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A71223 The compleat History of independencie Upon the Parliament begun 1640. By Clem. Walker, Esq; Continued till this present year 1660. which fourth part was never before published.; History of independency. Walker, Clement, 1595-1651.; Theodorus Verax. aut; T. M., lover of his king and country. aut 1661 (1661) Wing W324B; ESTC R220805 504,530 690

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with him to refrain from weeping coming to the front of the Scaffold Lo. Capell his speech before his death he spoke to this purpose That he would pray for those that sent him thither and were the cause of his violent Death it being an effect of the Religion he professed being a Protestant with the profession whereof he was very much in love after the manner as it was established in England by the 39. Articles That he abhorred Papistry relying only on Christs merits That he was condemned to dye contrary to the Law that governs all the World that is by the Law of the Sword the Protection whereof he had for his Life yet among Englishmen he an Englishman acknowledged Peer condemned to dye contrary to all the laws of England That he dyed as to the cause he fought in for maintaining the fifth Commandement injoyned by God himself the Father of the Country the King as well as the natural Parent being to be obeyed thereby That he was guilty of Voting against the Earl of Strafford but he hoped God had washed off the guilt of his blood with the more precious blood of his Son That his late Majesty was the most vertuous and sufficient known Prince in the World God preserve the King that now is his Son God send him more fortunate and longer dayes God restore him to this Kingdom that that family may reign till thy Kingdom come that is while all Temporal power is consummated God give much happiness to this your King and to you that in it shall be his subjects That he did again forgive those that were the causers of his coming thither from his very soul so praying again for the King and his restoration and for the peace of the Kingdom he finished his speech L. C. his carri●ge Then turning about to the Executioner he pulled off his doublet when the Heads-man kneeling down Lord Capell said I forgive thee from my soul and shall pray for thee There is five pounds for thee and if any thing be due for my cloaths you shall be fully recompenced And when I ly down give me a short time for a prayer then again blessing the People very earnestly and desiring their prayers at the moment of death he said to the Executioner you are ready when I am ready are you not then as he stood putting up his hair with hands and eyes lift up he said O God I do with a perfect and a willing heart submit to thy will O God I do most willingly humble my self so kneeling down and fitting his neck to the block as he lay with both his hands stretched out he said When I lift up my Right hand then strike When after he had said a short prayer L. Capell beheaded he lifted up his right hand and the Executioner at one blow severed his head from his body which was taken up by his servants and put into a Coffin Having thus brought to pass their bloody purpose shortly after they acquitted the Lord Goring and Sir John Owen as to their lives but seized upon all they had according as they did upon most of the Estates of the Nobility and Gentry throughout England for such now was their unsatiable malice that they thought it not enough to ruine and destroy the heads of Families but The barbarousness of the faction with divellish rancor endeavour to blot out the name and memoriall of Posterity by such unheard of cruelties and barbarous actions as would make a Savage Scithian or Barbarian blush to think on so that we may say with Cicero in the like case Rem vides quomodo se habeat orbem terrarum Imperiis distributis ardere bello urbem sine legibus sine judiciis sine jure sine fide relictam direptioni incendiis Which indeed is the very present case Thus did they grow from bad to worse acting rather like butchers then Men each one of them proving to all about him a devouring wolfe whose insatiate gorge was never filled with his pray so that having in effect the mastery of them whom they called their Enemies like true thieves they fall out about parting the stakes The Army and Independent close the Presbyterian faction will brook no superior the Independent no equall upon these terms stands the Kingdom divided when the later grown now more powerfull by the additon of the Army whose guilt in the murther of the King had suggested to them that the only way to save and raise themselves was to confound and reduce all things else to an Anarchy In pursuance of which Principle they at last proceed against the very root of Monarchy and after many uncouth debates resolved that the Nation should be setled in the way of a free State Free-state appointed and Kingly government be utterly abolished Now was the stile in all proceedings at the law altered the seals changed and the Kings armes and statues in all places taken down that so their seared consciences might not at the sight thereof be terrified with the sad remembrance of their committed crimes And that no sparke or attendant of antient Majesty might be left remaining soon after they vote the house of Lords to be burdensome and useless Lords house voted useless and that the People might understand their meaning also on the 21th of February they proclaim at Westminster and send it to the City the next Day to the like purpose but the then Lord Mayor refusing to do it as being contrary to his honour conscience and Oath rather chose to suffer an unjust imprisonment which he did in the Tower Any honest Man would have thought this example would have put a stop to the attempt of any villain for the making that proclamation but so farr were they from being deterred that they rather grow more implacable and having found some hair brained and half decayed Cittizens out of them one is set up as a mock-Mayor who being a fellow fit for their turns after a short complement or two with the Juncto The Proclamation against Kingship he enters the Stage and Proclaims the abolishing of Kingship and the House of Lords Having thus brought their design to some kind of maturity they find another invention to be as a Shibboleth a mark of distinction between themselves and other men The engagement a mark of distinction and that was the engagement forsooth whereby every man should promise to be true and faithfull to the Common-wealth of England without a King or house of Lords and he that would not subscribe to this was forced either to fly or which was as bad to stay at home and have neither the benefit nor the protection of the law of the land nor any advantage either of his liberty or Estate Now might you have seen Vice regnand and nothing but Schisme and faction Countenanced now might you have beheld England sometime the Glory of the World now become its by words the name of
namely the Marquess of Argyle whose dealing with his Kindred Friends and Confederates mentioned in the following discourse will be a warning to all religious Protestants how they trust such an Apostate Covenanter whose ambition and avarice hath ruined the KING Church and State or three flourishing Kingdoms Although it may seem a paradox to many I dare boldly aver that Argile and his Faction in Scotland have been and are the chief Malignants Incendiaries and evil Instruments who have been the Ruiners of these three flourishing Kingdoms and the Authors of the blood shed in all of them as I hope by this following Discourse will be made appear to every impartial and unprejudicate Reader who hath or may have the certain knowledge of every particular when time shall serve This Argile's Father after the Marriage of his English Lady having turned Roman Catholique and this his only Son by his first Lady being carefully educated by the Earl of Morton by whose means he obtained the possession of his Fathers whole Estate for a small Pension and by His Majesties special favour for out-quitting his pretended Title of Justice General of the Kingdom of Scotland did obtain an Heritable Justiciary of Argile Lorn Kintyre and many of the Western Isles which power he did execute with that cruelty that he disgusted all the Islanders and Highlands of Scotland who were never so tyrannized over by any of their Kings till his Fathers death still fearing his return he kept himself somewhat moderate for the engaging for the Covenant or keeping company sometimes with those that