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A49445 Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow Esq; Lieutenant General of the Horse, Commander in Chief of the forces in Ireland, one of the Council of State, and a Member of the Parliament which began on November 3, 1640. In two volumes. Vol. 1.; Memoirs. Part 1. Ludlow, Edmund, 1617?-1692. 1698 (1698) Wing L3460_pt1; ESTC R1476 216,094 443

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Parliament who being encompassed with Difficulties on all hands and understanding that the Queen was landing with a considerable Strength at Bridlington-Bay in the County of York sent Commissioners to treat with their Friends in Scotland to march into England to their Assistance In the mean timethe King's Army besieged the City of Glocester the King being there in Person to countenance the Siege The Besieged made a vigorous Defence for about a Month during which the Parliament took care to recruit their Army in order to relieve them Their Rendezvouz was appointed on Hounslow-heath whither some Members of Parliament of which my Father was one were sent to inspect their Condition that their Wants being known might be the better supplied who found them a very shatter'd and broken Body but the City being then very affectionate to the Publick soon recruited them and drew forth so many of their Trained Bands and Auxiliary Regiments as made them up a gallant Army In their March towards Glocester some of ours fell upon a Party of the Enemy at Cirencester of whom they took many Prisoners and seized a great quantity of Provisions which they found prepared for the Enemy who upon our Approach raised the Siege The Earl of Essex having relieved the Town was marching back again when he perceived the Enemy endeavouring to get between him and London and to that end falling upon his Rear with a strong Party of Horse they so disordered his Men and retarded the March of his Army that he sound himself obliged to engage them at Newbury The Dispute was very hot on both sides and the Enemy had the better at the first but our Men resolving to carry their point and the City-Regiments behaving themselves with great Bravery gave them before Night so little cause to boast that the next Morning they were willing to permit the Earl of Essex to march to London without interruption Few Prisoners were taken on either side The Enemy had several Persons of Quality killed the principal of whom were the Earl of Carnarvan the Earl of Sunderland the Lord Falkland and a French Marquiss We lost a Colonel of one of the City-Regiments together with some inferiour Officers Some of the Lords and Commons contrary to their Duty withdrew themselves from the Parliament at Westminster and went to the King at Oxford where they met together but never did any thing considerable for the King's Service and shewed themselves so little willing to assume the name of a Parliament that the King in a Letter to the Queen a Copy whereof was afterwards found amongst his Papers called them his Mongrel Parliament In the mean time the Earl of Manchester received a Commission from the Parliament to raise Forces in the associated Counties of Suffolk Norfolk Essex Cambridg Huntington c. which was very necessary for the King was Master of all Places of Strength from Berwick to Boston except Hull and two small Castles in Lincolnshire and Ferdinando Lord Fairfax not able to keep the Field against the Earl of Newcastle was retired with his Horse and Foot to Hull the Enemies Strength in the North no way inferiour to what it was in the West and none considerable enough to oppose their March into the South The Earl of Newcastle upon advice that the Lord Willoughby of Parham had possessed himself of the Town of Gainsborough for the Parliament sent his Brother Col. Cavendish Lieutenant General of his Army with a great Party of Horse and Dragoons to summon it himself marching after with the Foot Col. Oliver Cromwell having notice thereof and understanding by fresh Experience that Victory is not always obtained by the greater Number having lately defeated near Grantham twenty four Troops of the Enemies Horse and Dragoons with seven Troops only which he had with him resolved to endeavour the Relief of Gainsborough and with twelve Troops of Horse and Dragoons marched thither where he found the Enemy who were drawn up near the Town to be more than thrice his Number and no way to attack them but through a Gate and up-hill notwithstanding which Disadvantages he adventured to fall upon them and after some Dispute totally routed them killing many of their Officers and amongst them Lieutenant General Cavendish Thus was Gainsborough relieved but the Conquerors had little time to rejoice for within two or three hours the routed Enemy rallying and joining with the rest of Newcastle's Army marched against them Upon which they retreated to Lincoln that night in good order and without any Loss facing the Enemy with three Troops at a time as they drew off the rest Lincoln not being defensible Col. Cromwell marched the next day to Boston that he might join the Earl of Manchester who with his new-rais'd Forces had very seasonably reduced Lynn a Town in Norfolk not far from the Sea naturally strong and might have proved impregnable if Time had favoured Art and Industry to have fortified and furnished it with Provisions But Sir Hammond Lestrange who had before surprized it for the King was soon surprized himself and being suddenly summoned by the Earl of Manchester and threatned with a Storm after he had fired a few great Shot against the Besiegers thought fit to surrender it upon Articles From thence the Earl of Manchester marched to Boston where being joined by Col. Cromwell appointed by the Parliament to command under him and a Party of Horse brought by Sir Thomas Fairfax by Sea from Hull he mustered about six thousand Foot and thirty seven Troops of Horse and Dragoons To prevent any further addition to his Forces the Earl of Newcastle advanced with his Army and sent a strong Detachment of Horse and Dragoons towards Boston appearing by their Standards to be eighty seven Troops commanded by Sir John Henderson an old Souldier who hearing that Col. Cromwell was drawn out towards him with the Horse and Dragoons made haste to engage him before the Earl of Manchester with the Foot could march up as accordingly it fell out at a place called Winsby-field near Horn-castle In the first shock Col. Cromwell had his Horse kill'd under him yet the Encounter was but short tho very sharp for there being Field-room enough the Fight lasted but a quarter of an hour before the Earl of Newcastle's Forces were totally routed and many of them killed amongst them the Lord Widdrington Sir Ingram Hopton and other Persons of Quality The Enemy had no time to rally being pursued by ours almost as far as Lincoln which was fourteen Miles off in which Pursuit divers of them were killed and made Prisoners and many Horse and Arms taken Neither were they suffered to rest at Lincoln the Earl of Manchester marching thither the day following where the Enemies broken Troops had endeavoured to fortisy the higher part of the City called the Close but had not quite finished their Works when the Earl arrived and summoned them to surrender which they resusing our Foot and Horse fell on and took it
William Cawley gave his single Negative On the 13 th of April 1646. Exeter was delivered to ours upon Articles by which all such as were in the Town and Garison were admitted to compound for their Estates paying two Years Value for the same Barnstable Dunstar-Castle and Michael's-Mount in Cornwall were also surrendred in the last of which Places the Marquiss of Hamilton was Prisoner by the King's Order and restored to his Liberty upon the Surrender of it which Favour he acknowledged to the Members of the House of Commons attending in Person at their door to that end The most considerable Body of Men remaining in the Field for the King was commanded by Sir Jacob Ashley who being on his March towards Oxford was attacked by Col. Morgan and Sir William Brereton at Stow in the Woald where after a sharp Dispute on both sides Sir Jacob Ashley's Forces were entirely defeated many of them killed and wounded and himself taken Prisoner During his Confinement he was heard to say That now they had no hopes to prevail but by our Divisions Which deserves the more Reflection because he being well acquainted with the King 's Secrets was not ignorant that many amongst us who at the beginning appeared most forward to engage themselves and to invite others to the War against the King finding themselves disappointed of those Preferments which they expected or out of some particular Disgusts taken had made Conditions with the King not only for their Indemnity but for Places and Advancements under him endcavouring by a Treaty or rather by Treachery to betray what had cost so much Blood to obtain These Men to strengthen their Interest applied themselves to the Presbyterian Party who jealous of the Increase of Sectaries of which the Army was reported chiefly to consist readily joined with them By which Conjunction most of the new elected Members were either Men of a neutral Spirit and willing to have Peace upon any Terms or such who tho they had engaged against the King yet finding things tending to a Composition with him resolved to have the Benefit of it and his Favour tho with the Guilt of all the Blood that had been shed in the War upon their Heads in not requiring Satisfaction for the same nor endeavouring to prevent the like for the future designing at the most only to punish some inferiour Instruments whilst the Capital Offender should not only go free but his Authority be still acknowledged and adored and so the Nation more enslaved than ever to a Power which tho it destroys the People by Thousands must be accountable to none but God for so doing whom some Persons as it is apparent by their Usage of Mankind either think not to be or not at all superiour to them Another sort of Men there was amongst us who having acquired Estates in the Service of the Parliament now adhered to the King's Party for the preserving of what they had got who together with such as had been discharged from their Employments by the Reform of the Army or envied their Success combined together against the Commonwealth This Party was encouraged and supported upon all occasions by the Scots and the City of London The first of them tho they began the War and tho their Assembly of Ministers had declared the King guilty of the Blood of Thousands of his best Subjects their Covenant engaging them in the preservation of his Person so far only as might consist with the Laws of the Land and Liberty of the Subject yet having had many good Opportunities in England and hoping for more supposing it to be in their Power to awe the King to whatsoever they should think fit they were contented to swallow that Ocean of Blood that had been shed pressing the Parliament by their Commissioners to conclude upon such Terms with the King as shewed them rather Advocates than such as had been Enemies to him The latter having had their Treasure much exhausted by the War and their Trade long interrupted besides the Influence the Scots had upon them by the means of their Ministers the Common Council being also debauched by Serjeant Glyn and others of that Party in the House of Commons it was not so much to be wondred at if they earnestly solicited for a speedy Determination of the Difference by a Treaty The King also perceiving Judgment to be given against him by that Power to which both Parties had made their solemn Appeal thought it advisable to make use of the Foxes Skin and for a time to lay aside that of the Lion sending Messages to the Parliament to desire of them a safe Conduct for his coming to London in Honour Freedom and Safety there personally to treat with the Two Houses about the means of settling a firm and lasting Peace the Scots in the mean time repeating their Instances with the Parliament to enter into the Consideration of the Articles of Religion contained in the Covenant to give a speedy Peace to his Majesty to pay them near two hundred thousand Pounds which they pretended to be due to them for their Arrcars and to make a just Estimate of the Losses they had sustained by Sea and Land since the beginning of the War for want of such Supplies as were promised them which they computed at more than the former Sum. The Parliament for divers Reasons thought it not convenient to comply with the King's Propositions and in answer to the Scots demanded of them an exact Account of what was due to them requiring them to withdraw their Garisons from such Places as they possessed in England Some Differences they had also with the Scots Commissioners concerning the Exclusion of the King from having any thing to do with the Militia and touching the Scots intermedling with the Government of England about the Education of the King's Children the disbanding of Armies and an Act of Oblivion in which Matters the Parliament of England would not permit the Scots to interpose and therefore their Commissioners acquainted them that they had not Power to consent to any Demands of that nature whereupon the Deputies of Scotland applied themselves to the Two Houses demanding that they would enlarge the Powers of their Commissioners to that end But there being found in these Demands of the Scots some Expressions highly reflecting upon the Parliament the Two Houses declared them to be injurious and scandalous and ordered them to be burnt by the Hands of the Common Hangman After which they commanded the Army to besiege Oxford who in order to that Design blocked up Farringdon Wallingford and Woodstock but before they could form the Siege of Oxford the King escaped from thence on the 27 th of April 1646. of which notice being given to the Parliament by Col. Rainsborough who lay before Woodstock they suspecting that he designed to come to London to raise a Party against them published an Ordinance declaring That whosoever should harbour or conceal the King's Person should be proceeded
Waller had earnestly solicited for this Employment of Lieutenant General of the Horse in Ireland and that the General not thinking it convenient to entrust him with it yet unwilling he should know so much perswaded him to believe that the Parliament had over-ruled him therein The Parliament then passed an Act constituting Commissioners for the Administration of Civil Affairs in Ireland and agreed upon Instructions of sufficient Latitude for them to act by in particular to lay a Tax on that Nation not exceeding the Sum of thirty thousand Pounds To give order for the distribution of Justice as near to the Rules of the Law as the nencessity of the Times would permit and to consider of a Method of Proceeding in the Courts of Justice there to be offered to the Parliament for their Approbation The Commissioners were those that I mentioned before only Major Salloway desiring to be excused from that Service Mr. Miles Corbet a Member of Parliament was inserted in his room Some Suspicions there were at this time that the Presbyterian Party in England especially those about London entertained a private Correspondence with their Brethren in Scotland where tho that Nation had received a great Blow at Dunbar yet it was resolved that their King should be crowned upon his taking the Solemn League and Covenant and obliging himself thereby to endeavour the extirpation of Popery and Episcopacy This Action was performed with all the Circumstances and Solemnities that could be used in the Condition of their Affairs The Nobility swore Fidelity to him and the Marquiss of Argile put the Crown upon his Head with his own Hands And now having a King like other Nations and a Covenanting King too they doubted not of Success under his Conduct presuming by this means most certainly to retrieve all their Losses and Reputation But the Parliament who had removed one King was not frighted with the setting up of another and therefore proceeded in the Settlement of their Affairs both Military and Civil and to that end ordered a thousand Pounds to be advanced to the Commissioners of the Civil Affairs in Ireland directing them to receive also a thousand Pounds yearly They like wise gave Orders for the payment of a thousand Pounds to me by way of Advance upon my Pay as Lieutenant General of the Horse that I might be enabled to furnish my self with Tents Horses and other things necessary for that Service The Committee of Irish Affairs raised also a Troop consisting of a hundred Horse to accompany me and armed them with Back Breast Head-pieces Pistols and Musquetoons with two Months Pay advanced The Lord Deputy Ireton's Lady Daughter to General Cromwell prepared to go over with us to her Husband who had removed his Head-quarters to Waterford partly because he thought that Place most convenient for the Service as the Enemy then lay and partly from some Disgust conceived against Dublin where the Inhabitants had extorted unreasonable Rates for their Provisions and other Necessaries sold to our Army at their Arrival there for the Relief of Ireland Therefore resolving to pass through South Wales I hastned out of Town before the rest of my Company in order to take leave of my Friends in the West and from thence going to Glamorganshire I stayed there with some Relations of my Wife till the rest of the Company came down Before I left the Parliament some Difference happening between the Countess of Rutland and the Lord Edward Howard of Escrick Col. Gell who was a great Servant of the Countess informed Major General Harison that the Lord Edward Howard being a Member of Parliament and one of the Committee at Haberdashers-Hall had taken divers Bribes for the excusing Delinquents from Sequestration and easing them in their Compositions and that in particular he had received a Diamond Hatband valued at eight hundred Pounds from one Mr. Compton of Sussex concerning which he could not prevail with any to inform the Parliament Major General Harrison being a Man of severe Principles and zealous for Justice especially against such as betrayed the Publick Trust reposed in them assured him that if he could satisfy him that the Fact was as he affirmed he would not fail to inform the Parliament of it and upon Satisfaction received from the Colonel touching that Matter said in Parliament That tho the Honour of every Member was dear to him and of that Gentleman in particular naming the Lord Howard because he had so openly owned the Interest of the Commonwealth as to decline his Peerage and to sit upon the foot of his Election by the People yet he loved Justice before all other things looking upon it to be Honour of the Parliament and the Image of God upon them that therefore he durst not refuse to lay this Matter before them tho he was very desirous that the said Lord might clear himself of the Accusation The Parliament having received his Information referred the Consideration of the Matter to a Committee where it was fully examined and notwithstanding all the Art of Counsel learned in the Law who are very skilful at putting a good Appearance upon a bad Cause and all the Friends the Lord Howard could make so just and equitable a Spirit then governed that the Committee having represented the Matter to the Parliament as they found it to be they discharged him from being a Member of Parliament sent him to the Tower and fined him ten thousand Pounds About the beginning of January the Commissioners of Parliament the Lady Ireton and my self met at Milford in order to embark for Ireland three Men of War lying ready for us in the Harbour with several Ships for the Transportation of my Troop with our Goods and Horses We came to Milford on Saturday and on Monday following the Lady Ireton and the Commissioners set sail with fair Wind leaving the Guinea-Frigat for me and to be Convoy to those Vessels that were appointed to transport the Horse and other things of which but one could be ready time enough to set sail with them my Troop being not yet mustered The next day Mr. Lort by order of the Committee of Parliament mustered my Troop so that I began to ship them on Wednesday in the Afternoon and on Thursday Morning they being all embarked we set sail and tho the Weather proved very calm we arrived the next day under the Fort of Duncannon near Waterford where I understood that the Lady Ireton and the Commissioners had landed there the day before and were gone to the Lord Deputy at Waterford Immediately after my Arrival I went to wait on the Lord Deputy Ireton who was much surprized at my landing so soon after the rest of the Company and ordered good Quarters to be assigned to my Troop that they might be refreshed before they entred upon Duty for it was observed that the English Horses were not so fit for Service till they had been seasoned for some time with the Air and Provisions of that Country
