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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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your Lordship or your Officers Judges I therefore desire to know from your Lordship what kind of Prisoner I am and whose If a Prisoner of peace neither your Lordship nor your Officers are any Justices of peace or Civill Magistrates in this place to restrain me for any civill crime were I guilty of it much less without proof or hearing in case I were no Member but being neither guilty nor accused of any such crime and a Member too no Magistrate can nor ought to imprison me upon any pretext at least without the Houses licence first obtained If a Prisoner of Warre which I cannot probably be being never in Arms and apprehended neer the Commons House door going peaceably and unarmed thither to discharge my duty then you and your Officers thereby acknowledge That you have levied Warre against the Parliament and its Members and what capital offence this is and what a punishment it deserves I need not inform your Lordship or your Councell who have for this very crime condemned and shot some to death as Traytours and demanded speedy justice and execution for it upon the King himself I have but one thing more to trouble your Lordship with and that is to demand whose Prisoner I am having yet seen no Warrant nor Order from your self or your Officers for my restraint though I have oft demanded it of your Marshall If your Lordships Prisoner there appearing yet no legall Authority cause or Warrant for my restraint I must then crave so much justice from your Lordship being but a Subject and not yet paramount all Laws to order your Attourney to give an Appearance for you in the Kings bench the first return of the next Tearm to an action of false Imprisonment for this my unjust restraint which I intend by Gods assistance effectually to prosecute If your Officers Prisoner onely and not yours which I conceive who yet abuse your name and authority herein though it be a rule in Law and Divinity too Qui non prohibet malum quod potest jubet yet I shall be so just as to set the saddle upon the right horse and commence my action onely against such of your Officers who have been most active in my Imprisonment for damage and reparations which if there be any justice remaining under Heaven I doubt not but I shall recover in Gods due time in this publick cause which so highly concerns the honour freedom and Priviledges of Parliament and Subjects Liberties for defence and maintenance whereof as I have hitherto spent my strength adventured my life body liberty and estate so shall I now again engage them all and all the friends and interests I have in heaven and earth rather then they shall suffer the least diminution prejudice or eclipse by my stupid patience under this unjust captivity though I can as willingly forgive and put up private injuries when the publike is not concerned as any man All which I thought meet to inform your Lordship of whom I am heartily sorry to see so much dishonoured abu●ed and misled by rash ill-advised Officers and dangerous destructive and I dare say Jesuitical Councels to the Parliaments dissipation the Kingdoms prejudice Irelands loss most good mens and Ministers grief your best Friends astonishment your Enemies and the Papists triumph our Religions scandal and your own dishonour which I beseech you as an Englishman a Christian a Professor of piety and Religion a Souldier a General to lay sadly to your heart as the earnest request of From my Prison at the Sign of the Kings Head in the Strand 3. Jan. 1648. Your Lordships faithful Friend and Monitor William Pryn. * An Additional Postscript VVE reade Luke 3.14 that when the Souldiers demanded of John Baptist saying and What shall we do he said unto them Do violence to no man or put no man in fears neither accuse any falsly and be content with your allowance not imprison depose or murther Kings pull down Parliaments imprison violently shut out and drive away Parliament men and then lay all false accusations and scandals upon them to colour your violence subvert Kingdoms alter States break all bonds of Laws Oaths Covenants Obligations Engagements to God and Men usurp all Civil Military and Ecclesiastical power and the Kings Royal Palaces into your own hands as supreme Lords and Kings raise what new forces and levie what new Taxes you please take up what Free-quarters and Houses seize and plunder what publike Treasuries monies you please without Commission or Authority obey neither God nor Man neither Parliament nor Magistrate and be content with nothing but alter and subvert all things These are Saint Peters new doctrines and Revelations to our Officers and Souldiers now those Jesuits who lurk amongst them not John the Baptist whose Canonicall advice is now rejected as Apocryphall even among the Army Saints who preferre every ignis fatuus though from Doway or R●me it self before this burning and shining old light and are guided onely by a new minted law of pretended providence or necessity of their own forging and not by the revealed will and law of God the sacred light whereof their present works of darkness dare not approach lest they should be reproved and condemned by them But some 43. Actions of false imprisonment by the imprisoned and 150. Actions of the Case by the secluded Members brought against these domineering lawless Officers and Grandees of the Army wherein good Damages will be recovered and some 12. Indictm of High Treason against them for laying violent hands upon the Kings Person and the Members and leavying War against the Parliament will teach them more obedience humility and modesty then either John Baptist Saint Paul Saint Peter or Saint Peters will do and be like Gideon thorns and briers of discipline to these men of Succoth with whom no fair means will prevail who might have learned so much law and justice from a Heathen Souldier and Governour Festus Acts 25.27 It seemeth unto me unreasonable to send much more to commit a Prisoner and not withall to signifie the crimes laid against him and come short of that ingenuity of the heathenish chief Captain who seized upon Paul thereby to appease the Tumult at Hierusalem Acts 22.27 29. who as soon as ever Paul told him he was a Roman Free-born then straight way they departed from him who should have examined him and the chief Captain also was affraid after he knew that he was a Roman and because he had bound him And should not false imprisoning of a Parliament-man Free-born English-man be as formidable to our chief Captains being a Christian I say sworn and vowed to defend the Houses Priviledges and Members Persons as the Imprisonment of a Roman was to this chief Captain and they as ingenious and just as he who shall rise up in judgement against them and condemn them at the last I shall close up all with this observation That as the most glorious Angels in Heaven when
King James it was then only called An Act of high presumption and dangerous consequence in the Duke nor was there then the least reflection upon King Charles yet now because King Charles dissolved that Parliament the Independent party were willing to raise a suspition against him concerning His Fathers death wheras the accusation against the Duke of Buckingham 3. Caroli contained 7. or 8. Charges against him the least whereof might occasion the dissolving of that Parliament These desperate courses to dishonour the King 74. Why the independents went so high against the King To usurp the regal power into themselves either in the Houses purged or in the Committee of Safety at Derby house and make Him uncapable of Government to ruine His Person Crown and Dignity and extirpate Monarchy root and branch were taken in order to the usurping the Kingly power into the Grandees of the Parliament and Army and in case they could not purge the two Houses and make them wholly Independent which they now despair of then into the Hands of the Committee or Council of State at Derby-house and Grandees of the Army In order to which they are now contriving to strengthen the said Committee with more power and more Members and to adjourn the Parliament and sent down the Presbyterian Members into the Country upon pretence of service where if any Tumults happen for which their extortions will give sufficient provocation the said dissenting Members shall bear the blame and have blank Impeachments given them to purge them out of the Houses if not out of the world or at least be sequestred for now they have squeezed what they can out of the Kings party by Sequestrations the next fewel to their covetousness is to sequester the Presbyterians and then to sequester one another for they are already divided into Pure Independents and Mixed Independents and have feuds amongst themselves for this faction insatiate with money and blood are all beasts of prey and when they want prey will prey one upon another nor shall the Houses meet above one month or two in a year to ratifie and approve what Derby-house and the Junto of the Army shall dictate to them and to give an account to the domineering party how eath Member hath carried himself in the Country Thus instead of one King 75. Why the Grandees do still continue to truck with the King notwithstanding the said 4. Votes we shall have twenty or thirty tyrants in chief and as many subordinate Tyrants as they please to imploy under them with the Iron yoak of an Army to hold us in subjection to their Arbitrary Government Notwithstanding the aforesaid four Votes and Resolutions the Cabal of Grandees still keep Ashburnham and Barkley in the Army and have sent divers Turn-coat-Cavaliers and Emissaries under-hand disguised to the King who pretending that by Bribes they had bought their admission to Him after some insinuations endeavour with false and deceitfull news and arguments to shake His constancy and perswade him to pass the said 4. dethroning Bills for these Usurpers of Sovereign Authority long to turn their armed and violent Tyranny into a legal Tyranny or at least to make him declare against the Scots coming in In both which cases He will dis-hearten His Friends who endeavour to take the golden reigns of Government out of the gripes of these Phaetons and restore them again to His hand unking Himself and His Posterity for ever be carried up and down like a stalking Horse to their Designs and be Crowned Ludibrio Coronae with straw or thorns For who can think that at the end of twenty years these Usurpers will lay down what they have so unjustly contrary to all Laws Divine and Humane and contrary to their own Declarations Oathes and Covenants extorted And who can or dare wrest these powers out of their hands being once setled and grown customary in them the peoples spirits broken with an habitual servitude a numerous Army and Garrisons hovering over them and all places of Judicature filled with corrupt Judges who shall by constrained interpretations of the Law force bloody presidents out of them against whosoever shall dare to be so good a Patriot as to oppose their Tyranny They could make Steel sharp enough to cut Captain Burlies throat for attempting to rescue the King out of the hands of a Rebellious Army that neither obeys King nor Parliament will find gold and silver enough to corrupt all the Judges the mean to prefer and make them Wild and vild enough for their purposes But it is hoped He hath more of a King more of man in Him than to leese his Principles and stumble again at the same stone dash again upon the same Rock whatsoever Syrens sing upon it knowing He hath a Son at liberty to revenge His wrongs all the Princes of Christendom His Allies whose common cause is controverted in His sufferings the greatest men of England and Scotland of His blood and the People generally whose farthest design was to preserve their Laws and Liberties and to defend the Parliament from being conquered by the Sword looking with an angry aspect upon these Seducers who by insensible degrees and many forgeries have ingaged them further than they intended not to the Defence of Religion Laws and Liberties but to the setting up of Schism Committee Law and Martial Law Impeachments before the Lords and unlimitted slavery And I am confident this Faction despair of working upon the King who like a Rock is mediis tutissimus undis whatsoever reports they give out to the contrary having from the beginning made lies their refuge which being wisely foreseen by the King He sent a Message to both Houses by way of prevention delivered in the Painted-Chamber by the Lords of Louderdale one of the Scots Commissioners consisting of three heads 1 That He was taken from Holdenby against his will 2 That they should mantain the Honour and Privileges of Parliament 3 That they should believe no Message as coming from him during his Restraint in the Army but should only credit what they received from His own mouth These Grandees have cheated all the interests of the Kingdom and have lately attempted the City again and had the repulse But the King is their old Customer and hath been often cheated by them and having him in strict custody peradventure they may perswade Him it is for His safety to be deceived once more wherefore notwithstanding their many endeavours to root up Monarchy dethrone the King and His Posterity and usurp his power in order to which they have over-whelmed Him and all His with innumerable calamities and reproaches yet since the passing of the Declaration against the King their desperate condition hath enforced them to make new Addresses in private to Him notwithstanding their four Votes inflicting the penalitie of Treason upon the Infringers But Treason is as natural to Cromwel as false accusing protesting and lying he is so superlative a Traytor that the
The King cannot plead Dures no man can imprison or hurt the King in his politick capacity as King though in his natural capacity as man he is as passive as other men To which was replyed That it had been frequently said in the House the King was a prisoner That there was no difference in Law between a restraint and an imprisonment whether legal or illegal A tortious restraint is called in Law a false Imprisonment That former Kings have avoided their own Acts by pleading Restraint or Imprisonment and Constraint as R. 2. H. 3. That the King may as well plead Imprisonment as the Parliament plead a Force which they have lately done That the Kings Restraint in Law is Arcta custodia God grant it be salva custodia we have lately had Information to the contrary The distinction between the Kings natural and politique capacity was Treason in the Spencers and so declared by 2 Acts of Parliament in the time of Edw. 2. and Edw. 3. See Calvins case in my Lord Cook they are unseparable by the Law Tho. Scot argued That the City was as obnoxious to the Kings anger as any part of the Kingdom and if the Treaty should be in London who shall secure us that the City will not make their Peace with the inraged King by delivering up our Heads to Him for a sacrifice as the men of Samaria did the heads of the 70 sons of Ahab It was farther moved That if the King came not to London but to one of his houses about 10 miles from London That He might be desired to give His Royal word to reside there untill the Conclusion of the Treaty Col. Harvy slighted this motion vilifying the Kings Royal word and saying There was no trust in Princes he alleged the Kings promises had been frequently broken as when he protested the safety and privileges of Parliament should be as precious to Him as the safety of His Wife and Children and within three or four dayes after came with armed Guards to force the House and other instances which have been too often remembred and shall be here omitted At last they fell upon a report that the Committee of Lords and Commons had Voted They would not insist upon the 3 Votes preparatory to a Treaty viz. Presbytery the Militia and recalling all Declar Procla c. This was long argued to and fro At last it was Voted That the King be desired to assent to the said 3 preparatory Propositions 99 My Lord Say's discourse about a Personal Treaty and sign them with his hand to be passed as acts of Parliament when the King shall come to Westminster My Lord of Warwick had moved in the Lords House about this time for a Personal Treaty and was seconded by the Earl of Northumberland but my Lord Say opposed it and prevailed against it afterwards my Lord Say in his way home visited the Duke of Richmond and amongst other discourse told the Duke He was sorry to find so great an indisposition to peace saying he had moved for a Personal Treaty but could not prevail this was done upon hopes the Duke would have writ so much to the Queen or Prince But the Earl of Holland coming that day to see the Duke and the Duke relating to the Earl what the Lord Say had told him the Earl of Holland discovered the truth to him and so spoiled the design you see the Devil doth not always own the endeavours of his servants The said 5 July the Speaker as soon as he sate in his Chair 100. The news of the D. of Buck. taking Arms. alarmed the house of Commons with the news of the Duke of Buckingham's and the Earl of Holland's drawing into an hostile posture relating they were 2000. that they intended to take Lambeth-house that the Bullets would presently be about their ears if they did not rise which put the zealots into such a rout that they presently cried Adjourn adjourn until Monday and had hardly so much patience as to hear any reasons to the contrary but this was but a counterfeit fear the design hid under it was to prevent the City from bringing in that day their Petition for a Personal Treaty and to leave the whole power of the House during the Adjournment to the Committee of Derby house to raise what Horse and Foot they pleased under colour of suppressing this Insurrection For when they found they could not prevail to Adjourn 101. Skippon authorized to raise 1000 Horse they moved for power to be given to Maj. Gen. Skippon to raise Horse whether to possess the Avenues and passages from the City to the Earl of Hollands Army or to keep the City under the terror of a Horse Guard is doubtfull And the same day Mr. Swynfin reported from the Committee of Safety That they offered to the Consideration of that House 102. A Report from Derby house that the Members should underwrite for maintaining of Horse that it was fit the House should have a Horse Guard and that every Member should underwrite how many Horse he will pay for 10 days This is refused by some Gentlemen upon these grounds 1. It bears the aspect of an Imposition or Tax set upon the House by their Committee 2. The Members have not suffered alike and therefore cannot do alike some have lost much and got nothing others have got much and lost nothing and it is not equal that Losers should bear equall burthens with Getters and contribute out of their Losses to maintain other mens Gains and preserve them in their rich Offices and Bishops Lands purchased for little or nothing Gentlemen are made Beggers and Beggers Gentlemen 3. It is a dividing motion tending to lay an imputation of Malignancy and dis-affection upon those that cannot as well as those that will not subscr●be and so gives a great advantage to the Gainers over the Losers which the Losers have no reason to submit to 4. A Personal Treaty being now in debate this motion makes many Members forbear the House who cannot grant and dare not deny It carries with it therefore something of design and terror and so takes away the liberty of Parliament which when so weighty a business is handling is ought to be If this Horse Guard be raised how shall we assure our selves they shall be Disbanded after ten days being once under Command It is therefore a subtile malicious tyrannous act for the Committee of Safety to put so tempting a motion upon the House and give men cause to suspect that something of Design and Danger lies hid under it 103. The device of a forged letter About this time a Letter without any name subscribed was left at Major General Brown's house in his absence consisting of two parts 1. A Preamble of great respect and love born to him by the Epistoler for his fair carriage to the King and good affection to peace and reconcilement with the King 2. An Admonition to look to
say farther that other things of main importance for the good of this Kingdom are in Proposition c. which yet before the end of this Session they hope may receive some progresse and perfection As the establishing and ordering the Kings Revenue c. The Regulating of Courts of Justice and the abridging both the delaies and Charges of Law Sutes c. Preventing the exportation of Gold and Silver and the inequality of Exchanges between this and other Kingdoms improving the Herring fishing upon our Coasts c. which things in all their Propositions and Addresses to the King have not been once mentioned nor any thing else but what makes for the profit preferment and power of a few ambitious Grandees of the Parliament and Army in order to which they demand the Militia of a standing Army with an arbitrary power to raise what Forces by Land and Sea consisting of what persons and to raise what sums of Money out of every mans Estate they please which power the King hath not to give neither did He nor His Ancestors ever exercise the only Militia they used having been either the Posse Commitatus under the Sheriffs which is very legal and antient or the Militia of Trained Bands under Lord Lieutenants and their Deputy Lieutenants which is a new invention Nor did the policy of our Law ever trust the power of the Sword and the Purse in one hand for fear of enslaving the People Ex. Col. p. 19. They farther declare That it is far from their purpose or desire to let loose the Golden reins of Discipline and Government in the Church to have private persons or particular Congregations to take up what form of Divine Service they please because they hold it requisite that there should be throughout the whole Realm a Conformity to that Order which the Laws enjoyn Ex. Col. p. 203. They farther say there That the gracious favour His Majesty expressed in the Bill for continuance of this Parliament and the advantage and security which they thereby have from being Dissolved shall not encourage them to do any thing which otherwise had not been fit to have been done Ex. Col. p. 281. They conclude the said Declaration thus That they doubt not but it shall in the end appear to all the world that their endeavours have been most hearty and sincere for the maintenance of the true Protestant Religion The Kings just Prerogatives The Laws and Liberties of the Land and the Privileges of Parliament in which indeavours by the Grace of God they would still persist though they should perish in the work Ex. Col. p. 376. In their Declaration 4. June 1642. The Lords and Commons do declare That the Design of their Propositions for Plate and Money is To maintain the Protestant Religion the King's Authority and Person in his Royal Dignity The free Course of Justice The Laws of the Land what then becomes of Martial Law and Committee Law The Peace of the Kingdom and Privileges of Parliament In their Propositions for bringing in Money and Plate Ex. Col. p. 340. 10. June 1642. the Lords and Commons declare That no mans affections shall be measured according to the proportion of his offer so that he express his good will to the Service in any proportion whatsoever that is so that he ingage with them yet notwithstanding the 29. Novemb following Ex. Col. p. 765. the same Lords and Commons appointed a Committee of 6. persons who should have power to Assess all such persons as were of ability and had not Contributed and such as had Contributed yet not according to their ability which is now looked upon as a Malignancy to pay such sums of Money according to their Estates as the Assessors or any of them should think fit so as the same exceeded not the 20. part of their Estates The power is still exercised by all Country Committees to a 5. and 20. part charged upon all men even such as have been destroyed and undon or laid forth themselves beyond their abilities for their service to this Parliament In the National Covenant taken by this Parliament and by them imposed upon the Kingdom to be taken with hands lifted up to the most High God the Lords and Commons vow To maintain the King's Person Crown and Dignity in Defence of Religion Laws and Liberties c. To suppress all Errors Heresies Blasphemies and Schisms and to defend one another mutually in the same work with their lives and fortunes yet is the same Covenant now cast aside and called An Almanack out of date Many men have been punished for attempting to keep it And I hear the House of Commons are now upon passing an Ordinance for Martial Law to be executed in London upon all such persons as having taken the said Covenant shall attempt or design any thing against the Parliament or City of London what is this but to impose a special penalty upon such as have taken the Covenant and leave those that have not taken it free And who doubts but that the said Council of War shall consist of Anti-monarchical Schismaticks and Anti-covenanters for the most part who shall stretch every word to the utmost extent And this is now in brewing contrary to the Petition of Right 3. Caroli Magna Charta no considerable enemy being in the Field and the Courts of Justice in Westminster hall sitting nay I hear like Janus Bifrons this Law if I do not mis-call it looks backwards to Acts past as well as forward contrary to the nature of all Laws which have an admonishing power to warn men of the evil to come before they can have a punishing power for evils passed Therefore the Apostle saith Sin is a breach of a Commandement or Law I had not known Sin but by the Law The Law therefore must be previous to the Sin How the said Promises and Covenant and many more have been kept let the world judge What the Promises Undertakings and Proposals of the Army have been in order to setling the peace of the people of this Kingdom and of the King 's just Rights and Prerogatives and their own Disbanding are to be found in their many printed Papers which I will here omit because they had no lawfull calling or warrant for such undertakings and how they have been prosecuted and perfomed is obvious to every capacity General Conclusion Out of these Premises I shall draw these Conclusions following 1. The Grandees have subverted the fundamental Government of the Kingdom and why 1. THe engaged Party have laid the Axe to the very root of Monarchy and Parliaments they have cast all the Mysteries and secrets of Government both by Kings and Parliaments before the vulgar like Pearl before Swine and have taught both the Souldiery and People to look so far into them as to ravel back all Governments to the first principles of nature He that shakes Fundamentals means to take down the Fabrick Nor have
