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A95888 Gods arke overtopping the worlds waves, or The third part of the Parliamentary chronicle. Containing a successive continuation and exact and faithful narration of all the most materiall parliamentary proceedings & memorable mercies wherewith God hath crowned this famous present Parliament and their armies in all the severall parts of the land; ... Collected and published for Gods high honour and the great encouragement of all that are zealous for God and lovers of their country. / By the most unworthy admirer of them, John Vicars.; God in the mount. Part 3 Vicars, John, 1579 or 80-1652. 1645 (1645) Wing V309; Thomason E312_3; ESTC R200473 307,400 332

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most happie and admirable freeing the brave Town of Plymouth from a long and dangerous Siege And lastly The pretty prankes and successfull surprisall of those loose and lewd Cavalerian Commanders and royall-Cormorants in the midst of supine and secure carding and dicing by valiant and vigilant Cap. Clark and his Northampton forces Together with the WindsorGarrisons apprehending of the 4 high-Constables and 80●● in money and divers Malignants also at their Christmas Bacchanalian feastings As also that religious reformation of King Henry the sevenths Chappell at Westminster All which so rich and rare mercies powred upon us with so open and bountifull a hand out of the Lords rich and unexhaustible treasury of free grace and meer mercie so many defeats and victories against our adversaries their great loss and our great gain such plots discovered such Ordinances for the States Church and Cities good confirmed and that not onely this moneth but one moneth successively after another O who can choose but say and apparently see Gods Ark still triumphantly over-tapping the worlds waves thus incessantly raging and swelling against it And who seeing seriously considering and cordially tasting with the palate of true christian godly gratitude the soveraigne sweetness of all these exuberant blessings can choose but stand and admire and adore our great and good and wonder-working God and with that sweet Psalmograph of Israel holy King David can forbear to break forth into amazing exultation and sing and say O how great is thy goodness O God which thou hast layd up for them that fear thee which thou hast wrought for those that trust in thee before the sonnes of men But now to proceed And heer now again to launch out into the deep begin this next ensuing Moneths voyage for new discoveries descriptions of Gods admirable dealings in most undeserved mercy with this our sinful Nation and Kingdome in the remarkable preservation of his so menaced and molested Ark tost up and down on the wretched waves of these our most unnaturall intestine bloudy broyles I shall in the first place desire to take libertie a little to touch upon one forein passage of Gods most wise and wonderfull disposing of things as well abroad as at home for our welfare verifying that notable Scripture The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in behalf of them whose heart is upright and perfect towards him So far forth onely as it hath notable influence resultance on our Kingdomes present affaires which is this That about this time it pleased the Lord to give us intelligence from Denmark that whereas the Jesuiticall plot now in sad and sanguine agitation is to destroy the Protestant Religion throughout all Christendome And because Great-Britain and Ireland are the main fat morsells their treacherous teeth so water for as their principall impediment in the way of their wicked work for an epidemicall and universall tyranny over mens bodies and soules two of these at least being the speciall upholders of the true Christian Religion indeed I mean the refined and refining pure Protestant Religion which is the goad in their sides and the offensive pearl in their eye To destroy which they have now I say engaged or at least endeavoured to engage all these three Kingdomes in the first prime place in a most degenerous unnaturall warre one against another and each of the Kingdomes against it self as in part they have most devillishly done the most miserable effects whereof wee all to our present sorrow see and feel And for the better corroborating and strengthning of this their great and Catholicall designe they have in a deluding way procured the neutrality of Denmark Holland who have more than underhand contributed much against us therein much more was shortly expected from Denmark had it not pleased the Lord in his admirable wisdome and mercy towards us to stirre up the heart of the resolved Queen of Sweden in revenge of the bloud of that late precious never enough honoured King of Sweden her dear deceased husband slain in the Germane warres in defence of the Protestant Religion to be a great block in their way and a mightie obstacle to this their deep designe and strangely to cut short that armie which the King of Denmark had plotted with the Emperour as t was cunningly contriv'd by the Romish Jesuiticall Counsell to raise up first for the destruction of the Swedes his neerest neighbours and so to sweep them out of Germany and afterward for farther designes against England And to this end the King of Denmark had secretly desired assistance from his neighbour the King of Poland next neighbour on the other side to the Swedes but divine providence most blessedly discovered the plot and by Letters from Denmark which the Swedes happily intercepted the whole plot was made known The Swedes also by the same good hand of providence wisely concealed it yet diligently prepared to prevent the danger and by speedy adding some strength to that they had made ready for another design els-where they fell sodainly upon part of the King of Denmarks Country before they thought of any surprisall and therefore were unready to make any considerable resistance the Swedes heerby O the admirable unfathomed depth and profundity of the wisdome and justice of our God! have most valiantly and resolutely run through or over-run the whole Country of Holstein a brave and rich Province being most Southward of all Denmark to Germanie which is the Duke of Holts Country second Son to the King of Denmark And they most victoriously have proceeded farther into the other parts of Denmark by G●stavus Horn a brave Swedish Commander and have taken some of their chief Magazines many thousands of armes some of which no doubt intended to be sent against us for heerby the King of Denmark was constrained to make stay of 2 ships laden with armes to have been sent to England and must then be employed and all little enough in his own defence Thus wee see Man purposeth but God disposeth Our God can take the wicked in his own craftines every way and every where and bring to nought the Counsels of Princes But his own work shall stand and prosper in the thing for which he sends it This I thought good heer to premise as a certain and seasonable addition to the honour of our great and glorious wonder-working God and the just ground of raising up our hearts spirits to a yet higher pitch of praising his name for our wonderfull preservation both at home and abroad And about the beginning of this instant January came credible intelligence from Warwickshire to London that Coventry forces marched out to Sir Thomas Holts-House about 14 miles from Coventry and a little mile from Brumingham and summoned them within the House but they refused to yeeld wherupon Coventry forces
were prickt at Oxford and to remove the office of Green wax from London to Oxford The fourth to inhibite the administring and taking of the Nationall League and Covenant between England and Scotland of which Proclamation more heerafter in its more proper place But I say this our most worthie wise pious and loyall Lord Major to the glory of God his own just honour the joy of all Gods people and the vexation of all the base malignant spirits in London whose false faithless and graceless hopes in him were now at the first I say most worthily frustrated and blasted by him even in the very bud who no sooner received the said four Proclamations but the presently sent the Messenger and them with a strong guard to the Parliament who took it as a singular and acceptable service from the Lord Major kept the Proclamations and committed the Messenger to Newgate-prison as a Spie for coming from Oxford to London without either their warrant or his Excellencies the Lord Generalls contrary to their late Ordinance of Parliament About the latter end also of the said September 1643. the Parliament taking into serious consideration the great inconveniences which the Kingdome in generall and the Citie of London in speciall were like to feel and finde in the insuing Winter-season by reason of the want of Sea-coal fuell and firing which would fall most heavily upon the poorer sort of people and might cause a mutinie and molestation of the peace of the Citie if not timely prevented and they not therein competently provided for according to that old adagie That hunger and cold will break through stone-walls Therefore upon a Message from the House of Lords in Parliament a Committee also of the House of Commons was appointed to joyn with a Committee of Lords to consult about the prevention of this otherwise inevitable danger and to take order for the felling and cutting of wood for the better supply of the Citie and parts adjacent with firing for the winter season according to an Ordinance of Parliament which both Houses had passed immediately after viz October 2d 1643. and by virtue whereof the said Committee had power to appoint the felling and cutting of such quantitie of wood as they should think fit within sixtie miles of London in all Forests Chases and Parkes belonging to the Kings or Queenes Majesties or out of any other woods groves springs or other land where fellable wood was belonging to any Arch-bishops Bishops Deanes Chapters c. Papists Delinquents or other Malignants against the Parliament and the same to be disposed of for the better supply of the Citie as aforesaid and to be sold at such rates as the said Committee should think fit And now again good Reader be pleased a little heer to re-peruse and review the sweet Parliamentarie-Mercies of this Moneth also First In the timely preservation of Plimouth from a treacherous plot Secondly In the Siege and preservation of Hull from that dangerous casualtie by Gunpowder Thirdly In the three-fold Declaration of the Parliaments pietie and providence Fourthly In the happie election of Sir John Wollaston to be Lord Major of the Citie of London in such a time of so great need of godly and loyall Magistrates Fifthly The dashing that dangerous designe in pieces of the four pernicious Proclamations sent to the said most worthily honoured Lord Major and in the Parliaments so prudent and provident provision of fuell in this Winter-season And then tell mee good Reader whether God did not heerin also most smoothly carry-on his Ark with prosperous gales maugre all the swelling surges of the wicked intentions of its envious adversaries and on the sweet sight and serious consideration thereof to give the Lord onely all the praise and glorie and with holy David to break forth into a holy extasie of rejoycing gratitude and say Blessed be the Lord our God who thus daily loads us with benefits and blessings even the Lord the God of our salvation And now to goe on And heer now I shall begin this moneth of Octobers successfull voyage with a singular act and evidence of our most renowned Parliaments piety and charitie to that most famous Nursery of many succeeding thousands of poor helpless Orphans I mean Christs Hospitall in London The best and most beautifull Flower of my Garden Where and I most heartily bless my good God that I have this happie and fit and fair opportunitie to acknowledge and to let the whole Kingdome know as I am infinitely bound to Gods due glorie and mine own comfort I the unworthy Author of this Parliamentarie-Chronicle have from my tender infancie had my best beeing breeding and education And to which House of Charitie and so consequently to the renowned Citizens of London the pious and provident Patrons thereof next under God I owe my self and my poor All what ever it be both for all my former happie education and present sustentation there in my place and Calling But to leave this brief and gratefull digression which I hope was not altogether impertinent to this place I am sure not to my person and condition and to come to the present business It pleased God I say to put into the hearts of our plous Parliamentarie-Statists to set forth a singular act and order of Parliament for the good of the poor Children of Christs Hospitall in these hard and pinching times that they might have comfortable sustenance and maintenance notwithstanding the great straits and necessities of the Kingdome Which order of Parliament happily coming to my hands I have thought good heer to insert for the Readers bet●er content and satisfaction which was as followeth Die Lunae Octobris 1643. IT is this day Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament That all the Rents and Revenues belonging to Christs Hospitall which are to be payd for the immediate use and advantage of the Children of the said Hospitall shall be free from the Ordinance of the Twentieth and Fifth part and from all other Taxes or Charges whatsoever And they doe require all Assessors heerby to take notice heerof Provided that the Tenants who injoy good and considerable bargaines in their Leases from the said Hospitall doe claime and enjoy no freedome exemption or adva●tage by this Order Joh. Brown Cler. Parliament October the 6th 1643. The House of Commons in Parliament adjourned themselves into severall Committees and one choice Committee of them assembled the same day at a Common Hall in London which was called on purpose to consult with the Citizens for the speedie raising of an 100000li. for the advance of the Scottish Armie unto us for repayment of which summe our Brethren of Scotland undertook as hath been formerly mentioned to bring 21000 men into this Kingdome which said 100000li. was also desired to be borrowed of the Citie upon loan and to be certainly repaid out of moneys procured from forein parts upon the publick Faith of
last delivered up to Sir William Waller and all within the Castle left to his m●rcie wherein he took prisoners Sir William Ford high Sheriff of Sussex who formerly brake out of Windsor-Castle and had sent a Letter to his Majestie offering to bring him a thousand men and to undertake the conquest of the whole County of Sussex although it be sixty miles in length but before he had gone twelve miles thereof he was caught again for want of a running horse There was also then taken Sir Edward Bishop Colo. Bamfield Lievtenrnt Colonell Roles Major Massey Major Moulines and divers other Gentlemen of qualitie of Sussex There were also taken above fifty Reformadoes that had all Commissions to raise Companies 1200 prisoners and their armes divers Engineers about 4000li. in money great store of other rich prize and pillage And heer now if wee reckon up these our late victories together and the number of prisoners taken wee shall easily see they will amount to at lest a little armie As namely first at Alton 900 at Gainesborough 700 at Grafton 300 at Sir Tho. Holts-House neer an 100 almost as many at Bewly-House by Sir William Constable and Sir John Meldrum in a House in Yorkshire from which Sir Hugh Cholmley ran away at least an 100 and heer now at Arundell-Castle above a 1000 besides what had then lately been taken by Pool Southamptons garrisons which in all may arise to at least 3300 horse and foot besides all the ammunition and armes In most just and serious consideration whereof have wee not great cause to magnifie the mercies of our good God unto us in thus still weakning the armies of our adversaries and strengthning our hands against them And yet again to adde to the lustre of this foresaid famous victory very shortly after the taking of the foresaid Castle it pleased the Lord so to order and dispose of things that Sir Will. Waller seized on a very rich prize by Sea namely a Dunkirk-Ship of a great burthen which had been chased by the Hollanders as was then credibly enformed and was forced into the harbour at Arundell and that not till wee had taken the Castle which Sir William himself went aboard of and found in her about 20 excellent brass pieces of Ordnance an 100 barrells of powder 2000 armes great store of other ammunition divers Commanders and other persons of qualitie together with a great quantitie of linnen cloth as considerable in value as the other prizes which could not but be a singular advantage to Sir William for the present better securing and defence of Arundell-Castle And about the 8th or 10th of this instant came certain information from Leverpool in Lancashire to London that a Ship of the Kings which he had sent from Bristoll to Chester with good store of armes and ammunition most unexpectedly but very happily opportunely came into Leverpool to serve the Parliament the Sailers therein having compelled their Master to put in there which armes and ammunition came very seasonably to help to arme recrute Colonell Ashtons regiment which a little before had received some loss in their valiant performances against the enemies of their Country And about the 12th of this instant moneth of January 1643. the famous and ever to be renowned Citie of London being very sensible of the great care and indefatigable pains of the Parliament in and for the defence and preservation of Religion the whole Kingdome and liberties thereof from that slavery and misery which the Prelaticall and Popish faction would bring upon them and also of their singular vigilancy and great providence and circumspection to discover all plots and secret designes against the Citie and Parliament to divide the one from the other and so to destroy both together and to shew that they are the more inseparably conjoyned and firmly united the one to the other notwithstanding all the joynt endeavours and sly insinuations of the adversaries and in speciall of that late mischievous Machination by Colonell Read that base Irish-Rebell Sir Basil Brook and the rest of that accursed rable as was forementioned The City I say was therefore pleased in the name of the Lord Major Aldermen and Common-Councell their representative-Body by both the Sheriffs some selected Common-Councell-men to make an humble request to the Parliament by way of testimony of their gratitude for the great endeavours as aforesaid of the Parliament for the good of the whole Kingdome to invite them all therefore even of both the Houses to a dinner at Merchant-Taylors-Hall in London on Tuesday or Thursday then next ensuing whether day might best stand most convenient with the great affaires of the Kingdome Expressing farther to both Houses that they desired that that late designe to have divided the Parliament Citie might appeare by this loving action of theirs more firmly to have united them to one another Which motion of theirs was most acceptable to the Parliament as appeared by the answer given them by the Speaker in the name of the House of Commons which in substance was this That the House of Commons had considered the loving expressions delivered by them at the barre in the name of the whole Citie of London manifesting their great esteem of the endeavours of the Parliament and their sense of the late designe of the enemie against both the Parliament and the Citie by such a division to involve both of them into one universall calamity declaring their resolution to continue in a faithfull compliance with the Parliaments good endeavours and to live and die with them in the maintenance of the publick Cause having now also desired them as a testimony of this and to deceive the expectation of their enemies that they would honour them with their presence at a dinner in the City The Speaker therefore told them he was commanded by the House to take notice of the good affection of this great City therein and that the House looked on the invitation as a seasonable demonstration of their love to them and their resolved loyaltie to the Cause and that therefore they were resolved on Thursday then next ensuing to give them a meeting according to the Cities desire And said he that both they and you may lay hold on this opportunity joyntly to acknowledg the continued blessing of God in prospering this Parliament and the City from the secret practises and malicious open designes of their enemies and particularly in this lewd and last discovery they desired that on the foresaid Thursday morning at their intended meeting about eight of the clock there might be in such a place as the City should think fit to make choice of an able godly Minister intreated to preach a Sermon for the commemoration among the rest of Gods manifold mercies of this late and not the least deliverance both of the Parliament and City and indeed therein of the whole Kingdome And
Lastly The taking of Hilsden-House which a week before the garrison of Ailesbury attempted but could not take after which time and before wee endeavoured it the enemie had sent in two or three loads of ammunition Where were taken above 200 prisoners about 12 barrels of powder and proportionable Match all their armes and about 50 horse Which service was much to the ease and comfort of the poor Inhabitants of the almost wasted Countie of Buckingham which was oppressed by them and by the countenance of which House great summes of money and contributions were raised both for themselves and Oxford and a regiment of foot and the completing Colo. Smiths regiment of horse was speedily intended Where also were taken men of qualitie Sir Alexander Deinton and the said Colonell Smith besides two field Officers and divers Captains Now these things have been thus particularly heer recited not for vain ostentation nor that any honour should be given to any person or to our forces but that by thus commemorating particulars the hearts of Gods people might be enlarged and quickned in sinceritie to give God onely the glory due to him alone and to encourage other Counties also to the like activitie and performances Januarie the 26th 1643. there was a conference of both Houses where severall Letters and Warrants were read by the Earl of Manchester the Lord Wharton discovering a desperate designe agitated between the Earl of Bristoll and Serjeant Major Ogle sometime a prisoner in Winchester-House during which time he sent Letters and held correspondence with the Earl of Bristoll at Oxford who proposed unto him that the onely way to disturb the Parliament and Citie would be to make a division between the Presbyterians and the Independents this latter indeed proving an unhappie Remera in the otherwise most hopefull progress of the business of setling a holy Apostolicall Discipline Church-government Anabaptists Brownists Separatists for which purpose he advised him to deal with some Divines to declare unto them that they should perswade the people that the Presbyterian Government would be worse than the English high Commission or Spanish Inquisition Upon which Serjeant Major Ogle sent for Mr Nye Mr John Goodwin to whom he discovered all the matter and withall shewed how they might prevent the coming in of the Scots by infusing into the peoples heads and hearts if possible especially the trained Bands of the Citie whom they desired most of all to divide such instigations as these That they came to alter our Religion to possess themselves of our estates and tye the weak consciences of their Presbyterie which would be worse than Episcopacy But Mr Nye and Mr Goodwin declared the designe to some Members of the Parliament who advised them to hold correspondency with them and to sift out the intentions of the Courtat Oxford how far forth the King would condescend to libertie of Conscience if they would side and comply with him Whereupon they proceeded so far that severall Propositions were drawn up it was agreed the King should grant a toleration of their Independencie or any thing they would desire in that way upon condition they would adhere to him and resist the Presbyteriall and Scotch government Ogle during the agitation of these things was much encouraged by the Earl of Bristoll and order was taken by his advice with one Mr Crispe a Citizen of London to pay unto Ogle an 100 li for his good service At last a Letter was procured under his Majesties hand to Mr Devonish Keeper of Winchester-House to release the said Ogle out of prison Which he first informing the Parliament and being advised that to do accordingly performed it Whereupon Ogle being released got to Oxford Whence he and the Earl of Bristoll sent divers Letters to the said Ministers others to encourage them to the work promising that Mr Nye should be his Majesties Chaplain and severall other Independents should be highly preferred rewarded In fine Letters were procured under the Kings hand for a safe conduct to four men to treat of these affaires but by Gods good providence this plot perished and came to nought even in the very Embryo of it About a short time after there was another designe agitated between Bristoll and Ogle to betray Windsor-Castle into the Kings hands which in brief was thus They had dealt with Mr Devonish again the Keeper of Winchester-House as aforesaid conceiving at the enlargement of Ogle that he was at their disposall that he should labour to prevail with the Parliament that a partie of horse should be raised which should be entertained in Windsor-Castle for the safeguard of it and so making a partie in it should surrender it to the enemie who should be ready on notice given to second it and take strong possession of it And for the better effecting of this there were Letters read signed with the Kings own hand on the top and subscribed at the bottome Ogle as if he had been his Majesties Secretarie thus to encourage Devonish to that attempt But he honestly and faithfully revealing all this intercourse also to the Parliament their designe proved frustrate and perished God be praised ere it came to its wickedly intended maturitie About the foresaid 26th also of Jan. 1643. came certain intelligence from Aylesbury by a Post to our most noble and renowned Lord Generall signifying by letters then sent that an armie from Oxford of about four or five thousand horse and foot were within seven miles of Aylesbury marching toward the Town but the next day came other Letters certifying the certainty and substance of the business which was this There having lately been some difference and flight discontent between Lievtenant Colonell Mosley and some other Commanders of Aylesbury and the Lievtenant coming to London upon some occasions of his own was closed withall by some of Oxford factors for treachery then resident in secret at London and in particular the foresaid Serjeant Major Ogle who was now it seemes grown an apt Scholler and deep proficient in the School of treachery who having intelligence of Colonell Moselyes foresaid discontent took the boldness to deal with this honest and wise Lievtenant Colonell about the delivery up of Aylesbury to the Kings forces the discreet and loyall Lievtenant Colonell at the very first carrying the business very smoothly cunningly Ogle and his complices at last finding him as they hop'd pliant and coming on strake in with him to purpose and after divers meetings the bargain came to be confirmed and a 1000li. must be the reward to deliver up Aylesbury whereof he had an 100li. in hand paid unto him and a brave horse and sword together with safe conduct under the Kings own hand for himself and all that he should bring with him who should all be preferred to places of command in the Kings seruice The business was to be put in execution on the
use of his Forces in the said Town About the 24. of this instant also came most certain information by Letters from Notingham to London of a most admirable and marvellous deliverance of the said Town and Castle from a most bloody plot intended against it by the Kings base and bloody Cormorants and also a very great Victory obtained by the Town and Castle upon the said Enemies on the happy discovery thereof which was thus related Some Horses laden with sacks went from Newcastle toward Notingham and about 30. Cavaliers or treache●ous Cormorants with them some of them in the habits of plain Country men others of them like unto homely country-women in womens apparrell see here the devillish audacity and craft of the sons of darknesse who all with great confidence and undaunted audaciousnesse passed thus along as if they had been going to Nottingham Market but comming to the Court of Guard they were examined and made answer That they had brought corn to sell in the Market But it pleased God that some of the Souldiers perceived something to stick out in the supposed womens bosomes which bred an occasion of some mistrust and the Captain of the Guard being there and taking it into consideration he caused the women to be layd hold on and to be searched and withall bad the seeming Country-men to shut out the corn in a place which he had appointed them and promised to pay for it which they could no wayes avoyd but go they must though but with heavie hearts in which mean time the women were searched who in the search proved men and every one of them provided of his weapon under their coats which it seems was that which stuck out so and the pretended sacks of corn being emptied were found to be powder Pistols and Match Hereupon these couzening Cormorants were further examined but were very unwilling to confesse the Plot for all this onely they said they were sent as Spies from Newark but the prudent Governour before whom they were now brought seriously examining the businesse and being too old a bird to be caught or couzend with such chaffe took match and caused their fingers to be tyed therewith and told them what they must trust to except they would speedily discover the Plot. Hereupon they fearing presently to be trust up protested they would make the Plot fully and faithfully known unto them that they were sorry they were so unfortunate to go about so wicked a design and confest as follows That in the night these Cormorants and ten more being in all about 40. in number should with their pistols and other weapons have fallen upon the Court of guard on a sudden and so put them all to the sword at which time a party of horse and foot should be ready to march into the Towne and put all to the sword that stirr'd to make any the least resistance and thus to take all into their owne hands and they assured them that the said strength of horse and foot would certainely be there that night Whereupon the most valiant and vigilant Governour being not a litle joyfull that it had thus graciously pleased the Lord to discover this plot prepared that night for the enemies comming and had provided a strength to be ready at the time appointed who just accordingly as 't was made knowne came that night and being discovered by Nottingham forces our men couragiously issued out and set upon them speedily put them to the rout and retreat took prisoners between 2 and 300 of them and had they not wheeled about so soon there could scarce have a man of them escaped them the rest fled away in great disorder some swam over the river to save their lives for haste others betook them to horse back some to hedges to hide themselves for the time and there were afterward about an 100. found dead in the river who it seemes were in their hasty flight drowned and our men took above 300 Armes and many Horse besides the admirable and blessed deliverance from this base Plot and their barbarous intended cruelty therein And here good Reader I may very fitly there not having fallen out any other matter of great concernment this moneth cast Anchor and give our Arke a little rest in the harbour of this Mount-Ararat a little while to re-collect our serious thoughts and most gratefull recogitations and summary reperusalls of all the most excellent and eminent mercies and rich Parliamentary-merchandizes of this moneths prosperous Voyage through the boysterous and billowing Ocean of our Kingdomes sad intestine bloody distractions and disturbances As namely First in reciting renowned Col. Massyes brave surprisall of Colonell Sir Henry Talbot in his Quarters with the brave prizes and purchace obtained thereby In valiant and virtuous Sir Iohn Meldrums taking of the Isle of Axholme in Yorkeshire The happy prudent and politick establishment of a Councill of State for the more sute and secret managing of the most important affaires of all the three Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland The happy and timely discovery of the dangerous plot against Southampton The nullifying and foolifying of the Oxonian Propositions for a falsely pretended Peace thereby to have retarded and prejudiced the Parliaments proceedings together with the sequestring and selling away of Malignants goods for the publike use immediately thereupon setled and resolved on The many various and victorious defeates and performances of the Parliaments Forces both by the noble and renowned Lord Fairfaix Sir William Constable in the North and the rest of the Parliaments Forces in the Westerne parts of the Kingdom interception of dangerous Letters to the State and other successefull enterprises The happy and holy resolution of our most famous Parliamentary Statists in confirming and expatiating the progresse of the Solemn-League or Covenant throughout the whole Kingdome of England and Dominions of Wales to be taken by all of all sorts of people in Cities or Cou●tries within their power and jurisdiction In the singular good successe yet further enlarged by the good hand of God unto us in the North by Sir William Constable at Sea by Captaine Swanley at Milford-Haven by Colonell Mitton and the mighty preservation of Cheshire The pious and prudent care taken by our Religious Parliamentary Senators for the regulating of the Government of the Church and about Preachers in London And lastly in the good successe of our Parliamentary Forces in Northampton Yorke Pool and the marveilous deliverance of Nottingham Town and Castle from that most desperate and deepe designe by the Royall Cormorants together with the brave Victory which God gave unto ours there immediatly upon the discovery of that pestilent Plot. All which religiously recollected and wisely reviewed will amount to thus much even a copious Cornucopia of rare and faire Mercies of the Lord still continued and enlarged to worthlesse and wretched England a scelerous and very sinfull Nation yet I say all these
