presume to counterfeit their conterfeit 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 nor 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 jubeo it shall be Treason because they vvill 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 Liberties must now hold our Lives at the will of those Grand Seigniours one Vote of 40. or 50. factious Commons Servants Members of the Army vacates all our Lawes Liberties Properties and destroies our Lives Behold here a short view 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 See 1 H. 4. c. 10. ●1 H. 7. c. 1. Declares 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 leavie Warre against the KING or adhere to His Enemies in his Realm and thereof be proveably attainted of open deed by people of their condition 4. To counterfeit the KING' 's Great or Prive Seale 5. Or His Money 6 To stay the KING'S Chancellour Treasurer Iustices of one Bench or other Iustices in Oyre Iustices in Assize and all other Iustices assigned to heare and determine being in their Places doing their Offices If any other case supposed Treason which is not above specified So the 4 Lords ought to have been Tried not by a new shambles of justice doth happen before any Iustices the Iustices shall tarry without any going to Iudgment of the Treason till the Cause be shewed and declared before the KING and His Parliament not before the House of Commons onely or before both Houses without the KING whether it ought to be adjuged Treason You see how few in number these Treasons specified are and that they must be attainted of open deed by their Peeres our words were free under Monarchy though not free under our Free-State so were they under the Romans Tacitus An. 1. sub finem speaking of Treasons facta arguebantur dicta impune erant These horrible tyrannies considered and being destitute of all other lesse desperate reliefe I doe here solemnly declare and protest before that God that hath made me 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 Iudge or Iustice shall give Sentence of Death upon any Friend of mine upon this or any other illegall 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 exemples of Sampson Iudith Iaell and Ehud and by Ponyard Pistoll Poyson or any other meanes whatsoever secret or open prosecute to the Death the said Iudge and Iustice and all their principall Abettors and I doe hereby invite and exhort all generous free-borne English-men to the like resolutions and to enter into Leagues defensive and offensive and sacramentall 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 illegall and tyrannous Usurpations 162. A motion to enlarge Sr 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 Generall 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
damned Spirits or rather over such Spirits as not submitting basely to the tyranny of our State-Mountebanks Witnesse his tampering with Hamilton c. incurre 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 soules Hughs first salute was That he came meerly to give John a visite without any designe his guilty Conscience prompting him to a voluntary Apology Iohn answered I know you well enough you are one of the setting Dogs of the great Men of the Army with faire and plausible pretences to insinuate into Men when they have done them wrong and to worke out their designes when they are in a strait and cover over the blots that they have made Then Iohn complained of the † Compare this Act of the Kings With the violent act of those Traytors and Tyrants Fiarfax his Councell of Warre in imprisoning and secluding above 200. Members at once without cause shewne leaving only 40. or 50. of their cheating Faction in the House to carry on their bloody Anarchicall designes some of which secured Members with barbarous usage were almost brought to death and their murder since attempted by Soldiers illegall and violent seizing upon him by Souldiers and carrying him before that new erected thing called A Councell of State who committed him without any Accusor accusation Prosecutor or Witnesse or any due processe of Law and yet when the King impeached the 5 Members and preferred a Charge of High Treason against them Recorded 1. part Booke of Decl. p. 35. and onely failed in a single punctilio of due processe of Law they cryed out it was an invasion of the Peoples Liberties so that foure or five Recantations from Him Recorded in their owne Declarations would not serve His turne Peters halfe out of countenance if so prostituted a Villaine that practises impudence amongst common Whores and whose Pulpit is more shamefull than another mans Pillory can be out of countenance takes up one of Coke's Institutions and professed Lilburne was meerly gulled in reading or trusting to those Books for there were no Lawes in England Iohn answered he did believe him for that bis great Masters Cromwell Fairfax c. had destroyed them all Nay quoth Hugb there never was any in England with that Iohn shewed him the Petition of Right asking him whether that were a Law which Peters had the impudence to deny asking what Law was Iohn replied * The Law is now taken away and all things in confusion by turning our Monarchy without our consent into a Free-State of Slaves govened by Tyrants out of the Parliaments owne Declarations