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A88244 Regall tyrannie discovered: or, A discourse, shewing that all lawfull (approbational) instituted power by God amongst men, is by common agreement, and mutual consent. Which power (in the hands of whomsoever) ought alwayes to be exercised for the good, benefit, and welfare of the trusters, and never ought other wise to be administered: ... In which is also punctually declared, the tyrannie of the kings of England, from the dayes of William the invader and robber, and tyrant, alias the Conqueror, to this present King Charles, ... Out of which is drawn a discourse, occasioned by the tyrannie and injustice inflicted by the Lords, upon that stout-faithful-lover of his country, and constant sufferer for the liberties thereof, Lieut. Col. John Lilburn, now prisoner in the Tower. In which these 4. following positions are punctually handled ... Vnto which is annexed a little touch, upon some palbable miscarriages, of some rotten members of the House of Commons: which house, is the absolute sole lawmaking, and law-binding interest of England. Lilburne, John, 1614?-1657. 1647 (1647) Wing L2172; Thomason E370_12; ESTC R201291 90,580 119

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him in the House of those Peers by way of Charge bu● sends him no Copy of it although it was impossible for him being so close as he was to get a Copy of it himselfe the greatest part of which is taken out of his booke called The Freemans Freedome vindicated and his Epistle to Mr. Wolaston the Jaylor of Newgate both of them made by him in Newgate many dayes after the Lords had Cōmitted him which letter of his to Mr. Wollaston for the excellent matter therein we will insert heere verbarim SIR I this morning have seen a Warrant from the House of Lords made yesterday to Command you to bring me this day at 10. a clocke before them the Warrant expresseth no cause wherefore I should dance attendance before them neither do I know any ground or reason wherefore I should nor any Law that compels mee thereunto for their Lordships sitting by vertue of Prerogative-pa●ents and not by election or common consent of the People haue as Magna Charta and other good Lawes of the Land tels me nothing to do to try me or any Common●r whatsoever in any criminall case either for life limb liberty or estate but contrary hereunto as incrochers and usurpers upon m● freedomes and liberties they lately and illegally endeavored to try m● a Commoner at their Bar for which I under my hand and seale protested to their faces against them as violent and illegal incrochers upon the rights and liberties of me and all the Commons of England a copy of which c. I in Print herewith send you and at their Bar I openly appealed to my competent proper legall Tryers and Judges the Commons of England assembled in Parliament for which their Lordships did illegally arbitarily and tyrannically commit me to prison into your custody unto whom divers dayes agoe I sent my Appeale c which now remains in the hands of their Speaker if it be not already read in their house unto which I do and will stand and obey their commands Sir I am a free-man of England and therefore I am not to be used as a slave or Vas●all by the Lords which they have alreday done and would further doe I also am a man of peace and quietnesse and desire not to mo●est any if I be not forced thereunto therefore I desire you as you tender my good and your own take this for an answer that I cannot without turning traytor to my liberties dance attendance to their Lordships Barre being bound in conscience duty to God my self mine and my Country to oppose their incroachments to the death which by the strength of God I am resolved to do Sir you may or cause to be exercised upon me some force or violence to pull and drag me out of my chamber which I am resolved to mantain as long as I can before I will be ●●mpelled to go before them and therefore I desire you in a friendly way to be wise and considerate before you do that which it may be you can never undoe Sir I am your true and faire conditioned prisoner if you will be so to me IOHN LILBURN From my Cock-loft in the Presse yard of Newgate this 13. of June 1646. And the next day aftere Serjente Finch exhibited his Artiicles being the 11 July 1646. Lieutenant Colonell Lilburne is by vertue of a warrant to the Sheriffe or Sheriffes of London M. Foot and Mr. Kendrik who contrary to Law refused to give him a Coppy of ha● warrant although hee sent for it by Mr. Bisco ●he Clerk of Newgate brought up to the Lords barr in a●most base Contumelious and reproachfull maner the substance of that Warant being to command him to the Lords Barr to heare his charge read But before he was called in hee by his Keeper sent word to the Lords That they being not his Peers and Equals were none of his LEGALL JUDGES and so had no jurisdiction over him and therefore hee would not stoop unto or acknowledge