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A65910 Memorials of the English affairs, or, An historical account of what passed from the beginning of the reign of King Charles the First, to King Charles the Second his happy restauration containing the publick transactions, civil and military : together with the private consultations and secrets of the cabinet. Whitlocke, Bulstrode, 1605-1675 or 6.; Anglesey, Arthur Annesley, Earl of, 1614-1686. 1682 (1682) Wing W1986; ESTC R13122 1,537,120 725

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brought to the Parliament declaring his Affections for Peace and concluding that God had given him a late Victory and therefore he desires them to consider of his long rejected Message from Evesham which was for peace but not till this time brought to the Parliament The Parliament appointed a day to take this into consideration and ordered all Officers and Souldiers to repair to their Colours on pain to be proceeded against by the Commissioners for Martial Law Mr. Hoyle was put into Sir Peter Osborn's Office and Mr. Salway into Sir Thomas Fanshaw's place in the Exchequer and several Judges went into the Counties which were quiet to keep Assizes and to execute the Commissions of Oyer and Terminer Colonel Cromwell was sent with two thousand horse to meet Prince Rupert coming to relieve Bandury but Colonel Massey had before prevented the Prince's coming The Irish Rebels that landed in Scotland were beaten into the Mountains by the Earl of Argyle and L. Gourdon Upon debate of the King's Letter it was held not to be a sufficient acknowledgment of the Parliament and therefore laid by Yet the House went on to compleat the Propositions for Peace and a day was appointed for the bringing in the Names of such Delinquents as should be excepted from pardon Divers Ministers of London presented a Petition to the Parliament for dispatch of the Directory of Worship and settling of pure Discipline and Government according to the word of God and complained of the Schisms in the Church The Petitioners had thanks from the House and the Committee of Lords and Commons appointed to confer with the Assembly to endeavour to reconcile some Differences among them and to find out a way how tender Consciences may be born withall so far as may stand with the peace of the Kingdom and the word of God The Assembly named 23 Ministers to give Ordination who were passed The Commons considered of the Propositions for peace the L. Macquire and Macmahon who escaped out of the Tower were again apprehended by the Lieutenant of the Tower and Sir John Clotworthy and upon a Report from a Committee of Lawyers it was ordered That they should be tried by a Commission of Oyer and Terminer and not by Martial Law The French Agent lay at the same house where Macquire and Macmahon were taken and had a chief hand in their escape and opposed the Officers searching in that house for papers c. because he lodged there But a Committee of both Houses were appointed to search there and did so notwithstanding the Agent 's pretences A Committee of Lawyers was appointed to meet daily about the Tryal of the Archbishop till the same should be dispatcht The Parliament ordered all the Forces of the Earl of Manchester and of Sir William Waller to joyn together and advance into the West The Ordinance passed for the Militia in Worcestershire About eighty of the Leicester horse in convoy of some Carriers were set upon by 120 of Colonel Hastings his men but the 80 routed and dispersed the 120 killed 8 and took 60 of them prisoners and store of Arms. By Letters from Sir Thomas Middleton it was certified That he having taken Mountgomery Castle was forced to retreat upon the coming of the King's Forces thither who again besieged the Castle with five thousand men and Middleton being joyned with Brereton Sir John Meldrum and Sir William Fairfax in all about three thousand they marched to relieve the Castle and were fought with by the Enemy who came up gallantly a good while to push of Pike and worsted the Parliament Horse Which so encouraged the King's Forces that they shouted and cryed The Day is ours the Day is ours at which the Parliament Forces were so enraged that they came on again with a fresh Charge and wholly routed and put them to flight took prisoners Major General Broughton Colonel Sir Thomas Tilsley Lieutenant Colonel Bludwell Major Williams nine Captains many inferiour Officers and fifteen hundred common Souldiers Of the King's part were slain about three hundred and about five hundred wounded Of the Parliament part were slain Sir William Fairfax with eleven wounds and Major Fitz Symons and about forty common Souldiers and about sixty wounded the Lord Byron who commanded the King's Forces hardly escaped by the goodness of his horse Upon Letters from my Lord Roberts both Houses took care for Supplies for Plymouth and their other Western Garrisons The King came to Exeter and gave order to remove all superfluous persons forth of the Town and for the Country to bring in thither all their provisions About forty prisoners of quality were brought from Plymouth to London and committed to Lambeth-house After the Siege was raised before Plymouth and the King gone to Exeter yet the Cornish-men continued near the Town to stop provisions coming to them by Land but were driven away again Many of the prisoners taken at Mountgomery being willing to take the Covenant and to serve against the Rebels in Ireland the Parliament to avoid the inconvenience of many prisoners consented thereunto and gave order for their transportation The Commons came near to a conclusion of their Debate touching the Propositions for peace Orders were sent to the Earl of Manchester and Sir William Waller to advance together with all expedition to prevent the King's return back to Oxford and took care for Supplies for them and for the Lord General The Parliament sent thanks to Sir Thomas Middleton Sir William Brereton and Sir John Meldrum for their good service at Mountgomery and which was more acceptable took order for Supplies for them the Lord Cherbury and Sir John Price came in to the Parliament Massey fell upon a party of the King 's between Bristoll and Monmouth took their Commander in chief and ten others and a hundred and sixty common Souldiers two hundred Arms and two pieces of Ordnance The King's Forces besieged Barnstable which rendred to them upon conditions which they afterwards broke pillaged the Parliament's Souldiers plundred the Town executed the Major and imprisoned many of the Inhabitants Colonel Ludlow took eighty of the King's Commissioners of Array in Somersetshire and Captain Savile took twenty of Prince Rupert's men prisoners Sir Thomas Fairfax recovered of his Wound and Sir H. Cholmly offered to surrender Scarborough Castle to the Parliament but now upon the news of the King's Victory in the West he revictuals it again and is again wholly for the King whereupon the Lord Fairfax sent Sir William Constable with a strong party to besiege the Castle Colonel Ware revolted from the Lord General in the West to the King and another Colonel quitted his Post and the Matters of that nature were referred to a Committee to be examined A Day was set apart by the Commons for receiving private Petitions At Basing-house the Besiegers took an Outwork a Captain and twenty eight Souldiers who defended it At Banbury they made a Breach and some of the
up to the Lords with a Message to importune them to pass the Self-denying Ordinance the Lords returned answer that they would speedily take the same into consideration which they did but rejected the Ordinance and here first began to increase the great difference between the two Houses of Parliament which swelled to so great a height as you will see afterwards The Commons proceeded about the Model of the Army and resolved that it should be 21000 Horse and Foot 6000 Horse 1000 Dragoons and 14000 Foot the 6000 Horse to be divided into ten Regiments the Dragoons into single Companies and every Regiment of Foot to consist of 1200 Men and ten Companies in a Regiment the whole charge of this Army to be 44955 l. by the Month to be raised by a proportionable Assessement The Lords sent to the Commons the names of their Commissioners the Earls of Northumberland Pembroke Salisbury and Denbigh and that a Letter be sent to the King for a Safe Conduct for all the Commissioners for the Treaty of Peace but the Commons did not now name their Commissioners because of the rejecting of the Self-denying Ordinance They also sent to the Commons to come to some resolution concerning the business of Dunnington Castle The King's forces under General Goring went off from near Portsmouth and upon their remove Colonel Jephson the Governour visited their quarters and took some Prisoners Colonel Mitton from Oswestree fell upon three Troups of Sir Jo. Byron took two Captains other Officers nineteen Troupers and Arms. The Commons named their Commissioners for the Treaty Mr. Pierpoint Mr. Hollis L. Wenman Sir Henry Vane Junior Mr. St. John Mr. Whitelocke Mr. Crew Mr. Prideaux and they agreed that the number of the Attendants of the Parliaments Commissioners should be eighty The Commons voted a Commission for the Lord Inchequin to be President of Munster and sent it to the Lords for their Concurrence and a warrant to the Commissioners of the Great Seal to pass the said Commission The Commons passed another Vote That many Congregations may be under one Presbyterian Government in order to the Directory for government of the Church The Lords agreed to the Ordinance for regulation of Free Quarter with a Clause added to exempt themselves and their Attendants and the Members of the House of Commons from billeting Souldiers which the Commons would not agree unto they desiring to be in no other condition than their Fellow Subjects were Letters from Major General Brown certified that three days before P. Rupert P. Maurice Colonel Sir Henry Gage Governour of Oxford and others with a party of about 1000 Horse and 800 Foot came against Abington on Cullam side intending to storm the Town and gained the Bridge before notice was given and were about to pull the same down To prevent which the Cawsey to the Bridge being very long and narrow Brown was compelled to send some of his men into the Meadow where was much water notwithstanding with much chearfulness they marched through the water And after a hot dispute which lasted near four hours they beat the Enemy from the Bridge who betaking themselves to the Hedges Brown's men with wondrous courage beat them from the Hedges and afterwards quite out of the Field A party of his horse at the same time when a party of the King 's fell on them in their Quarters slew wounded and took almost all of them in which service Major Bradbury was slain upon the Bridge and about eight of Brown's Souldiers and some wounded Of the King's party were ●lain Sir Henry Gage and the Major of the Prince's Regiment with many others of note and they carried away a Cart-load of dead men besides those carried away on Horseback The Commons ordered thanks to be sent to Major General Brown for his good service and 2000 l. to pay his Souldiers Letters from Captain Swanley informed that Major General Laughern took the Town of Cardigan in Wales upon surrender but the Castle holding out obstinately he made a breach with his great Ordnance and in three days took it by storm and in it 200 Officers and Souldiers with their Arms and much Plunder The States Ambassadours desired to take their leaves and a Pass to goe to the King to take leave of him they prayed likewise an Answer to their Propositions touching Shipping and Free Trade which was referred to the Committee of both Houses for this business The Lords concurred in the Letter and Money for Abington The Lords sent down the names of the Attendants of the four Lords Commissioners for the Treaty desiring the Commons to doe the like for their Members and they ordered them to bring in a List the next day The Commons proceeded in the Directory for Church Government and voted Pastors Doctors Teachers Elders and Deacons to be the Officers of the Church Sir Richard Greenvile made a gallant assault upon Plymouth and possessed two or three of the Out-works and turned the Ordnance against the Town but the Garrison with great resolution beat them out again and slew many of them The Commons ordered Sir William Waller for the present to command in chief in the West with a party of 6000 Horse A Ship of Scarborough driven by storm into Hartlepoole was there seized on by the Parliaments forces and in her two Brass and four Iron Pieces of Ordnance with store of Arms. Sir Thomas Fairfax and Colonel Forbes standing together near Pomfret Castle a Cannon Bullet from thence came betwixt them and the wind of it beat them both to the ground and put out one of Colonel Forbes his Eyes and spoiled that side of his Face and yet no other hurt to Sir Thomas Fairfax The Commons considered the business of the Navy at Sea for the next Spring and the estimate of the yearly charge both for Summer and Winter Guard was proposed to be 100000 l. per annum Letters from the Lord Roberts informed the particulars of the business at Plymouth that Greenvile alarmed the works about the Town in four several places and after a very hot dispute became Master of one great work but was beaten off from the other three works with great loss leaving 75 of his men dead upon the place and at least four times as many more slain in the service and many hundreds wounded As soon as they were beaten off the three works the Plymouth men who behaved themselves with extraordinary gallantry environed the fourth work and the Enemy presently surrendred it upon quarter there were many Prisoners taken and much Arms. The House took care for supply of that Garrison One Dobson was ordered to be tried for contriving and printing a scandalous Book against the Parliament and the Lord General and they gave order for suppressing all scandalous Pamphlets Some who arrested a Servant of Sir Edward Hungerford's were sent for as Delinquents The Letter to the King about the Treaty was finished and Mr. Marshal and Mr. Vines
the King's Forces at Thrup near Farrington killed one Neast a Lieutenant of Horse who formerly kept a Dicing-house and three or four more and brought away 19 good Horse Major Sheffield fell upon the Enemies quarters on the edge of Northamptonshire took Sir Tho. Read Lieutenant Denton and divers Horse and Prisoners and intercepted with Read two Letters of importance 8. Orders concerning the Army and drawing together Forces for Sir Tho. Fairfax and for supplies and some High Sheriffs named A Committee of both Houses named to consider of selecting Officers to supply the Commands of Members of both Houses Morton Bishop of Durham a Reverend man was brought before the Commons for Christening of a Child in the old way and signing it with the sign of the Cross contrary to the Directory and because he refused to deliver up the Seal of the County Palatine of Durham he was committed to the Tower Serjeant Major Hudderston under Greenevile came to London with 30 Horse and submitted to the Parliament offering to take the Covenant Three of Waller's Troups were surprised in their quarters by Goring's Forces and about 50 of them taken the rest escaped Letters from Scotland informed that Lieutenant General Bayly and Major General Vrrey took 800 horse-load of provisions going to Montross the men horse bag and baggage and dividing themselves pursued Montross into the High-lands 9. Colonel Rainsborough's Regiment appointed for Colonel Grey Referred to the Committee to consider of the profits of Places lately enjoyed by Members of Parliament and what of them may be spared for ease of the publick charge Letters from Massey informed that the discontented Herefordshire men having laid down their Arms upon Articles with the Princes afterwards and contrary to those Articles the Princes caused three worthy Gentlemen to be executed who were conceived chief in that Rising That there the Princes levy men and money by violence and he saith that if 1000 horse may be sent to him he doubts not but most of the discontented party will come in to him many being already come this was in a special manner referred to the Committee of both Kingdoms The Master of the Ceremonies ordered to acquaint the States Ambassadours that to morrow if they pleased they might have audience of both Houses and Coaches were to be provided for their Reception The Earl of Warwick laid down his Commission of Lord Admiral in compliance with the Ordinance for discharging the Members of both houses from all employments Military and Civil but with a protestation of continuing his faithfulness and endeavours to serve the publick as long as he lived and some believed that the Precedents of the Earls of Essex Manchester and Denbigh were inducements to him to doe the like He did gallant service in the time of his Command for the Parliament and deserves an honourable mention 10. Care taken for employment of old Officers left out of the new Army and of the condition of the West and of settling the Excise and for the Forces of Poole and Dorsetshire 11. Orders for the Army for the Regiment of Kent under Colonel Welden to go to Sir Thomas Fairfax and for Officers to repair to their Charges by a day or to be cashiered and Sir Tho. Fairfax to choose new ones this proclaimed by beat of Drum and sound of Trumpet The States Ambassadours had Audience in both Houses with solemnity and they spake of the affection of their Masters to this Kingdom and their deslres to have mediated peace and composed the distractions thereof but that it took no effect and the distractions were now wider than when they came first hither Therefore there being nothing more for them to doe their Masters had sent for them home and they had taken their leave of the king and were now come to do the same of the Parliament Sir William Brereton began to Mine at Hawarden Castle and took in Goozanna House and in it a Captain and 27 prisoners and some Officers and from thence blocked up Chester on the Welch side gained Manley House killed divers and took a Captain and many prisoners 12. Care taken touching the Customs and for the Officers Oaths and for the Affairs of the Admiralty Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax gave an account of the state of his Army and the chearfulness of his Souldiers and his want of pay for them This was very early for them to want pay and the House were very sensible of the inconveniences which might thereupon ensue and therefore specially referred it to the Committee of the Army to take order therein Pay ordered for the British Forces in Ireland and an Ordinance to be brought in for satisfaction of their Arrears out of the Rebels-Estates next after satisfaction to the Adventures Care for pay for Brereton's Forces by borrowing upon the Excise 14. Ordinance committed for associating the Northern Counties Ordinances past for reimbursing the Moneys raised for Brown and for Langherine another considered for pay of the Lincolnshire forces Order that the Scots Brigade lately come from Sir William Brereton be sent to by the Scots Commissioners to return to his assistance again the Enemy drawing towards him and the Committee of both Kingdoms to take care thereof and for provisions and money for him the House took order Langdale relieved Sir Jo. Winter's House besieged by Massey and was hurt in the Arm Massey brought off his men with little loss Care for Imployment of the Officers of the Earl of Manchester and of Sir William Waller not imployed in the new Army Order for Goods concealed from the Excise to be forfeited About 300 discontented persons got together into a body in Kent and took Sir Percival Hart's House but Colonel Blunt being sent against them with 500 foot and two Troups of horse dispersed them and took divers of the chief of them and regained the House 15. Debate touching persons not to be admitted to the Sacrament Both Houses agreed upon a Committee of six Lords viz. Essex Warwick Northumberland Pembroke Say North and 12 Commoners viz. Sir William Earle Sir Philip Stapleton Sir Jo. Evelyn jun. Sir Christop Wray Mr. Rolle Greene Hollis Selden Rouse Eden Lisle and Whitelocke to manage the Admiralty business An Insurrection in Westmerland and a design to have surprized a Magazine of the Parliaments there was suppressed The Plague increased in Newcastle and the Inhabitants were discontented at the Imposition upon Coals Some of Pomfret Garrison sallied out but were beaten back with the loss of Colonel Tindall Lieutenant Colonel Middleton and other Officers and many Souldiers Carlisle was upon Treaty to render A Dunkirk Ship loaden with Arms and Ammunition for the King taken by the Besiegers of Scarborough A party from Abington under Captain Blundell met with some of Dennington forces took a Colonel and a Major and divers others and slew a Captain and others of them Brown himself between Shottover and Oxford took divers Carriages and about
were left out of the new Model should be equally provided for as the English Officers Order for Coat and Conduct money for those that were pressed for Souldiers Debate of non-admission to the Sacrament Letters from Gen. Leven certified that he had sent part of his Army to assist Sir William Brereton and would be ready to march Southwatds A Letter from Prince Rupert to the Earl of Essex in answer to his Letter touching the hanging up of the Parliaments prisoners full of haughtiness and that he would follow his own judgment without the Earl of Essex his advice Upon which the Commons ordered a Declaration to be drawn 24. Debate in a Grand Committee touching non-admission to the Sacrament An Ordinance past for pressing of Souldiers and that all repair to their Colours and none to depart from their Colours without licence and search for them that depart and to be punisht Letters from Abington certifie that Cromwel and others coming within a mile of Oxford hindred the King's remove towards Worcester Colonel West nominated by the Common-council to be Lieutenant of the Tower 25. Letters from Skippon informed that the discontented Horse came in and were reduced and promised faithful Service Ordinance committed for supply of the wants of Members of Parliament whose Estates were in the power of the Enemy Ordered that those late of the Lifeguard of the Earl of Essex shall have 3 s. a day above the allowance of a common Trouper and have Horse and Arms from the State and Sir Tho. Fairfax to appoint their Rendezvous This is to be one of the six Troups to attend the body of Sir Thomas Fairfax Ordinance for reimbursing monies raised for Sir William Brereton sent to the Lords and for other monies for Lancashire forces Ordinance past both Houses That none be admitted to preach but such as are ordained by this or some other reformed Church except persons permitted Colonel John Fiennes sent out a party near Newbury who took of the Enemy 17 Prisoners and Arms and all their Horse then they summoned Brocas House which the Enemy quitted and fled and Major Temple pursued and did executiou on them 26. The Mayor Aldermen and Common-council came into the House thanked them for the favour in admitting them to make choice of a Lieutenant of the Tower and presented Colonel West for that Service and desired care might be had of Gloucester and for bringing in the Arrears of London Colonel West was admitted Lieutenant of the Tower till further order of the Houses And an Ordinance to be brought in for raising a considerable force in Gloucestershire and for money to pay them Ordinance past for reimbursing monies for the Lifeguard Letters from Lieutenant General Cromwell informed that he had fallen upon a party of the King's Horse under the Earl of Northampton and part of the Queens Regiment near Oxford and took of them 400 horse 200 prisoners whereof many Officers and Gentlemen of quality and the Queens own Colours the rest fled to Bletchington where Colonel Windebank kept a Garrison for the King L. G. Cromwell pursued them thither and after some Treaty took the House also upon Articles and therein store of Arms and Ammunition and 72 horse more 28. After long debate the Commons resolved that the business of the Admiralty should be managed by Commissioners of both Houses consisting of three and those were the Earl of Warwick Mr. Bense and Mr. Pelham of the Commons House A thousand men of the King 's lost before Taunton and Col. Popham's House at Wellington being taken and the Siege of Taunton continuing very close it was ordered that Sir Thomas Fairfax and Skippon should advance into the West with the forces for relief of Taunton 8000 horse and foot and care taken for money and provisions for them Order for the Train of Artillery to be sent down to him A quarrel in Westminster-hall between Sir William Andrews and Col. Tyrrell informed to the House and that Tyrrell behaved himself discreetly in it he was called into the House and had their thanks for his carriage therein Sir William Andrews ordered to be taken into safe custody and when the House were not sitting Mr. Speaker was authorized to send his Warrants to prevent quarrels Letters from the North informed that the Scots were upon their march Southwards with 9000 foot and 3 Regiments of horse 29. Debate touching providing of Arms and Ammunition and 12000 l. allowed for it Sir Theodore Mayhernes Order to be discharged of Taxes was vacated The power of Marshal Law ordered to be given to persons in every County for suppressing and punishing of Insurrections Debauchery of some Officers of the Army occasioned an Order to Sir Tho. Fairfax That the Discipline of War be duly executed Lambeth Parsonage conferred on Mr. White one of the Assembly Two thousand pounds ordered for Taunton Proclamation for all Officers and Souldiers to repair to their Colours upon pain of cashiering for the Officers and death for the common Souldiers M. G. Brown with a party from Abington fell upon a party of the King 's near Farington took a Captain and other Officers and Souldiers Then upon Intelligence met with another party and took Col. Conquest M. Bamfield 3 Captains 3 Lieutenants and other prisoners Colonel Fiennes fell upon a party of the King 's near Witney and took from them 120 horse 3 Colours 40 prisoners and 50 Arms. L. G. Cromwell at Bampton Bush fell upon another party of the King 's surprized them all and took Col. Sir H. Vaughan 2 Lieutenant Colonels M. Lee 5 Captains 8 Lieutenants 8 Ensigns Dr. Dunse 20 Sergeants 230 Prisoners and Arms. May 1645. 1. Letters from Col. Massey certified that Prince Rupert with a party of about 6000 horse and foot intercepting his Scouts charged upon Massey into Ledbury who received him and beat his men back to a Retreat his horse made several charges till his foot got off 40 of the Prince's men were slain many of them Officers and the L. Hastings one That Massey lost about 7 men and some of the horse from the Countries not standing well to it the Enemy got in among the Foot and took divers prisoners whereof they sent a List to Massey of 110 but 80 of them were none of his men but country-people M. Bacchus was wounded and taken prisoner Major Harley wounded Captain Bayly and Captain Forster taken prisoners by the Prince's forces That Lydney House was fired and Sir John Winter left there 8 pieces of Ordnance An Ordnance ordered to be brought in for setling 1000 l. per annum upon Col. Massey for his gallant services for his life and 200 l. in present and a Letter of Thanks was sent to him The Resident of the States had a day appointed for his audience Debate touching non-admission to the Sacrament 2. The States Ambassadour had audience in the usual solemn way and he made demands for restitution of some ships taken
30 wounded in all That they slew about 10 of the Enemy and took Prisoners Colonel Robert Legge about 50 other Officers and about 500 Common Souldiers with store of Arms and Ammunition The Declaration of the Transactions with the States Ambassadours was published wherein the Parliament set forth the abusive and ill carriage of the States Ambassadours Borelli and Rainsborough both made Knights and Barons by the King and that they shewed themselves rather parties for the King than Mediatours between him and his Parliament They demand justice against those Ambassadors and declare their own condition not to be yet so low but that they can resent if not return both Courtesies and Injuries They acknowledge the Christian and neighbourly Zeal of the States to the peace of this Nation and desire to know wherein they may be useful to them their honoure Neighbours and Predecessours in the like Sufferings 29. Order to Audite the Accounts of the Officers of the train of Artilery of Sir William Waller Cromwel drew off to the Isle of Ely Sir Tho. Fairfax blocked up Bostal-house and made a bridge with two Forts near Kidlington they came towards Leicester A party of Colonel Norton's Forces went towards Langford-house and placed an Ambuscado undiscovered by the Enemy who came forth to fall upon them they retreated to their Ambuscado the Enemy followed them and were all surprised There were taken Colonel Griffith the Governour divers Officers 63 Prisoners and their Arms and 10 killed 30. A Letter from the Committee of Gloucester of the danger of that place and County by the removal of Colonel Massey answer'd by the Commons that they would take care of that City and of the County Prisoners from Guernesey referred to a Committee and to examine that business Ordinance sent up to the Lords to enable the Committee of Plymouth to execute Martial Law there The Kentish Regiment continued and pay for them there Major General Browne came to London to hasten the Provisions for the siege before Oxford 31. The business of the Church debated and Ordinances touching the Excise and for money for the Forces in the West Letters written to the Sub-commissioners of Excise and to the Officers in the several Counties to give incouragement and assistance for the levying the Excise money Order of both Houses for their Committee touching Forts and Castles to be reduced in the Quorum to 2 Lords and 4 Commoners Letters Informed that the King was set down before Leicester June 1645. 2. On consideration of the King 's being at Leicester and the danger to the associated Counties thereby the House Ordered that the Committee of both Kingdomes should consider of such disposal of the Armies under Sir Thomas Fairfax as may be most advantageous for the publick and that the blocking up of Oxford be left to Major General Browne Browne being at the door of the House at that time was sent for in and had the thanks of the House for his good service and was desired to continue his care and constancy therein and to return to his charge Ordinances past for moneys for the West and other Forces Colonel Rainsborough with his Regiment of foot and three Troups of Colonel Sheffield's horse took in Gaunt-house 10 miles from Oxford and therein the Governour with all his Soldiers Arms Ammunition and Provisions The King's Forces having made their batteries stormed Leicester those within made stout resistance but some of them betrayed one of the Gates the women of the Town labour'd in making up the breaches and in great danger The King's Forces having entred the Town had a hot incounter in the Market place and many of them were slain by shot out of the Windows That they gave no quarter but hanged some of the Committee and cut others in pieces Some Letters said that the kennels ran down with bloud That Colonel Gray the Governour and Captain Hacker were wounded and taken Prisoners and very many of the Garrison put to the Sword and the Town miserably plunder'd The King entred the Town on Sunday June I st and sent part of his forces into Derbyshire 3. Order for Colonel Massey to advance into the West and the City and County of Gloucester to be governed by a Committee as the Parliament shall direct Ordinance for money for the siege of Oxford and two Regiments to go out of London to Major General Brown to that siege An Ordinance for money for the Isle of Ely The Papists and others in Northumberland plotted to surprize Sir John Fenwick the High Shiriff and the Militia there but were discovered and suppressed Sir John Meldrum dyed of his wounds received in the siege of Scarborough Castle Both parties in the West had often Skirmishes A party sallyed out of Oxford and took and killed about 80 of the Parliament's Forces the next day a party of the Parliaments took 12 of the Garrison and brought away 50 Cows from under their Walls Letters intercepted by Colonel Massey mention the King 's concluding a peace with the Irish-Rebels 4. Order of both Houses for 200 l. for L. G. Middleton and a pass for him to goe to his charge in the Scots Army 2000 l. of the Arrears due to the Earl of Essex charged on the Excise An Ordinance past for reimbursing money lent by the Commissioners of Excise for reducing Oxford Lieutenant General Cromwel got together 3000 horse in the associated Counties The City of London petitioned that recruits may be had for Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army and a Committee sent thither that the Army or part of it may be ordered to march towards the Enemy in the field and to regaine Leicester and to prevent the surprisal of other places and the Scots pressed to advance Southwards that Cromwel may command the association and care taken of the Navy and that the proceedings of the late Treaty may be published The House called in the Petitioners and gave them thanks for their care and good affections At a Conference the Lords acquainted the Commons with an Information concerning the taking of Leicester which was referred to a Committee to be examined 5. Orders for recruits of the Kentish Regiment and Colonel Fleetwood's Regiment An Ordinance considered for the sale of Delinquents Estates Another sent to the Lords to give power of Martial Law to the Committee of Kent The King continued at Leicester and began to fortify there and then marched forth to meet Sir T. F. who was drawn off from Oxford to advance towards the King 6. Massey wrote for recruits and some Members of the House were appointed to answer his Letters that they were sent to him and that he should never want the incouragement of Parliament and prayed him to go on in the business of the West with his wonted valour and prudence Upon the danger of Newport Paganel the King drawing that way and upon the Petition of the Town Sir Sam. Luke was continued Governour there
of their own After the taking of Bridgwater Sir Thomas Fairfax sent Colonel Whaley Colonel Fincher Sir Robert Pye and Colonel Sheffield with a commanded party of Horse towards Reading to convoy the recruits to his Army who in their march by Sherborne fell upon the Regiment of Colonel Antell a Dr. of Divinity whom they took prisoner with other Officers 40 Troupers and 150 Horse 26. The House turned into a grand Committee debated the Ordinance for Sale of Delinquents Estates They voted Colonel Birch to be Governour of Bridgewater he was appoved of by Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Lords consent was desired Mr. Peters who brought up the Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax was called into the House and made a large Relation of the particular passages in the taking of Bridgewater he also produced several Commissions in Characters which the House referred to a Committee to be decyphered and gave 100 l. to Mr Peters for his unwearied services and sent a Letter of thanks to Sir Thomas Fairfax for all his great services and particularly for this of Bridgewater Order for Sir John Hewet to pay 2000 l. being the fine for his Delinquency by a day or else his lands to be sold Letters from Abington informed that about 50 Horse from Oxford faced Abington and began to drive away the poor Inhabitants Cattle that a small part of Abington Horse drew out immediately charged and routed the Oxford party who though they had their reserves to retreat unto yet were so amazed that they ran the contrary way The Abington Horse pursued and charged them within half a mile of Wallingford took 20 Horse 15 prisoners some Officers and but one of the Abington men wounded That they used frequently to march to the Walls of Wallingford and Oxford and take some of their men prisoners That they in Oxford are in fear of a siege and cut down the Trees and Hedges within half a mile of the Town and fired North Hinksey That in Abington they have 200 prisoners of the Enemy but they have none to exchange for them That the sickness increaseth much at Abington 100 Houses there shut up and the Souldiers lye without the Town in Hutts Letters came of the surrender of Scarborough Castle 20 Witches in Norfolk were Executed 28. Letters from the L. Inchequin certifie the necessities of Youghall besieged by the Rebels and pray supplies from the Parliament The House took care for money and provisions to be sent to Ireland and ordered an Ordinance to be brought in for executing the Irish Rebels and Mutineers by Martial Law The P. Electors Committee was brought to the Quorum of five that they might meet the oftner Order for the Committee of both Kingdoms to take care to keep in the forces of Newarke who did much damage to the Adjacent Counties A Collection ordered for the losses of those of Leicester Letters informed the surrender of Scarborough Castle to Colonel Sir Mathew Boynton with the Articles of surrender and that there was taken 37 pieces of Ordnance 1000 Arms and great store of Ammunition and Plunder It was further certified that Raby Castle was surrendered to the Parliament forces and that those of Skipton fearing a siege sent their Horse to Newarke but a Troop of Colonel Brights met with a party of them killed divers took Sir Charles Howard of Naworth some Officers and 20 other prisoners 29. Letters from the Scots Army certified the taking of Cannon Froome a Garrison of the Kings between Worcester and Hereford by assault about 70 of the Garrison slain but 8 of the Scots and 20 hurt the Governor Colonel Barnold taken Prisoner and wounded several other Officers and 30 Soldiers Prisoners The House of Commons ordered a Letter of thanks to be written to General Leven and a Jewel of 500 l. to be provided by Mr. Allen a Goldsmith one of their Members to be presented to General Leven as a Badge of the favour of both Houses to him Referred to the Committee of Glocester and Worcester to consider whether it were fit to slight the works at Cannon Froome or to keep it a Garrison and then to name a fit person to be Governour An Ordinance past for providing 2000 l. for Ireland and 200 l. for M. G. Skippon Another sent up to the Lords for 5000 l. for the West The L. Wharton and four of the House of Commons agreed upon to go Commissioners into Scotland A party from the Garrison of Lyme took in Chedwick-house belonging to Count Arundel within six miles of Lyme and in it 100 prisoners 30 Horse store of Arms Provisions and Ammunition Sir Thomas Fairfax advanced to Wells and Massey with a body of Horse towards Exeter The L. Hopton sought to gain the Club-men to him he and Greenvile and those of Exeter were about 7000 the King continued in Wales 30. The day of publick Fast Letters from Aylesbury informed that they at Oxford fearing a siege sent out 300 Horse to force contribution and Provisions to be brought into Oxford that this party were met with by about a 100 of Aylesbury Horse who had several hot Incounters with them and at length routed the King's forces killed many of them took 50 prisoners 80 Arms and beat the rest back again to Oxford 31. Ordered that the Committee for the 4 Northern Counties should treat with the Committee of both Kingdoms about the blocking up of Newarke and that a Letter should be sent to the Committee at York to send as many of their forces as they could spare to joyn with the forces of Nottingham c. for that purpose Ordered that Lieutenant Colonel Throckmorton be examined by the Committee of examinations concerning the loss of Monmouth and that business to be again revived The House turned into a grand Committee about the Ordinance for Sale of Delinquents Estates Order for Mr. Strickland the Parliaments Agent in Holland to have 500 l. for his good Service and towards his charges there and 400 l. per an allowed him during his continuance in that imployment to begin from his first going over thither Colonel Harley was appointed by the General to be Governour of Cannon Froome the Scots advanced through the Forrest of Dean and had Intelligence that the King passed over the Severne towards Bristol That about 80 of his Horse endeavouring to pass over Severne were taken by one of the Parliaments Friggots That many of the Welsh are quartered about Eristol which Prince Rupert labours to fortifie and had several meetings with the Club-men of Wiltshire and Somersetshire but could not prevail with them to take up Armes and joyn with him Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army informed that from Wells he sent a party against Sherborne and another party of two Regiments of Horse and two Companies of Dragoons under Colonel Rich towards Bath to view the Town and to give him an account of it That at the approach of Rich's Dragoons near
