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A52526 An exact and most impartial accompt of the indictment, arraignment, trial, and judgment (according to law) of twenty nine regicides, the murtherers of His Late Sacred Majesty of most glorious memory begun at Hicks-Hall on Tuesday, the 9th of October, 1660, and continued (at the Sessions-House in the Old-Bayley) until Friday, the nineteenth of the same moneth : together with a summary of the dark and horrid decrees of the caballists, preperatory to that hellish fact exposed to view for the reader's satisfaction, and information of posterity. Nottingham, Heneage Finch, Earl of, 1621-1682. 1679 (1679) Wing N1404; ESTC R17120 239,655 332

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them who did either look Sadly or speak Affectionately And yet it will appear upon our Evidence too that so few of the very Common Souldiers could be brought to approve these Proceedings or to cry out Justice that their Officers were fain by Money or Blows or both to bring a great many to it My Lords The Actors in this Tragedy were many very many so many that sure their Name is Legion or rather many Legions And certainly my Lords when we shall consider the Thing that they have done we cannot but look upon it as a Villany which had in it all the Ingredients to make it detestable that it was possible for the Counsel of Men or Devils either to put together But yet if any thing can be of a deeper Dy then the Guilt of that Sacred Blood wherewith they stand Polluted me thinks their Impudence should make them more odious then their Treason It was the destruction of God's Anointed in the Name of the Lord. It was the Murther of a most blessed and beloved Prince in the Name of His People Him whom they had taken the transcendent Boldness to imprison as the Author of the War they put to Death because He would have been the Author of our Peace and that with so much Scorn and Indignity that some of them were not ashamed to spit in the Face of our Lord and Sovereign And when they had thus quenched the Light of Israel Darkness and Confusion did over-spread the face of the Land many poor Subjects at Home and some Protestants in Foreign Nations at the very News of it fell down Dead as if this excellent King had been in a Natural as well as a Religious sence the Breath of our Nostrils the Anointed of the Lord who was taken in their Pits The Judges Officers and other Immediate Actors in this pretended Court were in number about fourscore Of these some four or five and twenty are dead and gone to their own place The God of Recompences hath taken the matter so far into His Own Hands and who knows but that it might be one dreadful part of His Vengeance that they died in Peace Some six or seven of them who are thought to have sinned with less Malice have their Lives spared indeed but are like to be brought to a severe Repentance by future Penalties Some eighteen or nineteen have fled from Justice and wander to and fro about the World with the Mark of Cain upon them are Perpetual trembling lest every Eye that sees them and every Hand that meets them should fall upon them Twenty nine Persons do now expect your Justice Amongst them the first that is brought is the Prisoner at the Bar and he deserves to be the first for if any Person now left alive ought to be stiled the Conductour Leader and Captain of all this Work that 's the Man He my Lord brought the King up a Prisoner from Windsor but how and in what manner with how little Duty nay with how little Civility to a common Person you will hear in time He Sate upon Him Sentenced Him he Signed the Warrant first to call that Court together then the bloody Warrant to cut off His Sacred Head Against him as against all the rest our Evidence will be of two sorts Witnesses Viva voce that shall first prove to your Lordships that every Person now in Question did sit in that Court when their King stood as a Prisoner at the Bar. We shall prove that the Precept by which this pretended Court was summoned was not obeyed and executed till it had had the hands and seals of most of the pretended Judges among the rest the hand of the Prisoner at the Bar will be found there We shall prove his hand to the bloody Warrant for severing the Sacred Head of our Blessed Sovereign from the Body and then some Circumstances of his Malice and of his Demeanour And after we have done with our Witnesses Viva voce if we have occasion to use Records of Parliament we shall shew them too for we have the Originals or authentick Copies But now we shall proceed to our Evidence Proclamation was made for Silence Sir Edward Turner My Lords The service of this Day doth call to my Memory the Story of good King Amaziah We read in Holy Writ that his Father King Joash was murthered and murthered by His own Subjects but we read further that when Amaziah had regained the Crown was settled in the Government He slew those that slew His Father He did go downe into Edom the Valley of Salt and there He did slay ten thousand The work of this Day doth very much resemble that Action Our Good and Gratious King His Father of blessed Memory and our Father His natural and our politick Father to whom our natural Allegiance was due was murthered and by His own Subjects But My Lords this was not a National Crime and our Good and Gratious Sovereign hath done us that Honour and Right to vindicate us in Forreign Nations and now He is come Home in Power and Glory He does continue in the same Mind that 's the Reason we are not now slain by thousands but that those Miscreants are gathered up here and there that did commit the Offence and would have involved the Nation in a common Infamy Gentlemen of the Jury Your time to enquire of this Matter is precious more pretious then my Words else I would repeat to you the History of the Tragedy at least that Summary that was entred in the Black Book or the Journals of that they then called a Parliament It shall suffice to tell you and that most truly that it was but an handful of men in respect of the whole Nation that did contrive and design this damnable and traiterous Plot to subvert the Laws and change the Government of this well-governed Nation In prosecution of which they did cast abroad and spread forth Jesuitical Maxims Damnable and Diabolical Principles to intoxicate the People and when their Heads were troubled they were easily lead into Arms where after some time they grew drunk with Successes and when they had drunk too much of the Loyal Blood of the People then they thirsted for the Royal Blood also I do confess we read in Stories that Kings have before this time been murthered some in our Nation as King Richard the Second and Edward the Third and in other Nations But the Actors of those Murthers were modest to these They did it in Private these in the Face of the Sun and the People but it was those People Gentlemen they had corrupted with Shares in their Robberies and Villanies They pretended it was in a way of Justice but you must know no Justice can be executed upon the Person of the King Touch not mine Anointed saith God himself My Lords I do read in the Roman Story that both amongst them and other Nations there was no Law against Parricide It was not thought that any man was
a voluntary Act of mine own and so it cannot be Compassing the death of the King For to the word Execution what can be the sense of this word Execution is a single word those people that started the word justice might put it in the heads of the Souldiers which I might strike to command silence they likewise might upon the same account cry out Execution and so to hinder all Tumults and Hubbubs and the like in the place I might repeat their words in correcting of them for it I might say I 'le justice you I 'le execution you But my Lord this word Execution of justice it is a glorious word not that there can be an inference that what they did I should say was Justice or to approve of any thing that they did but only in general Execution of justice which my Lord relates not to any person possibly the rude people might be speaking as hath been said before in that manner and the Souldiers might take it up and I might reprove them and make use of their own words by word of repetition I will Justice you I will Execution you My Lord in the next place I do observe to speak that of Mr. Burden he did observe to your Lordships and the Jury my Country-men my Brethren with whom are the issues of life and death for whose life they must answer before the Lord as to Righteousness Judgment and Equity I say my Lord as to Mr. Burden he tells you that for my sake he was imprisoned saith he I have suffered much by him and speaks it with much indignation of spirit I have suffered and been imprisoned by him and afterwards he comes to speak his Evidence how much his Evidence may be of Force I desire my Lord the Jury may consider of that and then he comes and saith I commanded a Guard at the Banqueting-house in Whitehall Truly my Lord the Lord Fairfax commanded a Regiment to quarter there and I as an inferior Officer might be there in the next place my Lord he saith I sent Alisha Axtell to fetch the Hang-man Truly my Lord I wonder this person is come from Ireland if this were so the Authority there would not send that person with his great Evidence as well as this person he may as well charge any person with this as me It is evident Ireton Harrison and Cromwell they did all amongst themselves I never was with them amongst them received no command from them nor obeyed them nor did any thing but what I had command for from the General who by the Law I was bound to obey as a Souldier I shall only observe one thing more this person being so long a Prisoner to Extricate himself out of his imprisonment and chains poor man he may say more than is true I wonder he should say I sent for the Executioner I never knew of any circumstance touching consultation about his Death or took him Prisoner When they sent to me to be one of his Gnard I never would go I humbly conceive there is nothing sticks upon me in this considering the circumstances and the words of he person that spoke them My Lord the next person that speaks against me is Mr. Cooke and he saith he heard me say Thrust that Lady down that made a disturbance in the Court or words to that purpose it is probable there might be a desire of silence The next Evidence is Lt. Col. Nelson he saith that upon a Discourse L. Ch. Bar. I would put you in remembrance lest you should forget what Sir Purback Temple said That by leave of persons under your command he saw the body of the King It is only a Circumstance Axtell I have heard there were Chirurgions Physitians and Halberteers appointed by whom I know not they had the care of such things and had the keeping of him he was locked up by them no body could come in but by them I never had a Key possibly Col. Temple might come to me quartering there and desire me to speak to some persons that had the charge of it to let him in whether I did or no I cannot remember but if it were so I hope it will not amount to Treason The last thing given in Evidence against me is Mr. Nelson he saith that upon some discourse between us he was asking what person cut off the Kings head and that I should say Hewlet c. Truly my Lord I was never privy and I appeal to Mr. Rushworth if he were here who was Secretary if ever he saw me in any Counsel to advise or Act or any thing in that kind in relation to the Kings Tryal Sentence or Execution for me to know the person that was imployed about the Execution it is strange when as I said before they did all within themselves I had no knowledg thereof and medled not with any thing but within my own Sphear as a Souldier under my L. Fairfax by Authority of Parliament For naming of any person truly my Lord it would be a wonder to me that I should name any person to go to do any person that wrong and injury to say he was the person I must invent it for I knew nothing of it But by common fame up and down the City it was said to be another person but who it was I cannot say my Lord but to all this that hath been said against me there are but two things upon two Witnesses that are placed upon me the First my Lord here is two Witnesses for crying Justice and Execution L. Ch. Bar. I think you have more than two to those words Axtell Not for both together L. Ch. Bar. No but several for Justice Axtell There is three to that I shall only say this to your Lordship and this Jury in whose hand this life of mine is and is committed to them either to acquit or condemn me and God knows the hearts of all men and my innocency and integrity I shall say nothing to the Witnesses it is a day of Temptation and I desire the Jury my Countrymen my fellow Citizens my Brethren that they would well consider of it the word Execution and Justice admit I had said them which my Lord I do not I must not Grant there being an uprore of people there such words might be used and possibly Souldiers might take them up from them and chastising the Souldiers I might repeat the words I will Justice you I will Execution you L. Ch. Bar. The Evidence is that you beat them because they did not readily cry Justice Justice Axtel It might be more probable I beat them because they did do it I might chastise them for doing of it and repeat it as a reason for their Chastisement and but admitting it was true which I grant not yet I hope Justice and Execution of Justice as it is so great an Attribute of God by Gods Laws nor Mans Laws is no where made Treason but Mercy attends it and Judgment attends
the thirtieth of January 1648. Sign and Seal a Warrant for the Execution of His late Sacred and Serene Majesty of Blessed Memory Where also c. Clerk of the Crown How sayest thou Sir Hardress Waller Art thou guilty of that Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and for which thou hast now been Arraigned or Not guilty Sir Hardress Waller My Lords I dare not say Not Guilty but since that in a Business of this nature we have no Council or Advice and being not able to speak to matter of Law Lord Chief Baron I am loth to interrupt you but this is the course you have heard the Indictment read and the course is you must plead guilty or Not guilty There is no Medium Guilty or Not guilty It is that which is the Law and the case of all men Are you guilty or Not guilty Sir Hard. Waller I may confess my self Guilty of some Particulars in that Indictment but not of all for so instead of discharging I shall wound my Conscience Clerk Are you Guilty or Not guilty Sir Hard. Waller If I might have that liberty to Court You shall have that Liberty that any Subject of the Nation can have or can challenge No man standing at the Bar in that condition you are must make any other answer to the Indictment then guilty or Not guilty It 's the Common case of all men Your Confession must be Plain and direct Either Guilty or not Guilty Sir Hard. Waller My Lord I do desire some time to consider of it for it is a great Surprisal Court You have had time enough to consider of it you must follow the Directions of the Court Guilty or Not Guilty You must not thus Discourse of being surprised for these Discourses are contrary to all Proceedings of this Nature Clerk How say you Sir H. Waller Are you guilty or Not guilty Sir Hard. Waller I dare not say Not guilty Clerk Will you confess then Sir Hard. Waller I would be glad to be understood Court Your Plea must be direct guilty or Not guilty Sir Hard. Waller Shall I be heard my Lord Court Yes upon your Trial. There is but two ways Plead Not guilty or confess it Sir Hardress Waller we would not have you to be deceived If you confess and say you are guilty there is nothing then but Judgment If you say Not guilty then you shall be heard with your Evidence Consider with your self Plead Not Guilty or confess and say you are guilty Sir Hard. Waller My Lord It puts me upon a great contest with my self I shall be very free to open my Heart Court Sir you must plead Guilty or Not Guilty Sir Hard. Waller My Lord my condition differs from others I am a Stranger I have been thirty years transplanted into Ireland which ha's made me unacquainted with the affairs of the Law here Court You must keep to the course of the Law Either Guilty or Not guilty There is but one of these two Pleas to be made Sir Hard. Waller I dare not say Not guilty Court There are but these three thing to be considered Either you must say Guilty which is Confession and then there remains no more but Judgment or Not Guilty and then you shall be heard or Judgment will pass for your standing Mute which is all one as if you had confessed Sir Hard. Waller In as much as I have said I dare not say Not Guilty I must say Guilty Clerk You say you are guilty You confess the Indictment Sir Hardress Waller Yes Clerk Thomas Harrison How saiest thou Art thou guilty of the Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and art now Arraigned or Not Guilty Tho. Harrison My Lords have I liberty to speak Court No more at this time then Guilty or Not Guilty Mr. Harrison You have heard the Direction before We can give you but the same Rule If you plead Not guilty you shall be heard at large if Guilty you know what remains Tho. Harrison Will you give me leave to give you my Answer in my own words Lord Chief Bar. There is no answer but what the Law directs It is the same with you as with all others or as I would desire if I were in your condition You must plead Not guilty or if you confess guilty there must be Judgment upon your confession The same Rule for one must be for another Tho. Harrison You express your Rule very fair as well to me as this Gentleman pointing at Sir Hardress Waller but I have something to say to your Lordships which concerns your Lordships as well as my self Court You must hold and plead guilty or Not guilty If you go otherwise as I told you before it will be as if you pleaded not at all and then Judgment will pass against you The Law gives the words frames your Answer it is none else but the Laws Guilty or Not Guilty Tho. Harrison My Lord I have been kept close Prisoner near these three Moneths that no body might have Access to me Do you call me to give you a Legal Answer not knowing of my Trial till nine of the clock last night and brought away from the Tower to this place at six of the clock this morning Court You must give your direct Answer Guilty or Not guilty You cannot say it is sudden or unprovided You spend time in vain You trouble the Court You must plead Guilty or Not Guilty We must not suffer you to make Discourses there You must plead either Guilty or Not Guilty Clerk Are you guilty or Not guilty Tho. Harrison I am speaking Shall I not speak two words Court If you will not put your self upon your Tryal you must expect that course that the Law directs Tho. Harrison May it please your Lordships I am now Clerk Are you guilty or Not Guilty Tho. Harrison I desire to be advised by the Law This is a special Case Court The Law allows nothing now but to plead guilty or Not guilty Court You must plead to your Indictment If it be Treason it cannot be justified if it be justifiable it is not Treason Therefore Plead guilty or not guilty Tho. Harrison Give me advice in this Clerk Tho. Harrison Are you guilty or Not Guilty Tho Harrison I would willingly render an account of all my Doings Clerk Are you Guilty or Not guilty Court You have been acquainted with the Legal Proceedings You never found in all your Experience that any Prisoner at the Bar for Felony or Treason was suffered thus to discourse or to answer otherwise then guilty or Not guilty Clerk Are you guilty or Not guilty Mr. Sol. Gen. I do beseech your Lordships he may Plead Peradventure he knows his case so well that he thinks it as cheap to defie the Court as submit to it Court We must enter your standing Mute that 's Judgment Clerk Are you guilty or Not guilty Tho. Harrison Will you refuse to give me any Satisfaction Court Are you guilty or Not guilty Tho.
of Injustice that was Erected for Tryal of the late King it had all the formalities of a Court to put in Execution that bloody Act they had their President their Council their Chaplain and their Guards some of their Judges have been already Tryed one of their Council and their Chaplain Now my Lord we come to the Guards and this Gentleman at the Bar that is now the Prisoner He was Commander of that Black Guard that cruel and bloody Guard The Indictment is That he did Imagin and compass the Death of the King there be several overt acts that are mentioned in the Indictment as Evidences of that Imagination as the consultation to bring him to Tryal the Actual bringing him to Tryal and the Bloody Execution upon the Scaffold Our Evidence shall be this That during the time of the Tryal the Prisoner at the Bar did Command the Souldiers in Westminster-Hall himself did keep the Entrance into the Court and when Bradshaw did speak to the King and told him he trifled away time and required his answer to the charge exhibited in the Name of the Commons of England Assembled in Parliament and the good People of England that a Noble person in the Gallery there cryed out it was a Lye saying that above half the Commons disowned it saying where are these good people it is a lye Oliver Cromwel is a Traytor this bloodly Fellow commanded the Souldiers to shoot her he did several times command and encourage the Souldiers to cry out Justice justice and the last day of that horrid Tryal called by them the day of Judgement he likewise commanded them to cry out Execution Execution and when some of them would not do it he had the Valour to Beat them My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury if we prove any of these particulars to demonstrate unto you that he was Guilty of compassing and imagining the King's Death it is equal as if we had proved he did Actually cut off the King's head Mr. Bodurdoe Mr. Nutly Mr. Harrington Sir Purback Temple Mr. Sympson Mr. Baker Mr. Huncks and Mr. Jeoner Sworn Coun. Mr. Symp. tell my Lords and the Jury who had the command of the Souldiers during the Tryal of the King in Westminster-Hall Sym. My Lords as I said before in the Case of Mr. Peters Col. Stubberd and Col. Axtel had the command of the Souldiers below Stairs near that which was called the High Court of Justice Axtell I desire to know his Name my Lord Sym. My Name is Holland Sympson Coun. Did you see him there commanding the Souldiers Sym. There was a kind of a Hubbub in the Court there was a Lady they said it was the Lady Fairfax who at the Exhibiting of the Charge against the King said to be in the Name of the Commons and people of England She spoke out aloud and said it was a lye that not half not a quarter of the people Oliver Comwell is a Rogue and a Traytor they called for a Guard this Gentleman he was called and brought up some Musqueteers and commanded his Souldiers to Present and give Fire against the Lady and commanded her to Unmask Axtell What Lady was it I desire to know Sim. She went by the name of the Lady Fairfax I know not whether it was so or no it was the common report it was she Cl. Mr. H. pray tell my Lord what you know of the Prisoner at the Bar. Huncks My Lord to say positively any thing of the man touching his command I cannot but only that morning the King Dyed he came into the Door of the Room where Colonel Phayre Colonel Hacker Cromwell and my self were Ireton and Harrison lying in bed together in the same Room and then he stood at the Door half in and half out I refusing to Sign an Order for Executing the King as Cromwell ordered me and some little cross Language having passed saith the Prisoner at the Bar Colonel Huncks Iam ashamed of you the Ship is now coming into the Harbour and will you strike Sayle before we come to Anchor This I appeal to your self but for crying out Knock them down Shoot them I know not who it was the Officers cryed Justice and some of the Souldiers but I profess I know not who it was particularly but they cryed Justice and then I fell a trembling for I was afraid of the King but these were the words he used to me will you strike sayle c. Axtell My Lord I desire to ask him a question L. Ch. Bar. Ask him what you will Axtell If I am not in the right I hope your Lordships will direct me L. Ch. Bar. Go on Axtell Col. Huncks where was it Huncks In a little Room in White hall where Ireton and Harrison lay in bed together Axtell Do you know whereabouts Huncks I think I can go to the Room I appeal to your own conscience before all this people Axtell By your favour Sir the Room I perceive you know not and truly Sir My Lord if you please to give me leave because he appeals to my conscience I do appeal to the Great God before whom it may be I may be Arraigned to give an account of all my Words thoughts and Actions I do not remember that ever I had any converse with this man there or met him there or any of that company there that day he was a stranger to me but I wish that you to save your self being in the Warrant for Execution do not make others a Peace-Offiring to save your self the Lord that knows my heart I appeal to him I appeal to your own conscience because you appeal to my conscience I never met you nor saw you there Huncks Have you done then give me leave you say you do not know me I appeal to the same God when Cromwell took upon him to have the Crown have not I said What have you got by being Jehu-like Lord strike me dead here if it be not true Axtell I will not reflect upon him but because he hath appealed to my conscience therefore I speak it it is known Notoriously how Jehu-like you were when you were one of the chief Guards of his Majesty one of the Fourty Halberteers that did oppose every person then for the King had I had time and had not been a close Prisoner as I was there were Witnesses enough Council This after our Evidence is more proper Huncks Spare me not Col. Axtell L. Ch. Bar. Take the Old and Antient course let the Witnesses that are produced for the King be all heard then give your answer to all of them together Axtell My Memory is not very good L. Ch. Bar. You have Pen Ink and Paper L. Ch. Bar. Mr. Axtell is this all that you desire to speak to Col. Huncks Axtell Yes my Lord. L. Ch. Bar. Have you any other Questions Council My Lord we have a few words he Objects as if Col. Huncks were under a danger he is pardoned Axtell I desire to ask
Whitehall there were some Cavaliers then in the Regiment it was my fortune I came into your Company I wish I never had you commanded more besides my self to be a Witness against the King and Justice Cook took my Examination you brought me in you commanded the Guards that time at Whitehall when the King was upon his Tryal Axtell What more Burden And you commanded Elisha Axtell with a file of Souldiers to take a Boat and go down to the common Hangman that liv'd beyond the Tower to execute the King he is now Shepards Serjeant in Ireland Axtell My Lord I desire to ask him a question he was pleased to say I desired him to be a Witness Bur. Yes Axtell Where was it Burden In the Court at Whitehall Axtell My Lord I have seen the printed List of Witnesses against the King and in that list you shall find no such Name Burden I have been a Prisoner in Dublin by your means Axtell My Lord I hope you will take notice of that Councel Burden do you remember any of his commands to Web to draw up in the Banqueting-house Bur. He commanded Web to draw up in the Banqueting-house during the time of Execution his own company I was one of his own company then Coun. In order to what Bur. For Execution Axtell My Lord is Web here Bur. He is in Dublin Axt. I wish he were here Edward Cook sworn Cook And it please your Honour my Lord the last day of the Tryal of his Majesty I came into Westminster-hall coming where the Court was I did see Col. Axtell the Prisoner at the Bar there with some Musquetiers Coun. What day was this Cook The last day of his Majesties Tryal L. ch Bar. Go on Sir Cook Standing there a little while his Majesty came guarded with some Halberteers when he came by the Souldiers that stood with Col. Axtell his Majesty bowed and afterwards put off his Hat and went up to the Court I could not know what Bradshaw said to him I stood below I heard him say he was brought by the consent of the Commons and people of England there stood a Lady above in a Gallery crying out it is a lye where are the people or their consents Cromwel is a Traytor whereupon Col. Axtell standing by saith he what Drab is that that disturbs the Court come down or I will fetch you down Mr. Nelson sworn Coun. Tell my Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury touching the Discourse between you and the Prisoner at the Bar in Dublin Nelson My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury upon a Discourse with the prisoner at the Bar in Dublin 5 or 6 years since upon the platform in that Castle we discoursed of the late Kings having had several reports I desired to know of him who it was that Executed the King thinking he might inform me he was pleased to tell me this saith he the persons that were imployed in that service you know them as well as I do truly Sir not I said I I saw them in Vizards but not their Visage as I know of yes saith he you do know them it is true saith he my self and others were imployed in that affair in order to the Execution but there were several persons came and offered themselves out of a kind of Zeal to do the thing but we did not think it proper to imploy persons whom we did not know but we made choice of a couple of Stout persons pray let me hear their Names said I saith he it was Heulet and Walker I desired to know their reward Truly saith he I do not know whether 30 l. a piece or between them I said it was a small reward for a work of that Nature truly saith he that was all Axt. You named one man I did not hear the other named Nelson I named Heulet and Walker we was one that managed the Execution he told me so and it pleased you Sir Axtell He is pleased to say that in Ireland there was such conference was any body by Nelson No Sir Axt. Did I name any body to you Nel. You named those two persons Axt. Certainly I must invent them then for I had no more knowledg of them then any one here Nel. You told me you were one of them that had the managing of that Affair Councel My Lord we have done with our Evidence those particulars that were first opened to you have rendred the prisoner much a blacker person then we thought we leave him to his defence Axt. May it please your Lordships in the first place because I am ignorant in the Laws I desire to know upon what Statute this indictment is grounded L. ch B. It is grounded upon the statute of the 25th of Edward the Third Axt. My Lords I must acknowledg my ignorance of the Laws being a thing I never studied nor have the knowledg of but I have heard it is the duty of your Lordships and the Judges to be of Counsel for the Prisoner in things wherein he is ignorant in matters of law to make his just defence and therefore my Lord the Indictment it self being matter of law if your Lordships please not to grant me Counsel to speak to matrers of law I humbly pray that your Lordships will be pleased that for want of knowledg formalities punctilloes and niceties of the Law I might not undo my self I have heard by a learned Judg that though the Judg be of Counsel to the King yet by his Oath he is also to be Counsellor to the Prisoner and stands as a Mediator between the King and Prisoner and therefore my Lord I shall beg that humble favour that wherein I shall fall short to make the best improvement of my Plea in matter of law that your Lordships will help me and not take advantages against me as to the niceties formalities and punctilloes of the Law and my Lord this is a resemblance of that Great day where Christ will be Judg and will judg the secrets of all hearts and of all words and of all persons and by him all Actions are weighed knows all our hearts whether there be malice or how it stands in the frame of each heart before him in this place and therefore I hope there will be nothing by prejudging or any thing by precluding to be so black a person as it seemed to be said against me My Lords I must shorten the time and come to speak as to the Authority L. Ch. Bar. As to what Sir Axt. I speak as to the Authority by which or under which I acted I humbly conceive my Lord under favour that I am not within the compass of that Statute of the 25th of Edward the Third for that questionless must intend private persons Counselling Compassing or Imagining the death of the King But you know my Lords the War was first stated by the Lords and Commons the Parliament of England and by vertue of their Authority was forced to be raised and they pretended