were against it but his Father being dead finding himself idolized by those who had taken the managing of all affairs into their hands and that by his power and policy he could prevail with them in any thing to indear himself the more to that party he did seem exceeding zealous for the Covenant and pretending great fears from Ireland which the then Lord Deputy Strafford his Greatnesse and known aversenesse from the Covenant did make the more easily to be beleeved whereas the true cause of his fears was for the loss of Kintyre whereof he cosened his Brother long before his death Isla and divers considerable Isles which were and ought to be the possessions of the Mackdonalds and his indiscreet provoking of Strafford who in revenge of him did use very hardly all the Scots in Ireland who would not renounce the National Covenant of Scotland he dis-arming them did Arm and Train many Irish who after his Head was off shed so much bloud in Ireland and upon pretence of divers of the Mackdonalds Argile's own Tenants for the time were accessary to the Plot fearing his Judiciary power where he was both Judge and Party they were inforced to flie to Ireland till their peace should be made to prevent which he sent their Wives and Children after them took possession of all their moveables and placed other Tenants in their Room but being grieved that Culkettough and his Sons who had goodly Possessions were not gone with the rest he caused cite them before the Council as accessary to an Invasion to be made by Antrum and some of their friends which citation as legal men and not guilty in the least they did obey and after some dayes stay in Edinburgh taking their walk daily before Argile's door they did humbly intreat his Secretary to plead for them that they might have a speedy hearing since they were weary of their attendance which the Secretary acquanting the Lord Argile returned them this Answer That since they had testifyed their obedience by their appearance they might go home and he have themselves civilly not medling with their Rebellious friends as he was pleased to term them and be ready upon any new citation they should be excused for that time they did humbly thank his Lordship and his Secretary for this courtesie and did presently depart from Edinburgh towards their home whereof my Lord by his Spies upon them having notice did immediately convene the Council and whereas in many dayes before during their stay in Town they could not be heard that day they were first Called and upon their not Answering my Lord aggravating their Accusation by their departure occasioned by his own and his Secretaries contriving procures a Warrant to make them prisoners till they should be Tried and to seize upon their Estates which out of his zeal to the Covenant God knows he did carefully perform and made Culkettough and his two Sons Prisoners before they were half way at home which Alexander Macdonald afterwards Sir Alexander Macdonald being fled to Ireland having no valuable possession to look to at home did associate himself with the Irish in the beginning of their Rebellion but so soon as the Scots Army came over he did apply himself to them assuring them that he would do them faithfull service against the Irish Rebels if they would release his old Father and his two Brethren unjustly detained prisoners or bring them to Legal Trial whereof having assurance given him he brought with him two hundred gallant men of his friends and did more execution upon the Irish than half of the Scots Army their horse being not able to follow through Bogs and their Foot not so swift as the Irish and did in one morning bring in six or seven thousand Cowes to the Scots Camp the like booty they did never take at any one time before or since for which good service the General did of new ingage for his Father and Brethrens releasment but when the Committee of Estates had consented Argile did reverse all and frustrate the Generals promise which Alexander Macdonald perceiving said no more but well I will yet cause my faithful service procure my Fathers inlargement and did continue without pay or hope of pay saving a very spare allowance of quarters until Argile sent over and caused him to be discharged of all quarters to the grief of all the Scots Officers who did wel know what faithful service he had done and was able to do them so that meer necessity did inforce him to make his peace with the Irish by whose help he did come over into Scotland meerly to be revenged on Argile and to relieve his Father hoping the Estates of Scotland would not blame him for suing the performance of what their General had promised unto him intending no more til Montrosse out of his desire to be revenged on Argile did enforce Alexander Macdonald to joyn his Majesties Interest as Montrosse pretended with the said Macdonald hoping he would find as indeed he did a great many discontented persons to joyn with them all which or the most considerable were parties and persons wronged oppressed and ruined by Argile as chiefly besides the forementioned Islanders and these Highlands that were under his lash the Atholl men twice or thrice plundered by him Montrosse himself provoked by many wel-known injuries which no Noble heart could endure as the death of Mr. James Stewart who
Antrim should grow strong he procured one Regiment for himself another for his Cozen Lawers a third with the place of L. General for that most ungrate Gentleman the Earl of Lothian who was married to his Neece and one of his Confidents who was once heard say That the 3 Kingdoms would never have peace so long as King CHARLES his Head was on his shoulders and yet it is only King CHARLES his favour that hath made him and his Father exceed the estate of Gentlemen with many other places to divers of their friends intending a ful Conquest of Ireland at least to banish Antrim and the Mackdonalds from thence as he and his Predecessors had done many of them out of Scotland taking a gift from the Parliament of England of some of the Earl of Antrims Lands in Ireland especially the Island of Rachera to the which one of the forementioned Regiments was sent and kept there a long time so that all the three Kingdomes must be at the charge to maintain Armies and Garrisons for enlarging the Dominions of Argile His next project having begun his Confederacy in England by shewing them the wayes to get money by Taxes and Excise 10. and 20. part bringing in of Plate voluntary Contributions borrowing on the Publique Faith tyrannizing over the Persons and Estates of all that durst be so bold as speak against the Illegal Orders and all this Money in both Kingdoms to be employed against His Majestie whom their renewed Covenant did oblige them to defend having good opportunity to traffique betwixt under the pretence of Commissioners for the Kingdom of Scotland the rest for the most part either his Creatures or Confidents so that he ruled all the Council at home and abroad sending Lothian to France to have them brought in a Confederacy abusing his Majesty by procuring His Commission for Treating concerning the keeping and preservation of that ancient League betwixt France and Scotland begun in Charls the Great 's time with Achaius King of Scotland but the effect of the Treaty was to bring money to Argile who at that time when the Kingdom stood in much need of men sold five thousand to the French to be under his Brother from whom he had as formerly the Estate so now the Title of Kintyre and he must be Earl of Irwin all the Interest he had there being by his quondam Tutor now Slave Barcley his being sometime Provost thereof and the Chancellors Brother Lundie sur France and Irwin had bad penny worths although Argile made a good market for the Men like Money trusted in a Jugle●s hand were gone with a puff thus you see how much both KING and Kingdome were obliged to him in this particular But to come to the main point of the Conspiracy finding Scotland although he had all the power of the Persons and Estates in his hand not pliable as yet to cast off Monarchy and imbrace Aristocracy of whom as affairs stood none could be the chief Ruler but himself he did imploy the Zealots of the Clergy to asperse those who did oppose him especially some most faithfull and religious Noble men as if they were fallen from their first love turn enemies to the cause of Christ had with Demas imbraced this present world and that Argile was the only man that stood in the gap threatning out of their Pulpits all such as would think or speak evil of him but when the State-juglers with