committed many outrages and the next day he lay at Belvoir Castle and the next day at Stamford which was very suddain As they past along some Forces from Burleigh and Leicester fell upon their Rear took 80 horse 4 Colours divers Arms and about 20 prisoners of the L. St. Paul's Regiment The Van of the King's Army being as far as Huntington by Stilton a party under Captain Gibs and Captain Poe from Huntington skirmished with the Van killed divers and retreated to Huntington On Sunday last in the Afternoon the King's Forces entred Huntington after some resistance made at the Bridge by Captain Bennet with his Foot till he his Lieutenant and many of his men were slain the King's Souldiers miserably plundered the Town and the Counties of Bedford and Cambridge and took away their horses and goods Aug. 21. Sir Thomas Fairfax sat down before Bristol Colonel Ireton with a Brigade of four Regiments of Horse and Dragoons and 500 Foot quartered onthat side next Gloucester Sir Thomas Fairfax on the other side Prince Rupert made several attempts to escape out of Bristol with his horse but was beaten back with loss he fired Bedmister and some other Villages near Bristol and the whole Temple Street in the City his strength in the City was said to be 900 horse 2500 Foot and 1500 Auxiliaries the Prince disarmed divers of the Citizens Order that Sherbourne Castle should be demolished Massey with 2000 horse attended Goring's motions 26. A Petition of divers Citizens on the behalf of Lieutenant Colonel Lilburne shewing his former opposing of Tyranny and oppression and his late good Services desiring the causes of his commitment may be examined and maintenance allowed him The Speaker returned answer to the Petition That Lieutenant Colonel Lilburne was committed by order of the House and referred to a legal Tryal that the House did not approve of the time of presenting this Petition but in convenient time they would do further therein according to Justice that they had upon a former Petition from him allowed him 100 l. for his Subssistance Sir John Tyrrells composition of 600 l. approved and 500 l. of it ordered for the Garrison of Newport Paganell Supplies ordered for several Forces An Ordinance past for setling the Court of the Dutchy of Lancaster in the hands of the Lord Grey Speaker of the Lords House and of the Speaker Lenthall 27. The House sate and being informed of the plunderings by the King's Forces in their march in the associated Counties they ordered the Earl of Warwick to be General of that Association and forthwith to go thither and command the Forces for the security of those Counties Shrewbury Forces took in Linsell House and a 100 horse and armes there and the King's Forces quitted and fired Dowley Castle The Scots Forces finished three Mines at Hereford and intended a storm there 28. Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax desired pay for his Army supplies for his Magazine and recruits for which the House made several Orders An Ordinance sent to the Lords for Elections in Eaton College as formerly and for their discharge from Taxes Order for 750 l. for M. G. Brown in part of his Arrears and a little to sweeten him Order for 4. pounds a week for Sir George Grelley out of his own Estate being sequestred The King gave several Allarums to Cambridge faced them with a party of horse and his Forces plundered the Country where they went laid great Taxes upon Towns to be paid presently and so they marched forwards Understanding that the Country were rising and some Forces from Cambridge coming against him he went to Wobourne where some of his straglers were taken his Forces plundered much in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire and within 5 miles of S. Albans some skirmishes were between parties of them and of the Parliaments Forces under M. Cokaine and some killed and taken prisoners A Parliament Ship took a French Vessel bound for Excester and therein divers Letters of Consequence from the Queen to the King Four hundred and fifty Prisoners taken by M. G. Langherne took the Covenant to serve the Parliament against the Rebels in Ireland whither they were sent with supplies for Younghall 29. The Prisoners taken at Sherburne were sent up to London and Sir Lewis Dives and Sir John Strangeway's kneeling at the Barr were committed to the Tower for high Treason Orders for restraint of the abuses of Keepers in permitting the Parliaments prisoners to go abroad The King came to Oxford and many of his straglers were taken up by the horse of Alesbury and the Adjacent Counties Order for M. G. Brown to go down to his charge and for Mr. Dunch and Mr. Whitelocke to conferr with him about it 30. Debate concerning the Northern horse that mutinyed and Orders for their march Southwards and with other Forces to attend the King's motions Colonel Thornhaugh who brought the Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax was called in and had the thanks of the House for his good services and two horses bestowed on him Order for a Day of Humiliation for praying a blessing on Scotland and on Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army and for Cessation of the Plague in both Kingdoms Orders touching Sequestrations and supplies for Forces in Leicester-shire and for disbanding some Forces raised in the Associated Counties upon the Allarum of the King 's coming thither September 1645. 1. Upon a Petition from the Militia of London the House ordered that the Committee of the Militia at the Savoy should execute the Warrants of the Militia of London upon the Ordinance for searching for Delinquents and Papists and turning them out of the lines of Communication and should be saved harmless therein by the House They also took care for the payment of the Arrears to the Waggoners of Sir James Harrington's Brigade Orders for Writs for New Elections in several places And that none who had taken up Arms against the Parliament should be capable to be chosen a member of Parliament Orders for pay for the Garrison of Leicester and for a Collection for the poor in that Town and County Order for the Committee of the three Counties to sign a Warrant to their Treasurer for a fortnights pay for Reformadoes Intelligence came that the Clubmen of Gloucester and Somerset-shire have expressed good affection to Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army That Somerset-shire raised 2000 men who joyned with a party of Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army and they took the strong Fort of Ports-head-point and in it 6 peices of Ordnance a Demy Culverin and 200 Arms and that 36 of the Garrison had terms to go to their houses the rest were run away before one of the terms was an Oath never to bear Arms against the Parliament That the Parliament Forces seized upon a Ship in Avon with 12 peices of Ordnance 50 prisoners and store of Ammunition That Sir Bernard Ashley and Colonel Daniell riding out of the works at Bristol to see the
volley of Shot The Parliaments Forlorn hope seeing the Dragoons ingaged gave fire whereupon the enemy gave fire all along the Hedges and Works and the reserve to the Forlorn Hope came up to relieve them and being so ingaged the whole Army advanced and about eight at night the Battle began about six fields from the Town and they fought from hedge to hedge till the enemy were beaten into their Barricado's Which they maintained for an hour after very resolutely and often times repulsed the Parliaments Forces yet at last they got over the Barricado's and forced the Enemy into the Town whereupon the Horse were let in who scowring the Streets were received by the enemy and a hot charge given by both Parties Yet at last the enemy was driven out of the Barricadoes at the farthest end of the Town and by this time many Prisoners were taken by the Parliaments Forces and put into the Church but far more escaped being dark over the hedges and by-ways throwing down their Arms and every man flying several ways The Parliaments Forces were no sooner possest of the Town but the enemies Magazine which they left in the Church was fired whether on purpose by them or by accident is uncertain but it proved a terrible blow blowing up the Church with all the Wood and Lead upon it deforming many Houses killed some of the Prisoners in the Church and some of the Parliament Soldiers in the Church-yard two great webs of Lead fell within twice a Horse length of the General many others were hurt with the stones timber and lead Most of the Town was shaken by this blow being the terriblest that hath been seen there being above eighty barrels of powder blown up together The enemy perceiving their Magazine thus on fire gave one Charge more with their Horse commanded by Sir John Digby but being fired upon by the Musquetiers they took their farewell the Parliament horse instantly advanced through the Town after them and began the pursuit about eleven at night The Infantry were taken slain and totally routed the Horse many taken and dispersed and the rest gone in great disorder towards Cornwall they had eight Regiments of Horse two thousand five hundred or three thousand men very resolute and fought valiantly and after they were chased from hedge to hedge defended their Barricadoes and Works at push of pike and the butt end of their Musquets They were old Cornish Foot many of the Parliaments Men were wounded Officers and Soldiers more than hath been at any Storm since the Army came forth The Parliaments first Word was Emmanuel God with us and a Furse-bush in their hats the Enemys Word was We are with You and a handkerchief tied about their right arm they having gotten the Word and Signal of the Parliaments Army they took a second Word which was Truth and a handkerchief or white mark in their Hats The particulars of this great Victory were not ready to be sent up with these Letters 20. Both Houses agreed upon several Votes for the chusing of Elders in the Church-Government The two Messengers that brought the news of the success of Torrington had forty pound for a gratuity A Passage at the Common Council of London referred to a Committee to be examined 21. Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax informed the particulars of the great success at Torrington Six hundred Prisoners taken many of them of Quality Eighty of the Princes Life-guard Thirty of Hoptons Life-guard Three thousand Arms taken Hopton shot in the thigh Sir John Digby wounded in the head others of note wounded Divers of the enemy slain in the Fight and in the Church by firing the Magazine Eighty Barrells of Powder blown up in the Church done purposely and twenty pound given by the Enemy to one of their men to do it Twenty of the Parliaments Party slain in the Fight and at the firing of the Magazine and an hundred wounded All the Enemies Bag and Baggage and Provisions taken The Messenger had twenty pounds for a reward 23. A Gratuity of fifty pounds to the Messenger from Sir T. F. A day of thanksgiving appointed Debate about the business of the Navy and the Officers for the next Summers Fleet voted one by one Eight Colours were taken and brought in from Torrington-Battle one the Lord Hoptons with this Motto I will strive to serve my Soveraign King about a hundred of the Enemy slain Lord Hoptons Commission taken and Sir John Digby's and other Papers five hundred pound in the Lord Hoptons Quarters and much rich pillage Many of the Kings Party came in to Sir Thomas Fairfax who prepared to follow the broken Troops into Cornwall where they had in all but four hundred Foot Sir Tho. Fairfax blocked up Barnstable and took in the Earl of Bathes House neer it his Forces took two Ships with ten pieces of Ordnance and ten tun of Salt Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax to the Parliament desiring two Months pay for his Army that they may not take free Quarter in Cornwall and desires care may be taken that the Oxford Horse may not infest the Countries thereabouts whilst his Army was in the West The House made effectual Orders in these things and for recruits for the Army The Forces besieging Banbury were about three thousand and about three hundred in the Castle the Parliaments Forces Quartered in the Town and the Enemy made some Sallyes but were beaten back Col. Fleet-wood fell upon the Kings Quarters neer Wood-stock took fifty Horse and divers Prisoners 24. An Ordinance debated for discharging the Ward-ship of the Heirs Males of Sir Christopher Wray late a Member of the House according to a former Vote for discharging the Wardship of those who died in this War in the Parliaments Service Upon debate hereof the Original of Ward-ships and the misapplication of the intention of Ward-ships and the present oppression to the Families of Noble-men and Gentle-men by Ward-ships being opened to the House by Selden Maynard St John Whitelocke and other Lawyers the House passed a Vote That the Court of Wards it self and all Ward-ships Tenures Licenses for Alienation c. should be taken away and the Lords concurred therein The Ordinance for the Northern Association was continued Order for fifty thousand pound out of the Excise for Sir Tho. Fairfax's Army in Cornwall Articles for the Surrender of Ashbe de-la-zouch were sent up to the Parliament and a debate upon them whether the Estates of the Earl of Huntington Col. Hastings and Col. Perkins should be discharged of Sequestration which the House did agree unto Some of the Garrison of Newarke Sallied out and took twenty four of Captain Markhams men and horse in their Quarters Letters from Bristol informed that the Governor of Cardiffe for the Parliament Col. Prichard and Col. Leyton betook themselves to Cardiffe Castle and kept that with their Forces that the Vice-Admiral came and shot six pieces to the Castle to let them know that in that time
upon which the House revoked their last Order about the Muster and set a day for it and informed the Militia that both Houses would be present at it Order for the safe keeping and disposing of the Princess Henrietta and for all things fitting for her Person Order for a Declaration to take off Scandals and Jealousies of the Parliaments Proceedings Conferrence about the Votes touching the demand of the Kings Person and the Lords desired reparation about some words spoken by a Member of the House of Commons at the last conference touching this business The King was at Lumley House three miles from Newcastle Letters from the Leaguer before Oxford certified that a Treaty was begun about the surrender of Oxford 18. Progress in the business of the Church Ordinance passed for eight hundred pound per An. to Bishop Morton of Duresme A Petition from M. G. Massey put off The Commissioners of the Excise continued Pass'd in the afternoon by the Commons for Compositions of Delinquents near twenty Ordinances Intelligence came of the Kings coming into Newcastle but without any Solemnity and lay at G. Levens Quarters Proclamation made by G. Leven that no Papists or Delinquents be permitted to come to the King Upon a Letter from the English Commissioners another Proclamation that all do conform to the Orders and Ordinances of Parliament Gen. Leven forbids all compliance of his Officers and Soldiers with any Malignants The Estates of Scotland forbid any to go out of that Kingdom without a Pass 19. Reasons given in the House why Mr. Ashburnham could not be delivered up according to the order of Parliament and complaints of the Scots Forces quartering in York-shire Voted That this Kingdom had no farther need of the Army of their Brethren the Scots in this Kingdom and that a hundred thousand pound should be raised and paid to the Scots Army fifty thousand pound thereof after they shall have surrendred New-Castle Carlisle and other English Garrisons possessed by them and the other fifty thousand pound to be paid to them after their advance into the Kingdom of Scotland Order to desire the Scots Commissioners in London to give in the Accounts of their Army that the Arrears may be audited and paid Both Houses went into Hide Park to see the general Muster Hartlebury Castle was surrendred to Col. Morgan upon Articles 20. The Speaker ordered to give a Pass for six Horses for the Prince of Orange Supply of Ammunition for Garrisons Progress upon the propositions for Peace and to sit daily till it were finished Letters of the Surrender of Ludlow to Col. Birch and Col. Mackworth 21 Wholly spent about the business of the Church Letters informed that the Treaty went on for the surrender of Oxford 22. Col. Rich brought Letters to the House from the General giving an account of the demands for the surrender of Oxford which were very high and so esteemed by the House who writ a Letter of thanks to the General for his care and desired him to proceed in the business for the reducing of Oxford The Copy of the Instructions to the Commissioners from Oxford to treat about the surrender of it sent up 23. Order for the Serjeant at Arms to fetch up from New-Castle Mr. Hudson one of the Persons that conveyed the King into the Scots Army who was said to confess that his Majesty was near London upon the day that the General Muster should have been Progress in the business of the Church The Houses differed upon some amendments of an Ordinance for Ely House for the Serjeant at Arms. The Oxford Commissioners for the Treaty of Surrender insisted upon liberty to send to the King wherein Sir Tho. Fairfax would not resolve and in the mean time the Treaty was adjourned for two or three days yet both sides prepared for War great Guns came from Reading and they shot from the Garrison at those in the Leaguer but little hurt was done Col. Whaley coming before Worcester Col. Morgan drew farther off and the Garrison sallyed out upon Col. Whaley who beat them back and took eight Prisoners Captain Batten summoned Pendennis Castle to surrender to the Parliament 25. Order for the Princess Henrietta to be brought to St. Jameses and Provision to be made there for her answerable to her Quality and Richmont was appointed for the Prince his Residence if he shall come in A Letter from the King to both Houses expressed That his Majesty was not come into the Scots Army out of any intent to divide the Kingdoms in assection or prolong the War but to secure his Person and labour to compose the differences between him and his Kingdoms and settle all well He desired that Religion might be first insisted on and setled according to the advice of the Assembly of Divines of both Kingdoms For the Militia he was willing to concur with that propounded at Uxbridge For Ireland he will do what he can to satisfie desires of that kind That for surrender of the Garrisons in his hands he hath given order for Oxford to be surrendred and will do the like for the rest and is willing that all Forces may be disbanded and that the Debts of the Nation should be paid He sent another Letter to the Commissioners of the Parliament of Scotland Professing his Intention to settle Peace and give them satisfaction and that he hath written to all that have Commissions from him in Scotland to disband their Forces and to render their Garrisons and professeth his resolution to give all just satisfaction to the joynt desires of both Kingdoms and to comply with both Parliaments and for the expression of their loyal intentions towards him he returns them hearty thanks He acquaints them that he hath written to the Governor of Oxford to quit that Garrison upon honourable conditions and disband those Forces and that being granted he will give the like order to his other Garrisons and Forces he desires this Letter may be published with a proclamation in Scotland He also wrote another Letter to the City of London complementing them and acquainting them with his Letters to the Parliaments of both Kingdoms Ashburnham escaped from New-Castle before the Deputy of the Serjeant at Arms came thither for him and another Messenger was sent thither for Hudson 26. Debate about the Irish business and supplys thither and the Arrears of the Lord Inchequin and Lord Broghil A Remonstrance from the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common Council of London was presented to both Houses desiring a strict course for suppressing all private and seperate Congregations That all Anabaptists Hereticks and Sectaries c. as conformed not to the publick Discipline may be declared and proceeded against That all may be required to obey the Government setled or to be setled That none disaffected to the Presbyterian Government may be imployed in any place of publick Trust That the Propositions for Peace may be hastned That the Vnion may be preserved
consider what Garrisons are fit to be demolished 4. Progress upon the propositions for Peace and both Houses agreed to trust London with their own Militia Col. Rossiter was called into the House and had thanks for his good services The Treaty proceeded for the surrender of Oxford 5. The Ordinance past both House for the Church Government Ammunition ordered for the Forces at Monmouth and Money Divers Ordinances past the House of Commons for compositions of Delinquents 6. Order for the Commissioners of Excise to pay ten thousand pound a Month for the Northern Forces A Declaration ordered to be drawn of the misdemeanors Plundrings and Cruelties of the Scots Army and their refusal to surrender the English Garrisons and to undeceive the People ●ouching a Book of the Lieutenant of the Scots Army justifying their proceedings and to draw the affections of the English to the Scots Sir Robert King brought Letters from Ireland to the House one from the King to the Marquess of Ormond to be communicated in Ireland to this effect That his Majesty having sent many Messages and Propositions for Peace to the Parliament received either no answer or such as shews their intentions to ruine him and Monarchy it self and a refusal of what formerly themselves desired but to have That hereupon having received good security that he and all that would adhere to him should be safe in their Persons Honours and Consciences in the Scots Army who would joyn with the King and his Forces in procuring a happy Peace and his rights he resolved to put himself into that Army and to use the best means by conjunction of them with the Forces of the Marquess of Montross and his Friends in England and Ireland to endeavour the setling of a good Peace The Treaty proceeded for the surrender of Oxford the General had nineteen thousand five hundred men in his Army 8. Mr. Hudson one of the Kings guides to the Scots Army was discovered at Rochester coming to London and apprehended Papers from the Scots Commissioners here touching the Kings Letters to the Marquess of Ormond whereof they say they had no knowledge nor hand in it ordered to be considered at a set day Ordinance for a thousand pound a Month for the Garrison of Henley Bostall House was surrendrd to the Parliament upon Articles A Letter of thanks to the General and order for thanksgiving to God for the several late successes 9. Votes That the King in going to the Scots Army intended to prolong the War against the Parliament in England and to make a difference between the two Kingdoms That there should be a Declaration to set forth the Jealousies and fears and the grounds thereof this Kingdom had to be presented to the States of Scotland and their Commissioners here Order for the Execution of the Ordinance for Church-Government Letters intercepted going to Oxford to incourage them to hold out and that the King was in the Scots Army Recruits came out of Scotland to the Army at New-castle The Lord Byron surrendred Caernarvon Castle to Major General Mitton upon Articles Letters and Papers read of transactions between the Marquess of Worcester and the Committee of Monmouth and L. G. Morgan and his Lp. for the surrender of Ragland Castle which Morgan by command of Sir Thomas Fairfax summoned and the Marquess desired liberty to send to the King to know his Pleasure which Morgan denied alledging that the King was in the Army of the Scots our Friends who had proclaimed that none formerly in Arms against the Parliament should be admitted to any conference with him The Marquess resolved to stand it out to the uttermost 10. Order for Circuits to be gone and the Commissioners of the Seal to appoint Judges Messages between the two Houses about the reception of the Russia Embassador and about an house for him 11. Several Orders in private matters Col. Glyn voted to be Governor of Caernarvon Castle The Garrison of Bostall house marched out and left four Brass Pieces and one Iron Gun store of Provisions and Ammunition 12. A Ship was taken with Ammunition and Provisions for Pendennis Castle and divers Letters intercepted in her Some of the Sheriffs and Common Council of London came to the House gave them thanks for their unwearied labours and desired that in any act or propositions care might be taken of the Rights and Priviledges of the City and were answered that the House have been and ever will be tender of the Rights and Priviledges of the City Order concerning an honourable reception of the Russia Ambassador 13. The Russia Ambassador solemnly received and delivered his Message for Unity between the two Nations and concerning Trade The Judges were appointed in several Circuits and the Commissioners of the Seal ordered to issue forth Commissions and Warrants requisite for that purpose The Order for Church Government published and ordered to be put in Execution Two hundred Sallyed out of Farrington House fell upon the Guards but the Parliament Forces wounded their Commander Major Hen and took him Prisoner killed two Lieutenants and five others took four Horses forty brown bills and forced the rest into the House again and lost but four men 15. Letters from Ireland informed of a great defeat given to the Protestant Forces in Ireland by the Irish Rebels the House ordered several Supplys for those Forces and ordered five thousand Foot and fifteen hundred Horse to be provided for that Service Referred to the Committee of Ireland to dispose of the Forces under Major General Massey for the Irish Service and the rest to be disbanded the like for other Forces in several Counties Complaint of the Major and others of Derby against some of the Soldiers of that Garrison upon his commitment of four of them for Sheepstealing the House ordered those Forces to be disposed of for Ireland and that Garrison to be dismantled The Scots Forces in Vlster marched out of their Garrisons under Major General Monrow to fall upon the Rebels all of them were about five thousand Foot and eleven Troops of Horse they were informed that the Rebels had eight Regiments of Foot and twelve Troops of Horse compleatly armed but the Scots would not believe it nor valued it but the Brittish Forces marched after them The Rebells drew up in good order in a place of advantage and set divers Ambuscadoes the Brittish Horse drew up so near them that they were galled and retired their Ambuscadoes made the Protestants retire and after some hours hot dispute the Rebels prevailed near five hundred of the Protestants killed taken and routed five field pieces with all the Ammunition and Baggage lost and about five thousand Foot Arms and most of the Officers killed and taken The Lord Mont-gomery and Lord Blaney taken the Lord Conweys Son had two Horses killed yet mounted on a third and escaped many Horses lost and men wounded Letters from the King to both Houses of Parliament to the same effect
from the English Forces The Commissioners of Parliament arrived with the propositions for Peace at New-Castle and were visited the same day by General Leven and the King appointed them to present the propostions the next day A List was sent up to the Parliament of those that marched sorth of Worcester upon the rendition of it The Earl of Shrewsbury Lord Talbot Lord Brereton sixteen Knights forty four Equires eleven Colonels nine Lieutenant Colonels fifteen Majors seventy Captains forty nine Lieutenants twenty four Ensigns of Horse forty Ensigns of Foot one Bishop many Doctors and Clergymen and many Ladies They left there twenty eight pieces of Cannon six Drakes and sling-pieces Arms three thousand Provisions for six months and Ammunition 28. Every Friday ordered for Debate how the Gospel might be Preached in some dark places of this Kingdom Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax of the Particulars of the Surrender of Wallingford and the House approved Adjutant Evelin to be Governor there who was nominated by the General Order for imployment of the Forces in the Counties of Oxon Berks and Bucks for the Service of Ireland Upon Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax of some breaches of Articles which he had made the House took care that right should be done and appointed a Committee to hear Complaints of that nature Order to apprehend Capt. Conningham come from the Queen to New-Castle because he had formerly broke the Prison of the Parliament the like order was to apprehend Mr. Buchannon Order to slight all the Garrisons in Glocester-shire except Glocester and to reduce the Forces there to a less number The Duke of York came to Town and was met by the Earl of Northumberland and divers Lords and Gentlemen and conveyed in great and fitting state to St. Jameses where his Oxford retinue was dismiss'd and new Servants placed about him The Princess Henrietta was conveyed away from Oatlands Letters informed the Surrender of Wallingford Castle That Col. Blagge sold the Corn and Provisions there and put the Money in his own purse without giving one penny of it to the Soldiers though much pay was in arrears to them and they were so much discontented at the greediness of their Governor that they fell into a Mutiny which caused Blagge to surrender the Castle two days sooner than it was agreed to be They left in it fourteen pieces of Ordnance store of Arms Ammunition and some Provisions and marched a thousand Foot beside Horse out of it Rutland Castle surrendred to C. Mitton with all the Arms and Ammunition in it 29. The Monthly Fast day Letters informed the sad condition of the Protestants in Ireland the Rebels prevailing there that they lately took Roscommon and put all the English there to the Sword then they took Bonratty which held out three Months and there also they put the English and Scotch to the Sword 30. Order for a considerable Force to be sent over into Ireland and for such as were willing of M. General Masseys Brigade to go over thither under their own Officers A Regiment of five hundred Horse ordered for Col. Coote for the Irish Service and for supernumerary Forces in all Counties Another Regiment of five hundred Horse ordered for Col. Lidcote for Ireland and an order for forty thousand pounds for Ireland 31. Debate of the business of Ireland and voted that none of the Forces of Sir Tho. Fairfax his Army should be taken off to be sent thither but four Regiments of Foot and three Regiments of Horse of the Forces of the several Garrisons dismantled and of the Counties where there was no present use of them Upon hearing a Petition of Adjutant Grey and Mr. Steward against an illegal Decree made by Sir George Ratcliffe in Ireland against them the House ordered fifteen hundred pounds to Mr. Steward and four hundred pounds to Adjutant Grey out of Sir Geroge Ratcliff's Estate Reference to a Committee to compute the arrears of some Reformadoe Officers that course may be taken for their pay Moneys ordered for the Duke of Glocester Order to demand of the Commissioners of Scotland here the Rendition of Belfast in Ireland More Letters came of the Particulars of the Surrender of Worcester much to the same effect as is before mentioned with an order of the Committee of Worcester-shire to take the Mace and Sword and Seal of that City into their possession That Serjeant Welde who went from the Parliament thither was chosen to be their Recorder with other particulars Letters from Newcastle certified that the Commissioners had presented the Propositions for Peace to his Majesty and acquainted him that they had but ten days allowed them to attend for his Majesties answer which they desired he would be pleased to give them within that time That the King desired longer time for him to consider and give his answer to all those propositions and matters of so great weight as they were but being told by the Commissioners that they had no longer time allowed to them but ten days only after which time they were commanded to return back to the Parliament his Majesty told them that within that time they should receive his answer to the propositions August 1646. August 1. The House sate not nor did any intelligence come this day 3. Letters from Newcastle informed that upon the Commissioners presenting the propositions to the King he asked them if they had any power to Treat they answered they had not then the King replyed saving the honour of the business an honest Trumpeter might have done as much That the Scots Lords and Officers begged of the King to sign the Propositions A Proclamation at Newcastle forbidding all Malignants to come to the King the Provost and Baylies of Edingborough Petitioned the King to grant the propositions Col. Birch entred some of the works of Gotherich Castle whereupon the Garrison hung out a white Flag for Parley which Birch refused and went on Storming and they all submitted to Mercy In the Castle besides the Governor Sir Henry Lingen were fifty Gentlemen and a hundred and twenty Soldiers with Arms Ammunition and Provisions Ragland Castle held out and made some Sallies but were beaten back Col. Birch and Col. Rainsborough went to assist Col. Morgan in that Siege and the General himself went thither Pendennis Castle had some relief by Sea the Arch-Bishop received some loss at Conwey Denbigh Castle held out against the Parliament and Film Castle seemed tractable to come to a Treaty 4. Order to transport the Forces of Major General Laugherne into Ireland and that the Forces in the several Counties that will list themselves for Ireland shall have a Months pay and those that will not to be disbanded their Officers are to march with those that go to the water side if they will not go over into Ireland Bristol Chester and Leverpoole appointed to be rendezvous for the Soldiers to take shipping for Ireland and orders for Cloaths Victuals and
Million of Money free Quarter taken by them not accounted and that they would be willing to accept a Sum in gross in full discharge of their arrears and the house appointed a Committee to treat with them about the Sum and times of Payment New Letters of the Peace concluded in Ireland and a Copy of the Articles That they should not be bound to take the Oath of Allegiance All Laws against Roman-Catholicks to be Repealed To have no dependency upon the Parliament of England and the like Major General Mitton took Conwey Town by Storm and killed and wounded divers took many Officers twenty two Soldiers and fifty Towns-men in Arms one great Gun Arms Ammunition and Provisions many Irish men who were tied back to back and thrown into the water 19. Report from the Committee appointed to treat with the Scots Commissioners That they desired five hundred thousand pound whereof two hundred thousand pound upon the advance of their Army into Scotland and two hundred thousand pound residue at the end of twelve months A day set to consider of this Report Order for shutting up the Houses of those infected with the Plague as formerly and the Statute for that purpose to be printed and published Both Houses agreed to a list of Ships and Captains of them for the Winter Guard Order for the Marchioness of Winton to make use of any of her Countrey houses for her health and to lye in there 20. A difference between the Forces of Bristol and Glocester about levying of Money for their pay the House ordered that neither of them should levy that Money and referred it to a Committee to compose that difference A Petition brought by Multitudes of Waggoners Wives and Officers Wives and Widows and other distressed people for Money referred to a Committee to Consider of a way for raising ten thousand pound for them and that not above two of them should come together about this business to the House or Committee The allowances of four pound a Week to divers Members of the House formerly given was now ordered to cease The Articles agreed for surrender of Ragland Castle and the Marquess of Worcester threw himself upon the Mercy of the Parliament 21. Letter of the surrender of Pendennis Castle and in it were Col. Arundel the Governor four Knights five Colonels and divers others of Quality That the Parliament had there forty great pieces of Ordnance one great Ship one Shallop some other Boats seven great Guns in the Ship many pieces unmounted about the Castle store of Arms but little Provision A Copy of the Articles sent up for the surrender of Ragland Castle there were in the Castle seven hundred Officers and Soldiers twenty pieces of Ordnance and a thousand Arms. Vote for two hundred thousand pound to be paid to the Scots Army one hundred thousand pound upon their Advance out of this Kingdom and the other hundred thousand pound by fifty thousand pound at two payments at certain days and to have the publick Faith for the other three hundred thousand pound deducting out of the same the Accounts of the Countrey for their free Quarters Referred to a Committee to consider of raising a hundred thousand pound of the Companies of London upon security the Lords concurred herein and were moved to pass the Ordinance for Sale of Delinquents Estates Order to discharge Sir Tho. Glenham from an Arrest according to the Articles of Oxford 22. The Houses sate not and no intelligence was communicated 24. The Articles sent up of the surrender of Pendennis Castle Letters that the convention of Estates of Scotland met at Edingburg and intended the Peace of both Kingdoms very zealously 25. Order to make Ragland Castle untenable Col. Fortescue appointed Governor of Pendennis Castle A day of thanksgiving ordered for the late Successes and a Collection for the poor infected with the Sickness The three Regiments under Sir Hardress Waller before Ragland ordered for the service of Munster in Ireland and orders for re-payment of Moneys disbursed by some of the Commanders 26. The Monthly Fast day after the Sermons they met in the House and some new Members took the Covenant Letters informed that when the Officers and Soldiers marched out of Ragland Castle not the least injury or incivility was offered by Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army to any of them but they were courteously used and not a tittle of their Articles broken That Sir Thomas Fairfax had much conference with the Marquess with all respect and there being store of Rich Furniture and Goods in the Castle the General caused the Commissioners in the Army to make an Inventory of them and to proclaim that if any of them belong to any well affected in the Countrey that they should be restored 27. Exceptions of Plunders Money Coals Lead and free quarterings had by the Scots Army offered to their Accounts the House voted a hundred thousand pound to be paid to them the ninth month after the payment of the Money formerly voted for them An Ordinance sent up to the Lords for ordination of Ministers Orders touching Col. Saundersons Regiment of Reformadoes Upon the Petition of the Sheriffs of London that if Sir Tho. Glemham were discharged out of Prison according to the order of the House that then the Sheriffs and their Heirs should be liable to pay the debt for which he was a Prisoner The House ordered that Sir Thomas Glemham should be brought to the Bar and that they would take order for the Sheriffs indemnity The Judges rode in some Counties and held the Assizes to the rejoycing of the People Order to discharge Sir Tho. Glemham from his imprisonment according to the Articles of Oxford and that all Officers and others should be saved harmless for it by Authority of the House of Commons The House approved of the Earl of Northumberlands removing the Kings Children to Sion house because of the Sickness in London and they ordered the Earl to take care and give directions that none of the Kings Party should be admitted to come to the Kings Children to give them ill Counsel The Power of the Committe of Haberdashers Hall as to the five and twentieth part was lessened 29. The Houses sate not Intelligence came of the surrender of Flint Castle to Major General Mitton 31. The Scots Minister Mr. Hinderson dyed at Edingburg a person of a sober Coversation and good Learning some said he dyed of grief because he could not perswade the King to Sign the Propositions The Convention of Estates in Scotland agreed to send new Commissioners to the King to Sign the Propositions The Earl of Antrim and Kilketto refused to lay down Arms by the Kings command alledging that the King was under restraint and they hoped ere long to have a power to free him from that restraint Complaints from the Northern Counties of the oppression by the Scots Army Two Ships of the Rebels taken by a Parliament Ship at
