Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n call_v king_n see_v 1,786 5 3.4083 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

quandarumque poenes Rempublicam non unum aliquem Magistratum esse debet potestas nulla enim in re gravius peccatum admittitur nusquam graviores turbae minantur quàm hisce de rebus That is the best forme of Government where the King can doe most good and least evill 1. Let Him be disabled to raise new Taxes and lay on new Tribute 2. Let Him not have the sole power to make or repeale Lawes which ought to belong to the Common-wealth not any one Magistrate for no power is more hurtfull to the people nor stirres more Commotions then these two such is the Kingdome of England the King hath neither the power of our Purses nor the changing of our Lawes in His hands and if he give away his Sword he will be such a King of clouts as can do neither good nor evill like Rex Sacrificulis at Rome ea summa potestas dicitur quâ secundum Leges non est major neque par such was the Dictator at Rome he had no equall there Papyp cursor dictator adjudged to death his Generall of the Horse Fabius for fighting against his command though prosperously and rejected all appeale to the Senate and Tribunes of the People yeilding at last onely to their prayers with this saying Vicit tandem imperii majestas such is the King of England the Common-wealth cannot compell him to grant a Pardon or dispense justice or mercy as they please the Oath of Supremacy calls Him Supreame Governour in all Causes over all Persons so doe all our Statutes to whom in Parliament which is his highest sphere of majestie is the last appeale by Writ of Error who is Principium caput finis Parliamenti the beginning head and end of the Parliament and therefore he onely calls the Parliament to advise with him and dissolves it when he is satisfied He makes Warre and Peaee See the 1. part of this History Prolegomena 1. and is Protector of the Lawes and of all just interests onely the policy of the Law disables him to make repeale or alter Lawes or raise Monies without consent of both Houses by Bill passed which is but an Embrio until he quickens it by his Royal Assent because this way the King may doe most hurt and wrong to his people as I have already said it being the wisdome of our Lawes to keep the Sword in one hand and the purse in another The 1. 15. The 1. Proposition for j●stifying the Parliaments and condemning His owne quarrell proemial Proposition for justifying the Parliaments Cause and Quarrell and condemning his owne Cause and Party was a bitter pill but an earnest desire of peace sweetned it and guilded it over and invited him to swallow it without chawing or ruminating upon it but how devilish unchristian and illegal a use the Faction hath made of this extorted confession let God judge Their insisting upon it that the King should take the Covenant 16. The Covenant endeavoured to be put upon the King was an errour in Policy whereof the rigid Presbyterians are guilty they supposing the King would take it at last stood upon it and intended thereby to joyne the King to their Interest and Party The more subtile Independent knew the King would not nor could not take it and therefore complyed with the Presbyterians in obtruding it upon him to break off the Treaty many things in the Covenant were vaine in the Person of His Majesty as that He should swear to maintain his owne Person c. which the Law of nature binds him to without an Oath which in this case is idle and a prophaning of Gods name some things in the Oath were contradictory to what the Parliaments Propositions desired of him as to maintain His own Authority in defence of Religion Lawes and Liberties which was impossible for Him to doe unlesse he kept the Militia in his owne hands and his Negative Voice also which that clause in the Bill of Militia That all Bills for leavying Forces should have the power of Acts of Parliament without the Royall Assent c. would have deprived him of by making their Ordinances Acts of Parliament in effect binding to the Persons and Estates of the People in an Arbitrary way to their utter enslaving To sweare to Abolish Bishops c. was against his Coronation-Oath To sware to extirpate Heresies Schismes c is more then the Independents would permit To sweare to maintaine the Vnion between the two Nations which the Parliament declare already to be broken by the Scots Invasion is vaine besides how unjust a thing was it to impose that Oath upon the King when most Members of the Parliament Army and others are left at large not to take it The Parliaments Demands That the King should declare against the Marquesse of Ormonds proceedings to unite all the Interests of Ireland for the service of his Majesty was no part of the Propositions upon which the Treaty was begun but a subsequent request upon an emergent occasion and therefore I see no reason why the King should have given any answer to it but onely have held himselfe to the original Propositions yet he did Answer That the whole businesse of Ireland was included in the Treaty and therefore a happy Agreement thereupon would set an end to all differences there which being voted unsatisfactory and moved that a new Declaration might be published against him the King was inforced to put a stand to the Marquesses proceedings by his Letter to his great prejudice yet these Declarers against him do now comply with Owen Roe Oneale and have entertained O Realy the Popes Irish-Vicar-general in England to negotiate for the Irish massacring Rebels with the Parliament These things considered prove what I finde in our late King Charles the 1. most excellent Book Chap. 18. That it is a Maxime to those that are Enemies of peace to ask something which in Reason and Honour must be denied that they might have some colour to refuse all the rest that is granted More observations upon this unlucky Treaty I will not trouble my Reader with these being enough to shew the vanity of those Propositions by these he may take a scantling of the rest ex pede Herculem I cannot but blame the indiscretion if not the indisposition of those Commissioners who cavilled away so much time in the Treaty 17. Jones complaines by Letters that Ireland was like to be lost until Cromwell had done his work in the North and marched up to Towne to make the Treaty ineffectuall About the latter end of Octob. 1648. Col. Jones sent whining Letters from Dublin to the Steersmen at Derby-house complaining that all Ireland was like to unite and prosecute the Kings Interest and therefore he cried for help but neither the said Committee in their consultations nor the Army in execution of what was resolved could agree amongst themselves the Engrossers and Monopolizers of Oligarchy into a few hands desiring to make themselves
we could enjoy nothing but as the will of any number of men that shall call themselves The People And upon the same ground that those that shall subscribe this Agreement may call themselves the People may those that shall refuse to subscribe call themselves the People and upon far better grounds as being farre the more numerous and standing for defence of those ancient Lawes which do constitute the People and Common-wealth of England which will breed infinite confusions and divisions and what those that call themselves the People now agree to they may alter upon the next change of humour or interest 2. The inconveniences of the present Government have not yet been plainly discovered nor no Trial hath been made by the present knowne legal power of England whether those inconveniences may not be removed without subverting the present Government and introducing so totall a change as will be very dangerous and grievous to all sorts and conditions of men 3. In the Protestation May 5. 1641. and the Covenant Septemb. 27. 1643. we are bound to defend Parliaments and to oppose and bring to punishment all such as shall endeavour the subversion of Parliaments which this Agreement cleerly doth 4. This Agreement encroacheth desperately upon the liberty of the People of England in the Election of this Representative depriving them that have constantly adhered to this Parliament as wel as the Kings Party if they cannot in conscience subscribe it from Electing or being Elected yet they shall have Laws and Taxes imposed upon them by Subscribers who are the least and the least considerable party of the Kingdome and upon whom they conferre no trust which is to disfranchise the Nonsubscribers and reduce them to the condition of Conquered Slaves It is a knowne Maxime in Law Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus tractaeni debet what concernes all men must be debated and agreed to by all men either personally or representatively 5. It will raise factions and feuds between the Subscribers and Non-subscribers of the Parliament party 6. It takes away Magistracy and Government not onely by placing such a Supreme power over them as is disputable nay apparently illegal But by making the heady multitude the People supreme Judges over the said Representative for although it inflicts the penalty of death upon the Resisters of their Orders yet is with this salvo except such Representative shall expresly violate this Agreement which makes every man or number of men that shall get power into their hands Judges of it nor is there any other Judge designed and if there were who shall judge that Judge sic in infinitum the legal supreme Trust of all publique interests being taken away our vagabond thoughts wander in a circle not knowing where to repose our trust all Judges all Councels may erre but the rascal multitude are the very sinke of errors and corruptions If therefore the Supreme the Representative have so unstable an authority what shall the subordinate Magistrate acting under them have 7. It smels so much of the Jesuite that it tolerateth Popery in private Houses contrary to the knowne Lawes of the Land Popery like the old Serpent if it once