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A46779 Severall papers lately vvritten and published by Iudge Ienkins, prisoner in the Tower viz. 1. His vindication. 2. The armies indempnity [sic]: with a declaration, shewing, how every subject ought to be tryed for treasons, felonies, and all other capitall crimes. 3. Lex terræ. 4. A cordiall for the good people of London. 5. A discourse touching the incoveniences of a long continued Parliament. 6. An apologie for the army.; Severall papers lately written and published by Judge Jenkins, prisoner in the Tower. Jenkins, David, 1582-1663. 1647 (1647) Wing J608; ESTC R217036 64,480 98

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doe upon the knees of our hearts ag●ze constant Faith Loyalty and Obedience to the King and his Royall progeny in this high Court of Parliament where all the body of the Realme is eyther in person or by representation We doe acknowledge that the true and sincere Religion of the Church is continued and established by the King And doe recognize as we are bound by the Law of God and Man the Realme of England and the Imperiall Crowne thereof doth belong to him by inherent byrth-right and lawfull and undoubted succession and submit our selves and our posterities for ever untill the last drop of our blood be spent to his rule and beseech the king to accept the same as the first fruits of our Loyalty and Faith to his Majesty and his posteritie for ever and for that this Act is not compleat nor perfect without his Majesties assent the same is humbly desired This proves that the Houses are not above the King that Kings have not their Titles to the Crowne by the two Houses but by inherent byrth-right and that there can bee no Statute without his expresse assent and destroyes the chymera of the Kings virtuall being in the Houses To promise obedience to the Pope or any other State Prince or Potentate 3 Jac. cap. 4 other then the King his Heires and Successors is Treason and therefore those persons who call the Houses the Estates offend this Lawe Such Bills as his Majesty is bound in Conscience and Justice to passe K. Charles Collection of Ordinances fo 727. 1 pars ib. fol. 728. are no Law without his assent To designe the ruine of the Kings person or of Monarchy is a monstrous and injurious charge Vbi Lex non distinguit ibid fol. 865. non est distinguendum all the aforesaid Acts and Lawes doe evidently prove the Militia to belong to the king that the king is not virtnally in the two Houses that the king is not considerable separately in relation to his politique capacity that the king is not a person trusted with a power but that it is his inherent byrth-right from God Nature and Lawe and that hee hath not his power from the people These Lawes have none of those distinctions of naturall and politique abstractum concretum power and person in Caesars time this Island had kings and ever since which is almost 17 hundred yeeres agoe No King can be named in any time made in this kingdom by the people A parliament never made king for they were kings before the Parliaments are summoned by the kings Writs which for Knights Citizens and Burgesses begins thus viz. Rex vic Wilis Saltem Quia Nos de avisamento assensu consilij nri pro quibus arduis urgentib negetiis nos statum defensionem Regninri Aug. Eccles Anglic. concernentibus quoddam Parliamentum urum apud B. teneri ordinavimus ibid cum Prelatis Magnatib proceribus dicti Regni uri Colloqui habere tractatum ipsi Vicecomiti precipimus firmiter injungendo qd facta Proclamatione in prox Comitatu tuo post receptionem ejusd Brevis dues Milites gladiis cinctos c. eligi facias ad faciendum consentiendum hiis quae tunc ibidem de Communi Concilio nro Angl faventi De● contigerit ordinari super Negotiis antedictis ita quod pro defectis potestatis hujusmodi seu propter improvidam electionem Milium Civium Burgensium pred dicta negotia ura infecta non remanerent The King is Principium caput finis Parliamenti the body makes not the head 4 pars Instit fol. 3 4. nor that which is posterior that which is prior concilium non est Preceptum conciliarij non sunt Praeceptores for Counsell to compell a consent hath not beene heard of to this time in any age and the house of Commons by the writt are not called ad concilium the Writts to the twelve Judges Kings Councell twelve Masters of the Chancery are concilium impensuri and so of the Peeres The writts for the Cominalty Ad faciendum consentiendum Which shewes what power the representative body hath they have not power to give an oath neither do they claime it The Oath of the Justices 18 of E. 3. among Statutes of that yeere The King at all times when there is no parliament in Parliament is assisted with the advice of the Judges of the Lawe 12 in number for England at least hath 2 Sergeants when fewest an Attorny and Solicitor twelve Masters of the Chancery his Councell of State consisting of some great Prelates and other great Personages versed in State affaires when they are fewest to the number of twelve All these persons are alwaies of great substance which is not preserved but by the keeping of the Lawe The Prelates versed in divine Lawe the other Grandees in affaires of State managery of Government The Judges Kings Sergeants Attorny Sollicitor and Masters of the Chancery versed in the Lawe and Customes of the Realme All sworn to serve the King and his people justly truly the King is also sworn to observe the Laws and the Judges have in their Oath a clause That they shall do common right to the Kings people according to the established Laws not withstanding any command of the King to the contrary under the Great Seale or otherwise The people are safe by the Lawes in force without any new The Law finding the Kings of this Realme assisted with so many great men of Conscience Honour and skill in the rule of Common-wealth knowledge of the Lawes and bound by the high and holy bond of an Oath upon the Evangelists settles among other powers upon the King a power to refuse any Bill agreed upon by both Houses and power to pardon all offences to passe any Graunts in his Minority there are many great persons living hold many a thousand pound a yeare by Patents from Edward the sixt passed when he was but ten yeares of age not to be bound to any Law to his prejudice whereby he doth not binde himselfe power of warre and peace coyning of Money making all Officers c. The Lawe for the reasons aforesaid hath approved these powers to be unquestionable in the King and all Kings have enjoyed them till 3. Nov. 1640. It will bee said notwithstanding all this fence about the Lawes the Lawes have beene violated and therefore the said powers must not hold the two Houses will remedy this The answere to this is evident There is no time past nor time present nor will there bee time to come so long as men mannage the Lawe but the Lawes will be broken more or lesse as appeares by the story of every age All the pretended violations of this time were remedied by Acts to which the King consented before his departure 10. Jan. 1641. being then driven away by Tumults And the Houses for a yeere and almost three Moneths From 3. Nov. 1640 to 10