the Earl of Essex to sit in Parliament Divers Scotch Ministers endeavoured to satisfie the Kings Conscience that he might take the Covenant but could not prevail 17. An Ordinance sent up to the Lords for charging ten thousand pound upon the Excise for poor Widows Officers Wives and others The Lords desired the concurrence of the Commons that the Earl of Northumberland be made L. Lieutenant of York-shire in the stead of the Earl of Essex deceased A Petition of the Levan● Merchants against Sir Sackvile Crow for Cruelties and Tyrannies exercised by him against their Company and desiring his Commission might be made void was referred to a Committee Order for four hundred pound for relief of poor Irish Protestants here 18. Order for a Letter to the Grand Seignior to revoke the Commission of Sir Sackvile Crow from being Agent at Constantinople and power given to the Merchants to chuse a new Agent Voted That no Consultation touching his Majestics Person should hinder the March of the Scots Army out of England nor violate the Treaties and that the Kings Person should be disposed of as both Houses of the Parliament of England should hold fit The Speaker desired he might communicate some secret Intelligence which he had to a Committee and was ordered to do it to the Committee of both Kingdoms and the Committee of the Admiralty Order for stating Arrears of Accounts 19. The Houses sate not The Estates of Scotland met about the surrender of the English Garrisons c. 21. The Commissioners from Scotland not being able to prevail with the King to pass the propositions returned into Scotland The Kings did not absolutely refuse to do it but said he hoped they would grant him a hearing which for better accommodation he desires may be near London and doubts not but after a full hearing he may not only have but receive full satisfaction Letters informed of the Irish Rebels drawing with a great Army towards Vlster and that the Marquess of Ormond was gone with Forces to joyn with them to suppress such as withstand the new Peace The Committee of Worcester took great care in listing their Soldiers for Ireland 22. No means prevailing with the King to pass the Propositions the House named a Committee to turn those Propositions into Ordinances of Parliament Order that the Committee of both Kingdoms do communicate to the Scots Commissioners the Votes of the House for disposing of the Kings Person Ordinance for Money A Committee for satisfying the City about the security for the two hundred thousand pound Letters of the surrender of Silley and Col. Rouse appointed Governor Reasons offered by the Commons to the Lords for continuance of the Commissioners and Treasurers of the Army The Lords Voted the Lord Roberts to be Governor of Silly but before that the Commons Vote was passed for Col. Rouse The Lords concurred with the Commons in the Vote for disposing of the Kings person The Duke d'Anguienne Besieged Dunkirk The Spaniard raised Forces to relieve it 23. The House proceeded in a grand Committee upon the Ordinance against Blasphemies and Heresies A Petition of Lieutenant Col. Lilburnes Wife accompanied with many Women at the door of the House and mentioning the Tyranny of the Lords by their imprisoning of her Husband and thereby divorcing her from him and desires Justice Intelligence came that upon discovery of a Plot against the Person of the Marquess of Ormond and those with him they returned back to Dublin 24. A new Committee appointed of both Houses to treat with the Scots Commissioners about disposing of the Kings Person this new Committee was purposely named to carry on the design touching the Kings Person as was intended The Committee of Foreign Affairs appointed to receive what the Spanish Ambassador desired to communicate to both Houses Order that no Passes should be granted to transport any Horses for six Months An Ordinance sent up to the Lords to put the Office of Chancellor of Chester in the Speakers of both Houses Order for the Forces of Cheshire for Money A day set to consider how the Army under Sir The. Fair fax shall be disposed of 25. Orders for Money and Cloaths for the Forces in Vlster Order to continue the Committee of both Kingdoms till the last of November next and that if the Scots Commissioners shall refuse to joyn with them then they were to act by themselves Votes That the Estates of the Lord Capell Lord Cottington Marquess of Winchester Earl of Worcester and Sir Charles Smith should be sold to raise Money for Ireland Some of the Assembly of Divines from the rest brought into the House such Heads of the Articles of Faith as they had perfected The Establishment and securing of Wallingford Castle referred to the General and a Committee named to draw up a new establishment thereof 26. The House sate not 28. Letters from the North certified that the Convention at Edinburg agreed that the Scots Army should march out of England upon the receipt of the two hundred thousand pound as agreed and all Towns and Castles held now by them in England to be delivered up that they are sending a Plenipotence to their Commissioners here to determine with the Parliament of England as to the dispose of his Majesties Person The Irish Rebels by Declaration disclaimed the Peace made with the Protestants The Articles of the Surrender of Silly Islands sent up 29. Vote That no Office shall be conferred by any Committee upon any person without consent of the Parliament A Committee of the long Robe appointed to make some amendmerts in the Ordinance for security to the advancers of the two hundred thousand pound Great complaints of the Quartering of the Scots Army in the North and in Lancashire Denbigh Castle was upon Treaty of surrender Order against the great resort of multitudes of People to the door of the House and it was observed then that some of those Gentlemen who formerly most incouraged such resort were now most fearful of them 30. The publick Fast day the House met after the Sermons and ordered an Ordinance to be drawn up to be read in every Congregation on every Fast day and therein the sins of the Nation to be mentioned and lamented and particularly in relation to Ireland The Ordinance for Observation of the publick fast day sent up to the Lords with some amendments An Ordinance to be drawn up to prevent clandestine Marriages without the consent of Parents October 1646. October 1. Order for five hundred pound to be paid to the Executors of the late Earl of Essex for defraying some ingagements and for the charge of his Funeral and that of four thousand five hundred pound due to his Countess who was disaffected to the Parliament four thousand pound should be paid to the State and five hundred pound to Col. Mathews and to the Servants of the Earl A question being propounded whether the great Seal be disposed of
Regiment resolved that the Votes would not be satisfactory except six or seven of them their reasons were Because eight weeks Pay voted was not a considerable part of their Arrears and that no visible security was given for what should not now be paid and that nothing was done for their vindication they being declared enemies they might be dealt with as enemies when they came home unless that Declaration were recalled After this a Petition was Read which had been presented to the General in the name of the private Souldiers of the Army desiring a general Rendesvouz of the Army before their Disbanding It being an amazement to them to hear that some of the Army were so soon to be Disbanded before all their grievances redressed The Councel of War resolved to contract the Quarters of the Army nearer to the Head Quarter in the mean time Ireton and Lilburne Okey Rich and Harrison were appointed to draw up some Heads of advice to be presented to the General by the Councel of War not above five or six Officers differing from it They show the necessity of the Officers complying with the Souldiers who would have a general Rendesvouz without their Officers if not by their consent and the spoil to the Country by such a disorderly drawing together and draw up a Declaration to the General to that purpose past by all but four or five and That his Excellency would be pleased to represent to the Parliament the condition of the Army and that they would be pleased to reassume the Votes lately passed and to suspend any present proceeding upon them and some satisfaction to be given to the grievances of the Army Relation That Collonel Fenwickes Troop in Ireland defeated a Party under the Earl of Westmeath on great disadvantage where Captain Farrington one Lieutenant on Ensign and sixty Souldiers of the Parliaments were slain and the Rebels lost three hundred Wherein Captain Standley did gallantly and of several other successes there Whitelocke's friends in the House and some others who would have been rid of him had moved that he might be sent Lord Justice into Ireland to exercise the Civil Government as Field Marshal Skippon was to Command on the Military part who was very willing to have his company but Whitelocke was not free to undertake that charge in Ireland And now Cromwel and his Party were against his going away and more than formerly desired his company and began to use his advice in many things June 1647. June 1. Divers Compositions past but the Titles which they had since the War were altered as for Sir Peter Ball Kt. they stilled him Peter Ball Esq and so of the rest Ordinance for thirty thousand pound for such as had advanced sums upon the publick Faith and were now become indigent Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax That he had called a Council of War and communicated to them the Letters and Votes of the Parliament and sends the results of the Council saith it is a grief to him that there should be a misunderstandding between the Parliament and the Army and that the late Votes did not give satisfaction wisheth that things may be determined in Love and ways of composure thought upon that the Officers were many and unanimous and a speedy resolution taken Order that the Money sent to disband the Generals Regiment be recalled the like for Col. Inglosby's Regiment and the Commissioners sent to the Army to be recalled That Field Martial Skippon do forthwith attend the House The Lords agreed The Lords desired concurrence of the Commons to take off the Sequestration of the Duke of Bucks 2. Information against Sir Richard Price a Member of the House bearing Arms against the Parliament notice to him to attend the like aganst Sir Philip Percival referred to a Committee Three thousand pound recalled that was to have been paid to Col. Ingolsby's Regiment was stopped by some of Col. Rainsboroughs men and many come into Oxford A Petition of the City with a thousand hands read and laid aside Order that the Forces drawn for Ireland shall have a Months pay Order for three thousand pound for Widows c. 3. Vote for an Ordinance to enable Soldiers to assign their debenters and that Officers be protected from arrests for two Months whilst they attend the Committee of Accounts That Officers in Prison should have their arrears first audited and paid and accounts left with the Committee shall be of equal benefit to the Officers who attend the Parliaments Service as to any others and that the Accounts be expedited Order that the Common Soldiers shall have all their Arrears deducting for free quarter the like for non-Commissioned Officers to have three months Pay and a Letter to acquaint the General with what the House had done in persuance of the desires of the Army and to signifie to him their desire of his care to keep the Army in an orderly posture Order for ten thousand pound for the Officers whose Accounts were stated And that the Declaration against the Army be razed out of the Journal of the House and the Lords desired to do the like and here the Parliament began to surrender themselves and their power into the hands of their own Army The General 's Regiment came nearer to the Army of their own accord some of the other Regiments marched without their Colours and divers Troops were very disorderly 4. An Ordinance of Indemnity more large than the former was committed and Orders for an Act of Oblivion to be brought in Order to continue the Commissioners of the great Seal for forty days after the Term and the Ordinance for hearing Causes in Chancery Letters from the Commissioners at Holmeby with an inclosed Note delivered in by Cornet Joyce and Capt. Titus related the coming of a Party of Horse to Holmeby Fifty pound ordered to Titus to buy him a Horse A Petition of Soldiers referred to the Auditors to state their accounts Order for ten thousand pound for the Petitioners The Lords desired the Commons concurrence to recall the Kings Children to London and to a Letter to the General they agreed to the first Two Members of the House that fell out were injoyned by the House to keep the Peace 5. Letters from Holmeby from the Commissioners informed that a Party of Horse sent from the Committee of Troopers of the Army came to Holmeby where after they had secured the Guards they demanded his Majesty the Commissioners amazed at it demanded of them what Warrant they had for what they did but they would give no other account but that it was the pleasure of the Army When they came to his Majesty he demanded several questions of them as security for his Person c. which they promised and the next day his Majesty and the Commissioners went along with this Party towards the Army That night the King lay at Huntington Mr. Walford the Commissioners Messenger was called into the House and related the particulars
to the house to give way to it and the Commons concurred and that the Earl of Northumberland should go with the Children to the King and take care of their return Order for the Lord Major of York to have the charge of Cliffords Tower there The Soldiers in Dublin were in a high Mutiny Col. Jones the Governor in danger to be killed by them yet he appeased the Mutiny with great Courage and stoutness Some little Defeats were given to the Rebels and sometimes to the English some of the leading Rebels taken Prisoners by Col. Coots Forces twenty five killed five hundred Cowes a thousand sheep and two hundred and fifty Plough-Horses taken Indeavours were used in Scotland to raise an Army there to invade England several debates about it at Edinborough and by the Estates but nothing concluded 13. The first day of relaxation for Scholars and Apprentices Many Apprentices came to the Parliament with a Petition which they presented to the Commons set on by their Masters and others their desires were 1. That the House according to promise take into consideration the several heads of a petition of theirs delivered the fifth of March last 2. That the authority of Parliament so apparently abused contrary to Right by those that have of late effected the ejections of men of known Fidelity out of places of Trust redeemed and those so expulsed may be restored 3. That they would declare against all invectives of the Clergy 4. That those who have appealed to this Court of Justice may have an impartial Tryal 5. That the sum of all the endeavours of Parliament may tend to the sweet composure of differences The Petitioners had Answer by some Members that were Citizens That their Petition would be considered in due time And they were commended for their civil carriage in presenting it Orders for slighting of Garrisons The Lords desired the Commons Concurrence to an Order for Money for the Earl of Kildare the Commons rejected it because the Lords had first made the Order for Money which was not proper for them to do but afterwards the Commons made a new Order for two hundred pound for the Earl 14. A contrary Party of the London Apprentices came to both Houses with a Petition 1. That according to the Covenant the Kings Person may be defended and his just power in defence of Religion and Liberties be estabished 2. That the Priviledges of Parliament may be vindicated and the Liberties and Property of the Subject preserved 3. That the Government of the Church may be setled and Conventicles suppressed 4. That Incendiaries Malignants and evil instruments hindering reformation and raising Divisions may be punished 5. That Obstructions in Courts of Justice may be removed and the abuse of Committees and their Officers considered 6. That Arrears of Soldiers may be paid 7. That the Army may be disbanded 8. Against Forreigners being free of London Thus each Party might frame what matter they pleased into Petitions and have hands to them and multitudes to present them The answer to this Petition was That divers matters thereof were under consideration and the rest should be considered in due time The Lords gave leave for the Marquess Winton to go out of Town The Earl of Clare had his Priviledge of Peer allowed him 15. According to a former Order of the House several Members of the House brought in their Case stated touching their Elections and the point of being disable to sit in the House and they were referred to a Committee Letters from Major General Pointz and another from his Wife informed the manner of his imprisonment by his own Soldiers and their seizing of his goods The House ordered Copies of them to be sent to the General with directions for the discharge of Pointz or sending him up to London and a Letter ordered to the Lord Mayor of York to discharge and restore his goods to him The Kings Children went with the Earl of Northumberland to Causham to see their Father 16. Orders touching supplys and managing the Forces in Ireland A Proposition for the Earl of Ormond to transport five thousand five hundred men out of Ireland was denyed by the House Orders for Pay and disbanding of Forces come off from the Army The Kings Children coming to Causham to meet their Father great numbers of People slocked thither to see them and strewed the ways with green bows and herbs After Dinner at Maiden-head the King and his Children went together to Causham 17. Vote That all the Forces in England and Wales c. be under the immediate Command of Sir Thomas Fairfax and for disbanding of divers Forces Order for putting Reformades out of the Line and about money for the Army 19. The eleven Members in Person presented to the House an answer by way of Demurrer to the Charge of Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army against them which was for the present laid aside Votes for divers Garrisons to be slighted and the Deputy Lieutenants to see it done Bristol Castle and the great Fort at Caernarvon to be continued the keys of the Garrison to be delivered to the Mayors of the Corporations to be governed as formerly Leave given to the Lawyers to go the Circuits Upon information from Col. Birch of some distempers in his Regiment Ordered that the General send them away for Ireland The Assembly in Scotland debated about a Declaration concerning the Affairs of England relating to the King the Parliament and Army Letters from Ireland informed the taking of eight or nine thousand Cattle from the Rebels but they by a strategem killed betwixt thirty of forty of the Parliaments Forces and That they are forced for want of Bread and Money to leave the Field and retire into Garrisons A design to surprize Dublyn discovered and prevented and the Actors apprehended 20. Upon a Message from the eleven Members of their desires to absent themselves for six Months That in the mean time the great affairs of the Kingdom mentioned by the Army might be setled without any interruption from their lesser business The House voted That they or any of them should have leave and Passes to go into the Countrey or beyond Sea for six Months and then to return to the Parliament to attend concerning the Charge against them Upon information that a Multitude of People were coming up to the doors of the House in a tumultuous manner The House Ordered that the Guards do disperse them And that the Serjeant at Arms acquaint that it was the pleasure of the House that they remove themselves That an hundred Halberts be brought into the House for their Service That the Militia order the Guards constantly to suppress such disturbers of the House and that Col. Webbe see the Guards daily placed Letters from the Commissioners of the Army with these new Proposals from the Army 1. That a Declaration be published against the
and an Order for the loan of thirty thousand pound for the service of the Navy Reference upon Letters from the General about Provision for maimed Soldiers Order for auditing the Arrears of Major General Brown's Brigade Upon Letters to the Committee at Derby House That one Mr. Wake a Minister pretended to have a gathered Church in Dorset-shire whereof he was Pastor and read to them the Common Prayer and used the Order and Ceremonies in that Book whereof notice being given to the Committee of Dorset they sent and apprehended Mr. Wake but he was rescued by the Multitude and the Officers of the Committee were sorely beaten The Committee of Derby House sent to the General to take care to suppress this Riot and to prevent the like for the future and he sent order for that purpose to Col. Scroop who was Quartered with his Regiment in that Countrey 27. Letters from Mr. Lort that the Foot of Major General Laugherne being without any Commander but an Ensign whom they Governed agreed to assist Col. Poyer against the Parliaments Forces and sent to him into Pembroke Castle for that purpose and seised upon the Parliaments Commissioners who were then disbanding Major Gen. Laughernes Forces whom they much abused That they put the Commissioners and many of themselves into Vessels to bring them to Pembroke Castle which took not effect but many of the Soldiers got into the Castle and Sallying out upon the Parliaments Forces before it tyred out with duty killed wounded and took many of them and and some Pieces of Ordnance Letters that Col. Poyer dispatched a Frigot into France and took a Vessel of the Parliaments Order for the General to send a considerable Party against Poyer which was done Letters from the Commissioners in Scotland that the Parliament there sat close yet some of the Lords had leisure for Duells That the Committee of danger there are most of them for War That many English come thither and that the Horses in Northumberland are stolen or bought and carried thither great fears of the well a ffected and joyes of the Papists and Malignants Order for the House to be called by a day and the Sheriffs to summon the Members in the several Counties to attend The Sheriff of Bucks dispensed with from taking the usual Oath and a reference to a Committee to consider of the Oath Mr Fawke made General Receiver of York A Remonstrance to the House from the Officers in Ireland under the Lord Inchequin asserting their Fidelities and mentioning their Successes through all the difficulties and wants wherewith they have incountred That their Enemies have obstructed their supplies whereof they make great complaint and that the Votes for their supply and indemnity were not performed but jealousies raised against them and their Honours questioned That they are involved in so great exigencies that they cannot subsist without speedy supplies but must either make their terms with the publick Enemies or expect Ships to be sent to bring them over into England Letters from Hereford of Major Hoptons Regiment being disbanded who were very affectionate one to another and to the Major and parted with tears 28. Ordinance sent up to the Lords for setling the business of the Admiralty Order for three Judges of the Admiralty and for an Ordinance for it and for a Salary for them Order for five hundred pound to buy Books for Cambridge University Letters from the Lord Inchequin full of discontent for want of supplys referred to a Committee Order for a Member of the House to go into Pembroke shire to settle the Peace of that County and to prepare Instructions for him Order for a Letter to the Committee of Somerset to collect the Assessments there 29. The Monthly Fast day 30. Petition of the Kings Servants who had adhered to the Parliament referred to the Committee of the Revenue for an allowance for them Ordinance sent up to the Lords for ten thousand pound for the General in lieu of a thousand pound per. An. Debate of the business of Ireland An Officer that came from thence made a relation to the House of the Lord Inchequins being suspected to fall off from the Parliament the House ordered Collonel Jephson Mr. Salweys and Mr. Swinfin to go Commissioners to him and referred to the Committee at Derby House to prepare instructions for them Vote that the Forces in Munster should have an Ordinance of Indemnity and security for their Arrears Commissioners appointed for the three other Provinces in Ireland and Money to be sent over with them 31. An Information against a Member of the House for words spoken by him a year before he was ordered to attend to answer it Debate of the business of the Church An Ordinance debated and Committed for punishment of Incest Adultery Fornication and incestuous Marriages Another for the better observation of the Lords day Fast dayes Thanksgiving dayes and other dayes set a part by the Parliament was Committed Letters from Pembroke of a tumultuous rising of the people referred to the General to take speedy and effectual course therein April 1648. April 1. The Ordinance for the Admiralty after a long debate passed and ordered to be sent up to the Lords Additional and private Instructions passed for the Commissioners gone to Munster to the Lord Inchequin whose Officers had taken an Oath of Secrecy and those that refused it were cashiered The House of Peers sate not the General removed his head Quarters to St Edmonds-Bury 3. Letters from Col. Jones of the great necessities of the Soldiers at Dublyn and desiring supplys Order for a thousand pound to be bestowed on Col. Jones as their favour for his great Services and to acquaint him with what Provisions and Supplyes were made for the Forces in Ireland and particularly for those under his Command A Petition of many reduced Officers for their Arrears to have them out of such discoveries as they should make and in respect of their great necessities it was referred to a Committee to make them allowances out of their discoveries Order to prevent the like for the future and the clamors at the door of the House for Arrears and an Ordinance for some Moneys for indigent persons Letters from the Commissioners in Scotland that they had made several Addresses to the Parliament of Scotland concerning Captain Wogan but could obtain no answer from them The House ordered a Letter of thanks to the Commissioners and desired them to proceed in their endeavours about that business A Woman executed at York for crucifying her Mother and Sacrificing a Calf a Cock c. as a burnt Sacrifice and her Husband was hanged for having a hand in that Fact Seven Ipswitch Ships were split upon the Bar of Tinmouth and seven more driven upon the Sands Letters from Edenburgh of a new Army raising there for maintenance of the Covenant and Church-Government The General Assembly in Scotland desired
future Upon this many of the Multitude who were come as far as Greenwich and Deptford retreated home and left the Ordnance and what they had taken behind them Letters from Cornwall That Sir Hardress Waller had routed and dispersed the Forces there for the King That he had killed near a hundred and took about two hundred of them Prisoners and let the rest go home to their own dwelling Letters from Collonel Ewer of his taking of Chepstow Castle Sir Nicholas Kemish slain an hundred and twenty Prisoners taken Order for fifty pound for the Captain who brought the News and for a Letter of thanks to Collonel Ewer and his Officers and Soldiers Letters from Viceadmiral Rainsborough of the revolt of some of the Ships under his command and that they had set him on Shore and had sent to the Earl of Warwick to take the Command of them and declared for King Parliament and Covenant The Commons referred this business to the Committee of Derby House and to follow the humour of the Revolters they Voted that the Earl of Warwick should be Lord High Admiral of England and forthwith go to take care of the Navy Order for a Letter of thanks to Sir Hardress Waller his Officers and Soldiers for their good Service in suppressing the Insurrection in Cornwall Letters from Kent that the Rioters encreased there to a great strength and committed many Plundrings and Insolencies the House left the business of reducing them wholly to the management of the General with power for him to give Pardons and Indemnity to any but only to such as had been formerly in Arms against the Parliament in pursuance hereof the General had a Rendezvous upon Black-Heath of seven Regiments of Horse and Foot and marched towards Rochester Letters of Cromwells Success in Wales Letters from Scotland That the Levyes of Soldiers there are opposed in some Counties From Newcastle That Langdale left five hundred Foot and a Troop of Horse at Berwicke That the number of the Cavaliers in those parts were about eight thousand That Major General Lambert was come with about nine hundred Horse to Bernard Castle The Three Bills to be sent to the King in order to a Treaty transmitted to the Lords Some Members added to the Committee of Derby House six Lord and twelve Commoners Referred to Major General Skippon to take care of the Ordnance at White-Hall and of sending Beds to Windsor Ordinances passed the Commons giving Power to the Militia of London to send Guards to the Parliament and for six thousand pound for satisfying the ingagement of Collonel Welden to the Inhabitants of Plymouth The Kentish men grew numerous under Esquire Hales their General and Sir Thomas Peiton their Lieuetenant General who sent a Message by a Trumpet to the Lord General for a Pass for their Commissioners to come and treat with him but the General refused it answering That he knew no authority they had to appoint Commissioners for such a purpose But finding them and their Countreymen gathered together in Arms and doing many Acts of Hostility and damage to their Neighbours in disturbance of the Peace and without any authority from the Parliament he cannot admit of a Treaty with them whilst they are thus in Arms. But if they shall forthwith lay down their Arms and depart to their Homes he doubts not but the Mercy of the Parliament will be extended to the Estates and Lives of those who have been deluded into this Rebellion and their Justice only against some of the most eminent fomenters of it Some Skirmishes were between Parties of the Army and the Kentish Men some few of them slain and about a hundred Prisoners taken they fought stoutly 31. The Monthly Fast they had three Sermons in the House The Kentish men sent a Resolute Reply to the General 's Letter Justifying themselves and their Cause The House sate till after six a Clock at night June 1648. June 1. Debate of an Ordinance touching the Arrears of many Officers and Soldiers who have served the Parliament A Petition from the Lord Major and Common Councel of London to acquaint the Houses with a Petition presented to the Common Councel which they desired to tender to the Houses and to leave to their Consideration It was 1. To return thanks to the Common Councel for their endeavours for a Personal Treaty 2. That the Militia of London Essex Hertford Bucks Kent Sussex and Surrey might be Associated 3. That Captain Batten might be restored to the place of Vice-Admiral 4. That the Distempers in Kent might be appeased 5. That the Aldermen under restraint might be discharged The Answer of both Houses to the Petition was That they perceived the Wisdom and Moderation of the Common Councel in this business and thereby their good affections to the Parliament for which they gave them thanks and desired that a Common Councel might be called this afternoon to which the Houses resolved to send some of their Members to acquaint them with the sence of the Houses upon such Petitions Intelligence that the General with four Regiments of Horse and three of Foot and some Companies of Colonel Ingoldsbie's Regiment marched to Eltham and lay in the Fields all Night May 31. they had a rendezvous at Craford Heath and from thence marched through Dartford and the General having intelligence that a party of the Kentish had fortifyed and barricadoed a bridge which led to Gravesend A commanded party was sent forth under Major Husbands of three hundred Horse who took up an hundred Foot behind them when they drew towards the bridge the Enemy sired thick upon them but they notwithstanding fell on and the Horse swam through the water and so got over The Kentish men seeing their danger fled Major Childe who commanded them hardly escaped having his Horse shot and his Son was shot and taken About twenty of the Kentish were slain on the place divers wounded and thirty Prisoners taken most of the party routed were Country-men Sca-men and Apprentices of London Major Husbands Marched on two or three Miles beyond Gravesend and had orders to retreat to Maulin where the Army quartered The General published a Proclamation forbidding his Souldiers to Plunder or commit any outrage in their March and to restore any thing that had been so taken Many Knights and Gentlemen of quality and Cavaliers were with the Kentish men and their numbers were increased to above ten thousand Major Gibbon went with a party to relieve Dover-Castle and forced Sir Richard Hardresse who had besieged it to retreat 2. A report from the committee who were sent to the Common Council That they did return their humble thanks to the Parliament for sending the Committee to acquaint them with the Overtures of favour the Parliament have made to the Petitioners of Kent The Common Council acknowledge the great patience and low condescension of the Parliament towards the Kentish men
provisions that they mutinyed crying out we shall be starved for two or three mens pleasures better it were that we should throw them over the Walls That they have taken away the Water from the Castle and that Poyer is in much danger of his own men that he endeavoured to Storm the Castle but the Ladders were too short and he lost some men That Poyer allows his men but half a Pound of Beef and as much Bread a day and hath promised not to hold out the Castle longer than the Town can hold out that he fired many Houses in the Town which much frighted them Letters from the leaguer before Colchester that the Parliaments Ships at Harwich took two Ships that lay to assist the King's Party at Colchester that they sent out Forces to assist their Ships but a Party from the leaguer fell on them and took fourty of them Prisoners that Lieutenant Gardiner was taken Prisoner by them That Sir Charles Lucas sent a Trumpet proposing an exchange of Prisoners but the General answered that Sir Charles Lucas had forfeited his parol his honor and faith being his Prisoner upon parol and therefore not capable of Command or trust in Martial affairs to this an answer and excuse was presently returned The Committee Sir William Masham and others under restraint in Colchester sent a Paper signed by them to the General Intreating him to enter into a Treaty for Peace and in the same Paper a line or two signed Norwich Arthur Capel Charles Lucas 21. Ordinance committed for setling the Presbyterian Government Additional Power given to the Committee who are to apprehend twenty of the King's Party in lieu of those detained in Colchester The Committee of Essex ordered to go down to Indeavour the securing of that County An Ordinance past for setling the Militia of Bristol and for a thousand Pounds for the fortifications and victualling of it Order for a demy-Culverin to be taken out of Arundell-Castle for the service of the Isle of Wight M r Doucet and others who indeavored the King's escape out of the Isle of Wight committed to Peter House Order for a thousand Musquets five hundred Case of Pistols with their furniture four thousand Pikes and five thousand Swords with ammunition for the Northern service Order for the Common Council to take care that at the Common hall for choosing of Sheriffs none be admitted but those of the Liveries Letters that those in Colchester are fortifying apace and getting in provisions and have imposed a fine upon the Town forcing all between sixteen and sixty years old to bear Arms and are preparing Horse and hand-Mills to grind their Corn. That the General began a work which his men maintained with great resolution that those in the Town sent a Trumpeter for a Treaty that they twice attempted the regaining of Marsy-Fort and Island but were beaten back that the Earl of Norwich perswades his men that London was plundered and that Langdale was coming with ten thousand men to fall upon the Generals Rear who was willing to draw off and had sent a Trumpet to the Town for that purpose The weather was strangely cold and rainy for this time of the year 22. Order for the General to proceed against Captain Vesey by Marshal Law he being a Captain of the Trained-bands in Essex that perswaded his Company to join with the Lord Goring and was since taken Prisoner by the General A Petition from the Contractors for sale of Bishops Lands touching obstructions in that business referred to the Committee of obstructions Debate of an Ordinance for setling the Militia of Westminster Ordinance past for discharging the Sequestration of Sir John Strangeways and his Son Debate of the State of the Navy and ordered that an Ordinance be brought in for Forty Thousand Pounds out of the Excise for the Navy Order for the Committee of the Army to pay two Thousand Five Hundred Pounds borrowed by them of the Committee of the Navy and that the Summers Fleet be fitted in order to the reducing of the revolted Ships Reference to the Committee of derby-Derby-house to take care for the safety of the Isle of Wight both by land and Sea 23. Debate touching the Settlement of the Peace of the Kingdom and a Committee appointed to consider how far the Parliament have gone and what offers have been made by the King in order thereunto and what is fit further to be offered to him and of the place manner and circumstances relating to this business A question was proposed but not passed whether the King should be removed from Carisbrook Castle to Windsor Castle in order to a personal Treaty with both Kingdoms Order for Printing a Letter of Colonel Hamonds and a Charge by one Osborn against him and Captain Rolfe Order for the House to adjourn from every Friday till Tuesday after Letters from the Leaguer before Colchester that thirty Horse and forty Foot Sallied out of the Town to discover the new work that the General was making and were beaten back by fourteen of the Parliaments Musquetiers and that six Foot Souldiers went over the River and brought away six Cows whithin Pistol shot of the main work of the Town that some men were killed by the Cannon on both sides That the Suffolk Forces not being come up to the Leaguer the Enemy had free passage to Sir Harbottle Grimston's house at Bradfield Hall where they placed two hundred Musquetiers and two Troops of Horse and they sent a Summons to the Suffolk Forces at Cattaway Bridge That by Command of Sir Charles Lucas Commander in Chief of his Majesties Forces in Essex they desire to know the positive answer of the Suffolk men Whether they will declare themselves Enemies or not to those in Colchester who are come to preserve the Hundred from plunder and not to act any thing against those of Suffolk if they declare either to be friends or neuters and their intention to be only to secure their own County The General published a Proclamation that whereas he had offered liberty to all private Soldiers laying down their Arms and leaving the Party in Colchester to depart to their private homes and to be free from any violence of the Soldiers with conditions to persons of other Quality He Commands all his Officers and Soldiers to permit them so to do 24. Letters from Colchester Leaguer that the weather being extream wet some began to sally out of the Town but the Parliaments Soldiers and Horse of the Trained-bands notwithstanding the wet stood to their Arms with so much readiness and cheerfulness that the Cavaliers went in again That the Suffolk Forces made some scruple of marching out of their own County that the party in Sir Harbottle Grimston's house plundered it and turned out his Lady That the Suffolk Forces were come up to the Leaguer before Colchester two thousand Foot and five troops of Horse and had intrenched themselves before the East-gate and left
Militia of Wiltshire transmitted to the Lords Letters from the Isle of Wight that the Earl of Middlesex with the rest of the Parliaments Commissioners attended the King at Carisbrook Castle where the Earl read the Votes to his Majesty for the Treaty who received them with much cheerfulness and said that no man desired peace so much as he in his several relations as a King a Husband a Father a Master and that he would give ear to any motion or overture which might conduce to a good accommodation and that whosoever gained by these troubles he must needs be a loser and that he would dispatch them within the time limited 12. The Grand Committee sat about the Ordinance for the Militia At a Conference with the Lords about M r Rolph and M r Ailburton the Commons alledged that M r Rolph was committed by their Lordships without any cause in the warrant and they found reason to clear him and that Ailburton was imployed by the Scots enemies to this Kingdom and therefore not to be protected here The Lords desire the Commons concurrence to an Ordinance to disable Major General Skippon from listing any more forces in the City Order for the exchange of the rest of the Committee of Essex under restraint in Colchester Sir Peter Killegrew returned with Letters from the Isle of Wight that the King had agreed to a personal Treaty at Newport in that Island and desired that Scotland might treat also but left that to the two Houses Letters from the Bayliffes of Yarmouth to the General that they had received aLetter from Prince Charles in the Downs with a Declaration by a Fisher-man going to sell his Fish in France which was taken from him by the Admiral and this Declaration which is in print and the Letter which now they sent to the General was sent by the Fisher-man to Yarmouth That the Town made answer they would stand to their first ingagement to the Parliament and oppose all hostile attempts against them and the Kingdom His Excellency took this so well from them that he sent them word he would not put any Forces into the Town unless they and necessity should require it The Prince his Letter to the Town was that he had sent to them his Declaration as he had done to London and other places and expected their concurrence for his Majesty upon the grounds and for the ends expressed in the Declaration And that they would with courage joyn with him and the English and Scots Forces already appearing for the obtaining of a happy and well grounded peace in spight of all opposition and for the freeing of all his Majesties Subjects from Tyranny Oppression and all illegal Taxes c. 14. The Commissioners returned from the King reported their reception and passages in that business with his Majesty and his Letter to both Houses wherein he expresseth his sad condition for seven Months last past likes well of the Treaty and desires 1. That the Parliament would recall all such Votes and Orders by which people are frighted from coming writing or speaking freely to him 2. That such men of all professions whom he shall send for as of necessary use to him in this Treaty may be admitted to wait upon him that he may be in the same state of freedoom he was in when he was last at Hampton-Court 3. That the Scots may be invited to send their Commissioners to joyn in this Treaty 4. He names Newport in the Isle of Wight for the place of Treaty but thinks it would be much more conducing to a good and speedy issue to have the Treaty in some place in or near London The Lords desired the Commons concurrence that Dr. Shelden and Dr. Hammond might attend the King Letters from Sir Arthur Haselrigge That Lieutenant Colonel Henry Liburne Governour of Tinmouth Castle commanded most of his Officers and Soldiers out of the Castle upon service and reserved a few most of them he knew to be of his own mind with him in the Castle Then he discharged the Prisoners and calling all the Soldiers together he declared for himself and King Charles and that such as did not yield hereunto were dead men whereupon many of the honest Soldiers got over the Wall but a Corporal refusing to consent hereunto was presently run through by the Lieutenant Colonel who then sent to the Shields and Town desiring such as loved King Charles to joyn with him which many did accordingly That this news being presently brought to Newcastle Sir Arthur Haselrigge drew out a considerable body of Foot and one hundred Dragoons with orders to storm the Castle which they attempted but the Ladders were too short yet they forced in at the portholes and notwithstanding the Caunon playing upon them after a short dispute they became possessors of the Castle The Souldiers had quarter many within were Slain among whom the Governour of the Parliaments Soldiers three were wounded and not one Slain That the Scots play at sweep-stake take all Moveables Cows Sheep and all House-hold-stuff to the very Pot-hooks that they take children and make their parents pay ransoms for them and force women before their friends faces that Lieutenant General Cromwel was come up to them with Lambert and had taken about four of the Scots That Colonel Stephkin who had formerly betrayed Stafford to the Parliament had now a design to betray it back again to the King but was prevented by the care of Captain Stone the present Governour and was slain 15. A Verbal Message from the Common Council of London desiring the House of Commons to consider of their Votes in order to their security that the Militia of the outparts may be joyned that Major General Skippon may not list without them with a representation of the Officers of the City that they would be as faithful to the Parliament as ever The House ordered thanks to the Gentlemen and an Ordinance to be brought in for transmitting the power of raising and listing Forces to the Militia that the Committee for joyning the Militias should be revived and the other Committee added to them Sir John Hippesly and M r Bunkley who were Commissioners to the Isle of Wight had the thanks of the House Letters from Colonel Rich that the Prince landed five hundred Soldiers about three hundred Mariners and one hundred Officers and Reformandoes with orders to fall upon Colonel Rich and Colonel Hewson in their trenches they marched by Upper Deal in good order and being discovered three hundred Musquetiers were drawn off all they could get under Hewsons Lieutenant Colonel and Major Husbands with one hundred Horse The Prince his Forces marched up with great resolution and to prevent the Parliaments Horse from annoying them had marsh-ground for their action and retreat which put the Horse upon a loss not knowing how to ingage but Major Husbands wheeled about in a way of retreat This occasioned