get in the head will soon insinuate the whole body being so well backed by Potent Princes and Councels from beyond Sea And truly I know not what to say against Popery where Heresie Schisme Atheisme and Blasphemie are openly tolerated and exempted from the power of the civil Magistrate as in this Agreement 8. It will lose Ireland the managing of the Warre there being legally in this Parliament by Act passed not in this newfangled Representative 9. It divides us from Scotland 10. It destroyes the Cause for which the Parliament so often Declared Voted Protested and Covenanted that they fought viz. Defence of Parliaments Religion Lawes and Liberties and bestowes the Cause upon the King as if He only from the beginning had fought for them which all men have reason to believe when they shall see the Parliament make such ill use of their Victory as to root them all up And this and all other Parliament-Armies were Commissioned to preserve this Parliament by this Authority they have their Pay and Indemnity without which they are Thieves Rebels and Murderers 11. It demands that there be no Lawyers nor Lawes but new Rules in English to be made from time to time by the new Representative who are to be chosen and trusted onely by a small faction of Subscribers as hath been said according to which justice shall be administred not by Mayors Sheriffs Justices of the peace Officers alwaies ready but by hundred Courts who are to supply the roome of all the Judges and Lawyers of the Kingdome and all this to lie in the brests of 12. Men in every Hundred of the Tribe of the Godly be sure who peradventure can neither write nor read nor have responsible Estates to satisfie wrongs done these shall doe justice by providence and revelation 12. It destroyeth all great and publique Interests and therefore cannot stand Kings Lords Souldiers Magistrates Parliaments Lawyers Ministers who will oppose it because it confounds and destroyes Religion and depriveth the Ministery of its lot Tythes stopping their mouthes with famine purposely to cast them off and generally all men of quality and discretion will withstand it because it gives no security for enjoyment of liberty and property nor for increase of learning civility and piety who then are left to owne and subscribe it but desperate forlorne Persons who because they cannot bring their actions under the protection of our present Laws and Government will bring the Laws and Government to their own corrupt wills and interests and therefore will signe this Agreement no obedience being given to this Representative but upon condition that they kept this Agreement and their being no other Judges of their keeping it but the Subscribers who in the result of all hath the Law in their owne Wills 36. This Agreement of the People was condemned by the House of Commons 9. Nov. 1647. This Agreement of the People is the same which was subscribed by 9. Regiments of Horse and 7. of Foot and presented with a Petition to the House of Commons Novemb. 5. 1647 by the Agitators Gifforde the Jesuite being then in the Lobby with them and very active therein Upon reading and debate hereof the House then declared their judgements against it by passing these Votes Die Martis 9. Nov. 1647. A Paper directed to the Supreme Authority of the Nation the Commons in Parliament assembled The just and earnest Petition of those whose Names are subscribed in behalfe of themselves and all the Free-borne people of England Together with a Paper annexed intituled An Agreement of the people for present and future peace upon grounds of Common Right avowed How these Papers come now to be owned those that oppose them violenrly secured by the Army by the connivance at least of the dregs of the House now sitting
much more to act it Queen or their eldest Son and Heyre 2. To violate the KING'S Companion eldest Daughter unmarried or the Wife of the KING' 's eldest Son and Heyre 3. To leavy War against the King or adhere to his Enemies in his Realm and thereof be proveably attained of open deed by people of their condition 4. To counterfeit the King 's Great or Privy Seal 5. Or his M ney 6. To slay the King's Chancellor Treasurer Justices of one Bench or other Justices in Eyre Justices in Assize and all other Justices assigned to hear and determine being in their Places doing their Offices If any other case supposed Treason which is not above specified So the four Lords ought to have been Tried not by a new shambles of Justice doth happen before any Justices the Justices shall tarry without any going to Judgement of the Treason till the Cause be shewed and declared before the King and his Parliament not before the House of Commons only or before both Houses without the King whether it ought to be adjudged Treason You see how few in number these Treasons specified are and that they must be attained of open deed by their Peers our words were free under Monarchy though not free under our Free-State so were they under the Romans Tacitus An. 1. sub finem seaking of Treasons facia arguebantut dicta impune erant These horrible tyrannies considered and being destitute of all other less desperate relief I do here solemnly declare and protest before that God that hath made mee a Man and not a Beast a Free-man and not a Slave that if any man whatsoever that taketh upon him the reverend name and title of a Judge or Justice shall give Sentence of Death upon any friend of mine upon this or any other illegal Act of this piece of a House of Commons I will and lawfully may the enslaving scar-crow doctrine of all time-serving State-flattering Priests and Ministers notwithstanding follow the examples of Sampson Judith Jael and Ehud and by Ponyard Pistol Poyson or any other means whatsoever secret or open prosecute to the Death the said Judge and Justice and all their principal Abettors And I do here invite and exhort all generous free-born English-men to the like resolutions and to enter into Leagues defensive and offensive and sacramental associations seven or eight in a company or as many as can well confide in one another to defend and revenge mutually one anothers Persons Lives Limbs and Liberties as aforesaid against this and all other illegal and tyrannous Usurpations 162. A motion to inlarge Sir Will. Waller c. And the Generals Answer intimating the securing of the Members to be done by confederacy with the Army-party in the House About this time or a little before the General was moved to enlarge Sir William Waller and the other Members illegally kept Prisoners in Windsor He answered They were no longer his but the Parliaments prisoners It should seem the Brute hath made a private deed of gift of them to his Journy-men of the House The Generals Warrant seized and imprisoned them and notwithstanding the Councel of Officers declared in Print that they were preparing a Charge against them yet the Knaves lyed like Saints they were then so far from having matter to accuse them of that they have ever since hunted after a Charge against them and endeavoured to suborn Witnesses but after 24 weeks restraint whereas by the Law no man ought to be committed without an accusation they have found nothing against them This turning over of these Prisoners to the House of Commons proves what I formerly asserted in Sect. 24. That the violence of the Army in securing and secluding the Members was by consent of their Somerset-house Junto now sitting in the House of Commons 163 The General sends forth Warrants to all Justices of the Peace to attach those Levellers that he had routed The honest Levellers most of them Country-men endeavouring to draw to a Randezvouz about 600. or 700. of them marched from Banbury to Burford in Oxfordshire where lying securely because they were upon treaty with the Enemy their Quarters were beaten up and about 180. of them taken Prisoners which their enemies according to their usual custome to gain reputation by lying reported to be so many Hundreds And the General as if they had been all routed sent forth his Warrants to all Justices of the Peace in the adjacent Counties requiring them to apprehend and secure all such of them as shall be found I desire to know by what Authority the General takes upon him to command Justices of the Peace who are not under his Power and what tame Animals these Justices are that will submit to his commands and whether he thinks the Civil Magistrate to be obnoxious to the Power of the Sword and the Councel of Officers See the Vote and Act for abolishing the Kingly office 164. and his single self the Supreme Magistrate or Tyrant Paramount notwitstanding the Vote of his Journey-men Commons That no single Man should be trusted with the Supreme Power The Levellers having possessed themselves of Northampton the General it is said thought fit to take hold of the Horns of the Altar The General sends to the City for additional Forces and wrote to his vassals of the City to send their Trained Bands to his relief that he might the better domineer over them and continue their slavery hereafter But if the Citizens have no more wit I wish their Horns may be as visible in their fore-heads as the Nose in Olivers face To cozen the honest Levellers 165. The Commons colourably debate to dissolve this Parl. and settle a succeeding Representative the Commons in order to the ending this present Parliament are debating how to pack a succeeding Representative as wicked as themselves and of the same leaven whose Election shall not be free but bounded with such Orders of limitation and restriction as shall shut out all men from electing or being elected as are not precisely of the same principles and practices and as deep engaged in their tyrannical trayterous cheating bloody designs as themselves guilty Committee-men and Accountants to the State shall be the next Representative and for the better lengthening of the businesse that they may see what success in the mean time the Levellers will have they wire-draw it through a Committee and refer it to be debated by a Committee of the whole House And at last if they must dissolve having packed themselves into a Councel of State they will usurp the Supreme Authority there to prepare the way to which design they have passed another Act May 19. That the People shall be Governed as a Free-state by Representatives and by such as they shall constitute and then consider what kind of Representatives we are like to have Great care is taken that the State or rather our States-mens private pockets might not be prejudiced by Judgments