their authority and jurisdiction over him in this particular which he desired a-fore-hand to acquaint them with And that he must be forced out of conscience to that duty he owes to Himselfe his Liberties and the Liberties of his Countrey seeing their LORDSHIPS would neither be satisfied with his Protestation nor Appeale to the COMMONS nor yet with his refusing to kneele at their Bar nor consult with the House of COMMONS about the legality of their proceedings but the third time to send for him who they knew could not in this case stoop unto them as though they were resolved to tread the Liberties of all the COMMONS of ENGLAND under their feet And therefore seeing that they increased in their illegall an unwarrantable presumptiō he said he must increase in his just detestation of their actions and incroachments In testimony of which hee was resolved to come in with his HATON and to STOP his EARES when his charge was offered to be read which as I understand he accordingly did And having liberty sometimes to speak to them being commanded to withdraw three times and brought in again he told them to this effect with a great deal of resolution That they were not onely not his Judges but the manner of their proceeding with him was against all Law and Justice yea contrary to their own judgement lately given by themselves in February last in his own case of the Star-Chamber and of the Petition of Right For said he My Lords the warrant that commanded me to your Barre did summon me up to answer a criminall charge And being at your Bar I pressed you again and again to see it and earnestly intreated you that if you had any legall charge in writing against me that it might bee produced But contrary to Law and Justice you refused to do it contrary to all law just High Commission-li●e pressed me to answer Interrogatories cōcerning myself w●●ch fo●●●● 〈…〉 me to deliver in my Protestatiō aga●●●●● you And I have 〈◊〉 appp●aled ro my Legall Judges the COMMONS of ENGLAND assembled in PARLIAMENT who have received accepted read and committed my appeale and promised me justice in it And my Lords I tell you to your ●●ces These are the MEN that ONELY and ALONE have THE SUPREAM POWER of ENGLAND residing in them who when you have done all 〈◊〉 the worst you can they both must and will bee your Judges and mine But my Lords if you will not joyne issue with me there that you may know I neither feare you nor your Charge nor decline a legall proceeding about it preferre your charge against me in any Court of Justice in Westm●nster-Hall or any other Court in England rhat hath a legall jurisdiction over me and I will answer you The which if you refuse and will still persev●re in your incroachmens upon my Rights and Liberties know my Lords that here to your faces I bid defiance to you to doe the worst you can to me being resolved to spend my
denyed him her society unlesse she would be a prisonor with him and then what should become of them both and of their children having no Lands t● live upon and tost already from one Iayle to another for many years together to his great charge although he was but onely committed to be kept in safe custody and from writing scandalous Bookes which the Lieutenant told him he could not doe unlesse hee kept his wife and friends from him but as well he might have said I must also l●y you in a Dungeon where you shall neither see day-light nor enjoy a candle It being almost impossible to keepe a man so strictly but he will write if he have day-light and candle-light and so accordingly he bath commanded and executed that neither his wife nor any of his friends should speak with him but in the presence of his Keeper And that the Warders at the Gate take the names and pla●es of abode of all those that come to see him That so the Lords may have them all down in their black and mercilesse book and know where to find them when the day of their fierce indignation shall more fu●ly smoke against him and all those that have visited him Which some of the Warders have told some of his friends to terrifie them as not far of And this cruelty exercised upon him by the Lieutenant is more then legally can be done to a Fellon Murderer or Traytor and yet this is his portion although hee offe●ed to engage his promise to the Lieutenant when he first went in before his brother Major Lilburn and another Major that as hee was a Christian and a Gentleman that hee would suffer his wife and friends according to Law and Right to have free accesse unto him he would promise him not to write a line nor reade a line written while he enjoyed that priviledge which the Lieutenant refused but executed his pleasure upon him And then got their Lordships to make a new illegall Order that he might be kept as he had kept him Now for the Lords to do this to him seeing some of them were Actors in his bloudy Sentences in Star-chamber for which transcendent injustice and sufferings he never had a peny recompence 〈◊〉 tho●gh he saith in his fore-mentioned answer to Mr. Pryn he hath spent divers hundreds of pounds to procure it and though he lost not a little that yeere he ●ay prisoner in Oxford for the Parliament see innocency and truth justified Pag. 21. 