their Clergy-Impostors could neither shake the Loyalty of the one who were really for the Covenant and Monarchical Government nor plaster over the many fraudulent cheats of the Argathelian party now become a most odious and heavy burthen to the Kingdome harased and ruined from the one end to the other by him and his Armies on the one part and Montrosse and his Confederates on the other part Argile of the two being the Kingdoms most cruel Enemy was simulat humiliation having the Church-men still his friends did reconcile himself to the other noble and loyall Patriots by suffering them to take some share of the Government that the by him dis-joynted State might by them be set in a right frame again with a resolution when all things were right to usurp his wonted Authority and follow his old trade of Dethroning His Majesty and cantonizing the Kingdom but things falling out so that one day at Nazeby quelling the KINGS party in England and one day at Philipshaugh almost quieting Scotland finding the Presbyterians in England inclinable to peace and desirous of his Majesties re-establishment according to the Covenant he leaves them and joyns Counsell with Say Perpoint Cromwel and others of the Independent Junto doing them that Master●iece of good service First under colour of Loyalty and friendship to prevail with His Majesty to return to the Scots Army then at Newark Cromwell contributing a Passe to Hudson and Ashburnham with a slack Guard that His Majesty might the more freely escape Secondly after many learned and loyal Speeches for Monarchy the Kingdom of Scotlands interest in the person of the KING and many Vows and Protestations both in private and publick not to abandon His Majesty without his own consent contrary to all which he and his Party did overthrow the Loyalty of That once famous Gentleman Lieuten General David Leslie who had deeply sworn and ingaged himself to His Majesty to convoy him safely into Scotland or then to see His Majesty peaceably setled in his Throne in England forcing him and he perswading and prevailing with the Souldiers to march away leaving his Majesty behind little better than but now an assured Prisoner and the whole power of the Sword in the hands of the Independents and Sectaries to the ruine and overthrow of their Presbyterian friends in the City and Parliament as the History of Independency doth Witness encouraging the Independent Party by their Letters to proceed in their dethroning Votes and accusation of his Majesty assuring them that no party from Scotland shall be able to hinder them in their proceedings but finding the body of the Parliament and the Kingdom of Scotland to be sensible of the ruine of Religion and Monarchical Government if the Sectaries prevaile and their resolution to adhere to their Covenant and re-establishing his Majesty being in fear their party shall not be able any longer to delude the Kingdom or hinder the Army designed to come in for the vindication of the many breaches of the Solemn League and Covenant and the several Treaties betwixt the Kingdoms they have solicited the Armies of Sectaries to come to their assistance some of their Ministers professing in their Letters They have no hope of safety unless it be by means of this rebellious Army now in England thereby endeavouring to make Scotland the seat of War And if these troubles in Wales and cutting Petitions from Essex Kent Surry and Sussex had not hindered them their resolution was to have sent Cromwel thither it being debated before he went to Wales
him and then the Mayor conducted them all to Christ-Church where the Commons Councel of State General and his Officers together with the Mayor Aldermen and Common Councel c. mocked God with their Devotions where Mr. Tho. Goodwin and Mr. Owen preached out of the Politicks to them from thence they were conducted to a great Dinner at Grocers-hall and entertained in the quality of a Free State no man bring admitted without delivering his Ticket They were all strongly guarded with Souldiers and every Cook had an Oath given to be true to them which sh●wed they had more of fear and guilt thah of confidence and innocency within them Great Presents of Plate given to his Excellency Fairfax and to his Super-excellency Cromw l and to others fit to be chronicled in Stow● and Hollingsheads Volumes 177. A necessary advertisement to all honest Presbyterians See K. Charles the first his book The Portraicture of his Majesty in his solitudes sufferings Some over-hastily expect the King should satisfie the Presbyterians by his Declaration but the height of the Independents malice their guilty fears are such as may endanger the d awing on a Massac●e upon them by such a course amongst other solemn Fooleries let it not be omitted that Hugh Peter and many other Saints were too full of the Creature anglice Drunk I am to give a necessary advertisement to all men that though the young King shews much respect and a desire of reconcilement according to his dead Fathers never-dying precepts to all moderate men and Presbyterians that make Addresses to Him yet it is complained of by some who look not into the undermining practises of our new Statists that some few of His Counsellors and Followers are as violent against the more moderate and honest Presbyterians as against the Independents who murdered his Father but these zealous Royalist are either some passionate light-brain'd men of little discretion and less power with him or else some false-hearted Pen●ioners to our new State and such as have under-hand an Indemnity for their own Estates in England who stand like Scar-crows about His Majesty to fright away such as return to their Loyalty and tender their due Allegiance to Him thereby to weaken the hands of his Majesty and cut off the hopes of this Nation from depending upon him who as our undoubted Sovereign both by the Laws of God and the Land and Gods Vice-geren● in His three Kingdomes onely can and will if we forsake not him and our selves free and protect us from the many-headed miserable arbitrary tyranny we now starve and bleed under and restore unto us again our Religion Laws and Liberties our Wives Children and Estates Trading Husbandry peace and plen●y now held in more than Aegyptian bondage by our cruel bloody and thievish Task-masters See a Book entituted His Majesties gracious Messages for peace Mr. Pryns Speech 5. Dec. 1648. in the House And the secured Members Reply to the Councel of War Remember his deceased Majesties gracious Messages frequently sent for peace and reconcilement Remember His Concessions to His Parliament upon the last Treaty more than ever any King granted to His People Remember His pious meek and Christian Martyrdome suffered for His People which bitter Cup had passed from Him if He would have built up and established this Babel of Tyranny now insulting over us and have turned our wel-mixed Monarchy into an Olygarchical legal Tyranny by adding His Royal Assent to their wicked Demands tendered to Him but two dayes before His Translation from this valley of teares Remember His Posthumus Book to His Son full of Prec●pts savouring meerly of piety Christian wisdom charitie and forgiveness to His very Enemies and then judge whether our late King or our usurping Kinglings now scratching and tearing us making one War beget another 1 King 3. perpetuating an Army and domineering over us by the power of the Sword were the natural Parent whose bowels yearned upon this now Orphan Child the English Nation dying and expiring under this new Corporation of Tyrants Oath of Allegiance and Stat. of Recognition 1 Jacobi the putative Patent which overlayed it He that acknowledged Allegiance to the Father cannot deny it to his Son as having sworn to hear faith and true Allegiance to the King his Father and to his lawful Heirs and Successors which our usurping Hogens Mogens cannot pretend to be so that as well for duty and conscience to God and their own Souls as for a necessary and just protection of their lives and estates all honest and wise men ought to cast themselves into the Arms of his D●ead Majesty our present KING as the only sanctuary of their salvation and not suffer themselves to be so far mis-led by vain reports as to be more afraid of their cure than of their disease Stultorum incurata pudor malas ulcera celat S●lomon hath shewed you out of the Cabinet of Nature the difference between a Natural-mother and a Step-mother Dictum de Kennelworth and that you may see the difference between a natural King correcting his own people with fatherly compassion for examples