quandarumque poenes Rempublicam non unum aliquem Magistratum esse debet potestas nulla enim in re gravius peccatum admittitur nusquam graviores turbae minantur quàm hisce de rebus That is the best forme of Government where the King can doe most good and least evill 1. Let Him be disabled to raise new Taxes and lay on new Tribute 2. Let Him not have the sole power to make or repeale Lawes which ought to belong to the Common-wealth not any one Magistrate for no power is more hurtfull to the people nor stirres more Commotions then these two such is the Kingdome of England the King hath neither the power of our Purses nor the changing of our Lawes in His hands and if he give away his Sword he will be such a King of clouts as can do neither good nor evill like Rex Sacrificulis at Rome ea summa potestas dicitur quâ secundum Leges non est major neque par such was the Dictator at Rome he had no equall there Papyp cursor dictator adjudged to death his Generall of the Horse Fabius for fighting against his command though prosperously and rejected all appeale to the Senate and Tribunes of the People yeilding at last onely to their prayers with this saying Vicit tandem imperii majestas such is the King of England the Common-wealth cannot compell him to grant a Pardon or dispense justice or mercy as they please the Oath of Supremacy calls Him Supreame Governour in all Causes over all Persons so doe all our Statutes to whom in Parliament which is his highest sphere of majestie is the last appeale by Writ of Error who is Principium caput finis Parliamenti the beginning head and end of the Parliament and therefore he onely calls the Parliament to advise with him and dissolves it when he is satisfied He makes Warre and Peaee See the 1. part of this History Prolegomena 1. and is Protector of the Lawes and of all just interests onely the policy of the Law disables him to make repeale or alter Lawes or raise Monies without consent of both Houses by Bill passed which is but an Embrio until he quickens it by his Royal Assent because this way the King may doe most hurt and wrong to his people as I have already said it being the wisdome of our Lawes to keep the Sword in one hand and the purse in another The 1. 15. The 1. Proposition for j●stifying the Parliaments and condemning His owne quarrell proemial Proposition for justifying the Parliaments Cause and Quarrell and condemning his owne Cause and Party was a bitter pill but an earnest desire of peace sweetned it and guilded it over and invited him to swallow it without chawing or ruminating upon it but how devilish unchristian and illegal a use the Faction hath made of this extorted confession let God judge Their insisting upon it that the King should take the Covenant 16. The Covenant endeavoured to be put upon the King was an errour in Policy whereof the rigid Presbyterians are guilty they supposing the King would take it at last stood upon it and intended thereby to joyne the King to their Interest and Party The more subtile Independent knew the King would not nor could not take it and therefore complyed with the Presbyterians in obtruding it upon him to break off the Treaty many things in the Covenant were vaine in the Person of His Majesty as that He should swear to maintain his owne Person c. which the Law of nature binds him to without an Oath which in this case is idle and a prophaning of Gods name some things in the Oath were contradictory to what the Parliaments Propositions desired of him as to maintain His own Authority in defence of Religion Lawes and Liberties which was impossible for Him to doe unlesse he kept the Militia in his owne hands and his Negative Voice also which that clause in the Bill of Militia That all Bills for leavying Forces should have the power of Acts of Parliament without the Royall Assent c. would have deprived him of by making their Ordinances Acts of Parliament in effect binding to the Persons and Estates of the People in an Arbitrary way to their utter enslaving To sweare to Abolish Bishops c. was against his Coronation-Oath To sware to extirpate Heresies Schismes c is more then the Independents would permit To sweare to maintaine the Vnion between the two Nations which the Parliament declare already to be broken by the Scots Invasion is vaine besides how unjust a thing was it to impose that Oath upon the King when most Members of the Parliament Army and others are left at large not to take it The Parliaments Demands That the King should declare against the Marquesse of Ormonds proceedings to unite all the Interests of Ireland for the service of his Majesty was no part of the Propositions upon which the Treaty was begun but a subsequent request upon an emergent occasion and therefore I see no reason why the King should have given any answer to it but onely have held himselfe to the original Propositions yet he did Answer That the whole businesse of Ireland was included in the Treaty and therefore a happy Agreement thereupon would set an end to all differences there which being voted unsatisfactory and moved that a new Declaration might be published against him the King was inforced to put a stand to the Marquesses proceedings by his Letter to his great prejudice yet these Declarers against him do now comply with Owen Roe Oneale and have entertained O Realy the Popes Irish-Vicar-general in England to negotiate for the Irish massacring Rebels with the Parliament These things considered prove what I finde in our late King Charles the 1. most excellent Book Chap. 18. That it is a Maxime to those that are Enemies of peace to ask something which in Reason and Honour must be denied that they might have some colour to refuse all the rest that is granted More observations upon this unlucky Treaty I will not trouble my Reader with these being enough to shew the vanity of those Propositions by these he may take a scantling of the rest ex pede Herculem I cannot but blame the indiscretion if not the indisposition of those Commissioners who cavilled away so much time in the Treaty 17. Jones complaines by Letters that Ireland was like to be lost until Cromwell had done his work in the North and marched up to Towne to make the Treaty ineffectuall About the latter end of Octob. 1648. Col. Jones sent whining Letters from Dublin to the Steersmen at Derby-house complaining that all Ireland was like to unite and prosecute the Kings Interest and therefore he cried for help but neither the said Committee in their consultations nor the Army in execution of what was resolved could agree amongst themselves the Engrossers and Monopolizers of Oligarchy into a few hands desiring to make themselves
but the designs projects of Jesuits Popish Priests and Recusants who bear chief sway in their Councels to destroy and subvert our Religion Laws Liberties Government Magistracy Ministry the present and all future Parl. the King his Posterity and our 3. Kingdoms yea the Generall Officers and Army themselves and that with speedy and inevitable certaint● to betray them all to our forreign Popish Enemies and give a just occasion to the Prince and Duke now in the Papists power to alter their Religion and engage them and all forreign Princes and Estates to exert all their power to suppresse and extirpate the Protestant Religion and Professors of it through all the world which these unchristian scandalous treacherous rebellious tyrannicall Jesuitical disloyall bloudy present Councels and exorbitances of this Army of Saints so much pretending to piety and justice have so deeply wounded scandalized and rendred detestable to all pious carnall morall men of all conditions All which I am and shall alwaies be ready to make good before God Angels Men and our whole three Kingdoms in a free and full Parliament upon all just occasions and seale the truth of it with the last drop of my dearest bloud In witnesse whereof I have hereunto subscribed my Name at the Signe of the Kings-head in the Strand Decemb. 26. 1648. William Pryn. 51. The Councell of War forbid all state and ceremony to the King From Dec. 25. to 1. January Num. 283. 27. Decemb. The Councel of VVarr who manage the businesse in relation to the King saith the Diurnal ordered That all state and ceremony should be forborne to the King and his Attendants lessened to mortifie him by degrees and work Him to their desires VVhen it was first moved in the House of Commons to proceed capitally against the King 52. Cromwels Sp. in the Ho. when it was first propounded to try the King Cromwell stood up and told them That if any man moved this up●n d●signe he should think him the greatest Traytour in the world but since providence and necessity had cast them upon it he should pray God to blesse their Councels though he were not provided on the suddaine to give them counsel this blessing of his proved a curse to the King 53. The Ordinance for electing Com Councel men confi●med 28. Decemb. was brought into and read in the House an Ordinance explaining the former Ordinance for electing Common-Councel-men which confirmed the former Ordinance It was referred back againe to the said Committee to consider of taking away the illegal as they please to miscall them Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy and other Oaths usually administred to Officers Free-men c. of the City The 28. Decemb. Tho. Scot brought in the Ordinance for Trial of the King it was read and recommitted three severall times 54. The Ordinance for Trial of His Majesty passed the Commons and the Commissioners Names inserted consisting of diverse Lords Commons Aldermen Citizens Country Gentlemen and Souldiers that the more persons of all sorts might be engaged in so damnable and treasonable a designe and because this Ordinance and the proceedings thereupon had no foundation in Divinity Law reason nor practice The Commons to give it a foundation and ground from the authority of their Votes declared as followeth Resolved c. Diurnall from 1. Ian. to the 8. of Ian. 1648. Numb 286. That the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament doe declare and adjudge That by the fundamental Laws of the Realme it is Treason in the King of England for the time to come to levie War against the Parliament and Kingdom of England So together with this declaratory Vote the said Ordinance was carried up to the Lords by that Renegado Lord Gray of Grooby Jan. 2. 1648. 55. And sent up to the Lords The Lords met that day farre more than ordinary 16. in number and promising to send an Answer by Messengers of their owne The first Question started by some Lords who had rather have had a thinner House was 56. And Debated Whether it should be presently debated which passed Affirmatively The first Debate was upon the said Declaratory Vote The Earle of Manchester told them The Parliament of England by the fundamentall Laws of England consisted of three Estates 1. King 2. Lords 3. Commons the King is the first and chief Estate He calls and dissolves Parliaments and confirmes all their Acts and without him there can be no Parliament therefore it is absurd to say The King can be a Traitour against the Parliament The Earle of Northumberland said The greatest part at least twenty to one of the people of England were not yet satisfied whether the King levied war first against the Houses or the Houses against Him 57. The Zealots of the H. of Com offended with the Lords for casting forth the Ordin for Triall of the King And if the King did levie Warr first against the Houses we have no Law to make it Treason in Him so to doe And for us to declare Treason by an Ordinance when the matter of fact is not yet proved nor any Law extant to judge it by is very unreasonable so the Lords cast off the Debate and cast out the Ordinance and adjourned for seven dayes Jan. 3. The Zealots of the Commons were very angry at the Lords and threatned to clap a Pad-lock on the Door of their House but at last they sent up some of their Members to examine the Lords Book and see what they have done who brought word back that their Lordships had passed 2. Votes 1. That they doe not concurre to the said Declaratory Vote 2. That they had rejected the Ordinance for Triall of the King 58. Votes passed by them therupon Hereupon the Commons resolved to rid their hands of King and Lords together and presently they voted That all Members of the House of Commons and others appointed by order of that House or Ordinances of both Houses of Parliament to act in any Ordinance wherin the Lords are joyned shall be impowred and enjoyned to sit and act and execute in the said several Committees of themselves notwithstanding the House of Peers joyne not with them therein Upon the debate many hot-brain'd men insisted upon it That the Lords who rejected the Ordinance should be themselves Impeached for favouring the grand Delinquent of England you see the King was likely to have much justice when his Judges must either condemne Him or be condemned others thought it more prudence to touch their Priviledges and let alone their Persons Die Iovis 4. Jan. 1648. The Commons passed these 3. Votes A question in Divinity voted in Parliament never agreed to by Divines This we find de fact● in the subversion of our Religion Lawes Liberties and Properties though not de Jure You see that since both Houses ravished the Supremacy from the King and a petty faction from the Houses our Lawes are first shrunk into arbitrary Ordinances of
a force consulting in the House without their fellow Members advice or concurrence about speedie Deposing and executing CHARLES their lawfull Soveraign to please the Generall Officers and Counsell of the Army who have usurped to themselves the Supreme Authoritie both of King and Parliament or rather the Jesuits and Popish Priests among them 1. By the Common Law the Stat. 25. Edw. 3. Cok. 5. Inst 4. 1. Stamf. Pleas of the Crown l. 1. c. 1 2. and all other Acts concerning Treason It is High Treason for any man by overt act to compass the death of the King or his eldest Son though never executed and so adjudged by Parliament in the Earl of Arundels Case 21 Ric. 2. Plac. Coronae n. 4 6 7. 2. In the Oath of Allegiance which every man takes before he sits in Parliament you acknowledge him to be lawful and rightful King of this Realm and that the Pope neither of himself nor by any authority of the See of Rome or by any other means with any other hath any Power or Authority to depose the King c. Exact Collect. p. 16 19 21 59 66 83 102 103 118 123 125 141 142 143 173 180 195 219 259 281 307 380 312 360 376 457. A Collect c. p. 13 18 41 43 44 49 51 61 64 96 181 182 340 341 424 425 499 599 623 696 806 807 879. Appendix p. 15. 3. Your selves amongst other Members in above one hundred Remonstrances Declarations Petitions Ordinances c. in the name of the Parliament have professed You never intended the least hurt injury or violence to the Kings Person Crown Dignity or Posterity but intended to Him and His Posterity more Honour Happiness Glory and Greatness than ever any of His predecessors enjoyed That you would make good to the uttermost with your Lives and Fortunes the Faith and Allegiance you have alwaies born to him That all Contributions Loans should be imploied onely to maintain the Protestant Religion the Kings Authoritie Person Royal Dignitie Laws of the Land Peace of the Kingdome and Priviledges of Parliament That the Forces raised by the Parliament were for defence of the Kings Person and of both Houses That the Parliament will ever have a care to prevent any danger to his Person That they are resolved to expose their lives and fortunes for maintenance of the Kings Person Honour and Estate and the Power and Priviledges of Parliament when the King taxed the Houses for insinuating Exact Collect. p. 298 695 696 657 658 991. That if they should make the highest Presidents of other Parliaments their pattern that is depose the King there could be no cause to complain of them Both Houses by two Declarations protested against it saying That such thoughts never entred nor should enter into their loyal hearts Collect. of all Orders p. 8 13 41 43 44 49 51 61 64 96 99 623 696 879. Appendix p. 15. 4. By the Protestation They declare in the presence of God to defend the Kings Person and Estate and that their Armies under Essex and Fairfax were raised for that purpose inter alia 5. By the National Covenant They vowed to defend the Kings Person and Authoritie in preservation of true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdom and that they will all the daies of their lives continue in this Covenant against all opposition 6. You monopolize the Supreme power into your own hands robbing both King Lords and the rest of your fellow Members thereof whom you are content should be violently shut out by your Army who have leavied War against the Parliament to dissolve it till the removall of which force and restoring your Members with freedom and safety Also 15. E. 3. n. 5. 17 E. 3. n. 2 6. 18. E. 3 n 1. 2. 5. c. 1. R. 2. n. 1. 2. R. 2. n. 1. 3. R. 2. n. 1. 4. R. 2. n. 1. 5. R. 2. Parl. 1. n. 1. Parl. 2. n. 1. 8. H. 4. n. 28. you ought not to sit or Act in your Armies own doctrine in their Remonstrance Aug. 18. and by the Declaration and Ordinances of both Houses Aug. 20. 1647. Sec 21. R. 2. c. 12. 1. H. 4. c. 3. 31. H. 6. c. 1. 39. H. 6 c. 1. See the memorable Record 6. E. 3. Parl. apud Ebor. n. 1 2 dorso clauso 6. E. 3. m. 4. 6. E. apud Westm. Parl. 2. n. 1. 13. E. 3. Parl. 2. n. 4. many more Rolls where Parliaments when any considerable number of Members of either House were absent refused to sit though under no force till the House were full You have neither Law nor president for what you do Edw. 2. Rich. 2. were forced by Mortimer and H. 4. to resign their Crowns in a formall way one to his Son the other to his conquering Successor neither of them to the Parliament and at last Deposed by a subsequent Sentence of Parliament as unfit to Reign without any formall Triall * 72. The Armies party in the H approve the matter of the Co of Officers accusatory Ans against the secured Memb with out hearing them See Mr. Io Geerees Ans to that silly Sophister Io Goodwin called Might overcoming right Jan. 11. 1648. The House read the Answer of the Generall Counsell of the Army concerning the secured and secluded Members and as I have formerly said without hearing what the said Members could say for themselves approved the matter of it whereupon the secured and secluded Members 20. Jan. 1648. with much ado got printed their Vindication against the Aspersion cast upon them in The humble Answer of the Generall Counsell of the Officers of the Army concerning the securing secluding of the said Members The sum whereof is as followeth 73. The sec and secl Memb. Defence against the scandalous An of the C of W By the Preamble of this Answer and by the Proposals of the 6. Decemb. and the late Declaration and Remonstrance therein cited it appears this Design to break the House by force hath been long since plotted and contrived with action The Generall Councell of the Army in their said Answer say Is a course in it self irregular and not justifiable but by honest intentions and extraordinarie necessitie the weakness of which Answer we must examine but first must state the case b tween us They are an Army raised by Ordinance of Parliament of 15. Febr. 1644. for defence of King and Parliament the true Protestant Religion the Lawes and Liberties of the Kingdom and to be from time to time subject to such Orders and Directions as they shall receive from both Houses of Parliament and to this end they stand commissioned by them and receive pay from them to this day And besides this trust thus lying upon them they are under the obligation of a solemn Covenant sworn to God That they will in their place and callings with sincerity reality and constancy with their estates and lives preserve the Rights and Priviledges of