Liberty of Priviledged Spies speak bold language to draw other men into danger and plot conspiracies which themselves detect and are rewarded like Decoy Duckes for their paines Of this sort are Bernard and Pits set no work to betray Gell and Andrewes as aforesaid For which Bernard had 300 l. and a Troop of horse conferred upon him Johnson that falsly accused Sir Robert Sherly and Colonel Egerton for their charity in relieving his wants is another Varney is a Fourth So well are they fitted with these Sonnes of Belial that no Naboth can keep his Vineyard if a Grandee cast a covetous eye upon it they can prove what they list Nay it is usuall for our Grandees to molest one man with examining him 20. or 30. severall times against one Prisoner and upon one point to distract his memory and not to let him be quiet untill he perceive he must speak what their questions and discourses lead him to to redeem himself from vexation To say nothing of their Menaces To torture men if they will not confess what they impudently pretend is already discovered by other meanes And their insinuating into the Affections of witnesses by asking them Whether the State doth not owe them money And why they do not use fitting meanes and opportunities to recover it And why they do not make meanes for some beneficiall employment 5. In Magna Charta chap. 29. it is enacted That no Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Free-hold or Liberties or Free-Customes or be outlawed or exiled or any otherwise destroyed nor we will not passe upon him or condemn him but by lawfull Judgement of his Peers or by the Law of the Land We will sell to no man we will not deny or defer to any man Justice or Right See Statute 2. Edward III. chap. 8. 5. Ed. III. chap. 9. 14. Ed. III. chap. 14. 25. Ed. III. chap. 4. 11. R. II. chap. 10. Pet. of Right 3. Car. 1. 10. Edward IV. fol. 6. Dier folio 104. Cook lib. 5. folio 6. lib. 10. folio 74. lib. 11. folio 99. Regist folio 86. Where note the word Peers signifies that no man is to be condemned or destroyed but by the lawfull verdict of a Jury of 12. sworn men of the Neighbourhood where the Fact was committed because in probability Neighbours may have best cognisance of the Fact and of the life and conversation of the Party Accused And these only are Competent Judges of Matter of Fact and in many cases of Matter of Law too if they will take the knowledge of the Law upon them Neither can this Petty Jury of 12. men go upon the Prisoner unlesse a Bill of Enditement containing the whole Matter of charge be first found in open Court by a Grande Jury or Enquest of sworn men who are to enquire of the Fact upon the Oathes of two lawfull witnesses at least to every materiall Point of the Enditement and then when the Grande Enquest are all agreed the Foreman endorseth upon the back of the Bill Billa vera and then presents it in open Court as the Information for the King of the whole Enqueste otherwise the Enditement is quasht and null Cookes 3. Instit chapter High Treason and Petty Treason And whereas the Statute saith but by his Peeres or by the Law of the Land Lex Terrae signifies The Antient Customes of the Land Amongst which Fundamentall Customes Trialls by Juries hold a principall place And when the King Charles I. accused this Parliament That they disposed of the Subjects Lives and Fortunes by their votes contrary to the known Laws of the Land This Parliament in their Remonstrance Sept. 1642. 1. Part of the Book of Declarations fol. 6 9 3. highly resented it And Magna Charta being nothing else but an Affirmation of the Common Law inserted this Clause or by the Law of the Land as a speciall caution not to annihilate or frustrate no not so much as tacitely or by preterition any of the said Fundamentall Lawes or Customes nor any other particular lawfull Customes which are not one and the same in all parts of England Witnesse the Custom of Gavelkind in Kent I have told you what our known antient Legal Courts of Justice do And I must tell you that Legal formes and set Modes of proceedings are so essentiall unto Justice that without them we can not measure the Rectitude of Obliquity of Justice or Injustice where they do not chalk forth the way both Judges Lawyers Officers and Atturneys will tread what subtle obscure pathes they please usurp an Arbitrary power and latitude to prevaricate and so far corrupt and work the Law of their sense that they will rather Leges dare then Leges dicere so that what is Law in one mans case shall not be so in another mans They will so intricate and intangle causes that every case shall be Casus pro amico as Civilians call it when upon full hearing The Merits of the cause appear so equall and undistinguishable on both parties that the Judge may according to his discretion look upon the Merits of the Persons onely and give the cause Pauperiori viâ Charitatis or digniori ratione virtutis Justice not fixed by Formalities will become such a vagrant that no man shall know where to find her Let us now see what our new shambles our upstart High Court doth Which in this work of Reformation and Destruction so much abhorres Superstition and Ceremonies and sticks so close to a Summary way of proceeding that they have not onely stripped but flead her as their Masters the Parliament not onely fleece but flea the People In lieu of a Bill of presentment by a Grande Enquest the pretended Parliament or Counsell of State send a List of such Persons names as they have proscribed And set a Nigrum Theta upon as men dangerous to their designed interest to the Masters of their Slaughter-house The said High Court together with such Depositions as they have taken in corners against the Prisoners and this is such a forejudging of them that the said Court neither will nor dare acquite whom their Masters and Pay-Masters have precondemned Next Articles of Impeachment in nature of a charge are drawn up against the Prisoner although such Articles are nothing in Law which regards onely a Bill of Inditement Then the Prisoner after a close Imprisonment for he knows not what upon two daies warning is led to the Bar where the first work is to dazle his eyes amaze and distract his Judgement and Memory with the terror of their Souldiers the Numerousnesse high affronting words and looks of his Judges having thus mortified the Prisoner he is commanded to hear his charge read and bid plead to it Guilty or not Guilty If he own their Jurisdiction and plead the said Generall Plea they have him where they would have him they never ask him how he will be tried Whether by God and his Country For God hath no hand in
they left few honest moderate men in them to oppose their projects still bringing in Schismaticks and men of their own interests by enforced and undue Elections into their rooms and so by insensible degrees new modelled the House suitable to their own corrupt desires and new modelled the Army accordingly so that the people who had no intention to be interested so far were step by step so far ingaged before they were aware that they could not draw their feet back and do now find to their grief that the Bit is in their mouths the Saddle fast girt on their galled backs and these Rank riders mounted who will spur them not only out of their Estates Laws and Liberties but into Hell with renewed Treasons new Oathes Covenants and Engagements if they take not the more heed and be not the more resolute they have changed their old honest principles and their old friends who bore the first brunt of the business and have taken new principles and friends in their room suitable to their present desperate designs and now that they have squeezed what they can out of the Kings party they think of sequestring their old friends because they adhere to their old principles 10. Who are the Kings bitterest enemies 10. Amongst those that are most bitter against the King His own Servants especially the Judasses of the Committee of the Revenue that carry His purse and have fingered more of His Money and Goods than they can or dare give an account for are the greatest Zealots those that take upon them imployments about His Revenue and share what allowances to themselves they please for their pains those that buy in for trifles old sleeping Pensions that have not been payed nor allowed this thirty years and pay themselves all arrears those that Rent parcels of the Kings Revenue for the eighth or tenth part of the worth as Cor. Holland who renteth for 200 l. per ann as much of his Estate as is worth 1600 l. or 1800 l. per annum Thus you see the Lion Lord of the Forest growing sick and weak become a prey and is goared by the Ox bitten by the Dog yea and kicked by the Asse Look upon this president you Kings and Princes and call to mind examples of old that of Nebuchadnezzer and others lest by exalting your selves too high you provoke God to cast you too low When the Grandee Independents have a desire to raise new forces or erect new Garrisons or use any extremity against the City 11. Forged Conspiracies and false News or Royal party they commonly usher in their design with reporting to the House the discovery of some new-invented conspiracy or plot full of danger and destructinn such as was that of many thousond consecrated Knives and then propound their own forelaid design as a counsellable way to prevent it and he that doth not hastily believe their Informations or doth argue against the remedies they propound