said Duke then Protector to summon that Parliament Prynne ibid. fol. 19. ●●t the new count c●fe it Seale was made when the King was at G●xford in his own kingdome and not in the holy Land M● Prynne in his Book of the two Houses power to impose Taxes restraines Malignants against any Habeas Corpus 20. Ob. c. saith that the Parliament is above Magna Charta and fol. 15. ibid. The Parliament hath power over Magna Charta to repeale the same when there is Cause This Argument supposeth that they have the kings power Sol. which hath appeared formerly they have not But suppose they had Magna Charta containes many morall Lawes which by the Law of the Land a Parliament cannot alter 21 H. 7.2 D. Student 2. Dialogue For example it saith cap 18 Justice shall not be sold delayed no● denyed to any man but by this Argument the Parliament may make law to delay deny and to sell Justice which surely is a very ill position to maintaine What they would have doth now by the Propositions sent to N●●● castl● to his Majesty appeare whereby they would have him divest himselfe and settle in them all his kingly power by Sea and land and of themselves ●o have power without him today upon the people of this land what taxes they think meet to abolish the Common prayer booke to abolish Episcopacie and to introduce a Church Government not yet agreed but such as they shall agree on His Majes●y finding 〈◊〉 prevailing p●rty in both Houses to 〈…〉 and being chased away with Tumults from London leaves the Houses for these Reasons 〈◊〉 First because to 〈◊〉 the Government for Religion in against the king 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against their Oathes For every of them hath sworne in this Parliament That His M●j●sty is the 〈◊〉 supreme Governour in all Causes Ecclesiasticall and over all persons Thirdly This course is against Magna Charta the 1. chap. and the last Salvae suis Episcopis omnes libertates suae Confirmed by thirty two Acts of Parliament and in the two and fortieth of Edward the third in the first Chapter enacts If any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none and so it is for Judgements at Law in the 25. of Edward the 1. chap. 1 2. The Great Charter is declared to bee the Common Law of the Land Fourthly they endeavour to take away by their Propositions the Government of Bishops which is as ancient as Christianity in this Land and the Book of Common-Prayer setled by five Acts of Parliament and compiled by the Reformers and Martyrs and practised in the time of foure Princes Fifthly these Propositions taking away from His Majesty all his power by land and Sea rob him of that which all his Ancestours kings of this Realme have enjoyed That Enjoyment and Usage makes the Law and a Right by the same to His Majesty They are against their owne Protestation made this Parliament viz. to maintaine His Royall person Honour and Estate They are against their Covenant which doth say that they will not diminish His Just Power and Greatnesse For these Reasons His Majesty hath left them and as i● beleeved will refuse to agree to the said Propositions as by the Fundamentall Law of the land hee may having a Negative Voyce to any Bills proposed The result of all is upon the whole matter That the king thus leaving of the Houses and his Denyall to passe the said Propositions are so farre from making him a Tyrant or not in a condition to Governe at the present That thereby hee is rendred a Just Magnanimous and pious Prince so that by this it appeares clearly to whom the Miseries of these Times are to be imputed The remedy for all is an Act of Oblivion and a Generall pardon God save the KING DAVID JENKINS now Prisoner in the Tower 28 Aprilis 1647. THE CORDIALL OF JVDGE JENKINS For the good People of LONDON In Reply to a thing called AN Answer to the Poysonous Seditious Paper of Mr David Jenkins By H.P. Barrester of Lincolns-Inne Printed in the Yeare 1647. The Cordial of Judge Jenkings for the good People of London c. After the said Mr H.P. hath made a recitall of the Heads of my Vindication hee deduceth his Answer unto these eight Particulars which follow verbatum 1. It cannot be denyed but the Parliament sits by the Kings Writ ●ay if Statute Law be greater then the Kings Writ it cannot be denyed but the Parliament sits or ought to sit by something greater then the Kings Writ And if it be confessed that the Parliament sits by the Kings Writ but does not Act by the Kings Writ then it must follow that the Parliament is a void vaine Court and sits to no purpose nay it must also follow that the Parliament is of lesse authority and of lesse use then any other inferiour Court forasmuch as it is not in the Kings power to controule other Courts or to prevent them from sitting or Acting 2. This is a grosse non sequitur the Kings power is in himself Ergo it is not derived to nor does reside virtually in the Parliament For the light of the Sun remaines imbodied and unexhausted in the Globe of the Sun at the same time as it is diffused and displayed through all the body of the ●yre and who sees not that the King without emptying himselfe gives commissions daily of Oyer and Terminer to others which yet he himselfe can neither frustrate nor clude but for my part I conceive it is a great errour to inferre that the Parliament has onely the Kings power because it has the Kings power in it for it seemes to me that the Parliament does both sit and act by concurrent power devolved both from the King and Kingdom And this in some things is more obvious and apparent then in others For by what power does the Parliament grant Subsidies to the King if only by the power which the King gives then the King may take Subsidies without any grant from the Parliament and if it be so by a power which the people give to the Parliament Then it will follow the Parliament has a power given both by King and Kingdome 3. The sending Propositions to the King and desiring his concurrence is scarce worth an Answer for Subjects may humbly petition for that which is their strict right and property Nay it may sometimes beseeme a superiour to preferre suite to an inferiour for matters in themselves du● God himselfe has not utterly disdained to beseech his own miserable impious unworthy creatures besides t is not our Tenet that the King has no power because he has not all power nor that the King cannot at all promote our happinesse because hee has no just claime to procure our ruine 4. We affirm not that the Kings power is separated from his Person so as the two Spencers affirmed neither doe we frame conclusions out of that separation as the two
