Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n bishop_n great_a lord_n 4,276 5 3.7012 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A50375 An epitomy of English history wherein arbitrary government is display'd to the life, in the illegal transactions of the late times under the tyrannick usurpation of Oliver Cromwell; being a paralell to the four years reign of the late King James, whose government was popery, slavery, and arbitrary power, but now happily delivered by the instrumental means of King William & Queen Mary. Illustrated with copper plates. By Tho. May Esq; a late Member of Parliament.; Arbitrary government displayed to the life. May, Thomas, ca. 1645-1718. 1690 (1690) Wing M1416E; ESTC R202900 143,325 210

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Eliz. and the 1. Jacob against Sectaries An Act of general Pardon and Oblivion to all Persons except such as should be nominated therein An Act for relief of poor Prisoners An Act to secure the Souldiers their Arrears Then they were Considering of some orders which the Councel of State were to put in Execution and which the said Councel desired of them after their recess 1. That they might appoint Commissioners in every County to make an Estimate of all Tyths 2. That the Councel of State may consider of setling future Parliaments and the constant time of Calling Sitting and Ending after this Parliament shall Dissolve themselves 3. That they shall consider an Act for regulating Proceedings at Law and to prevent tediousness of Suits 4. That they should consider what Laws are fit to be repealed Thus they were Cutting out one another Work In the mean time Oliver Cromwell with a brave Army lands at Dublin the whole Kingdom being reduced under the Kings obedience most of the Irish coming in except the Ulster Irish under Owen Roe Oneal being prevailed with by the Popes Nuncio Contrary to his promise not to come in and under-hand there was a Confederacy driven between our new Republicans and this Nuncio but on what Conditions was kept Private for their Assistance of reducing that Kingdom under their obedience tho this being laid in their Dish they impudently deny'd it afterwards Some of the Propositions were That all Laws and Penalties against the Popish Religion should be taken off by Act of Parliament and that Act to extend to them and their Heirs for ever That an Act of Oblivion should be pass'd to extend to all of his Party for all things done since the beginning of the year 1641 So that the horrid Massacre of the Protestants should have been forgotten That Owen Oneal should have a competent Command in the Army That they should enjoy their Lands now in Possession and that rightly they might claim from their Ancestors That all Acts of State that incapacitated them to be taken off That Oneal should in regard of his Merit and good Service to the Parliament in joyning with them have all the Estate of his Ancestors or some Estate equivalent to it in the Counties of Tyrone Ardmagh or London-Derry And that his Army should be provided for c. So that the sweetness of ruling and getting Ireland into their hands as well as England made them thus treat with the Popes Nuncio and a most notorius Rebel and Papist to joyn with them But they who had Confederated with the Devil might well joyn with his Holiness to subdue the Cavaliers and yet at the same time these men cryed out upon the Duke of Ormond for joyning with the Irish for the reducing that Kingdom to the obedience of the King And some of Cromwell's own Soldiers hearing of this Confederacy abominating it deserted him which made him to certifie to his Journey-men in London and caused them to null their Debenters for all their Service which were stated before the Expedition And this Agreement with Oneal went so far that the said Oneal assisted Sr. Charles Coot in raising the Siege of London-Derry as may appear by his Letters to the Parliament says the Author of the History of Independency However they fell to pieces afterwards but this is enough to shew by what Principles they Acted and how much they valued Religion when Gain and Dominion stood in Competition Oliver is successful in Ireland at the taking of Tredagh a strong place twenty miles North of Dublin in which were the Flower of the Irish Army where he put to the Sword all persons whatsoever without Distinction of Age or Sex and lasted for three days he slew about three thousand of their best and stoutest men with their Governour Sr. Arthur Aston Sr. Edmund Varny Collonel Warren Collonel Dun Finglus Tempest and others who all fell by his Eury which so affrighted the rest that he no sooner appeared before a place but it was surrendred to him The next place was Wexford a considerable Town by the Sea South West of Dublin which was betray'd to him and where he after a barbarous manner put to the Sword two Thousand more and among the rest two hundred of the chiefest Women of the place fled to the Market-Cross for shelter and there put to the Sword by his Command tho several of his own Soldiers who had before given them Quarter refused to obey his Bloody Commands After which he took Ross Carick Kilkenny Clonmel and other places Munster Thus with extraordinary diligence and great Slaughter in less than a year that he staid there he subdued the greatest part of Ireland and kill'd and exterminated most part of the Irish leaving his Son-in-Law Ireton to complete the Conquest as Governour or his Lieutenant who there died of the Plague before he had quite finish'd his work In the mean time the King being in Jersey received a Letter from the Scots by Mr. Windram with several Conditions the chief of which was the acknowledging them a Parliament and particularly the two last Sessions of that Assembly and then they would treat with him at Breda concerning his coming to Scotland owning him for their King But those about his Majesty having no good Opinion of the Scots were fearful of having him to put himself into their Hands but to trust to Montross whom with a Commission he had sen● before into Scotland his valiant Service being most remarkable there for the King his Father and they now hoped from him the like success However the King dispatch'd away Windram with a Letter to the Scotch Parliament wherein he concedes to have them to send Commissioners to him to treat at Breda which they did and on the 16 th of March they met where the Agreement was made and it was concluded That they should enjoy the Presbytery throughout the Kingdom the King himself and Family not expected but bound him to the Covenant Directory and Catechisms which the King his Affairs in Ireland being desperate and his hopes in England as little many Noble-men and Gentlemen flying thence from the bloody Tyranny of the States he was forced with great Reluctancy to Consent and then on their parts they Covenant That his Majesty should be admitted to the Throne of Scotland That his Rights should by Parliament be recovered out of the Hands of Usurpers and That they would assist to bring to Condign Punishment the Murtherers of his Father and to restore him to his Kingdom of England But in the interim of this Treaty the gallant and renowned Montross being landed in the Islands of Orkney with a few German Soldiers accompanied with the Lord Trendraught Sr. John Urry Henry Graham Collonel Johnson George Drummond of Ballack and other Persons his Friends and Confederates he begun with great Resolution and Courage to levy men notwithstanding several Losses of Arms at Sea and disappointments of Men and Monies which he had exspected from other
Speech shewing them some reasons for the necessity of their being dissolved he peremptorily declared them to be dissolved But the Speaker refusing to leave the Chair Cromwell began to huff and fall into a passion telling them they were a company of drunkards whoremasters Hipocrites Knaves and Oppressors and commanded that the Bauble the Mace should be took from them and no more carried before them and Harrison taking the Speaker by the Arm lifted him out of his Chair and having thus turned them out of doors he lock'd them up and set a Guard of Soldiers at them and at all the Avenues that they might not meet again in that place and thus exeunt Tyranni one Devil driving out another to make way at last for their Lawful Prince This done Cromwell returning to his Council of Officers told them of his Exploit and let them know that now they must go hand in hand with them and justifie it by their lives and fortunes they having advised him to it He told them that when he went to the House he did not think to do it but perceiving the Spirit of God so strongly upon him he would no longer consult Flesh and Blood for the Parliament intended to have perpetuated themselves This Action of his tho arbitrary illegal and tyrannical was generally applauded by all sorts of people these Rumpers were grown so very odious by their tyrannick Usurpation And the King's Friends both at home and abroad were not a little joyful to see this Turn and to behold them dethroned and trampled on even in the midst of their Laurels obtained for their Victories over the Dutch Grievous Muttering they kept for this violence done to them by their Servant as they stiled him thinking it none when he did the like to those secluded Members that would not vote with them against the King but as mad as they were they saw no help for it and it was not possible for them to get together tho they would not own themselves dissolved and thus our usurping Junto went out like a Snuff with a Stink smelling very unsavourly in the Nostrils of the whole Nation Thus far have I traced out to you the Lines of the Image of Arbitrary and Tyrannick Usurpation and how ugly and grim a Representation it is you who have seen it truly delineated may judge You have seen this Titular Parliament unjustly seize upon the Government by murthering their King and against all Laws thrust out two of the States of the Land the Lords Spiritual first and then the Lords temporal and having now grasp'd the Government with rapacious hands with the like Injustice and Arbitrariness turn the greater part of their own Members out of Doors and rule by a few bloody and tyrannical Usurpers You have likewise seen after what manner they have swayed the three Nations by their own Arbitrary Wills and Pleasures as so many lawless Tyrants upholding an Army only to cut the Peoples Throats and to over-awe them burthening them with Taxes and oppressing them with a standing Army and free Quarter taking away their lives by an Arbitrary Court of Justice contrary to the known Laws of the Land and robbing and spoiling all men of their Estates that opposed them filling the Jayls thorowout the three Kingdoms with Prisoners The Liberties of the Subject overthrown Magna Charta and all the Laws and Ancient Constitutions of Parliaments trodden under foot and disregarded so as no man could call any thing his own And in fine all the People of England made Slaves by these the Keepers of their Liberties so that it was no wonder that there was a general rejoycing at their fall tho as yet it was but out of the Frying-pan into the Fire having exchanged two hundred Tyrants for one as Lawless Boundless and Arbitrary as they or a Rump for an Oliver I should now proceed to give a