them and That the Prince of Conde came with Force before Paris and stopt provisions 3. The List of the Officers of the Fleet referred to the Committee of the Navy To report who they think fit to go out with this Winter guard and who not Ordered that Captain Moulton be preferred in the Navy answerable to his Merit and the like for Colonel Lidcote The Commons taking notice that the Lords had rejected their Ordinance for Tryal of the King and had Adjourned their House they sent some of their Members to examine the Lords Journal-Book and they reported to the Commons three Votes passed by the Lords 1. To send answer by Messengers of their own 2. That their Lordships did not concur to the Declaration 3. That they had rejected the Ordinance for Tryal of the King Hereupon the Commons Voted That all their Members and others appointed to act in any Ordinance wherein the Lords are joyned with them shall be impowered and injoyned to sit act and execute in the said several Committees of themselves notwithstanding the House of Peers joyn not with them Order that the Ordinance for Tryal of the King and the Declaration from which the Lords dissented and which were intended for both Houses shall now be by the Commons only and that the former Committee do sit presently and report the alteration in the Afternoon during which time the House Adjourned In the Afternoon the Committee made their report and the Ordinance was re-committed and to be reported again to morrow the Lords names to be left out and the three Judges and Sergeant Bradshaw Sergeant Nicholas and Mr. Steel to be Assistants The Speaker acquainted the House with a Letter he had received by the French Ambassador from the Queen but the House would not have it read A Letter was sent from the General to the Committees of several Counties for Levying the Arrears of the Assessment for the Army and that he would take off free-quarter from those who paid their proportions 4. Report of amendments to the Ordinance for Tryal of the King and in respect the Lords had rejected it the Commons turned themselves into a Grand Committee to consider of the power of the Commons in Parliament and the Committee Voted 1. That the people under God are the Original of all just power 2. That the Commons of England assembled in Parliament being chosen by and representing the people have the Supream Authority of this Nation 3. That whatsoever is enacted and declared for Law by the Commons in Parliament hath the force of Law and all the people of this Nation are included thereby although the consent and concurrence of the King and House of Peers be not had thereunto These being reported to the House were upon the question all passed without a negative Voice to any of them An Ordinance intitled for Tryal of Charles Stuart by a Court Martial was assented to and ordered to be Ingrossed and brought in to Morrow Order that the Clerk do not give out any Copy of the Ordinance for Tryial of the King to any Member of the House or to any other 5. Order to require the Lord Mayor of London to suspend the taking of the usual Oaths and to proceed to perfect the elections of Common-Council Men. Upon information that divers Prisoners of War had escaped out of Peter-house through neglect of the Keeper referred to a Committee to examine and report it And to consider of a Prison to be given to the Sergeant at Arms attending the House Order to desire the General to command his Marshal General of the Army to put in execution the Ordinance concerning Scandalous and un-licensed Pamphlets Order for a large Book of Velom to be made and all the Acts Ordinances and Records which lie abroad in Papers and have been neglected be there entred The Committee for Concealed Monies sate in Whitehall and rewards were allowed to the discoverers 6. The Ordinance for Tryal of the King was brought in ingrossed and passed A Letter from the Commissioners of Scotland resident here pressing for unity of Councils and Actions according to the Covenant betwixt the two Kingdoms and that the House would not proceed to Try or Execute the King till the advice of that Nation be had thereunto Debate concerning the proceedings of Law the issuing of Writs and the like in what name they should be the King and the Lords not acting The Common Council agreed upon an Order to be published to morrow in all Churches for speedy payment of nineteen thousand pound of the arrears of the Assessment for the Army to prevent the whole Armies coming into the City and to be quartered upon those who have not paid their Arrears 8. Letters from Ireland that Sir Charles Coot marched with his Forces of Connaght from Sligo seventy miles into the Rebels Country and after a little conflict with the Rebels some of them were killed and his party burned great store of their Corn preyed upon the Country and brought away one thousand of their Cows without loss That at his return he apprehended Sir Robert Stuart and hath sent him into England with a Charge against him that since this he hath possessed himself of Kilmore and fourteen Guns which Sir Robert Stuart endeavoured to block up by Sea and Land and hindered the provisions sent by the Parliament from being brought to their Forces The House referred it to the General and Councel of War to try Sir Robert Stuart and to take care for the Forces of Sir Charles Coot in Ireland whose actions they approved and Ordered a Letter of thanks to him Referred to the General and Council of War to secure Holy Island Order for the Northern Counties to have the Sequestrations of Delinquents there for disbanding their Forces The Commissioners for Tryal of the King sate in the Painted Chamber at Westminster and Ordered that to morrow a Herald should proclaim and invite the people to bring in what matter of fact they had against Charles Stuart King of England and appointed to sit the next day upon his Tryal 9. Widdrington and Whitelock by agreement went into the House this Morning the Tryal of the King being begun some looked very shy upon them others bid them welcome and seemed glad to see them there About ten of the Lords sate and passed several Ordinances which they sent to the Commons who laid them all aside The Lords had debate upon their last Votes about the Tryal of the King And that some thing should be published to satisfy upon what grounds they rejected the Commission for his Tryal but they resolved nothing Sergeant Dendy who attended the Commissioners for Tryal of the King according to their Order rode into Westminster-Hall with the Mace on his shoulder and some Officers attending him bare and six Trumpets on Horse back and Guards of Horse and Foot in the Palace-yard The Trumpets sounded in the middle of the
transported for Spain That old Van Trump was dead killed with a Cannon shot in the late Fight with the English and that many others of Note were slain Upon Information of designs in hand against the Parliament Order for an Act for Erecting a High Court of Justice That a Standard was set up for the King of Scots in the Highlands and Middleton was among them and some landed out of Ireland and came to them 15. Letters that the Highlanders were up in a body of Four Thousand Glencarn their General Middleton and some other English Officers and the Earl of Argyles Son was with them Of the Refractoriness of the Scots Ministers That the Hollanders endeavoured to lessen their losses in the late Fight that the States keep Guards in several places to prevent tumults and give it out that the English were beaten in the late Fight that twenty five of their Ships carried themselves as Rogues and kept without Cannon shot 16. The Act passed touching Marriages A Committee appointed for Trade and to receive Informations touching the good of the Common-wealth Order for an Act touching Publick Debts Votes concerning the Publick Revenue Mr. Lilburn's Trial at the Sessions proceeded 17. Order for a Grand day of Thanksgiving for the success against the Dutch and the Declaration and Narrative of that business was passed 19. Several Persons secured by the Commander in Chief in Scotland for having intelligence with the Highlanders That Argyle set out a Proclamation declaring all those to be Traitors who joyned with his Son That the King of Scots his Standard was set up in the Highlands and they were raising more Forces to joyn with Glencarn in the Lowlands That Middleton was landed in the Highlands with Arms and Ammunition 20 Of three Dutch Prizes taken by the French A Charge against Sir John Lenthall referred to a Committee Order for an Act for Redress of Grievances touching Prisons and Prisoners A Committee to consider of a new body of Law Orders touching Arrears of some Officers in Ireland and for Sale of some Delinquents Lands to defray publick Charges About twenty Dutch Vessels taken by Lawson who had Fifty Sayl upon the Holland Coast and more going out to him The Jury found Lilburn not Guilty he pleaded long for himself Vice Admiral Lawson with Sixty Ships was upon the Coast of Holland before the Dutch had got out Letters from Holland acknowledging Their loss in the late Fight to have been Twenty Seven Ships and of Men slain drowned wounded and prisoners Six Thousand That the English Merchants there left the Country for fear of the rage of the People that at the Hague they began to be sensible that they had not a Victory That the Dutch labour to get France to them That the States clapt up Three English Men pretending they had Correspondency with England one of them they Rackt and threw the other Two into the Dungeon They appointed a day of publick Fasting and Prayer 23 The House was called and the absent Members appointed to Attend by a day Orders upon Reports from the Committee of Petitions Order for an Act to take care of Ideots Lunaticks and Infants Order for Hampton Court and the Parks there to be sold An Act passed touching Marriages and the Registring of them and of Births and Burials 25 The Solemn day of Thanskgiving for the Victory against the Dutch 26 Letters that Collonel Morgan marched with some Forces to Innerness but the Highlanders being about Seven Hundred in a body and Three Hundred Horse would not force the English nearer than two miles distance and that upon the news then coming to them of the Victory at Sea against the Dutch they presently dispersed themselves 27 Vessels chased into Plymouth and Falmouth being Merchant Men. A Convoy appointed for them 29 Lilburn marched towards the Highlands to suppress any Commotions in those parts The Ministers in Scotland published their Reasons against the Declaration of the English Commissioners and in Justification of their praying for the King and the Answer to those Reasons 30 An Act passed for the bringing in the Arrears of the Excise Referred to the Council to examine and take order to punish a Riot lately committed in Staffordshire in pulling up the Fences of some inclosures and laying the Grounds unto the Common fields again Vote for all Occupyers of Deans and Chapters Lands yet concealed from the State to discover the same by a day on pain of Sequestration Order of the Committee of Petitions for Petitioners in private Matters to set the Matters down in Writing in particular and the Witnesses names to each particular 31 Letters of a Fleet of twenty Sayl of Hollanders gone towards the Orkneys and an express sent thither from the English Fleet. That the Highlanders in Commotion in Scotland were dispersed September 1653. Septemb. 1. Upon Information to the Council of the escape of divers Dutch Prisoners and their being Shipped and transported again into Holland they Prohibite any to Transport them unless they have Certificates from the Parliament of their Discharge from their Imprisonment 2 Many Ministers did forbear to Pray for the King by name but Prayed for all in Distress from the highest to the lowest A Petition to the House from the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council of London wherein they Pray That the pretious Truths of the Gospel may be preserved in Purity and the Dispensers thereof being approved to be Learned Godly and void of offence may be sent forth to Preach the Gospel That their setled maintenance by Law may be confirmed and their Just properties preserved That the Vniversities may be zealously countenanced and incouraged The Petitioners had thanks for their good affections and were desired to continue their care of the Peace and safety of the City 3 Orders touching Compositions of Delinquents The Ship Love from Surat richly laden was followed by Seven Dutch Ships who viewing her posture and strength did not make any attempt upon her The Parliaments Frigots lying before the Vlye took Eighteen Dutch Vessels some of them Fishermen and some Busses and sent them to Yarmouth 5 Long Papers sent up to London of Answers to the Scotch Ministers Papers of Reasons why they ought not to be troubled for Fraying for the King 6 Letters that near Mallaga an English Ship brake through a whole Squadron of the Dutch and by all their Shot at her had not one Man killed or wounded Many Freebooters upon the Coast of Falmouth That the Lilly Frigot had taken two Freebooters of the French And Order given by the Council of State to the Admiralty for the Trial of them because they had a Commission from the King of Scots 7 Particular Letters of the business of the French Freebooters 8 Letters of Seventeen Sayl of the Dutch Ships in the Streights disturbing that Trade and that they had taken One English Vessel That the Highlanders were all quiet Messengers sent to Collonel Lilburn to
pass for History themselves Only Julius Caesar writ in this kind with so much care to discourage any from writing after him but he design'd them for the World and deals not bonâ fide in the Story He takes no notice of his Scuffle with Metellus about the Sacred treasure and wheresoever his Prudence or his Justice might be arraign'd all is slurr'd over in Silence as they who Confront him with Plutarch Dion Cassius Ammianus Lucan c. may observe So that he composed his Commentaries with great Elegancy of Style but not with much Reputation to his Integrity The Author of these Memorials had not the same Temptations to Prevaricate nor can well be suspected of a Design to represent things otherwise than Faithfully to himself 'T is not the Style and Delicacies of Language that a Wise Reader expects in Writings of this kind 't is the Heart he seeks here and not the Countenance Here is no Preface of Insinuation of Indifferency and Impartially Our Author confesses every-where his Engagements his Party when he Proceeded and when he Retreated without casting any Mist to Lead you aside or Divert you where the Ways are Nice and Difficult from observing what were the Measures and where the danger of making a false Step. All are Naked here and the Party more likely to Suffer by the Truth than the Truth to have any Violence in Favour of a Party Hence it is that here we meet with many Secrets that never otherwise could have come to Light or would not have come without some Preparation and Adjustment And we find what were the Perplexities and what the Thoughts of the Principal Actours in the Critical Junctures and times of extreamest Difficulty and how they Steer'd in those black tempestuous Seas where no Chart or Compass could direct them We are told every where what the Intelligence and whence it comes without Reflecting on Persons and find always in him that principle of a Gentleman not to report Dishonourably of an Enemy And therefore is he the more Excusable in giving a fair Character of his Friends Livy every where made honourable Mention of Scipio Afranius and even of Brutus and Cassius often styling them Excellent Persons yet was he not the less beloved of Augustus Caesar nor had from him other Reprimand than to be called Pompeianus Nor did those times ever call them Rogues and Rigicides terms that afterwards a more degenerate Vn-Roman Generation under the Ministry of Sejanus bestowed upon them Lucian makes sport with a certain dealer in History who gave the Captain of his own Party the Name of Achilles and always call'd the Enemies General Thersites There are some sort of Writings devoted to the Passions and lower Agitations of the Soul to stir Anger and whet up a rusting Animosity But of all others it worst becomes an Historian to be dipt in any Drudgery of that nature 'T is an Affront to a Civil Reader who comes with a good Appetite hungry for the Truth to grate upon his Teeth with Reproaches and Aggravations or on the other hand to turn his Stomach with Nauseous Flourishes and Slavish Adulation The Reader comes not to Engage or List himself on a Party but expects with an Honest Neutrality to make Profit and a laudable Spoil from the Quarrels and Miscarriages of others and without declaring either for Guelph or Gibellin comes to reap the true Fruit of all the Toyl and Dangers that both have undergone he is to fill his head with Wisdom and seeks not the superficial Ornament of fading Laurels he studies not to be angry but to find Wit to his anger Our Author was too much in the World and too much a Philosopher for any such Malignity to infect his Pen nor was it in his Temper And certainly no man was ever better Furnisht or more Capable of Composing an History of these Times Worthy the Majesty of the English Name had he taken upon him that Province Some have an Opinion that it must be some General or some Ambassadour or some Prime Minister only that can be Sufficient for a Work of this nature But what can an Ambassadour perform beyond his own Circle and Negotiation Even Secretaries of State we know are not always of the Cabal nor their Intelligence the most infallible Nor is it to be thought that Hannibal bred in the Camp for all his discipline and his skill in Marshalling an Army could vye with Levy in managing a Pen in choosing his Words or disposing them in order nor could express that vigour of Style that address of Speech and Elocution All which are clear another sort of Talent Yet our Author not only served the State in several Stations and Places of the highest Trust and Importance both at Home and in Forreign Countreys and Acquitted himself with Success and Reputation answerable to each respective great Character but likewise conversed with Books and made himself a large Provision from his Studies and Contemplation like that Noble Roman Portius Cato as described by Nepos he was Reipublicae peritus Jurisconsultus magnus Imperator probabilis Orator cupidissimus litterarum A Statesman and learned in the Laws a Great Commander an Eminent Speaker in Parliament and an Exquisite Scholar He was all along so much in Business one would not imagine he ever had leisure for Books yet who considers his Studies might believe he had been always shut up with his Friend Selden and the dust of Action never faln on his Gown His relation to the Publick was such throughout all the Revolutions that few mysteries of State could be to him any Secret Nor was the felicity of his Pen less considerable than his knowledge of Affairs or did less Service to the Cause he Espoused So we find the words apt and proper for the Occasion the Style clear easie and without the least Force or Affectation of any kind as is shewn in his Speeches his Narratives his Descriptions and in every place where the Subject deserves the least Care or Consideration In all Occurrences in all the Messages Letters Remonstrances Petitions Representations Addresses Votes Conferences Orders Informations Proclamations Declarations and Proposals he delivers them in their Immediate Words in their own Cant and Dialect the more lively to express the particular Genius and that Ayr of Religion which in those Times overspread the face of Affairs The daily Passages and matters of Fact thus Simple and Vnadorn'd without being Pinn'd together and Lickt over to Advantage for Publick View may have as good Effect may be as Profitable and be as well Received by Men of Judgment as any Story drest up with Gloss and Artifice and all the Starch and Formality that ordinarily Recommend them to the World In matters of History none amongst the Moderns ever Merited better than Thuanus yet 't is observed without any Diminution to him that his Posthumous Work contains multa Falsissima Indigna many things most False and unworthy so great
the Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery and to Sir Henry Vane the Controller of the King's House to advise with them and to take order about the Scenes and other matters relating to the Masque and about preparing things in the Banquetting-house in order thereunto The Gallery behind the State at the end of the Banquetting-house was reserved for the Gentle-men of the Inns of Court who should come thither to see their Masque that there they might sit together and none else to be admitted with them into that place The Dancers Masquers Anti-Masquers and Musicians did before-hand practise in the place where they were to present the Masque and the Scenes were artificially prepared at the lower end of the Banquetting-house The grand Masquers were four Gentlemen of each Inns of Court most suitable for their Persons Dancing and Garb for that business And it was ordered that they should be drawn in four rich Chariots four Masquers in each Chariot by six Horses in a Chariot but there grew a difference about the order of their going which of the Inns of Court should have the first Chariot so of the rest in their order and how the several grand Masquers should sit in the several Chariots who in the first or chiefest place and who in the second third and last place To satisfie this it was propounded and assented to by the Committee that the Chariots should be made after the fashion of the Roman Triumphant Chariots and being of an Oval form in the Seats there would be no difference of place in them For the several Colours and for the precedence of the Chariots it was agreed that one of each house of the Committee should throw the Dice and as that happened the Society to be bound of which he that threw was a number On Candlemas-day in the Afternoon the Masquers Horsemen Musicians Dancers and all that were Actors in this business according to order met at Ely-house in Holborn there the grand Committee sace all day to order all Affairs and when the Evening was come all things being in full readiness they began to set forth in this order down Chancery-Lane to Whitehall The first that marched were twenty Footmen in Scarlet Liveries with Silver-lace each one having his Sword by his side a Baton in his hand and a Torch lighted in the other hand these were the Marshal's-men who cleared the Streets made way and were all about the Marshal waiting his Commands After them and sometimes in the midst of them came the Marshall then Mr. Darrel afterwards Knighted by the King He was of Lincolns-Inn an extraordinary handsom proper Gentleman he was mounted upon one of the King 's best Horses and richest Saddles and his own Habit was exceeding rich and glorious his Horsemanship very gallant and besides his Marshals-men he had two Lacquies who carried Torches by him and a Page in Livery that went by him carrying his Cloak After him followed one hundred Gentlemen of the Inns of Court five and twenty chosen out of each house of the most proper and handsom young Gentlemen of the Societies every one of them was gallantly mounted on the best Horses and with the best Furniture that the King 's Stable and the Stables of all the Noblemen in Town would afford and they were forward on this occasion to lend them to the Inns of Court Every one of these hundred Gentlemen were in very rich Clothes scarce any thing but Gold and Silver-lace to be seen of them and each Gentle-man had a Page and two Lacquies waiting on him in his Livery by his Horse-side The Lacquies carried Torches and the Page his Masters Cloak The richness of their Apparel and Furniture glittering by the light of a multitude of torches attending on them with the motion and stirring of their mettled Horses and the many and various gay Liveries of their Servants but especially the personal beauty and gallantry of the handsom young Gentlemen made the most glorious and splendid shew that ever was beheld in England After the Horsemen came the Antimasquers and as the Horsemen had their Musick about a dozen of the best Trumpeters proper for them and in their Livery sounding before them so the first Antimasque being of Cripples and Beggers on horseback had their Musick of Keys and Tongues and the like snapping and yet playing in a Consort before them These Beggers were also mounted but on the poorest leanest Jades that could be gotten out of the Dirt-carts or elsewhere and the variety and change from such noble Musick and gallant Horses as went before them unto their proper Musick and pitiful Horses made both of them the more pleasing The Habits and properties of these Cripples and Beggers were most ingeniously fitted as of all the rest by the Commissioners direction wherein as in the whole business Mr. Attorney Noy Sir John Finch Sir Edward Herbert Mr. Selden those great and eminent Persons as all the rest of the Committee had often Meetings and took extraordinary care and pains in the ordering of this business and it seemed a pleasure to them After the Beggers Antimasque came men on Horseback playing upon Pipes Whistles and Instruments sounding Notes like those of Birds of all sorts and in excellent consort and were followed by the Antimasque of Birds This was an Owl in an Ivy-bush with many several sorts of other Birds in a clustre about the Owl gazing as it were upon her these were little Boys put into covers of the shapes of those Birds rarely fitted and sitting on small Horses with Footmen going by them with Torches in their hands and here were some besides to look unto the Children and this was very pleasant to the Beholders After this Antimasque came other Musicians on Horseback playing upon Bag-pipes Horn-pipes and such kind of Northern Musick speaking the following Antimasque of Projectors to be of the Scotch and Northern Quarters and these as all the rest had many Footmen with Torches waiting on them First in this Antimasque rode a Fellow upon a little Horse with a great Bit in his mouth and upon the man's head was a Bit with Headstall and Rains fastned and signified a Projector who begged a Patent that none in the Kingdom might ride their Horses but with such Bits as they should buy of him Then came another Fellow with a bunch of Carrots upon his Head and a Capon upon his Fist describing a Projector who begg'd a Patent of Monopoly as the first Inventer of the Art to feed Capons fat with Carrots and that none but himself might make use of that Invention and have the Priviledge for fourteen years according to the Statute Several other Projectors were in like manner personated in this Antimasque and it pleased the Spectators the more because by it an Information was covertly given to the King of the unfitness and ridiculousness of these Projects against the Law and the Attorney Noy who had most knowledge of them had a great hand in this Antimasque of
and other Officers Letters to the Committee in the Army to keep the Army together and to assist for Sir Tho. Fairfax his Recruits Orders for providing the Train Waggons Artillery Arms Powder and a Magazine for Sir Tho Fairfax and for Draught-horses and Carriages out of several Counties for him A thousand pounds ordered for General Brown The mutinous Horse returned to duty were allowed a Fortnights pay but none for the time they were in mutiny and were now sent upon Service Several Committee-men added in divers Counties and Orders for money and clothes for the Scots Army in Ireland 15. Ordinances past for 1. per Cent. for supply of Plymouth and for money upon the Custom of Currans for Gloucester and for recruiting the Kentish Regiment at Plymouth The Lords at a Conference gave Reasons why they left some Officers out of the List of Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army but they waved the nominating of others they sent to the Commons an Ordinance for Marshall Law differing from the former and to continue two Months Waller and Cromwell beat up Goring's quarters who sled to Exeter 17. Captain Smith of Colonel Martins Regiment for a slight offence murdred an honest Buckinghamshire man the Commons sent to inform the Lord General thereof and ordered Smith to be sent for and punished Letters from the Committee of Nantwich informed that Prince Rupert Maurice and Langdale were all joyned in one great body and that without a speedy relief Sir Will. Brereton's Forces would be in great danger The House Ordered a Letter to be forthwith sent by the Committee of both Kingdomes for a party of the Scots horse and Dragoons to advance towards Sir Will. Brereton and ordered Supplies for his Forces And they referred it to the Members serving for Yorkshire and Lancashire to consider of some means for the supply of the Forces in those Counties At a free Conference the Commons offered their reasons to the Lords why they could not consent to the leaving out of the list those Officers whom the Lords had left out because they were such as Sir Tho. Fairfax nominated and the Commons approved and a delay in passing this list would be dangerous to Sir Will. Brereton ' s Forces to the association and to the whole Kingdome The Lords acquainted the Commons with a Paper from the French Resident desiring the transportation of Gunpowder from Holland to France without interruption of the Parliaments Navy The Commons Ordered for Answer that there being Amity between the Crown of England and the Crown of France there needed no particular Licence for the same Colonel Sir James Long High Sheriff of Wilts for the King returning from the Convoy of Prince Charles to Bristol was set upon by a party of Sir William Waller's at the Devizes and 40 of his men killed the Colonel 8 Captains 7 Cornets and most of the other Officers with 300 Souldiers taken Prisoners about 340 Horse and store of Arms taken and but 30 of the whole Regiment escaped Oxford was much streightned for Provisions Browne did them no small prejudice from Abington some of the Souldiers and Townsmen grew very mutinous and the Antiparliament there were about to question the Lord Digby for an Incendiary but they were dissolved 18. 1000 l. Ordered for Abington Colonel Stephenson a Member of the House was taken Prisoner at Royden-house in Wilts Ordered that Sir James Long taken at the Devizes be exchanged for him An Order for supply of the Town of Henly upon Thames with Match 1000 Bandeliers c. and Whitelocke was appointed Governour of that Town and of the Fort of Phillis Court which he rather accepted being his own house and he had there in Garrison about 300 foot and a Troup of horse The works of the Fort were strong and regular and the Thames brought round the Fort in a large Graft all the horse and foot were quartered within the works the great Guns about it were good and the Souldiers stout men and well armed and good Officers The Officers and Souldiers of Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army had a fortnights pay allowed them The Lords concurred with the Commons in passing the list of the Officers of Sir T. Fairfax's Army without any alteration which was so well taken by the Commons that they appointed a Committee to prepare a Message to be sent to the Lords from them to assure their Lordships of the real affection and endeavours of the House of Commons to support their Lordships in their honour and privileges The List of the Officers was this Sir Thomas Fairfax Commander in chief Major General Skippon Colonels of Horse Middleton Sidney Graves Sheffield Vermuden Whaley Sir M. Livesey Fleetwood Rosseter Sir Robert Pye Colonels of Foot Craford Berkley Aldridge Holborne Fortescue Inglesby Mountague Pickering Welden and Rainsborough A Petition of the East India Company for transporting some things agreed unto The Governour of Hurst Castle took two of the King's Ships bound for France forced by weather into the Isle of Wight in them they had 300 barrels of Herrings 11 pieces of Cloath 10 pieces of Ordnance 40 Prisoners and a pack of hounds News came that the Swedes in Germany gave a great defeat to the Emperours Forces 8000 of them slain the two Generals the whole Army routed many Prisoners taken all their Colours Ordnance Carriage and Ammunition Letters from Holland mentioned some difference rising there between the Prince of Orange and the States 19. The care of the education of the King's Children was committed to the Earl of Northumberland and his Countess and they took into Consideration the great losses of this noble Earl for his affection to the publick Care was also taken for an allowance for the Earl of Mulgrave and the Lord Sheffield in lieu of their losses Mr. Ford was voted to be one of the Assembly in the room of Mr. Bolles deceased Orders for expediting Sir Thomas Fairfax into the field and for money for the Lord Generals old Foot Souldiers and for monies for Sir William Brereton's Forces and for supplies for Ireland The Lord Savile left the Oxford party and came to London he was staid by the Guards and this day examined by a Committee of the Lords of the grounds of his coming in and was committed to the custody of the black Rod. Colonel Holborne routed a party of Goring's horse near Crookehorne and took about 500 of them About 400 of Banbury horse faced Northampton and endeavoured to take a Parliament Captain out of his house near Northampton but he with his Servants and about 16 firelocks kept the house and repelled the enemy and a party of horse drawing forth of Northampton the Banbury Horse fled away with some loss Letters from Colonel Cromwel informed that since his coming to his Regiment their Carriage had been obedient respective and valiant a good testimony whereof they gave in the late defeat of Long 's Regiment that they were sorry
from the Hollanders by the Parliaments ships of War c. which was referred to the Committee for foreign affairs Order about constituting of a Conful in Flanders for the affairs of this Kingdom Sheriffs sent for who had not undertaken cheif Offices 1000 l. allowed to Sir T. F. for intelligence and 500 l. extraordinary for his Artillery and allowahces for Waggoners and for the Commissioners in his Army Order for auditing the arrears of some Scots Officers left out of the new Model and some present supply for their subsistence Ordinance sent up to the Lords for the Commissioners of the Navy 3. Debate of the business of the Church The Commons would not concur with the Lords in releasing Sir John Hinderson out of prison but ordered a Letter to be written to the King of Denmark to acquaint him with the cause of his detention in prison Order for leave for a Member to goe into the Countrey Ordinance sent to the Lords for the pay of the Derbyshire forces Order for money for Mr. Frost Secretary to the Committee of both Kingdoms Ordinance sent to the Lords to prohibit importation of any Whale Oyl but what is fished for in Greenland by English men Sir Thomas Fairfax advanced from Reading to Salisbury and left with L. G. Cromwel 4000 Horse and Foot to streighten Oxford 5. Debate about admission to the Sacrament Care for money for Waggoners and for Souldiers Widows Information being given that P. Rupert and Goring with 7000 Horse and Foot were come to Burford and P. Maurice with 200 more to joyn with them to get the King and his Artillery out of Oxford where Provisions grew scarce and that divers of the King's Forces were withdrawn from Taunton The Parliament ordered that Sir Thomas Fairfax should send Col. Graves or some other with 3000 foot and 1500 horse to relieve Taunton and himself and Skippon to return with the rest of his forces to joyn with Cromwell and Brown to attend the motions of the King Care taken of Cambridgeshire and the Eastern association in case the King's forces should break in there Sir John Meldrum's men attempted to storm Scarborough but were repulsed with the loss of 20 men The Lords concurred to the Ordinance concerning Whale-oyl Some of the Leicester and Nottingham forces marching to regain Trent Bridge the King's forces in it fled away at night carrying with them what they could and set fire on the rest 6. The Commons ordered an Allowance of 8000 l. per an for the Prince Elector 2000 l. per an of it out of the King's Revenue and the rest out of the Estates of the L. Cottington and of Sir Nicholas Crispe A Preamble to the Proceedings in the Church Affairs to be sent into Scotland was presented by the Assembly to the Commons and assented unto and ordered that all the Proceedings of the Parliament and Assembly in the business of the Church should be drawn up and sent into Scotland The Earl of Carlisle took the Oath appointed for those that come out of the King's Quarters 7. One of the King's Captains came to the Committee of Cambridgeshire and took an Oath and protested to live and die with them Then he conspired to betray the Isle of Ely to the King but it was discovered and prevented The House took care for security of that place and for forces to be sent thither in case the King's forces should break into that Association A Declaration of the Transactions with the States Ambassadours voted Commissary Copley being under confinement upon an Accusation against him when he was an Officer to the Earl of Essex was upon his Petition bailed The House ordered the Declaration touching the Treaty at Vxbridge to be expedited They desired the Assembly of Divines to expedite the rest of the business of the Church 8. The Declaration of the Transactions with the States Ambassadour past and sent to the Lords Order that the Company of Merchants Adventurers do send the Covenant to all of their Company at home and abroad and return the Names of such as shall refuse to take it The Lord Mayor and Aldermen desired to call a Common-council That the Necessities of the Army for want of the Assessment may be communicated to them and to desire the Monies may be imbursed speedily At a Conference the Lords gave their Reasons against passing the Ordinance for the Admiralty Propositions from the Scots now upon their march Southwards were referred to a Committee and were for securing the Northern parts in their absence and for Money and Provisions Power given to Sir Thomas Fairfax to receive all Trumpeters and other Messengers from the Enemy for exchange of Prisoners or other Matters touching his Army and to discharge them upon all Addresses and to acquaint the Houses with all their Messages 9. An Ordinance against such who are called Spirits and use to steal away and take up children and bereave their Parents of them and convey them away And they ordered another Ordinance to be brought in to make this Offence Felony The Town of Newport Paganell desired that Colonel Cockeram in the place of Sir Samuel Luke might be their Governour but upon the question it passed in the Negative The Town of Plymouth petitioned that the Lord Roberts might be continued Governour there It was laid aside as contrary to the Self-denying Ordinance and ordered that a Committee of sive principal Townsmen and Gentlemen their Neighbours should have the Government there and Colonel Kerre to have command of the Forces of the Town Care was taken to answer the Scots Propositions according to their desires Order for Col. Rosseter to have the command of all the Forces in Lincolnshire Lieutenant Colonel Brown of Boston and Captain Culmore to have Col. Purefoy's Regiment Letters from Abington informed that the King with Prince Rupert and Maurice with one part of their Forces marched out of Oxford towards Cambden his Infantry went with Goring and about four and thirty Field-pieces and Carriages towards Worcester that Cromwell and Brown followed them Ordinance sent up to the Lords for punishing Souldiers that run from their Colours 10. Order for the Lord Fairfax and Committee in the North to order the War in that Association and the Committee to do it for 40 days after the Commission of the Lord Fairfax expires Orders for the pay of Troups Letters from Cromwell and Brown inform of the King 's going from Oxford Orders thereupon to the Committee of the Army for sending Money and Ammunition to them Both Houses ordered that L. G. Cromwell should be dispensed with for his personal attendance in the House and continue his Service and Command in the Army for 40 days longer notwithstanding the Self-denying Ordinance This was much spoken against by Essex his party as a breach of that Ordinance and a discovery of the Intentions to continue who they pleased and to remove the others from Commands notwithstanding their