the Lawes of the Land and liberties of the Subject to take up Armes against their naturall Liege Lord and Soveraigne the King The People is the Body Mag. Char. c. 1. ultim All the act concerning the King Church and Churchmen 25. E. 1. c. 1. the King is their Head was the Body sufe when the Head was distressed and imprisoned For Lawes and Liberties have not the prevailing pa●tie in the two Houses destroyed above 100 Acte of Parliament and in 〈◊〉 Magun Charta Chorta de Forest● which are the common Lawes of the Land Doth Excize Fifth and Twentieth Parts Meale-money and many more burdens which this Land never heard of before maintaine the Liberties of the people You and that partie of the two Houses made the Army by severall Declar●tions before ingagement believe that you would preserve the Kings Honour and Greatnesse the Lawes and Liberties of the people The Army and the whole Kingdome ●ow 〈…〉 see your actions and have no reason longer to bel●eve your Oaths Vowes and Declarations and fince that partie in the two Houses refuse to performe any thing according to their said Oathes Vowes and Declarations The Army and the Kingdome may and ought both by your own principles and the Lawes of the Land pursue the end for which they were raysed And so your first Quaere is resolved whereby it is manifest that specious pretences to carry on ambitious and pernicious designes fix not upon the Army but upon you and the prevailing partie in both Houses The Solution of the second Quaere The Army 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. par Instit f. 12.39 Eli. 1. Iacob ibi 2. 3. E. 6. cap. 2. 11. H. 7. c. 1. to their eternall honour have freed the King from imprisonment a● Holmby It was High Treason to imprison His Ma●estie 〈◊〉 Tof●●● His Majestie from that imprisonment was to delive●● Him out of Traitero●s mands which was the Armies bounden dutie by the Law of God and the Land That partie refused to suffer His Majestie to have two of His Chaplaines for the exercise of His Conscience who had not taken the Covenant free aceesse wa● not permitted doth the Army use His Majestie so all men see that accesse to Him is free 〈…〉 and such Chaplaines as His Majestie desired are now attending on His Grace Who are the guiltie persons the Army who in this action of delivering the King act according to Law or the said partie who acted Treasonably against the Law Who doth observe the Protestation better they who imprison their King or they who free Him from prison That this Army was raysed by the Parliament is 〈◊〉 false The Army was raysed by the two Houses upon the specious pretences of the Kings Honour common sa●etie and the preservation of Lawes and Liberties which how made good hath beene shewed before and all the people of the Kingdome doe find by wofull experience The two Houses are no more a Parliament then a Body without a Head a man 14. H●● ● 36. H. 8. Dier 60. 4. par Instit p. 1.3.12.14 16. R. 2. c. 1. 5. Eliz. c. 2. 17. Carol. The act for the continuance of this Parliament The two Houses can make no Court without the King they are no Body Corporate without the King they all Head and Members make one Corporate Body and this is so cleare a truth that in this Parliament by the Act of 17 Caroli it is declared That the Parliament shall not be dissolved or prorogued but by act of Parliament but the two Houses may respectively adjourne themselves two Houses a Parliament are severall things Cunct a fidem vero faciunt all circumstances agree to prove this truth Before the Norman Conquest and sithence to this day the King is holden Principall Caput finis that is the beginning Head and chief end of the Parliament as appeareth by the Treatise of the manner of holding of Parliaments made before the Norman Conquest 4. par Instit pag. 12. by the Writ of Sumons of Parliament whereby the Treaty and Parler in Parliament is to be had with the King onely by the Common Lau● by the Statute-Law by the Oath of Supremacy 4. par Instit pag. 4.9 5. Eli. c. 1.2 taken at this and every Parliament it doth manifestly appeare that without the King there can be no colour of a Parliament How many Votes have they revoked in one Session yea and Bills Was there ever the like done Nay is not the constant course of Parliaments violated and made nothing thereby They are guarded by Armed-men 〈…〉 divide the publique money among themselves and that partie indeavours to bring in a Forreigne to invade this Land againe If they be no Parliament as clearely they are none without His Majestie they have no privileges but doe exercise an Arbitrary Tyrannicall and Treasonable power over the people By the Law of the Land 7. E. 4.20 8. E. 4.3 9. E. 4.27 4. H. 7.18 27. H. 8.23 when Treason or Felony is committed it is lawfull for every Subject who suspects the Offender to apprehend him and to secure him so that Justice may be done upon him according to the Law You say The disobedience of the Army is a sad publique president like to conjure up a spirit of universall disobedience I pray object not that conjuring up to the Army whereof you the prevailing partie in the Houses are guiltie who conjured up the spirit of universall disobedience against His Majestie your and our onely Supreme Governour But you and that partie in the two Houses and even then when the house of Commons were taking and did take the said Oath of Supremacy For the Covenant you mention it is an Oath against the Lawes of the Land against the Petition of Right devised in Scotland wherein the first Article is to maintaine the Reformed Religion in the Church of Scotland 2. pars Coll. of Ord. pag. 803. Petition of right 3. Car. 2. pars instit 719. And certainly there is no Subject of the English Nation doth know what the Scottish Religion is I believe the Army tooke not the Covenant No man by the Law can give an Oath in a new case without an Act of Parliament and therefore the imposers thereof are very blamable and guiltie of the highest Crime The Writer of these Quaeries seemes to professe the L●wes let him declare what Act of Parliament doth justifie the tendring giving or taking of the said Oath he knoweth there is none he knoweth that all the parts of it are destructive of the Lawes and Government to maintaine which the Law of nature the Law of the Land had obliged them Mag. Chart. cap. 1. Ultimo Articuli cleri and many other statutes 16. Ed. 4.10 The Oath of the Covenant makes the Houses Supreme Governours in causes Ecclesiasticall the Oath of Supremacy makes the King so and yet both taken by the same persons at the same time
What credit is to be given to persons who make nothing of Oathes and contradict themselves How d●e the Covenant and the Oath of Supremacy agree How doth their Protestation and the Covenant agree How doe their Declarations and Oathes agree The Lord be mercifull to this Land for these Oaths It is a sad thing to consider that so many gentlemen who professe the lawes and so many worthy men in both Houses should be so transported as they are knowing that the Lawes of the Land from time to time and in all times are contrary to all their actions and that yet they should amuse themselves and the people with the word of Parliament without the King and with the Covenant whereas they know they are no Parliament without His Majestie and that English men throughout the Kingdome should sweare a Covenant to preserve the reformed Religion of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government which they no more know than the Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government of Prester Iohn in Ethiopia if they consider it they cannot but discerne that this is a high desperate and impious madnesse Be wise in time without the King and the Lawes you will never have one houre of safety for your Persons Wives Children or Estates Be good to your selves and to your Posterities apply your selves to be capable of an Act of Oblivion and of a generall Pardon and to be