further Display of this Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government under the Usurpation of Oliver Cromwell who had pull'd these down only to set up himself but before I enter upon it I think it will not be ungrateful to the Reader and not impertinent to my Design to shew you what a sort of men these were who had thus long usurped by a brief Character of some of the chiefest of them and what benefit they made of their pretended Godliness giving one another Estates out of the Kings Queens Bishops Deans and Chapters and Delinquents Lands And I will begin with Oliver Cromwell the Lucifer of the rest who out-witted them all and ruled by himself with greater Power and more absolute Sway than ever any Monarch of England did He was very well descended of a Knightly Family in the County of Huntington being born in S. John's Parish in the Town of Huntington the twenty fifth of April 1599 being the Son of Mr. Robert Cromwell who was the third Son of Sir Henry Cromwell a Gentleman of great worth honored and beloved in Court and Country whose eldest Son Sir Oliver Cromwell a Gentleman well known for his Loyalty and Uncle to this our Oliver was his God-father and gave him his Name His Mother was th●● Daughter of Sir Richard Steward of Ely They therefore were much mistaken who said he was the Son of a Brewer tho indeed his Mother even in his Father's Life-time did manage a Brew-House by their Servants and after her Husbands death continued the same as an honest means of Livelyhood the Patrimony of a younger Brother being but small He was observed in his Youth to be ambitious willful and head-strong which improved with his years and always and upon all occasions exercised the Impostor under the mask of Hypocrisie However he was bred at School where he got some smattering in the Rudiments of Learning but was so violent and head-strong and so very prone to robbing Orchards and Dove-Houses that he grew the terror of the Country and past his Tutor's Correction It was about that time he dream'd he should be King of England if it were not more than a Dream a suggestion of some evil Spirit for he would often confidently report it in his Youth tho rebuked by his Father for it and flash'd by his Master Dr. Bernard for his constant avouching it And acting in a Play in the School going beyond his Cue he took a Crown and put it on his own Head and as if inspired spake some big words with great authority Thence he was translated to Cambridge where he was more noted for Foot-ball Cudgelling and Wrestling than for his Studies to which he little gave his mind and after his Father's death left the University and returning home fell to all manner of Licentiousness and Debauchery and grew so distastful to his Mother and Neighbourhood that she sent him away to London and enters him into Lincolns-Inn intending to make him a Lawyer but finding this place not agreeable to his humor he stayed not long before he returned back into the Country where he fell to his
Sceptre-bearers That the Sword was not only a Military but a Civil Sword a Sword rather of defence than of offence to defend himself and his people Upon which he would presume to write this Motto Ego sum Domini Protectoris ad protegendum Populum Meum I am the Lord Protectors to protect my People This being ended he gave the Protector his Oath on the Bible and Mr. Manton made a Prayer wherein he recommended the Protector the Parliament the Army and Government to God which done the Trumpets sounded and the Heraulds proclaimed him Protector of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging After which he returned in great State the Lord Sherrard and the Lord Roberts his eldest Son carrying his Train The Pageantry being finished the House having done like good Boys have leave to play for returning to their House they adjourn themselves to the 20 th of January following Being thus setled in his Dignity he began to live more splendidly and like a King having a very full Court and after a Monarchical Manner all his Officers of State Steel was made Chief Baron and Lambert Warden of the Cinque-Ports but that would not satisfie him for he was not a little disgusted that Cromwell had power given him to nominate his Successor and he now plainly perceived his Intentions of setling the Succession in his Children for which he now resolves if he can to ruine him with the Army But Cromwell is vigilant and had on the 19 th of April at a certain house in Shoreditch taken several of the Champions of the Fifth-Monarchy men among whom was one Venner a Preaching Wine-Cooper Ashton Gowler Hopkins and Gray their Scribe these were to have risen and with them was taken a considerable quantity of Arms and their Standard with a Lyon-Couchant Guiles in a Field Argent with this Motto Who shall rouse him The late Vice-Admiral Lawson and Major Danvers were secured As also Major Wildman who was taken at Marlborow drawing up a Declaration against him and clapt up in order to his Tryal And hearing of private Subscriptions to Petitions and Addresses to the Parliament carrying on in the Army against Kingship he peremptorily sent to them to desist upon their peril and so over-aw'd and dasht them that they durst not go on with their attempt There was no body now very considerable of their own party that could give him any disturbance but Lambert and to secure himself against him he followed the example Lambert had set him before in securing himself against the Rump Parliament and caused all the Army by his Privado's Regiment after Regiment to subscribe Addresses Congratulating his legal Authority and declaring their readiness to stand by him with their Lives and Fortunes This year on the 20 th of April 1657 that great action of General Blake was performed against the Spaniards at Santa Cruze in the Island of Tenarif where he burnt their whole West-India Ships being 16 in number notwithstanding they were barracado'd in the Haven and defended by a Castle well fortified and 7 Forts and got forth of their Haven without any loss for which considerable service the Protect●r and Parliament ordered him a Jewel of 500 l. and gratuities to the other Officers and Soldiers But this Valiant and Renowned Seaman did not long out-live this his memorable exploit dying at Sea as he was entring the sound of Plymouth Never any Seaman performed so many Actions redounding to the Glory of the English Nation as he did and it was his only misfortune that he serv'd not a lawfull Prince And now the 20 th of January being come at which time the Parliament was to re-assemble they met accordingly but they now were quite another thing than what they were before for according to the Clause in the Petition and Advice That the persons legally Chosen should not be secluded but by the consent of the House those Members that Cromwell had before kept out by force were now re-admitted though against his mind who presently gave him a disturbance Then according to their new Model there was the other House for as yet they did not dare to call it a House of Lords which consisted of his chiefest Favourites of the Army-Officers and others and many pick'd out of the House of Commons some of them being of the excluded Commonwealths-men whom he hoped to draw to his party by this obligation about half a score likewise of the old Nobility were nominated thinking to draw them in but they refused to come The Houses being thus altered in their Constitution quickly let Cromwell see he was deceived in his hopes for Hazelrig and others disdaining his proffer'd Baronage took their seats in the Commons House where they thought they should doe more good and by which means the Commonwealths-men grew so high that the other House was not taken notice of but fell to questioning all their fellows had done during their Seclusion and had the Messages of the other House in contempt and derision And now the Humble Petition and Advice was like to be overthrown The news of their proceedings so inraged the mind of Oliver seeing his great Hopes of being King so suddenly dasht that contrary to the advice of his Council he goes to them and for haste takes an Hackney-Coach and entring into the other House and standing under a Canopy of State he sends for the Commons to come to him who being come with much eagerness made them a long Speech which being remarkable I shall recite some few heads That the Lord was his witness his desires of carrying on the affairs of the Nation were for the ends of Mercy Truth Righteousness and Peace which he desired might be improved That there was not a Man or Woman treading upon English Ground could say that he sought the place of Protector but he thought the Nations happy therein But that he was Petitioned thereunto by them who had the Legislative Power to take up a burthen too heavy for any creature therefore did look they should make it good to him That he could say in the presence of God before whom they were all but poor creeping Ants upon the Earth he had rather have kept sheep than undertook such a place of Government as that was That he had told them he would not undertake it unless he might have men that should go between him and the House of Commons to prevent tumultuary spirits which was granted and he had named another House and that it was not Titles or Lords that they valued but a Christian and English Interest who would be a ballance to them and themselves and of their own rank and quality whilst they loved England and Religion That he thought he had been doing his duty and that they would be satisfied but if they were too high and too low they would not be satisfied That God knew he had taken an Oath upon condition expressed in the Government and thought he had been upon a sure
