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A56162 The first and second part of A seasonable, legal, and historicall vindication and chronological collection of the good old fundamentall liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen ... wherein is irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records, proofs, presidents, that we have such fundamentall liberties, franchises, rights, laws ... : collected, recommended to the whole English nation, as the best legacy he can leave them / by William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire.; Seasonable, legal, and historical vindication of the good old fundamental liberties, franchises, rights, properties, laws, government of all English freemen. Part 1-2 Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1655 (1655) Wing P3954; ESTC R19429 161,045 206

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exported or imported except the same be due by Grant IN PARLIAMENT shall incur the penalties and forfeitures OF A PREMVNIRE to the which the King gave his Royal Assent And to prevent any future prescription thereunto by the King they discontinued it for some time and then granted it specially from Month to Month or some short space with sundry limitations and the penalty of A PREMVNIRE if otherwise received by several New Acts of Parliament to which the King gave his assent These Acts the King himself in his Proclamation of the sixteenth of December in the eighteenth year of his reign stiles THE FENCES OF THE SVBJECTS PROPERTY received from Vs and understood by Vs as one of THE GREATEST GRACES THE CROWN EVER CONFERRED ON THE SVBJECT And by that Proclamation he prohibited all his Subjects both the paiment and receipt of any Monies for Customs or other Maritine Duties contrary to this Act by any Ordinance of both Houses of Parliament under pain of a PREMUNIRE and of being likewise proceeded against as ill-affected persons to the Peace of the Kingdome Whereupon the Lords and Commons in their answer to this Proclamation though they declared that the intent and meaning of that penall Clause of a PRAEMVNIRE and other Forfeitures in these new statutes which likewise disable every person Customer Officers who should take or receive or cause to be taken or received any such subsidy or imposition upon any Merchandize during his life to sue or implead any persons in any action reall mixt or personal in any Court whatsoever was only to restrain the Crown from imposing any duty or payment on the Subjects without their consent in Parliament and that it was not intended to extend to any case whereunto the LORDS and COMMONS GIVE THEIR ASSENT IN PARLIAMENT which they never did to this New White-hall Ordinance nor the pretended Act recited in it therefore the imposers and receivers of it by vertue thereof without such assent in Parliament are within the penalties of the aforesaid Statutes Yet to avoid the danger of a Praemunire in their Officers by exacting it only by an Ordinance of both Houses without a speciall Act of Parliament they did by their first Ordinances impose and demand Customes Tonnage Poundage and new Imposts not as a Legal Duty but only BY WAY OF LOANE til the Act of Parliament for their future continuance should be assented to by the King as their Declaration of 31 December 1642. and their Ordinance of the same date concerning the subsidy of Tonnage and Poundage attest By what coulor of Law Iustice Right this antient birth-right of all English Subjects so lately declared by three Acts of Parliament to which most of our late and present White-hall Grandees were parties comes to bee lost and forfeited by our contests to preserve it or how the Customes Imposts of Tonnage and Poundage can bee now imposed continued on or exacted from the Subjects by any Powers Officers or persons Whatsoever and levied by severest penalties Forfeitures Imprisonments Seisures by pretext of this White-hal Ordinance though no waies granted by common consent and Act of Parliament without incurring a Praemunire and forementioned penalties disabilities or without subverting the Fundamental Liberty Property Franchises Laws Statutes of the whole English Nation in a farre higher degree then ever in former ages I cannot yet discern and all our New Governours Merchants Customers Officers and other persons who have any Cordial affection Love Zeal to their own or the peoples hereditary Rights and Priviledges may do well to demurre in Law upon it till they can satisfy their own and other mens consciences therein to prevent the dangerous consequences of such an ill president to posterity In the Parliament of 1 H. 4. rot Parl. n. 32 33 34 36. These were the principall Articles of impreachment exhibited against King Richard the Second for which hee was forced to depose himself as unfit to Govern and resign up his Crown to King Henry the Fourth That whereas the King of England out of the profits of the Realm and the Patrimony belonging to his Crown might live honestly without oppression of his people so as the Kingdome were not burdened with the extraordinary expences of warre that this King during the Truces between the Realm and the Adversaries thereof gave and squandered away a great part of the crown-Crown-Lands to unworthy persons and thereupon exacted almost every year so many Taxes and Grants of Ayde from his Subjects of the Realm that hee thereby GREATLY and TOO EXCESSIVELY OPPRESSED HIS PEOPLE TO THE IMPOVERISHING OF HIS REALM That the same King being unwilling to keep and defend the just Laws and Customes of his Realm and to do according to his pleasure whatsoever should suite with his desires frequently when the Laws of his Realm were expounded and declared to him by the Justices and others of his Council who requested him to administer Justice according to those Laws said expresly with an austere and frownning Countenance THAT THE LAWS WERE HIS more suo AFTER his own MANER and sometimes THAT THEY WERE IN HIS OWN BREAST and THAT HEE ALONE COULD ALTER and MAKE THE LAWS OF HIS REALM And being seduced with this opinion he permitted not Justice to be done to very many of his Leige people but compelled very many to cease from the prosecution of common Justice That when as afterwards in his Parliament certain Statutes were made which might always bind till they were specially repealed by another Parliament the same King desiring to enjoy so great Liberty that none of these Statutes might so binde him but that he might execute and do according to the pleasure of his own Will which hee could not do of right subtilly procured such a Petition to be presented to him in his Parliament in the behalf of the Commons of his Realm and to be granted to him in the general THAT HE MIGHT BE SO FREE AS ANY OF HIS PROGENITORS WERE BEFORE HIM By colour of which Petition and Grant he frequently did and commanded to bee done MANY THINGS CONTRARY TO THE SAID STATVTES NOT REPEALED GOING AGAINST THEM EXPRESLY and WITTINGLY AGAINST HIS OATH AT HIS CORONATION That although by the Statutes and Customs of his Realm in the summoning of every Parliament his people in every County of the Realm ought to be free to elect and depute Knights for the said Counties to sit 〈◊〉 Parliament both TO RECEIVE their GRIEVANCES and TO PROSECVTE REMEDIES THEREUPON AS IT SHALL SEEM EXPEDIENT TO THEM yet the said King that he might in his Parliament be able to obtain the effect of his rash Will frequently directed his Mandates to his Sheriffs that they should cause to come to his Parliament CERTAIN PERSONS NAMED BY THE KING HIMSELF AS KNIGHTS OF THE SHIRE Which Knights verily favouring the said King he might easily enduce as he frequently did sometimes by divers threats and terrors and sometimes by gifts TO CONSENT TO THOSE THINGS WHICH WERE VERY
Kingdome are firmly established So William Watson a Secular Priest chargeth Father Parsons the English Jesuite and his Jesuited companions in their Memorial for Reformation of England when it should be reduced under the power of the Jesuites as Parsons was confident it would be though he should not live to see it written at Sevil in Spain Anno Dom. 1590. that they intended to have Magna Charta with our Common Fundamental Laws and Liberties abrogated and suppressed thus expressed by William Watson in his Quodlibets pag. 92 94 95. Father Parsons and the Jesuites in their deep Jesuitical Court of Parliament begun at Styx in Phlegeton have compiled their Acts in a compleat Volume intituled THE HIGH COVRT OF REFORMATION FOR ENGLAND And to give you a taste of their intent by that base Court of A TRIBE of TRAITORS sawcily like to Gade Jack Straw and Tom Tiler VSVRPING the AVTHORITY of both STATES ECCLESIASTICAL and TEMPORALL in all their REBELLIOVS ENTERPRICES these were principall points discussed set down and so decreed by them c. He first mentions three of them relating to Church-men Scholars and Church and Colledge-Lands which were to be put in Fee off●●s hands and they all to be reduced unto Arbitrary Pensions c. And then proceeds thus to the Fourth The fourth Statute was there made concerning the COMMON LAWS of this LAND and that consisted of this one principal point That ALL THE GREAT CHARTERS of ENGLAND MUST BE BURNT the manner of holding Lands in Fee simple Fee tail Kings service Soccage or Villanage brought into villany scogg●●y and popularity and in few the Common Law must be wholy annihillated abolished and troden down under foot and Caesars civill Imperials brought amongst us and sway for a time in their places All whatsoever England yeelds being but base barbarous and void of all sence knowledge or discretion shewed in the first Founders and Legifers and on the other side all whatsoever is or shal be brought in by these out-casts of Moses stain of Solon and refuse of Lycurgus must be reputed for metaphysical seme-divine and of more excellency than the other were Which he thus seconds Quodlibet 9. Article 2. p. 286. First it is plain that Father Parsons and his Company divide it amongst them how they list have laid a plot as being most consonant and fitting for their other Designments That the Common Laws of the Realm of England must be forsooth either abolished utterly or else bear no greater sway in the Realm than the Civil Law doth And the chief reason is for that the State of the Crown and Kingdome by the Common Laws is so strongly settled as whilest they continue the Jesuites see not how they can work their wills And on the other side in the Civil laws they think they have some shreds whereby they may patch a cloak together to cover a bloody shew of their Treasons for the present from the eys of the Vulgar people Secondly the said good Father hath set down a course how every man may shake off all authority at their pleasures as if he would become a new Anabaptist or King John of Leydon to draw all the world into Mutiny ●ebellion and Combustion And the Stratagem is how the Common people may be inveigled seduced to conceit to themselves such a liberty or prerogative as that it may be lawfull for them when they think meet to place and displace Kings and Princes as men do their Tenants at will hirelings or ordinary Servants Which Anabaptistical and abominable Doctrine proceeding from a turbul●nt tribe of Traiterous Puritan●s and other Hereticks this treacherous Jesuite would now foist into the Catholick Church as a ground of his corrupt Divinity And p. 330 332. He intends to alter and change all Laws Customs and Orders of this Noble Isle He hath prejudiced the law of Property in instituting Government Governours and Hereditary Princes to be BENEPLACITVM POPVLI and all other private possessions ad bene-placitum sui c Whether any such new deep Jesuitical Court of Parliament and high Court of Reformation for England to carry on this old Design of the Jesuites against our Laws hath been of late years sitting amongst us in or neer Westminster or elswhere in secret Counsel every week as divers intelligent Protestants have informed me and Hugh Peters reported to divers on his own knowledge being well acquainted with their Persons and practises of late years it concerns others neerer to them and more able then I to examine Sure I am a greater man by far then Hugh Peters in an Assembly of Divines and others for reconciling all dissenting parties not long since averred to them on his own knowledge That during our late innovations distractions subversions in Church State and overturning of Laws and Government the common adversary hath taken many advantages to effect his designes thereby in civill and spiritual respects That he knew very well that Emissaries of the Jesuites never came over in those swarms as they have done since these things were on foot That DIVERS GENTLEMNE CAN BEAR WITNES WITH HIM that they had a CONSISTORY AND COUNCEL ABROAD THAT RULES ALL THE AFFAIRS OF THE THINGS IN ENGLAND That they had fixed in England in the limits of most Cathedrals of which he was able to produce the PARTICULAR INSTRUMENT an Episcopal power with Archdeacons and other persons to pervert seduce and deceive the people And all this whiles we were in this sad and deplorable distracted condition Yea most certain it is that many hundreds if not some thousands of them within these few years have been sent over from Forraign Seminaries into England under the disguises of converted Jews Physitians Chyrurgions Mechanicks of all sorts Merchants Factors Travellers Souldiers and some of them particularly into the Army as appears by the late printed Examination of Ramsey the Anabaptized New-dipped Jesuite under the mask of a Jewish Convert taken at New Castle in June 1653. and by sundry severall late instances I could name To pretermit all instances of diverse particular Jesuites come over into England not only within these few years but moneths discovered by persons of credit with Sir Kenelm Digby who though the son of one of the executed old popish Gunpowder Traitors a dangerous active seducing Jesuited papist if not a professed Jesuit who in the years 1638 and 1639. conspired with the Popes Nuncio and a Conclave of Jesuites sitting in Council at London to subvert our Religion introduce a universall tolleration of the popish Religion in our kingomes new modle and shake our former established government and to poyson destroy the late King himself in case he consented not to them therein and for this very purpose both plotted raised promoted the first Wars between the Protestants of England and Scotland which he abetted all he could by his letters and secret Collections of moneys from all the Papists throughout England and elswhere who