22. And although the Earle of Manchester and Collonel King detaine his pay from him which he earned with the hazard of his life Pag. 47. 65. 70. and besides all this while he and others have been fighting for liberty and freedome for the whole Kingdome he hath been robbed and deprived of his trade by the monopolizing Merchant Adventurers Pag. 462. Whose knavery and illegall practices he notably anatomizeth and layeth open in the aforesaid booke from pag. 46. to pag. 63. To the Parliaments credit and reputation be it spoken to suffer such vipers to eat out the bowels of this poore Kingdome yea and to set them in the Custome-house and Excise Office to receive the treasure of the Kingdome whose lives and estates for their illegall and arbitrary practises are forfeited to the state as there he proveth it Now after all this for the Lords to commit him for 7. yeares to so chargeable a place as the present Lieutenant of the Tower makes the Tower by his will to bee and takes no care to allow him one penny of the Kings old allowance which was to finde the prisoners their meat drink and lodging and to pay the Lieutenant c. his fees according to the antient legall and just customs of the place What is it else in their Lordships intentions but to starve and destroy the honest man and his wife and children for according to the information I have the fees that have bin demanded there are Fifty pounds to the Lieutenant Five pounds a mans upper garment to the Gentleman-Port●r Forty shillings to the Warders Ten shillings to the Lieutenants Clarke T●n shillings to the Minister Thirt● shillings per week for suffering the prisoners to dresse their own diet and about so much a week for Chamber-rent besides what it costs them for their diet And all this demanded without any coulor of Law Justice or righ● as is ●argely proved by a late booke called Liberty vindicated against Slavery Oh ye Commons of England what neede have you to be combined together to maintaine your common interest against these usurping cruel and mercilesse Lords and to take speciall heede that by their charmes and Syren-like songs you be not divided about toyes into factions to your own destruction and ruine that being vifibly the game to the eyes of rationall men which they and their agents have now to play and by the foote you may easily judge what the beare is But now after this necessitated digression let us returne back to the King and to his forfeiting his trust which is to protect his people from violence and wrong and governe them according to law Let us consider what his and our supreame legall and rightfull Judges The House of Commons the State representative of England in their Petition and Remonstrance presented to him at Hampton Court 15. December 1642. and which begins book declaration pag. 1. and ends pag. 21. Say And we shall cleerly finde that they evidently make plaine to the King and the whole Kingdome That his 17. yeers raigne was filled up with a constant continnued Act of violating the Lawes of the Kingdome and the Liberties of his people Yes in pag. 491. They plainly say that before this Parliament the Lawes were no defence nor protection of any mans right all was subject to will and power which imposed what payments they thought fit to draine the subjects purses and they who yeelded and complyed were countenanced and advanced and all others disgraced and kept under that so mens minds made poore and base and their liberties lost and gone they might be ready to let go their religion And the rest of the regall tyrannicall designes there most acutely anatomised to which I referr the reader as a peece extraordinary much worth the reading And though the King this Parliament signed divers good Lawes as though he intended to turne over a new leafe Yet the Parliament tell him plainly that even in or about the time of passing those bills some designe or other hath been on foote which if it had taken effect would not onely have deprived us of the fruits of those bills but would have reduced us to a worse condition of confusion then that wherein the Parliament found us see pag. 124. in which the King himselfe was a principall acter And so they charge him to be pag. 210. 211. 216. 218. 221. 227. 228. 229. 230. 493 494. 496. 563. Yea and they plainly declare that the King had a finger in the
