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A37887 The ordinance and declaration of the Lords and Commons for the assessing all such who have not contributed sufficiently for raising of money, plate &c. with His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects upon occasion thereof. England and Wales. Parliament. 1642 (1642) Wing E1767; ESTC R29749 10,604 18

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money and plate to be delivered unto the Treasurer of the Army or his Deputy vvho shall take care to convey the Plate unto the Treasurer for the propositions and shall be charged vvith all such money upon his accompt as vvith other money recieved from them FINIS His MAJESTIES Declaration to all His loving Subjects upon occasion of the aforesaid Ordinance and Declaration IT would not be believed at least great pains have been taken that it might not that the pretended Ordinance of the Militia the first attempt that ever was to make a Law by Ordinance without Our consent or the keeping Us out Hull and taking Our Arms and Munition from Us could any way concern the Interest Property or Liberty of the Subject and it was confessed by that desperate Declaration it self of the 26. of May that if they were found guilty of that charge of destroying the Title and Interest of Our Subjects to their Lands and Goods it were indeed a very great crime But it was a strange fatall Lethargy which had sessed Our good people and kept them from discerning that the Nobility Gentry Commonalty of England were not onely stripped of their preheminences and Priviledges but of their Liberties and Estates when Our just Rights were denied Us and that no Subject could from thenceforth expect to dwell at home when We were driven from Our Houses and Our Towns It was not possible that a Commission could be granted to the Earl of Essex to raise an Army against Us and for the safety of Our person and preservation of the peace of the Kingdome to pursue kill slay Vs and all who wish well to Us but that in a short time inferiour Commanders by the same Authority would require Our good Subjects for the maintenance of the property of the Subject to supply them with such summes of money as they think sit upon the penalty of being plundered with all extremity of Warre as the stile of Sir Edward Bayntons warrant runs against Our poore Subjects in Wiltshire and by such rules of unlimited Arbitrary power as are inconsistent with the least pretence or shadow of that Property it would seem to defend If there could be yet any understanding so unskilfull and supine to believe That these Disturbers of the publick peace do intend any thing but a generall confusion they have brought them a sad Argument to their own doores to convince them after this Ordinance and Declaration 't is not in any sober mans power to believe himself worth any thing or that there is such a thing as Law Liberty Property left in England under the jurisdiction of these men and the same power that robs them now of the Twentieth part of their estates hath by that but made a claime and entitled it self to the other Ninteen when it shall be thought fit to hasten the generall ruine Sure if the minds of all men be not stubbornly prepared for servitude they will looke on this Ordinance as the greatest Prodigy of Arbitrary power and tyranny that any Age hath brought forth in any kingdome other grievances and the greatest have been conceived intolerable rather by the Logick and Consequence they by the Pressure it self this at once sweeps away all that the wisdome and justice of Parliaments have provided for them Is their property in their estates so carefully looked to by their Ancestours and so amply established by Vs against any possibility of Invasion from the Crown which makes the meanest Subject as much a Lord of his own as the greatest Peere to be valued or considered here is a twentieth part of every mans estate or so much more as foure men will please to call the Twentieth part taken away at once and yet a power left to take a twentieth still of that which remaines and this to be leavied by such circumstances of severity as no Act of Parliament ever consented to Is their liberty which distinguishes Subjects from slaves and in which this free-borne Nation hath the Advantage of all Christendome deare to them they shall not onely be imprison'd in such places of this kingdome a latitude of judgement no Court can challenge to it self in any Cases but for so long time as the Committee of the House of Commons for examination shall appoint and order the House of Commons it self having never assumed or in the least degree pretended to a power of judicature having no more Authority to administer an oath the onely way to discover and find out the truth of facts to then to cut off the heads of any of Our Subjects and this Committee being so farre from being a part of the Parliament that it is destructive to the whole by usurping to it self all the power of King Lords and Commons All who know any thing of Parliaments know that a Committee of either House ought not by the Law to publish their own Resultes neither are their conclusions of any force without the Confirmation of the House which hath the same power of controling them as if the matter had never been debated but that any Committee should be so contracted as this of Examination a style no Committee ever bore before this Parliament as to exclude the Members of the House who are equally trusted by their Country from being present at the Counsells is so monstrous