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A63192 The tryal of Sir Henry Vane, Kt. at the Kings Bench, Westminster, June the 2d. and 6th, 1662 together with what he intended to have spoken the day of his sentence (June 11) for arrest of judgment (had he not been interrupted and over-ruled by the court) and his bill of exceptions : with other occasional speeches, &c. : also his speech and prayer, &c. on the scaffold. Vane, Henry, Sir, 1612?-1662, defendant.; England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. 1662 (1662) Wing T2216; ESTC R21850 115,834 133

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for Government-sake it self it is requisit it should be so because none are Judges of the Power and Priviledges of Parliament but themselves For admit once that their Judgment may be called in question and disputed by private persons or by inferiour Courts whose Votes are included in theirs the Fundamentals of Government are plucked up by the roots Par in pares non habet Imperium multó minus in eos qui majus Imperium habent An Equal has no command over his Equal much less over those that have a greater command or authority His late Majesty in his Answer to the nineteen Propositions does very briefly and exactly state the nature and kind of Government that is exercised in this Kingdom saying The Laws in this Kingdom are made by a King a House of Peers and a House of Commons chosen by the People all having free Votes and particular Priviledges These three Estates making one incorporate body are they in whom the Soveraignty and Supream Power is placed as to the making and repealing of Laws And the Government according to these Laws is trusted to the King who in the Interval of Parliaments is sole in the exercise of Government which the Parliament sitting he is to exercise in conjunction with the two Houses And his said Majesty asserting three sorts of Government Absolute Monarchy Aristocracy and Democracy does most rightly distinguish the Monarchy of England from all those three and commends the Constitution of this Kingdom as it is a mixture of all three having the conveniencies of them all without the inconveniencies of any one as long as the ballance hangs even between the three Estates that they run joyntly on in their proper channels and that the overflowing of either on either side raise no deluge nor inundation By the passing of the foresaid Act for the continuance of the forementioned Parliament the Intervals of Parliament were no longer as before at the will and pleasure of the King but the Power to continue the said Parliament without Adjournment Prorogation or Dissolution resided in the two Houses with the King joyntly and in none of them severally so that in effect the Government of the Kingdom during the continuance of that Parliament was in conjunction of the three Estates and in their common consents and agreements among themselves given in Parliament the assembling and meeting whereof was appointed and fixed to a place certain by Law By reason hereof it is not the attendance of any of the Members in Parliament for discharge of the Trust reposed in them confirm'd and enlarged by the said Act that is faulty or censurable by the Law but those that unwarrantably depart and desert that their Trust and station are to be blamed 6. Hen. 8. 16. The King in conjunction with the Parliament is maxime Rex and is supported in the Throne and exercise of his Regal Power by the joynt concurrence of both Houses And because as his late Majesty well observed the happiness and good of the Constitution of this Government lies in keeping the ballance even between the three Estates containing themselves within the bounds of their proper channels therefore in attempts of either to overflow those bounds they being co-ordinate the Office of a Parliament is by the very fundamental constitution of the Government to keep this ballance well poised And to that end as was before mentioned his Majesties own words are in his said Answer to the nineteen Propositions That there was legally placed in both Houses a Power more than sufficient to prevent and restrain the Power of Tyranny If so then are they the legal Judges when there is danger of Tyranny and have legal power to require their Judgment and Resolves to be obeyed not only when Arms are actually raised against them but when they discern and accordingly declare a preparation towards it else they may find it too late to prevent the power of Tyranny There is no greater attempt of Tyranny than to arm against the Parliament and there is no visible way for the restraining such Tyranny but by raising Arms in their own and the Kingdoms defence Less than this is not sufficient and therefore far from more than sufficient for the punishment of Delinquents and restraint of Tyranny Unto the King in conjunction with his two Houses according as is provided by the Law in this capacity of his as maxime Rex was the duty of Allegiance to be yeelded by his Subjects during the indissolved state of that Parliament For they were the King 's great Council and supream Court exercising the known Power and Priviledges that time out of mind have appertained to them and been put forth by them as the Exigents of the Kingdom have required when differences have happened about the very title of the Crown in declaring the duty of the Subject by yeelding their Allegiance to Kings de facto when Kings de jure have been kept out of possession This our Chronicles and the Histories of former times do plentifully inform The causes that did happen to move his late Majesty to depart from his Parliament and continue for many years not only at a distance and in a disjunction from them but at last in a declared posture of Enmity and War against them are so well known and fully stated in print not to say written in characters of blood on both parts that I shall only mention it and refer to it This matter was not done in a corner The Appeals were solemn and the decision by the Sword was given by that God who being the Judge of the whole World does Right and cannot do otherwise By occasion of these unhappy differences thus happening most great and unusual Changes and Revolutions like an irresistible Torrent did break in upon us not only to the disjoynting that Parliamentary Assembly among themselves the head from the members the co-ordinates from each other and the houses within themselves but to the creating such formed divisions among the people and to the producing such a general state of Confusion and Disorder that hardly any were able to know their duty and with certainly to discern who were to command and who to obey All things seemed to be reduced and in a manner resolved into their first elements and principles Nevertheless as dark as such a state might be the Law of England leaves not the Subjects thereof as I humbly conceive without some glimpses of direction what to do in the cleaving to and pursuing of which I hope I shall not be accounted nor judged an offender or if I am I shall have the comfort and peace of my Actions to support me in and under my greatest sufferings The Resolutions of all the Judges in Calvin's Case entituled Post-nati in the 7th Book of Cook 's Reports and the learned Arguments thereupon afforded me instruction even in this matter It may be 't is truly thence affirmed that Allegiance is due only to the King and how due is also shewed The
King is acknowledged to have two capacities in him one a natural as he is descended of the Blood Royal of the Realm and the Body natural he hath in this capacity is of the creation of Almighty God and mortal The other is a politick capacity in respect of which he is a Body politick or mystical framed by the policy of man which is immortal and invisible To the King in both these capacities conjoyn'd Allegiance is due that is to say to the natural person of the King accompanied with his politick capacity or the politick appropriated to the natural The politick capacity of the King hath properly no body nor soul for it is framed by the policy of man In all Indictments of Treason when any one does intend the death and destruction of the King it must needs be understood of his natural body the other being immortal The Indictment therefore concludes contra Legiantiae suae debitum against the duty of his Allegiance so that Allegiance is due to the natural body Admitting then that thus by Law Allegiance is due to the King as before recited yet it is alwayes to be presumed that it is to the King in conjunction with the Parliament the Law and the Kingdom and not in disjunction from or opposition to them and that while a Parliament is in being and cannot be dissolved but by the Consent of the three Estates This is therefore that which makes the matter in question a new Case that never before happened in the Kingdom nor was possible to happen unless there had been a Parliament constituted as this was unsubjected to Adjournment Prorogation or Dissolution by the King's will Where such a power is granted and the co-ordinates thereupon disagree and fall out such effects and consequents as these that have happened will but too probably follow And if either the Law of Nature or England inform not in such case it will be impossible for the Subjects to know their duty when that Power and Command which ought to flow from three in conjunction comes to be exercised by all or either of them singly and apart or by two of them against one When new and never-heard-of Changes do fall out in the Kingdom it is not like that the known and written Laws of the Land should be the exact Rule but the Grounds and Rules of Justice contained and declared in the Law of Nature are and ought to be a Sanctuary in such cases even by the very Common Law of England For thence originally spring the unerring Rules that are set by the Divine and Eternal Law for Rule and Subjection in all States and Kingdoms In contemplation hereof as the Resolve of all the Judges it was agreed 1. That Allegiance is due to Soveraignty by the Law of Nature to wit that Law which God at the creation of Man infused into his heart for his preservation and direction the Law eternal Yet is it not this Law as it is in the heart of every individual man that is binding over many or legislative but as it is the Act of a Community or an Associated People by the right dictates and perswasions of the work of this Law in their hearts This appears in the Case of the Israelites Judg. 20 21 chapters cited in the 4th part of Cook 's Institutes where mention is made of a Parliament without a King that made War and that with their Brethren They met as one man to do it in vindication of that Justice unto which they were obliged even by the Law of Nature This is that which Chancellor Fortescue calls Political Power here in England by which as by the Ordinance of man in pursuance of the Ordinance of God the Regal Office