sake and a Usurper wounding killing and robbing those which are none of his own his fellow-servants for his lust and lucre sake I will set down a short Abridgement of our own famous Dictum de Kennelworth and first the occasion thereof which was thus Simon de Montford Earl of Leicester conspiring with many other great men rebelled against Henry 3. pretending after the manner of all Rebels Reformation of publick Grievances He overthrew the King in battel took Him and his Son Prince Edward Prisoners the Prince after a while escaped out of Prison raised an Army overthrew and slew in the Battel of Evesham Simon Montford subdued the whole Party rescued and re-inthroned his Father Cummissions were sent forth to prevent future troubles and settle mem minds grown desperate with fear what horrid punishents so horrible a Rebellion would bring upon them The result of all is contained in the said Dictum de Kennelworth as I find it in Magna Charta veteri fol. 60. part 2. observe the moderation pf it No man bled to death for it but in the field the blood of war was not shed in time of peace the King did not slay those whom he had taken with his Sword and with his Bow but reasonably fined them not unto destruction though the known Laws called them Traitors See the late History of the Marquess of Montross what gentle use he made of his Victory after he had subdued the strength of Scotland at Battel of Kylsythe and put them into his power for life lands and goods they were but once punished not always tormented and kept upon the rack after the late custom of our fellow-Servants and Subjects who will never suffer the partition-wall between us to be thrown down England once more to become one Nation and one people and our broken bones to
venit sed certa venit All their hypocriticall shewes cannot cheat God who raiseth up the Spirit of one among themselves to chastise the errours of their pride and vain glorious attempts for no sooner is that Infernall crew of Atheists met in their Committee but they are alarumed with a letter from General Monck out of Scotland wherein he gives them notice that both himself and some Officers of the Army in Scotland Monck dissatisfied with their proceedings were much dissatisfied in reference to the transactions of affairs in England at the same time receiving intelligence that he had seized severall strong holds secured diverse of his dissenting Officers and possessed himself of Barwick Seizeth Barwick which drove them for a time into a kind of Phanatick stupidity that they knew not which way to move in the management of their affairs but at last willing to preserve themselves they order the forces in the North into a posture and command Lambert with more Regiments out of the Southerly parts to joyn with them that so they might appear formidable at least at a distance and put a stay to the violence which they foresaw was approaching to them for the prevention of which storm Col. Cobbet is sent to General Monck with insinuating relations Lambert marcheth against him whom the Generall immediately upon his arrivall commits to custody thereby preserving his Army from the dangerous contrivances that Person brought along with him and depriving of the intelligence he might have carried to England back with him which being done by the power of his Commission as one of the seven he straight new models his Army according to his own mind and then declares his resolution to assert the authority of Parliament against all violence whatsoever Upon newes of this our safe Committeemen knowing the pulse of the late Juncto to beat after the mode of a free-state think they shall merit highly at the hands of the General if they promote that though they disown the Parliament he pretended to declare for and to that purpose having nominated severall Gallant fellowes of their own number Viz. Fleetwood Vane Ludlow Saloway Tichburn Lambert Desborow Hewsen Holland and others to consider of and prepare a form of Government to be setled over the three Nations Safe Committee for a free-state in the way of a Free-State and Common-wealth they send away Whalley Goffe Caryl and Barker to shew the same to General Monck and thereupon to mediate with him for avoiding the effusion of blood the Officers at London writing also to his Officers and expostulating with them touching the necessity of a brotherly union crying out of nothing but Liberty while the Nation groan'd under their oppression But Monck revolving with himself both the greatness difficulty and hazard of his design concludes not to be rash in a direct quarrel but rather by procrastinations to weaken the force of his enemies which he knew could not continue long without money and so to gain the victory without striking a blow therefore to amuse them and cast the more seeming gloss upon his action he orders Col. Talbot Monck desires a treaty and Dr. Clargies who were the first messengers sent to him to send Fleetwood word that himself and his Officers had nominated Col. Wilkes L. C. Cloberry and Major Knight to repair speedily to London and treat with the like number of Officers there for a firm unity and peace and the better to confirm it he sends another Letter from himself to the same purpose with promise that his forces should advance no further But the Committee of safety willing by strenth to hold what they had got and not knowing what to think of the Generall issue out many severall Commissions to raise forces throughout all England to anticipate him and to settle Militia's to be ready in a moment Militia setled as it were to resist him which he hearing and that Lambert was coming against him with thirteen thousand men he according to his before mentioned Letter forthwith sends his three appointed messengers for peace upon whose arrivall at Yorke in November and speech with Lambert he became so farr satisfied of their intentions towards an Accommodation that thereupon he gave order his forces should advance no further Northward in their march Things being brought now into this posture The treaty begun the Generalls three Commissioners arrive at London November the 12th where the Treaty is immediately begun which lulled the Committee of safety into such a security that they begin to think of shareing great Offices and places of trust and profit among themselves to this end appointing Fleetwood Desborow Sydenham Saloway Cornelius Holland Col. Clark Col. John Blackwell or any two of them to be Commissioners for the Treasury and to manage the affaris of the publick revenue with power as large as could be desired And would it not be well managed think you in the hands of such bankrupts but while these men mind their own wealth only the Treaty must not be forgotten which was now in hand and on a sudden brought to such an issue that it startled the City who had by Col. Alured and Collonel Markham received Letters from Scotland of another purport for at last the Commissioners on both sides agreed on these heads ensuing that is to say The articles of the Treaty That the pretended Title of CHARLES STUART or any other claiming from that family should be utterly renounced O horrid Treason first murder the Father and then abjure the Son That the Government of these Nations shall be by a free State or Common-wealth and not by a single person King or house of Lords What must the new settlement utterly abolish all the old fundamentall Laws of England at one breath Your Precipitation bodes your ruine That a Godly and learned Ministery shall be maintained and encouraged 'T is well the Generalls Men thought of it for you may be assured it is against the principle of Anabaptists and fifth-Monarchy Men That the Universities shall be reformed and countenanced so as that they may become Nurseries of Piety and Learning That the Officers and Souldiers and other persons on either side be indemnified for what is past touching their late difference and that all unkindness betwixt them be buried in perpetuall Oblivion pray take care of that but it may be supposed you shall be the furthest off when you think your self neerest That the Officers which were made prisoners in Scotland be forthwith set at liberty How will the Generall like that That the Armies be presently disposed into quarters and that there be a committee of nineteen whereof nine to make the Quorum who were to meet about qualifications for succeeding Parliaments This was the effect of part of the agreement which was sent away with all speed to Generall Monck upon knowledge whereof and by reason the conclusions of the said Treaty were so contrary to the Letters by them formerly