to the priviledges of Parliament that it is no more in the power of any man to give up that freedome then of himself to order that from that time the place for which he serves shall never more send a Knight or Burgesse to the Parliament and in truth is no lesse then to alter the whole frame of government to pull up Parliaments by the rootes and to commit the Lives Liberties and Estates of all the people of England to the Arbitrary power of a few unqualified persons who shall dispose thereof according to their discretion without account to any rule or Authority whatsoever Are their friends their Wives and Children the greatest blessings of peace and the comforts of Life pretious to them would even their penury and imprisonment be lesse grievous by those cordials they shall be divorced from them banished and shall no longer remaine within the Cities of London and Westminster the Suburbes and the Counties adjacent and how farre those adjacent Counties shall extend no man knowes Is there any thing now left to enjoy but the Liberty to rebell and destroy one another are the outward blessings onely of peace property and liberty taken and forced from Our Subjects are their Consciences free and unassaulted by the violence of these fire-brands Sure the liberty and freedome of Conscience cannot suffer by these men Alas all these punishments are imposed upon them because they will not submit to Actions contrary to their naturall loyalty to their Oathes of Allegiance and Supremacy and to their late voluntary Protestation which obliges them to the care of Our person and Our just Rights How many persons of Honour Quality and
Reputation of the severall Counties of England are now imprisoned without any objection against them but suspition of their loyalty How many of the gravest and most sustantiall Citizens of London by whom the government and discipline of that City was preserved are disgraced robbed and imprisoned without any processe of Law or colour of accusation but of obedience to the Law and Government of the Kingdome whil'st Anabaptists and Brownists with the assistance of vitious and deboshed persons of desperate Fortunes take upon them to break up and rifle houses as publike and avowed Ministers of a new invented Authority How many godly pious and painfull Divines whose lives and learning hath made them of Reverend estimation are now slandered with inclination to popery discountenanced and imprisoned for discharging their Consciences in instructing the people in the Christian duty of Religion and Obedience whilst Schismaticall illiterate and scandalous preachers fill the Pulpits and Churches with blasphemie irreverence and treason and incite their Auditory to nothing but murther and rebellion We passe over the vulgar charm by which they have captivated such who have been contented to dispence with their Consciences for the preservation of their estates and by which they perswade men chearfully to part with this twentieth part of their estate to the good work in hand for whoever will give what he hath may escape robbing They shall be repaid upon the publick faith as all other monies lent upon the Propositions of both Houses It may be so but men must be condemned to a strange unthriftinesse who will lend upon such securitie The publick Faith indeed is as great an earnest as the State can give and engages the Honour Reputation and Honesty of the Nation and is the Act of the Kingdome it is the security of the King the Lords and Commons which can never need an Executour can never die never be Bankrupt and therefore We willingly consented to it for indemnitie of Our good Subjects of Scotland who we hope will not think the worse of it for being so often and so cheaply mentioned since But that a Vote of one or both Houses should be an engagement upon the publick faith is as impossible as that the Committee of the House of Commons for Examinations should be the High Court of Parliament And what is or can be said with the least shadow of reason to justifie these extravagances We have not lately heard of the old fundamentall Laws which used to warrant the Innovations this needs a Refuge even below those foundations They will say they cannot manage their great undertakings without such extraordinarie wayes We think so too but that proves onely they have undertaken somewhat they ought not to undertake not that it is lawfull for them to do any thing that is convenient for those ends We remembred them long ago and We cannot do it too often of that excellent Speech of M. Pyms The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt good and evil betwixt just and unjust if you take away the Law all things will fall into a confusion every man will become a Law unto himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce many great enormities Lust will become a Law and Envy will become a Law Coveteousnesse and Ambition will become Lawes and what Dictates what Decisions such Lawes will produce may easily be discerned It may indeed by the sad instances over the whole Kingdome But will Posteritie believe that in the same Parliament this doctrine was avowed with that Acclamation and these instances after produced That in the same Parliament such care was taken that no man should be committed in what case soever without the cause of his Imprisonment expressed and that all men should be immediately bayled in all Cases baylable and during the same Parliament that Alderman Pennington or indeed any body else but the sworn Ministers of Justice should imprison whom they would