and against all Law so sent away for the Law says no English man ought to be banished by less authority than by Act of Parliament and ordered forthwith the Prisoners to be set free without Fees or Charges and had they sat longer had undoubtedly punished the Lieutenant too Then after publick faith given and the party restored to Common Privileges he caused that most horrid Order of Decimation to be put in execution on the poor Cavaliers by his Janizaries which was by the ensuing Parliament damned as an unjust and wic●●● breach of Faith This however is the great the just the brave victorious pious and most renowned Oliver who as I have said is yet by some remembred even to a kind of Idolatry but I shall leave him having long since received his deserved reward and conclude with the rapture of Sterry who Preaching his Funeral Sermon had these blasphemous expressions of him As sure says he as this is the Bible which he held in his hand the blessed spirit of Oliver Cromwell is with Christ at the right hand of the Father and if he be there what may not his family expect from him for if he were so usefull and helpfull and so much good influenced from him to them when he was in a Mortal State how much more influence will they have from him now in heaven The Father Son and Spirit through him bestowing Gifts and Graces upon them I shall now proceed to the second Scene of this single Usurpation and Tyranny which brought his Son short-liv'd Dick upon the Stage Oliver being thus dead on the 3 d. of September about three of the Clock in the afternoon he was opened and embalmed but he stunk so filthily though wrapt in Cearcloths and Lead with Aromatick Spices that they were fain to bury him privately but a Coffin was carried to Somerset-house where after some days with his Effigies made for that purpose he seem'd to lye in great state pomp and magnificence to which sight crouds of people daily pressed The out-rooms all hung with black with Scutcheons hanging on the Walls but the room where the Effigies lay was hung with black Velvet and the Ceiling of the same having a large Canopy of the same deeply fringed the Effigies being Robed in Purple Velvet laced with Gold-Lace and furred with Ermins with strings and tassels of Gold In its right hand a Sceptre in its left a Globe on his head a Velvet Cap furred with Ermins and behind his head placed high on a Chair of Tissued Gold was set an Imperial ●●wn Eight Silver Candlesticks of about five foot high stood about his Bed of State with large white Waxtapers burning of three foot long all invironed with Rails and Ballisters covered with Velvet within which stood men in Mourning bare-headed which was continued for many weeks and then the Effigies was removed into another room and vested as before set up in a standing posture with the Crown upon his head which it seems he now obtained though he could not wear it while alive Thus they continued this Pageantry to the 23 d of November following when his Funeral was made and he carried in great pomp to Westminster with more cost and state than ever was bestow'd on any King of England costing they say 26000 l. or more and at last was interred among the Kings and Queens of England where he lay till the 30 th of January 1660 when he had a Resurrection to another Exaltation at Tyburn where he was a second time interr'd under the Gallows according to his demerits with his great Counsellors Ireton and Bradshaw But we will leave the dead and relate in b●ief the Transactions of the living Oliver being gone the Privy Council met and a search was made in the Protector 's Cabinet for a Paper safely lay'd up wherein he had nominated Fleetwood for his Successor but it was not to be found therefore they send to him and Desborow to know if they did acquiesce in the Declaration of the late Protector which made his Son Richard Cromwell Protector To which Fleetwood sent word that he cordially acquiesced in that Declaration of the late Protector 's concerning his Son's Succession though any other Paper should be found in which he had been formerly nominated his Successor This done the Council wait upon Richard to Condole with him for his Father's Death and to Congratulate him as Protector Then Skippon and Strickland were sent to the City to acquaint them with what was done and the next day they caused a Proclamation to be made subscribed by ●hiverton Lord Mayor the Council of State and several Officers of the Army at White-Hall Charing-Cross Fleetstreet and several places in London Proclaiming Richard Cromwell Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. After which the City-Sword by the Lord Mayor and the Seal by Fiennes were resigned to him and his Oath was given him by Fiennes one of the Commissioners of the Great Seal in which he Swore to maintain the Protestant Religion in its purity and to govern the three Nations according to the best of his power and skill according to the Laws After which he dispatches Messengers to Ireland to inform his brother Harry Deputy there and to General Monk in Scotland to inform them and to know how they stood affected to his Advancement And presently he receives Addresses from most of the Counties in England contrived and made at White-Hall and Protestations from the Armies in England Scotland and Ireland to live and dye with him Also Addresses from the Independant Churches as Goodwins Nyes and the rest of them many giving Adoration to this rising false light forgetting the true Sun yet in Eclipse beyond Sea and the fawning Poets Waller and Dryden among the rest praised to the Skies in their Elegies the dead Tyrant Richard was proclaimed both at Dublin and at Edenborough and all things ran smooth on his side But however General Monk liked not the Tyrannical sway of the Army in England but so early began to form the happy project of his Majestie 's Restauration without which he well perceived these Kingdoms would not be in any setled posture but be still subject to any Usurper or Usurpers the Army should set up but this was a great work and time not yet ripened for it he kept the secret in his own breast and intended to take opportunity by the forelock complying for the present as others did but in the mean time with great diligence he reformed his Army and purg'd it from those ill humours as he knew would soon bring it to destruction but this also he did wisely and cautiously and by degrees for fear of causing too early jealousies of his design Richard seeing the many Addresses made to him from the People and Army and the caresses and flatteries of great ones being a man of no great reach thought all had been real and now began to form to himself an Imagination of setling himself in his
consent All things seem succeed to very fortunatly to them and Lockchart Governour of Dunkirk submits to them to whom they send over Peirson Ashfeild and Packer Colonels To Ireland they send their Commissioners Steelones Thomljnson and Goodwin and for the command of the Armie Colonel Ludlow with the title of Lieutenant General Embassadors from the United Provinces come over to congratulate them and to offer their amity as also from many other places were coming so that they now began to think themselvs sure They had a mind to new model Monk's armie in Scotland and were provideing to doe it which Monk had timely notice of by his Agents in London which made him write to the Parliament in which he told them that he thought himself fit to be credited in the qualifications of his own Officers whom he assured them were honest and stout men and for whose fidelity he would be ingaged This letter troubled them being the first rub they had met with yet they hoped to get over it for they were now more eagre to have creatures of their own stamp in that Armie and think with good words to pacifie Monk letting him know as to his own Regiment they would make no alteration But Monk was not satisfied with this but sent up some Officers to solicite at London in behalf of themselvs and the rest Then the Junto made an Order that such Officers as were in Ireland and Scotland because they could not receive their Commissions of the Parliament should receive them from the hand of certain Commissioners named for the civil Government of both Kingdoms But those for Scotland were not yet named and Monk still continued his old Officers In the mean time Somerset House was exposed to sail at the yearly value of 233 l. the gross value of materials at 5545. st 1 s 3 d. to he had not under 13 years purchace And now that they may seem Kind to poor dick who began to fear an Arrest for the mourning took up for this fathers funeral they give him a protection from all Arrests for 6 months and take into consideration how that debt might be paid without charge to themselves And now these Tyrants who held their fellow subjects in slavery had some inck'ling of a Cavalier-plot which made them very jealous of every body so that few could meet upon any occasion but they were disturbed and some of them clapt up for Conspirators In July they put out their Act of Indemnity but none were to have the benefit of this mock Act but such who being above 16 years of age subscribed an Engagement against a single Person Kingship and House of Peers And all Cavaliers as would not take it were to be banish'd out of England and if afterwards seen there to be proceeded against as Traytors and 10 l. reward to the discoverer of such person or persons And now the poor Royalists were in a worse condition than ever after all their losses sequestrations decimations and plund'rings they must either go against their consciences or leave the land The Harvest was great and the labourers few and in August the weather being sultry hot many of the Junto were retired into the Country so that they could hardly make an House upon which they make a strict Order that all rotten members attend the House and that none depart without leave of the House And now they order a Fast and day of Humiliation and to shew that they were the same bloody m●n they were formerly they proclame J. mordant Esq with several others Traytors and order the Lady Howard Sr E. Byron and Mr. Sumner to be brought to a tryal for treasonable designs They seize upon persons horses and armes throughout London increase and double their Guards stop passengers the Council of State sitting night and day and all the Militia in the City and throughout England were ordered to be drawn up for their security for they were in a great consternation about a plot and began to court the people in their canting way by their preachers one of which said The Lord stir up the Hearts of his people and fill them with unanimity and courage at this evil time against the common Enemie Charles Stewart and that desperate Crew of ravenous and unreasonable men who should they get in to satisfie the rable of his followers would enslave you and with your goods maintain forraigners and the pomp and pride of a luxurious Court and an absolute Tyranny And it was not without cause that these persons were put into such afear for there was a general riseing to have been thorowout England of all parties against these Rumpers for the Presbyterians and discarded Protect●rians began now to see their slavery and to tack about seing a necessity of joyning with the Royalists and some of the greatest amongst them sue for the Kings pardon and obtain it and hereupon they cement with the Cavaliers and the famous plot or St. George Booth's riseing was then formed the King lying privatly at Calais ready to have come over on the first geting together of any considerable body But the design was too Early prevented by being some way discovered to Sc●t and some others and by an intercepted letter of the Lady Mary Howards who was clapt up with others about it M●ssy is taken in Gloucester shire but being carried behind a Trooper by a party of Horse in the night he took his time and with a sudden jerk flung the trooper before him and himself into a precipice whereby he escaped being better acquainted with the ways than they were The Rumpers had got some knowledg of the design and with their diligence had prevented it in many Counties Yet Sir George Booth rose in Chesheir with a considerable partie with Sir Tho. Middleton Ma or General Randulph Egerton and others they surprise Chester Liverpool Chi●k Castle and some other places declaring only for a free Parliament so that they had gotten together about 3000 men but few well armed presently the Rump proclame them Rebells and Traytors and Lambert comes against them with 3 Regim●nts of Horse as many of Fort and one of Dragoons besides a Train of Artillery Some of these should have joined Sir George Booth had they seen that they had been in a capacity of doing any good and of proceeding unanimously in their design but in stead thereof there fel out unseasonable contests between the old and the new Cavaliers and the private animosities of the Gentry hind'red much every one that brought but 30 men would be a Captain or take it very ill so that by their unseasonable punctillio's the publique int'rest received damage and besides it was no small daunting to them finding that the design of Riseing was quasht in all other Counties nor could they reduce the Castle of Chester which Colonel Croxton held out against them But so soon as Lambert came up with his forces the raw men that made up the body of the force of Sir
