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

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and to take order for the charging of Him the said Charles Stuart with the Crimes above mentioned and for the receiving His Personall Answer thereunto These wise men of Gotham could not tell wh● her Witnesses upon o●th were necessary upon Trials of life and death But I confess that upon the defensive part upon Indictments Witnesses upo● oath were not to be heard against the King much more Accusers of the King and for examination of Witnesses upon oath if need be concerning the same and thereupon or in default of such Answer to proceed to finall Sentence according to justice and the merit of the Cause to be executed speedily and impartially And the said Court is hereby Authorized and required to chuse and appoint all such Officers Attendants and other circumstances as they or the major part of them shall in any sort judge necessary or usefull for the orderly and good managing of the premises and Thomas Lord Fairf●x * * The Generall is no Officer of justice All well affected Persons tag and rag inv ted to assist in a Tumultuaty way to destroy the King if need had been that is all Antimonarchists the Generall with all Officers of justice and other wel-affected Persons are hereby authorized and required to be aiding and assisting unto the said Commissioners in the due execution of the trust hereby committed unto them provided that this Ordinance and the Authority hereby granted do continue for the space of one Moneth from the Date of the making hereof and no longer 60. A new Great Seal to be made But at last they stumbled at a rub not foreseen they could not use the old Great Seal against Him because it was the Kings Great Seal no more could they use any of our Laws Courts or Judges against Him because they are all the Kings the Sculpture upon it is Carolus Dei Gratia neither would the Grace of God square with their proceedings they must therefore make a new Great Seal but that was long a making and their fingers were in the fire they therefore proceeded without any Commission under Seal onely upon the said Ordinance and every Commissioner set his own hand and seal to the publique instruments of their proceedings what need ceremonies when men are resolved upon the substance 61. The Iews petition the Councell of War to have the Stat of their banishment repealed About this time the Hebrew Jews presented a Petition to the uncircumcised Jews of the Councell of Warre That the Statute of Banishment against them may be repealed and they re-admitted to a Synagogue and Trade amongst us They offer for their re-admission S. Pauls Church and the Library at Oxford 500000 l. but 700000 l. is demanced Hugh Peters and Harry Martin solicite the business Upon this occasion was published this Paper ensuing * The last damnable Design of Cromwel and Ireton 62. A Paper published upon occasion of the Jews Petition and their Junto or Cabal intended to be carried on in their General Councel of the Army and by their journey-men in the House of Commons when they have engaged them dede perately in sin past all hope of Retreat by murthering the King MAjor White a Member of the Army long since at Putney foretold That shortly there would be no other power in England but the power of the Sword and Will. Sedgwick in his Book called Justice upon the Armies Remonstrance saith The Principle of this Army is To break the Powers of the Earth to pieces and John Lilburn in his Plea for Common Right p. 6. saith The Army by these extraordinary proceedings have overturned all the visible Supreme Authority of this Nation that is they have and will by seizing upon the Members of Parl. dissolving it and setting up a new invented Representative and bringing the King to capital punishment and dis-inheriting his Posterity subvert the Monarchical Government and Parliaments of this Kingdome the Laws and Liberties of the People and so by bringing all to Anarchy and confusion put the whole Government of the Land under the Arbitrary power of the Sword In order to which they have and will overturn the Government of the City of London by a Lord Mayor and Aldermen and govern it by Commissioners and a schismatical Common Councel of Anabaptists illegally chosen and deprive them of their Charter of Incorporation and Franchises and this shall be a leading case to all the Corporations of England Their next Design is to plunder and disarm the City of London and all the Country round about thereby to disable them to rise when the Armie removes but not to the use of the Souldiers although they greedily expect the first Week in February the time appointed from whom they will redeem the plunder at an easie rate and so sell it in bulk to the Jews whom they have lately admitted to set up their banks and magazines of Trade amongst us contrary to an Act of Parliament for their banishment and these shall be their Merchants to buy off for ready money to maintain such Warrs as their violent proceedings will inevitably bring upon them not onely all Sequestred and plundred goods but also the very bodies of Men Women and Children whole Families taken Prisoners for sale of whom these Jewish Merchants shall keep a constant traffick with the Turks Moors and other Mahometans the Barbadus and other English Plantations being already cloyed with Welch Scottish Colchester and other Prisoners imposed by way of Sale upon the Adventurers and this is the meaning of Hugh Peters threat to the London Ministers That if another War followed they will spare neither Man Woman nor Child For the better carrying on of which Design the said Cabal or Junto keep a strict correspondency with Owen Roe Oneale the bloodie Popish Antimonarchical Rebel in Ireland and the Popes Nuntio there The Antimonarchical Marquess of Argyle in Scotland the Parisian Norman and Picardie Rebels in France and the Rebel King of Portugal If danger be not held so close to your eies that you cannot discern it look about you English But this Kingdome is not to be saved by men that will save themselves nothing but a private band and a publike spirit can redeem it 63. Master Pryns second Letter to the General The 3. Jan. 1648. Master Pryn sent a Letter to the General demanding what kind of Prisoner and whose he was as followeth * To the Honourable Thomas Lord Fairfax General of the present Army these present My Lord IT is now a full Months space since I with other Members of the Commons House have been forcibly apprehended and kept Prisoner by some of your Officers and Marshal against the Priviledges of Parliament the Liberty of the Subject the Laws and Statutes of the Realm and all Rules of justice conscience and right reason without the least shadow of Authority or any cause at all yet made known to me of which were there any neither God nor man ever yet made
Projector Holland the Linkeboy John Trencharde that packed a Committee in which he was a Member and voted to himself 2000 l. Love the super-inducted Six Clerk or any other of that Self-created Authority let them sheath their swords and tell me See the Additionall P●stscript at the Latter end of this Book 2. An Enditement must certainly allege the Offence committed in respect of the Matter Time Place Persons and other Circumstances But in these Articles of Impeachment they tie themselves to no such certainties Whereby the Accused knows not at what ward to lie nor how to make his Defence The Circumstances of Time Place and Persons being the assured Testimony of all Humane Actions This Lawless Court leaves him in a vast Sea of Troubles without Pole-star card or compass to steer by The Arbitrary Opinions of this Court declared upon emergent Occasions being a false-hearted Pilot to him These Judges not being of Counsel with the Prisoner as our Legall Judges are who swear to do Justice according to the Law 3. By the Law any learned man that is present may inform the Court for the benefit of the Prisoner of any thing that may make the proceedings erronious Cooks 3. Instit p. 29. But the whole Proceedings of this Court their Meeting and sitting being erroneous here is no room left for Admonition To take away their errours is to take away Court 4. Cooks 2. Instit pag. 51. expounding the 29. chapter of Magna Charta hath these words All Commissions ought to be grounded upon the Laws of England not upon the votes of the House of Commons and to contain this Clause in them To do what is just according to the Laws and Customs of England not to execute the severall powers given them by the Act. 26. March 1650 and a little further he saith Against this Antient and Fundamentall Law I find an Act of Parliament made 11. Hen. VII c. 3. That as well Justices of Assize as Justices of the Peace without any finding or presentment by the verdict of 12 men upon a bare Information for the King before them made should have full power and Authority by their Discretions to hear and determine all Offences and Contempts committed or done by any Person or Persons against the Form Ordinance or effect of any Statute made and not repealed saving Treason Murder or Felony By colour of which Act shaking this Fundamentall Law it is not credible what horrible Oppressions and Exactions to the undoing of infinite number of People were Committed by Empson and Dudley Justices of the Peace throughout England And upon this unjust and injurious Act a New Office was erected as commonly in like cases it falleth out and they made Masters of the Kings Forfeitures I hear such an other Offfce will be erected when the Novelty of this wonderfull High Court is lessened and the yoke thereof throughly setled upon the Peoples Necks Yet observe the said Act. 11. Hen. VII c. 3. went not so high as to Treason Murder and Felony But by the Stat. 1. Hen. VIII chap. 6. the said Act 11. Hen. VII was repealed and the reason given For that by force of the said Act it was manifestly known That many sinister and crafty forged and feigned Informations had been pursued against many of the Kings subjects to their great dammage and wrongfull vexation The ill successe hereof saith Cook and the fearfull end of these two Oppressors who were Endited and suffered for High Treason for all the said Act 11. Hen. VII passed in a full and Free Parliament Cooks 3. Instit p. 208. Should admonish Parliaments That instead of this Ordinary and precious Triall by the Law of the Land they bring not in Absolute and Partiall Trialls by Discretion And in his 4. Instit page 41. Cook saith Let Parliaments leave all Causes to be measured by the golden and streightned wand of the Law and not the uncertain and crooked cord of Discretion for it is not almost Credible to foresee when any Maxime or Fundamentall Law of the Land is altered what dangerous inconveniences will follow as appeares by this unjust and strange Act 11. Henry VII chap. 3. 5. This Parliament alwaies declared they bore Arms against the King in Defence of the Laws Liberties and Properties of the People This way ran the whole current of their Declarations And they alwaies reckoned Magna Charta the Petition of Right and Trialls by Juries the Chief and most Fundamentall of all our Laws See their 1. Remonstrance Therefore in their 7. Article against Strafford They charged him with High Treason for giving Judgements against mens Estates without Trials by Juries Much aggravated by Master St. Iohns in his aforesaid Argument against Strafford And for the better preservation of Legall Trialls by Juries it is provided in the Bill of Attainder of Strafford that the case of the same Earl should not be used as a President in succeeding times And in two of this Parliaments late Declarations 9. Febr. and 17. March 1648. The Parliament promiseth To preserve and keep the fundamental Laws of the land for preservation of the lives liberties and properties of the people with all things incident thereto Now to erect an arbitrary lawless high Court to give judgment against mens lives and estates and attain their bloods without Enditement found by a grand Jury and a trial by a Jury of twelve sworn men vicineto is a far fouler breach of trust in them against their Sovereign Lords the People than all they charged the King withall and a far higher act of tyranny and injustice than either the late King or Empson and Dudley or Strafford were accused of But if they alledg They do not put down Juries in general but only in some particular mens cases and upon necessity I answer That we are all born Freemen of England alike That our ancient known Laws Laws Courts and trials by Juries are our inheritance equal alike to all And one party or part of the people ought not to be disherited disfranchised or forejudged no more than another No man can be said guilty of any crime until he be legally convicted and sentenced the Law must first go upon him and condemn him Ubilex non distinguit non est distinguendum If we do not live all under one Law and form of Justice we are not all of one Commonwealth See the aforementioned Gentlemans Argument against the special Commission of the Court of York For Necessity our present power is under none but the fears and terrors of their own guilty consciences No apparence nor probability of any enemy by their own confession nor can they plead in their excuse a necessity which they have brought upon themselves I know some Kings have de facto used the Animadversion of the Sword to cut off such powerful and dangerous persons as could not safely be called to account by the Law so dyed Joab Adonijah c. for which the rule is Neminem adeo eminere