Scotland directed to the Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland setting forth what the Parliament had done in way of setling peace reforming the Church and Universities and maintaining the Covenant and union between the two Nations and complaining of Duke Hamilton's Invading England under the Authority of the Parliament of Scotland to the Kirk there How dangerous this president may prove to both Kingdoms to make a few ambitious paedantical Church-men supreme Judges over Parliament and State affairs in ordine ad Deum and how apt they are to lay hold upon such occasions and kindle their zeal into a consuming flame I leave to all wise men to judge 122. A Declaration and 2. Letters from the Prince to the City The Commons Debate upon them Thursday 3. August The Sheriffs of London and some of the Common Council brought to the House the Copies of two Letters they had received from the PRINCE one directed to the Common Council expressing his Highnesse good affection to Peace and to the whole City and his endeavours to vindicate his Fathers Liberty and just Prerogative and Rights to restore to the People their Laws Liberties and Property to free them from that bondage under which they were now held like a Conquered Nation to ease them of Excise and Taxes to settle Religion according to his Fathers Agreement made with the Scots and to reduce all things into their antient and proper Chanel This Letter was accompanied with his Declaration to the same purpose The other was to the Merchant Adventurers Informing them he had made stay of 3. of their ships but without any intent to make prize of them desiring to borrow 20000 l. of them to be repayed out of the Customes and requiring their speedy answer To which Col. Harvy first aggravating many faults in the King's Government according to the scandalous Declaration against him said The Prince was his Fathers own Son as like him as could be That he had invited the Scots to come in and declared for them and had been formerly in Arms against the Parliament That he was but a subject And moved the House to declare him a Rebell and a Traytor Sir Peter Wentworth Mr. Knightly and Mr. Blackstone seconded him with much earnestnesse so did Edward Ash who farther moved That the Common Council and Merchants should give no answer to his Letters saying there was no danger the Prince should make prize of their ships for that he had engaged to the States of the Low-Countries to do no act prejudicial to Trade At last the Debate was put off until the next day being Friday when the Speaker putting the House in mind of it again It was earnestly called upon by the younger Sir John Evelin Mr. Solicitors shadow Scot Weaver Holland Boys and almost all the Godly Gang. So the Debate was resumed and Weaver went very high to try the temper of the House But the Debate in Terminis That the Prince should be declared a Rebell and a Traytor was soon laid by though violently pressed chiefly upon these reasons 1. That they had not the Originals of the Princes Letter and Declaration which the Common-Council still kept but onely Copies not so much as attested upon Oath by any authentical Clerk therefore no legal proceedings could be upon them 2. To Vote the Prince a Traytor the same day when they sent Messengers to invite the King his Father to a Treaty of Peace would argue no peaceable inclination in them and would be so understood by the People 3. They were engaged by the Nationall Covenant to defend the King's Person Crown and Dignity but the Prince Heir apparent to His Crown was next under God the chief supporter of his Crown and Dignity therefore to Vote him a Traitor was to subvert his Crown and Dignity 4. By the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. it is High Treason to endeavour the destruction of the Prince the Kings eldest Son but to declare him a Rebel and a Traitor was to endeavour to destroy him and therefore High Treason 5. The people were already jealous that the KING and His Posterity should be laid by and in them the Monarchical Government of this Nation subverted and a new form of Government introduced they had already by the Votes of No Addresses to the KING and by their Declaration against Him wherein they say They can no longer confide in Him laid by the KING and now to Vote the PRINCE a Rebel and a Traytor was to lay by both him and his Brother the DUKE of YORK who adheres to him which would exceedingly confirm the people in their feares But what they could not do expresly All that adhere to the Prince declared Traytors they did implicitly by Voting All that should adhere to ayd or assist the PRINCE Rebels and Traytors Hereby they put a tie upon the City not to redeem their Ships by lending 20000 l. to the Prince and yet had a Pirat taken them it had been lawful to redeem them Saturday 5 August 123. The National Covenant The House of Commons went upon the Commissioners to judge of Scandals there was a Clause in the Ordinance forbidding the Nomination of such as refused the National Covenant which was strongly opposed by the Independents who argued That the National Covenant was but a League sworn mutually by the two Nations that the Scots by Invading England had first broke it and thereby set the English at liberty from it that the Covenant was not Jure divino no more than Presbytery was To which was Answered That the large Treaty containing the League between the two Nations so did not the Covenant which was a Vow made unto God with our hands lifted up to heaven for the maintenance and observation of the ends and principles expressed in the Covenant from which no power on Earth can absolve That though the Covenant was not Jure divino yet the keeping of it after we have taken it is Jure divino it being the revealed will of God that we should not offer to him the sacrifice of fools a Covenant to day and break it to morrow 124. A new Militia erected in every County in the hands of Sectaries Mondon 7 August A particular Ordinance to put the County of Wilts into a posture of defence was read many that were named to be Deputy Lieutenants or Commissioners were mean petty fellowes as one Read a Serving-man and others such as refuse to Act upon the Ordinances for setling Church Government and declare that our Ministery is Antichristian and are new dipped Brethren that have been re-baptized These to have power to raise what men and put arms into what hands they list to fine 10 l. and twenty days Imprisonment for every default and to levy 400 l. a week upon that poor County over and above the Taxes to Fairfax's Army and Ireland and Free-quarter The general Ordinance to trust the Counties with their own defence is obstructed to give way to these particular Ordinances
of the Army and Houses of Parliament to purchase their compliance and Votes in all matters agitated in the Houses of Parliament by reason whereof all motions for His Majesties return to his Parliament the first step to our desired Peace have been either totally rejected or by them politickly delayed because Peace would determine both their power and profit 7. The Estates of Delinquents the Lands of Bishops Deans and Chapters designed by several Ordinances for discharge of publique Debts are by the Houses and power of the Army shared and divided amongst themselves while the publique debts be unsatisfied the common Souldier unpayed the mained unrelieved the Widdows and Children of the slain unprovided for and all left burdens to the Commonwealth 8. That the Army consisting of mean ignorant and illiterate men only gilt with hypocrisie divine and civil under pretence of tender Consciences the better to induce and tolerate all Heresies have expelled and supprest all learned Orthodox Divines and Church Government and crying Liberty Liberty have subjected our Persons and Estates to arbitrary Law and tyranny and by Rape imbracing the Legislative power cuckolds the body Politick giving Laws to the whole Kingdom and yet by Petitions and Remonstrances make both Houses father as their own the adulterous issue 9. That this Army assuming to themselves the modelling and settlement both of Church and State at Windsor in April last in their Council did consult these 3. Questions First Whether shall we joyn with the Levellers and new model both Church and State Next Whether with the moderate Party Treat and receive the KING with more qualified and limited Power Thirdly Whether Depose the KING Dis-inherit the PRINCE Crown the DUKE of YORK and appoint a Protector The first was held to promise most of