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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A58718 A letter from a friend in the North to his friend in the West, concerning the electing of Parliament-men T. S. 1689 (1689) Wing S167A; ESTC R219803 5,658 10

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were those who chiefly promoted them yet I doubt not but that many nay most of those very Men who scrupled those Oaths and yet refuse to take them will prove as quiet and as serviceable in their Places as any of those who at first set it on foot and I can assure you that those amongst us who in Parliament opposed the said Oaths and some other Things since they have been enacted have exhorted and perswaded all their Neighbours and Tenants near them to take the said Oaths and to live in all loyal and due Obedience to their Majesties And those who have taken them who are the greatest part both by their Purse and by exposing their Persons to War and Dangers are as ready and as willing to contribute to the Reduction of Ireland and pulling down the French as any Men whatsoever though they had wish'd the said Oaths had not been so rigorously impos'd but that those who were quiet and were likely so to remain might have been dealt more favourably with than I am apt to think was by some Men in that Act design'd Yea it remains a Question to this Day whether the King has got any more Friends by that Act than he had before c. However there are Men enough of the Church of England who freely took the same Oaths and will as faithfully keep them as any of those Persons you endeavour to recommend and so are not to be rejected upon any such Pretence As to the other Part of the Objection their being too great Bigots to the Court Party not to mention how impartial his Majesty hath been in distributing Places at Court or elsewhere and how willing many of those you recommend upon pretence of being Patriots are to engross all Places of Trust and Profit I cannot imagine why any Man should be thought unfit to serve his Country because he is true to his King as if the Court and the Countries Interest were like the Juglers Glass wherein the Angel and the Devil by turns went down as soon as the other got up Indeed where a Prince apparently designs the Subversion of our Government and the introducing of Arbitrary and Despotical Power as some of late have endeavour'd Those who are Favorites and active Courtiers under such Princes are but justly suspected as Tools to serve his Purpose and ought not to be entrusted with the Peoples Liberties but as the Case now stands the Court the Camp and the Country are but one and the same thing they are all embarqu'd in the same Cause they have all one common Enemy and are all equally engaged in one War and have all the same Interest Nor will you I dare say affirm that he that is true to the King is therefore unfit to be his Subjects Representative in that and you lately said no less 't is evident his Majesty designs the Good and Welfare of his People as much I had almost said more than his own and would make us Happy if we can but be content to be so What some peevish Men would have I cannot tell nay can they tell themselves Of so wrestless a Spirit are some of this Nation that I think what Q. Eliz. said of the Puritans in her Days is too true of them viz. Such are the restless Spirits of those Factious Men that no Quiet can be expected from them How lately have I heard some of that Party you recommend declare solemnly that had they but such and such Priviledges granted were but such and such Laws repeal'd and were they permitted to serve God in that way which seem'd best to their Consciences how happy they should think themselves how quiet how peaceable how content they should live under such a Government yet when all this and more is freely granted them they remain as unsatisfy'd as before and are still wayward and out of Humor though they know not at what Nor should you ask them could they readily say what would please them or at least how long What you add concerning the Carriage of some men in Places of Trust at the Landing of the late D. of M. is nothing to the purpose since what they then acted was out of Principles of honest and true English Loyalty and had the late King been as true to them as they were to him they would have had no Cause to repent of what they then so willingly acted However whether they that took Commission from a King in possession of the Crown and as his Subjects fought against those who oppos'd him and were by the Supream Authority of the Nation declar'd Rebels or they who in Compliance to the same King sate in open Courts with profess'd Papists and such as had no legal Commission and who by their several Addresses did give Thanks and promised to stand by him and assist him with their Lives and Fortunes even then when he was exercising the Dispensing Power and had declar'd no Person fit for any Office or Employment who would not uphold his unbounded Sovereignty thereby robbing his People of their Fundamental Right be the fitter Men to serve in Parliament I leave to you or any sober Protestant to determine And now perchance you expect I should say something in answer to the old Business you are so large upon the persecuting Spirit of the Church of England But I thought the last time you and I were together you had been fully satisfy'd in that Point and had a good Opinion of the Church of England and laid the Fault where it really was However I do not think this any reason to disswade me from choosing such Men at this time since I do not believe they will ever go about to trouble the Dissenters nor am I acquainted with any sober Church of England Man that is at all displeased with that Liberty which Authority hath been pleased to allow them unless it be for this reason that you and others are so forward to chuse them to serve in Parliament which in plain terms is not Persecution but the Preservation of our antient Government by Kings and Queens And I am sure no sober Church of England Man thinks much that Men are suffer'd to enjoy their Consciences and have distinct and separate Meetings till they can be convinced of the Truth of what is taught and practised in this Church but yet they are not willing that Men be permitted to undermine the Government pull down Episcopacy or deprive them of their antient Right of Sitting and Voting as Peers of the Realm and which will be the next Work of rendring the Monarch unsafe or at least so to fetter and shackle him as he shall be unable to help us or defend himself And assure your self 't is upon this account and not from any Spirit of Persecution or a Desire of depriving the Dissenters of any just and safe Liberty that we endeavour to choose such Men as are of the Church of England's Communion I had thought to have added some Reasons which induce us to make choice of such men as are no Enemies to the establish'd Religion but I see I have already exceeded the Bounds of an Epistle and so will only add three or four Queries which if you duly and impartially consider I hope you will change your Opinion and both in point of Prudence and Interest and as an Argument of that Trust and Confidence you justly repose in his Sacred Majesty you will perswade all in your Parts to make choice of such as are Friends or at least no profess'd Enemies to the Church of England who happily agreeing with his Majesty you and I may in a short time see the great Affairs of Peace and War brought to a happy Issue to the beating down our Foes the putting an end to the Expence and Charge we at present are necessarily at the removing all our Fears and Jealousies and settling the Kingdom in a firm and lasting Peace Q. 1. Whether the King is not ty'd by his Coronation Oath to maintain and uphold the Church of England as by Law establish'd Q. 2. Whether a Disagreement between the King and Parliament be not of dangerous Consequence advancing the French and Popish Interest and tending to the utter Ruine of the Protestant Religion Q. 3. Whether the choosing such Men for Members to serve in this Parliament as are Enemies to that Church which his Majesty Esteems the chiefest support of the Protestant Church and which he hath often and lately declared to stand by be not a probable yea an inevitable Way to beget such a fatal Disagreement Q. 4. Whether they that endeavour to choose such Men must not answer to God for all the Evils and Mischiefs which will be the unavoidable Consequence of such a Disagreement In return to your pious Wishes I beseech God to open our Eyes that we may at this Day discern the Things that belong to our Peace that through Passion or Prejudice they may no longer be hid from us which shall be the constant Prayer of Yours to command T. S. FINIS