constituted or the King 's Politick Capacity and becomes appropriated to his natural person Thus Politick Power is the immediate Efflux and Off-spring of the Law of Nature and may be called a part of it To this Hooker in his Ecclesiastical Polity agrees and Selden on that subject The Law of Nature thus considered is part of the Law of England as is evident by all the best received Law-Books Bracton Fleta Lambard upon the Saxon Laws and Fortescue in the praise of the Laws of England This is the Law that is before any judicial or municipal Law as the root and fountain whence these and all Government under God and his Law do flow This Politick Power as it is exercised in conjunction with and conformity to the Eternal Law partakes of its moral and immutable nature and cannot be changed by Act of Parliament Of this Law it is that Magna Charta and the Charter of Forest with other Statutes rehearsed in the Petition of Right are for the most part declaratory For they are not introductive of any new Law but confirmations of what was good in all Laws of England before This agrees with that Maxime Salus Populi suprema Lex that being made due and binding by this Law which in the Judgment of the Community declaring their mind by their own free chosen Delegates and Trustees in harmony with the Eternal Law appears profitable and necessary for the preservation and good of the whole Society This is the Law which is put forth by the common consent of the whole Realm in their Representative and according to the fundamental Constitutions of this Kingdom is that with which the Kings of this Land by the joynt co-operation of the three Estates do make and repeal Laws But through the disorders and divisions of the times these two Powers the Regal and Political which according to the Law of England make up but one and the same supream Authority fell assunder and found themselves in disjunction from and opposition to one another I do not say The question is now which of these is most rightly according to the principles of the Law of Nature and the Law of England to be adhered unto and obeyed but unto whether Power adherence is a crime in such an Exigent of State Which since it is such a new and extraordinary Case evidently above the Track of the ordinary Rules contained in the positive and municipal Laws of England there can be no colour to bring it within the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. forasmuch as all Statutes presuppose these two Powers Regal and Political in conjunction perfect unity and subserviency which this Case does not cannot admit So exceeding new and extraordinary a Case is it that it may be doubted whether and questioned how far any other Parliament but that Parliament it self that was privy to all its own Actings and Intentions can be an indifferent and competent Judge But however the point is of so abstruse and high consideration as no inferiour Court can or ought to judge of it as by Law-Books is most undeniable to wit Bracton and others This then being the true state of the Case and the spring of that Contest that ensued and received its decision by the late War
Judgement and the Lord's Day And this is that in every individual man which in the collective Body of the People and meeting of Head and Members in Parliament is called The Supream Authority and is the publick reason and will of the whole Kingdon the going against which is in Nature as well as by the Law of Nations an offence of the highest rank amongst men For it must be presumed that there is more of the Wisdom and Will of God in that publick Suffrage of the whole Nation than of any private Person or lesser collective Body whatsoever not better quallified and principled For Man is made in God's Image or in a likeness in Judgement and Will unto God himself according to the measure that in his nature he is proportioned and made capable to be the receiver and bearer thereof Therefore it is that the resisting and opposing either of that Judgement of Will which is in it self Supream and the Law to all others or which bears so much proportion and likeness to the Supream Will as is possible for a Society and community of Men agreeing together for that end to contrive and set up for an administration thereof unto them is against the duty of any member of that Society as well as it is against the duty of the Body of the whole Society to oppose its Judgement and Will to that of the Supream Law-giver their highest Soveraign God himself The highest Judgement and Will set up by God for Angels and Men in their particular beings to hold proportion with and bear conformity unto in the capacity of Ruled in relation to their chief Ruler sinnes forth in the person of Christ the engrafted Word And when by the Agreement or common Consent of a Nation or State there is such a Constitution and Form of Administration pitched upon as in a standing and ordinary way may derive and conveigh the nearest and greatest likeness in humane Laws or Acts of such a Constitution unto the Judgement and Will of the Supream Legislator as the Rule and declared Duty for every one in that Society to observe It is thereby that Government or Supream Power comes to receive Being in a Nation or State and is brought into exercise according to God's Ordinance and Divine Institution So then it is not so much the Form of the Administration as the thing Administred wherein the good or evil of Government doth consist that is to say a greater likeness or unlikeness unto Judgement and Will of the highest Being in all the Acts or Laws flowing from the Fundamental Constitution of the Government Hence it is that common Consent lawfully and rightfully given by the Body of a Nation and intrusted with Delegates of their own free choice to be exercised by them as their Representatives as well for the Welfare and good of the Body that trusts them as to the Honour and Well-pleasing of God the Supream Legislator is the Principle and Means warranted by the Law of Nature and Nations to give Constitution and Admission to the exercise of Government and Supream Authority over them and amongst them Agreeable hereunto we are to suppose that our Ancestors in this Kingdom did proceed when they constituted the Government thereof in that form of Administration which hath been derived to us in the course and channel of our Customes and Laws amongst which the Law and Customes in and of the Parliaments are to be accounted as chief For Hereby First The Directive or Legislative Power having the Right to State and Give the Rule for the Governors Duty and the Subjects Obedience is continued in our Laws which as well the King as People are under the Observation of witness the Coronation Oath and the Oath of Allegiance Secondly The Coercive or Executive Power is placed in one Person under the Name and Style of a King to be put forth not by his own single personal Command but by the signification of his Will and Pleasure as the Will of the whole State in and by his Courts of Justice and stated publick Counsels and Judicatures agreed on for that purpose between him and his People in their Parliamentary Assemblies The Will of the whole State thus signified the Law it self prefers before the personal Will of the King in distinction from the Law and makes the one binding the other not So that the publick Will of the State signified and declared by the publick Suffrage and Vote of the People or Kingdom in Parliament Assembled is a Legal and Warrantable ground for the Subjects Obedience in the things commanded by it for the good and welfare of the whole Body according to the best Understanding of such their Representative Body by it put forth during the time of its sitting The Body with whom the Delegated Vote and publick Suffrage of the whole Nation is Intrusted being once Assembled with Power not to be Dissolved but by their own consent in that capacity the highest Vote and Trust that can be is exercised and this by Authority of Parliament unto ex Officio or by way of Office are the Keepers of the Liberties of England or of the People by the said Authority for which they are accountable if they do not faithfully discharge that their duty This Office of keeping the Liberty which by the Law of God and Nature is due to the Community or whole Body of the People is by way of Trust committed by themselves to their own Delegates and in effect amounts unto this 1. That they may of right keep out and refuse any to exercise Rule and Command over them except God himself who is the Supream and Universal King and Governour or such as shall agree in their Actings to bear his Image which is to be Just and shew for the Warrant of their Exercise of Soveraignty both a likeness in Judgement and Will unto him who is Wisdom and Righteousness it self and the Approbation and common Consent of the whole Body rationally reposing that Trust in them from what is with visible and apparent Characters manifest to them of an aptness and sufficiency in them to give forth such publick Acts of Government that may bear the Stamp of God's Impression upon them in the Judgements they do and execute especially being therein helped with a National Counsel of the Peoples own choosing from time to time 2. They may of right keep hold and restrain him or them with whom the Coercive or Executive Power is intrusted unto a punctual performance of Duty according to the Fundamental Constitution the Oath of the Ruler and the Laws of the Land And if they shall refuse to be so held and restrained by the humble Desires Advice and common Consent in Parliament and the Peoples Delegates be invaded and attempted upon by force to deter them from the faithful discharge of this their Duty they may in asserting their Right and in a way of their own just Defence raise Armes put the issue upon Battel and Appeal unto