the Realm as the Arteries Nerves Veines are in and to the natural Body the Bark to the Tree the Foundation to the House and therefore the cutting of them a sunder or their Subversion must of necessity kill destroy disjoyn and ruine the whole Realm at once Wherefore it must be Treason in the highest degree But I shall onely subjoyn here some materiall Passages in Master St. Johns Argument at Law concerning the Attainder of High Treason of Thomas Earle of Strafford before a Committee of both Houses of Parliament in Westminster Hall Aprill 29. 1641. soon after Printed and published by Order of the Commons House Wherein p. 8. he lays down this Position recited again p. 64. That Straffords endeavouring To subvert the Fundamentall Lawes and Government of England and Ireland and instead therefore to introduce a Tyrannicall Government against Law is Treason by the Common Law That Treasons at the Common Law are not taken away by the statutes of 25. E. 3. 1 H. 4. c. 10. 1 Mar. c. 1. nor any of them The Authorities Judgements in and out of Parliament which he cites to prove it have been already mentioned some others he omitted I shall therefore but transcribe his Reasons to evince it to be Treason superadded to those alledged by him against the Ship mony Judges Page 12. It is a War against the King Let our Military Officers and Souldiers consider it when intended For alteration of the Laws or Government in any part of them This is a levying War against the King and so Treason within the Statute of 25. E. 3. 1. Because the King doth maintain and protect the Laws in every part of them 2. Because they are the Kings Laws He is the Fountain from whence in their severall Channels they are derived to the Subject Whence all our indictments run thus Trespasses laid to be done Contra pacem Domini Regis c. against the Kings peace for exorbitant offences though not intended against the Kings Person against the King his Crown and Dignity Page 64. In this I shall not labour at all to prove That the endeavouring by words Counsels and actions To subvert the Fundamental Laws and Government of the Kingdome is Treason at the Common Law If there be any Common Law Treasons at all left NOTHING TREASON IF THIS IS NOT TO MAKE A KINGDOME NO KINGDOME Take the Policy and Government away Englands but a piece of earth wherein so many men have their commerce and abode without rank or distinction of men without property in any thing further than in possession no Law to punish the murdering or robbing one another Page 70 71 72. The horridnesse of the offence in endeavouring to overthrow the Laws and present Government hath been fully opened before The Parliament is the representation of the whole Kingdome wherein the King as Head your Lordships as the more Noble and the Commons the other Members are knit together in one body Politique This dissolves the Arteries and Ligaments that hold the body together THE LAWS He that takes away the Laws takes not away the Allegiance of one Subject only but of the whole Kingdome It was made Treason by the Statute of 13 Eliz. for her time to affirm That the Law of the Realm do not binde the descent of the Crown No Law no descent at all NO LAWS NO PEERAGE no ranks nor degrees of men the same condition to all It s Treason to kill a Judge upon the Bench this kills not Judicem sed Judicium There be twelve men but no Law never a Judge amongst them It s Felony to embezell any one of the Judiciall Records of the Kingdome THIS AT ONCE SWEEPS THEM ALL AWAY and FROM ALL. It s Teason to counterfeit a Twenty shilling peice Here 's a counterfeiting of the Law we can call neither the counterfeit nor the true Coyn our own It s Treason to counterfeit the great Seal for an Acre of Land No property is left hereby to any Land at all NOTHING TREASON NOW AGAINST KING OR KINGDOME NO LAW TO PVNISH IT My Lords If the question were asked in Westminster Hall whether this were a Crime punishable in the Star Chamber or in THE KINGS BENCH by Fine or Imprisonment They would say It were higher If whether Felony They would say That is an Offence onely against the Life or Goods of some one or few persons It would I believe be answered by the JVDGES as it was by the Chief Justice Thirning in the 21 R. 2. That though he could not judge the Case TREASON there before him yet if he were a Peer in Parliament HE WOULD SO ADJUDGE IT And so the Peers did here in Straffords and not long after in Canterburies case who both lost their Heads on Tower-Hill I have transcribed these Pass●ges of Mr. Oliver S. John at large for five Reasons 1. Because they were the Voice and Sence of the whole House of Commons by his mouth who afterwards owned and ratified them by their special Order for their publication in Print for information and satisfaction of the whole Nation and terrour of all others who should after that either secretly or openly by fraud or force directly or indirectly attempt the subversion of all or any of our Fundamental Laws or Liberties or the alteration of our Fundamental Government or setting up any Arbitrary or Tyrannical Power Taxes Impositions or new kinds of arbitrary Judicatories and imprisonments against these our Laws and Liberties 2. To minde and inform all such who have not onely equalled but transcended Strafford and Canterbury in these their HIGH TREASONS even since these PUBLICATIONS SPEECHES and their EXEMPLARY EXECUTIONS of the hainousnesse in excusablenesse wilfulnesse maliciousnesse Capitalnesse of their Crimes which not onely the whole Parliament in generality but many of themselves in particular so severely prosecuted condemned and inexorably punished of late years in them that so they may sadly consider bewail repent reform them with all speed and diligence as much as in them lies And with all I shall exhort them seriously to consider that Gospel terrifying passage if they have not quite sinned away all Conscience Shame Christianity Religion and Fear of the last Judge and Judgement to come Rom. 2. 1 2 3. Therefore thou art inexcusable O man whosoever thou art that judgest for wherein thou judgest another thou CONDEMNEST THY SELF FOR THOV THAT JUDGEST DOEST THOV THE SAME THING But we are sure that the Judgment of God is according to truth against them who commit such things And thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape the Judgment of God 3. To excite all Lawyers especially such who of late times have taken upon them the stile power of Judges to examine their Consciences Actions how far all or any of them have been guilty in the highest degree of these Crimes and Treasons so highly aggravated so exemplarily punished of former and
extravagant Heavy Taxes Contributions from the exhausted Free-born People of England especially being now pretended new Free State against all our Fundamental Lawes Statutes Franchises Charters Properties Liberties Records Parliamentary Iudgements their own late Remonstrances Declarations Votes the Presidents of all former ages yea of all our Kings coming in by the Sword to their Thrones let the Imposers of them seriously advise as they will answer it at their utmost peril to God Men and the whole English Nation who expected better things from them even a total final exemption from all such illegal Burthens after all their late Wars Agonies Expences to redeem and preserve their Lawes Liberties Estates Properties Posterities from such exorbitant Oppressions diametrically contrary to all the forecited Iudgements Resolutions Remonstrances Statutes Votes Presidents and sundry others which I shall hereafter insist on in the third Chapter of this Treatise to which I must refer you And shall we not then adventure a distresse a Prison quartering upon or any other Duresse yea Death it self rather than volutarily submit our selves and Posterities backs thereto when as we spend our Bloods Lives Treasures against lesser easier Royal Impositions How shall we answer it to God Men or our enslaved Posterities if we now most safely unworthily submit thereto in perpe●uity without the least legal strenuous publick oppression or debate of its legality If any here allege as some men do in Iustification of these three or rather four forecited kinds of illegal universal Taxes imposed levied on the whole Nation without consent of Parliament That they are all warranted by the Instrument of the new Gevernment Article 27 28 29. That a constant yearly revenue shall be raised setled and established for maintaining Ten Thousand Horse and Dragoons and Twenty Thousand Foot in England Scotland and Ireland for the Defence and security thereof and also for a convenient number of Ships for guarding the Seas besides two hundred thousand pounds per annum for defraying other necessary charges for Administration of Iustice and other expences of the Government which Revenue shall be raised by the Customes and such other ways and means which shall be agreed u●o● By the Lord Protector and Council and shall not be taken away or diminished nor the way agreed upon for the raising of the same altered but by consent of the Lord Protector and the Parliament That the said yearly Revenue shall be paid into the publick Treasury and issued out for the uses aforesaid That in case there shall not because hereafter to keep up so great a Defence at Land or Sea but that there be an abatement made thereof The Mony which shall be saved thereby shall remain in banke for the Publick service c. All which they in the True state of the Case of the Common-wealth p. 43 44 commend for a most excellent Provision A co●stant Revenue A Publike Bank or Treasury upon all occasions c. which they intend to perpetuate on the whole Kingdom without end or abatement as well in times of peace safety as of war and danger Therefore the Protector and his Counsell at Whitehall in pursuance hereof may lawfully impose by vertue of these Articles both Excise Customs Tonnage Poundage Ship-money and contributions for these ends upon our three whole Kingdoms and all the Freeborn English by printed Ordinances of their own in what Proportions and for what time they please yea and for perpetuity without consent or grant in Parliaments and restrain all future Parliaments both from taking away or diminishing them or altering the way agreed on for their raising without their Protectors consent thereto as the expresse words run and their practise yet expounds them notwithstanding all former Laws Statutes Charters Resolutions Iudgements Remonstrances Oathes Vowes Declarations Presidents either in or out of Parliament to the contrary To this I answer first that I cannot but stand amazed to hear any Army-Officers Souldiers Lawyers or persons in present trust or power who bear the name or hearts of English Freemen Saints Christians Lovers Patriots or Protectors of their Native Country of England its Parliaments Laws and Liberties to make such a stupendious irrational objection as this which justifies all the exorbitant Opinions Proceedings Taxes Oppressions Impositions of our late beheaded King Strafford Canterbury the Ship-money Iudges old Whitehall Council Table yea all our other former Kings and their evil Counsellors most irregular Exaction of mony in all ages from Brute till now and will render the very worst of all our Kings if compared with our late and present Tax-masters and pretended Assertors of our Liberties rather good gracious just righteous Princes Benefactors than Tyrants or Oppressors for the future seeing they never out of Parliament imposed enforced on their subjects any such heavy various perpetual Taxes Imposts Excises Ordinances or new Articles of the Government● as these forecited 2ly This Objection if admitted just or solid gives a private Cabinet ●uncto of obscure persons yet unknown by name unto our Nation a Superlative Super-Parliamentall Authority to contrive and set on foot a new devised Instrument to undermine and blow up all our former fundamental Laws Customs great Charters Liberties Franchises Properties Parliaments former frame of Government at one crake after all our late bloody costly contestations for their preservation both in the Supream Courts of Publick Iustice and fields of War without our privities or consents thereto either in or out of Parliament contrary to all their and our Protestations Oathes Covenants Commissions Trusts Promises Pretences And instead of English Freemen as we were before these contests and wars to strip us quite naked of all our former Freedoms Liberties Properties Customs Rights derived to us from our Noble Ancestors as the purchas of their dearest blood render us our Posterities for the future the most absolute Issachars Vassals slaves under Heaven inthralled to all sorts of intollerable illegal unpresidented incessant endlesse Taxes of all kinds without hopes of alteration or mitigation by any future Parliaments without their Protectors or his Successors voluntary consents which they cannot expect and to a constant standing Mercenary Army of Horse and Foot by Land and Navies of Hirelings by Sea to keep us and ours in perpetual Bondage under such New irregular Successive Tax-Masters who must elect their successors like themselves 3ly All our former antient Laws Statutes Parliaments till now in all changes Revolutions of State or Government ever constantly asserted maintained provided That no Tax Tallage Custom Contribution Impost Subsidy Charge Excise Loan or Payment whatsoever should be imposed on the Freemen of England without their common consent and grant in full free lawfull English Parliaments and if any were imposed otherwise by any Power or Pretext whatsoever out of Parliament that it was Null and void to all intents to bind the people But these Monstrous Articles quite turn the scales impowring a few private persons neither elected nor intru●ted by the people
of our Society ought to be a Souldier because as it is the part of a Sculdier to rush upon the Enemy with all his Forces and not to desist till he become a Conquerour so it is our duty to run violently upon all who resist the Pope of Rome and to Destroy and Abolish them not onely with Counsels Writings and Words Sed invocato etiam brachio seculari Igne Ferro tollere abolere sicut Pontifer nostra Vota contra Lutheranos suscepta Volunt Mandant But likewise by calling in to our assistance the secular Arm of an Army to take away and destroy them with Fire and Sword as the Pope and our Oathes taken against the Protestants Will and Command And may we not then safely conclude they have been the Original Contrivers Fomenters Continuers of all our late intestine and forraign wars by Land and Sea with our Christian Protestant Brethren and Allyes as sundry Parliament Declarations of both Houses aver and attest And that many of them have secretly crept into and listed themselves Souldiers in our Armies on purpose to put on foot their designs against our King Kingdoms Churches Religion and perpetuate our Civil Wars And so much the rather because Alphonsus de Vargas a Spanish Popish Priest informs us That the Jesuites being a Generation of Incendiaries are so welpleased with the name of their Founder Ignatius derived from Fire and signifying a Caster about of wild-Fire or an Incendiary that though his christned name at first was Innicus or Inighistas Yet Iohannes Eusebius Nirenberger a Jesuite in his Book De Vita Ignatii printed at Madrid 1630. most falsly records That his Parents at his Baptism being in doubt what name to give him thereupon the Infant himself with a loud voice said He would be named Ignatius to signifie what office he should obtain in the Church and world even to cast abroad fire in them and set them all in a flame Hereupon his Disciples the Jesuites considering that this their founder was by his name A firebrand and a Souldier by his profession professed publikely to the King of Spain his councel and the world that it was no less consonant to the mind institution and statutes then to the name of their warlike Father Ignatius that they should not onely exercise but Publikely profess and teach to others Artem Pyrotechnisam c. the art how to make and cast abroad fire-balls fire-works and wild-fire to fire and burn houses and Cities and likewise the art of warre of setting Armies in battel array of Assaulting cities the maner of making Gun-powder bullets fire-bals of casting Guns and the maner and wayes of making all other Military works Engines together with rules and precepts belonging to Navigation omnia maritini belli munia and all duties and incidents belonging to Sea-fights Upon which they perswaded the King of Spain notwithstanding the opposition of all the Universit●es of Spain against it to erect a publike University for their fiery martial order at Madrid and to endow it with an annual Revenue of ten thousand Crownes wherein they set up a publike Lecture concerning war and all incidents appertaining thereunto with this Printed title Acroasis De re Militari in qua pracipietur Doctrina forma Militiae veteris Hodiernae Species Mathematum arti isti subordinatarum quae sunt Tactica five De Acie instruenda Topographica Machinaria Militaris Organo Poetica Pyrotechnica c. Hanc acrosia faciet P. Hermannus Hago a Jesuit quarta pomeridiana usque ad quintam This is the first publike Military Lecture I ever read of erected in any University amongst Christians and Professors of the Gospel of peace who are expresly enjoyned by the God of peace and Prince of peace To put up their swords into their scabberds because all those that that the sword shall perish with the sword To beat their swords into plow●shares and their spears into pruning-hookes not to lift up the sword against one another neither To learne war any more Yet such bloody incendiaries and delighters in war are the Jesuites that they thus publikely teach others the art of war and fire-workes to set the whole Christian world in combustions and open warres against each other which they have everywhere accomplished and that upon this accompt that the Gospel of Jesus is principally to be taught and propagated by armed power exercitu armorum usu by An army and the use of armes whereby they now propagate it in our Kingdomes the quite contrary way to the ruine of our Church and religion whereupon Vargas passeth this just censure on them Hos velut Ignigenos illis Comici verbis recte quis a se amoliri in malam rem abire jusserit Apage illum a me nan ille quidem Vulcani irati est filius Quaqua tangit Omne amburit si prope abstes calefacit And a German Frier in his Astrum inextinctum gives this true Character of them Discordias inter suprema Reipublicae Christianae capita seminare credimus esse veritati patrocinari quam salvam esse negant quamdiu Principes isti inter se non colliduntur Hoc est flammas in Europa suscitare sicut gloriantur Patrem societatis Ignatium esse illum de quo Christus dexerit Veni ignem mittere in terram hoc est classicum in aulis Principum canere illos inter so committere 4. That the Jesuites from the first erection of their Military order have conspired attempted to subvert and utterly extirpate under the name of Schismatickes Hereticks Gospellers Heresie and the Gospel all professors whatsoever of the Protestant Religion and their Doctrines throughout the world not onely by Machivilian plots and treasons but by war fire sword holy leagues Armies armed power as is evident both by their bookes and Practices To instance in a few particulars both abroad and at home Franciscus Veronas Constantiensis a Jesuite in his Apology for John Castle Anno 1595. part 5. c. 13. resolves That all wars to extirpate heretickes Protestants Ar● lawfull yea more lawfull then against all other Infidels because Heresie according to Gods word is worse then all Infidelity And if war be Just against Heretickes how much more just is it against the head of the Heretickes And if it be just to Extirpats hereticall Kings out of all Christian Kingdomes which the Jesuites entred into an holy League to effect as you heard before out of Campian How much more just is it in the most Christian Kingdom France to root out King Henry the 4 whom they not onely warred against but stabbed and murdered as aforesaid Thuanus Historiae l. 65. p 238. and lib. 67. 299. records That it is the opinion and Sentence of the Jesuites that it is a Pious and wholsome thing that all Christians should lay violent hands upon Sectaries and Protestants ought to be armed against them and to make no peace