Tbe Law is that which puts a difference betwixt good and evill just and unjust If you take away the Law all things will fall into confusion every man will become a law unto himselfe which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce great enormities lust will become a law envie a law Covetousnesse and ambition will become lawes and what dictates what decisions such lawes will produce may easily be discerned Tbis Master Peters is a Definition of Law by the Parliament in the daies of their primitive purity before they had corrupted themselves with the Common-wealths money And elsewhere the Law is called The safeguard the custody of all private Interests your honors 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 uncertaine or unknowne To this the Comick Priest replied I tell you for all this there is no Law in this Nation but the Sword ●nd what it gives This doctrine of Devils that it is lawfull to submit to any present power that is strongest is broached in a Pamphlet by old Rowse the illiterate Iew of Eaton-Colledge And by Iohn Goodwin the sophistical Divine which is fully confuted in A Religious Demurrer concerning submission to the present power an excellent piece neither was there any Law or Government in the world but what the Sword gave To this the honest Lieutenant Colonel answered Master 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 foure honest men and rob them that act is righteous because they are the stronger Party And if any power he 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 Lawes so reputed in the common acceptation of all Men by the expresse letter of which all those that fought against Him are ipso facto Traytors And if it were not for preservation of our Lawes and Liberties why did the Parliament fight against Him a present power in being and if there be now no Lawes in England nor never was then you and your great Masters Cromwell Fairfax and the Parliament are a pack of Bloody Rogues and Villaines to set the People to murder one another in fighting for preservation of their Lawes in which their Liberties were included which was the principall declared Cause of the Warre from the beginning to the end I thought quoth the Lieutenant Colonel I had been safe when I made the knowne Lawes the rules of my Actions which you have all sworne and declared to Defend and make as the standard and Touchstone between you and the People * The Lawes 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 lies not therein their minds may change and then where are you I but quoth the Lieutenant Colonel I cannot take notice of what is in their minds to obey that but the constant D●claration of their minds never contradicted in any of their Declarations as That they will maintaine the Petition of Right and Lawes of the Land c. This was the substance of their discourse saving that Iohn pinched upon his great Masters large fingering of the Common-wealths Money calling it Theft and State-Robbery and saying That Cromwell 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 summe of this Debate to thee that by comparing their doctrine and principles with their dayly practises thou mayest perfectly see to what condition of slavery these beggarly upstart Tyrants and Traytors have reduced us by cheating us into a
Warre bloody thievish Task-masters Remember his deceased Majesties gracious Messages frequently fent 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 Olygarchicall legall Tyranny by adding His Royall Assent to their wicked Demands tendered to Him but two daies before His translation form this valley of teares Remember His Post humus Booke to His Sonne full of precepts savoring meerly of piety Christian wisdome charity and forgivenesse to His very Enemies and then judge whether our late King or our usurping Kinglings now scratching and tearing us making one Warre beget-another 1 King 3. perpetuating an Army and domineering over us by the power of the Sword were the naturall Parent whose bowels yearned upon this now Orphan Child the English Nation dying and expiring under this new Corporation of Tyrants Oath of Allegiance Stat. of Recognition 1 Iacobi the putative Parent which overlayed it He that acknowledged Allegiance to the Father cannot deny it to his Sonne as having sworne to beare faith and true Allegiance to the King his Father and to his lawfull Heyres and Successours which our usurping Hogens Mogens cannot pretend to be so that as well for duty and conscience to God and their owne Soules as for a necessary and just protection of their lives and estates all honest and wise men ought to cast themselves into the Armes of his Dread Majesty our present KING as the onely sanctuary of their salvation and not suffer themselves to be so farre mis-led by vaine reports as to be more afraid of their cure than of their disease Stultorum incurata pudor malas ulcera celat Solomon 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 owne people with fatherly compassion for examples sake and a Usurper wounding killing and robbing those which are none of his owne his fellow Servants for his lust and lucre sake I will set downe a short Abridgement of our owne famous Dictum de Kennelworth and first the occasion thereof which was thus Simon de Montford Earle