able and willing to pay the Souldiery and to allow a reasonable liberty for m●●● consciences and God will blesse your endeavours and the people to whom you are now very hatefull will have you in better estimation The third Quarie is thus answered You resemble the Army to Iacke Cade and his Complians and you cite the Act of Parliament of 31. Hen. 6. cap. 1. and that it may appeare who acts the Part of Iacke Cade you and that Party in the two Houses or the Army I thinke it necessary to set downe the said Act in words at large as followeth First Whereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious and arrant false Traytor Iohn Cade calling and naming himself sometime Mortimer sometime Cap. of Kent which name fame acts and feats are to be removed out of the speech and mind of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsely and traiterously purposing and imagining the perpetuall destruction of the Kings said Person and finall subversion of this Realme taking upon him Royall power and gathering to him the Kings people in great numbers by false subtle imagined Language and seditiously making a stirring Rebellion and Insurrection under colour of justice for reformation of the Lawes of the said King robbing stealing and spoiling great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraigne Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by advise and consent of the Lords aforesaid and at the request of the said Commons and by authority aforesaid hath ordained and established that the said Iohn Cade shall be reputed had named and declared a false Traytour to our Soveraigne Lord the King and that all his tyranny acts feats and false opinions shall be voyded abated annulled destroyed put out of remembrance for ever and that all enditements and all things depending thereof had and made under the power of tyranny shall be like wise void annulled anated repealed and holden for none and that the bloud of 〈…〉 them be thereof defiled nor corrupted but by the authority of the said Parliament cleerely declared for even and that all enditements in times comming in like case under power of tyranny rebellion and stirring had shall be of no Record nor effect but void in Law and all the Petitions delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at VVestminster Noveb 6. in the 29. of his Raigne against his mind by him not agreed shall be taken and put in oblivion out of remembrance undone voyded annulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and conscience and against His Royall Estate and preeminence and also dishonourable and unreasonable Now wee are to examine who hath trod in the step● of Jack Cade you and the present prevailing party of the two Houses tooke upon them and doe take all the Royall Power in all things so did Jack Cade as appeares by the said Act the Army doe not so They who imprison the King purpose to destroy His Person our imprisoned Kings alwayes * Edward ● Henry 6. Richard 2. fared so Jack Cade did likewise so purpose but the Army doe not so The said party in the two Houses made a stirring under colour of Justice for Reformation of the Lawes so did Jack Cade The Army doe not so but desire that the Lawes should be observed Jack Cade levied Warre against the King the Army preserves Him Jack Cade dyed a Declared Traytor to his Soveraigne Lord the King this Army lives to have the glorious true Honour of being restorers of their King Simon Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury was murtheted by Jack Cade i● William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury was likewise murthered by that party of the two Houses 25 Ed. 3.4 28 Ed. 3.3 Petition of Right 3 Car. for that an Ordinance by Law cannot take away any mans life his life was taken away by an Ordinance of the two Houses the Army had no hand in it Many misled by Jack Cade perceiving his Trayterous purposes fell from him and as that was lawfull just and Honourable so it is for this Army to adhere to their naturall King and to indeavour to settle the Kingdome againe in the just Lawes and Liberties thereof London did then right worthily adhere to the King and the Lawes and not to Iack Cade and his specious pretences and it is hoped they will now so doe By this it appeares that the Gentlemans Discourse touching Iack Cade fastens altogether on his party and cleareth the Army To the IV. which is solved thus The Arreares of the Army howbeit it is the least thing they looke after yet being not paid them it is by the Law of the Land a sufficient cause to leave and desert that party in the Houses A person who serves in any kinde and is not paid his wages the desertion of that service is warrantable by the Lawes of the Land Pitz. N. B. 25. 9 Ed. ● 20 38 H. 6.27 23 Eliz. Dier 369. You say the Houses will reforme all things when the Army doth disband who will beleeve it Will any beleeve that the setling of the Presbytery will doe it Will any beleeve that his Majesty will passe the Propositions sent to Him to Newcastle Will any man beleeve that this Kingdome will ever bee quiet without His Majesty and the ancient and just Lawes Can the Members of the Army conceive any of them to be safe in any thing without a Pardon from His Majesty Have they not seene some of their Fellows hanged before their eyes for actions done as Souldiers Shall the Kingdome
parle with him The Army hath no manner of security by this Ordinance For their indemnification referres to that which is not in being untill the King be at liberty VII It is more then probable that their Judges before the last circuite had instructions to the effect or this Ordinance The Common Souldiers sccond Apology 6. Grievances of the Army published 15. May last Three grievances of Col. Riche's Regiment but they the Judges making conscience of their Oath laid aside the said Instructions and ought and may and it is beleeved will no more regard this Ordinance then the said instructions What was done in the last circuite the Army well knowes touching many of their fellow-souldiers VIII The Houses in their first Proposition to his Majesty for a safe and well-grounded peace sent to Neweastle to desire a pardon from his Majesty for themselves they who desire a pardon cannot grant a pardon common reason dictates this to every man and therefore that the Army should accept an Indemnity from them who seeke it for themselves or should conceive it of any manner of force is a fancy so that no man in the whole Army but may apprehend that it is vaine and a meere delusion IX His Majesty by his gracious Message of the 12. of May fast the 22 of the same hath offered an Act of Oblivion and a generall pardon to all his people this done the Law doth indemnifie the Army without all manner of scruple for any thing that hath beene done for it is an Act of Parliament when the King and two Houses concurre and bindes all men There is no safety by the Ordinance There is safety by an act of Parliament And will not reasonable men preferre that which is safe before that which is unsafe X. His Majesty by his said Letter agrees to pay the Arreares of the Army I am sure that it is a publique Debt and the chiefest and the first that by the two Houses should be paid and before any Divident or