Body would passe that way But Prince Rupert understanding our preparations for him did passe on the other side the River and while a Party of his Horse did face us on the Moore which was neere a Bridge for their secure retreat at pleasure the Prince himselfe with 2000 of his Horse went into Yorke for the reliefe of that distressed people Upon this so sad and unexpected a disappointment our hearts generally were filled with sorrow but yet in the middest of our sadnesse many of us did encourage each other unto an hopefull expectation of a comfortable issue from the good hand of our God whose Name we had uncessantly supplicated for the happy speedying of this great concernment The night drawing on we marched unto Long-Marston a Town at hand where very few had either the comfort of convenient lodging or food our Souldiers did drinke the Wells drie and then were necessitated to make use of puddle water most of our Horse quartered in the Moore that night Upon Tuesday morning a Partie of the Enemies Horse having faced us a while wheeled backe out of sight which gave us cause to suspect that the maine Body was marched towards Tadcaster having relieved Yorke where he might cut off the River and so both scant us of Provisions and get downe suddenly into the South Hereupon our Foot with Artillery were commanded to advance towards Tadcaster The Scots marching in the Van that day being got almost to Tadcaster and the Earle of Manchesters Foot being two or three miles from Marston wee had a very hot alarme that the Enemy with all his strength was returned to the Moore While our Horse ●●ced the Enemy the whole Body of Foot were called back with all the●speed which they possibly could make and 〈◊〉 hope of a Hattaile moved our Souldiers to returne meerily which also administred matter of Comfort unto all who belonged to the Army Before our Foot could get backe which was about two or three a clock the Enemy was possessed of the Moore a ground very advantagious and had in many small Bodies bespread themselves that their Armie did extend two miles as it s judged in length yea by the improving of this opportunity they had by divers Regiments of Muskettiers so lined the bedges ditches betwixt themselves and us that our Souldiers could not assault them without very great apparent prejudice We were compelled to draw up our Army and to place it in Battalia in a large Field of Rie where the height of the Corne together with the shoures of raine which then fell proved no small inconvenience unto our Souldiers yet being on an hill we had the double advantage of the ground and the wind Here the noble Commander Generall Lessey exercised his Martiall abilities with unwearied activity and industry He hasted from place to place to put all his Forces in Battell array which hee did to the satisfaction and admiration of all that beheld it the other two Generals acting also in their owne Armies How goodly a sight was this to behold when three mighty Armies each of which consisted of above 20000 Horse and Foot did with flying Colours prepare for the Battell and looke each other in the face The Posture of our Army when drawne up was this Most of Generall Lesley his Horse together with the Horse of the Lord Fairfax made the right wing The Earle of Manchesters Horse with some of the Scotch Horse were the left wing Generall Lesleyes Foot were on the right hand the Earle of Mancesters Foot were on the left hand of the Lord Fairfax his Foot who were the Body There were three or foure Brigads placed for a Reserve Our Army being thus marshalled toward sixe or seven of the clock we advanced about 200 paces toward the Enemy Our Cannon which had played one or two houres before from the top of the hill was drawne forward for our best advantage Our Signall was a white Paper or Handcherchiffs in our Hats Our Word was God with us The Enemies Signall was to bee without Bands and Skarff●s Their Word was God and the King Our Army in its severall parts moving downe the Hill was like unto so many thicke clouds having divided themselves into Brigades consisting of 800 1000 1200 1500 men in a Brigade And our Brigades of Horse consisting of 3 and some of 4 Troopes The Enemy as some Prisoners reported was amazed and daunted at our approach not expecting any assault till the next morning Upon the advancing of the Earle of Manchesters Foot after short sitings on both sides we caused the Enemy to quit the hedge in a disorderly manner where they left behind them four Drakes The Lord Fairfax his Brigade on our right hand did also beat off the Enemy from the hedges before them driving them from their Cannon also being two Drakes and one Demiculvering but being afterwards received by Marquesse Newcastles Regiment of Foot and by them furiously assaulted they made a retreat in some disorder This advantage being espyed by a body of the Enemies Horse they charged through them unto the top of the hill but one Regiment of the Earle of Manchesters Foot seeing the Enemy both Horse and Foot pursuing an advantage did speedily wheele on the right hand upon their flancke and gave them so hot a charge that they were forced to fly backe disbanded into the Moore And these Enemies were also so opportunely met in the Moore by a body of our Horse that very many of them were killed in the place and about 200 by the Scots Horse taken prisoners Before this time also Lieutenant Generall Cromwell had with much gallantry charged through and through and quite routed two of the bravest Brigades of Horse in the Enemies right wing where were the stoutest men and best horse which Prince Rupert had And our Horse and Foot with undaunted courage did put the Enemies right wing to flight forcing them both from their Cannon and Ammunition but when they came up to the Enemies left wing hoping that our right wing had done as good service as themselves they were disappointed for our Horse here was beaten back And although the Scots musketteers had fired there most bravely and to good purpose to the dissipating of the Enemies Foot yet their Horse there stood still in full body But our left wing was neither wearyed by their former hot service nor discouraged by the sight of that strength which they saw in the Enemy yet unshaken and in order but continuing ô the strength of our God in them and renuing their valour they charged every party remaining in the Field till all were fully routed and put to flight and our men most admirably beating and pursuing the Enemies about three miles at least till they came neer unto Yorke in so much that Prince Rupert himselfe and Marquesse Newcastle escaped with much difficulty being extraordinarily well Horst and had not Rupert played the creep-hedge and
that most famous defeat and glorious Victory given by the good hand of God to the Parliaments three most renowned and victorious Generalls the most religious and renowned Earl of Manchester his Excellency Generall Lesley and the ever to be honoured valiant and victorious Lord Fairfax against that barbarous and bloody hair-braind ignoble Rupert the disgrace of his progenitors and indelible stain of his Posterity In the notable and unexpected discovery of the Lord of R●chfords disloyalty to the Parliament in speciall and Kingdome in generall The taking of Greenland-house by Major Generall Browne And Taunton-castle by the most Noble Lord Generalls Forces In the taking of Cholmley-house by the most noble Earl of Denbigh Colonell Rossiter Governour of Lincoln his valour and activity against the Common-Enemy Captain Sydenham● and Captaine Carrs most brave exploit against the Lord Inchiquin and the religious resolution of the Parliament to establish a learned and godly Ministry In the taking of Wilne-Ferry and Fort by the noble Lord Grey and valiant and faithfull Sir John Gell the said Lord Greys valour and vigilancy for the good of his Country and the most solemn and memorable Celebration of the Day of Thankesgiving at London for the most famous victory which God gave us at the great and bloody fight nere the City of Yorke In the most happy surrendering up of the City of York it self unto the three most noble Lord Generalls forementioned and the pious and prudent Message and motion which the said noble Generalls made and sent to the Parliament in point of farther thankfullnesse to God and satisfaction even to the worst of men In the most noble renowned and truely religious Earl of Manchesters successefull and victorious advance and progresse with his brave Army in taking Tickhill-castle and farther prosperous proceedings since the last great victory at Yorke And lastly In the brave defeates given to the Roysterly-regall Enemies both by Col. Laughorn and Capt. Moulton in Pembrookeshire by the noble Earl of Denbighs and Warwick Forces at Evesham the famous and ever to be renowned Garrison of Lyme at Colliton and Chard and finally in the most noble and renowned Lord Generalls brave and victorious and famous progresse into Devonshire and Cornwall and all those Western parts wherein hitherto by Gods power and providence he might worthily say as conquering Caesar said Veni vidi vici even all for the most part either voluntarily comming in unto him or violently enforced thereunto by his valiant and victorious forces All which most seriously and religiously considered have we not good Reader great cause justly and ingenuously to confesse and acknowledge to see and say with holy Samuel EBEN-EZER and to make this the glorious and gracious Motto of our Parliamentary Barke the Ark of our God most deeply ingraving it with indelible characters of golden-gratefull Remembrance HITHERTO HATH THE LORD HELPED VS And therefore zelously and constantly to conclude and hold maugre all malicious contradiction whatsoever that our title is most truely and infallibly ratified from heaven by all those manifold and even miraculous premises and patternes thereof that GODS Arke hath most triumphantly over-topped and been born above all the Worlds boysterous Billows swelling surges And hitherto the Lords most faithfull and glorious Cause blessedly embarked in our most pious Parliament hath in all its just undertakings most impregnably prevailed and been preserved against all the Malignant Atheisticall and Papisticall Machinations Plots and Practizes that men or devills were ever able to invent and foment against Gods Truth and a glorious and pure Gospel-Reformation In so much that now upon all these serious considerations of the Enemies combinations and injurious conjurations on the one side and our Gods most omnipotent and omniprudent frustrations of them all thus from time to time wee may most worthily say as the holy Prophet once said especially on the gracious and most gratefull recordation of that most memorable and admirable victory at Marston-Heath neere Yorke and also all those late forementioned Westerne victories even of this last Moneth of July wee may say and that most worthily as the LORD God himselfe said by the holy Prophet Now also many nations are gathered together against thee O English ISRAEL that say let her be defiled and let our eyes looke on Zions defilement But they know not the thoughts of the Lord neither understand they his Counsell For hee hath gathered them together as sheaves into the barn-floor And hath said to all our renowned Generalls and to their Armies Arise and thresh O daughter of Zion for I have made thy horne as iron and thy horses hoofes as brasse and thou shalt beat and bruise in pieces as with a strong flale many people and I will consecrate their gain to my selfe saith the Lord and their substance to the Lord of the whole Earth And hast not thou ô England as then Zion was promised seen all this come to passe for thy sake upon thine Enemies Even many nations brought together English Irish Dutch French Walloons who not that could be was not gathered against thee to defile and spoil thee yea to glut their accursed eyes and hearts with wicked joy at thy ruine and defilements But ah wicked fooles how ignorant and unacquainted were they with the Lords Counsels and how farre his thoughts were above and against their thoughts who brought them but together at York and else where like so many Sheaves on the barn-floar of Marston-Heath and there and then most graciously and gloriously said to our renouned Generalls Commanders and Souldiers Arise arise and thresh those Sheaves of shame and dishonour for I have made your Swords and instruments of war as Iron flales and your horses hoofs as brasse to trample on them and tear them in peices And then did the Lord also most triumphantly consecrate unto himselfe and we as we were able most worthily gave their gain and substance even all the honour and glory of these great and most famous victories to the Lord our God alone whose strong arme alone got us and gave us these glorious victories over all those our fierce and furious Enemies Yea he alone I say According to their deeds accordingly hath repayed fury to his Churches and Childrens adversaries recompense to his Enemies and to the Irish I stand he hath repayed and will yet still repay recompence And thus indeed it must needs be for Their strength and defence was departed from them and our God had made them as bread for us to eat and devour Yea our God hath for us wounded and broken in pieces the heads of these Leviathans and given them as meat to us his poore despised people And hath wounded the hairy scalps of all these that th●s went on in their insatiable wickednesse That thus therefore the great name of the Lord might be feared from the North to the West and his glorious splendour from the rising of the Sun
To the Right Honourable Alderman ADAMS Lord Mayor of the most famous and Renowned City of London The Right Worshipfull Sir Iohn Wollaston and Sir Richard Sprignall Together with the Right Worshipfull the Lady Rebecca Wollaston and the Lady Anne Sprignall their most virtuous and truely pious Consorts All my ever most highly honoured good Friends J. V. most Cordially prayeth the Fulnesse of the Kingdome of Grace here and of the Kingdome of Glo●y here●fter Right Hono●rable Right Worshipfull THe much Christian Courtesie and very many and most constant immerited favours whereof from time to time I and mine have most sweetly tasted from your Honour and Worships But especially the serious observation of the pious and painfull yea even indefatigable Labours of Love for God and his great Cause which not onely I but even the whole Kingdome in generall and this renowned City in speciall have cleerly taken notice of and been most happily sensible of to proceed from your Honour and Worships Et O terque quaterque felicia saecula quae Vos tales Patriae genuere Parentes This double and indissoluble Ligament I say of ever bounden Gratitude hath most deeply engaged me to dedicate and consecrate This third Part of my Parliamentary-Chronicle to your good Honour and Worships as a most true Tessera and Sincere Symbole of that ever obliged observance which together with my poor All I most justly and ingenuously acknowledge to be most due unto you All my ever most highly honoured good Friends in generall and hereby also in a more speciall and peculiar manner to take oportune occasion to give-in my most cordiall congratulation and just and joyful Acclamation for your good Honours happy inauguration unto the most honourable Majorallity of this celebrious and most Renouned City of London which though it may seem to come somewhat too tardily yet I assure your Honour it comes now most cordially and though it cannot speak so loudly as others yet I assure you my good Lord it speaks as lovingly as the best of your good Lordships most devoted Votaries Which therefore together with my best Services hoping your good Honour Worships wil in your accustomed Candor and even connative ingenuity receive with the Heart Hand of courteous and candid Acceptation I shall hereby be still more and more deeply endeered in all my best endeavours especially in my poor Prayers to presse the Thron of Grace that your good Honour and Worships may long flourish as most famous tall-grown Cedars on the tops of the Mountains of this our English-Lebanon inferiour to None of your former famous Predecessours and shall hereby also most obligedly rest Your good Honours and Worships in what he is to be ever Commanded JOHN VICARS To the Courteous and Christian Reader THe continued Encouragements and most aimable approbation Christian and candid Readers which you All especially the truely religious and reverend Divines both of City and Country have given unto me in the former two Parts of this our Parliamentary-Chronicle have set a sharpe edge upon my serious Affections and beene as a Spirit-quickening Spur to stimulate and stir forward my most zealous Resolutions and Endevours to the Continuation of this our Parliamentary-Chronicle and most famous and renowned History to a third Part thereof Wherein as formerly so now I have laboured with all the Discretion care and consciencious Sedulity wherewith I was possibly able to communicate nothing therein but true and innocent Intelligence of all our most famous and important Parliamentary Proceedings in way of rare and reall mercies to this Kingdome in speciall for the space of one entyre 12 Month past Yet herein I must ingenuously confesse I may possibly have missed in some particular circumstantialls either of Manner Time Persons or Numbers considering that they are all for the most part received from severall remote Hands and remote Habitations yet for thy better assurance herein I have according to the wise counsell of a most learned and religious Divine my much honoured good Friend Reverend Master Arrowsmith still taken mine Intelligence as neer as I could from the Lame-post Wherefore I heartily desire thee good Reader with christian candor and ingenuity to connive at and pardon what ever small slips or failings thou mayest peradventure meet with from me herein who faithfully assure thee that I have with my best ability striven in all equitable Sincerity to wrong None but to right All as neer as I could Whereunto if thou vouchsafest courteously to condescend together with the grant of a portion in thy holy prayers for the poor and unworthy Authour I shall justly account all my great paines herein plentifully repayed and for the same most gratefully rest Thine in the Lord John Vicars GODS ARK OVER-TOPPING THE VVORLDS WAVES MOst truly sayes the princely Prophet David They that goe down into the Sea in Ships and that are busied in great Waters These see the works of the Lord and his wonders in the Deep And as truly may I say They that goe forth and lanch into our English-Ocean to use the said holy Prophets Metaphor and keep a little to his Sea-Allegories in the Ship of serious Contemplation and pious Exploration may as easily and admirably see and discover the strange workings of the Lord and the rare wonders which he does in the deep deportments and various vicissitudes of State-affaires in this I say our English-Ocean Upon one side they may see the huge swelling waves the mightie and big billowes of furious floods and raging and roaring waters I mean wicked and ungodly men Atheists Papists Prelates and rotten-hearted Malignants in Citie and Countrey puffing snuffing blowing and beating their braines and vexing their hearts to overtop and overturn to swoop away and swallow-up in the deeply ingurgitating whirpool of their irreconciliable rage and malice the Ark of the Lord his Church and Children principally personated and represented in Both Houses of Parliament and in the happie Assembly of Divines sweetly subservient unto them in the long longed for pure and thorough Reformation of all things amiss in Church and State On the other side they may see the most admirable and indeed unexpressible power and providence the most infinite wisedome and unfathomable mercie of our good God the as prudent as potent Pilot and Moderator of all that his English-Ark bearing it up most safely and securely sustaining and maintaining it maugre all the beatings and billowings the sitly surges and swellings of all those raging and roaring waves and waters and making it still fairly to float and over-top their highest rising and most furious flashing and desperatest dashing waves craggiest penetrating rockes swallowing sands and shelves and mightiest and most malicious puffes and blasts of malignity and mischief all of them conspiring and aspiring with malice pride and impious ambition either to swallow-up or per fas aut nefas to tear in pieces this most honest holy and harmless Ark of God but all
of them labouring and tugging like so many Galley-slaves of Satan in vain which is their greatest miserie ever glorified and praised be the free grace of God therein as now wee shall most lively delineat and set forth by Gods gracious assistance in this our third Voyage through this vaste and various Ocean And having now I say by the good hand of Gods gracious providence made two former voyages through this our English-Ocean and twice safely and I hope successfully arrived at the desired Haven and brought my vessell thither fully and fairly fraught with such mercifull Merchandizes as I hope may help my Christian brethren to trade withall for the enriching of their hearts and soules with copious expressions of bounden gratitude and infinitely obliged thankfulness to our almighty Jehovah-jireh our most glorious and gracious Elohim God All-sufficient for the highest improvement of his all-deserving praise and glorie which indeed is and ought to be the pious Alpha and Omega the originall and ultimate ayme and end of his free and gracious Giving and of our so undeserved receiving of such and so rich rare and manifold mercies and deliverances from the hands and hatred of our so raging and roaring enemies Now I ●ay I am resolved by Gods guide and my Readers accustomed candor and experienced patience to set sayl again into this our English Main-Ocean and to enter upon a third voyage therein Onely beseeching thee good Reader to assist me with thy holy prayers that our good God will graciously breath upon our sayles and give us a prosperous gale which may carry us on comfortably to the end of this Voyage and reduce us safely to our desired Haven And now therefore plainly and pertinently to begin and goe on in this our intended Parliamentarie-History But heer before I proceed to the narration of the ensuing Parliamentarie-mercies which immediately succeeded the most happie and holy entring into the League or Covenant with God and our Brethren of Scotland and Ireland for the prosecution of a pure and perfect Reformation in all the three Kingdomes with which Covenant wee closed and shut up our former Continuation or Second Part of this our Parliamentarie-Chronicle Give me leave now good Reader in the first place to premise and set down a few very memorable mercies pretermitted by too much haste to finish the former Part at the importunitie of the Stationer in our said Second Continuation wherein I was I say by the Stationers over-much haste to publish that second part enforced to omit many memorable passages or if not to omit yet to misplace many between the Moneths of June July August and September then next following my orderly Conclusion of that second part being about the midst of June renowned Sir William Waller being then victorious in the Western parts of the kingdome with his faithfull and courageous Achates Sir Arthur Haslerig as you may see clearly about page 380 381 82 c. Give me leave now I say in the first place to make a fuller supply of the deficiencies of those foresaid Moneths with divers memorable passages there omitted but yet which fell out in order and came to my knowledge before some of those last mentioned Parliamentarie Mercies wherewith I say I concluded that Second Part and which now I thought fit heer to make mention of rather than to suffer them to be raked up in the ashes of oblivion which briefly are these that follow The happy and blessed Assembly of Divines being Convened at Westminster for the rectifying and setling of things amiss in the Church both touching Doctrine and Discipline as hath been mentioned in the former Narrations of this our Parliamentarie Chronicle pag. 352. It pleased the Lord immediately after the setling of their said Convocation or Assembly namely July the 19th 1643 to put into the hearts of our said venerable Assembly among many other sacred and serious matters to exhibite a Petition to both Houses of Parliament which Petition coming to my hands I thought fit to give the godly Reader a sight and sense of the sweet and fragrant sent thereof together with both the Houses comfortable answer thereunto the happie and holesome effects whereof have since that time dropped and distilled like so many honey-dewes upon our Church already and is like to be more and more by Gods gracious assistance and blessing on their pious endeavours manifested among us in Gods due time as in their proper places we shall have occasion to make mention of as in good measure we have had former opportunities hereunto Which Petition I say for the excellencie and singular sweetness thereof and for the high honour of God and the heart-reviving comfort of his children yea and for the just and eternall credit of the pious Petitioners themselves I have heer I say thought fit to insert which was as followeth To the Right Honourable the Lords and Commons assembled in PAR●IAMENT The humble Petition of divers Ministers of Christ in the Name of themselves and of divers others Humbly sheweth THat your Petitioners upon serious consideration and deep sense of Gods heavy wrath lying on us and hanging over our heads and the whole Nation and manifested particularly by the two la●e sad and unexpected defeates of our forces in the North and in the West doe apprehend it to be our dutie as Watchmen for the good of the Church and Kingdome to present to your religious and prudent Consideration these ensuing requests in the name of Jesus Christ your Lord and ours First That you would be pleased to command a publike and extraordinary day of humiliation this weeke throughout the Cities of London Westminster the Suburbs of both and places adjacent within the weekly bills of mortalitie that every one may bitterly bewaile his own sinnes and ●ny mightily to God for Christs sake to remove his wrath and to heal the Land with professed and renewed resolutions of more full performance of the late Covenant for the amendment of our wayes Secondly That you would vouchsafe instantly to tale into your more than ordinary serious Consideration how you may most speedily set up Christ more gloriously in all his Ordinances within this Kingdome and reform all things amiss throughout the Land wherein God is more immediately dishonoured Among which wee humbly lay before you these particulars First That the brutish ignorance and palpable darkness possessing the greatest part of the people in all places of the Kingdome wherby they are utterly unfit to wait upon God in any holy datie to the great disgrace of the Gospel and the everlasting endangering of their poore soules may be remedied by a speedy strict charge to all Ministers constantly to Catechize all the youth and ignorant people they being cammanded to be subject to it and all sorts to be present at it and information to be given of all persons who shall withstand or neglect it That the grievous and hainous pollution of the
strong Stone-wall but God seasonably sending Colonell Hubbard and Colonell Palsgrave to his assistance both with men and Ordnance the brave Colonell with this auxiliarie strength immediately advanced to the said Burleigh-House sate down before it and having commodiously planted his Ordnance shot at it two or three houres beginning about three of the clock that morning but could doe no good that way the house being so strongly built Then the noble Colonell sounded a parley to the enemie and offered them quarter to have their lives and libertie to depart without their weapons But the enemy utterly refused the motion resolutely answering that they would neither take nor give quarter Heerupon the valiant Colonell gave present order to storm and assault it with his Musketteers whereupon the fight grew very hot and was bravely performed on both sides for a while and with much difficultie and danger on ours the enemy being very active and confident and thus the assault continued divers houres till at last the Cavaliers courage began to fall ours pressing on them very fiercely and furiously so that they sounded a parley from within the House whereupon the as virtuous as valourous Colonell commanding presently that not one of his Souldiers should dare to shoot or kill any man during the parley on pain of death notwithstanding their former cruell and bloudy answer to his foresaid proffer of quarter to them In brief they soon concluded upon quarter for their lives and so they took them all being 2 Colonells 6 or 7 Captaines 3 or 400 foot about an 150 or 200 horse with all their armes and ammunition together with the pillage of the whole house Admirable was the providence of God in this victory in that in all this fight which continued about nine or ten houres not above six or seven of our men were slain though many were hurt in that so hot and fierce an encounter or assault onely about two miles beyond Stamford toward Grantham some 400 Club-men coming to the ayd of the Cavaliers and having kill'd some of our Colonells Scouts he sent three or foure troops of horse to meet and encounter them who at the first onset had almost slain one of the Captaines of one of our said troopes so furiously they fell upon ours at the first whereupon ours being instantly much enraged fell very fiercely upon them and had quickly slain about fiftie of them and forced the rest to flie into a great Wood hard by them for their lives Immediately after this brave victory thus most successfully atchieved namely about July the 31 1643. this noble and renowned Colonell sent a Letter to Cambridge to the Parliaments Committee there informing them of his brave proceedings also with the Earl of Newcastles Popish forces who had then lately again besieged Gainesborough which for the Readers better content therein and clearer satisfaction I have thought fit heer to insert verbatim as it came to my hands The Copie of a Letter written by Colonell Cromwell to the Committee at Cambridge July the 31 1643. Gentlemen IT hath pleased the Lord to give your Servant and Souldiers a notable victory now at Gainesborough I marched after the taking of Burleigh-House upon the Wednesday to Grantham where I met about 300 horse and Dragooneers of Nottingham with these by agreement with the Lincolners wee met at North-Scarl which is about ten miles from Gainesborough upon the Thursday in the evening where wee ●arried untill two of the clock in the morning and then with our whole body advanced toward Gainesborough About a mile and half from the Town we met a forlorn hope of the Enemy of neer an 100 horse our Dragoneers laboured to beat them back but not aliting from their horses the Enemy charged them and beat some four or five of them off their horse then our horse came up and charged them and made them retire into their main bodie Wee advanced and came to the bottome of a steep hill upon which the enemy stood wee could not well get up but by some tracts which our men assaying to doe the body of the enemie endeavoured to hinder but wherein wee prevailed and got the top of the hill This was done by the Lincolners who had the Vanguard When wee all had recovered the top of the hill wee saw a great bodie of the enemies horse facing us at about a Muskets shot or less distance and a good reserve of a full regiment of horse behinde it wee endeavoured to put our men into as good order as wee could they enemy in the mean time advanced toward us to take us at a disadvantage but in such order as wee were wee charged their great bodie I having the right wing we came up horse to horse where wee disputed it with our swords and pistolls a pretty time all keeping close order so that one could not break the other at last they a little shrinking and our men perceiving it and pressing in upon them immediately we routed this whole bodie some flying on one side others on the other side of the enemies reserve and our men pursuing them had chase and execution about 5 or 6 miles I perceiving this body which was the reserve standing still unbroken kept back my Major Whaley from the chase and with mine own troop and the other of my regiment in all three troops wee got into a bodie In this reserve stood Generall Cavendish who one while faced mee another while faced foure of the Lincoln-Troopes which was all of ours that then stood upon the place the rest being ingaged in the chase at last the Generall charged the Lincolners and routed them I immediately fell on his rear with my three Troopes which did so astonish him that he gave over the charge would fain have delivered himself from me but I pressing on forced them down a hill having good execution of them and below the hill drove the Generall with some of his Souldiers into a Quagmire where my Captain Lievtenant slew him with a thrust under his short ribs the rest of the bodie being also wholly routed and not one man staying upon the place Wee after this defeat which was so totall relieved the Town with such powder and provision as wee brought which done wee had notice that there were 6 troopes of horse and 300 foot on the other side of the Town about a mile off us whereupon wee desired some foot of my Lord Willoughbies about 400 and with our horse and their foot marched toward them when we came toward the place where their horse stood we beat back with my troopes about two or three troops of the enemies who retired into a small village at the bottome of the hill When wee had recovered the hill we saw in the bottome about a quarter of a mile from us a regiment of foot and after that another and then also Newcastles own regiment
and to inventorie the goods thereof and to let the Danish Commander know that the Parliament would be answerable touching the disposall of them according to their discretion and direction And thereupon the Ship was brought safely to London and there unladen A Copie of the true Inventorie of the fraight and goods wherein I have heer thought fit to insert for the Readers better satisfaction and content as I my self received it from the hands of one of the most eminent and most worthy Members of the Militia in the Citie of London which was as followeth Barrells of Gunpowder 476 Bundles of Match 890 Drums 050 Belly-pieces of armour 150 Swords 3040 Muskets 2977 Pistolls 493 Head-pieces 3000 Round-heads or Clubs 1000 Pikes very good ones 1500 Musket-rests 3000 Forks to fight against horses 0500 Collers of Bandiliers 3000 Belts 1 Hogshead Hangers 1 Hogshead Girdles 2 Hogsheads Hangers 4 Barrells Pistoll-keyes 1 Firkin Flasks 3 Barrells Hangers 1 Barrell Moulds for Muskets 2 Kilderkins Stones for Pistolls 1 Firkin Souch-powder 1 Firkin Cannon-Bullets 197 And pigs of Lead 14. And neer upon the same time a Ship laden with Sea-coales whereof I had unquestionable information from Newcastle and bound for Holland was then also apprehended by the vigilancy of the most noble Earl of Warwicks Ships wherein they found about 3 or 4000li. in money hid deep in the coales which was to have bought armes c. in Holland for the Kings use but thus happily diverted another and a better way And truly Reader there must needs be seen a speciall hand of Gods providence toward us in this Danish prize formentioned for this Ship could not have been seized on in a more seasonable time than as thus it pleased the Lord to dispose it considering the great use the Parliament had at that time of the said armes and ammunition to help to set forth a new armie then making ready to march forth again under the command of that noble and renowned Generall Sir William Waller and especially also the circumstances of that time considered namely the then ill success of our armies in the North under the command of the noble Lord Fairfax and the most unhappie surrender of Bristoll and Exeter also shortly after it to the Kings forces Sir William Wallers unhappie defeat in the West Countrie and the Lord Generalls armie being mouldred and crumbled away and almost quite torn in pieces by sickness and such like casualties as that he was not able to advance and take the field to affront the Kings and Kingdomes enemies untill they could be conveniently recruited and fill'd up and furnisht with men and armes Of all which having most fully made mention in the Conclusion of the Second part of our Parliamentarie Chronicle I shall cease to speak any more thereof And now about this time namely the 6th of August 1643. the Parliament being credibly and comfortably enformed out of Yorkshire that the most noble and renowned Lord Fairfax had in much competent measure recruited his Armie at Hull and got together some troops of horse and companies of foot that so he might the better both increase and strengthen his forces the Parliament sent him many Muskets Carbines Pistolls hookes and piked Clubs viz. Round-heads as they were termed that so his honest Round-heads might with them soundly beat and bang Newcastles Rattle-heads or rather Rotten-headed and hearted Papists and Atheists as not long after by Gods mercy they did by the brave conduct of renowned Sir John Meldrum together with 200 barrells of gunpowder part I say of this Danish prize so happily seized on as aforesaid Much also about the foresaid time there was a generall report and that upon good grounds and reasons all about the Citie of London that there was a purpose if not a plain though private plot at Oxford to work some of the Peeres in Parliament to treat again upon some articles or propositions for a pretended peace and indeed a motion was made as was credibly reported in the House of Lords to set it on foot which was generally much disrelisht and disliked in the Citie of London and began to cause great jealousies and feares among the wisest and best-affected Citizens as they and the whole Kingdome had just cause wee having ever received greatest dammage and detriment by such fained and treacherous treaties Whereupon the most renowned famous and faithfull Citizens of London with an unanimous consent resolved to joyn together as one man in a Petition to the Parliament in the name of the Lord Major Aldermen Commons of London which Petition coming to my hands I have heer thought fit to insert for the Readers better content and satisfaction therein To the Right Honourable the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House in Parliament The humble Petition of the Lord Major Aldermen and Commons of the Citie of London in Common Councell Assembled Sheweth THat your Petitioners having heard that such propositions and offers have been lately sent from the House of Peers to this honourable House which as wee greatly fear if yeelded unto may be destructive to our Religion Lawes and Liberties And finding already by experience that the spirits of all the well-affected partie in the Citie and Counties adjacent that are willing to assist the Parliament both in person and purse are much dejected thereat and the brotherly assistance from Scotland as well as the raising and maintaining of forces our selves thereby likely to be retarded all which the Petitioners refer to your serious consideration and considering our present sad condition lies upon us in a speciall manner through the incensed patience of the Almightie by delay and want of execution of justice upon traitors and Delinquents and having an opportunitie yet afforded us to speak our humble desires are That you would be pleased so to persist in your former resolutions wherupon the people have so depended and wherein yee have so deeply engaged your selves though you should perish in the work that justice may be done upon offenders and delinquents And since wee are as willing as ever to expose what wee are and have for the crowning of so good a cause you would be pleased by passing the Ordinance hereunto annext or one to this effect to put us into a probable way for ours and your defence wherein your Petitioners will by the blessing of God be never wanting But will ever pray c. This Petition being presented Aug. 7. 1643. by the Petitioners aforesaid to the House of Commons was well accepted and thankes returned by Mr Speaker for their care of the Kingdomes welfare with promise that the particulars desired should speedily be taken into consideration and to consider of an Ordinance to the purpose in the Petition mentioned which was referred to a Committee Now this Petition thus exhibited to the Parliament by Alderman Atkins in the name of the Lord Major Aldermen and Commons as aforesaid shortly after