debere legibus interrogari nequeat qui jus aequum ferre non potest in eum vim haud injustam fore No man ought to advance himself above the powers of the Law he that will not submit to equal right if he be cut off by violence suffers no wrong but this is to be understood of the eminency and greatness of the person not of the greatness of the crime whereof no man is to be forejudged because a great crime may prove a great calumny until a legal trial have adjudged it But there is no person in England so eminent for power or Authority but that the least of Bradshaws Ban-dogs can drive him to the Slaughter-house make him offer his throat to Keeble Therefore Animadversio Gladii if at any time lawful is now unlawful To make great examples upon men of little power is great injustice But the way of this Court is not Animodversio per Gladium It is a Mocking a Counterfeiting an Adulterating and Alchimisting of Justice it is to falsifie her weights and ballance and steal her sword to commit Murder withall See Col. Andrews three Answers 6. By the known Laws Matter of fact is intrusted to the Jury matter of Law to the Judges to prevent all errours combinations and partiallities The Judges are sworn to do justice according to the Law the Jury are sworn to finde according to their evidence But in this high Court the Commissioners or Judges are all packed confiding men chosen by and out of one party to destroy all of a different party They usurp the office of Judges not being sworn to deal well and lawfully with the people as by the said Stat. 18 Ed. 3. nor to do justice according to the Law But only to execute powers given by the said Act 26. Mar. 1650. And they arrogate as Jury-men to be Triers of the Fact without being sworn to find according to evidence So that they are Judges Juries and parties for ease of their tender consciences without any Oath of Indifferency A most excellent Compendium of Oppression They may go to the Devil for injustice and not be forsworn Great is the priviledge of the godly 7. The prisoner may except against his Jurors either against the Array if the Sheriff or Bayly impannelling the Jury be not wholly disingaged and indifferent both to the cause and to the parties prosecuting and prosecuted or against the Poll he may challenge 35 peremptorily as many more as he can render legal cause of challenge for As for defect of estate or other abilities or for partiality Disaffection Engagement Infamy But this Array of Jury-men Judges a Medley so new we know not how to express it though picked and empannelled by an engaged remainder of the Commons and abnoxious to all exceptions must not be challenged their backs are too much galled to indure the least touch Take heed you scandal not the Court cries Mr. Atturney See Col. Andrews three Answers 8. Many exceptions in a legal Trial are allowed against Imperfections Vncertainties and Illegallities in the Bill of Endictment for the advantage of the Prisoner But no Exceptions are allowed against these illegal Articles of Impeachment which are made uncertain intricate and obscure and ambiguous purposely to puzle confound and entangle the Respondent 9. By the Law a bill of Endictment must have two full and clear lawful witnesses to every considerable Matter of Fact both at finding the Bill and at the Trial. Where there is but one witness it shall be tried by combate before the Earl Martial Cooke ibidem Cooks 3. Instit pag. 25 26. And Probationes debent esse luce clariores Proofs must be as clear as the Sun not grounded upon Inferences Presumptions Probabilities And the Prisoner must be Provablement Attaint saith the Stat. 25. Ed. 3. chap. 2. Cooks 3. Instit pag. 12. The word attainted shews he must be legally proceeded with not by absolute power as formerly had been used and as is now used by this bloody High Court But before these Slaughter-men of the High Court all manner of witnesses Legal or Illegal one or two sworn or not sworn or apparently forsworn and suborned and all proofs clear or not clear are sufficient The Prisoner is sent thither foredoomed and hath its deaths Mark his fate in his forehead 10. The said Act 26. March 1650. carries two faces under one hood and looks backwards as well as forwards To facts precedent as well as subsequent the said Act contrary to the nature of all Laws whose office is to prohibit it before it punish to warn before it strike Where St. Paul defineth Sin to be the breach of Commandement or Law I had not known Sin but by the Law The Law must therefore be precedent to the Offence But these Acts are not Laws to admonish but Lime-twigs and Traps to ensnare and catch men See Col. Andrews 3. Answers at the latter end of this book Fourthly and lastly I am to consider To what end and purpose this new invented High Court is constituted and appointed Concerning which see a Letter dated 6. June 1650. Stilo veteri from the Hague supposed to be Walter Stricklands the Parliaments Agent there as I finde it in Walter Frosts brief Relations of some affairs and transactions c. from Tuesday June 11. to June 18. 1650. wherein the Epistoler hath these words One piece of the cure viz. of the dangers that threaten your new State must be Phlebotomy but then you must begin before Decumbency and then it wil be facile to prevent danger c. they are here most of all afraid of your high Court of Justice which they doubt may much discourage their party they wish you would not renew the power thereof but let it expire then they think that after Michaelmas they may expect Assistance with you And indeed that Court is of almost as much use to you as an Army and will prevent the rising of as many Enemies as the other will destroy only you must be sure to execute Justice there with all severity A few of the first stirrers taken away by the power thereof without respect to cousin or Countrey will keep all the rest quiet But whosoever that Court condemns let them be as already dead c. But let them be most free in cutting the vena Coephalica that is the Presbyterian Party for the Basilica or Royal Party will be latent The Median or Levellers would be spared as much as may be that the body be not too much emaciated Besides the blood is most corrupt in the Coephalicks or Presbyterians and is the very causa continens of your disease You need not fear to take freely of this vein c. Here you see this State Mountebank gives you the use and application of this corrasive The High Shambles of Justice so fully that I shall not need to comment upon it And in the latter end of a Letter from Cromwel dated from Dunbar 4. Sept.
graciously granted Yet now we are ten thousand times more oppressed with them and if these quarterers offer violence or villanous usage to any man in his house or family or commit murder or felony they are protected against the Laws and Justice of the Land and Triable only by a Council of War at the Head-quarters where a man can neither obtain justice nor seek it with safety 59. Martial Law So that we live under the burthen of a perpetual Army of 30000. or 40000. men exempt from all but Martial Law which frequently oppresseth seldom righteth any man witness Oliver Cromwel's taking of Tompson being no Souldier from the House of Commons door with Souldiers imprisoning and condemning him at a Council of War where he sate Judg in his own cause there being a quarrel between them yet it was held Treason in the Earl of Strafford to condemn the Lord of Valentia so being a Member of his Army because it was in time of Peace as this was Many other examples we have of the like nature and of this Army enough to perswade us that these vindicative Saints will not govern by the known Laws of the Land for which they have made us spend our money and blood but by Martial Law and Committee Law grounded upon Arbitrary Ordinances of Parliament which themselves in the first part of exact Collections p. 727. confess are not laws without the Royal assent This Army hath been dayly recruited without any Authority far beyond the said number or pay established the supernumeraries living upon free-quarter and when complaints have been made thereof in the House the Army being quartered in several Brigades supernumeraries have been disbanded in one brigade their Arms taken by their Officers 60. Cheats put upon the State and shortly after they have been listed again in another Brigade and their Arms sold again to the State after a while to new Arm them And of this sort were those Arms which being found in a Magazin in Town by some Zealots and rumoured to belong to the City for the arming of Reformado's were upon examination found to belong to Oliver Cromwel so the business was buried in silence for though the Kings over sights must be tragically published to the world yet the haynous crimes of the godly must lye hid under the mask of Religion And though they have usually taken free-quarter in one place 61. Arrears secur'd although the State ows them nothing and taken Composition money for free-quarter in another place some of them in two or three places at once 3 s. a day some of them 5 s. for a Trooper and 1 s a day and 1 s. 6 d. for a foot souldier whereby no arrears are due to them but they owe money to the State yet they have compelled the Houses to settle upon them for pretended Arrears 1. The moity of the Excise that they may have the Souldiers help in leavying it although to flatter the peope the Army had formerly declared against the Excise 2. The moity of Goldsmiths-hall 3. Remainder of Bishops Lands 4. The Customes of some Garrisons 5. Forrest Lands This Army brags They are the Saviours nay Conquerours of the Kingdom Let them say when they saved it whether at the Fight at Nazeby or taking in of Oxford and we will pay them according to the then list And for all the recuits taken in since the reducing of Oxford it is fit they be disbanded without pay having been taken in without nay against Authority to drive on wicked designs and enthrall King Parliment City and Kingdom 24. Decemb. 1647. The two Houses by their Commissioners presented to the King at Carisbrook-Castle 4. 62 4. Dethroning Bils presented to the King at Carisbrook Castle Bills to be passed as Acts of Parliament and divers Propositions to be assented to They are all printed so is his Majestis Answers to them wherefore I shall need to say the less of them only a word or two to two of the Bills 1. The Act for raising setling 63. Acts for the Militia and maintaining Forces by Sea and Land within the Kingdoms of England and Ireland Wales c. though it seems to be but for 20. years devests the King his Heirs and Successors of the power of the Militia for ever without hope of recovery but by repealing the said Act which will never be in his nor in their power for First it saith That neither the King nor His Heirs or Successors nor any other shall exercise any power over the Militia by land or sea but such as shall Act by authority and approbation of the said Lords and Commons That is a Committee of State of twenty or thirty Grandees to whom the two Houses shall transfer this trust being over-awed by the Army for the ground-work of this Committee was laid by these words though the Committee be erected since And Secondly it prohibiteh the King His Heirs and Successors c. after the expiration of the said 20. years to exercise any of the said powers without the consent of the said Lords and Commons and in all cases wherein the said Lords and Commons shall declare the safety of the Kingdom to be concerned after the said 20. years expired and shall pass any Bills for raising Arming c. Forces by Land or Sea or concerning Leavying of Money c. if the Royal assent to such Bills shall not be given by such a time c. then such Bills so passed by the Lords and Commons shall have the force of Acts of Parliament without the Royal assent Lo here a foundation laid to make an Ordinance of both Houses equal to an Act of Parliament take away the King 's Negative Voice if this be granted in one case it will be taken in another and then these subverters of our Religion Laws and Liberties will turn their usurpations into a legal Tyranny 2. It gives an unlimited Power to the two Houses to raise what Forces and what numbers for Land and Sea and of what persons without exceptions they please and to imploy them as they shall judge fit 3. To raise what Money they please for maintaining them and in what sort they think fit out of any mans Estate This is a Tax far more Arbitrary and unlimited than Ship-money and the more terrible because it depends upon the will and pleasure of a multitude who to support their own tyranny and satisfie their own hunger after other mens goods may and do create a necessity and then make that necessity the law and rule of their actions and our sufferings besides they are but our fellow subjects that usurp this Dominion over us which aggravates the indignity If the 24 Conservators of the Peace in Hen. 3. time were thought a burden to the Commons and called totidem tyranni what will our Grandees prove when the Power of the sword is theirs by Act of Parliament Besides if the King give them his Sword they may take all
excluding the two Houses and for a time indefinite * The Members of this Committee are now the E. of Northumberland Robert E. of Warwick the E. of Kent Ed. E. of Manchester Wil. L. Say and Seal Phil. L. Wharton Jo. L. Roberts Wil. Pierrepoint Sir Hen. Vane sen Sr. Gilbert G rrard Sr. Wil Armine Sr. Ar. Haslerig Sr. Hen Vane jun. Jo. Crew Rob. Wallope Oliver St. Johns Sol. O. Cromwel St. Brown Natha Fiennes Sr. Jo. Evelin jun. There were then added to this Committee Nathaniel Fiennes in place of Sir Phil. Stapleton Sir John Evelin junior in place of M. Recorder and the Earl of Kent instead of the Earl of Essex 22 Jan. following the Lords sent down a Message for a farther power to this Committee which was granted in these words Power to suppress Tumults and Insurrections in England c. and at Barwick and for that purpose the Committee to have power to give Orders and Directions to all the Militia and Forces of the Kingdom The addition of four Lords and eight Commoners likewise to this Committee was desired but denyed 68. Whitehall and the Mews Garrisoned Friday 14 January after a long debate it was ordered that Sir Lewis Dives Sir John Stowel and David Jenkins be tryed as Traytors at the Kings Bench the Grand Jury had found the Bill against Jenkins Mr. Solicitor c. appointed to manage this business * See Judge Jenkins's Remonstrance to the Lords and Commons of Parliament 21. Feb. 1647. but Jenkins is so great a Lawyer that the Solicitor durst not venture upon him the long sword being more powerfull in his mouth than the Law wherefore the Solicitor found an Errour in the indictment turned him back again upon the House to be impeached before the Lords to whose Jurisdiction he pleaded so the Solicitor put the affront from himself upon the Houses It was now twelve of the clock and many of the Independent party began to cry Rise rise The Presbyterians thinking all had been done many went to Dinner yet the Independents sate still and finding the House for their turn moved That a Letter might be forthwith sent to Sir Thomas Fairfax to send a convenient number of Foot to Garrison White-hall and a party of Horse to quarter in the Mews The Lords concurrence was not desired to this Vote but the Letters immediately drawn and sent Observe that before this Vote passed divers forces were upon their March towards the Town and came to White-hall Saturday following by eight of the Clock in the morning Saturday 15. Jan. The Army sent a Declaration to the House of Commons Thanking them for their 4. Votes against the King 69. The Armies Declaration thanking the Commons for their 4. Votes 70. The Lords pass the 4. Votes promising them to live and die with the Commons in defence of them against all Opponents Many of the Lords had argued very hotly against the said four Votes insomuch that it was 10. Lords to 10. but this engagement of the Army and the unexpected garrisoning of White-hall and the Mews turned the scales so that they passed the said 4. Votes only adding a short preamble little to the purpose holding forth some reasons for passing them to which the Commons when they came down assented When presently about twelve of the clock the House being thin Dennis Bond moved That whosoever should act against those 4. Votes or incite other to act against them should be imprisoned and sequestred Three or four days after the Lords had passed the said 4. Votes 71. The Army thanks the Lords the Army vouchsafed to spit thanks in their mouthes and make much of them These 4. Votes were generally sinisterly taken and filled mens minds with suspicion what form of Government