to give any satisfaction they could to the Committee or to any particular Gentleman but they hoped that they should not be examined upon this as a charge against them which was not allowed to be so by the House Which after some debate seemed to be admitted and that in general they should be heard in this business by the Committee which they themselves freely offered The Lord Savile insisted upon a Letter from Mr. Hollis to the Duke of Richmond in a correspondence with his Grace but that did not touch Whitelocke nor did he prove by the Letter a Correspondence by Mr. Hollis but by some circumstances raised jealousies of it in some of their minds who were not Friends Nor could his Lordship prove any thing of his Information That they distinguished the parties among them in the Parliament into the Presbyterian and the Independent parties the Earl of Essex and the Scots as the Heads of the Presbyterians and the other party being the Independent party to be averse to peace but the Earl of Essex and his party of which Mr. Hollis and Mr. Whitelocke were to be the friends to peace Which words were denied by them The Committee adjourned to the next day and nothing was further done at this meeting 8. An Ordinance for regulating the University of Cambridge read the first and second time Order for Money for the Lord Fairfax his Forces and for the other Northern Forces of that Association An Ordinance sent to the Lords for levying 12000 l. in the Eastern Association Upon Letters from General Leven care was taken for Money for his Army Order for 2000 pair of Shoes and 2000 pair of Stockings for Sir Thomas Fairfax his Foot-souldiers A Souldier of Sir Thomas Fairfax was hanged for running away from his Colours and a Dragooner hanged for robbing a Countryman upon the High-way some few of his men staying behind at a Fair were surprized by the King's Forces from the Devizes Agents came from the Clubmen in Dorsetshire to Sir Thomas Fairfax desiring his Pass for their Commissioners to go to the King and others to the Parliament with their Proposals for a new Treaty of Peace and for a Cessation of Arms in the mean time and for the Towns and Garrisons of Dorset-shire and Wiltshire in the mean time to be put in their hands To this Sir Thomas Fairfax gave an Answer in writing That he could not allow of their Demands nor be an Instrument to convey them to the Parliament because by the Cessation of Arms and the Garrisons to be put into their hands the Parliament should be disabled to carry on the War in their own defence until a firm Peace might be settled which he and his Army desired as much as any and was the end of this War That he would undertake that the Army under his command should not injure the Country whereof they already had some experience and thus he dismissed the Clubmen's Agents The Governour of Lyme had an Encounter with some of them and killed about 50 of them led by one of Goring's Officers Colonel Fleetwood with a Party of 200 Horse and Dragoons was sent to follow the Rere of Goring whose Forces hasted away and they took only about 10 Prisoners Sir Charles Lucas with a party from Barkley Castle fell upon the quarters of some of the Parliaments Forces who received them and routed the whole party killed 16 wounded many took 38 Prisoners In the Afternoon Hollis and Whitelocke attended the Committee for the Lord Savile's business which was very full And many were there to promote the design of ruining them and to preserve them there were Mr. Recorder Glyn Sir Philip Stapleton Sir William Lewys and many other noble Gentlemen constantly attending upon this Great Committee The Lord Savile was again brought in to the Committee and as before he justified the Paper and that in the King's Answer to the Propositions there were divers expressions and words the same with those in the Paper which Mr. Hollis and Mr. Whitelocke did give to the Earl of Lindsey at Oxford Being again shewed his Paper and demanded by the Committee to say in particular what were the same words he intended he desired to see the King's Answer which was delivered to him and he comparing their Paper and the King's Answer together observed several expressions and words in their Paper to be the same with expressions and words in the King's Paper and did particularly set forth which they were Mr. Recorder asked If it were proved that Mr. Hollis and Mr. Whitelocke did give in a Paper at Oxford which had in it those words and expressions which the Lord Savile noted to be in the King's Answer That he had not heard any such thing proved and then he thought the Observations of the Lord Savile upon the King's Answer to be to little purpose Others disired to know how the Lord Savile being in those secret Councils at Oxford should become so well affected as he pretended himself to be to the Parliament He answered That he was Impeached at Oxford for something that he spoke at those Meetings with Mr. Hollis and Mr. Whitelocke and that they met more than once at the Earl of Lindsey's Chamber To which they made no answer Then the Lord Savile desired that Mr. Hollis would produce a Letter which he brought to him from the Duke of Richmond from Oxford by which he believed much of this business would appear But it was returned upon the Lord Savile that even then when he came into the Parliament he confessed he was imployed to bring Letters and a correspondence from the Parliaments Enemies to this place Mr. Hollis said little to this Letter and I suppose and partly know that such a Letter was delivered to him by the Lord Savile from the Duke of Richmond Mr. Gourdon at this Committee acknowledgeth that the Letter and Paper was brought to him by the Lady Temple who was the Messenger and Agent of the Lord Savile and that the Lord Say was acquainted with it before the Letter was delivered and that Sir Nathaniel Barnadiston and Sir Henry Vane jun. were likewise acquainted with it and wished him to offer the Letter That he said the House would be in a grand Committee and then he could not offer the Letter They replyed that they would call the Speaker to the Chair purposely to receive the Letter That none but these knew Mr. Hollis and Mr. Whitelocke to be the persons charged with having Intelligence with the King's Party but only he told others in the general That he had an Impeachment to deliver against two Members of the House but did not name them to any others 9. Order for a Letter of Thanks to Coventry for sending plenty of Provisions to Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army Much time was spent about Ordinances for raising Money for the Scots Army 10. The Sheriffs and divers of the Militia of London and of the adjacent Counties
of some of the King 's and Queen's Letters taken at Naseby Fight 16. The House passed many Compositions for delinquency for Sir Richard Halford Sir John Cotton and others and appointed a Committee to examine the abuses of Sequestrators and Sollicitors of Committees Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax his Army informed that they made a breach of about 30 foot wide in the Wall of Sherburne Castle and then sent a Summons And Sir Lewis Dives returned a peremptory denyal whereupon Sir Thomas Fairfax his men went on to storm 20 of the Garrison leaped over the Wall and came in to him demanding Quarter those within cryed out for a Parley but it was denied only Quarter offered for their Lives upon which terms the Parliament Souldiers soon made themselves masters of the Castle There they took Sir Lewis Dives the Governour and Sir John Stangeways formerly members of Parliament One of the Lord Paulet's Sons ●ussell an Attorney 10 Ministers divers of the Gentry and Commissioners of Array and 600 prisoners 1400 arms great store of Ammunition and Provisions 18. Order for the House to sit some daies in the week as a Grand Committee to consider of Propositions of Peace to be sent to his Majesty and the Scots Commissioners to be acquainted therewith Col. Rowe and Mr. Booker chosen by the City to go as Commissioners into Ireland were approved A Petition from Kent referred to a Committee Order for a Letter of thanks to Sir Thomas Fairfax and for a Day of thanksgiving for the taking of Bath Bridgwater and other Garrisons Goring failed of recruits in the West At Exeter an Oath was tendred to all the Inhabitants and Souldiers to oppose all forces not raised by the King's consent and particularly Sir T. F ' s. Army Letters informed that Prince Rupert had in Bristol a 1000 horse and 2000 Foot and took in a Garrison of the Parliaments called Stenchcombe where he put 40 men to the Sword in cold bloud In the King's march the Scotch horse fell upon his quarters at Bewley and took 70 horse and divers Officers At Litchfield the King confined Col. Hastings for delivering up of Leicester about Tilbury Sir John Gell fell upon his Rear took Captain Blake and others and 40 prisoners but the King's Forces returned upon him and rescued 20 of their own men and took 10 of Sir John Gell's prisoners Lieutenant G. David Lesly with the Scotch horse was near him and Mr. G. Pointz with 2500 horse Colonel Rositer with 1500 horse and the Country horse about 2000 intended to joyn together in all about 10000 horse to follow his Majesty 19. The House resolved That the Committees in the North had no power to appoint Governours of Forts there and the House nominated M. G. Pointz to be Governour of York and Colonel Sir Matthew Boynton of Scarborough A Declaration against Tumultuous Assemblies by any persons in Arms without Authority from the Parliament sent to Governours of Forts to be published and they impowered to seize on the Leaders of them to be proceeded against as Traytors Orders for Captain Doyley Governour of New-port Paganel to command the Regiment that was Sir Samuel Luke's Orders for levying the Arrears in London of the Assesment for Sir Thomas Fairfax's Army and for the Arrears to the Scots Army Order for money for several Forces 20. The House were in debate of the point for suspending from the Sacrament but nothing was determined in it Order for superstitious Pictures in York-House to be sold Orders for money and supplies for Garrisons Order That no foreign Impressions of English Bibles be vended here without perusal of the Assembly The King with 5000 Horse and Dragoons was at the Lord Fretswell's House and the Parliament forces not far from him G. Leven having planted his Batteries sent his summons to Hereford to come to a Parley and to expect no further offer A Book was brought into the House taken at Naseby fight wherein were the names of divers members of the House with summs of money supposed to have been contributed by them to the King and his Majestie 's hand in many places of it The Speaker said he had perused the Book and did not find there his own name nor Mr. Dunch or Mr. Whitelocke's name and he believed the reason was because the King had taken all from them 21. The House were in a Grand Committee in debate of new Elections for members and upon the Question it was carried by three voices to have new Elections and the Speaker ordered to issue out his Warrants for Writs for new Elections at Southwark Bury and Hithe and none to be chosen and sit unless they took the Covenant Both Houses granted a pass for the Lord Houghton the Earl of Clare's Son and another for Mr. Hollis's Son for going beyond Sea But Captain Bettisworth praying the like was desired to stay in England to doe further Service Sir Thomas Fairfax with advice of his Council of Warr proposed to go before Bristol The Plague was much in Scotland and Montross lately routed aBrigade of horse of the Covenanters 23. Order for supplies for M. G. Langherne and for 10 l. a Week to be allowed to his Wife in part of his Arrears A Bookseller questioned for Printing sheets unlicensed and order that none shall doe the like An Ordinance sent to the Lords for Mr. Case one of the Assembly to be Parson of Sapport in Cheshire Order for Colonel Jephson to beat up Drums for Voluntiers for Ireland Five hundred pounds Allowed to Scots Reformadoes Order for payment of Waggoners according to Contract and of Trades-men for their Commodities M. G. Brown continued very scrupulous and a discontent seemed to remain with him 25. Orders for recruits which came in but slowly for the Army and for money for the Forces of M. G. Massey A Petition of Ministers of London and Westminster concerning non-admittance of gross sinners to the Sacrament referred to the Grand Committee Order That the sad Condition of Scotland in respect of the sickness there and the late defeat given them by Montross shall be remembred in the publick prayers on the next fast day Upon Information of the King 's returning Southward and to prevent the plundering of his Souldiers and the breaking into the Associated Counties care was taken to put them into a posture of defence and for supplies of Garrisons in his way and Colonel Graves and Colonel Whaley were to go with more Forces into those parts Order for 300 l. for Colonel Graves The Scots Horse and Dragoons to whom M. G. Pointz Colonel Rositer and the Countrey Forces joyned makeing in all 10000 Horse and Dragoons got betwixt the King and the North so that he retreated back to Newarke a party of the Parliaments fell upon his Rear took the L. Harris a Papist 100 horse and divers prisoners From Newarke the King marched into Lincoln-shire where his Army
and divers great Lords remained in Oxford till they might receive the Kings order for which they had sent Messengers to him The next day the Citizens opened their Shops and there was a full Market again Farringdon was likewise surrendred and accommodation was sent for to London for removal of the Duke of York thither and surely no action or agreement either of War or Peace was ever more punctually observed than was this of the Oxford Articles Order for an Express to be sent to Prince Rupert and Prince Maurice that the Parliament took notice of their breach of the Oxford Articles by coming so near to London as Oatlands and requiring them to transport themselves beyond Seas within ten days if it could be or else to lose the benefit of those Articles Debate about the Preamble to the Propositions for Peace 27. The propositions for Peace were all agreed and a Committee named to consider of the manner of passing them and another Committee to be as Conservators of the Peace between both Kingdoms 29. Debate about the dismantling of Garrisons that of Oxford put off that of Winchester voted to be slighted Referred to the Committee of the Army to take care for the security of the City upon the repair of so many Delinquents thither from the Kings Quarters Order about the Judges who are to go Circuits and for allowances for them The General Commanded a select Council Cromwell Ireton Lambert Fleet-wood and Whitelocke to consult about disposing part of the Army to several Places and Sieges where there was need of them and also about the reducing of Wallingford and what conditions to send to them According to their advice Articles were drawn up to be sent to Wallingford and Whitelocke was made use of as their Secretary and there were two Regiments sent thither two more to Ragland and four Regiments to Worcester 30. The Princes Rupert and Maurice sent a very respectful answer to the Parliaments Letter to them that they were sorry that they had given them any offence had no intention to do it and would obey their orders The Prince Elector had leave to go and see his Brethren A Committee named to draw up an additional proposition for confirmation of the great Seal and invalidating of Acts passed by the Seal which was carried away to Oxford One Morgan a Popish Priest executed July 1646. July 1. Debate upon Ordinances touching the Excise and for moneys for Soldiers and Widows Order for reception of the French Ambassador one of the Lords and two of the Commons to come to him at his first landing The Garrison of Worcester agreed to a Treaty for the surrender of it 2. The Earl of Kent voted to be L. Lieutenant of Bedfordshire Orders that all Papists and Irish be put out of the lines of Communication and out of Corporations and that they that came from Oxford should be in their lodgings by nine a Clock the like for others that came out of any of the Kings Garrisons and that they have no Arms and that at Guild-hall they produce their Passes and ingage not to bear Arms against the Parliament and this order to be published by beat of Drum and sound of Trumpet Thus we may see that even after almost a Conquest yet they apprehended no safety such are the issues and miseries of a Civil War that the Victors are full of fears from those whom they have subdued no quiet no security O let our Prayers be to God never to have such calamitous times again Letters from Major General Mitton informed the readiness and assistance of Bishop Williams to promote the Parliaments affairs and particularly for the reducing of the Castle of Conwey giving his advice and being very active in that and all other matters for the Parliament 3. Letters from Sir Tho. Fairfax gave an account of the disposal of his Forces since the rendition of Oxford and the state he had put that City in and he sent up the great Seals and several other Seals which were there rendred to him Mr. Harbert one of the Commissioners for the Army presented the Seals to the House The great Seal which was carried away from the Parliament the Privy Seal the Signet Royal the Seal of the Kings Bench the Seals of the Exchequer and of the Court of Wards and of the Admiralty and the Sword Order for all those Seals to be broken and the Sword to be kept in the Kings Wardrobe Vote for the Earl of Salisbury to be one of the Commissioners of the great Seal in the place of the Earl of Bullingbroke deceased The proposition past the Commons and sent up to the Lords for making void what passed under the great Seal at Oxford and honours in Ireland and for confirming the great Seal here to which the Lords agreed and it was ordered to be communicated to the Scots Commissioners Order for Letters from both Houses to the King to desire him to send order to the Marquess of Ormond to deliver the Forts in Ireland in his hands to such as the Parliament should appoint A Petition from L. C. Lilburne to the Commons appealing from the judgment of the Lords who had Committed him referred to a Committee to consider of the priviledges of the Commoners of England 4. L. G. Pointz called into the House gave them an account of the Northern Forces they ordered a thousand pound to him in part of his Arrears and two hundred pound as a guift to buy him a Sword and a brace of Geldings and ordered three hundred pound per An. to him and his Heirs and gave him the thanks of the House Ordinance for ten thousand pounds for the Northern Forces Petition of London shewing that they intended to Petition the King a Copy of which they presented to the House for their approbation the House appointed a time to consider of it The Lords gave the City thanks for the like Petition Col. Jones his Regiment to be hastned for Ireland Papers from the Scots Commissioners which they received from New-Castle presented to the House One was a Declaration from General Leven and his Officers That they will adhere to the Covenant and will preserve the Vnion between the two Kingdoms and not countenance any disaffected to either Parliament that they abhor all wayes contrary to the Covenant Disclaim the Kings Letter to the Marquess of Ormond That as they came into England out of affection and not in a mercenary way so they will be as willing to return home and want of Pay shall be no hindrance thereunto and that the Kings unexpected coming to their Army hath not wrought in them any thing contrary to the Covenant Another Paper was a Petition of General Leven and his Officers to the King That his Majesty would take a speedy course to settle Religion and Church-Government the Liberties Priviledges of his Kingdoms to sign the Covenant and to comply with the Councils
Some of the Kings antient Servants and some others were approved of by the House to go down with the Commissioners to attend his Majesty and power given to the Commissioners to name inferiour Servants Orders for Money for the Commissioners charges for repairing Holmby House for Coaches Horses c. for the King For two thousand pound for Major General Brown in part of his Arrears and referred to a Committee that he be considered as other Major Generals Debate about an Information of a Protection from the King to a Member of the House A Colonel charged the Earl of Northumberland and of Pembroke to have sent Money to the King but upon examination he said he heard it from some of their Servants they denyed it and the Colonel being but a single witness and speaking but by hearsay the Lords acquitted the Earls and left them to their Remedy against the Colonel for the Scandal Mr. Murrey sent for in again upon information that he was Plotting the Kings escape from Newcastle in a Dutch Ship lying there for that purpose 13. A report of the Committee approved for making Sir John Bramston Sir Thomas Beddingfield and Mr. Chute Commissioners of the Great Seal and an Ordinance appointed to be brought in for that purpose An Ordinance committed for regulating the University of Oxford and agreed that no Members of either House shall be Visitors and that the right of the Earl of Denbigh as Chancellor of the University be preserved and that the City of Oxford do choose a Recorder An Ordinance to put Doctor Temple into a Parsonage 14. Compositions of Delinquents pass'd Ordinance sent up to the Lords for the new Commissioners of the Great Seal 15. Debate in a Grand Committee touching the Dissenters from the Presbyterian Government A Minister presented Articles to the Council of War against a Trooper for Preaching and expounding the Scripture and uttering erroneous Opinions The Council adjudged that none of the Articles were against the Law or Articles of War but that only the Trooper called the Parson a Minister of Anti-Christ for which Reproach they ordered the Trooper to make an acknowledgment which he did and was one night imprisoned Great noise was about this in London and about another Troopers Preaching at Buckingham upon which a Tumult was raised by the Cavaliers and suppressed 16. Order for levying the Arrears for the Army Debate about inlarging the Instructions for the Commissioners who were to receive the Kings Person they being gone out of Town An Ordinance sent from the Lords to the Commons for constituting the Commissioners of the Seal the Commons desired the Lords to pass that which they formerly sent up to them Ordinance for the accounts of the Soldiery and an order for fifteen hundred pound for Sir William Fairfax's Lady of her Husbands Arrears 18. Votes for Mr. Hollis Mr. Selden Sir Jo. Elliots Children Mr. Strodes Kindred Mr. Valentine Sir Peter Hammond's children Sir Miles Hobert Mr. Walter Long and Mr. John Hamdens children shall have five thousand pound to each for the sufferings of them or their parents 3 Car. for opposing the illegalities of that time and a thousand pound to Mr. Varsall upon the same account and all sentences formerly against them to be taken off and a Committee to consider how these allowances may be raised and to consider of the Petition of Alderman Chambers Order for two thousand pound for the Soldiers in Portsmouth and Hurst Castle and for viewing the Fortisications there and for six months pay for the Army The General made strict Orders for his Officers and Soldiers to pay their Quarters and that the Countrey may not be burdened and misdemeanors prevented and this by advice of his Council of War Captain Batten kept in the Dutch Ship at Newcastle Sir Tho. Tiddesly and Col. Price being apprehended about endeavouring the Kings escape got away Letters informed that the Scots Commissioners at New-castle could not prevail with the King to take the Covenant and sign the Propositions and that a Scotch Lord told him if he did not they must give him up to the Parliament of England and it would fall heavy upon him and his Posterity That his Majesty is not pleased to come to Holmby house not liking the place Letters informed that the Parliament of Scotland had voted That if his Majesty should have thoughts of coming thither at this time he not having subscribed to the Covenant nor satisfied the Lawful Defires of his Subjects in both Nations they have just cause to fear the consequences of it may be very dangerous both to his Majesty and to these Kingdoms which they desire may be timely prevented and they express their Arguments that if they should receive his Majesty it would be contrary to their Engagements with England and the Treaties 19. Order for ten thousand pound for the Earl of Northumberland out of Compositions in regard of his losses in the North. Orders about the Sale of Bishops Lands Lieutenant Col. Harrisons Accounts referred to a Committee and three hundred pound ordered to Mrs Serle a widow out of Doctor Ducks Estate Order for Money formerly given to Licutenant General Cromwell to be out of the Estates of Papists in Arms. Power given to the Committee of Complaints to imprison 20. Orders for bringing in and maintaining the credit of the Excise Order for the due observation of the Articles of surrender of Portland Sir Peter Killegrew returned with Letters from the King to both houses That he had received their Votes for his coming to Holmby and understood that Commissioners were coming for him and that he shall give them his resolution when they come the like Letters were to the Scots Commissioners Another Letter was from General Leven That according to the Parliaments desires he would take care of his Majesty that he depart not away and will be ready to do all good Offices A third Letter to the Parliament was from the Commissioners of Estates that they had received the Votes and sent them to the Parliament of Scotland Orders to communicate these Letters to the Scots Commissioners and for a hundred pound for Sir Peter Killegrew for his Journey Letters from the Parliaments Agent in Denmarke and an offer from thence of a Treaty for Correspondence betwixt the Kingdoms referred to a Committee Orders for a hundred pound for Mr. Jenkins formerly imployed to Denmark and for a hundred pound to Sir Henry Vane Sen. disbursed by him for the State and for two hundred pound to Mr. Smith for Provisions for Ireland and for the Arrears of the Porter of Portland Castle 21. The Lords differing about the new Commissioners for the Great Seal An Ordinance pass'd to continue the two Speakers Commissioners of the Seal till ten days after the next Term and they were ordered to consider of persons to ride the next Circuit A Committee named to draw instructions for the Judges that shall ride the next Circuits and to
sate not 5. The Houses sate not Letters from some in the Army informed that they were discontented at a Petition on foot in Essex against the Army That they might not be heard to Petition but Petitions against them were not suppressed That the Horse talked of drawing to a rendezvous to compose something for their vindication That the General was very industrious to keep them from disorders Letters from Scotland informed of good success by Major General Middleton against the Gourdons and that he had taken in the chief Fort of the Marquess Huntley 6. Orders for placing Ministers in Livings Letters from the Judges in the Norfolk Circuit of convicting one for Blasphemy Order for the Members of the House who serve for Essex and for Suffolk and for Norfolke to write into the Countrey for suppressing the Petition now on Foot there against the Army and to let the Inhabitants understand that the Parliament are upon a way so to dispose of the Army as may be best advantageous to the whole Kingdom The difference about the new Election at Newcastle referred to a Committee The Committee of both Houses propounded to the Common Council for the loan of two hundred thousand pound this security viz. the remainder of the Bishops Lands the Excise Delinquents Estates and the Ordinance for sixty thousand pound a Month or any other security in the power of the Parliament to give the Common Council appointed a Committee to consider of their answer to these Proposals Several Forces dispatched for Ireland For Dublyn divers Irish Rebels went out of that City and others were turned out by the Marquess Ormond Mr. Ashurst was careful in sending Forces and Supplys thither The Rebels were raising a great Army for Vlster 7. Reference to the Committee of Ireland to consider of the Exchange of some Scots Lords taken Prisoners in Ireland Scots Papers read about Belfast and calling home all their Forces upon payment of their Arrears Letters from Ireland from the Lord L'Isle Debate upon the Ordinance for sixty thousand pound a Month. A Clause offered to exempt the Universities Hospitals and Schools from the payment of it referred to a Committee Another Clause for abating all Counties the free Quarter in paying the Assessment was agreed unto Power to the Committee of Ireland to secure the Horses and Arms of such as shall not be listed for Ireland and to transport those that are designed thither The Lords desire the Commons concurrence to take off the Sequestration of the Duke of Bucks 8. Vote for Col. Jones to be Governor of Dublyn and to approve several contracts for supplys for Ireland and that Col. Sidney be considered for his good Service An addition of both Houses to the Committee for Ireland Votes to continue the Regiments of Horse of Sir Thomas Fairfax of Lieutenant General Cromwell of Col. Rossiter and Col. Whaley and Col. Needham and that Major General Mitton shall have an hundred Horse and an hundred Dragoons for North-Wales and Major General Laugherne the like for South Wales Letters from the Commissioners at Holmeby informed That notwithstanding all their care to prevent delivering of Papers to his Majestie yet one Col. Bosvill formerly of the Kings Party in the disguise of a Countrey mans habit as the King and the Commissioners were passing over a narrow Bridge put a packet of Letters into the Kings hand the Commissioners apprehended him and he confessed the Letters came from France and sent up his Examinations Order that Col. Bosvile be sent up as a Delinquent and a Letter of thanks to the Commissioners for their care and to desire the continuance of it 9. Order for greater pay for the Officers that go for Ireland than for those that continue here and to have Land in Ireland for that part that is respited upon the publick Faith and a Committee to draw up an Establishment of pay for the Forces there and in England Power to the Committee to grant Commissions to the Officers for Ireland to draw the Forces into Regiments and to take care to transport them Order to proceed a fortnight hence in the business in the Church for fourteen days together and no private business to intervene and the Assembly to examine such as are recommended to Livings Reasons given by the Lords at a Conference for taking away of Country Committees The present Commissioners of the great Seal continued for twenty days longer 10. The House sate not 12. Letters from Holmeby certified That when Bosvile delivered the Letters to the King no man perceived it but a Miller that stood by and he espying it cryed out Nobles and Gentlemen there is a man gave his Majesty Letters That Bosvile offered Gold to the Miller to be silent but he would not take it Bosvile got away and the Miller told some of it that attended the King and they rode after Bosvile and brought him back who being examined confessed he brought the Letters from Paris from the Queen That he was told the Letters contained a desire of the Prince to go into the War with the Duke of Orleans this Summer in point of Honour That the King being desired to make known the Contents of the Letters answered he was not to give an account to any man living That Bosvile was sending up to the Parliament 13. Votes touching Pay for the Forces to go into Ireland The Committee of both Houses sent down again to the Army to make further Propositions to the Forces that are to go for Ireland An Establishment agreed by the Commons for the Forces in both Kingdoms The Impost of five shillings per Chaldron upon Coals taken off and Vote That those who adventured mony for the reducing of Newcastle be repaid by Goldsmiths Hall Letters from the Lord L'Isle Lord Lieutenant of Ireland expressing his readyness to serve the Parliament and willingness to return if they think fit Letters Propositions and a Charge against a person in Ireland referred to the Committee for Ireland Unruliness of some of the Souldiers going for Ireland referred to that Committee A Citizen came and rendered himself Prisoner to the Sergeant at Arms saying He had a dangerous Plot to discover against the Parliament and Westminster which he had imparted to Mr. Marshal and Captain White The Lords concurrence desired to the Votes concerning Ireland and other Votes The Souldiers in North-Wales mutinyed for mony kept some of the Committee-men Prisoners in Wrexham Church and say they will have mony before Disbanding Letters from Ireland informed That the Lord L'Isle was ready to take the Field and to do all the service they should enable to do for the Parliament The Scots prevailed against the Gourdons Letters from Ireland informed That about sixty Men Women and Children that were stripped by the Rebels in Kerry coming from thence into the Protestant Quarters were taken and thrown into a deep rocky Cave and impossible to get out some with broken Arms Legs and other Limbs and most
the City They declare 1. That for what time their defaults and delayes shall occasion the stay of the Army hereabouts the charge should be upon them and their adherents about the City 2. That the Houses would consider of the Delinquencyes of those that had a hand in the late tumults and design of a new War and that such Fines may be set upon them as are agreeable to Justice 3. That in case the Money be not brought in by the time appointed that the Parliament would give leave to the General with the advice of the Committee of the Army for levying of the Arrears This was sent by the Commissioners to the Parliament and by them communicated to the Common-Council of London at which they were much startled 20. An Ordinance pass'd for payment of Moneys due upon Bonds in the Court of Wards and a day set to consider of providing for Orphans Upon a Letter from the General of the necessities of Portsmouth Garrison referred to the General and Commissioners in the Army to take care thereof An Ordinance sent up to the Lords for suppressing unlicenced Pamphlets and punishing the Authors and Sellers of them Orders for seven thousand Suits of Apparel and for Shirts Shoes and Stockings for the Forces in Munster and the like for the Forces in Vlster to be deducted out of their pay Mr. Thomas Challoner and Col. Jo. Temple appointed Commissioners of Parliament in Munster The Army in Scotland was voted to be disbanded The Inhabitants of Richmond-shire stood upon their Guard against free Quarter Major General Lambert sent some Forces thither to keep all quiet and went himself to disband the Forces in Northumberland The General made Commissioners of Martial Law in every Regiment to punish the misdemeanours of Soldiers in their Quarters referring all cases extending to Life or Limb to the Council of War at the Head Quarters 21. Upon a long debate Voted by both Houses That the King denyes in his answer to give his assent to the Propositions Order for all the Members of the House to attend in their places by a day Ordinances pass'd for Compositions A Report from the City to satisfie the House That the City at this time could no ways advance the fifty thousand pound for the Army Mr. Por●y one of the Commissioners with the Army presented to the House the Explanations and resolutions of the Council of the Army to the Quaeries made upon the Army's Proposals by the Parliaments Commissioners residing with the Army 1. Touching the time when this Parliament should determine it was held fit to suspend that till it should appear what expedition will be made in the Settlement of the things proposed 2. That the Army shall be satisfied either with Biennial or Triennial Parliaments if Triennial then they to sit at least six or eight Months 3. The limitations that Parliaments shall not sit above two hundred and forty days to be understood unless the Parliament find it fit to sit longer but every Parliament to dissolve at least eighty days before the next is to be begun that the course of new Elections may not be interrupted 4. That the Liberty of entring dissents is not desired but where the Vote may be to the destruction of Right or Liberty 5. By the Power of the Militia they mean the power of raising arming c. according to the expressions in the Propositions 6. By the Power of raising and disposing Moneys they mean the same as in the expressions in the Propositions 7. By great Officers they mean the same as in the Propositions 22. Upon a long debate in a grand Committee touching the Kings answer to the Propositions and motions for a personal Treaty and for sending the Propositions again to the King the House resolved to fall upon the settlement of the Kingdom by establishing such additional Laws as may make for the present and future good of the Kingdom and turning the Propositions into Bills and Acts. The House resolved That the Militia should be setled as a Law for twenty years Ordinances sent up to the Lords for Money for the Forces in Lancashire and against unlicensed Pamphlets 23. Upon debate Whether the Parliament should once more send the Propositions or any of them to the King it was voted That they should once more make application to his Majesty for his assent to such things in the Propositions as they conceive will most tend to the good of the Kingdom In order to which it was voted That the Proposition for the great Seal concerning Honours and Titles the Proposition for taking away Bishops c. with some alterations the Proposition concerning Declanations and Proclamations against the Parliament and so much of the twelve Propositions as concern the raising of Moneys for payment of the publick debts of the Kingdom be drawn into Bills and sent to his Majesty for his Assent The Ordinance pass'd for continuing the Committee of the Army and Treasurers at War Orders touching thirty thousand pound for the Army and the Months gratuity to the private Soldiers The General Council of Officers of the Army at Putney agreed upon a representation to the Parliament of their desires as Soldiers and delivered to the Parliaments Commissioners 1. That a Committee may abide at the Head Quarters to state the Accounts and give Debenters 2. For a visible security for the Arrears 3. For an Ordinance That none who have served the Parliament shall be pressed to any Forraign Service nor a Horseman to serve on Foot 4. That the Ordinance concerning Apprentices Freedom who have served the Parliament may be an Act. 5. The like for maimed Soldiers c. 6. For an addition to the Act of Indemnity for all said or done by any of the Army concerning any thing about the Army's Petition at Walden or in vindication of themselves 24. Upon a further report touching the Force upon the Parliament It was voted That Sir John Gayer Lord Major of London Alderman Bunce Alderman Cullam Alderman Langham and Alderman Adams shall be committed to the Tower upon Accusation of High Treason for countenancing and abetting the Force and Tumult brought down and used against the House July 26 last and this to be in order to their Tryal and the Committee ordered to bring in Impeachments against them 25. The Impeached Lord Mayor and Aldermen were carried to the Tower and upon further debate touching the Tumult and Force upon the Parliament it was Voted That several Citizens be Impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors and others to be Indicted at the Kings Bench of High Treason Reference to the Aldermen and Common-Council to consider how the Civil Government of the City may be executed according to their Charters now that the Lord Mayor is committed Orders touching Wharton's Books and other Pamphlets scandalous to the Parliament 27. The Commons sent up to the Lords an Impeachment against the Lord Major and desired a time for his Tryal