Gratuities bestowed among themselves for their Bloud Limbes and Lives have put and kept the both Houses at rest in the power they have So by this concurrence of his Majesty for your indemnity and for your Arreares The Army have not an Ordinance or the Publique Faith but the Law of the Land to make sure unto them their Indemnity for all Acts and for their Arreares and therewith also bring peace to the Land XI The Kingdome and people generally desire these things To such an Army just and reasonable things must not be denyed the things formerly proposed are most just and reasonable you may have them if you will if you will not you render this Kingdome miserable Mr Pyms Speech against the Earle of Strafford p. 16 Sixt consideration Printed by the command of the House of Commons wherein you will have your shares of miseries The head and the body are such an incorporation as cannot be dissolved without the destruction of both The Additional Ordinance of both houses passed the fifth of June instant for the fuller indemnity of the Army makes nothing at all to the matter 1. For that it extends not to Felony Homicide Burglary Robbery or any other capitall crime which is the maine businesse insisted upon and most concerneth the Souldiers security II. The both Houses in the said Additionall Ordinance say that it is expedient that all offences be pardoned and put in oblivion Pardon and Oblivion cannot bee understood to bee for a time but for ever and they themselves confesse that an Ordinance is not binding but pro tempore which with the most advantagious Interpretation can be but a reprieve or delay of the execution of the Law and therefore that cannot pardon or put in oblivion by their owne shewing But the Law of the Land is 27. H. 8. c. 24. and so it hath constantly been practised in all times that no persons of what estate soever have any power to pardon Treason Felony or any other offences but the King onely who hath the sole and whole power to pardon all such crimes whatsoever And in the same manner an Ordinance is of no Authority at all to take away the right of private mens actions by any evidence it can give In truth all the evidence that this Ordinance will give is that it records to posterity nothing but a lawlesse and distempered time For remedy therefore I say againe it is a certaine truth This Kingdome without an act of Oblivion and a generall Pardon and the payment of Souldiers arreares and a meet regard had to tender Consciences will unavoidably be ruined June 10. 1647. David Jenkins Prisoner in the Tower of London Sundry Acts of Parliament mentioned and cited in the Armies Indemnities set forth in words at large for the better satisfaction of such as desire to be rightly informed 25. Edw. 3. Chap. 2. A Declaration what offences shall be adjudged Treason VVHereas divers opinions have been before this time in what case Treason shall be said in what not The K. at the request of the Lords and of the Commons hath made a Declaration in the manner as hereafter followeth That is to say When a man doth compasse or imagine the death of our Lord the King or of our Lady the Queen or of their eldest Son and Heire or if a man do violate the Kings companion or the Kings eldest daughter unmarried or the wife of the Kings eldest sonne and heire or if a man do levie war against the Lord our King in his Realme or bee adherent to the Kings enemies in his Realm giving to them aid and comfort in the Realme or else-where and thereof be probably attainted of open deed by people of their condition And if a man counterfeit the Kings great or privie Scale or his Money and if a man bring false money into this Realm counterfeit to the money of England and the money called Lusburgh or other like to the said money of England c. 11. Hen. 7. Cap. 1. None that shall attend upon the King and doe him true service shall bee attainted or forfeit any thing THe King our Soveraign Lord calling to his remembrance the duty of allegiance of his Subjects of this his Realm and that they by reason of the same are bound to serve their Prince and Soveraign Lord for the time being in his wars for the defence of Him and the Land against every rebellion power and might raised reared against him and with him to enter and abide in service in battell if case so require and that for the same service what fortune ever fall by chance in the same battell against the minde and will of the Prince as in this Land sometime passed hath been seen that it is not reasonable but against all lawes reason and good conscience that the said Subjects going with their Soveraigne Lord in wars attending upon him in his person or being in other places by his commandement within this
Land or without any thing should lose or forfeit for doing their duty or service of Allegiance It be therefore ordained enacted and established by the King our Soveraigne Lord by the advice and assent of the Lords spiritual and temporall and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the same that from henceforth no manner of person or persons whatsoever he or they be that attend upo● the King and Soveraigne Lord of this Land for the time being in his person and doe him true and faithfull service of allegiance in the same or be in other places by his commandement in his wars within this Land or without that for the said deed and true duty of allegiance he or they be in no wise convict or attaint of high treason nor of other offences for that cause by act of Parliament or otherwise by any processe of Law whereby hee or any of them shall lose or forfeit life lands tenements rents possessions hereditaments goods chattels or any other things but to be for that deed and service utterly discharged of any vexation trouble or losse And if any act or acts or other processe of the Law hereafter thereupon for the same happen to be made contrary to this Ordinance that then that act or acts or other processe of the Law whatsoever they shall be stand and be utterly void Provided alwaies that no person or persons shall take any benefit or advantage by this Act which shall hereafter decline from his or their said allegiance Cap. 24. In the Statute of 27. H. 8. It is enacted that no person or persons of what estate or degree soever they be of shall have any power or authority to pardon or remit any treason murders man-slaughters or any kinde of Fellonies c. but that the King shall have the sole and whole power and authority thereof united and knit to the Imperiall Crowne as of right it appertaineth c. And in the same it is enacted further that none shall have power of what estate degree or condition soever they be to make Justices of Eyre Justices of Assize Justices of the Peace c. but all such officers and Ministers shall be made by Letters Patents under the Kings great Seale in the name and by the authority of the King and his Heires and Successors Kings of this Realme In the first yeare of Queen Mary and the first Chapter It is enacted by the Queen with the consent of the Lords and Commons That no deed or offence by Act of Parliament made treason shall be taken deemed or adjudged to be high treason but only such as be declared and expressed to be treason by the Act of Parliament made 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. before mentioned A Declaration of M. David Ienkins now Prisoner in the Tower of London one of His Majesties Iudges in Wales for tryalls of Treasons Murthers Felonies and all other capitall crimes that they ought only to be by Iuries and not otherwise unlesse it be by Act of Parliament THe common Law of this Land is That every freeman is subject to a tryall by bill of Attainder in Parliament wherein His Majesty and both Houses must necessarily concurre for that tryall and attainder is an Act of Parliament to which all men are subject to a Mag. Chart. cap. 29. 