to violate we shall appeal to the judgement of any indifferent man how little truth is contained in this their assertion or in the Army Officers printed Papers to the same effect The Parliament is to be considered in three severall respects First As a Councell to advise Secondly As a Court to judge 3. As it is the body representative of the whole Kingdom to make repeal or alter Laws and whether the Parliament hath enjoyed its priviledges in any of these respects under the Army-Officers and powers as well as late King let any that hath eyes open judge For the first We dare appeal even to the Consciences of the Contrivers themselves and to the consciences of the Army-Officers Souldiers and Whitehall men themselves whether matters of the highest importance witness all the publick proceedings against the late Parliament King Peers Government the Warrs with Scotland Holland their new Magna Ch●rta repealing the old Entituled The Government of the Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland wherein they take upon them such an Omnipotent Soveraign power as To pass a decree upon the wavering humors of the people and to say to this Nation yea to Scotland and Ireland too As the Almighty himself said once to the unruly Sea Here shall be thy bounds hitherto shalt thou come and no further as some of them most arrogantly if not blasphemously publish in print to all the world in their True State of the Case of the Commonwealth p. 34. Their making of new binding Laws and Ordinances repealing old Laws and Statutes in and by pretext of this Instrument out of Parliament as their manifold Whitehall Folio new Edicts amounting to near 700 pages attest have not been agitated and determined in and by the Army-Officers General Councel and other unparliamentary Juncto's not only without but contrary to their Advice and Votes too and whether private unknown Councels in the Army Whitehall and elswhere yea the private Councels Plots conspiracies of Iesuits of Forraign Popish and Spanish Agents have not been hearkned unto approved and followed when the Faithful and wholsom advice of the great Counsel hath been scorned neglected by the Army Officers and their Confederates And yet none can deny but it is one of the Principle ends why a Parliament is called To Consult the great Affairs of the Church and State And what miserable effects and sad events this neglect of the great Councel and preferring of unknown and private Councels before it hath produced let the present Distractions of this Kingdom bear witnesse with all the bloody unchristian Wars Taxes Oppressions Distractions since the Armies force upon the King Members Houses Anno 1647. and 1648. to this present time Concerning the Second it sufficiently appears by the making the Kings Court by the Force and Power of the Kings Army the Sanctuary and refuge of All sorts of Delinquents against the Parliament and Kingdom and protecting and defending them from the Justice thereof and by admitting such to bear places of great trust in the Army and to stand in defiance of the Parliament and the Authority thereof and is it not a far greater crime to make the Parliaments Army it self a Delinquent against the Parliament and Kingdom the sanctuary of such Delinquents against both and to continue such Officers in places of greatest trust in the Army who have levied actual war against the Parliament secluded secured members of Parliament kept divers years under their armed guards in defiance of the Parliament without any particular Charge or Impeachment refusing to release them even when the Serjeant was sent at first from the House it self to demand the Members seised By all which it is apparent how our Privledges have been torn from us by piece-meals from time to time And we might mention many passages whereby they were endeavoured to be pulled up by the root and totally subverted As the attempt to bring up the late Army from the North to force Conditions upon the Parliament His Majesties Letters and Commands to the Members of both Houses which found obedience in a great many to attend him at York and so By depriving the Parliament of their Members destroy the whole Body And was not the actual twice bringing up of the Parliaments own Army by the Army Officers against the Parliament it self to impeach secure some principal Members of both Houses seclude the Majority of the Commons House suppress the whole House of Lords break off the Treaty behead the King the Head of the Parliament against the Parliaments Votes alter the Government force conditions on the Parliament it self to omit the 12 21 24 32 37 38 39 Articles of their New Government with the secluding of all the Members lately admitted by Armed Souldiers till they took a New Engagement and keeping out all others a taking of the Privileges of the Parliament from them all by Whole-sale and a more desperate pulling up by the Roots and total subversion of all the Priviledges and whole Body of the Parliament than this objected against the Northern Army or the Kings Jesuitical ill Councel Which is enough to prove the vanity of the Contrivers of that Declaration and of the Army Officers too to feed themselves with hope of belief That the Priviledges of Parliament are not Violated but intended to be preserved with all due observance Concerning the Allegation That the Army raised by the Parliament is to murder the KING oft alledged by the King and his Party in many printed PROCLAMATIONS Declarations before and after this here mentioned We hoped the Contrivers of that Declaration or any that professed but the name of a Christian could not have so little charity as to raise such a SCANDAL especially when they must needs know the Protestation taken by every Member of both Houses and Army Officers too whereby they promise in the presence of Almighty God TO DEFEND HIS MAJESTIES PERSON The Promise and Protestation made by the Members of both Houses upon the nomination of the Earl of Essex to be General and to live and die with him wherein is expressed THAT THIS ARMY WAS RAISED FOR DEFENCE OF THE KINGS PERSON Our oft earnest and most humble Address to his Majesty to leave that desperate and dangerous Army c. A request inconsistent with any purpose to offer the least violence to His Person which hath and ever shall be dear unto us And concerning the imputation laid to our Charge of Raising this Army to Alter the whole Frame of Government and Established Laws of the Land which the King and his party frequently objected in print we shall need give no other Answer but this That the Army Raised by the Parliament is to no other end but for the Preservation of his Majesties Person to Defend themselves the Laws of the Land and the true Protestant Religion After which they there and elswhere conclude And by this time we doubt not but every man doth plainly discern through
the Mask and Visard of their Hypocrifie what their the Kings ill Counsels design is To Subject both King and Parliament and Kingdom to their needy Ambitious and Avaritious Spirits and to the violent Laws Martial law of Governing the People by guards and by the Souldiers But alas for grief how superlatively have many of the Army Officers and their confederate members though parties to these Declarations and Protestations violated them and both Houses Faiths Trusts intentions ends in raising the Army in every of these particulars How have they verified justified the Kings Declarations Jealousies concerning the Parliaments Army in every point here and elswhere disclaimed by both Houses How have they exceeded out-acted the Kings Jesuitical Counsellers and most desperate Popish Army in violating subverting both the Parliaments Priviledges Members and Parliaments themselves together with our Fundamental Laws Liberties Government for whose preservation they were only raised paid How have they pursued the Kings and his worst Jesuited Counsellers footsteps in all the charges here objected against them by both Houses in relation to the Parliaments priviledges Members Constitution Rights Laws to their utter subversion dissolution and waged war against them And doth not every man plainly discern through the Mask and Visard of their Hypocrifie to use both Houses expressions that their design is just the same with that here objected by the Parliament to the Kings ill Jesuited Counsellers and Popish army even to subject both King Parliament and Kingdom to their needy ambitious avaritions spirits and to the violent Laws marshal Law of Governing the People yea Parliaments themselves by Guards and by the Souldiers and By Conquest to establish an absolute and unlimited power over the Parliament and good Subjects of this Kingdom as the Houses elswhere thrice objected against the late King his Army and party being the very design as many wisemen fear of the 27 Article of their New Government to settle a constant Annual revenue for the maintenance of 20000 Foot 10000 Horse and Dragoones to be alwayes constantly kept up Winter and Summer without disbanding or diminution for the Defence and Security of England Scotland and Ireland Which must henceforth be kept under by Mercinary Fo●ces to guard of Protectors when as the Heathen Poet assures us ●nteger vitae scel●risque purus non eget Mauri jaculis nec arcu much less our English Nation ever formerly secured by their own unmercinary Militia of the Trained Bands and those Lords and Gentlemen who hold their Lands by Knight-service O that they would now in the name and fear of God as they tender the eternal salvation of their Souls the honour and priviledges of all future Parliaments the ease welfare settlement of our Nation Lay all this most seriously to their Hearts and make it a matter of their greatest lamentation and repentance Besides this have they not falsified that memorable late Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament Novemb. 2. 1642. in Answer to his Majesties well worthy perusal now and made good both for the time past and all succeeding Parliaments whiles there shall be any standing Army in England able to over-power them all the odious scandalous positions in relation to the English Parliament its Members and priviledges deduced from the Kings Declaration only by inference but disclaimed by the King summed up by them in the close of that Remonstrance and published in these ensuing terms as will evidently appear if applied to the Army and their Generall Councel of Officers by adding or exchanging their names only for the Kings in a parenthesis 1. That the King the * Army General and their General Councel of Officers when he pleaseth may declare the Major part of both Houses which in all sorts of Republicks doth yea ought of right to over sway the Minority their Votes to be firm and binding to all men as Aristotle himself resolves a faction of Malignant Schismatical and ambitious Persons so that all Parliaments that have been heretofore and SHALL BE HEREAFTER AND ALL LAWS MADE IN THEM may by this means be called in question at pleasure yea nulled and repealed for ever as some former Parliaments have been when held and over-awed by armed power or unduly elected packed summoned without Lawfull Authority or some of the Members forcibly secluded as you may read at large in the Statutes of 21 R. 2. c. 11 12 16 17 18. 1 H. 4. c. 3. 1 H. 4. Rot. Parl. n. 22 23 36 48 66 70. 113. 39 H. 6. c. 1. 17 E. 4. c. 7. worthy the serious perusal of our present Grandees and all illegitimate Parliaments where they may read the fatal end of all new unparliamentary projects laws devices wherein many now so much glory as if they would continue form for ever when as in a few years space they will all probably prove nullities be for ever reversed yea branded to posterity as most pernicious presidents 2. That his Majesty the Army and their General Councel may declare what is the known Law of the Land against the judgement of the Highest Court and consequently of all his Courts So that the safety and right of King and people and THE LAW IT SELF must depend upon his Majesties the Army General and their Councels pleasure 4. That as the King hath a property in his Townes Forts and Kingdoms so he the Army and their General Councel may dispose of them as he pleaseth and the Representative body of the whole Kingdom may not intermedle in discharge of his Majesties the Armies Generals Councels trust though by the advice of evil Councellers they see it diverted to the hazard of the publique peace safety of the Kingdom 5. That his Majesty the Army General and their Councel or any other person may upon suggestions and pretences of Treason Felony or breach of peace or of their Trusts a fourth Army new-minted cause Take the Members of Parliament without giving satisfaction to the House whereof they are Members of the grounds of such suggestion or accusation and without and against their consent as in the case of the late secured secluded Members and their two Junct●'s since so they may Dismember a Parliament when they please and make it what they will when they will 6. That whosoever shall follow the King Army General and their Councel in the wars against the Parliament though it were to destroy Laws Liberty Religion the Parliament it self and the whole Kingdom yet he shall be free from all crime or punishment And that on the other side to oppose by force any such force though in the most Legal way and by authority of the Representative body of the whole Kingdom is to leavy war against the King Army General and TREASON within the Letter of 25 E. 3. or of their new Knacks since So our Lands Liberties Lives Religion and Laws themselves Whereby all the Rights both of King and People