Executioner and such other Acts prove these are in your Commission and you say something I am sure you cannot be ignorant that That very Authority that you do now urge to give life and power to your Actions that you destroyed it laid it in the dust acted contrary to it several ways when the Parliament protested against fetching the King from Holmby as they did when they went on proceeding in the way of peace then came you up to the Bar I think you your self and charged some of the Members first 11 as rotten Members and these Men were forced away this you know your General had no Commission to do and this you know was a Violation of that Power that gave our General the Commission After that when the Treaty was brought on in the Isle of Wight when there was great hopes of peace then you knew the King was hurried thence by Force which the Parliament protested against After that when both the House of Commons and Lords came to consider of one particular that passed they resolved that it was sufficient ground to proceed on for the settlement of peace then did you fall upon these Houses and tear them in pieces and throwing out above 200 suffering only about 40 to remain and they were glad to send for one Member out of Prison to make up a House That which you say of the Supreme Authority and that by Vertue of which you did Act it shews that you did not at all go by any Authority but you followed your own Lusts and therefore do not few these Fig-leaves together which will stand you in no stead if you would apply your self to answer that which you were charged with it were something Axt. I do desire to have no more interruptions then is me● 〈◊〉 making my own Defence My Lord here are many things by way of motive urged to the Jury which is not within the Charge I desire I may have that fair play that nothing may be urg'd but what is in the charge L. Ch. Bar. You give the occasion Mr. Axtell keep to the matter and you shall not be interrupted Lord Hollis I shall be very sorry to urge any thing against you which doth not necessarily follow for what you say touching your Authority I shall shew you have no Authority Axtell My Lord I have the same Commission as the General what I did was not of mine own head I had a Command As for all that hath been charged against me I shall say this I was none of the Court I did not fetch the King from the Isle of Wight nor advised compassed or imagined his Death or sentenced him to Death or signed the Warrant for his Execution or Executed Him I am none of them My Lords and therefore whoever did make any breach upon the House of Commons they were Grandees persons of a greater Quality I was an inferior Officer I was never at the House Bar but upon presenting one Petition to the Parliament from the Army I shall now come to speak to the Evidence which hath been given particularly against me and the first my Lord is Mr. Simpson he saith I had the Commands of the Guards at Westminster-Hall My Lords I have told you already shewn you by what Authority I came thither and that I ought not to refuse if I had according to the laws of War I must have suffer'd death and that is all as to Mr. Sympson only that a Lady he knows not who spake something there L. Ch. Bar. He saith he heard you bid the Souldiers give fire against the Lady Axt. My Lord I must say if there was any Lady that did speak who she was I know no more than the least child here but my Lord to silence a Lady I suppose is no Treason If a Lady will talk impertinently it is no Treason to bid her hold her tongue L. Ch. Bar. A Lady was speaking pertinently enough when she heard Bradshaw say to the King such a Charge is exhibited a charge of High Treason against Him in the Name of the Commons assembled in Parliament and the good People of England she said That was a lye not half nor a quarter of the people of England That Oliver Cromwel was a Traytor Then you took upon you to command Souldiers to fire at her and accordingly they levelled the muzles of their Musquets towards her Axtell My Lord as to that particular concerning Oliver Cromwell or any other words concerning the Court I understand them not but if any interruption was made to preserve the peace to desire a Woman to hold her tongue is no Treason To the next particular wherein Col. Huncks saith at a door at a certain lodging where Ireton and Harrison were in Bed together he saith that upon his refusal to sign the Warrant for executing the King I said to him Col. Huncks I am ashamed of you the Ship is now coming into Harbour and will you strike Sayle before we come to Anchor truly my Lord I think all that amounts to nothing if it were so which I deny it for to bring the Ship into Harbor what is that there is no person named Fact named nor Design named and I appeal to my conscience I remember not the time place person or words and I can call for Col. Phayre and Col. Hacker who were there for I desire things may appear right I desire they two persons may be called for their Evidence in that point L. ch Bar. They both are in the same condition Col. Hacker in the prison behind you Col. Phayre in the Tower Mr. Axtell you know the strength of one Affirmative witness I saw such a man and heard such a man say c. is more then if twenty should witness they stood by but did not see him or hear him speak Axt. My Lord he saith only this I saw you at the door going unto Ireton's chamber and said will you strike Sayl c. Truly my Lord he doth not say what or how or any thing I meant there must be according to Sir Edward Cook 's 7th Book of his Institutes that Oracle of the Law he saith That Evidence ought to he as clear as the Sun at noon day All that you can say is this it must be a wide Inference a large Inference I conceive there is nothing in these two witnesses and if the two Prisoners were here they would clear me in this L. ch Bar. If by Law you could have had them you should but I fear if they could be admitted they would not be to your advantage Axtell Then my Lord in the next place Col. Temple is pleased to say that the Lady Fairfax saying something against the Court which in truth as I said before I know not who it was or what the words were he saith I bid Fire against them I did nothing but what I was commanded upon pain of Death to preserve peace and in pursuance of that command from the superior
be directed to answer and if he refused That the matter of the Charge be taken pro confesso And the King not owning their Authority was remanded Fol. 58. Westminster-Hall Tuesday the 23d Afternoon The King not owning their Authority was remanded and the Court Adjourned to the Painted-Chamber And there Resolved They would examine Witnesses Fol. 61. Painted-Chamber Wednesday the 24th was spent in examining their Witnesses Fol. 66. Painted-Chamber Thursday the 25th Afternoon They examined more Witnesses They Resolved to proceed to Sentence of Condemnation against the King And that this Condemnation be for being Tyrant Traytor and Murtherer and Publick Enemy to the Commonwealth And that the Condemnation extend to Death Fol. 68. And Ordered That a Sentence grounded upon these Votes be prepared by Scot Marten Harrison and others Painted-Chamber Friday the 26 th The draught of the Sentence Reported and agreed And Resolved That the King be brought the next day to Westminster-Hall to receive it Fol 96. Painted-Chamber Saturday the 27 th Fore-noon The Sentence being engrossed Resolved The same should be the Sentence which should be read and published in Westminster-Hall the same day That the President should not permit the King to speak after Sentence That after the Sentence read he should declare it to be the Sence and Judgment of the Court. That the Commissioners should thereupon signifie their Consent by standing up And the same day the Commons Ordered the Clerk to bring in the Records of that Judgment to the House Journal of the House Westminster-Hall the same Day After-noon The King being brought in and not owning their Authority the Sentence was read And upon the Declaration of the President That it was the Judgment of the Court they stood up and Owned it and Adjourned to the Painted-Chamber And there appointed Waller and others to consider of the Time and Place for Execution Painted-Chamber Monday the 29 th Upon the report of the Committee Ordered A Warrant be drawn for executing the King in the open Street before White-Hall the next day directed to Hacker and others which was done accordingly Fol. 116. 31. January 1648. Ordered by the Commons That the Lord Grey out of Haberdashers-Hall to difpose of 100 l. for the Service of the Common-wealth 2. February 1648. They Ordered in the first place to take into Consideration and Debate the House of Lords for settlement of the Government 6. February 1648. The House being seventy three And the Question put Whether that House should take the Advice of the House of Lords in the exercise of the Legislative Power The House was divided and it carried in the Negative by fifteen Voices And then Resolved That the House of Peers was useless and dangerous and ought to be abolished And Ordered an Act to be brought in for that purpose 7. February 1648. The Declared That the Office of a King in this Nation and to have Power thereof in a Single Person was unnecessary burthensom and dangerous to the Liberty Safety and publick interest of the People and therefore ought to be abolished 9. February 1648. They Ordered The Narrative of the Proceeding and Records for Tryal of the King to be forthwith brought into this House 16. February 1648. They Ordered That the Clerk of that High Court of Justice be desired to bring in those Proceedings to their House the next Day March 1648. Sir Arthur Hasilrig Reports from the Committee that Charls and James Stewart Sons of the late King should dye without Mercy wheresoever they should be found 12. December 1650. Mr. Say Reported the Proceedings of their High-Court against the King contained in a Book entituled A Journal c. which was read at large by their Clerk He likewise presented from that Court the Act for Tryal of the King and the Precept for holding the Court. The Charge was exhibited the twentieth And The Sentence Read the twenty seventh of January 1648. And thereupon they Declared That the Persons entrusted in that great Service had discharged their Trust with great Courage and Fidelity That the Parliament was well satisfied in that Accompt of the Particulars and Proceedings And Ordered That the same Records do remain among the Records of Parliament That those Proceedings be Engrossed in a Roll and Recorded among the Parliament-Rolls for transmitting the Memory thereof to Posterity And Resolved That their Commissioners for their Great Seal issue a Certiorari to their Clerk to transmit those Proceedings into the Chancery there to be on Record And that the same be sent by Mittimus from thence to other Courts at Westminster and Custos Rotulorum of the Counties to be Recorded In the County Middlesex The Proceedings at Hicks Hall Tuesday the 9th of October 1660. in order to the Tryal of the pretended Judges of his late Sacred Majesty THe Court being sate the Commission of Oyer and Terminer under the Great Seal of England was first read It was directed to the Lords and others hereafter named viz. Thomas Aleyn Knight and Baronet Lord Mayor of the City of London The Lord Chancellor of England The Earl of South-hampton Lord Treasurer of England The Duke of Somerset The Duke of Albemarle The Marquess of Ormond Steward of his Majesties Houshold The Earl of Lindsey Great Chamberlain of England The Earl of Manchester Chamberlain of his Majesties Houshold The Earl of Dorset The Earl of Berkshire The Earl of Sandwich Viscount Say and Seal The Lord Roberts The Lord Finch Denzil Hollis Esquire Sir Frederick Cornwallis Knight and Baronet Treasurer of His Majesties Houshold Sir Charles Barkly Knight Comptrouler of His Majesties Houshold Mr. Secretary Nicholas Mr. Secretary Morris Sir Anthony Ashley-Cooper Arthur Annesley Esquire The Lord Chief Baron Mr. Justice Foster Mr. Justice Mallet Mr. Justice Hide Mr. Baron Atkins Mr. Justice Twisden Mr. Justice Tyrrel Mr. Baron Turner Sir Harbottle Grimston Knight and Baronet Sir William Wild Knight and Baronet Recorder of London Mr. Serjeant Brown Mr. Serjeant Hale John Howel Esquire Sir Geoffry Palmer His Majestie 's Attorny General Sir Heneage Finch His Majestie 's Solicitor General Sir Edward Turner Attorney to His Highness the Duke of York Wadham Windham Esquire Edward Shelton Esquire Clerk of the Crown The Grand Jury Sworn were Sir William Darcy Baronet Foreman Sir Robert Bolles Baronet Sir Edward Ford Knight Sir Thomas Prestwick Sir William Coney Knight Sir Charles Sidley Baronet Sir Lewis Kirk Knight Sir Henry Littleton Baronet Sir Ralph Bovey Baronet Edward Chard Esquire Robert Giggon Esquire John Fotherly Esquire Charles Gibbons Esquire Thomas Geree Esquire Richard Cox Esquire Robert Bladwell Esquire Henry Mustian Esquire John Markham Esquire Edward Buckley Gent. Francis Bourchier Gent. Edward Lole Hart Cryer After Proclamation for silence was made it pleased Sir Orlando-Bridgman Lord Chief Baron of His Majestie 's High Court of Exchequer to speak to the Jury as followeth The Lord Chief Baron's Speech Gentlemen YOu are the Grand Inquest for the Body of this County of Middlesex You may
perceive by this Commission that hath been read that we are authorized by the King's Majesty to hear and determine all Treasons Felonies and other Offences within this County But because this Commission is upon a special occasion the Execrable Murther of the blessed King that is now a Saint in Heaven King Charls the first we shall not trouble you with the Heads of a long Charge The ground of this Commission was and is from the Act of Oblivion and Indempnity You shall find in that Act there is an Exception of several persons who for their Execrable Treasons in sentencing to Death and signing the Warrant for the taking away the Life of our said Sovereign are left to be proceeded against as Traytors according to the Laws of England and are out of that Act wholly excepted and fore-prized Gentlemen You see these Persons are to be proceeded with according to the Laws of the Land and I shall speak nothing to you but what are the words of the Laws By the Statute of the twenty fifth of Edward the third a Statute or Declaration of Treason it is made High-Treason to compass and imagine the Death of the King It was the ancient Laws of the Nation In no Case else Imagination or Compassing without an Actual Effect of it was punishable by our Law Nihil officit Conatus nisi sequatur Effectus that was the old Rule of Law But in the case of the King His Life was so pretious that the Intent was Treason by the Common Law and Declared Treason by this Statute The reason of it is this In the case of the Death of the King the Head of the Commonwealth that 's cut off and what a Trunk an inanimate Lump the Body is when the Head is gone you all know For the Life of a single man there 's the Life of the Offendor there 's some Recompence Life for Life But for the Death of the King what Recompence can be made This Compassing and Imagining the cutting off the Head of the King is known by some Overt-Act Treason it is in the wicked Imagination though not Treason Apparent but when this Poison swells out of the Heart and breaks forth into Action in that case it 's High-Treason Then what is an Imagination or Compassing of the King's Death Truly it is any thing which shews what the Imagination is Words in many cases are Evidences of this Imagination they are Evidences of the Heart Secondly As Words so if a man if two men do conspire to Levy War against the King and by the way what I say of the King is as well of the King dead as living for if a Treason be committed in the Life of one King it is a Treason and punishable in the Time of the Successor Then I say in case not only of Words but if they conspire to Levy War against the King there 's another Branch of this Statute the Levying of War is Treason But if men shall go and consult together and this is to kill the King to put Him to Death this Consultation is clearly an Overt-Act to prove this Imagination or Compassing of the King's Death But what will you say then if men do not only go about to conspire and consult but take upon them to Judge Condemn nay put to Death the King Certainly this is so much beyond the Imagination and Compassing as 't is not only laying the Cockatrice's Egg but brooding upon it till it hath brought forth a Serpent I must deliver to you for plain and true Law That no Authority no single person no community of persons not the people Collectively or Representatively have any coercive power over the King of England And I do not speak mine own Sence but the words of the Laws unto you It was the Treason of the Spencers in King Edward the Second's Time in Calvin's case second Report The Spencers had an opinion that all Homage and Allegiance was due to the King by reason of the Crown as they called it And thereupon say the Books and Records they drew out this execrable Inference among others That if the King did not demean himself according to Right because he could not be reformed by Law he might per aspertee that is by sharp Imprisonment but this was adjudged horrid Treason by two Acts of Parliament Gentlemen Let me tell you what our Law-books say for there 's the Ground out of which and the Statutes together we must draw all our Conclusions for matter of Government How do they Stile the King They call Him The Lieutenant of God and many other expressions in the Book of Primo Henrici Septimi Says that Book there The King is immediate from God and hath no Superior The Statutes say That the Crown of England is immediately subject to God and to no other Power The King says our Books He is not only Caput Populi the Head of the People but Caput Reipublicae the Head of the Commonwealth The three Estates And truly thus our Statutes speak very fully Common Experience tells you when we speak of the King and so the Statutes of Edward the Third we call the King Our Sovereign Lord the King Sovereign that is Supreme And when the Lords and Commons in Parliament apply themselves to the King they use this Expression Your Lords and Commons your faithful Subjects humbly beseech I do not speak any Words of my own but the Words of the Laws Look upon the Statute primo Jacobi there 's a Recognition that the Crown of England was lawfully descended on the King and His Progeny The Statute it self was read to which it is desired the Reader will be referred These are the Words of the Act. And this is not the first precedent for you shall find it primo Eli. cap. 3. They do acknowledge the Imperial Crown lawfully descended on the Queen the same Recognition with this Before that because we shall shew you we go upon Grounds of Law in what we say Stat. 24. Hen. 8. cap. 12. Whereas by sundry old authentick Histories and Chronicles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this Realm of England is an Empire and so hath been accepted in the world governed by one Supreme Head and King having the Dignity and Royal Estate of the Imperial Crown of the same c. 25 Hen. 8. c. 21. there it is the people speaking of themselves That they do recognize no Superiour under God but only the King's Grace Gentlemen You see if the King be immediate under God he derives his Authority from no body else if the King have an Imperial Power if the King be Head of the Commonwealth Head of the body Politick if the body Politick own him obedience truly I think it is an undenied consequence He must needs be Superiour over them Gentlemen This is no new thing to talk of an Emperour or an Imperial Crown Do not mistake me all this while It is one thing to have an Imperial Crown and another
Clerk George Fleetwood Hold up thy hand What saiest thou Art thou guilty of this horrid Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and art now Arraigned or Not guilty George Fleetwood My Lord I came in upon his Majestie 's Proclamation Clerk Art thou Guilty or Not guilty George Fleetwood I must Confess I am Guilty And thereupon he delivered a Petition in to the Court which he said was directed To his Majesty and the Parliament and the Court did receive it accordingly Clerk Set him aside Clerk Simon Meyn Hold up thy hand What saiest thou Art thou guilty of this horrid Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and art now Arraigned or Not guilty Sim. Meyn Not guilty I come in upon His Majestie 's Proclamation my Lord. Clerk How wilt thou be Tried Sim. Meyn By God and the Countrey Clerk God send thee a good Deliverance Clerk James Temple Hold up thy hand What saiest thou Art thou guilty of this horrid Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and art now Arraigned or Not guilty James Temple Not guilty Clerk How wilt thou be Tried James Temple By God and the Countrey Clerk God send thee a good Deliverance Clerk Peter Temple Hold up your hand How saiest thou Art thou guilty of the Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and for which thou art now Arraigned or Not guilty Peter Temple Not guilty Clerk How wilt thou be Tried Peter Temple By God and the Countrey Clerk God send thee a good Deliverance Clerk Thomas Wait Hold up your Hand How saiest thou Art thou guilty of the Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and for which thou art Arraigned or Not Guilty Th Wait. I desire to be heard a word or two Court There is a Rule of Law which is set to us and you that in all these Cases you are to plead Guilty or Not guilty When you have Pleaded if Not Guilty you may speak what you will in its proper time Clerk Are you Guilty or Not guilty Th. Wait. I pray let me be heard a word I am very unwilling to spend time knowing you have a great deal of Business I am very unwilling to deprive my self of my Native Right I shall speak nothing but that which is Truth Court Do not Preface then but speak what you would say Th. Wait. My Lord my Case is different from the rest Court Whatsoever the Case he you have no Plea to us but guilty or Not guilty We can go no other way The Law sets our your Plea Th. Wait. My Lord I would speak one word There was a Great Peer of this Nation Indicted at Northampton within these two years for killing a man The Judges there Court You must Plead guilty or Not guiley Pray who are you that should take this upon you more then all the rest You must go the ordinary way guilty or Not guilty Are you guilty or Not guilty We do not intend to prevent any thing you have to say but it must be proper Clerk Are you guilty or Not guilty Th. Wait. I cannot say I am Guilty Court How then Th. Wait. I am Not guilty Clerk How wilt thou be Tried Th. Wait. By God and the Countrey Clerk Good send thee a good Deliverance Clerk Hugh Peters Hold up thy hand How saiest thou Art thou guilty of the Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and for which thou art now Arraigned or Not guilty Hugh Peters I would not for ten thousand Worlds say I am Guilty I am Not guilty Clerk How will you be Tried Hugh Peters By the Word of God Here the People laughed Court You must say By God and the Countrey Tell him you that stand by him what he should say if he doth not know Clerk How will you be Tried Hugh Peters By God and the Countrey Clerk God send thee a good Deliverance Clerk Dan. Axtel Hold up thy hand What saiest thou Art thou guilty of the Treason whereof thou standest Indicted and for which thou art now Arraigned or Not guilty Dan. Axtel May it please your Lordship I desire to have the freedom of an English-man that which is my Right by Law and inheritance I have something to offer in point of Law Clerk Art thou Guilty or Not guilty Dan. Axtel My Lords give me leave to speak For the Matter of the Indictment I conceive is upon the King's Death that there is a Commission of Oyer and Terminer for you to sit But in regard it was in pursuance of an Act of Parliament I conceive no Inferiour Court ought to judge of it I desire Councel it being of great and eminent Concernment in Law That ever any Judges or any Inferiour Court should judge of the Powers and Priviledges of a Parliament and I pray that Councel may be assigned me Clerk Are you Guilty or Not guilty Dan. Axtel If the Court over-rule me and I shall not have my Liberty as an English-man Court The Course of Law is this No man can Justifie Treason If the matter which you have to say be Justifiable it is not Treason if Treason it is not Justifiable Therefore you must go to the ordinary course of the Law You must Plead Guilty or Not guilty Dan. Axtel I can produce many Precedents Cour Are you Guilty or Not guilty The Language is put into your Mouth You have no other words to express your self by at this time but Guilty or Not guilty Dan Axtel Judg Heath had Councel assigned him upon the same Case Court That is very strange the same case What was it for killing a King Dan. Axtel If the Court will over-rule me I cannot help it Mr. Solicitour Gen. It may be this Gentleman may be deceived by a Mistake It may be he knows not the Law which your Lordships may be pleased to acquaint him with That to stand Mute in High-Treason is all one as to Confess the Fact and will have the same Sentence and Condemnation upon them as if they had Confessed it Lord Chief Baron Then I 'le tell you the Law He that doth refuse to put himself upon his Legal Trial of God and the Countrey is a Mute in Law and therefore you must Plead Guilty or Not guilty Let his Language be what it will he is a Mute in Law Dan. Axtel I do not refuse it Court Then say Dan. Axtel I am Not guilty Clerk How wilt thou be Tried Dan. Axtel By twelve lawful men according to the Constitutions of the Law Court That is by God and the Countrey Dan. Axtel That is not lawful God is not locally here Clerk How wilt thou be Tried You must say By God and the Countrey Dan. Axtel By God and the Countrey Clerk God send you a good Deliverance Lord Chief Baron Mr. Axtel have you your Papers again Dan. Axtel Yes my Lord. Lord Chief Baron When your Indictment is read the second time when you come to your Trial you may take what Notes you please The Court then Adjourned to the same Place till the next morning seven of the Clock
Terrours of that Presence of God that was with his Servants in those days However it seemeth good to him to suffer this Turn to come on us and are Witnesses that the things were not done in a Corner I have desired as in the sight of him that searcheth all hearts whilest this hath been done to wait and receive from him Convictions upon my own Conscience though I have sought it with Tears many a time and Prayers over and over to that God to whom you and all Nations are less than a Drop of water of the Bucket and to this moment I have received rather Assurance of it and that the things that have been done as astonishing on one hand I do believe e're it be long it will be made known from Heaven There was more from God than men are aware of I do profess that I would not offer of my self the least Injury to the poorest Man or Woman that goes upon the Earth That I have humbly to offer is this to your Lordships You know what a Contest hath been in these Nations for many years Divers of those that sit upon the Bench were formerly as Active Court Pray Mr. Harrison do not thus Reflect on the Court This is not to the Business Mr. Harrison I followed not my own Judgment I did what I did as out of Conscience to the Lord. For when I found those that were as the Apple of mine Eye to turn aside I did loath them and suffered Imprisonment many years Rather then to turn as many did that did put their Hands to this Plough I chose rather to be separated from Wife and Family than to have Compliance with them though it was said Sit at my Right Hand and such kind of Expressions Thus I have given a little poor Testimony that I have not been doing things in a Corner or from my self May be I might be a little mistaken but I did it all according to the best of my understanding desiring to make the Revealed Will of God in his Holy Scriptures as a guide to me I humbly conceive That what was done was done in the name of the Parliament of England that what was done was done by their Power and Authority and I do humbly conceive it is my Duty to offer unto you in the beginning that this Court or any Court below the High Court of Parliament hath no Jurisdiction of their Actions Here are many Learned in the Law and to shorten the Work I desire I may have the help of Councel Learned in the Laws that may in this matter give me a little assistance to offer those Grounds that the Law of the Land doth offer I say what was done was done by the Authority of the Parliament which was then the Supreme Authority and that those that have Acted under them are not to be questioned by any Power less than them And for that I conceive there is much out of the Laws to be shewed to you and many Presidents also in the Case Much is to be offered to you in that according to the Laws of the Nations that was a due Parliament Those Commissions were issued forth and what was done was done by their Power And whereas it hath been said we did Assume and Usurp an Authority I say this was done rather in the Fear of the Lord. Court Away with him Know where you are Sir You are in the Assembly of Christians Will you make God the Author of your Treasons and Murthers Take heed where you are Christians must not hear this We will allow you to say for your own Defence what you can And we have with a great deal of Patience suffered you to sally out wherein you have not gone about so much for Extenuation of your Crimes as to Justifie them to fall upon others and to Blaspheme God and commit a new Treason For your having of Councel This is the reason for allowing of Councel when a man would Plead any thing because he would Plead it in Formality Councel is allowed But you must first say in what the Matter shall be and then you shall have the Court's Answer Lord Finch Though my Lords here have been pleased to give you a great Latitude this must not be suffered that you should run into these damnable Excursions to make God the Author of this damnable Treason Committed Mr. Harrison I have two things to offer to you to say for my Defence in Matter of Law One is That this that hath been done was done by a Parliament of England by the Commons of England assembled in Parliament and that being so whatever was done by their Commands or their Authority is not questionable by your Lordships as being as I humbly conceive a Power Inferiour to that of an High Court of Parliament That 's one A second is this That what therefore any did in obedience to that Power and Authority they are not to be questioned for it otherwise we are in a most miserable Condition bound to obey them that are in Authority and yet to be punished if obeyed We are not to Judg what is lawful or what is unlawful My Lords Upon these two Points I do desire that those that are Learned in the Laws may speak too on my behalf It concerns all my Countreymen There are Cases alike to this you know in King Richard the Second's Time wherein some Question had been of what had been done by a Parliament and what followed upon it I need not urge in it I hope it will seem good to you that Councel may be assigned for it concerns all my Countreymen Councel You are mistaken if you appeal to your Countreymen They will cry you Out and shame you Mr. Harrison May be so my Lords some will but I am sure others will not Mr. Sollicitor Gen. These two Points my Lords are but one and they are a new Treason at the Bar for which he deserves to dy if there were no other Indictment It is the Malice of his heart to the Dignity and Crown of England I say this is not matter for which Councel can be assigned Councel cannot put into Form that which is not Matter Pleadable it self It is so far from being true that this was the Act of the Supreme Parliament of the People of England that there was nothing received with more Heart-bleeding than this Bloody Business But that the World may not be abused by the Insinuations of a man who acts as if he had a Spirit and in truth is possessed I will say That the Lords and Commons are not a Parliament That the King and Lords cannot do any thing without the Commons Nor the King and Commons without the Lords Nor the Lords and Commons without the King especially against the King If they do they must answer it with their Head for the King is not accountable to any Coercive Power And for the Prisoner to Justifie his Act as if it were the Act of the Commons of England