Oppressions of the People they were found guilty of The Statute under colour whereof they acted ran to this effect Be it enacted that the Justices of the Assizes and Justices of the Peace upon Information for the King before them to be made have full power and authority by their discretion to hear and determine all offences and contempts Having this ground they proceeded against the People upon meer Information in the execution of Penal Laws without any Indictment or Presentment by good and lawful men but only by their own Promoters or Informers contrary to the 29th of Magna Charta which requires That no free-man be proceeded against but by lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land Secondly This Act allowed them to hear and determine arbitrarily by their own discretion which is not according to the Law and Custom of England And Cook sayes 't is the worst and most aggravated oppression of all that is done under the colour of Law or disguise of Justice Such a Statute or Act of Parliament is not only against the light of Reason but against the express letter of unrepealed Statute-Law 42. Edw. 3. 1. It is assented and accorded That the great Charter and the Charter of Forest be holden and kept in all points and if any Statute be made to the contrary that shall be holden for none This also is consonant to the first chapter of the great Charter it self made 9. Hen. 3. We have granted to all the free-men of our Realm these Liberties under-written to have and to hold to them and their heirs of Us and our Heirs for ever But what if this great Charter it self had never been made had England been to seek for righteous Laws and just Liberties nothing lesse The same Liberties and Laws were ratified before that in the great Charter made the seventeenth year of King John and mentioned among others by Matthew Paris And to what yet amounted the matter of all these Grants but what the Kings themselves were bound before to observe by their Coronation Oaths as the antient fundamental Laws or Customs of this Land This we may find in Mr. Lambard's Translation of the Saxon Laws from the time of King Ina who began anno 712 to Hen. 1. who began 1100. Amongst the Saxons King Alfred is reputed the most famous and learned Compiler of our Laws which were still handed along from one King to another as the unalterable Customs of the Kingdom In the 17th chapter of Edward the Confessor's Laws The mention of the duty of a King which if not performed nec nomen Regis in eo constabit is remarkable And Mr. Lambard tells us that even William the Conqueror did ratifie and observe the same Laws that his kinsman Edward the Confessor did as obliged by his Coronation Oath So then neither the great Charter in King John's time nor that of 9. Hen. 3. were properly a new Body of Law but a Declaration of the antient fundamental Laws Rights and Liberties of this Nation in Brittish Saxon Danish and Norman times before This Cook in his Proem to the second part of his Institutes observes where he notes also that this Charter is not called great for quantity of words a sheet of Paper will contain it but for the great importance and weight of its matter Through the advice of Hubert de Burgo Chief Justice of England Edward the first in the eleventh year of his Reign did in a Council held at Oxford unjustly cancel this great Charter and that of Forest Hubert therefore was justly sentenc'd according to Law by his Peers in open Parliament Then 25 Ed. 1. The Statute called Confirmationes Charrarum was made in the first chapter whereof the Mag. Charta is peculiarly called the Common Law 25. Ed. 1. cap. 2. Any Judgment given contrary to the said Charter is to be undone and holden for naught And cap. 4. Any that by word deed or counsel go contrary to the said Charter are to be excommunicated by the Bishops and the Arch-Bishops of Canterbury and York are bound to compel the other Bishops to denounce sentence accordingly in case of their remisness or neglect The next famous sticklers to Hubert de Burgo for Arbitrary Domination were the two Spencers father and son by whose rash and evil counsel sayes Cook Edward the second was seduced to break the Great Charter and they were banished for their pains By these passages we may observe how the People would still be strugling in and by their Representatives for their Legal Rights and Just Liberties to obviate the Encroachers whereof they procured several new Ratifications of their old Laws which were indeed in themselves unrepealable even by Parliaments if they will act as men and not contradict the Law of their own Reason and of the common Reason of all mankind By 25 Ed. 1. cap. 1. Justices Sheriffs Majors and other Ministers that have the Laws of the Land to guide them are required to allow the said Charter to be pleaded in all its points and in all causes that shall come before them in Judgment This is a clause sayes Cook worthy to be written in letters of gold That the Laws to be the Judges guides and therefore not the Judges the guides of the Laws by their arbitrary glosses which never yet misguided any that certainly knew and truly followed them In consonancy herewith the Spaniard sayes Of all the three learned Professions The Lawyer is the only letter'd man his business and duty being to follow the plain literal construction of the Law as his guide in giving Judgment Pretence of mystery here carries in the bowels of it intents or at least a deep suspition of arbitrary domination The mind of the Law is not subject to be clouded disturbed or perverted by passion or interest 'T is far otherwise with Judges therefore 't is fitter and safer the Law should guide them than they the Law Cook on the last mentioned Statute affirms That this great Charter and the Charter of Forest are properly the Common Law of this Land or the Law that is common to all the People thereof 2 Ed. 3. cap. 8. Exact care is taken that no Commands by the Great or Little Seal shall come to disturb or delay Common Right Or if such Commands come the Justices are not thereby to leave to do Right in any point So 14 Ed. 3. 14. 11 Ric. 2. 10. The Judges Oath 18 Ed. 3. 7 runs thus If any force come to disturb the execution of the Common Law ye shall cause their bodies to be arrested and put into Prison Ye shall deny no man Right by the King's Letters nor counsel the King any thing that may turn to his dammage or disherison The late King in his Declaration at Newmarket 1641 acknowledged the Law to be the Rule of his Power And his Majesty that now is in his Speech to both Houses the 19th of May last said excellently The good old Rules of Law are
Laws of this Kingdom and have been so adjudged by two Acts of Parliament and ought to suffer as Traitors Die Jovis Octob. 8. 1642. In the Instructions agreed upon by the Lords and Commons about the Militia They declare That the King seduced by wicked Counsel hath raised War against the Parliament and other his good Subjects And by the Judgment and Resolution of both Houses bearing date Aug. 13. 1642 upon occasion of his Majesties Proclamation for suppressing the present Rebellion under the Command of Robert Earl of Essex They do unanimously publish and declare That all they who have advised declared abetted or countenanced or hereafter shall abet and countenance the said Proclamation are Traytors and Enemies to God the King and Kingdom and guilty of the highest degree of Treason that can be committed against the King and Kingdom as that which invites his Majesties Subjects to destroy his Parliament and good People by a Civil War and by that means to bring ruine confusion and perpetual slavery upon the surviving part of a then wretched Kingdom The Law is acknowledged by the King to be the onely Rule by which the People can be iustly governed and that as it is his duty so it shall be his perpetual vigilant care to see to it Therefore he will not suffer either or both Houses by their Vo●es without or against his Consent to enjoyn any thing that is forbidden by the Law or to forbid any thing that is enjoyned by the Law The King does assert in his Answer to the Houses Petition May 23. 1642. That He is a part of the Parliament which they take upon them to defend and secure and that his Prerogative is a part of and a defence to the Laws of the Land In the Remonstrance of both Houses May 26. 1642. They do assert That if they have made any Precedents this Parliament they have made them for posterity upon the same or better grounds of Reason and Law than those were upon which their Predecessors made any for them and do say That as some Precedents ought not to be Rules for them to follow so none can be limits to bound their Proceedings which may and must vary according to the different condition of times And for the particular with which they were charged of setting forth Declarations to the People who have chosen and entrusted them with all that is dearest to them if there be no example for it in former times They say it is because there never were such Monsters before that attempted to disaffect the People towards a Parliament They further say His Majesties Towns are no more his care than his Kingdom nor his Kingdom than his People who are not so his own that he hath absolute power over them or in them as in his proper Goods and Estate but fiduciary for the Kingdom and in the paramount right of the Kingdom They also acknowledge the Law to be the safeguard and custody of all publick and private Interests They also hold it fit to declare unto the Kingdom whose Honour and Interest is so much concerned in it what is the Priviledge of the great Council of Parliament herein and what is the Obligation that lies upon the Kings of this Realm as to the passing such Bills as are offered to them by both Houses in the name and for the good of the whole Kingdom whereunto they stand engaged both in Conscience and Justice to give their Royal Assent First In Conscience in respect of the Oath that is or ought to be taken by them at their Coronation as well to confirm by their Royal Assent all such good Laws as the People shall chuse whereby to remedy such inconveniencies as the Kingdom may suffer as to keep and protect the Laws already in being The form of the Oath is upon Record and asserted by Books of good authority Unto it relation is had 25 Ed. 3. entitiled The Statute of Provisors of Benefices Hereupon The said Commons prayed our said Lord the King sith the Right of the Crown of England and the Law of the said Realm is such that upon the mischiefs and dammages which happen to this Realm he ought and is bound by his Oath with the accord of his People in Parliament to make Remedy and Law for the removing thereof That it may please him to ordain Remedy This Right thus claimed by the Lords and Commons the King doth not deny in his Answer thereunto Secondly In Justice the Kings are obliged as well as in Conscience in respect of the Trust reposed in them to preserve the Kingdom by the making of new Laws where there shall be need as well as by observing of Laws already made a Kingdom being many times as much exposed to ruine for want of a new Law as by the violation of those that are in being This is a most clear Right not to be denyed but to be as due from his Majesty to his People as his Protection In all Laws framed by both Houses as Petitions of Right they have taken themselves to be so far Judges of the Rights claimed by them That when the King's Answer hath not been in every point fully according to their desire they have still insisted upon their Claim and never given it over till the Answer hath been according to their demand as was done in the late Petition of Right 3. Caroli This shews the two Houses of Parliament are Judge between the King and the People in question of Right as in the Case also of Ship-money and other illegal Taxes and if so why should they not also be Judge in the Cases of the Common Good and Necessity of the Kingdom wherein the Kingdom hath as clear a Right to have the benefit and remedy of the Law as in any other matter saying Pardon and Grants of Favour The Malignant Party are they that not only neglect and despise but labour to undermine the Law under colour of maintaining it They endeavour to destroy the Fountain and Conservators of the Law the Parliament They make other Judges of the Law than what the Law hath appointed They set up other Rules for themselves to walk by than such as are according to Law and dispence with the Subjects obedience to that which the Law calls Authority and to their Determinations and Resolutions to whom the Judgment doth appertain by Law Yea though but private persons they make the Law to be their Rule according to their own understanding only contrary to the Judgment of those that are the competent Judges thereof The King asserts That the Act of Sir John Hotham was levying War against the King by the letter of the Statute 25 Ed. 3. cap. 2. The Houses state the Case and deny it to be within that Statute saying If the letter of that Statute be thought to import this That no War can be levied against the King but what is directed and intended against his Person Or that every levying of Forces for the defence