of Leicester conspiring with many other great Men rebelled against Henry 3. pretending after the manner of all Rebels Reformation of publique Grievances He overthrew the King in battle took Him and his Sonne Prince Edward Prisoners the Prince after a while escaped out of Prison raised an Army overthrew and slew in the Battle of Evesham Simon Montford subdued the whole Party rescued and re-inthroned his Father Commissions were sent forth to prevent future troubles and settle mens minds grown desperare with feare what horrid punishments 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 of it No man bled to death for it but in the field the bloud of warre 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 See the late History of the Marquesse of Montrosse what gentle use he made of his Victory after he had subdued the strength of Scotland at the Battle of Kylsythe not unto destruction though the knowne Lawes called them Traytors and put them into his power for life lands and goods they were but once punished not alwaies tormented and kept upon the rack after the late custome of our fellow Servants and Subjects who will never suffer the partition wall between us to be throwne downe England once more to become one Nation and one People and our broken bones to be againe set and knit together Dictum de Kennelvvorth None to be Dis-inherited but onely fined As namely Those 1. That began and continued in Warre 2. That held Northampton against the King 3. That fought against him at Lewis Evesham Chesterfeild 4. That were taken at Kenilworth 5. That sacked Winchster being yet unpardoned 6. That voluntarily sent against him or the Prince 7. The Officers of the Earl of Leicesters who molested their Neighbours with Rapine Fire Murder or otherwise to pay in three yeares five yeares value and half their Estates of Land If they sell it such as are by the Kings grant possessed of then to have them giving as any other c. and so if it be to be Let those who pay the whole to have all instantly and that pay halfe to have halfe If in three yeares the whole be unpaid the Land to be divided between him that owes it and him to whom the King hath given it If any have Woods by sale of which he would pay his Fine the money to be paid by two of which either side to chuse one 2. Knights and Esquires who during this Warre have enriched themselves by Rapine having no Land to pay half their goods and be bound with Sureties to the peace if no goods be quitted by Oath exceptis bannitis quibus solus Rex potest remittere 3. Lords of Wards to pay for them and be answered by their Wards when they come to age which if they accept not the Wardship to accrue to such as the King hath given the Ransome to and they to be so answered 4. The Kings Wards to remaine where they are placed and be Ransomed as others but without destruction 5. Such as were with the King before the Battle of Levvis and since are Dis-inherited His Majesty to declare his pleasure touching them 6. No man now possest of wood to fell any but onely for repaire till the last day of payment be passed and not observed 7. The King and the Popes Legate to send beyond sea for a time such as are likely to trouble the peace of the Kingdome which if it hindered the paying of their Ransome not for that to be Dis-inherited 8. Such as were grieved with this Agreement might appeale to the Kings Court before S. Hilary and such as were beyond sea to have inducias transmarinas 9. Because the King was to reward many and some had too much the King out of these Fines to provide for them 10. The Legate King and Henry d'Almain to Elect 12. who should cause these Articles to be executed and to see performed what they ordaine according to the estimates already taken or if not to have new rates taken reasonable and true 11. Tenants tha were against the King to lose their Leases but at the expiration of their time the Land to returne to the true owner 12. Forts built by the assent of the King
Lenthall their Speaker as followeth 1. FOr releasing out of New-gate 3 of the Queens Priests and Iesuits by his Warrant 2. For maintaining and protecting severall Spies and Agents for the late King within the Line of Communication during the late Warre 3. For conveying divers remarkable Prisoners of War out of the Line of Communication unto the late King 4. For assisting and protecting severall Plotters on the behalfe 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 Warre with Men and Armes 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 conceale and smother the foregoing Treacheries 10. For endeavouring to take away the Lives of severall the Prosecutors and Witnesses unto the foregoing Treacheries You see there is not one word in them of Cousening the Common-wealth 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 eares 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 then their owne to wit the KING 's And though they will be so much Masters of their own Priviledges as to coyne new every day upon emergent occasions yet those irregularities are alwaies done under the power and protection of the Sword which they could not expect against their owne Visier Basha Oliver This trick being smelt out was so highly resented that it perished in the birth onely I heare the Speaker bled in private 15000 l. towards Olivers expedition 199. 