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A56197 The re-publicans and others spurious good old cause, briefly and truly anatomized. To preserve our native country, kingdom, legal government, Church, parliaments, laws, liberties, privileges of Parliament, and Protestant religion from ruine, scandal, and perpetual infamy; to reform, reclaim all Jesuit-ridden seduced republicans, officers, soldiers, sectaries, heretofore, or now engaged in the prosecution of this misintituled good old cause, from any future pursute thereof, and engage them for ever to abominate it, as apparently tending to publike ruin, their own temporal and eternal condemnation, infamy, our religions reproach, in present and succeeding ages. By William Prynne Esq; a bencher of Lincolns Inne. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1659 (1659) Wing P4052; ESTC R234922 18,673 20

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all ages to come Yea after all these old Traitors exemplary condemnations forfeitures executions and hanging up of their Heads Quarters over both Houses of Parl. to deter all others from the like treasonable attempts That though this their late plot was for certain (a) The 2. part of the History of Independency my Epistle to a Seasonable legal historical Vindication My Speech in Parliament p. 107 the Appendix to it originally projected infused into them by Jesuites and Popish Agents yet they openly attributed to themselves both the projecting prosecution accomplishment of this transcendent Treason farr exceeding theirs and proclaimed justified it in sundry of their Remonstrances Ac●s Ordinances Papers as a most heroick Saint-like Christian Honorable and meritorious Act of Justice wherein God himself hath most gloriously appeered bearing witness to and owning it from Heaven by their unparalleld successes not only as a Good but the very best of causes tending to the great advancement of the Throne and kingdom of the Lord Iesus Ch●ist Some of them desiring that the everlasting memory of it may be inscribed on their publike Statues or Monuments For their eternal honour in all succeeding Generations Whereas the very foulest Devils and worst of damned Spirits in Hell would be both afraid ashamed to own or approve such an infernal black cause as this much less to justifie and extoll it in such a prodigious impudent manner as some now doe which exceedingly heightens and aggravates their Impudency Impenitency Guilt and Condemnation Certainly those must have (b) Jer. 3.3 wh●rish forheads brows of brass hearts of steel (c) 2 Tim. 4.2 and conseiences seared with an hot iron who dare to own extoll or espouse such a prodigy or Cause as this And may doe well to remember those two woes which will fall upon them for it Isa 5.18.20 Wo unto them that draw Iniquity with cords of vanity and sin as with a cartrope Wo unto them that call Evil yea the worst of all Evils Treasons Good and good will that put darkness for light and light for darkness that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter and now call the destruction of their lawfull Soveraign their Native Country kingdom Church the Parliaments of England and their privileges their Good Old cause and (d) Phil. 3.19 glory in these their shamefull Actions e Job 42 6. which should cause them rather to abhor themselves and repent in dust and ashes 7ly The old Gunpowder Traitors only plotted but never actually effected the blowing up of the King Parliament and House of Lords thorugh the providence of f 3 Jac. c. 1. Almighty God who in all ages hath shewed his power and mercy in the miraculous and gratious deliverance of his church and in the protection of Religious Kings and States But our new Salt-peter-men have with an high storng hand fully executed g See their Declaration of 17 March 1648. May 6. 1659. John Godwins Obstructors of Justice Cooks Bradshawes Speeches John Miltons Answer to Salmatius and sundry other printed Pamphlets accomplished whatever they designed and because they miscarried not in it like them but by Gods justice upon them us our King Lords Parliament for all our crying sins have prospered in this Foelix Seelus and brought their wicked devices to pass they glory in it as the Highest Act of Justice the Best of Causes the Greatest Mercy and Deliverance that ever befell the English Nation point blank against the (h) Psal 37 1.7 Ps 73.3 c. Ps 92.6 7. Ps 94.3 4 5. Dan. 11.33.36 Mat. 7.21 Acts 2.33 Pro. 29.19 20 21 22 23. Job 21.7 c. Scriptures and principles of Christian Religion whereby they have involved us in many intestine and forein Wars with our Protestant Brethren and Allies by Sea and Land which they have dyed red and drenchd with precious Christian bloud exhausted our publike treasures destroyed our trade impoverished oppressed quite eaten out the wealth and spirits of our Nation imposed endlesse Egyptian burdens on