are due to them and preserved for them shall be at the sole will and pleas●re of the Prince Army General and General Councel of Officers in their new High Courts of Injustice or other Martial Judicatories as now they are O consider consider seriously by these particulars to what a sad low despicable condition all English Parliaments are now for ever reduced and their pristine antient Priviledges Honor Freedom Power violently ravished from them by the late Army practises violences and rebellious insolencies against them never to be parallel'd in any age which hath really verified this clause in the Declaration of both Houses August 4. 1642. objected against the King and his popish Army in relation to the Parliaments Army purposely raised commissioned engaged for their defence That if the King by his Army may force this Parliament as the Parliaments Army both forced and dissolved it they may bid farewell to all Parliaments for ever receiving good by them And if Parliaments be lost they the People are lost their Laws are lost as well those lately made as in former times ALL WHICH WILL BE CVT IN SVNDER WITH THE SAME SWORD NOW DRAWN FOR THE DESTRVCTION OF THIS PARLIAMENT as we now find true by sad experience Athanasius Bishop of Alexandria about the year of our Lord 340. objected this as a great crime barbarism cruelty and violation of the priviledges of Councels to the Arrian Emperour Constantius That whensoever he called a Councel or Assembly of Bishops it was but for a shew For he would not permit them to be guided by the Ecclesiastical Canons but his Will alone must be their only Canon And when they advised him not to subvert the Ecclesiastical order nor bring the Arrian Heresie into the Church of God he would neither hear nor permit them to speak freely but grievously bending his brows if they had spoken cross to his designs and SHAKING HIS SWORD AT THEM COMMANDED THEM TO BE TAKEN AWAY Whereupon he thus infers What Liberty for perswasion or place for advice is there left when he that contradicteth shall for his labour lose either his Life or his Country Why hath the Emperour gathered so great a number of Bishops partly terrified with threats partly inticed with promises to condescend that they will not communicate wi●h Athanasius And Hilary Bishop of Poictou Ann. 360. in his first Book against this Tyrannical Arrian Emperour Constantius thus censures his violent proceedings of this kind to the subversion of the freedom and priviledge of Councils and their members Thou gatherest COUNCILS and when they be shut up together in one City thou TERRIFIEST THEM WITH THREATS THOU PINEST THEM WITH HVNGER THOU LAMEST THEM WITH COLD as the Army Officers did the secluded Members 6 and 7 Decemb. 1648. when they shut them up all night in Hell on the bare boards without beds in the cold and kept them fasting all the next day at Whitehall til 7 a clock at night Thou depravest them with Dissembling O THOU WICKED ONE what a mockery dost thou make of the Church and Councels Only Dogs return to their Vomit and thou compellest the Priests of Christ to sup up those things which they have disgorged and commandest them in their confessions to allow that WHICH BEFORE THEY CONDEMNED What Bishops hand hast thou left innocent What tongue hast thou not forced to falshood Whose heart hast thou not brought to the condemning of his former opinion Thou hast subjected all to thy will yea to thy violence And have not some swaying Army Officers by their frowns menaces frauds Swords open force upon the Parliament and its Members beyond all the presidents in any ages done the like and exceeded this Arrian Tyrant herein And is it not then high time for all friends to Parliaments to protest and provide against such detestable treasonable violences for the future destructive to all Parliaments if permitted or silently pretermitted without question exemplary censure righting of the imprisoned Members or any provision to redresse them for the future Our prudent Ancesters were so carefull to prevent all violence force arms and armed men in or near any places where Parliaments were held to terrifie over-awe or disturb their proceedings or Members That in the Parliament of 7 E. 1. as you may read in Rastals Abridgement Armour 1. Provision was made by the King by common consent of the Prelates Earls and Barons by a general act That in all Parliaments Treaties and other Assemblies which should be made in the Realm of England FOR EVER every man shall come without Force and without Armour well and peaceably to the honour of the King and of the peace of him and of his Realm and they together with the Commonalty of the Realm upon solemn advise declared That it belonged to the King and his part it is by his Royal Signiory strictly to defend Wearing of Armour and all other Force against his peace at all times when it shall please him especially at such times and in places where such Parliaments Treaties and Assemblies are held and to punish them which shall doe contrary according to the Laws and usage of the Realm And hereunto they are bound to aid the Kind as their Soveraign Lord at all seasons when need shall be Hereupon our Kings ever since this statute by virtue thereof and by the Law and Custom of the PARLIAMENT as Sir Edward Cook in his 4 Institutes c. 1. p. 14. informs us did at the beginning of every Parliament make a speciall Proclamation Prohibiting the bearing of Arms or weapons in or near the places where the Parliament sate under pain of forfeiting all they had Of which there are sundry presidents cited by Sir Edward Cook in his Margin whereof I shall transcribe but one which he omits and that is 6 E. 3. Rot. Parliament n. 2. 3. Because that before these days at the Parliaments and Counsels of our Lord the King Debates Riots and commotions have risen and been moved for that People have come to the places where Parliaments have been summoned and assembled armed with privy coats of plate spears swords long knives or daggers and other sort of arms by which the businesses of our Lord the King and his Realm have been impeached and the great men which have come thither by his command have been affrighted Our Lord the King willing to provide remedy against such mischiefs defendeth that no man of what estate or condition soever he be upon pain of forfeiting all that he may forfeit to the King shall be seen armed with a Coat of Male nor yet of plate nor with an Halberd nor with a spear nor sword nor long knife nor any other suspitious arms within the City of LONDON nor within the Suburbs thereof nor any place near the said City nor yet within the Palace of WEST MINSTER or any place near the said Palace by Land or Water under the foresaid pain except only such of the Kings men
as he shall depute or by his command shall be deputed to keep the peace within the said places and also except the Kings servants according to the Statute of Northampton And it is not the intention of our Lord the King that any Earl or Baron may not have his Lance brought to him in any place but onely in the Kings presence and in the place of Councell The like Proclamations were made in the beginning of the Parliaments of 9. 1● 17 18. 20 25 ●dw 3. and sundry others more necessary to be revived in all succeeding English Parliaments now than ever heretofore since the unpresidented forces upon the late Members of both Houses and the Parliament it self by the Army-Officers and Souldiers raised to defend them from Violence The Treasonablenesse and Transcendency whereof being at large related in my Epistle to the Reader before my Speech in Parliament 4 December 1648 I shall not here criminally presse nor insist on but referred them thereunto However for the future security and freedome of our Parliaments from violence I must crave liberty to inform these Army Parliament drivers forcers dissolvers habituated to this trade That if the late Kings march to the House of Commons accompanied only with some of his Pensioners and others armed with Pistols and Swords meerly to demand but five Members thereof to be delivered up to Justice particularly impeached by him of High Treason some dayes before to wit That they had traiterously endeavoured to subvert the Fundamental Laws and Government of this Kingdome To deprive the King of his Royal power To place over the Subjects an Arbitrary and Tyrannical power To subvert the very Rights and being of Parliaments and by force and terrour to compell the Parliament to joyn with them in their designs for which end they had actually raised and countenanced Tumults against the King and Parliament Or if the Kings bare tampering with some Officers of his own Northern Army to draw a Petition from them to the Houses or march towards London from their quarters not to seise upon force or dissolve the Parliament or its Members but only to over-aw them and impeach the freedom of their debates Votes touching Episcopacy Church-Government and the Kings Revenues were such high transcendent violations of the Priviledges and Freedome of Parliament and unsufferable injuries as both Houses of Parliament separately and joyntly proclaimed them to all the world in severall Declarations during his life Or such capitall crimes as those who condemned and executed him for a Traytor and Tyrant have published in their Declaration of 17 March 1648. touching the grounds of their proceedings against him and setling the Government in the way of a Free State without King or House of Lords since his beheading in these very words But ABOVE ALL the English army was laboured by the King to be engaged against the English Parliament a thing of that strange in piety and unnaturalness for the King of England that nothing can answer it but his being a Forraigner neither could it have easily purchased belief but by his succeeding visible actions in full pursuance of the same as the Kings comming in Person to the House of Commons to seise the five Members whither he was followed with some hundreds of unworthy debauched persons armed with swords and pistols and other arms and they attending him at the door of the House ready to execute what the Leader should command them Which they charged against the King as the highest of his unparralleld Offences for which they appeal to all the world of indifferent men to judge whether they had not sufficient cause to bring him to Justice Though neither he nor his followers then seized secured secluded injured any one Member when they thus went to the Commons House Yea presently retracted his Impeachment and offered all satisfaction that should be desired by the House for this breach of Privilege and though neither the Northern Army nor their Officers ever advanced towards or offered the least violence to the Houses or their priviledges by Petition or otherwise Then certainly the Parliaments own Armies Officers Counsels manifold high printed Declarations of June 14. 23. July 7. Aug. 18. 1647. Nov. 16. Decemb 7. 1648. and others before and since their professed open Oppositions Impeachments against the very Proceedings Votes Orders Ordinances Members of both Houses of Parliament which first raised them principally for their defence Printed by their order in their Book of Declarations The History of Independency and my Speech in Parliament their Impeachment of eleven Members of the House of Commons and sundry Lords at once their securing of above 40 and secluding of above five parts of six of the whole House of Commons at once their avowed marches with the whole Body of the Army in Ba●talia severall times to force the Houses seise their Members over-aw affright dis-member dissolve the Parliament it self and their own new erected Junctoes since and justification of it to all the world in print in their humble Answer touching the secured and secluded Members Jan. 3. 1648. The true state of the case of the Commonwealth of England 1654. and their Declarations concerning their dissolution of their two Junctoes after these Misdemeanours of the King without the least repentance for them must needs be farre more execrable unwarrantable and criminal than the Kings and deserve a severer censure than his Peccadilioes in respect of their crimes And if by the whole Armies printed Remonstrances August 2. and 18. 1647. the tumult of some unarmed London Apprentices who offered some small force to the Houses to the violation of their Priviledges without securing or secluding any one Member deserved a speedy and exemplary capital proceeding against the principal contrivers and Actors in it as they then declared and vehemently urged again and again in those Remonstrances Or if by their own Charge in the Name of the whole Army June 14. 1647. against the XI Members it was so high an offence in them That they joyntly or severally invited encouraged abetted or countenanced several Reformadoes and OTHER OFFICERS AND SOULDIERS TVMVLTVOVSLY AND VIOLENTLY TO GATHER TOGETHER AT WESTMINSTER TO AFFRIGHT ASSAULT THE MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT IN PASSAGES TO FROM THE HO●SE TO OFFER VIOLENCE TO THE HOUSE IT SELF BY SVCH VNRVLY OVTRAGES THREATS TO AWE AND INFORCE THE PARLIAMENT And that upon their bare suggestion thereof without any proof at all or colour of truth they presently demanded That the persons impeached MIGHT BE FORTHWITH SECLVDED FROM SITTING IN THE HOVSE and removed thence before any hearing or trial which the Officers and Army eagerly pressed in their Paper of June 15. 1647. Nay if by their own late printed Instrument of the Government of the Commonwealth of England c. Articles 14. 16. All and every person and persons who have aided advised assisted or abetted in any war against the Parliament since the first day of
Parliament set on Impositions either within the Land or upon commodities exported or imported by the merchants they have in open Parliament complained of it in that it was done without their consents and thereupon never failed to obtain a speedy and full redresse without any claim made by the Kings of any Power or Prerogative in that point And though the Law of property be original and carefully preserved by the Common Laws of this Real WHiCH ARE AS ANCIENT AS THE KINGDOME IT SELF yet those famous Kings for the better contentment and assurance of their loving Subjects agreed THAT THIS OLD FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT observe the words should be further declared and established by Acts of Parliament wherein it is provided That no such Charge shall ever be laid upon the People without their common Consents as may appear by sundry Records of former times We therefore your Majesties most humble Commons assembled in Parliament following the example of this worthy care of our Ancestors and out of our Duty to those for whom we serve finding that your Majesty without advice of your Lords and Commons hath lately in times of Peace Set both greater Impositions and farre more in number than any your Noble Ancestors did ever in time of Warre do with all humility present this most just and necessary Petition unto your Majesty THAT ALL IMPOSITIONS SET WITHOVT ASSENT IN PARLIAMENT MAY BE QVITE ABOLISHED AND TAKEN AWAY And that your Majesty likewise in imitation of your Royal Progenitors will be pleased that a Law in your time and during this Session of Parliament may be also made to declare That all Imposition of any kinde set or to be set upon your people their Goods or Merchandises save onely by common Consent in Parliament are and shall b● Void wherein your Majesty shall not onely Give your Subjects great Satisfaction in point of their Right but also bring exceeding joy and comfort to them who now suffer partly through the abating of the price of Native Commodities and partly through the raising of all Forraign to the overthrow of Merchants and shipping the causing of general dearth and decay of all wealth among your people who will be thereby no lesse discouraged than disabled to supply your Majesty when occasion shall require In which memorable Petition the whole House of Commons resolve in direct terms 1. That the Subjects of England have old original Fundamental Rights and more particularly in the Property of their Goods exempted from all Impositions whatsoever in times of peace or war without their common consent in Parliament declared and established both by the ancient and common law of England and sundry Acts of Parliament and records of former times 2. They declare the constant vigilant care zeal of our ancestors and former Parliaments in all ages inviolably to maintain defend preserve the same against all enchroachments together with their own care duty and vigilancy in this kind in that very Parliament 3. They relate the readinesse of our Kings to ratifie these their Fundamental Rights by new Acts of Parliament when they have been violated in any kinde 4. They declare the benefit accruing both to Prince and People by the inviolable preservation and establishment of this old Fundamental right and the mischiefs accruing to both by the