and for what they would and for as long time as they would That the King should he reproached with breach of Priviledge for accusing Sir John Hotham of high treason when with force of Arms he kept him out of Hull and despised him to his face because in no case a Member of either House might be committed or accused without leave of that House of which he is a Member and yet that during the same Parliament the same Alderman should commit the Earl of Middlesex a Peer of the Realm and the Lord Buckhurst a Member of the House of Commons to the Counter without reprehension That to be a Traitour which is defined every man understands should be no crime and to be called a Malignant which no body knows the meaning of should be ground enough for close imprisonment That a Law should be made that whosoever should presume to take tunnage and poundage without an Act of Parliament should incurre the penaltie of a Premunire and the same Parliament that the same imposition should be laid upon Our Subjects and taken by an Order of both Houses without and against Our consent Lastly that the same Parliament a Law should be made to declare the proceedings and judgement upon ship-money to be illegall and void and during that Parliament that an Order of both Houses shall upon pretence of necessitie inable foure men to take away the twentieth part of their estates from all their Neighbours according to their discretion But Our good Subjects will no longer look upon these and the like results as upon the Counsels and conclusions of both Our Houses of Parliament though all the world knows even that Authority can never justifie things unwarrantable by the Law they well know how few of the Persons trusted by them are present at their consultations of above 500 not 80. and of the House of Peers not a fifth part that they who are present enjoy not the Priviledge and Freedome of Parliament but are besieged by an Army and awed by the same tumults which drave Vs and their fellow-Members from thence to consent to what some few Seditious Schismaticall Persons amongst them do propose These are the men who joyning with the Anabaptists and Brownists of London first changed the Government and Discipline of that City and now by the pride and power of that City would undoe the Kingdome whilst their Lord Major a Person accused and known to be guilty of high Treason by a new Legislative power of his own suppresses and reviles the book of Common-prayer robbes and imprisons whom he thinks fit and with the rabble of his Faction gives Laws to both Houses of Parliament and tells them they will have no Accommodation whilst the Members sent and entrusted by their Countreys are expelled the House or committed for refusing to take the Oath of Association to live and die with the Earl of Essex as very lately Sir Sidny Mountague These are the men who have presumed to send Ambassadours and to enter into treaties with forrain States in their own behalfs having at this time an Agent of their own with the States of Holland to negotiate for them upon private instructions These are the men who not thinking they have yet brought mischief enough upon this Kingdome at this time invite and sollicite Our Subjects of Scotland to enter this land with an Army against Vs. In a word these are the men who have made this last devouring Ordinance to take away all Law Libertie and Property from Our people and have by it really acted that upon Our people which with infinite malice and no colour or ground was laboured to be infused into them to have been Our intention by the Commission of Array We have done what power and Authority these men have or will have we know not for Our self we challenge none such We look upon the pressures and inconveniences Our good Subjects beare even by Vs and Our Army which the Army first raised by them enforced Vs to leavy in Our defence and their refusall of all offers and desires of Treaty enforceth Vs to keep with very much sadnesse of heart We are so far from requiring a twentieth part of their estates though for their own visible preservation that as We have already sold or pawned Our own Jewels coyned Our own Plate so We are willing to sell all Our own Land and Houses for their relief yet We do not doubt but Our good Subjects will seriously consider Our condition and their own duties and think Our readinesse to protect them with the utmost hazard of Our life deserves their readines to assist Vs with some part of their fortunes whilst other men give a 20th part of their estates to enable them to forfeit the other nineteen that they wil extend themselves to Us in a liberal free proposition for the preservation of the rest for the maintenance of Gods true religion the Laws of the Land the Liberty of the Subject and the safety and very being of Parliaments and this Kingdome for if all these ever were or can be in manifest danger it is now in this present Rebellion against Vs. Lastly We will and require all Our loving Subjects of what degree or quality soever as they will answer it to God to Vs and to posterity by their oathes of Allegeance and Supremacy as they would not be looked upon now and remembred hereafter as betrayers of the Laws and Liberty they were born to that they in no degree submit to this wilde pretended Ordinance and that they presume not to give any encouragement or assistance to the Army now in Rebellion against Vs which if notwithstanding they shall do they must expect from Vs the severest punishment the Law can inflict and a perpetuall Infamy with all good men FINIS