liberty and profit but threatned greatest danger in effecting and difficulty in continuing The second was said to be easiest obtained and continued because nighest to the present frame and constitution already setled but would bring them little of profit and less of Soveraignty The third like Benjamin last in birth but first in the Parents affections was held not difficult to be acted but to be maintained for it would require both the expence of much blood and money and the Kingdom to re-act York and Lancaster under the names of Wales and York To this Lieut. Gen. Cromwel answered It was the better for that would necessitate the continuance of our Army which secures our persons will enforce our reasons make just our demands and facilitate their grant For the bloud that will flow from the cheapveins of Common Souldiers whereof England hath plenty and we will not want For the money London is our bank and from their Purses it shall drain to our Coffers Commissary Ireton L. Gen. Cromwel's Son-in-law said The work was half done for we have already Voted no Addresses to be made to the King and Him guilty of crimes enough to Depose Him and by Imprisoning His Person have fitted Him for a private life and by it taught the people that He is subject to the dispose of both Houses of Parliament whole Ordinances are only powerful by our Swords and therefore our Actions shall be legal by their Vote Further the Prince said he is link'd with his Father in crime and therefore cannot be severed in punishment he hath been General in a Western Army warring as his Father against the Parliament a crime that as it rendred the Father fit to be Deposed so doth it the Son unfit to succeed in the Government And that the descent of the Crown purge not him as it did Hen. 7. let us in the Fathers life time Crown the Duke of York now in our power whose tender years have preserved him innocent and presents him fitter for protection and our design and should any blame our severity towards the King and Prince others will commend our clemency towards the Duke of York Upon the result of this Council L. Gen. Cromwel in the House of Commons tels Mr. Speaker That it was time to set on foot our great design and that such as should not concur in Votes with us be not continued of us The motion being mis-timed and divers of his party absent it was only wondred at by Master Knightly and died with the words The Scene now alters from Westminster to Carisbrook-Castle and the King that could not be removed by Votes must now by Poyson the Actor Col. Hammond Major Rolf c. all Members of the Army yet must we by cursed Excise that insensibly devours the poor by insupportable Monthly Taxes that impoverish the rich contrary to Law and our Allegiance contrary to our Protestation and Covenant inforced upon us we must traiterously maintain and pay this Army that traiterously contrive and endeavour the deposal and murder of our Soveraign Lord the King the subversion of our Protestant Church our Fundamental and known Laws We therefore declare to the World that God blessing us we will with hazard of our lives and fortunes disband and dissipate this Army the Suppressors of the pure Protestant Religion the Imprisoners and would be the Murtherers of their Soveraign Lord the King and grand Oppressors of the Common-wealth then free from Imprisonment our said Soveraign and him God-willing restore to his lawfull Government just Rights and Throne in Parliament this done we shall joyfully and readily deposite our justly assumed Arms and on our knees beg what his Majesty hath often most graciously offered and will undoubtedly grant his most Royal and gracious pardon to all his mis-led Subjects will return to their Allegiance and forward to bring the King back to his own house We therefore hereby earnestly desire and request all loyal and wel-affected Subjects as well Members of both Houses of Parliament as others to be herein aiding and assisting to us First by not recruiting the Forces of the Lord Fairfax Next by withdrawing all aid and assistance from his Army by with-holding Excise and Monthly Taxes allotted for their pay and support and to give us with their prayers such assistance as their Allegiance and opportunity shall advise and we trust that the God that judgeth rightly will crown our loyal action with happy successe and our successe with a glorious peace which is heartily prayed for and shall God willing be resolutely fought for by us His Majecties loyal and faithfull Subjects in Colchester A List of the Names of the Members of the House of Commons Observing which are Officers of the Army contrary to the self-denying Ordinance Together with such summes of Money Offices and Lands as they have given to themselves for service done and to be done against the KING and Kingdom Corrected and augmented Note Reader that such as have this mark * comming immediately before their Names are Recruiters illegally elected by colour of the new Seal the power of the Army and voices of the Souldiers and are unduly returned and serve accordingly The first Century 1. WIlliam Lenthall
latter grindeth the needy and poor Yet these are thy Gods O London these are the Idol Calves the People have set up and do worship these be the Molec to whom ye sacrifice Sons and Servants by Troops Regiments and Armies to maintain their soveraignty rebellion and profit And that these and other their actions may never be questioned they His Majesties loyal and obedient subjects will always Imprison their King continue their Army perpetuate their Parliament and intail their Member-ships as the Priesthood on Levi upon confiding Families to furnish them with Votes as Mr. Gilbert Gerrard and his 2 Sons Brampton Guidon and his 2 Sons Sir Robert Harley and his 2 Sons 3 Fines 2 Ashes 4 Stephens 4 Pelhams 4 Herberts 4 Temples it were endlesse to name the Father and the Son Brother and Brother that fils the House they come in couples more than unclean Beasts to the Ark 2 Vanes 2 Puries 2 Chaloners 2 Bacons 2 Pierpoints 2 Bonds 2 Onslowes 2 Lenthals c. And that our Ecclesiasticks may comply with our Temporal Governors the Houses abolish as superstitious because Legal the Convocation of learned Divines regularly summoned by the King 's Writ and duly elected by the Clergy and the House of Commons nominates an assembly of gifted Divines indeed wicked Simons that slander the Godly Onias 2. Mac. 4. to out him of his Priests place so that at this day there is not one Assembly-man but is illegally thrust into anothers Benefice a Catalogue of whose names and Preferments expect shortly and with them a view of the Militia and Common-Council-men of London observing what Places Offices and salaries they have from the Houses of Parliament and then thou wilt know the reasons of their Votes and Actions in the City You see in part what the Grandees have done for themselves Consider after 8 years sitting what they have done for the people when amongst all their Propositions to the King for Peace hardly any one respects the good of the People but their own grandeur and profit They demand a Militia to keep up this Army upon us which is not the Kings to give No King of England ever governed by a standing Army They demand likewise power to raise what Forces for Land and Sea consisting of what Persons they please to presse and to raise what money to maintain them out of all mens Estates to be laid on at their discretion and as partially as they please so that they may favour one Faction and oppresse the other at pleasure for so much the Act for the Militia as it is penned imports and this is more than his Majesty hath power to grant The late Militia of Trained Bands and the Posse Comitatus under Sheriffs being the only legal Militia of England will not serve their turnes It hath always been the Policy of England to trust the Militia and sword in one hand viz. the KINGS and the Purse that should pay them in another viz. the PARLIAMENTS whereby one power might bound and limit the other For to put the Sword and the Purse into one hand is to make that hand absolute Master of our Persons and Estates and so reduced us to absolute slavery under the Arbitrary power of one man without appeal or redresse Awake and look about you good People THE END AN APPENDIX TO The History of Independency BEING A brief description of some few of ARGYLE'S proceedings before and since he joyned in Confederacy with the Independent Junto in ENGLAND With a Parallel betwixt him and Cromwell AND A Caveat to all his seduced Adherents CICERO Totius injustitia nulla capitalior est quam