Hand to the Warrant for summoning of that Traiterous Assembly The High Court of Justice as they called it And also it appears by his Hand to the Warrant for Execution that Bloody Warrant He hath been so far from denying that he hath Justified these Actions The Evidence is so clear and pregnant as nothing more I think you need not go out The Jury went together at the Bar and presently unanimously agreed on their Verdict whereupon they were demanded by the Clerk Clerk Are you agreed upon your Verdict Jury Yes Clark Who shall say for you Jury Our Fore-man Which was Sir Thomas Allen. Clerk Thomas Harrison Hold up thy Hand Gentlemen of the Jury Look upon the Prisoner How say ye Is he guilty of the Treason whereof he stands Indicted and hath been Arraigned or Not guilty Fore-man Guilty Then the Keeper was charged to look to the Prisoner Clerk What Goods and Chattels had he at the time of committing this Treason or at any time sithence Fore-man None to our Knowledg Which Verdict being repeated to the Jury by Mr. Clerk of the Crown the Jury owned it unanimously Mr. Solicitor Gen. My Lords upon this Verdict that hath been given against the Prisoner at the Bar I humbly move that we may have Judgment given Your Sessions will be long and your work will be great his Demeanour hath been such that he doth not deserve a Reprieve for so many Days that you are like to spend in this Session Court Mr. Harrison they desire Judgment upon the Verdict What do you say for your self why Judgement should not pass against you Clerk Thomas Harrison hold up thy Hand What hast thou to say for thy self why Judgmnt should not pass against thee to dy according to Law Mr. Harrison I have nothing further to say because the Court have not seen meet to hear what was in my Heart to speak I submit to it The Cryer made Proclamation for Silence whilest Judgment was in giving Lord Chief Baron You that are the Prisoner at the Bar you are to pass the Sentence of Death which Sentence is this The Judgment of this Court is and the Court doth award that You be led back to the place from whence you came and from thence to be drawn upon an Hurdle to the place of Execution and there you shall be hanged by the Neck and being alive shall be cut down and your Privy-Members to be cut off your Entrails to be taken out of your Body and you living the same to be burnt before your Eyes and your Head to be cut off your Body to be divided into four Quarters and your Head and Quarters to be disposed of at the pleasure of the Kings Majesty and the Lord have Mercy upon your Soul And then Proclamation was made for Adjournment of the Court to this place till seven of the Clock to morrow morning And all Jury-men and Witnesses were commanded to be at the said Place and Time upon Forfeiture of an hundred Pounds apiece Octob. 1● 1660. The Proclamation for Silence The Jury called Prisoners brought to the Bar viz. John Jones Adrian Scroop Thomas Scot Gregory Clement John Carew Cryer Sir Thomas Allen. Clerk Sir Tho. Aleyn lay your hand on the Book look upon the Prisoner at the Bar. Scroop I challenge him my Lord. L. C. Bar. That you may not mistake if you challenge in this manner and do not joyn in your challenges we must try you severally one after another I must tell you the course of the Law If one challenge one and another challenge another we must sever and go to Tryal one by one Call the next Cl. Sir Henry Wroth. Scroop I challenge him L. C. Bar. Then we must go on severally set all aside but Mr. Scroope Mr. Scroop you may challenge particularly whom you will till you come to 35. if you go beyond that number you will lose the benefit of the Law Scr. I desire my Lord that whosoever was challenged yesterday may not be called again Court No that cannot be that is nothing to you The Court thereupon proceeded and called Challenged John Lisle Nic. Raynton Thomas Wynter Thomas Frankelyn Randal Nichol Jo. Kirke Ambrose Scudamore George Tirrey who were all challenged Jury Thomas Willet Hen. Marsh Charles Pitfied Chr. Abdy Rich. Cheny Tho Bid. Jo. Smith Richard Abel Ralph Halsal Jo. Gallyard Tho. Swallow Sam. Starnel were admitted and sworn on the Jury Cl. Cryer make Proclamation If any man can inform my Lords the King's Justices the King's Serjeant or the King's Attorney before this Inquest be taken between our Soveraign Lord the King and the Prisoner at the Bar let them come forth and they shall be heard for now the Prisoner stands at the Bar upon his delivery and all others bound by recognizance to give evidence against the Prisoner at the Bar let them come forth and give their evidence or else they shall forfeit their recognizance Cl. Adrian Scroop hold up thy hand you Gentlemen that are sworn look upon the Prisoner and hearken to his charge you shall understand c. upon this Indictment he hath pleaded not guilty M. Sol. May it please your Lordships and you Gentlemen of the Jury this Prisoner at the Bar stands indicted sor compassing and imagining the death of the late King of blessed memory The Indictment sets out that to that end and purpose the Prisoner at the Bar did with others assemble and sit together at Westminster Hall consulting upon him and usurped an authority to proceed against the life of our said late Soveraign and in persuance of that our late Soveraign was brought to his death These things are alledged in the Indictment as several over Acts to shew the treason of his heart which was the compassing and imagining the death of the King Compassing and Imagining are the words of the Statute the rest of the Indictment is but as so many overt-acts evidences and manifestations of that corrupt and wicked heart of his by which he first thought such a thought against his Soveraign The manner of our evidence shall be this Before they could come to accomplish this damnable design it was necessary to meet in a trayterous assembly which they called the High-Court of Justice that under the pageantry and mockery of that they might pretend to murder him by a Sentence and before that assembly could come to sit there was a Precept set forth very formally to summon them to sit This Prisoner at the Bar is one of those persons who under his hand and seal did summon that Court to sit upon the life of our late Soveraign When the Court in obedience to that summons as they called it did meet they sate several times and he among them they did proceed with a wonderful impudence as they had begun to pronounce sentence of death upon our late Soveraign My Lords this Prisoner at the Bar was amongst them and was at that Court and gave the sentence When they had done that
there I met this Gentleman whom indeed I knew not he told me who he was and when I understood who he was I said to him or words to this purpose I cannot tell the words because I would not distaste him and say you have done this therefore I put it thus We have done this What a sad case have we said I brought this Kingdom unto Why saith he you see said I how it is ruined now the King is murthered c Saith he some are of one opinion and some of another Sir said I do you think it was well done to murther the King saith he I will not make you my Confessor Sir it was much to this purpose Coun. When was this spoken Lord Elect. Truly I do not know the day but it was that day that Sir H. M. rendered himself to the Speaker it was since the coming in of the King M. Sol. Neither time nor the hand of God appearing in this business nor the condition he was in was ever able to bring this Gentleman to be sorry for his offence but we do not give it as any evidence of his crimes You have heard the Prisoner confess the two Warrants You have heard by several witnesses produced that he did sit in that which they called the High-Court of Justice by three that he sat particularly on that day they called the day of their Judgment you have heard how little penitence he hath had by his Declaration to the Lord Mayor Elect. Scr. I hope now that you have heard the Evidence against me that you will give me leave to make some defence for my self L. C. Bar. God forbid otherwise but that you should have free liberty Scr. Truly my Lords though my breeding hath not been in the way of the Laws and therefore I have a great disadvantage when there be such learned Gentlemen as these are to plead against me I must confess to you I have something for matter of Law to plead for the justification of the fact though I would not undertake to justifie the person this I humbly entreat if it may be granted that I may have some time given me and some Councel that I may answer matter of Law L. C. Bar. M. Scroop if you have any thing of matter of Law for which you would have Councel you must alledge that matter first the use of Councel is only to put in certainty what you have of matter of Law and then the Court and Judges must judge of it If you have matter of Law you must tell what it is if it be matter that there is cause to over-rule it there is no cause of making further use of Councel If one be Indicted for murther when he comes to Tryal he will say I have matter of Law to plead What is that That Murther is no felony Do you think Councel will be admitted in this If you do alledge what this matter is wherein you desire Councel you shall have your answer Scr. My Lords as well as I am able to do it I shall do it my Lord I was not of the Parliament take notice of that and that which was done in the High Court of Justice it was done by a Commission from the Parliament My Lord it was that Authority which was then I will not say it was so because I would not give offence it was that Authority then which was accounted the supreme Authority of the Nation and that Authority My Lord that a great many of the generality of the Nation submitted to My Lord I having received a command from that Authority what I did was in obedience to that Authority My Lord I have not had time to consider of these things because I have been for these six weeks time shut up a close Prisoner and that I could neither come at Councel nor any thing else nor to get any thing to prepare for it therefore I desire your Lordships to do me the savour if you see any weight in it to let me have time and Councel assigned me L. C. Bar. Have you done Sir Scr. Yes L. C. Bar. Then I take it this is the effect of what you have said if I have not taken it aright tell me so You say you justifie the fact though not your Person That you were not of the Parliament That what was done was by Commission from the Parliament Be pleased not to mistake me for I say you said this That that which I have to plead in justification of it I do not say that I justifie my self but that which I have to say is for justification of the Fact I was first no contriver of the business And then secondly I did it by virtue of the Command and in obedience to the Authority of the Parliament That that Authority was then accounted the Supream Authority of the Nations and that the Generality of the Nations did submit to their Authority I think I have repeated all you have said Then Mr. Scroop you must know this That there is no cause at all why Councel should be given for what you speak I profess it rather tends to the aggravation than extenuation of what you did First you say you did it by Authority of Parliament I am afraid you have been mistaken as well as others by the word Parliament what doth that mean I am sure you and e-every one knows that there was not one Precedent ever heard of till this That the House of Commons should take upon them the Legislative Power and make such an Act as this was there was no colour for it Then for men upon their own heads never heard of before and against the Liberty and Fredome of the People that they should call it the Parliament when there was but 46 sate whereas there was above 240 excluded and how you can call this a House of Commons is a great wonder to me but I tell you this take it for granted that if they were the most perfect House of Commons that could be Did ever the House of Commons before this single Act take upon them the Legislative Powers without the Lords The Acts are begun in the Commons House when you have done if the Lords not pass it it is a bortive if it be done by both Houses there ought to be a Royal assent But the Lords had rejected this Act then they must take upon them these 46 men whereof I do believe there was not above 25 or 26 men that did vote this and this must be called the Parliament the Commons of England I would fain know whether any man hath heard that the House of Commons took upon them the Legislative power before this Act but this hath been over-ruled in the like Case and I shall say no more to it What is the Oath of Allegiance is it not that you would defend the King his Crown Rights and Liberties against all persons whatsoever It was not only against the Pope as some would have it but the
word is or otherwise They broke the oath of Supremacy which was That the King was the Supreme Governour of these Nations They swore that they would maintain and keep all Priviledges Immunities Preheminencies annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm there is difference between some Crowns and Imperial Crowns An Imperial Crown it was that which was not to be touched in the Person We do not speak any thing of the absoiute Power of the King for you see he cannot Judge concerning the Death of his Father but by Lawes When you swore this Allegiance all those Members of break all this at once This would be so far from having any colour of Authority that he that justifies it justifies it against the light of Conscience and Laws You say you did it by Commandment from them He that doth a Command by such an Authority it is his guilt Our Law-Books say That if a Court at Common-Law exceed their Jurisdiction in that Case he that obeys that Command is punishable In the Court of Common-Pleas if there be an Appeal there for Murther it is only proper to the Upper Bench and therefore if the party be condemned sentenced and executed thereupon the Executioner in that Case is guilty of Murther for obeying that Authority which was indeed no Authority And therefore whereas you would go about to justifie the Fact because you did it by Command of that Authority that is an Aggravation That when men shall assume an Authority which is a Devil at the noon-day appearing without Vizors I say shall assume an Authority never heard of before If men will countenance their Acts by obeying of them it is an Aggravation We have already Declared this in the Case of the Prisoner yesterday We are all satisfied in the Law in that Case It is so clear a Point in Law that my Brethren here and we did over-rule it yesterday in the like Case and so We must now and I hope that all do concur in this Opinion that hath been delivered Lord Finch I hope all do concur in this opinion delivered by my Lord Chief Baron You shelter your self under a Command of the House of Commons But let me tell you and all the Word That if the House of Commons let it have been never so compleat had given a Command it had been a thing no ways justifiable the Justification is an Aggravation Scr. My Lord I do see that every thing I speak though it be for clearing of my self from your ill opinion I see it is taken in an ill sence I humhly beseech pardon for the Expression if I erre I will crave your Lordships pardon But my Lord I say this If I have been misled I am not a single person that have been misled My Lord I could say but I think it doth not become me to say so That I see a great many faces at this time that were misled as well as my self But that I will not insist upon I say this That I hope an Error in Judgment shall not be accounted Malice or an Error of the Will Truly my Lord I never went to the work with a malicious heart I humbly desire your Lordships to take notice of it That I never bore any malice at all against his late Majesty L. C. Bar. Mr. Scroop have you done Scr. My Lord I do beseech your Lordships to take notice That an Error in Judgement is not an Error in the Will L. C. Bar. Mr. Scroop I am very glad to hear you say so But let me tell you what the Law saith The Law in this Case treates the malice If a man do an act of this nature that may be some kind of excuse to God but towards man you are to look to the Fact the Law implies the malice If there be any thing you will say in the Extenuation of your offence we will be very glad to hear that may tend to your help Scr. My Lord There is one Evidence comes in against me that I must confess that I am very sorry to see and my Lord there was a saying it is by my Lord Mayor Elect Truly he is a worthy Gentleman but I desire the Lord may forgive that which he hath spoken Truly my Lord I did never intend any thing in this neither can I directly remember that I spake those words directly as my Lord Mayor Elect doth spake I do believe my Lord Mayor cannot very well remember them himself for he saith So far as he can remember I must confess that when I was there and had appeared according to the Proclamation that such discourse somewhat like it was raised not of my procuring I did not procure the Discourse I never intended the Justification of the Fact but it was my ill success that I should meet with that worthy Gentleman to have so much discourse with him L. C. Bar. Mr. Scroop my Lord Mayor Elect saith no further then this So far as he remembers and the words that you should say were these That some are of one opinion and some are of another Scr. Vpon the death of the King My Lord I mnst confesse to you that somewhat I said to him but I cannot own that I said those words My Lords He is a worthy person I do not desire to spake any thing to degenerate in the least kind from him it is but his yea and my no there was nobody there L. C. Bar. Have you any thing more to say for your self Scr. My Lord if your Lordship do over-rule it so that I may not have Councel I have little more to say L. C. Bar. You have heard the sence of the Court in that particular you cannot have Councel allowed you as to the matter you have pleaded Scr. I have done but only this My Lords I know not whether it be seasonable to mention it I came in upon the Proclamation and My Lord by means of these unhappy words that have been reported of me in the House of Commons whereas before I was no excepted person I came to be excepted and upon the very last day of passing that Act never was excepted before the very last day I beseech you take notice of this L. C. Bar. Mr. Scroop That is a thing that is not before us but there will be a proper time to consider of it in another place that is nothing to the Tryal have you any more to say Sir Scr. No My Lord Will your Lordship please to let me speak a word to the Jury L. Ch. Baron If you speak to the Court the Jury will hear it Scr. Truly my Lord This I do perceive that I am under a very great prejudice as to this fact It hath been the case of many Gentlemen besides my self I desire that these Gentlemen would take my case into consideration as they would their own and I desire that the Lord would give them direction that they may do that which is according to Justice and Mercy that is all I
to pronounce Judgment against his Soveraign In this he rested not but he among them set his Hand and Seal to that bloody Roll or Warrant for putting him to death which accordingly was done and to these several open acts we shall call out Witnesses and so proceed M. Masterson M. Clark and M. Kirk sworn Coun. M. Masterson look upon the prisoner did you see him sit in that they called the High Court of Justice Lord Chief Baron Mr. Carew if you will have pen ink and paper you may have it pray call for it Carew I have no need of it Coun. Mr. Masterson did you see c. Ma. My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury I was present at that Assembly which they called the High Court of Justice for Tryal of the King upon the 22 23 and 27th days of Jan. 1648. and there I saw the King stand a Prisoner at the Bar. I saw this Gentleman the Prisoner at the Bar sit upon the Bench in that Court as one of his Majesties Judges particularly upon the 27th day of Jan. which was the day of Sentence I saw him sitting there Coun. Mr. Clark You hear the Question Do you remember that you saw the Prisoner at the Bar sitting in that which they called the High Court of Justice Mr. Clark I remember I saw the Prisoner at the Bar sitting in that which they called the High Court of Justice for the Trial of the late King and particularly I took notice upon the 23. and 27th of Jan. 1648. that he was present Coun. What was done upon that 27th day Mr. Clark The 27th day the late King was sentenced to death Jury What is your Name Sir Coun. His Name is William Clark Coun. Mr. Kirk What say you to the former Question touching the Prisoner his being at that which they called the High Court of Justice Mr. Kirk My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury I was present at the Tryal of his late Majesty of blessed memory I saw that Gentleman the Prisoner at the Bar several days there particularly the day of the Sentence which was the 27th day of Jan. 1648. when the Sentence was passed he rose up assenting to it Then the Warrant for summoning that pretended Court was shewed to Mr. Kirk Coun. Do you believe that Hand to be the Hand of Mr. Jo. Carew Prisoner at the Bar Kirk My Lords I do believe it to be his Hand I have seen his Hand to several Orders and being very well acquainted with his Hand-writing I believe it to be his Hand as much as any Man can possibly know another man's Hand Then the Warrant for Execution of the King was likewise shewn him Coun. Is that the Hand also of the Prisoner at the Bar Kirk It is the same Hand my Lord. Court Was Mr. Carew a Member of the Long Parliament K. Yes My Lord. Coun. Had you occasion to be acquainted with his hand K. My Lord I have seen him set his hand several times to Orders and other Papers Mr. Farrington sworn Coun. Do you know the Warrants being shewn him those hands to be the writing of the Prisoner at the Bar Far. My Lords really I believe these are his hands Court Are you acquainted with his hand Far. Yes My Lord and I do believe these to be his hand-writing I did not see him write them but so far as possibly a man can know anothers writing I do believe these to be his Court If you will ask to see them you may see them Mr. Carew Ca. Please you to go on Here they were both read Coun. May it please your Lordships we shall not need to trouble the Jury any further we have proved that the Prisoner did sign that Warrant for summoning that Court of Injustice that he sate there and sentenced the King to death among other and that he signed the Warrant for execution L. Chief Baron M. Carew you have heard the evidence you may please to speak what you think fit for your self Ca. My Lords the crimes that are here laid to my charge in this Indictment are Treason and Murther L. Chief Baron I would not have you to be mis-informed it is Treason onely but it carries the other in with it Murther Ca. Because you say it carries the other inclusively L. Chief Baron It doth the charge is the compassing and imagining the death of the King the other is but evidence Ca. Then the thing that I stand upon before the Lord and before you all I say before the Lord before whom we must all stand and give an account of this action which is a very great and weighty one And whereas it is charged there for I shall not trouble you with many words as to the particulars or as to the proofs but I shall ingeniously acknowledg what the truth is and how far I can believe it and therefore I say as to the beginning of what was charg'd by the Council and according to the course of the Indictment that what was done in those things that it was not having the fear of God before mine eyes but being moved by the Devil and that it was done with a Trayterous Malicious and Devilish heart and all those things mentioned in the Indictment As for that I can say in the presence of the Lord who is the searcher of all hearts that what I did was in his fear and I did it in obedience to his holy and righteous Laws Here the people hum'd L. Chief Bar. Go on he stands for his Life let him have liberty Ca. It is part of my charge not to have the fear of God c. I did such and such things I hope I may have liberty L. Chief Bar. Go on you shall not be interrupted Ca. I say that I did it in the fear of the Lord and I will begin with that and confess ingeniously the truth of it When this came into question there was an Ordinance brought in to try the King where my name was not as one of the Judges There was another afterwards an Act which I shall mention upon what ground by and by what that was and that Act was brought in and committed and names brought in and my Name was not brought in and so afterwards my name was put in and seeing it I did strike it out After the Committee was up I told them I did desire to be excused in such a business I have told you how wherein and the ground that I did it which I shall leave with the Lord in whose hand your and my breath and all our breaths are and therefore when it was so I did because of the weight of it as being a very great and special thing and so I was very unwilling because of there being enow which I thought had more experience every way for so great a concernment as that was to be imployed rather then I yet being satisfied with that Authority that did it This is to shew you how that I had the fear