of Newcastle and Generall King brought down their whole Armie upon us from their head quarter Whereupon wee turned the two last pieces now taken by us upon this bodie of their armie and thereupon they were all instantly forced to a most wretched retreat and to stand at a distance untill wee had sleighted their whole line of approach and then wee brought off nine pieces of Ordnance the Demy-Cannon aforementioned called by some one of the Queenes gods and by others the Queenes Pocket-pistoll which at first we made shift to draw out of danger of the enemies recovery till wee had more leasure toward night to fetch within the walls as afterward wee did and brought them safely within our quarters Now after the enemie perceived they had lost the two brass-pieces which they did imagine wee were not able to draw off their whole bodie of foot with fortie Colours drew themselves as a fresh reserve both horse and foot within Pistoll-shot to our Ragged-Jettie resolving it seemed to fall upon it that night which they did with great fury and violence But it pleased the Lord infinitely to manifest great strength in the weakness of our weary men and as it were to put new spirits into their tyred bodies and after a hot ski●mish of about two houres at least wee also having ordered as they perceived two hundred Musqueteers to keep without the Jetty which could not possibly have been done if the enemie had had Ordnance and having put so many resolved men within the said Jetty thus I say at length it pleased the Lord so to order and dispose of things that they all betook themselves to their heeles about midnight and we●e driven quite out of the field and forced to retyre quite away to their head-quarter The Marquess of Newcastle himself and Lievtenant King were beholders of the second part of this act and as it was reported King himself was wounded in two severall places Our Ordnance did them a great deal of mischief and if wee had had but a fresh bodie of foot they had been put to a great strait indeed In their retyring their other great-god helpless gods stuck fast in the myre untill all the Country-people were called together to draw her off Among the Captains that deserved well in this service Captain Micklethwait Parsons Bethel and Hardstaff for the horse Captain Clayton the bearer heerof who hath a generall love of all the Souldiers did us singular good service Captain ●almond Captain Sibbalds and Captain Crooker did all of them carry themselves very valiantly I my self had a blow on my side by a slug of cutted-iron shot from the great piece but thanks be to the Lord was not the worse for it but I beleeve had her Majestie known where the shot should have lighted shee would have checkt the Gunner for not charging full home Whilest wee were in this service to increase our comfort we heard the noyse of the great incounter in Lincolnshire whereunto also God hath pleased to give a happie issue whereby wee may perceive that God is certainly upon the stage and that Dagon must down Since the beginning of this my Letter wee understand that Colonell Rainesborow is safe Sir I desire that you will continue your accustomed favour toward Your affectionate friend and servant JOHN ME●DRUM From Hull Octob. 14. 1643. And although this virtuous and valourous Commander Sir John Meldrum in his wisedome and humility forbeares to write ought of his own best deservings in that foresaid Service yet I cannot forbear to give the Reader at least one touch thereof attested by the most noble and renowned Lord Generall himself the Lord Fairfax in his Letter to the Speaker of the Parliament which in brief was this That itpleased God to give you my Lords own words by the gallant courage and activitie of Sir John Meldrum and the spirit and valour of the other Commanders and Officers that all which the Souldiers had got and lost at the first assault forementioned by their sodain fear and retreat was totally recovered again and that with advantage too and the whole victory in the Conclusion And now having formerly toucht upon the mention of that famous fight and most glorious victory which our good God graciously conferred upon that as virtuous as valiant Generall the noble Earl of Manchester against the Popish and atheisticall forces of Newcastle in Lincolnshire under their Papisticall Commander the Lord Widrington and Generall Henderson at Horn-Castle I shall now in the next place give the. Reader a most exact and full and fair account thereof also in all the materiall and substantiall passages of it especially for the just advancement of the honour of the Lord our God and the great comfort of all that wish the welfare and prosperitie of our Jerusalem About the 10th of October 1643. my Lord of Manchester having had notice when he was at Linne of a great force of horse and Dragooneers come into Lincolnshire under the command of Generall Henderson and that upon the retreat of Sir Thomas Fairfax and Colonell Cromwell from about Lowth they were much heightned with confidence of success when ever they could draw-out forces to an eng●gement The want of foot and Dragooneers made Sir Thomas Fairfax and Colonell Cromwell very unwilling to fight with them till they had acquainted my Lord and tryed what supplies he could afford them and withall his Lordship was assured if he could draw any forces toward Balenbrook-Castle the enemy was so confident of his own strength that he would bring down all his force to fight with him Upon these grounds my Lord drew all his forces both horse and foot from Linne save onely one troop of horse and six companies of foot which he left for the guard of that Town with Colonell Walton whom he made Lievtenant-Governour Thus upon the Munday my Lord drew out all his foot out of Boston ten Companies he laid in Bolenbrook-Town under the command of Major Knight Serjeant Major to Sir Miles Hobart Colonell Russells Regiment was quartered at Strickford within a mile of them and my Lords own being but three Companies the rest being sent to Hull and left at Linne at Stickney and the horse were all quartered in the Townes round about at eight and ten miles distance Upon this Munday at night Major Knight summoned the Castle of Bolenbrook in my Lord of M●nchesters name but was answered That his bug-bear words must not winne Castles nor should make them quit the place that night our men took in a little house on the right hand between the Castle and the Church and resolved the next night to endeavour to break-open the Church-doores and there to mount a Morter-piece and thence fire the Castle The enemie had notice on the fryday following that my Lord was coming or come into those parts and thereupon drew out all their horse and Dragooners from their severall Garrisons at Lincoln Newark and Gainsborow with a
bold resolution to finde him out and fight with him Upon Tuesday those of the Castle kill'd one or two of our men and as Major Knight and Quarter-master Generall Vermeyden were viewing of it made some shot at them and one of them hit the said Quarter-master Generall a little below the ancle but pierced not the skin onely bruis'd his leg That afternoon my Lord of Manchester came himself to Kirkby which is within a mile of Bolenbrook with Colonell Cromwell where also my Lord Willoughby met him and Sir Thomas Fairfax was then at Horn-Castle about five miles off one of his Regiments having the watch at Edlingston about three miles farther but neerer to the enemie My Lord had not been long there before he received a Letter from Sir Thomas Fairfax that an allarm was given to some of our Quarters and that himself had sent out some horse to discover what it might be and would immediately give him a farther account which he did by another Letter about an houre after the partie being returned and could get no information of any enemy neer but conceived it to be a mistake However Sir Thomas resolved to stay there untill the evening and then to come to Kirkby to my Lord. My Lord conceived it fit and so did all those that were with him to give the allarm to all his quarters and to appoint Horn-Castle to be the Allarm-place and then to goe himself immediately thither to Sir Thomas Fairfax and when all their men were thus drawn together to take farther resolutions and so immediately with my Lo. Willoughby and some Officers with him he took horse for Horn-Castle Sir Thomas Fairfax in the mean time getting no intelligence of the enemies approach came away toward Kirkby to my Lord. Before my Lord had reached Horn-Castle the allarm came to him in good earnest that the enemie was fallen into our quarters and was marching toward Horn-Castle Coming neerer the Town he could hear great shouting and noyse which he conceived to be the enemies triumph having beaten our men out of the Town but it proved otherwise for some of our men falling upon the enemies forlorn-hopes though but part of two troopes seeing themselves desperately engaged resolved to put the best face on it and fell upon them with crying and shouting which did exceedingly amaze the enemie and gave our men the easier passage through the midst of them Now my Lord finding the enemie come into his quarters before he could have any certain information where he was and the allarm-place possessed by the enemie he appointed Kirkby and Bolenbrook-hill for all his men to repair unto and accordingly sent word to all the quarters whither all our men came but that night except three troopes that were directed to Stickney and three or four troopes that went by the way of Tottershall and came not in till next morning Many of our troopes came to Horn-Castle according to the first orders but finding the enemie there came away without any loss at all or very little The enemie had fallen into our quarters at Thimbleby and some Townes thereabout where three or foure of our troopes were in a manner surprized but finding themselves ingaged gave so good testimony and proof of their courage and resolution that the enemie had little or no cause to brag of that nights work which being of so memorable consequence I have thought fit briefly heer to relate which was thus Captain Johnson Captain Samuel Moody and Captain Player were three of the commanders of these troopes which the enemie had thus almost surprized in their quarters and were afterward also environed about by the enemie who had gotten between them and the bodie of their horse so that they were forced to break through two bodies of the enemies horse of at least a thousand horse in each body but with admirable courage and resolution they with their troopes charged the enemy crying all of them as before they had agreed among themselves with a shout and loud voyce Come on come on all is our own all is our own which so amazed the enemie expecting some ambuscado that these three troopes brake thorow the first bodie and so thorow the second doing great execution yet lost but three men After that they hasting toward the Town of Horncastle where they thought the Earl of M●nchester was about a mile before they came at the Town they discovered another partie of the enemies horse Heer they discreetly agreed to goe soberly toward them every man making answer to him that asked any question nothing but Friends friends all friends as if they had been of the enemies troopes and were going upon some design it being yet dark therefore when the enemies called to them Who is there the other all answered Friends friends and so they passed but as soon as they were past and thought themselves secure they turned faces about and asked the enemie Who are you for They answered for the King Then said they Wee are for the King and Parliament and charging the enemy fled toward Horncastle and the enemy pursuing followed them to the Town-side there being no forces in the Town on either side but they in the Town had with carts and timber barracadoed the passages into the Town so that by this meanes there was some loss in the troopes being thus unexpectedly put to their shifts but the loss was but little a Cornet and some few others and they brought half a douzen of prisoners with them Which could not but manifest a most evident hand of God in so great a preservation But to proceed All that night wee were drawing our horse to the appointed rendevouz And the next morning being Wednesday my Lord gave order that the whole force both horse and foot should be drawn up to Bolenbrook-hill where he would expect the enemie being the onely convenient ground to fight with him But Colonell Cromwell was no way satisfied that wee should fight our horse being extremely wearied with hard duty two or three dayes together The enemy also drew that morning their whole body of horse and Dragooneers into the field being 74 Colours of horse and 21 Colours of Dragooneers in all 95 Colours Wee had not many more than half so many Colours of horse and Dragooneers but I believe wee had as many men besides our foot which indeed could not be drawn up untill it was very late The enemies word was Cavendish and ours was Religion I beleeve that as wee had no notice of the enemies coming toward us so they had as little of our preparation to fight with them It was about twelve of the clock ere our horse and Dragooneers were drawn up after that wee marched about a mile nearer the enemie and then wee began to descry him by little and little coming toward us But untill this time wee did not know wee should fight but so soon as our men had
many of their horses and armes most of their pickaxes spades and other instruments wherewith they were raising trenches and strength'ning their kennells to have lyen lurking the more securely like so many prey-devouring Wolves or Sheep-biting mischievous Mastives and having thus most successfully demolished their works he returned again victoriously to Gloucester Much also about the same time came certain intelligence by Letters out of Warwickshire to London of another brave defeat given to the Kings Cormorants at Cambden in another part of the said Countie of Gloucester which was informed to be thus About 300 of the Kings horse came from Oxford into that Town of Cambden whereof the Parliaments forces in Warwick-Castle having speedie intelligence there came a considerable partie of them in the midst of the night into the said Town surprized most of them in their beds and carried them away prisoners with them to Warwick-Castle together with all their horses There were between thirtie and fortie of thtm that for some space stood stoutly to oppose our forces but they were all soon quelled and some of them slain in fight but the rest were all taken prisoners and carried to Warwick-Castle as aforesaid About the 20th of October also 1643. Our most prudent and provident Parliamentarie-Statists for the better securing of the great affaires and waightie negotiations of both the Houses of Parliament and their just proceedings therein for the welfare of Church and State they set forth an Ordinance or Declaration for the prevention and surprisall of all spies and intelligencers from Oxford to London and from London to Oxford for the sequestring of their estates and allowance of a fair reward to all such persons as should be assistant in giving notice of and apprehending any such according to the tenor of the said Ordinance which for the Readers better satisfaction therein I have thought fit to insert as it was printed and published by authoritie of Parliament A Declaration and Ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for the Sequestring of c. Die Martis Octob. 31. 1643. WHereas by the frequent intercourse of persons and intelligence contrary to the use and custome of War between the Cities of London and Westminster and other parts of the Kingdome and the persons of the King and Queen and forces raised by the King against the Parliament and Kingdome opportunitie hath been given for the plotting and contriving a late treacherous and horrid design and in case the said intercourse and intelligence should continue the same way will still be open for any other of the like nature in time to come As also for the frequent conveying of moneys and other provisions for the supporting of this unnaturall War For the preventing whereof be it declared and ordained by the Lords and Commons now assembled in Parliament that no person or persons whatsoever shall from henceforth repair or goe from the said Cities of London and Westminster or from any other parts of the Kingdome unto the person of the King or Queen or Lords of Councell abiding with him or her or to any person or persons within any of the Kings Quarters Leaguers or Garrisons or that are within any of the armies raised by the King nor shall give or hold any intelligence by Letters Messages or otherwise with the persons of the King and Queen or other persons aforesaid without consent of both Houses of Parliament or warrant from the Lord Generall of the forces raised by the two Houses or from the respective Officers that shall command in chief any of the forces And the said Lords and Commons doe further declare That the person or persons who shall doe to the contrary heerof shall be proceeded against as those within the Ordinance for sequestrations And shall be farther accounted as persons that doe adhere unto those that have levied war against the Parliament and Kingdome and be liable to the same punishment And be it further declared and ordained for the better and more effectuall execution of the premises That the person or persons that shall discover any of the persons offending as aforesaid shall have one fifth part of all such benefits and profits that shall ac●rue or grow by reason of the seizing and sequestring of their estates according to the true intent and meaning of this Ordinance and of the said Ordinance of Sequestration And in case any person or persons after the last of June having knowledge of the said offenders and offences shall not within convenient time reveal the same unto the Speakers of both Houses of Parliament or to the Lord Gene●all or other Officers commanding in chief the said person or persons shall incur the like penalties and forfeitures as are heerin provided against the said principall offenders Ordered by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that this Declaration and Ordinance be forthwith printed and published Hen. Elsynge Cler. P. D. Com. About the 24th also of October aforesaid the most noble and victorious Earl of Manchester whom the Lord most graciously raised up to shew himself most valiantly for the cause of God and his Countrie and whom the good hand of Gods almightie power and providence hath made victorious over those abominable Antichristian and atheisticall forces in the North in pursuance now of his late so prosperous and successfull atchievments in those parts and of that brave and memorable victory he obtained at Horn-Castle as aforesaid went on also most couragiously to the Citie of Lincoln whither being come with his forces and upon the summoning thereof it was soon surrendred to him Wherein he found and forced to be left in the Citie Close and Minster of Lincoln armes for at least 2500 men 28 or 30 Colours three pieces of Ordnance and great store of other ammunition the Cormorants or Cavalerian Officers having libertie granted to depart on horseback with their swords but the common Souldiers onely with sticks in their hands and thus became Master of this Citie without bloudshed or much molestation After which he most victoriously marched also to Gainesborough another of the enemies Garrison Townes in the said Countie But the Garrison therein hearing of the surrender of Lincoln and that the noble Earl of Manchester was making hastie preparation unto them they more hastily sleighted their workes as by credible information was related and speedily quitted the place and fled away thence to Newark And very shortly after this most noble and renowned Lord having received farther assistance and supply by the coming over of such horse as the most heroick Lord Fairfax could spare him from Hull he now resolved to prosecute his design to the full of quite clearing Lincolnshire maugre all the opposition of Newcastles viperous papisticall forces from those devouring Cormorants and hideous Harpyes which had so infected and infested that whole Countie where now for a while wee will leave him full of cause of praise and thanksgiving to his God who made him
shall be laborious and faithfull in the right governing of all such persons as be resident in or upon the said Plantations and due ordering and disposing all such Affaires as concerne the safety and welfare of the same is of very great advantage to the publique good of all such remote and new Plantations It is hereby further ordained and decreed That the said Robert Earl of Warwick Governour in chief and Admirall of the said Plantations together with the aforesaid Commissioners Philip Earl of Pembrook Edward Earl of Manchester William Viscount Say and Seale Philip Lord Wharton John Lord Roberts Sir Gilbert Gerard Knight and Baronet Sir Arthur Haselrig Baronet Sir Henry Vane junior Knight Sir Benjamin Rudyer Knight John Pym Oliver Cromwell Dennis Bond Miles Corbet Cornelius Holland Samuel Vassall John Rolls and William Spurstowe Esquires or the greater number of them shall have power and authoritie from time to time to nominate appoint and constitute all such subordinate Governours Counsellors Commanders Officers and Agents as they shall judge to be best affected and most fit and serviceable for the said Islands and Plantations And shall heerby have power and authoritie upon the death or other avoydance of the aforesaid chief Governour and Admirall or any the other Commissioners before named from time to time to nominate and appoint such other chiefe Governour and Admirall or Commissioners in the place and roome of such as shall so become voyd And shall also heerby have power and authority to remove any of the said subordinate Governours Counsellors Commanders Officers or Agents which are or shall be appointed to Governe Counsell or Negotiate the publike Affaires of the said Plantation and in their place and roome to appoint such other Officers as they shall judge fit And it is heerby ordained That no subordinate Governours Counsellors Commanders Officers Agents Planters or Inhabitants whatsoever that are now resident in or upon the said Islands or Plantations shall admit or receive any other new Governours Counsellors Commanders Officers or Agents whatsoever but such as shall be allowed and approved of under the hands and Seales of the aforesaid chief Governour and high Admirall of the said Plantation together with the hands and Seales of the aforementioned Commissioners or any six of them or under the hands and Seales of such as they shall authorize thereunto And whereas for the better government and security of the said Plantations and Islands and the Owners and Inhabitants thereof there may be just and fit occasion to assigne over some part of the power and authoritie granted in this Ordination to the chief Governour Commissioners afore-named unto the said Owners Inhabitants or others It is heerby ordained That the said chiefe Governour and Commissioners before-mentioned or the greater number of them shall heerby be authorized to assigne ratifie and confirme so much of their afore-mentioned authoritie and power and in such manner and to such persons as they shall judge to be fit for the better governing and preserving of the said Plantations and Islands from open violence and private disturbance and distractions And lastly That whosoever shall doe execute or yeeld obedience to any thing contained in this Ordinance shall by vertue heerof be saved harmlesse and indempnified Ordered by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that this Ordinance shall be forthwith printed and published John Brown Cler. Par. About the 8th of November 1643. came certain intelligence to London by Letters out of the Western parts of the Kingdome and also by the testimony of divers credible persons that a certain considerable number of English-Irish Protestant Souldiers being transported out of Ireland to Bristoll under the command of Sir Charles Vavasor on pretence to fight in England for the King and Parliament where being arrived and thinking that Bristoll had been still in the Parliaments possession but finding it otherwise on their arrivall and that their commanders would have enforced them to have taken an oath or Covenant to fight against the Parliament they utterly refused it declaring that they did not come from fighting against the bloudy Papists in Ireland with an intent to take part with the same and the other Papists in England and thereupon there being a great mutinie between the Souldiers and their Commanders the Souldiers slue some of their Commanders in the place enforced the rest of their Commanders to flie to Oxford for shelter After which they unanimously departed out of Bristoll toward Bathe and from thence also putting themselves under the Command of one Apleton a brave spirited man and valiant Souldier they marched to Gloucester to the most renowned Colonell Massey to be disposed of by him in the Parliaments service and before their departure from Bathe divers of the gen●rie and well-affected inhabitants of that Countie as was also credibly informed being weary of the Kings Cormorants tyranny laid hold on the opportunitie and joyned themselves with those Souldiers and put themselves into the same service with them And was not heer a most remarkable hand of Gods providence thus at the very first of these the enemies bloudy and base attempts in that most atrocious and scelerous Cessation of armes in Ireland manifesting thus I say in the very front of their devillish designe the Lords high indignation against them and undoubted purpose to blast and bring to nought the rest of this their most nefarious villanie in his own due time to their greater shame sorrow smart and infamie But to proceed About the 10th of the foresaid November came certain information by Letters and other very credible testimonies out of Shropshire of a very notable and brave Defeat given to that irreligious if not atheisticall and pragmaticall but yet blessed be the Lord that unfortunate and unsuccessfull upstart Lord Capell and his vulturous and ravenous Harpies by the most valiant forces of Cheshire and Shropshire under the happie conduct of that most virtuous and victorious Commander Sir William Brereton and his unanimous and magnanimous associates therein Sir Thomas Midleton and most courageous Colonell Mitton which was as followeth Sir Thomas Midleton having authoritie to raise forces for the defence of the King Parliament and Kingdome in N●rth Wales as Colonell Mitton had in Shropshire desired and deserved indeed by the good service they had done in Staffordshire as they went the assistance of Sir William Brereton who commanded in chiefe in Cheshire and is a Colonell in and hath a tender care of and interest in the affections of Staffordshire Souldiers This noble Colonell willing to accommodate those Worthies drew part of his forces from Namptwich to safeguard them into and make provision for their safety in Shropshire and thus marching together to Wem a little Town about six miles from Shrewsbery the place of their torment as Capell had made it unto honest men At Wem I say they began to fortifie and this lusty Lord Capell perceiving by the help of his Councell
of War how prejudiciall this was like to prove to his designes he heerupon led on his misled animals to Namptwich hoping to get abroad what he prudently foresaw he was like to loose neer home but being come to Namptwich he found that that Garrison gave him his hands and his belly full ere Sir William Brereton who most providently watching his motions was on his march toward them could come to their relief Which also this nimble gallant perceiving he quickly retreats toward Wem and with his whole armie consisting of about 4000 horse and foot fell desperately upon that small strength which Colonell Midleton and Colonell Mitton had there who contrary to his good Lordships expectation did most bravely maintain the fight untill renowned active and indefatigable Sir William Brereton was come againe from Namptwich to their rescue assistance who being now all together did such execution upon the enemie that it with the particular circumstances of Gods admirable providence therein deserve to be perpetuated to all posteritie in those parts The particulars whereof being so memorable I have heer thought fit for the Readers better satisfaction and more full content to set down as they came from singular good hands which were as follow 1. That whiles wee quartered at Drayton as wee were on our March to assist Sir Thomas Midleton and the rest when there came with all possible speed upon us no less as was credibly reported than a 1000 horse from Shrewshery to have surprized us in our quarte●s they were all repelled and beaten back again by onely a partie of thirtie or fortie horse and Dragooneers commanded by Captain Munck there being divers of them slain and the rest pursued by our horse many miles toward Shrewsbery at which time some of Major Bromhalls men were taken prisone●s some slain and some wounded and one Ge●rge Cook a very valiant man of Sir William Breretons own troop was slain and one Peter Anlet another of them taken prisoner but afterward redeemed 2. That wee were not interrupted in our march to Wem all the next day nor disquieted or disturbed there during six or seven dayes untill wee had made some works of defence which though they were then but sleight and weak yet were of some encouragement and advantage to our men 3. That when they had made mightie preparation to hinder us in our fortification at Wem and that notwithstanding all the forces they could make united into a bodie which were said to consist of three or foure thousand which quartered within three or foure miles of Wem yet that they should and did receive interruption by two or three Companies of our Dragooneers who were quartered at Lappington a little village about two miles from Wem who hearing of the enemies approach betook themselves to the protection of the Church and Churchyard which they did most valiantly maintain a long time untill by the multitudes of the enemies encompassing them they were enforced to betake themselves onely to the Church where they behaved themselves so valiantly as that their enemies could not take the Church untill they fired the porch roof of the Church which were covered with shingles by which meanes some of our men were almost suffocated and stifled so as they were constrained to deliver up themselves prisoners though wee speedily rescued many of them Our Souldiers then wounded were Major Spotswood and Captain Daughtie since reported to be dead and one other Captain wounded and their Cannonier wounded or slain and their whole armie was repulsed by less than 200 foot and 300 horse of ours who hasted from Wem to the relief of our men in the Church so soon as they heard the enemies Cannon play and our horse pursued and routed them so as they left one of their Cannons within our power but by reason of the darknesse of the night wee knew not thereof nor could we see to pursue them the lanes being narrow and hedges thick They took Major Bromhall prisoner and we took Master Needham the Lord Vicount Kilmurreys sonne prisoner If they had then come on to Wem they had found the Town very weak and naked and much less able in respect of the workes to make resistance and defence than when they did make their violent assault upon tuesday and wednesday 17. and 18. October 4. That betwixt the first and second assault at which time they were much more encouraged by the increase of their strength from Litchfield Dudley Worcester and some from the Kings armie and when their forces were all united and in readinesse The Lord in his wisdome and goodness was pleased so to order as that there were many interruptions and diversions which occasioned their delay as want of cariages and steering their course toward us and assaulting Namptwich on purpose to withdraw the Cheshire forces out of Wem during which intermission wee made good use of our time in Wem to perfect the workes 5. That when they all came against Namptwich upon Munday October 16. they were so confident of surprizing the same as that the Lord Capell as it is reported returned backe all the Chester horse which were tendered unto him and coming to his assistance returning this answer That he had strength sufficient to take Namptwich to which end he did speedily and that before notice was given of his approach seize upon and possesse himselfe of Acton Church and Dartford house and attempted to force their passage by the way of Beame-bridge but by the valour of those few men who were left in the Town they were repulsed from passing the water not without the losse of divers of their men Foure whereof were found dead in the ditch those that attempted to undermine the walls in the darknesse of the night were taken prisoners and this night and the next morning there were neer forty prisoners taken besides many horses and armes and many of their men run away And upon the newes of our approach to their reliefe they sent away their carriages and marched after them with speed towards Wem This was the fift time they did come before and attempt this poore Town of Namptwich which the Lord hath miraculously preserved and defended and returned them alwayes backe with shame and dishonour 6. That whilst the Cheshire Souldiers continued in Wem which were about 500 Musketteers besides horse the enemy did forbeare to make any attempt against the Town but were repulsed and beaten off with great loss by a far lesse number than the third part of those who were commanded out of the Town and gone to relieve Namptwich as though the Lord judged all too many and preferred rather to deliver them by Gideons three hundred to whom the whole glory of this deliverance is to be attributed and ascribed 7. The unparalleld magnanimity resolution and dexterity of those young Souldiers who were not in any service except some of them in that skirmish at Lappington before they were ingaged in this