hundred Men on shore commanded by Captain Morrice to attack a Quarter of the Enemies that lay by the Harbour which they executed Successfully by taking the Fort and about forty Prisoners with four Pieces of Cannon which they nailed up and returned on board again At this time the Virginia Fleet arriving at the Barbadoes it was thought fit to send a third Summons to the Lord Willoughby but finding that neither this nor the Declaration sent to them by the Commissioners of Parliament to the same purpose produced any effect Sir George Ayscue landed seven hundred Men from his own and the Virginia Fleet giving the Command of them to the same Captain Morrice who fell upon thirteen hundred of the Enemies Foot and three Troops of their Horse and beat them from their Works killing many of their Men and taking about a hundred Prisoners with all their Guns The Loss on our side was inconsiderable few of ours being killed upon the place and not above thirty wounded Yet these Successes were not sufficient to accomplish the Work there being above five thousand Horse and Foot in the Island and our Virginia Fleet preparing to depart for want of Provisions In this conjuncture Colonel Muddiford who commanded a Regiment in the Island by the means of a Friend that he had in our Fleet made his Terms and declared for the Parliament Many of his Friends following his Example did the like and in conjunction with him encamped under the protection of our Fleet. Upon this the most part of the Island were inclined to join us but the Lord Willoughby prevented them by placing Guards on all the Avenues to our Camp and designed to charge our Men with his Body of Horse wherein he was much superior to them had not a Cannon-Ball that was fired at random beat open the door of a Room where he and his Council of War were sitting which taking off the Head of the Sentinel who was placed at the door so alarmed them all that he changed his design and retreated to a Place two Miles distant from the Harbour Our Party consisting of two thousand Foot and one hundred Horse advancing towards him he desired to treat which being accepted Colonel Muddiford Colonel Collyton Mr. Searl and Captain Pack were appointed Commissioners by Sir George Ayscue and by the Lord Willoughby Sir Richard Pierce Mr. Charles Pym Colonel Ellis and Major Byham By these it was concluded that the Islands of Barbadoes Mevis Antego and St. Christophers should be surrendered to the Parliament of England That the Lord Willoughby Colonel Walrond and some others should be restored to their Estates and that the Inhabitants of the said Isles should be maintained in the quiet enjoyment of what they possessed on condition to do nothing to the prejudice of the Commonwealth This News being brought to Virginia they submitted also where one Mr. George Ludlow a Relation of mine served the Parliament in the like manner as Col. Muddiford had done at the Barbadoes The Parliament of England being desirous after all these Successes to convince even their Enemies that their principal design was to procure the happiness and prosperity of all that were under their Government sent Commissioners to Scotland to treat concerning an Union of that Nation with England in one Common-wealth directing them to take care till that could be effected that Obedience should be given to the Authority of the Parliament of the Common wealth of England The Commissioners appointed to this end on the part of the Parliament were Sir Henry Vane the Chief Justice St. Johns Mr. Fenwick Major Salloway Major General Lambert Colonel Titchborn Major General Dean and Colonel Monk This Proposition of Union was chearfully accepted by the most iudicious amongst the Scots who well understood how great a condescension it was in the Parliament of England to permit a People they had conquered to have a part in the Legislative Power The States-General being highly displeased with the late Act of Navigation passed by the Parliament which they accounted to be a great obstruction to their Trade resolved to leave no means unattempted to procure it to be repealed To this end they sent three Ambassadors to England who pretending a desire to finish the Treaty begun formerly between the Two States requested that things might be as they were at the time of our Ambassador's departure from Holland designing thereby that the Act lately passed for the Encouragement of our Seamen should be suspended and all such Merchandizes restored as had been seized from the Dutch by virtue of the said Act. The Parliament refusing to consent to this Proposal the States-General gave Orders for the equipping a considerable Fleet consisting of about a hundred Ships of War giving notice to the Parliament by their Ambassadors of these Preparations and assuring them that they were not design'd to offend the English Nation with whom they desired to maintain a friendly Correspondence and that they were provided to no other end than to protect their own Subjects in their Trade and Navigation But the Parliament being unwilling to rely upon the Promises of those who by their past and present Actions had manifested little Friendship to us resolved to make what Preparations they could to defend themselves This Alarm awakened us to a diligent performance of our duty in Ireland fearing that the Hollanders might transport some foreign Forces by their Fleet to the Assistance of the Irish who were not only still numerous in the Field but had also divers Places of Strength to retreat to Our Suspicions were farther increased by the Advices we received of a Treaty on foot between the Duke of Lorain and Theobald Viscount Taff with other Irish to bring the Forces of that Duke into Ireland against us in order to extirpate all Hereticks out of that Nation to re-establish the Romish Religion in all Parts of it and to restore the Irish to their Possessions all which being performed he should deliver up the Authority to the King of Great Britain and assist him against his Rebellious Subjects in England That all Ireland should be ingaged for his Re-imbursement That Galway Limerick Athenree Athlone Waterford and the Fort of Duncannon should be put into his hands as Cautionary Places with other things of the same nature The Report of this Agreement being spread amongst the Irish encouraged them to make all possible Opposition against us in expectation of the promised Succours The Commissioners of the Parliament on the other hand laboured with all diligence to dispose their Affairs in the best manner they could for the Publick Service in order to which they sent to the several Commanders of our Army to excite them to the discharge of their Duty making provision of Arms Ammunition Clothes Tents and all things necessary to the carrying on the War in the ensuing Spring A general Meeting of Officers was also appointed to be held at Kilkenay to consult about the best Method of employing our Arms against the
Nation doth of Right belong only to the Parliament of England who will distinguish those who have always lived peaceably or have already submitted to their Authority and put themselves under their Protection from such as have committed and countenanced the Murders and Massacres of the Protestants during the first Year of the Rebellion as well as from those who continue still in Arms to oppose their Authority That they cannot in Justice consent to an Act so prejudicial to the Peace of the Country as would involve quiet and peaceable People in the same Prosecution with those who are in open Hostility That they cannot grant safe Conducts to such as persist in their Opposition to the Parliament to assemble from all Provinces and to communicate their Designs to each other But that all those who will lay down their Arms and submit to the Common-wealth shall have as favourable Conditions as they can justly expect This Resolution of the Commissioners being made publick the Irish fell upon another Expedient in pursuance of which the Earl of Clanrickard who had been left Deputy by the Earl of Ormond sent a Letter directed to me then Commander in Chief of the Forces of the Parliament in Ireland in the Words following SIR MANY of the Nobility Clergy and other Persons of Quality Subjects of this Kingdom with the Corporation of Galway having considered the present State of Affairs and the ruinous Effects which this long War hath produced have solicited me to desire of you a Conference for the establishment of the Repose of this Nation and to obtain a safe Conduct for the Commissioners whom by their Advice I shall judg capable to be sent to you for that end It is this which hath obliged me to send you an Express with this Protestation that I shall not abandon them till I see such Conditions granted them as they may with Honour accept for want of which I am resolved to continue the Authority and Protection of his Majesty over them even to Extremity not doubting but by Divine Assistance with the Forces we have already and the Succours which shall be sent us by his Majesty and Allies we shall be found in a condition to change the present State of Affairs or at least to render your former Conquests of little advantage and in the end to sell our Lives at a dear rate if we shall be forced thereto the which leaving to your Consideration and expecting your certain Answer and Resolution I remain 24 March 1652. SIR Your Servant CLANRICKARD POSTSCRIPT If you please to send a safe Conduct I desire it may be addressed to Sir Charles Coote or whom you shall think fit near to this Place with a Pass for the number of five Commissioners and their Retinue of about twenty Persons to the end that having notice thereof I may send a List of the Names of the said Commissioners To this I returned the following Answer My Lord IN answer to yours of the 24 th of March by which you propose a Treaty for the Settlement of this Country and desire a safe Conduct for the Commissioners you shall judg fit to employ in the management of that Affair I think fit in pursuance of the Advice of the Commissioners of the Parliament of England and of many Officers of the English Army to advertise you as hath been already answered to those who have sent Propositions of the like nature That the Settlement of this Nation doth of Right belong to the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England to whom we are obliged in duty to leave it being assured that they will not capitulate with those who ought to submit to them and yet oppose themselves to their Authority and upon vain and frivolous hopes have refused such Offers of Favour as they would gladly accept at present so that I fear they will be constrained to proceed against them with the highest Severity which that you may prevent by your timely Submission is the Desire of My Lord Your humble Servant EDMVND LVDLOW That Passage in my Answer touching their Readiness to accept such Terms as they had formerly rejected was grounded upon notice sent by Sir Charles Coote that the Town of Galway since the time limited by the Commissioners for their Submission was expired desired a Treaty whereupon I had acquainted him that seeing the Besieged had refused the Conditions formerly offered they ought not now to expect the like after such an addition of Trouble and Charge as they had lately put us upon yet for all this Caution Sir Charles Coote concluded a Treaty with them immediately after the Return of my Answer to the Earl of Clanrickard upon Conditions much more advantagious to them than those formerly proposed and very prejudicial to the Publick undertaking to get them ratified by the Commissioners of Parliament within twenty days and in the mean time promising that they should be inviolably observed The Commissioners of Parliament having received the Articles and conceiving it to be unjust as well as imprudent to give the best Terms to those who made the longest Opposition and of what dangerous Consequence it might be if that Place were not fully secured to the English Interest spent the whole Night in Consultation with the Officers of the Army and in the end resolved That they could not consent that any should receive the Benefit of those Articles who had been any way concerned in the murdering of the English in the first Year of the War That they would not oblige themselves to permit any to live in Galway whom they should hereafter think fit to remove from thence for the Security of the Place That they cannot consent that the Burgesses shall enjoy any more than two thirds of their Estates lying near the Town That they will not suffer the Habitations of such as have been forced to quit the Place upon the account of their Affection to the Parliament to be detained from them With these and some other Alterations they declared their Consent to the rest of the Articles before-mentioned which if those of the Town refused they ordered that our Men should not enter and if entred that they should restore the Possession of it to the Garison but notwithstanding this Expedition the Messenger that was dispatched with the Resolutions of the Commissioners came too late and all that could be obtained was a Promise from Sir Charles Coote to endeavour to perswade those of Galway to accept of the Articles with the Amendments made by the Commissioners The Parliament having resolved upon the Incorporation of Scotland with the Nation of England into one Free State or Commonwealth and to reimburse themselves some part of that Treasure they had expended in their own Defence against the Invasions of the Scots declared the Goods and Lands formerly belonging to the Crown of Scotland to be confiscated and also those that were possessed by such Persons as had assisted in the Invasion of England by Duke Hamilton in the
Year 1648 or had appeared in Arms since under the King of Scots in order to subvert the present Government excepting those who since the Battel of Dunbar had abandoned the said King of Scots and by their Merits and Services had rendred themselves worthy of Favour That all such who are not comprehended under the said Qualifications and shall concur with them in their just Enterprize shall receive the Benefit of their Protection and enjoy their Liberties and Goods equally with the free People of England In pursuance of this Declaration of the Parliament their Commissioners in Scotland published another wherein they discharge from Confiscation all Merchants and Tradesmen who possess not in Lands or Goods above the Value of five hundred Pounds and are not Prisoners of War Souldiers of Fortune Moss Troopers or such as have killed or committed Outrages against the English Souldiers contrary to the Laws and Customs of War They also emitted a Proclamation abolishing in the name of the Parliament all manner of Authority and Jurisdiction derived from any other Power but that of the Commonwealth of England as well in Scotland as in all the Isles belonging to it After this they summoned the Counties Cities and Boroughs to agree to the Incorporation before mentioned of which eighteen of one and thirty Counties and twenty four of fifty six Cities and Boroughs consented to send their Deputies to the Parliament of England most of the rest excusing themselves for want of Money to defray the Expences of their Representatives This Business being accomplished and an Act passed for the Incorporation of England and Scotland into one Commonwealth the Parliament were prevailed with by the Importunities of some of their own Members and in particular of General Cromwell that so he might fortify himself by the Addition of new Friends for the carrying on his Designs to pass an Act of General Pardon and Amnesty whereby tho it had thirty eight several Exceptions many Persons who deserved to pay towards the Reimbursement of the Publick no less than those who had been already fined escaped the Punishment due to their Misdemeanours and the Commonwealth was defrauded of great Sums of Money by which means they were rendred unable to discharge many just Debts owing to such as had served them with Diligence and Fidelity In Ireland the Rebels were so pressed by our Forces in all Parts that they began to think it necessary to treat about Conditions of Submission and many of them obtained Liberty to be transported into foreign Service wherein the Commissioners of Parliament assisted them with Ships so that the Irish Officers were in many Places deserted by their own Souldiers Col. Fitzpatrick was the first who submitted on condition to be transported with his Regiment into the Service of the King of Spain which was a great blow to the Irish Confederacy who were very desirous to treat in conjunction hoping to obtain more favourable Terms in consideration of their Numbers insomuch that they published Declarations against him and the Irish Clergy excommunicated him and all those who joined with him Notwithstanding which Col. Odowyer Commander in Chief of the Irish in the Counties of Waterford and Tipperary followed his Example and proposed a Treaty to Col. Zanchey who having received Instructions from the Commissioners concluded an Agreement with him the principal Articles whereof were to this effect That the Arms and Horses belonging to the Brigade of Col. Edmund Odowyer shall be delivered up at a certain price That he and his Party shall enjoy their personal Estates and such a proportion of their real Estates as others under their Qualification shall be permitted to do That the Benefit of the Articles shall not extend to such as had murdered any of the English or had been engaged in the Rebellion during the first Year or to any Romish Priests or to those who had been of the first General Assembly those also who had taken away the Life of any of ours after Quarter given and those who had deserted us and joined themselves to the Enemy were excepted out of the Treaty All others to have Liberty to live in our Quarters or to transport themselves into the Service of any foreign State in Friendship with the Commonwealth of England Whilst the Ambassadors from Holland were in Treaty with the Commissioners appointed by the Parliament to that end the Dutch Fleet consisting of forty three Ships of War commanded by the Heer Van Tromp came into the Downs Major Bourn having with him a Squadron of eight Men of War perceiving two of the Dutch Ships making sail towards him sent to them to demand the Reason of their Approach and an Answer being returned that they had a Message to deliver from Admiral Van Tromp to the English Commander of that Squadron they were permitted to come up to that purpose The Captains of the two Dutch Ships after they had saluted Major Bourn by striking the Flag went on board him and acquainted him that they were sent by their Admiral to let him know that riding with his Fleet near Dunkirk he had lost many Cables and Anchors by bad Weather and was now brought by a North Wind more Southward than he designed of which he thought himself obliged to give him notice to prevent any Misunderstanding Major Bourn told them he was willing to believe what was said and that the Truth of it would best appear by their speedy Retreat With this Answer the two Captains returned to their Fleet which coming within Cannon-shot of Dover-Castle with their Sails up and Flag at the Top-mast not saluting the Fort according to Custom the Garison was constrained to fire three Guns at the Hollanders to put them in mind of their Duty But their Admiral made no Answer and still keeping up his Flag lay in the Road till the next day about Noon at which time he weighed Anchor and set sail towards Calais The rest of the English Fleet consisting only of thirteen Men of War commanded by General Blake who had been upon the Coast of Sussex returning into the Downs soon after the Departure of the Dutch was joined by Major Bourn and those eight Ships he had with him But Admiral Van Tromp being obliged to take care of some rich Merchant Ships bound home to Holland from the Straits returned towards the Downs and being come within Cannon-shot of our Fleet without striking their Flag General Blake commanded three several Guns one after the other to be fired at him Whereupon he answered with one Gun which shot through the English Flag and followed it with a whole Broad-side setting up a red Standard on his Topmast as a Signal to the whole Fleet to prepare to fight The Engagement began about four in the Afternoon and lasted till nine at Night with great Loss to the Enemy and little Damage on our side tho their Fleet was double our Number We took two of their Men of War in the Fight one of which was brought away