James's in woman apparel and landed safe at Dort in Holland and about the same time several Petitions came to the Parliament and especially one from the County of Essex which supplicate That the Army might be paid off and Disbanded and the King admitted to a personal Treaty Surry and the City of London followed with the like and the Affections of the People began to appear and were ready to fly to Arms. The Kentish men being up ten Thousand strong were routed by General Fairfax the Earl of Norwich who headed them with five hundred men crossed over the Thames into Essex and Sr. Charles Lucas joyning him with 200 thousand men they possessed themselves of Cholchester which became the seat of War and endured a famous Siege Also at the same time a part of the Navy revolted to the Prince who having attempted to help his Father in vain was forced to retire into Holland with his Fleet. Then the Earl of Holland the Earl of Peterborough and others Head a fresh Insurrection at Kingston upon Thames where they were routed the Earl of Holland taken and the Lord Francis Villers the Duke of Buckingham's Brother slain Affairs standing in this Posture the Scots are much displeased tho they had many fair Offers made them by the Parliament Concerning the Payment of money yet due to them and on the 24 th day of July they passed an Ordinance to establish the Presbyterian Government in England and Ireland under Classical Provincial and Parochial Assemblies to please them yet all would not do for they Voted in Scotland a War with England and published a Declaration wherein they propose That the King may come to London or to some of his Houses near with safety That those who had Carried him away might make Satisfaction or be punished for it That the Army under the Lord Fairfax might be disbanded That Presbytery be setled and Sectaries punished That all members of the House might be restored Upon this Berwick was surprised Forces came out of Ireland and many rise in the North for the King Carlisle is seized and their Forces increased under Sr. Marmaduke Langdale Sr. Thomas Glenham Sr. Philip Musgrave and others to the number of three Thousand Horse and foot Sr. Marmaduke Langdale is made their General And on the 13 th of July the Scots enter with an Army into England under Duke Hamilton with whom Langdale joyns and beats Lambert at Appleby Several places declared for the King and all things seemed in an hopeful way when Cromwell having quieted wales marches with his Army to Preston in Lancathire to give a stop to Hamilton who was about twenty Thousand strong with the English Lambert joyns with Cromwell and make up a Body of about twelve Thousand on the 17 th of August both Armies Face one another and the battel being begun on the English side after two hours dispute the Scots gave ground and were most fiercely pursued by the English and Totally routed multitudes of them being taken but Hamilton escaped to Nantwich with three Thousand horse where the Countrey being up in Armes seized upon most of them and at last Hamilton himself was taken at uloxeter by the Lord Gray of Grooby the Scots Ensigm Cornets and Colours then taken were afterwards hung up in Westminster Hall Sr. Marmaduke Langdale was also taken and Cromwell improving his Victory marches towards Monroe who was coming with a reserve of six Thousand Scots but upon Hamilton's overthrow had order to return into Scotland which they did but the Anti-Hamiltonian party in Scotland under Argile which were the stricter sort of Presbyters invited Cromwell into Scotland which the laying hold on to smooth his way he put forth a Declaration severely prohibiting any Souldier under pain of Death to take either Money Horses Goods Victuals or any other thing or any ways to abuse the People He put such a terror among the Scots that they all presently submitted and agreed to disband their Armies and to render up to him Berwick and Carlile which were in their Hands That a Parliament should be called in Scotland for the setling Religion and composing their differences and also that none that had been in the last Ingagements against England should be chosen of this new Parliament or into their general Assembly Thus having setled Scotland to his mind he returns into England Upon his Victory against Hamilton Colchester being driven to the utmost extremity was surrendred and the two valiant Gentlemen contrary to Faith given Sr. Charles Lucas and Sr. George Lisle shot to Death and the Earl of Norwich Lord Capel and others sent Prisoners to London While these things were in doing there had been some Attempts made towards the private murthering of the King which was made known to the Parliament who took some Examinations thereupon but nothing to any purpose done in it he being now look'd upon as a Tyrant and suffered openly to be so called daily with many other most opprobrious Speeches both against his person and Government which the Parliament took no notice of but had made an Order in April before That any three of their Committe-men at Darby House should have Power to Imprison and sequester all such as shall actually adhere to any that shall raise or endeavour to raise my Tumults or Insurrections or shall so much as speak or publish any thing reproachful of the Parliament or their proceedings so that you see they had tyed up mens Tongues from speaking against themselves without the least restraint of reviling their King and for every light Word a free born Subject of England was made an offender and lyable to be ruined at the Pleasure of three Arbitrary men of their Committee absolutely against that known Maxim of our Law Nemo imprisonetur aut disseis●tur nisi per legale judicium parium suorum No man shall be imprisoned or disseised of his Property but by the lawful judgment of his Peers that is by a jury of twelve men But what signified Magna Charta Petition of Right the Ancient Laws of the Land to these Men who had trampled the Imperial Crown under their feet and usurp'd more than ever rightful Monarch or the most Arbitrary of our Kings ever Claim'd And had raised upon the People for the maintainance of this unnatural War and towards the enslaving of themselves about three Millions of pounds sterling Per annum which was six times more than ever the most rapacious of our Kings had raised on the People besides the vast Incomes of the Kings revenue Sequestrations and Compositions About the third of August the Prince now our Soveraign sent Letters to the City Expressing his good affection to Peace and to the whole City and his Endeavours to vindicate his fathers Liberty and just Prerogative and Rights and to restore to the People their Laws Liberties and Property to free them from Bondage and to ease them of the Burthen of Excise and Taxes to settle Religion and to reduce all things
up the Foundation of a Government which the people were to consent to which consent or Agreement of the People should be above Law That in the Agreement a day should be set for the Dissolution of the Parliament and this to be drawn up in a Remonstrance from the Army This was incouraged by Major general Harrison who urgged there could be no safety for them nor the Nation but by the cutting off the Kings Head and the thorowly purging at least if not the Dissolving the Parliament Upon this the Army now wholly at Cromwell's Devotion sends up a Petition to the Commons for Justice to be done on the King as a Capital Offender That the Prince of Wales and Duke of York be Summon'd by a Day and if they come not in to be declared incapable of the Succession and Government and if they come in to be proceeded against for Satisfaction That the Revenues of the Crown be sequestred That publick Justice might be done against the Actors in the late Wars against the Parliament That they may be paid their Arrears and the Country eased of free Quarters and lastly that a Period be put to this Parliament and care taken for the Electing of future Parliaments and that no King be admitted for the future The Army Entring the City The Rump dreggs of y e house of Commons Sitting after y e Army had turnd y e good members out Oliver seeking God whil● the King is murthered by his order Bradshaw the Taylor and y e Hangman keeper of the Libertyes of England This force being put upon the House and new moulded driving away all that were not for their turn besides many others for fear absented themselves the rest who afterwards obtained the name of Rump or Rumpers being the Relicks of a greater Body met again and submitting to the Power of the Army to please them Vote That no Message be received from the King on pain of Treason That the General should take Care of his Person and that a Charge of High Treason should be drawn up against him Having now fully concluded to destroy him Thus have we briefly drawn to your View the first Lineaments of an Arbitrary Government and Tyrannical Usurpation in very short Draughts shewing however the ways and means whereby these Men or Junto of Usurpers came by their Power and Authority overthrowing the very Foundation of our Ancient and most glorious Monarchy under the Notion of Liberty and setting up a Tyrannical Democracy or rather Oligarchy under the Regiment of a few selected Fellows who called themselves the Parliament and the Representatives of the Nation and in whom they pretend all Right of Power and Magistracy was to be placed The very shadow of all legal Power was now gone and this unparallel'd force put upon the Parliament in excluding the Major part of their Members by the Arbitrary will of Oliver Cromwel and his M●●midons contrary to all Law and Right took from them the very Name of a Parliament But they care not for that they shadow their impious Acts under that venerable Denomination and having now as they thought got into the Kingly throne by the power of the Army and the Sword imagined they should keep it when all this while not having the Command of the Army but being ridden by the general Officers thereof who designed as soon as they had done their work to pay them their Wages by dismissing them were but as the Cats foot made use of by the Monkey for the raking the Chesnut out of the Fire the benefit of which they intended to take themselves and this was the Murthering of their lawful Soverain whom they had deposed which was the next main Design driven on by the Independent Army and their Dromidaries this Junto of Men. We have seen these Men grown up into full Strength of Arbitrariness and got into the Throne of their Soveraign we will now proceed to Trace them by their Steps in the Exercise of this their Tyrannical Usurpation which we shall find to be according to the same unlawful Progress and to be of the same bloody Complexion for it is a certain Maxim That what Power is got by unlawful means must