to his Majesty three of them were agreed unto and the fourth concerning the Militia was committed 4. The Speaker came very late to the House and was not able to sit above a quarter of an hour in the afternoon they sate in a grand Committee to provide a constant Pay for the Army and to take away free Quarter The House adjourned till Tuesday The Officers in every Regiment in obedience to the General 's Order put out all Soldiers who had been taken in since the engagement at New-Market or that had been of the Kings Party They flocked to the Head Quarters at Windsor desiring Money to bear their Charges or to return to their several Regiments from whence they came Those who had formerly served the Parliament were for want of Money to pay them off returned to their Regiments but not the Cavaliers or disorderly Persons A Corporal of Col. Lilburne's Regiment was sentenced to death by the Councel of War for putting on the Mutiny of that Regiment and five or six Troopers to run the Gantelope which was executed at Windsor but the Corporal was reprieved till Captain Braye's Tryal Who being tryed in part carried himself with great Pride and Arrogance The General Councel of the Army were informed of an universal denyal of Payment of the Assessment of the Army to make them odious and by that means to have free quarter taken off Twenty Resolute Fellows designed to rob the Exchequer but were discovered by a Water-man and Guards set to meet with them but sixteen of the Company fought resolutely and made their way through the Guards the other four were taken much wounded 16. the House sate not because of the Speaker's being sick The High German Prophet published a Maenifesto of great destruction to be in England the which he had before told to the King and to the General 7. A Petition for Hertford-shire to be eased of free Quarter the Petitioners had thanks for their good affections and were told that the House was now upon that business and hoped to give satisfaction therein to the whole Kingdom An information against a Member of the House that he had been a Delinquent was referred to a Committee A Petition from Bucks and another from Middlesex against free Quarter the Petitioners had the same answer as those of Hertford-shire had before Order to continue the Speakers to be Commissioners of the great Seal for twenty days after the next Term. Col. Sir Hardress Waller and Col. Whaley presented from the General and Council of the Army the representation of the Army and desired it might have a present reading It was read and referred to a Committee to report what parts of it were fit to be presently proceeded in 1. It takes notice how little hath been done since the Speakers return from the Army 2. That through this delay there have been dangerous attempts 3. That notwithstanding the Army is again setled 4. That the General engaged they should have content in Pay 5. The want of Pay occaesioning free Quarter but nothing done to take it off 6. They could have made their own way of Pay and destroyed their opposers but have studied the preservation of all 7. The Parliament have had sufficient cautions yet supernumeraries being twenty thousand are not disbanded 8. That the Pay be inlarged for the whole and they will engage that no free quarter shall be taken Much about Arrears and stating Accounts Till these things setled they offer That part of the Army may quarter in London till the Arrears be levied for maimed Soldiers and Apprentices Freedom and all must be done with all possible speed and if content be not given by the end of this Week they cannot answer for the Army but desire it may be under the conduct of others and that the Impeached Citizens may be proceeded against and the City pay the Countries dammage by free quarter occasioned by their not paying the Assessments 8. Upon a report from the Committee to whom the Representation of the Army was referred Order for a Committee of six to go to the General and treat with him and his Councel about disbanding the supernumeraries and Instructions agreed for them Votes for Pay and provision of Money free quarter to be upon those places which pay not the Assessment Both Houses passed the Ordinance of Tunnage and Poundage and some other Ordinances for Money and for the two Speakers to be Commissioners of the great Seal till twenty days after next Term. Mr. Walter Montague had liberty Order to exclude private business for eight days Letters from the Isle of Wight That the King was much retired his old Servants and Chaplains came to him Col. Jones had good success in Ireland 9. A Letter from the King to both Houses Taxing them for not answering his last Message and earnestly pressing for a personal Treaty that Peace may be setled the retarding whereof he lays on them and expresseth his own readiness to consent Order to communicate this to the Scots Commissioners Proceedings upon the Impeachments against the seven Lords 10. Upon a report from the Committee several Bills assented to to be presented to the King and Instructions for the Commissioners who are to present them A Letter from the Assembly in Scotland to the Assembly at Westminster ordered to be brought into the House Order for Fuel and money for the maimed Souldiers A further day desired to bring in the Charge against the Impeached Members and an Ordinance pass'd both Houses for Money for Plymouth Garrison 11. A Petition from the Gentlemen of Ireland now in London complaining of the want of Supplys for the Forces in Ireland the Petitioners had thanks for their care of that Kingdom and a day set for consideration of that business Difference upon amendments of the Ordinance of Tunnage and Poundage Order to re-imburse the Commissioners of the Customs and to continue them Mr. Scot added to the Committee of Sequestrations The Parliaments Commissioners conferred with the General about the disbanding of Forces and agreed that there be no addition of Forces and for securing of Arrears Representations were presented to the General from particular Regiments 13. The Speaker acquainted the House with a new design to raise an Army against the Parliament the Examination of it was referred to a Committee The Lieutenant of the Tower apprehended some suspitious Persons there and the House approved thereof Divers Compositions were passed Some brought out of Ireland referred to the Committee at Derby-House Order for Col. Mitton to secure Sir Faithful Fortescue Order for the Commissioners of the Great Seal to present to Livings The Impeachments against the seven Lords were long debated Letters from the Commissioners at Windfor of their proceedings Letters from York of a Soldiers being censured by the Council of War to a weeks imprisonment and dyet of Bread and Water for being unruly at his Quarters and not contented with his dyet another cashiered
and to stand with a Paper in the Market-place and to be whipped Another shot to death for killing a man 14. The Lords finished the four Bills to be sent to his Majesty and named the Earl of Northumberland Kent Rutland Pembroke and Salisbury to be their Commissioners to present them The Commons concurred and named for their Commissioners Mr. Bulkley Mr. L'Isle Mr. Robert Goodwyn and Mr. Kemp for their Commissioners or any three of both Houses Order for Money for Ireland Divers Compositions passed 15. Ordinance for Sallaries for the Officers of the Committee of Accounts Another pass'd for addition of Members to the Committee of the Navy The Scots Commissioners desired time to consider of the four Bills to be presented to his Majesty Vote of both Houses for the Country Committees to certifie the full value of all Sequestred Estates The House in the afternoon passed an Answer to the Scots Commissioners That Bills pass'd both Houses are not to be altered by any other and that they are resolved to send their Commissioners by Tuesday next and desire that the Scots Commissioners would send their Propositions at the same time 16. Report from Col. Lilburne's Committee An Ordinance for repairing Churches and Chappels Ordinances sent to the Commons for turning Delinquents out of the Lines Another about chusing Common-Council-men Malignants and such as abetted the late Force against the Parliament to be uncapable to be chosen Order for five thousand pound to be paid to Mr. Hampden's Executors An Ordinance pass'd for setting poor people to work A Letter with an inclosed Declaration from the Scots Commissioners Order about the Guards of the House Ordinance pass'd for Captain Ed. Harley to be Vice-Admiral of the North c. Reference to the Committee of the Navy about the Isle of Providence Letters from Windsor of a good agreement between the Parliaments Commissioners and the G. Councel of the Army about the particulars before-mentioned and for the Armies being drawn into Garrisons and all free Quarter to be taken off so as they may have constant Pay Deans and Chapters Lands desired for security A Petition of the Farmers in Surrey to the General about free Quarter and their Landlords refusing to deduct of their Rents for the free Quarter they desired the General to move the Parliament for their Relief herein who recommended it to the Houses 18. Mr. Marshall and Mr. Nye appointed to go Chaplains to the Commissioners to the Isle of Wight Divers Compositions passed Order for Col. Nedham's Arrears to be audited One of Col. Lilburn's Regiment condemned to dye by the Councel of War for raising the Mutiny at Ware and others to run the Gantelope Captain Grey and Major Cobbet tryed 20. The Commissioners ordered two hundred pound for their Charge to go to the Isle of Wight The Primate of Armagh continued Preacher at Lincolns Inne Referred to a Committee to examine what Delinquent Ministers did Preach or Read the Book of Common Prayer and to silence them which was much opposed by divers as contrary to that liberty of Consciences which they themselves pretended to insist upon as due to every Christian It was carried in the Negative upon the question that Deans and Chapters Lands should not be security for the Arrears of the Soldiers but that it should be out of the remainder of Bishops Lands and out of Forrest Lands and the Excise Several Compositions were passed Debate upon the Declaration from the Scots Commissioners claiming in language a joynt interest with the Parliament of England in the setling of Peace in both the Kingdoms and protesting against the four Bills and they press for a personal Treaty at London They inforce Let that be given to God which is God's and to Caesar that which is Caesar ' s and puts them in mind of their professed Loyalty An Answer was agreed upon in like high termes to their Declaration 21. Order for an Ordinance for further Indemnity for the Soliders and for another to draw the Forces into Garrisons and for a Declaration of the necessity that hath been to keep up an Army and to take free Quarter and that if the Kingdom will pay in six Months Arrears of the sixty thousand pound per Mens that then the other three Months Arrears will be remitted and no Officer shall come into any mans House without his leave nor no Soldier except in Innes Ale-houses Taverns and Victualling-houses The Printer Committed for Printing the Scots Declaration without leave of the House Orders for preserving the Arms of such as shall be disbanded from being imbezeled that the Forces to be disbanded shall have two month pay and divers Compositions were passed Major Cobbet sentenced by the Court-Martial to be Cashiered 22. Debate of an Ordinance for reimbursing the Commissioners of the Customs and they to be removable at the pleasure of both Houses their Money being paid An Ordinance passed for the maimed Soldiers another committed for securing the Soliders Arrears Another past for stating the Accounts of the Army Another pass'd to make a Committee in Kent to hear Differences about Military Affairs and to give indemnity Order for the Members to go into their several Counties for collecting the Arrears of the Assesment 23. The Trustees for Bishops Lands were made Trustees for Delinquents Lands and Forrest Lands for security of the Arrears of the Soldiers Vote That 15 January next the Army shall be drawn into Garrisons and free Quarter taken off and that the remainder of Bishops Lands should be security also to the Soliders Orders about collecting the Assessment of sixty thousand pound a Month. 24. Letters from the General to the House with a Paper of the result of the Councel of War at Windsor concerning Quartering of the Soliders in Innes Ale houses c. referred to the Committee of the Army to confer and consider with the General and his Officers about it A Petition of Divers Citizens who were abused the last year for opening their Shops on Christ-mas day though an Ordinance of Parliament did warrant it Order that the Committee of the Militia of London and Westminster should take care to prevent the like inconveniences and to put out of the Lines all Delinquent Ministers Order upon the General 's Letter for Col. Rainsborough to go forthwith to his Charge at Sea as Vice-Admiral At a Councel of War some Officers acknowledged their Errors upon former passages and desired to be re-admitted into the favour of the General and his Councel which was approved and the Officers kept a Fast where Cromwell Ireton Col. Tichburne and other Officers Prayed and from Scripture exhorted to Unity and Obedience to Commands 25. Christ-mas day the shops were all shut up in London notwithstanding the Ordinance to the contrary The Houses sat and upon complaint that some Delinquent Ministers Preached on this day in London and that the Common-Prayer-Book was used in several places power was given to the Committee of Plundered Ministers
to examine and punish Church-wardens Sequestrators and others who countenance the same Order to put in Execution the ordinance for abolishing Holy-days A Printed Paper directed to the Speaker intituled Observations on the Scots Message to the Parliament referred to a Committee to find out the Authors and Printers of it being very scandalous to the King Parliament and Army Mr. Saltmarsh the Minister assirmed that he had somewhat revealed to him from Heaven wherewith he must acquaint the Army And presently went from his House in Essex to Windsor where he spake with the General with his hat on and told him he had doted on him but now must honour him no more because he had Imprisoned the Saints He also told the Officers of the Army That formerly he came to them as a Lamb but now he was come as a Lyon to tell them what the Lord bad revealed to him That though the Lord had done much by them and for them yet he had now for saken them and would not prosper them because they had for saken him their first Principles and had imprison'd the Saints with many of the like expressions He then told the Army He had delivered his message done his work and must leave them and see them no more and so went from Windsor to London and from thence to his House in Essex where being ill on Friday he told his Wife he had now finished his Course and must go to his Father And the next day he dyed 27. Orders for Money for the Navy At a Conference the Commons informed the Lords that Col. Rainsborough had cleared himself of the objections formerly made against him and now at the desire of the General and his Councel the Commons had voted him to be readmitted to his imployment of Vice-Admiral and desired their Lordships Concurrence therein Debate upon a Petition of Doctor Trigge Some Compositions of Delinquents passed Letters from the Commissioners sent to the King That they presented the Bills and Propositions to his Majesty who then said He was assured they would not expect a present answer but he would take the same into consideration and give his answer within few days The next day after the four Bills presented to the King the Scots Commissioners came to him and presented to him a Declaration That they had endeavoured by all means to the Parliament of England for furthering a happy Peace having seen the Propositions and understood of Bills brought to his Majesty which they apprehend prejudicial to Religion the Crown and the Vnion between the Kingdoms and therefore in the name of the Kingdom of Scotland declare their dissent The General sent his Letters to Major General Lambert Major General Laugherne Major General Mitton Major Hopton Col. Humphreys Col. Duckenfield and Col. Venables concerning the disbanding supernumeraries Letters from Ireland of Col. Jone's Marching into Wicklow That his Regiment conformed that Owen Roe Oneale was by the Popish Clergy opposing the Laity made Generalissimo of the Rebels and General Preston cast off That Sir Charles Coote was gone into the Field but Sir Robert and Sir William Steward's Regiments refused to March with him That the Soldiers under the Lord Iuchequin in the last Victory they gained fought all of them with the greatest courage imaginable though they wanted Cloaths Shooes and Bread 28. Debate of an Ordinance for eight hundred pound per An. to be setled on the Bishop of Durham A Petition from Newcastle complaining of the sore burden upon them of free Quarter when the Scots were there and ever since and the Oppression not so great in any other part of the Kingdom Order that they shall have the publick Faith for all free Quarter since the Scots were there Orders for Ammunition for that Garrison and touching the Sequestrations there and in Northumberland to pay Money due to those Countries The Lords dissented from Col. Rainsborough's going to Sea and gave their Reasons for it at a Conference A Message from the Lords to give the Marquess of Winton four Months longer time of liberty and to consider of the Petition of the Lord Cromwell A Letter of thanks written to the Commissioners in the Isle of Wight Divers Compositions passed 29. The Monthly Fast-day News came of a great Disorder and tumult in Canterbury about the observation of Christmas-day the Major endeavouring the Execution of the Ordinance for abolishing holy-days was much abused by the rude multitude had his head broken and was dragged up and down till he got into an house for his safety They broke into the houses of divers others who were of the Majors Opinion put themselves into a Military Posture kept Guards stopt Passes and examined Passengers and the like Insurrections were in several other places of the Kingdom 30. Upon a Letter from the Committee of Kent of the disorder at Canterbury The House ordered That the Order for examining and committing of Church wardens c. who countenanced Malignant Ministers should be Printed and referred the business of the Riot at Canterbury to the Committee with power to send for Parties c. and to imprison and to certifie the whole matter to the House The like Riot at Eling in Middlesex was referred to be examined and proceeded against at the Sessions of Peace Letters from the General that he had given a Commission to Sir Arthur Haselrigge to be Governor of New-castle which the House approved and ordered him to repair thither to his Charge Mr. Harris a Church-Warden of St. Martins Parish ordered to be committed for bringing Delinquents to Preach there and to be displaced from being Church-warden there 31. Letters from Sir Thomas Fairfax That by reason of a late Mutiny and design to carry away the King he had given order to Col. Hammond to keep a strict guard upon his Majesties Person till he further knew the pleasure of the Parliament The House approved therof and ordered the General to take special care for securing the Person of his Majesty where he now is in Caresbrooke Castle And they ordered that Col. Hammond the Governor of the Isle of Wight take special care for securing the King's Person where he now is and to observe such further Orders therein as he should receive from the General and the Lords concurred herein The Parliaments Commissioners returned from the King with little satisfaction touching the four Bills presented to him The House Ordered that Mr. Marshal and Mr. Nye be desired to come and pray with the House to morrow morning to seek God for his blessing and direction in their consultations tending to matters of great concernment The general Councel of the Army agreed upon Warrants to be sent from the General to all those Officers whose Soldiers were to be disbanded according to the Orders of Parliament that they conform unto and see the same done accordingly and mention of the stating their Accounts and security for their Arrears with present Pay of
part of them in the Warrants The Officers of the Army fully complyed with the Parliaments Commissioners and at their parting all expressed much joy and the General Councel that they would live and dye with the Parliament and gave the Commissioners twenty five Guns from the Castle at their going away from Windsor January 1647. January 1. Letters from Col. Hammond of the great Mutiny two days since in the Isle of Wight in New-port when the Parliaments Commissioners went away That the Mutineers designed to seize upon Carisbrooke Castle and to take away the King That Captain Barley and others of the Mutineers are in Custody and the King yet secured at Caresbrooke Castle and stronger guards set upon him than formerly Divers Letters came from the Parliaments Commissioners at the Cowes to the same purpose Some related not without ground that Mr. William L'Isle had undertaken to provide a Ship for the King's escape out of the Isle of Wight but the Ship failed not without some reflection upon the undertaker and the Kings escape was thereby prevented Order for Vice-Admiral Rainsborough to repair with some Ships to the Isle of Wight and the House approved the Order of the Commissioners for some of the Parliaments Ships to attend at the Island Order for the General to give Commission to Col. Hammond to try by Martial Law the actors in that Mutiny and a Commission of Oyer and Terminer to Try the others Order for a Letter of thanks to the Major and well affected Inhabitants of Newport for their good affections expressed upon the late Mutiny and for Money for the Soldiers there Sir William Constable Lieutenant Collonel Goffe and Lieutenant Collonel Salmon sent from the General into the Isle of Wight More Forces sent thither and Mr. Ashburnham Sir Jo. Berkley Dr. Shelden and the rest of the Kings retinue were discharged 3. Upon a long debate from Morning till late at night of the Kings last Message and the report of the Commissioners who presented the four Bills to him and his not giving any satisfactory answer thereunto the Commons passed these Votes 1. That no more Addresses be made from the Parliament to the King nor any Letters or Messages received from him 2. That it shall be Treason for any to deliver any Message to the King or to receive any Letter or Message from him without leave of both Houses 3. That the Members of both Houses of the Committee of both Kingdoms have power to sit and act alone as formerly the Committee of both Kingdoms for the safety of the Kingdom 4. That the Earl of Kent Sir Jo. Evelyn and Mr. Fines be added to that Committee in the rooms of the Earl of Essex Sir Philip Stapleton and Mr. Glyn. 5. That a Committee draw up a Declaration to satisfie the Kingdom of the reason of the Votes 6. That the Concurrence of the Lords be desired to them The General and his Council published a Declaration reciting tho Orders of Parliament they do now declare and assure That the Army by the fifteenth of January next according to the said directions shall be drawn into Towns Cities and Garrisons and that the Parliament supplying the Soldiery with Pay no free Quarter shall be taken after that day upon any that pay their Assessments nor any inforcement for Horse-meat or Mans meat during the Pay 4. The Commons considering the many weighty Affairs which prolong this Session of Parliament and being willing to for bear their own priviledge for the publick good they did order That from 20th of this January no person under the authority of that House except the Members thereof shall during this Session of Parliament have any Protection or Immunity by reason of any Priviledge of this House in any Suit for Debt or upon contract or security or upon any Title to Lands c. Their Estates to be liable but not their Persons to be imprisoned nor prosecuted upon Poenal Laws and if they refuse to appear to any Suit the House being moved therein will do Justice and appointed a Committee to hear and report complaints of this Nature A Committee of Grievances was named to consider of such whereof redress hath been promised to the People and what ease is fit to be given in relation to their Burdens Freedoms and Liberties and of reforming Courts of Justice and proceedings in Law and in all matters of Trade and to prepare Ordinances for the same to be presented to the House Orders for Money for disbanding the Supernumeraries and for supplyes for Carisbroke Castle and other Forts in the Isle of Wight Several Copositions were passed Letters from the Isle of Wight That the King was much Discontented since the Insurrection at New-port That he much desired Dr. Shelden and Dr. Hammond might continue with him whereof Col. Hammond gave notice to the Parliament and to the General 5. Debate about Compositions Power given to Col. Hammond and Sir William Constable to place and displace such attendants about the King as they think fit for security of his Person Order for allowance for his attendants Divers Compositions passed Both Houses passed some additional Directions for Billeting the Army when they are upon a March or setled in their Quarters The Civil Officers to joyn with the Quarter-masters of the Army and what the Soldiers shall have and what he shall pay for it 6. Order touching relief of Widows and maimed Soldiers One presented to the House a Book concerning the Power of Civil Magistracy for which he was Committed and the Committee about Scandalous Pamphlets ordered to sit and Money ordered to gratifie such as shall discover Presses or Authors of Scandalous Pamphlets Order for Supplies of Garrisons 7. Order for a Letter of thanks to the Committee of Kent for their care in suppressing the tumult in Canterbury and for a Commission of Oyer and Terminer to try the chief Mutineers there The Commons agreed with the Lords for further Liberty upon Bayl for the Marquess of Winton and Earl Cleaveland 8. More Power given to the Committee of Grievances and order for the Printing of that business Order of both Houses to restore to Duke Hamilton his Pictures An Ordinance sent up to the Lords to prohibit the transportation of Wool and of Fullers Earth and of Irish Wool Order for a further Ordinance against Scandalous Pamphlets and Reports from that Committee to have Precedence Upon a petition of the Primate of Armagh Order for him to continue Preacher at Lincolns Inne The general Councel of the Army sat at Windsor and were very Unanimous in the results of their debates and to morrow they were appointed to dine with the General in the Castle to congratulate the Unity of the Army and to take leave of one another before the Armies going into Towns and Garrisons after the fifteenth of this Month. 10. Upon a Report from a Committee of some Papers and Warrants taken in the time of War as a Warrant under
Committee who are to go into the several Counties for disbanding the supernumerary Forces take care to disband Troop after Troop and Company after Company till they be all disbanded and the General desired to give his Orders therein Letters of a design of Col. Kempson's Col. Ayres Col. Herberts and Col. Cookes Officers of their Regiments consulting about eighty of them together to surprize Glocester and other Forts thereabouts upon assurance that Col. Laugherne and the discontented Londoners would joyn with them This was referred to the Committee at Derby House 25. Order for the Committee of the Revenue to retrench the Kings Servants and upon the Governors Letter a thousand pound ordered for Repairs of Carisbrooke Castle The Commons named Mr. Goodwyn Mr. Ashurst Mr. Stapleton and Col. Birch their Commissioners to go into Scotland An Ordinance passed both Houses for Pardons to be passed under the Great Seal for some Prisoners in New-gate Another for the sale of Worcester House to the Earl of Salisbury another for making Major General Mitton Vice-Admiral of North Wales 26. The Monthly Fast-day Letters from Ireland of the Lord Inchequin's success in Limericke but the extream want of his Soldiers of Food and Rayment compelled his return That there were differences amongst the chief of the Rebels the Lord Taffe was chosen their General 27. Upon Letters from the Committee of Kent the House voted tryal of more of the Rioters of Canterbury by a Commission of Oyer and Terminer The charge against the Lord Willoughby of Parham pass'd the House and ordered to be sent up to the Lords wherein his Friends did him what service they could to pacifie his adversaries but they were sharply bent against him Debate of the charge against the eleven Members The charge against Sir Jo. Maynard passed and ordered to be sent up to the Lords and ordered that Mr. Hollis Sir William Lewis Mr. Nichols Sir Jo. Clotworthy Sir William Waller Col Massey and Col. Long be disabled to sit as Members of the House The Lords named the Earl of Denbigh and the Earl of Stamford Commissioners to go into Scotland 28. The Ordinance for setling the Presbyterian Government and for removing obstructions therein sent up to the Lords Part of the Instructions assented to for the Commissioners that are to go into Scotland Upon information that divers discontented persons met in the West and under pretence of apprehending High-way-men themselves committed many Robberies Order for the General to suppress all such Money ordered for the Commissioners who are to go into Scotland Reference to a Committee to consider of removing Prisoners out of the Tower to other Prisons for security of the Magazine and of the Lieutenants Fees 29. Voted that the rest of the eleven Members should be impeached of High Treason as Sir Jo. Maynard was except Sir William Lewis who was to be impeached of High Crimes only The House considered of recommending a Successor to Mr. Glyn to be Recorder of London And upon consideration of the good Service done by Mr. Steel in the business of Captain Burley and other affairs they recommended him to the City to be their Recorder Voted to impeach the rest of the seven Lords as the Lord Willoughby was impeached The Lords named the Earl of Nottingham in the place of the Earl of Denbigh to be one of the Commissioners to go into Scotland and had sent up to them the instructions for the Commissioners Sir William Constable's Regiment marched into Glocester and Col. Morgan's Forces marched from thence 31. An Ordinance pass'd the Commons for dividing the Parish of Roram in Kent The Charges carried up against the Lords and desired that they may be proceeded against according to the Laws and Customs of Parliament Reference to the Committee of Foreign Affairs to examine an Information touching the raising some Forces here for the Spanish Ambassador without leave of the Parliament Order for payment of Arrears of some of the Scots Officers Debate of the Ordinance for suppressing of Stage-plays The Lords Concurrence was desired to recommend Mr. Steel to be recorder of London A Petition of the Officers sent out of Ireland to have their Liberty The Ordinance passed both Houses for dividing and setling the several Counties into distinct Classical Presbyteries and Congregational Elderships The Disbanding went on in the North. Rumors of preparations for War from Scotland February 1647. February 1. Orders for providing Money for the next Summers Fleet and about the Customs An Ordinance sent up to the Lords for two thousand pound per Mens for Ireland Order to prosecute the late Riotous Persons and that Mr. Jermy and Mr. Steel be of Councel with the State against them and Mr. Becke to be the Sollicitor An Ordinance for repair of Churches assented to Letters from Ireland That Col. Jones for want of Corn and Cloaths for his Soldiers was inforced to leave the Field 2. The Examination and punishment of the late Authors of the Force against the Parliament referred to the Judges An Ordinance appointed that the Probate of Wills shall be as heretofore by the Civil Law proceedings Order to dissolve the Kings Houshold and the Committee of Revenue to pay them off and the General to appoint attendants upon the King not exceeding thirty Sir Henry Mildmay had the thanks of the House for his good Service in Hamp-shire at the tryal of Captain Burley c. The House of Peers ordered the seven Impeached Lords to give security for their appearances and to answer the charges against them by a day 3. Votes for Legacies Administrations Marriages Divorces Suits for Tythes c. to be by the same Law as formerly Referred to a Committee to consider of some speedy course to prevent the sale or pawning of the Crown Jewels An Ordinance sent up to the Lords for conveying the Earl of Newcastle's Mannor of Flawborough in Nottingham to a Member of the House in satisfaction of his losses by the Earl Upon Letters of General Leven Order for a thousand pound for Mr. Robert Fenwicke for his losses and good affections Both Houses pass'd an Ordinance to make Mr. Strong Minister of St. Dunstans 4. Debate upon the Confession of Faith The General was feasted in the City by the Lord Major with many of his Officers 5. Referred to Col. Hammond to remove such attendants about the King as the Collonel cannot confide in and to appoint eight such persons to attend his Majesty as he shall think fit and can confide in till the General hath setled the Family according to former Order Debate about the Declaration touching non Addresses to the King Sir Jo. Maynard one of the eleven Members appealed from the Judgment of the Lords by a Paper spread abroad saying their Lordships were no competent Judges of him The Lords advised with two Judges Assistants as to matter of Law and ordered Sir Jo. Maynard to be remanded to the Tower Fined five hundred pound
Commissioners sent down to try the Riotors at Canterbury could not perswade the Grand Jury to find the Bill and therefore they adjourned the Court they and the Committee of Kent had the thanks of the House for their care in this business and the Committee were desired to proceed in the further execution of it Intelligence from Vice Admiral Rainsborough of two Men of War from France appointed to transport Arms and Horse for Scotland Letters from the North of a design to surprize York for the King and at the time appointed for the Royalists to enter the City a Troop of the Parliaments Horse coming thither accidentally the Malignants taking them for their own Party cryed up the King and so were discovered and prevented Letters from Newcastle That Colonel Bright's Regiment and other Parliament's Forces are come that way to guard the Borders That the Governour of Berwick laies heavy Taxes upon the English That they and the King's Party in Carlisle are impatient that the Scot's Forces do not come in to assist them being dayly expected The Commissioners of the Kirk of Scotland sent to the Ministers to admonish their people not to engage in the intended War under the pain of the displeasure of God but the other Party proceeded in their Levies The Commissioners of the Kirk passed a Declaration in answer and opposition to that of the Parliament of Scotland Which they say is to restore the King to his Honour before Jesus Christ be restored to his and they declare their dissent from the intended War 16. An Ordinance transmitted for punishing Defaulters at Musters in Kent Letters from the Gentlemen of Cheshire That they had fortified the Castle and City of Chester the House approved thereof and Ordered thanks to the Gentlemen Letters from the Gentlemen of the Counties of Flint Denbigh and Montgomery That they had entred into an Association for securing those Counties against the Enemy the House approved thereof and Ordered them hearty thanks for it The like from Lancashire The House agreed to the Ordinance for the Militia of London A Petition to both Houses accompanied with divers hundreds of that County That the King may be restored to his due honour and just Rights according to the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance that he may be forthwith Established in his Throne according to the splendour of his Ancestors That he may for the present come to Westminster with Honour and Safety to Treat personally for composing of Differences That the Free born Subjects of England may be Governed by the known Laws and Statutes That the War beginning may be prevented That the Ordinance for preventing Free-Quarter may be duly Executed and speed made in disbanding all Armies having their Arrears due paid them The Lords answered the Petitioners That they were at present upon consideration of the Settlement of the Kingdom and doubted not but to satisfie all This Petition was presented to the Commons in the Afternoon when some of the Country-men being gotten almost drunk and animated by the Malignants as they came through Westminster-Hall they fell a Quarrelling with the Guards and asked them why they stood there to Guard a Company of Rogues Then words on both sides increasing the Countrymen fell upon the Guards disarmed them and killed one of them and wounded divers Upon this Alarum more Soldiers were sent for from White-Hall and the Meuse who fellupon the Country-men and killed five or six of them and wounded very many chasing them up and down through the Hall and the Lanes and Passages there abouts 17. The day of Thanksgiving for the success in Wales observed by the Houses but not much in the City After the Sermons the House Ordered the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common-Council of London not to suffer any multitudes of men to pass through the City nor any to come in Armed and that the Ordinance be renewed for putting Papists and Delinquents c. out of the Lines and twenty Miles from London Order That the Committees of Kent and Surrey take care to prevent tumultuous meetings in those Counties One hundred pounds given to Captain Nichols who brought Letters from Collonel Horton Order to examine and find out the Authors and Printers of some Pamphlets Letters That Lieutenant General Cromwel came to Chepstow where they drew out some Forces against him but Collonel Pride's men fell on so furiously that they gained the Town and beat the Soldiers into the Castle which being strongly fortified and provided Cromwel sent to Bristol for some Great Guns left a Party before it and Marched with the rest to Pembrokeshire 18. Both Houses passed the Ordinances for appointing the Militia of London and the Liberties during the pleasure of the Houses and for Collonel West to be Lieutenant of the Tower and for Major General Skippon to be Major General of London Westminster and the Lines Letters of St. Edmondsbury That about six hundred got together in Arms there about setting up a May-Pole and they cried out for God and King Charles laid hold upon some of the Soldiers and set Guards in several places That some Troops of the Parliament Quartered near and some Country Foot drew together and kept in a Body before the Town all night and kept them in on every side who seeing themselves in that condition sent for a Parley and submitted to mercy Upon a Letter from the Prince Elector his Brother Prince Philip had leave to raise one thousand Voluntiers for the Venetian service Report of a great design in London and the Suburbs of rising for the King in a great Body and to destroy the Parliament and City The House Ordered notice hereof to be given to the Common-Council and That the Militia be put into a posture of defence And That Prisoners be secured and a Committee appointed to draw Heads for an Union and good correspondence between the Parliament and City 19. Mr. Ashburnham and Mr. Legge being apprehended were committed to Windsor Castle Orders for the Committee of Salop to secure such Prisoners as they have surprized in Ludlow Castle and for Winchester Castle to be Garrisoned at the request of that Country 20. An Ordinance transmitted to the Lords for suppressing tumults The Common Councel of London returned in answer to the Parliament's Proposals for Union and good Correspondence That they resolve to remain firmly joyned against the Common Enemy And for this Parliament they did acknowledge with thankfulness their great care and pains for the Kingdom and particularly for this City and that they would live and die with that Parliament according to their former protestation An Ordinance past the Commons for putting Papists and Malignants out of the Lines Order for Captain Wogan and other Officers and Soldiers who came off from Major General Laugherne to the Parliament's Forces to have their Arrears and that the Prisoners taken in Wales and tryable by Marshal-Law shall be so