2 part instit fol. 28 29.46.48 49 50. composed by Sir Ed. Cooke and published by the Order of the House of Commons in May 1641. No man shall otherwise be destroyed c but by the lawfull judgement of his Peers or by the common Law of the Land Peers to Noblemen are Noblemen Peers to the Commons are Knights Gentlemen c. Judgement of Peers refers to Peers those words The Law of the Land refers to the Commons the Law of the Land is for the tryall of the life of a free Commoner by Indictment Presentment of good and lawfull men where the deed is done or by Writ originall of the common Law all this is declared in Magna Charta c. 29. and by 25. Ed. 3. c. 4. 28. Ed. 3. c. 3. 37. Ed. 3. c. 8. 42. Ed. 3. c. 3. If the Lords will try any man by an Ordinance they destroy that excellent Act of Magna Charta and all those other good Lawes Sir Simon de Bereford a free Commoner of England was condemned by the Lords to death by an Ordinance which after the Lords better considering the matter that they might be acquitted of that sentence became suters to the King that what they had so done in future time might not be drawn into president because that which they had so done was against the Law b Rot. Par. 1. roule 4. E. 3. Num. 2. part inst page 50. with this 〈◊〉 grees Sir Jo●n Lees case Rot. Par. 42. E. 3. Num. 22.23 2. inst fol. 50. with this agrees the practice and usage of all times in this Land all the free Commoners of this Kingdome have alwayes been tryed and acquitted or condemned in capitall causes by Jurers of their equalls An Ordinance bindeth not in Law at all c See 4. part inst fol. 23.48.292 2. part inst f. 47 48. and but pro tempore as the two Houses now affirme a mans life cannot be tryed by that which is not binding and to continue for all times for a life lost cannot be restored By an Act of Parliament of the 1. and 2. of Philip and Mary chap. 10. It is enacted that a●● tryalls for Treason hereafter to be had shall be according to the course of the common-law If the crime charged upon any be treason against the two Houses against the Parliament it cannot be for there is no Parliament without the King that is no Treason in Law as appeares by 25. Ed. 3. chap. 2. 11. R. 2. chap. 3. 1 Hen. 4. cha 10. 1. and 2. Philip and Mary chap. 10. 3 part of the institutes Page 23. An Act of Parliament to make any a Judge where he is party is a void act d Dr ●o●ams case 8. part of Cooks reports for none can be a Judge and party in the same cause and therefore the House of Peers being a party touching the crime charged upon any man whom they would try by an Ordinance for Treason against both Houses cannot be a Judge By the Petition of Right e Petition of Right 3. Car. Regis if any man deserve death he ought to suffer the same according to the Lawes of the Land established and not otherwise but an Ordinance of the Lords is no established law The Protestation the Vow and Covenant the solemne League and Covenant the Declarations of both Houses had made and published sithence this unnaturall Warre are amongst other things sworne and set downe to be for the maintenance of the Lawes the people of this land ought to enjoy the benefit of their Birth-right the Law of the Land and the making good of the said Protestation Vow and Covenant League and Covenant and
and the subversion of the Law and Land laying taxes on the people never heard of before in this Land devised new oathes to oppose forces ray fed by the King not to adhaere to him but to them in this Warre which they call the Negative Oath and the Vow and Covenant By severall wayes never used in this Kingdome they have raised monies to foment this warre and especially to inrich some among them namely first Excise secondly Contributions thirdly Sequestrations fourthly Fift parts fiftly Twentieth Parts fixtly Meale-money seventhly Sale of Plundered goods ●ightly Loanes ninthly Benevolences tenthly Collections upon their Fast-dayes eleventhly new Inpositions upon Merchandizes twelvethly Guards maintained upon the charge of private men thirteenthly Fifty Subsidies at one time fourteenthly Compositions with such as they call Delinquents fifteenthly Sale of Bishops lands c. From the Kings party meanes of subsistance are taken 1 R. 3. cap. 3. ●ract li. 3. c. 8. Stanford 192. Sir Ger. Fleetwoods Case 8. pars Cook 7. H. 4 last lease before any indictment their Lands seized their goods taken the Law allows a Traytor or Fellon attainted Necessaria sibi familie sua in vict●● v●stitu where is the Covenant where is the Petition of light where is the liberty of the subject First We have ayded the King in this warre contrary to the negative oath and other votes Our warrant is the twenty fifth of Edward the third the second Chapter and the said resolutions of all the Judges Secondly Wee have maintained the Commission of Array by the Kings Command contrary to their votes We are warranted by the statute of the fifth of Henry the fourth and the judgement of Sir Edward Cooke the Oracle of the Law as they call him Thirdly We maintained Arch-Bishops and Bishops whom they would suppresse Our warrant is Magna Charta and many statutes more Fourthly we have maintained the booke of Common prayer they suppresse it Our warrant is five acts of Parliament in Edward the sixt and Queene Elizabeths time 5. Pesch● 35. Elizabeth inter placita Coronae in Banco Regis New booke of Entries sol 252. Penry for publishing two scandalous Libels against the Church government was indicted arraigned attainted and executed at Tyburne Fifthly We maintained the Militia of the Kingdome to belong to the King they the contrary Our warrant is the statute of the seventh of Edward the first and many statures sithence the practise of all times and the custome of the Realm Sixthly We maintained the counterfeiting of the great Seale to be high Treason and so of the usurpation of the Kings Forts Ports Shipping Castles and his Revenue and the Coyning of money against them We have our warrant by the said statute of the twenty fifth of Edward the third Chapter the second and divers others since and the practise of all times Seventhly We maintaine that the King is the only supreme govermour in all causes They that his Majesly is to be governed by them Our warrant is the statures of the first of Q. Eliza. Chapter the first and the fifth of Q. Elizabeth the first Eighthly 9. Ed. 4. sol 4. Wee maintaine that the King is King by an inhaerent birth-right by nature by Gods law and by the lay● of the Land They say his Kingly right is an 〈…〉 Our warrant is the statute of the first of King Ja●●● Chapter the first And the resolution of all the Judges of England in Calvins case