siege at Wem whose courageous spirits were so supported and transported beyond themselves as did much admire and daunt the enemie there being no such thing expressed as any desire or willingnesse to entertain or embrace the motion of a parley or treaty with the enemy seeming all to be as of one mind resolved to fight and stand it out to the last man 8. The great slaughter and execution which was performed upon the enemy when they set upon Wem there being six cart loads of dead men carried away at one time besides the wounded and as it is said there were fifteen found buried in one grave neer the Town-workes and divers were seen dead and stripped lying upon the ground the next day And that little execution which was done upon our men whereof we lost not above three in the Town Major Marrow and one Souldier and one boy and we had very few others hurt 9. The qualitie of the persons slain or wounded even such as were most eminent or considerable Col. Win certainly slain his Major Vaughan wounded in the ribs one of Winters Captain● shot in the back Captain Davison taken prisoner since dead Captain Francis Manley shot in the leg Captain Ellis of Oswestray wounded some say slain Captain Jones slain as some say Colonell Scriven slightly wounded Sir Richard Willis Major Trercon and Major Braughton wounded as some report the certainty I cannot affirme their Cannoneer shot in the leg Captain Chapman taken prisoner who was Captain Lievtenant to Colonell Woodhouse exchanged for Captain Zanchie Captain Lievtenant Smith a Papist who was Captain Lievtenant to Sir Rich Willis Colonell Scrivens Captain Lievtenant taken prisoner a Gentleman of good quality shot in the back at Leighi-bridge 10. The various circumstances of admiration which happened during the fight wherein the Lords hand is much to be acknowledged First One of their great Cannons or Morter-pieces or both as it is reported brake with the first shot sure I am that part of the carriages of one or both of them was broken and left in the lane Secondly The mighty execution which our Cannon did upon the enemies whereas their Cannon and Morterpiece though discharged did no execution at all having as it should seem no commission from heaven to touch any of those that fought the Lords battail Thirdly A Cannon discharged in the night by Col. Mittons order intended to give Sir William Brereton and his Souldiers who were marching warning that the Town was not taken and onely levelled at one of the enemies fires as some report dismounted one of the enemies Cannons wounded their Cannoneer in the knee or leg Fourthly A barrell of powder was blown up which burned or wounded 15 of their men whereof 12 dyed Fifthly The confessions and acknowledgements which the Lord extorted out of the mouthes of some dying men as it is reported of Colonell Winter that he should reply to some who were lamenting their misfortune to be repulsed by a few that there were more with them in the Town than against them for God was with them and divers other expressions to the like purpose Sixthly Others confidently report that one of their Cannons taking fire twice or thrice yet could they not procure the same to be discharged wherewith they were much amazed and did draw off their pieces and retreated All this I thought fit heer thus particularly to relate as a just and rare monument of Gods power and providence in thus taking the proud and self-conceited wickedly wise ones of this world in their own accursed craftiness and still as hath been clearly seen and shewen all along in this narration making good and ratifying to the full that of the holy Prophet David an excellent place appliable most fitly to the vain and prophane enemies of Gods truth in these our dayes Surely men of low degree are vanity and men of high degree are a lie to be laid in the ballance they are altogether lighter than vanity Trust not therefore in oppression and become not vain in robberie But to goe on About the 14th of this instant November came credible information by letters to London from the most noble Earl of Manchesters forces in and about Linc●lnshire that about 4000 of the said renowned Earles horse being then quartered about Newark had d●iven away most of the cattle b●asts sheep and horses from about all those parts unto Bost●n and Lincoln thus to shorten and necessitate the garrison in Newark of provision And that the Lord Willoughbie of Parrha● had taken Bullingbrook-castle from the Newcastellian Cormorants As also that brave and most valiant Commander Sir Thomas Fairfax with about 12 troopes of horse was now gone into the West-Riding of York-shire where a partie of the never-sufficiently praised Manchesterians and other loyall Lanca-shire forces appointed to meet him for the farther advancement of some great designe in those parts and for the further terrour of the Popish and atheisticall Newcastellian forces whose formerly reputed formidable and flourishing armie was at that time as was most credibly and frequently enformed in a very tottering torn and declining condition for that upon the mustering thereof hee could hardly bring together 7 or 8000 horse and foot into a complete body And therefore no wonder that he had sent so many Letters to Oxford one whereof was for certain intercepted by the Parliaments forces whereby he signified that unless his Majestie did move with his Armie very speedily that way to his assistance all the Northern parts would be totally lost especially also because he found the gentrie of Yorkshire much discontented and most unwilling to march out of their own County which indeed was a rare mercie also and a great overture of things there by the good providence of our God thus ordering it And for the farther confirmation heerof about the 16th of November 1643. came certain intelligence to London by Letters out of the remoter Northern parts that above an hundred Gentlemen and substantiall Freeholders well mounted were gone out of Northumberland into Scotland and had listed themselves under one Colonell Welden a Northumberland Gentleman to come in with the Scots and that the generalitie of the people of those parts were even impatient till our brethren of Scotland were come in among them their burthens having been so intolerable by reason of the Popish armie and their so insolent carriages over them that they now longed exceedingly to be eased thereof Yea and that divers other Gentlemen in other Northern Counties had declared themselves some privately and some publikely that they would now no longer assist the King especially in regard of that horrible and accursed Cessation which he had made with the most abomin●bly bloudy rogues and rebells of Ireland The Gentlemen that then did lay down their armes in a publike manner were as was credibly enformed Sir Edward Hussey Mr Sutton Sir Philip Therold with divers others of like quality as then in discretion forborn to be
improvement wee can make of this our voyage for the honour of our good God in briefly observing and admiring the menacing molestations and shrewd brushes and disturbances which the advers waves and boysterous billowes rocks and sands of most wicked and ungodly proud presumptuous enemies of this Ark labouring to overtop or overturn it yet now by the Lords almightie and irresistible power and sweet protection all those proud waves were broken the rocks removed and the devouring sands securely evaded Both in the good hand of God first Uniting and associating the Counties of Hampshire Sussex Surrey and Kent and ordaining renowned Sir William Waller Commander in chief over them Secondly In the Parliaments pious care and providence for the welfare of forein English Plantations Thirdly In causing a considerable number of English-Irish-Protestant Souldiers transported out of Ireland and landed at Bristoll to fight against the Parliament to revolt from the Kings designes by them and really and readily to turn to the Parliaments-side against the Parliaments enemies Fourthly In that brave defeat given by the Parliaments forces in Shropshire and Cheshire to that proud and unsuccessfull upstart Lord Capell Fifthly In the most successfull pious and renowned Earl of Manchesters spoyling and bereaving of that pernicious Town of Newark of their provision the taking of Bullingbrook-Castle the declining and perishing condition of proud and Popish Newcastles armie and the notable defection of the Gentrie of ●orkshire and other Northern-Counties from the Kings partie Sixthly In the admirable contrary effects which the wisdome of the Lord our God caused the accursed Cessation of armes in Ireland to bring forth which mainly appeared in the Parliaments perfecting and producing their former long intended new Broad-Seal of England and the hopefully happie effects thereof Seventhly In renowned Sir William Wallers brave prize taken about Newbery The most excellent effects which the loss of Stamford-Mount at Plymouth produced And renowned Colonell Rigbies famous victorie at Thurland Eighthly The brave atchievements and victorious performances of the little Town yet greatly renowned Garrison at Pool in Dorsetshire Ninthly The happie re-establishment of the renowned Earl of Warwick in the place of Lord high Admirall of England for the singular securitie and safety of the Kingdome as well by sea as by land Tenthly The brave exploits of the valiant Governour and Garrison of Warwick Castle Eleventhly The most successfull proceedings and brave atchievements of those two renowned Colonells and Commanders Sir William Brereton and Sir Thomas Midleton Twelfthly and lastly the most prudent and provident Ordinance of Parliament granting out Letters of Mart by Sea for the better hindrance of the accursed designes of our Oxonian adversaries in the rebellious and most bloudy Kingdome of Ireland And now tell mee good Reader dost thou not see plainly by all these premised passages and apparent prints of Gods providence The Lord sitting as a most prudent and propitious Pilot at the Stern of his Ark and graciously and gloriously carrying it on safely and securely through the midst of all these molesting and raging waves of wicked men and all their most desperate and devillish designes against it whereby wee may and must most justly and ingenuously acknowledge with the sweet Psalmograph the holy Prophet David Thou O Lord art our safe and secure hiding-place Thou alone dost preserve us from troubles Thou dost encompasse us with songs of deliverance But to proceed The first thing wherewith I shall begin this Moneth of December shall be that happie and blessed business to this Kingdome of fully confirming and setting on foot the new Great Seal of England But before I come to the present relation of what was more fully setled and confirmed therein Give me leave good Reader to acquaint thee with what formerly past about it in Parliament namely That about the midst of October last when as the Commons debating on the speedie putting it in execution they considered a collection of certain Acts then read setting forth the power and use of the great Seal of England and reviewed their former votes touching the absence of the other great Seal at Oxford the substance of which former votes having relation to what was then farther agreed upon I have thought fit heer to insert Resolved on the Question 1. That the great Seal of England ought to attend the Parliament 2. That the absence of it hath been a cause of great mischiefes to the Common-wealth 3. That a remedie ought to be provided for those mischiefes 4. That the proper way is by making a New great Seal And they then proceeded to some farther votes touching the same which were to this effect Resolved on the Question That the great Seal at Oxford be disanull'd and what ever act or thing hath passed under it since it was carried away from the Parliament to be voyd and of none effect and that an Ordinance of Parliament be forthwith drawn up to that purpose By which Vote those late thundring Proclamations against the Parliament and well-affected Subjects of the Kingdome and the many new honours conferred on c. and many others at Oxford for their good service in withholding his Majestie from his Parliament and fostering this unnaturall rebellion against the Parliament Kingdome thereby occasioning the death of many thousands of his Majesties good and loyall subjects will fall flat to the ground Also resolved on the Question That Commissioners of both Houses of Parliament be forthwith appointed viz. Three of the House of Peeres and six of the House of Commons if the Lords so think fit to have the trust of the new great Seal which is to reside with the Parliament for the use of the Parliament and Kingdome And lastly resolved on the Question That the House of Peeres be forthwith desired to nominate such members of their House to joyn with a proportionable number of the Commons House as Commissioners for the said New great Seal and that all businesses proper to the Seal be dispatched by them or by order of both Houses All which was accordingly ratified not long after as was manifested in the Ordinance of Parliament for the great Seal forementioned After which long and serious agitation consultation and debates in both Houses of Parliament a Declaration from both Houses now fully resolved on and the Lord Ruthen Earl of Kent being with full approbation of both Houses chosen and made a Commissioner thereof in stead of the Earl of Rutland first chosen who upon some scruples of conscience objected by him was acquitted of that service and the Ordinance of Parliament accordingly altered The new great Seal was now I say delivered to the Commissioners of both Houses of Parliament for the putting thereof into due execution viz. To the Earl of Kent and the Earl of Bullingbrook for the House of Peers Mr Saint John Sollicitor Generall Mr Serjeant Wilde Mr Prideaux and Mr
Brown for the House of Commons The solemn and exact manner of delivering whereof to the honourable personages aforesaid I have also thought fit heer to insert for the Readers better conte●● and delight heerin as I have received it from good hands which was thus The great Seal was carryed up by the Speaker of the House of Commons accompanied with that whole House to the House of Peers who delivered it to the Speaker of that House and made a short speech at the delivery of it desiring the said Seal might be delivered to the Commissioners and the Oath for the due execution of their places thereabout be tendered to them in a full Parliament before both Houses which was done accordingly The Speaker of the House of Peeres viz. The Lord Gray of Wark swearing the two Lords and the Clerk of that House John Brown Esquire swearing the other foure Commissioners which done the Seal was delivered to them and they presently carried it to Master Brownes office and put it into an iron-chest with three different locks as was formerly appointed and the said Commissioners shortly after appointed a Sealing-day to put the said Seal in execution according to the Ordinance of Parliament without any farther let or obstacle the happie and blessed effects whereof wee shall in their due time by Gods good providence and gracious assistance see and give the Reader occasion to understand of in their convenient and proper places Upon the 30th of November last our most honourable Commons in Parliament passed an Order which was printed published the second of this instant December That the Ministers of the severall parishes within the bills of Mortalitie should on that next ensuing Lords-day in the afternoon tender the Solemn-League and Covenant in the severall Churches and Chappell 's within the bills of Mortalitie to such as had not then taken it with other very materiall Clauses therein contained which for the Readers better satisfaction and content therein I have thought fit heer to insert as it was printed and published which was as followeth Die Iovis Novem. 30 th 1643. An Order of the Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the returning in writing to the House of Commons the names of such Ministers and other persons within the bills of Mortalitie as shall not take the Solemn-League and Covenant before Wednesday next IT is this day ordered by the Commons in Parliament assembled that the Ministers within the severall parishes within the bills of Mortalitie doe on the next Lords day in the afternoon tender the Solemn League and Covenant in the severall Churches and Chappell 's within the bills of Mortalitie to such as have not yet taken it And that the Minister and Church-wardens of every parish be required on wednesday next to return to the House of Commons the names of all such in their severall parishes as have not taken or shall then refuse to take the Covenant And the Ministers Lecturers Curates in the said severall parishes that have not yet taken the Covenant are required then to take it And if any of them refuse or further delay the taking of the same then the Church-wardens of those parishes are required to return to this House in writing the names of such Ministers Lecturers and Curates that so refuse And the severall Ministers in the said severall parishes are to give notice of this Order publikely on the next Lords-day in the afternoone And this Order is to be printed and published and sent to the Ministers of the severall parishes aforesaid H. Elsynge Cler. Parl. D. Com. And now that wee are again fallen most fitly on this sacred subject of the holy-League and Covenant although I have spoken somewhat of it in the close of my Second Part of our Parliamentarie Chronicle touching the taking thereof first by the Commons in Parliament and are now in order of the progress thereof fallen again I say upon it as it was enjoyned to all sorts in the Citie of London yet give mee leave now good Reader heer also to acquaint thee briefly how it past and was taken in the House of Peeres in Parliament which comes now to be handled in the next place for the present On October the 15th being the Lords day the House of Peeres according to a former appointment in a very full appearance contrary to the calumnious and slanderous report of that Oxonian-Minter of untruths Aulicus the Kings lyer in chief as acute Britanicus●●tly ●●tly styles him took the Solemn-League and Covenant in Westminster-Abbey after the morning Sermon which was preached by Dr Temple a reverend and able Divine and a member of the Assembly his text being out of Nehemiah 10. 29. The Sermon being ended the Lords assembled themselves together and each of them with much alacritie and chearfulness subscribed unto the said Covenant in order as they are heer mentioned viz. The Earles 1. Pembrook 2. Essex 3. Warwick 4. Suffolk 5. Salisbury 6. Denbigh 7. Bullingbrook 8. Stamford The Lords 9. Say and Seal 10. Howard 11. Gray of Wark 12. Wharton 13. Rochford Besides severall other Lords who were not then present but had formerly declared themselves for the Covenant viz. The Earles of Northumberland Lincoln Nottingham Rutland Mulgrave and the Lord Dacres Also the Earle of Manchester the Lord Fairfax Lord Willoughby of Parrham Lord Roberts and Lord Gray of Groobey who were forth in the Parliaments service Certainly the entring of so many honourable Peeres of this Realme into so solemn a League and Covenant for reformation extirpation of Poperie and her sister Prelacie out of this Kingdome must needs much amaze and amuse not onely our London Malignants but also all the Court Parasites and Papisticall and Prelaticall Machivilians at Oxford who no question gnasht their teeth and did even gnaw their tongues with malice and envie when they heard of such a generall and unanimous taking of this Covenant both by the Nobility and by the Communaltie of the Kingdome In the same Moneth also of October 1643. on severall dayes appointed thereunto there were great confi●ences of Martiall Commanders Knights and Gentlemen of qualitie who most cheerfully and freely took this Covenant as others had done reverend and learned Mr Caryll of Lincolnes-Inne preaching one day at St Marga●ets-Church in Westminster unto them and likewise other grave and godly Divines to others of them on other dayes appointed thereunto And when the whole Citie of London all within the bills of Mortalitie took this holy Covenant according to the Ordinance of Parliament in October last as hath been forementioned in that moneth they were so forward and cheerfull therein that upon a motion thereunto made they sealed the Covenant with the loan of an 100000●● to the Parliament for the helping forward of our faithfull loyall and loving brethren of Scotlands advance to help the Lord and us against the mightie and mischievous enemies of this Kingdome and our most precious Religion Lawes and
as you have that such choice men as they are may not continue long unredeemed God give a sodain stop to this issue of English bloud which is the desire of your faithfull friend to serve you Winton 16 Decemb. 1643. Ralph Hopton And one thing more as a very observable passage of Gods providence heerin I cannot omit namely That the knowledge of this victory as wee were credibly enformed came to Oxford just upon the very same day on which they were making Bonfires at Oxford for joy of the death of that ever most worthily honoured and most pious and prudent Patriot one of the most famous never to be forgotten Atlasses of this Church and State I mean learned and religious Mr John Pim which relation of their loss at Alton could not but be as it were a strong showre of rain to quench the prophane flames of their wicked fiery jollity at our loss of so precious and choice an instrument of so much good as God had made him to the Cause and Kingdome But now to proceed About the middle of this instant December the Duke of Gloucester and the Ladie Princess Elizabeth the two pledges of the Crown of England Scotland Ireland royally kept and maintained by the Parliament at St Jameses were by a private Oxonian plot designed with the close help of some malignant and dis-affected persons about them to be conveyed away to Oxford but Letters being intercepted they were presently the better secured and all ill-disposed servants about them ordered to be removed and good Ministers placed in the roomes of bad ones and to preach monethly by turnes at St Jameses reverend and godly Mr Stephen Marshall and Mr Obadiah Sedgewick being appointed two of them for this service And about Decemb. 20th 1643. the trained bands which had been sent out of London and Westminster to Sir William Wallers army viz. the Red-Regiment under the command of Colonell Sir James Harrington of Westminster The Green Regiment of Auxiliaries under the command of Colonell Whitchcot and the Yellow Regiment of Auxiliaries all which had been upon divers hazardous desperate services and adventures since their going forth and especially at the siege of Basing-House and this last brave defeat at Alton now returned home by the good hand of God to whom be all the honour and praise thereof victoriously to London with about 400 prisoners which they others of Sir William Wallers forces had taken at Alton the Wednesday before as hath been already declared namely 37 Commanders and Officers and 330 common Souldiers together with divers servants and attendants belonging to some of the chief Commanders And as thus they came triumphantly home they were met by the most worthy Lievtenant of the Tower of London Alderman Pennington by Colonell Manwaring Colonell Zacharie together with a brave company of the Hamletts belonging to the Tower and the Citie Marshalls and divers other most gallant Citizens who accompanied them into the Citie that afternoone As for their prisoners they were safely guarded through London to the Royall-Exchange and from thence conveyed and dispersed by direction of the Committee of the Citie for the Militia into severall places of Strength in about London viz. Leaden-hall Bridewell Newgate Eli-house London-house and divers other prisons where they were safely kept in durance till they could be disposed of by way of Exchange or otherwise Much also about this time both Houses of Parliament taking into consideration that the well-government of the City of London did chiefly depend on the faithfulness integrity of their Common-Councell-men and such like Officers of the Citie they passed an Ordinance for the disabling of all those to be Common-Councell-men or to bear any other office of Church-warden Constable c. who shall or doe refuse to take the solemn-League or Covenant appointed to be taken throughout all the three Kingdomes and the like course to be observed concerning those whose estates are sequestred for their delinquencie malignancie against the Parliament who were also to be debarred from bearing any Office or having any vote in any such offices or places as aforesaid A singular good course indeed for the happie conservation of the peace and welfare of the well-affected partie in the Citie and the better putting in due execution of the Orders and Constitutions of the Parliament and Citie as occasions are offered About the 20th of this instant came certain newes by Letters to London that valiant Colonell Sydenham having taken Warham in Dorsetshire as hath been forementioned and fortified it He went with about an hundreth men to Dorchester where he apprehended Capt. William Churchhill Deputie-Governour of that Town his Lievtenant Paty both which had been very active against the Parliament and had compelled that Town and County to yeeld obedience to the Kings Cormorants And there this brave Commander Col. Sydenham brake open the prison and freed such honest men out of it as had been committed by those cruell Cormorants for refusing their illegall commands and took them with him for their further safety There also he met with a Cart laden with Muskets and gunpowder which came from Weymouth and was bound for Bristoll the gunpowder he threw into the river brake 200 Muskets and carried away 80 of them his men not being able to carry any more He also borrowed there of one Mr Cokar a malignant Goldsmith such plate as he had and all this he did in an houre half and returned safe to his garrison at Warham And a little before this action he went into the Isle of Purbeck and carried away from thence 323 cattle of all sorts This is that valiant and faithfull Gentleman that saved the Town of Pool from the Earle of Crafords intended treacherie against it Much also about the foresaid time came credible intelligence by letters to London from Canterbury in Kent that about the 13th or 14th of Decemb. the Ordinance of Parliament for demolishing idolatrous and superstitious images pictures and monuments was there put in execution And the first place which was set upon in Canterbury-Minster was the famous window in that Cathedrall wherein among many other Popish pictures was Austine the Monks picture who first brought Poporie not true Christianity as they vapour and brag from Rome into England and this Austine forsooth was the first Bishop of Canterbury therefore was very fitly first puld down Next they went to the Quire-door over which were placed 13 images or statues of stone 12 of them personating the 12 Apostles and the 13th in the middle of them our Saviour Christ these were all hewn-down and 12 more images of Popish Saints over them which were also headlong thrown down and like so many Dagons had their necks broke in the fall yea and hands and bodies too Many other they also brake down in this Cathedrall and many Crucifixes yea blasphemous pictures of God the Father
from London for their relief had been beaten back with contrary winds whereby the poor people were grievously pinched put to it But behold on a sodain there cam● in an infinite multitude of Pilchards into the harbour within the Barbicon which the people took up with as great ease as cheerfulness in baskets and tubs and that in such a plentifull measure as did not onely refresh them for the present but a great deale more were taken preserved and salted whereby the poor got much money in selling them Such a passage not heard of I beleeve in our kingdome since the siege of Rochel in France by that innumerous shole of Cods which then preserved that Protestant Town then besieged by the French King with an 100000 Popish enemies as the French Historie records The truth heerof I have also attested out of the foresaid Narration of this Plymouth Siege pag. 14. And now to goe on Much about the foresaid time also came credible intelligence from Northampton to London that that most valiant vigilant and well experienced Souldier Capt. Clarke one of the prime Commanders in the garrison at Northampton advancing from thence with a partie of horse and coming to a place called Brandon within 2 or 3 miles of Taciter in that Countie according to the intelligence given him sprung up a covie of Prince-Robbers Commanders and Officers being indeed the greatest part if not all the Commanders the enemie had in their garrison at Tociter one whereof was a Lievtenant Colonell and another a Serjeant Major with their horses and a malignant Parson of that County in their company they surprized them all as they were playing at cards for you must know that it is the greatest devotion that these prophane time-servers use at the good time forsooth of their merry Christmas which they account the most solemn time in the year for beastly Bacchanalian and atheisticall playing drinking revelling and thus spoyling their sport they were all carried prisoners to Northampton And at the same time also such another prety prank or Christmas-gamball was played them by a partie of Dragoones sent out from Windsor-Castle who advancing as far as Redding having come within little less than half a mile of the Town and faced the enemie there they entred the Townes of Twyford Hurst and Okingham and took there divers of the enemies horse and four high Constables who were gathering Contribution-money for Redding-Cormorants they having then collected the sum of 80li. which the said Dragoons took from them and brought it together with their prisoners and horses into Windsor-Castle And very shortly after another partie was sent out from thence who coming into Stoke about 4 miles from Windsor they had intelligence of a great feast which was that day to be kept at the house of a notorious malignant in that Town who had accordingly invited all his malignant neighbours unto it who being all assembled and preparing to sit down our said forces came sodainly in upon them and having laden a Cart full of their provision which they had made ready for dinner with great store of sack claret and other sorts of wine they speedily dispatched it to Windsor and brought away with them 3 prime men of about twenty then present namely the Master of the house the Parson of the Town and another active malignant who were all committed prisoners in the Castle there to feed on prison-short Commons whiles the garrison-Souldiers merrily feasted themselves with their good chear and drank off their wine heartily it being all disposed of among the said garrison-Souldiers December the 30th 1643. The high altar and other superstitious pictures and Crucifixes in King Henry the sevenths Chappell in Westminster Abbey were by order of Parliament and in the presence of the Committee for innovations taken away and demolished even the very next day after the monethly fast Sermon preached that day before the House of Commons in Parliament by Mr Hinderson that reverend and renowned Scotish Minister at Westminster This pious act being performed at the request of the said venerable Mr Hinderson as I was by credible testimony enformed And now good Reader having by Gods gracious assistance thus finished this Moneths voyage and brought our Ark safely into the harbour of this Moneths conclusion I shall heer desire wee may a little repose our senses and reflect our serious thoughts upon a most brief and gratefull recapitulation of all the precious traffique rich merchandize of mercies brought in for the better improvement of Gods honour and precious praises therein and to see and survey with thankfull hearts as in a short Map what God hath this moneth done for us and how he hath graciously and gloriously carried on this blessed Ark the Parliaments most upright and innocent cause through all the boysterous billowes and swelling surges of all its inveterate and malignant enemies rage and most malicious sly and subtill machinations not onely to overtop but overturn it too with utter ruine and destruction if it had been possible for them as namely First In setling the New great Seal of England In the religious reviving and farther pressing the Solemn-League or Covenant in places and by persons where it had not formerly been taken and this notwithstanding that shrew'd crosse-winde it met with by the way in the Oxonian accursed Proclamation published against it In the many and most brave exploits of that ever renowned and famous Commander Colonell Massie at Gloucester against his many and malicious garrison-neighbours In that brave defeat given to trayterous Digbie before Plymouth and that other defeat at Dunscot neer Tociter by Northampton forces In that famous defeat or rather indeed glorious victory obtained through the good hand of God by that ever to be honoured and renowned Commander Sir William Waller at Alton in Surrey the discovery and prevention of the plot of conveying away the Duke of Gloucester and the Princess Elizabeth from St Jameses to Oxford And the most triumphant return of the Train'd-Bands of London and Westminster with their prisoners taken at Alton In that excellent Ordinance of Parliament for the preservation of the Citie of Londons good Government The brave exploits of Cap. Sydenham at Pool And the notable reformation of the Cathedrall Church at Canterbury In the successfull Storming of Gainesborough and the brave prize taken therein The Kings unsuccessfulness in all his most waightie enterprizes since that most odious scelerous Cessation of armes in Ireland Together with the Storming of Grafton-House the rich spoiles taken therin And the great encouragement of the other London train'd Bands thereby to goe forth in the publick service and the excellent Ordinance of Parliament enabling the Militia of London the sooner and better to send them forth to noble Sir William Waller The notorious plot against Nottingham Town and Castle discovered and prevented And the brave defeat given to the Belvoir Cormorants by renowned Colonell Waight The
Master Speaker told them farther that he was commanded in the name of the House to assure them that as the Cities resolution was to live and die with them So they resolved by the grace of God never to desert the City but to make it one of their greatest cares to watch all opportunities to advance the honour happiness of this City which under God hath been the principall meanes of the preservation of this Parliament Now on Thursday January the 18th 1643. according to this foresaid invitation the whole Parliament of Lords and Commons with the Assembly of reverend and learned Divines and the Scottish Commissioners met at Christ-Church in London between 9 and 10 of the clock in the morning in the first place to testifie and acknowledge their bounden gratitude unto almightie God for the gracious preservation both of the Parliament and City from the late desperate designe of those pernicious Conspirators aforesaid who had complotted with Oxford agents to have made a dissention and discord between them There preached before them that day that venerable pious and learned Divine Master Stephen Marshall who before the Sermon made an elegant and patheticall Preface wherein he did excellently set forth both the true occasion of their meeting and the admirable lustre and glory of that most honourable Assembly the like never seen since England was a Kingdome Which being singularly observable I have heer for the Readers better delight and most full satisfaction therein exactly set down and inserted which was to this effect Right Honourable and well beloved in our Lord THis day is a day purposely set apart for feasting and it is like one of the Lords Feasts where you have a Feast and an holy Convocation and you are first met heer to feast your soules with the fat things of Gods House with a Feast of fat things full of marrow and wine on the lees well refined and afterwards to feast your bodies with the fat things of the Land and Sea both plentie and daintie But if you please you may first feast your eyes Doe but behold the face of the Assembly I dare say it is one of the excellentest Feast that ever your eyes were feasted with Heer in this Assembly you may first see the two Houses of Parliament the Honourable Lords and Commons who after thus in my yeares wrestling with extreame difficulties in their indeavouring to preserve an undone Kingdome and to purge and reforme a back-sliding and a polluted Church you may behold them still not onely preserved from so many treacherous designes and open violences but as resolved as ever to goe on with this great work which God hath put into their hands Here you may also see his Excellency my most honoured Lord and neer him that other Noble Lord the Commander of our Forces by Sea as the other is by Land and with them abundance of Lords resolute Commanders all of them with their faces like Lyons who after so many terrible Battles and abundance of difficulties and charging in the faces of so many Deaths are yet all of them preserved and not a haire of their head falne to the ground Here also you may behold the representative Body of the Citie of London the Lord Major the Court of Aldermen the Common-Councell the Militia and in them the face and affection of this glorious Cities this Citie which under God hath had the honour of being the greatest meanes of the salvation of the whole Kingdome and after the expence of Millions of Treasure and thousands of their lives still as courageous and resolute to live and die in the Cause of God as ever heertofore Here you may likewise see a reverend Assembly of grave and learned Divines who daily wait upon the Angel in the Mount to receive from him the lively Oracles and the pattern of Gods House to present unto you All these of our own Nation and with them you may see the Honourable Reverend and Learned Commissioners of the Church of Scotland and in them behold the wisdome and the affection of their whole Nation willing to live and die with us all these may you behold in one view And not onely so but you may behold them all of one minde after so many plots and conspiracies to divide them one from another And which is yet more you may see them all met together this day on purpose both to praise God for this union to hold it out to the whole world and thereby to testifie that as one man they will live and die together in this Cause of God Oh Beloved how beautifull is the Face of this Assembly verily I may say of it as it was said of Salomons Throne that the like was never to be seen in any other Nation I question whether the like Assembly was ever to be seen this thousand yeares upon the face of the earth Me thinkes I may call this Assembly The Host of God I may call this place Mahanaim and I beleeve there are many in this Assembly that would say as old Jacob did when he had seen his son Josephs face Let me now die seeing my son Joseph is yet alive And for mine own part I am almost like the Queen of Sheba when shee had seen the Court of Salomon it is said that shee had no spirit in her and I could send you away and say that you had no cause to weep to day or to morrow but to eate the fat and drink the sweet and send portions one unto another and I should send you away presently but that I have first some banquetting-stuffe for your soules such as the hand of God hath set before you for your inward refreshing the ground whereof you shall finde in the 12 Chapter of the 1 Book of Chronicles and three last Verses Upon which Text the said Mr Marshall made an excellent Sermon sitting his discourse suitable to the persons and occasion After the conclusion of the Sermon the said Honourable Assembly went to Merchant-Taylors-Hall to dinner all the Regiments of the London Trained Bands standing in a compleat posture from Christ-Church to Merchant-Taylors-Hall as two wals between which they passed without presse or disturbance The first that went forth were the Common-Councell men and Militia of London in their gownes after them the Lord Major and Court of Aldermen in their scarlet gownes on horsebacke with their Officers and Attendants next came the Lord Generall and the Lord Admirall and the Earl of Manchester together with about 16 Earles and Lords of the Peers House of Parliament divers Colonels and Military Commanders all on foot and immediately after them came neer two hundred of the worthy Members of the House of Commons and the Speaker of that House with the Mace born before him and then the Commissioners of Scotland and after all these about 80 Divines of the Reverend Assembly All which did much content and delight the spectators to see these so noble