be kept by the same unlawful ways notwithstanding the specious pretences of Liberty and setling the Kingdom This Junto of Men being met and Voted as we have declared That no more Address should be made to the King nor any Message received from him they take Care in the next place having got into the Saddle to keep it and to make the World believe they had a right to it if they could for now an Ordinance was drawn up that the Lords and Commons of England do declare That by the Fundamental Laws of the Land it is Treason in the King of England to levy War against the Parliament This preparative in making the King a Transgressor and in placing the Supream Power in the People whose Representatives they were was in Order to their Design of Murthering the King This being sent up to the Lords who denyed to consent to it the Commons grow very angry and finding the Lords to be yet an Obstacle to their bloody Intentions they Vote That all Members of Committees should Act in any Ordinance by them made without the Lords Concurrance the People having by God the full power Originally in themselves and therefore what ever they enact is Law which passed Nemine Contradicente The Army still continuing their Guards upon the House keeping out any of those Members were not of their Party and imprisoning them they had much ●doe to make an House and sometimes it was Noon 〈◊〉 they could get forty men together without which i● could not be an House so very Scrupulous were these grand Hypocrites to keep up a Face of Authority in these minute Circumstances who in the great Fundamentals had broke in two all Bonds Obligations Oaths and Laws The Army now the Lords of all Garrison Black-Fryars and St. Paul's turning the house of God into a Stable and defiling it with Dung robbing divers Halls which they call'd borrowing of several sums of Money by their Saint-like Prerogative accounting the rest Egyptians In the mean time the secluded Members still imprisoned put forth a Declaration against this most horrid violence of the Army done to their Persons and to the Fundamental Laws of the Land the Rights of the People and the priviledges of Parliament this was dated 11 th December 1648. This being complained of to the House both Lords and Commons put forth a Declaration against it wherein they declare That the Declaration put forth by those Members of the House of Commons Excluded the House in which was these Words viz That all Acts Ordinances Votes and Proceedings of the House of Commons made since the 6 th of December or hereafter to be made duering the restraint and forcible Seclusion from the House and the Continuance of the Armies force upon it are no way Obligatory but
having made way for the most horrid and Bloody design that ever was heard of the Motion is made in this usurping House to proceed to the Tr●al of the King as a Capital Offender When the grand Impostor Cromwell stood up and said That if any man moved this upon Design he should think him the greatest Traytor in the World but since Providence and Necessity had cast them upon it he should pray to God to bless their Councells And so on the 28 th of December 1648. Thomas Scot brought in the Ordinance for the Tryal of the King being read and Committed three several times and all the Commissioners names inserted Consisting of divers Gentlemen and Soldiers This Ordinance being pass'd the Junto they send it up to the Lords House by the Lord Grey of Grooby together with their Vote formerly made Viz. Resolved c. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament do declare and adjudge That by the Fundamental Laws of the Realm it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levy War against the Parliament and Kingdom of England The house of Lords debate the matter and first the Declaratory Vote against which the Earls of Manchester and Northumberland with others spake and declared There was none nor could be any such Fundamental Law in England whereby the King could be a Traytor by leaving War against his People and that thus to declare Treason by an Ordinance when no law was extant to judge it by was most unreasonable Upon which the Lords cast out this Ordinance and Vote and adjourned themselves for seven days This proceeding of the Lords gave them no small trouble and stirr'd up the wrath of some of the Zealots who threatned to hang a Pad-lock on the Lords door and sending up to search their journal Book they found the Lords had made these two Votes That they do not Concur to the said declaratory Vote And Secondly That they rejected the Ordinance for the Tryal of the King Upon which these men resolving to be rid of the Lords as well as of King they Vote That they should Act without them as well they might according to their own Law That all Authority was sounded in the People and that they being the Representatives of the People all Authority lay in them Some of them were for Impeaching the Lords for favouring the grand Delinquent of the Land as they called the King And now to make all sure on their sides that they may Act legally On the 4 th of January they Vote That the People are under God the Original of all just Power That the Commons of England in Parliament assembled being chosen by and representing the People have the Supreme Power of this Nation That whatsoever is declared or Enacted for Law by the House of Commons assembled in Parliament hath the force of Law This makes clear Work and by this our Arbitrary Usurpers may do what they will and cut off their Kings Head according to their own Position legally what need of Kings Lords Laws Rights Liberties Properties or fundamental Government when the Arbitrary Consciences of such men may serve instead of all and conclude thereby all the People of England tho they declare against it and tho opposed by the King or House of Peers And thus notwithstanding the rejection of the Lords these Commons pass their Ordinance and declaratory Vote by the name of An Act of Parliament of the House of Commons which was never before heard of for the Tryal of Charles Stewart King of England This being objected to Hugh Peters that there was no President or Example for the Tryal of a King by a judicial Court he Prophanely applyed That there was never any President before the Virgin Mary of a Womans conceiving and bringing forth a Child without accompanying with a Man therefore they might walk without President for this was an Age to make Examples and Presidents There was yet one thing that passed these men which they had not foreseen which was That it was a very improper thing to make use of the Kings Seal wherein he is styled King of England c. by the Grace of God to seal a Commission against him for his Tryal They were now in hast and could not stay for a new one which they had not as yet thought on therefore it was concluded the Commissioners should proceed upon the Ordinance without any Commission under Seal and that every Commissioner should set his own Hand and Seal to the Instruments of their Proceedings All things being now in a readiness for the Tryal The King is taken from Hurst Castle and brought to Winchester thence to Farnham thence to Winsor and thence to St. James on the 19 th day of January And they had caused for the greater Solemnity of the Business their Serjeant Dandy who was appointed Serjeant at Arms to the Commissioners for the Tryal of his Majesty to proclaim it openly in Westminster-Hall with his Mace on Horse back with six Trumpets and several Officers attending all bare That the Commissioners were to sit to morrow and that all those who had any thing to say against Charles Stewart King of England might be heard This was done in like manner in Cheap-side and at the Royal Exchange The same day the House Voted their great Seal to be broken and ordered a new one to be made Upon this Mr. Prin sends to the Junto a Memento of their unpresidented Proceedings Complaining of the force and Violence put upon their fellow Members warning them from Acting Consulting or ordaining any Act or Ordinance without Concurrence of their fellow-Members being Arbitrary and against Law and that the secluded Members not only declared against such Proceedings but more especially against this horrid Act of theirs for the Tryal of the King shewing them That by the common Law and by the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. and all other Acts concerning Treason it is high Treason for any man to Compass or Contrive the Death of the King or his eldest Son tho never Executed That they were also bound to the Contrary by their Oath of All●giance from which no Power could absolve them That they had in above an hundred Declarations and Ordinances in the name of the Parliament professed That they never intended the least hurt injury or Violence to the Kings person his Crown Dignity or Posterity with several other things very pressing and full as may be seen at large in the printed Paper but all was in vain for they were resolved on the Business tho they could give no kind of colourable Reason for their Actings This Memento was seconded with a Declaration and Protestation signed the 19 th of January by the said Prin and Clement Walker another of the secluded Members which ran very much after the same Tenure and absolutely Protesting against the Junto's Actings and Proceedings declared against the illegal Act of Erecting an high Court of Justice and usurping a Power against
on by the secret and forcible Machinations of Oliver and his Cabal The second day being Monday the 22 d. of January the Court met again and the Solicitor Cook urged extreamly for judgment against the Prisoner unless he would own the Authority of the Court which the King constantly denyed to do and offered his reasons against them but they would not be heard The 3 d. day being January 23 d. the King was brought again before the Court who had in the Painted Chamber the day before Resolved That the King should not be suffered to argue the Courts Jurisdiction and had ordered That in case he offer'd to dispute the Authority of the Court that the President should let him know that he ought to rest satisfied with this Answer That the Commons of England assembled in Parliament have Constituted this Court whose Power may not nor should be permitted to be disputed by him And that in case he should refuse to answer or acknowledge the Court the Lord President should let him know his Contumacy should be recorded But the King still persisted in the denyal of their Authority upon which the Clark reads Charles Stewart King of England you are accused in the behalf of the Commons of England of divers high Crimes and Treasons which Charge hath been read unto you the Court now requires you to give your positive and final Answer by way of Confession or denial of the Charge But the King told them he could not acknowledge a new Court set up contrary to the Priviledges of the People to alter the fundamental Laws of the Land The 4 th and last day was the 27 th of January 1648. where appeared about fifty six of those Commissioners who sate when judgment was given against the King by their President Bradshaw But the King having moved to be heard before the Lords and Commons in the painted Chamber promising after that to abide the judgement of the Court they withdrew for half an hour and returning