recalling the Lord Lysle from his command there and putting the best part of the said Kingdom and where the Parliament had the strongest footing Munster into the hands of Inchiquine a Native Irish who hath since Revolted from the Parliament hath lately united with the Irish Rebels and with them and Ormond for the King To this we ●ay the Lord Inchiquine came in and brought Munster to the Parliament and preserved their Interest in Ireland in all the heat of their Warres in England when they had little other Interest there and less means to relieve them the Lord Lysle was not recalled from his Command there This Lo went late caried over 160000 l. for which he hath not yet accounted began a quarrell with Inchiqueen and put him into discontent and then returned See the Irish Letters and Papers to the the House in print but his Commission for Lord Lieutenant expiring 15. April 1647. on the 17. April he hoysed sayle for England after the Lord Lysles return for England the Lord Inchiquine did gallant service against the Rebels took many strong Holds from them and won the Battel of Knocke-knowes one of the greatest that ever was gotten of the Rebels The House therefore approved of his behaviour untill 3. April 1648. when the Army having led the way the Lord Inchiquine taking distast thereat by way of imitation began to enter into Engagements and Remonstrances against the Parliament as it was then constituted for which he made the Remonstrances Engagements and Declarations of the Army the Summer before both the cause and precedent as by the printed Relation doth appear 2. Their endeavours to bring in the King upon His own Tearms without satisfaction and security to the Kingdom v●z upon His Message of the 12. of May 1647. and to this end to Disband this Army before any peace made or assured To this we say the House of Commons upon the first notice thereof voted the said Engagement of the 12. of May Treasonable and by Ordinance 17. Decemb 1647. put an incapacity upon such Citizens as had any hand in it which evidenceth we were here in a right majority as in other parts of their Paper they take the Votes of the House to prove us a corrupt majority The charge here lying in generall and not fixed upon any particular Concerning Disbanding the Army we say the House voted 8. Regiments of Foot 4. of Horse and 1. of Dragoones to be sent out of the Army for Ireland and resolved to keep 10000. Foot and 5400. Horse under Command of the Lord Fairfax for defence of England This was 1. For Relieving Ireland 2. For easing the heavy pressures of the poor People in England And 3. an honorable employment for the Forces of the Army to prevent such high distempers as have since ensued See my 1. part sect 16. 17. 18. and my said Animadversions pag. 2. neither were they legally impeached See Ardua regni or twelve arduous doubts written in defence of the expulsed Memb and the sa d Members Ans to the Armies Charge 3. That they endeavoured to protect the 11. impeached Members from justice and with them to raise a new Warre To this we say we gave them no other protection than the Laws allowed them For the mispending 200000 l. designed for Ireland we say that 80000 l. thereof was paid to Nicholas Loftus and others for service of Ireland and above 50000 l. to the Treasurers at Warre for the Army which may more reasonably be said to be mis-imployed because the Army had an established pay another way than what the Reformado Officers and Souldiers who obeyed the Orders of the House for Disbanding received who nevertheless pressed upon the House the more earnestly for their Arrears after the Declarations and Remonstrances published by the Army for paying the Arrears of all the Souldiers of England 4. Their countenancing abetting There was a close Inquisition of Godly Cut-throats purposely chosen to examine this Tumult which proceeded illegally and used so much foul play as to accuse men upon characters of their clothes persons yet malice it self could find nothing See my 1. part sect 45 46. to sect 54. Return to sect 2. 5. and partaking with the Tumult of Apprentices and others against both Houses of Parliament To this we say that we wonder they should urge the force offered to the House then which they declared horrid and treasonable to justifie the violence acted upon the House by themselves of a much higher nature This is a meer fiction of the Pen-mans which we do every one of us for our selves respectively deny 5. The holding correspondency engaging and assisting the tumultuous Petitioners last Spring the rebellious Insurrections in Kent the Revolted Ships Prince of Wales with the Scots Army We do every one of us for our selves respectively deny these 6. That when the Army was dispensed and engaged in severall parts c. and many faithfull Members employed abroad upon publique services and others through Malignant Tumults about this City could not with safety attend the House Then the corrupt and Apostating Party taking advantage of these distractions which themselves had caused First recalled in those Members c. Then they recalled those Votes for Non-Addresses and voted a Personall Treaty To this we say that if the proceedings of the Treaty were surreptitiously gotten in a thin House why do they then complain in other parts of their Paper that the majority of the House is corrupt Return to sect 2. 5. there see the true grounds of these Tumults See wh t u●e they make of provid nce in the 1. part of Englands new Chains and formed to serve the Kings corrupt Interest why did they force from the House above 200 Members at once the Counties never expressed so high contempt of the Parliament untill the like had been first done by the Armies quartering upon them And now let us come to that Vote of the House 5. Dec. 1648. That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses are a ground to proceed upon to a settlement of Peace of which they say That though they advanced hither to attend providence for opening some way to avoid the present evils designed and introduce the desired good into the Kingdom yet they said nor acted nothing in relation to the Parliament nor any Member thereof untill by the Vote passed Decemb. 5. they found the corrupt majority so resolvedly bent to compleat their Design in bringing in the King Do they call their threatning Declaration and Remonstrance a saying nothing and their marching up against the House contrary to the Order of the House a doing nothing in relation to the Parliament But by these words it appears that this Vote 5. Decemb. is the very point of that necessity they now relie upon to justifie their force upon the House For before that passed they say They acted nothing c. we must now state the difference between the
all the Parliaments Declarations and Remonstrances held forth to the world their Treaties and promises made to the Scots when they delivered the Kings Person into our hands against our promises made to the Hollanders and other Nations and against all the Professions Declarations Remonstrances and Proposals made by this Army when they made their Addresses to the King at New-market Hampton-Court and other places William Pryn. Clem Walker January 19. 1648. 75. The Coun of Officers order 2. Petitions for the Commons House against Tythes 2. against the Stat. for Banishing the Jews Aout this time the Generall Councell of Officers at White-Hall ordered That two Petitions or mandates rather should be drawn and presented to their House of Commons One against Payment of Tythes the other for Repealing the Act for Banishment of the Jews Hear you see they shake hands with the Jews and crucifie Christ in his Ministers as well as in his Anointed the King About this time Col Tichburn and some schismaticall Common-Councell-men 57. Col Tichburns Petition and complaint against the Lord Mayor and their Orders thereupon The like Petitions were invited from most Counties where a dozen Schism●ticks and two or three Cloaks represented a whole Country presented a Petition to the supreme Authority the Commons in Parliament demanding justice against all grand and capitall Actors in the late Warres against the Parliament from the highest to the lowest the Militia Navy and all Places of power to be in faithfull hands that is in their own Faction all others being displaced under the generall notion of disaffected to settle the Votes That the supreme Authority is in the Commons in Parliament assembled They complained That the Lord Mayor and some Aldermen denied to put their Petition to the Question at the Common Councell and departed the Court with the Sergeant and Town-Clerke That the Court afterwards passed it Nemine contradicente The Commons thanked the Petitioners for the tender of their assistance and Ordered That the Petition should be entered amongst the Acts of the Common Councell and owned them for a Common Councell notwithstanding the departure of the Lord Mayor c. And about four or five daies after the Commons Ordered * See a just and solemn Protest of the free Cit●zens of London against the Ordinance 17. Decemb. 1647. disabling such as had any hand in the City Engagment to bear Office That any six of the Commons Councell upon eme gent occasions might send for the Lord Mayor to call a Common Councell themselves and any forty of them to have power to Act as a Common Councell without the Lord Mayor any thing in their Charter to the contrary notwithstanding Thus you see the Votes of this supreme thing the House of Commons are now become the onely Laws and Reason of all our actions 77 An Act passed for adjournment of part of Hillary Term and the Lords concurrence rejected The 16 Jan. 1648. was passed an Act of the Commons for adjournment of Hillary Term for fourty daies This was in order to the Kings Triall but the Commissioners of the Great Seal declared That they could not agree to seal Writs of Adjournment without the Lords concurrence the assent of one Lord being requisite their tame Lordships sent down to the Commons to offer their readiness to joyn therein But the Commons having formerly Voted The Supreme Power to be in themselves as the Peoples Representative and that the Commons in every Committee should be empowered to Act without the Lords The Question was put Whether the House would concurre with the Lords therein which passed in the Negative so the Lords were not owned Afterwards they ordered that the Commoners Commissioners for the Great Seal should issue forth Writs without the Lords 78. The Agreement of the People presented to the House of Commons by the Officers the Army Diurnall from Jan. 15. 10. 22. 1648. nu 286. 20. January Lieut. Generall Hammond with many Officers of the Army presented to the Commons from the Generall and Councell of the Army a thing like a Petition with The Agreement of the People annexed Mr. Speaker thanking them desired them to return the hearty thanks of the House to the Generall and all his Army for their gallant services to the Nation and desired the Petition and Agreement should be forthwith printed to shew the good affection between the Parliament and Army I cannot blame them to brag of this affection being the best string to their bowe About this time some wel-meaning man that durst think truth in private published his thoughts under the Title of Six serious Quaeries concerning the Kings Triall by the High Court of Justice .. 79. 6. Queries concerning the Kings Triall by the new High Court of Justice 1. Whether a King of three distinct Kingdoms can be condemned and executed by one Kingdom alone without the concurrent consent or against the judgement of the other two 2. Whether if the King be indicted or arraignd of high Treason he ought not to be tried by his Peers whether those who are now nominated to trie him or any others in the Kingd be his Peers 3. Whether if the King be triable in any Court for any Treason against the Ki●gdom He ought not to be tried onely in full Parliament in the most solemn and publike manner before all the Members of both Houses in as honourable a way as Strafford was in the beginning of this Parliament And whether He ought not to have liberty and time to make His full defence and the benefit of his learned Counsel in all matters of Law that may arise in or about his Trial or in demurring to the jurisdiction of this illegal new Court as Strafford and Canterbury had 4. Whether one eighth part only of the Members of the Commons House meeting in the House under the Armies force when all the rest of the Members are forcibly restrained secluded or scared away by the Armies violence and representing not above one eighth part of the Counties Cities Boroughs of the Kingdom without the consent and against the Vote of the majority of the Members excluded and chased away and of the House of Peers by any pretext of Authority Law or Justice can erect a New great Court of Justice to try the King in whom all the rest of the Members Peers and Kingdom being far the Major part have a greater interest then they Whether such an High Court can be erected without an Act of Parl. or at least an Ordin of both Houses and a Commission under the Great Seal of England And if not whether this can be properly called a Court of Justice and whether it be superiour or inferiour to those who erected it who either cannot or dare not try and condemn the King in the Com. House though they now stile it The Supreme Authority of the Kingdom and whether all who shall sit as Judges or act as Officers in it towards the
onely in the Lords and Peers of the Realme being by Inheritance custome and Law in such case the Kings and Kingdoms great Councel to whose lawfull commands all other Subjects ought to yeeld ready Obedience 6. That every professed actuall endeavour by force or otherwise to alter the fundamentall Monarchicall Government Laws and legall Style and proceedings of this Realme and to introduce any new Government or Arbitrary proceedings contrary thereunto is no lesse then High Treason and so declared and resolved by the last Parliament in the cases of Strafford and Canterbury the losse of whose Heads yet fresh in memory should deterre all others from pursuing their pernitious courses and out-stripping them therein they being as great potent and as farre out of the reach of danger and justice in humane probability as any of our present Grandees 111. A New Stamp for Coyne That no Act of Rebellion and Treason might be unattempted by this Conventicle no part of the Regalities of the King or peoples Liberties unviolated they considered of a New Stamp to be given to all Coyne for the future of this Nation 112. Instructions for the Councel of State 13. Febr. They considered of Instructions and Power to be given by way of Commission to the said Committee or Councel of State 1. For the Government of the two Nations of England and Ireland appointing a Committee to bring in the Names of these Hogens Mogens and to perfect their Instructions for 1 Ordering the Militia 2 Governing the People they were wont to be Governed by knowne Lawes not by Arbitrary Instructions and by one King not by forty Tyrants most of them base Mechanicks whose education never taught them to aspire to more knowledge then the Office of a Constable 3 Setling of Trade most of them have driven a rich Trade in the work of Reformation for themselves 4 Execution of Lawes this was wont to be done by legall sworne Judges Juries and Officers 113. Powers given to the Councel of State 14. Eebr The Committee reported to the House the Names of the Committee of State or Lords States Generall Also the Power they were to have viz 1. Power to command and settle the Militia of England and Ireland 2. Power to set forth Ships and such a considerable Navy as they should think fit 3. Power to appoint Magazines and Stores for the Kingdoms of England and Ireland and dispose of them from time to time for the service of both Nations as they shall think fit 4. Power to fit and execute the severall powers given for the space of one whole yeare with many other powers not yet revealed and daily increased besides what improvements of Power they are able to make hereafter having the Militia of an Army that formidable Hob-goblin at their command They have two Seales appointed a Great Seale and a Signet Patents for Sheriffs and Commissions for Justices and Oaths for both were reformed according to the Godly cut When the Committtee of State was nominated in the House 114. An expurgatory Oath put upon the Councel of State scrupled by some of the Members and moderated by Cromwell ●n opposition of the Level●ers divers Gentlemen of the best quality were named whom they could not omit because they had sat with them and concurred in all their great debates although they had more confidence in those petty Fellows who had or would sell their soules for gain to make themselves Gentlemen to debarre the said Gentlemen of quality therefore and make them forbear they invented an expurgatory Oath or Shibeleth to be taken by every Member before his initiation whereby they should declare That they approved of what the House of Commons and their High Court of Justice had done against the KING and of their abolishing of Kingly Government and of the House of Peers and that the Legislative and Supreme power was wholly in the House of Commons 22. Febr. Cromwell Chairman of that Committee of State reported to the Commons That according to the Order of that House 19. of the said Members had subscribed to that forme of the Oath as it was originally penned but 22. of them scrupled it whereof all the Lords were part not but that they confessed except one The Commons of England to be the Supreme power of the Nation or that they would not live and die with them in what they should do for the future but could not confirm what they had done in relation to the King and Lords so it was referred to a Committee to consider of an expedient Cromwell having made use of the Levellers 115. Cromwells usurped power When the House of Commons opposed Cromwels and Iret●ns designes they cried up the Libertie of the People and decried the Authority of Parliament until they had made use of the Levellers to purge the House of Commons and make it subservient to their ends and abolish the House of Lords and then they cried up the Supreme Au●horitie of their House of Commons and decried the Liberty of the people and the Levellers who upheld it So Charles the 5. first made use of the Popes Authority to subdue the Protest●nts of Germany and then used an Army of Protestants to subdue and imprison ●he Pope Assertors of publique Liberty to purge the House of Commons and abolish the Lords House doth now endeavour to cast down the Levellers once more finding himself raised to so great an height that he cannot endure to think of a levelling equality he overswayes the Councel of Warre over-awes the House of Commons and is Chairman and Ring-leader of the Councel of State so that he hath engrossed all the power of England into his own hands and is become the triple-Triple-King or Lord Paramount over all the Tyrants of England in opposition therefore to the Levelling party and for the upholding his own more Lordly Interest he procured an expedient to Alter and Reforme the said Oath which at last passed in this forme following February the 22. 1648. 116. The forme of the said reformed Oath I A. B. being nominated a Member of the Councel of State by this present Parliament do testify that I do adhere to this present Parliament in the maintenance and defence of the publique liberty and freedome of this Nation as it is now Declared by this Parliament by whose Authority I am constituted a Member of the said Councel and in the maintenance and defence of their resolutions concerning the setling of the Government of this Nation for the future in way of a Republique without King or House of Peers and I do promise in the sight of God that through his Grace I will be faithfull in performance of the trust committed to me as aforesaid and therin faithfully pursue the Instructions given to the said Councel by this present Parliament Mere you see a curtain drawn between the eyes of the people and the clandestine machinations and actings of this Councell and not reveale or
English being among forreign Nations esteemed as a crime sufficient so did the Land mourn for oaths that she was ready to vomit out her inhabitants while the Juncto still endeavour to palliate their villany and to get allies among neighbour Princes and States to many of whom they send Embassadours as they stiled them and were again reciprocally courted and owned and particularly by the Spanyard and the French but the Dutch did seem to be Men of a better mould and temper The dutch quarrel and therefore having no better ground they quarrell for superiority denying to vaill to the English because they were the younger State yet still owning that respect to the Monarchy hereat the English though yet but an Embrio begin to startle and weighing the unsetledness of their basis and that all they had hitherto done was only dawbed together with untempered morter they resolve to try all wayes rather then fall out St. Johns sent to treat but returnes without doing any thing and will seek to gain that by Courtship which they are unwilling to hazard by force as a fit Man for this work they pick out a pure Saint Mr. Oliver St. Johns and dispatch him into Holland with as large a train as great State and as full instructions as they could possibly afford or invent whether when he is come he makes his addresse to the Lords States but with so little approbation and success that in a little time he began to grow weary of his businesse especially when the multitude began to grow clamourous against him insomuch that he durst hardly stir abroad so that being both outworded and outwitted after many debates brotherly expostulations Declarations and hearty desires to small or rather indeed to no purpose he gravely makes his Congee takes his leave and vanisheth The Juncto at his teturn somewhat discontented at his fruitless Embassie yet finding no other remedy and willing to make the best of a bad market prepare for war for by this time the Dutch had begun both to affront them and seize on what they could catch as lawfull prize which so vexed the English Puny State that they presently fall to an open war the various successes of which and the losses that accrewed thereby to each party by means of the same I shall not make the work of my pen having only designed to delineate those black deeds of impiety acted within the narrow limits of our England by the horridest crew of bloody miscreants that were ever spared by Divine vengeance from sudden destruction The English affairs and Government being thus wrested into the hands of a few desperate persons Ireland looked at the next thing aimed at is the reducing of Ireland for effecting whereof they give a Commission to and raise an Army under the Command of Cromwell Cromwell sent to Ireland and prove Victorious which he as suddenly transports thither Ormond and Inchequeen having at that time all the Country in obedience to his Majesty save only Dublin kept by Col. Michael Jones and London-derry by Sir Charles Coot when lo as it were to wellcome Cromwell Jones immediately before his arrival had made way for him by the overthrow of Ormonds forces about Dublin And now as if fortune had already designed him the laurell St. Charles Coot in an other place at Londonderry worsteth a Second party and the Earl of Ormond and the Lord Inchequeen having joyned their broken forces into a considerable strength are again together overthrown at Connaught The concatenation of these successes together with the cruelty exercised by Cromwell at the taking of Tredagh by storm where his rage spared neither age nor sex a barbarism scarcely used by the very Turkes cast such a Panick fear over the whole Nation that the strong holds fell into his power like over-ripe fruit into the prepared hands of its ready gatherer So hidden and misticall is the series of Gods providence that for a time the most enormous crimes are counted vertues the poor loosing honest soul constrained to stoop and bow under the heavy yoke of a prevailing tyrant yea Majesty it self enforced like the clouded Sun compulsively to hide his beams and retire with his light for a while as though it had been but borrowed but as the Sun so Majesty can never be kept in perpetuall darkness for by this time the Independent who had for a space been chief find a Competitor of the Leveller The Leveller begins to ●●r who resolves either to share in the whole and so reduce and keep all in an equality whereby himself may be one of the greatest or else to endeavour to b●ing back all into its originall channel and to shew they meant as they said with better hearts then success or strength they rise in three or four places for they are assoon quasht as seen and themselves and their design end both together A garment of linnen and woollen was forbidden to be worn by the Leviticall law and I suppose because the mixture would be improper either for wearing or handsomness of sight in the same manner may I say of the Levelling faction that though they in intent were reall for restoring the King yet God would not suffer it to be brought to pass by such hands that had been so deeply dyed before in royall blood The royal party though under hatches and now suffering for their loyalty having passed and been refined in the fire of affliction must be the Men whose unspotted fingers shall not only pull down the Idolized Babel of the Peoples imagination but repair the decayed ruines of our broken Government and reinstate exiled Majesty upon its throne adorned with safety and with beauty both and guarded with the safest strength of faithfull hearts and hands better then walls of brass or formed troops of mercenary Souldiers Scots send to the King But that time was not yet come although the Scots sent a peculiar messenger the Lord Libberton to the King desiring him among other things that he would please to appoint a place for a Treaty to be between his Majesty and his Kingdom of Scotland which offer of theirs was graciously accepted and a Treaty appointed at Breda on the 15th of March whither the Scots Commissioners came the 16th and on the 19th fell to their business neither would by any means relinquish their Presbytery though but in part and as to the particular person of the King himself whom they strongly bound up to the Covenant Directory and Catechismes Treaty at Bredah concluded whereto his Majesty after many long and serious debates having unwillingly consented The Scots on their part did promise 1. That his Majesty should be admitted to the throne of Scotland 2. That his Rights then should be by Parliament recovered from the hands of Usurpers and 3. That they would assist to bring the murtherers of his Father of blessed memory to condigne punishment and to restore him to his Native Kingdom of England A