of the King's Authority and of his Kingdom against the personal Commands of the King opposed thereunto though accompanied with his presence is Treason or levying War against the King Such Interpretation is very far from the sense of that Statute and so much the Statute it self speaks beside the authority of Book-cases For if the clause of levying War had been meant only against the King's Person what need had there been thereof after the other branch in the same Statute of compassing the King's death which would necessarily have implied this And because the former doth imply this it seems not at all to be intended at least not chiefly in the latter branch but the levying War against his Laws and Authority and such a levying War though not against his Person is a levying War against the King whereas the levying of Force against his personal Commands though accompanied with his Presence and not against his Laws and Authority but in the maintenance thereof is no levying of War against the King but for him especially in a time of so many successive plots and designs of Force against the Parliament and Kingdom of probable Invasion from abroad and of so great distance and alienation of his Majesties affections from his Parliament and People and of the particular danger of the Place and Magazine of Hull of which the two Houses sitting are the most proper Judges In proclaiming Sir John Hotham Traitor they say The breach of the Priviledge of Parliament was very clear and the subversion of the Subjects common Right For though the Priviledges of Parliament extend not to these cases mentioned in the Declaration of Treason Felony and breach of the Peace so as to exempt the Members of Parliament from Punishment or from all manner of Process and Tryal yet it doth priviledge them in the way and method of their Tryal and Punishment and that the Parliament should first have the Cause brought before them that they may judge of the Fact and of the grounds of their Accusation and how far forth the manner of their Tryal may or may not concern the Priviledge of Parliament Otherwise under this pretext the Priviledge of Parliament in this matter may be so essentially broken as thereby the very Being of Parliaments may be destroyed Neither doth the sitting of a Parliament suspend all or any Law in maintaining that Law which upholds the Priviledge of Parliament which upholds the Parliament which upholds the Kingdom They further assert That in some sense they acknowledge the King to be the only person against whom Treason can be committed that is as he is King and that Treason which is against the Kingdom is more against the King than that which is against his Person because he is King For Treason is not Treason as it is against him as a man but as a man that is a King and as he hath and stands in that relation to the Kingdom entrusted with the Kingdom and discharging that Trust They also a vow That there can be no competent Judge of this or any the like case but a Parliament and do say that if the wicked Counsel about the King could master this Parliament by force they would hold up the same power to deprive us of all Parliaments which are the ground and pillar of the Subjects Liberty and that which only maketh England a free Monarchy The Orders of the two Houses carry in them Law for their limits and the Safety of the Land for their end This makes them not doubt but all his Majesties good Subjects will yeeld obedience to his Majesties Authority signified therein by both Houses of Parliament for whose encouragement and that they may know their Duty in matters of that nature and upon how sure a ground they go that follow the Judgement of Parliament for their guide They alledge the true meaning and ground of that Statute 11. Hen. 7. cap. 1. printed at large in his Majesties Message May 4 This Statute provides that none that shall attend upon the King and do him true service shall be attainted or forfeit any thing What was the scope of this Statute Answ To provide that men should not suffer as Traitors for serving the King in his Wars according to the duty of their Allegiance But if this had been all it had been a very needless and ridiculous Statute Was it then intended as they seem to make it that print it with his Majesties Message that those should be free from all crime and penalty that should follow the King and serve him in War in any case whatsoever whether it were for or against the Kingdom or the Laws thereof That cannot be for that could not stand with the duty of their Allegiance which in the beginning of this Statute is expressed to be to serve the King for the time being in his Wars for the defence of him and the Land If therefore it be against the Land as it must be if it be against the Parliament the Representative Body of the Kingdom it is a declining from the duty of Allegiance which this Statute supposes may be done though men should follow the Kings Person in the War Otherwise there had been no need of such a Proviso in the end of the Statute that none should take benefit thereby that should decline from their Allegiance That therefore which is the Principal Verb in this is the serving of the King for the time being which cannot be meant of a Perkin Warbeck or any that should call himself King but such a one as whatever his Title might prove either in himself or in his Ancestors should be received and acknowledged for such by the Kingdome the Consent whereof cannot be discern'd but by Parliament the Act whereof is the Act of the whole Kingdom by the personal Suffrage of the Peers and the Delegate Consent of the Commons of England Henry 7th therefore a wise Prince to clear this matter of contest happening between Kings de facto and Kings de jure procured this Statute to be made That none shall be accounted a Traitor for serving in his Wars the King for the time being that is him that is for the present allowed and received by the Parliament in behalf of the Kingdom And as it is truly suggested in the Preamble of the Statute It is not agreeable to reason or conscience that it should be otherwise seeing men should be put upon an impossibility of knowing their duty if the Judgment of the highest Court should not be a Rule to guide them And if the Judgment thereof is to be followed when the question is who is King much more when the question is what is the best service of the King and Kingdom Those therefore that shall guide themselves by the Judgment of Parliament ought what ever happen to be secure and free from all account and penalties upon the ground and equity of this Statute To make the Parliament countenancers of Treason they say is enough
extraordinariness thereof And I beseech your Lordships to let me go on without interruption in my endeavouring to make it out as clearly as God shall enable me and as briefly also not to spend too much of your time In general I do affirm of this Case That it is so comprehensive as to take in the very Interests of Heaven and Earth First Of God the Universal Soveraign and King of Kings Secondly That of earthly Soveraigns who are God's Vicegerents as also the Interests of all Mankind that stand in the relation of Subjects to the one or both those sorts of Soveraigns This is general More particularly within the bowels of this Case is that Cause of God that hath stated it self in the late Differnces and Wars that have happened and arisen within these three Nations and have been of more than twenty years continuance which for the greater certainty and solemnity hath been recorded in the form of a National Covenant in which the generality of the three Nations have been either implicitly involved or expresly concern'd by the signing of their Names The principal things contained in that Covenant were the known and commonly received Duties which either as Men or as Christians we owed and stood obliged to perform either to God the highest and universal King in Church and State or to our natural Lord and Sovereign the Kings of this Realm in subordination to God and his Laws Again It contains as well the Duties which we owe to every particular and individual person in their several stations and callings as to the King in general and our Representative Body in Parliament assembled These Duties we are thereby obliged to yeeld and perform in consistency with and in a just subordination and manifest agreeableness to the Laws of God as is therein expressed And this also in no disagreement to the Laws of the Land as they then were By this solemn Covenant and Agreement of the three Nations giving up themselves in subjection to God and to his Laws in the first place as the Allegiance they owe to their highest Soveraign as the Creator Redeemer Owner and Ruler of all Mankind they have so far interested the Son of God in the the Supream Rule and Government of these Nations that nothing therein ought to be brought into practice contrary to his revealed Will in the holy Scriptures and his known and most righteous Laws This Duty which we owe to God the universal King Nature and Christianity do so clearly teach and assert that it needs no more than to be named For this subjection and allegiance to God and his Laws by a Right so indisputable all are accountable before the Judgment-seat of Christ It is true indeed men may de facto become open Rebels to God and to his Laws and prove such as forfeit his Protection and engage him to proceed against them as his professed Enemies But with your Lordships favour give me leave to say that that which you have made a Rule for your proceedings in my Case will indeed hold and that very strongly in this that is to say in the sence wherein Christ the Son of God is King de jure not only in general