150000 l. Advance money for Cromwells expedition All the sinks of tyranny and oppression about the Towne 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 l. part whereof onely he is accountable for the residue is left to his discretion and conscience to buy Townes 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 Culpeper's Sonne married Forde's Daughter Observe how the Generall is lessened to advance Cromwell 1. The Command of the Irish Forces taken from him and Cromwell 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 Cromwell so that the discontented and Levelling Party onely are left under the Command of Fairfax Col. Martin's Accounts brought into the House 200. More Gifts to the Godly 3. Iuly 1649. his Arreares came to 25000 l and 1000 l. per ann Land ordered to be setled upon him and his Heyres 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 Generall by Captaine Iubbs The Moderate from Iuly 3. to Iuly 10. 1649. in the name of Col. Huson's Regiment about Iuly 6. wherein amongst other things they complaine 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 Generall and putting the most confiding men under Cromwell the taking the whole Command of Ireland from the Generall and conferrirg it upon Cromwell the drawing drie all Treasuries of Money to furnish Cromwell and leaving no Money to content the Generalls remaining part of the Army the turning the odium of seizing and secluding the Members and Murdering the KING upon the Generall were not sufficient diminutions of the Generall and augmentations of his Lieutenant Generall The Welch Counties are set on worke to desire Harry Martin for their Commander in Chiefe and the Westerne Garrisons the most considerable of England are to be taken from the Generall and put into the hands of Cromwell and his Party for his retreat from Ireland so that if all this doe not enable him to ruine the Generall it will at least enable him to divide the Army and cautonize the Kingdome and turne the Generall into the dangers and troubles of the starving forlorne North Counties bordering upon Scotland And if Cromwell find Ireland too hard a Bone for him it is thought he will endeavour to surprize the Isle of Man and from thence infest Scotland and Ireland 202. An Inquisition for bloud an ingenious piece newly come to light About the 18. Iuly 1649. was presented to the world an ingenious piece entituled An Inquisition for Bloud to the Parliament in statu quo nunc And to the Army Regnante wherin the Author proves That the KING dsd not take the guilt of Bloud upon Himselfe by granting the Preambulatory Proposition in the late Treaty in the Isle of Wight in these words viz That He acknowledged that the two Houses of Parliament were necessitated to undertake a Warre in their owne just and lawfull Defence c. And that therefore all Oathes Declarations or other publique Instruments against the 2 Houses of Parliament or any for adhering to them c. be Declared null suppressed and forbidden His Majesty in yeilding to this Grant had reference to two ends 1. To prepare the way to peace which without this had been hopelesse 2. To secure indemnifie the two Houses with all their Adherents and rid them from those despairing feares and jealousies which made them adversaries to peace For the words of this Preamble they were not of His penning He was not Authour of them but an Assentor to them nor was He or His Party accused or so much as mentioned in them He made this Concession sub stricta novacula when the Razor was as it were at His throat 1. An Army of 3e000 Horse and Foot effective against Him 2. When He was endangered and tired out with a long and close Imprisonment 3. When many dangerous menacing Petitions against His life had been encouraged and entertained so that the King may seem to have been necessitated to yeild to this Grant for His owne just and lawfull Defence His Majesty passed this Concession with these two Provisoes 1. That it should be of no validity until the whole Treaty were intirely
be done by the King if by those Words things done or to be done for the dissolving c. they shall say they related to the Kings Naturall Death Natural Death is the Act of God which these Saints cannot make voide if they related to His violent Death it could not then be said a thing done or to be done for the unlawfulness and injustice of it This Act passed long before any War or Bloud shed The onely pretence they have since found out for the Kings Murder 2. If this Parliament were not Dissolved by the Kings Death Yet the House of Peeres formerly Voted downe by the Commons gave no consent the passing this Act Entituled An Act of the House of Commons who without the concurring Assent of the Lords and the Kings Royall Assent have no power to passe any Act Make or Declare any Law or impose any Tax as appeares by the fore-recited Acts The Petition of Right The Act for the Trienniall Parliament and this very Act against Dissolving Proroguing c. with all our Printed Statutes Parliament Rolls and Law-Bookes The Commons being so farre from claiming the sole Legislative Power heretofore as that they were not Summoned to our Ancient Parliaments which consisted onely of King Lords Temporall and Spirituall untill 45 Hen. 3. nor had they so much as a House of Commons or Speaker untill the Reigne of Edw. 3. nor never tendred any Acts or Bills to the King but Petitions onely of Grievances untill long after Rich. 2. time See the Printed Prologues to the Stat. 1 4. 