Justice or signed the Warrant for execution of any person there condemned Thus by the blessing of God I have waded through the many intricate Meanders and Revolutions untill at last I have as it were brought you by the hand to see that desperate Faction of Indepencency as one may say laid into its Grave all the heads thereof being so annihilated by the Iustice of the known Law of the Land that I hope its memory shall be raked up in such an Eternal forgetfulnesse that posterity seeing no foot-steps thereof shall conceive it to be a bare name a mere notion or aliquid non ens of which in nature there can be no subsistance An Appendix HOw far the Treasons of faction have reached and how high they durst soare is to be seen before I shall onely now in short give a hint how highly the Law of England resents such impious acts I say then the wisdome and foresight of the Laws of this Land in all cases of Treason maketh this judgement that the Subject that riseth or rebelleth in forcible to over-rule the royal will and power of the King intendeth to deprive the King both of Crown and Life and this is no mystery or quidity of the Common Law but an infallible conclusion drawn out of reason and experience for the Crown is not a ceremony or Garland but as Imperial consisteth of preheminence and power This made former Traytors in all their quarrels against their Princes not to strike down-right because God unto Lawful Kings did ever impart such beams of his own glory as Rebels never durst look straight upon them but ever turned their pretences against some about them this caused the Judges sometime to deliver their opinions for matter in Law upon two points The first that in case where a subject attempteth to put himself into such strength as the King shall not be able to resist him and to force and compel the King to govern otherwise then according to his own royal authority and direction it is manifest rebellion The second that in every Rebellion the Law intendeth as a consequent the compassing the death and deprivation of the King as foregoing that the rebel will never suffer that King to live or raign which might punish or take revenge of his treason And this is not onely the wisdome of the Laws of our own Kingdome but it is also the censure of forraign Laws the conclusion of common reason which is the ground of Law and the demonstrative assertion of experience which is the warranty of all reason For the first the Civil Law that saith Treason is nothing else but Crimen Laesae vel dimminutae Majestatis making every offence which abridgeth or hurteth the power and authority of the Prince as an insult or invading of the Crown and extorting the imperial Scepter And for common reason and experience they cry it is not possible that a Subject should once come to that height as to give law to his Soveraign but what with terror of his own guilt and what with the insolency of the change he will never permit the King if he can chuse to recover his authority nay or to live Experience further tells us and 't is confirmed by all stories and examples two notable ones we had formerly in our own Chronicles the first of Edw. the 2d who when he kept himself close for danger was summoned by proclamation to come and take upon him the Government but as soon as he presented himself was made prisoner next forced to resign and shortly after was tragically murthered in Berkly-Castle The other is of K. Rich. the second before whom the Duke of Hereford afterwards K. Hen. the 4th presented himself with three seemingly humble but indeed flattering reverences yet in the end both deposed him and put him to death but our own experience outvies all else in the Horrid murther of our late dread Soveraign which is related in the former parts the punishment whereof is fully related in this last part and therefore I shall no more thereof in this place You may have observed that the practice of our Regicides was after they had ruined the Gentry to advance their own kindred and allyes though never so insufficiently unworthy to the most profitable places of the Common wealth by which means all kind of exorbitances were committed without controul the Death of the King being attended with infinite oppressions as in such changes is usual which made Writers say that the Death of Caesar was no benefit to the Romans but rather brought greater Calamities on them they underwent befere as may be found in Aspian The success was the like when Nero fell for the next year that followed after his Death felt more oppression and spilt more blood then was shed in all those nine years wherein he had so tyrannically reigned So when the Athenians had expelled one Tyrant they brought in thirty and when the Romans expelled their King they did not put away the Tyranny but only change the Tyrants But such and so tender is the hand of heaven over us that he hath not only restored our Kings as at the first and all our Counsellors as at the beginning but brought us home our King so accomplished and pious that we must needs confesse with the Children of Israel because the Lord hath a delight in us therefore hath he made him King over us Oh then let us render without grudging unto Caesar the things that are Caesars acknowledge him as Gods immediate Vicegerent not prescribing him in what manner we will be ruled nor by what means But in all things with obedience and humility to submit to his command like Julian the Apostata's Soldiers who would not sacrifice at his words sed timendo potestatem contemnebant potestatem in fearing the power of God they regarded not the power of man yet when he led them against his enemies Subditi errant propter Dominum eternum etiam Domino Temporali I will conclude all with one word of Advice Since God hath so bettered our condition that our words are hardly able to express our happinesse to avoyd the danger of a relapse through a too carelesse security let circumspection moderation take away all bitternesse rather reflecting on the offences then the persons of any offenders so it may be those concerned will not be so desperate to proceed on further in their wicked courses but with speed retire and make some recompence to in●ured parties by their future provident endevours for the Common good And for these Loyal hearts who have borne the brunt of the storm both at home and abroad since God hath rescued them as brands out of the fire 't is hoped they will be nothing the more secure in their vigilant care of future occurrences having alwayes a provident eye for the timely prevention of such inconveniencies as might steal on them in their own or be intended against them from forrain parts That so the Throne of our Solomon may continue for ever and peace be upon our Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sed bene velle meretur veniam Cicero THE END ☞ There is now in the Press ready to come forth that so much desired Book intituled An Exact History of the Life and Actions of Hugh Peters As also his Diary Sold by H. Brome and H. Marsh c.
facinorous persons who comply with them to keep up this Army for their own security against publick justice Having thus courted and cheated all the publick and just Interests of the Kingdom they deceived the people so far as to make them Issachar-like patiently to bear the burden of free-quarter and to make addresses to the Army for themselves by Petitions to which they gave plausible answers That this and this was the sense of the Army As if the sense of the Army had been the supreme Law of the Land and to make addresses to the Parliament for the Army not to be disbanded for which purpose their Agitators carried Petitions ready penned to be subscribed in most Counties The Peo●le being thus lulled asleep 22. A quarrel against the City invented they now cast about how to make benefit of a joynt quarrel both against the Parliament and City since they could not separate them or at least against the Presbyterian party in both they had withdrawn their quarters in a seeming obedience to Parliaments commands 30 miles from London of which they often brag in their Papers and presumed the suspension of the 11. Members had struck such an awfulness into the Houses that most of the Presbyterian Members would either absent themselves as too many indeed did or turn Renegadoes from their own principles to them but found themselves notwithstanding opposed and their desires retarded beyond their expectation by the remainder of that party 23. The Army demand the City Militia to be changed into other hands They must therefore find out a quarrel to march against the City and give the Houses another Purge stronger than the former The Army being principled and put into a posture sutable to Cromwels desire and the Country charmed into a dull sleep now was his time to pick a quarrel with the City that what he could not obtain by fair means he might obtain by foul to make them desert and divide from the Parliament and leave it to be modelled according to the discretion of the Souldiery He could not think it agreeable to policy that the City which had slai● his Compeer and fellow Prince Wat Tyler the Idol of the Commons in Richard the seconds time and routed his followers four times as many in number as this Army should be trusted with their own Militia the City being now greater more populous and powerfull than in his days In a full and free Parliament upon mature debate both Houses by Ordinance dated 4 May 1647. had established the Militia of the City of London for a year in the hands of such Citizens as by their Authority and approbation were nominated by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council and though the Army had recruted it self without Authority and had got themselves invested with the whole power of all the Land forces of the Kingdom in pay of the Parliam so that there was nothing left that could be formidable to them but their own crimes and that it was expected they should go roundly to work upon those publick remedies they had so often held forth to the people in their popular Printed Papers See the Letter and Remonstrance from Sir Tho. Fairfax and the Army p. 8. 9. Yet the Army contrary to what they promised to the City in their Letter 10. June and their Declaration or Representation 14 June 1647. That they would not go beyond their desires at that time expressed and for other particulars would acquiesce in the Justice and wisdom of the Parliament behold their modesty by a Letter and Remonstrance from Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army with unresisted boldness demanded the Militia of the City of London to be returned into other hands without acquainting the City of their Commissioners then resident in the Army to keep a good correspondency with them therewith upon which Letter alone the House of Commons being very thin and many Members driven away by menaces upon July 22. Voted the repealing the said Vote of 4 May and a new Ordinance for reviving the old Militia presently passed and transmitted to the Lords the same day about seven of the clock at night and there presently passed without debate though moved by some to be put off until the City whose safety and privileges it highly concerned were heard what they could say to it Observe that neither by the said Paper from the Army nor by any man in the two Houses any thing was objected against any of the new Militia And indeed formerly the Parliament never made choice of enlarged or changed the City Militia but they were still pleased fi●st to communicate the same to the Common-Council a Res●ect justly shewed to that City which had been such good friends to them but of late since the Parliament have shifted their old P●inci●les and Interests they have learned to lay by their old Friends The pretence for this hasty passing the Ordinance was to prevent the Armies so much theatned march to London if the Houses refused to pass it and the Cities opposition if not passed before their notice of it But the real design was to strike a discontent and jealousie into the City thereby to force them to some act of self-defence which might give a colour to the Army to march up against them and their friends in the Houses The unexpected news of this changing their Militia 24. The City troubled at the change of their Militia caused the City June 24. being Saturday to meet in Common-Council where for some reasons already expressed and because the repealing this Ordinance upon no other grounds than the Armies imperious desires might justly be suspected to shake all other Ordinances for security of Money sale of Bishops Lands I appeal to Colonel Harvy whether this did not fright him by making them repealable at the Armies pleasure they resolve to Petition the House upon Monday morning following being 26. July which they did by the Sheriffs and some Common-Council men But so it hapned that about one thousand Apprentices wholly unarmed 25. The City Petition the Houses for their Militia again came down two or three hours after with another Petition of their own to the Houses Therein complaining that to Order the Cities Militia was the Cities Birth-right belonging to them by Charters confirmed in Parliament for defence whereof they had adventured their lives as far as the Army And desired the Militia might be put again into the same hands in which it was put with the Parliaments and Cities consent by Ordinance May 4. 26. The tumult of Apprentices 26. July Upon reading these Petitions the Lords were pleased to revoke the Ordinance of July 23. and revive that of May 4. by a new Ordinance of July 26. which they presently sent down to the Commons for their consents where some of the Apprentices presuming they might have as good an influence upon the House to obtain their due as the Army in pay of the Parliament had to
Principles for which the Parliament so often declared in print that they fought and for defence whereof they had entered into a covenant with their hands lifted up to God the other two principles were Religion and L●berties 1. The Lords were not Peers to the Commoners At the common Law they shall have sworn Judges for matter of Law of whom they may ask questions in doubtfull points nor can they be Judges in their own cases 2. They have sworn Jurors of the Neighbourhood for matter of fact whom they may challenge 3. The known Laws and Statutes for Rules to judg by which in case of Treason in the Stat. 25. Ed. 3. you cannot Vote nor declare a new Treason And if you could to do it Ex post facto is contraty to all rules of justice The Apostle saith sin is a breach of a Commandment or Law I had not known sin but by the Law the Law therefore must go before the Sin 4. At the Common Law They have Witnesses openly and newly examined upon Oath before the accused's face who may except against them and cross examine them 5. Even in Star-chamber and Chancery where only hearings are upon Testimonies the Examiners are sworn Officers 6. A man hath but one Tryal and Judgment upon one accusation so that he knows when he hath satisfied the Law In this way of proceeding all these necessary legalities are laid by and these Gentlemen have not so much fair play for their Lives and Estates as Naboth had for his Vineyard he had all the formalities of the Law yea he had Law it self yet he had not justice because they were the sons of Belial that were set before him what shall we conceive these Witnesses are that do not appear nay whose very names are concealed yet Naboth was murdered by the sword of Justice for the honour of Parliaments give not the people cause to suspect these Gentlemen shall be so too non recurrendum ad extraordinaria quando fieri potest per ordinaria But all this was but to charm a deaf Adder 52. Arguments proving the Lords to have no power of Judicature over the Commons the nine or ten engaged Lords that then possessed the House were thought to be fitter than a Jury of Middlesex to make work for the hang-man and yet they have no Judicature over the Commons as appears by the President of Sir Simon de Berisford William Talboys and the City of Cambridge Note that one president against the Jurisdiction of a Court is more valued than a hundred for it because the Court cannot be supposed ignorant of the Law and its own rights but a particular man or Client may see Sir John Maynard's Royal quarrel and his Laws subversion Lieutenant Col. Lilburn's Whip for the present House of Lords and Judge Jenkins Remonstrance to the Lords and Commons of the two Houses of Parliament dated 21 Feb. 1647. As for the cases of Weston Gomenes and Hall cited by Mr. Pryn they were for facts done beyond Sea and before the Stat. 1. Hen. 4. ch 14. whereof the Common Law could then have no connusance and therefore an extraordinary way of proceeding before the Lords was requisit and by the Kings special authority it was done without which I dare boldly affirm the Lords have no Judicature at all which thus I make appear 1. The King by delivering the Great Seal to the Lord Keeper 53. The House of Peers no Court of Judicature at all properly and per se makes him Keeper of his conscience for matter of equity By His Brevia patentia to the Judges of the two Benehes and the Exchequer the King makes them administrators and interpreters of his Laws But he never trust any but himself with the power of pardoning and dispensing with the rigor of the Law in Criminal cases And though the Lord Keeper is Speaker of the Lords House of course yet he is no Member of the Lords House virtute Officii the Judges are not Members but assistants only so that no man in the House of Peers as he is simply a Peer is trusted by the King either with dispensation of Law or Equity 2. When a Peer of Parliament or any man else is tried before the Lords in Parliament criminally he cannot be tryed by his Peers only because in acts of judicature there must be a Judge Superior who must have his inferiors ministerial to him therefore in the trial of the Earl of Strafford as in all other trials upon life and death in the Lords House the King grants his Commission to a Lord high Steward to sit as Judge and the rest of the Lords are but in the nature of Jurors So that it is the Kings Commission that Authoriseth and Distinguisheth them 3. When a Writ of Error issueth out of the Chancery to the House of Peers they derive their Authority meerly from that Writ For the three Reasons aforesaid the House of Peers is no Court of Judicature without the Kings special Authority granted to them either by his Writ or his Commission and the Lords by their four Votes having denied all further address or application to the King have cut off from themselves that fountain from which they derived all their power and all trials by Commission must be upon Bills or Acts of Attainder not by Articles of Impeachment a way never heard of before this Parliament and invented to carry on the designs of a restless impetuous faction Had the Faction had but so much wit as to try the Gentlemen by Commission of Oyer and Terminer before Sergeant Wild he would have borrowed a point of Law to hang a hundred of them for his own preferment Observe that almost all the cases cited by Mr. Pryn concerning the Peers trials of Commissioners were Authorised by the King upon the special instance of the House of Commons as for the House of Commons they never pretended to any power of Judicature and have not so much Authority as to Administer an Oath which every Court of Pye-Poulders hath 54. Blank Impeachments dormant But this way of tryal before the pre-ingaged Lords and upon Articles of Impeachment which they keep by them of all sorts and sizes fit for every man as in Birchin-lane they have suits ready made to fit every body was the apter means to bring men to death whom they feared living had not a doubt of the Scots comming in taught them more moderation than their nature is usually acquainted with and to fright away at least put to silence the rest of the Members with fear of having their names put in blank Impeachments and that it might be so apprehended Miles Corbet moved openly in the House of Commons that they should proceed with the Impeachments which were ready nothing wanted but to fill up the Blanks they might put in what names they pleased This Inquisitor General this Prologue to the Hang-man that looks more like a Hang-man than the Hang-man himself hath since gotten a
that there is a natural purging a natural phlebotomy belonging to Politique as well as to Natural bodies and that some good humors are always evacuated with the bad yet I cannot but deplore what I have observed That the honestest and justest men on both sides such as if they have done evil did it because they thought it good such as were carried aside with specious pretences and many of them seduced by Pulpit-devils who transformed themselves into Angels of light have always fared worse than other men as if this difference between the King and Parliament were but a syncretismus or illusion against honest men nay I do further foresee that in the period and closing up of this Tragedy they will fare worst of all because they have not taken a liberty to inrich themselves with publique spoils and fat themselves by eating out the bowels of their mother but are grown lean and poor by their integrity whereby being disabled to buy friendship in the dayes of Trouble they will be put upon it to pay other mens reckonings When Verres was Praetor of Sicily he had with wonderfull corruptions pillaged that Province and at the same time the Praetor of Sardinia being sentenced for depeculating and Robbing that Province Timarchides Verres Correspondent at Rome writ a very anxious Letter to him giving him warning of it But Verres in a jolly humour answered him That the Praetor of Sardinia was a fool and had extorted no more from the Sardinians than would serve his own turn but himself had gathered up such rich booties amongst the Sicilians that the very overplus thereof would dazle the eyes of the Senate and blind them so that they should not see his faults Such I foresee will be the lot of the more just and modest men who shall be guilty because they were fools as the other sort shall be innocent because they were knaves Whatsoever befalls you clear and innoxious soules be not ashamed be not affraid of your integrity if this Kingdom be a fit habitation for honest men God will provide you a habitation here if it be not capable of honesty God will take you away from the evils to come and pour out all the Vials of his wrath on this totally and universally corrupted Nation this incurable people Qui nec vitia sua nec eorum remedia ferre potest for my own part if I am not such already I hope God will make me such a man Quem neque pauperies neque mors neque vincula terrent and if Moses in an heroick zeal to draw a remission of the peoples sin from God desired to be blotted out of his Book the Book of Life and St. Paul to be Anathema for his Brethren why should not I with relation to my self and submission to Christ say oportet unum mori pro populo it is fit one man die for the people and devote my self to death for my Country as the family of the Decii in ancient Rome were wont to do I have read and admired their examples why not imitate them is it because as Machiavel saith The Christian Religion doth too much break enfeeble and cowardise the spirit of man by persecuting and subduing nature by denying her due Liberty and tying her to be more passive than active At facere pati fortia Romanum imo Christianum est or is it because in this generall deluge of sinne and corruption a publique spirit and excellency in virtue is accounted a degree of madness or is it because of the corrupt judgement of these times which makes a man more infamous for his punishment than for his sin and therefore Heroick acts are out of fashion the circumstances and ceremonies of Death are more taken notice of than Death it self these follies weigh not with me Sublimis an humi putrescam parvi refert The Thief upon the Crosse found a ready way to Heaven How much more an honest man Many a man out of Prison steps into Heaven no man out of Paradise ever found the way thither Salebrosa sit via modo certa modo expedita altè succinctus ad iter me accingo THe Premises considered I do here in the name and behalf of all the free Commons of England declare and protest that there is no free nor legal Parliament sitting in England but that the two Houses sit under a visible actual and an horrid force of a mutinous Army and of a small party of both Houses conspiring and engaged with the Army to destroy expell and murder with false Accusations and Blank and Illegal Impeachments and prosecutions the rest of their fellow Members who sate in Parliament doing their duty when the two Speakers with a small company of Members secretly fled away to the Army and sate in Council with them contriving how to enslave King Parliament City and Kingdom and how to raise Taxes at their pleasure which they share amongst themselves and their party under the name and title of the Godly the Saints and afterwards they brought the Army up to London against the Parliament and City in hostile manner a design far exceeding the Plot of Jermine Goring c. to bring up the Northern Army to London to over-awe the Parliament I do farther protest that the two Houses have sate under the said force ever since the sixth of August 1647. and therefore all they have done and all they shall do in the condition they sit in is void and null in Law ab initio by their own doctrine and judgement included in their Ordinance of the 20. of August last whereby they null and void ab initio all Votes Orders c. passed from the 26. July 1647. to the 6. August following Arguments against all accommodation and Treaties between the City of LONDON and the ingaged Grandees of the Parliament and Army 1 IT will never be safe nor honourable for so great a City to accommodate and joyn interest with a conspiring Party that by frequent violations of their faith and duty have inslaved King Parliament City and Kingdom and broken the Faith of this Nation given to the Scots in the large Treaties and in the National Covenant 2. By accommodating with them you make all their crimes your own their subtilty being to involve you to joyn with them in defence of their crimes 3. The Scottish quarrel is not against the English Nation but against the treacherous and hypocritical Grandees who by perjuring themselves and falsifying their ingagements both unto Kingdom and Army keeping the Souldiers by false suggestions from disbanding and totally obstructing Irelands relief and also a conspiring party in Parliament who keep them up to make good the aforesaid crimes forcing what Votes they please to passe by over-awing the Parliament Witnesse Cromwels laying his hand upon his Sword and forcing the House to passe those traiterous Votes against the King contrary to their own Consciences Allegiance Protestations Vow and Covenant and to raise Taxes upon the people which