your perill and see that you ha●e there this Writ Witnesse Edw Cook 20. Nov. and the Tenth Yeare of Our Raign This is the usuall forme of the Writ of Habeas Corpus in the Kings-Bench vide Mich. 5. Edw. 4. Rot. 143. Coram Rege Kesars Case under the Test of Sir John Markeham REX Vicecom London salutem Praecipimus vobis quod habeatis Coram Justiciariis nostris apud Westm ' Die Jovis prox post In the common pleas for any man priviledged in that Court the like in the Exchequer quinque Septiman Pasche corpus A.B. quocunque nomine censeatur in prisona vestra sub custodia vestra detent ut dicitur una cum die causa captionis detentionis ejusdam ut iidem Justiciar nostri visa causa illa ulterius fieri fac quod de jure secundum legem cons●etudinem Regni nostri Angliae for et faciend habeatis ibi ●oc breve Test c. THE King to the Sheriffes of London greeting We command you that you have before Our Justices at Westminster upon Thursday next five weekes after Easter the Body of A. B. by what Name soever he be called being detained in your Prison under your custody togetherwith the day and cause of his Caption to the end that Our said Justices having seen the cause may further doe that which of right and according to the Law and Custome of Our Realm of England ought to have done or have there this Writ Witnesse c. The like Writ is to be granted out of the Chancery either in the time of the Term as in the Kings Dench or in the vacation for the Court of Chancery is offici●● just●●ia and is ever 〈◊〉 and never adjourned so as the subject being wrongfully imprisoned may have Justice for the liberty of his person as well in the Vacation-time as in the Terme By these Writs it manifestly appeareth that no man ought to be imprisoned but for some certain cause and these words Ad subjiciend re●ipiend c. prove that cause must be shewed for otherwise how can the Court take order therein according to Law And this is agreeable with that which is said in Holy Histd●y sine ratione ●ihi videtur mittere vinctum in carcerim cau as ●jus non signifit 〈◊〉 But since we wrote these things passed over too many other Acts of Parliament see now the Petition of Right Anno tertio Caroli Regis resolved in full Parliament by the King the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and the Commons which hath made an end of this question if any were Imprisonment doth not only extend to 〈◊〉 imprisonment and unjust but for detaining of the prisoner longer then hee ought where hee was at the first lawfully imprisoned If the Kings 〈◊〉 come to the 〈◊〉 deliver to the prisoner If he detain him this detaining is an imprisonment against the law of the land c. But look upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Warrant● 〈…〉 committed and 〈◊〉 committed 〈…〉 and you 〈◊〉 not find one legall one amongst them all Now for the second thing before spoken of in the manner of his tryall which is That it ought by Law to have b● publike in the presence of all that had a mind to have heard it 〈◊〉 any restraint of any This I find to be claimed by Mr. Pryn at the tryall of Colonell Nat. Fines in the 11. page of his relation thereof which he desired That they might have a publike hearing and that the do●e might be set open and none excluded that would come in the which he saith ●e desired the rather because the Parliament the representative Body of the Kingdome had ordered a fair and equall tryall which he conceived as he told the Councell of Warre was to be a free and open one agreeable as he saith to the proceedings of Parliament and all other Courts of Justice in the Realm which stand open to all and from whence no Auditors are or ought to be excluded To which Mr. Dorisla answered that it was against the stile conrse of a Court-Marshall to be publike and open and therefore it might not be admitted upon any tearmes Unto which Mr. Will. Pryn replyed that hee was a common-Lawyer and by his profession his late Protestation and Covenant bound to maintain the fundamental laws of the kingdome and liberty of the Subject which he told the Councell of Warr they themselves had taken vp Armes c. to defend and maintain And saith he by the Lawes and Statutes of the Realm all Courts of Justice ever have been are and ought to be held openly and publikely not close like a Cabinet-Councell Witnesse all Courts of Justice at Westminster and else-where yea all our Assizes Sessions wherein men though indicted but for a private Fellony Murder or trespasse have alwayes open tryals He goes on and in the 12. page thereof tells him that not only Courts of common-Law but the Admiralty and all other Courts proceeding by the Rules of either of the civill or canon-Law the proceedings have ever been publike and the Courts open and even in 〈◊〉 proceedings by Martiall Law before a Conncell of Warre at the G●●●d-Hall of London at the tryall of Mr. Tompkin● 〈◊〉 and others it was publike and open in 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Parliament and the whole City no come●s 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And he positively tels the Councell of Warre a little further that it was both against the laws and subjects liberty as he humbly conceived to deny any prosecutor o● subject an open tryall And he gives divers reasons there for it he goes on and in the 13. page saith That the Parliament