and of this Nation to keepe inviolate And they declare that they are so far from desiring harme or losse to any of their Brethren of England that their sincere and reall intentions are not to adde fuell nor bring oyle but water to extinguish these lamentable combustions and fires which they have with so much duty and love laboured to quench That their taking of Armes is not to make Warrs if they be not necessitated but to obtaine a better grounded and more durable Peace for enjoying our Religion and Liberties in all the three Kingdoms and that the wicked who are the unworthy authors of all our troubles being removed from our King a right understanding may be ' established betwixt his Majestie and his people And as they have solemnly sworne to protect all who shall adhere to this Covenant So doe they certainly expect that all their Brethren in England who are zealous for the true Protestant Religion loyal to the King and faithfull for their Country will joyn with them in procuring these just desires which being obtained they shall be most willing and ready to returne to their Native Countrey esteeming it their greatest happinesse that truth with Peace may be established in all his Majesties Dominions ANd here give mee leave good Reader to add 2 or 3 things omitted in that former Relation but very observable in their said March which were these First that on Thursday Ianuary the twenty fifth their Army had a hard and difficult March in respect of a very great thaw after much frost and snow upon the ground at that time which so swelled the waters whereof there were not a few in their way that oftentimes it came up to the middle and sometime to the arme-pits of their Foot insomuch that the horse passed with little lesse difficulty which though it was not without much hazard and danger yet blessed be God without the least harme or dammage to the meanest Souldier Sir Thomas Glemham also did intend to hinder the Scots March and advance forward to cut Feltam-Bridge but the Masons and workemen which he brought thither for that purpose were so affrighted and amazed by reason of the exclamation and execrations of the Countrey women upon their knees that while Sir Thomas went into a House to refresh himselfe they all stole away and before he could get them to returne again he received an alarm from the Scottish Horse which made himselfe also to fly away with speed to Morpeth but there also he stayed not long but Marched to Newcastle Also the great storm of Snow which in reason the Scots could not but expect would encounter them in the way especially at that time of the yeare and might have killed many of their Foot did not by Gods providence hurt any of them but contrariwise did greatly hinder the enemy from putting in execution their wicked resolutions to plunder and drive away all the Cattle and goods and burning up of all the Corne of the whole Country where the Scots should passe that so they might starve their Army Lastly that there was so great a Frost the like whereof had not been seen in any mans memory in those parts that in two nights the River of Tweed freezed so strong and thick as that the whole Army of our brethren the Scots and all their Ammunition which was at a place called Kelso marched most safely upon the ice which otherwise could not possibly have come over the River in a long time after and that with difficulty and danger too But their forces have thus happily passed on to Alnwick the Lord Marquesse of Argyle marched to Cocquet-Island which was yeilded to him at the first shot which they discharged against the Towne though they had 70 Souldiers within it 7 pieces of brasse Ordnance and victuals almost for a yeare And were not here remarkable testimonies and cleare demonstrations of Gods speciall good hand of Providence guiding and guarding this blessed Army so safely and securely in so imminent and eminent dangers and difficulties as these were Yes most assuredly and none questionlesse but a meer Mole-ey'd Malignant or open Atheist can deny it But to go● on Shortly after our said Brethren of Scotlands arrivall thus into the Kingdome besides a most excellent satisfactory Declaration set forth and sent abroad in print by our said brethren as was touched in the former relation of their march There was also another Declaration which had past the Convention of Estates in Scotland about the 28. or 29. of Jan. 1643 that was unanimously confirmed by our pious and prudent House of Commons in Parliament and transmitted to the House of Lords and by them also assented to which in effect declared who in both the Kingdomes should be received into mercy and who not viz. First all Papists in armes to be proceeded against for their lives as Traitors and their estates confiscate The like for all Irish Rebels whom His Majesty doth entertain in these wars Secondly None of the grand Incendiaries and fomenters of this war to have any mercy shewed them either for life or estate Thirdly That all such as have or shall refuse the Covenant to have all their estates forthwith sequestred Fourthly That such Noblemen Knights Gentlemen and others that have been misled to take up arms against the Parliament and shall returne to the Parliament by the first of March or to any part of their Armies shall be protected as to his life and liberty but as to his estate a competencie shall be allowed to him and his family but a proportion must go out of it to help to satisfie the losses of others that have suffered and to defray the charges of the Kingdome And for the yet more happy compleating of the Parliamentary mercies of this Moneth both privative and positive both by freedom from secret mischievous and treacherous plots and conspiracies and thereby great dangers threatned as also by many admirable and comfortable Victories and thereby sweet and soveraigne blessings obtained See here how in the very close and shutting up of this Moneth it pleased the Lord on the very night of this Moneths Fast-day or Monethly Humiliation and seeking the Lord in the face of Christ as a most immediate and gracious returne of our prayers a thing which I have all along observed in most of the Moneths of these our Parliamentary passages in both the former parts of this our Parliamentary Chronicle how it pleased the Lord I say as a blessed return of prayer to crown us in the conclusion of this moneth with a most memorable and almost incredible famous Victory by Gods almighty power and mercy obtained by his ever to be honoured Instruments therein those two renowned valiant and victorious Commanders Sir Thomas Fairfax and Sir William Brereton neer Namptwich against the Forces which came out of Ireland into those parts and were then under the Command of bloody Bragadochio Sir
of sedition in the City of London by Master Nye Master Goodwin and other Independents in the Plot against Windsor and that also at Aylesbury and the most happy preservation of Nottingham Towne and Castle by loyall and valiant Colonell Hutchinson The long desired and seasonable comming into this Kingdome of our loyall and loving Brethren of Scotland to our assistance with a potent Army to help to re-establish Peace and Truth among us In the harmonious pious and prudent consent of the Commissioners and Estates of both Kingdoms in a most excellent Declaration for the just terror and trouble of our Popish and Atheisticall Adversaries as a condigne punishment of their viperous insolencies And lastly in that most memorable and famous Victory which the Lord graciously vouchsafed to give unto his two faithfull and magnanimous Joshuahs Sir Thomas Fairfax and Sir William Brereton at Namptwich All which admirable Parliamentary mercies being rightly reflected on and seriously considered of with a truly pious and gratefull heart who can choose but s●e and say Gods Ark was here also triumphantly over-topping the Worlds waves and winds fiercely raging and swelling And upon the right and religious review thereof who can but in all bounden gratitude with holy David break out into most thankfull expressions of soule and say Ascribe unto the Lord O happy England ascribe unto the Lord glory and strength ascribe unto the Lord the glory due unto his great name worship the Lord in the beauty of holinesse For the voice of the Lord is upon the great waters yea the Lord rideth upon many and mighty waters as King for ever And now to proceed About the beginning of this moneth of February came certain advertisement by Letters out of Gloucestershire to London that the ever to be renowned Commander Col. Massey had lately before issued forth with a party of his Souldiers and had fallen upon Sir Henry Talbots quarters at Shepstow where he surprized the said Colonel 3 Captains 3 Lieutenants 3 Irish Reformadoes Serjeant Major Moore besides 60 Common Souldiers with much arms and ammunition And that he had also the week before this sent out a Frigot man'd with his Garrison-souldiers which took a Vessel going with supplies to the Enemies forces at Worcester the Bark was laden with Tobacco and some ammunition which was all brought into Gloucester for his own Souldiers And it was likewise then confirmed that divers parties of his Horse had taken divers Carriers going with severall parcels of Gunpowder and other Military necessaries to the Enemy which he also disposed of to his own better uses Also about the beginning of this instant Febr. came certain intelligence from Sir Iohn Meldrum that brave pious and prudent Commander that whereas a little before some French-men had treacherously betrayed about 20 of Sir Iohn's Souldiers and a Captain of his together with divers well-affected Inhabitants of the Isle of Axholme into the hands of Newcastles Cavaliers Sir Iohn hereupon resolved to go into that Island with a convenient party to repay that affront and to give them their due desert for their said treachery and about the 4. of February Sir Iohn approaching the Isle most valiantly assaulted and took the Royall Fort or chiefe Defence of the said Island which commands all the passages from Newark upon Trent and that he purged the Island of all the Malignants therein and took there about an hundred prisoners most of them men of quality 8 peeces of Ordnance 300 Arms and a Troop of Horse of Newcastles Cormorants together with 5 Hoyes upon the River which were going forth with provision to Newcastles Army Much also about the same time our most pious and prudent Parliamentary Worthies having long and divers times had much debate in both Houses about a resolved Councel of State for the more sure secret transacting and managing of the principall and most weighty affaires in and about all the three Kingdomes of England Scotland and Ireland and having deliberated most seriously both of the persons and power of those that were to be chosen thereunto and after a most wise and discreet regulating thereof so as that they may never commence nor determine a Peace without the House of Commons consent and good liking They at last agreed that all those personages which were nominated by the Lords should be returned without any alteration and so resolved to transmit the businesse to the Lords The names of those that were to be of this Councell are these following The Earle of Northumberland the Earle of Essex the Earle of Warwick the Earle of Manchester the Lord Vicount Say and Seale the Lord Wharton and the Lord Roberts Of the house of Commons Sir Gilbert Gerard Sir William Waller Sir Arthur Haslerigge Sir William Armyne Sir Henry Vane senior Sir Henry Vane junior Sir Philip Stapleton Mr. Crew Mr. St. Iohn Sollicitor Mr. Brown Mr. Glyn Recorder of London Mr. Perpoint and Mr. Wallop And for the State and Kingdome of Scotland the Lord Lowden the Lord Maitland Sir Archibold Johnstone and Mr. Berkley But shortly after namely about the midst of this instant February the Ordinance for the absolute setling of this great Councel of State passed both Houses with a joint concurrence in all particulars both the time of their sitting for three moneths to advise consult order and direct concerning the Recruits regulating and government of the Armies and concerning Treaties and Answers and other the great affairs of the three Kingdoms The names of the persons ye have had their place of meeting was Derby-house in Chanel-row in Westminster This piece of State-policie may by Gods mercy and hath already as we have found by happy experience it hath and doth produce much good to the whole three Kingdomes and is no doubt a mighty terrour and startling to the Enemies God in his mercy go on still to direct them for the best advancement of his glory and the blessed peace and welfare of the three Kingdomes About th●5 of this instant came certain intelligence by Letters to London of another mischievous designe plotted against the Town of Southampton most happily discovered and prevented by the wisdom and loyalty next under God of Mr. Peter Murford Serjeant Major to Colonel Norton the most noble and active Governour of the said Town Which Letter containing the exact relation thereof and having in it divers very observable passages I have therefore thought fit for the Readers better and more full content and satisfaction therein here to insert verbatim as it was printed and published by Order and Authority A true Copy of Mr. Murfords Letter touching the discovery of a new Plot against the Town of Southampton by the Kings Cormorants or Cavaliers SIR YOur Letter is come to my hands which I take kindly from you I should desire to exchange lines oftner with you I thank you for your newes I had Letters this day from my Lord
Admirall for the Maria-Pinace to ride before this Town We are yet in safety blessed be God but daily braved by the Enemy yet hitherto they have not dared to fasten upon this Town And I have observed that they have never come before this place or neer it but we have still worsted them we have alwayes taken prisoners horses armes wounded or slain some of them On Thursday last we took sixe men and Horse wherof one was a Cornet On Saturday wee tooke two men Horses and Armes shot a Captaine who lyes languishing at Rumsey and wounded three men more The Lord bee still our defence and refuge and give us thankfull hearts for his preservation over us This poor County of Hampshire having had its share of blood and misery in this sad Tragedie of our Nation that there is hardly left any thing for man or beast therein I perceive you have received knowledge of a treacherous practice for the delivery of this Town but lest you should bee misinformed therein I will give you a briefe account thereof Some few daies before Christ-tide last the Lord Hopton marched with his Army from Winchester towards Southampton with a purpose to face it as we were informed but he came not within two Miles thereof to outface it but marched to Redbridge the way into the New Forrest brake it downe to hinder us of Provision from thence after so horrible an Act he faced about and marched to his old quarters again without attempting any further atchievement The next day here arrived a Letter from one Mr. Iasper Cornelius sometimes an Atturney of this Town but run away before my comming hither for Malignancy directed to Mr. R. Mason a Merchant of this Towne intimating that this Cornelius was the day before with the Lord Hopton before this Towne and was the meanes of diverting the Lord Hoptons intent of attempting this place and tells Mr. Mason he had made choice of him to deliver an inclosed Letter to me with all secresie which I received yet the said Cornelius was an unknowne man to me by his Letter he insinuates that then was a fit time for me to doe his Majesty good service and that I was not the man I was formerly meaning as I conceived that the government of this Towne was imposed upon my honoured friend Colonel Norton which I long sued to be eased thereof and by it he thought I was a disconted person and so fit to be wrought upon but he was deceived I being never better pleased then to be eased of so great a burthen which I had borne long enough though it pleased his Excellency to require my service with a more sutable command to my disposition made me Serjeant Major to Colonell Norton which pleased me farre better after the receit of this Letter I instantly acquainted my Colonell and Master Mayor therewith we all agreed I should shew a seeming complying the better to bottome their designe and to find out what malignant party they had made in this Town I forthwith gave him a copie of a Character to explaine his minde more fully To which he replied That by the command of his Superiours he did in the name of His Majesty and his Countrey and two Lords which he named offer me a thousand pounds in money a present imployment of more value and honour than at present I had His Majesties pardon under the great Seale and his favour if I would be a meanes to reduce the Towne of Hampton to His Majestie I returned a seeming complying Answere and demanded the one thousand pounds in hand or the moity thereof and assurance given me for the residue the imployment named the Pardon sent me this performed he should soon see what I would say to it In the interim my Colonell acquainted my Lord Generall and Sir William Waller with the offer made by Cornelius wherein I continued the Treaty to regaine time untill Sir William Waller had finished his businesse at Arundel and drawne his Army this way and then to have drawne the Enemy hither in hope of gaining this place whilest Sir William might have fallen behind them in this place of advantage and so to have deceivd such treacherous corrupters I continued the Treaty untill I had his Majesties Signe Manuall for a Pardon sent me and afterwards the Pardon it selfe but I could get no money but strong engagements of honour to performe with me when the worke desired was effected I whiled out a moneths time with them to the exchange of eight Letters Master Robert Mason being still the man they employed to bring theirs and receive my Letters whom they had bound to secrecie by an Oath before I knew thereof who brought me the copy thereof hoping to have gained me to the like saying he had no engagement all this time on me neither by protestation nor promise to performe with them and which I still delayed which put the Projectors to a jealousie that I was not reall all to them yet to draw them still on I framed some offers in the nature of Articles for my selfe and this Towne to which the Lord Hopton subscribed that upon his honour he would performe them but I still pressed for the money but could not obtaine it they fearing I would Craford them as Poole did yet Master Mason offered me to become bound for it which I accepted of but before he could performe on Friday last was sevennight he earnestly pressed me to declare my reality in the designe I saw the man in a distracted extasie by his over-zealousnesse and rashnesse for them having no assurance of me my bowels pittied him his wife and many children told him plainly I never intended to be a villaine and traytor to betray a trust committed to me and the lives and goods of so many innocent people to be made a prey to cruelty and told him I have revealed it from the beginning to my Colonell Then he begged I would conceale his name I told him I could not but in compassion of his condition gave him leave to goe to his house being but three Houses from mine in which time I went foorthwith to acquaint my Colonell with what had hapned betweene Master Mason and my selfe wee concluded instantly to seize his person and caused all the gates to be secured but yet hee escaped from us and could not be found although we searched carefully for him since we heare he is at Winchester and shall be preferred and imployed in matter of trust In all the time of our Treaty I could not discover that he had any confederates of any Townsmen with him but had undertaken it to carry it alone But I was grieved that I was conceived by the adverse part to be a fit Instrument for them But now they have tryed me I am confident they will never doe the like but to revenge themselves on me But I will to all the world declare and maintaine my faithfulnesse to my Countrey and Cause I have
undertaken and cleare my unfeigned reputation Thus much I thought good to say unto you that you may give a satisfactory testimony of that designe in my behalfe if you heare it falsely reported And I shall be ready to requite you in vindicating of truth and acknowledge my selfe Southampton Feb. 5. 1643. Your reall friend PET. MURFORD About the 6. of this instant came to the publike knowledge of the City of London and so to others in the Kingdome a notable designe from Oxford namely That in the latter end of Ianuary last the pretended Parliament or rather mischievous meeting of Popish Atheisticall and Malignant fugitive Lords and rotten Members of the most blessed Parliament at Westminster being brought into a desperate condition by the happy and good successe of our said Parliament● Forces against them assembled themselves into a most illegall jugling Iunto or accursed Conventicle at Oxford and would needs there forsooth make a poor shew of Propositions for Peace And by their Lord Generall Ruthen the Popish Earl of Forth they contrived a Letter which was signed by the Prince the Duke of York 44 of the foresaid condition'd Lords and about an 100 rotten Commons and was sent as from Ruthen to his Excellencie the Parliaments most noble and renowned Lord Generall the magnanimous and heroick Eul of Essex and in that Letter manifested their scornfull esteem of our most renowned Parliament at Westminster not allowing it so much as the name of a Parliament which must needs argue a proper piece of intention really to advance a true Peace betwixt the King and his Parliament Now hereupon the said Letter being by his Excellencie communicated with the Parliament they thought it not fit to take notice of the said Message only it was consulted and resolved on by both Houses that my Lord Generall should be intreated to send a Complement to the Earle of Forth and to inclose the Covenant and Declaration agreed upon by both Kingdomes in this Letter which accordingly his Excellencie performed as followeth His Excellencies Letter to the Earl of Forth in answer to a Letter from Oxford subscribed by the Prince Duke of Yorke and divers Lords and Gentlemen at Oxford My Lord I Received this day a Letter of the 29. of this instant from your Lordship and therein a Parchment subscribed by the Prince Duke of York and divers Lords and Gentlemen but it neither having addresse to the two houses of Parliament nor therein there being any acknowledgment of them I could not communicate it unto them My Lord the maintenance of the Parliament of England and of the priviledges thereof is that for which we are all resolved to spend our blood as being the foundation whereon all our Lawes and Liberties are built I send your Lordship herewith a Nationall Covenant solemnly entred into by both Kingdomes of England and Scotland and a Declaration passed by them both together with another Declaration of the Kingdome of Scotland I rest Your Lordships humble Servant ESSEX Essex-house Ian. 30. 1643. About the 9. of this instant February our most noble and renowned Patriots in Parliament resolved on the sequestring of the Estates of many grand Malignants and Incendiaries and to order and dispose of their Estates for the publike use And they appointed a Committee accordingly to take order for the sequestrating of the Lands and Estates of the Earle of Berk-shire prisoner in the Tower and that the same should be disposed of for the use of the publike good And the like for the estate of the Earle of Carbery a great stickler for the adverse party in Wales The Lord Aborthorum Mr. Walter Mountague prisoner in the Tower The Lord Cottington that Spanish Don and grand Incendiary of the Kingdome And that all the goods and Chattels already sequestred and to be sequestred belonging to the aforesaid Lords and Gentlemen should be forthwith sold and the monies made use of for the publike service and more especially for supplies for the Noble Lord Fairfax in Yorkshire The like also for all the goods and chattels belonging to Sir John Banks Lord Chiefe Justice at Oxford The like for the Bishop of Winchester and the like for all the goods of all other Malignants sequestred and being in Cambden-house in London or elsewhere As also the goods and whole estate in and about London belonging to that unhappy and unholy Neuter or Ambo-dexter Dr. Vsher Arch-Prelate of Armagh resident at Oxford a man once I confesse of good yea of great esteem like his apostate brother Dr. White Bishop of Ely in City and Country both in England and Ireland but at length whose last dayes hitherto have proved his worst dayes Of whom one thing I may not here omit to his eternall shame and ignominie That upon debating of the businesse in Parliament concerning him there was evidence given in to the Parliament against him That upon the first framing of that pernicious Oath at Oxford to enjoyn all men to take up Armes against the Parliament this slye Archbishop was a chiefe Agent by his Episcopall rhetorick to perswade all men to take the said Oath yea and that he wished they might all dye in prison that refused to take it that divers who by his perswasions had taken it were afterward much troubled in conscience and some of them dyed in that condition much perplexed and unsatisfied A most sad and bad burthen to lie on the Conscience of such an unholy and unhappy Instigator thereunto whose perishing blood will I feare be one day severely required at his hands without repentance Also about the 10. of this instant certain intelligence came out of York-shire by Letters to London from the most Noble Lord Fairfax of the taking of Burlington in the said County the place where the Queene formerly landed when she unhappily returned out of Holland by a party of Horse and Foot commanded by that valiant and vertuous Colonel Sir William Constable who entred the Town in a full Carriere took 250 Common-souldiers besides Major New nam the Governour of the Town and divers other Officers with 2 Drakes and 500 Arms besides other Ammunition In this exploit Major Briery and Captain Bethel the one in the Van the other in the Reare did singular good service and put the Enemy into a great disorder This place being within 6 miles of Scarborough will make Sir Hugh Cholmley that perfidious Apostate to look about him And very shortly after came farther intelligence of another notable Exploit performed by the said brave and valiant Commander Sir William Constable who surprised a party of the Enemy at a place called Driffle between Malton and Scarborough where he took 300 of Newcastles Horse Colonel Washington one Serjeant-Major three Captaines divers Officers and about an hundred and sixty common Foot-souldiers and routed another Regiment besides Much about the same time came certain information by Letters from the Scotch Commissioners out of the North That since
our loyall and loving Brethren of Scotland's advance into this Kingdome from Barwick toward Newcastle and their taking of Alnwick and Morpeth the two only Towns of defence and strength twixt Barwick and Newcastle That they also took the strong Island of Cocquet with about 200 men and their Arms 7 peeces of Ordnance and other necessary martiall provisions Also that Colonel Gray brother to the Lord Gray of Wark with a Regiment of Horse came in unto the Army of our said brethren of Scotland and most cheerfully took the Covenant That they had rescued a head of cattle which were driven away by the enemy toward Newcastle and that they most honestly restored them to the persons from whom they were taken A notable act of justice and that the Counties of Northumberland and Westmerland most cordially came in and adhered to them About the tenth of this instant certaine letters being intercepted were read in Parliament which came from the Lord Goring to the Lord Digby dated at Paris Feb. 7. 1643. The summe whereof in briefe was this That he hoped this Letter would have better successe to come to the hands of his most blessed sacred Mistresse than his former Letters had That he was in nothing more happy than to be accounted a Trator at London considering his sacred Mistresse had the same badge of honour stamped upon her before him in whose service he professed hee would be ever faithfull to the quicke and was not here think'st thou good Reader a pure and sure slave to Sathan That the same morning he wrote this Letter he was called to sweare to be true to the two Crownes of England and France and afterward was to dine with the King And further specifying what forreine forces armes and ammunition were in preparation to be sent into this Kingdome And said he in this very expression let my Mr. hang me if I do not furnish him with armes ammunition c. And concludes thus that what he writes they may believe to bee as true as Gospell This flashey letter of this old doting shamelesse Traytor full as yee see of blasphemy and Treason and so adjudged by the Parliament they have ordered to be recorded with an other former intercepted Letter of his which will be sufficient evidences to make good their impeachment of high Treason against him See heere then good Reader the good hand of Gods wise and just providence thus to discover the secret and slavish enemies of his Church and people But to goe on Besides those former brave exploits of that pious and prudent Commander Colonell Sir William Constable aforesaid There came certaine intelligence to London much about the middst of this instant February of divers other most valiant performances and victorious atchivements of the Parliaments Forces in severall other places worthy our most thankefull remembrance both to Gods glory and the Instruments deserved praise The first was performed by the brave and active well-deserving Garrison of Pool in Dorsetshire who sallied out and by an Ambuscado their enemies owne late Stratagem against Pool with some little losse not long before they entrapped Colonell Windham and about 7. or 8. score of his Horse and slew his Lieutenant Colonel Barker but the Colonell himselfe with the rest of his men taken as aforesaid they carried Prisoners into Pool A Partie also of Warwick Garrison issuing out toward Stow on the Wold in Gloucestershire tooke a Cavalier Colonell Prisoner and about 30 good Horse with him And heere also I may most justly commemorate diverse brave atchievements of Sir Thomas Fairfax that as famous as pious Commander in Cheshire since his last great Victory at Namptwich who most prosperously pursued his late Victory in those parts took a strong hould called Keel-House Another called Adlinton-House Duddington also belonging to sir Thomas Delves And Crew-House where he tooke an 150. Royalists Prisoners and great store of Armes and Ammunition together with Dorison-House another strong Garrison of the Enemies where he tooke 200. Prisoners with good store of armes and ammunition Darby Forces also having been two dayes before Kings-Mylus a very strong House of the Earle of Huntingtons neere Wildon-Ferrey upon the River of Trent whereinto Colonell Hastings alias Rob-Carryer had put a Garrison of Souldiers who much annoyed that part of the Countrey but the House being very strong their Ordnance did no great execution upon it Whereupon that brave and most couragious and faithfull Patriott Sir Iohn Gell chose 5. men out of each of his Troopes to storme it who made such a desperate assault upon it that they tooke this House with the losse onely of three of his men whence they brought 46. Prisoners with their armes to Darbey but Captaine Daniel and his Lieutenant they sent Prisoners to Nottingham-Castle Lastly that most noble and renouned successefull Patriott of the Northern parts the good Lord Fairfax with his valiant Commander sir William Constable marched toward Whitby a Haven-Town in the farthest part of Yorkeshire with a very considerable Army intending if the Enemy would not deliver up the Town to Storm it For this Whitby was a very strong Garison of the Earle of New-Castles But the Enemie considering in what a condition they were surrendered up the Town to the Lord Fairfax wherein were above 500. Captaines Lieutenants Commanders Officers and Common-souldiers besides at least 20. of the Commission of Array and almost a 1000 Saylers and Inhabitants of the Town all which delivered up the Towne and with it themselves to the said most noble Lords Service together with 40. Vessels greater and lesser in the Haven So this most Honourable Lord with valiant sir William Constable seized on all their Workes Ships Ammunition 500. Armes many Barrels of Powder Match and other traine of Artillery and it was verily beleeved about an hundred pieces of Ordnance in the ships and on the Workes for the use of the Parliament About the 16th of this instant February 1643. an Ordinance of the Lords and Commons in Parliament and instructions agreed upon by them for the taking of the Solemne League and Covenant throughout the whole Kingdome which we have formerly mentioned to have been solemnly taken by both Houses of Parliament and in and about the whole Cities of London and Westminster and the Dominion of Wales was new Printed and published together with a most emphaticall and patheticall ●xhortation made by the Assembly of Divines at the motion and desire of our most pious and prudent Parliamentary Worthies for the more willing and cheerfull taking thereof and for the better and more full satisfaction of all such scruples as might arise thereupon which was ordered to be taken after this manner The minister was first to read the whole Covenant distinctly and audibly in the Pulpit and during the reading thereof the whole congregation to be uncovered and at the end of his reading thereof all to take it standing