of the Lord and did weigh the things After that when the Bill was brought into the house my name was put in there with several others so I came to be in and what I did was upon these two Accounts First in obedience as I told you to the Lord which was the chief thing And in obedience to that which was then the Supreme Authority of this Nation and therefore I shall mention these grounds very briefly because indeed the things that are controverted here at this time they have been controverted in the Face of the whole world in several Nations and the Lord hath given an answer upon solemn Appeals to these things I shall therefore mention them very briefly because they have been so publique The Declarations and Remonstrances that have passed between the King and Parliament concerning the beginning of the Wars L. Chief Baron Mr. Ca. I would be very loth to interrupt you But I see what course is taken and the peoples eyes are upon you You seek delays and against the course of Prisoners you say you will confess but you do confess the Fact after you have spent the time And all the Witnesses are heard for this that you speak of now you go about to justifie as in the fear of the Lord or any thing of that nature that we cannot allow of but we do allow you to speak and give the heads of what you will say as to the matter of Fact but to hear you make discourses and debates which are a justification of a horrid and notorious Treason we cannot hear it we ought not to hear the maintaining of open Treason cannot hear you to speak that upon your opening which is Treason We are willing that you open the Heads what you have to say we are upon our consciences and to appear before God for what we do and so are you too but remember the Devil sometimes appears in the habit of an Angel of light If you will couch your matter in a few words the Court affords you liberty which is indeed beyond the strict Rules of Law Ca. You say you sit here by the Laws of the Land and are sworn to maintain the Laws We ought not that we should plead to this Indictment for what we did was by an Act of Parliament Court Pray Sir this must not be let fall without reproof or rather punishment Ca. I believe there is no Precedent for it Court Sir We know the act of Parliament as well as you and most of the standers by You go upon a false ground there was no such Act of the Supreme Authority as you pretend to these are but Phantasms of your own brain and must not be suffered these things have been controverted and decided many a time again and again Ca. I desire to have time to speak how it was begun and carried on or else how shall I be able to make my defence or to tell you what are the Heads I wil insist upon I shall declare the grounds upon which the Parliament did proceed L. Chief Baron Mr. Carew If that be your ground the Parliament did it the House of Commons did it I have something to offer not to interrupt you to the then Commons Ca. In my humble opinion for the maintaining of this It was by Authority the supreme Authority by which it was done L. Chief Baron Did you sign this Warrant for the summoning and warning of that Court And did you sign the Warrant for executing the late King Ca. I desire I may go on with my defence L. Chief Baron We would not have you be mistaken You seem to confess the act and now you justifie it you cannot speak any thing for your justification till you confess the fact Ca. I shall speak to that in its time L. Chief Baron You must speak to that first that is matter of Fact whereupon the Jury are to go Ca. There is matter of Law Court You must speak to matter of Fact first Ca. I say this is that I was about to say That the Supreme Authority Court You must speak to the Fact first Whether you did compass c. the Kings death or not that is the first ground if you did not there is an end of the business It is proved against you that you did it if you come to justifie it it must be when you have first agreed the matter of Fact Ca. I desire I may have liberty to proceed either for matter of Fact or Law as I list Court No no you must first speak to the Fact you may be after heard You know in all cases they must begin with the Fact either denying or extenuating For matter of Law in this case must arise from the fact Ca. But I humbly conceive there is a matter of Law in this case and it is matter of Law that is above the jurisdiction of this inferior Court Mr. Sol. Finch I pray that he may be held to the issue Guilty or Not Guilty If he deny the Fact let us relie upon our Evidence and he upon his he cannot come to Law till he hath confessed the Fact The question is Whether you did or not there is the Fact if you have any thing to justifie that follows Ca. I was upon that and going on to shew the reasons and grounds of it Court First you must confess it if you will shew the reasons why you did it Ca. I told you there was some things I did Coun. What are those some Ca. I do acknowledg that I was there at the Court. Coun. Did you sign the Warrants for summoning that Court and for Execution of the King Ca. Yes I did sign them both Coun. Then say what you will L. Chief Baron Now go on Ca. In the Year 1640. there was a Parliament called according to the Laws and constitutions of this Nation and after that there was some difference between the King and the Parliament the two Houses of Parliament Lords and Commons and thereupon the King did withdraw from the two Houses of Parliament as appears by their own Declaration The great Remonstrance printed in 1642. and thereupon the Lords and Commons did declare L. Chief Baron Mr. Carew The Court are of opinion not to suffer you to go on in this they say it tends not only to justifie your Act but you cast in Bones here to make some difference You talk of the Lords and Commons you have nothing to do with that business your authority that you pretend to was an Act of Parliament as they called themselves and that where there was but 46 Commons in the House and but 26 Voted it Ca. I say that the Lords and Commons by their Declaration Mr. J. Foster Hold your hand a while Sir not so fast you go to raise up those differences which I hope are asleep new Troubles to revive those things which by the grace of God are extinct you are not to be suffered in this it is not the singling
out of a few persons that makes a Parliament We see as before so still it is your course to blow the Trumpet of Sedition Did you ever hear or can you produce instances of an Act of Parliament made by the House of Commons alone though this was not the House of Commons as you heard before Ca. Neither was there ever such a War or such a precedent Court Nor we hope never will be Pray remember you were returned to serve in the House what was that Writ that summon'd your appearance You had no manner of ground in the world to go that way that you did Coun. We pray that the Prisoner at the Bar give us pationce a little to repeat that to him which your Lordships have been so often troubled with declaring this is not the first or second time that in this publique Assembly it hath been said That neither the Lords nor the Commons jointly nor severally have any power at all to proceed upon the Person of the King That it is not in their power to condemn any man in England without the good pleasure of the King much less the King himself and that this is the great Liberty of the people of England that it should be so and it was the first breach and invasion of our Liberty that that first Parliament made and which you justifie in the name of the Lord. In this case to throw us upon Debates of the War and to talk here of the causes and reasons of that quarrel which ended in such a Tragedie For this person to come here with this confidence and to justifie it but that he knows he cannot be in a worse condition one would wonder it should fall from any man that hath any regard of himself it is all one to them that perish whether they fall by one sin or multitudes He makes no scruple to multiply Treasons I do beseech your Lordship he may not offer as he hath begun but that the Jury may proceed Court All the Court are of the same opinion not to hear any thing like the former Discourses Ca. I desire I may be heard I have not compassed the Death of the late King contrived the death of the King what I did I did by Authority Court This is not to be heard You have heard what hath bin said to you There could be no such Authority neither was nor could be but you would by a wyre-lace bring it in by this You have confessed the Fact which must be left to the Jury L. Ansley I think you were present in the House of Commons when that Vote passed for agreement with the King in the Treaty at the Isle of Wight You know the King having condescended to most of the desires of This Parliament there was a debate in the House and a conclusion that they were grounds for peace You know the Lords and Commons did resolve to agree with their King when that was done that would not satisfie you and other Members of the House Then you go and contrive new ways you contrive a new fashioned Parliament the driving away many Members by power which you could not do by the Law of the Land Nay the Parliament had Declared against that which you pretend is by Authority is no Authority for a few of you set up an Arbitrary Parliament of a few of your selves when you had driven away the rest This kind of Parliament gives you the Authority you pretend to You were saying that the Parliament was called at first the Lords and Commons by the King according to the ancient Constitutions of the Laws Did such a Parliament give you such Authority as you pretend to and Act of Parliament as you call it which was but an Order of some of the Commons and but a few of them you can have no manner of Justification and therefore your Plea must be over-ruled as yesterday it was in the like Case You are indicted upon a cleer Act of Parliament of 25. Edw. 3. and you defend your self upon pretence of an Act of Parliament which hath been over-ruled as no Act. Ca. I am a stranger to many of these things which you have offered and this is strange You give evidence sitting as a Judge L. Ch. Bar. You are mistaken it is not Evidence he shews you what Authority that was an Authority of 26 Members How is this Evidence Mr. Carew if you have any thing more of Fact go on If you have nothing but according to this kind of discourse I am commanded to direct the Jury Ca. I am very willing to leave it with the Lord if you will stop me that I cannot open the true nature of those things that did give me ground of satisfaction in my Conscience that I did it from the Lord. Mr. Sol. I do pray for the honour of God and our King That he may not be suffered to go on in this manner You have been suffered to speak you have said but little only Sedition You pretend a Conscience and the fear of the Lord when all the world knows you did it against the Law of the Lord your own Conscience the light of Nature and the Laws of the Land against the Oaths you have taken of Allegiance and Supremacy Ca. Gentlemen of the Jury I say I shall leave it with you This Authority I speak of is right which was the supreme Power it is well known what they were Coun. It is so indeed many have known what they were L. Ch. Bar. Mr. Carew You have been heard what and beyond what was fit to say in your own defence that which you have said the heads of it you see the whole Court hath over-ruled To suffer you to expatiate against God and the King by Blasphemy is not to be endured it is suffering poison to go about to infect people but they know now too well the old saying In Nomine Domini In the Name of the Lord all mischiefs have been done that hath been an old Rule I must now give directions to the Jury L. Ch. Bar. Gentlemen of the Jury Ca. I have desired to speak the words of truth and soberness but have been hindered L. Ch. Bar. Gentlemen of the Jury You see the Prisoner here at the Bar hath been Indicted of Treason and this was for Compassing and Imagining the Death of our Soveraign Lord K. Charles the First of blessed Memory The Indictment sets forth several overt-Acts to prove this Imagination for otherwise it is secret in the heart the Fact it self the Treason it self is the Imagination of the heart The overt-Acts that are laid down in the Indictment to prove this That they did consult and meet together how to put the King to death That they did sit upon him And thirdly That they did sentence him to death and afterwards he died You heard what is proved against the Gentleman the Prisoner at the Bar by several Witnesses His own Confession That he signed the Warrant for Summoning and
such a Priviledge that no man shall ever be called to account for any thing spoken in Parliament if he be not called to account by the House before any other Member be suffered to speak Lord Ch. Bar. That is the House will not determine but that doth not extend to your Case you are not charged here criminally for speaking those words that have been testified against you but for Compassing and Imagining the Kings death of which there are other Evidences and this but an Evidence to prove that Scot. My Lord I never did say these words with that aggravation which is put upon them I have a great deal of hard measure as to say I hope I shall never repent I take God to witness I have often because it was spoken well of by some and ill by others I have by prayers and tears often sought the Lord that if there were iniquity in it he would shew it me I do affirm I did not say so Mr. Baker My Lord I omitted something which was this I had occasion to speak with Mr. Scot whilest Richard's Parliament was sitting and among other discourse insisting upon some things that Richard had done saith he I have cut off one Tyrants head and I hope to cut off another Scot. My Lord This is but a single witness Mr. Soll. Gen. I suppose he meant Rich. for he was a Tyrant Lord Ch. Bar. Speak on Mr. Scot whatever you have to say Sc. If that he laid aside as an impertinency I have the less to say L. Ch. Bar. The next thing you have to do is to answer to the fact whether you did it or did it not Scot. I say this Whatever I did be it more or less I did it by he Command and Authority of a Parliamentary Power I did sit as one of the Judges of the King and that doth justifie me whatever the nature of the fact was Lo. Ch. Bar. We have had these things alledged before us again and again The Court are clearly satisfied in themselves that this act could not be done by any Parliamentary power whatsoever I must tell you what hath been delivered that there is no power on earth that hath any coercive power over the King neither single Persons nor a Community neither the people Collectively nor Representatively In the next place that which you offer to be done as by Authority of Parliament it was done by a few members of the House of Commons there were but 46 there at that time and of these 46 not above 26 that voted it at that time the House of Lords was sitting who had rejected it and without them there was no Parliament there was a force upon the Parliament there was excluded seven parts of eight Supposing you were a full House of Commons and that without exception there was not Authority enough and it is known to you no man better that there never was a House of Commons before this time that this foul Act was made for erecting that High Court of Justice as you call'd it assumed that Authority of making a Law you cannot pretend to act by Authority of Parliament and because you would excuse it you did it by Authority of Parliament whether it were good or no If a man do that which is unlawful by an unlawful Authority the assuming to do it by that Authority is an Aggravation not an Extenuation of the Fact It was over-ruled I think my Lords will tell you That they do not allow of that Authority at all either to be for Justification or Plea Scot. My Lords I humbly pray leave to say that without offence to the Court every person whereof I honour This Court hath not Cognizance to Declare whether it were a Parliament or no. Lo. Ch. Bar. That was objected too and we must aquaint you That first of all it is no Derogation to Parliaments That what is a Statute or not a Statute should be adjudged by the Common Laws We have often brought it into question whether such and such a thing was an Act of Parliament or not any man may pretend to an Authority of Parliament If forty men should meet at Shooters Hill as the Little Convention did at Westminster and say We do declare our selves a Parliament of England because they do so shall not this be judged what is a Statute and what not It is every days practise we do judge upon it the Fact is so known to every body they did assume to themselves a Royal Authority it hath been over-ruled already it hath been the mistake of many the vulgar acceptation of the word Parliament A Parliament consists of the King Lords and Commons it is not the House of Commons alone and so it is not by Authority of Parliament It is not unless it be by that Authority which makes up the Parliament You cannot give one instance That ever the House of Commons did assume the Kings Authority Scot. I can many where there was nothing but a House of Commons Court When was that Scot. In the Saxons time Court You say it was in the Saxons time you do not come to any time within 600 years you speak of those times wherein things were obscure Scot. I know not but that it might be as lawful for them to make Laws as this late Parliament being called by the Keepers of the Liberties of England My Lords I have no seditious design but to submit to the providence of God Court This is notorious to every man This we have already heard and over-ruled L. Finch That that I hope is this That Mr. Scot will contradict that which he hath said before that is That he hopes he should not repent I hope he doth desire to repent Mr. Scot for this we must over-rule it as we have done before there is nothing at all to be pleaded to the Jurisdiction and this point hath been determined before Scot. The Parliament informer times consisted not so much of King Lords and Commons but King and Parliament In the beginning of the Parliament in 1641. the Bishops were one of the three Estates if it be not properly to be called a Parliament a legislative Power though it be not a Parliament it is binding If two Estates may take away the third if the second do not continue to execu●● their trust he that is in occupancy may have a title to the whole I do affirm I have a Parliamentary Authority a legislative power to justifie me Lo. Ch. Bar. Mr. Scot what you speak concerning the Lords Spiritual is nothing to your Case be it either one way of other it was done by an Act of Parliament with consent of the King Lords and Commons though you will bring it down to make these Commons have a legislative Power I told you it was over-ruled before We have suffered you to expatiate into that which was a thing not intended by many of my Lords that you should have any such power to expatiate into that which is
nothing but indeed to make a new Government which is the highest Treason next to the Murthering of the King in the world To subvert the Laws and to make a few of the Commons nay if they had been the whole to make them to have the Legislative power Mr. Scot if you have any thing in extenuation of the Fact we shall hear you further we cannot L. Finch If you speak to this purpose again for my part I will profess my self I dare not hear further of it It is so poysonous blasphemous a doctrine contrary to the Laws if you go upon this point I shall and I hope my Lords will be of that opinion too desire the Jury may be directed Scot. I thought my Lord you would rather be my Councel it is not my single opinion I am not alone in this Case therefore I think I may justifie my self in it it was the Judgement of many of the Secluded Members to own us to be a Parliament Lord Annesley What you said last doth occasion my rising you seem to deliver my opinion who you know could never agree to what you have alledged truly I have been heartily sorry to hear the defence you have made to day because you know I have had Letters from you of another nature I was very confident to have heard you an humble Penitent this day instead of justifying your self As to that which you say of the Secluded Members owning you to be a Parliament they were so far from it that you know for how many years they lay under sufferings and obscurity because they could not acknowledge that an Authority which was not so You cannot forget the Declaration of both Houses that was published upon a Jealousie that the people had they would change the Government of King Lords and Commons It was far from their thoughts it was called in that Declaration A black scandal cast upon them This Declaration you know was by Order of both Houses affixed in all Churches of England that people might take notice what they held to be the Fundamental Government of this Kingdom King Lords and Commons After this for you to set up another Government and under them to act such things that one would think should hardly enter into the heart of any man You know very well all along they declared themselves faithful Subjects to the King and so would have lived and dyed and you might have had your share of the happiness of that peace if you could have had an Inclination to submit to that which both Houses had resolved when you and others could not bring your hearts to stoop to your Fellow Subjects when you could not submit to that equal rule to take your share with them When Pride carried some so high then was the beginning of your fall and others and none could expect other than what is now come to pass That they should come to that shame and sorrow that this day hath brought upon you I could have wished to have heard nothing but an humble confession of the fault that hath been clearly proved and no Justification of it You have sworn among others to preserve the Laws and People of the Kingdom but you drove away not only the House of Lords but most of the Commons and then to give the name of a Parliament to the Remainder this is a great aggravation of your Treason I think we of the Secluded Members could not have discharged our duty to God and the Kingdom if we had not then appeared in Parliament to have dissolved that Parliament and so by our joynt assent put an end to all your pretences which if we had not done we had not so soon come to our happiness nor you to your miseries Lo. Ch. Bar. The Court hath told you before their opinions in the thing and no further debate is to be allowed in this the Justification of it doth comprehend treason We our selves are not by Law to allow the hearing of it If you have nothing to say for your self I must give direction to the Jury Scot. I humbly crave leave to move the Jury that they bethink themselves and consider of it rather as a special Verdict than of a definitive one I think there is cause of a special Verdict Court If there was need of a special Verdict We are upon our Oaths I should give direction to the Jury What We do We do upon our Oaths and must answer it before God Almighty The Court hath delivered their opinions before that in this Case the Pretended Authority under which you did derive that Power which you did execute that it is no Authority it is void in Law it is a foundation if it were true of subverting all Laws and indeed of all Religion a Power that you assumed to your selves of Judging and Condemning your King that you would countenance such an Authority is a great aggravation of the fault They are Jugdes whether you did Imagine or Compass the Kings Death that is all the Jurors have to do Gentlemen of the Jury Scot. I would know what particular Law I have transgressed in this thing Court The Law of God and Man 25 Edw. 3. Scot. I humbly conceive that reaches not to this Case Court To satisfie you in that the very words of the Statute are If any man do Compass or Imagine the Kings Death it is Treason The Indictment is That you did Imagine and Compass the death of the King if the Fact be proved against you you are within the Statute Scot. You will not say the King shall be a Traytor if he shall Compass the death of the Queen Court The Queen is a Subject Scot. I am not yet convinced Lo. Ch. Bar. Gentlemen of the Jury Scot. I do plead and claim that I am within the Compass of several Pardons and desire Councel in that particular I do come within the Compass of his Majesties Pardon Lo. Ch. Bar. If you had not gone on to matter of Justification you might have been more heard to this of Pardon but after a Justification then to come for a Pardon which implies a confession of Guilt they are contradictory I must tell you we are now upon point of Law That Proclamation I doubt not but his Majesty will inviolably make good but we are not to judge of that it is nothing to a legal proceeding You are now in a Court of Law it is not to be pleaded in a Court of Law the Kings Pardon in Law must be under his Broad Seal How far you are under that Proclamation care will be taken and what is fitting to be done will be done but it is nothing in the matter of the Charge to this Jury Scot. I desire Councel touching the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. Court You should have done it before you had confessed the Fact Scot. I may do it in Arrest of Judgement Lo. Ch. Bar. Mr. Scot for that of the Kings Proclamation if you be within the benefit and
the Bar concerning the Trial of his late Majesty Mr. Starkey My Lords this Gentleman now Prisoner and my self have been acquainted a great while being of the same Society of Grayes-Inne and truly my Lord I confess I owe all my knowledge in the Laws to that Gentleman when 〈◊〉 came first he was accused for debt and was pleased to do me and several other Gentlemen now and then the favour to reason the Law with us and assist us in the beginning of the long Parliament that is to give you an accompt of his being indebted he did desire I would do my endeavour to get his Protection Near the time of the Kings Trial there was a Gentleman with my self one Samuel Palmer of Grays-Inne which frequented his Company had several nights the opportunity of understanding the affairs at Westmin and truly he himself did seem to us to count that a very ridiculous Council I remember what he said one night I think they are all mad which was within two or three days before the Kings tryal and instanced how a Fellow cryed out to the Lord Fairfax that if he did not consent to the proceedings he would kill Christ and him After that I did not think he did go to this Council for imployment but out of curiosity when the King came to Tryal we heard that Mr. Cook was the person that was Solicitor and Acted that part that you have heard of and that during that Tryal whether the second or third day I cannot say that certainly Mr. Cook came to Grays-Inne that evening about Ten or Eleven of the clock at might only upon some particular occasion as he said I being walking in the Court in the walk before my Chamber with another Gentleman I did see him pass out of a house to go back again I thought it was he called after him Mr. Cook said I upon that he turned back and met me I took him by the hand said I I hear you are up to the ears in this business no saith he I am serving the people truly said I I believe there is a thousand to one will not give you thanks said I I hear you charge the King for the levying war against the Parliament how can you rationally do this when you have pulled out the Parliament to make way to his Trial he answered me you will see strange things and you must wait upon God I did ask him but first he said this of himself said he he was as gracious and wise a Prince as any was in the world which made me reflect upon him again and asked how he could press those things as I have heard what answer he made to that I cannot tell I did by the way inquire what he thought concerning the King whether he must suffer or no he told me he must die and Monarchy must die with him Cook Whether was this after or before the Sentence Mr. Starkey It was before the Sentence for it was either the second or third Trial or rather in some interim of time before the Sentence for there was an adjournment for a day or two but I am sure it was before the Sentence Court Mr. Cook they have concluded their Evidence plead for your self what you think fitting Cook My Lord I have been a Prisoner three months I humbly desire to acknowledge his Majesties and his Councils favour that I was not put into a Jeremy's Prison but in the Tower and not in Irons I give your Lordships humble thanks for that and truly considering the nature of the Charge had it been in some other Kingdom they would have served us as Iohn Baptist in prison I thank you that I have a fair Trial with the Judges of the Law who are upon their Oaths to do equal right and justice between our Soveraign Lord the King and every Prisoner concerning matters of life and death and likewise those Noble Lords that though they are not put upon their Oaths but upon their honour if they know any Law to preserve my life I trust they will rather save than destroy My Lords I do therefore say as Paul said my plea is much of that nature against the Law and against Caesar I hope I have not offended at all and so I have pleaded not guilty The learned Council have examined several witnesses against me and I humbly conceive that the matter will rest in a very narrow compass the substance of the Charge so far as my memory will serve doth rest in these three things the other being but matter of form That I with others should propound consult contrive and imagine the Death of the late King Secondly That to the perfecting and bringing about this wicked and horrid conspiracy that I with others did assume a Power and Authority as I remember power I am sure then to kill and murther the King thirdly That there was a person unknown that did cut off the Kings head and that we were abetting aiding assisting countenancing and procuring the person or words to that effect against the form of the Statutes and so forth I h●ve twelve poor words to offer for my self in this business wherein if I do not answer every thing that hath been particularly objected I hope you will give me leave afterwards to offer it First I humbly propound this that if it was not made appear to your Lordships that I did ever propound consult advise contrive attempt or any way plot or counsel the death of His Majestie then I hope I cannot be found guilty within the Statute of 25. Edward the third for the naked truth Mr. Nutly hath in a great part spoke to I was appointed upon the tenth of January 1648. for to give my advice concerning a Charge there having been upon the ninth a Proclamation for the Trial and upon the tenth Mr. Steel Dr. Dorislaus and Mr. Ask and my self were appointed and ordered to be of Council to draw up a Charge Here I have the order attested by Mr. Jessop and pray it may be read Court They do admit the thing that you were so assigned Cook Then I humbly conceive that that cannot be said to be done maliciously or advisedly or with any wicked intention in me which I was required and commanded to do Acting only within my Sphere and Element as a Counsellour no otherwise The next thing is this my L. that by Law words will not amount unto Treason we usually say that words may declare an Heretick but not a Traytor there were some Statutes formerly 1 Ed. 6. were words are made Treason but they are all repealed by 1 Mariae that nothing shall be Treason but what is expressed in 25 Ed. 3. this Objection will seem to lye that these were words put in writing and that I humbly conceive to be the greatest matter objected to which I answer 1. Whether there be any full certain clear proof that that is my hand to the Charge I must leave to you two or three