when it sits as a Conncell to consult debate or deliberate of the great and weighty affaires of the Kingdome is alwayes private and none but the Members or Officers of either House admitted to their consultations and debates But saith he as the Parliament is a Court of Justice to punish Malefactors so the proceedings of both or either House are alwayes publike as appears by the late Tryall of the Earle of Strafford in Westminster-Hall and infinite other presidents of antient and present time To which I may adde the Tryall of William Laud late Archbishop of Canterbury And this practice is suitable to what we read in Scripture that among the Iewes the Iudges sate openly in the City Gates the most publike place of all And truly he or they that will not suffer Justice to be executed and administred openly bewrayes their own guiltinesse and do thereby acknowledge that they are ashamed of their cause For saith Christ John 3. 20 21. Every one that doth evill hateth the light neither cometh to the light least his deeds should be reproved or discovered but he that doth truth cometh to the light that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God But so far were the Lords from this just way of permitting Lieutenant Col. Lilburn a publike tryall that the
judicative power nor a legislative power inherent in him as is strongly undeniably and unanswerably proved before in pag. 43 44 46 47 60 61. And therefore away with the pretended power of the Lords up with it by the roots and let them sit no longer as they do unlesse they will put themselves upon the love of their Country to be freely therby chosen as their ●ōmissioners to sit in Parliament for I am sure in right all their actions now are unbinding and unindivalid which becomes you O all ye Free-men or Commoners of England out of that duty you ow to your selves yours and your native Country throughly and home to set forth by Petition to your own HOVSE of COMMONS and to desire them speedily to remove them before the Kingdome be destroyed by their crosse proud and inconsistent interest for little do you know what Scotch-ale divers of them are now a brewing Read the Histories of William the Conqueror and you shall easily find that the pride and contention of those English-men that were called Lords amongst themselves was no small cause of the losing of this Kingdome to that Tyrant for saith Speed fol. 409. After the Normans had slain King Harold and overthrown his Army the two great Earles of Yorkshire and Cheshire Morcar and Edwine coming to London where the Londoners c. would gladly have set up Edgar Atheling the true Heire to the Crown to have been their Captain Generall to have defended them from the powerfull Norman Invaders who now was exceedingly fleshed with his victory and now likely to over-run the whole Land yet such was the pride and baesenesse of these two great Lords that the misery distresse and fearfull estate of their native Country could not disswade from their ambition plotting secretly to get the Crown to themselvs which hindered that wise and noble design and totally lost their native Country O COMMONS OF ENGLAND therefore beware of them and have a jealous eye over them and take heed that when it comes to the pinch they serve you not such another trick again For I am sure their interest is not yours nor the publikes neither is it consistent with their ends that you should enjoy Justice or your undeniable and just rights liberties and freedomes And well to this purpose saith Daniel pag. 36. That after the Bishops and the Clergy had shewed their aversnesse to the erecting of that probable meanes that was propounded to hinder the theevish invader the Nobility considering they were so born and must have a King and therefore considering of his power made them strive and run head-long who should bee the first to pre-occupate the grace of servitude and intrude them into forraign subjection So that the poor Commons like a strong vessell that saith hee might have been for good use were hereby left without a stern and could not move regularly trusting and resting it seemes too much upon those Lords which I call the broken Reeds of Egypt by whom they were undone But for the further clee●ng of the Originall of the House of Peers pretended power I shall desire the understanding Reader to read over a little Treatise printed in Anno 1641. called The manner of holding of Parliaments in England in the 28. pag. hee saith King Harold being overcome William the 1. King and Conqueror having obtained the Soveraignty according to his pleasure bestowed Dignities and Honours upon his companions and others Some of them so connext and conjoyned unto the Fees themselves that yet to this day the possessors thereof may seem to be inabled even with the possession of the places only as our Bishops at this day by reason of the Baronies joyned unto their Bishoprickes enjoy the title and preheminence of Barons in highest