unwarrantable Courses but he made his Escape by Water for that time and one of the most active of the People was seized and executed which served only to exasperate the rest Upon the near Approach of the English and Scots Army a considerable Party of each side encountred and the English contrary to their wonted Custom retired in Disorder not without Shame and some Loss Of such Force and Consequence is a Belief and full Perswasion of the Justice of an Undertaking tho managed by an Enemy in other respects inconsiderable The King startled at the Unsuccessfulness of his first Attempt upon the Petition of a considerable number of the well-affected Nobility requesting him that to avoid the Effusion of more Blood he would call an Assembly of the Nobility consented thereunto This Council accordingly met at York and advised the King to a Cessation of Arms and the Calling of a Parliament to compose Differences which to the great trouble of the Clergy and other Incendiaries he promised to do assuring the Scots of the Paiment of twenty thousand Pounds a Month to maintain their Army till the Pleasure of the Parliament should be known In order to which Writs were issued out for the Meeting of a Parliament on the 3 d of November 1640. The time prefix'd for their assembling being come they met accordingly and as they were very sensible that nothing but an absolute Necessity permitted their coming together so they resolved to improve this happy Opportunity to free the People from their Burdens and to punish the Authors of the late Disorders To this end they declared against Monopolies and expelled the Authors of them out of the House The Opinions of the Judges concerning Ship-Money they voted unjust and illegal fining and imprisoning those that had warranted the Lawfulness thereof And that the Offenders against the Publick might not escape they ordered the Sea-Ports to be diligently guarded and all Passengers to be strictly examined This being done they impeached the Lord Keeper Finch the Earl of Strafford and the Arch-bishop of Canterbury of High Treason in endeavouring to subvert the Laws and to erect an Arbitrary and Tyrannical Power They declared that they would pay the English and Scots Armies to the end of May 1641. and assist the Prince Palatine with Men and Money to recover his Country And now having the Charge of two Armies to pay and all Men suspecting they might be abruptly dissolved as had often hapned before and therefore refusing to credit them with such Sums as were necessary unless an Act might pass to secure their sitting till they should think fit to dissolve themselves by Act of Parliament the King gave his Assent to one drawn up and passed to that purpose Another Act likewise passed to assert that according to the antient Fundamental Laws of England a Parliament ought to be held every Year and directing that in case one was not called in three Years the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal should issue out Writs as is therein expressed and if he fail in his Duty he is declared guilty of High Treason and a certain number of Lords impowered to summon the said Parliament and is they should neglect so to do the Sheriffs and Constables are vested with the same Authority But if it should happen that all the forementioned Powers should be wanting in their Duty the People of England are thereby authorized to put the said Act in execution by meeting and electing Members to serve in Parliament tho not summoned by any Officers appointed to that end The Parliament then proceeded to correct the Abuses that had been introduced in the preceding Years Whereupon the Star-Chamber the High Commission Court the Court of Honour with some others were taken away by Act of Parliament and the Power of the Council-Table restrained The Commissioners of the Custom-House who had collected Customs contrary to Law were fined and such as had been imprisoned by any of the above-mentioned Arbitrary Courts were set at liberty A Protestation was also agreed upon by the Lords and Commons which they took and presented to others to take whereby all those that took it obliged themselves to defend and maintain the Power and Privileges of Parliament the Rights and Liberties of the People to use their utmost Endeavours to bring to condign Punishment all those who should by Force or otherwise do any thing to the contrary and to stand by and justify all such as should do any thing in prosecution of the said Protestation The Day prefix'd for the Earl of Strafford's Trial being come he was brought before the House of Peers where the Charge against him was managed by Members of the House of Commons appointed to that end The chief Heads of the Accusation were That he had governed the Kingdom of Ireland in an Arbitrary manner That he had retained the Revenues of the Crown without rendring a due Account of them That he had encouraged and promoted the Romish Religion That he had endeavoured to create Feuds and Quarrels between England and Scotland That he had laboured to render the Parliament suspected and odious to the King That he was the Author of that Advice That since the Parliament had denied to grant the King such Supplies as he demanded he was at liberty to raise them by such Means as he thought fit and that he had an Irish Army that would assist him to that end It being the Custom that a Lord High Steward should be made to preside at the Trial of a Peer that Honour was conferred upon the Earl of Arundel The King the Queen the House of Commons the Deputies of Scotland and Ireland with many other Persons of Quality of both Sexes were there present I remember the Earl of Strafford in his Defence objected against the Evidence of the Earl of Cork denying him to be a competent Witness because his Enemy To which George Lord Digby who was appointed one of the Managers of the Charge against him replied That if that Objection should be of any weight with the Court the Earl of Strafford had found out a certain way to secure himself from any sarther Prosecution Yet this Man who then spoke with so much Vigour soon after altered his Language and made a Speech to the House in his favour which he caused to be printed and also surreptitiously withdrew a Paper from the Committee containing the principal Evidence against the said Earl The Parliament resenting this Prevarication ordered his Speech to be burnt by the Hands of the Common Hangman The House of Commons having passed a Bill for the Condemnation of the Earl it was carried to the Lords for their Concurrence which they gave The King not satisfied therewith consulted with the Privy Council some Judges and four Bishops And all of them except one advise the throwing of Jonas over-board for the appeasing of the Storm Upon which the Earl of Arundel the Lord Privy Seal and two more were commissionated by
of the Army should be sent to the Relief of Ireland and it was carried in the Negative by one Voice only The Commonwealth-Party taking Advantage of the Arguments used in the House for the Relief of Ireland and Ease of the People of England procured an Order for the disbanding of Col. Massey's Brigade and Money to be sent to the Devizes in the County of Wiles where they were ordered to be drawn together for that purpose Alderman Allen and my self who served sor that County were commissionated to see it put in execution In order to which we repaired to the Lord General who lay then at Cornbury and prevailed with him and Commissary General Ireton with two Regiments of Horse to draw to the Devizes which we found to be very necessary for tho many of that Brigade were glad of the Opportunity to return home to their several Callings having taken up Arms and hazarded their Lives purely to serve the Publick yet divers idle and debauched Persons especially the Foreigners amongst them not knowing how to betake themselves to any honest Employment endeavoured to stir up the Brigade to a Mutiny but not being able to effect that some of them listed themselves to serve against the Rebels in Ireland under Sir William Fenton and others there present to receive them for which we had Instructions from the Parliament the rest dispersed themselves and returned home The Forces also that served in the North under Major General Pointz were soon after disbanded The City of London had made it their Request in the Petition before-mentioned that some Commissioners from them might accompany those from the Parliament to the King but their own Party in the House fearing perhaps to be outbid by them or it may be not having quite lost all Sense of Honour rejected that Motion with Contempt alledging that they had their Representatives in Parliament and were concluded by what they acted as well as other Men upon which Mr. Martin said That tho he could not but agree with what had been affirmed touching their being involved in what their Representatives did and their not sending Commissioners as desired yet as to the Substance of what they proposed he could not so much blame them as others had done they therein shewing themselves in the end of the War no less prudent than they had expressed themselves honest in the beginning for as when the Parliament invited them to stand by them in the War against the King in Defence of their Religion Lives Liberties and Estates they did it heartily and therein shewed themselves good Christians and true English-men so now the War being ended and the Parliament upon making Terms with the King and thinking fit to sue to him now their Prisoner for Peace whom they had all incensed by their Resistance the Citizens having considerable Estates to lose shewed themselves prudent Men in endeavouring to procure their Pardons as well as others And tho said he you will not permit them to send as they desire they have expressed their good Will which without doubt will be well accepted The Commissioners of Parliament joining with those who were before with the King endeavoured to perswade him to agree to the Propositions of the Parliament but he disliking several things in them and most of all the abolition of Episcopacy to which Interest he continued obstinately stedfast refused his Consent upon private Encouragement from some of the Scots and English to expect more easy Terms or to be received without any at all The Parliament willing to bring this Matter to a Conclusion sent the same Propositions a second time to the King and desired the Scots to use their utmost Endeavours to procure his Consent to them The Scots Commissioners especially the Lord Loudon pressed the King very earnestly to comply with them telling him that tho the Propositions were higher in some Particulars than they could have wished notwithstanding their Endeavours to bring them as low as they could according to their Promises yet if he continued to reject them he must not expect to be received in Scotland whither they must return and upon his resusal of the Conditions offered deliver him up to the Parliament of England But whatsoever they or the English could say making no Impression upon the King the Parliament's Commissioners returned with a Negative from him The Interposition of the Scots in this Affair proving ineffectual the War being at an end and such considerable Forces altogether unnecessary the Parliament appointed Commissioners to conser with those of Scotland concerning such things as remained to be performed by the Treaty between them that the fraternal Union might continue and the Scots depart towards their own Country In order to which the Accounts of their Army were adjusted and a great Sum of Money agreed to be paid to them at the present and other Sums upon certain days to their full Satisfaction Major General Skippon with a considerable Body of Men carried down the Money in specie for the Paiment of the Scots Army which being received by them they delivered the King into the hands of the Parliament's Commissioners that attended him there and began their March for Scotland having delivered Newcastle to the English and drawn their Men out of Berwick and Carlisle which two Places were agreed not to be garisoned without the Consent of both Kingdoms About this time the Earl of Essex having over-heated himself in the Chace of a Stag in Windsor Forest departed this Lise His Death was a great Loss to those of his Party who to keep up their Spirits and Credit procured his Funeral to be celebrated with great Magnificence at the Charge of the Publick the Lords and Commons with a great number of Officers and Gentlemen accompanying him to the Grave In the mean time I observed that another Party was not idle for walking one Morning with Lieutenant General Cromwell in Sir Robert Cotton's Garden he inveighed bitterly against them saying in a familiar way to me If thy Father were alive he would let some of them hear what they deserve adding farther That it was a miserable thing to serve a Parliament to whom let a Man be never so faithful if one pragmatical Fellow amongst them rise up and asperse him he shall never wipe it off Whereas said he when one serves under a General he may do as much Service and yet be free from all Blame and Envy This Text together with the Comment that his after-Actions put upon it hath since perswaded me that he had already conceived the Design of destroying the Civil Authority and setting up of himself and that he took that Opportunity to feel my Pulse whether I were a fit Instrument to be employed by him to those ends But having replied to his Discourse that we ought to perform the Duty of our Stations and trust God with our Honour Power and all that is dear to us not permitting any such Considerations to discourage us from the
Clothes or Food he used what Hour he went to rest or what Horse he mounted In the mean time our Army in Scotland lying near the Enemies Camp at Torwood who were plentifully furnished with Provisions from the County of Fife it was resolved that a Party of ours commanded by Colonel Overton should be sent in Boats from Leith and Edinburgh into that County to contrive some way to prevent the Enemies Supplies from thence This Party was followed by four Regiments of Horse and Foot commanded by Major General Lambert Of which the Enemy having notice sent Sir John Brown who was esteemed to be a Person of Courage and Conduct with part of their Army to oppose them It was not long before the two Parties came to an Engagement wherein the Enemy was totally routed Sir John Brown who commanded them with about two thousand of his Men killed many made Prisoners and all their Baggage taken The Scots being deprived of their usual Supplies from Fife and not expecting any from foreign Parts by reason of the number of our Ships cruizing on their Coast resolved to march into England having received Encouragement so to do from their old and new Friends there They passed the River Tweed near Carlisle there being a strong Garison in Berwick for the Parliament and were considerably advanced on their March before our Army in Scotland were acquainted with their Design Major General Harrison with about four thousand Horse and Foot somewhat obstructed their March tho he was not considerable enough to fight them and being joined by Major General Lambert with a Party of Horse from the Army they observed the Enemy so closely as to keep them from Excursions and to prevent others from joining with them The Scots who were in great expectation of Assistance from Wales and relied much upon Col. Massey's Interest in Glocestershire advanced that way Few of the Country came in to them but on the other side so affectionate were the People to the Common-wealth that they brought in Horse and Foot from all Parts to assist the Parliament Insomuch that their Number was by many thought sufficient to have beaten the Enemy without the Assistance of the Army some even of the excluded Members appearing in Arms and leading Regiments against the Common Enemy At the same time upon notice that the Earl of Derby was at the Head of fifteen hundred Horse and Foot in Lancashire Col. Liburn was sent that way with about eight hundred Men who meeting with the Earl's Forces near Wigan after a sharp Dispute for about an hour totally routed them The Number of the Slain was considerable on the Enemies side The Lord Widdrington with other Persons of Quality were killed All their Baggage was taken and three or four hundred made Prisoners with the Loss only of one Officer and about ten private Souldiers of Col. Lilburn's The Earl of Derby himself was wounded and escaped to Worcester but bringing not above thirty tired Horse with him the Townsmen began to repent their Revolt from the Parliament The Scots having possessed themselves of the City of Worcester and fortified it as well as they could in so short a time resolved to attack our Army which was now advanced to that Place and posted on each side of the Severn ready to receive them with General Cromwell at their Head Their first Attack was made upon Lieutenant General Fleetwood's Quarters that were on the other side of the River who with some Forces of the Army and a Reinforcement of the Militia made a vigorous Resistance The General fearing he might be overpower'd dispatch'd some Troops to his Assistance by a Bridg laid over the River commanding Major General Lambert to send another Detachment to the same purpose but he desired to be excused alledging that if the Enemy should alter