though he shew never so great inconveniency in them is presently cried out upon as a Malignant that doth not take the danger of the Parliament to heart and branded by the black tongues of the Godly and when any great business is to be treated of in Parliament or City which they either desire to promote or to obstruct they commonly publish counterfeit News and Letters of great victories and successes gotten by their Party in parts so remote that they cannot in a short time be confuted this serves to credit and animate their Party to go on boldly with their worke and to dishearten their Opponents and though the profit and reputation of a lie is seldom long-lived yet if it last some few dayes untill they have carried on their present business they care not herein they imitate a skilfull Architector who building an Arch supports it in the beginning with circular props and pieces of Timber untill he hath closed it and enabled it to support it self and then throws away the props When they have a design to ruine any man 12. The Art of Slander and Calumny before they fall openly upon his person they secretly undermine his credit and reputation that afterwards they may oppress him with applause and they are so excellently well fitted with Agents and Instruments for this purpose that they can prove what they list The close Committee of Examinations is an excellent forge for these contrivances they know where to find the sonnes of Belial now commonly called Knights of the Post who will trust God with their souls to advance the good Cause they have secret Examinations of several sorts some preparatory only amounting but to suspitions and presumptions to wound a mans good name and make him liable to more deadly blows hereafter and some consummatory laying the Axe to the root at the first blow nor is it a small Artifice of theirs boldly to accuse other men of those crimes they themselves are guilty of as they did the 11. Members of trucking with the King being their own fault by this means it doth constare de re presently it appears such offences are committed and if they can but fix them upon the persons of other men by bold Accusations close Examinations and false Witnesses then constat de persona they have found men to personate them deputies to bear the ignominy and punishment of their sinnes so some lascivious persons free themselves bestowing their diseases upon others 13. What a Confiding man is They account no man a Godly faithfull confiding man but he that engages as far in sin and makes himself as hopeless of reconciliation as themselves Quis nunc diligitur nisi conscius 14. The last Retreat and Refuge of the Godly Since the revolt of some of their Ships hath almost made them hopeless of transportation to foreign Plantations the schismatical Grandees have made Col. Walton Brother-in-law to Cromwel Governour of Lyn Boston and Crowland and of all that level of morasse Ground in the Isles of Ely Holland and Marshland which they can lay under water at pleasure it is a plentifull and strong Fastness able to feed 40000. men besides the ordinary Inhabitants there are but three passes to enter it over three Bridges upon which they have or may build Forts for their defence and may from thence invade the adjacent Country at pleasure being themselves free from incursions or they may if they list break down the said Bridges These places already strong by nature they daily fortifie by art for which purpose great sums of money have been sent to him and much Arms Powder Ammunition and Ordnance from Windsor Castle Here when all other helps fail the Godly mean to take Sanctuary this shall be their last retreat from whence they will draw the whole Kingdom to Parly upon Articles of treaty and enforce their peace from them at last These are the stratagems of the Godly These are our Saints no where canonized but in the Devils Calendar As the Church of Rome
could not be carried on by any private designe in Conventicles and corners as are all the bloudy Petitions for justice justice against capital Delinquents and the most High which being penned and solicited by the Army or sectary Committee-men 48. Somersetshire encouraged by the House to associate all the wel-affected i. e. all the Anarchists and Cheaters and subscribed and prosecuted by some few beggerly Schismaticks without Cloaks in the Names of whole Counties whom they had the impudence to belie were entertained in state and they and that wel-affected County though they abhorred the villany thanked for their paines * 25. Decemb. The House voted a Letter to be sent by way of encouragement to the County of Somerset to go on with setling their association with the wel-affected and forces of the Counties adjacent this is to associate and Arme all the Schismaticks Committee-men guilty and desperate Persons Antimonarchists and Anarchists against all the peaceable and honest men of the Kingdome 26. Decemb. Mr. Pryn sent a Letter to the General 49. Mr. Pryns Letter to the General demanding his liberty demanding his liberty and seconded it with a Declaration as followeth Mr. Pryn's Demand of his Liberty to the Generall Decemb. 26. 1648. with his Answer thereto And his Declaration and Protestation thereupon For the Honourable Lord Fairfax Generall of the present Army THese are to acquaint your Lordship 50. Mr. Pryns Declaration seconding his said Letter That I being a Member of the Commons House of Parliament a Free-man of England a great Sufferer for and an Assertor of the Subjects Liberties against all Regal and Prelatical tyranny and no way subject to your owne your Councel of Warrs or Officers military power or jurisdiction going to the House to discharge my duty on the 6 of this instant December was on the staires next the Commons House door forcibly kept back entring the House seized on and carried away thence without any pretext of Lawfull Authority therto assigned by Colonel Pride and other Officers and Souldiers of the Army under your Command And notwithstanding the Houses demand of my enlargement both by their Sergeant and otherwise ever since unjustly detained under your Marshals custody and tossed from place to place contrary to the known Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject and fundamental Laws of the Land which you are engaged to maintaine against all violation And therefore do hereby demand from your Lordship my present enlargement and just liberty with your Answer hereunto From the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. This was delivered to the Generals own hands at his House in Queen-street about three of the clock the same day it beares date by Doctor Bastwijcke VVho returned this Answer by him upon the reading therof THat he knew not but Mr. Pryn was already released and that he would send to his Officers to know what they had against him VVho it seems act all things without his privity and steer all the Armies present counsels and designes according to their absolute wills The Publique Declaration and Protestation of William Pryn of Lincolnes Inne Esquire Against his present Restraint and the present destructive Councels and Jesuiticall proceedings of the Generall Officers and Army I VVilliam Pryn a Member of the House of Commons and Freeman of England who have formerly suffer'd 8. years Imprisonment four of them close three in exile three Pillories the losse of my Ears Calling Estate for the vindicating of the Subjects just Rights and Liberties against the arbitrary tyranny 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 freedom 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 publicke services Do here solemnly 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 real grounds of Religion Conscience Justice Law prudence and right reason for the speedy and effectual setlement of the peace and safety of our three distracted bleeding dying Kingdoms on Monday Dec. 4. I was on Wednesday morning following the 6 of this instant going to the House to discharoe my duty on the Parliament staires next the Commons door forcibly seized upon by Col. Pride Sir Hardress VValler and other Officers of the Army who had then beset the House with strong Guards and whole Reg of Horse and Foote haled violently thence into 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 forceibly detained Prisoner with other Members there restrained 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 any other accommodations contrary to the known Priviledges of Parl. the fundamental Laws of the Realm and Liberty of the subject which both Houses the 3. Kingdoms the General with all Officers and Soldiers of the Army are by solemn Covenant and duty obliged inviolably to maintain Since which I have without any lawful power or authority bin removed and kept prisoner in several places put to great expences debar'd the liberty of my person calling denied that hereditary freedom which belongs to me of right both as a Freeman a Member an eminent sufferer for the publick and a Christian by these who have not the least shadow of authority or justice to restrain me and never yet objected the least cause for this my unjust restraint I do therfore hereby publickly protest against all these their proceedings as the highest usurpation of an arbitrary and tyrannical power the greatest breach of faith trust Covenant priviledges of Parl. and most dangerous encroachment on the Subjects liberties and Laws 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 freedom in all their Remonstrances whils they are triumphantly trampling them all under their armed iron feet And do further herby appeal to 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 less tyrannical oppressive unjust and fedifragus to God and men than themselves And do moreover remonstrat that all their present exorbitant actings against the King Parl. present Government and their new modled representative are nothing else