Treason and my Lord had this been in times of peace and had His Majesty been no Prisoner now he was under the power of an Army this had been great Treason but he being a Prisoner not by my means for I was no sword-man what can a man that knows himself innocent being a Prisoner desire more than a speedy Tryal so that making the Tryal more speedy cannot be said to be done trayterously A Tryal doth follow imprisonment as naturally and necessarily as the shadow doth the body If any man shall desire and be instrumental in bringing him to a Tryal which might acquit rather than condemn him and so humbly pray proceedings according to Justice this will have I hope a better name than Treason I am much beholding to His Majesty and this honourable Parli for the penning of the Act of Indempnity which I hope my L. you will give me leave to take notice of Court Open as much as you will of it Cook My Lords the words that I would make use of are in the beginning Treason Murder and other Felonies that are spoken of they are said to be counselled commanded acted or done in the preamble which is as the Key to open the mind and meaning of the Law-makers it is said that all persons shall be pardoned for all excepting such as shall be named and in such manner as they shall be excepted and then it comes provided that this Act shall not extend to pardon such and such persons and by name I am one and it is said all which persons for their execrable Treason in Sentencing to death or signing the Instrument for the horrid murther or being instrumental in taking away the precious life of our late Soveraign Lord Charles the First of glorious memory are left to be proceeded against as Traytors to his late Majesty according to the Laws of England and are out of the said Act wholly excepted and foreprized There is not any thing offered against me upon the two 1st great words which are Sentencing and signing that which I have to do to endeavour to clear my self is this being instrumental in taking away the life of his said Majesty first I humbly offer this to the Juries consideration That where the Parliament doth begin to fix the treasonable part there I hope and no otherwise this honourabe Court will fix it if it had been the Intention that Counsellors advisers and such as spoke their minds sometimes in the business you know that was Epidemical many words were spoken which cannot be justified whether naturally it would not have followed that all such persons for their counselling advising or being instrumental are left to be proceeded against as Traytors I hope you will take that into consideration concerning the words or being instrumental observe it is not said or being any otherwaies instrumental but Sentencing signing or being instrumental if therefore the word Instrumental be not of a general comprehensive nature then all this evidence which hath been given in against me being before the Sentencing and signing will fall to the ground that this is the legal genuine and Grammatical sense cannot be any otherwise than as particular as if it were the Sentencer signer Executioner which if it had been so nothing of the Evidence would have reached me My argument is this such a use is to be made of an Act of Parliament that no word may be frustrate and insignificant but if this Interpretation shall be put upon it sentencing signing or being any way instrumental then the words Sentencing and Signing need not have been if Instrumental will carry the words Sentencing and signing then these words will carry no force atall especially my Lord when there is no need of any retrospect at all if it be so I know not how far it may look back there is no necessity of putting any comprehensive generality upon this word instrumental but that the plain natural sense will be this That those that did sentence and Sign and those that were instrumental in taking away his life that is those that did abet and comfort that person unknown or justifie or countenance him which is after the Sentencing and not before in the legal sense Next I conceive that a Councellor cannot be said to do any thing vi armis It is said that by force and Arms I did abet c. it is Rhetorical to say that words may be as Swords but legal it is not unless there be something vi armis in the Grammatical sense instrumental in taking away the Kings life it is not said instrumental in order to take away the K. life or instrumental in advising to take away the K. life but instrumental in taking away the K. life My Lord The next thing is that there cannot be any thing to be said to be done by me first not falso because in that sense it must have the operation of mendacity that there must be a lie told in it I did nothing but what I was required to do to set down such and such words I did not invent nor contrive them I heard nothing of it till the tenth day of Jan. My Lord for malitiose that I did not any thing maliciously I hope it will appear in this what I then spoke it was for my Fee it may be called avaritia but not malitia for the Law will imply a malice but when there is no other express ground or reason why the thing was done but here was an express ground to speak for my Fee I hope the Jury will take that into consideration Then Secondly I was not Judicial in the Case I was not Magisterial as any Officer but ministerial As touching examining of witnesses it is a great mistake the Court had power to give an Oath I might be there but I had no power to give an Oath but whether I might ask any question I do not remember but that I should give an Oath that is a falsity then my Lord for proditorie I hope there is nothing at all that appears to the Jury so that there was no malice nor trayterous intention in the thing There are some matters of Law which I desire your Lordships will give me leave to speak to and that your Lordships will be of Counsel with me I would offer something concerning his Majesties gracious Declaration from Breda to the Parliament I was then in Ireland I did put in a Petition to the honourable Commissioners before any exception was that I might have the benefit of that Declaration I did lay hold of it My Lords there are two things in that Declaration that I would offer His Majesty saith that for the restoring of the Kings Peers and people of the Kingdom to their just rights and liberties He will grant a free and general Pardon to all excepting such as shall be by Parliament excepted and within three or four lines after it is said a free Parliament though I do not in the
crimes soever they have committed Except such as by a Free Parliament shall be excepted a legal Parliament called by the Writ of the King which this Parliament is not To that I give these answers First my Lord I do say that this letter of our gracious Soveraign from Breda in it self undoubtedly is no Pardon in Law for Treason that cannot be without the Broad Seal Next a Pardon under the Great Seal in such a form of words as this is would not be a Pardon for Treason for that must not be pardoned by implication but by positive words so in the Case of Sir Walter Raleigh a Commission directed to our well be loved Subject would not pardon the Treason of which he was condemned In the next place this Letter at the most is but a pardon in honour which must always be taken according to the meaning And that the Kings Honour may for ever be sacred I say this Letter doth no way help the Prisoner at the Bar. First it is plain by the very Superscription of this Letter 〈◊〉 which the Declaration was inclosed that it is directed to the Speaker of Our House of Commons in Parliament assembled which cannot possibly be expounded of any other Parliament than that which was then sitting to whose Speaker it was written Secondly the Letter it self says we have left it to you to provide for security and Indempnity and again if there be a ●●ying sin for which the Nation may be involved in infamy 〈◊〉 cannot doubt but you will be as solicitous to vindicate as we can be And then in this very letter encloseth that declaration upon the penning of which the prisoner so much relies Now lay all together and it is clear the Parliament meant by the Declaration must be the same Parliament which was meant by the Letter and that was this very Parliament whom the King intended to trust both with Indempnity and with the vindication of his Fathers death and to be the dispensers both of mercy and Justice in this particular Another thing is this This very Parliament as the Prisoner observes they did go to the King according to His gracious letter and in the behalf of all the good people of England they did lay hold of the Kings mercy in His letter and Declaration and prayed that this claim by their Speaker in the behalf of all the rest of the Commons of England might be effectual to all purposes and for all persons other than those that should be by themselves afterward excepted according to their requests His Majesty accepts their Petition and makes Proclamation that his Pardon should extend to all but such as they should except what can be more clear and evident than that this is the Parliament which the K. did mean to be the very Parliament to which the Letter should have reference till the Act of Oblivion was passed again the late transactions of these twelve years past had involved so many persons that we could scarce find a man his he had need of mercy nay this very Parliament to which the Letter was written had need of Indempnity and it is probable in the nature of the thing or can it be understood by any man that the King writing to this Parliament and offering them pardon and Indempnity should mean such a pardon and Indempnity as future Parliament to be called by his own Writ should be willing to afford them Whose hearts would have been satisfied with so contingent a security My Lords upon the whole matter by what the King hath said in this Letter and by what the Parlim hath done in pursuance thereof and by what the King hath proclaimed it is to my understanding as clear as the noon day that the honour of the King is not concerned at all in the exemption of the prisoner at the Bar and for the Cases of my Lord of Essex and Southampton which he hath cited they make against him they were condemned because they endeavoured to imprison the Queen and to remove her Councellours of which very fact the Prisoner is in Law guilty too and then the case of King Philip the Husband of Queen Mary makes nothing for him neither unless he will speak out and tell us plainly that because by a former violence the King was made a prisoner he became but like a titular King as King Philip. In the next place he saith my Case is out of the Law I acted as a Councellour in my own particular for my Fee it was avaritia but not malitia nor falso malitiose or Proditorie But he must know that no man hath or can have a lawful calling to pursue the life of his King and the Law implies malice for malitiose and proditorie are not only words of course but of truth too in this case else it were as much as to say that no Councel can be guilty of High Treason than which nothing can be more absurd My Lord for that which he said last for I must omit some things and give him leave to take the advantage of it to stand upon it that the place was a Court such a one it was that he was not answerable for the constitution of it if it were not in a legal sense it was such an order as might bear him out that is with modesty and good manners to justifie High Treason it is not with such insolency as some others before him did it but it amounts to that That an order of a few persons that first made themselves a Parliament and then made a Court of Justice had Officers and met together and perfected so great a Treason I say that this Order to bear him out is impossible He that is a Lawyer he must accompt to the Laws for what he hath done if the authority were not lawful he cannot but know that this which he calls the Parliam was so far from a legal Authority that it was one part of the Treason that he did assist such an Assembly Gentlemen of the Jury this is your own Case here is a charge that is exhibited by the prisoner at the Bar as he saith in the name of all the people of England Look to it for you are some of them if you own it then it may be true what he hath said but I hope you meet here to tell this Nation and all the world that the people of England had no hand in that charge do but consider how that this prisoner at the Bar had hunted the life of the King how he did fish out and examine evidence whether the King set up his Standard at Nottingham was at such a place and such a place to what end is all this but with design of blood Were these things to be produced against the King and then Judgement to be demanded that he may be saved Is it not plainly proved to you by Witnesses how he did exhibit the Charge press it aggravate it desired it might be taken pro
Gent. saith he a great many Officers Soldiers being there all this is worth nothing unless you proclaim it in Cheapside and at the Old Exchange Councel Explain your self what Proclamation do you mean Har. The Proclamation for the High Court of Justice Holland Simson Sworn Coun. What do you know concerning the prisoner at the Bar Simson I do know Mr. Peters very well I have known him these 12. or 13. years When the High Court of Justice was sitting both in the Court aud Painted Chamber I saw this Gentleman in consultation there and at several other places at Sr. Will. Breretons and other where Coun. Did you see him at the Tryal Simson I saw him but not as a Judge There was one day in the Hall Coll. Stubbards who was Adjutant General he was a very busie man and Coll. Axtel Mr. Peters going down the stairs comes to him and bids Stubbards to command the Souldiers to cry out Justice Justice against the Traytor at the 〈◊〉 Coun. Who did he mean Sim. The King was at the Bar at the same time whereupon my Lord the Souldiers did cry out upon the same and as the King was taken away to Sr. Robert Cottons some of them spit in the Kings face but he took his handkerchief wiped it off and smiled Peters I do not know this Gentleman did he ever see me Sim. Yes divers times in the Painted Chamber at Sir William Breretons at the Deanery in consultation with Bradshaw and you were admitted and no man else as I know unless Sir Will. Brereton who came along with you Thomas Richardson Sworn Richardson My Lords the first day that this Court of Justice as they called it did adjourn I went up into the Court and I saw the Prisoner at the Bar with some more standing in the Court and I came and stood close by him and some with him whom I did not know I heard him commend Bradshaw the carriage of him in the tryal of the King and another Cooks carriage to be short Mr. Peters holding up his hands said this is a most glorious beginning of the work Sir Jeremy Whitchcot Sworn Wh. My Lords I have by accident not by choice been several times in Mr. Peters company truly I have heard him speak very scurrilously of the King amongst the rest he was making some kind of Narration of Cromwel making an escape and that he was intended to be surprised that if he had not presently gone away he had been clapt up in the Tower and declared a Traytor he said there was a meeting of the Officers of the Army where he used this expression And th●● we did resolve to set aside the King My Lord after this it was at another time he was speaking of that which they called the High Court of Justice and I do very well remember this was his expression of it I cannot but look upon this Court with a great reverence for it doth resemble in some measure the tryal that shall be at the end of the world by the Sts. This is all that I perfectly remember It was a great while ago I cannot speak more punctually I have seldom heard 〈◊〉 speak of the K. but of the Tyrant I remember one time he wa● saying he would have preached before the King but said he the poor wretch would not hear me Rich. Nunnelly Sworn Coun. Was Peters upon the Scaffold at the time of Execution or before Nun. On that unhappy day 30. Jan. 1648. this Hugh Peters came an hour before the King came to Whitehall I came with a warrant of 40. or 50000.l to Oliver Cromwel being door-keeper to the Committee of the Army Nunnelly sayes Oliver Cromwel will you go to Whitehall Surely you will see the Beheading of the King and he let me into Whitehall coming into the boarded Gallery I met Hugh Peters and he was in the Gallery and then I got with H. Peters into the Banqueting-house being there Hugh Peters met one Tench of Hounsditch that was a Joyner meeting him he speaks to him and whispers in his ear and told him somewhat I do not know what it was but Tench presently went and knocked four staples upon the Scaffold I meeting Tench again what art thou doing said I what will you turn hangman saies he this day will be a happy day said I pray God send it be not a bloody day upon that H. Peters went upon the Scaffold just an hour before the King came and then he went off again I watched at the window when the Kings head was cut off and afterwards I saw the Vizards going into a Chamber there about an hour afterwards I staying there at the Door there comes H. Peters in his black Cloak and broad Hat out of that Chamber as I take it with the Hangman I am sure I did see him go along with the Hangman to take water this is all I can remember it being many years since Peters I humbly beg I may be heard in this case I have here a witness and I desire he may be examined it is noised I was upon the Scaffold I here call God to witness I was not out of 〈◊〉 Chamber that day I was sick that day I speak in the presence of the Lord. Court If your witness will stay he shall be heard there 〈◊〉 more witnesses to the same thing and so he may speak 〈◊〉 all together Dr. Mortimer Sworn Mortimer Me Lar me ha serd de King c. Court We cannot understand a word Coun. He is a Frenchman my Lord. Court Pray let there be an interpreter One Mr. Young was sworn to interpret truly his evidence But it being afterwards found difficult and troublesome the Councel waved his evidence and prayed another witness might be called Dr. Mortimer Me Lar me can peak Englis Coun. No no pray sit down we will examine other witnesses call Stephen Clough Stephen Clough Sworn Coun. What do you know of H. Peters Clough My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury in 1648. I heard of a meeting of the Councel of Officers at Westminster I think in the Painted Chamber and I willing my Lord to hear what their consultations were I went thither and was there as one of them but I was not one amongst the rest H. Peters was one when the room was pretty full the door was shut Mr. Peters desired to call for a blessing upon their business in his prayer he uttered these words O Lord saith he what a mercy it is to see this great City fall down before us and what a stir is there to bring this great man to tryal without whose blood he will turn us all into blood if he reign again Peters What day was this Clough It was about three weeks or a month before the King dyed Peters Where was this Clough In the Painted Chamber Peters You have been very bold Clough I speak upon my Oath Peters How long was this ago Clough In 1648. Peters How many years since is that Clough
You know your self sure how many years since 1648. Peters How long before the King dyed do you say Clough About three weeks or a month before the King was murdered Coun. We shall call a witness to prove that in Decemb. 1648. there was a solemn Fast appointed to seek God in what they were about and Mr. Peters was appointed to preach before them Mr. Beaver Sworn Mr. Beavers Evidence My Lord and you Gentlemen of the Jury upon a day that was appointed for a Fast for those that sate then as a Parliament I went to Westminster to find out some company to dine with me and having walked bout an hour in Westminster-Hall and finding none of my friends to dine with me I went to that place called Heaven and dined there after I had dined I passed through St. Margarets Church-yard to go home again I lay in the Strand I perceived all the Church-yard full of Muskets and Pikes upon the ground and asked some Souldiers that were there what was the business they told me they were guarding the Parliament that were keeping a Fast at St. Margarets who preaches said I they told me Mr. Peters is just now gone up into the Pulpit said I I must needs have the curiosity to hear that man having heard many stories of the manner of his preaching God knows I did not do it out of any manner of devotion I crouded near the Pulpit and came near the Speakers Pew and I saw a great many of the Members there whom I knew well I could not guess what his Text might be but hearing him talk much of Barabbas and our Saviour and insisting altogether upon that I guessed his Text was that passage wherein the Jews did desire the release of Barabbas and crucifying of Christ and so it proved the first thing I heard him say was it is a very sad thing that this should be a question amongst us as among the old Jews whether our Saviour Jesus Christ must be crucified or that Barabbas should be released the oppressor of the people O Jesus said he where are we that that should be a question amongst us saies he And because that you should think my Lords and Gentlemen that it is a question I will tell you it is a question I have been in the City which may very well be compared to Hierusalem in this conjuncture of time and I profess those foolish Citizens for a little trading and profit they will have Christ pointing to the Redcoats on the Pulpit stairs crucified and that great Barabbas at Windsor released sayes he but I do not much heed what the rabble sayes I hope sayes he that my brethren of the Clergy will be wiser the lips of the Priests do use to preserve knowledge I have been with them too in the Assembly and having seen and heard what they said I perceive they are for crucifying of Christ and releasing of Barabbas O Jesus what shall we do now with such like strange expressions and shrugging of his shoulders in the Pulpit Councel How long was this before the King was murdered It was a few dayes before the house of Commons made that thing called An Act for his Tryal Coun. What did he say to the Members I am coming to it sayes he My Lords and you noble Gentlemen of the House of Commons you are the Sanhedrim and the great Councel of the Nation therefore you must be sure to do Justice and it is from you we expect it you must not only be inheritors of your Ancestors but you must do as they did they have opposed Tyrannical Kings they have destroyed them it is you chiefly that we look for Justice from Do not prefer the great Barabbas Murderer Tyrant and Traytor before these poor hearts pointing to the Redcoats and the Army who are our Saviours and thus for two or three hours time that he spent he did nothing but rake up all the reasons arguments and examples he could to perswade them to bring the King to condign speedy and capital punishment Peters I do not know you are you sure you saw me at that time Do you know me Yes Sir Peters I did not preach there at that time Coun. Pray my Lord will you call Mr. Jessop who hath the Records of the Parlia and can produce the Order whereby you were appointed to carry on the work of that Fast there was the Order for his preaching and Order for thanks for his work Mr. Jessop produced the Journal wherein was the Order following which was read Cl. reads Die Jovis 7. Septemb. 1648. Resolved that there be a day of publick Humiliation for this House to seek God in these times of difficulty and that to morrow be the day and kept here in this House Resolved that Mr. Peters Mr. Marshal and Mr. Caril be desired to perform the duty on the day of Humiliation with the House to morrow Coun. That is not it we intend there was one after that in Decemb. 1648. Cl. reads 20 Decemb. 1648. Ordered that Mr. Peters be desired to preach on Friday next the day of publick Humiliation at Margarets Westminster in the place of Coun. Call Mr. Chase After this the work went on and the High Court of Justice sate and the first day they sate was Saturday the 20. Jan. in Westminster Hall the 21. being the Sunday following I think this Gentleman was at Whitehall he will tell you what he preached Mr. Chase sworn Chase My Lord I heard the Prisoner at the Bar preaching before Oliver Cromwell and Bradshaw who was called Lord President of the High Court of Justice and he took his Text out of the Psalms in these words Bind your Kings with chains and your Nobles in fetters of iron that was part of the Text But sayes he in his Sermon Beloved it is the last Psalm but one and the next Psalm hath six verses and twelve Hallelujahs praise ye the Lord Praise God in his Sanctuary and so on for what saies he look into my Text there is the reason of it That Kings were bound in chains c. He went on with a story of Major and a Bishop and his man the Bishops man saith he being drunk the Major laid him by the heels the Bishop sends to the Major to know by what authority he imprisoned his servant the Majors answer was there is an Act of Parliament for it and neither the Bishop nor his man are excepted out of it and applyed it thus Here is saith he a great discourse and talk in the world what will ye cut off the Kings head the head of a Protestant Prince and King turn to your Bibles and you shall find it there Whosoever sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed saies he I will even answer them as the Major did the Bishop here is an Act of God Whosoever sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed and I see neither King Charles nor Prince Charles nor Prince Rupert nor Prince
Maurice nor any of that rabble excepted out of it And further he said This is the day that I and many Saints of God besides have been praying for these many years Peters Ask him whether he took notes Chase No Sir but it being so memorable a Sermon I took special notice of it I came to my Brothers house at Shoolane and told him said I Brother I have been at White-Hall and have heard the most execrable business that ever was heard in the world by a Minister of the Gospel and I told him the words I observed that Oliver Cromwell did laugh at that time when you were Preaching Tho. Tongue sworn Coun. What do you know of the Prisoners preaching Tongue Upon Jan. 21. 1648. I was at Whitehall where this Gentleman preached and he preached upon this Text 149. Psalm v. 8. To bind their Kings in chains and their Nobles in links of iron in which Text this Peters did much applaud the Souldiers there he said he hoped to see such another day following as the day before and that blessed be God saies this Parson Peters the House the lower House is purged and the House of Lords themselves they will down suddenly this is all that I well remember at that time Upon the 28. of January 1648. next day after sentence of the King I heard Peters preach upon this Text in S. James's Chapel 149. Psalm 6 7 8. 9 verses Let the high praises of God be in their mouth and a two edged sword in their hands to execute vengeance upon the heathen and punishment upon the people To bind their Kings with chains and their Nobles with fetters of Iron To execute upon them the judgement written this honour have all his Saints praise ye the Lord And there he did so saint the Redcoats and so reprobate the poor Kings friends And in the middle of his Sermon he took occasion to produce a Text 14. Esay 18 19 20. All the Kings of the Nations even all of them lie in glory every one in his own house But thou art cast out of thy grave like an abominable branch and as the raiment of those that are slain thrust through with a sword that go down to the stones of the pit as a carkass trodden under feet Thou shalt not be joyned with them in burial because thou hast destroyed thy land and slain thy people the seed of evil doers shall never be renowned saies he This I did intend to insist and preach upon before the poor wretch and the poor wretch would not hear me Coun. Who did he mean Tongue His Majesty who was the day before condemned saith he look in your lesser Bibles and you shall find the title is The Tyrants fall Coun. That that was spoken of the King of Babylon the ignominy that was cast upon him he applies it to the King of England Peters Ask him where it was Tongue It was in S. James's Chapel Sunday the 28. of Jan. 1648. in the forenoon Reynold Bowdler Sworn Bowdler That which I have now to say is this I did hear him a few daies before the King was murthered preach in S. Sepulchers Church there he compares the King that was then to dye to Barabbas a murderer and in this manner saith he There is a great company amongst us like the Jews they cry out Let Christ be crucified and let Barabbas be released still comparing the King to Barabbas the murtherer these were his words with many more to the same purpose William Ryder Sworn Coun. Speak what you know concerning the Prisoner Ryder I was at the same time at Church in S. Sepulchers Coun. How long was that before the King dyed Ryder It was very near the Kings death Coun. Was it after the High Court of Justice sate as they called it Ryder About that time it was My Lord assoon as ever he had read the words of his Text which was He shall call his name Emanuel he presently shook hands with his Text and fell as he was wont to news and there he said the great inquiry now is to know what should become of the King let that alone saith he and presently he falls to it again and was pleased to stile the King Barabbas saith he there is a great many of the people had rather Christ should be crucified than Barabbas and here he was applauding the Souldiers and said that Emanuel was written upon the bridles of their horses and he was speaking of the Kings Souldiers saith he I have known eighty thousand of them and not one of them a gracious person Coun. Now we expect the Answer of the Prisoner at the Bar the Indictment hath been fully proved Peters I desire that witness may be admitted which I spoke of his name is Cornelius Glover Coun. We have omitted one evidence we desire Master Walker may be called Mr. Walker Sworn Walker On Sunday after the King was first brought to his tryal out of curiosity I went to hear Mr. Peters at Whitehall after he had made a long prayer saith he I have prayed and preached these twenty years and now I may say with old Symeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation Afterwards he speaks of the Text of binding their Kings in chains c. then much reviled the King but soft there saith he I must not talk so here I am in the Kings Chapel there is a very remarkable passage in Amos Amos went to preach and Amazia would not let him but Amos would preach the poor wretch would not hear me but yet I will preach Afterwards he speaks of the Major of Exeter that committed the Bishops servant for being drunk saith the Major here is an Act of Parliament for it and I do not see that the Bishop nor his man are either of them excepted out of the Act and saith he in Scripture it is said Whosoever sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed and I do not find that either King Charles Prince Charles Prince Rupert Prince Maurice or any of that rabble are excepted Coun. Now Mr. Peters you may call your witness Cornelius Glover not sworn Lord Chief Baron Where do you dwell Glover In Pauls Church-yard Lo. Ch. Bar. What is your quality of life Peters A servant of the Kings Lo. Ch. Bar. I do not ask you Mr. Peters Glover I belong to the Post-house Peters Pray hear him speak L. Ch. Bar. What would you have him asked Peters Whether I was out of my Chamber that day the King suffered Lo. Ch. Bar. What say you to that Glover I was come to Mr. Peters a little before that time to live with him as his servant it fell out that day he was ill in his chamber all the morning the Souldiers in S. James's-house were all gone away I had a desire to go see the meeting where they were at Whitehall saith he thou seemest to have a great desire to go and look about thee
