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A11675 A true representation of the proceedings of the kingdome of Scotland; since the late pacification: by the estates of the kingdome: against mistakings in the late declaration, 1640 Lothian, William Kerr, Earl of, 1605?-1675.; Church of Scotland. General Assembly.; Scotland. Parliament. 1640 (1640) STC 21929; ESTC S116866 97,000 176

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advancing of Pop●rie and what is done at home expresly against the articles of the pacification they rest perfectly satisfied If the defence be lawful the hands of men and the aide of moneys are necessary adminicles which all the Subjects do acknowledge and therfore contribute most willingly without the least exception except of some few not against the thing it self but against their stint and proportion which yet is lesse quarrelled in this then it hath been at any time in ordinary Subsidies or taxes It is known to the world that Scotland hath no Treasures whereof to boast but on the contrary if we be blocked up we will be necessitated either to famish or to fight our selves free And although we had the treasures of Craesus or Darius we would not put our trust in them The sentence of Q Curtius which after him is become common in the world crying up moneys above the just value that they are the Sinewes of warre is upon good grounds by wise men and upon better experience recalled and exploded The sinewes of this warre if a warre shall be must be a good cause good consciences and Souldiours stout and fearing GOD who cannot bee found out by gold but will be able to find out gold as some writers about this have spoken well Our fourth Transgression is from our papers and pamphlets and namely against an Information from the Estates of the Kingdome of Scotland to the Kingdome of England Many things have been written on both sides but in very different manner inasmuch as the writings of the prelats and their partisans are full of railings detractions injuries and slanders against this Kingdome and full of sedition to stirre up our King against us much written that our defence is unlawfull nothing against the unlawfulnesse of the invasion But our writings are full of al kinds of reverence to the Kings Majesty and of respect to the English Nation pressing the matter in hand without digression or falling from the purpose upon the persons of men further then the action intended against our adversaries the authors of all these evills did inforce us The for me of answering our Information not by evidencing any untruth or undutifulnesse in it but by Proclamation and by fire and faggot is indeed for the time the most easie the most compendious and the most affrighting way to the poore ignorant multitude But England can tell that the truth cannot be consumed by fire but will rise more pure and clear out of the ashes and flye with multiplyed wings further abroad in the world then before We might also without presumption have expected that an Information coming not from a particular person or society but from a Kingdome would have found with the Councell of England some better entertainment But we trust our Informations will be more precious in the sight of our friends who know through what difficulties they make their journey and what acceptance they find at their arrivall The next three Transgressions are about the Castle of Edinburgh and certain Fortifications Out-rages and violences we have committed against none of that Castle but many have we endured out of a desire and hope of peace and for them have returned courtesies and favours Materials to the Castle were not denyed till by boasting profession was made of that which wee might have known before that it was to be turned against our selves and the Town neither then were they altogether denyed so farre as our own necessary use of materialls would permit Neither was any work raysed against the Castle but a Rampier onely for defence of a Court d' guard till violence was done from the Castle Our desire and hope of peace and our unwillingnesse by the smallest breach to lose the thankes of our former obedience have mooved us to supererogate and to doe more then wee were oblidged but have not suffered us to be deficient It is rather to bee wondered at that wee have done so much to make up a Fortification against our selves and to put weapons in the hands of our enemies then to bee reprooved that we have done no more The eight concerning the Lord of Southesk and no other of quality except Sir Lewes Stewart we remit to the information of their own Letters come to his Majesties knowledge The carriage of Noblemen of Barons and of the Magistrats of the town of Edinburgh upon the harmlesse accident of their surprizall by the multitude doth rather deserve thanks then challenge from themselves or any other as is contained in our Remonstrance pag. 32. their safety in the time and their Liberty granted them since how soon they could be in safety are reall testimonies that no evill was meant against them We would not have it supposed that we do all that we are able to do or what we do for good that it is done for evill The ninth concerning the rendring of the Towne of Edinburgh into the hands of a Committee and therby the incurring the guilt of high Treason we wonder how any should be found so wicked as to invent it and much more if his Majesty or any wise or good man can be moved to believe it They have the honour to be the first Citty of this his Majesties Kingdome and as a principall member do joyn in this common cause of mutuall defence but neither know of any such usurping Committee nor of submission to any power beside that of their Soveraigne Lord and King how ready the Magistrats and whole Body of that Town have been to all good offices for his Majesties honour how far they have strained and spent themselves upon publick works for the honour of the Kingdome how difficult commandements they have obeyed at his Majesties pleasure and how they