Edward Ludlow Col. Jo. Hutchingson Col. Robert Titchburne Col. Owen Roe Col. Adriaen Scroop Col. John Oky Col. John Harrison Col. John Desborough Cornelius Holland Esq Miles Corbet Esq Francis Allen Esq Peregrin Pelham Esq John Gourdon Esq Serj. Francis Thorp Tho. Challoner Esq Col. John Moore John Aldred Esq Col. Francis Lassels Henry Smith Esq James Chaloner Esq Dennis Bond Esq Humph. Edwards Esq Gregory Clement Esq John Fray Esq Tho. Wogan Esq Sir Greg. Norton Serj. John Bradshaw Col. Edm. Harvey John Dove Esq Col. John Venn John Foulks Alder. Thomas Scot. Tho. Andrews Alder. William Cawley Esq Col. Anthony Stapley John Lisle Esq John Corbet Esq Thomas Blunt Esq Thomas Boone Esq Col. George Fleetwood Col. James Temple Sir Peter Temple Col. Thomas Wayte John Browne Esq William Say Esq Col. Matth. Thomlinson John Blackston Gilb. Millington Abraham Barrell Col. Jo. Downes Norton L. Gen. Tho. Hammond Nich. Love Vincent Potter Augustine Garland Sir Miles Lyvesey Jo. Dixwell Simon Mayne Daniel Blagrave Col. Robert Lylburne Col. Rich. Deane Col. Huson L. Col W. Goffe Master Carewe Jo. Joanes Mr. Bradshaw nominated President Counsellours assistant to this Court and to draw up the Charge against the KING are Doctor Dorislaus Master Aske Master Cooke Serjeant Dandy Serjeant at Armes Mr. Philips Clerke to the Court. Messengers and Dore-keepers are Master Walfard Mr. Radley Mr. Paine Mr. Powell Mr. Hull and M. King Crver 85. Observations upon the tryall of His Majesty This is a Relation of his Majesties Tryall by a mixed Court of Justice erected by 50. or 60. confederate Members of the House of Commons sitting under the power of the Army after all the rest of the Members above 250. had been violently secured secluded and frighted away And in order to this designe against the King the House of Peers ●●●d downe and yet the House of Commons when intire ●s 〈◊〉 Court of Judicature nor can give an Oath Had indifferent 〈◊〉 been permitted to take Notes you had had a more perfect narrative yet as it is truth shines forth to the confusion of this bloudy cheating Tyrannicall faction could they have wrought the King to have submitted to the Jurisdiction of this Arbitrary Court His example should have been urged as an irrefragable Precedent against the lives and liberties of the whole Kingdome and urged to be of as great Authority as if He had established that Court by Act of Parliament So that the King is to be looked on as a civil Martyr dying for the Liberty of the people And although they have failed of this device yet they will have some other Arbitrary bloudy Inquisition to cut off the lives without Law of such as they desire to remove without which this Tyrannous Kingdome of the Saints or Brambles cannot subsist And therefore on Thursday 2. February Cromwell and Ireton and their canniball Counsell of Officers projected to get an Act passed by their House of Commons where all their requests are commands to enable the said Councel to hang all such as they shall adjudge Disturbers of the Army 2. Part of Englands liberty in Chains sub fine And the Hunting of the Foxes c. although no Members of the Army they must have publique Slaughter-houses in terrorem as well as private ad poenam the nature of their cause and their naturall conditions requiring it Oliver is a Bird of prey you may know by his Bloudy Beake so was his Prodomus that Type and figure of him John of Leyden than whom this Fellow will shortly prove farre more bloudy you see this schismaticall remnant of one House have the impudence to usurp the Supreme Authority to themselves And then to tell you that the Votes of this petty conventicle calling themselves the Commons are the Law nay the Reason of the Land thereby divesting us of those Lawes which shall distinguish us from Slaves and denying us the use of our reason whereby we are differenced from Beasts and expecting an implicite faith and blind obedience from us to all the Votes of this half-quarter of an House of Commons so farre that they Vote obedience to the known Lawes in many cases to be Treason and what all our Lawes call Treason they Vote no Treason nay should they vote a Turd to be a Rose or Oliv●rs Nose a Ruby they would expect we should sweare it and fight for it This legislative Den of Thieves erect new Courts of Justice neither founded upon Law nor Prescription Theaters of illegal tyranny and oppression to take away mens lives Arbitrarily for Actions which no Law makes criminous nay for such acts as the Lawes command where their proceedings are contrary to Magna Charta and all our known Lawes and usages not per probos legales homines no Juries no sworn Judges authentically chosen no Witnesses face to face no formal Indictment in which a man may find errour and plead to the jurisdiction of the Court or where the Court ought to be of Councel with the Prisoner but the same engaged and vowed Enemies are both Parties Prosecutors Witnesses Judges or Authorizers and Nominators of the Judges Actors of all parts upon that stage of blood The King pressed earnestly especially upon Monday 22. Jan. to have his Reasons against the Jurisdiction of the Court heard but was as often denied He intended then to give them in writing which was likewise rejected so they were sent to the Presse A true Copie whereof followes His Majesties Reasons against the pretended Jurisdiction of the High Court of Justice which he intended to deliver in Writing on Monday Jan. 22. 1648. Faithfully transcribed out of the Original Copy under the Kings own hand 86. His Majesties Reasons against the Jurisdiction of the high Court of ●ustice published after His condemnation HAving already made my Protestations not only against the Illegality of this pretended Court but also that no earthly power can justly call Me who am your King in question as a Delinquent I would not any more open My mouth upon this ocasion more then to refer my self to what I have spoken were I alone in this case concerned But the duty I owe to God in the preservation of the true Liberty of my people will not suffer Me at this time to be silent For how can any free-borne Subject of England call life or any thing he possesseth his owne if power without right dayly make new and abrogate the old fundamental Law of the Land which I now take to be the present case Wherefore when I came hither I expected that you would have endeavoured to have satisfied Me concerning these grounds which hinder Me to answer to your pretended Impeachment but since I see that nothing I can say will move you to it though Negatives are not so naturally proved as Affirmatives yet I will shew you the Reason why I am confident you cannot judge Me nor indeed the meanest man in England for I will not like you without shewing a
both parties as equally guilty and was deeply engaged in point of Interest to cut off both Parties Endeavouring by these discourses to put the Presbyterians into despaire their own and Judas's sin and then to work upon that base and cowardly principle of self-preservation and invite them to joyn with them in point of civil Interest and common Defence But their kindness was but like that of a malicious Man who having plague-sores upon him embraceth his friend rather to infect then cherish him they know that by sitting voting acting and complying with them whose actions the Laws of God and the Land have damned and anathematized with the highest condemnation they should contract the guilt of all their forepassed crimes and treasons in the mean time the Presbyterians should sit and act but as a suspected Party and should be baffled and turned out again when the danger is past the Independents keeping in their own hands all the power profits and preferments of the Land and using the Presbyterian party but as Gibeonites Hewers of wood and Drawers of water under them they invited them therefore to share with them in their sins shames and punishments but would keep Achans Wedge and the Babilonish garment the profit of their crimes to themselves And as if it were not sufficient to cousen Man without mocking God the House of Commons Ordered a strict Fast to be kept upon Thursday 19 April 1649. as a day of Humiliation to implore Gods forgiveness for the ingratitude of the people who did not sufficiently acknowledge with thankfulness Gods great mercies upon this Land in freeing them from Monarchie and bestowing libertie upon them by changing Kingly Government into a Free-State or Republique The Faction knew that to partake with them in these prayers was to partake of their sins God deliver us from those deceitful lips whose prayers are snares whose kisses prove curses and whose devotion leads to damnation Never was Fast injoyned with more severity nor neglected with more contempt and horror men shunning it like the sins of Rebellion and Witchcraft Besides their Consciences told them that they never suffered the thousandth part of the oppressions they now groan under About this time it was debated to send supplies for Ireland 150. The jugling design of sending part of the Army for Ireland the predominannt Grandees were desirous to purge the Army as they had done the House and send the Levellers Assertors of Liberty thither the Levellers were desirous to keep their ground here and send the more mercenary enslaving and enslaved part of the Army the better to colour the design Cromwel undertook to be Conductor of this expedition and light them the way into Ireland with his Illuminated Nose having taken Order before hand that his precious self should be recalled time enough to keep up his party in England from sinking by his longer absence and the better to accommodate the business Lots were several times cast what Regiments should go but the Lots not falling out to the minds of the General Councel of Officers they cast Lots again and again untill fortune agreed with their desires This being discovered a printed Paper was scattered about the streets 26. April 1649. as followeth ALL worthy Officers and Souldiers who are yet mindfull that you engaged not as a meer mercenarie