it is very sad but if you will go you may I did go over the Park Coun. What time Glover About noon Coun. What hour Glover I do not know I did not stay there the soldiers and the people fill'd the place and I went back again to the chamber I came back again within a matter of an hours time Coun. Was the King dead before you came back again Glover They said he was not when I went home he asked me what was doing I told him there was a great croud I could not come near I staid there an hour and then went out again and still there was a croud and I came back again and M. Peters was in his chamber then Coun. Was he in bed or up Glover I do not remember Coun. How old were you then Glover I am not above 32. or 33. Coun. Was Mr. Peters sick Gl. Yes He was melancholy sick as he used to be L. Ch. Bar. How long have you been at the Post-office Gl. About five years L. Ch. Bar. M. Peters have you any more to ask him Peters I brought him to testifie that I was not out of my Chamber that day and that I was sick L. Ch. Bar. Did you desire to go or did he send you Gl. I did desire to go being newly come to London Lord Ch. Baron This Gentleman though not upon oath is examined and it is only to one particular nothing at all to the main proofs Peters I bring him only to vindicate my self from that aspersion of my being upon the Scaffold L. Ch. Bar. They do not lay the weight of their evidence upon that The Kings Councel have done with their evidence if you have any thing to say you have your liberty Peters May it please your Lordships I will give you an account of the business I lived fourteen years out of England when I came over I found the wars begun I began no war my Lord nor have been the Trumpeter when I came out of the West Indies I fled from the War into Ireland to the Western part there and it was after the Rebellion when some of the Irish had been stirring there I went and spent my time there I was neither at Edge-hill nor Naseby but my Lord after I came over there was War that the people were engaged in I was not here in the beginning of it but was a stranger to the carriage of it When I came into the Nations I looked after three things one was that there might be sound Religion The second was that learning and Laws might be maintained The third that the poor might be cared for and I must confess I have spent most of my time in these things to this end and purpose there was a noise in all parts of some miscarriages in matters of Religion after it was setled I lived in Ireland I must profess for my own part solemnly that my carriage hath been upon these heads For Religion I have through Gods mercies spoke the truths of the Protestant Church upon this account I did stay to see what God might do I was sent over to his Majesty that we might have a little help in point of Excise and Customes and encouragement in learning My Lord this is true that I being here in the Nation and being sent over upon the occasions of the Countrey and not upon any design but this I say I cannot deny it that after I came over and had seen the state of England in some measure I did stir but by strong importunities the Ministers of London deeper than I I am very sorry to hear of my carriage towards the King it is my great trouble I beg pardon for my own folly and weakness I thought God had a great controversie with the Nation and the Lord was displeased on all hands that which some people took to I did take unto I went into the Army I saw at the beginning of it that corruptions grew among them I suppose none can say I have gone aside from any Orthodox truth of the Lord And now to take off the scandal upon me and to the business let me beg of your Lordships to consider whatever prejudices or revenge may take up mens hearts there is a God that knows all God hath a regard to the people of England I look upon this Nation as the Cabinet of the world That that doth concern the business is this my Lord that after this time hither I came and did bear witness to all the world that there was amongst us something that was for better and some thing worse for the Nation I took advice of some great persons concerning the weightiness of it I had neither malice nor mischief in my heart against the King upon this I did engage so far as being invited I went into the Wars and there I found very strange and several kinds of providences as this day hath been seen I do not deny but that was active but not to stir in a way that was not honourable I challenge a great part of the Nations to manifest my carriage among them I shall make it good divers ways I had so much respect to his Majesty particularly at Windsor that I propounded to his Majesty my thoughts three ways to preserve himself from danger which were good as he was pleased to think though they did not succeed and the work died as for malice I had none in me It is true there was a difference amongst us an Army and an Army I never had a groat or penny from O. Cromwel since I knew this place I profess I have had no ends for honour or gain since I set foot upon this shore I challenge any man that belonged to that party whether they had not the same respect from me as my own party I have not persecuted any with malice I will only take off malice L. C. B. Your business is matter of fact Peters I am unskilful in Law this that I offer is to shew that I had no malice in me I was so far from malice that I have a Certificate if worth the reading from one of the Eminentest persons in the Nation to shew I had no malice It is concerning the Marques of Worcester under his Ladies hand beginning with these words I do here testifie that in all the sufferings of my husband Mr. Peters was my great friend c. I have here a seal and then produced it that the Earl of Norwich gave me to keep for his sake for saving his life which I will keep as long as I live L. C. Bar. I am not willing at all to interrupt you or hinder you that which you speak of doing good services is not at all to the point we do not question you for what good you have done but for the evil you have done I hope there is no malice in your heart nor upon the Court nor Jury we and they are upon our Oaths you hear the matter alledged against you pray
keep up our Army seven years longer we need not care for the King and all his posterity Peters My Lord I must deny abundance of this the King commanded me to ride before him that the Bishop of London might come to him L. Ch. B. But this was three weeks after The next witness against you is one Proctor he saith that day as the other witness did he saw you riding just before the Kings Coach and because he did his duty the Souldiers threw him horse and all into a ditch The next witness is one Hardwick he saith that when the Proclamation was read he saw you in Westminster-Hall and that you said they had done as good as nothing unless it was proclaimed in Cheapside and at the old Exchange this you said to some of the Officers there Peters My Lord I cannot acknowledge it L. Ch. Bar. The next witness against you is Simson he swears he saw you in consultation with Oliver Cromwel and take Sir William Brereton by the hand and come to Bradshaws and this during the time of the Kings Tryal he saith further that one day when the King was at his Tryal you commanded Colonel Stubbers to bid his Souldiers cry out Justice Justice which they cryed and afterwards some of the Souldiers spit upon the King Peters I do believe that he that swore that cannot say I was there L. Ch. Bar. Another witness is one Richardson who saw you the first day in the Court and he said further that you commended Bradshaw and another to wit Cook for their carriage in the tryal of the King That you held up your hands and said this is a most glorious beginning of the work Peters Whereabouts in the Court Richards In the body of the Court called then the High Court of Justice Peters My Lord I do not know that ever I was in the body of the Court. L. Ch. Bar. The next witness is Sir Jeremy Whitchcot he saith he heard you often speak scurrilously of the King and making a Narrative of Cromwels escape you said there was a meeting and there we resolved to set aside the King remember what the other witness said we agreed and here we resolved you said I cannot but reverence the High Court of Justice it doth resemble the judging of the world at the last day by the Saints so it was the Saints that sate there I would have preached before the wretch but the poor wretch would not hear me you often call'd him Tyrant I cannot possibly remember the place things or words that are alledged Then you have another witness Nonnelly he saith he came with a warrant to Oliver Cromwel for some money and that he should say go and see the beheading of the King at Whitehall he saith there he met with you though you said you were not there that day going to the Banquetting house that you spoke to Tench and whispered in his ear and that Tench went and knockt Staples on the Scaffold he meeting Tench said what are you a Hangman saith Tench this day will be a happy day he saith after all this Hugh Peters was upon the Scaffold and that he went out with the Hangman Peters I do profess to your Lordships before Angels and men that I did not stir out of my Chamber that day L. Ch. B. The Council doth not put relyance upon that because of what your witness saith though his evidence is not at all satisfactory The next is Clough and he swears this that he saw you in the Painted Chamber with the Council of Officers and there you desired them to call on God for a blessing upon their business and there you said O Lord what a mercy it is to see this great City fall down before us and what a stir is there to bring this great man to tryal without whose blood he will turn us all into blood if he reign again and this was about a month before the King was murthered L. Ch. Bar. You hear it Mr. Peters Peters Some part I did but it is impossible for me to bear down many witnesses indeed my Lord I say this they are marvellous uncharitable and speak many false things L. Ch. Bar. The next is this the testimony concerning several Sermons of yours and let me tell you the Pulpit ought not to be a place where men with impunity may speak any thing what they list of Sedition and Treason Peters I am of the same judgement my self my Lord. L. Ch. Bar. And there was a solemn day to seek God then you preached at St. Margarets Church this was Mr. Bever in he came and heard you talk much of Barab and our Saviour there you fell upon this speaking of the K. it is a sad thing that it should now be a question whether we should crucifie our Saviour Jesus Christ or that great Barabbas speaking of the King you call'd him Traytor Tyrant Murtherer of his subjects and the like you went on in a way of a story these Citizens for a little Trading they will have Christ crucified and the great Barabbas at Windsor released and said you the Clergy the Assembly they are all for crucifying Christ and releasing Barabbas you made that expression O Jesus what shall we do the King was a Prisoner then at Windsor you made your application to the Parliament that was then present you told them the people did expect Justice from them you must not prefer the great Tyrant and Traytor naming the King to these poor hearts the Redcoats standing by Peters I must profess against most of that Lord Chief Baron There is the same by others It is further proved by the Order that you were appointed to preach Peters I do not deny I preached but not these things Lord Chief Bar. The next thing is this there was one Mr. Chase this was during the tryal he saith you preached at Whitehall upon this Text the 149. Psalm to bind their Kings in chains and their Nobles in fetters of iron you had two or three other verses more then you made a discourse of a Major and a Bishops man the Bishops man being drunk the Major committed him to prison the Bishop being angry asked by what authority the Major said there was an Act of Parliament for it he did not find that either the Bishop or his man was excepted you applyed that to the King said you I will shew you an act of the Bible Whosoever sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed this doth not except the King Prince Prince Rupert Prince Maurice or any of that rabble Peters It is false Lord Chief Baron You said further This is the day that I and many other Saints of God have prayed for these many years and Oliver Cromwel laughed at that time The next witness was Tongue he heard you preach and he swears the same with the former that you applauded the souldiers and that you hoped to see such another day following as the day before and
business and to make people gaze upon you without any Ground Axt. I am upon my life I hope you will hear me patiently L. ch Bar. God forbid but we should Axt. I do desire to assert my Authority if any thing was done upon the House of Lords and Commons I do not come here to justifie their Actions I was not concerned in it My next Plea is this that if a House of Commons can be charged Guilty of High Treason as a community the distributive Body must needs be Guilty Court If there should have been 20 or 40 men come out of the House of Commons and should Murther a man they must answer for that it is not the community that can do such an Act of Treason these persons that you call a House of Commons there was but 26 of them and these must be the people this is the state of the case and when you have thrust out thrice the number of those remaining only those can serve your turn L. Annesly Mr. Axtell I am very sorry to see you in that place and it troubles me as much to hear you vent that for an Authority which you know your self was no Authority you would now for your defence for life and it is reason you should make as full a defence for life as you can you would shelter your self under that Authority which I am sorry I must say were one of the greatest Violators of you cannot forget how near a close of this bloody war by the mercy of God this Nation was when the Army interposed whose Trade it was to live by War when they had felt so much of the sweet of War they would not suffer the people to enjoy peace though the Lords and Representatives in Parliament had agreed to it A Treaty was begun terms of peace propounded and agreed to this you cannot forget and will have no need of Notes or Books to help your Memory when the people Groaned under the miseries of War and thirsted after Peace then came up the Army who were servants to the Parliament till that time taking upon them the Authority you cannot forget that your self was one of the number that came to offer accusations against the majority of the Commons House calling them Rotten Members the House of Lords was not then suffered to sit they would not joyn in that Ordinance that was preparing for the Tryal of the King when the Lords had refused they were no longer fit to be Lords neither then comes in a new Authority which we never heard of before a remnant of the House of Commons joyning with the Army that had driven away the greatest part of the House of Commons for in all Assemblies and Courts the major part must determine or no determination after this course was taken then is an Act set on foot they take upon them by Votes of their own to be the Parliament of England that the supreme power of the Nation is in the Representatives of the people who were they those few only that remained almost all the Cities Counties and Burroughs of England had none left to represent them they were driven away by Force then was this Act of Parliament such an Act as was never heard of before set on foot and passed as an Act by a few of the House of Commons if you can plead this for your defence this is the Act that you must shelter under But you know the Lords and Commons had Unanimously resolved for peace and so agree with the King if this Act will be any defence you may plead it to the full and this is all you have to say therefore go upon no Forreign matter Axt. If it please your Lordship that worthy Lord that spoke last is pleased to say that I was one of the persons that did accuse some of those Members of Parliament truly my Lord I never did come to the Commons Bar but once presenting a petition and for my hand either in charging any of the Members or Secluding any of them I never had any hand in that matter this is all to that part Next I Humbly conceive here I must ground my bottome and if I perish I perish by a Judgement in a Parliament My Commission that did Authorize me to obey my General was given me when the Lords and Commons sate in Parliament I had no other Commission then this my Lord Fairfax commanded the Army after the Kings Death by the like Commission I did but my duty in going to my Regiment the General saith go to such a place stay there if I refuse by the law of War I Dye if I obey I am in danger likewise I say my Commission was given me by the Lords and Commons and therefore I hope my Lord that what I have said and offered in that particular is not Truthless but of Weight Court The Effect of your Commission is only to make you an Officer Axtell My Commission bears date the 27th of March 1648. Ten months before the Kings Death we had no other Commissions therefore I humbly conceive the question will be this in point of law and I humbly desire it may be Truly and Fairly stated by your Lordship and these Honourable Jugdes that whether a man being guided by the Judgment of the Lords and Commons Assembled in Parliament and having declared their Judgments and Exposition of that Statute of the 25th of Edward the Third and Acting only by that Judgment of Parliament and under their Authority can be questioned for Treason That my Lord is a question that I do humbly think is a point in law and that you will please fairly and truly to state it whether I am within the compass of that Statute whereupon I am indicted Councel My Lord We do not charge him with any thing that he did Act under the colour of his Commission or with any thing he did before that but that which we charge him with are rhe Acts that he did at the Tryal of the King shew us your Commission from the Lords and Commons Assembled in Parliament for Tryal and Execution of the King you say something we do not charge him for any thing done by Vertue of that Commission but with those violent Acts that he did in encouraging the Souldiers to cry Justice Justice Execution Execution and all those other Violent Actions of his own malicious heart against the King We humbly beseech you he may answer to that which is the charge against him and that is the Compassing and Imagining the Death of the late King and his declaring that by those overt-acts that we have proved My Lords we desire that the Prisoner at the Bar may remember that he is not Indicted for levying War against the King if so then that Sir which you offer might be given as a Plea and we should have spoken to it but you are Indicted for Compassing and Imagining the Death of the King and that which we have given in Evidence
were the subsequent overtacts to prove the same Axtell I hope you will not think it much to give me some more freedom for my own defence for life My Lord I must needs say though there was a force on the Parliament I am not to justifie it I was no Lawyer no Statesman no Councellor but a Souldier and if the General who had a Commission from the Lords and Commons and that some years before and after the King's Death be not guilty of Treason what I did was by command from my General and though I am charged with being in Arms in Westminster-hall and at such and such a place yet it was not a Voluntary Act for I was bound to obey my General I do humbly pray that I may have your Lordships Judgment in this point I must say it was from the sense of their exposition of the Law and of the Statutes and from the Authority that every one took up Arms for and served them and obeyed either the one General or the other I say it was under this very Authority and this must needs acquit me from all the guilt that is laid upon me L. ch Bar. You put your self upon the Judgment of the Court upon this which you call a point in Law First it is manifest that there is no excuse at all for Treason no man by his Commission can warrant the doing of an Act which is Treason you must take notice of the Authority whether it be good or no your Commission was not to put the King to Death but on the contrary to preserve the Kings life The Lords and Commons what they did we do not meddle with the Reason and Ground of what they did was the preservation of the Kings Person as well as the maintenance of the Laws and Liberties of this Nation they made Protestations Declarations and Oaths for the preservation of the King's Person and you could not but take notice of those things Now whereas you go about to shroud your self under the Lord Fairfax he had no such Power and therefore you can challenge no more then he had and to what you say concerning the Judgment of the Parliament there will be a great deal of difference between a particular Case and a Declaration of Lords and Commons there is nothing you have said that hath any thing of Force and God forbid you should make use of it But I must tell you you could not but notoriously know all those Transactions that were in the Army what the Army had done that they came up with Swords in their Hands and turn'd out whom they would you saw what the Lords and Commons had done that the Treaty was ready for his Birth And then you come up with your Mermidons with Force and Arms and Exclude the greatest part of the Members and then the Lords were laid aside it is true the Lords were not wholly dissolved but they would not suffer them to Sit nor Act at all and this was apparent to the Nation If men under colour and pretence of such things Namely that a few persons for so they were but an Eighth part of the House of Commons permitted to remain and of that Eighth part which was but 46 in the whole there were but 26 that Voted that Act which you say you obeyed but you say you obeyed the General you were not to obey the General in this Case for the Facts that you have committed are not charged as Acts of War you are not charged for bringing the Souldiers in but for those Violent Actions that you were guilty of there you made the Souldiers cry out Justice Justice Execution Execution you sent officiously for a Hang-man to come down to you your Commission gave you no power for this the Death of the King you know how it was designed you know the Act for the bringing in of that Commission as they call'd it to sit in justice was after the House of Commons was reduced to a very small Number and some of those dissenting too what you did Act under that Authority if you can justifie it in the Name of God say so but do not Engage the Nation in those things which they abhorred and by the mercy of God are laid asleep Mr. Justice Foster You begin at the wrong End you ought as all men ought to do First to answer the matter of Fact and not to put in these long dilatory Pleas till you have answered the matter of Fact whether those things charged on you be true or not then if you have any thing further to say for your self by way of excuse it will be the time to speak and not before Axt. May it please your Lordships I humbly conceive I am upon that method to the first part of the witness they accuse me for commanding my Souldiers in Westminster-hall then I must prove my Authority which I have been about to do and declared the Judgment of Parliament L. ch B. The Court have heard you with a great deal of patience and that which is not at all to the business Axtell I only refer this as to the Authority I humbly conceive you will give me leave to insist upon this and how far I may improve it for my own defence here is the Commission by which my Lord Fairfax acted and that after the King's Death and I acted by the same Authority he did I had not been at Westminster-hall but on the command of the General Court Doth that Commission Authorize you to cry Justice Justice and to look up and down to get Witnesses against the King is that in your Commission Axt. I am to serve and obey all my Superior Officers that is my Commission if I do not I die by the Law of War Court You are to obey them in their just commands all unjust commands are invalid If our Superiors should command us to undue and irregular things much more if to the committing of Treason we are in each Case to make use of our passive not active Obedience Axt. Under Favour it is not proved that I did either Compass or Imagine the King's Death that is matter of Fact Court Let us try that Axt. My Lord I did nothing but as a meer Souldier I had Authority from the General I would leave this before your Lordships and the Jury that what I have done hath been by Authority of the Genetal L. Hollis Sir a word to you If you could satisfie the Court that you had received a Commission from the General to do those things with which you stand charged it were something then were it proper for you to plead it and the Court to judg Pray take this along with you the General gave you no such command what you are charged with in the Indictment is for Compassing and Imagining the Death of the King and that by such and such overt acts as making your Souldiers cry out Justice and Execution for being active and forward in sending for the
Officers of the Army silence was required and that was all that was done I suppose where a man is commanded to keep silence as the Sheriff is required to keep all at peace in a Court if he restrain a person that will not be quiet it is not Treason in him nor in me in this particular My Lord in the next place Mr. Temple is pleased to say that I stood upon the pavement laughing while others sighed Truly my Lord I know not whether I saw the Gentleman or no certainly smiling is no Treason if I did so though I believe I had as great a sense that day as many other persons there this is the sum of that he saith only he further adds that I bid the Souldiers cry for Justice truly my Lord L. ch Bar. Because it may be your Notes are short I will acquaint you there was a little more in it he said you bid the Souldiers cry out Justice Justice and they coming not very readily to it you struck some of them till they with your self cryed out Justice Justice till they with your self did it Axt. My Lord To that I answer that in the Hall there was some kind of people did set up a crying some kind of words and may be some of the Souldiers might cry so too I might command them to hold their Tongues and to say I 'le teach you to cry Justice and so the Gentleman standing by might believe I was the person that bid them do it Truly my Lord is this all that the Gentleman says which I humbly conceive is nothing because he does not say against any person and therefore my Lord I do hold to that Maxim in the Law as Sir Edward Cooke holds that man of great parts of learning and knowledg That in matters of Treason wherein a man is the most highliest concern'd in his life and posterity there ought not to be construed against him Inferences or presumptions or strains of wit there is no more in this and this is all that I say in this particular In the next place Mr. Temple is pleased to say that after the Court had sentenced his Majesty he was hurried away in a Cedan Truly whether he was or not I know not There was a Guard of Halbertiers whereof Col. Huncks was one and several others as I have heard they were Select Guards of his Majesty Guarding him from St. Jame's to other places how he came to be hurried I know not it was not by me and whereas he say's during the whole Tryal I was there truly I think I was there by command of my General by Authority of the Lords and Commons L. ch Bar. You speak this that the Jury may understand you did it by command of your General Do you mean by express command Axt. I did not move a day but by special command L. ch Bar. By whom Axtell The Lotd Fairfax gave his Orders every morning to his Adjutant General or Major General and they issued them out to such and such persons as he appoints L. ch Bar. Who gave these Orders out Axt. The Lord Fairfax we did all under him L. ch Bar. You had not the order immediately from him Axtell The Major General had L. ch Bar. What Major General gave you that Order Axtell There was Cromwell and Ireton L. ch Bar. The Lord Fairfax gave you no immediate Commission Axtell He have my Superior Officers L. ch Bar. How do you know that Axtell My Lord because they told me so it was by his command L. ch B. The question is now understood Axt. The next person that speaks is Mr. Bodurdoe and he says that I commanded the Souldiers at the King's Tryal and that a Lady that was speaking was commanded silence to this purpose Truly my Lord this is but the same as before L. ch Bar. You said Shoot too Axt. No my Lord I said not any such word or any thing like it I heard there was an Officer went up and intreated her to be silent I say it is the same with the former it is no Treason to desire one to be silent My Lord the next Witness that speaks in Evidence against me is Mr. Young he says this I bid the Souldiers cry for justice it is very like that person as well as Mr. Temple might see me in the croud speaking to make the Souldiers quiet I might repeat the words that the people said repeat the word justice or some such word as the peoples words L. Ch. Bar. Remember how he repeats them he saw you active in setting on the Souldiers to cry justice Axt. If I have taken them right one says he heard me say such words as justice and that he saw me strike two or three Souldiers if in the Tumult such a word should be started I hearing of them I might strike those Souldiers that said justice justice and might repeat the words I 'le give you justice and so strike them that is a good Evidence that it might be a repetition of their words and not any of mine own They both speak as to the word justice but here was not justice mentioned to any person I might repeat their own words and chastise them for those words besides this though I do not say the word was spoken by me if the word justice had been spoken my Lord I hope it is no Treason to say desire justice it is Gods great Attribute it is God's Ordinance and that can be no Treason I have read in Law Books though but lately and I cannot find that the word Justice should be made Treason then there is no person to whom that adjunct doth belong The next Evidence my Lord is Capt. Jeonar he saith I commanded a Guard truly several Regiments took their turns as they were commanded by the General and I as an inferior Officer was there but that is no more than what was said before it was done by the Authority of the General if I had not done it I had died by the Law of War He saith there was a cry for Justice I can say nothing more than I have formerly said it may be in the Tumult the Souldiers might say so and I chastising of them and repeating that in my chastisement they might think they were mine own words L. Ch. Bar. Mr. Axtell I would help your memory he swears the last day you encouraged the Souldiers to cry Execution Execution Axt. For that particular I am coming to it I thank your Lordship for helping me My Lord for that of Execution truly I cannot say whether I was there that day or no one day I was commanded to be there with some Companies in Westminster-Hall but whether I was there any more than that one time is the question Admit I was there that day I was never there but when I was commanded when the Colonel that commanded the Regiment was there I as an inferior Officer ought to be there I was there by a special Order and not by