their backs an Iron Yoak of vassallage on their necks subverted all Liberty property unity amity real piety charity honesty justice divided us into sundry irreconcileable Sects schisms factions fractions perplexed us with sundry manifold fears dangers sodain changes alterations dissolutions of Government Parliaments supreme and subordinate Authorities yea reduced us into a desperate unsetled floating tottering condition without any probable means or hopes of the least setled establishment and brought that severe judgement which God threatned to and inflicted on the Rebellious ten tribes of Israel who revolted from and rebelled against their lawfull Soveraign and right heir to the House of David King Rehoboam (i) Hosea 8.4 c. 13.11 setting up Kings but not by God and making them Princes k Hosea 3.4 and he knew it not whom God took away in his wrath The children of Israel shall abide many days without a King and without a Prince c. l Hosea 10.2 3 4. c. He hath divided their heart now shall they be found faulty For now they shall say and I wish we all would consider it say so too We have no King no true Parliament neither because we feared not the Lord What then should a King or Parliament do to us to help us in our confusions and extremities They have spoken lying words swearing falsly in making a Covenant thus judgement springeth up as hemlock in the furrows of the field one Judgement of God one trouble war change confusion oppression upon the neck of another and many complicated Judgements together So that Israel shall be ashamed of his own counsel now her King is cut off as the fome upon the water and the High places wherein they seated themselves destroyed and all their New Modles of Goverments Parliaments destroyed by themselves they being now disuniting undermining one another more than ever never free from new Troubles plots fears jealousies perplexities since they undertook this New Good Old Romish Cause blow up King Lords Parliaments since they m 1 Kings 21 19. killed and also took possession and like those rebellious wicked H. sbandmen in the n Mat. 21.38.39 1. u. 19.27 c. 20.14 15 16. Gospel said among themselves when the son came to dem and the fruits of his Fathors vineyard from them and cast him out of the vineyard this is the Heir Come let us kill him and seise upon the Inheritance and it shall be ours which ended in the miserable destruction of those wicked men and taking away their usurped vineyard which was let out to other Husbandmen who would render the fruits thereof in due season All which considered our new Powder mens Guilt crime as far transcends the old Powder Traytors as actual Murder destruction of the King Parliament kingdom Laws Liberties and ill consequents thereof exceed only intentionall without effect Theirs unsetled nothing and did no mischief to the publike whereas their actual accomplishment of
their old plot hath brought actual destruction on them all and endlesse miseries distractions ever since to our Three whole Nations Churches and God only knows not man what sodain and final ruine it may bring upon them all And is it then a good old cause as they now proclaim it to all the world afresh May 7. 1659 8ly The Gunpowder Traytors engaged in their pretended Good old Cause never passed any solemn Iudgement and condemnation against it before or after its undertaking which those who espoused this new misnamed Good old cause have often done against it themselves and all such who appeared in it Not to press or insist upon the antient Resolutions Statutes of 4 E. 3. rot parl n. 1. 25 E. 3. c. 2.21 R. 2. c. 22. 1 H. 4. c. 10.31 H. 6. c 1. i E. 6. c. 12. 3 Jac. c. 1 2 4 5. positively declaring resolving the levying of war against the King or Parliament the plotting compassing the death or destruction of either of them by any open Acts to be High-Treason The Republican Members of the long Parliament and Army did together with the rest of the members in sundry Ordinances resolve declare particularly in the o Exact Coll. p. 576. Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament printed and published by their special Order August 8. 1642. to the end that no man might be misled through ignorance That all such persons who shall upon any pretence whatsoever assist the King in making war against the Parliament with Horse arms plate or money are Traytors to His Maiesty the Parliament and the Kingdom and shall be brought to condign punishment for so high an Offence Upon which ground alone the Lords and Commons by their Ordinance of Apr. 1.1643 sequestred the estates of all such persons Ecclesiastical or Temporal as Traytors and Notorious Delinquents who have raised or shall raise Armes against the Parliament p A Collection of Ordinances p. 13. 