eorum qui cum maximè fallunt id tamen agunt ut viri boni esse videantur LONDON Printed in the Year 1648. AN APPENDIX TO The History of Independency BEING A brief description of some few of Argyle's proceedings before and since he joyned in confederacy with the Independent Junto in ENGLAND With a Parallel betwixt him and Cromwell AND A Caveat to all his seduced Adherents THe Covenant being at the first taking held to be the true Touchstone whereby the Religious Royal Subjects were discerned from all those who were unwilling to submit to the yoke of Christ in matters of Religion or to the just and lawfull Government of our dread Soveraign his Vicegerent now a subtil generation of men or rather Vipers in both Kingdomes who did take the Covenant and did magnifie it so long as it could serve them for a Ladder to mount to their intended Greatness being now at the top have kick'd away the Ladder and standing as it were on the pinacle look with disdain on all their old friends who out of the integrity of their hearts did for the good of Religion and His Majesties honour joyn in that solemn engagement it being far from their thoughts that their modest and humble desires for the Reformation of some abuses both in Church and State all which His Majesty in the respective Kingdoms did or was willing to cure should have struck so deep as to endeavour the overthrow of all lawfull Governments Civil and Ecclesiastical bringing instead of a promised Reformation in Religion a cursed Toleration of the most damnable Sects Errors and Heresies that ever Hell did send forth and for the Civil State instead of a well-setled Monarchy a most confused tyrannical Anarchy quite contrary to the words and meaning of the Covenant and the honest intentions of all true-hearted Religious and loyall Subjects in the three Kingdoms who did take that solemn Covenant with a purpose to keep it and of very many thousands who did never take the Covenant yet very good Protestants and loyall Subjects being more affrighted with the compulsory way of enforcing it on all than unsatisfied in the matter being introduced in a legal way none of these deserving the name of Malignants or to be so cruelly dealt with either for their persons or Estates as hath been too too common in both Kingdoms but the Covenant it self doth best decypher who are Incendiaries Malignants and evil Instruments viz. those who hinder the reformation of Religion who divide the King from His People or one Kingdom from another or make any Faction or Parties amongst the people contrary to the League and Covenant Yet by our new tenets none must be called Malignants but those that have loyall hearts towards their Soveraign though otherwise never so Religious and all of them with Master Martin would gladly make the Covenant an old Almanack that they might be rid of that tie of preserving His Majesties Person and Authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms that the world may bear witness with their consciences of their loyalties and that they have no thoughts or intentions to diminish His Majesties just Power and Greatnesse As the History of Independency hath discovered the practices of the Independent Junto so this Appendix will discover their chief Confederate in Scotland
of this Parliament and all Souldiers are engaged also by their own Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals to defend assert and vindicate with their Lives and Fortunes the Person Authority Title of our aforesaid Lawful KING and Suprem Governour the undoubtful Heire of all his late Fathers Dominions CHARLS the Second by the Grace of God King of Great Britaine France and Ireland c. against all opposites and pretended Authorities whatsoever unlesse they will be guilty of the fowlest sinnes of Treason Rebellion Perjury and Perfidiousnesse against their God their King and Countrey and of prostituting the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Land their Wives Children and Estates to the lusts of an Armed Faction usurping a farre more Arbitrary and Tyrannical Power over our Consciences Persons Liberties and Estates then ever was known in England before or then is now used by the Russe Turk or Tartar or any the most enslaving and lawlesse Tyrants under Heaven An Exhortatory CONCLUSION to the English NATION Compare the Date of the K. Commissions with those of the Parliament and their Declarations on both sides TO conclude the series of Affaires and Action on both Parties especially of late rightly compared it appeareth by the sequel That KING CHARLES the First from the beginning took up Defensive Armes to maintain Religion Lawes Liberties and the Antient fundamental Being of Parliaments and this Kingdome and that there alwayes was and now especially is a predominant Faction in Parliament notwithstanding their frequent Declarations Remonstrances Petitions Protestations Covenant and Votes to the contrary conspiring with a Party especially of Commissioned Officers of the Army without the Houses to change the Fundamental Lawes and Government of the Church and Common-wealth to usurp into a few hands the Supreme Authority to enslave the People with an Oligarchical Military and Arb trary Government to raise what illegal Taxes they please to establish their Tyranny and enrich themselves and their Party to oppresse consume and devoure all Men of a judgement contrary to their Interest to Murder them by new declared arbitrary Treasons contrary to the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. for ascertaining Treasons to Disfranchise them of their birth-rights and make them Adscriptios Glebae Villains Regardante to their owne Lands which the Nobility Gentry and Yeomanry plough sowe and reap whilest Brewers Dray-men and Coblers eate drink and play upon the sweat of their Labours and are the Usufructuaries of their Estates All which they have lately brought to passe wherefore let all true Engl shmen as becomes good Christians good Patriots and gallant Men claim their Birth-rights and with one voice cry out 1. We will not Change our Ancient setled and well-approved Lawes to which we are sworne 2. We will not Change our Ancient and well-tempered Monarchy to wh ch we are sworne 3. We will not change our old Religion for New Lights and Inventions 4. We will not subject our selves to an eighth part of one Estate or House of Parliament sitting under a force and having expelled two hundred and fifty of their Fellows more Righteous then themselves by force and usurping to themselves the Supreme Authority 5. We will not be subjected to a new Supreme Authority usurped by fourty ambitious covetous Tyrants arrogating to themselves to be a Councel of State and designed to supply the room of Parliaments under what name or title soever they shall mask themselves 6. We will not submit our selves to a Military Government or Councel of Officers 7. We must and will have A KING See the Star of Recognition 1. Iac. and the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy and The KING whom the Lawes of God and this Land have designed to us we being by the Oaths of Allegiance Obedience and Supremacy sworne to beare faith and true Allegiance to KING CHARLES the First his lawful Heires and Successors Hic telum infigam moriarque in vulnere Postscript REader at the latter end of my First part of The History of Independency I have presented to thy consideration some General Conclusions arising out of the Premises the same Conclusions does naturally arise out of the Premises of this Second Part of the History and do as aptly serve to illustrate this Second as that First part wherefore to that First Part I send thee for opening thy understanding When our old Lawes run again into their Ancient Channel and the Sword of Murder is sheathed and the Sword of Justice drawn the Author engageth to publish his Name and Apology and shew what he hath done and suffered for the Parliament and Kingdom THE END TO THE READER READER having spoken to thee in the First Part I might have forborn thee in this Second did I not feare to seem guilty of the fullennesse and malignity of these times The subject-matter of my Book is a Combination or Faction of Pseudo-Polititians and Pseudo-Theologicians Hereticks and Schismaticks both in Divinity and Policy who having sacrificed to their Fancies Lusts Ambition and Avarice both their God and Religion their King and Country our Laws Liberties and Properties all duties Divine and Humane are grown so far in love with their prosperous Sins as to entitle God himself to be Father and Author of them from whose