the Grandees would set up now they had laid by the King and every mans mind presaged a new War which they conceived the Independent Grandees were willing to have to colour their keeping up this Army and raising money to maintain them and every man began to lay the project of a new war at their door notwithstanding by way of prevention they had Impeached divers Members and Citizens of London for endeavouring a new War when they did but raise men for their self-defence To shew the people therefore the reasons of these 4. Votes 72. The Declaration against the King the Independent Grandees appointed a Committee to search into the Kings conversation and errors of his Government and publish them in a Declaration to the World wherein they objected many high crimes against Him concerning His Fathers death the loss of Rochel and the Massacre and Rebellion in Ireland which upon debate in the House were very much moderated by the Presbyterians of which Declaration I will only say that they have set forth no new matter therein which they have not formerly published in parcels since which time they have taken and caused others to take the National Covenant whereby they vow to maintain the Kings Person Crown and Dignity in defence of Religion Laws and Liberties and therefore to reprint only the same things as arguments to lay by the King savours more of design than justice I will wade no farther in the censure of the said Declaration lest I imitate the Authors of it and as they by a feeble accusation have done the King much right so I by a weak defence should do him much wrong 73. Tho. Haslerig's Letter concerning the King The people were as ill satisfied with this Declaration as with the 4. Votes wherefore 24. Feb. Mr. Speaker with much seriousness presented to the House a Letter out of Leicester-shire from Thomas Haslerig brother to Sir Arthur which was read to this purpose That there was one Mr. Smalling a Committee-man of Leicester-shire who had been a Deputy examiner in the Star-Chamber and affirmed that above twenty years since there being a sute in Star-Chamber between the Earl of Bristol Complainant and the Duke of Buckingham Defendant concerning Physick presumptuously administred by the said Duke to King James the said Smalling took many Depositions therein and was farther proceeding in the Examinations until a Warrant signed by the King was brought him commanding him to surcease and to send him the Depositions already taken which Smalling did yet kept notes by him of the Principal passages doubting what farther proceedings might be hereafter in a business of such importance Sir Henry Mildmay moved that Smalling be sent for and examined upon Oath by the Committee that penned the said Declaration but upon motion of the Presbyterians he was Ordered to be examined at the Commons Bar. Smalling came produced the Warrant but no Notes so this Chimaera vanished What the said Committee would have made of this who knows God bless us all from clandestine examinations especially when they are taken by parties pre-ingaged 3. Caroli This business had been ventilated and examined against the Duke and no mention made of poysoning or killing
should hear of it and beget a slavish fear in the whole Kingdom to submit to the laying aside of the KING and his Negative Voice and the establishing of a tyrannical Oligarchy in the Grandees of the two Houses and Army for finding the whole Kingdom to hate them with a perfect hatred they have no hope to govern by Love but by Fear which according to the Turkish rule is more predominant and constant passion And certainly had not Goring's passing over at Greenwich into Essex compelled Fairfax to follow immediately after with his Army they had been used with much extremity insomuch that Weaver a Member fuller of zeal than wisdom though wise enough for his own profit as most Saints and knaves are moved in the House That all Kent might be sequestred because they had rebelled and all Essex because they would rebell And truly this is as good a way as Cromwel's selling his Welch Prisoners for 12 d. a head to be transported into barbarous Plantations whereby to expell the Canaanites and make new plantations in old England for the Godly the seed of the Faithfull for this faction like the Divell cry all is mine 91. Banbury-Castle obtruded upon the State 27. May A friend of my Lord Say's moved in the House of Commons That Banbury-Castle might be demolished to prevent any surprise thereof by Malignants saying it had already cost the State 200000 l. to reduce it and had undone the Country which was unable to pay for it it belonged to a Noble Godly person the L. Say and it was not fit to demolish it without his consent and recompence it was therefore desired the State should bear the charge his Lordship being willing to sell it for 2000 l. To which was answered That other well-affected Gentlemen had their Houses destroyed for service of the State without recompence not so well provided to bear the loss as my Lord Say as Mr. Charles Doyly two handsome habitable Houses Mr. Vachell some Houses in Reading and others well deserving of the State though not of themselves This Castle was unhabitable a rude heap of stones a publick nusance to the Country It cost his Lordship but 500 l. and now to obtrude it upon the State at 2000 l. price in so great a scarcity and want of mony the Kingdom graoning under Taxes was not reasonable So Divine providence not saying Amen to it this Cheat failed like the untimely birth of a Woman 92 The Impeached Lords Members and Aldermen About the beginning of June a debate hapned in the House of Commons about the four imprisoned Aldermen occasioned by a Petition from the City and concerning the impeached Lords and Commons Mr. Gewen spake modestly in their behalf saying That what they did was done by virtue of an Ordinance of Parliament made this very Sessions of Parliament and without any intent to raise a new war but only to defend the City against the menaces of the Army marching up against them and the Parliament But Mr. Gourdon a man hot enough for his zeal to set a Kingdom on fire Answered He thought they intended a new War and were encouraged thereto by the Gentleman that spake last when he said to them at their Common Council Vp and be doing Mr. Walker perceiving Mr. Gewen to be causlesly reflected upon replied that since this debate upon the City Petition tended towards a closing up of all differences it was unfit men that spake their consciences freely and modestly should be upbraided with Repetitions tending to dis-union and desired men might not be permitted to vent their malice under colour of shewing their zeal when presently Tho. Scot the Brewers Clerk he that hath a Tally of every mans faults but his own hanging at his Girdle by virtue of his Office being Deputy-Inquisitor or Hangman to Miles Corbet in the clandestine Committee of examinations replyed upon Mr. Walker That the Gent. that spake last was not so well-affected but that the close Committee of examinations would find cause to take an order with him shortly Mr. Walker offered to answer him and demanded the Justice of the House but could not be heard those that spake in behalf of the Aldermen were often affronted and threatned with the displeasure of the Army which they alleged would be apt to fall into distempers if we discharged them Notwithstanding these menaces it was Voted that the House would not prosecute their Impeachments against the said four Aldermen Sir John Maynard and the seven Lords and that they would proceed no faother upon their Order for impeaching Mr. Hollis Sir William Waller c. Two or three dayes after a motion was set on foot That the Order whereby the said Members were disabled from being of the House might be revoked many zealots argued fiercely and threatned against it amongst many arguments for them a President was insisted upon That Master Henry Martin was by Order disabled from being a Member yet was afterwards readmitted upon his old Election and desired these Gentlemen might find equall justice The House having freed them à Culpa could not in equity but free them à poena and put them in the remainder of all that belonged to them But Sir Peter Wentworth answered That Mr. Martins case and theirs differed Mr. Martin was expelled for words spoken against the King such as every mans Conscience told him were true but because he spoke those words unseasonably when the King was in good strength and the words whether true or false were in strictnesse of Law Treason the House especially the lukewa●n men considering the doubtfull events of War disabled and committed him lest the whole House might be drawn in compass of High Treason for conniving at them which was a prudential Act contrary to justice and contrary to the sense of the Godly and honest party of the House But afterwards the King growing weaker and the Parliament stronger the House restored Master Martin and thought fit to set every mans tongue at liberty to speak truth even against the King himself and now every day words of a higher nature are spoken against him by the well-affected Godly in the House After many threats used by Wentworth Ven Harvy Scot Gourdon Weaver c. The said disabling Order was repealed 93. Members added to the Committee of Safety at Darby house About the same time the Lords sent a Message to the Commons that they had named six Lords to be added to the Committee of safety and desired the House to adde twelve Commons to them This had five or six times been brought down from the Lords before and received so many denials but the Lords would not acquiesce the Message came down about one of the Clock the House being thin many argued against it saying that there were seven Lords and fourteen Commons of that Committee already enough if not too many to dispatch businesse with secrecy and expedition that to adde six Lords more to them was in effect to make
both Houses and now into Orders of a remaining Faction of one House 1. That the People that is their own faction according to their said Principle are under God the originall of all just power 2. That the Commons of England in Parliament assembled being chosen by and representing the People have the supreme power of this Nation 3. That whatsoever is enacted or declared for Law by the House of Commons assembled in Parliament hath the force of Law and all the People of this Nation are concluded therby although the consent or concurrence of the King or House of Peers be not had thereunto This chain-shot sweeps away King Lords Laws Liberties property and fundamentall Government of this Nation at once and deposites all that is or can be neer or deare unto us in scrinio pectoris in the bosomes and consciences of 50. or 60. factious covetous Saints the dregs and lees of the House of Commons sitting and acting under the power of an Army and yet the House of Commons never had any Power of Iudicature nor can legally administer an Oath but this in pursuance of their aforesaid Principle That they may pass through any form of Government to carry on their Design The Diurnall tells you there was not a Negative Voice this shews under what a terror they sit when in things so apparently untrue no man durst say No so the said Declaratory Vote and Ordinance for Triall of His Majesty by a Court Martiall if the Diurnall speak true and yet the King no Prisoner of War was passed onely in the name and by the Authority of the Commons Notwithstanding the Order of the House That the Clerk should not deliver a Copy of the said Ordinance to any man I here present the Reader with a Copy thereof * An Act of Parliament of the House of Commons for Tryall of Charls Stuart King of England 59. The Act for Triall of the King VVHeras it is notorious that Charles Stuart the now King of England was not content with the many incroachments which his Predecessors had made upon the People in their Rights and Freedom hath had a wicked Design to subvert the ancient and foundamentall Laws and Liberties of this Nation and in their place to introduce an Arbytrary and Tyrannicall Government Quaere Whether the Faction do not translate these Crimes from themselves to the King with many others and that besides all evil waies to bring His Design to pass He hath prosecuted it with fire and sword levied and maintained a Civill Warre in the Land against the Parliament and Kingdom whereby this Countrie hath been miserablie wasted the publique Treasure exhausted Trade decayed thousands of People murdered and infinite of other mischiefs committed for all which high offences the said Charls Stuart might long since have been brought to exemplary and condigne punishment Whereas also the Parliament well hoping that the restraint and imprisonment of His Person after it had pleased God to deliver Him into their hands would have quieted the distempers of the Kingdom did forbear to proceed judicially against Him but found by sad experience that such their remissness served onely to encourage Him and His Complices in the continuance of their evil practices and raising new Commotions Rebellions and Invasions For prevention of the like and greater inconveniences and to the end no chief Officer or Magistrate may hereafter presume Traiterously and maliciously to imagine or contrive the enslaving or destroying of the English Nation and to expect impunity Be it enacted and ordained by the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and it is hereby enacted and ordained that Thomas Ld. Fairfax Generall Oliver cromwel Lieu. Generall Com. Gen. Ireton Major Gen. Skippon Sir Hardresse Waller Col. Valentine Walton Col. Thomas Harrison Col. Edward Whalley Col. Thomas Pride Col. Isaac Ewer Col. Rich Ingolsby Sir Henry Mildmay Sir Tho Honywood Thomas Lord Grey Philip Lord Lisle Will Lord Munson Sir John Danvers Sir Tho Maleverer Sir Iohn Bowcher Sir Iames Harington Sir William Brereton Robert Wallop Esquire Will Henningham Es Isaas Pennington Alderman Thomas Atkins Ald Col. Rowland VVilson Sir Peter VVentworth Col. Henry Martyn Col. William Purefoy Col. Godfrey Bosvill Iohn Trencherd Esq Col. Harbottle Morley Col. Iohn Berkstead Col. Mat. Tomblinson Iohn Blackstone Esq Gilb Millington Esq Sir Will Cunstable Col Edward Ludlow Col. Iohn Lambert Col. Io. Hutchingson Sir Arth Hazlerigge Sir Michael Livesley Rich Saloway Esq Humph Saloway Esq Col. Rob Titchburn Col. Owen Roe Col. Rob Manwaring Col. Robert Lilburn Col. Adrian Scroop Col. Richard Dean Col. Iohn Okey Col. Robert Overton Col. Iohn Harrison Col. Iohn Desborough Col. William Goffe Col. Rob Dukenfield Cornelius Holland Esq Iohn Carne Esq Sir Will Armine Iohn Iones Esq Miles Corbet Esq Francis Allen Esq Thomas Lister Esq Ben Weston Esq Peregrin Pelham Esq Iohn Gourdon Esq Serj. Francis Thorp Iohn Nut Esq Tho Challoner Esq Col. Algern Sidney Iohn Anlaby Esq Col. Iohn Moore Richard Darley Esq William Saye Esq Iohn Aldred Esq Iohn Fagge Esq Iames Nelthrop Esq Sir Will Roberts Col. Francis Lassels Col. Alex Rixby Henry Smith Esq Edmond Wilde Esq Iames Chaloner Esq Iosias Barnes Esq Dennis Bond Esq Humph Edwards Esq Greg Clement Esq Iohn Fray Esq Tho Wogan Esq Sir Greg Norton Serj. Iohn Bradshaw Col. Edm Harvey Iohn Dove Esq Col. Iohn Venn Iohn Foulks Ald. Thomas Scot Alder. Tho Andrews Ald William Cawley Esq Abraham Burrell Esq Col Anthony Stapley Roger Gratwicke Esq Iohn Downs Esq Col. Thomas Horton Col. Tho Hammond Col. George Fenwick Serj. Robert Nichols Rohert Reynolds Esq Iohn Lisl Esq Nicholas Love Esq Vincent Potter Sir Gilbert Pickering Iohn Weaver Eq. Iohn Lenthall Esq Sir Edward Baynton Iohn Corbet Esq Thomas Blunt Esq Thomas Boone Esq Augustin Garland Esq Augustin Skinner Esq Iohn Dickswell Esq Col. George Fleetwood Simon Maine Esq Col. Iames Temple Col. Peter Temple Daniel Blagrave Esq Sir Peter Temple Col. Thomas Wayte Iohn Brown Esq Iohn Lowry Esq Mr. Bradshaw nominated President Counsellors assistant to this Court and to draw up the Charge against the KING are Doctor Dorislau Master Steel Master Aske Master Cooke Serjeant Dandy Serjeant at Arms. Mr. Philips Clerk to the Court. Messengers and door-keepers are Master Walford Master Radley Master Paine Master Powel Master Hull And Mr. King Crier shall be and are hereby appointed Commissioners and Judges for the hearing trying and Judging of the said Charles Stuart and the said Commissioners or any 20 or more of them shall be and are hereby Authorized and Constituted an High Court of Justice to meet at such convenient times and place as by the said Commissioners or the major part or 20. or more of them under their hand and seals shall be appointed and notified by publick Proclamation in the great Hall or Palace-yard of Westminster and to adjourn from time to time and from place to place as the said High Court or the major part thereof meeting shall hold fit