their Course and fall upon those on this side they might probably cut off all that remained which was not unlikely for soon after most of the Enemies Strength fell upon that part of the Army where the General and Major General Lambert were The Battel was sought with various Success for a considerable time but at length the Scots Army was broken and quitting their Ground retreated in great Disorder to the Town where they endeavoured to defend themselves Major General Harrison Col. Croxton and the Forces of Cheshire entred the Place at their heels and being followed by the rest of the Army soon finished the Dispute and totally defeated the Enemy Three English Earls seven Scots Lords and above six hundred Officers besides ten thousand private Souldiers were made Prisoners The King's Standard and a hundred fifty eight Colours with all their Artillery Ammunition and Baggage was also taken On our side Quarter-master General Mosely and Capt. Jones with about a hundred private Souldiers were killed and Capt. Howard with one Captain more and about three hundred Souldiers wounded This Victory was obtained by the Parliament's Forces on the 3 d of September being the same Day of the same Month that the Scots had been defeated at Dunbar the preceding Year Col. Massey escaped into Leicestershire but being dangerously wounded found himself not able to continue his way and fearing to be knock'd on the head by the Country delivered himself to the Countess of Stamford Mother to the Lord Grey of Grooby who caused his Wounds to be carefully dressed and sent notice of his Surrender to the Army Whereupon a Party was dispatched with Orders to conduct him from thence to London as soon as he should be fit to travel which was done and he committed Prisoner to the Tower The Scots King with the Lord Wilmot were concealed by three Country-men till they could furnish him with a Horse with which he crossed the Country to one Mr. Gunter's near Shoreham in Sussex carrying one Mrs. Lane behind him from whence in a small Bark he escaped to France The General after this Action which he called the Crowning Victory took upon him a more stately Behaviour and chose new Friends neither must it be omitted that instead of acknowledging the Services of those who came from all Parts to assist against the Common Enemy tho he knew they had deserved as much Honour as himself and the standing Army he srowned upon them and the very next day after the Fight dismissed and sent them home well knowing that a useful and experienced Militia was more likely to obstruct than to second him in his ambitious Designs Being on his way to London many Members of the Parliament attended by the City and great numbers of Persons of all Orders and Conditions went some Miles out of the Town to meet him which tended not a little to heighten the Spirit of this haughty Gentleman Lieutenant General Monk whom the General had raised to that Employment and ordered to command in Scotland during his Absence took Sterling-Castle and then marched with about four thousand Horse and Foot before Dundee But being advised that General Lesley the Earl of
Enemy And because the Propositions offered by the late Lord Deputy to those of Galway had been no farther prosecuted by reason of his Death Orders were dispatched to Sir Charles Coote authorizing him to conclude with them in case they should accept the Conditions at or before the ninth of the next January According to their Orders the Officers met at Kilkenny by whom being informed of what they thought necessary for the ensuing Service we acquainted the Parliament and Council of State with the Particulars of such things as were requisite desiring them to send them over with all convenient speed that no time might be lost when the Season of the Year should permit us to take the Field We published two Proclamations to prevent the Country from supplying the Enemy with Arms and other Necessaries wherein drawing a Line as it were about the Irish Quarters we required all Persons to withdraw themselves and their Goods from the places of their resort within a limited time which if they refused to do we declared them Enemies and ordered all Officers and Souldiers to treat them accordingly commanding also all Smiths Armourers and Sadlers that lived in the Country to retire in twenty days with all their Families Forges and Instruments into some Garison of the Parliament on pain of forfeiture of their Goods and Tools besides six months Imprisonment for the first Offence and of Death for the second We ordered also that all those who had withdrawn themselves out of our Protection and joined with the Enemy since the coming over of General Cromwell should be deprived of the benefit of Quarter Having published these and other Orders of the like tenour we appointed the Lord Broghil Commissary General Reynolds Sir Hardress Waller Colonel Axtel and the rest of the Officers to cause them to be put in execution as occasion should require Having finished our Affairs at Kilkenny and dismissed the Officers to their respective Quarters I resolved to go to Portumna to make all things ready for the Siege of Galway Being on my March on the other side of Nenagh an advanced Party found two of the Rebels one of whom was killed by the Guard before I came up to them the other was saved and being brought before me at Portumna and I asking him if he had a mind to be hanged he only answered If you please so insensibly stupid were many of these poor Creatures The Commissioners having done their business in this Place and given Directions for the carrying on the Siege of Galway with Power to treat as before mentioned to Sir Charles Coote we returned to Dublin and at our arrival were informed that the Barony of B●rren relying upon the security of their places of Retreat had refused to pay the Contributions which they had promised upon which Sir Hardress Waller had been obliged to lay the Country waste and to seize what he could find that it might be no longer useful to the Enemy We had advice also from Vlster that some of our Troops had killed and drowned about a hundred and forty Tories who infested that Province with their Robberies The time limited by the Proclamation requiring the Irish to withdraw from the places mentioned therein being expired I marched with a Party of Horse and Foot into the Fastnesses of Wicklo as well to make Examples of such as had not obeyed the Proclamation as to place a Garison there to prevent the Excursions of the Enemy Talbot's Town was the Place I thought fittest for that end which having rendred defensible against any sudden attempt and furnished with all things necessary I marched farther into the Country The next morning I divided my Men into three Parties sending away Colonel Pretty with one of them to his own Quarters lest the Enemy should fall upon them in his absence with the other two we scoured by different ways the Passes and Retreats of the Irish but met not with many of them our Parties being so big that the Irish who had Sentinels placed upon every Hill gave notice of our March to their Friends so that upon our Approach they still fled to their Bogs and Woods When I came to Dundrum a Place lying in the heart of the Enemy's Quarters I perceived the Walls and Roof of an old Church standing wherein I placed Captain Jacob with his Company who was afterwards very serviceable against the Enemy The like Methods being taken by the Lord Broghil Colonel Zanchey Colonel Abbot and other Officers the Irish were reduced to great Extremities About fourscore of the Inhabitants of Galway went privately out of the Town and seizing a hundred Head of Cattel designed to drive them thither but being upon their Return they were met by a Party of ours who killed threescore of them and recovered all the Cattel This Disappointment was attended with another much greater for two Vessels loaden with Corn endeavouring to get into the Harbour of Galway being pursued by two of our Frigats one of them was taken and the other forced upon the Rocks near the Isle of Arran where she was lost The Parliament having received an Account of the hopeful Condition of their Affairs in Ireland and of the great Appearance there was of a speedy Determination of that War appointed a Committee to summon before them those Adventurers who in the Year 1641 had advanced Monies upon the Lands in Ireland The said Persons being met at Grocers-Hall chose twenty eight Deputies to manage the Business with the Committee in the Names of all the rest In conformity to this Proceeding the Commissioners of Parliament in Ireland began to consider of Qualifications and Heads under which the Irish should be brought that the Innocent might be freed from their Fears and Apprehensions that Justice might be done and the Guilty punished according to the different nature of their Crimes Of which the Irish having notice and considering the declining Condition of their Affairs in all Parts sent a Letter directed to the Commissioners of the Parliament of England from the Principal as they called themselves of the Kingdom of Ireland and subscribed by Gerald Fitz-Gerald on the behalf of their Assembly held at Glanmaliero in the Province of Leinster representing That being advised that the Commonwealth of England is in a condition to give honourable and sure Terms to them they are in an entire Disposition to receive them and to that effect desire in the Name of that and the rest of the Provinces a safe Conduct for every one of them with Blanks subscribed to that end that they may impower and send some of their Members to present Propositions to the Commissioners that are or should be authorized to that purpose To this the Commissioners answered in substance That tho the Letter was subscribed by one under the pretext of an Authority which they could not own without prejudice to that of the Parliament yet for the satisfaction of those concerned they thought fit to declare That the Establishment of this
and the other being very much shatter'd sunk down as our Men were carrying her off The Council of State having received an Account of this Action made their Report of it to the Parliament who passed a Vote for the justification of General Blake and resolving to have Satisfaction for this Assault placed a Guard upon the Dutch Ambassadors at their Lodgings in Chelsey and sent General Cromwell and Mr. Denis Bond a Member of Parliament down to the Fleet with Assurances that nothing should be wanting for their Encouragement The Event of this Undertaking not answering the Expectations of the Hollanders serving only to provoke the English Nation and to publish their own Dishonour they endeavoured to make the World as well as the Parliament believe that the Quarrel was begun by General Blake or at least that what had been done was not by their Orders and therefore desired that the Treaty might go on and that the Prisoners taken in the late Fight might be restored To this end they sent over the Heer Paw of Heemsted to carry on the Treaty in conjunction with the Ambassadors they had sent before into England This Minister was received with all the usual Demonstrations of Honour and being admitted to Audience pressed for an Accommodation of all Differences and a Cessation of all Acts of Hostility between the two Nations assuring the Parliament that his Masters had given Orders to their Ships to strike to the English Flag in the same manner as had been practised in former times But being demanded to shew his Powers he produced nothing save Letters of Credence and Passports referring himself to the other Ambassadors in that Point with whom he made some General Propositions to the Parliament and desired them to declare their Demands By these Proceedings of the Dutch the Parliament perceiving that this Difference was not like to be decided by a Treaty contented themselves to require Satisfaction for the Injuries received and Assurance that nothing of that nature should be attempted for the future which if the Ambassadors would consent to they declared themselves ready to proceed in the Treaty and to grant a Cessation of Arms. But so little were they disposed to give the Satisfaction demanded that they made no farther mention of the Cessation which they had so earnestly pressed and having taken their Audience of Leave they broke off the Treaty abruptly and returned home In Ireland tho the Number of those that submitted on condition to be transported into foreign Service was so great that they became a great Burden to us before we could procure Shipping for their Transportation and tho the Enemy had received several Defeats by our Forces during the Winter wherein many of them had been killed and taken yet they continued to make Incursions into our Quarters carrying away Cattel and other Booty and having lately seized upon the Horses belonging to two Troops of Dragoons they were so encouraged that Sir Walter Dungan Commissary General of the Enemies Horse and Capt. Scurlock a forward Officer and one who had done us much Mischief with five hundred Foot and two hundred and fifty Horse marched into Wexford with a Design to plunder that County Lieutenant Colonel Throgmorton who commanded in those Parts having informed us of their March we sent two Troops of Horse to his Assistance who with them and about four hundred Foot charged the Enemy upon their Return and after some Dispute routed them killing two hundred of them upon the Place and many more with divers Officers in the Pursuit besides several of the Irish taken Prisoners with the Loss of about twenty killed and a hundred wounded on our side The Booty which the Enemy had gotten consisting chiefly in five hundred Cows was all recovered The Season of Action advancing the Commissioners of Parliament went to Kilkenny as well to confer with the Officers from all Parts of Ireland as to make the necessary Preparations for the ensuing Service of which the Earl of Westmeath who commanded the Enemies Forces in Leinster having notice sent to desire a safe Conduct for Commissioners to be named by them to treat with us at Kilkenny on their behalf which being granted they appointed Commissary General Dungan Lewis Viscount of Glanmaliere Sir Robert Talbot Sir Richard Barnwel Col. Walter Bagnol Col. Lewis Moor and Col. Thomas Tyrrell to be their Commissioners And on our part Commissary General Reynolds Col. Hewetson Col. Lawrence Col. Axtel Adjutant General Allen Major Henry Owen and Mr. James Standish Deputy-Treasurer of the Army were commissionated to treat and conclude with them in conformity to such Instructions as they received from a General Council and after several days Conference the Commissioners on each part came to an Agreement upon Terms that were the same in substance with those formerly granted to Col. Edmund Odonryer and his Party with liberty left for the Lord Muskerry Major General Taaf and other Commanders of the Irish in the Provinces of M●nster Connaught and Vlster yet in Arms to come in and accept of the same Conditions within a limited time The Articles were approved by the Earl of Westmeath on the behalf of the Irish and on the part of the Commonwealth of England by Me as Commander in chief of their Forces in Ireland In the mean time the Committee appointed by the Parliament for the Reformation of the Law in England made a considerable progress in that matter Judges were also sent into Scotland for the Administration of Justice there which they performed to the great satisfaction of that People The Parliament also appointed a Committee to consider of means to set at work all the Poor throughout the Nation and to make Provision for such as were not able to work that there might be no Beggar in England In Scotland our Forces having reduced the Castle of Dunotter which was the last Garison of that Nation that held out against the Parliament of England it was resolved to make four considerable Forts one at Inverness another at Leith a third at Ayre and a fourth at St. Johnsto●n and because the Enemy being entirely beaten out of the Field was retired to the mountainous Parts which to that time had been accounted inaccessible by the English it was agreed to endeavour to clear those Places of them also being perswaded that where any went before others might follow after To this end our Men were divided into three Parties the first consisted of Colonel Overcon's Regiment of Foot and a Regiment of Horse commanded by Major Blackmore The second of Colonel Hacker's Regiment of Horse and one of Foot commanded by Colonel Lilburn and the third was composed of the Regiment of Horse of Major General Dean and of a Regiment of Foot belonging to Lieutenant General Monk Each of these having a Party of Dragoons to attend them rendezvouzed at Loughaber and from thence fell separately into the Enemy's Quarters where they killed many of them and burned their Provisions pursuing them so