speech among the Souldiers that Hulet cut off the Kings head L. Ch. B. How long before did you see Hulet upon the guard Burden The day before but not that day nor the day after L. Ch. B. William Hulet the evidence against you is twofold one concerning the cutting off the Kings head the other that you were in a frock If it be proved that you did not cut off the Kings head yet if you were in a frock in that place it will not excuse you if you have any thing to say I will be glad to hear it Hulet I desire the persons may be examined upon oath prisoners and others who was the person that did it I mean Hacker Huncks and Phayer L. Ch. B. You that are the prisoner for that which concerns Hacker and Phayer you know what conditions they are in one already tryed for his life the other a prisoner in the Tower and Hacker saith himself he doth not know the person at all you that are prisoner at the bar the Court conceives you have had time to get your witnesses here you were informed of the business before you came here yet notwithstanding it is conceived there are some here that can say something tending to the information of the Jury but they are not to be admitted upon Oath against the King Sheriffs Officer examined Sheriffs Officer My Lord all that I can say in this business is this one of our fellows that belongs to our Master the Sheriff John Rooten by name he and I were talking about this very story and he did acquaint me with this That he was in Rosemary-Lane a little after the Execution of the King drinking with the Hangman that he did urge him whether he did this fact God forgive me saith the Hangman I did it and I had forty half Crowns for my pains Abraham Smith examined Smith My Lord assoon as that fatal blow was given I was walking about White-hall down came a file of Musketeers the first word they said was this where be the Bargemen Answer was made here are none away they directed the Hangman into my Boat going into the Boat he gave one of the Souldiers a half Crown saith the Souldiers Waterman away with him be gone quickly but I fearing this Hangman had cut off the Kings Head I trembled that he should come into my Boat but dared not to examine him on shore for fear of the Souldiers so out I lanched and having got a little way in the water said I who the Devil have I got in my Boat says my fellow sayes he why I directed my speech to him saying are you the Hangman that cut off the Kings Head No as I am a sinner to God saith he not I he shook every joynt of him I knew not what to do I rowed away a little further and fell to a new examination of him when I had got him a little further tell me true said I are you the Hangman that hath cut off the Kings Head I cannot carry you said I no saith he I was fetcht with a troop of Horse and I was kept a close prisoner at White-Hall and truly I did not do it I was kept a close prisoner all the while but they had my instruments I said I would sink the boat if he would not tell me true but he denyed it with several protestations William Cox examined Cox When my Lord Capell Duke Hamilton and the Earl of Holland were beheaded in the Palace yard in Westminster My Lord Capell asked the Common Hangman said he did you cut off my masters head yes saith he where is the instrument that did it He then brought the Ax is this the same ax are you sure said my Lord Yes my Lord saith the Hangman I am very sure it is the same my Lord Capell took the Ax and kissed it and gave him five pieces of Gold I heard him say sirrah wert thou not affraid saith the Hangman they made me cut it off and I had thirty pound for my pains Richard Abell examined Abell My Lord in the house of one Mr. Bramston I did hear Gregory himself confess that he cut off the Kings head L. Ch. B. You that are the prisoner at the bar the Court is willing to give all full scope as far as may be to examine the truth of the fact as they would not condemn the innocent so they would not acquit the guilty do you desire further time to examine the truth of it before it be put upon the Jury H. I do confess I do not understand the Laws I desire I may have a little further time I desire the Jury may be withdrawn I desire a fortnights time but submit to the Court. A Stranger Examined Stranger My Lord I was with my Master in the company of Brandon the Hangman and My Master asked Brandon whether he cut off the Kings head or no He confessed in my presence that he was the man that did cut off the Kings head Lord Chief Baron You that are the Prisoner at the Bar the Court was willing to give you as much time as they could by Law The Jury hath been charged and evidence given all those Witnesses have been examined that we could hear of now for your advantage I will say something to you It was here said and given in Evidence that Axtell did send a Boat to fetch the common Hangman if we knew more that might tend to your advantage it should be repeated You Gentlemen of the Jury mark it There is first Gittens he swears that he was in the same Regiment that you were in twelve or thirteen years together he saith that he and others were called together upon their Oaths and you amongst the rest and there was an Oath of secrecy asking them if they would do such an Act they all refused to do it so did you but he said the day of Execution of the King this Gittens got among them and one Captain Web kept the door and he saw you fall before the King and ask the King forgiveness he said he heard your voice and so knew you and that the day after Captain Atkins said you shall see Hulet shortly come to preferment and he saith he did not see you in the Regiment that day and that Hewson and all the Regiment used to call you Father Gray-beard Stammers he saith that you was Capt. Lieutenant to Col. Hewsons Troop and you coming to Lutterels town you asked him several particulars whether he had been in the Kings Army walking up and down you said you were the man beheaded King Charles and for that you had one hundred pounds this he swears positively Samson Toogood he swears he saw you come to Col. Hewsons in 1650. you talked to him very familiarly when you were gone he asked who you were he told him you were a Captain Lieutenant of Horse and he said that you were a very mettled fellow and did the Kings business upon the Scaffold that
his Execution and that one of the Prisoners at the Bar was in before the High Court of Justice consulting of bringing it about When we have proved this I think it is enough Pray call the Witnesses Harvey My Lord according to my duty I shall save this honourable Court all their trouble I do humbly acknowledg that I was and did sit in that Court but I did not Sign and Seal that Warrant L. Ch. B. It is very true Mr. Harvey Har. I hope your Lordships and this honourable Bench will give me leave in that time which you shall appoint to shew you my reasons that I did it not of Malice and it was an error not of Will but of Judgment what I have to say will be thought not for the annihilating yet for the extenuation of my crimes Lord Chief Baron Say now what you will only consider with your self whether you have not already spoken as much as you can for the Extenuation of it say what you can further Harvy Let me speak a word L. Ch. Bar. Go on Sir Harvey My Lord I do humbly conceive if I had conceived that I had then done any thing of Treason I would not for all the World have been there I was present when his Majesty did not own the Court desiring that both his Houses might meet that he might have a Conference with them for setling of the peace My Lord heartily and unfeignedly I did endeavour that that advice might be embraced and that no sentence might be pronounced I was one of those with some others that did so far promote it that that which they called the High Court of Justice did withdraw to consider of it but the major part of it did dissent But my Lord I was so unhappy as to return to the Court though with reluctancy I went with a resolution not to go more to them nor never did I was sommoned to come to the Court I did declare I abhorred the thing that my Soul had reluctancy against it and I was greatly grieved and troubled at it and I did refuse any more to come or to consult about any thing that followed in order to his Majesties death and to Sign and to Seal And that I may make it appear to your Lordships I pray I may have a Witness or two examined Lord Chief Baron Name them Did he sit upon the day of sentence Councel Yes he did he followed it Mr. Edw. Corbet examined Mr. Corbet My Lord the attestation which I this day make solemnly in the holy fear of Almighty God and in awful reverence of this great Tribunal hath only this great scope that Colonel Harvey the Prisoner at the Bar upon that day of signing the Warrant for that horrid Execution of His most Excellent Majesty not in title only but in reality he finding me as I was passing to the duty of my place in the Assembly of Divines then sitting he seized on me and desired privacy of time and place that he might disburthen his soul and spirit unto me it was then about nine a clock in the forenoon to the best of my remembrance L. C. B. What day I beseech you Corbet To the best of my remembrance upon the Monday Sir says he I desire to make known unto you the deep horrour that sits upon my spirit the sadness and grief above all expressions that my present case has cast me into I have endeavoured Sir says he in the sight of God all that possibly I could to divert them from the Sentence I could not prevail Sir says he I have been this morning sollicited with very much earnestness that I would go and sign and seal and order that wicked Execution which my soul abhors and Sir that I might be removed and withdrawn from all temptations and sollicitations of such a wicked fact I beseech you spare me your time this day which I did in the presence of another Divine till four a clock that afternoon and then I parted and went to Westminster to sign and assist that which I did apprehend my bounden duty the Vindication of the Assembly of Divines wherein we did testifie that it was far from our thoughts to advise the Parliament to any such unheard of unnatural act Councel We do admit that after he sat and Sentence past that he did not sign Harvey Be pleased to call one Mr. Tho. Langham he hath heard me often declare against that act Mr. Thomas Langham examined Lord Chief Baron What do you say Mr. Langham as to this business Langham Sir about the time that his Majesty was executed in 1648. I was then Servant to Alderman Sleigh who was formerly partner with this Colonel and he frequently came to Alderman Sleigh's every night and the Alderman having some business with him would ask him what News there was at the High Court of Justice he usually told him the passages upon any day the Alderman asked him if so be he thought his Majesty might escape he told him this that he would do what lay in his power that he might that he might not come to have Sentence past upon Saturday being also there he told him this that he had done what lay in his power to hinder the Sentence but could not attain his design but he was resolved he would never sign nor seal to his Majesties death for it was utterly against his Judgment Harvey There is another my Lord and but one more that is George Langham Lord Chief Baron To what purpose This is believed Harvey I shall only crave and supplicate this favour of this Honourable Bench that this Honourable Bench will be pleased on my behalf since I have endeavoured it two moneths before to present my humble Petition to his Sacred Majesty and to intercede for mercy and favour on my behalf my self my wife and thirteen Children shall humbly pray The Court received the said Petition and promised to present it to his Majesty Millington I do not know whether it will be seasonable for me to interpose now I would speak a little Lord Chief Baron Is he next in order Clerk No my Lord Pennington is next Pennington I am unwilling to be troublesom to the Court This I shall take the boldness to say which shall be nothing but truth I never had a hand in plotting contriving malicious practices against his Majesty demonstrated by my utterly refusing to sign the Warrant for his Execution though often sollicited thereunto I cannot deny but I sate amongst them that day of the Sentence but I cannot remember I was there when the Sentence passed My sitting amongst them was out of ignorance I knew not what I did therefore I hope you wil believe there was nothing of malice in any thing I did I was misled to it L. Ch. Baron I cannot hear you he not speaking aloud Penington It was Ignorance not Malice that lead me if I had known what I had done I would not have done it I humbly pray that
there may be a favourable construction made of it I humbly leave it with you I did my Duty to pray for the King but had no malice to act willingly against him Clerk Henry Marten Counsel He did both sign and seal the Precept for summoning the Court and the Warrant for Execution sat almost every day and particularly the day of Sentence Marten My Lord I do not decline a confession so as to the matter of Fact the malice set aside maliciously murderously and traiterously Counsel If you have any thing to say to that we will prove it L. Ch. Baron That I may inform you in it there is malice implied by Law malice in the Act it self that which you call malice that you had no particular intention or design against the King's Person but in relation to the Government that will not be to this present business if it should extenuate any thing that would be between God and your own Soul but as to that which is alledged in the Indictment Maliciously Murderously and Traiterously they are the consequences of Law If a Man meet another in the Street and run him through in this case the Law implies malice though but to an ordinary Watchman there is malice by the Law in the Fact if there was no such expressed personal malice as you conceive yet the Fact done implies malice in Law Mr. Solicitor General My Lord He does think a Man may sit upon the death of the King sentence him to death sign a Warrant for his Execution meekly innocently charitably and honestly Marten I shall not presume to compare my knowledg in the Law with that of that Learned Gentleman but according to that poor understanding of the Law of England that I was capable of there is no Fact that he can name that is a Crime in it self but as it is circumstantiated Of killing a Watchman as your Lordship instanced a Watchman may be killed in not doing his Office and yet no murder Lord Chief Baron I instanced that of a Watchman to shew there may be a malice by Law though not expressed though a Man kill a Watchman intending to kill another Man in that case it is malice in Law against him so in this case if you went to kill the King when he was not doing his Office because he was in Prison and you hindred him from it the Law implies malice in this It is true all Actions are circumstantiated but the killing of the King is Treason of all Treasons Justice Foster If a Watchman be killed it is murder it is in contempt of Magistracy of the Powers Above the Law says that contempt adds to the malice Counsel We shall prove against the Prisoner at the Bar because he would wipe off malice he did this very merrily and was in great sport at the time of the signing the Warrant for the King's Execution Marten That does not imply malice Ewer sworn Councel Come Sir you are here upon your Oath speak to my Lords and the Jury you know the Prisoner at the Bar very well you have sometimes served him Were you present in the Painted Chamber January 29. 1648. at the signing the Warrant the Parchment against the King Ewer The day I do not remember but I was in that Chamber to attend a Gentleman there I followed that Gentleman looking at Mr. Marten I followed that Gentleman into that Chamber L. C. Baron After what Gentleman Ewer Mr. Marten my Lord I was pressing to come near but I was put off by an Officer or Souldier there who told me I should not be there I told him I was ordered to be by that Gentleman My Lord I did see a Pen in Mr. Cromwel's hand and he marked Mr. Marten in the face with it and Mr. Marten did the like to him but I did not see any one set his Hand though I did see a Parchment there with a great many Seals to it Sir Purback Temple sworn Counsel What do you know of that Gentleman in his carriage of this Business Sir Purback Temple My Lords I being present in Town when that horrid Murder was contrived against the late King there came some Persons of Honour Servants to the late King to my Father's House Sir Edward Partridge to engage me to join with them to attempt the King's escape In order whereunto they told me nothing would tend so much to his Majesty's Service as to endeavour to discover some part of their Counsels for that it was resolved by Cromwel to have the King tried at the High Court of Justice as they called it the next day and desired me if possible to be there to discover their Counsels whereby the King might have notice and those that were to attempt his escape In order whereunto the next day by giving Mony to the Officer of the Painted Chamber I got in by day light in the Lobby to the Lords House I espied a Hole in the Wall under the Hangings where I placed my self till the Council came where they were contriving the manner of trying the King when he should come before them and after the manner of praying and private consults amongst themselves when their Prayer was over there came news that the King was landed at Sir Robert Cotton's Stairs at which Cromwel run to a Window looking on the King as he came up the Garden he returned as white as the Wall returning to the Board he speaks to Bradshaw and Sir Henry Mildmay how they and Sir William Breerton had concluded on such a Business Then turning to the Board said thus My Masters He is come He is come and now we are doing that great Work that the whole Nation will be full of Therefore I desire you to let us resolve here what answer we shall give the King when he comes before us for the first Question that he will ask us will be By what Authority and Commission do we try him To which none answered presently Then after a little space Henry Marten the Prisoner at the Bar rose up and said In the Name of the Commons and Parliament assembled and all the good People of England which none contradicted so all rose up and then I saw every Officer that waited in the Room sent out by Cromwel to call away my Lord such a one whose Name I have forgot who was in the Court of Wards Chamber that he should send away the Instrument which came not and so they adjourned themselves to Westminster-Hall going into the Court of Wards themselves as they went thither When they came to the Court in Westminster-Hall I heard the King ask them the very same Question that Cromwel had said to them Mr. Solicitor Gentlemen the Prisoner at the Bar confesses his Hand to the Warrant for Executing the King you see by his Servant how merry he was at the sport You see by his Witness how serious he was at it and gave the foundation of that Advice upon which they all proceeded and now he
Clerk of the Crown Are you agreed of your Verdict Jurors Yes Clerk Who shall say for you Jury Our Foreman Clerk Edmond Harvey hold up thy hand How say you Is the Prisoner Guilty of the Treason whereof he stands Indicted and hath been Arraigned or not Guilty Jury Guilty Clerk Look to him Keeper Clerk What Goods and Chattels c. Jury None to our knowledg The same question being asked touching Alderman Penington Henry Marten Gilbert Millington Alderman Titchborne Col. Roe Col. Lilburn and Henry Smith they were severally found Guilty by the Jury in manner aforesaid All which Prisoners finding the place where they stood to be cold and unwholsome prayed the Court they might have leave to be returned to the Prison till the Court shall be pleased to command their further attendance which was granted The rest of the Prisoners aforenamed together with W. Heveningham brought to the Bar. Clerk You the Prisoners at the Bar those Persons last called of the Jury are to pass c. If you or any of you will challenge all or any of them you must challenge them when they come to the Book before they be sworn Clerk Charles Pilfield Christopher Abdy George Terry Daniel Cole Anthony Hall Richard Abel Edmond Starnel Edmond Pit William Whitcomb Francis Dorrington Thomas Nicoll Robert Sheppard in all twelve admitted and sworn of the Jury Clerk If any Man can inform c. Clerk John Downs hold up thy hand c. and the like were said to to all the other Persons following viz. Vincent Potter Augustine Garland Simon Meyne James Temple Peter Temple Thomas Waite and William Heveningham Look upon the Prisoners at the Bar you that are sworn you shall understand that John Downes the Prisoner at the Bar stands Indicted c. Kings Counsel May it please your Lordships and you Gentlemen of the Jury The Prisoners at the Bar stand indicted of High Treason for compassing and imagining the Death of the late King Charles the First of blessed memory The Evidence by which we shall make out against them this Treason of their Heart in compassing and imagining the King's Death for that is the substance of the Indictment and all that follows is but Evidence will be by proving that they did sit as Judges in that pretended Court of Justice when the King stood a Prisoner at the Bar That they did Sentence him to death every one of them and we shall prove against all but one of them that they did sign that bloody Warrant for murthering of the King and against one of them that stands at the Bar we shall prove to his shame and confusion of face that he did spit in the face of our late Sovereign Lord. John Downes My Lord I have humbly pleaded Not Guilty not with any intention to justifie the Fact or to extenuate it but my Lord in regard there is that charged in the Indictment that my Conscience saith I am not guilty of I durst not plead guilty otherwise my Lord I should not have troubled you with Not Guilty but should have humbly taken the shame and confusion for it it is my intention to put the Court to as little trouble as possible I can therefore I do most humbly intreat of your Lordships and the Court that you will permit me to acknowledg that which will be a sufficient evidence of my Conviction if the Court so please and that you will be pleased to hear me on my behalf if I can humbly offer to you some special thing which is not in the Case of another I could wish it had if it had we had none been here I do humbly acknowledg that to sit upon that occasion in that place is evidence enough to convince what is in the Heart except by some signal Actions that might happen from some that might shew how it was his unhappiness to be put into such a business yet had neither Malice nor Treason in his Heart I do humbly conceive that there is that goodness in you that this Plea this Allegation will be most welcome to you My Lord though there was such a thing such an unparallel'd thing I was thrust into this number but never was in consultatin about the thing God is witness I was not put in till the Act was ready to pass in a second Commitment by one of the same number I denied it yet they said I must make one I must take my share so I came in Never did I know of his Majesty's being brought to London till he came My Lords In this great unhappiness I think it is some mitigation and I judg it a happiness that so wise prudent Persons as this Court consists of that you are my Judges that can look back my Lord and consider what the Times were then and can my Lord account it a happiness that there is a special Wisdom in you that in nice Cases you will be able to make a distinction I do indeed my Lords sadly and seriously confess That I was divers times with those Persons that were called Judges of the late King at several of their Meetings and Sittings it is long ago I cannot say how often I was several times there My Lord I do humbly beg of your Lordships I will trouble you as short as I can that you would be pleased so far to favour me as to give me leave to give you a short account of the business The last day his Majesty came to that which was called then a Court several times he was brought I think thrice and his Charge was given in words high enough he said He could not acknowledg their Jurisdiction that was the Answer my Lord till the last day then I confess I was there He that was called President did again and again tell him the Heads of his Charge told him he had several days given for consideration That this was the last day that the Court as they call'd themselves would give him his final Answer if he stood still to day and move to the jurisdiction of the Court they must take all pro Confesso and would give sentence My Lord to this his Majesty indeed with a great deal of composedness and wisdom told them to this effect I cannot own your Jurisdiction you have power enough indeed I wish you may use it well but because you are so ready to give a sentence which may be sooner given then avoided I think fit to let you know that I have something that I desire to speak to my Parliament for I have something to offer unto them that will be satisfactory to you all and will be for the immediate settlement of the Kingdom in peace My Lord he that was called President answered that no notice could be taken of any thing but onely whether he would answer to his Charge upon that my Lord his Majesty indeed with the greatest earnestness that ever I beheld and yet in no unseemly passion told them they might soon repent of such
a sentence that he did conjure them to withdraw once again and to consider of it if it were but half an hour or saith he if that be too much for you I will withdraw My Lord here I can make my appeal to him that must judg me when you have done with me I had not a murderous nor a trayterous thought against him but Sir I confess such deep passions did fall upon me that truly my self I was not I remember the persons betwen whom I sate as it fell out were one Mr. Cawly and Col. Walton these two I sate betwixt these were the very words I speak to them Have we hearts of stone are we men they laboured to appease me they told me I would ruine both my self and them said I if I die for it I must do it Cromwel sate just the seat below me the hearing of me make some stir whispering he looked up to me and asked me if I were my self what I meant to do that I could not be quiet Sir said I No I cannot be quiet upon that I started up in the very nick when the President commanded the Clerk to read the Sentence I stepping up and as loud as I could speak spoke to this effect these words or to the like purpose My Lord said I I am not satisfied to give my consent to this Sentence but have Reasons to offer to you against it and I desire the Court may adjourn to hear me presently he stept up and looked at me Nay saith he if any one of the Court be unsatisfied the Court must adjourn Sir accordingly they did adjourn into the inner Court of Wards when they came there I was called upon by Cromwel to give an account why I had put this trouble and disturbance upon the Court I did speak Sir to this effect it is long ago the very words I think I cannot speak but to this effect I did speak My Lord I should have been exceeding glad if the Court had been pleased to condescend to this gracious Expression but it is not too late for me I desire not his Death but his Life and that the Nations may be setled in Peace The King now is pleased to offer That if he might but speak with his Parliament he would offer to them such things as should be satisfactory to us all So said I what would you have Your pretence of bringing him to these Proceedings was That after such a long and bloody War his Majesty would not condescend to such Concessions as might secure the Parliaments Party but now you hear him that he will give every one of us satisfaction I told them sadly told them I think I may truly say more sadly then than at this time that if they should go precipitantly on and give Judgment upon him before they had acquainted the Parliament with what the King was pleased to offer we should never be able answer it the rather my Lord and that I did press with all the little understanding that I had if they did but consider the last concluded Order that the Parliament made after the passing of the Act for Trial that which was so called I say there was this Order that shut up all That upon any Emergency that could not at that time be thought on in the House the Court should immediately acquaint the House with it My Lord I did infer as strongly as I could to them That if this were not Emergent I could not tell what was The King denied the Jurisdiction of the Court and yet with all vehemency desired to speak with his Parliament were not these Emergencies if not I knew not what were Emergences My Lords Besides this there was another thing I did press that I thought was of greater consequence than this as to the satisfaction of every Man 's particular Conscience that admitting if it might be admitted that the King was liable to his Subjects that they might call him to an account and might condemn him I beg your pardon that I take the boldness to make such admissions but if such a thing might be admitted certainly it did exceedingly become those Judges that were to give such a Sentence not against a common Person but against the greatest to be very well satisfied in Matter of Fact to a full Evidence before them that such and such things that were said were true I do acknowledg this that to the best of my apprehension I wish it had been so to others there was a great shortness in this I do humbly affirm this That not one Member of the Court did hear one Witness Viva Voce I did press That if the Court did give Judgment against the King without a fair Examination I said it was such a thing as no Judg at any Assizes would do against a common Person what I had was from Peters and from some private Whispers from one of them that is gone and hath received his Sentence and Doom Cromwel did answer with a great deal of storm He told the President that now he saw what great reason the Gentleman had to put such a trouble and disturbance upon them saith he Sure he doth not know that he hath to do with the hardest hearted Man that lives upon the Earth however it is not fit that the Court should be hindred from their Duty by one peevish Man he said the bottom was known that he would fain save his old Master and desired the Court without any more ado would go and do their Duty Another that spoke to me in answer was one that hath been before you and hath rereived his Sentence but is not dead and I desire I may not name his Name his answer was to what I have said That some Men were either Scepticks or Infidels After this I did go into the Speaker's Chamber and there I did ease my mind and heart with tears God only knows I have an unhappy memory I have slipt many thin●s Lord Chief Baron Remember your self by Papers if you have any no man will hinder you Downes I have no papers but my Lord for the truth of this I have said there are some witnesses that will make the substance the effect of this appear Lord Chief Baron Mr. Downes there is one particular before you come to the witnesses that after all these Convictions you signed the Warrant you deny it the Council will prove it Downes I did never hope or think that any thing I can say should be so satisfactory to you but things might be retorted upon me and perhaps what I thought might be for extenuating my Crime my fall out to my disadvantage I understand you do proceed upon three particulars either signing the first Warrant for constituting the Court To my remembrance I know not of it if my hand was to it I have forgot Counsel Your hand is not to that but we mean your hand is to the Warrant for execution pray shew it him It was shewn him Downes My Lord