written Word and revealed Will held forth to us in the Scriptures as the only North Pole and Cynosure of our Actions where they find no warrant for their doing they appeal to the secret Will and Providence of God to which they most Turkishly and Heathenishly ascribe all their enormities only because they succeed and from that Abysse of Gods Providence draw secondary principles of Necessity and Honest Intentions to build the Babel of their confused Designes and Actions upon not considering that wicked Men perform the secret Will a God to their Damnition as good Men do the known Will of their Father to their Salvation If a Man lie sick to death and his Son wish him dead this is Sin in the Son although his desire concur with the Secret Will of God because the Son ought to desire the preservation of his Fathers life whereto the Will of God revealed in his Word obligeth him and vivendum secundùm Praecepta non secundùm Decreta Dei The secret Will and Providence of God can be no rule and law of our Actions because we know it not nor can search into it without presumption We must not therefore altum sapere think our selves too wise and well-gifted to tie our selves to the Scripture of God and lust after Revelations and Inspirations expecting God should rain Bread from Heaven for us Manna Exod 16.4 but be wise unto Sobriety But prosperum scelus virtus vocatur Thus casting off the written Word of God unless where by an enforced Interpretation they can squeeze Atheisme and Blasphemy out of it as they do somtimes rack Treason Murder and Non-sense out of our Laws and Parliament-Priviledges conducible to their ends they insensibly cast off God himself and make themselves both the
lies if not answered did from their several and respective Counties as also in the Cities of London and Westminster declare The Gentry declare that they were far from any thoughts of revenge it belonging to God alone alluding to that text of Scripture Vengeance is mine I will repay saith the Lord but as for Justice they would acquiesce in the judgment of the approaching Parliament This being done and the whole Parliament at the appointed time The Parliament begins beginning first with their duty to God they follow that golden Pythagorean rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 giving him hearty thanks for that their freedome of meeting which when they had cordially done they fell in order to their Governour First They fear God then honour the King As the same Pythagoras goes on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The very Heathen we see by the meer light of Nature could dictate that which our Grand Enthusiasts of Religion would not for these many years by the ignis fatuus of their new lighted notion walk after But the Parliament were better principled for after their devotions regularly paid to God they in the very next place own their duty to their Prince upon the first day of May a happy day to be remembred to posterity voting the Government to be by King Kingly government voted Lords and Commons a constitution so incomparably mixed that it may rather be admired then envied neither were they satisfied to rest there but on the Eighth day of the same May caused his Majesty to be proclaimed King of England King proclaimed Scotland France and Ireland which was performed with so much Solemnity and Joy as I presume England I dare say hardly any Kingdome in the World ever saw or were sensible of the like the shouts and acclamations of the pleased people rending the very skies as a token of their extraordinary Thankfulnesse to Heaven and at night by the multitude of their bonfires turning the Darknesse into a kind of lightsome day This hapy beginning thus owned by the general consent of all honest men made the Parliament resolute to prosecute their begun endeavours which the more orderly to do for order befitteth men best both as Subjects and Christians they immediately prepared Commissioners Commissioners sent to the King who were persons choyce for their integrity and wisedome like those heads of the children of Issachar which were men that had understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do being intrusted to wait on his Majesty and to desire him to come to his Parliament and People with all convenient speed Before whose arrival his Majesty had withdrawn himself from Bruxels not upon any account as was by the ignorant and malicious insinuated but out of a design of safe guard to his own sacred Person as knowing those two principles of the Romanists si violandum est jus Regni causa violandum est and nulla fides servanda est haereticis might prove dangerous if not fatal to his interest as affairs then stood He well remembred Richard the first his case sirnamed Caeur-du-Lion and what his detention once cost England and therefore had no reason to cast himself into the like hazard Therefore having discharged all Accounts whatsosoever at Bruxels he as I said removes his Court to Breda As that first he might hold the more certain and quick intelligence with his friends in England where there hardly wanted any thing to complete his Restoration and the Kingdomes satisfaction but his Personal presence so in the second place he there knew himself safe being within the jurisdiction of his beloved sister the Princesse Royal Mary Princesse of Orange King at Breda whose tender love and zeal to him in his affliction deserves to be written in brasse and graven with the point of a Diamond During the time of his residence there to shew himself to be a second Solomon a Prince of Peace and not onely so but the most pious and merciful of Princes who was wise as a Serpent yet innocent as a Dove by the Honourable the Lord Viscount Mordant and Sir Richard Grenvile since by his Majesties special grace created Earl of Bath Gentleman of his Majesties Bedchamber He sent a most gracious Declaration with respective Letters to the Lords to the Commons to the City and to the Army Whetein His Majesties Declaration layes Independency dead His Majesty first offers a Pardon for all miscarriages and misdemeanors against his Father or himself to all persons such onely excepted as shall be excepted by the Parliament promising likewise securitie to all whose guilt might otherwise endanger them so as they laid hold on his Majesties Pardon within 40. dayes after the publication thereof 2. He refers the purchasers of Kings Queens and Bishops Lands to Justice to the Law and to the Parliament 3. He assures the Souldiery of their Arrears for past services although done against him and of incouragement and pay for the future under him This Declaration was received with no ordinary joy and solemnity the messenger Sr. Iohn Greenvil being rewarded with 500. pounds ro buy him a Jewell and upon reading thereof and a conference had with the Lords who had now reassumed their Native right by taking their places in the higher House they agree unanimously each in their several house That a Letter be sent in answer to his Majesties gracious Letter and Declaration superscribed To his most Excellent Majestie which were since more immediately drawn up and sent by Commissioners before prepared as is already mentioned sixe from each House who were in the name of both Houses 1. To give his Majesty most humble and hearty thanks for his gracious Letter and Declaration 2. To desire his Majesty to return to the exercise of his Regal Office and come to his Parliament and people with all speed possible And thirdly to that purpose to desire him to appoint a place for the Navy to attend him the Commissioners that went from the house of Peeres were these The Earl of Oxford Earl of VVarwick Earl of Middlesex Lord Brook Lord Berckley Commissioners names that went to the King Lord Visc Hereford Of the House of Commons were selected these following Lord Charleton Lord Bruce Lord Falkland Lord Mandevile Lord Herbert Lord Fairefax Sir George Booth Sir Iohn Holland Sir Antho. Ashly-Cooper Sir Horatio Townsend Sir Henry Cholmly Mr. Hollis The City of London having also received the like Letters and Declarations the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council appoint a loyal and humble answer to be returned wherein they give his Majesty thanks for his tender care grace and favour to their ancient and renowned City which was sent by these worthy Gentlemen For the City of London Alderman Adams Recorder VVilde Alderman Robinson Alderman Bateman Theophilus Biddolph Richard Ford Alderman Vincent Alderman Frederick Alderman VVale John Lewis Esquire William Bateman Esq Alderman Bludworth Major