5 9 10. 20. 23. 36. 37. 50. Edw. 3. 1 Ric. 2. 1. 2. 4. 5. 7. 9. 11. 13 Hen. 4. 1. 2. 3. 4. 8. 9 Hen. 5. 1 2 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 14 15. 28 29 39 Hen. 6. 1 4 7 8 12 17 22 Edw. 4. 1 Rich. 3. 3. But suppose the Commons alone had power to impose Taxes yet it must be in a full and free House whereas when this Act for 90000 l. a Moneth passed the House was neither Full nor Free The Major part of the House who by Law are the House to wit 8. parts of 10. at the least being Secured or Secluded by Col. Pride and his Souldiers by Confederacy with those 40. or 50. then sitting when this Act passed and acting the Wills of the Councell of Officers to the subversion of Parliaments and the great wrong of those Counties and Burroughs for which they served Object If it be objected that by usage of Parliament 40. Members make a House of Commons Answ 1. I Answer not to all intents and purposes Not to grant Subsidies nor passe Lawes or matters of greatest moment Modus tenendi Parl. Cookes 4. Instit pag. 1. 2. 26. 35. 36. Cromptons Iurisd of Couts fol. 1. 39 Edw. 3. 7. Brook Parl. 27. 1. Iac. c. 1. 2. 40 Members make not a House when the rest are Excluded by force without Dores and fraud of their Fellow-members within Dores on purpose that being the Major number they may not over-vote them The Commons not having power to expell any of their Members without consent of King and Lords in whom onely the Iudiciall power Paribus in Pares non est Potestas Claus Dors 7 Rich. 2. M. 27 Seldens Title of Honour pag. 737. Baron Camoyes case discharged by the Kings Writ and Iudgement from serving amongst the Commons because a Peer of the Realm The practice for Members to Expell and Sequester their Fellow-members being a late dangerous innovation to pack a Factious Conventicle instead of a Parliament If the King should send forth no more Writs then would Summon 40. or 50. Commons it were no House Added by the Abridger So M. Pryn concludes That if he should voluntarily submit to pay this Tax by virtue of the said pretended Act of Parliament Dated 7. Aprill 1649. made by those now sitting some of whose Elections have been Voted void others of them Elected by new Illegall Writs under a new kind of Seal since the Kings Beheading as the Earl of Pembroke and Lord Edward Howard uncapable of being Knights or Burgesses by the Common Law because Peeres of the Realm as was adjudged in the Lord Camoyes case Claus Dors 7 Rich. 2. M. 32. and asserted by Mr. Seldens Titles of Honour Part 2. chap. 5. pag. 735. Seconded by Cookes 4. Instit pag. 1. 4. 5. 46. 47. 49. As he should admit those to be lawfull Members so he should assent to ex post facto some particulars against his Knowledge and against the Oathes of Allegeance Supremacy Protestation Solemn League and Covenant taken in the presence of God with a sincere heart and reall intention to performe 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 lawfull Parliament of England actually in being and legally continuing after the Kings Death consisting onely 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 lawfull Authority 1. To Violate the Priviledges Rights Freedomes Customes and alter the Constitution of our Parliaments themselves 2. To Imprison Seclude and Expell most of their fellow Members the farre Major part of the House for Voting according to their Consciencies in favour of Peace and settlement of the Common-wealth 3. To Repeal all Votes Ordinances and Acts of Parliament they please 4. To Erect new Arbitrary Courts of Warre and Iustice 5. To Arraign Condemne and Execute the King himself with the Peeres and Commons of this Realm by a new kind of Martiall Law contrary to Magna Charta The Petition of Right 3. Car. and the known Lawes of the Land 6. To Dis-inherit the Kings Posterity of the Crown 7. To éxtirpate Monarchy and the whole House of Peers 8. To Change and Subvert the Ancient Government Seales Lawes Writs Legall proceedings Courts and Coyne of the Kingdome 9. To Sell and Dispose of all the Lands Revenues Iewels Goods of the Crowne with the Lands of Deans and Chapters for their own advantage not the easing of the People from Taxes 10. To absolve themselves by a Papall kind of Power and all the Subjects of England and Ireland from all the Oaths and Engagements they have made to the Kings Majesty His Heires and Successours yea from the very Oath of Allegeance notwithstanding this expresse Clause in it fit to be laid to Heart by all Conscientious Christians I doe believe 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