People or else by the power of Courtiers stopping the course of Justice at the Councel Table and in other Arbitrary Courts both which are taken away by the Kings Concessions 1. That the Nomination of Judges and Officers be in the Parliament 2. That the King make no new Parliament Lords for the future to Vote there For this you must take the faith of the misty brained Penman who had this as well as many other gross Lies by Revelation The Army had had the King in h●ir power and had the Parliament adjourned the sole power of the Kingdom had been left in the Army which is a thing aimed at by them Another Objection is That they had intelligence that had they been suffered to meet all in the House once more it was designed to have passed some higher Resolutions to lay farther foundations of a new quarrel so as to carry therein the name and countenance of Parliamentary Authori●y together with the Kings upon an acceptable pretence of Peace to draw men in and then to have adjourned the Parliament for a long time excluding all remedy in this case but by another War To this we say the House immediately upon passing the Vote 5. Decemb sent a Committee to the General to confer with him and his Officers and keep a good correspondency with them To which the General promised his readiness howsoever it was hindred afterwards And then they seized upon one of the Commissioners appointed to Treat affronted another and left no way free for a Conference which shews they were resolved to doe what they had designed The last Obj. is That those Members that are yet detained in Custodie are either such as have been formerly Impeached and in part judged by the House for Treason and other Crimes and never acquitted and against whom they can and very shortly will produce new matter of no less crime or else such who have appeared most active and united in Councels with them against whom also they are preparing and shall shortly give matter of particular Impeachment To this we say that when it appears what those crimes are and what persons are charged with them we doubt not but they will sufficiently acquit themselves if things may be legally carried in a judicial way by competent Judges not preingaged In the mean time we conclude That Souldiers whose advantages arise by War are not fit to judge of the Peace of the Nation 74. A Declaration by Mr. Walker and Mr. Pryn The 19. Jan. 1648. Mr. Pryn and Mr. Walker two of the secured Members published in print their Declaration and Protestation against the actings and proceedings of the Army and their Faction now remaining in the House of Commons as followeth A Declaration and Protestation of Will Pryn and Clem Walker Esquires Members of the House of Commons Against the present Actings and Proceedings of the Generall and Generall Councell of the Army and their Election now remaining and sitting in the said House WHereas long since for ease of the People both Houses in a full and free Parliament Voted the Disbanding of this Army in opposition to which some great Officers of the said Army to continue their rich Commands with some Members of the House of Commons who daily inrich themselves by the troubles of the times secretly mutinied the Army against the Parliament And whereas lately the farre major part of the House of Commons pittying the bleeding condition and tears of the oppressed People Voted and entred into a Personall Treaty with the King without which by the Armies own confession in their Remonstrance at Saint Albons p. 64. there can be no peace which the Army interrupted by obtruding upon the Commons a treasonable Remonstrance 20. Novemb. 1648. tending to destroy the King and His Posterity and wholly to subvert all Parliaments Religion Laws and Liberties for ever whereby the Commons in Parliament found it absolutely necessary to prevent such pernitious innovations by concluding a safe peace with His Majesty whereupon after mature debate the House of Commons the 5. Decemb. 1648. Voted That the Kings Answer to the Propositions of both Houses upon the Treaty were a ground for the Houses to proceed to the settlement of a safe and well-grounded Peace Upon which the Generall and Councell of Warre Wednesday morning 6. December 1648. Seized and Imprisoned 41 of the Members going to the House of Commons to do their Duty secluded above 160. other Members besidss 40. or 50. Members who voluntarily withdrew themselves to avoid their violence leaving onely their own engaged party of 40. or 50. Members sitting who now pass Acts of Parliament of the House of Commons as they call them without the Lords and comply with the said Councell of Warre to carry on the said Remonstrance To which purpose this present remnant of the Commons have unvoted in a thin House under the force of the Army what was deliberately Voted in a full and free House whereas by their own Ordinance passed upon the Tumult of Apprentices 20. August 1647. to null and make void ab initio all Acts Orders Votes c. passed under the said force This remaining Party ought not to sit act nor take upon them the style of a House under so visible actuall and horrid a Force The premises considered We whose names are hereunto subscribed Members of the House of Commons do declare and protest That the said Generall Commissioned Officers and Generall Councell of the Army by the said act of violence upon the major part of the House which legally and virtually is the whole House have waged War and Rebelled against the Parliament their Masters who raised them to defend the Priviledges of Parliament and the Kings Person and Authority in defence of Religion Laws and Liberties and have thereby forfeited their Commissions and have broken and dis-continued this Parliament so that untill this force be removed punished the Honour of the Parliament and their wronged Members vindicated and all the Members resummoned all the Votes Orders and Actings passed and to be passed by this nominall House of Commons are and will be void ab initio and all such as do or shall obey them are and will be punishable both by the Armies own judgment in their Remonstrance August 18. and by the Houses Declaration and the said Ordinance 20. August 1647. We do farther declare and protest against this present House of Commons illegall Acts Order or Ordinance for erecting a High Court of Justice and usurping a power without any Law or president to Trie Depose and bring to capitall punishment the King and to Dis-inherit His Posterity or any of them and against the said Generall Councell of Officers aiding and abetting them therein as highly impious against the Law of God Nations and the Protestant Profession Traitors against the Stat. of Treason 25. Edw. 3. and against all Laws and our Statutes perjurious and perfidious against the Oaths of Allegiance Supremacy Nationall Covenant and Protestation
Deposing or taking away the Kings life be not really guilty of High Treason and all those who were aiding or assenting to the erection thereof in such an irregular manner by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm 5. Whether those who are professed Enemies to the King and by their Remonstrances Speeches and actions profess they desire his blood and seek his life can either in Law or Conscience be reputed competent Judges to try him for his life It being a just exception to any Jury man who is to try the basest or poorest Felon and a legal challenge for which he must be withdrawn that he is a professed Enemy and Prosecutor who seeks his life and therefore no lawfull nor indifferent trier of him for it 6. Whether the triall and taking away of the Kings life by such an illegal and arbitrary High Court of Justice as this will not prove a most dangerous inlet to the absolutest tyranny and bloodiest butchery ever yet heard of or practised in this or any other Nation and a ready way to teach us how to chop off one anothers heads till we are all destroyed For if they may take away the Kings head in it without and against all rules of Law then by the same or stronger reason they may in like manner chop off the heads of any Nobleman Peer Member Gentleman or inferiour Subject for any imaginary Treason or offence and confiscate their Estates there being no assurance they will stop at the Kings The Answer of the Generall Councel of Officers touching the secluded Members Jan. 3. 1648. And if those who are confessed to be the Majority of the Com. House and therefore excluded or the Prince of Wales next Heir to the Crown or the Malignant party or any oher Faction whatsoever which may arise should at any time hereafter get the upper hand by the peoples general adhering to them or any divisions of the Army or by any means Gods providence should administer who hath thousands of ways to pull down the proudest Tyrants and dissipate the strongest Armies in a moment as he did Senacheribs the Midianites the Moabites and Ammonites with sundry others recorded in sacred Writ and prophane Stories and the Scots Army but few months since they may by like authority and president erect the like new Court to cut off the heads of all the Members now sitting and of the present General Councel of the Army and all the Commissioners acting in this new Court and so fall a murthering and butchering one another till we were all destroyed one by another and made a spectacle of most unnatural tyranny and cruelty to the whole world Angels and Men and a prey to our common Enemies Upon which consideration let every man now seriously lay his hand upon his own breast and sadly consider what the bloody tragical issue of this new Phaleris Bull may prove to him or his and whether every Free-born English-man especially of Noblest birth and amplest Estate be not deeply obliged in point of prudence and conscience to use his utmost endeavour with hazard of life and estate to prevent the erection of such an exorbitant and illegal Authority in the very rise and foundation ere it be over-late and not patiently suffer a rash inconsiderate number of Hotspurs of mean condition and broken desperate fortunes for the most part out of private malice fear or designs to secure and enrich themselves by the ruines of others of better fortunes and quality to set up such a new shambles to butcher and quarter the King Nobles Parliament-men Gentlemen and persons of all conditions as was never heard of among Pagans or Christians from the Creation to this present and will no way suit with our English soil already overmuch watred with English blood and so deeply ingaged against all arbitrary and tyrannical usurpations and proceedings especially capital in any hands whatsoever which have cost us so much blood and treasure to oppose and fight against for seven years last past Saturday Ian. 20. 1648. 80. The first days Trial of his Majesty The new thing called The High Court of Justice sate Bradshaw being President who had the Mace and Sword carried before him and 20 Gentlemen forsooth with Partizans for his Guard under the command of Colonel Fox the Tinker An O yes being made and silence commanded the said Act of the Commons for erecting the said Court was read and the Court called there being about 70 of the Commissioners present Then the King was brought to the Bar by Col. Hacker with Halberdiers the Mace of the Court conducting him to his chair within the Bar where he sate And then Pres Bradshaw said to the King Charles Stuart King of England The Commons of England assembled in Parliament being sensible of the great calamities brought upon this Nation Prove this power and trust The whole Kingdom in effect deny it So do all our Law-Books and the practice of all Ages and of the innocent blood shed which are referred to you as the Author of it according to that duty which they owne to God the Nation and themselves and according to that power and fundamental trust reposed in them by the People have constituted this High Court of Justice before which you are now brought and you are to hear your Charge upon which the Court will proceed Solicitor Cook My Lord in behalf of the Commons of England and of all the People thereof I do accuse Charles Stuart here present of High Treason and misdemeanours and I doe in the name of the Commons of England desire the Charge may be read unto him The King Hold a little President Sir the Court commands the Charge to be read afterwards you may be heard The Charge was read as followeth The Charge against King Charles the First January 20. 1648. The Charge read THat the said CHARLES STUART being admitted King of England and therein trusted with a limited power to govern by and according to the Laws of the Land and not otherwise And by his Trust Oath and Office being obliged to use the power committed to him For the good and benefit of the People and for the preservation of their Rights and Liberties yet nevertheless out of a wicked design to erect and uphold in himself an unlimited and tyrannical power to rule according to his Will and to overthrow the Rights and Liberties of the People Yea to take away and make void the foundations thereof and of all redress and remedy of mis-government which by the fundamental Constitutions of this Kingdom were reserved on the peoples behalf in the right and power of frequent and successive Parliaments or National meetings in Councel He the said Charles Stuart for accomplishment of such his Designs and for the protecting of himself and his Adherents in his and their wicked Practises to the same Ends hath traiterously and malitiously levied War against the present Parliament and the People therein Represented Particularly upon or