purpose Commissioners were appointed on both Parts to treat The Articles were the same in effect with those granted to the Irish in Leinster and other Places But much time was spent in the discussion of some Particulars especially that concerning the Murder of the English which was an Exception we never failed to make so that the Irish Commissioners seeming doubtful whether by the wording that Article they were not all included desired that it might be explained to which we consented and it was accordingly done They also made it their Request that instead of that Article relating to their real Estates whereby they were to enjoy such a part as should be allotted to them by the Qualifications to be agreed upon it might be expressed that they wholly submitted to the Mercy of the Parliament therein The Exercise also of their Religion was earnestly insisted upon by them but we refused to oblige our selves to any thing in that Particular declaring only that it was neither the Principle or Practice of the Authority which we served to impose their way of Worship upon any by violent means With these Explanations the Commissioners after a Fortnight's Debate concluded the Agreement the Lord Muskerry and my self confirming it his Son with Sir Daniel Obryan were delivered to me as Hostages for the performance of the Articles in consequence of which about five thousand Horse and Foot laid down their Arms and surrendred their Horses Whilst this was doing in Munster Col. Grace with some Forces that had not submitted passed the Shannon and being joined by many of the Irish of Connaught and Galway began to grow considerable being about three thousand most of them Foot Col. Ingoldsby having notice of them drew together a Party about Limerick and marching with them to find out the Enemy attacked them at a Pass which they disputed for some time but our Horse breaking in upon some of their Foot and encouraging the rest to fall on the Irish quitted their Post and shifted for themselves In this Action many of them were killed and taken Prisoners the rest escaping to the Bogs and Woods After this Defeat Col. Grace and his Party was forced to submit and to that end treated with Col. Zanchey but found that his obstinate Resistance so long had done him no Service for Col. Zanchey upon the Surrender of Inch to him and the Submission of Col. Grace's Forces caused a Captain a Lieutenant and a Serjeant with other Officers to be shot to death for revolting at Carrick to the Enemy according to the Liberty he had reserved to himself in that case by the Capitulation In the North of Ireland Col. Theophilus Jones being sent out with seven Troops of Horse one of Dragoons and three hundred Foot to get Provisions for the Relief of those Parts met with a Party of the Enemy consisting of sixteen hundred Foot and three hundred Horse whom he charged and after a sharp Dispute routed and put to flight killing many of their Officers and three hundred Souldiers upon the Place All the Arms of their Foot were taken and a hundred and fifty Horse with the Loss only of six of our Men killed and about twenty wounded The Earl of Clanrickard finding the Irish Affairs in a desperate Condition with what Forces he had left retired into the Isle of Carrick where being encompassed by our Men on all sides he submitted and obtained Liberty to transport himself with three thousand Men to any foreign Country in Friendship with the Commonwealth within the space of three Months The Parliament having already sent over to us five Companies of Foot under the Command of Licutenant Colonel Finch who had done very good Service at the Battel of Worcester resolved to send eight hundred more out of the Regiment of Major Gen. Lambert and an intire Regiment commanded by Col. Clark which Forces were procured rather to promote the Designs of General Cromvel than from any need we had of them our military Service in Ireland by the Blessing of God drawing towards a Conclusion most of the Irish Forces having submitted and laid down their Arms no Garison of any Strength holding out against us and many Thousand of the Enemy sent into foreign Service The Souldiers of Lambert's Regiment were countermanded upon his refusal to go to Ireland without the Character of Deputy but the Regiment of Col. Clark being throughly principled for Cromvel's Design continued their March by order of the Parliament who were perswaded to constitute Lieutenant General Fleetwood Commander in Chief of their Forces in Ireland and one of their Commissioners for the Civil Affairs in that Nation The States General upon the Return of their Ambassadors from England dispatched Orders to their Admiral to take all Advantages against the English and solicited the King of Denmark to break with us also encouraging him to detain twenty two English Merchant Ships which he had formerly seized coming through the Sound The Parliament to prevent the Dangers that might ensue by farther Delay gave Orders to General Blake to fall upon the Subjects of Holland wheresoever he should meet them and particularly to interrupt their Fishery upon the Northern Coast sending the Regiments of Col. Ingoldsby and Col. Goff on board the Fleet. General Blake having received these Instructions set sail for the North where meeting with about six hundred Herring-Busses under a Convoy of twelve Men of War he took and sunk the whole Convoy and having seized the Fish that the Busses had taken he released all the Vessels with the Seamen belonging to them Which Action was blamed by some who thought that by the help of those Ships we might have been enabled to erect a Fishery and thereby have made some Reparation to the English Nation for the Damages which they had sustained from the Dutch and that by detaining their Mariners we might have weakned and distressed them considerably they wanting Men for the management of their Shipping In the mean time Sir George Ayscue who was lately returned from the Reduction of Barbadoes and had convoyed into the River five Merchant Ships richly laden from the East Indies fell upon a Fleet of Hollanders consisting of sorty Merchant-men under the Convoy of four Men of War Of this Fleet he took seven forced divers on shore and the rest narrowly escaped About the same time a Ship from Guiny valued at forty thousand Pounds was by some of ours taken srom the Dutch with many other rich Ships to the great Prejudice and Interruption of their Trade To apply some Remedy to this the Dutch Admiral with his Fleet came into the Downs and anchored by Sir George Ayscue who was retired under Dover-Castle being much inferiour in Number to the Enemy but the Hollanders after a short stay left our Fleet and set sail without attempting any thing against us At Leghorn some of their Men of War preparing to seize such English Merchants Ships as lay in that Port the Grand Duke sent a Message to
from them When the British Refugees were glad to hear him named for that Service and he in an Extasie to serve his Country any where was arrived in England the Reception he found there was such as ought rather to be forgotten than transmitted to Posierity with any Remarks upon that Conjuncture Thus being denied the Honour of dying for his Country he returned to the more hospitable Place from whence he came But England had not one good Wish the less from him on the account of her last Vnkindness For at the very Article of Death some of his last Words were Wishes for the Prosperity Peace and Glory of his Country and that Religion and Liberty might be established there on so sure and solid a Foundation that the Designs of ill Men might never bring them into Danger for the time to come MEMOIRS OF EDMVND LVDLOW Esq. HAving seen our Cause betrayed and the most solemn Promises that could be made to the Asserters of it openly violated I departed from my Native Country And hoping that my Retirement may protect me from the Rage and Malice of my Enemies I cannot think it a mispending of some part of my leisure to employ it in setting down the most remarkable Counsels and Actions of the Parties engaged in the late Civil War which spread it self through the Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland wherein I shall not strictly confine my self to a relation of such things only in which I was personally concerned but also give the best Account I can of such other memorable Occurrences of those Times as I have learn'd from Persons well inform'd and of unsuspected Fidelity Those who make any Enquiry into the History of K. James's Reign will find that tho his Inclinations were strongly bent to render himself Absolute yet he chose rather to carry on that Design by Fraud than Violence But K. Charles having taken a nearer view of Despotick Government in his Journey to France and Spain tempted with the ghttering Shew and imaginary Pleasures of that empty Pageantry immediately after his Ascent to the Throne pulled off the Masque and openly discovered his Intentions to make the Crown absolute and independent In the beginning of his Reign he marry'd a Daughter of France who was not wanting on her part to press him upon all occasions to pursue the Design of enlarging his Power not omitting to solicite him also to mould the Church of England to a nearer Compliance with the See of Rome Wherein she was but too well seconded by corrupt Ministers of State of whom some were professed Papists and an ambitious Clergy whose Influence upon the King was always greater than could well consist with the Peace and Happiness of England 'T is true he called some Parliaments in the first Years of his Reign but the People soon became sensible he did it rather to empty their Purses than to redress their Grievances The Petition of Right as it was called passed in one of them yet by the manner of passing it and more by the way of keeping or rather breaking it in almost every Particular they clearly saw what they were to expect from him And the by the Votes passed in the House of Commons after a Message from the King to require their Attendance in order to a Dissolution thereby to prevent their Enquiry into his Father's Death complaining of the Grievances of the Nation and asserting the Liberties thereof declaring it Treason for any to pay Custom or other Taxes without the Authority of Parliament locking the Door of the House of Commons and compelling the Speaker to continue in the Chair till it pass'd He might have observed the Pulse of the Nation beating high towards Liberty yet contrary to his Promise to preserve the Privileges of Parliament he caused the Studies of their Members to be searched their Papers to be seized and their Persons to be imprisoned in the Tower where Sir John Elliot who was one of them lost his Life Divers others suffered in their Health and Estates being prosecuted with all Severity at the Common Law for discharging their Duty in Parliament After the Dissolution of which a Proclamation was published whereby it was made criminal in the People to speak any more of Parliaments The King having assumed this extraordinary Power resolved to make War against France not upon the account of those of the Reformed Religion as was pretended but grounded upon personal Discontents and to gratify the Revenge and Lust of his Favourite The Rochellers who once before upon Encouragement from England had endeavoured to desend their just Rights against the Encroachments of the French King till being deserted by the King of England they were necessitated to accept Terms from their King very disadvantageous to their Affairs were again by frequent Importunities and fair Promises prevailed with tho very unwillingly to assist the English with Provisions and such other things as they wanted in their Expedition against the Isle of Rhee From whence our Forces being repulsed the French King sent his Army against the Protestants of Rochel whose Provisions being before exhausted by the English they applied to the King of England for Succours according to his Promise Who as if he intended to assist them effectually caused a certain Number of Ships to be fitted out under the Conduct of Sir John Pennington But private Differences being soon after composed Sir John receiv'd a Letter from the King signed Charles Rex which was afterwards found by the Parliament amongst his Papers requiring him to dispose of those Ships as he should be directed by the French King and if any should refuse to obey those Orders to sink or fire them The King's Command was put in execution accordingly and by the help of those Ships the French became Masters of the Sea and thereby inabled to raise a Work composed of Earth Stones and Piles with which they entirely shut up the Mouth of the Harbour and so prevented them from any ReLef that way Being thus straitned on all sides they were forced to yield to the Pleasure of their King and that strong Town of 〈◊〉 wherein the Security of the Protestants of France chiefly consisted by this horrible Treachery was delivered up to the Papists and those of the Reform'd Religion in all Parts of that Kingdom exposed to the Rage of their bloody and cruel Enemies About this time the most profitable Preferments in the English Church were given to those of the Clergy who were most forward to promote the Imposition of new Ceremonies and Superstitions An Oath was enjoined by them with an c. several new Holy Days introduced and required to be observed by the People with all possible Solemnity at the same time that they were encouraged to profane the Lord's Day by a Book commonly called The Book of Sports printed and published by the King 's especial Command But this was not the only Work of which the Clergy were judged capable and therefore divers of them
entered the Lists as Champions of the Prerogative asserting that the Possessions and Estates of the Subject did of Right belong to the King and that he might dispose of them at his pleasure thereby vacating and annulling as much as in them lay all the Laws of England that secure a Propriety to the People Arbitrary Courts were erected and the Power of others enlarged such were the High Commission Court the Star-Chamber the Court of Honour the Court of Wards the Court of R●●●●●s c. Patents and Monopolies of almost every thing were granted to private Men to the great Damage of the Publick Knighthood Coat and Conduct-Money and many other illegal Methods were revived and put in execution to rob the People in order to support the Profusion of the Court And that our Liberties might be extirpated at once and we become Tenants at will to the King that rare Invention of Ship-Money was found out by Finch whose Solicitation and Importunities prevailed with the major part of the Judges of Westminster-Hall to declare for Law That for the Supply of Shipping to defend the Nation the King might impose a Tax upon the People That he was to be Judg of the Necessity of such Supply and of the Quantity to be imposed for it and that he might Imprison as well as Destrain in case of Refusal Some there were who out of a hearty Affection to the Service of their Country and a true English Spirit opposed these illegal Proceedings Amongst whom Mr. John Hampden of Buckingham-shire Judge Croke and Judge Hutton were of the most eminent Prerogative being wound up to this height in England and the Affairs of the Church tending to a Conjunction with the See of Rome before any farther Progress should be made therein here it was thought expedient that the Pulse of Scotland should be felt and they perswaded or compelled to the like Conformity To this end a Form of Publick Prayer was sent to Scotland more nearly approaching the Roman Office than that used in England The reading of this New Service-Book at Edinburgh was first interrupted by a poor Woman but the People were so generally discontented with the Book it self as well as the manner of imposing it that she was soon seconded by the Generality of them those who officiated hardly escaping with their Lives This produced divers Meetings of many of the Nobility Clergy and Gentry who entred into an Agreement or Covenant to root out Episcopacy Heresy and Superstition Those of the Clergy of England who had been the chief Advisers and Promoters of this Violence prevailed with the King to cause all such as should persist in their Opposition after a certain time to be proclaimed Traitors But the Scots not at all afrighted with these Menaces resolved to make good their former Undertaking Which the King perceiving and that this violent way took not effect began to incline to more moderate Counsels and by Commission empowered the Marquiss of Hamilton to treat them into a Submission consenting to the Suppression of the Liturgy High Commission Court and Articles of Perth But the Scots insisting upon the Abolition of Episcopacy and the King refusing his Consent to it they did it themselves in an Assembly held at Glasco and being informed that the King was preparing an Army to compel them to Obedience agreed upon the raising of some Forces to defend themselves The Clergy in England were not wanting to promote the New Levies against the Scots contributing largely thereunto which was but reasonable it being manifest to all that they were the principal Authors and Fomentors of these Troubles The Nobility and Gentry were likewise required to further this Expedition in which tho divers of them did appear yet was it rather out of Compliment than Affection to the Design being sensible of the Oppressions they themselves lay under and how dangerous to the People of England a thorow Success against the Scots might prove The King perceiving an Universal Dislike to this War as well in the People as in the Officers and Souldiers of his Army concluded an Agreement with the Scots at Berwick the 17 th of June 1639. But upon his Return to London under colour that many false Copies of the said Articles were published and dispersed by the Scots to the great Dishonour of the King the said Agreement was disowned and order'd to be burnt by the Hands of the Hangman Thereupon hoping that a Parliament would espouse his Quarrel and furnish him with Money for the carrying on of his Design he sammoned one to meet at Westminster on the 3 a of April 1640. which sitting but a little time thereby obtained the Name of the short Parliament The King by his Agents earnestly pressed them to grant him present Supplies for the Use of his Army but they sensible of former Usage after they had gratified him in that Particular and of the insupportable Burdens and Oppressions they lay under refused to grant any Subsidies till their Grievances should be redressed Whereupon the King put a Period to their sitting the fifth of May following the Earl of Strafford and others of his Council advising him so to do and to make use of other Means for his Supply as appeared to the ensuing Parliament by the Minutes of the Secretary of State taken at that Cabal and produced at the Trial of the said Earl The Sum of whose Advice was to this effect Sir You have now tried your People and are denied by them therefore you are clear before God and Man if you make use of other Means for your Supply You have an Army in Ireland c. This Counsel was prosecuted and new Preparations made for the carrying on of the War against the Scots all imaginable ways used to raise Supplies Privy Seals sent throughout the Nation for the Loan of Money Ship-Money Coat and Conduct-Money pressed to the height Commodities taken up on Credit and sold for ready Money Warrants also were delivered out to press Men to serve in the Army Brass-Money was propounded and some prepared but that Project took no effect The Clergy being permitted and encouraged by the King to sit in Convocation after the Dissolution of the Parliament took upon them not only to frame Canons and Oaths but also to impose four Shillings in the Pound upon Ecclesiastical Benefices throughout the Kingdom The King to give life to the Advance of his Army marched with them in Person the Earl of Northumberland as most popular wearing the name of General whilst Strafford with the Title of Lieutenant General had the principal Management of all The City of London had refused to pay some of the illegal Taxes before-mentioned whereupon divers of their chief Officers were imprisoned and an Order issued forth to take away the Sword from the Lord Mayor Whereupon the People rise and beset the House of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury who in conjunction with the Earl of Strafford was supposed to put the King upon these violent and