they told the King This was but another denial of the Courts jurisdiction and therefore if he had no more to say they would proceed to Judgement Upon this after Bradshaw had made a long Speech endeavouring to justifie their Proceedings on this false point That the People are the supream Power whom the Commons represented he commanded the Clark to read the Sentence which was drawn up in Parchment in these words Whereas the Commons of England in Parliament have appointed them an High Court of Justice for the trying of Charles Stewart King of England before whom he had been three times convented and the first time a Charge of high Treason and other Crimes and Misdemeanors was read in the behalf of the Kingdom of England c. Here the Charge at length was read after which the Clark proceeds which Charge being read unto him as aforesaid He the said Charles Stewart was required to give his Answer but he refused so to do For all which Treasons and Crimes this Court doth adjudge the said Charles Stewart as a Tyrant Traytor Murtherer and a publick Enemy shall be put to Death by the severing his Head from his Body After this wicked Sentence passed by these Miscreants the King was had away to Sr. Robert Cotten's and thence to St. James's the rude Soldiers in his passage by them blowing Tobacco in his Face and one spit on it which he wiped off with his Hand-kerchief without taking notice of it But when he heard some of them to Cry out Justice Justice he said alas Poor Souls for a piece of Money they will do as much for their Commanders On the 29 th a Committee met in the paint●d Chamber to consider on the time and place of the Kings death which they ordered to be the next day before his own Palace Gate which was approved of by the Commissioners and a Warrant Signed and Sealed by them directed to Hacker Hunts and Phare and order that Marshal Nye Caryl Salway and Dell should attend on his Majesty and to administer to him spiritual help but the King would not be troubled with them and at his desire Doctor Juxon Bishop of London was admitted to Pray with him in private in his Chamber and to administer to him the Sacrament and his Children permitted to come to see him But John Godwin was also sent to be an over-looker of their Actions In the mean time the Junto Pen a Proclamation which they afterwards caused to be published making it high Treason for any man to proclaim or publish Charles Stewart the Son to be rightful Heir and Successor to the Crown of England after his Fathers death or any other of that Line King of England and that no man under Pain of imprisonment or other Arbitrary punishment which they should think fit to inflict shall Preach Write or speak any thing contrary to the present Proceedings of the supream Authority of this Nation the Commons of England assembled in Parliament The Sunday before the King dyed it is reported that some of the chief of the Army and Parliament tendred the King a paper to sign with promise of Life and some shew of a King the Power being wholly invested on themselves and was Destructive to the Fundamental Laws of the Land to the Religion established to the Liberties and Properties of the People one Proposition whereof was To continue the Power of the Sword to the Army and to have as a standing Force under the same general Officers forty Thousand Horse and Foot they to have the Choice of their own Officers among themselves by a Councel of War and to settle a constant Tax upon the People by way of a Land rate for the payment of the said Army and to be collected and levyed by themselves and a Court martial to be Erected of an exorbitant Extent and Latitude But his Majesty disdaining to read them all flung them aside and told them He should rather become a Sacrifice for his People and dye by their Hands than so to betray their Laws Liberties Lives and Estates the Church and Honour of his Crown and so to make all Slaves to the Arbitrary Will and Tyranny of an Army O Glorious Prince Oh height of Impudence of armed Arbitrariness See yet how they proceed on the 29 th of January the Junto Vote That it be enacted by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same That in all Courts of Law Justice Equity and in all Writs Grants Patents Commissions Inditements Informations Suits Returns of Writs Fines Recoveries Exemplificationr Recognizances Processes and Proceedings at Law c. Within the Kingdom of England and Ireland and Dominion of Wales c. Instead of the Name Style or Title of King heretofore used should thence forward be used and no other than the Name Style or Title Custodes Libertatis A●glie Authoritate Parliamenti The keepers of the Liberty of England by Authority of Parliament and the date of the Year of our Lord and no
States In the mean time they have no small umbrage of the Scots Proceedings who had sent to the King then at the Hague and invited him into Scotland with several Propositions in order thereunto But Middleton and Monroe fearing the Kirk Party would hold the King to hard Terms should he come in upon their Propositions rise in the North of Scotland but were soon supprest by Ker and Stranghan upon this our Junto strike in and offering them by their Letters several fair Temptations that they might break with the King promising to stand by them and to defend their Liberty as they called it But this took not And about this time they make a new Act of Treason such as scarce was ever heard of before That to kill the General Lievtenant General or any Member of that House of Parliament or Councel of State should be Treason was to have been put into it but after long debate was omitted betraying too much Cowardise in them and having other ways secured themselves in the Act. For it was made Treason to Act Plot Contrive or speak against this Fag End of the Parliament or their Government and all Endeavours against the Keepers of the Liberties of England and the Councel of State to subvert them as now Constituted and that shall be hereafter Constituted by Parliament what an individuum vagum is here and for every such Act c. to forfeit Life and Estate And also to move and stir up the people against them was declared Treason nay so much as to endeavour to withdraw any Soldier or Officer from their obedience to their Superior Officer or from the present Government aforesaid Also to Counterfeit their great Seal is by this Act made Treasons Are not these in the mean time excellent Conservators of the Liberties of the Nation And a very free State Lilburn in the Tower was kept from Pen Ink and Paper and all allowance for Meat and Drink taken from him tho he petitioned for it so that he was kept three days with half a Meals meat and in a close Chamber none suffered to come at him This under a King had been Tyrannical but is Prudence in this free State About this time also orders were given to certain Committees to inquire upon Oath and to Certifie the improved vallue of every mans Estate both Real and Personal which they intended thorowout the Kingdom following the Conqueror's steps to have by them a Dooms-day Book that they might the better load the people with Taxes and free Quarter in this their new Subjected and Conquered Kingdom called a Free-state Here the House enables their Committees to give Oaths when they had not Power to give any themselves Contrary to that Maxim None can give what he hath not or more Power than is in himself These are the men that were so much troubled with the Oath ex Officio and yet require Oaths against a mans self Nay the Scriveners in London were commanded by these supream Governors to shew their Books that they might inspect what and whose Money they had in their Hands the better to come at it themselves And that they might grasp at all they were Contriving to seize all the Tythes of the Kingdom into their own Hands and to make all Ministers their Stipendary Lecturers and to depend upon the State that they might Preach no Doctrine but what should be agreeable to themselves or in justification of their Actions This was a politick Device Oliver before he went for Ireland took all the politiok Care possible to keep up the Greatness he had acquired and to secure this Junto of Men which he made use of only to set up himself besides the Bridle he had already made them the Councel of State Composed of his Creatures he picks out of the Army left behind in England the chief of his Creatures and Constitutes them a Councel of War or a Councel of Officers to over-awe all with the Power of the Sword for silent Leges inter Arma and now silet Justitia inter Leges filet Jus inter Judices The Government was now a Cerberus with three Heads a Parliament a Councel of State and a Councel of War Many Scruple to pay their illegal Tax of ninety Thousand pound a Month for the Army and therefore have their Goods taken from them by Violence and sold tho they exclaim against it as not done by Law Mr. Prin declares against it and shews it to be against the Statutes Magna Charta 29.30.25 Ed. 1 Chap. 5.6.34 Ed. 1.21 Ed. 3.25 Ed 3.45 Ed. 3.11 Hen. 4.1 Rich 3. The Petition of Right and many more and it was observed to them that no Tax was to be imposed but upon necessity and for the good of the People 25. Ed. 1. Cook Just but for the keeping up an Army when the Wars were done was the bain of the People and that more Taxes had been raised in eight years than in all the Kings Reigns since the Conquest A hundred and fifty thousand Pound was advanced for Oliver's expedition into Ireland who was to be accomptable only of part of it the rest to be disposed at his Discretion for the use of the Common-wealth And now this Junto begin to think of adjourning themselves according to Oliver's desire and in the mean time things to be left to his two Caballs or Councells That of State and that of War but this was a bitter Pill and they knew not how to leave their old Seats where most of them were grown very warm and tho urged to it by the Councells and that some trouble was given to Lenthal their Speaker by Articles drawn up by his Council of Officers but they fearing lest they might not get together again if once separated desired time to finish some Acts they had upon their Hands and then they would adjourn themselves by which you may see how free these Keepers of the Kingdoms freedom were First down went the King and his Power lapsed into the two Houses down went the House of Lords and then all Power was in the House of Commons now they are going down and the supream Power is in a Councel of State who must down too and then the Wheel turns round and all the Power will be in a single Tyrannical person and Usurper Some of the Acts that lay yet on their Hands and which they promised to dispatch were That all Acts concerning Loans Monies Excise Sequestrations Goldsmiths-Hall Haberdashers-Hall Assessments for England and Ireland be passed so that they intended a Continuance of the Peoples Slavery and Burthens Also an Act for the setling the Militia throughout the Kingdom An Act for punishing revolted Seamen An Act for the relief of well affected Tenants against Malignant Land Lords An Act for suppressing Malignant Pamphlets aspersing the Proceeding of this Parliament Councel of State and Army An Act for the suppressing of seditious Preachers An Act for the ●●●ing away of a Clause of the Stat. 25.