have omitted nothing which they conceived could be brought within the compasse of the duty of humble and faithfull Subjects These who somtime professed themselves to be their friends but are now become their enemies can bear witnesse We may truly with them and in their name honour them with this testimony that as it is his Majesties glory to have one prime City in this his Kingdome so have they beside all other respects by their affections and deportments deserved to be the first and to have a better place in his Majesties estimation then to be suspect of Rebellion or Treason Declarations of this kind are devised to be divisions betwixt the King and his best Subjects The Tenth Transgression is keeped to the last place Decumanus fluctus as a great wave to over whelme us and our Cause But we have no fear so long as we saile in the ship of a good conscience which by no surge or storme can be wrecked This is that French Letter so much talked of and insisted upon as to open a gate to let in forrain power to rule over England and our selves which by what consequence it can be inferred we would fain know when a people is sore distressed by sea and land is
his Majesties happy government And did hold in the other hand the sword of just and innocent defence against the oppression and violence of the Enemies of the Kings honour and of our peace Which we are confident by no Law of God or Nations can be judged to be rebellion or laes-Majesty Our petition at that time when we are said to have been in the hight of rebellion we have here set down whole the Declaration containing but a part thereof We did then write our mind whereof we never did repent and which we desire may be known to all men To the Kings most excellent Majesty The supplication of his Majesties Subjects of SCOTLAND humbly shewing THat where the former meanes used by us have not been effectuall for recovering your Majesties favour and the peace of this your Majesties native Kingdome wee fall down again at your Majesties feet most humbly supplicating that your Majestie would be graciously pleased to appoint some few of the many worthy men of your Majesties Kingdome of England who are well-affected to the true Religon and to our common peace To heare by some of us of the same disposition our humble desires and to make knowne to us your Majesties gracious pleasure That as by the providence of God we are joyned in one Iland under one King so by your Majesties great wisedome and tender care all mistakings may be speedily removed and the two Kingdomes may be kept in peace and happinesse under your Majesties long and prosperous reigne For which we shall never cease to pray as it be commeth your Majesties most humble Subjects With the Supplication sent to his Majesty by the hand of the Earle of Dumfermling a Letter was sent to the Earle of Holland and others of the Councell of England about his Majesty In these words MOST NOBLE LORDS ALthough wee have been labouring this long time past by our Supplications Informations and Missives to some of your Lordships to make knowne to his Majesty and the whole Kingdome of England the loyaltie and peaceablenesse of our intentions and desires and that we never meaned to deny to his Majestie our dread Soveraigne and native King any point of temporall and civill obedience yet contrary to our expectation and hopes matters to this day growing worse and worse both Kingdomes are brought to the dangerous and deplorable condition wherein they now stand in the sight of the world In this extreamitie we have sent to his Majestie our humble supplication beside which we know no other meane of pacification and doe most earnestly intreat that it may bee assisted by your Lordships that if it bee possible by a meeting in some convenient place of some prime and well-affected men to the reformed Religion and our common peace matters may bee accommodate in a faire and peaceable way and that so speedily and with such expedition as that through farther delayes which wee see not how they can be longer endured our evills become not incurable wee take God and the world to witnesse that we have left no meanes unassayed to give his Majestie and the whole Kingdome of England all just satisfaction And that wee desire nothing but the preservation of our Religion and Lawes If the fearefull consequents shall ensue which must be very neare except they be wisely and speedily prevented we trust they shall not bee imputed unto us who till this time have been following after peace and who doe in every duetie most ardently desire to shew our selves his Majesties faithfull Subjects and Your Lordships humble servants His Majestie being pleased to admit some of us to repair to the Camp neare Barwick and granting unto them a safe conduct under his Majesties hand our Commissioners presented our humble desires the last words whereof are expressed in the Declaration but we have set them down intire that both the reasonablenesse of our petitions and the loyaltie of our hearts may be knowne to all men First it is our humble desire that his Majesty would be graciously pleased to assure us that the acts of the late Assembly at Glasgow shall be ratified by his Majesty in the ensuing Parliament to be holden at Edinburgh July 23. since the peace of the Kirk and Kingdome cannot endure further prorogation Secondly that his Majesty from his tender care of the preservation of our Religion and Lawes will be graciously pleased to declare and assure that it is his Royall will that all matters Ecclesiasticall bee determined by the Assemblies of the Kirk and matters civill by Parliament which will be for his Majesties honour and keeping peace and order amongst the subjects in the time of his Majesties personall absence Thirdly that a blessed pacification may bee speedily brought about and his Majesties Subjects may be secured our humble desire is that his Majesties ships and forces by land be recalled that all persons ships and goods arrested may be restored the losses which we have sustained