Ninthly We maintain that the politick capacity i● not to be severed from the naturall They hold the contrary Our warrant is two flatures viz. ●xilium Hugonis in Edward the seconds time and the first of Edward the third Chapter the second and their Oracle who hath published it to posterity that it is damnable detestable and execrable Treason Calvins case pars 7. fol. 11. Tenthly we maintain that who aids the King at home or abroad ought not to be molested or questioned for the same they hold and practise the contrary our warrant is the statute of the eleventh of Henry the seventh Chapter the first Eleventhly We maintain that the King hath power to disassent to any Bill agreed by the two Houses which they deny Our warrant is the Statute of the second of Henry the fift and the practise of all times the first of King Charles Chapter the seventh the first of King James Chapter the first Twelfthly We maintain that Parliaments ought to be holden in a grave and peaceable manner without ●●ults They allowed multitudes of the meanest sort of people to come to Westminster to cry for Coll. of Ord. fol. 31. Justice when they could not have their will and keep guards of armed men to wait upon them Our warrant is the Statute of the seventh of Edward the second and their Oracle Thirteenthly We maintain that there is no state within this Kingdome but the Kings Majesty and that to adhere to any other State within this Kingdome is high treason our warrant is the Statute of the third of King James Chapter the fourth and the ●●enty third of Queen Elizabeth Chapter the first Fourteenthly We maintain that to levy a warre to remove Councellours to alter religion or any Law established is high Treason They hold the contrary One warrant is the resolutions of all the judges of England in Queen Elisabeths time and their oracle agrees with the same Fifteenthly We maintain that no man should be imprisoned put out of his Lands but by due course of Law and that no man ought to be adjudged to death but by the Law established the customer of the Realm or by act of Parliament They practise the contrary in London Bristol Kent c. Our warrant is Magna Charta Chapter the twenty ninth the Petition of right the third of King Charles and divers Lawes there mentioned We of the Kings party did and do detest Monopolies and ship money and all the grievances of the people as much as any men living we do well know that our estates lives and fortunes are preserved by the Lawes and that the King is bound by his lawes we love Parliaments if the Kings Judges Counsell or Ministers have done amisse they had from the third of November 1640 to the tenth of Ianuary 1641 time to punish them being all left to Justice where is the Kings fault The law faith the King can do no wrong 11 pars Cooks Reports Magdalen Colledge Cale that he is medicus Regni pater patriae sponsus regni qui per annlum is espoused to his Realm at his Coronation The King is Gods Lieutenant and is not able to do an unjust thing these are the words of the Law One great matter is pretended that the people are not sure to enjoy the acts passed this Parliament A succeeding Parliament may repeal them The objection is very weak a Parliament succeeding to that may repeal that repealing Parliament That feare is endlesse and remedilesse for it is the
Impossibility The death of His Majesty whose life God prolong dissolves it necessarily For the Writ of summons is Carolus Rex in hoc individuo and Carolus Rex is in this particular Habiturus colloquium tractatum cum Prelatis proceribus c. 2 H. 5. Cooke Title Parliam 3. pars King Charles being to have Conference and Treaty with his Prelates and Peeres Carolus Rex cannot have Colloquium tractatum Conference and Treaty when he is deceased and therefore it is impossible for any Parliament to continue as long as they please as for a Parliament to make a dead man alive For Repugnancie That which is but for a time cannot be affirmed to have continuance for ever it is repugnant The end of the Act of 17. Caroli Regis which is to continue at pleasure is in the said Act expressed to be to raise credit for money for these three purposes First for reliefe of his Majesties Army and people in the North. Secondly for preventing the iminent danger of the Kingdome Thirdly for supply of other His Majesties present and urgent occasions These ends are ended the reliefe of that Army the iminent danger supposed was sixe yeares agoe the supply of His Majestie hath beene a supply against him take away the end the meanes thereto are to no purpose take away the cause the effect ceaseth and therefore the three ends of this Act being determined it agreeth with Law and Reason the Act should end Sir Anthony Mayns case 5. pars 1. H. 4.6 Littl. cap. Villen the Law rejects things unprofitable and uselesse A perpetuall Parliament besides that it incites men to selfe-ends destructive of the publique of which the whole Kingdome hath had sufficient experience wil be a constant charge to the Kingdome for that every County and Borough who send Members to the Parliament are by the Law to pay wages to their Parliament men which to many Counties will amount above some Subsidies Yearely There are many poore Borough-Townes in each County of this Kingdome who being to maintaine two Burgesses in Parliament will be quickly begger'd if the Parliament have no end for all which reasons it is cleare that such long continuance of Parliaments will instead of a remedy which is and ought to be the proper and true end of Parliaments become an insufferable grievance and oppression to all the People of the Land The Writ of Summons this Parliament is the basis and foundation of the Parliament If the Foundation be destroyed the Parliament falls The Assembly of Parliament if for three purposes Rex est habiturus colloquium et tractatum cum praelatis magnatibus et proceribus super arduis negotijs concernentibus 1. Nos 2 Defensionem regni nostri 3. Defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae This Parliament hath overthrowne this Foundation in all 3 parts 1. Nos the King they have chased him away and imprisoned him they have voted no prelats and a number of other Lords about 40. in the City must not come to the House and about 40 more are out of Towne the colloquium et tractatus are made void therby For the King cannot consult and treat there with men removed from thence 2. Defensionem regni nostri that is gone they have made it their Kingdome not His for they have usurped all His Soveraigntie 3. Defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae that is gone that Ecclesia Anglicana trust be understood necessarily that Church that at the test of the Writ was Ecclesia Anglicana they have destroyed that too So now these men would be called a Parliament having abated quashed and made nothing of the Writ whereby they were Summoned and Assembled If the Writ be made void all the processe is void also that House must needs fall where the Foundation is overthrowne Sublato fundamento opus cadit the Foundation being taken away the worke falls is both a maxime in Law and Reason For some yeares past there is no crime from Treason to Trespasse but they are guilty of all Treason Felonies Robberies trespasses are contra pacem coronam et dignitatem Regis against the Peace Crowne and Dignitie of the King as appeares by all Indictments in all Ages Pax Regis the Kings Peace Corona Regis the Kings Crowne Dignitas Regis the Kings Dignitie are all trod under foot and made nothing Pax Regis the Peace of the King is become a Warre against the King His Dignitie put into prison and the Crowne put upon their owne heads All the Judges of England have resolved Nevills ease 7. part 34. 