219 220. or have been are or shall be in actual Arms against the same or have contributed or shall contribute voluntarily any money plate horse arms ammunition or other ayde or assistance for or towards the maintenance of any forces raised against the Parliament and of all such as have joyned or shall joyn in any Oath or Act of Association against the Parliament or have imposed or shall impose any Tax or Assessment upon his Majesties subjects For or towards the maintenance of any forces against the Parliament Upon this only ground they afterwards condemned executed Mr. Tomkins and Mr. Chaloner in the year 1643. as Traitors for receiving a Commission from the late King dated h A Collection p. 199 200 201. March 16. An. 18 Caroli to raise forces in about London to force the Parliament and seise upon some of the principal Members of it though they never put it in actual execution nor offered the least force to the Parliament to either of the houses or their Members Since which sundry others were elsewhere condemned and executed as Traitors upon the same account of levying war against the Parliament Yea both i A Collection p. 905 906 907 908. Houses in their last Propositions to the King exempted some particular persons frō any pardon for their lives or estates perpetually banished and confiscated the estates of others and put all the rest to great Fines only for levying warr against the Parliament See the 2. part of the History of Independency which they declared to be High Treason Yea the Republican members sitting after the others seclusion and Army-Officers themselves in their late High courts of Justice impeached condemned beheaded our late King * Charls himself the Head of the Parliament the Marquess of Hamilton the Earl of Holland the Lord Capel others of the Lords House and divers Commoners and condemned executed Sir Charles Lucas with others in and by a bare Councel of War at Colchester confiscating most of their real and personal estates as Rebells Traytors and publike Enemies only for levying war and taking up Arms against both Houses of Parliament Since which the Army-Officers and those in late yea present power in and by their Instrument of Government 1653. and contradictory Humble Petition and Advice 1657. disabled all persons who had formerly taken up arms and levied any war against the Parliament at any time since the year 1641. and given no signal testimony of their good affection to the Parliament in taking up Arms for its defence to be disabled to be chosen Members of Parliament or to give their voice in the election of any such Members Yet neither the King himself nor any of all these beheaded execcuted excepted sequestred disabled Lords Citizens Souldiers Gentlemen ever actually assaulted the Parliament it self or either of the Houses of Parliament or any Member or Members thereof sitting in entring into or returning from the Houses nor secured secluded them by any Gards put upon the Houses only for speaking their Consciences or discharging their duties in the Parliament as they did but only waged war against the Parliament and Members thereof at a great distance by levying war against the forces raised by them neither did the King or his Forces in any of their Proclamations or Declarations ever affirm that they took up arms against the Parliament it self or its Members to dissolve secure seclude force or interrupt their proceeding k An Exact Coll. p. 349 350 351 to 357. 451 455 470 472 620 621. which they utterly disclaimed but only to defend the Kings person his just Royal authority and those adhering to him against the Parliament Army to preserve and maintain the just Power Rights privileges of Parliament and the loyal Members therein the Laws of the Land the Liberty and Property of the Subjects against the usurpations of a prevailing Faction who had as they affirmed raisod Forces to destroy the King Mo●●rchy it self the very Freedom Rights and Privileges of Parliament and the Liberty Property of the Subjects which they constantly asserted in all their printed Papers to the very end of the War If they then not withstanding all this were thus capitally and criminally proceeded against sentenced executed sequestred disabled by the Votes Resolutions Judgements Instrument Declarations of the Republicā Members Officers Soldiers themselves now crying up this Good old cause as Traytors and publike Enemies for levying war against the Parliament only thus mediately indirectly consequentially and secundarily because they waged war against the forces raised for the Parliaments defence and safeguard and if the unarmed London Apprentices and other disorderly persons coming unarmed to the Commons House dores and there in a tumultuous manner pressing some Members to pass a Petition and some Votes they desired without seising securing or secluding any one Member of either House though an unarmed force was presently so resented by the General and Officers of the Army that they immediaty declared it to be a l The Generals