about the thirtieth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and two at Beverley in the County of York and upon or about the thirtieth day of July in the year aforesaid in the County of the City of York and upon or about the twenty fourth day of August in the same year at the County of the Town of Nottingham when and where he set up his Standard of War and also on or about the twenty third day of October in the same year at Edgehill and Keinton-field in the County of Warwick and upon or about the thirtieth day of November in the same year at Brainford in the County of Middlesex and upon or about the thirtieth day of August in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred fourty and three at Cavesham-bridge neer Reading in the County of Berks and upon or about the thirtieth day of October in the year last mentioned at or neer the City of Gloucester And upon or about the thirtieth day of November in the year last mentioned at Newbury in the County of Berks And upon or about the one and thirtieth day of July in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and four at Cropredy-bridge in the County of Oxon And upon or about the thirtieth day of September in the year last mentioned at Bodmin and other places neer adjacent in the County of Cornwall And upon or about the thirtieth day of November in the year last mentioned at Newbury aforesaid And upon or about the eighth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and five at the Towne of Leicester And also upon the fourteenth day of the same moneth in the same year at Naseby-field in the County of Northampton At which several times and places or most of them and at many other places in this Land at several other times within the years aforementioned And in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred forty and six He the said Charles Stuart hath caused and procured many thousands of the free-people of the Nation to be slaine and by Divisions Parties and Insurrections within this Land by invasions from forraigne parts endeavoured and procured by Him and by many other evill waies and meanes He the said Charles Stuart hath not only maintained and carried on the said Warre both by Land and Sea during the years before mentioned but also hath renewed or caused to be renewed the said Warre against the Parliament and good people of this Nation in this present yeare one thousand six hundred forty and eight in the Counties of Kent Essex Surrey Sussex Middlesex and many other Counties and places in England and Wales and also by Sea And particularly He the said Charles Stuart hath for that purpose given Commissions to his Sonne the Prince and others whereby besides multitudes of other Persons many such as were by the Parliament intrusted and employed for the safety of the Nation being by Him or his Agents corrupted to the betraying of their Trust and revolting from the Parliament have had entertainement and commission for the continuing and renewing of Warre and Hostility against the said Parliament and People as aforesaid By which cruell and unnaturall Warres by Him the said Charles Stuart levyed continued and renewed as aforesaid much Innocent bloud of the Free-people of this Nation hath been spilt many Families have been undone the Publique Treasury wasted and exhausted Trade obstructed and miserably decayed vast expence and damage to the Nation incurred and many parts of the Land spoyled some of them even to desolation And for further prosecution of His said evill Designes He the said Charles Stuart doth still continue his Commissions to the said Prince and other Rebels and Revolters both English and Forraigners and to the Earle of Ormond and to the Irish Rebels and Revolters associated with him from whom further Invasions upon this Land are threatned upon the procurement and on the behalf of the said Charles Stuart All which wicked Designes Warrs and evill practises of Him the said Charles Stuart have been and are carried on for the advancing and upholding of the Personall Interest of Will and Power and pretended prerogative to Himself and his Family against the publique Interest Common Right Liberty Justice and Peace of the people of this Nation by and for whom He was entrusted as aforesaid By all which it appeareth that He the said Charles Stuart hath been and is the Occasioner Author and Contriver of the said unnaturall cruell and bloudy Warrs and therein guilty of all the treasons murthers rapines burnings spoiles desolations damage and mischief to this Nation acted or committed in the said Warrs or occasioned therby And the said John Cook by Protestation saving on the behalfe of the people of England the liberty of Exhibiting at any time hereafter any other Charge against the said Charles Stuart and also of replying to the Answers which the said Charles Stuart shall make to the premises or any of them or any other Charge that shall be so exhibited doth for the said treasons and crimes on the behalf of the said people of England Impeach the said Charles Stuart as a Tyrant Traytor Murtherer and a publique and implacable Enemy to the Common-wealth of England And pray that the said Charles Stuart King of England may be put to answer all and every the premises That such Proceedings Examinations Tryals Sentence and Judgment may be thereupon had or shall be agreeable to Justice The King smiled often during the reading of the Charge especially at these words Tyrant Traytor Murderer and publique Enemy of the Commonwealth President Sir you have now heard your Charge you finde that in the close of it it is prayed to the Court in behalfe of the Commons of England that you answer to your Charge which the Court expects King I would know by what power I am called hither I was not long ago in the Isle of Wight how I came there is a longer story then I think fit at this time for me to speak But there I entred into a Treaty with both Houses of Parliament with as much faith as is possible to be had of any People in the World I Treated there with a number of Honourable Lords and Gentlemen and treated honestly and uprightly I cannot say but that they did very nobly with Me We were upon a Conclusion of the Treaty Now I would know by what lawful Authority there are many unlawfull Authorities Thieves and Robbers on the High-way I was brought from thence and carried from place to place and I know not what and when I know by what lawfull Authority I shall Answer Remember I am your King your lawfull King and what sinns you bring upon your own heads and the judgment of God upon this Land think well upon it think well upon it I say before you go on from one sinne to a greater therefore let me know by what
themselves though they prohibit others But Gold and Silver are drawn out of Mines Royal and belong to the Saints by their Prerogative 5. An Act to be passed for punishment of Revolted Sea-men and Mariners None against traiterous tyrannous theevish Saints 6. An Act for relief of wel-affected Tenants against Malignant Land-lords who have compounded for their Estates rack their Tenants Rents or turn them out of doors This is a device First to make work for such Members as not being of the Councel of State would become as contemptible as they are hateful being devested of all power to play the Tyrants after Adjournment And secondly to stir up all the Tenants of England especially Schismaticks to combine with them against their Land-lords and deprive them of the legal use of their Estates and the benefit of their Compositions for to what purpose shall Gentlemen compound for their Estates when they must let and set them at the discretion of domineering Committees or Commissioners conspiring with the high Shoos to oppress make a prey of enslave and unspirit all the Nobility and Gentry of England here aimed at under the general Title of Malignants Oh perfidious Tyrants keep your money Gentlemen or turn it into Iron and Gun-powder 7. An Act to suppress Malignant Pamphlets aspersing the present proceedings of the Parliament Councel of State and the Army and prevent Printing as much as may be This is to set truth in the pillory whilst her counterfeit impudent lying and slandering sits in state in Parliament Councel of State and Councel of Officers and rides triumphantly Coached into the City to Thansgiving Devotions and Dinners 8. That the Pulpits being as scandalous as the Press against their proceedings they enjoyn that a more strict course be taken to stop the mouthes of the Preachers hereafter You see how Ahab-like these Subverters of Church and Common-wealth 1 King 18.17 accuse our Prophets for troubling our Israel being their own sin and seek occasion to bring a spiritual as well as a corporal famine upon the Land cutting off the staff of bread as well from our souls as bodies by stopping the mouths of Gods Ministers But I hope they will remember the duty they owe to the honour of him that sent them upon his Embassage to his people and fearing God more than Man every man cry out to his own soul and conscience with S. Paul 1 Cor. 9.16 Vae mihi si non praedicavero Woe be to me if I do not Preach 9. That an Act be passed that that clause of the Stat. 23. Eliz. 25. Eliz. 1 Jac. against Sectaries should be repealed that none may be questioned thereby in the vacancy of Parl. What is this but to pray in aid of Turks Jewes Anabaptists of Munster nay the Devil himself to joyn with them as they have already joyned with Owen Roe Oneale and his bloody massacring Irish Papists against the Protestant Religion which was part of the designe of the schismatical Party in Parliament in waging war against the King from the beginning See Sect. 184. the Marginal notes there This impious Liberty of Conscience to destroy the Protestant Religion is all the liberty we are like to enjoy under the Kingdom of these bloody cheating Saints in all things else we are meer and absolute slaves 10. That an Act for a General Pardon be passed to all Persons except such as are particularly named therein and declaring no Pardon to any that shall for the future raise War in this Nation against the present Authority thereof This is a project 1. To pardon themselves and their Party for their transcendent villanies and to stop the mouthes of the Countrey from complaining of them after their Adjournment and this shall be effectually done 2. To befool silly weak-spirited people with general words of a Pardon which shall be made ineffectual by many exceptions and limitations 3. This is principally intended to fright men from attempting any thing against the usurped Supremacy and Tyranny of the Councel of State and therefore all Pardons to such Attemptors are before-hand declared against This with them is as a sin against the Holy Ghost unpardonable to deny their Supreme Arbitrary Authority 11. That the Act for relief of poor Prisoners for Debt may be passed Though I can with as much Charity as any Man wish a relief to them yet I like not that Charity should be made a cloak to ambitious Knavery and all the Creditors of the Kingdom be made liable to the vexation of a covetous Committee who under colour of Charity shall raise up all the indebted Men of the Kingdom against all the monied Men if they will not sacrifice their purses to the Foh-Gods of the new State and be bountiful to the Committee which is the full scope of this Proposition 12. That the Souldiers may be secured their Arreares out of the late Kings Lands This is to tie all the Souldiery by the purse-strings which is Saints Tenure to make good that horrid trayterous Murther 13. That an Act be passed for Probate of Wills Granting Administrations and investing of Ministers presented These lunatique Saints should have thought upon a new way to be set up before they throw down the old one and not have left men in an uncertainty how to dispose of their Estates and a Justitium a vacancy of Justice upon the Kingdom you see what Mountebanks our new State-Juglers are The good Boyes began to learn these Lessons upon Monday 25. June 190. Things undertaken by the Councel of State during the Recess The Councel of State likewise reported to their said Free-School of Commons several things which they in order to their future greatness would put into a way during the Recess against the Houses next meeting when two Sundays come together 1. That Commissioners be appointed in every County to make an estimate of all Tythes to the end they may be taken away for the future and some other provision designed for Ministers This is a whip and a Bell to lash Ministers to Preach State-Divinity 2. That the Councel of State consider of setling future Parliaments and the constant time of their calling sitting and ending after this Parliament shal think fit to dissolve themselves If they are not dissolved already which is the constant opinion of many great learned Lawyers well-affected to the Parl. they will never be dissolved without the help of a Hangman But I would gladly know by what Authority a Pack of forty Knaves calling themselves a Councel of State and usurping Regal power shall take upon them to abolish our ancient form of Parliaments contrary to the fundamental Laws of the Land their own Declarations Protestations and Covenants and to pack and shuffle new Parliaments to dispose of our Religion Laws Liberties Lives and Estates against the consent of the far major part of the people 3. That they shall consider of an Act for regulating proceedings in Law and prevent tediousness of Suits There are too many