over the whole World but in particular in relation to these three Kingdoms He ought not to be kept out of his Throne nor his visible Government that consists in the Authority of his Word and Laws suppressed and trampled under foot under any pretence whatsoever And in the asserting and adhering unto the Right of this highest Soveraign as stated in the Covenant before mentioned The Lords and Commons joyntly before the year 1648 and the Commons alone afterwards to the very times charged in the Indictment did manage the War and late Differences within these Kingdoms And whatever defections did happen by Apostates Hypocrites and Time-serving worldlings there was a party amongst them that continued firm sincere and chast unto the last and loved it better than their very lives of which number I am not ashamed to profess my self to be not so much admiring the form and words of the Covenant as the righteous and holy ends therein expressed and the true sense and meaning thereof which I have reason to know Nor will I deny but that as to the manner of the prosecution of the Covenant to other ends than it self warrants and with a rigid oppressive spirit to bring all dissenting minds and tender Consciences under one Uniformity of Church-discipline and government it was utterly against my Judgment For I alwayes esteemed it more agreeable to the Word of God that the Ends and Work declared in the Covenant should be promoted in a spirit of love and forbearance to differing Judgments and Consciences that thereby we might be approving our selves in doing that to others which we desire they would do to us and so though upon different principles be found joynt and faithful advancers of the Reformation contained in the Covenant both publick and personal This happy Union and Conjunction of all Interests in the respective duties of all relations agreed and consented to by the common suffrage of the three Nations as well in their publick Parliamentary capacity as private stations appeared to me a Rule and measure approved of and commanded by Parliament for my action and deportment though it met with great opposition in a tedious sad and long War and this under the name and pretext of Royal Authority Yet as this Case appeared to me in my conscience under all its circumstances of Times of Persons and of Revolutions inevitably happening by the hand of God and the course of his wise Providences I held it safest and best to keep my station in Parliament to the last under the guidance and protection of their Authority and in pursuance of the Ends before declared in my just Defence This general and publick Case of the Kingdoms is so well known by the Declarations and Actions that have passed on both sides that I need but name it since this matter was not done in a corner but frequently contended for in the high places of the Field and written even with characters of Blood And out of the bowels of these Publick Differences and Disputes doth my particular Case arise for which I am called into question But admitting it come to my lot to stand single in the witness I am to give to this Glorious Cause and to be left alone as in a sort I am yet being upheld with the Authority before asserted and keeping my self in union and conjunction therewith I am not afraid to bear my Witness to it in this great Presence nor to seal it with my Blood if called thereunto And I am so far satisfied in my conscience and understanding that it neither is nor can be Treason either against the Law of Nature or the Law of the Land either malum per se or malum prohibitum that on the contrary it is the duty I owed to God the universal King and
THE TRYAL OF Sir Henry Vane Kt. AT The KINGS BENCH Westminster June the 2d and 6th 1662. Together With what he intended to have Spoken the Day of his Sentence June 11. for Arrest of Judgment had he not been interrupted and over-ruled by the Court and his Bill of Exceptions With other Occasional SPEECHES c. Also his SPEECH and PRAYER c. on the Scaffold Printed in the Year 1662. The TRYAL of Sir Henry Vane Knight at the Kings Bench Westminster June the 2d and 6th 1662. READER THou shalt not be detained with any flourishing Preface 'T is true whether we consider the Person or Cause so much might pertinently be said as were the Pen of some ready Writer imployed therein a large Preamble might seem to need but a very short Apol●gy if any at all Yet by that time we have well weighed what this Sufferer hath said for himself and left behind him in writing it will appear that there needed not any tongue of the Learned to form up an Introduction thereunto but meerly the hand of a faithful Transcriber of his own Observations in defence of himself and his Cause Rest assured of this thou hast them here fully and clearly represented The necessity of this course for thy information as to the truth of his Case be pleased to consider on these following accounts He was much over-ruled diverted interrupted and cut short in his Plea as to a free and full delivery of his mind upon the whole matter at the Bar by the Judges of the Kings-Bench and by the Kings Counsel He was also denyed the benefit of any Counsel to speak on his behalf And what he did speak at the Bar and on the Scaffold was so disgustful to some that the Books of those that took Notes of what passed all along in both places were carefully called in and suppressed It is therefore altogether unpossible to give thee a full Narrative of all he said or was said to him either in Westminster-Hall or on Tower-Hill The Defendant foreseeing this did most carefully set down in writing the substance of what he intended to enlarge upon the three dayes of his appearance at the Kings-Bench Bar and the day of his Execution Monday June 2. 1662 was the day of his Arraignment Friday June 6. was the day of his Tryal and the Jurors Verdict Wednesday June 11. was the day of his Sentence Saturday June 14. was the day of his Execution on Tower-Hill where limitations were put upon him and the interruptions of him by many hard speeches and disturbing carriages of some that compassed him about upon the Scaffold as also by the sounding of Trumpets in his face to prevent his being heard had many eye and ear witnesses Vpon these considerations I doubt not it will appear undispensably necessary to have given this faithful Transcript of such Papers of his as do contain the most substantial and pleadable grounds of his publick actings any time this twenty years and more as the only means left of giving any tolerable account of the whole matter to thy satisfaction Yet such Information as could be picked up from those that did preserve any Notes taken in Court or at the Scaffold are here also recorded for thy use and that faithfully word for word Chancellor Fortescue doth right worthily commend the Laws of England as the best now extant and in force in any Nation of the world affording if duely administred just outward liberty to the People and securing the meanest from any oppressive and injurious practices of Superiours against them They give also that just Prerogative to Princes that is convenient or truly useful and advantagious for them to have that is to say such as doth not enterfere with the Peoples just Rights the intire and most wary preservation of which as it is the covenant-Covenant-duty of the Prince so is it his best security and greatest honour 'T is safer and better for him to be loved and rightly feared by free Subjects than to be feared and hated by injured slaves The main fundamental Liberties of the free People of England are summed up and comprehended in the 29th Chapter of Magna Charta These be the words No freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseized of his Freehold or Liberties or free-customs or be out-lawed or exiled or any otherwise destroyed Nor will we pass upon him or condemn him but by lawful 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 either Justice or Right Lord Chief Justice Cook observes here nine famous branches of the Law of England couched in this short Chapter and discourses upon them to good purpose He saith also that from this Chapter as out of a root many fruitful branches of the Law of England have sprung As for the very leading injury to other wrongings of the Subject to wit the restraint or imprisonment of his person so curious and tender is the Law in this point that sayes Cook no man is to be attached arrested taken or restrained of his liberty by petition or suggestion to the King or to his Council unless it be by Indictment or Presentment of good and lawful men of the neighbourhood where such deeds be done This great Charter of Englands Liberties made 9 Hen. 3. and set in the front of all succeeding Statute-Laws or Acts of Parliament as the Standard Touch-stone or Jury for them to be tryed by hath been ratified by about two and thirty Parliaments and the Petition of Right 3. Caroli The two most famous Ratifications hereof entituled Confirmationes Chartarum Articuli super Chartas were made 25 and 28 of Edw. 1. All this stir about the great Charter some conceive very needless seeing that therein are contained those fundamental Laws or Liberties of the Nation which are so undeniably consonant to the Law of Nature or Light of Reason that Parliaments themselves ought not to abrogate but preserve them Even Parliaments may seem to be bounded in their Legislative Power and Jurisdiction by divine Equity and Reason which is an eternal and therefore unalterable Law Hence is it that an Act of Parliament that is evidently against common Right or Reason is null and void in it self without more ado Suppose a Parliament by their Act should constitute a man Judge in his own cause give him a meer Arbitrary power such Act would be in it self void This is declared to be the ground of that exemplary Justice done upon Empson and Dudley as acting contrary to the Peoples Liberties in Magna Charta whose Case is very memorable in this point For though they gratified Hen. 7th in what they did and had an Act of Parliament for their Warrant made the 11th of his Reign yet met they with their due reward from the hands of Justice that Act being against Equity and common Reason and so no justifiable ground or apology for those infinit Abuses and