Assemblies of the Kingdome in Parliament he gave and granted to others Dignities and Honours together with the Lands and Fees themselves hee gave to Hugh Lupas his kinsman a Norman and sonne to Emma sister to the Conqueror by the Mother the Earldome of Choster Adconquirendum Angliā-per Coronam that is in English to conquer and hold to himself and his Heires as free by the Sword as the King of England held it by his Crown to HANNVSRVFVS then Earl of Britain in France the Earldome of Richmond It a lib●re honorifice ut e●ndem Edwinus Comes antea tenue●at that is in English as freely and honourably as Edwine Earle held it before And the Earldome of Arundel which Harrold possessed he granted with a fee unto Roger of Montgomeny And in page 33. the same Author declares That Kings sometimes not regarding the Solemnities of Ceremonies and Charters have only by their becks suffered Dignities and Honours to be transferred So that by what Iam able to gather out of ancient Histories William the Conquerour absolutely subdued the Rights and Priviledges of Parliaments held in England before this time The manner of holding of which as the same Author in his first page declares was by the discreet sort of the Kingdome of England rehearsed and shewed unto the Conquerour which as hee saith he approved of And the same doth John Minshew say in his Dictionary published and printed at London July 22. 1625. fol. 526. his words are these In England the PARLIAMENT is called for the debating of matters touching the Common-wealth and especially the making and correcting of Lawes which Assembly or Court is of all other the highest and of greatest authority as you may read in Sir Thomas Smith de Re. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 1. 2. Cambd. Brit. Compt. Juris fol. 1. And see the Institution of this Court Polydor Virgil lib 11. of his Chronicles refer●eth after a sort to Henry 1. yet confessing that it was used before though very seldome You may find saith he in the former Prologue of the grand Customary of Normandy That the Normans used the same meanes in making their lawes In a Monument os Antiquity shewing the manner of holding this Parliament in the time of King Edward the sonne of King Etheldred which as the Note saith was delivered by the discreeter sort of the Realm to William the Conqueror and allowed by him This writing began thus Rex est Caput c. See more saith he of the course and order of this Parliament in Compt. Juris fol. 1. c. And VOWEL alias Hooker in his Book purposely written of this matter Powels book called the Atturneys Academy Read Mr. William Prynnes first part of the SOVERAIGNE POWER OF PARLIAMENTS AND KINGDOMES printed by the authority of this present Parliament pag 42 43 44. William the Conqueror having as to me is clearly evident subdued Parliaments their power authority priviledges and jurisdiction did set up by the absolute law of his own will for his Compceres Couzens and Connsellors such men who had most pleased him in vassalizing and enslaving this kingdom and the people thereof in whose steps severall of his successors after him did tread So that the kingdome was
his late booke called LONDONS LIBERTIES IN CHAINES DISCOVERED pag. 54 And what me●nes Lieutenant Collonel Iohn Lilburnes p●ttifull Complaints in divers of his bookes against severall Members of the HOVSE of COMMONS but especially against Justice LAVRANCE WHITAKER See Innocency and Truth justified pag. 12. 15. 16. 63. 64. And Londons Liberty in Chaines discovered And what meanes his leud Complaints in his Epistle to Iudge REEVE c. against the Earle of Manchester and Collonel Edward King of Lincolnsh●re whom he accuseth for being Traytors to the trust reposed by the PARLIAMENT in them And yet is so farre from obtaining Justice against them that he is clapt by the heeles in the exceeding chargeable prison of the Tower of London by their meanes And what meanes that extraordinary Complaint of Mr. ANDREWES BVRRELL in his printed REMONSTRANCE TO THE PARLIAMENT OF ENGLAND against the CHIEFE MEN that are mannagers of the NAVIE viz THE EARLE of WARWICK Mr. GILES GREENE Chairman of the Committee of the Navy Mr. SAMVEL VASSALL and the 2. Mr. Bencis Members of the same Committee c To whose charge he layes little lesse then TREACHERY TO THE WHOLE KINGDOME and couse●ing and cheating of the publicks monyes yea such is his CHARGE there against them that if he be able to make it good THEY DESERVE NO LESSE THEN HANGING And it seemes he is able sufficiently to do it for they dare not call him to account but let him go at Liberty which demonstrat●s to all understanding men They know their own guiltinesse And a thing of as high a consequence is the lamentable Complaint made against Sir Iohn Clotworthy and his friend Mr. Davis c. about their cousening and cheating poore and bleeding Ireland of much of the monies that should have relieved it which Complaint is called The State of the Irish affaires for the