odious to the people by their bloody tyrannous and arbitrary Actions that he knew it would be very grateful to them to have them dissolv'd Ireton was dead in Ireland who had been a great Assistant to him in promoting him but it was thought he was so true a Common-wealths-man that he would not have suffered Cromwell to have grasped the Scepter and to have set up himself in the place of the Monarch he had pull'd down and since he was now able to act himself without his Councils he was but a Rub out of his way almost all Ireland being subdued and under his subjection Ludlow being Lieutenant General of th● Army there and one active in the reducing the Remainder left unfinished by Ireton On the other hand General Monk whom he had left in Scotland with seven thousand men had taken Sterlin Dundee Perth and all the strong Holds in Scotland S. Andrews Aberdeen and all the Castles surrendred upon Summons so that Scotland as well as Ireland was at his devotion and three Kingdoms he hoped to make a prey of and to make them more sure and to unite them into one they enter'd upon the project of having each Kingdom incorporated with England like Wales by causing them to elect their several Members to sit in the English Parliament And now that he might yet make the Junto more odious he puts them on the ordinary Drudgery of taking away the lives of such of the Royal Party as he thought might be any hinderance to his Designs by their arbitrary way of Tryal in their High Court of Injustice or by a Court-Marshal and thus as the saying is he killed two Birds with one Stone rid his Opposers out of the way and made his Instruments odious that he might with the more safety lay them aside when he saw his time The Earl of Derby was the first that felt the bloody severity of these Rulers at Westminster who appointed a Court-Marshal to sit at Chester for his Tryal and several others that were taken at the Battel of Worcester where he was sentenced to be beheaded tho he had surrendred himself upon Articles and promise of his life to one Captain Edge but notwithstanding his plea the arbitrary Court condemn'd him and he was executed at Bolton in Lancashire the fifteenth of October 1651. And by the same Court Sir Timothy Fetherstone-haugh was condemned and for the same crime of Loyalty for endeavouring to bring in Charles Stewart as they called the King and to possess him of his Right the Crown of England who was beheaded at Chester the twenty second day of the same month likewise by the same Court Captain Benbow was condemned and according to their Sentence shot to Death at Shrewsbury And Captain Symkins in another place Many more of note were put into the Tower and reserved for a further Exercise of their Cruelty And now the way to the Crown did not seem very Difficult for Jersy Isie of Man and the Barbadoes yield to their Power and Oliver in the next place bent all his thoughts to turn this ●ump of a Parliament out of Doors having done with them as much Mischief as he well could He looks now very big upon them and had shewn by his behaviour the Resentment he had of their former sawcy Expostulation of his management of the Affairs in Scotland and when he came into the House they all Crouch'd and the fauning Speaker made his Panegyrick with palpable Flattery notwithstanding it was moved in the House by some of his Creatures that this House should be dissolved and Care taken for another to be Chosen but this was a bitter Potion they knew not how to swallow And upon this the Levellers are again set to work and Countenanced who before were so much Cry'd down that they might bait them to a Dissolution and that he might be Lord Paramount in Nomine as well as he was already in Re. But yet there were two Obstacles in his Way The first was the Duke of Gloucester was too near him he was yet a Prisoner in Scarborow Castle him he causes to be removed and sent away into Holland which was done by the order of the Junto to the no small joy of his Friends that he had escaped out of the cruel Claws of these Bears with Life This rub being removed another more Difficult appeared which was the War with Holland and he very Rationally concluded it would be too hard a Task for him to make War both abroad with them and at home with his own Common-wealth which he intended to pull down Considering what a small share he had of the Love of the people and that he was to ●et up himself and Establish his rule and Arbitrary Sway by the Power of the Army only and for this Reason he was forced to let his Journy-men continue their Seats a little longer and wait the Issue of this War This War being foreseen to quiet the Peoples minds they pass an Act of Grace or Oblivion a Pardon for all Hostilities past with an Intention of forgetting all Injuries but upon Condition of taking an Ingagement which they imposed upon the People wherein they promise and Ingage To be true and Faithful to the Common-wealth of England as then Established without King or House of Lords But out of this Act The Lord Goring and his Sons Sr. John Webster The executors of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Murtherers of Dorislaus and Ascham were excepted Still several Addresses Petitions Declarations and Desires came from divers Counties and Places to the Parliament for the putting a Period to their sitting and for providing for future Representatives which Perplext them and were very distastful seeing them so pressing and after many put offs and Reasons for their Continuance they were forced to comply and resolved that the longest Day of their Sitting should be the 5 th of November in the Year 1654. two years too long as Cromwell thought for he intended their Reign should be shorter but his Projects being not yet Ripe he awaited his oportunity About the latter end of this year they made an Act to banish John Lilburn who was very troublesome to them and whom it seems Oliver was much afraid of Knowing him to be an Enemy to his Ambitious Proceedings and very popular It was provided by this Act that if he returned without leave from the State he should suffer as a Felon Preparations for War being made on both sides the States of Holland seeing the English make an Act so Prejudicial to their Trade and to prepare to maintain it against them being somewhat fearful of the Event sent over their Embassadors Myn Heeren Cate Vander-Peer Sharp and Newport who found our English States very high and made such demands that the Dutch could not yield to and so in the beginning of the year 1652 they get their Fleets to Sea well Man'd and Equipped Marten Harpers Vantrump being the Admiral for the Dutch Popham being Dead Dean
th of July 1654. And on the same day Col. Gerard was beheaded on Tower-hill presently after Emanuel Say the Portugal Ambassadors brother put to death for killing one in a fray in the New-Exchange this Col. Gerard being the chief man that opposed the said Ambassadors brother at that time with the hazard of his life yet both came to suffer in one day upon one Scaffold for different Crimes For this Colonel suffered onely for the Crime of Loyalty and was sacrifised to Oliver's Fear and Policy He dyed with great bravery courage and undauntedness This was Cromwell's first bloudy remarke and like an Usurper who must maintain his illegal greatness by illegal Arts. But dominion founded in innocent bloud cannot long stand before the Avenger for bloud visits it in his wrathfull Justice About this time he takes care there shall be a faithfull ministry to his interest he means therefore he sets up a Company of Tryers the chief of which were Nye Goodwin Hugh Peters Manton and others named as Commissioners These make a Reformation among the Ministry for humane Learning was rather a Crime than an help to any for the question was had they Grace in their hearts Many good Livings were disburthened of their Pastours and others of more Grace and less Knowledge put in I heard of one who had been Hebrew and Chaldee Reader in Oxford and knowing in all the Eastern Tongues put out of a good living for insufficiency He had it seems not Grace equal to his Learning or his Living had more Grace than he But such as agreed with Nol's Principles and were ready to maintain his Government to be jure divino were put into the best Livings throughout England and the favourers of the Church of England though they had conformed every where thrust forth In Ireland all was subdued and he sent Cook over as a Judg who with a kind of Itinerant Court of Justice hung up many of the Irish Rebels at Dublin Waterford Kilkenny and in Vlster and those that escaped of the Irish were confined to the Province of Conaught and the rest banished But in Scotland at the mediation of Argile whom he had tyed to his Interest and by whose power he held a great part of the Highlands in subjection the Presbyterians were allowed their Religion and had their own Kirk Government and the power of Excommunication but the rigor of it was taken off for such as were excommunicated were not onely forbid the Communion but they had all their Estates confiscated to the Church which was not allowed them nor the meeting of their general Assembly Cromwell was jealous of Lambert and of the Love he had among the Sectaries of the Army so that as yet he was forced to caress him and to delude him with vain hopes of succeeding him in the Protectorate and therefore made him Commander in chief of the Army next himself with the allowance of 10 l. a day Abroad he confederates with most of the Potentates and upon his making a Peace with France the King is obliged to leave that Court where he had been neer two years and had done many good offices for that King with his neighbour Princes but Interest sways more than Gratitude He retires into Germany where all his designs and private Councils in his Cabinet were betray'd to Cromwell by one Manning who was Clerk to his Secretary bribed by the Usurper who had a knack that way of expending vast summs for intelligence and by this means many of the Royalists