the King to sign the Warrant for his Execution Which they did upon the twelfth of May following and the 22 d of the same Month the Earl of Strafford was beheaded accordingly At this time a treacherous Design was set on foot not without the Participation of the King as appear'd under his own Hand to bring up the English Army and by Force to dissolve the Parliament the Plunder of London being promised to the Officers and Souldiers as a Reward for that Service This was confessed by the Lord Goring Mr. Piercy and others The Scots Army was also tried and the sour Northern Counties offered to be given to them in case they will undertake the same Design And tho neither of these Attempts did succeed yet the King pleased himself with hopes that a seasonable time for dissolving the Parliament would come and then all Power reverting into his own Hands he would deal with their new enacted Laws as he had done besore with the Petition of Right and with their Members as he had done with those of the former Parliaments And that he might not long languish in this Expectation he sent to the House desiring that at once they would make their full Demands and prepare Bills accordingly for his Assent assuring them of his Readiness to comply with their Desires But they perceiving the Design return'd for answer That they could not suddenly resolve on so weighty a Work but would do it with all possible speed In the mean time to improve the present Opportunity they prevail with the King to pass an Act for the Exclusion of the Bishops out of the House of Lords for tho he was unwilling to grant the Parliament any thing yet the State of his Affairs was such that he durst deny them no reasonable thing And now having paid to the Scots and English Armies what was due to them they dismissed them to their respective homes The King having laid his Designs in Ireland as will afterwards appear was not without great Difficulty prevailed with by the Parliament to consent to the disbanding of those eight thousand Irish Papists that had been raised there by the Earl of Strafford Soon after which he resolved upon a Journey to Scotland and tho the Parliament endeavoured to disswade him from it or at least to defer it to a fitter Opportunity he refused to hearken to them under pretence that the Affairs of that Kingdom necessarily required his Presence but in truth his great business was to leave no means unattempted to take off that Nation from their Adherence to the Parliament of England Before his Departure he signed a Commission to certain Persons impowering them to pass the Bills that should be tender'd in his Absence Whilst he was about this Work in Scotland the News of the Irish Rebellion was brought to him that the Papists throughout that Kingdom were in Arms that their Design to surprize and seize the Castle of Dublin had not succeeded being discovered by one O Connelly a Servant of Sir John Clotworthy's and that the Lord Macquire and Mac-mahon who were appointed to that end were taken and sent into England where they were soon after executed for the same The News of this Rrebellion as I have heard from Persons of undoubted Credit was not displcasing to the King tho it was attended with the Massacre of many thousands of the Protestants there Having made what Progress he could in Scotland confirming by Act of Parliament not only what he had formerly granted them but also what they had done in their Assembly at Glascow and in effect whatsoever they desired of him he returned to London where being received with Acclamations and treated at the Expence of the City he became elevated to that degree that in his first Speech to the Commons he sharply reproved them for that instead of thanking him for what he had done they continued to multiply their Demands and Dissatisfactions Whereupon the Parliament were confirmed in their Suspicions that he design'd to break what he had already granted so soon as he had Opportunity and Power in his hands to plead that he was under a Force as some of his Predecessors had done and so reverse what had been enacted for the Good of the People revenge himself on those who had been Instruments in compelling him thereto and fortify himself against the like for the future These Apprehensions made them carnestly insist upon settling the Militia of the Nation in such Hands as both Houses of Parliament should recommend to him particularly representing the great Dissatisfaction of the City of London that Sir William B●lfeur for refusing to permit the Earl of Strafford to escape was dismissed from his Charge of Lieutenant of the Tower and the Government of it put into the hands of one Lunsford a Souldier of Fortune of a profligate Conversation and fit for any wicked Design With much difficulty this Lunsford was removed and Sir John Conyers put into his place but the Parliament and City not satisfied with this Choice and having discovered that Sir John Suckling under pretence of raising a Regiment for Portugal was bringing together a number of Mento seize the Tower for the King it was at last entrusted to the Custody of the Lord Mayor of London About this time great Numbers of English Protestants flying from the bloody Hands of the Irish Rebels arrived in England filling all Places with sad complaints of their Cruelties to the Protestants of that Kingdom Whereupon the Parliament earnestly pressed the King to proclaim them Rebels but could not obtain it to be done till after many Weeks and then but forty of those Proclamations were printed and not above half of them published which was the more observed and resented by reason of the different Treatment that the Scots had met with who no sooner appeared in a much better Cause but they were forth with declared Rebels in every Parish-Church within the Kingdom of England The Rebels in Ireland pretended a Commission from the King for what they did which so alarm'd the People of England that the King thought himself necessitated to do something therein and therefore to carry on his Design he acquainted the Parliament that when an Army was raised he would go in Person to reduce them but they apprehending this pretended Resolution to be only in order to put himself at the Head of an Army that he might reduce the Parliament to his Will refused to consent and procured an Act to pass for the leaving of that War to the management of the two Houses the King obliging himself not to give Terms to any of the Rebels or to make Peace with them without the Parliament's Consent In this Act Provision was made for the satisfying of such as should advance Money for the reduction of Ireland out of the Rebels Lands in several Provinces according to the Rates therein mentioned Upon which considerable Sums of Money were s●on brought in The Parliament neglecting no Opportunity
were ordered to be hung up in Westminster-Hall and the Prisoners were secured in the Artillery-Ground near Tuttle-fields a Committee being appointed to consider how to dispose of them who permitted those to return home that would give Security for their living peaceably for the future but such as did not which was much the greater Number were shipped off to serve in Foreign Parts upon Conditions This Success was astonishing being obtained by Men of little Experience in Affairs of this nature and upon that account despised by their Enemies yet it proved the deciding Battel the King's Party after this time never making any considerable Opposition Leicester capitulated two days after and was surrendred and some of our Forces besieged Chester whilst the Scots did the like to Hereford The General Sir Thomas Fairfax marched with the Army to relieve our Friends at Taunton where Col. Welden was besieged took Highworth in his March and dissipated the Club-men defeated Goring's Forces at Lamport possessed himself of the Towns of Bridgwater and Bath by Capitulation and of Sherburn-Castle by storm Bristol also was surrendred after the Outworks and Fort had been taken by Assault with divers other Successes of less importance and therefore unnecessary to be mentioned here Lieutenant General Cromwell being sent to reduce such Garisons as were in the way to London began with the Castle of Winchester which was delivered to him upon Articles after which he marched to Basinghouse and erected a Battery on the East-side of it by which having made a Breach he stormed and entered it putting many of the Garison to the Sword and taking the rest with the Marquiss of Winchester whose House it was Prisoners Col. Robert Hammond had been before made Prisoner by the Marquiss and was kept here by him in order to secure his own Life which he did by putting himself under the Colonel's Protection when ours entred the Place It was suspected that Col. Hammond ' being related to the Earl of Essex whose half-Sister was married to the Marquiss of Winchester had suffered himself to be taken Prisoner on design to serve the said Marquiss The next Place he attempted was Langford-house near Salisbury which was yielded in a day or two upon Articles The Works about Basing were levelled Sherborn-Castle slighted as also Falston-house of which Major Ludlow was Governour who was removed to undertake the same Charge at Langford-house wherein the Parliament thought fit to keep a Garison by reason of its nearness to the Enemy The King as well to secure himself by getting as far from our Forces as he could as to raise a new Army if possible marched with the Horse that he had left towards North-Wales hoping in his way to relieve Chester besieged by Sir William Brereton and by his Presence in Wales to prevail with them to furnish him with a Body of Foot but he found himself frustrated in both these Designs For being worsted near Routen Heath by Major General Pointz who commanded a Brigade of the Parliament's in those Parts he saw the Face of Affairs much altered both in North and South-Wales In the last of which tho he was entertained civilly by some particular Persons yet the generality of the Country that during his Successes had subjected themselves even slavishly to his Instruments now fearing he might draw the Army of the Parliament after him and make their Country the Seat of War began to murmur against him and drew together a numerous Body in the nature of a Club-Army whispering amongst themselves as if they intended to seize his Person and deliver him to the Parliament to make their Peace Which being reported to the King he thought fit to retire from thence with his Forces only leaving a small Garison in the Castle of Cardiff which together with the County was soon after reduced to the Obedience of the Parliament by Col. Pritchard where Sir John Strangwaies was amongst others taken Prisoner who by order of the Parliament was sent up to London and committed to the Tower The Isle of Anglesey and such Places of North-Wales as had been held for the King were surrendred to the Parliament but Glamorganshire and the parts adjacent continued not long in their Duty but revolted at the Instigation of one Mr. Kerne of Winny who pretending great Fidelity to the Parliament was intrusted by them as their Sheriff for that County and made use of that Authority to raise the Country against them and to besiege Colonel Pritchard and the rest of their Friends in the Castle of Cardiff who being reduced to some necessity had been probably constrained to surrender it had not speedy relief been procured from the Parliament under the Conduct of Colonel Kirle of Glocestershire who falling suddenly upon the Enemy routed and killed many of them The King's Affairs being in this low condition in England and Wales he resolved to try what might be done in Scotland in order to which he commands the Lord Digby to march thither with a Party of sixteen hundred Horse and to join the Marquiss of Montross then in Arms for him in that Kingdom In obedience to the King's Order the Lord Digby marched from Newark and in his way surprized about eight hundred of ours near Sherbon but was afterwards routed by Col. Copley who recovered the Men and Arms taken from ours killed forty of the Enemy upon the spot took four hundred of them Prisoners and about six hundred Horses The Lord Digby's Coach and Papers were also taken This Party was defeated a second time by Sir John Brown and a third by Col. Bright who took two hundred of them Prisoners the Lord Digby with about twenty more hardly escaping to the Isle of Man and from thence to Ireland At the approach of Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army the Enemy raised the Siege of Taunton from thence the General marched to Honyton and the next day to Colompton from whence the Enemy retired in great disorder On October 20. the Army tho much weakned by hard Duty and the Rigour of the Season resolved upon the Blockade of Exeter Carmarthen Castle Monmouth and divers other Places were surrendred to the Parliament so that the King looking upon the Rebels in Ireland as his last Refuge sends Orders to the Earl of Ormond not only to continue the Cessation but to conclude a Peace with them upon condition they would oblige themselves to send over an Army to his Assistance against the Parliament of England The Supreme Council of Ireland as they called themselves having notice of it invited the Earl of Ormond to Kilkenny to treat about the same who being willing to see his Relations and his Estate in those Parts as also to expedite that Service accepted their Invitation and marched thither with about three or 4000 Horse and Foot for his Guard which by the advice of the Lord Mountgarret and the Supreme Council were dispersed into Quarters in the Villages thereabouts the Earl of Ormond suspecting nothing having sent Orders to
for their own Security The Scots Commissioners also who had been long tampering with him took hold of this Opportunity to perswade him to come to their Terms by augmenting his Fears as much as they could It was also proposed that he should conceal himself in England but that was thought unsafe if not impossible Some there were who proposed his going to Jersey which was then kept for him but the King being told by the Earl of Lanerick that the Ships provided by Sir John Barkley for that purpose had been discovered and seized tho Sir John affirms in his Papers that none were provided that Design was laid aside At last the King resolved to go to the Isle of Wight being as is most probable recommended thither by Cromwell who as well as the King had a good Opinion of Col. Hammond the Governour there To this end the King sent Mr. William Leg to Sir John Barkley and Mr. Ashburnham requiring them to assist him in his Escape and Horses were laid at Sutton in Hampshire to that purpose On the day following Sir John Barkley and Mr. Ashburnham waiting with Horses the King with Mr. Leg came out towards the Evening and being mounted they designed to ride through the Forest having the King for their Guide but they lost the way so that the Night proving dark and stormy and the Ways very bad they could not reach Sutton before break of day tho they hoped to have been there three hours before At Sutton they were informed that a Committee of the County was there sitting by Order of the Parliament which when the King heard he passed by that Place and continued his way towards Southampton attended only by Mr. Leg and went to a House of the Earl of Southampton at Titchfield having sent Sir John Barkley and Mr. Ashburnham to Col. Hammond Governour of the Isle of Wight with a Copy of the Letter left upon the Table in his Chamber at Hampton-Court and two other Letters which he had lately received one of them without a Name expressing great Fears and Apprehensions of the ill Intentions of the Commonwealth-Party against the King The other from Cromwell much to the same purpose with this Addition that in prosecution thereof a new Guard was designed the next day to be placed about the King consisting of Men of that Party He also sent by them a Letter to Col. Hammond wherein after he had expressed his Distrust of the Levelling Part of the Army as he termed it and the necessity lying upon him to provide for his own Safety he assured him that he did not intend to desert the Interest of the Army ordering his two Messengers to acquaint him that of all the Army the King had chosen to put himself upon him whom he knew to be a Person of a good Extraction and tho engaged against him in the War yet without any Animosity to his Person to which he was informed he had no Aversion that he did not think it fit to surprize him and therefore had sent the two Persons before-mentioned to advertise him of his Intentions and to desire his Promise to protect the King and his Servants to the best of his Power and if it should happen that he was not able to do it then to oblige himself to leave them in as good a Condition as he found them Being ready to depart with these Instructions Sir John Barkley said to the King that having no knowledg of the Governour he could not tell whether he might not detain them in the Island and therefore advised if they returned not the next day that he would think no more of them but secure his own Escape Towards Evening they arrived at Limmington but could not pass by reason of a violent Storm The next Morning they got over to the Island and went directly to Carisbrook-Castle the Residence of the Governour where they were told that he was gone towards Newport Upon this notice they rode after and having overtaken and acquainted him with their Message he grew pale and fell into such a trembling that it was thought he would have fallen from his Horse In this Consternation he continued about an hour breaking out sometimes into passionate and distracted Expressions saying O Gentlemen you have undone me in bringing the King into the Island if at least you have brought him and if you have not I pray let him not come for what between my Duty to the King and Gratitude to him upon this fresh Obligation of Confidence and the Discharge of my Trust to the Army I shall be confounded Upon this they took occasion to tell him that the King intended a Favour to him and his Posterity in giving him this Opportunity to lay a great Obligation upon him and such as was very consistent with his relation to the Army who had solemnly engaged themselves to the King but if he thought otherwise the King would be far from imposing his Person upon him but said the Governour if the King should come to any Mischance what would the Army and the King say to him that had refused to receive him To which they answered that he had not refused him who was not come to him Then beginning to speak more calmly he desired to know where the King was and wished that he had absolutely thrown himself upon him which made the two Gentlemen suspect that the Governour was not for their turn but Mr. Ashburnham fearing what would become of the King if he should be discovered before he had gained this point took the Governour aside and after some Conference prevailed with him to declare That he did believe the King relied on him as a Person of Honour and Honesty and therefore he did engage himself to perform whatsoever could be expected from a Person so qualified Mr. Ashburnham replied I will ask no more Then said the Governour Let us all go to the King and acquaint him with it When they came to Cowes-Castle where a Boat lay to carry them over Col. Hammond took Capt. Basket the Governour of that Castle with him and gave order for a File or two of Musqueteers to follow them in another Boat When they came to the Earl of Southampton's House Mr. Ashburnham leaving Sir John Barkley below with Col. Hammond and Capt. Basket went up to the King and having given an Account of what had passed between the Governour and them and that he was come with them to make good what he had promised the King striking his Hand upon his Breast said What have you brought Hammond with you O you have undone me for I am by this means made fast from stirring Mr. Ashburnham then told him that if he mistrusted Hammond he would undertake to secure him To which the King replied I understand you well enough but if I should follow that Counsel it would be said and believed that he ventured his Life for me and that I had unworthily taken it from him Telling him further That