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
which of the two he should take in hand but the constant assurance they had from Argile and those accursed Clergy-men that were bribed by Stephen Marshal That there was no fear of danger from Scotland in hast made them hasten to finish the enslaving of England and Wales and then they resolve to conquer Scotland which they conceive may be quickly done having Argile and his Faction so firm to them that although he would neither he nor his Partners dare revolt from them having received so much of their money lest they should reveal more than he desires should be known and as the Independents sent their Emissaries through all Counties and Corporations to get hands to Petitions for thanks to the House for their dethroning Votes so Argile and Marshal's Hirelings have been very active to get hands to Petitions in many Shires Corporations and Provincial Assemblies for hindering the engagement against the rebellious Army of Sectaries and the Independent Junto their Confederates whereas there is no intention against the Parliament or Body of England but to comply with all religious honest hearted and loyal Subjects who desire that His Majesty may be enlarged and brought to a Personal Treatie whereby Peace and Truth may be setled in the three Kingdoms their chief pretences being that Religion is not secured the Religion now established in Scotland was by Act of Parliament His Majesty present so well secured as the most religious Church-men and most skilfull Lawyers could devise if you have got New Lights and desire any other Religion to be established vindicate His Majesties Honour and put up your Petitions to Him in an orderly way and He may possibly vindicate you from the Yoke of Slavery which some of your tyrannizing Clergy desire to put upon you The next is a wonderfull increase of your fears by the great Trusts put upon such persons of whom you have just cause of jealousie to this Kingdom and the Cause of God though you do not speak plain your Pamphletters do and your Pulpit Incendiaries to some purpose you mean Duke Hamilton now General of the Forces des gned by the Kingdom and Parliament of Scotland for vindicating the Honour of the Nation and revenging His Majesties Captivity upon that perfidious rebellious Army of Sectaries and their adherents what he did before the subscribing of the Covenant ought not to be objected his moderation even then deserving the honour and love of his Country and since his subscribing malice it self cannot tax him that he hath done any thing contrary to his Covenant or his Country what Montrosse doth asperse him with that he hindred his intended invasion of Scotland and so consequently His Majesties Service none of those who stand for the Covenant who did think Montrosse an enemy to the Covenant and to his Country ought to object this to my Lord Duke whose tender care of the safety and welfare of his Country may evidently appear even in the relation of one of his most deadly enemies and whereas his good advice for moderation was misconstrued by Argile and his prevailing Faction on the one side as if he had done things contrary to the Covenant and by Montrosse and his Confederates at Court on the other side as if he had connived or been accessary to those violent courses against his Majesty which God knows he was not able at that time to hinder his intentions being still for Peace and such a Peace as might consist with the safety of Religion and His Majesties honour whereof he was very hopeful being confident of His Majesties propensnesse to Peace and the interest he had in His Majesties favour but the watchfull malice of his enemies and the enemies of Peace did cunningly prevent his going about so good a work making him Prisoner without His Majesties knowledg hindring by all means a meeting betwixt them knowing that his Majesties justice and the Dukes innocency would quickly make their calumnies to vanish what a sad imprisonment did he indure much heightned by the then impossibility of clearing his innocency to his Sovereign the losse of whose favour would be more bitter than a thousand deaths and his real intentions for the good of his Country for whose cause he hazarded and suffered so much misery and imprisonment Yet this noble Dukes implacable and malicious enemies do further asperse him as a man of no Religion a meer Polititian and one that seeketh the ruine of his Soveraign by the aspiring to the Crown of Scotland It would trouble the best Politicians and the most Religious upon earth in these distracting and distracted times to distinguish rightly betwixt the duty we owe to Religion and the duty we owe to our Prince supposing them enemies but the falsity of this supposition which hath misled many thousands and been the ground of all our miseries being evident to the Duke who had the honor to be educated and intimate with his Majesty from his youth knowing his Majesty to be a lover and honourer of the true Protestant Religion a lover of justice and mercy and a practiser of all Christian and moral virtues and with a most munificent hand a royal Benefactor to himself and his Family It may be asked if it had been either piety or policy in the Duke to have kick'd off so loving and so liberal a Lord and Master although he had not been his Soveraign or to have ingaged against his Country with any Party that for their own ends more than the good of their Soveraigns were disturbers of all moderate Counsels so long as he had any hopes of Peace especially seeing so many sad presidents in both Kingdoms where many powerfull Subjects lovers of the true Protestant Religion not joyning prudence with their loyalty and innocence have crush'd them under the Load and nothing easeth His Majesties burthen but rather increaseth the same all their wealth and power being now made instrumental to enslave both KING and Kingdoms the Duke's prudence having vindicated him from the ruine intended against him by his enemies and reserved him through Gods blessing to vindicate his Loyalty by re-enthroning his Majesty so soon as God hath enabled him with any power to do it As for his Religion it is known he is neither Popishly affected nor a Sectary but who hath ever been a professor of the true Protestant Religion a lover and Patron of all Godly men and honest Ministers even in the time of Episcopacy when few or none but himself durst appear for them if his judgement had not been overswayed in some Star-Chamber sentences before he had that wisdom and experience which he now hath and long before he did take the Covenant if he had been ambitious of popular applause he had been more renown'd for his Religion than for his Princes royall bounty but wishing rather to be religious than seem so his favours were given in secret to many godly Ministers and his Majesties honour and good chiefly aimed at in the bestowing of them and
Remonstrance delivered to the Commons Novemb. 20. 1648. The second part of Englands New Chains and the Hunting the Foxes from New-Market and Triplo heath to White-hall by five small Beagles p. 6 7. See my Animadversions upon the Army Remonstrance Nov. 20. 1648. and Putney Projects p. 43. and Major Huntingtons Relation in a Book called A Plea for King and Kingdome in Answer to the Army Remonst presented Novemb. 20. 1648. pag. 14 15 16. and Second part of Englands New Chaines and the said Hunting of the Foxes c And the Reasons inducing Major Robert Huntington to lay down his Commission though since they Quarrel with Parliament and City for using them and Reducers of his Queen and Children without which they openly profess and declare positively in many printed Papers to the world and the Parliament There can be no setled peace nor happiness to this Nation The truth of this Assertion was obvious to the meanest Capacities and will suddenly be proved by dear and lamentable experience To all these undertakings they now hunt directly counter yet in pursuance of these undertakings the Army by their own Authority made Addresses to his Majesty and presented to him more tolerable Proposals than any he could obtain from his Parliament They treated with him yea they wrought upon him under-hand to neglect the Propositions from Parliament tendered to him at Hampton-Court and to prefer the Proposals of the Army and then presuming they had him fast lymed they propounded to him anew as I have it from good hands private Proposals from the Interest of the Independent Grandees and the Army derogatory to the Kingly Power and Dignity to the Lawes Liberties and Properties of the Subject and destructive to Religion To which his Majesty giving an utter denial they began to entertain new Designs against the Kings Person and Kingly Government which they ushered in by setting the Schismatical and Levelling Party on work in City and most Counties to obtrude upon the Houses clamourous Petitions against further Treaties and demanding exemplary Justice against the King exceedingly laboured by Cromwel himself in Yorkeshire both amongst the Gentry and Souldiers c. amongst these the Petition D●cemb 11. 1648. was the most eminent these men that insolently petitioned against the fundamental Government of the Land and peace by Accommodation were entertained with Thanks Others that petitioned for Peace by Accommodation were entertained with Frowns disfranchisings sequestrations wounds and death as the Surrey Gentlemen this shewed with how little reality the over-ruling party in the Houses Treated with the King 2. part of Englands Chains discovered 1. ●reaty in the Isle of Wight In order to this Designe of laying aside the King and subverting Monarchy They 1. frighted his Majesty into the Isle of Wight 2. The Parliament that is the predominant Party pursued him thither with offer of a Treaty upon Propositions conditionally that before he should be admitted to Treat he pass 4. Dethroning Bils of so high a nature that he had enslaved the People subverted Parliaments and had made himself but the Statue of a King and no good Christian had he by his Royal assent passed them into Acts of Parliament 1. par Hist In● sect 62 63 64. and the Parliam●nt or rather the Grandees after his Royal assent might have made themselves Masters of all the other Propositions without his Consent so that this Treaty was but a flourish to dazle the eyes of the world His Majesty therefore denied the 4. said Bils and thereby preserved the legal Interests of King Parliament and People yet the Faction presently took a pretence and occasion thereupon to lay aside the King Ibidem sect 65 66 67 68 69 70 71. 72 74. 75. And my said Animadvers p. 10. And the 2 part of Englands new Ch. by passing 4. Votes for no more Addresses to him and a Declaration against him which were not passed without many threats and more shew of force than stood with the nature of a Free Parliament the Army lying near the Town to back their Party the design having been laid before-hand between Sir Henry Vane Junior Sir John Evelyn of Wilts Nath. Fiennes Solicitor Saint Johns and a select Committee of the Army I told you before the People had been throughly instructed formerly by the Army and their Agitators That there could be no peace nor happiness in England 2 part of Englands new Ch. discovered p. 4 5. without restoring the King to his just Rights and Prerogatives c. notwithstanding which the people now found their hopes that way deluded by the Army and their Party who had cast off the King upon private discontents the true grounds whereof did not appear and had obstructed all way s to Peace and Accommodation and made them dangerous and destructive to such as travelled peaceably in them witness the sad example of the Surrey-men Kent Essex and all to perpetuate their great Places of power and profit The minds of the people therefore troubled with apprehension that our old Lawes and laudable form of Government should be subverted and new obtruded by the power of the Sword suitable to the power and lust of these ambitious covetous men and finding besides evident symptomes of a new War approaching to consume that small Remainder which the last Wars had left grew so impotient of what they feared for the future and felt at present insupportable Taxes Free-quarter insolency of Souldiers Martial Law Arbitrary Government by Committees and by Ordinances of Parliament changed and executed at the will and pleasure of ths Grandees instead of our setled and well approved Laws that despair thrust them headlong into Arms in Wales Kent Essex Pontefract c. and at the same time a cloud arising in Ireland a storm powred in from Scotland and the Prince threatning a tempest from Sea these concurrences looked so black upon the Independent Grandees that they gave way to a second mock-Treaty in the Isle of Wight 2. Treaty in the Isle of Wight which was the fruit of their cowardise and subtilty as appeares by Sergeant Nicholas a Creature of theirs who upon Saturday Octob. 28. 1648. moved in the House That the Lord Goring might be proceeded against as a new Delinquent out of mercy because he had Cudgelled them into a Treaty though now they attribute all to the Kings corrupt Party in the two Houses the Army likewise kept a mock-Fast or day of Humiliation at Windsor to acknowledge their sins and implore Gods mercy for their former disobedience to the Parliament in not Disbanding and their insolent Rebellion in Marching up in a Hostile and Triumphant posture against the Parliament and City August 6. 1647. promising more obedience hereafter and to acquiesce in the judgment of the Parliament and Declared Decl. Jun. 14. 1647. That it was proper for them to act in their own sphere as Souldiers and leave State affairs to the Parliament but this was done but to recover
a Castle or two in Kent were not yet reduced the people in Wales Kent Essex the North not yet setled in such a calme but that a new storme might arise a considerable party of the Scots yet unbroken in England and fronting Cromwell and Lambert under the Command of Monroe a daring knowing and uncorrupted Commander Scotland it selfe not yet assured to them and above all the Prince of Wales with a strong Fleet at Sea likely to raise new tempests at Land had he landed some men ●n Kent or Essex to gather up the male-contents there but newly sc●●tered and broken and ready to adhere to any Party to defend themselves from the fury and rapines of their Committee Warwick but a fresh-water Admiral lying in the Thames under Protection of the Block-houses and relying upon Land-souldiers to awe the Mariners from mutinying a cloud arising in Ireland ready to break into a storme upon these considerations the Cabal or close Junto of Grandees thought fit to dally on the Treaty the better to keep the Prince quiet in expectation thereof and gain time to work upon his Seamen already corrupted with want of work and pay and to gull and pacifie the rest of the Members and People not patient of a sharper remedy until Oliver had quite finished his Northerne work a●d marched nearer London Colchester reduced and the Princes Fleet retired to Harbour to avoid Winter and then to break off the Treaty and purge the House of those Members that sought Peace by an accord with the King under the notion of the Kings corrupt party to blinde their eyes therefore the Speaker Lenthall though at this time the Fore-man of Olivers shop when it was debated in the House Whether a Treaty should be had with the King in the Isle of Wight upon the Propositions of Hampton-Court The Question much opposed and at last put the Noes and the Yeas were equal 57. to 57. insomuch that the Speakers voice was put in to turn the Scales he gave his voice in the affirmative that time following his conscience against his Interest and my Lord Say openly in the House of Lords said God forbid that any man should take advantage of this Victory to break off the Treaty and the Armies Scout from Tuesday Novemb. 14. to Novemb. 21. 1648. propounds three Riddles to the Reader 1. Why the Grandees of the Junto that use to rule the Army are the most active Solicitors for an Agreement of the Parliament with His Majesty when then the Army are acting to the contrary 2. Why His Majesty stumbles only at the matters wherein the Presbyterian Interest are concerned when that Faction is the only visible prop to His Life Crown Dignity and dying Interest 3. Why the Souldiers Petitions for Justice upon his Majesty were ill resented and they thought worthy to be tried by a Councel of Warre as Offendors yet a Remonstrance was then framing by the Grandee-Officers to the same purpose and much more against the present Authority and in this the Generall concurres 6. New Instructions to Hammond in order to the Treaty sect 132. The next thing taken into consideration in relation to the Treaty was the giving new instructions to Hammond the Head-Goaler how to demeane himself in the Treaty which had formerly been Voted to be in the Isle of Wight with honour freedome and safety to his Majesty The Instructions were 1. That the King should enjoy the same liberty during this Treaty that He had at Hampton-Court 2. That no person excepted out of mercy none now Imprisoned by the Parliament nor none now in actuall Armes against the Parliament should be admitted to come to the King 3. That no forreign Agent should make any Addresse to him without leave of both Houses Against these Instructions it was argued That some of them contradicted the former Votes That the King should Treat in Honour and Freedome and that He should enjoy the same Liberty He had at Hampton-Court which could not be so long as He was denyed to correspond with other Princes His Allyes with whom He was in league and amity by their Ambassadors and Agents a Royalty inseparable from the Crowne allowed Him at Hampton-Court and to deny it was implicitely to dethrone Him To which was answered That this was true of a King in actuall exercise of his Regall power which this King neither is nor ought to be untill He hath given satisfaction to His Parliament That it was a great condescention in them and below the Dignity of a Parliament to recal their Votes of Non-Addresse and put the businesse of the Treaty thus forward and if He would not accept of a Treaty upon such conditions as the Parliament thought fit then things would be but where they were The peaceable moderate Party perceiving what operation the Scotish Victory had already upon the fancies of those hot-headed Men knew they must speak mannerly and modestly for feare of correction and must take what they could since they could not have what they would 4. That the King should give His Royall word not to remove out of the Island during the Treaty nor in 20. daies after without consent of the two Houses this was to make his chaines a linke or two longer 7. The Earle of Warwicks Letter to Derby-ho complaining of his Sea-men yet the King did give His Royall word accordingly Thursday Aug. 24. a Letter came to the Committee of Safety at Derby-House from the Earle of Warwicke complaining of the perversnesse of his owne Sea-men and that those with the Prince would not yet stoop to the Gods of Gold his owne words That some other way must be thought of besides force to undermine the Prince that since they had subdued their Enemies by Land it would be a good preparative to work upon their Enemies by Sea with the same Engine You see these Saints having gotten a publique Purse into their hands are at the peoples cost and charges bountifull Corrupters of other mens faith having none of their owne About this time a new kind of pick-lock was invented to open the iron Chests and Counter-Boards of the City 8. A Committee to make effectuall the Sale of Bishops Lands and cajole the City and invite them to throw more money after that they had cast away already in purchase of Bishops Lands namely a Committee to consider of a way to secure unto the Purchasers the Mony they had already disbursed upon the said Lands and to remove all impediments in the Sale for time to come To which Col. Harvy said That he had experience in the late defection of the City when the Men most backwards in the Parliaments service were such of the Presbyterians as had no engagement upon Bishops Lands wheras others of the same Party that have interest in the same Lands are as forward as any the best affected Here you see what it is that chaines the affections of the City to this Parliament and what it is that