by the stopping of our trade and negotiating be repaired and we made safe from violence and invasion And that all excommunicat persons all Incendiaries and Informers against the Kingdome who have out of malice caused these commotions for their own private ends may be returned to suffer their deserved punishment And the Proclamations and Manifestoes sent abroad by them under his Majesties name to the dishonouring of the King and defaming of the Kingdome may be suppressed As these are our humble desires so is it our griefe that his Majestie should have been provoked to wrath against us his most humble loving subjects shal be our delight upon his Majesties assurance of the preservation of our Religion and Lawes to give example to others of all civill and temporall obedience which can be required or expected of loyall subjects Of those our desires the grounds and reasons following were given in writ at his Majesties command REASONS AND GROUNDS of our humble desires WEE doe first humbly desire a ratification of the acts of the late Assembly in the ensuing Parliament 1. Because the civill power is the keeper of both Tables and whereas the Kirk and Kingdome are one body consisting of the same members there can be no firme peace nor stabilitie of order unlesse the Ministers of the Kirk in their way presse the obedience of the civill Lawes and Magistrat and the civill power adde their sanction and authoritie to the constitutions of the Kirk 2. Because the late Generall Assembly indicted by his Majestie was lawfully constitute in all the members thereof according to the constitutions and order prescribed by acts of former Assemblies Thirdly because no particular is enacted in the late Assemblie which is not grounded upon the act of preceeding Assemblies And is either expressely contained in them or by necessary consequence may be deduced from them That the Parliament be keeped without prorogation his Majestie knowes how necessary it is since the peace of the Kirk and Kingdome call for it without longer delay Wee did
of Truth to enter in dispute but if our adversaries show not themselves more learned in their arguments nor they prove skilled in our Kirk-government and History which are the grounds of their vehement exhortation to their Northern brethren they will be found to have given but words in stead of substance As our adversaries have risen thus upon the one hand against our abjuration of Episcopacy by averring it to be of divine authority that the contradiction in the point of Kirk-government may be plain and strong So do they upon the other hand with all immanity and bar barousnesse against all our treaties and intreaties constrain our poore Countreymen and women in England and Ireland to sweare oaths whereof some covertly and other expressely carry an abjuration of the Oath and Covenant of Scotland as damnable and treasonable although it was sworne at first by the King himself that then was and is now again subscribed by his Majesties Commissioner in his name and with his consent ordained to be subscribed by Subjects of all ranks throughout the Kingdome and therefore may as well he called a Royall as a Popular Covenant What impiety this is against God and what provocation of his Justice what a snare it is to many poore soules how great dishonour is hereby done to Royall authority by had counsellours and wicked ministers and how farre it is from procuring cheerfull obedience or tying the hearts of people to Soveraignitie wee leave to be considered and heartily wish that a more wise a more conscionable and a more effectuall course may be taken for settling the peace of the Kingdome The words of the Oath which hath been ministred lately to be signed and sworne by some of our sea faring men and by them produced before us we have set downe and thereafter shall go on to the proceedings of our Commissioners sent to England I A. B. one of his Majesties Subjects in the Kingdome of Scotland doe by these presents signe with my hand upon my great oath as I shal be answerable to God upon my Salvation and Condemnation testifie and declare that CHARLES by the grace of God King of Great Britain France and Ireland Defender of the Faith is may Soveraigne Lord And that next unto Almighty GOD and his Sonne CHRIST IESUS He is over all persons within his Majesties Kingdomes and Dominions and in all causes as well Ecclesiasticall as Civill supreame Governour To whom his Heires and Successours I am bound in duty and alleageance to all obedience if it were to the losse of my life estate and fortunes doe hereby abjure all combinations Covenants and Bands that can bee pretended upon pretext of Religion or Liberty of the Kingdome and specially the damnable and treasonable Covenant commonly called the popular Covenant so much magnified now in Scotland and do promise never to take Armes against his Majesty his heirs and successours offensive or defensive but to abide constant in alleageance duety and obedience which I professe Almighty GOD hath tyed me to and to do the uttermost of my power against all oppositions whatsomever for rain or home bred So help me God The proceedings of the Commissioners sent from the Parliament of SCOTLAND To the KING SO soone as our Commissioners got presence and had the honour to kisse his Majesties hand they did in all humility represent to his Majestie how grievous it was to his Majesties good Subjects of that his ancient and native Kingdome that their loyaltie should bee called in question or that their proceeding should be traduced as trinching upon his Majesties authoritie or as contrare to the Laws And craved a publick hearing before his Majesties Councel of both Kingdomes for clearing of the justnesse and lawfulnesse of their proceedings and vindicating them from those unjust aspersions laid upon them by sinister information and that relation made publickly by the Earle of Traquair before the whole Councel of England to their prejudice And did likewise deliver to his Majestie a thanksgiving from the generall