infringment thereof by arbitrary illegall impositions without full consent in Parliament 5. They earnestly in point of Conscience prudence and duty to those for whom they served Petition his Majesty for a new Law and Declaration against all new Impositions and Taxes on inland Goods or Merchandises imported or exported without the peoples free consent in Parliament as null void utterly to be abolished and taken away Whether it will not be absolutely necessary for the whole English Nation and the next ensuing National or reall Parliament to prosecute enact establish such a Declaration and Law against all such former and future arbitrary illegal oppressive Taxes Impositions Excises that have been imposed and continued for many years together on the whole kingdome by new extravagant self-created usurping ARMY-OFFICERS and other Powers without free and full consent of the people in Lawfull English Parliaments against all former Laws Declarations and Resolutions in Parliaments to their great oppression enslaving undoing in far greater proportions multiplicity and variety than ever in former Ages without the least intermission and likewise against their late declared designe to perpetuate them on our exhausted Nation without alteration or diminution beyond and against all presidents of former Ages both in times of Peace and War for the future by the 27 28 29 30 39. Articles of the Instrument entituled The Government of the Common-wealth of England c. I remit to their most serious considerations to determine if ever they resolve to be English Freemen again or to imitate the wisdome prudence zeal courage and laudable examples of their worthy Ancestors from which they cannot now degenerate without the greatest Infamy and enslaving of themselves with their Posterities for ever to the arbitrary wils of present or future Vsurpers on their Fundamental Rights and Liberties in an higher degree then ever in any precedent Ages under the greatest Conquerours or Kings after all their late costly bloody Wars for their Defence against the beheaded King 5 The fifth is A learned and necessary Argument made in the Commons House of Parliament Anno 7. Jacobi to prove That each Subject hath a Property in his Goods shewing also the extent of the Kings Prerogative in Impositions upon the Goods of Merchants exported or imported c. by a late learned Judge of this Kingdome printed at London by Richard Bishop 1641. and Ordered to be Published in Print at a Committee appointed by the Honorable House of Commons for examination and Licensing of Books 20. Maii 1641. In which Parliamentary Argument p. 8. 11. 16. I finde these direct Passages That the New Impositions contained in the Book of Rates imposed on Merchandizes imported and exported by the Kings Prerogative and Letters Patents without consent in Parliament is against the natural Frame and Constitution of the Policy of this Kingdome which is JVS PVBLICVM REGNI AND SO SVBVERTETH THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF THE REALM and introduceth a new Form of State and Government Can any man give me a reason why the King can only in Parliament make Laws No man ever read any Law whereby it was so ordained and yet no man ever read that any King practised the contrary therefore IT IS THE ORIGINAL RIGHT OF THE KINGDOME AND THE VERY NATURAL CONSTITUTION OF OUR STATE AND POLICY being one of the highest Rights of Soveraign Power If the King alone out of Parliament may impose HE ALTERETH THE LAW OF ENGLAND IN ONE OF THESE TWO MAIN FUNDAMENTAL POiNTS he must either take the Subjects Goods from them without assent of the Party which is against the law or else he must give his own Letters Patents the force of
cloak their intentions from the people they took an Oath of all they met Quod Regi Communibus fidelitatem servarent that they should keep Allegiance and Faith to the King Commons Yea Wat Tyler demanded a Commission from the King to behead all Lawyers Escheaters and others whatsoever that were learned in the laws or communicated with the law by reason of their Office conceiving in his minde that this being brought to passe all things afterwards would be ordered according to his own and the common peoples fancy And he made his vaunt putting his hand to his own lips That before scure dayes came to an end ALL THE LAWS OF ENGLAND SHOULD PROCEED FROM HIS MOUTH Which some of late times seem to speak not only in words but deeds by their manifold new laws and Edicts repealing or contradicting our old This their resolution and attempt thus to alter and subvert the Laws and Government upon full debate in the Parliament of 5. R. 2. n. 30. 31. was declared to be High-Treason against the King and the Law for which divers of the chief Actors in this Treasonable Designe were condemned and executed as Traitors in severall places and the rest enforced to a publike submission then pardoned Let these imitators now remember this old President 2. In the Parliament of 11. R. 2. as appears by the Parliament Rols and printed Statutes at large three Privy Councellours the Archbishop of York the Duke of Ireland and the Earl of Suffolk the Bishop of Exeter the Kings Confessor five Knights six Judges whereof Sir Robert Tresylian Chief Justice was one Blake of the Kings Councel at Law Vsk and others were impeached and condemned of High Treason some of them executed as Traitors the rest banished their lands and goods forfeited and none to endeavour to procure their pardon under pain of Felony for their endeavouring to overthrow a Commission for the good of the Kingdome contrary to an Act of Parliament by force of Arms and opinions in Law delivered by these temporizing Judges and Lawyers to the King through threats and terrour at Nottingham Castle tending to subvert the Laws and Statutes of the Realm overthrow the Power Priviledges and proceedings of Parliament and betray not all the House of Lords but only some of the Lords of Parliament Which Judgement being afterwards reversed in the forced and packed Parliament of 21. R. 2. was reconfirmed in the Parliament of 1 H. 4. c. 3 4 5. and the Parliament of 21. R. 2. totally repealed and adnulled for ever and hath so continued Read Statut. at large 3. In the Parliament of 17 R. 2. n. 20. and Pas 17 R. 2. B. Regis Rot. 16. Sir Thomas Talbot was accused and found guilty of High Treason for conspiring the death of the Dukes of Glocester Lancaster and other Peers who maintained the Commission confirmed by Act of Parliament 10. R. 2 and assembling people in a warlike manner in the County of Chester for effecting of it in destruction of the estates of the Realm and the Laws of the Kingdome 4. In the 29. year of King Henry the sixth Jack Cade under a pretence to REFORM alter and abrogate some laws Purveyances and Extortions importable to the Commons whereupon he was called JOHN AMEND ALL drew a great multitude of Kentish people to Black-heath in a warlike manner to effect it In the Parliament of 29 H. 6. c. 1 this was adjudged High Treason in him and his Complices by Act of Parliament and the Parliament of 31. H. 6. c. 1. made this memorable Act against him and his Imitators in succeding ages worthy serious perusal and consideration by all who tread in his footsteps and over-act him in his Treasons Whereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious and errant FALSE TRAYTOR John Cade calling himself sometimes Mortimer sometime Captain of Kent which Name Fame Acts and Feats be to be removed out of the speech and minde of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsly and traiterously purposing and imagining the perpetuall destruction of the KINGS PERSON and FINAL SVBVERSION OF THIS REALM taking upon him ROYALL POWER and gathering to him the Kings People in great number BY FALSE SVBTIL IMAGINED LANGVAGE and seditiously made a stirring Rebellion and insurrection VNDER COLOVR OF JVSTICE FOR REFORMATION OF THE LAWS OF THE SAID KING robbing slaying spoiling a great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraign Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by advice and assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at THE REQUEST OF THE COMMONS and by Authority aforesaid Hath ordained and established that the said John Cade shall be had named and declared A FALSE TRAYTOR to our said Soveraign Lord the King and that all his Tyranny Acts Feats false Opinions shall be voided abated adnulled destroyed and put out of remembrance for ever And that all Indictments and things depending thereof had and made under the power of Tyranny shall likewise be void adnulled abated repealed and holden for none and that the blood of none of them be defiled nor corrupted but by the Authority of the said Parliament clearly declared for ever And that all Indictments in time coming in like case under power of Tyranny Rebellion and stirring had shall be of no regard or effect but void in Law And all the Petitions delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at Westminster the sixth day of November the 29. of his Reign against his minde by him not agreed shall be taken and put in Oblivion out of Remembrance undone voided adnulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and his Conscience and against his Royal estate and preheminence and also DISHONORABLE and UNREASONABLE 5. In the 8 year of King Henry the 8. William Bell and Thomas Lacy in the County of Kent conspired with Thomas Cheney the Hermite of the Queen of Fairies TO OVER THROW THE LAWS AND CUSTOMS OF THE REALM for effecting whereof they with 200 more met together and concluded upon a course of raising greater forces in Kent and the adjacent Shires This was judged High Treason and some of them executed as Traitors Moreover it was resolved by all the Judges of England in the reign of Henry 8. that an Insurrection against the Statute of Laborers or for the inhansing of Salaries and wages or against any Statute or to remove Councellors or to any other end pretending Reformation of their own heads was TREASON and a levying war against the King BECAVSE IT WAS GENERALLY AGAINST THE KINGS LAW and the Offenders took upon them THE REFORMATION THEREOF which Subjects by gathering of power ought not to do 6. On December 1. in the 21. year of King Henry the 8. Sr. Thomas Moore Lord Chancellour of England with fourteen more Lords of the Privy Councel John Fitz-James Chief Justice of England and Sir Anthony Fitz-Herbert Herbert
Kingdome And if it hath not been put in execution as he alledgeth this two hundred and fourty years it was not for want of LAW but that all that time had not bred a man bold enough to commit such Crimes as these which is a circumstance much aggravating his Offence and making him no lesse liable to punishment he is THE ONELY MAN that in so long a time hath ventured UPON SUCH A TREASON AS THIS Thus far Mr. John Pym in the Name and by the Order and Authority of the whole Commons House in Parliament which I wish all those who by their Words Actions Counsels and printed Publications too have traiterously endeavoured to subvert the Fundamentall Laws Liberties Government Parliaments of England and Ireland and to introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government against law as much as ever Strafford did yea far out stripped him therein even since his execution in all particulars for which he was beheaded would now seriously lay to heart and speedily reform lest they equal or exceed him in conclusion in capital punishments for the same or endlesse Hellish Torments 13. The next Authority I shall produce in point is The Speech and Declaration of Master Oliver St. John at a Conference of both Houses of Parliament concerning SHIPMONEY upon Judge Finches Impeachment of High Treason January 14. 1640. printed by the Commons Order London 1641. wherein he thus declares the sense of the Commons p. 12. c. That by the Judges opinions forecited concerning Ship-mony THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM CONCERNING OUR PROPERTIES and OUR PERSONS ARE SHAKEN whose Treasonable Offence herein he thus aggravates page 20. c. The Judges as is declared in the Parliament of 11 R. 2. are the Executors of the Statutes and of the Judgments and Ordinances of Parliament They have made themselves the EXECUTIONERS OF THEM they have indeavoured the DESTRUCTION OF THE FUNDAMENTALS OF OUR LAWS and LIBERTIES Holland in the Low Countries lies under the Sea the superfices of the Land is lower than the superficies of the Sea It is Capitall therefore for any man to cut the Banks because they defend the Country Besides our own even Forraign Authours as Comines observes That the Statute DE TALLAGIO and the other Old Laws are the Sea Wals and Banks which keep the Commons from the inundation of the Prerogative These Pioners have not onely undermined these banks but have levelled them even with the ground If one that was known to be Hostis Patriae had done this though the Dammage be the same yet the Guilt is lesse but the Conservatores Riparum the Overseers intrusted with the Defence of these Banks for them to destroy them the breach of Trust aggravates nay alters the nature of the offence Breach of Trust though in a private Person and in the least things is odious amongst all men much more in a publike Person in things of great and publike concernment because GREAT TRUST BINDES THE PARTY TRUSTED TO GREATEST CARE AND FIDELITY It is TREASON in the Constable of Dover Castle to deliver the Keys to the known enemies of the Kingdome Whereas if the House-keeper of a private person deliver possession to his Adversary it is a crime scarce punishable by Law The Judges under his Majesty are the Persons trusted with the Laws and in them with the Lives Liberties and Estates of the whole Kingdome This Trust of all we have is primarily from his Majesty and from him delegated to the Judges His Majesty at his Coronation is bound by his Oath TO EXECUTE JUSTICE TO HIS PEOPLE ACCORDING TO THE LAWES thereby to assure the People of the faithfull performance of his GREAT TRUST His Majesty again as he trusts the Judges with the performance of this part of his Oath so doth he likewise exact another Oath of them for their due execution of Justice to the people according to the Laws hereby the Judges stand intrusted with this part of his Majesties Oath If therefore the Judges shall doe wittingly against the Law they doe not onely break their own Oaths and therein the Common Faith and Trust of the whole Kingdome but do as much as in them lies asperse blemish the sacred Person of his Majesty with the odious and hatefull sin of Perjury My Lords the hainousnesse of this offence is most legible in the severe punishment which former Ages have inflicted upon those Judges who have broken any part of their Oaths wittingly though in things not so dangerous to the Subject as in the case in question Sir Thomas Wayland Chief Justice of the Common Pleas 17. E. 1. was attainted of Felony for taking Bribes and his Lands and Goods forfeited as appears in the Pleas of Parliament 18 E. 1. and he was banished the Kingdome as unworthy to live in the State against which he had so much offended Sir William Thorpe Chief Justice of the Kings Bench in Edward the thirds time having of five persons received five severall Bribes which in all amounted to one hundred pounds was for this alone adjudged to be hanged and all his Goods and Lands forfeited The reason of the Judgment is entered in the Roll in these words Quia praedictus Willielmus Thorp qui Sacramentum Domini Regis erga populum suum habuit ad custodiendum fregit malitiose falsò rebelliter quantum in ipso fuit There is a notable Declaration in that Judgement that this judgement was not to be drawn into example against any other Officers who should break their Oaths but onely against those qui praedictum Sacramentum fecerunt fregerunt habent Leges Angliae ad custodiendum That is onely to the Judges Oaths who have the Laws intrusted unto them This Judgment was given 24 E. 3. The next year in Parliament 25 E. 3. Numb 10. it was debated in Parliament whether this Judgement was legall Et nullo contradicente it was declared TO BE JUST AND ACCORDING TO THE LAW and the same Judgement may be given in time to come upon the like occasion This case is in point That it is death for any JVDGE wittingly to break his OATH in any part of it This OATH of THORP is entred in the Roll and the same Verbatim with the Judges OATH in 18 Edw. 3. and is the same which the Judges now take And let those who have taken the same Oath with the OATHES OF SUPREMACY and ALLEGIANCE too remember and apply this PRESIDENT lest others do it for them Your Lordships will give me leave to observe the differences between that and the case in question 1. That of Thorp was onely a selling of the Law by Retaile to these five persons for he had five severall Bribes of these five persons the Passage of the Law to the rest of the Subjects for ought appears was free and open But these Opinions are a conveyance of the Law by whole sale and that not