2. Jacobi that Noblemen committing Treason have forfeited their Office and Dignitie their Officei●s to councell the King in time of Peace to defend him in time of Warre and therefore those men against the duty and end of their Dignitie taking not onely Councell but Armes also to destroy Him and being thereof attaint by due course of Law by a racite condition annexed to the estate of their Dignitie have forfeited the same they are the words of the Law and therefore they have made themselves incapable to be Members of the upper House The Oppressions of the People Briberies Extortions Monopolies ought to be inquired after by the House of Commons and complained of to the King and Lords what have they done The House of Commons cannot by the Law commit any man to prison who is not of the said House for Treason Murder or Felony or any thing but for the disturbance of the publique Peace by the priviledge of the whole body They have no power by the Writ which the King issueth to elect and returne Members of that House so to doe For the Writ for them is onely ad faciendum et consentiendum to those things whereof His Majestie shall consult and treat with his Prelates and Nobles et de communi consilio Regni shall be there ordained as appeares by the Writ Here is no separate power given over the Kings people to them but onely ad faciendum et consentiendum 4 Pars. institut 23.24.25 and in all times this hath beene expounded and restrained to that which concerned their owne Members in Relation to the publique Service as he is a Member of the corporate body of the Parliament wherof the King is the Head But that the House of Commons have committed any man for Treason Murder or Felony or for any offence that had no relation to a Member of the House of Commons as it is against Law and Reason so no instance can be given till this Parliament 19 H. 6.43 22. E. 4.22 5 H. 4. cap. 8. 3 H. 6.46 All Questions and trials where witnesse are examined the examination is upon oath by the Law by all our Bookes Statutes every dayes practice Examination without an Oath is but a loose discourse therefore the House of Commons not claiming power to give an Oath have no power to examine any man No man shall bee imprisoned by the King or His Councell unlesse it be
have no account of the many Millions received of the Publike Money Will the Members of the Houses accuse themselves Shall private and publike Debts bee never paid Shall the Kingdome lye ever under burthens of Oppression and Tyranny There is no visible way to remedy all these enormities but the power of the Army To the V. which is solved thus The Kingdome hath better assurance of Reformation from the Army then from the Houses for that in their Military way they have bin just faithfull honorable they have kept their words That party of the Houses have bin constant to nothing but in dividing the publike Treasure among themselves and in laying burdens upon the people and in breaking all the Oathes Vowes and Promises they ever made 2 3 Ed. 6. cap. 2. 11 H 7. cap. 1. Calvins case 7. pars Cook fol. 11. As the Army hath power so now adhering to the King all the Lawes of God Nature and Man are for them their Armes are just and blessed and the King is bound in Justice to reward his Deliverers with Honour Profit and meet Liberty of Conscience To the VI. Quare All the sixth Quaere containes Calumnies cast upon the Armie the new elections are against all the Lawes mentioned in the Margin 11 H. 4. c. 1. 1 H. 5. c. 1. 8 H. 6. c. 7. 23 H. 6. c. 15. and are against the ejection of the old Members and by this it may be judged what a House of Commons we have By the said Lawes it appeares that if any undue returne be made the person returned is to continue a Member the Sherifes punishment is two hundred pounds one to the King and the other to the partie that is duly elected imprisonment for a yeare without Bayle or Mainprise and that person who is unduly returned shall serve at his owne charge and have no benefit at the end of the Parliament by the Writ de solutione feodorum Militum Civium Burgensium Parliament And the tryall of the falsitie of the returne is to be before the Justices of Assises in the proper Countie or by Action of Debt in any Court of Record This condemnes the Committee for undue elections which hath been practised but of late times for besides these Lawes it is a Maxime of the Common Law 3 Ed. 4.20 5 Ed. 4.42 an Averment is not receivable against the returne of the Sherife for his returne is upon Oath which Oath is to be credited in that suit wherein the returne is made The said Statutes condemne elections of such men which were not resiant and dwelt in the Countie or Boroughs for which they were returned and any abusive practise of late times to the contrary is against the Law and ought not to be allowed To the VII Quaere The Quaerist saith That the Votes of the Independents in the Houses were arbitrarie exorbitant and irregular and that they disposed and fingred more of the common Treasure then others That whole Quaere I believe is false and slanderous 37 E. 5. c. 17. and the Author ought to make it good or else to undergoe the Law of Talton● which is to suffer such punishment failing of his proofe as the accured should in case of proofe made To the VIII Quaere This Quaere is all minatorie and threatning and the contrarie o● every part is true by the deliverance of the King and Kingdome from the bondage of that partie in the two Houses by the Army their renowne will be everlasting they secure themselves they content and please the Kingdome Citie and Countrey as appeares by their confluence to see his Majestie and the Armie and their acclamations for his Majesties safetie and restitution all which doth evidence to every one of the Armie how acceptable the intentions of the Armie are to the people of this Land who have been so long inthralled Sir Thomas Fairfax let your Worthinesse remember your extraction and your Ladies by the grace and favour of the Prince to be in the ranke of Nobilitie remember what honour and glory the present Age and all posteritie will justly give to the restorer of the King to his Throne of the Lawes to their strength and of the afflicted people of this Land to peace let the Colonels and Commanders under you and likewise your Souldierie rest assured that they shall not only share in the renowne of this action but also shall have such remuneration as their hautie courage and so high a vertue doth deserve This his Majestie can and will doe the Houses neither will nor can and God blesse you all and prosper you I conclude all as I have alwayes done Without an Act of Oblivion a generall Pardon the Arreares of the Souldierie payd and a regard to Libertie of Conscience this Kingdome will certainly be ruined FINIS