Assembly containing a supplication for ratifying the conclusions thereof upon the 20 of Februarie 1640. The King commanded that what ever they had to remonstrat or petition to him they would present the same in write And that he would signifie his pleasure to them by the Earle of Traquair whereupon they gave in the remonstrance or supplication following MOST SACRED SOVERAIGNE BEing sent here from the Parliament of Scotland humbly to remonstrat that no earthly thing could be more grievous to them then that their loyaltie should be called in question or that any such hard impressions should bee given to your Majestie against their proceedings as trinching upon your Majesties sacred person and inviolable authoritie as not warranted by the fundamentall Laws and laudable practises of your Majesties ancient and native Kingdome or as contrare to the promises remonstrances which were made to your Majestie by your humble and faithfull Subjects in the truth of their hearts and were in the same sense graciously accepted by your Majestie And seeing your Majestie hath out of your goodnesse and justice kept one ear for us and would not give place to the suggestions and obliquies of any till the reasons of our proceedings and demands were made known from our selves who are allowed by your Majesties Royall warrant to come here for that end Therefore we humbly crave that your Majestie out of your fatherly care and tender compassion of your native Subjects may bee graciously pleased to grant us a full hearing and to call such as are here of the Councel of both Kingdomes that before your Majestie and them your Majesties Subjects may be vindicat from these aspersions and imputations wherewith we hear they are charged and that we may clear that the desires and proceedings of the Parliament are so agreeable to the fundamentall Laws and practise of that Kingdome and to the articles of pacification as may merit approbation at the throne of your Majesties justice and procure your Majesties royall commandments for the proceeding of the Parliament that by the mutuall embracement of Religion and justice the peace of the Kirk and Kingdome whose distressed estate and condition can hardly admit delay may be established and the love and chearfull obedience of your Majesties Subjects confirmed and increased And lest by occasion of that relation which was publickly made by the Earle of Traquair before your Majestie and your Councel any prejudicat thought may be harboured in your Majesties royall heart and if any hard impressions be given against your Subjects unheard the same may bee disludged Wee humbly crave that we may have that relation in the same terms and as it was then delivered under his hand which since it is sought that wee may bee the more able to give all respective satisfaction to your Majesties royall and just commandments we hope will not be refused And having once the permission and happinesse in publick to clear the loyaltie of your Majesties
by a treatie of peace have found no way more certain against it then to go about to commit some foul act against them with whom they would not have the accord to stand And it hath rarely come to passe that the best Princes have been suffered by male-contents to keep the conditions of peace which they have made with their own subjects For here it is no great difficulty to foment division and to make an exulceration in the mind of Soveraignitie We will not expresse what by relation and not by conjecture but by îndicative signes we learned at that time But will onely give the causes why the fourteen select persons called for by his Majesty were not suffered to goe to Barwick Some few of the many reasons given for staying the Noblemen and others named by his Majesty from repairing at this time to the Court at Barwicke 1. HIs Majesty hath not been in use at any time of the greatest securitie to call any of his Majesties Subjects out of the Kingdome after this sort At this time then which is so full of feares to call for so many of such Noblemen without any warrant or command sent to themselves it seemes to us strange and may we not say was ever his Majesty or his Royall Father wont to do so unto us since their going to England unto this day Although his Majesties Declaration at Dunce contrair to our mind and merit did call the late Assembly a pretended Assembly our humble and loyall proceedings disorders our courses disagreeable to Monarchicall governement and did threaten us with the terrours of his Majesties wrath yet our desire is to live a quiet and peaceable life under his Majesties governement and our zeale to his Majesties honour although with some aspersion put upon our selves before the world moved us to receive them because of diverse gracious expressions related from his Majesties mouth by our Commissioners which we did gladly heare and did note diligently for our own content and that wee might be able to satisfie others and without which the articles of pacification had never served for the beginning of peace yet we now understand that all or the greater part of these verball expressions are denyed which makes our hopes to waver giveth us great cause of Jealousie and suspition and moveth us to call in question all other reports made to us from his Majesty 2. His Majestie knoweth that what is so instantly pressed at this time was none of the articles agreed upon at that time And if beside the restitution of goods the rendring of the Castles the dissolving of the Army It had then been required that those fourteen should be sent to the Camp or to Barwicke the condition had beene harder then that wee could have yeelded unto it 3. Because we cannot judge the intentions of minds and disposition of hearts but by that which we heare with our eares and doeth appeare in action We desire to be considered that all expressions of favour are put upon our adversaries they esteemed and called his Majesties good Subjects and their practises his Majesties service Upon the contrair whole volumes