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 goodnesse holinesse justice Mistake me not I doe not meane 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 owne assured damnation Therefore Gods employing wicked Instruments can be no president for our Alchimy Saints to doe the like unlesse Cromwells * Councell of Officiers of State and Parliament three Iuntoes and faction will usurp Gods prerogative as they have done the Kings 5. The 15. August the Letter saith that Coote called a Councell of Warre who resolved It was better to accept of the assistance of those who proclaimed themselves Friends to us and the Interest we fight for c. Here you see O Neale's bloody Party those Parliament Champions united and friendly conspiring to uphold one Common Interest which can be nothing but the downfall of Monarchy and Protestancy 6. The 15. August the Letter further saith that we Coote and his Councell of Warre added to the Articles this wary Proviso not to use their assistance longer then the approbation of the State of England should go a long with us therein c. It should seem by this warinesse 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 meane to use their assistance hereafter it is left indefinite no longer then the approbation of the State shall goe along with us therein which may happily be untill Domes-day notwithstanding the Order Dated the 24. August 1649. voting That their Vote of the 10. August in the Case of Col. Monke be communicated to Sir Ch Coote as the Resolution of the House c. For who knowes 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 Monke's Letter of Answer to Oneale Dated 26. April 1649. from Dondalke contained in the last foregoing Section but one See the said Paper entituled The Propositions of Owen Roe O Neale sent to C. Monk c. printed at Corke 1649. O Neale was pleased to communicate to him certaine Proposalls which he saith were long since transmitted into England to the Parliament by C. Monke and though for his owne part and the prime Officers with him these are privie to the secret carriage of the businesse and therefore may well be satisfied with what is done already they do not doubt but the Proposalls are already yeilded 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 untill 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 intreat your Lordships to declare your Resolution 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 publique Declaration thereof is desired that they may Vnanimously and cheerfully endeavour the preservation of the Parliaments Interest The Articles of Agreement between O Neale and Coote conclude clearly a League or Warre Offensive and Defensive against the Enemies of both or either untill a more absolute Agreement be made and condiscended unto by the Parliament of England This more absolute Agreement is now in agitation and private Directions sent to Coote how to behave himselfe in the Transaction thereof See the 1. Vote die veneris 24. August 1649. See the Relation of the Transactions between Sir Charles Coote and Own 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. Monke be communicated to Coote and a Direction for him how to behave himselfe in the Transaction between him and Own Roe O Neale this Transaction is called in the Articles ut supra a more absolute Agreement These Letters Articles and Votes being Apologetically published for satisfaction of the Souldiery and People it had been fit to have communicated the said Directions also to their Trustors and Soveraigne Lords the People that they might have seen faire play above board and not to have sent clandestine Directions to Coote in so suspitious a busines how to behave himself in the Transaction with O Neale which implies the said Transaction shal be continued and may be compleated the rather for that their second Vote saith The House is well satisfied of the diligence faithfulnesse and integrity of Sir Charles Coote in preserving the Garrison of London Derry now it was preserved by his said Conjunction with O Neale who raised the Siege About this time came forth a Booke called 208. The Levellors vindicated or The Case of the twelve Troops c. The Levellors vindicated or The Case of the 12. Troops which by Treachery in a Treaty were lately surprized at Burford Subscribed by Six Officers in the name of many more Wherein p. 2. they say That under colour of the Armies solemne Engagement at New-market and Triplo-heath Iune 5. 1647. and many other their Declarations Promises and Protestations in pursuance thereof which Engagement they affirme against their Preaching Coronet Denne was never retracted by any Generall Councell of the Army nor upon any Petition of the Souldiers nor their Agitators ever by them recalled or dismissed The whole fabrik of this Common-wealth is fallen into the grossest and vilest Tyranny that ever English-men groaned under all their Laws Rights Lives Liberties and Proporties wholly subdued to the boundlesse wills of some deceitfull Persons having devolved the whole Magistracy of England into their Martiall Domination c. Pag. 7. They say That the Souldiers Paper-Debentures are good for nothing but to sell to Parliament-men for 3. or 4. in the pound which they are forced to sell them for to keep them from starving because they will not pay one penny Arreares to such as they put out of the Army any other waies that so they may rob the Souldiers of their Seven yeares Servìce and make themselves and their Adherents Purchasers of the Kings Lands for little or nothing and for ought appeares the Money they buy these Debentures with is the Money the Nation can have no Account of That they have dealt as basely with other Soldiers who never resisted their Commands 1. They turned them off with