Plymouths Commander in Chiefe Lieutenant Colonell Martine having timely intelligence upon the 18th of April last past between 4 and 5 of the Clock in the morning issued out with 17 Colours of Foot and 3 Troops of Horse the Forlorne Hope being Comma●ded by Captain Owen who not knowing the way came upon the Enemies Scouts unawares who would have fired upon them but by a speciall providence of God their Carbines would not off whereupon Captaine Owen safely advanced with his Souldiers to the Quarters of his Enemies-Foot-Souldiers fell upon them all pell-mell and at last forced them to retreat and to make what haste they could to sanctuary in the Church in the said Towne from the Steeple whereof the Enemy fired very violently upon our men and many of them shot from divers places round about the Church and others from the Houses but their surie was soone abated for our men fell in upon them most courageously and tooke two whole companyes of them compleat with their colours and drums 2 barrels of powder besides store of match with 40 horse there were also about 20 of the enemies souldiers drowned in their flight endeavouring to swim over Salt-Ash in Cornwall Our men heard since this defeat that Greenvile himselfe was in the Towne whereof had they had true and timely notice in all probabillity they had then surprized him On the Fryday following which was about April the 20. or 21. in the morning the enemies horse againe faced our workes upon which ●odain attempt our men could not be kept in but out they would upon them at which time about 60 of ours sallying forth pursued them as far as Plympton-bridge neere which place their maine strength lay but ours were so provident and circumspect as not to adventure too fare but had given them such a brave alarum as put them to a nonplus what to doe But ours I say not intending to hazard themselves so unequally unlesse a very faire advantage had been offered made a very faire and safe retreat our forlorne hope in this sally being led by valiant Captain Holme who fell upon one of their workes killed two in it and one brave Cavalier of quallity besides who with his horse was slaine by a shot from a piece of ordnance and many other also were slaine about that time by severall shots from Mount-Go●ld And thus was Plymouth bravely cleared for the most part some three miles about whereby they had a fit opportunity to cut downe two woods neere the Towne and supplyed themselves well with fuell which had beene one of their former greatest wants Much also about the same time we were credibly advertised by an expresse from Gloucester that that ever most renowned Governour Colonell Massey sent forth a party thence which joyned with the forces under the command of Colonell Fox and some other small parties from the garrisons of Warwicke and Coventry and entred Eusum where they tooke 80 of the kings Cormorants prisoners with much provision and many armes and at the same time they obtained a very good booty at Wych and other garrisons of the enemy in Worcestershire from whence they brought away diverse prisoners and performed all this with the losse only of 4 men of theirs who were taken straying from their companies and carryed prisoners into Worcester And about the third of this instant May 1644. this active and resolute Commander Colonell Fox went forth from Tamworth accompanyed with not above 64 men and that night came to Budeley a very considerable garrison Towne of the enemies At his comming to the first Court of guard in the Town he boldly commanded them it being in the night to make way for some of the Princes Regiment who desired to quarter in the Town that night which was immediately granted unto him both by that and the second guard at the chaines and so being thus come to the entrance into the Towne his men slew 5 or 6 of the Sentinells and thereby possessed themselves of the Town and set a guard at divers of the doores where the commanders officers and men of quallity lay all which he tooke with most of their common-souldiers there being about an 120 in all From thence he went to a great Mannour-house not farre from the Towne where he surprized Sir Thomas Litleton a Parliament-man and some other gentlemen tooke thence 4 brave Flaundersmares and great store of provision all which with 40 most gallant horse of the Kings Cormorants and as many prisoners together with Sir Thomas hee brought into Coventry the very next morning about which time all the neighbouring Cormorants and garrison-souldiers thereabout were raised up in armes with an intent to have rescued their friends thus taken captives and carryed away from them but blessed be God they came a day after the fair and according to that old proverbe When the steed was stoln then they would have shut the stable doore for all the prisoners and prizes were safely housed in Coventry About the 6. of this instant May came a most full and exact relation testified under the hand of that learned and truly religious minister of God Mr Goad Chaplain to the right honourable and most renowned Earl of Manchester concerning the prosperous proceedings and victorious atchievments of this most vi●tuous and valiant Generall especially of the famous winning of Lincolne and so consequently the regaining of all that whole County and of the frighting and forcing of those most odious and enormous devouring Cormorants from all their Augean-stalls aud holds therein which relation for the Readers better content and fuller satisfaction therin I have thought fit here to insert together with some small addition out of another very authenticke and unquestionable author which came to my hands which were as followeth After the most renowned and successefull Earle of Mancesters army had marched toward Huntington and from thence to Oundell and the Townes adjacent the Lord Generall himselfe met it at a place called WaterinHeath where the Rendevouz was appointed to be from whence we marched to Stamford and quartered there till we were in some measure furnisht with ammunition fit for a neerer advance toward the enemy During our abode at Stamford intelligence was carryed to the enemies being then at Grimsthorp and Sleeford with a purpose to fortifie those two places being chief inlets into Holland and those parts but my Lord speedily sending out a party though but small whereof the enemy hearing before ours did approach them they quitted Grimsthorpe not having made any workes at all about it My Lord being farther advertised that the enemy lay almost all over the County of Lincolne raising money and levying men by the Commission of Array and miserably plundring the Country his Lordship forthwith sent out another party under the command of the Lieutenant Generall Cromwell consisting of about 2000 horse and dragoones upon whose advance they quitted Sleeford where they had begun a
the blood of the Protestants that was upon them And about the same time we were certainly enformed that the most gallant and active Governour of Gloucester Colonell Massey loosing no time to annoy the Enemie nor omitting any opportunity to advance and advantage the Kingdomes Cause intercepted a Letter going from Wales to Oxford the contents whereof signifying that if assistance came not all Wales would be utterly lost And he also having intelligence of some preparations for that designe on the Enemies side to be put in action by Colonell Mynne he instantly and resolutely fell upon Mynnes quarters took divers Prisoners and Horse and brake the necke of that designe And about the same time it pleased the Lord very graciously to defeat our Adversaries devillish designs in the discovering of a most treacherous plot for the betraying of Gloucester into the enemies hands which was acted and agitated by one Edward Stanford Esquire a knowne Papist who plotted with an honest and loyall-hearted Gentleman Captaine Backhouse a Captaine of Horse under Colonell Massey In whom this Papist conceived he had a deep interest by reason of former ancient and intimate acquaintance To whom this Stanford assured a reward of 5000 l. for effecting the Treason But Captaine Backhouse most loyally and politickly deceived the said Popish Traitor and by speciall assent and good liking of Colonell Massey exchanged divers Letters about the firme contriving and carrying on of the businesse and so brought the Popish Agent into such a Fooles or Knaves Paradise as that he received 200 l. in hand of the said moneyes from Stanford and held out the acting of the businesse at least 3 moneths in treaties about it and things so fell out in that interim that partly Captaine Backehouse seemed to be necessitated to put it off but principally themselves were not fitted for action therein So that in the upshot they found themselves wound into a dangerous noose had it gone on and so voluntarily themselves left it off All this being at large related in print by Captain Backhouse himselfe with the interchangeable letters that past betweene them wherein was a cleare and full discovery of the whole plot to the just shame of those blood-thirsty traitors and the most deserved honour of that most loyall and faithfull commander Captain Backhouse May the 10. the most renowned and ever to be highly honoured Citizens of London observing a long and tedious obstruction in the Parliament about the re-establishing of the State-Committee of both Kingdomes which in its former setlement had produced much good to the affaires of the Kingdome and finding that the City Malignants began in their common discourse to seem to have great hopes of an utter dissolution thereof and most justly much fearing the ill consequences that were likely to follow thereon and considering that the main rub and remora thereof was in the House of Peeres The religious resolute prudent and provident Citizens therefore petitioned First their owne City Common-Council and the Common-Councill in the name of the whole City lamenting the not farther continuing of this Committee for both Kingdomes petitioned the whole House of Peeres for a most happy and speedy concurrence with the House of Commons especially now when an unanimous correspondency betweene them even in this conjuncture of time might redound much to their honours and the singular good of the Kingdome it having in 3 moneths time almost ruined our adversaries in their deepest designes against us as affaires then stood To which petition the Lords returned a very respective answer with great thankes for their love and care for the publike good And upon the 15. of May following the two Sheriffs of London with severall of the Aldermen and Common-Councill being the representative body of the City of London presented to the House of Commons in Parliament an humble petition expressing to that honourable House their thankefullnesse for the great and undefatigable paines which the House had now for some yeares past taken in the service of the publike Telling them withall that they were very sensible of the great discouragements they had received by some late obstructions yet did humbly desire them to loose no time in setling the Committee of both kingdomes assuring them that the City was resolved to obey the orders and directions of the House of Commons and that with the House of Commons they would live and dye as by the petition it selfe it was more at large expressed The House of Commons hereupon by their Speaker instantly returned many thanks to the City for their continued affection to the publique and to that House in particular and because a Petition so full of affection and resolution for the good of the publique might appeare to posterity They ordered it to be entred in the Journall-Book of the Parliament and the answer thereunto which was framed in expressions so suitable to the Petition as that it was exceedingly for the honour of the City and for the terrour of the enemies of this great Cause who eagerly sought and were in great hope at this time to have divided the one from the other The substance of this answer was delivered by Master Speaker as aforesaid on the very day of the delivery of the said City Petition and upon the Saturday following their Petition having been delivered but the Thursday before being May the 18th it was by expresse Order of the House delivered in writing by divers members of the House at a Common Councill in Guild-Hall sitting there of purpose to recieve the same Yea and upon the 20th or 21 of May next ensuing the Lords sent to the House of Commons this so long desired Ordinance for setling the Committee of both kingdomes with the alteration only of one word in it and the addition of two words more than were in it before and thus this weighty matter so long in disputation and expectation was now comfortably composed and yeelded unto to the great content of the well-affected and to the adversaries of the Causes great vexation and discouragement But yet within a day or two after the House of Commons moved the House of Lords againe by way of a reply to former Propositions therein with solid reasons why they could not concur with the Lords to have an additionall number of 15. to mannage the State-affaires with secrecy which is the key of certainty this having been the great blocke and obstruction in this weighty businesse and matters of high concernment being best carryed on when the number is the least So that at last the Lord was pleased to direct the heart of the Peeres to a full and clear setlement of this great businesse according to the desire of the House of Commons and long longed expectation of all the Well-affected Party and to the heart vexation of Malignants who hoped for an unhappy intestine division hereby among our selves Much also about
it may remaine on record as a Monument of their Gratitude to the God of heaven to all Posterity A true Copy of a Warrant sent from the Committee of Kent to all the Ministers in that County for the Celebration of the 21th day of May a day of Thankesgiving for their deliverance from the late Rebellion and for other mercies to that County WHereas the goodnes of God hath been wonderfully manifested toward this County in the speedy suppression of the late rebellion and the severall defeats and disappointments of the Enemy approaching this County with great Armies all threatning the ruine and destruction of the whole County The Committee therefore hold themselves obliged to invite the County while there is opportunity to a general acknowledgement of these unexpected and undeserved mercies and have therefore Ordered and appointed Tuesday the 21th of May 1644 to be observed by all the Inhabitants of this County as a day of thankesgiving to Almighty God for so great deliverance and lengthning our tranquillity in the middest of a deluge of warre And all the Ministers in this County are heereby required in their respective Churches to observe the said day of thankesgiving and to exhort and excite the people to acknowlege and improove the said multiplied deliverances in a spirituall way that God may have the sole honour and glory of them all in all our praises To the Minister of c. You are to publish this Order in the Church on the next Lords day And heere I cannot omit one thing but must crave leave of the Reader to mention it namely the renowned worth and high valuation we all ought to have of that ever to be honoured and most honest hearted Patriot of his Countrey the Earle of Pembrooke who not long since most nobly and heroically engaged his person purse and credit in the raising of monies for the service of that famous Garrison Towne of Lyme and other parts in the West and how he offered most freely to morgage his whole Estate to raise monies for the preservation of those Townes in the West that stand so firme and faithfull to the Parliament And that on the 17. of this instant he did publikely declare himselfe to be so farre and so fully satisfied in the most couragious and wise proceedings of the House of Commons that he for his particular was faithfully resolved to live and dye with them and hath all along most clearely evidenced his constant loyalty to the Parliament and cause of God without the least ignoble thought of base desertion or tergiversation from it from the first to this very present A rare example and true trophie of Nobility in him About the 22th of this instant May we had certaine intelligence by Letters out of Yorkeshire that Cawood Castle in that County was surrendred up to that most valiant and virtuous Commander Sir Iohn Meldrum for the use of the King and Parliament about 4 of the clocke in the afternoone wherein were 25 Armes 4 Pieces of Ordnance 4 barrels of Powder all the bagge and baggage therein also was delivered up Lunsdale the Governour thereof and all the Commanders surrendred themselves into our hands upon onely Quarter for their lives The Common Souldiers to goe home taking the Covenant which was performed accordingly Sir George Duncombe who contributed much to the surrender of this place tooke the Covenant and came in to the most noble Lord Fairfax This was the same Duncombe that was the most active man in raising the King Forces in Yorkeshire to set on foot this not Brittish but brutish warre for which good act his Majestie knighted him and the reason why he now became out of love with the Kings service as himselfe said was because his Majesty contrary to his promise and faith imployed Papists in Command whom at the beginning to the delusion of the people he seemingly banisht from the Court at Yorke And by Letters of the 24th of this instant wee were certified that the foresaid most couragious and valiant Commander Sir Iohn Meldrum had the Isle and Fort of Ayremouth delivered up unto him with all the Armes Ordnance and Ammunition therein So that by this meanes a cleare and free passage was opened even from Hull to Owz-Bridge which till now the Fort at Ayremouth and Cawood-castle did interrupt It was also further certified in the same Letters that Shovels Pickaxes Spades and other materials were brought in aboundance to the Leaguer at Yorke and above 10000 Countrey-men came in some voluntarily others by compulsion to helpe to make their approaches neere the City to batter it Much also about the same time we were certainly enformed by Letters from Abington that the King with his two great Armies Commanded by Forth and Hopton durst not bid battell to the Parliaments most noble Lord Generall the Earle of Essex on Wantage Downes where his Excellencie drew in Battalia to salute them but that they fled backe not daring neither to goe Westward to Abington whereupon my Lord Generall sent out a Partie of 3000 Horse and Foot Commanded by that thrice noble and worthyly honoured Commander the Lord Roberts Field-Marshall and the Horse by Sir Philip Stapleton Lieutenant Generall of the Horse who came in with such courage and brave resolution that 5000 of the Enemies fled in disorder and left the Towne to the Lord Roberts who on the Lords Day May 26 entred Abington in the morning the most noble Lord Gen being to quarter there that night The Enemy tooke such a flight on this pursuit that they hastily marched from Abington with most of their Artillery and Magazine to Oxford but yet 80 Wagons and 5000 Foot and Horse passed by Oxford toward Islip the way to Worcester Commanded by Sir Ralph Hopton This Partie also was soone dis-heartned by 18 Troopes under Command of that valiant active and undaunted Gentleman Captaine Temple who was sent from Newport Pannell with those Horse to discover the Enemy but not to engage himselfe But this brave not spirited Gallant would be in action and fell upon 3 Troopes of the Enemies quartered at Islip whereof Astons owne Troop was one and tooke there 50 Horse Sir Fortescue not that faithlesse wretch which you may imagine 17 more Prisoners 8 packs of Kersey from Exeter and 150. l. in ready money and gave such an alarme to the enemy that those Horse fled from Islip to Oxford gave Hopton the alarme in his March to Islip that all of them cryed out Essex is come Essex is come whereupon the gates of Oxford were shut up and they would not suffer even Astons owne Troop for a while to enter Such a terrour and amazement strooke the hearts of these gracelesse guilty and Conscience-wounded Enemies of God and goodnesse About the same time also his Excellencie being in those parts about Oxford and finding the Countrey extreamly pillaged and impoverished by the Kings Cormorants he most wisely and mercifully
joy of Gods people and the extreame terrour of the malignant Papisticall and Atheisticall adversaries of the great and glorious Cause of God there was a generall muster of all the City forces yet remaining within the line of Communication besides 6 Regiments of the City forces then abroad upon the publique service which were found to be no lesse than 12 regiments of foot of the London Train'd bands containing 40 companies Also Sir Iames Harringtons regiment being the Train'd bands of Westminster and that liberty containing 8 companies Colonell Hudsons regiment being that of Southwarke containing also 8 companies Also 4 regiments of Auxiliaries containing 20 companies within the City Colonell Willoughbies regiment being the Auxillaries of the Hamlets containing also 8 companies In all 48. All the companies of each severall regiment being more than 6 Companies in a Regiment were taken for a guard for the City and Parliament The rest being 12 Regiments 6 Companies in a Regiment marched about Noon on Thursday May 30. 1644. to Hyde-Parke where Tents were pitcht and Ordnance planted and whither the Right Honourable Sir John Wollaston then Lord Mayer of London together with the Right honourable the Lady Majoresse and other Ladies and Gentlewomen in about 30 Coaches went to see this famous Muster performed and where met them divers of the Lords and 〈◊〉 of Parliament who were there entertained in great State together with all the brave Colonels and Commanders The other 12 were thus disposed of 7 Companies to Guard the Works and Forts upon the Northside of the River 2 Companies to Guard the Southern side 1 Company for Westminsterh The other 2 Guarded the City one Company thereof at the Exchange the other Company halfe at the Tower-hill and the other at Pauls The names of the Colonels whose Regiments went forth were these The Right Honourable the Lord Mayors of the City of London Col. Atkins Col. Penningtons Col. Adams Col. Warners Col. Towers Col. Haringtons Col. H●●sons Col. Towes Col. Willoughbies Col. Shepheards and Colonell Harsnets This good Reader is here mentioned not to cause our hearts to be lifted up with pride by the Reedish-props of the arme of flesh No God forbid it God the searcher of all hearts knowes I am for from it and should much grieve if any should make such a sinister use of it but unfeinedly desiring in the words and with the spirit of the prophet Hosea to ●●y out and confesse that Ashut shall not save 〈◊〉 we will no● ride 〈◊〉 horses nor will wee say to the workes of our hands ye are our gods for in thee the fatherlesse findeth mercy No I say I only doe it to shew forth the admirable power and great pitty of the Lord toward us who thus graciously raised us up and Remembred us in our ●owestate for his mercy endureth for ever But now to go on About the 3● of this 〈◊〉 May we had certain intelligence that Russell-Hall in Staffordshire was surrendred to the noble Earle of Denbigh who managed the worke there with singular martiall prudence and prowesse There was taken in it Colonell Lane and divers other commanders at least 〈◊〉 other prisoners and all the 〈◊〉 in the House They tooke there also above 10000 l. worth of goods and wares that had beene plundered and pillaged from the carriers comming from London and other parts going toward Lancashire this being observed to have beene one of the most thee ●ing garrisons of the royall Cormorants in all that County in that they had sometimes taken 7 ●●ore packs at a time from the Country so that 〈◊〉 piece of service hath much advantaged the security of the Country there about both in reguard they may have more free and fearlesse passage for the time to come to Coventry and London and also in reguard that a greater part of the goods thus taken will be restored to the proper owners And much about the same time we were for certain enformed by letters from Plymouth that the garrison therein sallying forth with a considerable party fell upon the enemies quarters at a place called Milbrooke 2 miles from thence where they tooke 9 pieces of ordnance a 150 prisoners a 100 cowes and 300 sheepe In which encounter 10 of the enemies were slain and 6 of ours And Colonell Martyn the brave Governour thereof did then also certifie that hee was in a good posture of defence onely that he desired some farther supply of provision to be sent unto him for which purpose 3 barks were speedily laden with victuals and all other necessaries for reliefe of the said brave Towne and faithfull inhabitants thereof Much also about the same time came certaine information by letters from Nottingham to London that that valiant and faithfull Governour of Nottingham castle Colonell Hutchinson whom neither the power nor the promises of the atheisticall Marquesse of Newcastle could ever make to startle from his loyalty and sincere obedience to the Parliament had lately sent forth a party of horse toward Newarke where they encountred with a party of the enemies horse under the command of Captain Thimbleby and Captain Cartwright and after a hot skrimish and brave bickering forcing them to fly they tooke in the pursute between 50 and 60 horse and about 20 officers and gentlemen prisoners among whom was Captain Cartwright and a Captain Lieutenant whom the acute Rhetorick of their swords perswaded to keepe them company to Nottingham-castle the foresaid Captain Thimbleby being slain in the fight And finally about the end of this Moneth of May came certain Newes of divers letters intercepted dated at Lyme May 24. under the hands of Portescue formerly a Parliamenterian Ashburnham her Majesties bed-chamber friend and some others of that stamp who informed their great masters Bristol and Heath by those letters that that villanous Town of Lyme had destroyed more brave gentlemen of the West and men of honour than had been lost in all the West since these wattes began But that they were resolved once more to storme it for a farewell and would dispute it line by line and worke by work yet feared they should be forced to leave the siege else the Country people they said would cut their throats they were so bent for the Parliament at Westminster And shortly after according to the tenour of the foresaid Letter they assaulted this brave Towne whereupon the Towne-Souldiers suffered them to make a breach in their Workes and then ran away from the defence of the Worke as if indeed they had fled away from the Enemy but by that time that 3 or 4 hundred of the Enemies were entred the breach they instantly made use of the advantage and cut off and tooke every man of them Prisoners with their Armes and Ammunition and had the slaughter of the Enemy from other of their Works and thus by Gods great mercy beat off their Enemy and rested safe and secure for this time also And here
that out of their poore overplus they sent them above 30 pair of boots a 100 pair of shoes a 160 pair of stockings some linnen and old cloathes and some quantity of fish and bread which they had formerly saved out of their sea-allowance They did also unanimously give one 4th part of their bread for the next 4 Moneths amounting to 9000 waight which their hard labour and constant duty might advise them to have reserved rather for their owne be●lies My Lord and the ships with him determined to spare them 2000 weight of bread more and some quantities of beefe porke shot fish and other necessaries Some of our Seamen also being desired by the Town to looke to the line while 600 of the garrison sallyed out on the Enemy hereupon 300 men were resolved to be sent But the same day the Towne received a terrible storme from the Enemy yet with litle advantage to the besiegers they loosing about 60 and the Town but 8 men only some of their Commanders were then hurt viz. Colonell Ware was shot in the belly but not dangerously and Lieutenant Col. Blake was slightly hurt in the foot The Townsmen of the 3 Captaines that led up the forlorne hope killed one Captain Southern who had on the L. Pawlets own armour and tooke prisoner another viz. Captain Aston who was the next day brought aboard our ship This Captain Aston is brother to a servant of Mr. Ketchmar in Fish-street in London the Enemy refused to take off their dead resolving in the pride of their heart to bury them and take the Town altogether But God afterward corrected their daring and presumptuous cruelty The garrison being much encouraged by this good successe resolved to prosecute their former purpose of sallying out and in pursuance thereof the 300 men were sent safely on shore though to make good their landing 3 or 4 of the Townsmen were slain The same day his Lordship determined to send 2 of his ships and all the ship-boats fitted with men toward Charmouth Bird-port and other places about 6 miles from Lyme that the Enemies opinion of our landing men in those parts might draw off the horse whereby the sally might be more secure and advantageous And so accordingly immediately after the ships and boates were sent out at a time signified from the Towne by shooting off a gun from Daves-Fort and giving an alarum on the East-shoar they obtained what was in designe For all the day long 4 or 5 troopes of horse and some hundreds of Foot attended the moving of the ships and boates from whence divers great shot and small shot played on them which forced the Enemy to cast up a brest-worke by the Sea-side for their defence Now the Enemy mistooke our intention supposing that these boats had in the night taken men out of the Towne with purpose to set them on shore to get provisions into the Town or to fall on the reare and thereby thinking the Town to be weakned and therefore on the same day appointed by the Town for they sally aforesaid they assaulted the Town with great fury from about 6 at night to about 8 of the clocke in all which time there was such a continuall peal of small and great shot that the Town seemed to be all on a flame Twice the Enemy made an orderly retreat appearing each time in a body of about a 1000 men The third assault was most violent the Enemy advancing with brave resolution and being as gallantly received by the Townsmen A litle after 8 of the clocke there was a remitting of the former fury and about 9 almost a generall silence There were slain of the Enemies in this assault as some of the Town clearly computed at least 400 and of the garrison not above 6 or 7 at the most killed and wounded whereof Major Townsend was one who was shot in the head but was alive at the first relation hereof Among the slain of the Enemies there was found one Gentleman that came that morning from Exeter with letters for Oxford whither he would fain have carryed the newes of the taking of Lyme but God prevented him both in his journey and newes and the letters were found in his pocket and sent to London the principall thing imparted in them being That they found the wayes to Oxford began to be obstructed that the Queene was better I hardly believe it than formerly and much comforted in Doctor Miroons comming unto her But to proceed At last there was a parley sent to the Towne the Enemy now desiring leave to bury their dead which before they had scorned And about this time came some more reliefe to the Towne by Sea in the afternoone of which day the Enemy had fired the Towne yet but houses burnt and afterward againe another part of the Towne was fired which flame and combustion increased so as to burn down twenty new houses there And now you may easily judge the state of poor Lyme but if you had seene it as it was continually before us your eyes certainly would have beene much affected considering that such brave and gallant spirits very worth a whole nation indeed should bee the subjects on which the rage and madnesse of a base and cruell Enemy was from day to day exercised and implacably imprinted Who ever had then but rightly known their merit and condition I am confident they would not onely compassionate them but relieve them But what was wanting in men was mightily supplyed by the power and providence of Heaven Whose salvation had been all along as their Wals and Bulwarks And to manifest this the more cleerly I may not here omit that at the late storming of this Town one woman shot off 16 muskets upon the Enemy and the women of the Town generally did fill the Souldiers bandileers while they fought And it was credibly enformed by honest inhabitants of Lyme that a maid that had had one of her hands cut off in the fight being asked what course shee would take to live now shee had lost of her hands Truly said Christ for whose Cause I am as willing and ready to loose not onely my other hand but my life also A sweet and most Saint-like speach indeed Such admirable courage it pleased the Lord to infuse into the hearts of all the inhabitants in all the time of this long and sharpe Siege the continuance of their dangers having it seemed much blunted the sense and feare of their dayly dangers retaining in their spiris a constant cheerefulnesse as being strongly perswaded yea and certainely knowing they should have deliverance either from the affliction or by it as was then immediatly after that last and fore assault before mentioned most happily visible to their eyes and sight For Maurice and his mischievous Mates being tyred with the siege and their intollerable losses and terrified with the fear of the Lord Generalls hourly expected approach
to fall upon them and ease the Towne of them left the Siege totally and made hast away for feare of being taken as in a trap betweene the Town and the Generals Army as anone you shall hear most exactly and fully related About the beginning also of this instant Iune came certaine Information by Letters from that most pious Patriot Sir Wil. Armine Dated at Sunderland May 22th That the noble and religiously affected Earle of Callender having about a Moneth since entred the Kingdome out of Scotland as a second or reserve to the greater Armie of our Brethren of Scotland was about this time entred into Northumberland and had got possession of Morpeth-castle in the said County his Army then consisting of about 8 or 10000 men That by treachery between the Governour of the Southshields and the Mayor of Newcastle the Southshields was surrendred to the enemy without stricking one blow And that there was a Plot for the betraying of Sunderland also to the Enemy which being by Gods mercy timely discovered by the Seamen that lay upon the River with much difficulty they planted two Pieces of Ordnance commodiously and betaking themselves to their Armes they made good the passage repulsed the Enemy with strong hand and so secured the place against them For which excellent piece of service the Parliament Ordered that 200 l. should be given among them as a gratuity and the Captaine that had the command of the Shields was laid in hould till he also might have a just reward by a Councill of War for his said treachery Much also about the same time Letters were read in the House of Commons in Parliament from the Gentrie of Wales therein supplycating the House that Captaine Swanley that brave Sea-Commander an eminent person and famous for his good service in those parts as hath been already fully related might speedily returne unto them and continue Commander in Chiefe among them Whereupon it was speedily Ordered that the Leopard the Swallow and the Providence which he brought to the Downes with him should be forthwith re-victualed and that he should bee instantly recommended unto Wales as was desired and being in person called to the Barr in the Commons House of Parliament he had thanks returned for his good Service done and as a token of their good affection toward him and for his better encouragement it was Ordered That a Chaine of Gold of 200 l. value should be given to him and another of an 100 l. to Captaine Smith his valiant Vice Admirall A brave way to spur the Spirits of valiant Souldiers thus to engrave Characters of honour on their former famous and well-deserving Services The King as we all too well know made an agreement with his abominable Irish Canibals at Oxford to grant them a Parliament in Ireland of their own packing of Popish Natives and other such like most impious immunities and they having received their dispatch at Oxford went away for Ireland with great devillish joy and impious content to their hellish hearts But yet his Majesty and his accursed Councill would not permit the honest and well-affected Agents for the miserable and oppressed Protestants in Ireland to have favourable admittance to the King nor so much as to know what he had condescended unto it being so much against them But it pleased the Lord very shortly after to manifest to the world that he thrived and prospered accordingly For his Excellencie the Parliaments Lord Generall came thither with such a potent Army against Oxford and gave them there such a sudden alarme that Oxford proved too hot an habitation for his Majestie to reside in so that he was glad to fly after his beloved Irish-Rebels and to leave Oxford in a very distracted condition For upon Munday Iune the 3d 1644. about 12 of the Clocke at night he was glad to horse and away some 30 Coaches with Luggages and Court-baggages accompanying him and some of those Shee-Creatures crying out that they left their Iewels behinde them for haste and thus the next day they got to Burford where the King refreshed himselfe his Ladies and Souldiers but for a matter of two houres space for noble Sir William Waller comming at the same time to Whitney five miles distant gave them a sodaine and sound alarm whereat they all most frightfully cryed out to horse to horse away away and his Majestie with his naked Sword in his hand rode all about the Town to hasten his men away many of whom as 't was well known being more willing to stay behind and run to the Parliaments L. Generall the noble Earle of Essex than to serve his Majestie any longer Ah sad effects but most just reward of following such wicked Counsell and wretched Counsellours and oh the admirable justice of our most righteous God! in thus prosecuting the wilfull workers of iniquity with terrours and disgrace And here observe besides to this purpose what admirable operation this forlorne condition of the Enemies of Truth had upon the Councells of the Parliament and City of London For an Ordinance of Parliament was presently hereupon passed for the enabling of valiant and renowned Colonell Brown that noble Citizen who had done much most excellent service both in suppressing the Kentish Rebellion and at the battell neer Alsford where Hopton received such a fatall defeat as he could never recover nor recruit himself to this day to Command in chiefe as Major Generall of all the forces raised and to be raised for the reducing of Oxford Wallingford Greenland house and Banbury and of all other forces raised for the setling in peace of the Counties of Oxford Berks and Buckingham with power to use and exercise Martiall-Law according to the rules put forth by his Excellency the Earl of Essex the Parliaments Lord Generall About the 4th of this instant we had certain intelligence that noble Sir William Waller being in pursuite of those whom his Excellency the Lord Generalls horse had moved and pricked faster forward in their flight than they were willing and it comming speedily also to the knowledge of that most valiant and active Commander Col. Massey he presently also fell into martiall action and with a considerable party marched valiantly to Tewkesbury and after a slender dispute about it became master of it and with very little losse on his side slew Colonell Godfrey and a Quarter-master Gen. to that Runagado Wilmot a rancke Papist tooke Lieutenant Colonell Mynne prisoner and other Officers and Souldiers together with 300 new Pikes severall other Armes 18 Barrels of powder and other good purchase left in the Town and placed a garrison therein to prevent the Kings Army from reliefe there in case they should move that way About the 6th of this instant we were credibly informed that at a place called Parrishaw a Town about 7 miles from Worcester in the mid way between Evesham and Worcester the Kings forces passing or