Brook Comission 19. 21. It appears by the Writs of Summons to the Lords Crompt Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 1. Cooks 4. Instit p. 9. 10. and of Elections Quere How a Parliament Summoned by the Writ of K. Charles I. and called Parliamentum Nostrum ad tractandum nobiscum super arduis negotiis regni nostri can be continued one and the same Parl. after the Kings death that called it and the Monarchy changed into a Commonwealth formally it cannot be the same the Head thereof being gone The Lords House and Monarchy being abolished and the State not the same materially it cannot be the same so many of the ancient Members being thrown out and new ones unduly elected brought in But there are some pragmatical Taylors in the House who can make a garment fit for all states of the Moon and a Parl. fit for all changes of the State and leavying their Wages That the Parliament was only Parliamentum nostrum the Parliament of the Kings that is Dead not of his Heirs and Successors They are all Summoned to come to his Parliament to advise with him nobiscum not with his Heirs and Successors of great and weighty Affairs concerning Nos Regnum nostrum Him and his Kingdome 5 Edw. 3. 6. part 2. Dors Claus Regist fol. 192 200. So the King being dead and his Writ and Authority by which they were Summoned and the end for which they were Called Ad Tractandum ibidem nobiscum super arduis negotiis nos statum Regni nostri tangentibus being thereby absolutely determined without any hope of revival The Parliament is determined thereby especially as those who have Dis-inherited his Heirs and Successors and Voted down Monarchy it self and the Remnant now sitting are no longer Members of Parliament as all Judges Justices of the Peace Sheriffs made onely by the Kings Writ or Commission and not by Patent Cease and become void by the Kings death for this very reason because they are constituted Justitiarios Vicecomites nostros ad pacem nostram c. custodiendum The King being dead his Writs and Commissions expire with Him 4 Ed. 4. 43. 44. Brook Office and Officer 25. Commission 19. 21. Dyer 195. Cook 7. Rep. 30 31. 1 Ed. 6. c. 7. Daltons Justice of Peace chap. 3. pag. 13. Lambert pag. 71. Object If any object the Act of continuance of the Parliament 17 Car. That this present Parliament shall not be dissolved unless it be by Act of Parliament for that purpose Answ It is Answered That it is a Maxim in Law That every Statute ought to be expounded according to the intent of those that made it and the mischiefes it intended onely to prevent 4 Edw. 4. 12. 12 Edw. 4. 18. 1 Hen. 7. 12 13. Plowdens Comment fol. 369. Cooks 4. Institutes pag. 329 330. Now the intent of the Makers of this Act was not to prevent the Parliaments dissolution by the Kings Death no wayes intimated in any clause thereof although it be a clear dissolution of it to all intents not provided for by this Act but by any Writ or Proclamation of the Kings by his Regal Power without the consent of both Houses which I shall prove by the Arguments following 1. From the principal occasion of making the said Act. The Commons in their Remonstrance 15. Decemb. 1642. complain That the King had dissolved all former Parliaments against approbation of both Houses of Parliament Wherefore to prevent the Dissolution Prorogation or Adjournment of this present Parl. by the Kings Regal Power after the Scots Army should be disbanded and before the things mentioned in the Preamble could be effected was the ground and occasion of this Law and not any fear of Dissolving the Parliament by the Kings death Natural or Violent which is confessed by the Commons in the said Remonstrance Exact Collect. pag. 5 6. 14 17. compared together where they Affirm The abrupt dissolution of this Parliament is prevented by another Bill c. In the Bill for continuance of this Parliament there seemes to be some restraint of the Royal power in Dissolving of Parliaments not to take it out of the Crown but to suspend the execution of it for this time and occasion onely which was so necessary for the Kings own Security and the Publick Peace that without it we could not have undertaken any of those great Charges but must have left both Armies to disorder and confusion c. 2. The very Title of this Act an Act to prevent inconveniences which may happen by the untimely Adjourning Proroguing or Dissolution of this present Parliament intimates as much compared with the body of it which provides as well against the Adjourning or Proroguing without an Act as against a Dissolution Now the Parliament cannot be said to be Adjourned or Prorogued untimely by the Kings Death which never Adjourned or Prorogued any Parliament but onely by his Proclamation Writ or Royal Command to the Houses or their Speaker executed during his life-time See Parl. Rolls 6 Edw. 3. 2. Rot. Parl. 3. 6. 5 Ric. 2. n. 64 65. 11 Ric. 2. nu 14 16 20. 8 Hen. 4. nu 2 7. 27 Hen. 6. nu 12. 28 Hen. 6. nu 8 9 11. 29 Hen. 6. nu 10 11. 31 Hen. 6. nu 22 30 49. and Cooks 4. Instit p. 25. Dyer fol. 203. 3. The Prologue of the Act implies as much whereas great summs of Money must of necessity be speedily advanced for relief of His Majesties Army not his Heir or Successor and for supplying other His Majesties not his Heires nor Successors occasions which cannot be so timely effected as is requisite without credit for raising the said Monies which credit cannot be attained until such Obstacles be first removed as are occasioned by Fears and Jealousies That this Parliament may be Adjourned Prorogued or Dissolved before Justice shall be duly executed upon Delinquents then in being as Strafford Canterbury not since made Publique Grievances then complained of as Star-chamber High Commission Ship-money Knighthood-money Tonnage and Poundage c. redressed Peace concluded between the two Nations sufficient provisions made for repayment of the said monies not others since so to be raised All which expressions related onely to His late Majesty as to His Acts of Royal Power not to His Heires and Successors after His Natural much less Violent death which was not then thought on but publickly Detested and Protested against no Man being so hardy as to mention it for fear of the Law not then subdued by the Sword And the several Principal Scopes of this Act are fully satisfied long before the late Kings death 4. It is clear by the Body of this Act And be it declared c. That this present Parliament c. shall not be dissolved unless it be by Act of Parliament to be passed for that purpose nor shall at any time or times during this present Parliament be Adjourned or Prorogued unless it be by Act of Parliament to be passed for
a Meanes conducing to that Generall End Some few whereof I will here set down for my Readers satisfaction 1. To tollerate no King nor Magistrate Superior to themselves as Being a Tyranny or Bondage over the Christian Liberty of the Saints and Kingdom of Christ Because they know no Christian Magistrate can tollerate them being by the Genius of their Sect enemies to all Civil Societies whether Monarchicall Aristocraticall Democraticall or Mixed as the Kingdom of England was before these men destroyed it Besides their common Doctrine That they are appointed to break the powers of the Earth to pieces To levell the hils and fill up the vallies That they are called To bruise the Nations with a rod of Iron and break them in pieces like a Potters vessell Which they have done in England and threaten the like in France Germany c. whereof their Pulpits and discourses sound Observe their Practises in the Low Countries Where having by their spies and Emissaries found out some Burgers of the same humour with themselves They propagated their Doctrine so far as to endeavour to strike the Aristocraticall Members out of that Common-wealth by abetting some of the States Provinciall to lessen and so to abolish by degrees The Lords States Generall the Optimates of that State To ruine the Prince of Orange to whose Family they owe their Liberty To dissolve the Generall Union of the said United Provinces and so take in pieces the whole Frame of that Republick To say nothing of their Insolencies in fighting and killing their men because the Belgike Lion will not strike saile to their Crosse and Harpe and in blowing up the Antelope in Helversluce Which shews what good Neighbours Holland and other Parts are like to have of the New State of England and Ireland when they have made themselves intire by the purchase of Scotland that is born like our English Richard III. with Teeth in its head and snappeth at its Neighbours before it be out of its Swadling clouts This is the cause that Cromwell before he set saile for Ireland caused his Journey-men the pretended Parliament To passe an Act for Tolleration of all Errors Heresies and Schismes under the Notion of Liberty of Conscience and Ease for Tender Consciences 2. Their second Principle is That the Good things of this World belong onely to the Saints that is Themselves all others being usurpers thereof and therefore they may rob plunder sequester extort cheat and confiscate by illegal Laws of their own making by extrajudicial Courts and partial Judges of their own constituting other mens goods and estates upon as good Title as the Jews spoyled the Egyptians or expelled the Canaanites 3. Their third Principle That the Spirit which sanctifies and illuminates these men in every particular man blowes when and where it will sometimes this way sometimes that way often contrary waies And therefore they can make no profession of any certain Rule of Doctrine or Discipline because they know not which way the Spirit will inspire For this reason they are still pulling down old and setting up New Doctrines as the Nomades do cottages onely constant in unconstancy They professe their consciences are the Rule and Symboll both of their Faith and Doctrine by this Leaden Lesbian Rule they interpret and to this they conform the Scriptures not their Consciences to the Scriptures setting the Sun-Dyall by the clock not the clock by the Sun-Dyall That every man must pray according to the Dictates of his Private Spirit They reject the Lords Prayer for fear of quenching the Spirit When they break their Faith Articles Promises Declarations and Covenant they Alleage the Spirit is the Author thereof When Cromwell contrary to his vowes and Protestations made to the King kept him close Prisoner in Carisbrook Castle He affirmed the Spirit would not let him keep his word When contrary to the Publick Faith they Murdered Him they pretended They could not resist the Motions of the Spirit Sua cuique Deus fit dira libido This Hobgoblin serves all turnes 4. Their fourth Principle is That they may commit any sin and retain their Sanctity in the very Act of sinning For what is sinfull in other men is not so in the Saints who may commit any crime against the Law of God and yet it cannot be imputed to them for sin Because they know in their Consciences what they do So tender and delicate are their Consciences That they are capable of any Offence against their Neighbour without breach of Justice or Charity A righteous man is a Law to himself 5. Their fift Principle is That 7. make a Church although men women and children and that this Church is Independent upon any other The Anabaptists though they neither professe to follow Paul nor Cephas yet declare themselves to be some of Cromwells Church some of John Goodwins some of Kiffins some of Patiences and some of Carters Church 6. Their sixt Independent Principle is That if a man be questioned for any crime though his Judges have neither competent witnesses proofs nor Evidence of his guiltinesse yet if they think in their Consciences he his guilty they may condemn him out of the Testimony of their own Private Consciences Is it not fit men so Principled should be Judges and Jury too and condemn men by inspiration So Colonel Andrews and Sir John Gell were condemned for Bernard and Pits witnesses against them were apparently suborned by Bradshaw and Sir Henry Mildmay against them and forsworn in the same cause and good proof offered to the Court that they were both Flagitious men of scandalous life and conversation The letter supposed to be sent by Andrews to Gell was delivered to Bradshaw whereof Bradshaw sent a Copy onely to Gell at 10. of the clock at night and had a warrant then ready to arrest Gell which was done earely next morning before he could conveniently discover it Yet was Gell sentenced for Misprision of High Treason See Sir John Gells case stated August 1650. with Colonel Andrews Attestation in his behalf under his hand a little before his death And though Sir John was Impeached and Mr. Atturney prosecuted him onely for Misprision yet had he much ado to keep that bloud-thirsty old cur Keeble from taking a leap at his throat and giving Judgement against him for High Treason So for want of Law Sir John had like to be hanged by Inspiration and Instinct of the Spirit He that will see more of the Independent Tenets Let him read Cl. Salmasius chapter 10. Defensionis Regiae Elenchus Motuum nuperorum in Anglia And the History of Independency first and second part These 6. I have selected that by comparing their Doctrine with their daily Practise the Reader may perceive what pious Christians good Patriots and upright Judges these engaged Independent Commissioners of the High Court of Justice are like to prove The builders of this New Common-wealth or Babel hold forth to the People Justice and Liberty as their Motto
as if those excellent gifts had never received their birth nor been so much as shewen to the People untill they murdered the King and stepped into his Throne But how righteous a Free-State or Common-wealth is this like to be And how well are the People therein likely to be instructed in the waies of Righteousnesse Justice and Charity and improved in good life and conversation by men so principled as aforesaid Let the world judge Especially when they observe That our New Statists have enacted in the said pretended Act. 2. January 1649. enjoyning the Engagement That whosoever will promise Truth and fidelity to them by subscribing the Engagement may deal falsely and fraudulently with all the world besides And break all Bonds Assurances and Contracts made with Non-engagers concerning their Estates and pay their Debts by pleading in Bar of all Actions That the complaint hath not taken the Engagement This is to rob the Egyptians of the good things of this world This is to break their Faith by the Motions of the Spirit This is to cheat and rob their Neighbours without breach of Charity or Justice and without imputation of Sin according to their aforesaid Tenets 3. I am come now to consider in the third place The way and Manner of their proceedings How consonant they are to the usuall proceedings of our known Lawes and Legall Courts of Judicature the best Inheritance of all Freemen whereof see Colonel Andrews 3. Answers in his Defence given into the said High Court herewith printed 1. The first course they commonly take is To break open mens Houses Studies Chests c. and seise their Papers and thereby hunt for Matter of Charge against them And then to examine them against themselves upon the said Papers contrary to Magna Charta which saith Nemo tenetur prodere seipsum And contrary to the Doctrine of Christianity which forbids a man to destroy his own life or be Felo de se as many men unwittingly do who answer to captious ensnaring questions When that tempting question was put to Christ Art thou the King of the Jews He returned no other Answer then Thou sayest it Why askest thou me Ask them that heard me That is Ask witnesses It was objected against the Oath ex Officio That it was High Injustice to examine a man against himself Because his Answers may only serve to condemn but not to acquit him 2. They usually break open houses with Souldiers at all houres of the night pulling men out of their beds with great violence and Terrour and so carry them away under pretence whereof Robberies and Murders have been committed Whereas by the Stat. 1. Ed. VI. chap. 12. and 5. and 6. Ed. VI. chap. 11. A man ought not to be accused of High Treason but to one of the Kings Counsel or to one of the Kings Justices of the Assize or to one of the Kings Justices of the Peace being of the Quorum or to 2. Justices of the Peace where the Offence is committed Cooks 3. Instit chap. High Treason pag. 26. 27 28. 