designs in England came to be discovered and many brought into trouble about it but at last the Traytour was detected and shot to death for his perfidiousness About this time he sends over 6 Counsellors for Ireland Steel who was m●de Lord Chancellour there and Pepys Lord Chief justice there Miles Corbet Robert Hamond Matthew Tomlinson and Robert Goodwin About June this year Cromwell seeing he was able to rule 3 Kingdoms believed he was as well able to govern 6 Horses sent him by the Count of Oldenburg and in a frollick being in Hide Park leaving his Engine Thurlo alone in the Coach he gets into the Box and would needs play the Coach-man but the Horses feeling the lash and not so well yoaked as his English Slaves ran away with Coach Coach-man and Thurlo and at last dismounted him from his Box an ill omen of his fall and had like to have broke his Neck And now according to the Instrument on the 3 d of September the Parliament was to meet and great care was taken by Oliver that none of the Cavaliers should be chosen Writs were issued out in his name and Elections made as heretofore onely the Burrows sent but one Burgess and there were 6 or 7 Knights for some Shires all of them under sure qualifications Scotland and Ireland also according to the Instrument sent their number most being English Commanders The day came they meet and in Westminster Abby Marshall gave them a Sermon The next day the Protector went to them in great state in his Coach attended by Cleypool Master of his Horse Strickland Captain of his Guards bareheaded on both sides and at his entrance Lambert carried the Sword and Whitlock the Purse and in the painted Chamber he made to them a Speech after his old method with God in his mouth He told them this was an healing day for before there was neither Nobleman Gentleman nor Yeoman known by any distinction nor was there any bore rule or authority but the Magistracy and Christ's Ordinances were had in contempt that the fifth Monarchy was highly cry'd up by such persons as had a mind to assume the government to themselves Then in an extolling way he shewed what great things he had done during his Government and then he told them they were upon the edge of Canaan and that he spoke not as their Lord but Fellow-servant And so dismist them to choose their Speaker which they did without presenting to him his name Their Speaker was Lenthal the Speaker to the old Long Parliament This Parliament began to be very brisk upon the Government and fell upon the Instrument on which they made so bad musick questioning Oliver's power that he could not indure it and immediately sent them a Recognition for every Member to take before they sat whereby they were not to meddle with the Government as it was settled in a single person and the Parliament nor with the militia nor with perpetuating Parliaments nor taking away Liberty of Conscience He told them also that a Free Parliament was but a term of Reciprocation for that power which made him Protector made them a Parliament and therefore he was sorry they went about to destroy the Settlement and was forced to send them a Recognition for every Member to sign and seal to prevent it This startled most of them especially the Commonwealths men who all flew off and of 400 scarce 200 appeared though at last several came dropping in and
foundation and that the consequence had been confusion if he had not done it That there were no hereditary Lords or Kings setled the power consisting in the two Houses and himself and that God would judge between them and him God was his witness that there was a seeking of a new settlement in the Army that he spake not to those Gentlemen meaning his Lords or what they would call them but to them the Commons that advised him to that place yet that instead of owning him some of them must have they did not know what And that they were running the Nation into confusion again by their intention of devising a Commonwealth that some of the people might be the Men that might rule all and that those things were not according to God and according to Truth pretend what they would it was a playing a game for the King of Scots if he mought call him so and therefore he thought himself bound before God to doe what he meant to prevent it God was his witness he told them what was true the King of Scots had an Army at the water-side ready to be Shipt for England and that he had the knowledge of it from an eye-witness That they had not only been endeavouring to pervert the Army to draw them to a Commonwealth but some of them while sitting had been listing of persons by Commission from Charles Stuart to joyn with any insurrection that should be made that if this was the end of their sitting and that if these were their carriages concluding he thought it high time to put an end to their sitting and therefore by the living God he declared to them that he did Dissolve that Parliament To which many of the Commons cry'd out Amen And thus ended this Parliament crossing and vexing Oliver to the heart for he expected more supplies of Money Oliver having thus dismist this Parliament and rid himself of that fear begins to fortifie himself against the Royalists who had indeed formed a new Plot for the bringing in their King but were betray'd by Willis and one Corcar a Minister of Sussex who had been long employed by Cromwell for that purpose The Royalists were glad the Parliament was dissolved for they feared a Commonwealth much more than Cromwell not that he was less Tyrannical or had used them more favourably but for that the other sort of Government had rendred it self formidable and was in danger to have been more permanent than Oliver's Kingly Protectorship could for they believed as they well might that King Oliver would never be long endured by the people whose eyes must needs be opened and see that he was got into the Throne and exercised the same power and far more than the Kings of England ever did and whom they had flung out only to make way for a Tyrant and that they would never suffer a man of their own quality and rank thus to play the King amongst them and to be their Lord without endeavouring to fling him out Besides they found Lambert and the Army so much disgusted that they would rather have ventur'd all than not to have seen the downfall of Cromwell so that the Royalists thought all things to be favourable to their design But Cromwell having timely notice of all things by his Agents among them he takes care to prevent them and sending to his right hand Tichbourn Lord Mayor causes him to double the City-Guards and to make great changes in the Militia turning out all he suspected and presently seizes on Sir William Compton the Earl of Northampton's Brother Mr. Russel the Earl of Bedford's Brother Sir William Clayton and many more The Marquess of Ormond who on the design had lain hid for some time in London hardly escapes his hands Also he seizes on Mr. Mordant the Earl of Peterborough's Brother Mr. Manley Mr. Baron Mr. Stapely Mr. Mansel Mr. Woodcock Mr. Carent Mr. Jackson and one Mallory who was thought to be a decoy to the rest being pardoned after Condemnation And now to give more terror to the Royalists Cromwell resolves again to new dye his hands in Blood by the old Arbitrary and Tyrannical way Up goes the High Court of Justice and its bloody President Lisle who on the 25 th of May 1658 sat Cromwell had pickt out two Eminent Men to begin with one Lay-man Sir Henry Slingsby imprisoned ever since the West-Rising and one Clergy-man the Reverend Dr. Hewet Sir Henry Slingsby was accused though falsly to have endeavoured to betray Hull whilst a Prisoner there and for holding Correspondence with Charles Stuart for which he was Condemned for a Traytor and sentenced to be be-headed which Death he suffer'd on Tower-hill on the 8 th of June following though great application to save his life had been made to Cromwell by his Nephew and Cromwell's Son-in-law the Lord Faulconbridge but the Tyrant was inexorable having before-hand with Thurlo resolved on the Death of these two men The next was Dr. Hewet who was accused before the same Court for Conspiring against the Government and holding intelligence with the King But the Doctor Demurred to the Jurisdiction of the Court citing divers Law-Cases and giving many Reasons against their authority desiring them to evince to him the legality of their Court and he would plead to his charge But this they would not nor were able to doe and whilst he disputed with them they took the advantage of demanding his Plea three times after which though he then desired it seeing they would record him a Mute they would not admit for being designed for slaughter had they admitted him to plead he would have escaped them for want of Witnesses which it seems failed them at that time The Doctor had an Eloquent Tongue was of great esteem and abilities and Preached long at St. Gregory's where he sometimes could not forbear to deplore the misery of the Kingdom so that Cromwell had a particular desire to rid him out of the way as a most dangerous man and took this occasion to doe it upbraiding the Doctor with very bitter and unbecoming language when he was brought before him to be examined However though he was Condemned as a Mute yet he had the favour to be beheaded and suffer'd the same day with Sir Henry Slingsby where he prayed almost an hour with great zeal and fervour of spirit having his head severed from his body he dyed with much Christian Magnanimity The next that came to his Tryal was Mr. Mordant who at first denied the Jurisdiction of the Court but was by his friends at last perswaded to plead and was quitted by one voice only for very fortunately Col. Pride being taken with a fit of the Stone went off the Bench to the saving his life Then Mr. Woodcock and Sir Humphrey Bennet were tryed and acquitted Mallory confest was condemn'd but not executed Then Mr. Carent was try'd and acquitted Mr. Henry Frier was condemned by them but when going to be executed in