rather flying that way they pulled up the bridge and laid the loose boards upon stones for a party of their own forces then behind to passe over and then they intended to take them away to hinder the passage of any of the Parliaments Forces then in pursuite of them But the Rear of the Kings Army marched so hastily away that the loose boards slipt away from the stones when many were upon it there being a great and deep water running swiftly under the bridge so that about 60. of them fell into the river and were drowned among whom were some Commanders of quallity Thus we see still how evill haunts the wicked man at the heeles to destroy him And Sir William Waller still pursuing them as we were credibly enformed fell upon a party of them and took the Queenes Serjeant Major 3 Cornets and about an 100 horse But the noble and prudent Lord Generall well knowing what a considerable and sufficient party Sir William Waller had to pursue them marched Westward and Colonell Masseys forces joyned with Sir William Wallers in the prosecution of this running flight of their Enemies And about the 8th of this instant June we had credible enformation touching the siege and taking of Shudley-castle by that noble and renowned Generall Sir Wil. Waller a very strong piece and of much consequence which Sir William plyed so close with his batterring pieces that in a short space he became master of it for they within came soon to a parley with him the issue whereof was That they delivered up themselves prisoners and onely had quarter for all their lives Wherein were taken prisoners Col. Sir William Mourton Lieut. Colonell Sayer Serjeant Major Aldham Serjeant Major Floyd 4 Captaines 7 Lieutenants 1 Cornet 4 Ensignes 7 Gentlemen of quality 289 common souldiers one Drum a Malignant Priest and his 2 Sons 80 horse 2 Drakes many were slain in the fight against the castle but not a man slaine on Sir William Wallers side A rare mercy and singular preservation The very same day also on which the former good service was performed as aforesaid Colonell Purefoy being returned from Glocester and not willing to be idle by the way but having taken up some more strength from Coventry to adde to his owne Warwicke forces set upon the Earl of Northamptons-House commonly called Compton-House being between Banbury and Warwick a place or House of very considerable-strength In which House they found as was credibly enformed 5500 l. in ready money besides 5 or 6 earthen-pots of money afterward found in a fish-pond they tooke also an 120 prisoners and all their Armes 60 Horse 400 sheepe neer an 100 head of Cattell 18 loads of excellent plunder and other good prizes and there also they tooke prisoners Colonel Knotsford and Captain Clarke And now about the 10th of this instant came out the Ordinance of Parliament mentioned a litle before printed and published for the association of Buckinghamshire Berks and Oxfordshire and a Committee was nominated therein for the raising of money upon Papists Malignants and Delinquents estates in those Counties and likewise to settle the Excise there and to levy money upon the Ordinance of Parliament for the 25th parts for the maintenance of the forces that are or shall be raised for the reducing of the Enemies garrisons in those Counties And that the said Committee have power to cut downe the wood and timber of Papists or Malignants to raise fortifications or for other services as there shall be occasion And likewise that they shall call before them the Malignant Clergy and Schollars in those Counties and place and displace such as they shall find occasion thereunto And all this power was put principally into the hands of this brave and loyall Citizen Serjeant Major Generall Brown who was thereby also of purpose made Serjeant Major Generall of all the forces raised or to be raised in all those Counties aforesaid and he had power by this authority of Parliament to assemble a Councill of war as oft as he saw occasion for the executing of justice on all sorts of offenders About the 12. of this instant came certain information by letters and otherwise from that most valiant and worthy Commander Sir William Brereton of an excellent exploit performed by that most valiant and noble Patriot of his Country the Earle of Denbigh against a party of the kings horse which came to raise his siege at Dudley-castle the manner whereof was thus related The King being upon his departure from Bewdley toward Shrewsbury sent a party of about 3000 horse against the Earle of Denbigh at Dudley-castle which horse comming suddenly on them the noble Earle sent a party of forlorn-hope commanded in chiefe by ever honoured Col. Mitton Governour of Wem who most bravely charged the Enemy but their force as I said being all horse and comming violently on our forlorne-hope seemed to be in a forlorn condition being on a sudden desperately engaged and in such a danger that it was advised by the Councill of War That the Earl could not without great hazard to his whole Army attempt to releive the forlorn-hope but must rather leave them to shift as they could and keep their trenches with their main body to receive the Enemy if they came on But the noble Earle to his perpetuall honour hating to see his dear friends sacrifice their lives in a Cause so just as Religion and Liberties and himself stand by a looker on resolved to relieve them maugre all disadvantages or dye in the attempt and with this martiall and most noble resolution he drew up his forces and himselfe in person leading them on against the Enemy with admirable courage cryed out thus to his Souldiers Come on Sirs follow mee for by the grace of God I will rescue Colonell Mitton or lay my bones in the place And thereupon charged them to so good purpose that he soon freed his forlorne-hope and in short time put the Enemies to a disorderly flight if not quite routed them and was in the pursuite of them divers miles together In which flight as was certainly enformed the Enemy lost above an 100 men which were slain in the place and among them one person of speciall note was then killed for whom they made much lamentation there were also 17 persons of quality taken prisoners besides the common-souldiers and 30 more afterward at Master Dudleys House whom that valiant and most worthy Commander Colonell Rudgeley who with his Staffordshire forces did singular good service in this fight tooke prisoners before they could retreat besides Horse and Armes and on the Earles side was onely 7 slain and some wounded I a little before made mention of the good hand of God upon the most valiant and courageous garrison of Lyme in their long and straight Siege by a furious and cruell Enemy And now about the 15th of this instant came certain intelligence of
the full and cleare raising of that famous Siege to the perpetuall shame and disgrace of Maurice Pawlet Stoell Ashburnham Strangewayes and others which was confirmed by a Letter sent by the most renouned Earl of Warwick Lord Admirall to the Speaker of the Honourable House of Peers in Parliament and by Master Iesops Letter also and others the substance of all which in effect was this That since the most Noble and ever to be honoured Earl of Warwicke performed that brave Service in so timely relieving Lyme in the deepest of its distresse and continued there observing the occurrences and carriage of affaires as well without as within the Town and that the Enemyes had in the space of 4 or 5 dayes shot many Volleys of great and small shot into the Town but most unsuccessefully the besieged answering them still as courageously as ever at the first Hopton also comming to the Leaguer and hoping to have made some recruite of his broken fragments but was refused and at Dartmouth also whither he came with but 7 Horse giving out there that he was to raise an Army of 15000 men if hee could have got them and Maurice also now tyred with so ●oylesome a worke and terrified also with fear of the Parliaments Lord Generalls approach into those parts and especially to this Town to free it of its fear of his forces and unneighbourly neighbourhood that thus I say after the Enemies losse of at least an 105 Officers besides some more superiour Officers and commanders 25 Gunners and above 2000 common souldiers more than they lost at Bristol and Exeter as some of themselves confest Prince Maurice on sad and serious consideration of all these disasters and many more about June the 14th by two of the clock in the morning quite raised this his siege and went clear away to Exeter After whose departure the noble Lord Admirall Master Iesop and many others going into Lime to view the Townes line and the Enemies workes and truely comparing the very great slendernesse of the Towns line with the extraordinary strength and solidity of all the Enemies Works they could not but greatly admire what had been done by them and were forced most freely to confesse and grant that the defence of Heaven was meerly and cleerly their munition of rocks and that it was little lesse than a miracle that they should hold out so long and violent a Siege especially the Towne standing at the bottome of two hills and their Workes so low and thinne that in many places one might have runne over them and a strong hand might have thrust them downe they being in effect as it were paper or pasteboord walles and in the latter end of the siege the Enemies outragiously shooting into the Towne barres of Iron pieces of Anchors and great Shot blowne up to as great a measure of heat as was possible they having a Forge on purpose which falling on Houses fired many yet were sodainely quenched with onely hurt not death of but three men insomuch that all that saw and considered these things could not choose but with admiration ingenuously confesse that certainely there was never more valour and undantednesse of spirit shewn in the world against a potent and pestilent Enemy than was in thus defending this place and that every man deserved as the most noble Earle of Warwicke himselfe there publikely professed some eminent badge of honour to remaine to their posterity in memoriall of this most famous Siege About the time of the end of the Siege some 26 of the Enemies side came in unto the Lord Admirall freely and faithfully proffering their service to the Parliament among whom was Lievtenant Fair an Officer of the Lord Brogall brother to the Lord Inchiquin and 10 also of Inchiquins Regiment came in unto them One Irish woman left behinde was slaine and almost pull'd in pieces by the women of Lime In the Siege many houses were burnt and yet a Granado falling into a roome in one house and breaking upon a bed wherein lay 3 children not one of them had any harme there was scarce a house in the whole Towne that was not battered and scarce a roome into which shot had not beene made At one last great fire in the Towne two maides carying betweene them a vessell of water had three of their hands shot off One of these t is probable was that honest maid that spake so christianly as was forementioned in the reliefe of Lime touching the losse of one of her hands In all this the most noble and renowned Lord Admiralls pious and singular charitable affection to the Towne gained a most just acknowledgement from them That they all did owe their lives under God to his most honourable Lordship But above all all honour and praise is most due to the great God of Lime in this his mighty and even miraculous deliverance of it it being also a businesse of so great consequence as by Gods mercy to bring in the whole West Countrey who resolved long before to obey no command on the other side till Lime was taken O had Prince Maurice but obtained one Commander of the Parliaments that is God and their good Cause what a Victor might he have proved with but halfe the strength which by relation hee brought of the Country people thereabout The Enemies cursed the unlucky houre as they called it of their comming thither having lost as I said before from the first to the last at least 2 or 3000 Souldiers and the Town but six score men with the most Ever praised be the great God of battailes for it And thus the Lord at last to the glory of his great name and joy of his servants set Lime at liberty from all their former feares and dangers To all which mercies let me adde this as a prime result of them all that I make no doubt but that the prayers put up at that instant on their behalfe both aboard our Ships and in other parts of the Kingdome were a speciall and speedy meanes to shorten their dangers shelter their persons and hasten this their happy deliverance The thus happy relieving of this brave Garrison of Lime by the ever renowned and most highly to be honoured Earle of Warwick was and that most deservedly taken by the Parliament as a most singular and acceptable service done to the Kingdome who thereupon Ordered That a Letter of thankes should be sent unto him from both the Houses of Parliament for his great care love and loyalty therein And that not onely this brave Garrison of which we may say as the Damesels sang before the Arke That Saul had slain his thousand but David his ten thousand So other Garrisons have slaine their thousand done very bravely but this of Lime it s ten thousands far out-stript them all to encourage I say not onely this Garrison but that the whole Kingdome might as well
in this as in other things see and be assured that good and faithfull Service shall not be unrewarded It was therefore Ordered by the Parliament that 10000. l. a year out of the Lord Paulets Estate should be conferred upon the Towne of Lime for their loyalty and courage in this famous Siege which hath been indeed to admiration for that besides the straights they have been driven too their impregnable courage in so stoutly defending themselfe from the malice of their blood-thirsty Enemies hath sometimes caused their very water to be noysome with the blood of those that sought their ruine and destruction O the admirable power wisdome and justice of the righteous Lord of Heaven and Judge of the whole World But to goe on At the same time and from the same hand and ships of the most noble Lord Admirall at Lime it was informed that their ships had taken upon the Seas since their setting forth from the Downes two Prizes one at Dartmouth a Vessell laden with Oyle and Salt for Holland and the other that was brought in unto them was a Dutch Galliot laden with good Commodities for the Enemy at Aptham and Exeter to the value of at least 8000 l. And the Master himselfe of the Galliot confessed that they had for her more safe Convoy the Company of two Statesmen of War who had aboard their Ships 5 Barrels of money amounting to a 1000 Dollars confined to some Malignants in Exeter The Factor under whose charge the money was committed being aboard the Men of War was loath to be discovered but at length was apprehended and brought before his Lordship and for some peremptory and unmannerly speeches to his Lordship was put into safe custody And all the goods proved good prize From aboard the James at anchor before Lyme June 1. 1644. This blessed businesse of Lyme and the most noble Lord Admirals singular and seasonable supply afforded to it did also produce immediately after these severall Orders from the Parliament First that a letter was drawn up as was toucht before and sent to the most noble Lord Admirall signifying how sensible the House was of his so great and good service and returning him the thankes of the whole House for the same And truely these Parliamentary acknowledgements and gratulations are very good for the publique either by land or by water and that Excellent Lord deserves thanks of no lesse demension than a Parliament Secondly that a Letter was drawn up as from the whole House also to the Town of Lyme to enforme them that the House took speciall notice of their faithfull and valiant service And indeed it is a gratefull and most worthy act of the House to let no desert escape their notice For it is not fit that such places as have borne the heate of the day should take cold under the shadow of State-neglect Thirdly that the Lord Mayor of the City of London was thereby desired to send notice to all Churches and Chappels in and about the said City and County of Midelsex to desire the Ministers in their prayers the next Lords-day to give thanks to Almighty God for the great deliverance of the said Towne of Lime from the rage and intended malice and mischiefe of their outragious enemies Much about the foresaid time the Parliaments ever to be honoured Lord Generall the most noble Earle of Essex had sent out as he was desired by the Parliament a Party of Horse to the reliefe of Lime under the Command of that most loyall valiant and most virtuous Gentleman Sir William Belfore but as yee have already heard the Morris was done and danced away before Whereupon their Horse wheeled about toward Weymouth and after they had faced the Towne and given them Summons they within presently yeelded and 400 Souldiers were content to leave their heavier weapons and to march away with sticks onely in their hands The noyse of Lime and Weymouth and the Lord Generals terrour flew to Taunton-Deane and they also soone quitted the Garrison and daunced after Maurices pipe Truely I cannot tell what to say to these things but must most justly admire Gods infinite mercy whose hand was most manifestly seene now in the West as well as in the North working all our workes there for us But of the winning of these Townes and the rest we shall speak shortly after more fully in their more proper place Much also about the foresaid time we had certaine Intelligence by Letters out of Leicestershire that the loyall and right noble Lord Grey of Grooby who hath so bravely and faithfully defended the Town of Leicester as having divers times engaged his person and done singular good service for the Kingdome with that very small strength which hee had there notwithstanding the great strength and oft incursions of the enemy in those parts yet that he marched out of Leicester and tooke divers of the Kings Cormorants or Cavaliers which were stragling up and downe to plunder and sent them prisoners to Leicester and that he fell upon their Quarters neere Vlstrup tooke some Prisoners there and made the rest retreat and in despight of the Enemy and all their power safely conducted Sir Iohn Gells Ordnance and Artillery designed for Darby or Leicester About the 18 th of this instant Iune we had certaine Information out of the West that the most noble Lord Admirall sent word to his Excellencie the Parliaments Lord Generall that as his Lordship moved by Land so he would saile by Sea and so be assistant to him in the clearing of those Westerne coasts And that for this purpose the noble Lord Admirall designed the Iames the Admirall of his Navy for that businesse a Ship of 875 tun Captaine Richard Blithe being Commander thereof and fitted with 50 Pieces of Ordnance and 260. men in her Also the Constant Reformation Captaine William Battin being Commander thereof a Ship of 740 tun fitted with 40 Pieces of Ordnance and 250. men in her The Expedition Captain Ioseph Iordan being the Commander thereof fitted with an 100 men and 18. pieces of Ordnance together with some other lesser ships which being designed to attend the Lord Generalls marches and removes and to move by Sea still as his Army did by Land and was thus most hopefull by Gods helpe in due time to reduce all the West to the obedience of the King and Parliament whereof more in its due and proper place Much also about the same time came farther intelligence out of the Western parts of the Kingdome that his Excellency had sent severall parties to summon Wareham Bridge-water Portland-castle and other Malignant Townes in those parts that at least 800 men were gathered together in Somersetshire to joyn with his Excellency and that unhappy Hopton having lately then prest about 2000 Souldiers there giving out they were to resist the French from landing but they soone finding it otherwise most of them deserted him and came in unto his Excellency
Whereupon poore sir Ralph calling a Councill of Warre it was resolved they should presse no more it causing them the sooner to desert him And thus we see how graciously the Lord begins to carry on the work in those parts About the 20th of this instant wee were most credibly informed by letters from Manchester from very credible hands that notwithstanding the present great pressures on that County of Lancashire in this Moneth by reason of that bloody rover Prince Robbers entring the same and spoyling and destroying all the good of the land before him especially at poor blood-dyed Boulton Yet I say this famous Town of Manchester was by the good hand of God preserved from the rage and wra●h of that furious and filching Enemy and did even at that time enjoy great plenty of Food and other necessaries yea notwithstanding that they then had 3 or 4000 Souldiers in the Town victualls of all sorts being very cheap among them Wheat sold for 3. s. 8. d. a measure good butter 2. d. far a pound the best Cheese at 2. d. bating farthing flesh-meat very cheap And that ye may know that money also was not very scanty there On the 16. instant being the Lords-day there was a collection made among them at Manchester for poor distressed and p●undred Boulton at the Church and Chappell at Salford where was gathered 7 score pounds besides much money that came in after that publike Collection And was not this a rare mercy especially at such a time and in such a County to be able to be givers and not receivers and to live in such a height of plenty notwithstanding so great misery round about them O our great and Wonder-working God who thus dost manifest that thou not onely art Good but dost Good Much also about the same time came farther intelligence by a letter from the noble Lord General which was read in the Lords House of Parliament wherein his Excellency informed them of the taking of the Town of Weymouth a very strong and considerable Sea-Town upon surrender The Commanders and Officers going away on horse-backe with their swords and pistols and the Common Souldiers as I toucht before only with staves in their hands Hee tooke in the Town 27 pieces of Ordnance and 50 other pieces in the harbour and all the ships neer it above an 100 barrells of Powder besides much Armes and Ammunition Hee farther writ that the Country did dayly come in unto him in great numbers so that his Army was very much augmented in those parts and by a Scout of the West it was farther informed about the same time that besides this brave prize at Weymouth there were taken about 2000 Armes more at the least and betwixt 30 and 40 ships by the most noble Lord Admirall About the 21. of this instant there came forth a most Excellent Ordinance of Parliament viz. For the constant payment of 200 l. a Weeke out of the Excise-money both for the support and sustenance of sicke and maimed Souldiers and also for the reliefe of the Wives and Children of such as have been slain in the Service of the Parliament This is indeed a good piece of State-Charity to heal the miseries as well as may be which the Kingdome hath been necessitated to make and it is the most possible supply and recompence that when we cannot give them the lives of their friends and husbands again yet to give them their livelyhoods And this makes the States of the Netherlands so to flourish and their famous charity in this kind engages even divine providence to blesse them with a dayly prosperity About the 22. of this instant came information by letters from the Leaguer at York that the noble E. of Manchester had received a losse of about 200 men by the too timely springing of a Myne Whence this was observable among our London Malignants who having quick intelligence of any thing which they thinke may prejudice our comfort and content gave out according to their accustomed use and manner of lying and carryed it current from prison to prison and from place to place that the Earl of Manchester had received a sore blow enlarging it also to the purpose that he himselfe was hurt his Forces routed the siege at York raised and Prince Plunderer come to York and this they averred with Oathes and Execrations And their fool-hardy confidence of this newes was such that when they were answered The Siege at Lyme was raised Weymouth and other Townes and rich prizes by Sea and Land taken and with them was taken the Kings principall Magazine for the West Country They impudently replyed all these were but a Flea-biting to that at York which was on●ly the losse of those 200 men at the Myne all the rest of their reports most grossely f●lse Now I say this their Flea-biting was no more but their losse of 80 pieces of Ordnance mounted in the Town and ships an 180 some writ 200 Barrells of Powder 2000 good muskets 200 pair of pistols 60 sail of ships besides the Town of Weymouth it selfe its Forts also and the Castle at Sandfoot many such Flea-bitings I say may the Enemies have I beseech the Lord. About the 24th of this instant we were certainly enformed by letters from the valiant and victorious Commander Colonel Mitton that the noble and right valiant Earl of Denbigh in pursuance of some Directions from the Parliament advanced into Shropshire with Directions to have intercepted 40 Barrells of Powder going to Prince Robber but the noble Earl failing thereof it being conveyed another way into Wales he thought it not amisse being so neere some of his Enemies quarters to make some attempt upon them yet so as that he was resolved not to loose above 24 houres and accordingly with the advice of Colonell Mitton marched toward Drayton where he left a good reserve and so advanced to Oswel-stree and with the Forlorn-hope consisting of 200 Foot and two Troopes of Horse he faced the Town about Iune the twenty second at two of the clocke in the afternoone and had a hot dispute of the businesse for the space of two houres the Earle by that time had made his approaches so neer and played so fiercely upon the Enemy with both small and great shot that a breach was made in the wall of the Town which he bravely entred and with the losse of onely one man and three wounded he bravely brake his way into the Towne the Enemy flying into the Church and then to the Castle who were so closly pursued and my Lords Pioners so nimble in their Undermining wherein Colonell Mitton shewed himselfe with much valour and dexterity that they within presently condescended to surrender the Castle only to have quarter for their lives which accordingly was granted them and thereupon these Prisoners ●nd Armes following were taken viz. Lieutenant Col. Bladwin Capt. Iohn Farrell and 3. Captaines more 3
the Parliaments Cause above all the boisterous Billowes and swelling Surges which have tost and tumbled it too and fro purposing thereby to have over-topt or over-turned it but our God I say who is Soveraigne Lord of Sea and Land hath borne up the beautifull Sail●s of his blessed Arke and carryed it on most comfortably and brought it home safely to its home and harbour And therefore who can be so stupid and stony-hearted as not to acknowledge but that this is the Lords owne Worke and it is marvellous in our eyes and therefore in spirituall exultation to sing out with holy David and say The waters saw thee O God the proud waves and waters of the world even wicked and bloody men and were afraid before thee and the great depths were troubled at thee So that as Moses also sang The Children of Israel went into the the middest of them upon dry ground and the mighty waters were so farre from drowning or destroying them that they were a wall of safe-guard on their right and on their left hand to defend them And therefore as the foresaid sweet Singer of Israel Not unto us Lord not unto us but to thy great name be all the praise and glory of all these rare and rich mercies of all these many and mighty Deliverances But now to proceed ANd now we shall by Gods safe assistance put forth to Sea again with our blessed Barke the Arke of our God even our most righteous Cause and make this our next Moneths Voyage and begin first wi●h a present touch upon the Parliaments most renowned Lord Generalls successefull proceedings in the Westerne parts of the Kingdome From whence wee were certified by Letters from Chard that about the latter end of the last moneth and beginning of this there came in unto his Excellency within the circuit of twelve miles at l●st 4000 men who were all drawn into Rankes and Files in a Meadow whither his Excellency came to welcome them together with the noble Lord Roberts Lord Marshall of the Field who made an excellent speech unto them which they most cheerefully accepted with great and frequent acclamations they all offering themselves to live and dye in the Parliaments Cause and this in part confirmes what I mentioned before touching these West Countreymen at Dorchester Plymouths brave Garison also offered to take the Field with the most noble Lord Roberts who was Ordered aud resolved to goe into Cornwall and a part of that Garrison went out at that time about seven miles from Plymouth beat up a quarter of the Enemies tooke 44 Horse with their Riders Prisoners were pursued by that Skellum Greenvill but he also was beaten backe in great disorder with the losse of divers of his men Colonell Arundell a Member of the Oxford Junto and Major Wiseheart were slaine Colonell Digby brother to the traiterous Lord Digby wounded in the face and Greenvile himselfe closely put to it for his life but escaped the Gallowes as yet Much about the same time we were also informed by Letters out of Darbysh that that most worthy and active Patriot S. Ioh. Gel having sent 3 troops of horse 2 troops of dragoons to the E. of Denbigh then in Lancashire had also a small party of Horse abroad towards Nottingham seeking adventures who were met by some of the Kings Forces from Winkefield and divers of ours by them taken Prisoners but the alarme comming to Darby a fresh Party was sent out who in Winkefield set upon the Enemy as they were carousing and rejoycing at dinner for their good successe where they recovered all their owne men tooke 80 of the Enemies Horse and Riders and brought them all safe to Darbie without the losse of one man of their owne About the 4th of this instant Iuly we had also certaine newes out of the West that the greatest part of the Garrison at Barnstable being called off by Prince Maurice who it was then said was to goe to Pendennis Castle to be a Life-guard to the Queene yet the Garrison would needs leave a stinking savour behind them of their old trade of Plundering Whereupon the Inhabitants knowing the Lord Generall was at hand tooke courage and stoutly resisted them and in the issue bravely overcame their late tyrannicall Masters Which the most noble Lord Generall understanding of presently sent them a strong Party of Horse under the Command of the noble Lord Roberts and Sir Phillip Stapleton to helpe them to beat them quite away and keep them out from returning againe And thus they most happyly shooke off that servile Y●ak● of those cruell Cavees and twice repulsed young Digby and others whom Prince 〈◊〉 ●ent to have reduced them again under that banefull bondage and killed divers of them and tooke many others prisoners And now we hope they begin to taste how sweet religion and Liberty is And ô how v●liant they grow being now sensible I say of what it was that made their brave Brethren of Lyme with so much unheard of 〈◊〉 to fight and stand it out against such spoylers of their peace and conscience comforts Much also about the foresaid time we had certain intelligence at London by a letter sent by that brave Commander Sir Thomas Midleton to the Speaker of the Honourable House of Commons concerning the brave and victorious raising of the siege of Oswestree lately taken by the noble Earle of Denbigh as was forementioned who left that brave Commander Colonell Mitton Governour of the said Town and Castle and which presently after my Lords departure for Lancashire was besieged by the Kings forces of those parts under the Command of Colonell Marrow which Letter containing a full relation of the carryag● of the whole worke I have thought fit here to insert as it was printed and published by authority of Parliament which was as followeth To the Honourable William Lenthall Esquire Speaker of the House of Commons HONOURED SIR NOt to trouble you with vain relations whereby to hinder the other serious imployment for the Kingdomes good May it please you to be advertised That the Town of Oswestree late taken by the Forces of the Parliament under my Brother Colonell Mittons Command was upon Saturday last begun to be begirt and since strictly besieged by the Kings forces consisting of about Fifteen hundred Horse and Three thousand five hundred Foot under the command of Colonell Marrow And that thereupon in pursuance of a Councell of War's determination occasioned by ●●●●arnest and importunate Letter from my Brother Colonell Mitton directed to wee for speedy reliefe and raising of the siege of the said Towne I did upon the Lords-day last past with such Forces of Horse and Foot as I then had with me and the Foot Forces of Cheshire all of us then at Knotsford upon a determinate resolution to have marched for Manchester and then for the service in the North According to enjoyment of the Committee of both
Gods glory and our great comfort as witty and worthy Britanicus well noted his Majestie made Bonefires in the morning and our three foresaid noble Generalls quenched them and put them all out again before night And though now I have done with this brave Battell and famous Victory yet give me leave Good Reader to add this one note for a conclusion which I had from very credible and good information viz. That our Malignants choice Champion and stout Souldier Prince Robber as valiant and courageous as they would have the world hould him to be yet I say this great Kill-●owe besides the losse of his dainty Dog found dead among the rest of the slain lost also his brave Beaver in the field or flight for found it was and himselfe as divers affirmed lay hid in a Bean-field as was toucht before after a litle service done in the field untill it was dark and then got away into Yorke And in the same place where the Marq. of Newcastles Commission was found there was also found a Letter signed with Charls Rex to it saluting the Marquesse of Newcastle by the name of Right Trusty and most entirely beloved Couzen and Councellor by which we may observe that he was most entirely beloved that put Armies into Papists hands to cut the troats of Protest●nts signifying by that Letter That his Lordship should take care that the Lord Viscount Rochford should have all his Rents paid unto him for that he was reconciled to his Majesty If then his Majesty spake truth the Lord of Rochford deserved much blame who was thereupon accused by the House of Commons for adhering to the Enemies and upon Thursday Iuly the 11. the said Lord comming to the House of Peers was saluted with an impeachment of high Treason and committed prisoner to the Black Rod. About the 12 of this instant it was for certain informed that although they at Oxford boasted much of the relieving of Greenland-House yet now by Gods mercy it was yeilded upon fair termes and moderate Articles unto Major Generall Brown and that for the present his Souldiers maintained a Garrison in it But that it was resolved on not to continue it so but to have it demolished to the ground The taking of this House was of great concernment to the City of London for by that means great quantities of provisions may be securely convayed by water to London out of Oxfordshire and Barkshire and aboundance of Wood out of the Oxford Malignants estates in those parts to serve London for fuell all the succeeding winter Much also about the same time came certain intelligence by Letters out of the Western parts of the Kingdome that the Forces of his Excellency the Parliaments most Noble Lord Generall under the Command of Sir Robert Pye and Colonell Blake had taken Taunton Castle a peice of great strength and concernment also in those parts and that in it they had taken 4 Iron peeces of Ordnance 6 Murtherers 4 Hogsheads of Beef a load of Iron great store of powder one Demi culverin 2 tun of Match one powder-Mill a great quantity of bullets 2 Loads of Cheese 2 Hogsheads of Oatmeal with great store of Salt Wheat Meal and other sorts of provision with store of Housholdstuffe and rich moveables and Colonell Reve who commanded the Castle for the King and the rest of his souldiers had quarter to March away to Bridgewater the Kings next Garrison Town About the 14th of this instant came also certain information by letters from the truely noble Lord Denbigh that whereas he had made a shew as if he would have drawn his Forces toward Shrewsbery as intending to besiege it yet indeed his private resolution 〈…〉 upon the House of the Lord Cholmley and tooke it which was a singular good 〈◊〉 of service to the State in 〈◊〉 that this House had been a very great and long mischiefe to the Country in those neer adjacent 〈◊〉 into it Much also about this foresaid time we were certified by letters out of Lincolnshire of the brave activity and valour of Colonell Rossiter Governour of Lincoln who weekly used to fall upon the Enemy neer Newark and that at one time he took a Major a Captaine and 30 Troopers and their horses Shortly after also that issuing out again he took another Major 3 Captains and 50 horse more with their Riders within three miles of Newark The Commanders especially were good prize these not being so easily 〈◊〉 as Horses those Newarke plunderers making a shift frequently to take an 100 horse in a hight out of the Villages about them Thus that poor County of Lincoln was continually wronged and turned by that pestilent den of plunderers About the 16th of this instant came certain intelligence of some late performances and good Service done by Captain Sydenbam and Captaine Carr neer Dorchester which was informed to be thus The Lord Inchiquin drew out of Warcha●● about 240 horse and Dragoons and came against Dorchester intending to plunder burn and destroy all before them but making some pause before they fell upon the Town it gave Valiant Captain Sydenham and Captain Carr the opportunity of comming to their reliefe before they had attempted the intended mischiefe and so they fell upon the said Enemies about a mie from the Town beat them soundly back again took 160 prisoners with 60 horse and good store of their late gotten plunder elsewhere loaden in a Waggon and that some of the Enemies so taken being Irish Rogues euen 8. of them thus taken had such quarter given them as they gave the Protestants 〈◊〉 Ireland viz. That they hanged them up presently they having pursued their Enemies about 12 miles killing many of them by the way About this foresaid 〈◊〉 the honourable House of Commons in Parliament took into confideration having also before it passed the bill and great businesse of Ordination of Ministers the pious and religious 〈◊〉 of a godly and learned ministery of which there was and i● great complaint of the 〈◊〉 of and not without cause thankes to our former wicked Bishops almost all over the whol Kingdome And thereupon they agreed that all such as shall have Ordination shall be sound men well skil'd in Philosophy Logick and in the Tongues If all these and piety especially must precede it is to be feared that an age will not furnish all the Parishes in England and Wales in such a manner How ever we have just cause to blesse the Lord most heartily for so blessed and long desired a godly resolution in them and to wait on God for the good issue thereof Much also about the 18th of this instant July came certain intimation by Letters to London from out of Leistershire that Generall Hastings that wicked R●b-Carrier of all those parts was at Colchet●● with about 2000 horse and Foot they being all he could possibly draw out of all the Garrisons under his Command with