are spred and even since the treatie put in all hands against us not onely stuffed with such reproaches against almost the whole Kingdome and particularly against the persons now sent for That it were a dishonour to the King to have such a Kingdome and a shame to bee set over such subjects as we are descryved to bee But also containing threatnings and vowes of exemplar punishment upon such as they are reported to be That the troubles of the Northerne parts of the Kingdome are not as yet ceased That Garrisons are kept at Barwick and other places of the borders That the Castle of Edinburgh is fortified and furnished above any thing that hath been heard of at any time before That some cruell and bloody words against the Scottish Lords have been over-heard in Barwick and which we could not have beleeved but that it is testified by so many Letters sent hither That our friends and Countreymen not onely in Ireland but even now in England are not only stopped in their trade but casten in prison for the modest refusing to take oathes contrair to their oath and Covenant which they have sworne in their own Countrey a violence not used before the treatie of peace contrair to the Law of Nations to the rule of common equitie of doing that to others which we would they should doe unto us and to the articles of pacification agreed upon with his Majestie These and other the like considerations doe so work upon us that for the present except we doe against our own hearts and deny our owne sense wee cannot give way to so eminent persons to repair to Barwick which we trust his Majestie neither will interpret to be disobedience nor diffidencie since we have been all carefull to see all the conditions performed to the uttermost on our part and there is not one of that number nor of us all but shall bee ready for our owne parts to give the most ample testimony of our obedience to his Majesties commandements and of our confidence in his Majesties Justice and goodnesse as his Majestie shall really find and experience at his coming and during his abode in the Kingdome For wee are assured what hath been committed by any since the begunne pacification contrair to any of the articles thereof hath proceeded from the disposition of wicked instruments about his Majestie who are enemies of his Majesties honour and our peace and have been the authors of all our wofull divisions which we beseech the Lord to put to an end by an happy and everlasting peace The darknesse of those clouds which than threatned the storme now like to fall upon this Iland had been easily scattered by the brightnesse of his Majesties presence in his Royall person which would have been so farre from danger as the Lord is witnesse never any such treacherous intention or motion entred in our hearts that never was there a King more heartily welcomed more chearfully intertained and more universally accompanied with congratulations and acclamations of joy then his Majesty would have been if he had come and stayed in this his native Kingdome till that had been performed in Assembly and Parliament which was promised in the articles of pacification But God would not have it so And his Majesty shew to our Commissioners That weighty affairs of the Kingdome of England did call for his Majesties presence whereof he had received advertisement from the Councell of that Kingdome But that he would appoint a Commissioner in his place fully instructed for the Assembly and Parliament By all which it is apparent that neither any tumult in Edinburgh nor the not coming of the Noblemen and others called for was so much as pretended at that time to be the change of his Majesties resolution Having now represented that the Innovation of our Religion and the infringing of our
Par. 4. cap. 21. Par. 6. cap. 46. Par. 7. cap. 50. Par. 8. cap. 64. Par. 13. cap. 93. Item K. Ja. 4. Par. 1. cap. 2. Par. 2. cap. 17. Par. 5. cap. 55. Item K Ja. 5. Par. 7. cap. 99. Item K. Ja. 6. Par. 1. cap. 17. Item in the unprinted acts of K. Ja. 6. Par. 5. anno 1578. Par. 7. cap. 106. Par. 8. amongst unprinted acts an 1584. Item in his 13. Par. an 1593. amongst the unprinted acts And such like in printed acts of his Par. 15. cap. 249. Par. 16. c. 9. And in the Parliament an 1633 holden by your Majesties self There is commission given in Parliament to the secret Councel and other Commissioners anent the frequent course of Dollars and base copper money by reading of which acts It is most manifest That the fynnesse weight and price of money hath been ruled and determined by your Majesties predecessours and your Majesties self with advice of Parliament neither is it meaned nor intended that your Majesties royall priviledge which hath beene and is due to your Majestie and your royall antecessours shall thereby in any fort be trinched upon nor impared The reason of that article whereby it is humbly craved that the castles of Edinburgh Dumbartan and Striviling may be intrusted onely to Natives and these to be chosen by advice of Parliament of such faithfull and honest men as do tender your Majesties honour and the safetie of the Kingdome may be seene not onely from the nature and importance of the charge but likewise from the former practise of your Majesties royall predecessours who did dispose of these castles with the speciall advice and counsell of their Parliament as is recorded in the old Registers of the Parliament 1368. Likeas fol. 83. of the old acts K. Ja. 4. It is concluded by advice and deliverance of the three Estates That Patrick Lord Haills be keeper of the castle of Edinburgh and artilerie of the same c. Item fol. 21. cap. 35. K. Ja. 6. in the old acts The three Estates ordaines the castle of Dumbar and fort of Inchkeith to be demolished and destroyed that no foundation remain thereof Likeas by diverse unprinted acts as in anno 1578. and 1585. and 1606. Your Majesties houses hath beene disposed of with advice of Parliament And not onely nationall statutes but the common law of nature and Nations do forbid the receiving