how to reconcile that which hath been said before with this that comes after I leave it to you I am totally at a loss When those times were how impetuous the Soldiers how not a man that durst either disown them or speak against them I was threatned with my very life by the threats of one that hath received his reward I was induced to it Certainly my Lord it doth argue that there was not malice predommant Love and Hatred cannot be at the same time in one person Design my Lord what should be my design a poor ordinary mean man Surely my Lord I could not design any great matters or places I knew my self unfit I humbly beg you would give me leave to tell you a little what I got Mr. Sol. Gen. By your favour my Lord the Prisoners at the Bar may say what they will by way of extenuation but we expect that when they enter upon these Discourses they will save your Lordships time and ours by a publick confession and evidence of sorrow We cannot spend so long time to hear these long Discourses we will rather prove it against every man singly Downes I will trouble you no further I do acknowledge all I humbly submit and beg your favour and leave my self eupon my Countrymen the Jury and beg the King's mercy specially Pray spare me one word that you would hear but a Witness or two unto that business Counsel He doth confess he sate and signed we beleive he is sorrowful and against his Conscience he did sign and that he did it out of a fear and from a threat that he was over-awed so was the Hangman too but after he had apprehended this sorrow and declared his Judgment upon the fact he signed the Warrant Downes My Lord I do humbly beg his Majesties mercy I came in upon the Proclamation Vincent Potter My Lord my condition requires ease for my Body he had a fit of the Stone upon him at that same time I pray that the passing the Sentence for execution may be suspended L. Ch. B. The Execution must be suspended for you are within that Qualification Potter I desire only this I am not in a condition to declare what I know and would speak I am mighty ful of pain if I am under that Qualification let me rest under that Counsel Do you confess the Indictment or will you put us to prove it Potter I am one that came in L. Ch. B. It is thus with you whether or no did you sit sign or act in this High Court of Justice against the King Potter I will deny nothing I confess the fact but did not contrive it I am full of pain Lord Chief Baron According to the demerit of the Case in Law you must receive Judgment here but no execution of that Judgment shall be until the King by advice and consent of Lords and Commons shall order the execution of it you are to be tried now Do you confess you signed the Warrant for execution of the King Potter I do confess it my Lord. Counsel We do accept it Potter I beseech you let me go to ease my self Lord Chief Baron Officer set a Chair for him which was done Mr Potter sit down Aug. Garland May it please your Lordship I came here this day intending to have waved my plea and referred my self to this honourable Court to be recommended to the Kings mercy and the Parliament But hearing of some scandal up●● me more then ever I did hear till within these few dayes I shall desire your favour in hearing of my Trial. Mr. Sol. Gen. My Lord he saith well for if he had confessed the Indictment we should not have accepted it Call the Witnesses Garland I do confess this I sate and at the day of Sentence signed the Warrant for Execution Mr. Sol. Gen. And we will prove that he spat in the Kings face Gar. I pray let me hear that Otherwise I would not have put you to any trouble at all Clench sworn Counsel Do you know the prisoner at the Bar Augustine Garland Clench I know him very well Counsel Tell my Lords and the Jury how you saw him behave himself to our Sovereign Lord the King when he was at the Bar. Clench I was that day at Westminstar-hall when the King had sentence they hurried the King down this Mr. Garland came down stairs by them towards the bottome of the stairs he spit in his face at a little distance Couns Do you believe he did it on purpose upon your oath Clench I suppose he did it somewhat suspiciously in that way I did see the King put his hand in his left pocket but I do not know whether the king wiped it off Mr. Sol. Gen. The King wiped it off but he will never wipe it off so long as he lives He hath confessed that he sate that he sentenced and that he signed We say he contrived it at the beginning and at last bid defiance to the King I shall desire he may be remembred in another place Garland I do not know that I was near him at that time I do not remember this passage I am afraid he is an Indigent person If I was guilty of this inhumanity I desire no favour from God Almighty L. Ch. B. I will tell you this doth not at all concern the Jury but this Circumstance possibly may be considered in another place Gar. I refer my self whether you be satisfied that I did such an Inhumane act I submit that to you I dare appeal to all these Gentlemen here looking upon the prisoners or any other whether they ever heard of it nor I was never accused for such a thing till a few dayes since but I wave my plea and refer my self to the Court Now my Lord this is the truth of my Case there is that honorable Gentleman the Speaker of the House of Commons knows I lived in Essex in the beginning of these troubles and I was inforced to forsake my habitation I came from thence to London where I have behaved my self fairly in my way Afterwards in 1648 I was chosen a member into the Parliament in June 1648 I came in a Member of the Parliament My Lord after the division of the House by the insolency of the Soldiery some came to me and desired me that I would go to the House I was then at my Chamber at Lincolns-Inne I forbore a Week and more said I I do not expect to be admitted for they look upon me as another person said they If you will go you shall have no contradiction I went and went in when I was in the first business that came was the business of Tryal of the King and it was put on me to be Chair-man for bringing in this Act for Tryal I did not know how to contradict that power or authority be it what it will but I must obey I fear my ruine will follow it in that respect my Lord when I came there I
speak with his Parliament I rising up one told me I must not be heard for the President was to give Judgement and said there was an order that none should speak in Court Mr. Downes did move and they did adjourn the Court and I was glad I got out Cromwell laughed and smiled and jeared in the Court of Wards I hope your Lordship will be pleased to consider I was no Contriver no Soldier that put the force upon the House that erected the Court None of the Law-makers or did any thing maliciously against the King My Lord I was looked upon with an evil eye for regarding the King's friends in the Country Gray he told me the King would not die I hope he will not said I. The next day on Monday I went to the House they were labouring to get hands for his Execution at the Door I refused and went into the House saith Cromwell those that are gone in shall set their hands I will have their hands now That night I went to the Lord Grays and he said I am afraid they will put him to death I said so also My Lord I have been a great sufferer I was drawn in trapan'd into it since being a friend to the Kings friends I am almost ruined in my estate I beseech your Lordships make the best interpretation I hope you will believe I was no Contriver I humbly lay hold upon the Kings mercy and favour I came in upon the Proclamation I pray that this Honourable Court will prefer my Petition to the King and both Houses of Parliament which the Court then received William Heveningham My Lord in 1648. we were under a force under the tyranny of an Army they were our Masters for a malicious and a traiterous heart I had not I do absolutely deny the signing the Warrant for summoning the Court and also that Warrant for execution of the King at the time of sealing I had that Courage and Boldness that I protested against it Counsel We do not question him for that but for sitting in the high Court of Justice and that upon the day of the sentence do you deny that Heveningham My Lord I cannot say positively Counsel If you deny the matter of fact it must be proved Heveningham I cannot say positively but it may be I might Counsel Either say positively you did or else let the Witnesses be call'd Heveningham Truly my Lord I think I did but my after-actions Lord Chief Baron Mr. Heveningham that shall be considered Counsel My Lord to sit upon the day of Sentence was high Treason in it self and is an evidence of Compassing and Imagining the Kings death Hev I shall lay hold of the Declaration I came in upon the Proclamation I pray your Lordships to interceed for me to the King and both Houses of Parliament I pray the mercy of this Court L. C. B. You of the Jury they have all confessed and therefore you may go together Simon Meyne My Lords I have forgot my Petition it is at my lodging I desire I may send it at night John Downes and Peter Temple prayed the like favour L. Ch. B. Do send them they shall be received The Jury having consulted together a certain time they went to their places Clerk Gentlemen are you agreed of your verdict Jury Yes Clerk Who shall say for you Jury Our Fore-man Clerk John Downes hold up thy hand Look upon the prisoner how say you is he guilty of High Treason whereof he stands indicted and hath been arraigned or not guilty Forem Guilty Clerk Look to him Keeper What Goods and Chattels c. Forem None to our knowledge And the like verdicts at the same time passed in the same manner against Vincent Potter Augustine Garland Symon Meyne James Temple Peter Temple Thomas Waite and William Heveningham Potter I hope I may be freed from Irons I am in pain and a man of bulk L. Ch. B. We can give no order in it we must leave it to the Sheriff Potter I begg it of you my Lord. L. Ch. B. We must leave it to the Sheriff Mr. Heveningham You must withdraw from the Bar. Clerk Officer bring down VValler Fleetwood Hacker Axtel Hulet Penington Marten Millington Titchborne Roe Lilburne Smith and Harvey and set them to the Bar which was done accordingly Clerk Hardress VValler hold up thy hand thou hast been Indicted and found guilty of High Treason what canst thou say why judgment should not pass on thee to dy according to Law VValler My Lords I am now it seems Convicted by Law and so adjudged Your Lordships the other day on my desire told me I might have liberty to speak upon my trial I must now beg the like upon a condemned person L. Ch. B. You are Convicted not Condemned Waller My Lords I was the first that pleaded Guilty I bless God that he gave me a heart to do it I find most peace in the doing of it and since there is nothing left but hopes of Mercy I humbly submit it to your Lordships to hear me in this sad condition that that may make me seem more capable of mercy I have my Lords been so unhappy to have been transplanted out of my Country these thirty years I have been but once these eleven years in England this must needs make me a stranger L. Ch. B. I must not hinder you because it is for mercy that you plead but consider with your self whether it will not be better to give it in a Petition I leave it to you we can do nothing in point of Mercy but Judgment Waller Onely this My Lord whether I am not the more capable of your mercy L. Ch. B. That you may understand it the Act of Indempnity of Parliament hath excepted you yet upon some qualifications we are to proceed according to Law that is to go to Conviction and Judgment The Act sayes that after Judgment there shall be no execution but that it shall be suspended till a further Act of Parliament to be passed for that purpose so that in the mean time we are to proceed no further then Judgment That which concerns Mercy is referred to another place If you please to say any thing to satisfie us or to go by way of Petition it must be left to you but what you say for mercy is nothing to us Waller I humbly thank your Lordships for this clear and noble dealing and withall I would beg that these people that are witnesses of my shame and guilt may know that it was a force and temptation upon me I shall not insist much I have said that I did plead guilty which was most safe to my own Conscience yet I should make it appear that I did appear more to preserve the King from Tryal and Sentence then any other Lord Finch Sir Hardress Waller I have heard of late of your sorrow which I was glad to hear of because you are my kinsman both by your Father and Mothers side and also my
heard the Charge read Hern. I did not hear the Charge read I was not there the first day I heard you confess you had exhibited a Charge of high Treason against the Prisoner at the Bar which was then the King's Majestie Cook Whether I did not in the Charge conclude that all proceedings might be according to Justice Court Read the Title and last Article of that Charge which was accordingly read and follows in haec verba The Title of the Charge The Charge of the Commons of England against Charles Sewart KING of England of High Treason and other Crimes exhibited to the High Court of Justice The last Clause in the Charge And the said Iohn Cook by protestation saving on the behalf of the people of Eng. the liberty of exhibiting at any time hereafter any other Charge against the said Char. Stew. and also of replying to the answers which the said Char. Stew. shall make to the premisses or any of them or any other charge that shall be so exhibited doth for the said Treasons and Crimes on the behalf of the said people of England impeach the said Charles Stewart as a Tyrant Traytor Murderer publick and implacable enemy to the Commonwealth of England and prayeth that the said Charles Stewart King of England may be put to answer all and every the premisses that such proceedings examinations tryals sentences and judgement may be hereupon had as shall be agreeable to Justice Court Mr. Cook will you have any Witnesses examined touching the question you last asked Cook No be pleased to go on Mr. Baker Sworn Mr. Bak. My Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury I was at the High Court of Justice as they called it the first second and third daies not to trouble you with the proceedings of of Bradshaw I will tell you what I observed of this Gentleman I have the notes that I took there and pray that I may read them to help my memory which was granted and then proceeded in this manner That day my Lord Mr. Cook told the Court that he charged the Prisoner at the Bar meaning the KING with Treason and high misdemeanors and desired that the Charge might be read the Charge was this That he had upheld a Tyrannical Government c. and for that cause was adjudged to be a Tyrant c. and did then press that the prisoner might give an answer to that and that very earnestly The second day my Lord he told the Court that he did the last day exhibit a Charged High Treason against the Prisoner at the Bar meaning the King and that he did desire he might make answer to it and he told them also that instead of making an answer to the Court the King had delayed the Court but desired the K. might make a positive answer or otherwise that it might be taken pro confesso The third day my Lord he came and told the Court as before that the King had delayed then and then he charged him with the Highest Treasons and Crimes that ever were acted upon the Theatre of England and then pressed that Judgement might be given against him and another expression was that it was not so much He but the Innocent and precious bloud that was shed that did crie for Judgment against the Prisoner at the Bar this my Lord in substance there were other passages Cook Whether before this time he had not heard some thing of an Act or Order proclaimed at Westminster whether there was any other word in effect used in that charge more than in the Proclamation Mr. Baker I did hear of the Proclamation and Charge and the substance of it I have given an accompt of it and I did hear you press upon it very much the Proclamation I heard of it that it was made forthe summoning of the Court but I did not hear the Proclamation made Cook That that was called the Act of the Commons for Trying of the King Mr. Baker I did hear of the Act but did not take notice of it Mr. George Masterson Sworn Counc Mr. Masterson pray inform my Lords and the Jury what you know touching the carriage of the Prisoner at the Bar at the Tryal of his late Majesty Mr. Masterson My Lords and you Gentlemen of the Jury I was present in that they called the High Court of Justice upon the 22 23. and 27. days of January in the year 1648. I shall wave those circumstances which you have heard and many of which I well remember and what I heard likewise between the King who was then a Prisoner and the then President Bradshaw but concerning the Prisoner at the Bar this I very well remember that upon Munday I heard him say he had exhibited a Charge of High Treason against the Prisoner then the King and demanded how that he might plead to his charge I do very well remember that after some passages between the King and the Court the Prisoner at the Bar desired the King might plead to his Charge or else it might be taken pro Confesso I remember upon the last day the day of that fatal Sentence I heard the Prisoner at the Bar demand in the name of the Commons assembled in Parliament and all the good people of England Judgement upon the Prisoner at the Bar pointing to the King this is all Mr. Burden sworn Councel Do you know who did examine the witnesses against the King and were you examined and by whom Burden By Judge Cook for so he was called in Ireland Councel Did he examine you as a witness against the King did he give you an Oath Burden Yes my Lord and many others Cook This is a new thing I never heard of this before where was it that I examined him I had no power Council No we know that but you were active Court Where was it Cook Whether there were not any others with me in the Room and where it was Burden It was at Westminster-hall within the High Court of Justice Cook Who was there besides me Burden I cannot tell Axtel he was there and I am sure Cook was there Councel Mr. Burden Pray tell my L. the Jury what questions you were examined upon and what they tended to Burden He examined me and gave me my Oath there was eight or nine of us we had been in the Kings Army in former times this Gentleman Col. Axtel brought us in commanded us out of our Company I was in his Company and this Gentleman himself gave us our Oaths he asked us where we saw the King in action I did reply to him and told him I saw him in the Field with his Army he asked me many other questions that I could not tell him he asked me whether I did see the King at Nottingham set up his Standard and I was never at Nottingham in my life these were the questions Mr. Starkey Sworn Court Pray inform my Lords and Gentlemen of the Jury what passed between you and the Prisoner at
witnesses say they believe it that it is like my hand that I leave to you if that appear yet My Lord that that is put in writing as done by another that is the Dictator and does dictate unto me I humbly conceive that for any man to write words which in their own nature may be Treasonable if he doth but write them by the command of another by speaking them after another taking them upon rebound that is not Treason because they do not discover a trayterous heart Those words of compassing the death of the King in the 25 Ed. 3. they are secret imaginations in the heart and they must be manifest by some overtact that which was dictated my Lord unto me that I had expresly prescribed me what I should say what words I should say That I did not invent any thing of mine own head of my own conceit and therefore cannot properly be said to be malicious The next thing that I crave leave to offer is this that the pure and plain demanding and praying of Justice though injustice be done upon it cannot possibly be called Treason within the statute then I hope nothing that has been said against me will amount to Treason for the words in the natural grammatical plain genuine and legal sence will bear no other construction as I humbly conceive but that whereas those Gentlemen had his Majestie then in their power a Prisoner that it was prayed by me that they would do him justice I do hope that it will appear that I did give Bonum fidele Consilium It will appear I hope that some would have had a very voluminous and long charge that I was utterly against it as conceiving that it was not fit and requisite that any thing should be put in at least I durst not invent one word my self but what was expressed in the Act for tryal if your Lordships will not admit it an act you will an Order and so it will bear me forth at least to excuse me from Treason because I kept my self to the words whereas in that it was said that they should proceed according to the merits of the cause I was against that that I did not understand that but according to Justice that is but according to Law because the Law is the rule of Justice I do humbly hope my Lord that if by Law when words may be taken in a double sence they shall always have the more favourable interpretation much more when the words in the legal sence will bear it when it is prayed they will proceed according to justice I hope it will not be inferred there was any intention of doing injustice when justice was required And therefore my Lord the next word what I would offer is this if my Lord in all Tragedies which are as we call them judicially or colourably there are but these four Actors Accusers or Witnesses The Jury Judges and Executioner If I be none of these I cannot be Guilty of Treason I hope I may safely say according to Law that I had not a hand at all in his Majesties death My Lord the Court and Councel it is very true they do aim at the same thing the Councel Require●●● Justitiam the other Exequendo Justitiam the end being the same to have Justice If when justice be demanded and injustice be done what is that to the Councel we read to of John concerning Pilate Knowest thou not speaking to Christ that I have power to crucifie thee and have power to release thee My Lord I humbly answer this to that which seems to be the most material part in the Indictment that We did assume a Power My Lords I did not assume a power I hope it will not be said that the Councel had any power Eloquentia in the Councel Judicium in the Judges and Veritas in the Witnesses 25. Acts. Tertullus that eloquent Orator accused Paul Paul answered for himself and it is said Festus being willing to do the Jews a courtesie he left Paul bound it was not the Councel that left him bound His Majesty was never a Prisoner to me and I never laid any hands upon him if any witnesses have spoke of any irreverence I must appeal to God in that I did not in the least manner carry my self undutifully to his Majesty though one of the Witnesses was pleased to say that I said these words that there is a Charge against the Prisoner at the Bar It was not said the Prisoner at the Bar there was not one disrespective word from me There is a Case in the third Institutes of the Lord Cook it is to this purpose That one wilfully and knowingly forswore himself the Case was put to inveigle the Court and though the Court does injustice upon a false Oath it is not injustice at all in the Witness it is Perjury in him if there can be no injustice in a Witness much less a Counseller can be said to have his hand in the death of any because he has no power at all this must needs follow that if it shall be conceived to be Treason for a Counseller to plead against his Majesty then it will be Felony to plead against any man that is condemned unjustly for Felony The Counsellour is to make the best of his Clients cause then to leave it to the Court it is said I should demand judgement I do not remember that I leave it to you but still to demand Justice Counsellers they do ingage in business before they do rightly understand the true matter of the fact it is part of a Serjeants Oath that so soon as he does discover the falsity of the Cause he should forsake the Cause My Lord by what Mr. Nutly hath said it appears and I have many Witnesses in the Countrey three or four in Leicestershire would have spoken full to this that my Lord there was not before the Sentence of the King to the best of my knowledge a word spoken by any that they did intend to put him to death I say to my knowledge and my Lord when Judgement is demanded is it not twofold of Acquittal and Condemnation if those that then were entrusted with the power of Judicature if they did not know any Law to proceed by to take away his Majesty then I demanding their Judgement it doth not appear to be my Judgement and I refer it to the learned Councel that Councel many times at the Assises and other Courts have been sorry that the Verdict hath been given for their Clients when they have known the right lay on the other side and so I might in this The next thing I humbly offer is that if in right reason considering the condition his Majesty was then in the advising to draw up the Charge was rather to be looked upon as a matter of service than disservice then it cannot be called Treason it is very true my Lord that a very small little Overt act will amount to a
Countrey-man I was glad to hear of your great penitence for that horrid crime and I would have been glad to have seen it now advise with your self whether you do your self any good in speaking to extenuate when you know there is no man against whom there are such circumstances of aggravation as against you consider whether a publick penitence would not be more proper Waller I beseech you report me both to his Majesty and Parliament and receive me into your grace as being penitent truly penitent To say so now were a small thing for the fear of the punishment may procure it but I have been more penitent when no eye hath seen me but God when I never imagined to be questioned for this sin then my heart hath yerned in the business but I shal not trouble your Lordships God holds forth Mercy his Majesty holds forth Mercy the Parliament holds forth Mercy My Lords let me say something to you though it be but a word of the violence and force of temptation you may have been under it or may come to it Christ himself was under it we find that faithful Abraham by the power of a Temptation delivered up his wife to commit Adultery which scarce a Heathen would we finde that valiant Peter denied his Master righteous Lot committed incest None abhors this fact more then I do I have done it so long beforehand I need not be afraid to speak it in the face of the Judge of all men that is all I shall say I rendred my self three times I had as much opportunity to make my escape as any person whatsoever Lord Chief Baron It is understood Sir Hardress Clerk Isaac Pennington hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition as the former what canst thou say for thy self why judgment c. Pennington My Lord I have said what I have to say and shall not trouble your Lordships any further Clerk Henry Marten hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Marten I claim the benefit of the Proclamation Clerk Gilbert Millington hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Millington I shall not trouble you with long discourses I will say no more but this I have made a publick resentment of my sorrow for this offence formerly and many times I shall now desire no more but humbly beg that I may have the benefit of the Proclamation and pray his Majesties most gracious Pardon Clerk Robert Tichborne hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c Tichborne My Lord I will not trouble you with any repititions I have made my humble request before I leave it with you Clerk Owen Roe hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Roe My Lord I have no more to say then I said before Clerk Robert Lilburn hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Lilburn I shall refer my self without further trouble to the Court my Lord I beg the benefit of the Proclamation Clerk Thomas Waite hold up thy hand Thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Waite I can declare no more than what already my heart is sorry for what I have done I beg the benefit of the Proclamation Clerk Edmond Harvey hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Harvey My Lords I have no more then what I have said before Clerk John Downes Hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Downes I shall not trouble you any further I shall desire the benefit of his Majesties Proclamation Clerk Vincent Potter hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Potter My Lord I do not know Law I understand it not I am not in a condition to speak what I would have willingly spoke I desire that God would have mercy and I look for mercy from God and wept Clerk Augustine Garland Hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Garland I humbly desire your Lordships charitable opinion of me notwithstanding what has been objected against me I humbly refer my self to the Parliament Clerk George Fleetwood hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Fleetwood My Lord I have already confessed the fact I wish I could express my sorrow and wept Clerk James Temple hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. I. Temple My Lord I can say no more I beg the benefit of the Proclamation Clerk Simon Mayn hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Mayne I have told you before my Lord I have no more Clerk Peter Temple hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Peter Temple My Lord I came in upon the Proclamation and I humbly beg the benefit of it Cl. Tho. Waite hold up thy hand thou art in 〈◊〉 same condition what canst thou say for thy self Waite My Lord I refer it to your Lordships Clerk Francis Hacker hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Hacker My Lord. I have nothing to say but what has been before your Lordships Clerk Daniel Axtel hold up thy hand thou art in the same condition what canst thou say for thy self why Judgment c. Axtell May it please your Lordships my case differs from the rest of the Gentlemen L. Ch. B. I would be loth to hinder you but I must tell you that what hath been over-ruled must not be spoke to if you have any thing against the Indictment matter of Law go on Axtell I have one thing more that I did not then mention L. Ch. B. If it tend not as an exception to the Indictment it is not to be heard Axtell My Lord then I shall apply my self to that point I humbly conceive my Lord that my overt acts were not sufficiently set down in the Indictment as might be sufficient in Law to attaint me of high Treason I do not remember that the Overt act that was applyed to me in evidence was charged in the Indictment I have onely that exception because of the insufficiency of that point In the next place my Lord there is not the right additions to my name there are many persons of the same name I am arraigned by