Mariners of the shipping belonging to the River of Thames and a third Petition from the Master Warden and Fellows of Trinity House all for the personal Treaty with the King were presented to the House and a Committee appointed to draw up an answer to them Order for a Months pay for the Lancashire Forces and for the thanks of the House to Colonel Ashton their Commander Upon Information of an Insurrection in Sussex referred to the Committee of Derby house to take course for the subduing of them Upon Letters from the General ordered that the Committee of the Army take care speedily to send down to the Army provisions and other necessaries which they want An Ordinance to impower the Committee of Essex to raise money for payment of the Forces in their County now raised Order for security of their arrears to those Officers and Souldiers who came off from the Army for the service of Ireland Order for six hundred Pounds for victualling the Fort and Castle of Chester and that the late Actors in a design there be tryed by Martial Law Letters from Colchester leaguer that the Enemy is debarred from all manner of provisions that a party of the Suffolk Forces from Cattaway bridge took ten Troopers of the Enemy plundering and afterwards went to Sir Harbottle Grimstons house which they found miserably ruined and all the goods taken away and torn 30. Upon a report from the Committee for the business of the personal Treaty the Lords agreed to these Votes 1. That the Vote of Jan. 3. 1647. forbidding any addresses to be made to or received from his Majesty should be made null 2. That the three propositions sent into Scotland and to be presented to his Majesty before a personal Treaty be had should not be insisted upon and that his Majesty be removed to some of his Houses within ten miles of London to which the Lords desired the Commons concurrence The Lords recommended to the Commons the Petition of the Lady Capell that she may have her eldest Son again who is one of those sent down to the General to be used in the same manner as the Committee are under restraint by the Lord Goring The House ordered a Letter to be sent to the General with the Lady Capell's petition inclosed and that the General be desired to do therein as may stand with the Justice and honour of the Parliament M r Dowsett upon a Message from the Lords was ordered to attend that House in the business of M r Rolfe who was committed Order for the Committees of Sussex and of Worcestershire to raise Forces for suppressing Insurrections and preserving the Peace of those Counties The Ordinance passed for payment of the Forces of Essex and another for ten thousand pounds for Bristol Debate upon the Ordinance touching Religion Letters from Colchester leaguer that the Enemy plaid with their great Guns but did no hurt by reason of the deepness of the Trenches then they fell to annoy the besiegers with small shot out of M r Grimsion's House but the General 's great Cannon shooting through and through the House cutting off the Legs and Arms of many of them they fled into the Town and set that and other Houses with it on fire That the Enemy sallyed out on the other side towards Suffolk which the Parliaments Horse discovering they lined the hedges with Dragoons and went on with a party of Horse as if they had incant to charge and then faced about as running away from the Enemy who pursued them to the place where the Dragoons were who did so gall them with shot that they retreated leaving some slain and others desperately wounded That the next morning they sallyed out again with three troops of Horse five hundred Foot and a Drake but the Parliaments Foot coming up too late to them they brought away some Cattle and killed M r Sandford though their friend the owner of them The Barbarous Common Souldier will know no distinction between Friends and Foes eithers goods come alike to their rapine and upon an hasty word they no more regard the bloud of a Friend than of an Enemy and so it was with M r Sandford A Captain taken prisoner near Harwich Captain Brown came from the North to the General with Intelligence that the Enemy had quitted the Isle of Axholme July 1648. 1. Debate upon the report That the three Bills sent into Scotland should not be insisted upon c. ordered to be resumed to morrow and all the Members to attend Vote to approve what the Lord Grey of Groby and Captain Temple had done in raising a considerable Body of Forces in Leicestershire and commanding them Order for Committees to go down into the several Counties to take care for raising monies for the Forces before Colchester and in Essex Letters from Colchester Leaguer that those in the Town are so block't up that they cannot get provisions that the Works are near finished and that the besiegers perdu's lye so near the Enemy that they can hear them discourse drink healths c. The General sent to offer an exchange of the Lord Capell's Son for Sir William Masham and two affidavits that by the Earl of Norwich's and the Officers directions their Souldiers had chewed bullets and cast in Sand delivered to them out of their stores which being contrary to the Law of Armes the General required that the same might be forborn for the future Concerning the Lord Capell's Son the Lord Goring returned answer that he conceived it inhumane and that if all the Committee had been offered to him he would have disdained the Motion and that he joyed to see any of his if no other way yet by their sufferings to pay the Duty they owe to the King and known Laws To that concerning bullets all the three Generals denyed any such command or practice but for rough cast slugs they were the best they could send on the sudden 3. A long Debate whether the three Bills viz. 1. For setling the Presbyterian Government for three years 2. For recalling Declarations and Proclamations against the Parliament 3. For setling the Militia in the Parliament shall be sent as propositions to which his Majesty is to give his approbation by subscribing his hand before a Treaty and to give assurance to passe them into Acts so soon as he shall come to London and sit in Parliament It was carried by Vote in the affirmative Upon Information that the King's Party were listing of men in London and some of them who were apprehended for it were rescued the House for the better guarding and securing themselves and the City orderd five thousand Pounds for raising a new Regiment of Horse to be under the Command of Major General Skippon and declared it an acceptable service in such as would send in Horse or Arms for that purpose An Ordinance past for raising fourteen thousand pounds out of the Estates of Delinquents in Kent and
to him A Committee appointed to consider how every County may maintain a proportionable number of the Scots Prisoners and to treat with Merchants about transporting them to forreign service Order for the Lord Grey to dispose of Duke Hamilton into safe custody till the House take further order and to keep in strong custody all the Officers then Prisoners in such places and Castles as he should think fit Letters from Colchester that the Town was surrendered according to Articles all Prisoners at Mercy the Town preserved from plunder paying fourteen thousand pounds That by the resolution of a Council of War Sir Charles Lucas Sir George L'Isle and Sir Marmaduke Gascoigne a Papist were to be shot to death That the two first were executed and the third respited That Sir Charles Lucas urged this was to be without precedent but a Parliament Souldier standing by told him that he had put to death with his own hand some of the Parliaments Souldiers in cold blood at which he was dismaid but took better courage afterwards before he died That Sir George L' Isle kissed his dead friend and then after much expostulation and discourse first with the General his Chaplain then by his own desire with one of the Lord Norwich his Chaplains and some private prayers with him Sir George died both he and Sir Charles Lucas with very much courage 30. The publick Fast-day The House passed an Ordinance for the Discipline of the English in new England 31. Votes for several persons named by the King to have leave to attend his Majesty during the Treaty only M r Dowcet and M r Legge disapproved of Order for Instructions to be prepared for the Commissioners who are to treat and for mony for their charges Order that Colonel Farre Lieutenant Colonel to the Earl of Warwick who ingaged ten thousand men of the Train'd Bands of Essex to joyn with the Enemy should be left to the Lord Fairfax to be executed as Sir Charles Lucas was A Committee appointed to confer with M r Mo●bot about suppressing of scandalous Pamphlets and to bring in an Ordinance for that purpose Letter from the General of the particulars of the Surrender of Colchester and a Copy of the Articles with the explanations upon them That for some Satisfaction to Military Justice and in part of avenge for the innocent blood they had caused to be spilt and the trouble dammage and mischiefs they had brought upon that Town that County and Kingdom He had with the advice of a Council of War of the chief Officers both of the County Forces and the Army caused two of them who were rendred to mercy Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George L' Isle to be shot to death before any of them had quarter assured them and hopes the Parliament will not find cause in the Military execution of these two persons to think their own honour or justice prejudiced That as for the Lord Goring Lord Capel and the rest of the persons rendred to mercy and now assured of quarter whose names he sent in a List he did render to the Parliaments judgement for publick Justice and mercy to be used as they should see cause he desires that God may have the glory of his multiplied mercies In the List of the Prisoners were the Earl of Norwich Lord Capell Lord Loughborough eleven Knights nine Colonels eight Lieutenant Colonels nine Majors thirty Captains general Officers servants of the Lords and Gentlemen sixty five Lieutenants seventy two Ensigns and Cornets sixty nine Sergeants one hundred eighty three private Souldiers three thousand sixty seven Letters from Southampton that the Grand Jury found the Bill against Major Rolphe Ignoramus A Petition of the Common Council of London for Vnity and Amity between the Parliament the City and the Army approved of and thanks given to the Petitioners A Ship sent from the Prince to Garnsey taken by one of the Parliaments Ships September 1648. 1. An Ordinance for stating the accounts of Souldiers and Widows ordered to be Printed and published A place to be appointed for the Auditours Care for Augmentations for Ministers The five Commissioners for the Treaty named by the Lords were The Earl of Pembroke the Lord Say Earl of Salisbury Earl of Middlesex and the Earl of Northumberland The ten Commissioners of the House of Commons were M r Holles Lord Wenman M r Pierrepoint Sir Henry Vane junior Sir Harbottle Grimstone Mr. Samuel Brown Mr. Crew Mr. Recorder Glyn Sir John Potts and Mr. Bulkeley 2. A Letter agreed to his Majesty to acquaint him with the Commissioners named to attend him in the Treaty and that they should be dispatched to him with all convenient speed Sir Peter Killigrew sent away with this Message An Ordinance transmitted to the Lords for payment of fifty thousand pounds part of the last hundred thousand pounds formerly ordered for the Scots forty thousand pounds of it for the Navy seven thousand pound for Stores and three thousand pound for the pay of the Lancashire Forces A long debate about the Militia One thousand of the Prisoners taken at Colchester sent up to London Mr. Lilly's Astrological Predictions for the years 1648 49 and 50. published 4. Both Houses agreed for those servants of his Majesty who are to attend him during the Treaty And they passed an Ordinance to inable the Commissioners to treat with his Majesty upon the Propositions presented to him at Hampton-Court Those in the late insurrection in Essex c. admitted to a Composition at a fourth Value of their Estates Mr. Rolphe delivered his Remonstrance in the Lords House against the Judges and against his prosecutours and desired reparation the House ordered his discharge Lieutenant Colonel Lilburn desired reparation for the Sentences against him in the Star-chamber Order for the Committee to take care for transporting the Scots Prisoners in the first place to supply Plantations and the rest to send to Venice In a Vessel at Exeter one thousand five hundred pair of Carabins being found Order for Securing them till the matter be examined Both Houses agreed upon a day of publick Humiliation to desire a blessing upon the Treaty with his Majesty Colonel Hammonds Instructions for safe keeping his Majesty in Carisbrook Castle repealed The Colonel taking the Kings own ingagement for his going abroad in the Island Order for the Committee of the revenue to provide horses for the King to ride about the Island Upon Colonel Hammonds desire of an addition of Horse and Foot during the Treaty referred to the General and Committee of the Army and his desire for Shipping to ly about the Island referred to the Committee of the Army to prepare them The Forces of Suffolk and Essex had a rendezvous with the Army and after shaking hands and many Vollies of Shot they bid one another farewel Some Regiments marched towards Tarmouth The Lords that were Prisoners with two men a piece and twelve other
Officers were ordered to march with the General his Regiment to Windsor to be Prisoners there the other Officers were sent to the Mount Pendennis Cardiffe Oxford Arundel and other strengths but none beyond Trent The Common Souldiers were to be conveyed to Bristol and other Sea-Towns to be transported to America Venice or as shall be appointed the Gentlemen Souldiers were Committed to the care of Troupers till further order Letters from the North that of Scots Irish and English there are above seven thousand under Major General Monroe and they have twenty pieces of Ordnance that Lambert advanced to joyn with Cromwell against Monroe that the siege of Scarborough Castle continued 5. Letters from the Earl of Warwick of his pursuit of the Prince and of the revolted Ships A long debate about the Militia Order that all persons who were in the late Insurrections should be incapable of being Jury-men and that the Judges in their Circuits and the Justices of Peace at their Sessions do see this Order put in execution Ordered that the former Orders and Ordinances for the taking away the Voyces of Delinquents in Elections should be put in execution and all Officers of Cities and Towns Corporate to take notice thereof Order for a call of the House and a Fine of twenty pound upon those absent Order for three thousand pound for Lieutenant Colonel Lilburne as reparation for the Sentence against him in Star-Chamber A Message from the Lords that Doctor Burges may have his place at S. Pauls settled under the great Seal That the Earl of Cleveland may have his Liberty for three Months upon bayle to take the air in the Country for his health and to recommend a Petition from the Countess of Kildare for some reparation of her great losses in Ireland Letters from New-Castle that divers English came thither to ask quarter of the Governour and to desire to be imployed That the Committees of Berwick and Carlisle sit upon sequestrations and raise monies notwithstanding the troubles there That many English are with Monroe incouraged by their Land-lords and that Colonel Fenwicks Horse and some Dragoons relieved Holy Island near Berwick and stormed Fenham Castle in which was a Garrison of Scots 6. Order for mony for Tradesmen who trusted the Lord Inchequin for Armes Both Houses approved the appointment of monies for the Treaty five hundred pound for Coach and Horses for the King six thousand pound for his Majesties private use and three thousand pound for the charges of the Commissioners Debate of an Ordinance for sale of the Lands of Deans and Chapters The Commons agreed to the Earl of Clevelands Liberty upon Bayle so as he ingage upon his honour not to Act against the Parliament Letters from Holland that it was disputed amongst the states whether the Prince of Wales being returned thither they should entertain him in a publick way or give him an allowance per diem and they agreed to allow him a thousand gilders a day and some discontents were among the Sea-men in the Prince his Fleet. Order about stating Sir Jo. Clotworthy's accounts and for his pay and they declared an acceptable sence of his carriage 7. The thanksgiving day for the Victory aginst the Scots Sir Peter Killigrew returned with his Majesties answer to the last Message from the Houses desiring that the Treaty may be hastned that he could have wished all those desired by him might have been admitted to him but will not let that hinder the Treaty he desired Dr. Reeves and Dr. Ducke to be admitted to him in relation to the Treaty At the sight of a Gentleman in mourning for Sir Charles Lucas the King wept 8. Letters from the Earl of Warwick of the constancy unanimity and courage of the Officers and Sea-men in the Parliaments Fleet and that the revolted Ships though more in number avoided them That the Castles of Deal and the rest at the Downs upon which the Protection of the Fleet and of trade have such a dependance are in great want of reparation which he recommends to the Parliament Debate upon the Ordinance for Sale of Deans and Chapters lands Major Husbands sent to the House acquainted them with the surrender of Sandowne Castle in Kent and of the condition of the other Castles in Kent Referred to the Committee at Derby House to write to the Committee of Kent and Colonel Rich to advise with the Lord Admiral about the repair of those Castles and of pay for them Upon the General his Letter that four thousand Pounds of the fourteen thousand Pounds imposed on Colchester to free them from plunder could not be raised and was remitted by the General the House ordered five thousand Pounds to be raised out of the delinquents Estates in those parts to make up the Summ for the Souldiers who should have had the pillage of the Town 9. Order for a hundred and fifty pound for M r Rolphe for his unjust imprisonment The City of London advanced two thousand Pounds for the business of the Treaty Major Armestrong one of the Prisoners at Windsor was rescued at Brainford the House ordered the Captain of the Guards to send a party of Horse to apprehend those that made the rescue Letters from the North that Lieutenant General Cromwell was at Berwick that the Country generally rose with him against Monroe that Cromwell sent to Edenburgh to recal Major General Monroe and the Forces with him out of England and to surrender our Garrisons 11. Both Houses thought not fit to grant a Pass with Blanks for the King to send into Scotland but they advised his Majesty first to send into Scotland for them to name the Persons they would send hither and then a Pass to be granted to them M r Parsons had a Pass to go to his Majesty and to Scotland Instructions passed for Carriages to the Isle of Wight and things preparatory to the Treaty A Pass to Major Belford to transport six horses into France The business of Garrisoning the Earl of Lincoln's House referred to the Committee of Derby House and the Committee of Lincoln to secure it A Petition from thousands well affected persons in and near London giving reasons why they first assisted the Parliament and that they expected other ways from them than a Treaty they mentioned twenty seven heads which they expected from the Parliament 1. That they would have made good the supremacy of the People from all pretences of Negative Voices either in King or Lords 2. Laws for Election of Representatives yearly and of course without Writ or Summons 3. That their time of sitting exceed not forty or fifty dayes and to have fixed a time for the ending of this Parliament 4. To have exempted matters of Religion and Gods worship from the compulsive or restrictive power of any Authority 5. That none be forced or pressed to serve in War 6. To have made both Kings Queens
Lands and Revenues of the King Queen and Prince and securing thereby the Arreares of the Souldiery again debated and Committed A Petition from the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common Councel of London acquainting the House that one of the Members thereof Alderman Wilson was elected one of the Sherriffs and desired the leave of the House that he might serve according to his Election Upon the Question it was voted to be left to Alderman Wilson to except thereof if he should think fit and that the house would look upon it as an acceptable service to the Common-wealth if he would serve therein according to the election and desire of the City Alderman Wilson being very fit for that place and freely elected to it and a Conscientious worthy Person considering the Affection of the City and that God had blessed him and his Father with the gaining a plentiful Fortune in that place thought it fit for him to spend some of it and to undergo the Trouble of the place for the Honour and Service of the City A Petition of the well affected in Lancashire to the Officers of the Army reciting the Order of the Councel of State for demolishing Lancaster Castle shewing the danger thereof to the well affected praying them to be a Meanes to the General and to the Councel that it may not be done 14 Debate all day upon the Act for sale of the Kings Lands c. and Order to meet on Munday at 6 a Clock in the morning for the dispatch of this Act that the Souldiery may see the care of the Parliament for securing their Arreares before they go into Ireland Order giving further time for doubling upon the purchase of Deanes and Chapters Lands 16 An Act passed for sale of the Crown Lands to secure the Arrears of the Souldiery Order for allowing 3000 l. to Mr. John Brown Clerk of the Lords House for his Losses and referred to a Committee how to raise it Referred to the Councel of State to examine a Mutiny of the reduced Souldiers at York and to punish the Mutineers A Petition from South Wales that when Collonel Horton with his Regiment shall be drawn from thence to Ireland C. Martin or who the House shall think fit may be their Commander in Chief and they will pay his Forces Referred to the General to take care of South-Wales and the Petitioners had thanks for their good Affections Letters that the Fleet before Kingsale took a Vessel of Prince Ruperts of 11 Guns and in her Captain Leg and Sir Hugh Windham Captain Darcy and 60 Men and Ammunition That Captain Ball took a Holland Man of War of 30 Guns loaden with Stuffes and Provisions for Prince Rupert and Maurice and sent her up to the State Letters that Tredah holds out against Ormond who puts the English into Garrisons and keeps the Catholicks and the Irish in the Field to fight That Captain Jones out of Dublin fell upon Ormonds Quarters took 200 Horse killed and took 140 Men without the Loss of one Man cut their Tents and retreated to Dublin whither 4000 Quarters of Corn were brought in from Chester That the Lieutenant of Ireland was entertained with great Honour at Bristol and the Country came in great multitudes to see him that he lay there for a Wind. 17 The Act passed touching Coynes Upon a Report from the Conncel of State who had consulted therein with the General the House Voted That when the Councel should see Cause for the safty of the Common Wealth they might make an Addition of Forces both Horse and Foot to be in readiness to take the Field and march with the standing Army and they to have Pay only while they should be in Service Indemnity given to some well affected Justices of the Peace of Surrey who were sued for some things irregularly done by them Orders of Reference to Lords the Commissioners of the Seal touching Coynes Letters from Scotland that they resolve to levy a considerable Army forthwith and as they say for their own Defence Letters that Collonel Reynolds Regiment of Horse and Collonel Venable's and Collonel Hunks's Regiments of Foot were ready to be shiped Letters from Dublin that the Enemy fiercely assaulced Tredah but were beaten off with the Loss of 2000 Men that the Governour went forth with a Party of about 200 Horse and about 1500 Foot into the Enemies Camp brought away 200 of their Horse with some Bread Beer Fruit and Sack but are in great want of Provisions and can receive none from Dublin 18 Vote to discharge Mr. Abbot from being Register of the Prerogative Court and Mr. Oldsworth and Mr. Parker to have Patents for that Office Referred to a Committee to consider what to do concerning Ecclesiastical Offices and Courts An Act Passed for a Collection for the Propagation of the Gospel in New-England Leave given to Lieutenant Collonel Lilbourn to visit his sick Wife and Family Letters that Sir Charles Coot sent forth Captain St. John and Captain Taylor out of London Derry who fell upon the Enemies Quarters slew divers of them and took many Prisoners A Declaration passed in answer to the Letter from the Parliament of Scotland to vindicate the Proceedings of the Parliament of England 19 Order for the Printing and Publishing the Act declaring what Offences shall be adjudged Treason Several Orders passed relating to particular Persons and not of publick Concernment 20 Order for the Committee of Accounts to allow the Certificates of the several Sub-Commissioners for Accounts in the respective Counties Referred to the Commissioners of the Seal to consider how Monies may be raised for the Repair of Marlborough-Bridge Referred to the Committee of the Army to confer with the General and Officers of his Army how free Quarter may be totally taken off and the late Act passed for that end be put in effectual Execution and to give an Account thereof to the Councel of State Letters from Bristol from the Lieutenant of Ireland about Supplies for his Forces referred to the Committee of the Army Order for 500 l. for Mrs. Farrer of her Husbands Arrears Mr. Fell made Second Judge of Chester and the L. President Bradshaw made Chief Justice of Chester Order for 4000 l. to be paid to divers who were Labourers in Scotland Yard to his late Majesty Attourney General Prideaux moved the House in the behalf of the Lords Commissioners Whitelock and Lisle that they may have the Duke of Bucks House as a conveniency of their being together for their Service of the Seal and that they might have a Lease for 21 Years of that House The Parliament very freely ordered what Mr. Attourney desired and referred it to the Committee of Haberdashers Hall to set the Rent for it which they did the same day at 40 l. per annum and no more because of the great Charge they should be put to in the repair of it it being much ruined by the Quartering of Souldiers in it 21 Letters from Plymonth of Collonel
Town six Miles below where there is a strong Fort that secures the River The Dragoons fell presently upon the Storm and in a short time set fire on the Gate whereupon the Enemy within called out for Quarter and upon assurance given by the Lord Lieutenant that they should have Quarter for their Lives and their wearing Apparel they surrendred the Fort to him where was six pieces of Ordinance and the Town was of great Advantage to the Parliament The Parliament left in Carrick Collonel Reynolds with his Regiment of Horse a Troop of Dragoons and two Foot Companies The next day after they marched out of it Ormond whom they supposed inclined towards Cromwel marched towards Carrick and Besieged it The Kings Forces made themselves sure of carrying the Town and therefore drew a Party of Horse and Foot over the Water to prevent the Parliaments escape that way The Vlster Forces undertook the storm they came on very resolutely and made desperate Assaults for the space of four Hours they set fire to all the Gates and in one place undermined the Wall attempting to blow it up with a Barrel of Powder But through the Mercy and Strength of God Collonel Reynolds with the rest maintained the Town very gallantly and beat off the Enemy with the Loss of about 4 or 500 Men and wounded very many he loosing not above four of his Men all the while God hath prospered Collonel Reynolds very much he goes out almost upon every Party and behaves himself with much gallantry and Resolution The Parliaments Dragoons have done them great Service About a Mile from Carrick is a little Castle upon the River where the Parliament put six or seven Dragoons to keep it Inchequin Summons them by his Trumpet none of them could read the Summons but perceived by the Trumpet what it was and though they could not write yet without complement and in plain phrase they returned no other answer but this to the Trumpet Bid Inchequin go about his Business and be hanged for he had nothing to do with them And thus though they could not return an Answer in writing they did in Resolution The Parliaments Forces are now before Waterford and make Preparations for a Storm when their great Guns with other necessaries shall be dispatched to them Ruisile and Bandon Bridge are theirs The L. Broghil and C. Fair since their Arrival in Munster have gained many a Horse and Foot unto them The Lieutenant General and Officers received an Order of Parliament for stating the Accounts and giving Debenters to such reduced Souldiers as should ingage for Ireland In Prosecution of that Order of Parliament and according to the further Direction of the Councel of State the General sent his Orders and Instructions for the reducing of Troops to the number of 60 and concerning such so reduced as shall ingage for Ireland and such as refuse to go for Ireland to be dismissed the rest to be conducted into Ireland for Recruits for the Forces there and care taken for their present Pay and for their Accounts to be Stated and Debenters given them to purchase Kings Lands 13 Letters from Berwick That every Officer and Souldier of that Garrison except two only signed the Ingagement That Wheat there was at 10 s. a Bushel Corn and other Provisions desired From Carlile of the want of Corn That the Garrison unanimously subscribed the Ingagement That they give out in Scotland that Cromwel was routed in Ireland and with four broken Troops escaped to Dublin which much rejoyced them at Edenburgh That they expect the return of the Lord Libberton from Jersy From New-Castle of the unanimous Subscription of the Ingagement by that Garrison That many Witches were apprehended thereabout of late that the Witchtryer taking a Pin and thrusting it into the Skin in many parts of their Bodies they were insensible of it which is one Circumstance of Proof against them From Scarborough of the Garrisons free subscribing of the Ingagement That they see our Enemies at Sea chase our Ships desire Care of the Winter Guard From Hull That the Regiments both Officers and Souldiers signed the Ingagement not one refusing 14 Order for Ships to convoy and transport the Recruits for Ireland An Account for Leverpool of about 2000 Souldiers shipped from thence to Ireland From Weymouth That C. Popham was there with Ships ready to transport C. Coxes Men for Guernsey and the men also ready Order of Parliament for a thanksgiving throughout the City for the good Successes in Ireland 15 A private Souldier sentenced to be shot to death for killing a man In the Road at Broadway Hills many were robbed and murdered A Naylor found dead with seven or eight Wounds with 50 s. in his hand and his Horse loose by him Directions given to several Regiments of Horse to quarter in such places as are most convenient to scoure the High-wayes of Thieves and Robbers Letters from Dover That the Garrison freely subscribed the Ingagement That the King of France and those of Burdeaux were upon Agreement That the States of Holland intended to disband 5000 Horse and Foot and many of the Commanders purposed to come into England hoping for entertainment 17 The G. Councel of the Army after a long Debate about settling the business for the Sale of the Kings Lands referred it to a Committee to consult with the Committee of Parliament for Obstructions in the Sale of the Kings Lands c. Referred to some Officers to consider of a Course for pay for Captain Harrisons Company of Lancashire men who marched with Cromwel into Scotland One Vaughan a Minister once a Cavaleer then turned a Zealot then turned against the Commonwealth and preached that they were guilty of Perjury c. Letters that the Souldiers quartering about Tossiter and riding abroad in the Night had frighted away the Thieves from Broadway Hills and those Parts to the great contentment of the Countrey 18 The Committee of Officers had a long Debate about making the way practicable of buying the Kings Lands c. appointed for the Armies Security Mr. Penruddock an Agent for Prince Charles was taken and committed close Prisoner to the Tower Letters from York That there was a Rendezvous of C. Lilburns Party that are marching for Ireland about 100 old Blades stout men and well horsed ready for the Service An Account from Chester of Souldiers Shipped from thence to Ireland The Port at Coventry intercepted a Pacquet of scandalous Books intituled The Character of K. Cromwell The Woodstock Skuffle c. Letters that Montross having sollicited the King of Denmark and the Duke of Holstein for 6000 Men to be levyed in their Dominions for Prince Charles and for a place of Rendezvous and-Free Quarter in Holstein and for Shipping and Money to transport them was put off by them without obtaining any of his Requests to them That from thence he went to Stock-Holm to Sollicite the Court of Sweden for their Assistance One Hammond a
Ormond had given a Commission to C. Robbinson to Garrison the Isle of Barsey they sent thither Ensign Aspinal with 30 Men who three dayes after his landing there seized upon Collonel Gerrard Mr. Conwey and 6 Gentlemen more who landed there to surprize the Island took their Boat and sent them Prisoners to Carnarvan and the Pyrate fled away who had set them on shore and was an Irish Man 12 An Act passed for redress of delayes and Mischiefs arising by Writs of Error in several Cases Amendments reported to the Act for relief of Creditors and recommitted An Act passed for settling the Freefarm Rents heretofore paiable to the Crown Debate about a Book lately printed and Voted That the Book asserting the Observations of the Jewish Sabboth and condemning the Observation of the Lords Day as the Christian Sabboth is erroneous Scandalous and prophane contrary to the Practice of the Apostles and of all the Christian Churches Orders that all the printed Copies of the Book be brought in and burnt and referred to the Comittee of plundred Ministers to take Care for the apprehension and imprisonment of the Authors and for punishment of the Printer and publisher of it Order to send over 6 able Ministers to preach in Dublin and they to have 200 l. per annum a piece out of Bishops and Deanes and Chapters Lands in Ireland And in the mean time the Lord Lieutenant to take care that it be paid out of the publick Revenue and if any of those Ministers die in that Service in Ireland that the Parliament will make competent Provision for their Wives and Children A Bill committed for preventing and redress of many injuries done to the Merchants of this Commonwealth by Ships of the French and other Nations under pretence of visiting them and for recalling and inhibiting the Mariners and Seamen of this Nation for serving other Princes and States An Act for the Indemnity of Tenants well affected to the State An Act passed for the better packing of Butter and redress of abuses therein 13 Letters from Chester That Oneales Army was in great want about Cavan That as soon as Supplyes should come Sir Charles Coot intended to take the Field That the Plague raged much at Kilkenny That Inchequin appeared in a Body about Kilmallock and the Lord Lieutenant sent a Party to look upon him From Exeter of the Commissioners proceedings in settling the Militia there From Harwich That Captain Goose of the hart Frigot and all his Officers being on Shore 28 of the Mariners of the Ship who agreed together to betray her to the Prince and to carry her to Dunkirk took their Opportunity when the rest of their fellow Seamen were under Hatches and kept them there Those under hatches were 40 Men who would not joyn in this Treachery and being now shut in there by the rest they hoised sail to carry the Ship to Dunkirk But being off at Sea these 28 fell out among themselves and 17 of them took the Boat to put out to Sea and were drowned The other 11 were not able to carry on the Ship and seeing themselves pursued put back into Harwich where they were apprehended and committed to Prison 14 The Trustees sor sale of the Freefarm Rents published their Intention to begin the sale of them on a day set by them One Boutholmey a Quartermaster was tryed by a Councel of War for Blasphemy and sensenced to have his Tongue bored through with a hot Iron his Sword broken over his head and to be cashiered the Army Letters from Ireland of more Castles taken in and that the Lord Lieutenant was wholly become Master of the County of Tipperary and was upon his march into the County of Lymerick where he had Intelligence that the Enemy was imbodyed that so he might prevent their joyning together That the Sickness was very hot at Lymerick Kilkenny and other places From Pool of Tumults about the Excise especially at Shafton where they rescued Prisoners and took away from the Officers Goods distreyned for the Excise but they were quieted by a small party of Souldiers sent to them 15 Letters that G. Preston was come into Waterford with 1500 Men and that the Lord Lieutenant had besieged Kilkenny From Leverpool of Tumults about the Excise but quieted From Scotland That the Commissioners were upon going to the King and that Sir James Smith had advanced 2000 l. upon the business and was one of the Commissioners for the Treaty at Breda 16 From Coventry of the preaching of one Salmon and of his wicked Swearing and uncleanness which he justifyed and others of his way That it was God which did Swear in them and that it was their Liberty to keep company with Women for their Lust That one Wyke another of his Crew kissed a Souldier three times and said I breath the Spirit of God into thee and many the like abominable Blasphemies spoken by them for which they were imprisoned till a Tryal for the Crimes 18 Letters from Berwick That the Scots Parliament had sate and dispatched away their Commissioners to the King for Treaty From Cork That the Lord Lieutenant published a Declaration in answer to certain Declarations and Acts framed by the Irish Popish Prelates and Clergy Letters that Sir Charles Coot had reduced Castledove That the Plague was hot in Galloway and many principal Actors in the Rebellion perisned by it That the Parliament Forces took in a Fort over against Passage whereby the trading by Sea to Waterford is wholly stopped up That the Tories behaved themselves so barbarously towards their own Party that the Priests have excommunicated them 19 Returns of Subscriptions to the Ingagement by divers Regiments and Garrisons An Act for establishing an high Court of Justice in London and Westminster Committed An Additional Act for providing Maintenance for Preaching Ministers and other pious uses Committed Amendments passed to an Act for the better Preaching of the Gospel and maintainance of Ministers in Bristol An Act passed for settling certain Houses upon the Corporation for the poor of London and for Money for that Work An Act for constituting Commissioners as a standing Councel for the ordering and regulating of Trade Committed Amendments to the Act of Indempnity for Tenants who have adhered to the Parliament recommitted Petition of the Inhabitants of Westminster referred to a Committee Petition from Arundel and another from the Cinque Ports referred to the Committee of Corporations to consider of their Franchises and report them to the House From Chester That the Rebels in Ireland did blow up some strong Castles and quitted them That C. Hewson with 2500 Foot and 1000 Horse one Demyculverin and a Mortar Piece marched to Bellishannon where he planted his Guns and after the Granadoes had flown in among them killing at one time 14 Men the Enemy beat a Parley and delivered up the place That the Lord Lieutenant was before Clonmel and that the Plague was very hot in the
the public Treasuries in London and several Counties The high Court of Justice sate 6 From Exeter That the Judges of Assise there had much settled the People Minds asto the present Government in their Charges to the Grand Jury wherein the Lord Chief Justice Rolles and Judge Nicholas were very much commended An Account of Shipping some Troops designed for Ireland From Tossiter That the Officers and People in that Country did generally and chearfully subscribe the Ingagement From Liscard That the Committee were very active in settling the Militia and the Country were ready to come in and be listed 8 From Chester That Kilkenny was surrendred upon Articles unto the Lord Lieutenant That C. Hewson in his return to Dublin with part of his Brigade took Scarlough the great Tory and divers Priests and Fryars accidentally and that the Lord Lieutenant besieged Cartherlow From Scarborough That the Governour having notice of a small Man of War belonging to the Prince he got a Northsea Vessel and sent Captain Lassels with 50 men in her to see if they could meet with the Pyrate who lay near to that Harbour That the Pirate espying this little Vessel at Seacame out to her set upon her her men having Orders to keep close and not be seen till the word given and assoon as the Pyrates were ready to board the Souldiers came forth and fell on them forced their Men being 29 under deck and brought away them and their Ship to Scarborough six of their Men and one Captain being slain and all the men in the Pyrates Ship were Papists and those who had long used this Course of Piracy 9 An Act and Declaration passed for imposing Penalties upon such as purchase any Crown Lands as original Creditors and pay with assigned or false Bills An Additional Act Passed for the furthur ease and relief of poor Prisoners Order that the Lords Commissioners of the great Seal take care that all Indictments Outlawries and other Acts against any Person for adhering to the Parliament remaining upon Record be searched out taken off the File cancelled and burnt as things scandalous and void Order that all Patents for granting any Title of Honour to any Person after the carrying away of the great Seal to Oxford be annulled and made void And that they do not take that title to whom it is granted nor any presume to give it them and that the Lords Commissioners do prepare an Act for that purpose An Act read for laying an Imposition upon Coals towards the building of Ships An Act read against transportation of Gold and Bullion out of this Nation beyond Seas An Additional Act passed for providing Maintenance for Ministers by Augmentations Vote That no Merchant or Trader beyond Seas shall have any Place in the Custome House during the time that he tradeth That the Arms of the King be taken down in all Ships and the Generals at Sea to see it done That the Arms of the King be taken down in all Churches and Chappels and the Justices of Peace Churchwardens and other Officers ordered to see it done That the Councel of State have power to remove from London and 20 Miles distance from thence all such Delinquents whose abode there they shall Judge to be dangerous An Act passed impowring Commissioners to put in execution the Powers formerly given to the Commissioners for compounding with Delinquents the Committee of Habberdashers Hall c. 10 An Account of transporting Forces for Ireland Letters that Ormond is desirous to go out of Ireland and Inchequin to come in to the Parliament From Lisbon That G. Blake with the Parliaments Fleet arrived there and understood that Prince Rupert intended to set sail from thence within two days whereupon Blake sent to the King of Portugal for leave to come into the River of Lisbon and coming near with his Ships the Castle shot at him That upon this Blake came to an Anchor and sent a Boat to know the Reason why they shot at him the Captain of the great Castle made answer That they had no Order from the King to let them come in That the Merchants Ships that came with Blake seeing this set sail for the Streights After this the King sent one of his greatest Nobles to congratulate with Blake and to desire him not to come in except the weather proved bad whereby he could not ride where he was it being his Majesties Fear that he and Prince Rupeit would quarrel and fight in his Harbour The Kng also sent to Blake a large present of fresh Provisious for his Refreshment That the weather beginning to be foul Blake came into the Bay of Wyers in the River two Miles from Prince Rupert whose men came dayly from him to Blake and one of his Ships the Swallow was coming away but was discovered and the Boatswain clapt in Chains That the Admiral had not above 40 Seamen in his Ship and very few in the rest of his Fleet. That Captain Molton went on Shore from Blake to satisfy the King of the Falsities of Prince Ruperts Declaration 11 A Scots Vessel taken by an Irish Man of War was rescued by a Dutchman The Commissioners settled the Militia in Courwall From Chepsto That at the Assises was as great an appearance of Gentlemen and Freeholders as ever was seen in that Country One tryed and found guilty there for poisoning his Wife and was upon his own words greatly suspected to have poisoned his four Wives and three Children Orders issued That every Regiment of Foot should be recruited to 1200 the Collonels Company to be 200 the Lt. Collonels Company 160 the Majors 140 and the other seven Companies to be 100 a piece Anno 1650 12 From Scotland That notice being had of their Commissioners arriving in Holland the Kirk kept a day of humiliation to seek God for a Blessing upon the Treaty and injoyned the like through Scotland That many German Officers are there expecting imployment when the King comes thither That Cromwel granting Liberty of Conscience to the Irish they will all submit to him 13 From Dublin That the Governour C. Hewson after he had taken Lawlinbridge by order marched with a strong party and met the Lord Lieutenant at Gouran five Miles from Kilkenny and March 19. entred the Town without Opposition That the Castle stood on t and after a sharp dispute upon one attempt to storm the Common Souldiers that they might have Quarter for themselves delivered up their Officers viz. C. Hammon M. Townly two Captains one Quarter Master one Lieutenant and a Priest March 22 All the Officers were shot to death except the Lieutenant who was spared for that he joyned with the Souldiers to deliver up the Officers and the Priest was hanged The Souldiers that were English took up Arms with ours Next day our Forces marched towards Kilkenny and March 24th were necessitated to attempt a Storm to divert the Enemies Forces from falling upon a Party of