of strangers to bee keepers of the strengths of a free Kingdome And when the Parliament of Scotland 1604. gave commission anent the Union with England with exception of reserving of free Monarchie and the fundamentall laws liberties and priviledges of that Kingdome Your Majesties father in his printed speech to the Parliament of England 1607 when he interprets that clause of fundamental laws declares that hee could not make Scotland a naked Province without libertie and set Garisons over it as the Spaniards do over Cicilie and Naples or govern them by Commissioners So that his Majestie in his owne interpretation doth acknowledge that the putting in of Garisons especially of strangers as of English men in the Forts and Castles of Scotland as the King of Spain puts in Cicilie and Naples or as the King of England puts English in the Forts of Ireland is a breaking of the fundamentall laws and liberties of Scotland and the using of it like a naked conquest Province like unto Cicilie Naples or Ireland And as your Majesties Subjects gave an undoubted proofe how tender their mindes are in the point of obedience to your Majesties commandements not onely in delivering of the Castles to be disposed of at your Majesties pleasure without any assurance other then their confidence in your Majesties goodnesse and justice so have they of late given a verie submisse and rare testimonie of their obedience in the humble reception of these strangers and ammunition which your Majestie was pleased to send to the Castle of Edinburgh where the honours of the Crown and Kingdome and registers are keept preferring their obedience to your Majesties cōmandment to their own safety even at this time when their ears are filled with rumors of hostill preparation against them All which makes them and us in their names humbly to supplicat and expect that your Majestie will bee graciously pleased by recalling of that Garison to free your loyall subjects of these feares and dangers who will ever be ready to hazard their lives and fortunes to do your Majestie service Neither doe they in the act which is given in to the articles arrogat or assume power by themselves to appoint keepers for your Majesties Castles but do humbly crave that your Majestie may out of your goodnesse be graciously pleased to declare for further satisfaction of your Subjects that the Captains and Commanders of your Majesties Castles may bee chosen by advice of the Estates of Parliament And that such as shall happen to be placed betwixt Parliaments may beetryed and found by your Majesties Councell to be men of such qualitie as are fit and able to undergo that charge which in the judgement of the Parliament derogats nothing from your Majesties royall power As for reasons of the act anent the judicatorie of the Exchequer we have set down some few of the many reasōs which do sufficiētly prove the equity justnes therof 1 The Session and Exchecquer are distinct judicatories and not subordinat one to another and cannot be coincident in the same object And therefore seeing the question of right and nullitie of rights is competent to be decyded by the Lords of Session by way of action or exception it is altogether incompetent to be discussed by the Lords of Exchecquer 2 The Lords of Exchecquer are incompetent judges in a declaratour of nullitie by way of action and consequently cannot annull any right by way of exception which is a more summar way And it were absurd in law seeing the subject and question is one whether proponed by way of exception or action that incompetent judges of the action they should have a more absolute and summar jurisdiction by way of exception 3 It appears by an act of Parliament not printed 1593 intituled Commission to the Exchecquer anent decyding suspensions in the Kings cause that before the said act the Exchecquer had not power to decyde in suspensions while it was given them by the Parliament farre lesse then can it be thought that they ever had or can have power to decyde in the point of heretable rights Neither doth the late act 1633 authorize the Exchecquer to decyde therein expresly And if it bee truely considered some generall words contained therein intermixt with the particular cases therein exprest should not nor cannot be extended to so high a point as the disputing and decyding of the Subjects their heretable rights Likeas at the making of the said late act the Lords of Session having heard some surmize that your Majesties Advocat was giving in such an act seven or eight of them
in the acts of prorogation the consent of the articles although it was done by their advice are contrary to the Liberties of this Kingdome freedome and custome of Parliament and that they be no preparatives practiques nor prejudices in time coming against us or our successours But because we know that the eyes of the world are upon us that Declarations have beene made and published against us and malice is prompted for her obloquies and waiteth on with open mouth to snatch at the smallest shadow of dis-obedience dis-service or dis respect to his Majesties commandements that our proceedings may bee made odious to such as know not the way how these commandements are procured from his Majestie nor how they are made knowne and intimat to us And doe as little consider that wee are not now private subjects but a sitting Parliament what Nationall prejudices we have sustained in time past by mis-information and what is the present case of the Kingdome Wee therefore declare that whatsoever by the example of our predecessours in the like cases of necessitie by his Majesties indiction and by the articles of pacification we might doe lawfully in sitting still and which in this extreame necessity were justifiable not onely before so just a King but to the faces of our adversaries yet out of our most reverent regard and humble desire to render not onely all reall demonstrations of civill obedience but to put farre from us all shew or appearance of what may give his Majestie the