Armie hired to serve the Arbitrarie ends of a Councel of State but took up Arms in Judgment and Conscience in behalf of your own and the peoples just Rights and Liberties you may see plainly by the proceedings of Col. Hewson with his Regiment that the design of your grand Officers is to reduce the Army to a meer mercenary and servile temper that shall obey all their commands without so much as asking a question for Conscience sake Intending by this blind obedience in you to make you be whatsoever they shall find requisite to establish their own absolute power over the Common-wealth yea though it be to cut off your best friends or perpetuate this their own Parliament and Councel of State things so evidently destructive to your own and the peoples just Rights and Liberties as nothing can be more And for compassing whereof you know they have long since dissolved the Agitators and erected a Councel amongst themselves by which they have moulded the Parliament and a Councel of State to their own wills both which are to be as a screen between the People and your Grandees to make the world beleeve they do nothing but by Order of Parliament and Councel of State when they order all things themselves and indeed are confederated together to defend and protect each others in their defrauding and enslaving the Common-wealth This they have long aimed at but cannot possibly effect it untill they reduce the Army to a servile and base temper which they have been laboring to bring to pass along time as by picking quarrels with most Officers and Souldiers that have manifested any sence of Common Right and so vexing them and wearying them out of Troops and Companie And you know they have bin more than once disbanding twenty of a Troop upon pretence of easing the publike charge all their mischief being ever done after either fasting and prayer or upon some very specious pretence but the care and resolution of the honest Ofificers and Souldiers ever prevented this But now the business for Ireland it seems must doe the deed that being a service that must be preferred before the setling of the Liberties and Freedoms of this Nation and all that are not for this service must be esteemed no better than Enemies and Traitors and therefore an Ahab-like Fast goeth before the Lots are cast And Col. Hewson falls to worke and disbands all those Souldiers and Officers that refused to engage for the service of Ireland before the Liberties of England which we never trod under foot be restored to the people The end of this being to be a leading case to all other Regiments both Horse and Foot not that they certainly intend for Ireland but by such mans to be rid of all such as are apt to desire to be satisfied in their Consciences of the justice of the Cause before they engage in the killing and slaying of men any more or before they see some fruits answerable to the blood that hath been spilt And being rid of this kind of Officers and Souldiers then to fill the Regiments as this Hewson doth with such ignorant needy or servile men as these miserable times through loss of Trade have begotten And this being done then to make more strict enquiry after this sort of People in the Army and all other places suppresse meetings and if that will not doe then to disarme all from whom they suspect the least repining or opposition And therfore all those Officers and Souldiers and all people in all places are concerned in a very high nature even as much as the freedom of the Nation is worth yea as they tender the good of
to Coote and a Direction for him how to behave himself in the Transaction between him and Owen 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 the Trustors and Soveraign Lords the People that they might have seen fair play above board and not to have sent clandestine Directions to Coote in so suspitious a business how to behave himself in the Transaction with O Neal which implies the said Transaction shall be continued and may be compleated the rather for that their second Vote saith The House is well satisfied of the diligence faithfulness and integrity of Sir Charles Coote in preserving the Garris●n of London-Derry now it was preserved by his said Conjunction with O Neale who raised the Siege 208. The Levellers vindicated or The Case of the twelve Troops c. About this time came forth a Book called The Levellers 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 solemn Engagement at New-market and Triplo-heath June 5. 1647. and many other their Declarations Promises and Protestations in pursuance thereof which Engagement they affirm against their Preaching Coronet Denne was never retracted by any General Councel of the Army nor upon any Petition of the Souldiers nor their Agitators ever by them recalled or dismissed The whole Fabrick of this Commonwealth is fallen into the grossest and vilest Tyranny that ever Englishmen groaned under all their Laws Rights Lives Liberties and properties wholly subdued to the boundless wills of some deceitful Persons having devolved the whole Magistracy of England into their Martial Domination c. Pag. 7. They say That the Souldiers Paper-Debentures are good for nothing but to sell to Parliament men for 3 s. or 4 s. in the pound which they are forced to sell them for to keep them from starving because they will not pay one penny Arrears to such as they put out of the Army any otherwaies that so they may rob the Souldiers of their Seven years Service and make themselves and their Adherents Purchasers of the Kings Lands for little or nothing and for ought appears the Money they buy these Debenters with is the Money the Nation can have no Account of That they have dealt as basely with other Souldiers who never resisted their Commands 1. They turned them off with only two months pay 2. They have taken away three parts of their Arrears for Free-quarter without satisfaction to the Country And at last force them to sell their Debentures at the aforesaid rates that those Souldies that are continued in Arms shall fare no better when they have served their turns with them Pag. 10. they say Their Engagement against the King was not out of any Personal enmity but simply against his Oppressions and Tyranny on the people but the use and advantage on all the success God hath been pleased to give us is perverted to that end that by his removal the ruling Sword-men might intrude into his Throne set up a Martial Monarchy more cruel arbitrary and tyrannical than England ever tasted of and 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 falseness of the Lievtenant General Cromwel and his Son in Law Ireton with their Faction was enforced obtruded by meer Conquest on the people And a little after now rather than to be thus vassalized thus trampled and tr●d under foot by such as over our backs have stepped into the Chair of this hateful Kingship over us in despight of the consent choice and allowance of the Free-people of this Land the true fountain and original of all just Power as their Votes against Kingly Government confess 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 Original of all just Authority pretend the promotion of the Agreement of the People stile this The first year of Englands Freedome entitle the Government A Free State and yet none more bloody violent and perverse Enemies thereto for not under pains 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 boundless lawless wills their naked Swords Armies Arms is now Law in England c. 209. Col. Morrice Governour of Pontefract for the King Endicted at the Assizes at Yorke condemned and executed 16. August 1649. Col. Morrice who kept Pontefract Castle for the King was Endicted before Judge Thorpe and Pulleston at Yorke Assizes upon the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. for leavying War against the late King and Parliament The Colonel challenged one Brook Forerman of the Jury for being his professed Enemy but the Court knowing Brook to be the principal Verb the Key of their work answered Morrice He spake too late Brooks was sworn already Brook being asked the Question whether hee were sworn or no replied he had not yet kissed the Book The Court answered It was no matter that was but a Ceremony alleadging he was recorded Sworn there was no speaking against a Record Sure they made great haste to record him sworn before he could kiss the Book so Brooke was kept in upon this cavil by whose obstinacy Morrice was condemned I cannot wonder that legal Forms and Ceremonies are laid by although justice cannot subsist without those Legalities to ascertain her proceedings which otherwaies would be left at large to the discretion of the Judge when I see our known Laws Magna Charta the Petition of Right 3 Carol. and the rest with the fundamental Government of this Nation pulled up by the roots to carry on their Designs of enslaving the people to their lusts notwithstanding the Parliaments Declarations Remonstrances Protestations Covenants and Oaths 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 known Laws of the Land But to return to our Relation Then Morrice challenged 16. more of the Jury where Pulleston was so pettish that he bad Morrice keep his compass or else he would give him such a blow as should strike off his head Until Morice cited the Stat. 14 Hen. 7. fol. 19. whereby he might challenge 35. men without shewing cause Here you see the Judges which ought to be of Councel with the prisoner in matter of Law endeavouring to out-face and blind the prisoner with ignorance of the Law being a Martial-man Then he desired a Copy of his