Honourable Members of the Houses of Parliament as they lie represented before them from the Committee of Adventurers in London for lands in Ireland sitting at Gr●cers Hall for that service and printed at London by G. MILLER dwelling in the Black-Fryers The abstract of which with some additions are inserted in a written paper which I had from a good hand which followeth thus A further discovery of the evill managing of the affaires of Ireland wherein it doth plainly appeare that above the fourth part of the monies levied for Ireland is pursed by 4. or 5. private men to the value of 97195. l. THat presently after the trouble did breake forth in Ireland there was one Mr. John Davis of the Irish Nation came for England who was trusted by the Parliament with 4000. l. worth of Provisions and appointed Commissary for the disposall of those goods for the English and Scottish Armies in Ireland The said Mr. Davis using indirect wayes by feasting and bribing the Officers having spent 100. l. upon them in a week as he himselfe hath acknowledged and by that meanes he obtained his desire for he valued the goods which he delivered to the Armies at such unreasonable high prizes that in this imployment for the space of 8. or 9. months he so manageth the businesse that he makes the parliament indebted unto him 12195. l. And it will be made manifest by sufficient testimony that before he was put into this imployment he was not worth 200. l. but with feasting and bribing the Commanders of the said Armies He obtaines such an accompt in writing having such friends to assist him that he procures Generall L●sl●yes letter of recommendation for his good service setting forth how seasonable the provisions came to the Army but no mention made that the Parliament sent the goods That after the said Mr. Davis had procured this letter he comes for England the troubles here being great the Parliament had not time to heare him so he continued in and about London for the space of two yeares or thereabouts In which time he was reduced to a meane and low condition in so much as he hath acknowledged he had much ado to ge● mony to buy food for himself his wife yet in this low Condition he puts in Propositions to the Commi●tee of Parliament to deliver 60000. l. in Provisions Armes and Cloth to be paid out of the Ordinance for Ireland which was for above three times as much but he was to have the first mony that came in upon the said Ordinance onely 20000. l. was alotted otherwise The Committee of Adventurers for Ireland were sent for and treated withall to know if they would serve in and deliver those provisions for Ireland who at the first refused to agree by way of bargaine alledging that they would make use of the said Ordinance to serve it with all expedition expecting no profit but the Committee of Parliament said that there was necessity of making agreement by way of contract whereupon the Committee of Adventurers for Ireland did give in Propositions that they would serve and deliver those provisions 7000. l. in 60000. l. under the prises Mr. Davis had given in notwithstanding M. Davis delivered the goods had his prizes for those goods provisions but did fail in all his undertakings both in the time of delivering the goods and also the goods he served were generally very bad as doth appeare by the Testimony of one of the Parliaments Commissioners in Ireland which Testimony and the prises Mr. Davis had is here inserted The reasons why M. Davis had this employment before those Citizens are many I shall name one the cessation of Armes in Ireland being ended divers Commanders came over from thence into this Kingdom who knowing Mr. Davis of old in respect of his large bribes given them did desire the Committee of Parliament that Mr. Davies might be the man for the providing and furnishing of provisions for the service of Ireland alleadging they knew him well as for the Citizens they were more fit to keepe shops then to take care of a Kingdom These Commanders above-mentioned are those who were for the Parliament one year and the next year sided and joyned with the Irish Rebels these are the men who gave this good report of Mr. Davies That Mr. Davies hath made a second bargain with the Committe of Parliament for 45000. l. worth of goods the which mony is fully paid him and the 60000. l. also formerly mentioned and this Committee have allowed him his pretended Debt of 12195. l. out of the money appointed by Ordinance of Parliament only for Ireland and not to pay any debt although never so reall Mr. Davies in the moneth of July 1646. hath made a third agreement for 140000. l. to deliver so much in Arms Provisions other necessaries the money part of it to be paid out of the Excise and the rest by a new Ordinance of Parliament for levying of monies for the service of Ireland the Committe of Adventurers having formerly declared in their book formerly set forth by thē which was presented to divers Members of