least discontent We have resolved for the present onely to make remonstrances to his Majestie of the reasons of our propositions and proceedings in this Parliament and how necessary it is that without delay a speedy course be taken for the preservation of the Kirk and Kingdome from the evills which the enemies of our Religion the Kings honour and of our peace do project and long for And in expectation of his Majesties gracious answer to these our humble Remonstrances that some of each estate having power from the whole body of the Parliament remaine still here at Edinburgh to attend the returne of his Majesties gracious answer to our humble and just demands farther to remonstrat our humble desires to his Majestie upon all occasions That heereby it may be made most manifest against all contradiction that it was never our intention to deny his Majestie any part of that civill and temporall obedience which is due to all Kings from their Subjects and from us to our dread Soveraigne after a speciall manner but meerely to preserve our Religion and the Liberties of the Kingdome without which Religion cannot continue long in safetie And if it shall happen which God forbid that after wee have made our Remonstrances and to the uttermost of our power and duetie used all lawfull means for his Majesties information that our malicious enemies who are not considerable shall by their suggestions and lies prevaile against the informations and generall declarations of a whole Kingdome We take God and men to witnesse that wee are free of the outrages and insolencies that may be committed in the mean time And that it shall bee to us no imputation that we are constrained to take such courses as may best secure the Kirk and Kingdome from the extremity of confusion and misery Which Declaration above written wee the Estates of Parliament require the Clerk to insert in the records thereof and grant extracts thereof under his hand and subscription This is the just copie of the Declaration produced and read in the utter house of Parliament upon the 18 day of December 1639 According where unto the Nobilitie nominated and appointed the Earles of Lothian and Dalhoussie the Lords Yester Balmerinoch Cranstoune and Naper The Barons nominate the Commissioners of the three Lothianes Fyfe and Tweddell The Borrows nominate the Commissioners of Edinburgh Linlithgow Stirling Hadingtoune Dumbar to attend here at Edinburgh the returne of his Majesties gracious answer to their humble Remonstrances Sic subscribitur Alex. Gibsone BEtwixt the prorogation of the Parliament and the sending of our last Commissioners three points are touched in the Declaration One that the Earl of Dumfermling and the Lord Lowdoun were sent with Commission from the Parliament to make their remonstrance to his Majestie but were not admitted to his presence and were commanded to returne because they were not licenced or warranted by the Commissioner and had not acquainted him with their propositions Although it be of verity that the Commissioner had showen to diverse of the members of the Parliament his Majesties own warrant for the coming of some to his Majesties presence which to them seemed more sufficient and of greater authority then any thing they could have from himself and why might not they have some things to propone or to complain of upon the Commissioner to his Majestie which was not sitting to acquaint him with that his Majestie in his fatherly affection which cannot be transmitted to another might judge between him and them It was in his Majesties power to give such answer to their propositions as seemed good in his own royal wisedom but to comand them who had not bin sent without his Majesties warrant to return unheard after so long a journey was more then could have been expected or suspected by a Kingdome conveened in Parliament by his Majesties authoritie The second is that the Earle of Traquair at his coming made a large and exact representation to the Councel of England 〈◊〉 he most considerable matters proponed in Parliament of the largenes of his relation wee doubt not but how exact it was our adversaries can best discover who had taught him before so to say his lesson in publick as might serve most for the ends intended by them especially to animat England against us for which they have set their wits since the treatie of peace to make all means whereof this was a powerfull one to cooperat The third is the judgement of the Lords of his Majesties councel of England to reduce us to our duetie by force rather then to give way to our demands Of which we say no further but that it was the sentence of a Councel and of the Councel of England against a Parliament and the Parliament of another Kingdome That it was p●●●●unced upon the hearing of the relation of one man a new creature and but of yesterday against a whole free Kingdome of ancient Nobles Barons and others whose Commissioners two Noblemen were even now barred from hearing and presence and that it was in a matter of warre and peace which might ingage both the Kingdomes then which nothing could be more important for the present generation and for the posterity In Councel is stability but this is found not by precipitation but after many dayes agitation when the matters debated are more then ordinarie and such as it may be fall not to be considered once in many ages To us we confesse it seemed incredible at