Peace may goe forward can argue nothing but a true and clear desiring of Peace and the happy setlement of the Kingdome in quiet the great thing so much at least pretended to be desired by the adverse party And this cannot but content I hope the great Vapours of Peace in our Malignants who desire any Peace be it ever so bad so it be Peace And now to proceed About the 20th of this instant we had certain information by the foresaid reverend and religious Gentleman Mr Ash his letters that the most noble Earl of Manchester advanced from YORKE more Southward to refresh his Souldiers and that night being Saturday night and all the next Lords-day his Foot quartered in ●adcaster and the other Townes thereabout and his Horse neere Pontefract a strong Garrison of the Enemies and from thence on the Munday following his Lordship remooved to Doncaster and quartered therein both his Horse and Foot in other Townes thereabout from whence he sent 200 Dragoones commanded by Lieutenant Col. Lilburne to quarter in Tickhill about five miles from Doncaster where the Enemy had a long time quartered where was a strong Castle called Tickhill-castle which was pallisadoed and invironed with a broad Mote and a Counter-scarfe in which was 80 Muskettiers and a Troop of Horse armed which did great oppression and injury to the Co●ntry thereabout both by laying heavy burthens and taxes upon them and which did much interrupt the trade and transportation of cloth from Leedes Hallifax and other parts of Bawtree their Horse also bringing in frequently 20 30 40 horses at a time loaden with cloath which oftentimes upon the payment of twenty shil a horse-load they again released Now upon the Dragoones comming into the Town they tooke prisoners a Captain a Cornet a Quartermaster and some other Souldiers and about thirty horses belonging to the said Castle The Governour of the Castle understanding hereby that my Lords Army was so neer and being now summoned the next day to surrender the same to the King and Parliament did admit parley with the said Lieutenant Col. Lilburne which conference produced this conclusion That three of the chiefe Gentlemen therein should come to my Lords quarters to Doncaster upon a safe convoy 〈◊〉 for their returne which being done and the Gentlemen comming accordingly on Thursday Iuly the 25th it was agreed that the said Castle should be yielded up the next day upon four or five fair and honourable Articles befitting Gentlemen and Souldiers which Articles were sealed by both parties accordingly and then his Lordship with Lieutenant Gen. Cromwell Major Gen. Crawford and many other chiefe Officers guarded by a brave Troop of Horse rode to Tickhill the Fryday following in the afternoon to take possession of it and to see the Articles on our side exactly performed whither being come the Draw-bridge let downe and a lane made by our Dragoones to whom his Lordship had given strict charge not to offer offence in the least measure by word or deed to the Souldiers of the Garrison who were to passe by them they all came out with passes in their hands to the severall places of their desired aboad who also were safely convoyed by our Troop of Horse and so his Lordship and his Officers with twenty Musketteers onely entred and possession being taken and some hurries appeased my Lord with his attendants gave solemn thankes to God there for giving in that place of so much concernment upon most easie termes and without the losse of one drop of blood There were in the Castle Major M●nekton the Governour Colonell Redhead Major Redhead and divers Captaines with some of their Wives There was left in the Castle one Iron-piece mounted about in hundred Muskets sixty Horse and Armes some Powder and Match above an 100 quarters of grain many barrels of salt butter store of cheese powdred Bee●e and some beasts and sheepe with other necessary provisions About the 23. of this instant came certain information by letters out of Gloucestershire that the valiant Colonell L●ughor●● Governour of 〈…〉 and Captain Moulton with his valiant and courageous Sayle●s understanding of Gerrards 〈◊〉 approach to Pe●brook with the Earl of Carbery and his Welsh and Irish-Papists our forces there joyned in a body to oppose them and the inhabitants of the County to shew the●● willingnesse to assist them in this great 〈◊〉 the defence of their religion lawes and liberties First 〈…〉 books and P●pish pictures apt to seduce to be brought forth and burnt and then afterward joyned themselves in a compleat bo●y with their other friends already in armes against the common Enemy who marching into Pembrookeshire our Forces met them and notwithstanding all their power fell courageously upon them and in a short space did notable execution upon them made the Welsh fly apace to their own homes and holes in the Mountaines with great losse unto them even Gerrard himselfe hardly escaping by flight In this fight Colonell Laughorne and Captain Moulton flew and tooke prisoners at least 500 of the Enemies they also took divers Armes and many carryages with most of their baggage yea the Enemy was so routed as 't was verily believed they could never be able to get into a considerable body again against them Colonell Laughorne also resolving to follow the pursuite not leaving till he hath totally subdued them to the obedience of the King and Parliament In this fight also Captain Moulton and the brave Saylers deserved much praise and due respect for their undanted activity in this as in former performances And it was credibly assured that since this brave Sea-commander Captain Moulton cast the last Irish-rebells overboard into the Sea there have not any more been seen to passe out of Ireland About the 26th of this instant we had certain intelligence by letters out of Worcestershire that there went a party of Horse from Wor●ester unto Evesham with an intent to have surprized some of the Earl of Denbighs Forces who were there a fortifying Evesham But the vigilant and valiant Earl of Denbighs and Warwickshire forces having private notice thereof in their march that way dispatched 600 Horse thither presently 300 whereof were to come in upon one side of the Town and the other to wheele about and to come in by the other way upon the Enemies Rear upon the comming in of the first party of the Enemies ours began to retreat and the Enemies thinking they fled began to follow them But instantly they were set upon by our other party which wheeled about upon the Enemies Rear and skirmished with them a while till at last 50 of them were slain in the place and 120 Horse and about 40 or 50 prisoners taken with the losse of onely two or three men of ours at the most the rest of the Enemy got back into Worcester About the 28th of this instant we were credibly informed by letters out of the Western
parts of the Kingdome that the King about this time marching with his Forces into Devonshire and passing by Chard in Sommersetshire towards Honyton in Devonshire the way to Exetor A Regiment of the Kings horse commanded in chiefe by that upstart Lord and rotten Runagado Henry Piercy who desirous as it appeared to visite Lyme took up his quarters about Collyton a Town within 3 miles of Lyme and gave them an alarme which notwithstanding the Garrison at first slighting yet after a little pawse considering and perceiving the Enemies designe was onely in a bravado to give them a visit and so a vale to return back again to Collyton and renowned Lyme doubting whether it might not be taken a little unkindly if no regreet were given on so friendly a visit Lyme therefore to acquit themselves of that suspected guilt sodainly sent out young Captain Hercules Pine Capt. Herl Capt. Bragg and some others with a partee of about an 120 horse who ere the Enemies had well digested their Supper at Collyton sodainly fell in among them took as many horse of the Enemy as they carried out with them viz. between an 100 and sixscore besides 55 prisoners whereof one was a Major of that Regiment 2 or 3 Captains and some other Officers above an 100 Armes very good pillage found about those they took and brought them all safe into Lyme that whole Regiment by this notable exploit being totally routed and dispersed But yet this brave and most active Garrison rested not here but made another gallant adventure with the like partee of horse and came to Chard in Sommersetshire 12 miles from Lyme where the King being scarce got out of the Town with his main body they surprised 11 gallant Horses all with rich saddles and furniture conceived to be the Kings own Stable horses which they brought to Lyme with some prisoners of the Enemies partee And about the 30th and 31th of this instant Iuly we were certainly informed by yet more frequent letters out of the West that upon his Excellencies the most Noble Lord Generalls advance toward Plymouth the Forces which were then under that Apostate Greenvile being about 3000 were stricken with such a panick fear that they quitted their quarters there and raised themselves from their severall trenches and holds so as his Excellencies Forces immediately after possessed themselves of severall considerable Garrisons as namely Mount-Stamford where they tooke fo●re pieces of Ordnance Plympton where they tooke 8 pieces of Ordnance Salt Ash and in it a great Fort with some pieces of Ordnance and many Armes Lanson also and divers other small Garrisons thereabout which all instantly yeilded to my Lord Generall That presently after my Lord Generall sent a party against Greenviles-house at Tavestock Plymouth men having also about this time taken the field and being in all between 2 and three thousand Horse and Foot whither they being come those within the House hung out a white flag and desired a parley but our brave Souldiers had no patience to stand upon termes and treaties but sodainly and resolutely stormed the House got over the walls and soone entred the House they within crying out for quarter which was granted to all except bloody Irish-Rogues There was taken in the House two pieces of Cannon an 150 prisoners very neer 1000 Armes a ●oomefull of excellent good Muskets many pair of pistols excellent pillage for the Souldiers even at least 3000 pound in money and plate and other provisions in great quantity From thence his Excellency advanced toward Lanceston and tooke it and in it 40 barrells of powder And that Skellum Greenvile being gotten to Newbridge which is a passage into Cornwall his Excellency sending a considerable party thither set upon Greenviles Forces where they found some hot opposition for a while but at last ours got the bridge and Town too with the losse of some 40 of our men but there were slaine on the Enemies side neere upon 200 and many prisoners on their side taken and that a party of the noble and right valiant Lord Roberts Brigade being sent to pursue Greenvile and his Army which was reported to be neer 3000 strong horse and foot over-took him and forced their passage over Horsbridge fell fiercely on him and routed most of his forces about a place called Listithell in Cornwall where many of his men were slain and a 150 taken prisoners and that now they had no considerable Enemy left them in Cornwall so as they might proceed according to their owne designes leaving the most noble Lord Roberts with a reasonable party in Cornwall totally to keepe it downe and to reduce that whole County by presenting a full body to the East Intimating likewise that now that had advanced toward Bodmin and that in their passage from Newbridge as aforesaid they had taken Tadcaster and Foy and that in all they had taken from the Enemy 17 or 18 pieces of Ordnance and many ships of good value in Foy which the Enemy quitted and yet it was a place of great consequence and a Haven-Towne in Cornwall And thus the West also as ye have heard is in a very faire way and hopefull condition as well as the North to be timely reduced to the obedience of the Parliament especially if the Kings forces now gathered into a body in those parts be well back't with a party of the Parliaments to come as a reserve upon his Rear which was about this time seriously recommended to the farther consideration and speedy dispatch of the Committee of both Kingdomes and also of the Westerne Committee and money and other necessary supplies to be sent speedily to his Excellency the most noble and renowned Lord Generall of the Parliaments Forces And thus now have we by Gods good providence and gracious guide and assistance brought our Bark back again most prosperously into the Haven or Harbour of this Moneths rest and repose also full fraught and richly laden with rare Commodities most worthy the serious reveiw rumination and recogitation of every pious and prudent Christian Reader Wherefore I shall here now cast Anchour and make a stay to rest and refresh this our weary and weather-beaten Bark to rig and trim it and fit it for another Voyage whensoever God gives a fair occasion thereunto In which interim let me here now unlade and lay open in a summary and short occular sight and review all the most rare rich and indeed unvaluable Parliamentary-prizes and Kingdome-commodities which God hath purchased for us in this last Moneths happy Voyage and honourable adventure As first in our most noble Lord Generalls first very successefull advance toward the Western parts of the Kingdome from Oxford to raise the Siege at Lyme Darbyshires activity Barnstables revolt from the King to the Parliament And the second brave defeat given to the Enemy at Oswestree by the most noble and renowned Lord Denbighs Forces In
against Prince Rupert 163 Exploits of Col. Massye about Glocester 92 Exploits yet more of Colonell Massyes 227 Englands just objurgation 229 Englands great wonder to Gods great glory Anno 1644. 237 Enemy bravely beaten at Oswestree 266 The low Ebbe of the Parliaments Army 22 Estates of Malignants sequestred 153 Enemy bravely beaten at Lyme 241 A brave Defeat given to the Enemy at Evesham 295 F. The Fellowship a brave ship taken by the Parliaments Forces 27 Fuell provided for for the City of London 35 The Lord Fairfax his Victory at Hull 38 Sir Thomas Fairfax at Horn-Castle 47 France sends into Scotland 54 A brave Fight at Stamford 75 Sir Tho. Fairfax 156 Lord Fairfax Victorious at Hull 163 The Lord Fairfaxes Forces conjoyned with Sir Tho. Fairfaxes 202 L. Fairfax and the Scots conjoyned 210 Fidelity of the Scots to England 211 Col. Fox Victorious at Budely 217 Forces of Northampton beate the Enemy 95 Sir Thomas Fairfax stormeth Gains-borough 102 Sir Thomas Fairfaxes Valour at Marston-Moor Fight 274 Sir Tho. Fairfax compared to Julius Caesar 284 Foy in the West taken 297 G. Gally-slaves of Sathan are Wicked Men. 2 Gods glory is our Alpha and Omega ibid. Gainsbrough won 6 Gainsbrough taken again 51 Lord Gorings Letter intercepted and read in Parliament 155 Lord Generalls just praise 167 Gallows set up at Oxford and the cause 174 Sir Richard Greenviles defection from the Parliament 174 Gloucesters good condition 182 Gloucester releived with necessaries 192 Sir John Gell Victorious at Muck-bridge 199 Gloucesters Ammunition how conveyed thither 200 The Lord Generals advance with his Army 228 Gainsbrough stormed by Sir Thomas Fairfax 102 Grafton house taken 103 The Lord Generalls Mercifull Proclamation 235 The Lord Grey of Grooby his brave carriage at Leicester 257 The Lord Generall successefull in the West 264 3 Garnsey Gentlemen mightily preserved 122 Greenvill beaten at Plymouth 265 Government of the Church 162 Greenland-house taken 285 Lord Grey of Grooby and Sir John Gells forces take Wellney Fort. 287 The Lord Generall victorious in the West 296 Greenvils house at Tavestocke taken 297 H. Sir Edward Hales taken prisoner 15 Houghton Castle in Cheshire taken 18 The Earl of Hollands trunk seized on 27 Hull besieged 30 Hull remarkably preserved 31 Horn-castles famous Victory 42 Hulls victory related by Sir John Meldrums Letter 39 Hampshire Surry and Sussex Associated 57 30 or 40 of our Horse beate 1000 of the Enemies Horse 65 Hilsey house taken 167 Lord Hastings vexes the honest inhabitants of Leicester 169 Hinckly house 170 Sauls house decreaseth Davids house increaseth 173 Haverford west in Wales strangely taken 180 The Lady Hopton and two hundred prisoners taken 194 House of Peers take the Covenant 90 Sir Ralph Hopton writes to Sir William Waller 99 Sir Ralph Hoptons low ebbe 253 Hollanders underhand Enemies to the Parliament 116 Sir Tho. Holts house taken 117 Hildsden house taken 131 Sir Robert Harlow puls down a mighty crucifix at Christs-Hospitall in London 290 I. Capt. Johnsons brave courage 45 Intelligencers and Spies voted against 49 Irish Massacree 69 About 1500 Irish Rogues cast away at Sea by a storm 172 A Land storm also on the Irish ibid A Welch jest 179 Captaine Jordans good successe at Sea 182 The Lord John brother to the Duke of Lenox slain 190 Irish Rebels accorded with by the King 248 Justice of God prosecutes the wicked 249 K. The Earl of Kingstone slaine 7 Kentish Malignants rise in Rebellion 11 The King sends Letters into Scotland 54 The 3 Kingdomes to have one Councill of State 147 King Milus taken 156 The Kings great ayme at Cheshires County 161 The Kings children cared for by the Parliament 175 Kentish-mens brave behaviour at Alsford 193 Kents memorable gratitude to God 232 The Kings party unsuccessefull ever since the Irish cessation 102 The Kings Forces frighted 234 The Kings ungodly agreement with Ireland 248 The King pursued by Sir William Waller 248 L. Sir Michael Levesey at Yawlden in Kent 14 Londoners Petition against a pretended peace 23 Londoners take an Oath 24 A Loan of an 100000. l. to be raised in London for the Scots 38 Lincoln taken 51 Letters sent by the King into Scotland 54 London must be starved up 55 A Letter sent from Oxford to the Parliaments Lord Generall 152 A Letter from the Lord Goring intercepted and read in Parliament 155 Leicestershire men victorious at Hinckly 170 Col. Lamberts brave victory at Bradford 168 Col. Lambert again Victorious 171 Col. Laughorn in Penbrookshire 77 London Regiments brave valour at Alsford 193 Col. Lambert beats Bellassys in Yorkshire 200 Captain Layes Valour at Wareham 81 Solemn League or Covenant farther pressed 88 London petitions the Parliament for the setling of the State Committee 225 Lyme stormed by the Enemy and bravely repulsed 228 Lymes condition related 231 Lymes brave carriage against Prince Maurice ibid. Lymes valour testified by the Enemy 240 Lymes seige wholly raised 243. 252 Lyme bravely beats the Enemy 241 The Kings Letter to the Lord Mayor of London 121 Generall Lesleyes carriage at Marstone Moore fight 273 Col. Lamberts valour 274 Laystolk Garrison quitted 132 Col. Laughorns brave performances in Pembrookshire 294 Lyme garrison gives the Enemy a brave defeat 296 M Malignants of London imprisoned 27 Sir John Meldrum at Hull 39 Captain Moodies brave courage 45 Earle of Manchester victorious at Horncastle 42 Colonel Massies good service at Tewksbury 48 Earl of Manchester takes in Lincolne 51 Earl of Manchester takes Gainesborough 51 Earl of Manchesters care for the associated Counties 55 Malignants estates sequestred 153 Kings-Milus taken by Darby Forces 156 Members of Parliament that tooke the Covenant their names and number 157 Milford-Haven taken 161 Colonell Mitton beates Prince Rupert 161 Colonell Massey still victorious 183 Malignants mouthes stopt 194 At Munk-bridge Sir John Gell victorious 199 Letters of Mart granted against the Parliaments Enemies 84 Earl of Manchester again victorious at Lincoln 217 Colonell Massies brave exploits about Gloucester 92 Colonell Massey at Wotton garrison 93 Colonel Massyes just praise 227 Sir Thomas Middletons brave performances 84 Montrosse beaten in Scotland 230 A Message sent from England to Scotland 236 Col. Massey victorious 236 Malmsbury taken by Colonell Massye ibid. Colonell Massey still Victorious 237 Colonell Massies good services rewarded by the Parliament 237 Morpeth-castle taken by the Scots 247 Colonell Mitton his great daunger and deliverance 251 Two Maids had three of their hands shot off together 254 Gods mercy to Manchester in the midst of her misery 258 Malignants in London their Flea-biting 260 Marston●Moores most famous victory described 269 Sir John Meldrum stormes Gainesborough 103 Monuments of Superstition to be demolished 222 The Earl of Manchesters labour and vigilancy at York fight 273 A learned and godly Ministry to be ordained 287 Captain Moultons brave performances in Pembrookeshire 294 N The Earle of Newcastle beaten from Gainesborough 6 Mewcastle besiegeth Hull 30 Newcastle in great straites
the Danish-Ship Aug. 4. 1643. Another brave prize taken at the same time The seasonableness of that Danish prize wherein Gods providence is the more to be observed The low ebbe of our armies briefly touched Divers of the Danish armes sent to Hull to the noble Lord Fairfax Clubs called Round-heads sent to Hull A plot for a pretended Peace in the house of Peers in Parliament The Citizens of London Petition the Parliamēt against the pretended Peace The Parliaments present answer to the Petition The effects of the said Petition An Oath or Covenant to be taken by all Citizens of London Citie-Malignants imprisoned in Saint Faiths Church under Pauls in Ships on the Thames The Earl of Hollands T●unks seized on by water The Fellowship a brave Ship of Bristoll taken by Capt. Smith in the Swallow a Parliament-Ship Sir Wi●●allers Commissiō to advance with his intended designes is granted by his Excellencie A brief recapitulation of all these last recited Parliamentarie-Mercies by way of obliged thankfulness 1. 2. 3. 4. GODS Ark fairly carried on with fair blasts of good success against its boysterous billowes and swelling waves Psal 136. 4. September 1643. Sir Alexander Carews plot against Plimouth timely discovered and the danger prevented Hull besieged by the Earl of Newcastle Gods mightie preservation of the Town Beverly pitifully plundred by the enemies The Earl of Newcastle despairs of getting Hull A sodain and most remarkable preservation of Hull Hulls very great danger at this time by Powder sodainly blown up The admirable hand of God in Hulls mightie danger The occasion of Hu●ls so great danger The Parliaments care for the encouragement of London Apprentices in their Service of the Kingdome Sir Jo. Wollaston most happily chosen Lord Major of the Citie of London The Authors just and experimentall attestation and commendation of Sir John Wollaston Lord Major of London The mercies of this Lord Majors choice also was a sweet return of prayer A notable triall by Gods most wise disposall put upon the Lord Major of London and most loyally managed by him Foure Proclamations sent at one time to the Lo Major of London to be published in the Kings name in the Citie Provision of firing ordered by the Parliament for preventiō of dangerous mu●●n●es by the poorer sort Woods to be cut down to furnish the Citie and parts adjacent with fuell What woods were to be cut down A summary gratefull review of this Moneths Parliamentarie-Mercies GODS Ark carried on with fair and prosperous gales Psal 68. 19. October 1643. The Parliaments charitable act and order for the good of the poor children of Christs Hospitall in London The Authors own gratefull acknowledgement of Gods goodness to him in the said Hospitall An 100000 li to be raised in the Citie of London for the advance of an army of 21000 Scots to come into England 2 Sam. 24. A famous victorie obtained by the Lord Fairfax against Newcastles Popish forces whereby the Siege of Hull was raised The Marquess of Newcastle put to great straits by this Defeat A Copie of Sir John Meldrums Letter to the Speaker of the Parliament touching the brave victory he obtained at Hull A brief touch of Sir Jo. M●●drums worth and valour attested by the renowned Lord Fairfax himself The most famous and renowned victory obtained by the right honourable Earl of Manchester at Horncastle in Lincolnshire Bolenbrook-Castle summoned The enemie prepares to meet and fight with the Earl of Manchester Our forces are drawn all neer each other about Bolenbrook The enemie gives ours the allarm about Horncastle Ours bravely bicker with the enemies forlorn-hopes Three or four of our troopes in great dang●r but came off most bravely Cap. Iohnsons Cap. Moodies and Captain Players brave courage and resolution The commanders notable discretion and courage The great strait they were still put unto Bolenbrockhill designed to be the place to fight The enemies strength and ours The word on both sides Both armies in sight of each other The pietie of our armie Both armies met at a Town called Ixbie Gen. Cromwells great danger The sight in the very heat of it The enemie ●●ins to 〈◊〉 The enemies flie Sir Tho. Fairfax his undaunted courage The issue of the fight The Commission of Aray cryed out on by the dying Souldiers The spoyl and prizes taken The armie with the most noble Lord of Manchester possess themselves of Horncastle Letters of the enemies intercepted confirming the truth of this great victorie This famous victory and that also at Hull were obtained both in one and the same day Col. Massies good service at Tewksbery Another brave defeat given to the Kings forces by the Parliaments forces in Warwick-Castle An Ordināce of Parliament against Spies and intelligencers The Citie of Lincoln taken by the noble Earl of Manchester The prize taken in the Citie of Lincoln Gainesborough also taken by the said noble Earl of Manchester The great design against the Citie of London The great plot and designe was how to contrive to starve up the Citie of Londo● The manner and wayes of the enemies contriving their plot against London The manner of the enemies acting their cōtrivements 2 Chro. 16. 9. How God all along crost and disappointed all the enemies deep designes Another great plo● of the enemies to hinder our Brethren of Scotlands coming in to our ayd and assistance An Embassadour sent from the Queen-Regent of France into Scotland to divert those our brethren from coming to ayd us Two Letters sent by our King into Scotland to cross the Scots resolution to ayd England The substance of both the said Letters The Royallists hopes heerin also frustrated The grand plot of starving up the Citie of London now prosecuted by the Royallists but blessedly frustrated The Earl of Manchester resolves to ayd his associated Counties out of Lincolnshire by Colonell Cromwell Col Cromwell sent out of Lincolnshire into Huntingto●shire with considerable forces Col. Cromwell ordered by the Lo. Generall to return again into Lincolnshire The Kings Cormorants flie out of Newport-Pannell The great plot mightily dasht damped alreadie A summarie recapitulation of all this Moneths Parliamentarie-mercies and therein the sweet preservation of his Ark his great Cause GODS Ark still born-up above the tops of all its advers swelling waves of opposition Psal 57. 7. Psal 60. 12. November 1643. An association of Hampshire Surrey Sussex and Kent Sir 〈◊〉 Waller Commander in chief of this association The Parli●ments providence for the welfare of forein English Plantations A considerable number of English-Irish Protestant Souldiers landed at Bristoll out of Ireland revolted from the King to the Parliament The English-Irish Souldiers fall foul on their Commanders and Officers They march away to Gloucester to serve under Colonell Massi● A remarkable hand of Gods providence in this business A most brave defeat given to the Lord Capell by Cheshire Shropshire forces The manner of the performance of the defeat The Lord Capell marches toward
Col. Fox Sir Tho. Littleton surprized by Col. Fox Mr. Goads relation of the most happy and prosperous progresse of the thrice noble and renowned Earl of Manchest●r in Lincolnshire The manner of the Earle of Manchesters march An 100 troops of Newcastles horse plunder the Country on the other side of Trent The Earle of Manchester advan●●● to Lincolne Sir P●reg●in Barty taken prisoner and brought to my Lord of Manchester Lincoln summoned by my Lord of Manchester Resolution to storme the Town Colonel Cromwell sent out with 2000. horse to oppose Col. Goring from relieving Lincoln Preparation to storm the City of Lincons Colonell Russels and Col. Mo●ntague lead on most bravely to the on-set The lower town taken The Enemie in their retreat endeavoured to fire the Lower Town A second full resolution to storm the Town and Castle as was formerly intended The furious assaults on the Enemy in the upper town Castle The indefatigable paines and courage of our men about the Castle The scaling Ladders set up against the Castle wals The Town Castle obtained The slain the prisoners taken The losse on our side very inconsiderable Two Officers slain but 10 Common Souldiers The singular piety of the most noble renouned Generall A brief List of the Commanders Officers in Armes taken prisoners All the Common souldiers taken were willing to fight for the Parliament An Ordinance of Parliament for the demolishing of all Organs and superstitious monuments c. Capt. Swanley takes Carnarvan Town Castle other good prize Col. Massyes constant activity Col. Mynne beaten in his Quarters A Plot to betray Gloucester discovered 5000. l. profered for a reward to betray Gloucester 200. l. paid in hand of the 5000. to Capt. Backhouse The ●●●successe of their plot from themselves The Citizens of London petition the House of Peeres for the re-establishment of the State-Committee The result issue of the Cities petitioning the House of Peeres The Citizens of London also petition the House of Commons The result issue of the Cities ●●●tion to the House of Commons Singular sympathy 'twixt the House of Commons and the City of London The happy event of the City Petition in the principall expectation from both Houses of Parliament Secrecy is the Key of certainty The State-Committee for both Kingdomes established Col. Masseyes brave defeats given to the Enemies at Newnam Westbury and Little Dean Newnam defeat The prisoners and prizes taken Wesbury defeat The prisoners and prizes taken The defeat at Little Dean the prisoners and prizes taken Col. Massyes just Encomium The just commendation of divers other garrisons Lyme stormed the enemy bravely repulsed A day of Humiliation set a part to seeke the Lord upon the advance of the L. Gen. Army Devonshire Cornwall disaffected to the Irish Amost just objurgation of England from Devon Cornwalls great folly in deserting the Parliament A most wicked devillish plot to undoe Scotland also with England by the Popish Royallists there by way of diversion to recall our brethren of Scotand from assisting us The Noble Earl of Argyle stirs against the Popish insurrection begun in Scotland The Earl of Argyle breaks the neck of this Plot and puts the Marquesse Huntly to flight The Earl of Calender also riseth with about 8000. horse and foot to suppresse this intestine insurrection Montrosse forced to flye into the Castle of Carlile The present state of Lyme related to the Parliament by Cap. Iones Cap. Player The brave most resolute carriage of the Governour of Lyme to Pr. Maurice A brave prize taken at Sea by the noble Earle of Warwicks Ships An excellent patterne of gratitude in the County of Kent A just most deserved testimony of the right noble Earle of Pembrookes love loyalty to the Parliament Cawood Castle and all in it surrendred to the Parliam The Isle and Fort of Ayremouth taken also by Sir Iohn Meldrum The Kings Forces durst not bid battell to the Parl. L. Generall at Wantage Abington taken by the noble Lord Roberts Valiant Cap. Temples brave exploit on the enemies at Islip The most noble L. Generals mercifull Proclamation A Parallel of that Proclamation with the Oxonian Edict lately published from Oxford A most prudent pertinent Message sent by our Parliament in England to the Parliament in Scotland Beverton Castle in Gloustersh taken by Col. Massey Malmesbury taken by Col. Massey Chippenham Garrison in Wilts taken by Col. Massey Col. Massey advanceth into wilts with 2000. men toward the Devizes A most Noble and Renowned act of the Parliament in rewarding the good Service of Col. Massey Englands great wonder to Gods great glory May 30. 1644. Above 6 brave Armies at one time in the Kingdome on the Parliaments side The true muster of the City forces of Westminster at this 〈◊〉 Hosea 14. 3. Psal 136. 23. Russel-hall in Staffordshire taken good prize therein by the Earle of Denbigh This garrison was a most notorious thievish place A brave prize taken by Plymouth garrison The Garrison of Notingham gave Newarke Garrison a brave defeat Limes undaunted Valout testified by its adversaries themselves The Enemy bravely beaat Lime A gratefull summary recitall of all the foresaid Parliamentary mercies of the moneth past Gods Arke borne up above the worlds swelling waves Psal 119. 68. Psal 44. 8. 1 Sam. 2. 2 3. Iob 9. 4. Iune 1644. Lime most notably releived and the Seige wholly happily raised The most noble Lord Admirall arived at Lime Lymes distressed condition at his Lordships comming The most virtuous Lord Admiralls piety charity to Lyme Yea of my Lords honest Seamen too An assault upon the Towne to the enemies great losse The Enemies pride high hopes The most noble Lord Admiralls Stratagem The Enemy was mistaken frustrated of his hopes A very furious Assault upon the Towne bravely received The number of the slain in this Assault The enemies be fooled in reckoning without their hoast The enemies stomacke now come downe The enemies rage in firing the Towne Gods power providence was Lymes wals bulwarks The admirable courage of the women of Lyme The most pious reply of a maide in Lyme whole hand was shot off The continuance of Limes troubles took away the sense of fear terrour of them Prince Maurice leaves Lime raises his Siege The Earle of Calender possessed of Morpeth-Castle in Northubmerland Sunderland delivered from a treacherous Plot. A reward of 200 l. bestowed on the honest Seamen for their loyalty good service Valiant Capt. Swanley made commander in chief in Wales A Chaine of Gold worth 200 l. bestowed on Captain Swanley by the Parliament The Kings most ungodly agreement with the Irish Rebels Expelled him from his former secure abode at Oxford Valiant active Sir Will. Waller follows the King Gods justice prosecutes the wicked with terrour disgrace Major Gen. Brown made Commander in chiefe of 3 Counties by the