our best security The Common Law then or Liberties of England comprized in the Magna Charta and the Charter of Forest are rendred as secure as authentick words can set them from all Judgments or Precedents to the contrary in any Courts all corrupting advice or evil counsel of any Judges all Letters or Countermands from the Kings Person under the Great or Privy Seals yea and from any Acts of Parliament it self that are contrary thereunto As to the Judges no question they well know the story of the 44 corrupt Judges executed by King Alfred as also of Tresillian Belknap and many others since By 11 Hen. 7. cap. 1. They that serve the King in his Wars according to their duty of Allegiance for defence of the King and the Land are indempnified If against the Land and so not according to their Allegiance the last clause of that chapter seems to exclude them from the benefit of this Act. 6 Hen. 8. 16. Knights and Burgesse of Parliament are required not to depart from the Parliament till it be fully finished ended or prorogued 28 Ed. 3. cap. 3. No man is to be imprisoned disherited or put to death without being heard what he can say for himself 4 Ed. 3. 14. and 36. Ed. 3. 10. A Parliament is to be holden every year or oftner if need be 1 Ric. 3. cap. 2. The subjects of this Realm are not to be charged with any new imposition called a Benevolence 37 Ed. 3. c. 18. All those that make suggestions against any man to the King are to be sent with their suggestions before the Chancellor Treasurer and his grand Council and there to find surety that they will pursue their suggestions and are to incur the same pain the party by them accused should have had if attained in case the suggestion be found evil or false 21 Jacobi cap. 3. All Monopolies and Dispensations with Penal Laws are made void as contrary to the great Charters These quotations of several Statutes as Ratifications and Restorers of the Laws of the Land are prefixed to the following Discourses and Pleas of this Sufferer as certain steady unmovable Land-marks to which he oft relates The rouling Seas have other Laws peculiar to themselves as Cook observes on that expression Law of the Land in his Comment on the 29th Chapter of Magna Charta Offences done upon the High Sea the Admiral takes conusance of and proceeds by the Marine Law But have those steady Land-marks though exactly observed and never so pertinently quoted and urged by this Sufferer failed him as to the securing of his Life 'T is because we have had Land-floods of late Tumults of the People that are compared to the raging Seas Psal 65. 7. The first Paper of this deceased Sufferer towards the defence of his Cause and Life preparatory to the Tryal as the foundation of all that follows before he could know how the Indictment was laid and which also a glance back to any crime of Treason since the beginning of the late War that the Attorney General reckoned him chargeable with shews to be very requist take as followeth Memorandums touching my Defence THe Offence objected against me is levying War within the Statute 25 Ed. 3. and by consequence a most high and great failer in the duty which the Subject according to the Laws of England stands obliged to perform in relation to the Imperial Crown and Soveraign Power of England The crime if it prove any must needs be very great considering the circumstances with which it hath been accompaned For it relates to and takes in a series of publick action of above twenty years continuance It took its rise and had its root in the Being Authority Judgment Resolutions Votes and Orders of a Parliament and that a Parliament not onely authorized and commissionated in the ordinary and customary way by his Majesties Writ of Summons and the Peoples Election and Deputation subject to Adjournment Discontinuance and Dissolution at the King's will but which by express Act of Parliamen● was constituted in its continuance and exercise of its Power free from that subjection and made therein wholly to depend upon their own will to be declared in an Act of Parliament to be passed for that purpose when they should see cause To speak plainly and clearly in this matter That which is endeavoured to be made a Crime and an Offence of such an high nature in my person is no other than the necessary and unavoidable Actings of the Representative Body of the Kingdom for the preservation of the good People thereof in their allegiance and duty to God and his Law as also from the imminent dangers and destruction threatned them from God's and their own Enemies This made both Houses in their Remonstrance May 26. 1642. protest If the Malignant spirits about the King should ever force or necessitate them to defend their Religion the Kingdom the Priviledges of Parliament and the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects with their Swords The Blood and Destruction that should ensue therupon must be wholly cast upon their account God and their own consciences telling them that they were clear and would not doubt but that God and the whole world would clear them therein In his Majesties Answer to the Declaration of the two Houses May 19. 1642. he acknowledgeth his going into the House of Commons to demand the five Members was an errour And that was it which gave the Parliament the first cause to put themselves in a posture of defence by their own Power and Authority in commanding the Trained-Bands of the City of London to guard and secure them from Violence in the discharge of their Trust and Duty as the two Houses of Parliament appointed by Act to continue as above-mentioned The next cause was his Majesties raising Forces at York under pretence of a Guard expressed in the humble Petition of the Lords and Commons May 23. 1642. wherein they beseech his Majesty to disband all such Forces and desist from any further designs of that nature otherwise they should hold themselves bound in duty towards God and the Trust reposed in them by the People and the Fundamental Laws and Constitutions of this Kingdom to employ their care and utmost power to secure the Parliament and preserve the peace and quiet of the Kingdom May 20. 1642 The two Houses of Parliament gave their Judgment in these Votes First That it appears that the King seduced by wicked Counsel intends to make War against the Parliament who in all their Consultations and Actions have proposed no other end to themselves but the Care of his Kingdoms and the performance of all Duty and Loyalty to his Person Secondly That whensoever the King maketh War upon the Parliament it is a breach of Trust reposed in him by his People contrary to his Oath and tending to the dissolution of this Government Thirdly That whosoever shall serve or assist him in such Wars are Traytors by the fundamental
to have dissolv'd all the bands of service and confidence between his Majesty and his Parliament of whom the Law sayes a dishonourable thing ought not to be imagined This Conclusion then is a clear Result from what hath been argued That in all Cases of such difficulty and unusualness happening by the over-ruling Providence of God as render it impossible for the Subject to know his duty by any known Law or certain Rule extant his relying then upon the Judgment and Reason of the whole Realm declared by their Representative Body in Parliament then sitting and adhering thereto and pursuing thereof though the same afterwards be by succeeding Parliaments judged erroneous factious and unjust is most agreeable to right Reason and good Conscience and in so doing all persons are to be free and secure from all Account and Penalties not only upon the ground and equity of that Statute 11 Hen. 7. but according to all Rules of Justice natural or moral The day of Arraignment being Monday June 2. 1662. Reader The best account thou canst yet be furnished with as to this dayes proceedings in Court is as followeth SIR Henry Vane was the last Term indicted of High Treason before the Middlesex Grand Jury and the Bill being found by them he was upon Monday the second of June this Term arraigned to this effect That you as a false Traitor against his most excellent Majesty King Charles the second your supream and natural Lord not having the fear of God before your eyes and withdrawing that your duty and allegiance which a true Subject ought to have and bear to our said Leige and sovereign Lord thirteenth of May in the eleventh year of our said sovereign Lord the King at the Parish of St. Martins in the fields in the Country of Middlesex did compass and imagine the Death of our said sovereign Lord the King and the ancient frame of Government of this Realm totally to subvert and keep out our said sovereign Lord from the exercise of his Regal Government and the same the better to effect the said Sir Henry Vane the said thirteenth day of May in the said eleventh your c. at St. Martins aforesaid together with other false Traitors to the Jurors unknown did traiterously and maliciously assemble and sit together and then and there consulted to bring the King unto destruction and to hold him out from the exercise of his Regal Authority and then and there usurped the Government and appointed Officers to wit Colonels and Captains of a certain Army raised against the King against the Peace of our sovereign Lord the King his Crown and Dignity and contrary to the form of the Statute in that case made and provided And the better to effect this the twentieth of December in the said eleventh year with a multitude to the number of a thousand persons to the Jurors unknown in warlike manner assembled and arrayed with Guns Trumpets Drums c. did levy War against the Peace c. and contrary to the form of a Statute Which being read he prayed to have it read a second time which was granted him He then prayed to have it read in Latine which all the Court denyed and Keeling the King's Serjeant said That though all Pleas and Entries are set down on Record in Latine yet the agitations of Causes in Court ought to be in English The Prisoner moved several Exceptions to the Indictment as that the 25. Ed. 3. is not pursued that he had levied no such force as amounted to a levying of War Also the place in which persons with whom are both uncertain and the particular acts of levying War being not set forth he thought therefore the Indictment was insufficient Also he said here is a long time of Action for which I am charged and I may be concern'd for what I acted as a Member in that sovereign Court of Parliament and if any thing concerns the Jurisdiction of that Court I ought not to be judged here at which the Court and King's Counsel took great offence He said also There hath been an Act of General Pardon since that time whereby all Treasons are put in utter oblivion and though Sir Henry Vane were excepted yet none consent that he was that Sir Henry Vane But the King's Counsel said If he would plead that Plea they would joyn that Issue with him if he pleased which if it should be found against him it would be too late to plead not guilty But the Court said in favour of life a man may plead a double Plea and give in his Exception and plead over to the Felony or Treason not guilty But as to the Exceptions taken to the Indictment they gave little heed to them but pressed him to plead or confess Whereupon he pleaded Not guilty and had four dayes to wit till Friday next for his Tryal From another hand take as followeth The Prisoner did much press for Counsel to be allowed him to advise with about any further Exceptions to the Indictment besides those by him