Endictment that he might know what to answer saying he might plead Speeial as well as General which the Court denied him Next because there was point of Law in it he desired to have Councel citing the Stat. 1 Hen. 7. fol. 23. which was likewise denied him yet I am deceived if Rolfe had not Councel allowed him being endicted at Winchester for an endeavour to murder King CHARLES the First and had many other favours denied to Morrice Then Col. Morrice for his discharge produced the PRINCES Commission as Generalissimo to the KING his Father The Judges answered The Prince was but a Subject as Morrice was and if he were present must be tried as he was and rejected the Gommission without reading Morrice told them the Prince had his Authority from the King in whose name all Judges and Officers did then Act. The Court answered the power was not in the King but the Kingdome Observe they endicted him for Leavying War against the King and Parliament The word Parliament was a surplusage for which no Indictment could lye no Allegiance no Treason and we owe Allegiance to the King alone whosoever Leavieth War in England in the intendment of the Law is said to Leavy War against the King onely although he aim not at his Person but at some other Person And if he that Leavieth War against the King his Crown and Dignity be a Traytor how much more must they be Traytors that have actually murthered the King and Dis-inherited and proscribed his lawful and undoubted Heir and as much as in them lies have subverted the Monarchical Government of the Land and consequently all Monarchical Laws whereof the Stat. of Treasons for Leavying War against the Kings Majesty is one and therefore Morrice under a Free-State ought not to be condemned or tried upon any Monarchical Law So Morrice was found guilty by a Jury for that purpose And an illegal president begun to cut off whom the Faction pleaseth under a pretence and form of Law without help of a Councel of War or a private Slaughter-house or a Midnight-Coach guarded with Souldiers to Tyborne These Usurpers have got the old tyrannical trick To rule the People by the Laws but first to over-rule the Laws by their Lawyers and therefore Vt rei innocentes pereant fiunt nocentes judices that true men may go to the Gallows Thieves must sit on the bench but silent Leges inter arma and now silet Justitia inter Leges Three headed consisting of 1 Councel of War 2 Councel of State 3 Parliament filet Jus inter Judices The mungrel hypocritical three-headed conquest we live under hath dispoyled Justice of her ballance and left her in a Military posture with a Sword to strike but no scales to weigh withall Our licenced News Books like Ill-Boading-Birds fore-told and fore-judged Morrice's death a month before He dyed resolutely Observe the thing aimed at in this new form of Endictment of High Treason for leavying War against the King and Parliament is first that the word King may hold in the Endictment which otherwise would be found to have errour in it and though the word for Leavying War against the Parliament be a vain surplusage signifying nothing yet at last by help of their own Judges and new-made presidents to leavy War against the Parliament shall stand alone be the onely Significator and take up the whole room in the Endictment and thrust the word King out of doors and then Treason shall be as frequent as Malignancy is now Morrice had moved he might be Tried like a Souldier by a Councel of War alleadging the inconvenience of such a president if the Kings Party should retaliate it which would not be granted yet Col. Bethel writ to the General and his Councel of War desiring he might be reprieved but Col. Pride opposed it urging That it would not stand with the justice of the Army you see now who is the foun of Justice nor the safety of the Commonwealth to let such Enemies live the Parliament having adjudged him worthy of death without hearing and given instructions to the Judges accordingly O serviceable Judges so the General was overborn by this Dray-man This fellow sitteth frequently at the Sessions house in the Old Bayly where the weight of his Slings turneth the scale of Justice which way he pleaseth 210. Cap. Plunkett and the Marquess of Ormonds brother voted to be Tryed Col. Pride's Dray-horses the Commons in Parliament assembled not yet satisfied with Blood because they are out of danger of bleeding themselves have voted that Capt. Plunckett and the Marquess of Ormond's Brother Prisoners in Ireland shall be brought to Trial. If the Kings Party in imitation of their Cruelty shall put to death the Prisoners they have taken the Parliament will save their Arreares for their own privy purse These two cases are examples of the greatest danger and the highest contempt of Souldiers that ever were set on foot in any Age or Nation 29. August 1649. came forth a Book called 211. An out-cry of the young men and Apprentices of London concurring with those falsly called Levellers An out-cry of the young Men and Apprentises of London Or An Inquisition after the lost fundamental Laws and Liberties of England truly and Pathetically setting forth the slavery misery and danger of the Common Souldiery and People of this Nation and the causes thereof well worth the reading About this time came forth an Act forsooth for the speedy raising and levying money upon the Excise that is as the Act telleth you upon all and every Commodities Merchandizes 212. Excise Manufactures as well imported or exported as made or growing and put to sale or consumed c. That is to lay impositions upon all we eat drink wear or use as well in private houses as victualling houses ware-houses cellars shops c. as well what the Souldier devours in Free-quarter upon us as otherwise under unheard-of penalties both pecuniary and personal to be paid and levied with rigour And to make every mans house lie open to be searched by every prowling Rascal as often as he or they please The Traytors Tyrants and Thieves 213. Forrain Plantations the Commons in Colonel Prides Parliament assembled are now again frighted into a consideration of Forraign Plantations And passing Acts That they shall all be subject to the new Babel or State of England for which purpose they are very busie to undermine divide and subject the old and first Planters that if need be these reprobate Saints may come in upon their labours and the better to accommodate themselvs there In the Act for the sale of Kings Queens and Princes Personal Estate they have given leave to their Agents the Commissioners to transport beyond sea that is to say to their own Plantations under pretence of sale the rarest and choisest of the Kings Goods they heap up abundance of wealth by Excise Taxes Goldsmiths-hall Haberdashers-hall Sequestrations cozening the Souldiers
aforesaid commotions and all other causes they pleased to call High Treason They had no other bounds nor limits in their proceedings than what they prefixed to themselves in certain Articles Some few whereof I will here present unto my Reader because they judged of High Treason by those Articles not by the known Laws of the Land a thing very observable and applicable to my purpose so that they were not only Judges Leges dicere but also Law-makers Leges dare as all Judges are who take upon them a liberty to observe no set forms of proceedings but at their own pleasure 1. Article Petitioning against Innovations in Government and for the known Laws made Treason the like the Parliament practiseth against such as petitioned for peace by accommodation And against our High Court of Justice Arbitrary Imprisonments and Taxes All Petitions heretofore tendered to the States or Cities Corporate against the erecting of new Episcopal Sees or against the Holy Inquisition or or requiring a Moderation of Decrees or Acts of State Parliament are accounted meer conspiracies against God and the King 2. Art All Nobles Gentry Judges Magistrates and all others who connived at Heretical Sermons plundering of Churches and delivering such Petitions as aforesaid pretending the necessity of the times and did not resist and oppose them 3. Art Whosoever affirms that all His Majesties Subjects of Belgia have not forfeited their ancient Priviledges immunities and laws for Treason We have forfeited our laws by conquest or else our Grandees would not pass the two Acts for Treason 14. May 17. July 1648. nor erect the High Court of Justice and abolish our ancient lawes and government See Pol. 3. Oct. 1650. and the Case of the Kingdome stated and that it is not lawful for the King to use and handle them for the aforesaid Treasons as he pleaseth to prevent the like Treasons for the time to come and that the King is not absolved thereby from all Oaths Promises Grants Contracts and Obligations whatsoever Compare this with the two Acts for New Treasons 14. May 17. July 1649. and the Act 26 March 1650. and Sir John Gells Case stated 4. Art They that affirm this Councel or High Court of Justice exercise Tyranny in their Proceedings or Judgements and that they are not Supreme and competent Judges in all causes Criminal and Civil Our High Court of Just exceeds all this See Sir John Gells Case stated Printed Aug. 1650. 