it unlawfull by the Law of God and man to call for help from God and man Is there no help nor assistance by intercession by supply of money c Is all assistance by the sword and by men Is all imploring of assistance an argument of subjection unto the assistant May not friends and equalls assist as well as superiors Shall it be thought that diverse Princes and Estates sued unto for help are all invited to be rulers and governours over one and the same people We love not shrouds nor disguisements we speak the plain truth and feare nothing so much as that truth be not known We never had intention to preferre any forrain power to our native King whom God hath set over us We love not our selves or the English Nation so little as to raise up any wall of partition between them and us The Proclamation at that time as may be seen in our last Remonstrancepag 34. was without example Great forces by sea and land were coming upon us Informations went abroad in other nations to the prejudice of us and our Cause This made us to resolve to write unto the French King apprehending that upon sinister relation his power might be used against us as may be seen in our Instruction printed in our Remonstrance pag. 37. What kind of assistance we called for whether of men or mediation may be best known by the Commentary of our Letter our Instructions which are ready to be seen and are signed also by the Lord Lowdouns hand now in prison and therefore if we should need to say it not falsified without subjection or soveraignitie of either of the Nations Scotland or France Aide and assistance hath been given in former times If we had called at that time or have called now in the return of our troubles upon Denmark Holland Sweden Poland or other Nations for help are we therefore inviting them all to soveraignitie over us And when all is said or done the Letter was but an Embrio for saken in the birth as containing some unfit expressions and not agreeable to our Instructions and therefore slighted by the Subscribers but catched for some great advantage by this treacherous and secret accuser of the Kingdome Another Letter was formed consonant to the Instructions and signed by many hands But neither was this sent from us although some invent or imagine that it was intercepted by the way to France would be but late to avert the danger which was so neere The Letter it self carieth two tokens that is was unperfected one that it wanteth a date another that it beareth no superscription from us Both these are craftily turned against us The blank date hath made our enemies to number this Letter amongst our pretended faults committed after the Parliament where as it is universally known that it was written in May 1639. before our marching to the Border and therefore ought to have been buried in the pacification This is well known to the Commissioner who talked of it before his going to England was occasionally made known to some of quality in his Majesties Camp The want of the superscription hath made them to indorse it Au Roy a title say they used by the subjects of that Kingdome to their own Prince only But we affirme that the Letter was neither sealed folded nor written on the back by us or by our knowledge we hold it but a poore argument ground of accusation against the French or Dutch supplicating or writing to our King if they should say To the King every King being the King in his own Dominions We love not to harp more upon subscribing superscribing or sending of letters to other Princes to the Pope himself from examples of old of late which are not hid from the eyes of the world It is sufficient to us to have justified our selves to show how innocently the Lord Lowdoun suffereth for putting his hand to such a Letter the guiltines or innocencie here not being personall or proper to the Lord Lowdoun but nationall and common to us all And although it had been a fault his alone yet what soever it was it did in time for along time go before his cōmission imployment therfore ought not to have bin challenged till he had returned to his country unclothed himself of his commission turned again to be what he was a privat Nobleman The dignity safety of nations kingdomes Estates Republicks are much interessed in their Cōmissioners Legats whether they be sent from one Prince to another or from a kingdom province or republick to their own Prince Their dignity for what is done to the Legat is interpreted to be done to them that sent him their safety because if Legats be wronged there can be no more composing of differences nor possibility of Reconciliation which is the ground of the Law of Nations whose being consists in their honour and safety and therefore it will have no Legat to be accused during his Legation for any thing committed by him befor it It commands Legats to be free even from the inferiour Law of Reprisall and doeth reckon these to be the excellent effects which it produceth in all places where it is obeyed Religion to God Pietie toward our Countrey propulsation of injurie keeping of faith and that Legats be inviolable And although there were not such a Law of Nations yet his Majesties own roy all and inviolable warrant for the coming of our Commissioners to his presence at this time is enough for their safe conduct and security If they have committed any thing at home against their King Countrey or any particular subject the fundamentall Liberties and indepencie of the Kingdome and the practises of the former times since 1603. not onely in the persons of Noblemen but of others of mean quality doe require that they be tryed and judged at home in a Legall way by the ordinary Judicatories of the Land How many bloody warres and what horrible calamities have ensued upon this transgression of the Law of Nations we leave to be remembred from the Records of history and earnestly intreat for their liberty and safety who are to us as our selves When the wittinesse and malice of our adversaries are vented to the uttermost against all our proceedings since the pacification for things done before on either side ought not to be remembred not that we fear a new try all but because they are unty mous and impertinent By that which we have said and represented the unpartiall and such as are not praepossessed will find that till the peaceable ending of the Assembly and the proroguing of the Parliament not onely the bonds of piety to God loyaltie to our King and zeal to be approved of our neighbours but our desire our care and hope that all should end in a setled peace did oblige and tye us to bear many injuries to construct all so far as was possible to the better