later times in corrupt cowardly time-serving degenerate Lawyers and Judasses rather than Judges to the disgrace of their Profession now generally spoken against their own dishonour infamy reproach the scandall of Religion which some of them have eminently professed the prejudice and subversion of the Fundamentall Laws Liberties Rights Priviledges of our Nation Peers Parliaments and of the ancient Fundamental Government of this famous Kingdome whereof they are Members and that contrary to some of their own late Judgments sciences Consciences Votes Printed Arguments Speeches Declarations against others even in and out of Parliament and their own first Charges in their Circuits repugnant to their later 4. To instruct those Jesuited Anabaptists Levellers and their Factors especially John Canne and the rest of the Compilers Publishers Abetters of the Pamphlet intituled Leiutenant Colonel John Lilburn tried and east and other forementioned publications who professedly set themselves by Words Writings Counsels and overt Acts to subvert both our old Fundamentall with all other Laws Liberties Customs Parliaments and Government what transcendent Malefactors Traitors and Enemies they are to the publique and what Capital punishments they may incurre as well as d●merit should they be legally prosecuted for the same and thereupon to advise them timely to repent of and d●sist from such high Treasonable attempts 5. To clear both my self and this my seasonable Defence of our Fundamental Laws Liberties Government from the least suspition or shadow of Faction Sedition Treason and Emnity to the publique peace weal settlement of the Nation which those and those onely who are most factious and seditious and the greatest Enemies Traitors to the publique tranquility Weal Laws Liberties Government and establishment of our Kingdome as the premises evidence will be ready maliciously to asperse both me and it with as they have done heretofore some other of my Writings of this Nature with all which they must first brand Mr. St. John Mr. Pym the whole House of Commons the two last with all other Parliaments forecited and themselves too from which they are so much changed and degenerated of late years ere they can accuse traduce or censure me who do but barely relate apply their words and judgments in their purest times without malice or partiality for the whole Kingdomes benefit security and resettlement To these punctual full Juries of Records and Parliament Authorities in point I could accumulate Sr. Edward Cook his 3. Institutes p. 9. printed and authorised by the House of Commons speciall Order the last Parliament The severall Speeches of M. Hide M. Waller M. Pierpoint and M. Hollis July 6. 1641. at the Lords Bar in Parliament by Order of the Commons House at the Impeachment of the Shipmony Judges of High Treason printed in Diurnal Occurrences and Speeches in Parliament London 1641. p. 237 to 264. M. Samuel Browns Argument at law before the Lords and Commons at Canterburies Attainder all manifesting their endeavouring to subvert the Fundamentall Laws and Government of the Realm to be High Treason with sundry other printed Authorities to prove That we have Fundamental Laws Liberties Rights and a Fundamental Government likewise which ought not to be innovated violated or subverted upon any pretences whatsoever by any power or prevailing Faction Which Fundamental Rights Liberties Laws Sr. Thomas Fairfax and the Army under his Command by their Declaration of June 14. 1647. particularly promise and engage to assert vindicate against all arbitray power violence oppression and against all particular parties or Interests whatsoever which they may doe well to remember and make good But to avoid prolixity the double Jury of irrefragable and punctuall authorities already produced being sufficient to satisfie the most obstinate opposites formerly contradicting it I shall onely adde three swaying authorities more wherewith I shall conclude this point The first is a very late one in a Treatise intituled A true State of the Common Wealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging in Reference to the late established Government by a Lord Protector and a PARLIAMENT It being the Judgement of DIVERSE PERSONS who throughout these late troubles have approved themselves faithfull to the Cause and interest of God and their COUNTRY presented to the publike for the satisfaction of others Printed at London 1654. who relating the miscarriages of the last ASSEMBLY at Westminster elected nominated by the Censurers of them the Army Officers onely not the people use these expressions of them page 13 14 16 17 21 22. But on the contrary it so fell out in a short time that there appeared many in this Assembly of very contrary principles to the interest aforesaid which led them violently on to attempt and promote many things the consequence whereof would have been A subverting of the Fundamentall Laws of the Land the Destruction of Property and an utter extinguishment of the Gospel In truth their Principles led them TO A PULLING DOWN ALL AND ESTABLISING NOTHING So that instead of the expected settlement they were running into FURTHER ANARCHY AND CONFUSION As to the Laws and Civil Rights of the Nation nothing would serve them but a TOTALL ERADICATION OF THE OLD AND INTRODUCTION OF A NEW and so the good Old Laws of England the Guardians of our Laws and Fortunes established with prudence and confirmed by the experience of many Ages and Generations The Preservation whereof was a principall ground of our late quarrell with the King having been once abolished what could we have expected afterwards but an inthroning of Arbitrary power in the Seat of Judicature and an exposing of our Lives our Estates our Liberties and all that is dear unto us as a Sacrifice to the boundlesse appetite of meer Will and Power c. Things being at this passe and the House through these proceedings perfectly disjointed it was in vain to look for a settlement of this Nation from them thus constituted but on the contrary nothing else could be expected But that the Common-wealth should sink under their hands and the great cause hitherto so happily upheld and maintained to be for ever lost through their preposterous management of these affairs wherewith they had been intrusted Whereupon they justifie their dissolution and turning them forcibly out of doores by the Souldiers with shame and infamy to prevent that destruction which thereby was coming on THE WHOLE LAND by this New Powder Treason plot set on foot by the Jesuites and Anabaptists to destroy our Laws Liberties Properties Ministers and Religion it self at one blow and that in the very Parliament House where some destroyed and blowed up Kings Peers and Parliaments themselves as well as Lawes and Parliament Priviledges of late years where they had been constantly defended vindicated preserved established in all former Ages by ALL TRVE ENGLISH PARLIAMENTS The second is The Votes of the House of Commons concerning a Paper presented to them entituled An Agreement of the people for a firm present
frequently universally invaded assaulted undermined by our Kings and their evil Instruments heretofore and others since and thereupon more strenuously frequently vigilantly maintained fenced regained retained by our Nobles Parliaments and the people in all Ages till of late years than any or all of the rest put together though every of them hath been constantly defended maintained when impugned or incroached upon by our Ancestors and our selves 1 That no Tax Tallage Aid Subsidy Custom Contribution Loan Imposition Excise or other Assesment whatsoever for defence of the Realm by Land or Sea or any other publick ordinary or extraordinary occasion may or ought bee imposed or leavied upon all or any of the Freemen of England by reason of any pretended or real Danger Necessity or other pretext by the Kings of England or any other Powers but only with and by their common consent and grant in a free and lawful English Parliament duly summoned and elected except only such antient legal Ayds as they are specially obliged to render by their Tenures Charters Contracts and the common Law of England 2 That no Free-man of England ought to bee arrested confined imprisoned or in any private Castles or remote unusual Prisons under Souldiers or other Guardians but only in usual or Common Gaols under sworn responsible Goalers in the County where he lives or is apprehended and where his friends may freely visit and releeve him with necessaries And that only for some just and legal Cause expressed in the Writ Warrant or Process by which he is arrested or imprisoned which ought to be legally executed by known legal responsible sworn Officers of Justice not unknown Military Officers Troopers or other illegal Catchpolls That no such Free-man ought to bee denied Bail Mainprise or the benefit of an Habe as Corpus or any other Legal Writ for his enlargement when Bailable or Mainprizable by Law nor to be detained Prisoner for any real or pretended Crime not bailable by Law longer than until the next general or special Gaol-delivery held in the County where he is imprisoned when and where he ought to be legally tried and proceeded against or else enlarged by the Justices without denial or delay of Right and Justice And that no such Free-man may or ought to be out-lawed exiled condemned to any kinde of Corporal punishment loss of Life or Member or otherwise destroyed or passed upon but only by due and lawful Process Indictment and the lawful Trial Verdict and Judgement of his Peers according to the good old Law of the Land in some usual Court of publick Justice not by and in new illegal Military or other Arbitrary Judicatories Committees or Courts of High Justice unknown to our Ancestors 3 That the ordinary standing Militia Force and Arms of the Kingdom ought to reside in the Nobility Gentry Freeholders and Trained Bands of the Kingdom not in Mercenary Officers and Souldiers receiving pay and Contributions from the people more apt to oppress inslave betray than protect their Laws Liberties and to protract than end their Warres and Taxes That no Free-men of England unless it bee by special Grant and Act of Parliament may or ought to be compelled enforced pressed or arrayed to go forth of his own County much less out of the Realm into forreign parts against his will in times of Warre or Peace or except he be specially obliged thereto by antient Tenures and Charters save only upon the sudden coming of strange enemies into the Realm and then he is to array himself only in such sort as he is bonnd to do by the ancient Laws and Customs of the Kingdom still in force 4 That no Free-man of England may or ought to be disinherited disseised dispossessed or deprived of any Inheritance Free-hold Office Liberty Custom Franchise Chattles Goods whatsoever without his own Gift Grant or free Consent unless it be by lawful Processe Trial and Judgement of his Peers or special Grant by Act of Parliament nor to be denied or delayed common Right or Justice in any case 5 That the old received Government Laws Statutes Customs Priviledges Courts of Justice legal Processe of the Kingdom and Crown ought not to be altered repealed suppressed in any sort nor any new form of Government Law Statute Ordinance Court of Judicatury Writ● or legal proceedings instituted or imposed on all or any of the Free-men of England by any person or persons but only in and by the Kingdoms peoples free and full precedent consent in a lawful Parliament wherein the Legislative power solely resides 6 That Parliaments ought to be duly summoned and held for the good and safety of the Kingdom every year or every three years at least or so soon as there is just occasion That the Election of all Knights Citizens and Burgesses to sit and serve in Parliament and so of all other Elective Officers ought to be free That all Members of Parliament Hereditary or Elective ought to be present and there freely to speak and vote according to their Judgements and Consciences without any over-awing Guards to terrifie them and none to be forced sequestered or secluded thence by force or fraud That all Parliaments not thus duly and freely summoned elected freely held but unduly packed without due Elections or by forcible secluding securing any of the Members or not summoning all of them to the Parliament and all Acts of Parliament fraudulently or forcibly procured by indirect means ought to be nulled repealed reputed voyd and of dangerous president 7 That neither the Kings nor any Subjects of the Kingdom of England may or ought to be summoned before any Forreign Powers or Jurisdictions whatsoever out of the Realm or within the same for any manner of Right Inheritance Thing belonging to them or Offence done by them within the Realm nor tried nor judged by them 8 That all Subjects of the Realm are obliged by Allegiance Oaths and duty to defend their lawful Kings Persons Crowns the Laws Rights and Priviledges of the Realm and of Parliament against all Usurpers Traytors Violence and Conspiracies And that no Subject of this Realm who according to his Duty and Allegiance shall serve his King in his Warres for the just defence of him and the Land against Forreign Enemies or Rebels shall lose or forfeit any thing for doing his true duty service and allegiance to him therein but utterly be discharged of all vexation trouble or losse 9 That no publick Warre by Land or Sea ought to be made or leavied with or against any Forreign Nation nor any publick Truce or League entred into with Forreign Realms or States to binde the Nation without their common advice and consent in Parliament 10 That the Kings of England or others cannot grant away alien or subject the Crown Kingdom or antient Crown Lands of England to any other without their Nobles and Kingdoms full and free consent in Parliament That the antient Honours Manors Lands Rents