5. Art Those that in case of Heresie deny that all manner of Informers and Witnesses of whatsoever Degree and condition they be are to be credited and that upon the Testimony of any two witnesses this High Court ought to proceed to Judgment Execution and Confiscation of life and goods without publishing the cause or charge and without any legal form of Trial. All these are guilty of High Treason against God and the King The Rigour Cruelty and Injustice of this New erected Counsel of Blood or High Court of Justice enforced the Low Countries to revolt and cast off the King of Spain LEt us now examine whether in some one little Province or Island belonging to that vast Roman Empire and in some mean petty fellowes Natives of that Island men even at home of obscure Birth Breeding and Fortunes we cannot finde examples of Ambition Usurpation and Tyranny as high and transcendent as bloody and destructive as covetous and greedy as any of the fore-recited presidents And which is worst of all carried on by those that call themselves Christians nay Saints which is more than they vouchsafe to Saint Peter and the rest of the Apostles though glorified Saints in the Church Triumphant and such as in all their bloody oppressing cheating Designs promoted by Perjury Treachery breach of Faith Oaths and publick Declarations pretend to the singular favour Providence and will of heaven as confidently as if they could shew Gods special Commission to warrant Usurpation Treason Tyranny and Thievery It is not unknown by what Artifices frauds falsified promises Oaths and Covenants a party of Antimonarchists Schismaticks and Anabaptists lurking in the Parliament fooled the people to contribute their blood and money towards the subduing of the King and in him of themselves and how by the same wayes and subtilties the said party in the two Houses now combined openly under the General Title of Independents engaging and conspiring with the Officers of the Army and Souldiery expelled by armed force seven parts of eight of the House of Commons leaving not above 43. or 44. of their own engaged party sitting men inriched with publick spoyls and voting under the power of the Armies Commanders whose commands are now become a law to the said sitting Members as their Votes are become Laws to the Kingdome In Obedience to their said Masters of the Army The said remainder of Commons voted down the House of Lords though an integral and principal Member of the Parliament of England far antienter than the House of Commons and having a power of Judicature to administer an Oath which the House of Commons never had nor pretended to have until this time that they overflow their Bounds and the whole Kingdomes under the protection of their Army which prerogative of the House of Lords is clearly demonstrated by the House of Commons standing bare before them at all conferences as the Grand Inquest doth before the Judges because they rejected the Ordinance for Trial of the King And now these Dregs and Lees of the House of Commons take upon them to be a compleat Parliament To enact and repeal Statutes To subvert the Fundamental Government Laws and Liberties of the Land To pull up by the Roots without Legal proceedings every mans private property and possession and destroy his life To burden the people with unsupportable unheard of unparliamentary Taxes Impositions Excise Freequarter buying of New Arms after the Countrey have been disarmed of their old Arms three times in one year In their Tax Rolls they usually set in the Margent to every name private notes of distinction an M. an N. or P. The letter M. stands for Malignant he that is so branded is highly taxed and his complaints for redress slighted N stands for a Neuter he is more indifferently rated and upon cause shewn may chance to be relieved The letter P. signifies a perfect Parliamentarian He is so favourably taxed as he bears an inconsiderable part of the burden and that they may the better consume with Taxes and want all such as do not concur with them in the height of their villanies The pretended Parliament are now debating to raise the Monethly Tax to 240000 lib. or to deprive every man of the third part of his Estate both Real and Personal for maintenance of their immortal Wars and short lived Commonwealth Besides Excise Customes Tonnage and Poundage Freequarter finding Arms and Horses and the sale of Corporation Lands now in agitation Whilest our Grandees enrich all the Banks of
these proceedings nor amongst such Judges and this rod of Iron is provided to bruise his Country as well as himself Lieutenant Collonel Lilbornes Trial hath taught them That it is an easier Matter for them to pack a Butcher-Rowe of confiding partiall Judges then a Jury who are liable to be challenged if suspected of partiality When Collonel Andrewes claimed to be tried legally as a Freeman by a Jury and vouched Great Charter and many other Statutes whereof see his aforesaid 3. Answers that sneaking Bloud-sucker illiterate Keeble answered Those Statutes were out of date now meaning They were taken away by conquest So that this Shamble Rowe of Judges take upon them to be both Judges of the Law without acknowledging the Fundamentall Lawes of the Land or taking any Oath of Indifferency to the People Triors of the Fact or Jurates of life and death without being sworn to find according to Evidence as well as Parties and Prosecutors Theeves upon the high way may as justly arraign a True man before them because he brought no more Mony in his purse offered to draw his sword and hid his mony about him in contempt of their Jurisdiction and Authority and condemn him upon such a Mock Triall and Mummery or Enterlude of Justice as these Fellows If they allow him Counsel his Counsel must apprehend the mindes of his Judges at his perill and not be so faithfull and diligent as to help his client in earnest Lest the Counsel of State or some other power whose will is a Law interpose and banish him 20. miles from London as they did Master Sprat Sir John Gells Solicitor before Sir Johns businesse was ended whereby Sir John was left destitute of meanes to follow his businesse himself being Close Prisoner If they permit any witnesse to speak on the prisoners part He comes at his perill Sir John Gells first witnesse was so baffled in Court that the rest stole away and durst not appear I have not heard whether they give any Copy of their Aricles of Impeachment to the Prisoner for they cover all their doings with such a Plaguy Egyptian Darknesse that we cannot see a glimpse of light or whether they go a Starre Chamber way and make him Answer Ore tenus and ex tempore for his life and Estate But if they give him any Copy or any time to answer it is not above four or five daies or a week nor do they allow him Counsell or any other Clearing of the way to his defence untill he have ensnared himself by owning their Jurisdiction and pleaded the Generall Plea Not Guilty If he pleade not an Issuable Plea and yield to their Jurisdiction quitting all benefit of the Law and Legall proceedings the Razor is at his throat they thirst after his Bloud and they presently sentence him guilty of contumacy and take it pro confesso And if he do submit and plead His plea will have the operation but of a Psalm of Mercy prolonging his life but for a short time in the interim Keeble and his Court plays with him as a Cat with a Mouse and then devours him For no man is sent to this Court to be Tried but to be condemned In hac arena dimicatur sine missione Herein they shew themselves much more Tyrannous and bloudy then the Duke D' Alva when he erected his said Counsel of Troubles called Concilium Sanguinis or the Bloudy conventicle as this will shortly be For saith Strada Declar. 1. lib. 7. Procurator reginus menses 4. Conficiendae Accusationi accipiens sibi 5. Concedebat ad Defensionem regis Egmontio Hornano c. The Kings Atturney took 4. Moneths time to draw up the charge or accusation and gave 5. Months time to the Respondents to make their defence And had he given less then 5. Moneths time To Instruct Counsel Pen their Answers produce and summon witesses inquire into the lives and conversation of their Accusors his feet had been swift to shed bloud Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa est But our Inquisitors take whole yeares to themselves to hunt for Matter of Accusation and hire and engage witnesses against men kept in ignorance and want with close Imprisonment and allow not them so many daies to make their Defence All manner of Accusors and witnesses though apparently suborned and forsworn in the same cause and proofes without exceptions offered to the Court that they are of infamous life and conversation are in this Court the Object of whose desires are Bloud and Confiscations not Justice lawfull witnesses such witnesses were the said Bernard and Pits Monsters of men See Sir John Gells case stated Printed about August 1650. To cite any antient known Laws or Statutes or any other then their own new coined Acts passed by this 8th Parts of a House of Commons since they became elect Members chosen by Thomas Pride is to incur the High Indignation of the Court expressed abundantly in their words and looks But to put them in mind of the Parliaments many Declarations To maintain the antient known Laws Liberties and Properties of the People is to scandall the present Government and incur the Censure of that unknown Mysterious Crime which knaves call Malignancy The witnesses and Judges being thus irrefragable the first may swear what they will the second may judge what they will since they are left at large and have all things in scrinio pectoris and Book Law must give place to Bench Law The Jurisdiction and Authority of this New unparalled Court is such a Mistery of iniquity so unscrutable and unquestionable that if a Prisoner scruple in the least either it or any of the uncouth proceedings of it it is a Mortall Sinne to him and he is presently interrupted See the Trial of King Char. I. in the History of Independency 2. Part. pag. 91. c. and affronted both with disdainfull words and looks And told We are satisfied with our Authority that are your Judges So are Theeves upon the high way satisfied with their Authority that rob and murder us by Gods Providence and permission It is upon Gods Authority and the Kingdoms yet what they do is against the will of God revealed in his Scriptures and against the known established Lawes Statutes and continuall Practise of the Kingdom Which Authority commands you in the name of the People of England to answer them Yet at least 9. Parts of 10. of the People so much abhor these and other their Practises that every mans mouth speakes against them with bitter curses and reproaches to restrain which they have minted Acts of New Treasons to make men Offenders nay Traitors even for bare words and erected this bloudy illegall Theater The High Court so called for its High Injustice as a Spanish Inquisition over them and every mans hand would be about their eares did they not keep an Army of Janisaries to suppresse them Their Authority they do avow to the whole World that the whole Kingdom are