broached in a Pamphlet by old Rowse the illiterate Jew of Eaton-Colledge And by John Goodwin the sophistical Divine which is fully con●uted in A Religious Demurrer concerning submission to the present power an excellent peece but what the Sword gave To this the honest Lievtenant Colonel answered Mr. Peters You are one of the Guides of the Army used by the chief Leaders to trumpet their Principles and Tenents and if your reasoning be good then if six Theeves meet three or four honest men and rob them that act is righteous because they are the stronger Party And if any power be a just power that is uppermost I wonder how the Army and Parliament can acquit themselves of being Rebels and Traytors before God and man in resisting and fighting against a just power in the King who was a power up and visible fenced about with abundance of Laws so reputed in the common acceptation of Men by the express letter of which all th●se that fought against him are ipso facto Traytors and if it were not for the preservation of our Laws and Liberties why did the Parliament fight against Him a present power in being and if there be no Laws in England nor never was then you and your great M●sters Cromwel Fairfax and the Parliament are a pack of bloody Rogues and Villains to set the People to murder one an●ther in fighting for preservation of their Laws in which their Liberties were included which was the principal declared Cause of the War from the beginning to the end I thought quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I had been safe when I made the known Laws the rules of my actions which you have all sworn and declared to Defend and make as the standard and touchstone between you and the People * The Laws are now no protection to us nor the rule of our actions but the arbitrary wills and lusts of the Grandees I but replied Hugh I will shew that your safety lyes not therein their minds may change and then where are you I but quoth the Lievtenant Colonel I cannot take notice of what is in their minds to obey that but the constant Declaration of their minds never contradicted in any of their Declarations as That they will maintain the Petition of Right and Laws of the Land c. This was the substance of their discourse saving that John pinched upon his great Masters large fingring of the Common-wealths money calling it Theft and State-Robbery and saying That Cromwel and Ireton pissed both in one quill though they seem sometime to go one against another yet it is but that they may the more easily carry on their main design To enslave the People Reader I was the more willing to present the summ of this Debate to thee that by comparing their doctrine and principles with their daily practices thou mayst perfectly see to what condition of slavery these beggarly upstart Tyrants and Traytors have reduced us by cheating us into a War against our lawful Soveraign under pretence of defending our Laws and Liberties and the Priviledges of Parliament which themselves onely with a concurring faction in the House have now openly and in the face of the Sun pulled up by the roots and now they stop our mouths and silence our just complaints with horrid Sect. 162. illegal and bloody Acts Declaring words and deeds against their usurpations and tyranny to be High Treason nothing is now Treason but what the remaining faction of the House of Commons please to call so To murder the King break the Parliament by hostile force put down the House of Lords erect extrajudicial High Courts of Justice to murder Men without Trial by Peers or Jury or any legal proceeding to subvert the fundamental Government by Monarchy and dispossess the right Heir of the Crown and to usurp his Supreme Authority in a factious fagg-end of the House of Commons to put the Kingly Government into a packed Junto of forty Tyrants called A Councel of State to exercise Martial Law in times of peace and upon persons no Members of the Army to raise what unnecessary illegal Taxes they please and share them and the Crown Lands and Revenues amongst themselves leaving the Souldiers unpaid to live upon Free-quarter whilst they abuse the People with pretended Orders against Free-quarter to alter the Styles of Commissions Patents Processe and all Legal proceedings and intoduce a forraign Jurisdiction to Counterfeit the Great Seal and Coin of the Kingdome and to keep up Armies of Rebels to make good these and other Tyrannies and Treasons is High Treason by the known Lawes but now by the Votes of the Conventicle of Commons it is High Treason to speak against these crimes Good God! how long will thy patience suffer these Fools to say in their hearts there is no God and yet profess thee with their mouths to break all Oathes Covenants and Protestations made in thy Name to cloak and promote their Designes with dayes of impious fasting and thanksgiving how often have thy Thunderbolts rived sensless Trees and torn brute Beasts that serve thee according to their Creation yet thou passest over these men who contemn thee contrary to their knowledge and professions Scatter the People that delight in War Turn the Councels of the wise into folly let the crafty be taken in their own net and now at last let the Oppressed taste of thy mercies and the Oppressor of thy justice throw thy rod into the fire and let it no longer be a bundle bound together in thy right hand They appeal to thee as Author of their prosperous sins become Lord Author of their just punishments bestow upon them the rewards of Hypocrites and teach them to know the difference between the saving strength of Magistrates and the destroying violence of Hang-men But what am I that argue against thy long-suffering whereof my self stand in need and seek to ripen thy vengeance before thy time Shall the Pot ask the Potter what he doth I beheld the prosperity of the wicked and my feet had slipped Lord amend all in thy good time and teach us heartily to pray Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven 170. The Act for Abolishing Monarchy proclaimed in London May 30. 1649. The aforesaid Trayterous Act for abolishing Kingly Government and converting England into a Free-State consisting of forty Tyrants and many millions of slaves was proclaimed in London by the newly intruded illegal Lord Mayor Andrewes accompanied with 14 Aldermen of the same pack the People in great abundance crying out Away with it away with it GOD save King CHARLES the Second and bitterly reviling and cursing it and them until some Troops of Horse ready prepared in secret were sent to disperse beat and wound them and yet the Trial of the King and the subverting of our well-formed Monarchy under which we lived so happily heretofore with all other Acts of the like high nature was done in the name of the People of
goes on with the Relation of the said Treaty and Agreement but conceals what farther Transactions passed between Monke and O Neal upon the last recited Propositions Wherefore I shall be bold to continue the Story of a paper The Story of the father Transactions between O Neale and Monke continued and enlarged out of the Propositions printed at Cork entituled The Propositions of Owen Roe O Neal sent to Col. Monke and a Cessation for three Months concluded between them Together with a Letter thereupon sent by a Gentleman at Dundalk to his Friend at Cork Printed at Cork 1649. The last recited Propositions were sent to Monke 25. day of April 1649. who perused them and made some considerable Alterations in them as appears by Monks Letter of Answer thereupon to Owen O Neale dated from Dundalke 26. April 1649. as I finde it in the said paper printed at Cork in these words SIR I Have received yours of the 25. April and I have seen your Order given to Captain Hugh Mac Patricke Mac Mahon to Treat and conclude a peace with me in the behalf of your self and the Forces under your Command I have perused your Propositions and conceiving there are some particulars in them which at first view the Parliament of England may scruple to grant I have made a small alteration in some of them being well assured by it you will not receive the least disadvantage but it will rather prove a means to beget an increase of their good opinion towards you and your party which I believe your reality fidelity and action in their Service will sufficiently merit and in case you approve of them as I have revised and altered them I desire you to send them to me Signed and Sealed by you that I may present them to the Parliament of England to obtain their favourable Answer in return of them And in the mean time I desire that according to this inclosed paper three Months Cessation between us to be condescended unto and inviolably kept between our Forces during the same time Dundalk 26. April 1649. George Monke 1. Observations upon Monks letter 1. Col. Monke in his said Letter to O Neale 26. April answereth him 1. That he had perused his Propositions and conceiving there are some particulars which at first view the Parliament of England may scruple to grant c. A gentle phrase to nourish hopes in O Neale even of obtaining all his Demands if need be upon debate and deliberation though not at first view That he hath made a small alteration in some of them I confess very small being well assured he should not receive the least disadvantage by it c. From whom had Monke this Assurance unless from those Men by whose Authority and Directions private or publick he presumed to Treat with that Enemy he was Commissioned to fight with and whose Names he doth conceal That it yeilding to M●nks amendments would rather prove a means to beget an increase of their the Parliaments good opinion of Owen Roe O Neale and his party c. It should seem then the Parliament had entertained a good opinion of O Neale and his party before hand for every thing must have a being before it can have an increase of being In case you approve of them the amended Articles I desire you to send them to be signed and sealed by you that I may present them to the Parliament of England to obtain their favourable Answer in return of them c. You see all Monke did was in reference to the Parliaments ratification and therefore reason tells us the Parliament was originally privy to the Treaty It is not likely Monke should Treat upon his own head and abruptly send the result of the Treaty to be confirmed by the Parliament without any warning foregoing to prepare them 2. Observations upon the Propositions amended See the said Paper printed at Corke especially Monks Letter O Neale sent his Letter and Propositions to Monke Dated 25. April 1649. Monke answered his Letter and corrected O Neales Proposition the day after being the 26. April And the last mentioned Propositions of Gen. Owen O Neal the Lords Gentry and Commons of the Confederate Catholiques of Vlster c. as well as the first mentioned Articles for three Months Cessation c. bear Date 8. May 1649. which I conceive to be the Date given them when they were ratified by the Parliament or Councel of State See the said Paper The true state of the Transactions c. Then follows A second Copie of Owen Roe Oneales Propositions as they were corrected by Col. Monck Paper printed at Cork and sont to Oneale to be subseribed And then sent by Monck to the Parliament to be granted as followeth verbatim 1. INprimis That such as shall joyn with General O-Neal in the Service of the Parliament of England in this Kingdome may have Liberty of Conscience for themselves and their issue 2. The said General O Neale desireth an Act of Oblivion be passed to extend to all and every of his Party for all things done since the beginning of the Year 1641. 3. They desire that General O Neale be provided for a competent Command in the Army befitting his worth place and qualitie 4. They desire that they may enjoy all those Lands that were in their possession at the beginning of this War for themselves and Heirs during their fidelity to the Interest of England 5. That all incapacity inhability distrust hitherto by Act of State or otherwise against the said Party be taken off 6. That on both sides all Jealousies hate and aversion be laid aside unity love and amity renewed and practised between both Parties 7. That Gen. O Neale may be restored and put in possession of his Ancestors Estate or some other Estate equivalent to it in regard of his merit and the good Service that he shall perform in the Parliament of Englands Service in the preservation of their Interest in this Kingdom 8. That the Army belonging to the Gen. O Neale and his Party be provided for in all points as the rest of the Army shall be 9. That the said Party be provided with and possessed of a convenient Sea-port in the Province of Ulster See the Date in The true state of Transactions c. It seems to be 8. May 1649. And I do upon receiving a Confirmation of those Desires undertake and promise in the behalf of my self and the whole Party under my Command faithfully firmly to adhere to the Parliament of Englands Service in this Kingdom and to maintain their Interest hereafter with the hazard of our Lives and Estates against all Opposers whatsoever Given under my Hand and Seal In the said Paper printed at Corke is also contained A Letter from a Gentleman in Dundalke dated May 20. 1649. which take kere verbatim that you may see what opinion Men there upon the place had of that business at Corke in Munster To my
1650. as I find it in Politicus speaking of his new purchased victory over the Scots Cromwel saith God puts it more and more into your hands to improve your power viz. your absolute Authority we pray own his People more and more that is the Army they are the Chariots and Horsmen of Israel of the Kingdom of the Saints disown your selves but own your Authority which you enjoy under the Protection of the Army your Lords Paramount and improve it to Curb the Proud and Insolent c. That is all men of different opinions and parties from them that will not engage to be true and owe Allegiance to the Kingdom of the Saints and resign their Laws Liberties and properties to their lusts and wills That I have not misconstrued the contents of Cromwels mystical letter will appear by a Discourse in the same Politicus Numb 17. from Thursday Sept. 26. to Octob. 3. 1650. Where according to his custom delivering forth State-Oracles to the people He tels them in plain English That after the Confusions of a Civil War there is a necessity of some settlement and it cannot be imagined the Controversie being determined by the Sword that the Conquerours should submit to the conquered though more in number than themselves Nor are they obliged to settle the Government again according to the former Laws and Constitutions but may erect such a form as they themselves conceive most convenient for their own preservation For after a Civil War the written Laws viz. established Laws of the Nation are of no force but onely those which are not written And a little after the King having by Right of war lost his share and interest in Authority and power being conquered by Right of war the whole must needs reside in that part of the People which prevailed over him There being no middle power to make any claim and so the whole Right of Kingly Authority in England being by Military Decision resolved into the prevailing Party what Government soever it pleaseth them to erect is as valid de Jure as if it had the consent of the whole Body of the People That he should affirm That after a Civil War the Established Laws cease is so gross a piece of ignorance that there is hardly any History extant but confutes it After our Barons war and the Civil War between York and Lancaster Our Established Laws flourished so did they after the Norman Conquest How many Civil Wars in France have left their Laws untouched That of the Holy Leage lasted 40 years Belgia keeps her Laws maugre her intestine Wars What is now become of the Parliaments declared Supreme Power and Soveraign Lord the People the Original and Fountain of all just power are they not all here proclamed Ear-bored slaves for ever But I had thought that an Army of Mercenary Saints raised payed and commissioned by the Parliament to defend the Religion Laws Liberties and Properties of the people and the Kings Crown and Dignity according to the Protestation and Covenant and the Parliaments Declarations would not have made such carnal and hypocritical use of their Victories gotten by Gods providence and the peoples money as to destroy our known Laws Liberties and Properties and claim by Conquest and impose their own lusts for Laws vpon us thereby rendring themselves Rebels against their God their King and Countrey Nor was it ever the State of the Quarrel between the King and Parliament whose slaves the people should be Or whether we should have one King Governing by the known established Laws or 40 Tyrants Governing by their own lusts and arbitrary votes against our written Laws Nor can the success make n Conquest just unless the cause of the war were originally just and rhe prosecution thereof justly managed As 1. To vindicate a Just Claim and Title 2. Ad res repetendas To recover Damages wrongfully sustained 3. To repel an injury done to your self or to your Ally in league with you The ultimate end of these wicked endeavors is To establish and cement with the blood of their adversaries the Kingdom of the Brambles or Saints already founded in blood by cutting of all such by their said New Acts of Treason and High Court of Justice as will not bow their Necks to their Iron yoke Which appears more clearly in an Additional Act giving farther power to the said High Court dated 27. Aug. 1650. To hear and determine all Misprisions or Concealments of Treasons mentioned or contained in any of the said Articles or Acts of Parliaments And to inflict such punishments and award such execution as by the Laws and Statutes have been or may be inflicted This Law if I miscal it not considering how they have multiplied Treasons by their said 3 New Statutes 14. May 17 July 1649. and 26. March 1650. Whereby bare words without Act are made High Treason contrary to those well approved Statutes 25 Edw. 3. chap. 2. 1 Hen. 4. chap. 10. 1 Edw. 6. chap. 12. 1 Mariae chap. 1. Cook 3 Instit saith That words may make an Heretick not a Traitor Chap. High Treason And the Scripture denounceth a woe to him That maketh a man an Offender for a word is one of the cruelst and most generally dangerous and entrapping that ever was made For hereby all relations Husband and Wife Parents and Children Brothers and Sisters Masters and Servants are all injoyned to be informers against and accusers of one another which is to take upon them the Devils office and be Accusatores Fratrum for light and vain words spoken only in passion or ignorantly or else they fall into the jaws of this all-devouring Court from whence no more then from hell there is no redemption for Misprision of Treason the Penalty whereof is loss of liberty and lands for life and of goods for ever Who can imagine lesse hereby but that our Statists intend to raise a yearly revenue by this Court by Forfeitures and Confiscations and to erect an Office of Master of the States Forfeitures like Empsons and Dudleys in Hen. VII time aforesaid And so continue this Court 10. Decemb. 1650. A New Act passed for establish ng an High Court Justice in N●●folk Suffolk Huntington Camb idge Lincoln and the Isl● of Ely c. And so by degrees this gangrene shall enlarge it self all the Kingdom over to weede out the Ancient Inhabitants Canaanites and Amalekites The said Additional Act 27. Aug. 1650. concludes That the said High Court shall not Examine Try or proceed against any person other then such as shall be first by name appoin●ed by the Parliament or Councel of State It should seem the Parliament and Councel of State supply the want of a Grand Inquest and their Appointment is in stead of a Bill of Enditement found and presented As Assuredly as the High Inquisition was erected in Spain by Ferdinando and Isabella to extirpate the Mahometan Moors And the said Councel of Blood in the Lowe Countreys by the Duke D' Alva
matter of invitation into the kingdom he referred himself to the Declaration then in Print and setting forth how ready and willing he was ever to serve the English wishing happinesse and peace to them and praying that his blood might be the last that should be drawn heartily forgiving all saying I carry no rancour along with me to the grave That his Religion was such as he spoke of before whose Tenets he needed not to expresse as being known to all and himself not of a rigid opinion being not troubled with other mens differing judgments with which words and forgiving all that he might have even the greatest animosity against he kneeled down with Dr. Sibbald and prayed with much earnestnesse and devotion which pious exercise performed and some short ejaculations passing between himself and the Doctor the Earl turning to the Executioner said Shall I put on another cap and turn up my hair Which way is it that you would have me lye Sir The Executioner pointing to the front of the Scaffold the Earl replyed What my head this way Then the Undersheriffs son said My Lord the Order is that you lay your head toward the High Court of Justice Then the Earl after some private discourse with his servants kneeled down on the side of the Scaffold and prayed a while to himself afterwards with a smiling and cheerful countenance he embraced the Doctor in his Arms and then his servants saying to them Ye have been very faithful to me and the Lord blesse you then turning to the Executioner said I shall say a very short prayer while I lie down there and when I stretch out my hand my right hand then Sir do your duty and I do freely forgive you and so I do all the World So lying down and having fitted himself Hamilton executed devoutly praying to himself a short space he stretched out his right hand whereupon the Executioner at one blow severed his head from his body which was received by two of his Servants then kneeling by him into a Crimson Taffeta scarfe and that with the body immediately put into the Coffin brought thither for that purpose and so carried to Sr. John Hambletons house at the Mewes This Execution done the Sheriffs guard went immediately to ●●tch the Earl of Holland whom they met in the midway where the under Sheriffs son having received him into his charge conducted him to the Scaffold Mr. Bolton passing all the way hand in hand with him Being come upon the same and observing he could not spake aloud enough to be heard by the People by reason of the numerousness of the Souldiery that encompassed him he said Hollands speech on the Scaffold I think it is to no purpose to say any thing then proceeded That his breeding had been in a good family that had ever been faithfull to the true Protestant Religion in which he had ever lived and now resolved by Gods grace to dye That he hoped God would forgive him his sins though he acknowledged his Justice in bringing him thither for punishment of them in this World He observed that he was looked on as one that had ill designs against the State Truly saith he I look upon it as a judgement not having offended the Parliament in any thing save an extreme vanity in serving them very extraordinarily That his affections had been ever known to be faithfull and without wavering where the Parliament wrought changes beyond and against reason and Religion there He left them That he ever sought the peace of the Kingdom and that made him do what he did That he knew not how to judge of the then present affairs but should pray that the Kingdome might be again governed by the King by the Lords by the Commons and that the People may look upon the Posterity of the King with that affection they owe that they may be called again without bloodshed and admitted into that power and glory that God in their birth intended to them That he wisheth happiness even to the causers of his death praying heartily to God to forgive them And as Chancellor of Cambridge really praying that that University might flourish and be a continuall Nursery both to Learning and Religion Then mentioning again his Religion and family relating something to his own behaviour and his being a great sinner yet that he hoped God would hear his prayers and give him faith to trust in him with his prayers for the People he ended Then turning to the side he prayed for a good space of time after which by the instigation of Mr. Bolton he said That he was the less troubled with his violent death when he remembred how his Saviour suffered for him and again when he considered the King his Master not long before passed the same way with others at this time with himself with a serious and pithy justification of his said Master the late Kings Majesty a short recapitulation of his first speech concerning his Actions Religion breeding and sufferings After all wholly casting himself on the merits and mercies of Jesus Christ forgiving his Enemies praying for peace and that their blood might be the last which was shed strangely the tryall being as extraordinary as any thing in the Kingdom but he owned it as Gods hand then having some divine conference with Mr. Bolton for neer a quarter of an hour and spoken to a Souldier that took him prisoner and others he embraced Lievtenant Collonel Beecher and took his leave of him After which he came to Mr. Bolton and having embraced him and returned him many thanks for his great pains and affection to his soul he prepared himself to the block whereupon turning to the Executioner he said here my friend let my Cloaths and my body alone there is ten pounds for thee that is better than my cloaths His behaviour I am sure of it And when you take up my head do not take off my cap then taking his farewell of his Servants he kneeled down and prayed for a pretty space with much earnestness Then going to the front of the Scaffold he said to the People God bless you all God give all happiness to this Kingdom to this People to this Nation Then laying himself down he seemed to pray with much affection for a short space and then lifting up his head seeing the Executioner by him he said stay while I give the signe and presently after stretching out his hand and saying now now just as the words were coming out of his mouth the Executioner at one blow severed his head from his body E. of H●ll death The Execution of the Earl of Holland being thus performed the Lord Capell was brought to the Scaffold as the former and as he passed along he put off his hat to the People on both sides looking about him with a very stern countenance when mounting on the Scaffold having before taken his leave of his Chaplain and bidding his Servants that were