Oath to perform that the King had broken this Oath and thereby dissolved our Allegiance Protection and Obedience being reciprocal that having appealed to the Sword for the Decision of the things in dispute and thereby caused the Effusion of a Deluge of the Peoples Blood it seemed to be a Duty incumbent upon the Representatives of the People to call him to an account for the same more especially since the Controversy was determined by the same means which he had chosen and then to proceed to the Establishment of an equal Commonwealth founded upon the Consent of the People and providing for the Rights and Liberties of all Men that we might have the Hearts and Hands of the Nation to support it as being most just and in all respects most conducing to the Happiness and Prosperity thereof Notwithstanding what was said Lieutenant General Cromwell not for want of Conviction but in hopes to make a better Bargain with another Party professed himself unresolved and having learn'd what he could of the Principles and Inclinations of those present at the Conference took up a Cushion and flung it at my Head and then ran down the Stairs but I overtook him with another which made him hasten down faster than he desired The next day passing by me in the House he told me he was convinced of the Desirableness of what was proposed but not of the Feasibleness of it thereby as I suppose designing to encourage me to hope that he was inclined to join with us tho unwilling to publish his Opinion lest the Grandees should be informed of it to whom I presume he professed himself to be of another Judgment Much time being spent since the Parliament had voted no more Addresses to be made to the King nor any Messages received from him and yet nothing done towards bringing the King to a Trial or the settling of Affairs without him many of the People who had waited patiently hitherto finding themselves as far from a Settlement as ever concluded that they should never have it nor any Ease from their Burdens and Taxes without an Accommodation with the King and therefore entred into a Combination through England Scotland and Ireland to restore him to his Authority To this end Petitions were promoted throughout all Countries the King by his Agents fomenting and encouraging this Spirit by all means possible as appeared by his intercepted Letters so that Lieutenant General Cromwell who had made it his usual Practice to gratify Enemies even with the Oppression of those who were by Principle his Friends began again to court the Commonwealth-Party inviting some of them to confer with him at his Chamber with which acquainting me the next time he came to the House of Commons I took the Freedom to tell him that he knew how to cajole and give them good Words when he had occasion to make use of them whereat breaking out into a Rage he said they were a proud sort of People and only considerable in their own Conceits I told him it was no new thing to hear Truth calumniated and that tho the Commonwealths-men were fallen under his Displeasure I would take the liberty to say that they had always been and ever would be considerable where there was not a total Defection from Honesty Generosity and all true Vertue which I hoped was not yet our Case The Earl of Warwick with the Fleet equipped for him by the Parliament sell down the River towards the Ships commanded by Prince Charles who presuming either that he would not fight him or perhaps come over to him lay some time in expectation but finding by the manner of his Approach that he was deceived in that Particular he thought it convenient to make all the sail he could for the Coast of Holland Our Fleet followed him as far as the Texel but according to the defensive Principle of the Nobility our Admiral thinking he had sufficiently discharged his Duty by clearing the Downs and driving the other Fleet from our Coast declined to fight tho he had an opportunity to engage Deal and Sandown Castles were reduced by Col. Rich and many of our revolted Ships not finding things according to their Expectation being constrained to serve under Prince Rupert instead of the Lord Willoughby who they desired might command them returned to the Obedience of the Parliament The Scots making all possible Preparations to raise an Army for the Restitution of the King Sir Thomas Glenham and Sir Marmaduke Langdale went to Scotland to join with them in that Enterprize and to draw what English they could to promote the Design The first of these seized upon Carlisle by order of the Scots tho contrary to their Articles whereupon the Parliament thinking it necessary to provide for the Security of Berwick placed a good Garison therein and resolving to reinforce the Militia of each County sent down some of their Members to give Life to the Preparations Amongst others I was appointed to go down to the County for which I served where we agreed to raise two Regiments of Foot and one of Horse In the mean time the Enemy was not idle and taking advantage of the Discontents of Capt. Poyer Governour of Pembroke they prevailed with him to revolt and declare for the King Other disaffected Parts of the Nation not yet ready for open Opposition acted with more Caution preparing and encouraging Petitions to the Parliament for a Personal Treaty with the King of which the Principal were Surrey Essex and Kent In Essex they met at Chelmsford in a tumultuous manner and seized Sir William Masham and other Members of Parliament who being ready to use all gentle Methods to prevent farther Inconveniences sent down Mr. Charles Rich second Son to the Earl of Warwick and Sir Harbottle Grimston two of their Members to endeavour to quiet that tumultuous Spirit with Instructions and Power to promise Indemnity to all that should desist from the prosecution of what they desired in this violent way which Commission they managed so well that upon their Promise to present the Requests of the Petitioners which were drawn up in writing to the Parliament and to return them an Answer the People of the Country dispersed themselves to their own Houses But the Sedition of the Surrey-men was not terminated so easily of whom many hundreds came to the doors of the Parliament and not being satisfied with the Answer the Parliament thought fit to give to their Petition after they had been heated with Drink and animated by the Cavalier Party they resolved to force from them another Answer and with intolerable Insolence pressed upon their Guard beating the Sentinels to the main Guard which was drawn up at the upper end of Westminster-Hall where they wounded the Officer who commanded them and being intreated to desist became more violent so that the Souldiers were necessitated in their own Defence and discharge of their Duty to fire upon them whereby two or three of the Country-men were
of Affairs declined to concur with them in the same Yet both of them with the City of London joined in driving on a Personal Treaty with the King in the Isle of Wight and to that end the Lords and Commons revoked the Votes for Non-Addresses whereby the King seemed to be on sure ground for that if the Scots Army failed he might still make Terms with the Parliament The King's Party in Colchester were also much encouraged with hopes of Relief from the Scots Army who were very numerous and well furnished with all things but a good Cause To fight this formidable Army the Lieutenant General could not make up much above seven thousand Horse and Foot and those so extremely harassed with hard Service and long Marches that they seemed rather fit for a Hospital than a Battel With this handful of Men he advanced towards the Enemy and about Preston in Lancashire both Armies met on the 17 th of August 1648. The English who were in the Scots Army had the Honour of the Van and for a time entertained ours with some Opposition but being vigorously pressed by our Men they were forced to retreat to a Pass which they maintained against us whilst they sent to their General for Succours which he not sending on purpose as was said that the English might be cut off and his Party kept intire to enable him to set up for himself and give Law to both Nations they began to shift for themselves which made such an Impression upon the Scots that they soon followed their Example retreating in a disorderly manner Ours followed them so close that most of their Foot threw down their Arms and yielded themselves Prisoners Many of the principal Officers of their Foot were taken with all their Artillery Ammunition and Baggage Hamilton with four or five thousand Horse in a Body left the Field and was pursued by Col. Thorney a Member of Parliament and Colonel of a Regiment of Horse a worthy and a valiant Man who following them too close and unadvisedly run himself upon one of their Lances wherewith he was mortally wounded which he perceiving by the wasting of his Spirits to express his Affection to his Country and Joy for the Defeat of the Enemy desired his Men to open to the right and left that he might have the Satisfaction to see them run before he died The Enemies Body of Horse kept themselves together for some days roving up and down the Country about Leicestershire which County the Lord Grey of Grooby had raised and brought together about three thousand Horse and Foot to preserve the Country from Plunder and to take all possible Advantages against the Enemy and tho a Body of Horse from the Army was in pursuit of the Scots yet the Leicestershire Party came up first to them at Uttoxeter in Staffordshire where the Body of the Enemies Horse was and whilst the Scots were treating with the other Party from the Army the Lord Grey's Men observing no Guards kept entred upon them before any Conditions were made whereupon Hamilton surrendred himself to Col. Wayte an Officer of the Leicestershire-Party delivering to him his Scarf his George and his Sword which last he desired him to keep carefully because it had belonged to his Ancestors By the two Parties the Scots were all made Prisoners and all their Horses seized the Duke of Hamilton was carried Prisoner to Windsor-Castle and all their Standards of Horse and Foot were taken and sent up to London where the Parliament ordered them to be hung up in Westminster-Hall The House of Lords who had avoided to declare the Scots Enemies whilst their Army was entire now after their Defeat prevented the House of Commons and moved that a Day might be appointed to give God Thanks for this Success The News of this Victory being carried to the Isle of Wight the King said to the Governour that it was the worst News that ever came to England to which he answered That he thought the King had no cause to be of that Opinion since if Hamilton had beaten the English he would certainly have possessed himself of the Thrones of England and Scotland The King presently replied You are mistaken I could have commanded him back with the motion of my Hand Which whether he could do or no was doubtful but whatever Reasons he had for this Opinion it seemed very unseasonable to own it openly in that Conjuncture Lieutenant General Cromwell marched with part of his Army to Edinburgh where he dispossessed the Hamiltonian Party of their Authority and put the Power into the hands of the Presbyterians by whom he was received with great Demonstrations of Joy and tho lately they looked upon the Independent Party as the worst of their Enemies yet now they owned and embraced them as their best Friends and Deliverers and having notice given them that the English Army was about to return into England they prevailed with the Lieutenant General to leave Major General Lambert with a Body of Horse till they could raise more Forces to provide for their own Safety The Treaty with the King being pressed with more heat than ever and a Design visibly appearing to render all our Victories useless thereby by the Advice of some Friends I went down to the Army which lay at that time before Colchester where attending upon the General Sir Thomas Fairfax to acquaint him with the state of Affairs at London I told him that a Design was driving on to betray the Cause in which so much of the Peoples Blood had been shed that the King being under a Restraint would not account himself obliged by any thing he should promise under such Circumstances assuring him that most of those who pushed on the Treaty with the greatest Vehemency intended not that he should be bound to the performance of it but designed principally to use his Authority and Favour in order to destroy the Army who as they had assumed the Power ought to make the best use of it and to prevent the Ruin of Themselves and the Nation He acknowledged what I said to be true and declared himself resolved to use the Power he had to maintain the Cause of the Publick upon a clear and evident Call looking upon himself to be obliged to pursue the Work which he was about Perceiving by such a general Answer that he was irresolute I went to Commissary General Ireton who had a great Influence upon him and having found him we discoursed together upon the same Subject wherein we both agreed that it was necessary for the Army to interpose in this matter but differed about the time he being of opinion that it was best to permit the King and the Parliament to make an Agreement and to wait till they had made a full Discovery of their Intentions whereby the People becoming sensible of their own Danger would willingly join to oppose them My Opinion was that it would be much easier for the Army to keep them
the Place beat a Parley and sent out Commissioners to treat Articles were agreed and signed on both sides whereby it was concluded that the Town with all the Arms and ammunition therein should be delivered up the next Morning to such of our Forces as should be appointed to receive the same After this Agreement was made and signed the General was informed that Col. Hugh O Neal Governour of the Place with all the Garison had marched out at the beginning of the Night towards Waterford before the Commissioners came out to treat It something troubled the Commanders to be thus over-reach'd but Conditions being granted they thought it their Duty to keep them with the Town Dungarvan and Carrick were next reduced where Col. Reynolds being left with his Regiment of Horse the Lieutenant General with the Army marched towards the County of Waterford The Enemy having observed ours marching on the other side of the River took that Advantage to draw together a considerable Body of Horse and Foot with which they marched with all diligence to Carrick and stormed it not at all doubting to carry the Place wherein there was nothing but Horse armed only with Swords and Pistols to defend a Wall of great compass Yet did our Men manage their Defence so well making use of Stones and whatsoever might be serviceable to them that the Enemy was beaten off with loss so that tho Forces were sent from the Army to relieve their Friends upon the first notice of their Danger yet they found the Work done at their Arrival The Army began now to prepare for the Siege of Waterford but by the hard Service of this Winter and other Accidents being much diminished and those that remained being but in a sickly Condition it was thought fit to send Orders to Dublin requiring the Forces there who were in better Health to march towards Wexford in order to reinforce the Army before Waterford The Lord Inchequin who had notice of their March having formed a Body of two thousand five hundred Horse and some Foot resolved to fall upon them which he did between Arclo and Wexford our Forces not amounting to more than fifteen hundred Foot and five hundred Horse The Enemies charged our Horse with such Fury and Numbers that they were forced to retreat to their Foot after which falling upon our Foot they obliged them to retire to the Rocks that were on the Shore in great Disorder but some of our Horse with a part of our Foot rallying again charged a Body of their Horse with such Vigour that they broke them and killed many of them amongst whom were divers considerable Persons which so discouraged the rest that tho they were the choicest of the Enemies Men and many of ours so distempered with the Flux that they were forced to fight with their Breeches down yet durst they not make any farther Attempt against them but drew off and permitted ours to march to their designed Rendezvouz without any more Interruption By which it eminently appeared of what Importance it is towards the obtaining Success to fight in the Cause of our Country for these very Men as long as they were engaged with us performed Wonders against the Rebels and now being engaged with them were almost as easily overcome as they had beaten the Irish before and this was so visible even to the Irish themselves that some time after at a Consultation of the Chief Officers of Leinster where it was debated what Course to take in order to destroy our Army some advising to draw into a Body and fight us others to betake themselves to the Woods and Bogs and from thence to break our Forces by Parties the Lord of Glanmaleiro assured them of a way which if taken would certainly effect it and that was to induce us to make Peace with them for said he they are a successful Army and our Men are dispirited and not likely to get any thing by fighting with them and to weary them out by our Surprizes and Depredations is impossible as long as the way from England is open for their Supplies but the other way proposed will infallibly ruin them for did not our Ancestors by the same means render the Conquests of Queen Elizabeth fruitless to England and have we not thereby ruined the Earl of Ormond and Inchequin already who having been always successful when against us have been famous for nothing since their Conjunction with us but the Losses and Repulses which they have sustained so that if we can perswade this Army to make a Truce or League with us they will become as unfortunate as the fornier Whilst the Lieutenant General was making Preparations for the Siege of Waterford a Letter was brought to him from the Parliament requiring his Attendance in England In order to which he left the Command of the Army with Commissary General Ireton to carry on the remaining part of the Work going himself to visit those Places in Munster which had lately submitted to the Parliament with intention to settle the Civil as well as Military Affairs of that Province To this end he impowered John Coke Esq to be Chief Justice of Munster and having accomplished such things as he designed embarked for England and soon after landed at Bristol In the mean time the Treaty between Prince Charles and the Presbyterian Party in Scotland hastening towards a Conclusion the Forces which they had raised by the Encouragement of our Army after they had rescued them from the Power of the Hamiltonian Party fell upon Montrose killed many of his Men and took him with divers other Officers Prisoners and amongst them Major General Hurry and Capt. Spotiswood who was said to have been concerned in the Assassination of Dr. Dorislaus our Agent in Holland They were all three condemned to death and hanged Montrose being carried to the Place of Execution in an ignominious manner with the Declarations issued out by him for the King tied about his Neck where he was executed on a Gibbet of thirty Foot high His Quarters were placed upon the Gate through which their King was to pass at his coming to Edinburgh which could not but move his Indignation if he had the least Sense of Honour because he had acted by his Commission and in order to vest him with that absolute and uncontrolable Power which Kings think to be most for their Advantage but the King being instructed with other Maxims struck up the bargain with the Presbyterians and engaged to take the Covenant whereupon they cried him up for a great Convert Some Sycophants in the English Parliament a Race of Men never wanting in great Councils pressed earnestly for settling two thousand five hundred Pounds a Year upon the Lieutenant General according to a Vote formerly passed in the House or that it might at least be read once or twice before his Arrival at Westminster he being then upon his way from Bristol Upon this Motion I took the liberty to acquaint the House