no sooner projected by some evil Malignant Jesuited Counsellers about the late King but it was presently condemned and crushed in the very shell when first intended to be set on foot in England by King Charls with the advise and consent of his privie Council at White-Hall by a Commission under the Great Seal of England dated the last of February 3 Caroli issued to thirty three Lords of his Majesties Privie Council and others which authorized commanded them to raise monies BY IMPOSITIONS OR OTHERWISE as they in their wisdoms should finde most convenient and that only for these publike uses THE DEFENCE OF THE KING KINGDOM PEOPLE and of the Kings Friends and Allies beyond the Seas then in such imminent danger that WITHOUT EXTREAMEST HAZARD OF THE KING KINGDOM PEOPLE KINGS Friends and Allies it could admit of no longer delay In which INEVITABLE NECESSITY form and circumstance must rather be dispenced with than the substance lost The Commissioners being thereupon specially injoyned to be diligent in the Service and not fail therein as they tender his Majesties Honour and THE SAFETY OF THE KING and PEOPLE This Commission was no sooner discovered but it was presently complained of by the whole Commons House in the Parliament of 3 Caroli and upon Conference with the Lords it was immediately Voted adjudged by both Houses without one dissenting voyce TO BEE EX DIAMETHRO AGAINST LAW and CONTRARY TO THE PETITION OF RIGHT after which it was cancelled as such in the Kings own presence by his consent order and then sent cancelled to both Houses for their satisfaction before ever it was put in execution and all Warrants for and memorials of it cancelled damned destroyed the Commons further urging That the Projector thereof might be found out by strict inquiry and EXEMPLARILY PVNISHED as the Parliament Journal attests notwithstanding all the specious pretences of inevitable necessity imminent danger and the defence safety of the whole Kingdom People King and his forreign Protestant Friends and Allies then in greater real danger than any now appearing This Original Parliamentary Doom Judgement against that New Monster of Excise was ratified approved pressed by both Houses of Parliament in the Cases of Ship-money and the Commission of Array as you may read at large in Mr. Oliver St. Johns Speech and Declaration delivered at a Conference of both Houses concerning Ship-money 14 January 1640. printed by the Commons Order p. 13. to 20. and The Lords and Commons second Declaration against the Commission of Array Exact collection p. 884 885. from which they then drew this positive conclusion fit to be now considered by our New Governours and the whole Nation THAT TO DEFEND THE KINGDOM IN TIME OF IMMINENT DANGER IS NO SUFFICIENT CAVSE for the King and his Council much less then for those who condemned suppressed them for Tyrants and Oppressors of the People TO LAY ANY TAX OR CHARGE UPON THE SUBJECTS WITHOUT THEIR CONSENT IN PARLIAMENT Yea the whole House of Commons was so zealous against this Dutch Devil of Excise that in their Remonstrance of the state of the Kingdom 15 Decemb 1641. Exact Collection p. 3 4 6. they expresly brand censure the first Attempts to introduce it for A MALIGNANT and PERNI●IOUS DESIGN TO SUBVERT THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS and PRINCIPLES OF GOVERNMENT upon which the JUSTICE OF THIS KINGDOM WAS FORMERLY ESTABLISHED as proceeding from JESUITED COVNSELS BEING MOST ACTIVE and PREVAILING yea for AN UNJUST and PERNICIOVS ATTEMPT TO EXTORT GREAT PAYMENTS FROM THE SUBJECTS Which was to be accompanied as now it is with Billited Souldiers in all parts of the Kingdom and the concomitant of German as now of English HORSE That the LAND MIGHT EITHER SUBJECT WITH FEAR or BE ENFORCED WITH RIGOVR TO SUCH ARBITRARY CONTRIBUTIONS AS SHOVLD BE REQVIRED OF THEM And when some rumours were first spread abroad that the COMMONS HOVSE INTENDED TO LAY EXCISE UPON PEW●ER AND OTHER COMMODITIES they were so sensible of the injustice and odiousness thereof that they thereupon published a special Declaration printed 8 Octob. 1642. Exact Collection p. 638. wherein they not only disclaim renounce any such intention but branded those Reports and Rumours for FALSE and SCANDALOVS ASPERSIONS raised and cast upon the House BY MALIGNANT and ILL-AFFECTED PERSONS TENDING MUCH TO THE DISSERVICE OF THE PARLIAMENT and Ordered That the AVTHORS OF THEM should be inquired aftèr apprehended and brought to the House TO RECEIVE CONDIGNE PUNISHMENT After which this Excise being notwithstanding this Disclaimer and much publick private opposition against it set on foot by some swaying Members upon a pretence of necessity for support of the Army to the great Oppression and Discontent of the People The Generall and general Council of Officers and Souldiers of THE ARMY themselves were so sensible of this illegal oft-condemned New grievance that in the Heads of their Proposals and particulars of their Desires in order to the clearing and securing of the Rights and Liberties of the Kingdom tendred to the Commissioners of Parliament residing with the Army the first of August 1647. printed in their Book of Declarations p. 118 published by their own and the Lords House special Order they ●ade this one principall Desire to the Parliament That the EXCISE may be taken off from such Commodities whereof the poor of the Land do ordinarily live and A CERTAIN TIME TO BE LIMITED FOR TAKING OFF THE WHOLE Yet notwithstanding all these Judgements and Out-cryes against it some of those very persons who thus publickly branded it both in the Parliament House and Army by irregular paper Ordinances as they intitle them dated 24 December 1653. March 17. 1653. and May 4. 1654. have by their own Self-derived supertranscendent Authority without yea against the Peoples consents or any Authority from Parliament imposed continued Excise upon our own Inland and Forreign Commodities in very high proportions from the twenty fourth of March 1654. till the twenty fourth of March 1655. And which is most observable prescribed it to bee levied by putting the Parties to an EX OFFICIO OATH against themselves by Fines Forfeitures SEQVESTRATIONS and SALES OF THE REFUSERS OPPOSERS PERSONAL and REAL ESTATES DISSTRESSES BREAKING UP OF THE PARTIES HOVSES SEISVRES OF THEIR GOODS IMPRISONMENT OF THE PERSONS OF ALL SUCH WHO SHALL HINDER OR OPPOSE THE MINISTERS OR OFFICERS IMPLOYED IN LEVYING or distraining for the same BY LOCKING UP THE DOORS or OTHERWISE And by these their unparalleld Edicts they further order That the Officers of Excise BOTH DAY AND NIGHT shall be permitted free entrance into ALL ROOMES and PLACES WHATSOEVER THEY SHALL DEMAND in Brewers Sope-boylers and others Houses under pain of forfeiture of fifty pounds for every refusal by colour whereof all mens Houses may be robbed plundered and their throats cut by Theeves and Robbers pretending themselves Excise-men Souldiers authorised to make such Searches as many of late have been And they with all their assistants shall bee kept indenspnified in
PREJVDICIAL TO THE REALM and VERY BVRDENSOME TO THE PEOPLE and specially TO GRANT TO THE SAID KING A SUBSIDY FOR CERTAIN YEARS TO THE OPPRESSING OF His People overmuch That although the Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels of every Freeman by the Laws of the Realm used in all former ages past ought not to be seized unless they had forfeited Yet notwithstanding the said King purposing endeavouring to enervate these Laws in the presence of very many of the Lords and Commons of this Realm frequently said and affirmed That the Life Lands Tenements Goods and Chattles of every one of his Subjects are at his will and pleasure without any Forfeiture by the known Laws which is altogether contrary to the Laws customs of the Realm aforesaid Whether all these high Misdemeanors charged against King Richard have not been revived and acted over and over both by words and deeds in a farre higher degree than ever he was guilty of them by some late present Whitehall Grandees Army-Officers New Instrument-makers Legitors and Imposers of Excises Customs Imposts Tonnage Poundage Contributions for many years yet to come and of that constant Annual Revenue projected intended by them in their 27 Article I remit to their own judgements consciences and our whole Kingdom to resolve and what they demerit for such extravagant high offences for which he lost Crown and Regal power let others determine The 3. particular is their late incumbent Imposition of 6. Moneths new Contribution by a meer Self-enacted Whitchall Jurisdiction without any consent grant in or by the People in Parliament by that they intitle An Ordinance of the 8. of ●une 1654. beginning thus in a most imperial Stile transcending all former Acts of Parliament granting or imposing any Subsidies without any Prologue to sweeten it or court the people to its ready payment Be it Ordained and Enacted by his Highness the Lord Protector with the consent of his Council and it is hereby Ordained That towards the maintenance of the Armies and Navies of this Commonwealth An Assessement of one Hundred and Twenty Thousand Pounds per Mensem for Three Monethe commencing the 24 of Iune 1654 and ending the 29 of Sept. following shall be Taxed Levied Collected and Paid in England and Wales in such sort as is hereafter expressed The full sum of the said Three Months Assessment of One hundred and twenty thousand pounds by the Month to be at once wholly collected and paid in to the Receivers Generall at or before the tenth day of October next c. The Levying thereof upon the refusers hath been by distress of Goods by Souldiers Troopers and quartering them on the refusers till payment and double the value many times paid to and exacted by the Souldiers for their pains adjudged even by some of our New Grandees Votes who prescribe such Taxes and wayes of levying them to be No less then High Treason and levying Warre in Straffords case for which principally he was condemned and lost his head on Tower Hill as a Traytor In this New Whitehall Tax without a Parliament intended as a leading President to bind the whole Nation in perpetuity if now submitted to as the 27 Article intimates there is a double violation subversion of the Fundamental Laws and Properties of the Nation in the Highest degree The first is by the reviving imposing of Ship-mony on the whole Realm and all Inland Counties as well as Maritine for the Maintenance of the Navies by Sea which should be maintained only by the Customs and that in a farre higher proportion than the Shipmony imposed by Writs by our late beheaded King amounting to no less than Forty thousand pounds per Mensem at last by way of Contribution alone besides the Customs Tonnage Poundage and Excise paid towards it This Imposition of Shipmony by the late King though ratified with the advise and consent of his Council many colourable Presidents Records in all former ages and the precedent Resolution of all his Iudges under their hands as just and legally imposed in case of Necessity and Publike danger only without consent in Parliament together with the Iudgement and Proceedings of the Iudges in the Eschequer Chamber in justification thereof were in the last Parliament after solemne debate by the Votes and Iudgements of both Houses on the 20. Ian. and 26 February resolved Nemine contradicent● To be contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm contrary to the Rights and Properties of the Subjects of this Realm contrary to former Iudgements in Parliament contrary to the great Charter and to the Petition of Right and voted to be so declared by the Iudges at the Assizes in the severall Counties the same to be entred and inrolled in the severall Counties by the Clerks of the Assises After which it was for ever damned by a special Act of Parliament to which the King himself gave his Royal assent afterwards cited and enforced by both Houses Exact Collection p. 886. 887. in the case of the Array And those Iudges who argued That the King might lawfully impose Shipmony on the Subjects without a Parliament in cases of Danger and Necessity of which they affirmed him to be the sole Iudge were by all impeached by the House of Commons of High Treason for these Opinions of theirs whereby they trayterously and wickedly endeavoured to subvert The Fundamental Laws and established Government of the Realm of England and instead thereof to set up an Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government against Law of which at large before How any present Powers or Persons then can either impose justify levy enforce it upon any Pretext of Necessity or publique Danger on the whole Nation after all these late Resolutions Iudgements Votes Impeachments and a special Act of Parliament so fresh in memory especially such who were parties to them without incurring the self-same Impeachments and guilt as these Ship-mony Iudges did or a severer Censure then they sustained let their own Conscsences and those who may on● day prove their Iudges resolve them at leasure being past my skill to doe it The 2. is By the imposing of a direct heavy Tax Tallage and Monthly contr●bution and that only for the Maintenance of such a Land Army which hath offered force unto the Members of both Houses subverted destroyed that Parliament Government Laws Libertie for whose preservation they were specially raised Commissioned engaged without yea against the Peoples assent in Parliament which no King of England with the advice and consent of his Council had ever any Right or Power to doe or audacity enough to attempt no not William the Conqueror C●nute Henry the 4th Edward the 4th or Henry the 7th who came principally by power of the Sword to their Soveraign Regall Authorities By what Justice Power Legal Right any other person or persons whatsoever who are neither rightfull Kings nor Parliaments of England in their own or others repute can either impose levy exact such
it which would have forestalled affronted the next and all future Parliaments in their proper work of granting regulating all future Taxes according to the 6. and 30. Articles and made them meer Cyphers clearly takes away this evasion with all their former and future Whitehall Impositions after the 3 of September as contrary both to their Instrument and Oath 5ly The words of the 30th Article whereto this Saving refers are observable That they shall have power until the meeting of the first Parliament to raise Monies for defraying the Charges of the Extraordinary Forces both at Land and Sea In respect of the present Wars To which for the purposes aforesaid in the Saving relates But the present Warres being many Moneths since ended both by Land and Sea by the Peace concluded with Forreign Nations and so no need nor use of Extraordinary Forces to be still continued by Land or Sea the ancient Trayned Bands and Militia of the Realm being now well able to defend secure us at their owne cost without any Mercenary Forces Excises or Contributions only to pay them the power of raising Monies in this Saving with the grounds thereof are now at an end as well as our Warrs and the whole 27 Article too Since the old standing Militia and Trayned Bands of the 3. Nations will be a sufficient Safeguard to them without our Mercenary Army or Forces which usually prove Treacherous Supplanters Usurpers Oppressors to all who rely 〈◊〉 them whereupon our prudent Ancesters since 〈◊〉 gernes usurpation intrusted their Militia and Defence of the Realm only in the hands of the Nobility Gentry Freeholders and persons of best ability and estates not in Mercenary Armies which supplanted the Britons And our Warres now ceasing the antient Revenues Lands Customes of the Crowne and Perquisits of the Courts of Justice will be sufficient to defray all the Ordinary expences of the Government Navy old standing Garrisons if continued though useless Officers of State and Justice as they did in all former ages and still ought to do for the peoples ease and benefit 6ly It hath been the special policy care of our prudent Fore-fathers and wise Parliaments never to grant any annual Tax or Charge except Tonnage ●and Poundage in some cases for a limited time for Publike Defence unto their Kings and Governours nor usually to give them above Subsidy or one or two Fifteens or a single Escuage and sometimes not so much in any one Parliament upon any extraordinary occasion or necessity and that upon these Grounds 1. Because extraordinary Aydes ought to be granted only for and proportioned to extraordinary present emergent Necessities visibly appearing which being not lasting but momentany and various one from another no standing certain Contribution can or ought to be allotted for them but only a temporary and mutable the ordinary setled Crown Revenues being sufficient to defray all ordinary expences without other Aydes 2ly To keep a perpetual tye upon their Kings and Governours to summon frequent Parliaments and redre●s all their Grievances in them before they should receive any Grant of new Ayds or Subsidies from them to supply their publique Necessities to preserve a Power and Right in Parliaments to examine the grounds and present necessity of all Taxes demanded and to take an Accompt how former Taxes the Kings Revenues had been disbursed before they granted new ones All which the granting of standing annual Aydes for publique Defence would frust●●e 3ly To prevent the encroaching of a constant Charge and Revenue on the People which if granted but for years life or but twice or thrice in the same kind and proportion without alteration though but as a free gift in Parliament would thereupon be claimed exacted from them afterwards as a meer just annual Right and Revenue without their future grants as Danegeld was by some of our Kings of old Imposts once granted by Edward the 3. and other Kings heretofore and the Customes of Tonnage Poundage by King Charles of late 4ly To avoid all unjust Oppressions of the people by imposing on them more Taxes at once than the present urgent necessities required 5ly To prevent the inhaunsing doubling of Taxes by any new dangerous Presidents Sir Edward Co●k observes in his 4 Institutes p. 33. That the Commons never used to give above one Temporary Subsidie and two Fifteens in any one Parliament and sometimes less till the Parliament of 31 Eliz. which gave 2. Subsidies and 4 Fifteens upon which first breach of this old circle and usage their Taxes still increased afterwards by degrees for in 35 39 Eliz. they rose to 3. Subsidies and 6 Fifteens in 43 Eliz. to 4 Subsidies and 8 Fifteens in 21 Jacobi to 3 Subsidies and 6 Fifteens in shorter time then had been before in 3 Caroli to 5 Subsidies in shortest time of all and now of late to constant annual Imposts Excises endless Monethly Contributions amounting to at least 3 Subsidies every Moneth 6ly Because a standing extraordinary Tax especially for years or life when once claimed or received as part of the publique Revenue would be hardly relinquished or discontinued without much contest and danger as appears by Danegeld of old and Tonnage Poundage Excise Monthly Contributions of late imposed as of right upon us by every new upstart Power and when once customarily claimed collected as a Duty will no ways ease nor exempt the people from new Extraordinary Aydes and Taxes This is evident by that memorable President concerning abby-Abby-Lands in King Henry the 8 his reign setled on him as a large annuall standing Revenue of purpose to defend the Realm and ease the People from all future Aydes by the Parliaments of 27 H. 8. c. 28. 31 H. 8. c. 13. 32 H. 8. c. 14. Yet were these Lands no sooner setled on the Crown for these ends but in the same Parliament of 32 H. 8. the King demanded and ●ad of his Subjects one extraordinary Subsidy both of the Clergy and Laity and 34 H 8. c. 16 17. 37 H. 8. c. 24. he demanded and had the like Subsidy of them again and his Successors the like and greater Subsidies every Parliament since The like we see in the Case of Tonnage and Poundage granted only for the Defence of the Seas and Realm against Forraign Enemies Pirates Which no sooner taken by the late King as a standing Revenue of the Crown but he exacted and levied against Law a New annual Tax of Shipmony to guard the Seas for which very use he received Tonnage Poundage and the ancient Customes as our late Governors did and present do together with new Imposts and Excises and yet impose Land rates of Forty thousand pounds a Month besides to Maintain the Navy To instance in one particular more Our late new Governours made sale of all Archbishops Bishops Deanes Chapters Delinquents Kings Queens Princes and Sequestred Lands and Goods both in England Scotland and Ireland one after another under pretext