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
be sensible of the Divel where with they were possessed did frown upon them which so disanimated our Fanatick Enthusiasts ha a he very first blast they left the helm and like good boyes and well-taught having drawn up formally an instrument under their hands and Seals they repair to Cromwell and according as the design was laid together with the said instrument deliver and resign the Government to him and his Councill They resign to Cromwell who though at first he seemingly denyed yet immediately after with much solemnity he accepts thereof before the Mayor some Aldermen some Judges and the Officers of the Army Having thus far per●ected his devillish design and made all his own by modelling the Army under the command of his own Creatures setling the Government of Ireland upon his Son Harry and Scotland reduced to obey and submit to him It is now thought fit he should declare himself Cromwels first Parliament do nothing which to please and gull the people the better he does by abasing himself and calling as he termed it a Parliament to meet on the Third of September 1654. Which it did but the poor animalls not having well conned their lesson before-hand were suspected dull and turned a grazing to get more understanding the very first instant he might lay hold on to do it By which means once more all pretence of Government being utterly abolished he himself playes Rex and by an arbitrary power beyond without and against law doeth what he list Major Gen. set up by Mayor-Generals a name in England unknown oppressing the Country robbing the Gentry spoiling all and murdering many so that none durst say what doest thou A question was converted into a plot and to deny a tax merited decimation It was not enough to have suffered all former rapines imprisonment and plunderings fines and taxes but at last we must all be decimated We were tanquam Oves destined for slaughter and such was our misery there was none to redeem sad testimonies whereof were Gerard Grove and others about this time whose blood only could expiate a crime they never thought or were guilty off In this unlimited posture of arbitrary power did the the Kingdom stand when that Arch-Machiavilian Cromwell adding strength to the wings of his ambitious mind soared an Eagle-height and made all the circumference of his actions to center at the royall State thinking with a grasp of the Scepter to ennoble his name and family not minding either the danger of the passage or the slipperriness of the station when arrived at the top And indeed such was his fortune that he did ascend the throne in which it was for the future his restless endeavour to settle himself and his posterity and the better to cast a seeming gloss of legality upon his usurpation Cromwels second Parliament confirm him as Protector he summons another Parliament in the Year 1656. hoping thereby to work his ends unseen and so he did as to the vulgar eye for soon after their meeting and first triall of their temper he so moulds them to his own humour by a recognition that they are over-hastily delivered of a strange abortion by them called the petition and advice c. in which with much solemnity though damnable hypocrisie they desire him to be King but in more general terms to take upon him the government and be chief Magistate which he very gravely considering of diverse dayes returnes his denyall in part but withall insinuates in part his willingness to be setled Lord Protector at which newes his faction rejoycing with many Eulogies for his humility in refusing the Kingship he is by the said Parliament who adjourned for the same end solemnly installed Protector at Westminster by Widdrington who was the Speaker to that convention by Whitlock Lisle Warwick c. And upon their resisting he is petitioned to accept of almost two millions by the year for his support to maintain a crew of idle wenches his daughters whose pampered lusts were grown almost insatiable 2. To erect a new house of Lords of his own Creatures who being indebted to him for their raising durst do no other than by a slavish submission perform his tyrannous will 3. To name his successor that so he might entail his yoke of tyrannical Usurpation and slavish oppression on the Kigdom and severall other things which with much adoe after many perswasive intreaties and much unwillingness God knowes he accepts of No sooner is this done The said Parliament dissolved but the fox laughs in his sleeve to see how he has cheated the Parliament And therefore to make them know their rider after a few words of exhortation to them of the want of them in the Country and the necessity of their retiring thither for the peace of the Nation with a friendly nod he dismisseth them and sends them home Thus with much cunning and dissimulation having attained the perfection of his desires Cromwell seeks to strengthen himself knowing that such greatness must be upheld with allies and every noble coat of armes must have his supporters he strengthens himself at home by intermixing with noble blood marrying own of his Daughters to the Lord Faulconbridge and an other to the heir apparent of the Earldom of Warwick the later of which though in the prime of his youth finding the disagreement between N●ble and Rebell blood was soon over-heated and by the suddenness of his death left his wife the widow of a loathed bed In the next place he seeks friendships and leagues abroad and intending to close with France He closeth with France he directly quarrels with the Spanyard and affronts him in severall places near about one time particularly he sends one part of the Fleet under the command of Pen to Hispaniola but with so little disadvantage that he was enforced to retreat thence with no small loss falling soon after on Jamaica with better success winning a part thereof though most inconsiderable the whole Island being not worth the tenth part of the blood and treasure it hath cost this Kingdom being no way at all serviceable either for the advance or security of trade in those parts Mazarine in France finding the benefit of these helps upon the very first motion strikes with him a league offensive and defensive Cromwell promising to assist the French with 7000. Men to maintain the war against the Flanders which at this time he sent they proving so helpfull by their valour that in a short time they gain Mardike Gravelin and Dunkirke Dunkirke gained the last of them according to articles being delivered up to the English in whose hand it yet remains In the interim while these things were transacting Cromwell suspicious of every blast of wind and fearfull of every motion contrives in himself to take off two or three of the most eminent of the Kings party in England to daunt the rest among whom he separates one layman Sir Henry Slingsby and one
other house the Protectors party standing for the powers given by the Petition and advice and the rest of the house withstood it as of no value being obteined by force by which force also thirteen hundred thousand pounds a year was setled for ever upon the single person and the ruling members of the other house being a hotch potch or medley of Officers of the Army and Protectorian Courtiers contrary to the law of the land The other house debated and to the enslaving of the people By this means nothing being done herein as to the powers the Cromwelians that they might enforce something propose the question of transacting with the persons sitting in the other house as an house of Parliament urging both law and necessity for the same yea threatning force from the Army upon refusall notwithstanding all which a whole fornight the honest party of the House thought of nothing less asserting the undoubted Right of the antient Peers and denying all the rest but seeing nothing could be done till this was over in a very full house they came at last to this well qualified resolve Resolved That this House will transact with the Persons now sitting in the other house as an house of Parliament during this present Parliament And that it is not hereby intended to exclude such Peers as have been faithfull to the Parliament from their priviledge of being duly summoned to be Members of that house Herein may be seen something of the old English gallantry for in this vote those in the other House are not owned as Lords Not owned as Lords but called the Persons now sitting in the other House as an house of Parliament neither would the Commons treat and confer with them in the usuall way as with the house of Peers but found ou● a new word to transact and that neither but upon tryall Viz. during this present Parliament And the better and more legally to curbe them if they should begin to grow imperious they inserted the priviledge of the antient Peers as a good reserve concluding also to receive no message from them but by some of their own number The intent of that Parament During this time they had under consideration severall good Acts about the Militia against Excise concerning Customes c. and questioned diverse illegall imprisonments calling some Jaylors to the Bar and preparing a strict bill to prevent the unlawfull sending Freeborn Englishmen against their wills to be slaves in forreign Plantations They also examined severall grievances by the Farmers of the Excise Major Generalls and tyrannicall and exorbitant Courts of Justice The Committee of Inspections having by this time brought in their report by which it did appear that the yearly incomes of England Scotland and Ireland came to Eighteen hundred sixty eight thousand seven hundred and seventeen pounds Committee of inspections report and the yearly Issues to Two Millions two hundred and one thousand five hundred and forty pounds So that Three hundred thirty two thousand eight hundred twenty three pounds of debt incurred yearly by the ill management of double the revenew that ever any King of England enjoyed And to maintain the unjust conquest of Scotland cost us yearly One hundred sixty three thousand six hundred and nineteen pounds more than the revenew of it yields At these proceedings the Protector and the Army who were already jealous of one another Divisions between the Protector Praliament and Army grew both suspicious of the Parliament because the people begin to speake as if they expected great good from the issue of their Counsells therefore the Army least they should come too late put in for to get the power into their hands and according to the method used by them in like cases erect a Generall Councill of Officers who daily meet at Wallinford-house which the Protector hearing endeavours to countermine at Whitehall but they better skilled in their work than he was conclude a representation which is with speed both drawn and presented to him about the seventh of Aprill a copy whereof the next day after is sent enclosed by him in a Letter to the Speaker of the House who hereupon takes the Alarum and while the Protector thinks to secure himself by standing on his guard they not fearing the menaces of the Souldiers but resolving to behave themselv●s like true Englishmen on Munday the 18th of Aprill passed these votes following Resolved That during the sitting of the Parliament there should be no generall Concill or meeting of the Officers of the Army without direction leave and Authority of his Higness the Lord Protector and both houses of Parliament Resolved That no person shall have and continue any command or trust in any of the Armies or Navies of England Scotland or Ireland or any the Dominions and Territories thereto belonging who shall refuse to subscribe That he will not disturbe or interrupt the free meeting in Parliament of any the members of either house of Parliament or their freedom in their debates and Counsells Now that this bitter pill might be the easier swallowed knowing or at least believing that want of money was the thing that pinched in chief as to the private Souldier without whom the Officer was worthless they passed a vote to take into consideration how to satisfie the Arrears of the Army and provide present pay for them and also to prepare an Act of Indempnity for them But all this tended nothing to satisfaction for the Souldier being through Levened with the wicked designes of their Officers did nothing but murmur especially since the Protector in pursuance of the votes of the house had forbidden the meetings of the Officers so that now the animosities grew so high that guards were kept night and day by one against the other in which divided posture the management of affairs continued till Friday the 22. of April on which day early in the Morning Fleetwood Desborough and the rest of the Mutinous Officers with the greatest part of the Army at their beck Dicks Parliament dissolved the Cromwelian party not daring to stir got the supereminency and forced young Richard to consent to a commissiion and Proclamation ready pre-prepared thereby giving power to certain therein named to dissolve the Parliament although he had with much serious earnestness protested and promised rather to dye than be guilty of so pusillaminous an act which he was well assured would work for his confusion But actum est for the same day the black rod was sent twice to the house of Commons to go to the other house which they refused and scorned but understanding there were guards of horse and foot in the Pallace yard after some ebullient motions without resolving any question they adjourned till Munday morning the five and twenty of April and with much courage and resolution attended the Speaker in order through Westminster-Hall to his Coach even in the face of the Souldiery The Army having thus for the
spoil as long as they could at Midsummer they re-made their everlasting Speaker Offices bestowed and on whom Custos rotulorum of Oxford and Berkshires And that worshipfull Judas Sir H. Mildmay Custos rotulorum for Essex with severall other the like places to diverse of their leading members as the Government of Jersey to Col. Mason and severall Regiments in Ireland to Col. Cooper Col. Zankey Col. Sadler H. Cro mwell leaves I eland and Col. Laurence Having proceeded on thus far succesfully they now begin to clap their wings as invincible Ireland being delivered up wholly and quietly into their power by that pitifull cowardly Impe H. Cromwell who had already attended their pleasure at the Commons bar for which good service they stroaked him on the head told him he was a good boy for which kindness he bussed his hand made a leg and Exit But leave we him to stupid folly and let us see what rates Crown land bears the Contractors lately were very busie and behold the product June 29. 1659. By the Trustees and Contractors appointed by Act of Parliament for sale of the Castles parkes c. exempted from sale by a former Act. These are to give notice that there are Competitors for the purchase of Somerset-House Sommerset-house set to sale ctc. with the Appurtenances in the Strand Middlesex which therefore is to be exposed to sale for ready money by the box to be opened on Friday the eight of July next The annuall value being 233. l. the gross value of materialls c. 5545. l. 1. s 3. d. At which time such as desire to purchase the same may put in their papers with their name subscribed into the box aforesaid at VVorsester-House conteining how many years purchase not under 13. they will give for the annuall value c. and he that offers most is to have the purchase VVill. Tayler Clarke c. At the same time they appointed to sell ten brace of Buckes or more out of Hampton-Court Parkes and so from time to time Thus did they strive to make havock of whatever belonged to the King which indeed and no other was the good or rather cursed old cause that these miscreants so lustily fought for and so loudly cryed up And now lest they should seem ingratefull to Richard Cromwell who had so tamely left the chair of State to these Mountebanks to sit in they vote him an exemption from all arrests for any debt whatsoever for six moneths and appoint a Committee to examine what was due for mourning for the late Lord Generall Cromwell R. Cromwell protected and to consider how it may be paid for without charge to the Common-wealth Kind Gentlemen surely they are they take all he hath from him and then allow him a pension they rob him of a pound and give him a farthing not a feather of his own bird and well so too for his ambitious stepping into the royall seat deserved a greater punishment which 't was a wonder how he escaped since Usurpation and Tyranny in different hands are generally vehement scourges to each other and alwayes torments to themselves as will appear by the sequel For these godly great ones being now newly warm in their seats New plots and jealousies begin as of old to dream of Jealousies and fears Plots Plots nothing but Cavaleer plots rings either in their ears or mouths if two Gentlemen do but meet accidentally in the Street and talk together straight there is a confederacy and they must be committed to prison for doing nothing so that we might say with that Noble Romane Cicero Circumspice omnia membra Reipublicae quae nobilissima sunt nullum reperitur profecto quod non fractum debilitatumve sit O rem miseram dominum ferre non potuimus conservis vero jam servimus A sad cause of complaint to live in such a slavery but our Taskmasters would fain seem mercifull witness their Act of Indemnity Act of indemnity pardons all but Cavaliers which came out in print about July wherein they except none from pardon but only such whose consciences are not large enough to approve of open Rebellion as the last clause of their said mock-Act will shew wherein all are debarred the benefit of the same even from sixteen years of age unless they subscribe against a single person Kingship or house of Peers all sins can be digested by these fellowes except lawfull obedience to magistracy which they so abominate that all persons that are tainted therewith must not only depart out of London but out of England in either whereof if they be taken they shall be proceeded against as Traytors and all persons are impouered to take and apprehend them for encouragement of which roguery every one that discovers or takes such a person was to have ten pounds from the Councill of State Surely they are in a great fear else what should they make all this noise and bustle so furiously on a sudden to settle and raise a new militia but latet anguis in herba for now it being the Dog-dayes the house grew so hot that diverse members withdrew whereby the rest in regard of their fewness being become incapable to act because not enough to make up a house according to their own phantasticall modell on Friday 22. of July did Resolve Members to attend That the Members of Parliament who have had Letters to attend the service of the Parliament or have actually attended since the 7th of May 1659. be hereby injoyned to give their attendance in Parliament every Morning at eight of the clock for fourteen dayes and if employed by Parliament within a fourtnight Alas poor men the harvest truly was great but the labourers few therefore it was time to call for more help for which now they are so put to it that they hardly know which way to turn themselves they complain of designes of buying up of Armes to disturbe the peace which made a great one among them say this restless Spirit of the common Enemy should excite the friends of the Common-wealth to diligence and to study unity that advantage may not be given by divisions but that we may be all of one Spirit to uphold and promote the common cause that hath been contended for And the better to colour their villanies according to their usuall custome in like cases when they had mischief to do they set apart a day of fasting and humiliation A fasting day set a part for mischief and to shew that they were the same men and of the same if not worse mind than formerly for rapine and blood they proclaim J. Mordant Esquire with severall others traytors and order the Lady Howard Sr. E. Byron and Mr. Sumner to be brought to a speedy triall for dangerous and trayterous designes of bringing this Nation into blood and confusion again that is for endeavouring to restore his Sacred Majesty to his lawfull birth-right and dominions for which the