exhibited and to put all into form according to the customary proceedings and language of the Law as also to speak to them at the Bar on his behalf he not being vers'd in the punctilio's of Law-writings and Pleas. He further said That the Indictment which so nearly concern'd his Life being long and his memory short it could not well be imagined that he should upon the bare hearing it read be able in an instant to find out every material Exception against it in form or matter He pleaded a good while on this account but Counsel was finally denied him till he should plead guilty or not guilty unto which being a third time urged he pleaded Not guilty The Court having assured him beforehand that after pleading Counsel should be assigned him which yet never was performed Here followeth a Transcript of the Prisoners own Papers containing certain Memorandums pleadable upon his Arraignment Memorandums for and towards my Defence Upon hearing the Indictment read and before pleading FIrst To lay before the Court the impossibility that he humbly conceives is already in view as to the having any such indifferent and equal Tryal as the Law intends him and doth require and command on the behalf of all the free-People of England The Rise for this Conception he takes from what hath been already done in relation to the Prisoner himself unheard unexamined and yet kept close Prisoner for near two whole years This he shall leave to the Judgment of the Court after he hath made known the particulars thereof unto them as necessary to precede the thing demanded of him in pleading guilty or not guilty Secondly What is the indifferency which the Law requires and appoints throughout as well in matters that go before the Tryal as in the proceedings at the Tryal if it self Before the Tryal and in the first step to it which is the keeping and securing his person Magna Charta is clear and gives this
The next Consideration is how far I have had my share and part therein that by the Laws is not warrantable or by what appears in way of proof to the Jury For the first I shall crave leave to give you this account of my self who have best known my own mind and intentions throughout and would not now to save my life renounce the principles of that Righteous Cause which my conscience tells me was my duty to be faithful unto I do therefore humbly affirm That in the afore-mentioned great Changes and Revolutions from first to last I was never a first mover but alwayes a follower chusing rather to adhere to things than persons and where Authority was dark or dubious to do things justifiable by the Light and Law of Nature as that Law is acknowledged part of the Law of the Land things that are in se bona and such as according to the grounds and principles of the Common Law as well as the Statutes of this Land would warrant and indempnifie me in doing them For I have observed by Precedents of former times when there have arisen disputes about Titles to the Crown between Kings de facto and Kings de jure the People of this Realm wanted not directions for their safety and how to behave themselves within the duty and limits of Allegiance to the King and Kingdom in such difficult and dangerous seasons My Lord Cook is very clear in this point in his Chap. of Treason fol. 7. And if it were otherwise it were the hardest case that could be for the people of England For then they would be certainly exposed to punishment from those that are in possession of the supream power as Traitors if they do any thing against them or do not obey them and they would be punishable as Traitors by him that hath right and is King de jure in case they do obey the Kings de facto and so all the people of England are necessarily involved in Treasons either against the Powers de facto or de jure and may by the same reason be questioned for it as well as the Prisoner if the Act of Indempnity and the King's Pardon did not free them from it The security then and safety of all the People of England is by this means made to depend upon a Pardon which might have been granted or denied and not upon the sure foundations of Common Law an opinion sure which duly weighed and considered is very strange to say no more For I would gladly know that person in England of estate and fortune and of age that hath not counselled aided or abetted either by his person or estate and submitted to the Laws and Government of the Powers that then were and if so then by your Judgments upon me you condemn in effigies and by necessary consequence the whole Kingdom And if that be the Law and be now known to be so it is worth consideration whether if it had been generally known and understood before it might not have hindred his Majesties Restoration Besides although until this Judgement be passed upon me the people have apprehended themselves as free from question and out of danger by reason of the Act of Indempnity and General Pardon yet when it shall appear to them that such their safety is not grounded on the Common Law nor upon the Law of Nature but that against both these in their actions they are found faulty and tainted with a moral guilt and that as principals also since in Treason there are no Accessories what terrifying Reflexions must this needs stir up in the mind of every man that will be apt to believe his Turn will come next at least once in two years as hath befallen me in my p●rson who however I have been misjudged and misunderstood can truly affirm that in the whole series of my Actions that which I have had in my eye hath been to preserve the ancient well-constituted Government of England on its own basis and primitive righteous foundations most learnedly stated by Fortescue in his Book made in praise of the English Laws And I did account it the most likely means for the effecting of this to preserve it at least in its root whatever changes and alterations it might be exposed unto in its branches through the blustrous and stormy times that have passed over us This is no new doctrine in a Kingdom acquainted with Political Power as Fortescue shews ours is describing it to be in effect the Common Assent of the Realm the Will of the People or whole Body of the Kingdom represented in Parliament Nay though this Representation as hath fallen out be restrained for a season to the Commons House in their single actings into which as we have seen when by the inordinate fire of the times two of the three Estates have for a season been melted down they did but retire into their Root and were not hereby in their Right destroyed but rather preserved though as to their exercise laid for a while asleep till the season came of their Revival and Restoration And whatever were the intents and designs of others who are to give an account of their own actions It is sufficient for me that at a time critical and decisive though to my own hazard and ill usage I did declare my Refusal of the Oath of Abjuration which was intended to be taken by all the Members of Parliament in reference to Kingly Government and the Line of his now Majesty in particular This I not only positively refused to take but was an occasion of the second thoughts which the Parliament reassumed thereof till in a manner they came wholly at last to decline it a proof undeniable of the remoteness of any intentions or designs of mine as to the endeavouring any alteration or change in the Government and was that which gave such jealousie to many in the House that they were willing to take the first occasion to shew their dislike of me and to discharge me from sitting among them But to return to what I have before affirmed as to my being no leading or first Actor in any Change it is very apparent by my deportment at the time when that great Violation of Priviledges happened to the Parliament so as by force of Arms several Members thereof were debarred coming into the House and keeping their seats there This made me forbear to come to the Parliament for the space of ten weeks to wit from the third of Decemb. 1648 till towards the middle of February following or to meddle in any publick transactions And during that time the matter most obvious to exception in way of alteration of the Government did happen I can therefore truly say that as I had neither consent nor vote at first in the Resolutions of the Houses concerning the Non-Addresses to his late Majesty so neither had I in the least any consent in or approbation to his Death But on the contrary when required by
the Parliament to take an Oath to give my approbation ex post facto to what was done I utterly refused and would not accept of sitting in the Council of State upon those terms but occasioned a new Oath to be drawn wherein that was omitted Hereupon many of the Council of State sate that would not take the other In like manner The Resolutions and Votes for changing the Government into a Commonwealth or Free-State were passed some weeks before my return to Parliament Yet afterwards so far as I judged the same consonant to the principles and grounds declared in the Laws of England for upholding that Political Power which hath given the rise and introduction in this Nation to Monarchy it self by the account of antient Writers I conceived it my duty as the state of things did then appear to me notwithstanding the said Alteration made to keep my station in Parliament and to perform my Allegiance therein to King and Kingdom under the Powers then regnant upon my principles before declared yeelding obedience to their Authority and Commands And having received Trust in reference to the safety and preservation of the Kingdom in those times of imminent danger both within and without I did conscientiously hold my self obliged to be true and faithful therein This I did upon a publick account not daring to quit my station in Parliament by vertue of my first Writ Nor was it for any private or gainful ends to profit my self or enrich my Relations This may appear as well by the great Debt I have contracted as by the destitute condition my many Children are in as to any provision made for them And I do publickly challenge all persons whatsoever that can give information of any Bribes or covert wayes used by me during the whole time of my publick acting Therefore I hope it will be evident to the Consciences of the Jury that what I have done hath been upon principles of Integrity Honour Justice Reason and Conscience and not as is suggested in the Indictment by instigation of the Devil or want of the fear of God A second great Change that happened upon the Constitution of the Parliament and in them of the very Kingdom it self and the Laws thereof to the plucking up the Liberties of it by the very roots and the introducing of an Arbitrary Regal Power under the name of Protector by force and the Law of the Sword was the Usurpation of Cromwel which I opposed from the beginning to the end to that degree of suffering and with that