peremptorily to withstand the firs to prevent a second customary future exaction and payment in like kind pursuing the Poet Ovids old sage Counsel wherewith I shall conclude this point Principiis obsta serò medicina paratur Cum mala per longas invaluere moras How transcendently all the other Fundamental Laws Liberties Rights of our English Freeborn Nation have by late and present Governours and their Instruments been infringed subverted in an higher avowed degree than ever in former ages by forcible tyrannical Proceedings of all kindes in breaking open mens Houses by armed Souldiers and other unsworn illegal Officers Excise-men Sequestrators both by day and night seising their Persons Horses Armes Papers Writings ransacking their Studies Truncks Cabinets upon false surmises suspicions close imprisoning their persons by multitudes without before any examination particular accusation hearing trial in unusual places and some of them in remetest Isles Garrisons under Souldiers Their pressing of men for Land and Sea service and carrying them away perforce by Soldiers Troopers Officers Mariners like so many Prisoners out of their own Counties and the Realm to unnatural unchristian Warrs against their Wills and Consciences Their disinheriting many Thousands of English Freemen of all sorts of their Freeholds Lands Offices Fra●chises Honors Authorities spoyling them and theirs of theirs Goods Chattles Estates Lives in and by Arbitrary Committees Martial other extravagant Courts of highest Injustice Subverting Changing our ancient Fundamental Lawes Statutes and enacting New without the Peoples free consents in Lawfull English Parliaments altering the whole Frame and Constitution of our Monarchy Government and Parliaments themselves Depriving the people of the Free election of their Parliament Members and other Elective Officers contrary to our Lawes Charters Usages securing secluding the Members of Parliament themselves by armed Force dissolving Parliaments by the Sword alone without Writ or legall power contrary to Acts and Privileges of Parliament by erecting New Legislative Tax-imposing Self-created Powers not elected by the People at Whitehall and elsewhere not to be paralleld in any age By creating New-Treasons contrary to the old ones and the Statute of 25 E. 3. and condemning sequestring imprisoning executing English Peers and Freemen only for their loyalty Duty to their lawfull Soveraigns and defence of the Rights Privileges Liberties Laws of the Kingdom Parliament Nation according to their Oathes Protestations League Covenant and Gods own Precepts against the publique Enemies Oppugners Vnderminers Subvertors of and Conspirators against them By making publick wars at Land and Sea with our Christian Protestant Brethren and other Nations and concluding Leagues Truces without common consent or advice in Parliament By alienating selling giving squandring away the ancient Demesnes Lands Honours Rents Revenues Rights Inheritances of the Crown of England yea of Scotland and Ireland likewise to Officers Souldiers of the Army and others for pretended Arrears Services or inconsiderable values which should defray all the constant ordinary Expences of the Government publique State Officers Embassadours Garrisons Navy Courts of the Kingdom and ease the People from all kind of Taxes Payments Contributions whatsoever towards them except in extraordinary emergent cases and necessities in times of war requiring extraordinary expences for their publique safety supplied by Aydes and Subsidies granted only by common consent in Parliament only and not otherwise which now must be wholly or for the greatest part defrayed by the People alone out of their own exhausted private estates by endlesse Taxes Excises Contributions as appears by the 27 28 29 30. Articles of their New ill sounding Instrument foreinsisted on whiles others without right or legal Title enjoy the old standing Demesnes Lands Rents Revenues and Perquisites of the Crown for their private advantage without any Acts of Resumption usual in all former ages to keep the Kingdom Nation from becoming Bankrupts and people from oppression which should ease the people of those intollerable constant burthens lately laid upon them against all Justice Law Conscience and make insufferable wasts and spoyles of the stately Houses Timber Wood● Mines Forrests Parkes of the Crown without restraint to the Kingdoms extraordinary prejudice for which they ought to give an Account and make full reparations if the Earl of Devonshires case Cook 11 Reports f. 89 90 91 be Law And by sundry other particulars requiring whole Baronian volumes to recite and specifie to the full is so well known by dayly experience and multitude of Presidents fresh in memory to our whole three Nations that I shall here no further insist upon them all which experimentally confirm the truth of our Saviours own words Iohn 10 1 10. Verily verily I say unto you He that entreth not by the Do●r into the Sheepfold but climbeth up some other way the same is a Theef and a Robber The Theef cometh not but steal and to kill and to destroy Whatever his pretences be to the contrary And this rule of Johannes Angelius Wenderhagen Politiae Synopticae lib. 3. c. 9. sect 11. p. 3. 10. Hinc Regulae loco notandum Quod omne Regnum vi Armata acquisitum in effectis Subditos Semper in durior is Servatutis conditiones arripiat licet a principio Dulcedinem prurientibus spirare videatur which we now find most true by sad sensible experience Ide● cunctis hoc cavendum Ne temere se seduci patiantur FINIS This Epistle should have been printed before the first part but was omitted through hast a See the several Epistles of Frederick the Emperor against Pope Gegory the 9 and Innocent the 4 recorded by Mat. Paris p. 332. to 693. sparsim b See Extra● de Majoritate Obedientia Augustinus Triumphus Bellarminus Becanu● and others De Monarchia Remani Pontificis Hospinia● Hist Jesui l. 3 4. * Henricus de Knighton de Eventibus Angli ae l. 2. c. 14 15. c See Massaeus Vegius Petrus Ribadeniera in vita Ignatii Loyolae Heylins Micracosme p. 179. d See Lewis Owen his Jesuites Looking-glass printed London 1629. the Epistle to the Reader and p. 48 to 58. Jubilaeum sive speculum Jesuiti●um printed 1644. p. 307 to 213. Hospinian Hist Jesuitica l. 2. * Speculum Jesuiticum p. 210. See Romes Master-peice Conterburies Doom p. 435 c. Hidde● works of Darkness 88 144. e Mercure Iesu●le tom 1. p. 67. Speculum Jesuitieum p. 1. 56. f See Lewis Owen his running Register his Jesuited Looking glass The Anatomy of the English Nunnery at Lisbone g De Monarchia Hispanica p. 146 147 148 149 204 234 235 236 185 186. h See Thomas Campanella de Monarchia Hispaniae Watsons quodhbets Co●loni Posthuma p. 91. 10 107. Cardinal de Ossets Letters Arcana Imperii Hispanici Del●h 1628. Advice a tous les Estat's de Europe touches les maximas Fundamentales de Government diss●iennes Espaginols Pa●is 1625. i Set my Speccb in Parliament p. 107. ●o 119. and the History of Independency k Exact Coll●ction p. 651 652 662 666 813
Revenues Inheritances Rights and Perquisits of the Crown of England originally setled thereon for the ●ase and exemption of the people from all kind of Taxes payments whatsoever unlesse in case of extraordinary necessity and for defraying all the constant ordinary expences of the Kingdome as the expences of the Kings houshold Court Officers Judges Ambassadors Guard Garrisons Navy and the like ought not to be sold alienated given away or granted from it to the prejudice of the Crown and burdenning of the people And that all Sales Alienations Gifts or Grants thereof to the empairing of the publique Revenue or prejudice of the Crown and people are void in Law and ought to be resumed and repealed by our Parliaments and Kings as they have freqeuntly been in all former ages For the Readers fuller satisfaction in each of these propositions some of which I must in the ensuing Chapter but briefly touch for brevity sake having elsewhere fully debated them in print I shall especially recommend unto him the perusall of such Tractates and Arguments formerly published wherein each of them hath been fully discussed which hee may peruse at his best leasure The First of these Fundamentalls which I intend principally to insist on is fully asserted debated confirmed by 13. H. 4. f. 14. By Fortescue Lord Chief Justice and Chancellor of England de Laudibus Legum Angliae dedicated by him to King Henry the 6. f. 25. c. 36. By a Learned and necessary Argument against Impositions in the Parliament of 7. Jacobi by a late reverend Judge Printed at London 1641. By Mr. William Hakewell in his Liberty of the Subject against Impositions maintained in an Argument in the Parliament of 7 Jacobi Printed at London 1641. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments concerning Ship-mony both Printed at London 1641. By the Case of Ship-mony briefly discussed London 1640. By M. St. Johns Argument and Speech against Ship-mony Printed at London 1641. By Sir Edward Cook in his 2 Institutes p. 46. and 57. to 64. and 528 to 537. By the first and second Remonstrance of the Lords Commons in Parliament against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. to 398. and 850. to 890. and by my own Humble Remonstrance against Ship-mony London 1643. The Fourth part of the Sovereign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 14. to 26. my Legall Vindication of the Liberties of England against Illegall Taxes c. London 1649. and by the Records and Statutes cited in the ensuing Chapter referring for the most part to the first Proposition The second third and fourth of them are largely debated and confirmed by a Conference desired by the Lords and had by a Committee of both Houses concerning the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject 3 Aprilis 4 Caroli Printed at London 1642. By Sir Edward Cook in his Institutes on Magna charta c. 29. p. 45. to 57. By the first second Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. and 850. to 890. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments against Ship-mony By Sir Robert Cotton his Posthuma p. 222. to 269. By my Breviate of the Prelates Encroachments on the Kings Prerogative and the Subjects Liberties p. 138. my New Discovery of the Prelates Tyranny p. 137. to 183. and some of the ensuing Statutes and records ch 3. See 1 H. 4. rot Parl. n. 22 23 24 26 28 43 44 47. The Fift and Sixt of them are fully cleared vindicated in and by the Prologues of all our Councills Statutes Laws before and since the Conquest By 1. H. 4. Rot. Parl. n. 33 34 36. an excellent full president Sir Edward Cooks 4 Institutes ch 1. Mr. Cromptons Iurisdiction of Courts Title High Court of Parliament Mr. St. Johns speech against the Ship-mony Judges p. 32 33. my Plea for the Lords my Levellers levelled my Ardua Regni my Epistle before my Speech in Parliament my Memento my Sovereign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes part 1 2 3 4. my Legal Vindication against illegal Taxes and pretended Acts of Parliament London 1649. Prynnethe Member reconciled to Prynne the Bar●ester Printed the same year My Historical Collection of the Ancient great Councils and Parliaments of England London 1649. My Truth triumphing over Falshood Antiquity over Novel●y London 1645. 3 E. 1. c. 5 4 E. 3. c. 14. 36 E. 3. c. 10. 1 H. 4. c. 3 4. 5 R. 2. Stat. 2. c. 4. Rastal tit Parliament 1 H. 4. Rot. Parl. n. 21. 22. 48. 70. 31 H. 6. c. 1. 39 H. 6. c. 1. Rot. Parl. n. 8. 17 E. 4. c. 7. expresse in point and some of the Records hereafter transcribed In this I shall be more sparing because so fully confirmed in these and other Treatises The Seventh is ratified by Sir Edward Cooks 1. Institutes p. 97 98. 4 Institutes p. 89. and 5. report Cawdries case of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Laws Rastals Abridgement of Statutes Tit Provisors Praemunire Rome and other Records and Statutes in the ensuing Chapter The Eight is verified by the Statutes quoted in the Margin to it and by other Records in the third Chapter The Ninth and Tenth are fully debated in my Soveraign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes par 2. p. 3. to 34. part 4. p. 1. to 13. and 162. to 170. touched in Sir Robert Cottons Posthuma p. 174. 179. confirmed by sundry Presidents in the next Chapter by 1 H. 4. Rot. Parl. n 32. How all and every of these Fundamentall Liberties Rights Franchises Laws have been unparalledly violated subverted in all and every particular of late years beyond all Presidents in the worst of former ages even by their greatest pretended Propugners their own Printed Edicts Instruments Ordinances Papers together with their illegall Oppressions Taxes Excises Imposts Sequestrations Rapines Violences unjust Proceedings of all kinds will sufficiently evidence if compared with the premised Propositions Not to insist on any fore-past illegall Imposts Taxes Excises under which the nation lately groaned imposed on us by unparliamentary Junctoes or the Army Officers alone from Anno 1648 to 1653. without any real Parliament by their own armed Iurisdiction I shall here instance onyl in 3. or 4 particulars relating wholly to the First Proposition being of most generall greatest present and future concernment of all other to the whole English Nation at this very instant most intollerably oppressed grieved by them directly sweeping away all their Fundamentall Right of Property and consequentially all their Liberty of person Laws Charters at once and that in perpetuity beyond all hopes of Future redemption if not timely prevented by the Vniversality Body of the Realm or their Trustees The first of them is the present imposition and continuance of the strange oppressive monstrous general high Tax of EXCISE imposed on most native and forreign Commodities throughout England and its Dominions which as it was a meer Stranger to all our Ancestors and those now living till within these few years so it was