3. They Commit men to Prison without any Accusation or Accusor made known and during pleasure and detain them in Prison many yeares together without any Legall proceedings or Charge against them sharing their Estates Offices and Revenues by Sequestrations and Suspensions of the Profits amongst themselves without any Crime objected And so leave them to starve rot and dye in nasty Gaoles for want of Maintenance under the cruelty of covetous and mercilesse Gaolers whom they bear out for mony in all their Extortions And being thus imprisoned and wounded with the displeasure of the State no man dares adventure upon any security to lend him money for fear of incurring the disfavour of the State and a Note of Malignancy Witness about 3000. Scottish Prisoners of War starved to death at Durham where they eate one another for hunger These were taken at the battle of Dunbar on 1650. 3. Sept. and many hundred Prisoners have been murdered in Gaoles with hunger cold nastiness and contagion after they have been robbed of their Estates and no Crime laid to their Charge this is become a daily practise whereby their Prisons are become private Slaughter-houses as well as their Courts Publick shambles of Injustice Prisoners in the Tower of London To which prison no Goale-delivery belongs were alwaies wont in the time of that supposed Tyrant King Charles I. and his Predecessors to have allowance from the King according to their severall degrees As 5 l. a weeke for an Esquire c. although the King deprived them of no part of their Estates untill conviction and this Maintenance was provided for them by the Lieutenant of the Tower and in respect of his care and paines in procuring it he had Fees and not otherwise though now they continue and encrease the said Fees the cause being taken away the effect ceaseth not But these men now in power after they have Committed men and robbed them of their Estates without cause shewen are so far from giving them any allowance to feed them that they shut them up close Prisoners in unwholsome Chambers denying them the Liberty of the Tower and the benefit of fresh Aire the Cameleons Diet for their health and resort of friends for their accommodation And that they may be sure to deprive them of all legall meanes by habeas corpus to recover their liberties They Commit men by illegall warrants not expressing any particular Offence or cause for their Commitment so that it is impossible for the keeper of the prison to obey the habeas corpus which is directed to him in these words Praecipimus tibi quod corpus A. B. unâ cum causa detentionis suae habeas coram nobis c. ad recipiendum ea quae curia nostra c. Whereupon the Gaoler or Sheriff is to bring his Prisoner to the Bar and tender his mittimus to the Court shewing the particular cause of his Imprisonment that the Court may judge whether it be Legall or no. Dolosus versatur in Generalibus In the Acts of the Apostles chap. 25. vers 26 27. Festus thought it unreasonable to send Paul a prisoner to Cesar to whom he had appealed and not withall to signifie the Crimes laid to his Charge See Cooks 2. Instit fol. 591. 4. Their usuall Course of practising and suborning witnesses tempting them with hopes and terrifying them with fears is so notorious That it is known the Counsell of State have hundreds of Spies and Intelligencers Affidavit-men and Knights of the Post swarming over all England as Lice and Frogs did in Egypt and have both Pensions and set rates for every Pole brought in So that now the whole Nation is proscribed and every mans head set to sale and made a staple commodity far beyond the definite Proscriptions of Silla and the Triumvirate aforesaid These Sons of Belial are sent forth to compasse the earth seeking whom they may devour These with the
1650. as I find it in Politicus speaking of his new purchased victory over the Scots Cromwel saith God puts it more and more into your hands to improve your power viz. your absolute Authority we pray own his People more and more that is the Army they are the Chariots and Horsmen of Israel of the Kingdom of the Saints disown your selves but own your Authority which you enjoy under the Protection of the Army your Lords Paramount and improve it to Curb the Proud and Insolent c. That is all men of different opinions and parties from them that will not engage to be true and owe Allegiance to the Kingdom of the Saints and resign their Laws Liberties and properties to their lusts and wills That I have not misconstrued the contents of Cromwels mystical letter will appear by a Discourse in the same Politicus Numb 17. from Thursday Sept. 26. to Octob. 3. 1650. Where according to his custom delivering forth State-Oracles to the people He tels them in plain English That after the Confusions of a Civil War there is a necessity of some settlement and it cannot be imagined the Controversie being determined by the Sword that the Conquerours should submit to the conquered though more in number than themselves Nor are they obliged to settle the Government again according to the former Laws and Constitutions but may erect such a form as they themselves conceive most convenient for their own preservation For after a Civil War the written Laws viz. established Laws of the Nation are of no force but onely those which are not written And a little after the King having by Right of war lost his share and interest in Authority and power being conquered by Right of war the whole must needs reside in that part of the People which prevailed over him There being no middle power to make any claim and so the whole Right of Kingly Authority in England being by Military Decision resolved into the prevailing Party what Government soever it pleaseth them to erect is as valid de Jure as if it had the consent of the whole Body of the People That he should affirm That after a Civil War the Established Laws cease is so gross a piece of ignorance that there is hardly any History extant but confutes it After our Barons war and the Civil War between York and Lancaster Our Established Laws flourished so did they after the Norman Conquest How many Civil Wars in France have left their Laws untouched That of the Holy Leage lasted 40 years Belgia keeps her Laws maugre her intestine Wars What is now become of the Parliaments declared Supreme Power and Soveraign Lord the People the Original and Fountain of all just power are they not all here proclamed Ear-bored slaves for ever But I had thought that an Army of Mercenary Saints raised payed and commissioned by the Parliament to defend the Religion Laws Liberties and Properties of the people and the Kings Crown and Dignity according to the Protestation and Covenant and the Parliaments Declarations would not have made such carnal and hypocritical use of their Victories gotten by Gods providence and the peoples money as to destroy our known Laws Liberties and Properties and claim by Conquest and impose their own lusts for Laws vpon us thereby rendring themselves Rebels against their God their King and Countrey Nor was it ever the State of the Quarrel between the King and Parliament whose slaves the people should be Or whether we should have one King Governing by the known established Laws or 40 Tyrants Governing by their own lusts and arbitrary votes against our written Laws Nor can the success make n Conquest just unless the cause of the war were originally just and rhe prosecution thereof justly managed As 1. To vindicate a Just Claim and Title 2. Ad res repetendas To recover Damages wrongfully sustained 3. To repel an injury done to your self or to your Ally in league with you The ultimate end of these wicked endeavors is To establish and cement with the blood of their adversaries the Kingdom of the Brambles or Saints already founded in blood by cutting of all such by their said New Acts of Treason and High Court of Justice as will not bow their Necks to their Iron yoke Which appears more clearly in an Additional Act giving farther power to the said High Court dated 27. Aug. 1650. To hear and determine all Misprisions or Concealments of Treasons mentioned or contained in any of the said Articles or Acts of Parliaments And to inflict such punishments and award such execution as by the Laws and Statutes have been or may be inflicted This Law if I miscal it not considering how they have multiplied Treasons by their said 3 New Statutes 14. May 17 July 1649. and 26. March 1650. Whereby bare words without Act are made High Treason contrary to those well approved Statutes 25 Edw. 3. chap. 2. 1 Hen. 4. chap. 10. 1 Edw. 6. chap. 12. 1 Mariae chap. 1. Cook 3 Instit saith That words may make an Heretick not a Traitor Chap. High Treason And the Scripture denounceth a woe to him That maketh a man an Offender for a word is one of the cruelst and most generally dangerous and entrapping that ever was made For hereby all relations Husband and Wife Parents and Children Brothers and Sisters Masters and Servants are all injoyned to be informers against and accusers of one another which is to take upon them the Devils office and be Accusatores Fratrum for light and vain words spoken only in passion or ignorantly or else they fall into the jaws of this all-devouring Court from whence no more then from hell there is no redemption for Misprision of Treason the Penalty whereof is loss of liberty and lands for life and of goods for ever Who can imagine lesse hereby but that our Statists intend to raise a yearly revenue by this Court by Forfeitures and Confiscations and to erect an Office of Master of the States Forfeitures like Empsons and Dudleys in Hen. VII time aforesaid And so continue this Court 10. Decemb. 1650. A New Act passed for establish ng an High Court Justice in N●●folk Suffolk Huntington Camb idge Lincoln and the Isl● of Ely c. And so by degrees this gangrene shall enlarge it self all the Kingdom over to weede out the Ancient Inhabitants Canaanites and Amalekites The said Additional Act 27. Aug. 1650. concludes That the said High Court shall not Examine Try or proceed against any person other then such as shall be first by name appoin●ed by the Parliament or Councel of State It should seem the Parliament and Councel of State supply the want of a Grand Inquest and their Appointment is in stead of a Bill of Enditement found and presented As Assuredly as the High Inquisition was erected in Spain by Ferdinando and Isabella to extirpate the Mahometan Moors And the said Councel of Blood in the Lowe Countreys by the Duke D' Alva
to weed out the Lutherans Calvinists and Anabaptists So is this High Court set up in England to root out the Royallists Presbyterians and Levellers and generally all that will not wholly concur with our Independents in Practice and Opinions As will manifestly appear when their work is done in Scotland which will soon be effected the more zealous Scots being now as ready to sell their Kingdom as they were formerly to sell their King I. Conclude therefore upon the Reasons aforesaid That because the Commissioners or Judges are not sworn to do Justice according to the Laws and are parties pre ingaged as well as their Masters and pay Masters that named them ignorant men and of vild base professions uncapable of places of Judicature Necessitous Persons and some of them Scandalous and the High Court it self hath neither Law President nor any just Authority for constituting thereof or the Judges therein And all proceedings before them are directly Contrary to Magna Charta the Statute 25. Edw. III. chap. 2. The Petition of Right and all other known and Established Laws and the continual Practice of our Nations and in many points contrary to the Law of God and the Dictates of Right Reason That these Commissioners are Incompetent Judges Their Court an Extrajudicial Conventicle tending to disinherit disfranchise and enslave all the Freemen of the Nation and all Proceedings before them are void and coram non Judice See Col. Andrews 3. Answers The said High Court of Iustice to be a meer bloody Theater of Murder and Oppression It being against Common Reason and all Laws divine and humane That any man should be Iudge in his own Cause Neminem posse in sua causa Iudicem esse Is the Rule in Law But this Parliament and Councel of State know they cannot establish and confirm their usurped Tyranny The Kingdom of the Saints eate up the People with Taxes and share publike Lands Offices and Mony amongst themselves enslave the Nation to their Lawless wills and pleasures but by cutting off the most able and active men of all opposite parties by some such expedient as this Arbitrary Lawless High Court is The old Legal way by Iuries being found by Iohn Lilbourns Trial to be neither sure enough nor speedy enough to do their work A Butcher-Rowe of Iudges being easier packed then a Jury who may be challenged So that it fareth with the People of England as with a Traveller fallen into the hands of Thieves First they take away his Purse And then to secure themselves they take away his life So they Robbe him by Providence And then Murder him by Necessity And to bring in their third insisting Principle they may alleage They did all this upon Honest intentions to enrich the Saints and rob the Egyptians With these 3. Principles they Iustifie all their Villanies Which is an Invention so meerly their own That the Devil must acknowledge They have propagated his Kingdom of Sinne and Death more by their impudent Iustifications then by their Turbulent Actions An Additional Postscript SInce the Conclusion of the Premises hath hapned the Trial of that worthy Knight Sir Iohn Stowell of the County of Sommerset Who having bin often before this Court hath so well defended himself and wiped off all Objections and made such good use of the Articles of the Rendition of Excester that in the Opinion of all men and in despite of their ensnaring Acts for New Treasons he cannot be adjudged guilty of any Treason Old or New which was the Sum and Complement of the Charge against him Wherefore the Court put off his Trial for a longer time to hunt for New Crimes and Witnesses against him At last came into the Court as a witness Iohn Ashe notwithstanding he is a Party many wayes engaged against him 1. Ashe is a Parliament-man in which capacity Sir Iohn Stowel bore Arms for the King against him 2. Ashe as a Parliament-man is one of the constitutors of this murderous Court and the Judges thereof and therefore their Creatures who expect rewards from them bear a more awful respect to his testimony then a witnes ought to have from Iudges 3. It is publickly known that Ashe hath begged of the House a great summe of mony out of the Composition for or Confiscation of Sir Iohns Estate And 4ly It is known to many That during Sir Iohns many years Imprisonment Ashe often laboured with Sir Iohn to sell unto him for 4000. l. a Parcel of Land which cost Sir Iohn above 10000 l. promising him to passe his Composition at an easie rate to procure his enlargement from Prison and send him home in peace and quiet if he granted his desire But although with all their malicious diligence they cannot finde him guilty of High Treason yet their Articles of Impeachment Charge him in general Tearms with Treason Murder Felony and other High Crimes and Misdemeanors and amasse together such a Sozites and an Accumulation of Offences as if one fail another shall hit right to make him punishable in one kinde or other such an hailshot charge cannot wholly misse either they will have life estate or both Contrary to the nature of all Enditements and Criminal Charges whatsoever which ought to be particular clear and certain Lamb. page 487. that the accused may know for what Crime he puts himself upon issue But this Court as High as it is not being Constituted a Court of Record the Prisoner and those that are concerned in him can have no Record to resort to either 1. To demand a Writ of Errour in Case of Erroneous Judgment 2. To ground a plea of Auterfois Acquite in case of New Question for the same fact 3ly Or to demand an enlargement upon Acquital Or 4ly To demand a writ of conspiracy against such as have combined to betray the life of an innocent man Whereby it follows That this prodigious Court hath power only to Condemn and Execute not to Acquit and give Enlargement Contrary to the Nature of all Courts of Judicature and of Justice it self it is therefore a meer Slaughter-house to Commit Free-State Murders in without nay against Law and Justice and not a Court of Judicature to condemne the Nocent and absolve the Innocent And the Iudges of this Court runne Parallel with their Father the Devill who is ever the Minister of Gods wrath and fury never of his Mercy The humble Answer of Coll. Eusebius Andrews Esquire to the Proceedings against him before the Honourable The high Court of Justice 1650. THe said Respondent with favour of this Honourable Court reserving praying to be allowed the benefit and liberty of making farther Answer if it shall be adjudged necessary offereth to this Honorable Court That by the Stat. or Charter stiled Magna Charta which is the Fundamental Law and ought to be the Standard of the Laws of England Confirmed above 30. times and yet unrepealed it is in the 29. Chapter thereof granted and enacted 1. That no
Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or Free Customs or be out-lawed or exiled or any other ways destroyed Nor we shall not pass upon him but by a lawful Iudgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land 2. We shall sell to no man nor deferr to any man Iustice or Right By the Stat. 42. Ed. III chap III. The Great Charter is commanded to be kept in all points and it is enacted That if any Stat. be made to the contrary That shall be holden for none By the Act 26 March 1650. entituled An Act for establishing An High Court of Iustice Power is given to this Court To Try Condemn and cause execution of death to be done upon the Freemen of England according as the Major number of any 12. of the Members thereof shall judge to appertain to Justice And therupon the Respondent doth humbly inferre and affirme that the Tenor of the said Act is diametrically opposite to and inconsistent with the said Great Charter And is therefore by the said recited Stat. 42. Ed. III. to be holden for none Secondly That it can with no more Reason Equity or Justice hold the reputation or value of a Law if the said Stat. had not bin then if contrary to the 2d Clause of the 29. chap of Magna Charta it had bin also enacted That Iustice and Right shall be deferred to all Freemen and sould to all that will buy it By the Petition of Right 3. Car. upon premising That contrary to the Great Charter Trials and Executions had bin had and done against the Subjects by Commissions Martial c. it was therby prayed and by Commission enacted That 1. No Commissions of the like nature might be thenceforth issued c. 2. To prevent least any of the Subjects should be put to death Contrary to the Laws and Franchises of the Land The Respondent hereupon Humbly observeth and affirmeth That this Court is though under a d●fferent stile in nature and in the Proceedings therby directed the same with a Commission Martial The Freemen thereby being to be tried for life and adjudged by the Opinion of the Major Number of the Commissioners sitting as in Courts of Commissioners Martiall was practised and was agreeable to their constitution And consequently against the Petition of Right in which he and all the Freemen of England if it be granted there be any such hath and have Right and Interest he humbly claimes his right accordingly By the Declarations of this Parliament Dec. and Jan. 17. 1641. The benefit of the Laws and the ordinary course of Justice are the Subjects Birthright By the Declaration 12. July 6. 1. Octob. 1642. The Prosecution of the Laws and due administration of Iustice are owned to be the justifying cause of the War and the end of the Parliaments affaires managed by their Swords and Counsels and Gods curse is by them imprecated in case they should ever decline those ends By the Declaration 17. Aprill 1646. Promise was made not to interrupt the Course of Justice in the ordinary Courts By the Ordinance or Votes of Non-addresses Jan. 1648. It is assured That though they lay aside the King yet they will govern by the Laws and not interrupt the course of Iustice in the ordinary Courts thereof * * Th y forget the 2. Declarations 9. Febr. 17. March 1648. And therfore this Respondent humbly averreth and affirmeth That the constitution of this Court is a breach of the publique Faith of the Parliament exhibited and pledged in those Declarations and Votes to the Freemen of England And upon the whole matter the Respondent saving as aforesaid doth affirme for Law and claimeth as is Right That 1. This Court in defect of the validity of the said Act by which it is constituted hath no power to proceed against him or to presse him to a further Answer 2. That by vertue of Magna Charta The Petition of Right and the before recited Declarations he ought not to be proceeded against in this Court but by an ordinary Court of Iustice and to be tried by his Peers And humbly prayeth That this his present Answer and Salvo may be accepted and registred Eusebius Andrewes The Second Answer of Col. Eusebius Andrews Esquire To the Honorable The High Court of Justice 1650. THe said Respondent with the Favour of this Honorable Court reserving and praying to be allowed the Benefit and Liberty of making further Answer if it shall be Necessary In all humblenesse for the present Answer offereth to this Honourable Court. That by the Letter and genuine sense of the Act entituled An Act for establishing an High Court of Justice The said Court is not qualified to try a Freeman of England such as the Respondent averreth himself to be for life in case of Treason For that 1. The said Court is not constituted a Court of Record neither hath Commission returnable into a Court of Record So that 1. The State cannot upon the Record and but upon Record cannot at all have that account of their Freemen which Kings were wont to have of their Subjects and States exact else where at the hands of their Ministers of Justice 2. The Freemen and those who are or may be concerned in him can have no Record to resort to by which to preserve the Rights due to him and them respectively viz. 1. A writ of Errour in case of erronious judgment 2. A plea of Auterfoies acquit in case of new question for the same fact 3. An Enlargement upon Acquitall 4. A Writ of Conspiracy not to be brought until Acquital against those who have practised to betray the life of the Respondent 1. The Writ of Errour is due by Presidents Paschae 39. Ed. III. John of Gaunts Case Rot. Parliament 4. Ed. III. Num. 13. Count de Arundells Case Rot. Parliament 49. Ed. III. Num. 23. Sr. John of Lees Case 2. Auterfois acquit appears by Wetherell and Darl●is Case 4. Rep. 43. EliZ. Vaux his Case 4. Rep. 33. Eliz. 3. The Enlargement appears by Stat. 14. Hen. IV. chap. 1. Diers Reports fol. 121. The year book of E●● IV. 10. fol. 19. 4. The writ of Conspiracy by The Poulters Case 9 Rep. fol. 55. This Court is to determine at a day without account of their proceedings and have power to try judge and cause Execution but not to acquit or give Enlargement So that the nocent are therby punishable the injured and betrayed not vindicable Which are defects incompatible with a Court of Iustice and inconsistent with Iustice it self and the honor of a Christian Nation and Common wealth 2. The Members of this Court are by the said Act directed to be sworn 1. Not in conspectu populi For the Freemans satisfaction 2. Not in words of Indifferency and obliging in equality 3. But in words of manifest partiality viz. You shall swear That you shall well and truly according to the best of your skill and
and I pray God that all the mischiefs of the remaining Achitophel's Shimei's and Rabshakeh's may fall upon their own heads but peace happiness and prosperity may waite on our Solomon that he may be blessed and his throne be established before the Lord for ever To Conclude As your Loyalty in the worst oftentimes hath been signal if in nothing else yet in sufferings so dispise not to read this tractate wherein I dare presume you will find something which before you knew not the work ' its true is short but will not I hope want substance inest enim sua gratia parvis and to remember these things certainly cannot be irksome Saepe recordari medicamine melius omni to see and escape danger causeth not only admiration but pleasure which that you may receive with content by the perusall hereof is desired I shall only add one word in particular first to the Nobility You are Right Honourable Princes in the Congregation of our Israel Men of renown exemplarily both in your names and honours Be as eminent in service for your Prince as obliged to him for favours that it may be recorded of you as it is of Davids Worthies These are the mighty men which David had who strengthened themselves with him in his Kingdom according to the word of the Lord. 2. To the Gentry You are they whom Jethro counselled Moses to provide out of all the people to assist him and be mediatours between Prince and People approve your selves according to that counsel to be able men such as fear God men of truth and hating covetousness so shall the Lord give a blessing as he hath promised 3. To the Clergy God hath made you as a Beacon upon an hill that you might forewarn Israel of her sins ye are the salt of the Earth while you preach to others be not your selves cast away but in season and out of season labour labour to declare Christ not of contention and strife but sowe the word to effect that fruit may grow thereby And lastly to the Commons who are tumidum instabile vulgus I shall only wish that they will labour for peace and according to their Royal Princes dictate in his late Declaration concerning Ecclesiasticall affairs acquiesce in his condescentions concerning the differences which have so much disquieted the Sate by which endeavour all good Subjects will by Gods blessing enjoy as great a measure of felicity as this Nation hath ever done which is the earnest prayer of No. 2. 1660. Your c. T. M. THE HISTORY OF Independency The Fourth and Last part THE former parts of this Book having traced the prevalent and strong Factions of Presbyterian and Independent The Proeme through the several devious pathes wherein they marched and with what devillish cunning they did each endeavour to be greatest by surprising or at least undermining the other until at last they unriveted the very foundations of Government by the execrable murther of their undoubtedly lawful Soveraign a crime so abhorred that it is even inexpiable not to be purged with sacrifice for ever I say these things having received so lively a delineation in the former parts shall need no new recitalls I shall then begin at the end thereof which was when the sacred Reliques of betrayed Majesty specie justitiae received a fatal stroke from blood-thirsty hands neither able to protect it self or be a shadow and Asylum for rejected Truth and unspotted Loyalty Thus in an unsetled and confused posture stood poor England when the Sceptre departed from Israel and the Royal Lyon was not only robbed of his prey but his Life which Barbarism once committed what did the Independent Faction now grown chief ever after stick at Having tasted Royal Blood the Blood of Nobles seemed but a small thing to which end and to heighten and perfect their begun villanies they erect another High Court of Justice Lords H. H. C. tryed for the Tryal of James Earl of Cambridge Henry Earl of Holland George Lord Goring Arthur Lord Capell and Sir John Owen Knight whereof that Horsleech of Hell John Bradshaw was also President who with sixty two more as honest men as himself by a Warrant under the hands of Luke Robinson Nicholas Love and J. Sarland summoned for that purpose did accordingly appear upon Munday the fifth day of February 1648. for the putting in Execution an Act of Parliament as they called it for the erecting of an High Court of Justice for the trying and adjudging the Earls and Lords aforesaid with whom according to their fore-settled resolution making short work for they would admit of no plea of the five they presently condemned three to lose their heads on a scaffold in the Pallace-yard at Westminster Lords condemned on Friday the ninth day of March which day being come about ten of the clock that Morning Lieutenant Collonel Beecher came with his Order to the several Prisoners at S. James's requiring them to come away from whence they were immediately hurried in Sedans with a strong guard to Sir Thomas Cottons house at Westminster where they continued about two hours spending the whole time in holy devotion and religious exercises After which the Earl of Cambridge preparing first for the Scaffold after mutual embraces and some short parting expressions to and for his fellow-sufferers he took his leave and went along with the Officers attended on by Dr. Sibbalds whom he had chosen for his Comforter in his sad condition Being arrived at the Scaffold and seeing several Regiments both of horse and foot drawn up in the place after he had waited a little while with a fruitless hope and expectation of receiving some comfortable news from the Earl of Denbigh who was his Brother having sent for his Servant who being returned and having delivered his Message to the Earl of Cambridge privately he said So It is done now Hamiltons speech at his death and turning to the front of the Scaffold he spake to this effect That he desired not to speak much but being by providence brought to that place he declared to the Sheriff that the matter he suffered for as being a Traytor to the kingdom of England he was not guilty of having done what he did by the command of the Parliament of his own Countrey whom he durst not disobey they being satisfyed with tbe justnesse of their procedure and himself by the commands by them laid upon him and acknowledging that he had many wayes deserved a worldly punishment yet he hoped through Christ to obtain remission of his sins That he had from his Infancy professed the same Religion established by Law in the land That whereas he had been aspersed for evil intents towards the King all his actions being hypocritically disguised to advance his own self-interest hereto he protested his innocency professing he had reason to love the King as he was his King and had been his Master with other words to the same effect That as to the