constancy that well near had cost me not only the loss of my Estate but of my very Life if he might have had his will which a higher than he hindred Yet I did remain a Prisoner under great hardship four months in an Island by his Orders Hereby That which I have asserted is most undeniably evident as to the true grounds and ends of my actions all along that were against Usurpation on the one hand or such extraordinary Actings on the other as I doubted the Laws might not warrant or indempnifie unless I were inforced thereunto by an over-ruling and inevitable necessity The third considerable Change was the total disappointing and removing of the said Usurpation and the returning again of the Members of Parliament to the exercise of their primitive and original Trust for the good and safety of the Kingdom so far as the state of the times would then permit them being so much as they were under the power of an Army that for so long a time had influenced the Government Towards the recovery therefore of things again into their own channel and upon the legal Root of the Peoples Liberties to wit their Common Consent in Parliament given by their own Deputies and Trustees I held it my duty to be again acting in publick Affairs in the capacity of a Member of the said Parliament then re-entred upon the actual Exercise of their former Power or at least strugling for it In this season I had the opportunity of declaring my true intentions as to the Government upon occasion of refusing the Oath of Abjuration before mentioned And whereas I am charged with keeping out his Majesty that now is from exercising his Regal Power or Royal Authority in this his Kingdom through the ill-will born me by that part of the Parliament then sitting I was discharg'd from being a Member thereof about Jan. 9. 1659 and by many of them was charged or at least strongly suspected to be a Royalist Yea I was not only discharged from my attendance in Parliament but confined as a prisoner at mine own house some time before there was any visible power in the Nation that thought it seasonable to own the King's Interest And I hope my sitting still will not be imputed as a failer of duty in the condition of a prisoner and those circumstances I then was in This I can say that from the time I saw his Majesties Declarations from Breda declaring his Intentions and Resolutions as to his Return to take upon him the actual Exercise of his Regal Office in England and to indempnifie all those that had been Actors in the late Differences and Wars as in the said Declaration doth appear I resolved not to avoid any publick question if called thereto as relying on mine own Innocency and his Majesties declared Favour as beforesaid And for the future I determined to demean my self with that inoffensiveness and agreeableness to my duty as to give no just matter of new provocation to his Majesty in his Government All this on my part hath been punctually observed whatever my sufferings have been Nor am I willing in the least to harbour any discouraging thoughts in my mind as to his Majesties Generosity and Favour towards me who have been faithfull to the Trust I was engaged in without any malicious intentions against his Majesty his Crown or Dignity as before hath been shewed And I am desirous for the future to walk peaceably and blamelesly Whatever therefore my personal sufferings have been since his Majesties Restoration I rather impute them to the false reports and calumnies of mine enemies and misjudgers of my actions than reckon them as any thing that hath proceeded from his Majesties proper inclination whose favour and clemency I have had just reason with all humility to acknowledge First with regard to his Majesties Speech made the 27th of July 1660 in the House of Peers wherein his Majesty expresly declared it to be no intention of his that a person under my circumstances should be excepted out of the Act of Indempnity either for Life or Estate And secondly however it was the Parliaments pleasure my self unheard though then in the Tower and ready to have been brought before them to except me out of the common Indempnity and subject me to question for my actions yet they themselves of their own accord admitting the possibility that in such questioning of me I might be attainted made
to his Majesty that now is and to the Church and People of God in these Nations and to the innocent Blood of all that have been slain in this Quarrel Nothing it seems will now serve unless by the Condemnation passed upon my person they be rendred to posterity Murderers and Rebels and that upon Record in a Court of Justice in Westminster-hall And this would inevitably have followed if I had voluntarily given up this Cause without asserting their and my Innocency by which I should have pulled that Blood upon my own head which now I am sure must lie at the door of others and in particular of those that knowingly and precipitately shall embrew their hands in my innocent Blood under whatever form or pretext of Justice My Case is evidently new and unusual that which never happened before wherein there is not only much of God and of his Glory but all that is dear and of true value to all the good People in these three Nations And as I have said it cannot be Treason against the Law of Nature since the duties of the Subjects in relation to their Soveraigns and Superiours from highest to lowest are owned and conscientiously practised and yeelded by those that are the Assertors of this Cause Nor can it be Treason within the Statute of 25. Ed. 3 since besides what hath been said of no King in possession and of being under Powers regnant Kings de facto as also of the Fact in its own nature and the Evidence as to Overt Acts pretended it is very plain it cannot possibly fall within the purview of that Statute For this Case thus circumstantiated as before declared is no Act of any private person of his own head as that Statute intends nor in relation to the King there meant that is presumed to be in the exercise of his Royal Authority in conjunction with the Law and the two Houses of Parliament if they be sitting as the fundamental Constitutions of the Government do require My Lords If I have been free and plain with you in this matter I beg your Pardon For it concerns me to be so and something more than ordinarily urgent where both my Estate and Life are in such eminent peril nay more than my Life the Concerns of thousands of Lives are in it not only of those that are in their graves already but of all posterity in time to come Had nothing been in it but the care to preserve my own Life I needed not have stayed in England but might have taken my opportunity to have withdrawn my self into forreign parts to provide for my own safety Nor needed I to have been put upon pleading as now I am for an Arrest of Judgment but might have watch'd upon advantages that were visible enough to me in the managing of my Tryal if I had consulted only the preservation of my Life or Estate No my Lords I have otherwise learned Christ than to fear them that can but kill the Body and have no more that they can do I have also taken notice in the little reading that I have had of History how glorious the very Heathens have rendred their names to posterity in the contempt they have shewed of Death when the laying down of their Life has appeared to be their Duty from the love which they have owed to their Country Two remarkable examples of this give me leave to mention to you upon this occasion The one is of Socrates the divine Philosopher who was brought into question before a Judgment-Seat as now I am for maintaining that there was but one onely true God against the multiplicity of the superstitious Heathen gods and he was so little in love with his own Life upon this account wherein he knew the Right was on his side that he could not be perswaded by his friends to make any defence but would chuse rather to put it upon the conscience and determination of his Judges to decide that wherein he knew not how to make any choice of his own as to what would be best for him whether to live or to die he ingenuously professing that for ought he knew it might be much to his prejudice and loss to endeavour longer continuance in this bodily Life The other example is that of a chief Governour that to my best remembrance had the Command of a City in Greece which was besieged by a potent Enemy and brought into unimaginable straits Hereupon the said Governor makes his address to the Oracle to know the event of that danger The answer was That the City should be safely preserved if the chief Governour were slain by the Enemy He understanding this immediately disguis'd himself and went into the Enemies Camp amongst whom he did so comport himself that they unwittingly put him to death by which means immediately safety and deliverance arose to the City as the Oracle had declared So little was his Life in esteem with him when the Good and Safety of his Country required the laying of it down The BILL of EXCEPTIONS translated out of the best Latine form the Prisoner could procure No Counsel learned in the Law daring to assist him in those Circumstances without Assignment from the Court which was denied First Concerning my Imprisonment 1. I Shall here mention my entrance into this new Scene of Sufferings under the present Power after my having been handled at will and pleasure under the six years Usurpation of Cromwel which I conceive not to have been at all according to the Law of the Land as may appear by the 29th chap. of Magna Charta and Cook upon it with many other Statutes and Law-Books In all which it appears that the Law of England is so tender not to say curious in providing for the Subjects Liberty that he is not to suffer the least restraint confinement of imprisonment but by the lawfull Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land Contrary to all which I was committed at meer Will and Pleasure and have been detained close Prisoner these two years without any cause specified or any particular crime laid to my charge Secondly Concerning Transactions at the Grand Jury 2. The Grand Jury of Middlesex without my privity knowledge or presence after I had been kept a close Prisoner two full years did meet take the Depositions of Witnesses and find the Bill against me which inevitably exposed me to a Tryal at the Kings Bench Bar for I knew not what whereas Major Rolph and others have had the Right of Englishmen granted them to be present at the Grand Juries proceedings yea and to have Counsel also present to plead any thing in a way of Reason or Law for invalidating the Testimony or disabling the Witnesses whereby the Indictment hath been immediately quash'd and so the party accused delivered from any shadow of Infamy by so much as appearing in the circumstances of a Male-factor at any publick Bar of Justice That this Prisoner had great need