that tho I would not oppose that Motion yet it was but reasonable to make good their Promises also to Persons that had served them usefully in former occasions desiring them to remember the past Services of those that they knew continued still to be faithful to them tho not then in actual Employment and particularly not to forget the important Services of Major General Skippon nor the Vote they had passed to settle one thousand Pounds a Year upon him which hitherto had been insignificant to him Upon this Motion the Parliament ordered that the said Sum should be paid yearly to him out of the Receipt at Goldsmiths-Hall till so much should be settled upon him out of the forseited Lands in Ireland by Act of Parliament In consideration of this piece of Justice the Major General did me ever after the Honour to call me his Real Friend And now the Parliament being desirous to let the People see that they designed not to perpetuate themselves after they should be able to make a compleat Settlement of Affairs and provide for the Security of the Nation from Enemies both abroad and at home whom they had yet in great Numbers to contend with resolved that the House would upon every Wednesday turn themselves into a Grand Committee to debate concerning the manner of Assembling and Power of future successive Parliaments the Number of Persons to be appointed to serve for each County that the Nation might be more equally represented than hitherto had been practised and touching the Qualifications of the Electors as well as those to be elected which Order was constantly observed and considerable Progress from time to time made therein The Lieutenant General being arrived and having resumed his Place in the House the Parliament ordered their Speaker to give him Thanks in their Name for the Services he had done for the Commonwealth in the Nation of Ireland And now the Council of State concluding it highly necessary to make some Preparations against the Storm which threatned us from the North and knowing that the Satisfaction of their General was of great Importance to that Service desired the Lord Fairfax to declare his Resolution concerning the same who after a day or two's Consideration at the Instigation chiefly as was thought of his Wife upon whom the Presbyterian Clergy had no small Influence seemed unwilling to march into Scotland but declared that in case the Scots should attempt to invade England he would be ready to lay down his Life in opposing them We laboured to perswade him of the Reasonableness and Justice of our Resolution to march into Scotland they having already declared themselves our Enemies and by publick Protestation bound themselves to impose that Government upon us which we had found necessary to abolish and to that end had made their Terms with Prince Charles waiting only an Opportunity as soon as they had strengthned themselves by foreign Assistance which they expected to put their Design in execution after we should be reduced to great Difficulties incident to the keeping up of an Army in expectation of being invaded by them 〈◊〉 him that we thought our selves indispeusably obliged in Duty to our Country and as we tendred the Peace and Prosperity of it as well as to prevent the effusion of the Blood of those who had been and we hoped upon better Information would be our Friends to march into Scotland and either to understand from them that they are our Friends or to endeavour to make them so chusing rather to make that Country the Seat of the War than our own But the Lord Fairfax was unwilling to alter his Resolution in consideration of any thing that could be said Upon this Lieutenant General Cromwell pressed that notwithstanding the Unwillingness of the Lord Fairfax to command upon this occasion they would yet continue him to be General of the Army prosessing for himself that he would rather chuse to serve under him in his Post than to command the greatest Army in Europe But the Council of State not approving that Advice appointed a Committee of some of themselves to confer farther with the General in order to his Satisfaction This Committee was appointed upon the Motion of the Lieutenant General who acted his part so to the Life that I really thought him in earnest which obliged me to step to him as he was withdrawing with the rest of the Committee out of the Council-Chamber and to desire him that he would not in Compliment and Humility obstruct the Service of the Nation by his Refusal but the Consequence made it sufficiently evident that he had no such Intention The Committee having spent some time in Debate with the Lord Fairfax without any Success returned to the Council of State whereupon they ordered the Report of this Affair to be made to the Parliament Which being done and some of the General 's Friends informing them that tho he had shewed some Unwillingness to be employed in this Expedition himself yet being more unwilling to hinder the undertaking of it by another he had sent his Secretary who attended at the door to surrender his Commission if they thought fit to receive it the Secretary was called in and delivered the Commission which the Parliament having received they proceeded to settle an annual Revenue of five thousand Pounds upon the Lord Fairfax in consideration of his former Services and then voted Lieutenant General Cromwell to be Captain General of all their Land Forces ordering a Commission forthwith to be drawn up to that effect and referred to the Council of State to hasten the Preparations for the Northern Expedition A little after as I sat in the House near General Cromwell he told me that having observed an Alteration in my Looks and Carriage towards him he apprehended that I had entertained some Suspicions of him and that being perswaded of the Tendency of the Designs of us both to the Advancement of the Publick Service he desired that a Meeting might be appointed wherein we might with freedom discover the Grounds of our Mistakes and Misapprehensions and create a good Understanding between us for the future I answered that he had discovered in me what I had never perceived in my self and that if I troubled him not so frequently as formerly it was either because I was conscious of that weight of Business that lay upon him or that I had nothing to importune him withal upon my own or any other account yet since he was pleased to do me the Honour to desire a free Conversation with me I assured him of my Readiness therein Whereupon we resolved to meet that Afternoon in the Council of State and from thence to withdraw to a private Room which we did accordingly in the Queen's Guard-Chamber where he endeavoured to perswade me of the Necessity incumbent upon him to do several things that appeared extraordinary in the Judgment of some Men who in opposition to him took such Courses as would bring Ruin upon
not possibly undertake it without hazarding the Ruin of my Family and Estate But the Council refused to allow my Excuse which indeed was real and unseigned telling me that it would be more proper to represent those things to the Parliament when the Report should be made to them from the Council which was agreed upon to this effect That the House should be moved to appoint me Lieutenant General of the Horse in Ireland and that General Cromwell Major General Ireton my self Col. John Jones and Major Richard Salloway or any three of us should be authorized by Act of Parliament to be Commissioners for the Administration of the Civil Affairs in that Nation The News of this Transaction was unwelcome to some of my nearest Relations and best Friends not only for the Reasons above-mentioned but upon suspicion that this Opportunity was taken by the General to remove me out of the way lest I should prove an Obstruction to his Designs But I could not think my self so considerable and therefore could not concur with them in that Opinion Yet I endeavoured to clear my self of this Employment and knowing that this Affair was carried on chiefly by the General 's Influence I applied my self to him acquainting him with my present Circumstances and assuring him that it was altogether inconvenient and might prove very prejudicial to me He replied that Mens private Affairs must give place to those of the Publick that he had seriously considered the Matter and that he could not find a Person so fit for those Employments as my self desiring me therefore to acquiesce It was not many days before the Council of State made their Report of this Affair to the Parliament where I again pressed the Reasons I had used before to the Council with as much Earnestness as I could But they would not hearken to me and without any Debate presently concurred with the Council therein with the addition only of Mr. John Weaver a Member of the House to be one of the Commissioners appointed to manage the Civil Government In the mean time our Army proceeded successfully in Ireland where they reduced Waterford after a Siege of some Weeks which Place the Enemy had considerably fortified but their Provisions failing they were forced to surrender it upon Articles During this Siege the Army was supplied with all Necessaries by some of our Ships that came into the Harbour to that end After the reduction of Waterford a Detachment was made from our Army to besiege Duncannon a Place of considerable Strength having seven hundred Men within to desend it tho one third of their Number had been sufficient for that purpose This or some other Cause produced the Plague amongst them which lessened their Number and made their Provisions to hold out the longer yet at last they were constrained to deliver up the Place with all the Arms and Ammunition to our Men. The Lord of Esmond had been Governour of this Place for the English at the beginning of the War and held it out for the space of six or seven Months against the Rebels of whom he killed great Numbers before it during the Siege that he sustained but being driven to great Extremities he was obliged to surrender it to them which went so near the gallant old Gentleman's Heart that he soon after departed this Life The next Place our Army attempted was Carlo an inland Garison distant from Dublin about thirty Miles and lying upon the River Barrow The Place was esteemed by the Enemy to be of great Importance and therefore fortified by them with divers Works besides it had a small Castle at the foot of the Bridg and a River running under the Walls of the Castle The Country beyond it were also their Friends and furnished them with Provisions in great abundance To prevent which Major General Ireton found it necessary to employ the principal part of his Forces on the other side of the River Barrow yet by what means to secure a Communication between the two parts of his Army was a great Difficulty they having neither Boats nor Casks sufficient for that purpose In the end they sell upon this Expedient to bring together great Quantities of the biggest Reeds and tying them up in many little Bundles with small Cords they fastned them to two Cables that were fixed in the Ground on each side of the River at the distance of about eight or ten Yards from each other These being covered with Wattles bore Troops of Horse and Companies of Foot as well as Bridg arched with Stone Whilst these things were doing most of the Earl of Ormona's Forces retired into Connaught and those of the Lord Muskerry into Kerry the Lord Castlehaven also after he had fired most of the small Castles in Leinster and Munster marched out of those Parts But the Enemy which most threatned the Disturbance of the Parliament was that of Scotland where all Interests were united in opposition to the present Authority in England They had also many who favoured their Design in our Nation as well Presbyterians as Cavaliers the former of these were most bold and active upon presumption of more Favour in case of ill Success The Parliament being sensible of these things published a Declaration shewing that they had no Design to impose upon the Nation of Scotland any thing contrary to their Inclinations That they would leave them to chuse what Government they thought most convenient for themselves provided they would suffer the English Nation to live under that Establishment which they had chosen That it evidently appeared that the Scots were acted by a Spirit of Domination and Rule and that nothing might be wanting to compel us to submit to their Impositions they had espoused the Interests of that Family which they themselves had declared guilty of much precious Blood and resolved to force the same upon England That these and other things there mentioned had obliged them to send an Army into Scotland for their own Preservation and to keep the Scots from destroying themselves which they were about to do resolving notwithstanding to extend all possible Favour to such as were seduced through Weakness and misled by the Malice of others After this General Cromwell hastned to the Army which consisted of about twenty thousand Horse and Foot where having removed a Colonel or two with some inferiour Officers who were unwilling to be employed in that Service and made up a Regiment for Col. Monk with six Companies out of Sir Arthur Haslerig's and six out of Col. Fenwick's Regiment he marched into Scotland without any Opposition most of the People being fled from their Habitations towards Edinburgh whither all the Enemies Strength was drawn together The English Army drew up within sight of the Town but the Scots would not hazard all by the decision of a Battel hoping to tire us out with frequent Skirmishes and harassing our Men relying much upon the Unsutableness of the Climate to our Constitutions especially if they
Crawford and others were met at Elliot to consult of means to relieve that Town he sent a Party of Horse and Dragoons commanded by Col. Alured and Col. Morgan to surprize them which they did and the principal of them being taken were sent Prisoners to London where they were committed to the Tower After this he summoned the Town of Dundee but the Place being well fortified and provided with a numerous Garison refused to surrender whereupon he storm'd it and being entred put five or six hundred to the Sword and commanded the Governour with divers others to be killed in cold Blood Tho the News of these Successes much discouraged our Enemies in Ireland yet those in Limerick were not without some hopes that either the Plague or Scarcity of Provisions together with the badness of the Weather might constrain us to raise the Siege and therefore resused to accept such Conditions as we were willing to grant The Line which we had made about the Town and the Forts being in a condition of Defence the Deputy resolved to look after the Enemy in the County of Clare and if possible to get some Provisions from thence for the Relief of the Army He took me with him knowing I had been in those Parts before and between three and four thousand Horse and Foot At our Approach to the Places where the Enemies usually were we divided our Body the Deputy being at the Head of one and I at the Head of the other Party hoping by this means so to encompass the Enemy that they should not escape us but tho we sometimes came within sight of them and used our utmost Endeavours to engage them yet by reason of the Advantages they made of the Woods Rocks Hills and Bogs for their Retreat we could do them little hurt save by seizing their Horses and Cattel In the absence of this Party from the Army the Enemy with two thousand Foot made a Sally out of Limerick so unexpectedly upon our Men that they had almost surprized our Guard of Horse but ours immediately mounting and being not accustomed to be beaten charged them and notwithstanding the Inequality of the Forces they being much superiour to us in Number put them to a stand till a Party of Horse and Foot came to their Relief and forced the Enemies to retreat under the Walls of the Town from whence their Men fired so thick upon ours that their own Men had time to get into the Town When this Account was brought from Sir Hardress Waller to the Deputy he was upon his Return to the Army before Limerick having left me with about two thousand Horse and Foot as well to ease our Quarters about the Town not knowing how long we might lie before it as to endeavour to perswade the Garison of Clare-Castle a strong Place and situated upon the River to surrender To that end being arrived in the Army he sent one Lieutenant Colonel White who had served the Enemy and now had a Commission to raise Forces for the King of Spain with an Order to me to permit him to go to the said Garison that he might inform them of the Impossibility of their receiving any Relief and of the Necessities to which Limerick was already reduced and thereby prevail with them to make speedy provision for themselves and to list under him but his Design proving ineffectual I found my self obliged to return to the Camp before Limerick where we made provision for a Winter-Siege Great Numbers of People endeavoured to get out of the Town sent out by the Garison either as useless Persons or to spread the Contagion amongst us The Deputy commanded them to return and threatned to shoot any that should attempt to come out for the future But this not being sufficient to make them desist he caused two or three to be taken out in order to be executed and the rest to be whipped back into the Town One of those that were to be hanged was the Daughter of an old Man who was in that number which was to be sent back He desired that he might be hanged in the room of his Daughter but that was refused and he with the rest driven back into the Town After which a Gibbet was erected in the sight of the Town-Walls and one or two Persons hanged up who had been condemned for other Crimes that those within might suppose that Execution to be for coming out and by this means they were so terrified that we were no farther disturbed on that account The Deputy upon Information received that some in the Town were desirous to surrender and that others did violently oppose them endeavoured by Letters and Messages to foment the Division declaring against several Persons by name that were most active and obstinate for holding out that they should have no Benefit by the Articles to be agreed upon severely inveighing against a Generation of Men whom he called Souldiers of Fortune that made a trade of the War and valued not the Lives or Happiness of the People This wrought the desired effect and so encouraged the complying Party that it was carried for a Treaty and Commissioners again appointed on each side We insisted that about seventeen of the principal Persons in the Place should be excepted out of the Articles of which number were Col. Hugh O Neal the Governour the Mayor of the City the Bishops of Limerick and Emmene Major General Purcel Sir Geoffrey Galloway Sir Jeffrey Barrow one Wolf a Priest Sir Richard Everard and others But these made so strong a Party that the Treaty was broke up without any Agreement and no other way left to reduce them but by Force In order to which the Deputy caused the great Guns to be landed from the Ships and others to be brought from the adjacent Garisons With these he erected a Battery against the Town in the most convenient Place that could possibly have been found being against a part of the Wall which tho it was of the same Height and Thickness with the rest of it and also as well flanked yet it proved not to be lined with Earth within as all the other Parts were nor had any Counterscarp without In the mean time the Parliament seeing a Period put to the War in England and Scotland and that of Ireland drawing towards a Conclusion resolved to gratify such Officers as the General recommended to their Favour and thereupon settled a thousand Pounds yearly on Major General Lambert three hundred on Major General Overton the same on Col. Pride and Col. Whalley five hundred Pounds annually on Commissary General Reynolds a thousand Pounds per annum on the Lord Broghil They also settled four thousand Pounds a Year on the Lord General himself out of the Estates of the Duke of Buckingham and Marquiss of Worcester besides the two thousand five hundred Pounds a Year formerly granted This they did to oblige him by all means possible to the performance of his Duty or to leave