examine the Leases that have been made and the fines that have been paid thereupon and how disposed and by what authority with power to give reliefe and allowance to the said poor Knights and other poor people not exceeding their former allowance Oh take heed of too much charity and also to take a Catalogue of all Hospitalls within this Common-wealth and the revenewes of them they are sure to mind that And that the Masters and Governours do return to this Committee the constitution of the respective hospitalls and how the profits thereof have been and are disposed of and by what authority before the first of December 1659. And to report the whole matter to the house Ordered That all Masters and Governours of hospitalls be and are hereby prohibited to grant or renew any Leases of any Lands Tenements and hereditaments belonging unto any of the said respective hospitalls untill this house take further Order Notice of which is to be given to the respective concerned persons by the Councill of State See here how greedy is the zeal of these devouring Statists which yet is clothed in the garbe of a seeming Sanctimonious care but this hypocrisie must not go long unpunished neither does it for now begins to appear the result of Lamberts designments abroad in a remonstrative address from the Army at the very first newes whereof the Parliament is so startled that fearing to be whipped with their own rod they ordered Col. Ashfield Col. Cobbet and Lieutenant Col. Duckenfield Armies remonstrate the Juncto send for ●ome Officers three of the chief promoters of it to bring to them the original paper intended to be presented upon notice of which order given immediately a letter was delivered into the house signed by many persons of the Army superscribed to the said three summoned persons by whose hands they desired the inclosed paper might be presented to the Lord Fleetwood and after to the generall Councill which inclosed paper was intituled to the supream authority of these Nations the Parliament of the Common-wealth of England The humble Petition and proposalls of the Officers under the Command of the Right Honourable the Lord Lambert in the late Northern expedition the manner and method of which paper the Juncto so highly resented as supposing it to strike at their very root that they presentely voted That this house doth declare Observe this crack that to have any more Generall Officers in the Army than are already setled by Parliament is needless chargeable and dangerous to the Common-wealth Here was the first step to that division which afterwards grew into a flame but the Army Officers finding their design was not yet ripe enough by a dissembled acquiescency seemed to lay aside their proposalls by signifying to the Parliament that they would adhere to their authority in opposition to the common Enemy and that they would stand by them in the settlement of the Common-wealth against all disturbances whatsoever which lulled the Juncto into a kind of security the City also at this time seeming to claw them by an invitation to a Thanksgiving dinner whereat the field Officers of the Army were also to be present Thanksgiving dinner in the City so that now being in a manner rid of their fear they fall upon sequestring the Gentry about Sir George Booths business settle the Excise and revive the Assessements for the Militia using all their skill and power for amassing together the wealth of the Nation into their private purses concluding with the Epicureans ede lude bibe post mortem nulla voluptas so sottishly stupid were they grown in their high flown ambition But now least they should forget their duty the Officers of the Army present a new address requiring answer thereto Armies new address which made them take it into the several pieces wherein it was proposed wherein among other things to shew you the harmony that was then between them they give to their third proposall this answer Juncto angry there with Viz. The Parliament declares that every Member of the Army as free Men of England have a right of petitioning the Parliament but withall thinks fit to let them know that the Petitioners ought to be very carefull both in the manner and in the matter of what they desire that the way of promoting and presenting the same may be peaceable and the things petitioned for not tending to the disturbance of the Common-wealth nor to the dishonour of the Parliament And that it is the duty of petitioners to submit their desires to the Parliament and acquiesce in the judgment thereof By this Declaration they intended to curb the Wallingford party by teaching them manners and to know their distance but they being Men of another spirit and knowing they had the power of the sword in their own hands would not be so put off which the Juncto perceiving and beginning to grow jealous of their own safety and satisfyed that the Army could not subsist without money which is the Nerve of War to engage the People to themselves and to dis-inable the Officers from raising any money in case they should which they now much doubted interrupt them in their sitting they passed an Act against raising of monies upon the people without their consent in Parliament Part whereof take as followeth Be it enacted c. That all Orders Act against raising money without consent of Parliament makes the Souldiery mad Ordinances and Acts made by any single person and his Councill or both or either of them or otherwise or by any assembly or convention pretending to have Authority of Parliament from and after the 19th Day of April 1653. and before the 7th of May 1659. And which have not been or shall not be enacted allowed or confirmed by this present Parliament be and are hereby declared deemed taken and adjudged to be of no force and effect from and after the said seventh day of May 1659. And be it further enacted that no person or persons shall after the eleventh of October 1659. Assess Levy Collect gather or receive any Custom Impost Excise Assessment contribution Tax Tallage or any summe or summs of money or other imposition whatsoever upon the people of this Common-wealth without their consent in Parliament or as by law might have been done before the third of November 1640. And that every person offending contrary to this Act shall be and is hereby adjudged to be guilty of high Treason and shall forfeit and suffer as in case of high Treason When the Juncto had thrown abroad this killing thunderbolt to shew that they durst own the power which they yet conceived themselves Masters off they took into consideration a Letter dated October the 5th and signed by diverse Officers of the Army and directed to Col. Okey and also a printed paper called the humble representation and Petition of the Officers of the Army to the Parliament c. Upon the reading of which two
he supposed would be a full and a free Parliament upon whose resolves as himself so he doubted not but the whole Nation would acquiesce he told them the house was open for them to enter and prayed for their good success The secluded members being thus admitted How they begin and wherein proceed fall immediately to work where they were abruptly forced to break of in December 1648. Confirming their Vote made then by another now that the concessions of the late King were a sufficient ground to proceed on for setling the peace of the Kingdom hereby not only vindicating themselves but as it were at once disanulling all that had been done as dissonant thereto during the whole time of their recess This began to infuse a new spirit of life into the Kingdom in whom at this springing season of the year began a new to bud and peep out the bloomes of a too long frost-nipped loyalty so that one now might have seen what twenty years before could never shew countenances that lately were dejected through the cruell tyranny of their Aegipitian task masters now gather cheerfull looks and like fresh blown roses yield a fragant savour The Parliament thus sitting freely vote his Excellency Lord Generall of all the forces in England Scotland and Ireland by vertue of which Commission he disarmes all the Phanatick party both in City and Country the Parliament in the mean time providing to secure the Nation by two seasonable Acts the one of Assessment and the other of the Militia the last impowering and arming Gentlemen and Men of worth and power to stand up for their Liberties and Priviledges and put the Country into a posture of defence against all encroaching pretenders whatsoever and the former enabling them to raise moneyes which are the sineues of war for maintaining of the forces so raised to assert their and our rights Thus setling the ancient Government of the City and vacating the Phanatick power in the Country they commend the establishment of the Nation to a full and free Parliament to be called the 25th of Aprill 1660. Issuing out writs to that purpose in the name of the keepers of the Liberty of England by authority of Parliament and setling a Councell of State of most discreet and moderate men to whom the affairs of the three Nations in the intervall and untill the meeting of the Parliament on the aforesaid 25th of Aprill was committed who with much discretion managed their power to the satisfaction of all sober minded men and so saving to the house of Lords their rights notwithstanding the Commons were in this Juncture of time put upon necessity to act without them commending the Souldiery once more to his Excellency upon the sixteenth day of March in the year of our Lord 1659. a day worthy to be remembred they dissolved themselves Lorg P. legally ended and so at last put a legall period to that fatall long-Parliament which could not be dissolved by any but by it self And thus we see Independency laid in the dust and ready to give up the ghost and indeed not long after we shall see fully to expire the Prodromi of whose miserable end might be these and the like The Councel of State in this intervall of power The intervall with very great caution and wariness manage their affairs turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but keeping a direct course as knowing in medio ibunt tutissimi they set out a Proclamation against all disturbers of the peace under what pretence or name soever sparing none that in a time of such hopes durst either move a hand or tongue to work a disturbance taking care also that the order of the last Parliament touching elections should be duly and punctually observed as considering that the peace or ruine of the Nation would lye in their hands Elections for a new Parl. His Excellency the Lord Generall in this interregnum accepts of severall invitations and treatments in the City by several of the worthy companies yet still having an eye to the main he keeps close to his Officers who were not yet fully resolved and often confers with them in a more familiar manner than ordinary whereby he so wrought on them that at last he brought them to declare that they would acquiesce in the resolves of the approaching Parliament and indeed this was a shrewd forerunner of the fall of Independency as I said before whose only hope was builded on the averseness of these men to lawfull power which when they saw frustrated they might well depair yet endeavour once more to endeavour a confusion which being observed by the Councell and that a discontented Spirit possessed some of the old Officers and Grandees according to the power given them to that purpose they send for all suspected persons confining them unless they subscribed an engagement to demean themselves quietly and peaceably under the present Government and acquiesce submissively in the determination of the Parliament next ensuing which reasonable engagment Lambert and some others refusing were carefully confined to several prisons by which means the peace was wonderfully preserved but notwitstanding all this care such were the restless endeavours of that divellish faction that whether by the neglect or treachery of his keepers is not yet known Lambert gets out of prison cuningly who being a man of loose principles and desperate fortunes so encouraged the Phanatick party and stirred up their drooping Spirits that they began to threaten great matters and for perfecting their wicked design begin to gather to an head near Edg-hill which they hoped would prove to them an auspicious Omen for the beginning of a Second war but Heaven would no longer wink at such intollerable villanies for the sins of these Amorites were fully ripe for judgment so that they were discovered and quickly nipped in the bud Lambert and his accomplices being so eagerly pursued by Col. R. Ingoldsby that they were suddenly forc'd to scatter and shift for themselves by flight Taken and sent to the Tower neither was that so swift or secure but that Lambert was taken prisoner by the said Col. Ingoldsby and sent prisoner up to London at which time passing by Hide park on the twenty fourth of Ayril he saw all the City Regiments both of horse and foot Trayned Band and Auxiliaries complered armed and trayned and ready to hazard their Lives and Fortunes against all seditious and factious Traitors to their King and Country The news of this first appearance of armed loyalty being spred abroad into the Countreys The first loyal muster did so animate and encourage the old oppressed that casting off their fetters and fears together they begin to appear in their wonted guise and because they were by the Phanaticks traduced as men of blood and full of revenge not to be satisfied but with the utter ruine of their adversaries thereupon to undeceive the vulgar who might possibly have been misled by such
Chamberlin Colonel Bromfield Sir James Bunce Bar. Alderman Langham Alderman Reinoldson Alderman Brown Sir Nicholas Crispe Alderman Tompson All these Letters were sent away but the first that arrived to his Majesties hand was from his Excellency the Lord General Monck who by the leave of the House sent the same by his brother in Law Sir Thomas Clergies who was as being the first beyond all expression welcome and after some long but not tedious conferences Knighted and at length dismissed with as much kindnesse as he was at first received with joy Commissioners how received by the King After whom arrived shortly all the forenamed Commissioners together with some of the Ministry and were received by his sacred Majesty his two illustrious brothers of York and Glocester and his sister of Orange with demonstrations of affections on both sides such as are not capable of a description by my rude pen for they were such as may be imagined onely not defined like the joyes of a condemned soul now at point to dy when suddenly and beyond expectation it is not onely snatcht out of the very jawes of death but mounted aloft into a seat of Honour how it is even overpressed with the overflux of such a sudden yet joyful change and stands extasied not knowing or at le●st not well discerning the realities of those violent emotions under the happinesse whereof it at present labours which surpassing joy grown over and they dismissed with abundance of satisfaction with all speed his Majesty according to the earnest request of his Parliament prepared for England his Royal brother the most illustrious Duke of York Lord high Admiral taking order for the Navy And in the way to the Sea-side his Majesty was honourably entertained by the States General at the Hague of whom having taken his leave and thanked them for their Treatment and Presents he proceeded in his journey During this time the Navy under the conduct of General Mountague was come to attend and wait on his Royal pleasure upon notice of which attended by the Princesse of Orange and her son and the Queen of Bohemia he comes aboard the Naseby Frigot The King comes aboard for England and lands at Dover by him then named the Charles and after a repast there parting with high satisfaction pleasure and content on both sides with his Royal and Princely attendants he lanched forth and quickly with a prosperous and safe gale of wind anuuente Coelo came within two leagues of Dover Monck meets him a place formerly not so infamous for receiving the Barons in their rebellious wars against the King and harbouring Lewis of France as now it was famous for its loyalty in the joyful reception of its lawful Soveraign when he was come thither he sends Post for the General being resolved not to set foot on English ground till he came thither who upon the first hearing of that happy news presently took Post to meet him having before taken care for Pallaces to entertain him and left order for several Regiments of Horse to attend him for his Majesties security Providing with valor against open enemies and with prudence against pretended and basely false friends which being performed according to Order His Excellency waites upon his Majesty at Dover He is no sooner come thirher but upon knowledge thereof the King Landed at whose Honored feet in the most humble posture of a Loyal Subject on his Knees Our Great General presents himself and was received and imbraced by his Majesty in the open armes of an endeared mercy with so much affection as might well manifest the great respect the King bore to his high deserts for to shew that his embrace was signal and far from a meer complement he went nearer and kissed him No endearment is ever thought too great where there is grounded Love neither rested he there but like a true friend and lover indeed takes a delight in his society for the more clear demonstration whereof to all the world he took him with his two Brothers the Dukes of York and Glocester into his Coach with him to Dover aforesaid KINGS journey to London and the manner of it where after a dutiful acknowledgment from the Magistrates there and solemn though short entertainment he rid to the City of Canterbury so famed for her Arch-bishops Sea his Majesty being in the middle between his two brothers and the Duke of Buckingham and the General riding bare before him In this Equipage with the whole Gentry and Nobility of England attending and thousands of the meaner ranke he arrived as I said at Canterbury being met by the Mag●stracy in their richest habiliments of Honour and by the Ministry of the place who after a grave Speech and hearty Gratulation presented him with a rich Bible as He was Defender of the True Faith and afterwards with a Golden Boul full of Gold rendring it as a Tribute to him to whom Tribute was due From Canterbury where he rested all Sunday and gave thanks to God his Father and mighty Deliverer On Munday he came to Cobham-Hall in Kent a House belonging to the Duke of Richmond but without any stay there passed on the same night to Rochester from whence on Tuesday May the 29. the day of the week which was fatal for the murther of his Royal Father but happy to himself not onely for his Birth but also for giving the first hopes of his long wished and prayed for return by the Vote of the Parliament on Tuesday the 1. of May and his being proclaimed nemine contradicente on Tuesday the 8. of May. I say on that day attended by the Duke of Buckingham the Earle of North-hampton the Earle of Cleaveland the Earle of Norwich the Earle of Shrewesbury and many others with their several respective Troops of the choyce Nobles and Gentry of the Land and his Excellency with many Regiments of his best Horse the Lord Gerard with the choyce Life-guard and the whole Countrey flocking in cutting down Palmes and strowing the wayes with all sorts of Fragrant Flowers and decking the Lanes and Passage with the greatest variety of Country Pomps Garlands beset with Rings Ribands and the like the Air ecchoing all along and redoubling the perpetually iterated Hosanna's He came to London The Metropolis of his Kingdome whose preparations were no lesse sumptuous then joyful making a short stay onely at Black-heath a place many yeares since and more then once noted and remembred for the tumultuous assemblies of several Rebels but now much more famous for the united Congregation of the whole Kingdomes Loyalty from hence about n on order was given for a speedy march to London in which Major General Broun did lead the Van with a compleat Troop of Gentlemen all in cloth of Silver Doublets Alderman Robinson followed him with an other select company the severall Lords came after with their respective Troops then came the Life-Guard After the Marshals and Heralds with some antient Lords
the Parliament and the Liberties of the Kingdom and defend the Kings Person and Authority in defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdom they being under the said trusts and Oath march up to Westminster contrary to order in a hostile way forcibly secured secluded and drove away many of the Members the Question is Whether this Action be Justifiable upon pretence of Honest intentions and Necessity Their good intentions cannot be known but by their expressions and actions and they referre us to their Proposals Declarations and Remonstrances where we find their desires are 1. To take away the Kings life 2. To take away the lives of the Prince and the Duke of Yorke at least to dis-inherit both them and all the Kings Children 3. To put a period to thi● Parliament 4. To set up a new Representative of their own which takes away all Parliaments 5. To have an Elective King if any These are their Honest intentions for publick good which must come in to justice their waging warre against their Masters this Parliament To name them is to confute them as being apparently against the Laws of God and the Land under which they live and which they are engaged to maintain we shall produce no other Witnesses to prove this but themselves On the 15. of Novemb. 1647. The agreeement of the People which is lower in demands than these which they call Honest intentions for publick good was condemned by the Army The promoting it in the Army judged mutinous and capital Col. Rainsborough and Major Scot complained of in the House for appearing in it and-the Paper it self adjudged by the House destructive to Government and the being of Parliaments The second pretence or principle is Extraordinarie Necessity for the same end To this we say 1. The Armie made the same plea of necessity in their Remon●●rance June 23. 1647. upon quite contrary grounds to what they exp ess now and both to justifie the same viol nt proceedings against the Parliament then when the King was seized upon by a party of the Armie without Order from the House and the Army advanced against the Parliament They say in their Letter to the House July 8. 1647. There have been several Officers of the Army upon several occasions sent to his Majestie The first to present to Him a Copie of the Representations and after that some others to tender Him a Copie of the Remonstrance Vpon both which the Officers sent were appointed to clear the sence and intentions of any thing in either paper Turn back to sect 2. and see my Animadvers upon the Army 20 Nov. 1648. p. 4 5 6 7. whereupon his Majestie might make any Question There the Army treated with the King yet now they offer violence to the Parliament for treating with the King Then in their Remonstrance 25 June 1647. they say We clearly profess we do not see how there can be any peace to this Kingdom firm and lasting without a due consideration of and provision for the rights quiet and immunities of His Majesties Royall Family and his late partakers now they judge the majority of the House corrupt for moving one step towards a peace with the King The Parliament thought it not reasonable the King should be sole Judge of publike necessity in case of shipmony Return to sect 18. where I set down six of their Principles though he hath now granted more to them then all the Armies Proposals then demanded of Him Thus they make this general plea of Necessity serve to justifie the considerations which they are put to by making themselves Judges of those things they have no calling to meddle with for by what Authority are they Judges of publike Necessity 2. This principle Necessity is destructive to all Government for as the General Officer urgeth necessity for acting against the Commands and Persons of his Superiours and arrogates to be Judge of that Necessity the Inferiour may urge the same Necessity in his judgement to act against the Commands of his General The Souldiers ' gainst their Officers any other 20000. men in this Kingdom against this Army and this Army as against this Parliament so against any other Representative or Government and so in infinitum 3. The Commons have their Authority from the Writ of Election though their election from the people See the Writ Cromton's Jurisdict of Court Tit Parliamen The Commons in Parliament are not accountable for the use of their trust to any but the House being Trustees of the People not by Delegation but by translation all the power of the people being transferred to them for advising voting and assenting according to their judgements not according to the judgements of those that sent them for otherwise the parties electing and those elected differing in judgement one might protest against what the other had done and so make void all Acts of Parliament But if their Acts were valid or void at the Electors judgements yet were the Members onely accountable to them that sent them not to Strangers and in no case to the Army who are themselves but in subordinate trust to the Parliament for their defence 4. This violence upon the Members is not onely contrary to the Armies trust but against their Covenant and Protestation the breach whereof being a morrall evill cannot be made good by honest intentions and necessity The particulars of the said Generall Officers Answer upon which this pretended Necessity is grounded are six but we must first take notice what is said from the end of the 2. pag. to the end of the 5 before we enter upon them the summe is In all new Elections there were 2. Independents chosen for one of any other principles Independents were then Commissioners for the Great Seal and delivered Writs to men of their own Party who had the advantage to keep them and chuse their own time to deliver them and Souldiers under colour of keeping the peace became great Sticklers in Elections That by the endeavours of some old Malignant Members and by practises used in new Elections there came in a floud of new Burgesses that either are Malignant or Neuters To this we say what is done by the majority is the Act of the whole House and what is done against the majority is done against the whole House nor was the Ordinance for New Elections carried on by old Malignants unless the major part of the House were alwaies such and before the new Elections It is not hard to shew that many of the Officers of the Army came in upon the last Elections and were chosen by those places where they are scarce known upon what influence therefore they came in let the world judge And now for the said 6. particulars objected The Army betrayed Ireland by their disobedience They would neither go for Ireland themselves nor suffer others to go 1 part sect 16. 55.57 1. The betraying of Ireland into the Enemies hands by