Peoples freely taking the Ingagement From Denbigh of the Death of the Archbishop of York and of diverse others of Quality that the People willingly took the Ingagement From Corke that Mac Charty and O Sullivant are 800 Foot and 200 small Horse called Garrons That the Bishop of Cloher was of late in competition for the Title of Generalissimo and boasted to bring 700 Roman Catholickes into the Field that both he and Ormond have not above 1200 Horse and 3000 Foot That upon the Rendition of Cantwells Court a Place near Killkenny exceeding strong by Nature and Art 12 Officers of quality came in to the L. Lt. and had leave to embarque for Spain That the riding of the Parliament Ships in the Mouth of Shannon blocks up the Lymerick Vessels and Duncannon That the Parliament Forces from a Sick and Languishing Condition are recovered the Flux and Feaver the two predominant distempers much abated and the Garrisons kept clear and healthy through the Mercy of God none having any Infection For the Condition of the Army and what the L. Lt. and his Officers have brought it unto which is a good precedent he thus describes Our Foot are in a Gallant Posture well armed well cloathed and for bread Corn and other things by the State plentifully provided for The Parliament indeed gave full power to the Councel of State to take care for supply of their Forces and the Councel used the greatest Care and diligence that possibly could be That nothing might be wanting for the carrying on of the Business of Ireland and for the Forces there The Letter goes on The Armies Diligence Courage Thankfulness and Behaviour is such through the Strict Care and Providence of our G. and chief Officers that never men did obey Orders more chearfully nor go upon all duty more couragiously Never did greater Harmony appear or Resolution to prosecute this Cause of God than in this Army such a Consent of Hearts and Hands such a Sympathy in Affection not onely in a Carnal but spiritual Bond which lyes faster than Chaines of Adamant I have often observed especially in that time and those Actions a wonderful Consent of the Officers and Souldiers and indeed of all the Parliament Forces upon the Ground of doing Service for God and how miraculously they were in all their Actions successeful The Mind of man being satisfyed and fixed upon God and that his undertaking is for Gods Glory it gives the greatest Courage to those Men and prosperity to their Actions The Letter sayes further Our musters are strict here is no free Quarter allowed nor practised either they pay or give Ticket which being demanded by the poorest Irish is not dur'st not be denyed by any Officer Our Horse have in many Places wanted Hay but by the supply of Oats from England have made good Shift with Straw we have 7000 Horse and our Foot trebbles that Number yet are English Recruits of Moneys and necessarys to be continued And by this Government of the Army in Ireland and the great Successe of it and the well ordering of the civill Affairs of that Kingdom Cromwell got a very great Interest not onely in the Officers of the Army both there and here but likewise in the Parliament and Counsel of State and with their whole Party only the Scots and Presbiterians generally were no favourers of him or his Proceedings 23 An Act passed for the better Observation of the Lords Day days of Thanksgiving and Humiliation Order of the Trustees appointed by Parliament for providing Maintenance for Ministers and other pious Uses for those that have Augmentations to their Benefices to make their claimes by a day 24 From Edenburgh that Sir John Hurry is come with 1400 Men into Cathnesse and the Reer of his Army is to follow from Montrosse This Hurry was an Officer in the Pay and Service of the Parliament and revolting from them he now was an Officer under Montros He seized a passe That M. G. Middleton was sent for by the Estates He was likewise an Officer in the Service and Pay of the Parliament he revolted from the Parliament and was now in Service in his own Country and backward he was yet to engage in this Businesse not likeing it and pretending to be ill That at Breda all is private none can tell what is done but the King and the Commissioners all Writings being locked up and Guards put upon the Clarkes That the Clergy in Scotland have procured strict Orders from the Commissioners of the States for the prosecuting of Sectaries and have a great Arbitrary Power in proceeding against them and they are purged out of the Army as well as Malignants 25 The Trustees for Sale of the Lands of the late King c. gave a day for all Debenters to be brought in for the Souldiers Arreares and new Debenters to be given them Orders of the Commitee for the Accounts of the Soldiery touching their Arreares 26 The General and the Officers of the Army kept a day of Humiliation at Sommerset-House to seek God for a Blessing upon the present Undertakings of the Army A Petition to the Parliament from the Officers of the Army in behalf of themselves and the Souldiery Reciting the Ingagement of the Parliament to satisfy their Arreares and the transferring the security for 600000 1. for their Arreares from the Excise to the Lands Parkes c. Of the late King whereof they hoped to receive the Benefit for their past faithful Service and future Encouragement Yet they are informed that a 5th Part of the Parks are to be allowed for a pretended Interest of herbage and pawnage to those who claime Custodies of those Parks for Lives whereas it were the full value if they had the Fee simple and nothing is due to them but their Fee onely and this course will weaken if not invalid the intended Security as discontent and discourage the Souldiery They pray that no such allowances may be made And that the Parliament would declare their Resolutions herein speedily before the Army marched from hence 27 From Edenburgh That Hurrey and Montross have 3000 Men and 1000 more coming in to them whereupon Lieutenant General Lesly is ordered Northward with most of the Horse and 1400 Foot who labours to appease them by his Protestations of Faithfulness to the King and Perswasion to forbear intestine Broyles seeing in a little time the King and they may come to an Agreement and then go jointly against the Common Enemy the Sectaries of England 29 From Berwick That Messengers are to be sent to Montrosses Party to know their Intentions and if the Answer be not satisfactory then to fight them is the Resolution That Montrosses Party raise all the Country where they go from 16 to 60. That the Committee of Estates have 7000 Foot and 30 Troops of Horse which are marched Northward That one Peter Gourdon having notice of a search for Delinquents he being a notable one he took four
the Great Seal do grant a Writ of Ad quod damnum touching a Fair to be kept in North Auckland in Durham Order that the Record of the Court of Wards be transferred into the Exchequer to be under the care of Humphry Salwey Esquire Order for Mr. John Owen to be Dean of Christ-Church in Oxford Debate touching managing of the Treasury of the Common-wealth for the best advantage thereof and of providing Money for the Forces Report of the discovery of a dangerous Plot in the Northern Counties in complyance with the Scots and Malignants for raising a new War especially in and about Lancashire Vote that M. G. Harrison do forthwith advance with a considerable Body of Horse and Foot for security of the North. One Cook apprehended for conspiring to destroy the Parliament and being brought into the Room next the Gouncel escaped from thence Resolved that whosoever should discover Cook and return him in Custody should have 500 pound 19 Letters of the Pyracies committed by those of Jersy and Scilly 20 An Act passed for the apprehension of Thomas Cooke Esquire who was lately apprehended by Warrant from the Councel of State and made an escape from them The Sheriffs of London and Middlesex to proclaim the Act. 21 Letters That one of the Frigots belonging to the Barbadoes Fleet brought into Plimouth an Irish Prize of the value of 10000 l. An Account of Recruits ready for Ireland 22 Letters That the Scots came with 600 Horse to beat up the English Quarters about Lithgow but were beaten back and some Prisoners taken That the Books and Goods belonging to the King and Register were taken by the Parliaments Ships and another Ship laden with Oats Meal and Provisions going for Fife and 22 Prisoners taken That one Boston of Captain Lloyd's Company was Cashiered for holding some dangerous Opinions as That God was Reason c. That the Lord President of Connaught did bring out of the Enemies Quarters 600 Cows without any loss That a Bark of Cloaths for the Soldiers was by the Master betrayed to the Scots That the Governor of Leverpool secured several Gentlemen thereabouts suspected to be in the New Plot. April 1651. Lettert That the Gentlemen who were sent Prisoners to Edenburgh about a Fortnight since for raising Men and sending Arms to the Enemy refused to subscribe to live quietly being afraid of the Kirks Excommunication That an eminent Lord perswaded the King to be content to be King of Scotland only but that Advice was husht That the Scots had a Rendezvouz of 8000 Horse and 4000 Dragoons and the King in the Head of them and That their Design is supposed to be to pass by the English Army into England That Lieutenant Colonel Crooke's Man was Sentenced to be hanged for killing of a Scotchman not in Arms. That Middleton was coming up to Sterling with 8000 Men. Letters That the English Ambassadors at the Hague delivered in a Paper to the States Commissioners concerning the Affronts offered to them by Prince Edward the Palsgrave's Brother That the States sent to the Prince to appear before them but he disputed their Authority to send for him being a stranger-Prince yet upon a second Summons he ingaged upon his Honour to come to them but did not and went away to his Brother That one Apseley a desperate Cavalier at the Hague came to the Lord St. John's House and earnestly desired to speak with him about Matters highly concerning his Safety and being admitted into his Chamber where divers of his Gentlemen were present Aspeley desired That they might withdraw that to avoid Discovery of what he said they two might be private whereupon my Lord Ambassador bid them all withdraw but Mr. St. John his Kinsman suspecting Apseley would not withdraw but staid in the Room to observe and watch Apseley That Apseley made a long Discourse to the Ambassador of a Plot to take away his Life but told him no Particulars and seeing Mr. St. John continue in the Room he abruptly took his leave and went away That his Design was to have strangled the Ambasiador and for that purpose had a Rope ready wound about his wrist and a way was contrived for his Escape after he should have done this Fact at which he was very dexterous by getting out of a Window where divers of his Crew were ready to receive him That failing of his Enterprize when he went away he spake friendly to one of the Ambassadors Gentlemen to go a little way with him which he did and when Apseley had him alone he threw the Rope over his Head but the Gentleman strugling his Periwigg came off and the Rope with it and so the Gentleman escaped That the States were acquainted herewith and ordered Apseley to be apprehended but he fled away and one of the Lords came to the Ambassadors to acquaint them what the States had done touching him and Prince Edward and That they were both fled and That the States would be ready to prevent any such Affronts to their Lordships That the States Commissioners came to the English Ambassadors to treat with them touching their Proposals and desired the Amity and League between the two Nations to be continued and renewed but as to the Words in the Proposals a more intimate and strict Alliance they have not yet answered Anno 1651 They offered the English Ambassadors to ha vethe States Arms set over their Doors for their Protection but the Ambassadors refused it 15 An Act passed for continuing the Assessment of 120000 l. per mensem for six Months An Act committed for making void divers Honours granted by the late King Dr. Gourdon and Capt. Lymbrey added to the Councel of Trade and all of that Councel to take the Engagement Letters That the Army in Ireland had not taken the Field for want of Grass for their Horses That the Lord Deputy appointed a Fast for three weeks on every Thursday That the Lord Deputy gave leave to the Spanish Agent to raise 20000 among the Rebels and transport them for his Masters Service some persons being excepted That many Recruits were come over That more Corn was sown than formerly by reason that Liberty was given to any of the English to sow and reap in the Lands of the Irish who would not sow them 16 The Lord Beauchamp Lord Bellasis and the Lord Chandois were committed by the Councel of State upon suspition of designing new Troubles 17 Letters of the Jersey Pyrates taking two Barks laden with Corn and Timber in sight of Portland That Lieutenant Colonel Clarke with Nine Companies of Foot set Sail from Plymouth for Scilly Islands Of Recruits shipped for Ireland That Van Trump came to Pendennis and related That he had been at Scilly to demand Reparation for the Dutch Ships and Goods taken by them and receiving no satisfactory Answer he had according to his Commission declared War against them That they had 400 Recruits from Ireland and
Proposals to be tendered to the Parliament of England for their Submission to them That they are contented to wave Kingly Government That no Lord shall exceed in Power a Private Person That the Tyrannical Power of the Clergy may be dissolved 14. Letters That the Lord Argyle had called a Parliament and that Mr. Alexander Kant a Minister said in his Pulpit That God was bound to own that Parliament that all other Parliaments were called by Man but this was brought about by his own Hand That the Lord Belcarris levying Forces in the North of Scotland his Officers would not allow Men and Horses sent in though they were very good but would find fault with them and demanded 20 l. for every one and they would find Men and Horses for 20 l. a-piece themselves Whereupon the Countrey rose upon them killed some of them and made the rest run away A Soldier shot to death by Sentence of a Court-Marshal for striking a Serjeant who was correcting him for a misdemeanour That 800 Recruits were landed in Scotland and more expected That the Lieutenant-General sent out a strong Party under Collonel Overton That the greatest part of the Gourdons had laid down their Arms and most of the Gentry were willing to comply with the Parliament of England only the Ministers endeavoured to keep up the War 15. Letters That the Marquess Huntley sent to the Governour of Lieth for a Treaty as Argyle had done the Countrey forsaking them and inclining to submit to England That Mount Orgel in Jersey was surrendred to the Parliament Forces and in it 20 Brass and Iron Guns and 20 Barrels of Powder and that Admiral Blake was in a Treaty for Elizabeth Castle That a Master of a Ship coming by saw Boats passing up and down between the Ships and the Castle with Flags of Truce and many Guns fired The Parliament voted That it was a convenient time to declare a certain time for the continuance of this Parliament beyond which it should not sit 17. Letters That the Gentlemen of Fife and other Counties met and prepared Letters and Commissions to be sent into every County for authorizing Commissioners to attend the coming of the Commissioners from England to make Proposals to them for setling the Peace of the Kingdom 18. The Parliament voted That the time for continuance of this Parliament beyond which they resolve not to sit shall be the third day of November 1654. And that such Scots Prisoners who have been disposed of by the Parliament or Council of State and any Officers of the Army if they run away and go into Scotland without licence shall suffer death and be proceeded against by Marshal Law Letters from Collonel Heane from Jersey of his Proceedings there with the Summons Answers and Conditions of the Surrender of Mount Orgeil Castle That they had in the Castle 18 Pieces of Ordnance four Barrels of Powder Match and Bullet proportionable 1000 Arms Two Months Provisions for 70 Men. The Parliament confirmed the Articles and voted Thanks to General Blake and Collonel Hayne for their good Service 19. Letters That at the Surrender of Lymbrick the Bishop the Major and the Deputy-Governour were hanged the Governour was condemned but reprieved to be sent to the Parliament That the Bishop and Major were hanged for breach of the Articles in disguising many Friars Priests and Bloody Rogues whereby they escaped contrary to the Articles 21. Letters from Lieutenant-General Monk giving thanks to God for the good news of the Rendition of Orgeil Castle That he appointed some Gentlemen to meet with the Marquess of Argyle to treat with him according to his desires That the Country are expecting the coming of the Parliaments Commissioners from England to settle the Civil Affairs of Scotland The Protestation of 28 Ministers given in to the Provincial Assembly at Aberdeen which the Assembly condemned as prejudicial to the Priviledges of the Kirk whose Proceedings they justifie 22. Letters That the Marquess Huntley was come to live privately at his own House upon a Passe sent to him That one of his Proposals was That the Lieutenant-General should put him in possession of certain Lands which was kept from him by his Cousin the Marquess of Argyle That the Earl of Kalander and others of Quality were come in That some Gentlemen in Scotland have done great Service for the Parliament of England at which the Kirk are much enraged and call those Gentlemen Malignants and inveigh against them and against the Parliaments Forces That the Scots rose against Captain Augustin their Countryman killed some of his Men and drave away the rest That the Lord Forbes and others were come in to the Parliament of England and the Country generally desired to be under the Protection of the English Commander in chief in that Kingdom 24. Major-General Massey and others were brought up Prisoners to London Massey endeavoured to escape by the way as he was brought up having a good Horse to ride on he set Spurs to his Horse thinking to ride away from his Convoy but the Soldiers overtook him and brought him back Letters That the Enemy in Cornet Castle in ●uernsey were besieged and very high but the Inhabitants of Guernsey Island were generally the Parliaments Friends That Collonel Hayne shot with his great Guns against Elizabeth Castle and did very great execution and Sir George Carteret had much ado to appease the Mutiny of his Soldiers That Major-General Sterling was come in to the Protection of the Parliament That Argyle and Huntley were to meet with some Persons appointed by the Lieutenant-General to treat with them about their Submission to the Parliament 25. The Parliament ordered the new Council of State to be constituted for the year ensuing That 20 of the last years Council should be continued and ●1 new ones joyned to them The Parliament passed further Instructions to the Council of State The Power of the Admiralty was placed in the Council of State They ordered That the Council of State take care that no Meetings should be in Scotland under any pretence of consulting touching Matters of Government Order That no Chair-man shall continue in the Chair of any Committee above a Year and this to extend to the President of the Council of State Several Votes touching Compositions of Delinquents in Durham Letters That Major-General Dungan with 600 Horse attempted Rosse in Ireland and possessed the Town and took Collonel Markham and killed 12 sick Men in their Beds and took 13 Prisoners and plundered the Town although Irish upon the coming of Forces from Waterford they deserted the Town That Zanchey and others fell upon them killed 100 of them and took 50 of them Prisoners That 4 or 500 of Lymbrick were dead of the Plague That the Lord Deputy had the Castle of Clare surrendred to him 26. Letters That the Lord Belcarris had disbanded his Forces in Scotland and was come to his own House to
the Judgment of Banishment against Lieutenant-Collonel Lilborne An Act passed to make void all Titles of Honour Dignities or Precedencies given by the late King since 4 June 1641. Referred to the Committee for considering of things of greatest Importance to take care for ascertaining the Debts on Publick Faith Order for constant Pay and Supplies for the Forces in Ireland Order for Moneys for Incident Charges to be disposed of by the Committee for removing Obstructions in the Sale of Forfeited Lands 4. One who undertook to cure the Blind and Deaf took Money before-hand of divers People and then ran away 5. Letters that by the late great Snows and Rain in Ireland the Waters rose so high that it drowned and spoiled most of the Corn and Provisions which the Rebels had got into Islands so that they were in a starving Condition That a Party of Collonel Venables men surprised some of the Rebels at their Markets took 20 Horse Slew 20 Men and 120 of them were Drowned 6. Letters that a Petition was presented to the Commissioners at Dalkeith that Dundee might chuse Officers according to their ancient Custome and Rights the Commissioners ordered them to bring in their Charter by a day A Copy of the Letter sent to Major-Ceneral Lambert and intended for the Lord-General Cromwell from the Lord Wareston and other Presbyterians setting forth That they made their Addresses to him because he had charge of those Forces that had unjustly Invaded that Land and had shed the Blood of many of the Saints of Scotland But they confess themselves justly punished for their late Treaty with the King but this doth no way justifie the Instruments They charge the Army with divers Errors countenancing of deposed Ministers to Preach silencing of Ministers that Preach of State proceedings and suffering Officers to Preach Scandalizing the Ministers subordinating the Church to the State in things of Christ which will tolerate the gathering of Churches in Scotland as it is in England Abridging the Assembly of the Kirke and imposing Magistrates principled against the Government of the Kirke They offer compliance in any thing not against their Conscience and the Liberty of the Kirke and Intreat the Major-General to imploy his indeavours with the rest of the Commissioners of England for the obtaining of their desires That the City of Edenburgh had a Commission to choose new Officers and such as should be chosen were to take an Oath of Fidelity to the Common-Wealth of England Letters That the Grandees of the Rebells in Ireland have often meetings to draw up Propositions in order to a Submission to the Parliament of England but cannot agree 7. Letters That many of the Commissioners of Shires and Buroughs in Scotland are chosen to attend the English Commissioners at Dalkeith The Committee for Regulating the Law presented several Results to the Committee of Parliament appointed to receive them 9. Letters That the Oath of Fidelity to the Common-wealth of England much troubled the new chosen Burgesses of Edenburgh That there were great Contests in their Presbyteries and contradictory Orders by them and Appeals to the English Commissioners The English Commissioners published another Declaration for equal Execution of Justice and for the present appointed Persons to Administer Justice till the Judicatories should be Established and forbid any power under the King or any other than under the Common-wealth of England Letters That the Army in Ireland was disposed into convenient Quarters to meet with the Enemy if they came abroad and Collonel Reynolds to lye with a nimble Party of 3000 Horse and Foot to be ready upon any occasion A Copy of the Articles between the Irish and the Duke of Lorraine sent to the Parliament whereby Lorraine was to have the Lordship Spiering Silvercroon Agent from the Queen of Sweden to the Parliament dyed in the Strand 10. The Act of Oblivion passed and some Provisoes to be added to it debated Order for paying Mariners and for lessening the publick charge Order for the Lord-General to send down all the Officers belonging to the Forces in Scotland which was upon Letters from the Commissioners A Declaration of the Inhabitants of Jersey of their Fidelity to the Parliament of England with praise to God for his Justice and giving Success to the Parliaments Forces and beating out the Tyrant Carteret That 3000 Subscribed this Declaration and took the Ingagement Of the opposition of the Presbyters in Devon ' 11. An Account of the Frigats on the Western-Coast and that a great Fleet of Dutch-men of War lay there abouts that the Dutch Captains were rough against the English and demanded Restitution of some of their Ships taken by the English 13. Letters That a small Party of Highlanders Murthered five of the Parliaments Soldiers in their Beds near Innerness and another Party stole away some Cattle That the Scots Ministers pray for their King and the Prisoners in England That Argyles Countrey refused the Warrants sent thither for Contribution by the Parliaments Officers The English Commissioners published a Proclamation against entertaining any Scots in their house without giving up their names to the Governour of the place and that no Scot have any Armes 14. Letters That the English Commissioners in Ireland had settled the Affairs there and were returned to Dublin That Collonel Hewson sent out a Party who killed a whole Troop of Tories except two only That Captain Clerk took 200 Tun of Wheat and Rye carrying to relieve Golloway That Bellitan a strong hold of the Rebels was Stormed by Collonel Zanchey and Collonel Axtell and taken and 4 or 500 of the Rebels killed The Parliament ordered their Committee to call together the Adventurers for Ireland who met and chose a Committee of their own to make Proposals to the Parliament for Setling that Business with their Consent From Sir George Ascues Fleet That he had taken Eleven Dutch and One English Ship at the Barbadoes And that Sir George Shot many Pieces at their chief Castle and they Shot at him and killed one man That he took Two more Dutch Ships loaden with Provisions and Horses Sugar c. That he sent Summons to the Lord Willoughby who answered that he would keep that place for the King That he was informed the King was near London and that all the Countrey came in to him as a Dutch Ship related to him 16. Letters That Sir George Ascue came within half a Musquet Shot of the Fort at the Barbadoes that the Ships he took there were of great Value That his Voyage thither was 10 Weeks and 2 Days yet none of his Men Sick The Commissioners from the Parliament in the Fleet with Sir George Ascue sent a Declaration to the Inhabitants of the Barbadoes to perswade them to submit to the Parliament of England and to desert the Lord Willoughby and his Party there that this course they thought fit to take before they used any acts of
long after him came General Venables who upon Examination by the Protector and Councel of his Management of that Affair was committed to the Tower but being judged that he failed rather through his Imprudence than any ill Intent he was at length released The Princess Royal and her Brother the Duke of Gloucester went to the King of Scots to Colen and they went together to the Fair at Franckford through every Princes Countrey where they past the Chief Officers of State were sent to complement them and the great Guns saluted them from their Forts the Elector of Mentz entertained them sumptuously three dayes The King hearing the Queen Christiana of Sweden was coming that way in her Journey to Italy sent one of his Lords to her to Salute her in his Name and to express his desire to wait upon her Majesty at what place she would appoint She named Coningstein where they met and had private discourse together and amongst other things as the King afterwards related there was some mention of Whitelock and of his Ambassage in Sweden wherein the Queen spake with high Favour and Respect of him and told the King that in all the Conferences that she had with him at that time she never heard him speak a dishonourable word of the King The Duke of Savoy having Committed great Cruelties and a Barbarous Persecution of the poor Protestants in Piedmont the Protector appointed a Solemn day of Humiliation to be kept and a large Contribution to be gathered throughout the Nation for their Relief which was very well resented by the Protestants beyond the Seas October 1655. The Protectors Councel in Scotland published a Declaration for the Election of Magistrates there which was observed so great a power had he then in Scotland Notice by a Ship arrived in the Isle of Wight from Bilboa that the Imbargo continued there upon English Goods and in all Spain and the English Factors were confined to their Houses there and at Malaga the People were in disorder for the loss of their Trade with the English The Councel at Whitehall ordered That no Person presume to publish in Print any matter of publick News or Intelligence without leave and Approbation of the Secretary of State Many Lords and others Prisoners were released upon Security given by them for their Peaceable Demeanour Letters of the success of the Swedes in Poland and Lithuania Some Bickerings at Sea between General Blakes Ships and the Enemy but little done some of them returned home wanting Victuals Audience given to the Venetian Ambassador Some Spanish Ships assaulted some of General Blakes Fleet but they came off Stop of English Ships in Flanders A French Ship taken that had been Fishing at New-Foundland Letters of the Miseries of the poor Protestants in Piedmont Orders for Accommodations for Mr. Feake and Mr. Rogers Prisoners A Declaration by the Admiral of France for the clearing of all English Ships and Goods in any Ports of France Injuries to the English at Dunkirk Letters of the State of the Island of Jamaica and of the English Forces there Order of the Protector and Councel for those that bought Delinquents Estates to pay in forthwith all Arrears of the Purchase Money Letters of the Swedes Victory against the Muscovites Order of the Protector and Councel against Printing Unlicensed and Scandalous Books and Pamphlets and for regulating of Printing Orders touching the Ministers of Scotland The Protestant Cantons of Switzerland acknowledge the Protectors zeal and care for Piedmont The Spaniards took an English Man of War by Treachery Proclamation against Coiners and advice that none receive their false Money Order of the Protector and Councel commanding all that have been of the Kings part to depart out of the Lines of Communication Major-Generals appointed by the Protector and his Councel in the several Counties The Articles of Peace between England and France signed here October 24. General Pen was released from his Imprisonment This Moneth the Ambassador was full of expectation that Commissioners should be appointed to Treat with him but by reason of the great and unsettled Affairs of this Nation and for that the Councel judged other Affairs which they had in hand though perhaps mistaken to be of greater Consequence than this Treaty No Commissioners were yet appointed though the Ambassador had been several times with the Protector and desired his business might be proceeded in and was promised that it should November 1655. Letters of the miserable Condition of the Poor Protestants in Dauphine oppressed by the Duke of Savoy and left Sick and without Covert Food or Cloathing and many of them Dead with Cruelty A Day of Thanksgiving in Dublin for their Deliverance from the Rebels the Courts of Justice Established there the Soldiers many of them turned Planters One who called himself William Smith a Minister in Cornwall apprehended for having Seven Wifes together General Venables was released from his Imprisonment The Swedish Ambassador had Audience Letters of Reprisal granted to divers English against the Spaniards The Protector and Councel appointed a Councel of Trade to consider how to improve order and regulate the Trade and Navigation of the Common-wealth upon which Letters were sent to several Persons in this Form Sir His Highness considering of how great Importance it is to this Nation that the Trade and Commerce thereof be by all good wayes and means advanced and duely regulated hath by the Advice of his Councel thought fit to appoint a certain number of Persons whose Abilities and Experience have qualified them to be Serviceable to their Countrey herein to be a Committee for Trade Impow'ring them to take into Consideration the Trade and Navigation of this Common-wealth and in what manner and by what wayes and means the same may be Encouraged Improved Ordered and Regulated And having named you to be one of that Committee have thought fit to signifie the same unto you to the end you may be present at their first meeting which is appointed to be on the 27 of this Instant November in the Painted Chamber at Westminster not doubting of your readiness to joyn with the rest of the Committee in contributing your best assistance to a Work so highly tending to the Publick good Whitehall the 2 of November 1655. Signed in the Name and by the Order of his Highness and the Councel Hen. Lawrence President This was a business of much Importance to the Common-wealth and the Protector was earnestly set upon it A Declaration of the Protector and his Councel of the reasons for raising additional standing Forces of Horse in every County to preserve the Peace thereof from the New Plots and attempts of the Enemies of the Common-wealth upon whom he resolves to put the Charge of these New Forces which they have occasioned and not upon the honest party who have already so much suffered Letters from Ireland commending their Governour the Lord Lieutenant Cromwell
Ships of War so they were also for Merchandise which was not intended to be barred Whitelock then gave them an account of the Treaty made with him and how that agreed the Enumeration to be and what debates were in Sweden with him about it but referred by him to an after Enumeration It was alleadged also That Contrebanda Goods were such as were ready for present use of War Not such as were Materials for Preparation and they urged that they had made the like Enumerations in other Treaties and a saving of Corn to be no Contrebanda Goods else it had been included and they said that there was no certainty what Goods were or were not Contrebanda but as was agreed by Stipulation This was referred to a further Consideration and a more full Answer to be given to it They had likewise debate touching the Form of a Passport in pursuance of Whitelock's Treaty at which the Commissioners did stick and offered their Objections as formerly they had done but could not come near to an Agreement At length the Ambassador propounded That a free Ship should make Free goods and Free goods a free Ship which was not held unreasonable At their parting the Ambassador also propounded to take into Consideration at their next meeting the giving of satisfaction for the Losses susstained by either part in the late Wars between England and Holland with the rest of the particulars in Whitelock's Treaty referred to a future Consideration and Treaty whereof Whitelock gave them an Account 20. The Swedish Ambassador kept a Solemnity this Evening for the Birth of the young Prince of Sweden All the Glass of the Windows of his House which were very large being new built were taken off and instead thereof painted Papers were sitted to the places with the Arms of Sweden in it and inscriptions in great Letters testifying the rejoycing for the Birth of the young Prince in the inside of the Papers in the Rooms were set close to them a very great number of Lighted Candles glittering through the Papers the Arms and Colours and writings were plainly to be discerned and shewed glorious in the Street the like was in the Stair-Case which had the Form of a Tower In the Balconies on each side of the House were Trumpets which Sounded often 7 or 8 of them together The Company at Supper were the Dutch Ambassador the Portugal and Brandenburgh Residents Coyett Resident for Sweden the Earls of Bedford and Devon the Lords St. John Ossery Bruce Ogleby and 2 or 3 other young Lords The Count of Holac a German the Lord George Fleet-wood and a great many Knights and Gentlemen besides the Ambassadors Company 25. The Swedish Ambassador went to visit Whitelock and told him That now the Business of sending an Ambassador from hence to Sweden was over and there was at present no occasion for it for this their reasons he alledged were a Peace concluded betwixt the King of Sweden and the Elector of Brandenburgh And the proceeding of the Treaty here Intimating that he was sufficiently Impowered to conclude what was at present requisite between his Master and the Protector and that there was no likelyhood but there would be also a good understanding between the King of Sweden and the Vnited Provinces 28. Some of the Swedish Ambassadors Gentlemen had a little Quarrel with two Fidlers in a Tavern and beat them for calling the Gentlemen Swedish Dogs and other foul Language and ill carriage of the Fidlers who were drunk yet Alderman Tichburn bound over the Gentlemen to the Sessions being apprehended by a Constable and the Fidlers in actions of Battery against one of the Gentlemen had a Verdict for Forty pounds Damages The Ambassador was highly exasperated at this afront and as he called it breach of the Priviledge of an Ambassador and complained of it upon which his Servants had no further Trouble which gave full Contentment to the Ambassador 29. Fiennes Strickland and Whitelock went to the Swedes Ambassadors House where they proceeded in the Treaty and had much debate upon the Article of Restitution which the Ambassador pressed as pursuant to Whitelock's Treaty and instanced in several Cases wherein his Masters Subjects had received great Injury and Damage by the Capers of England in time of the War betwixt them and the Vnited Provinces Whitelock acquainted them with his proceedings upon this point in Sweden that it was there demanded to have Restitution made to the Swedes which he denied upon these grounds 1. Because such an Article would seem to admit a wrong done to the Swedes by the English and that Justice could not be had for the same 2. Because such Injuries were relievable in the Ordinary Course of Justice in England as in the Admiralty Court and upon Appeals 3. Because no Restitution could be expected untill the damage and wrong were first made to appear which could not then and there be done and was not to be admitted without proof At length this Epedient was agreed on there That Restitution should be made to either part for dammage Sustained and as it is in the Article After long debate and many Complaints now made by the Ambassador wherein the Admiralty Court here was much reflected upon and the delaies and Injustice of that Court by him opened and not spared it came to this Close The Ambassador was desired by the Commissioners that his Secretary might prepare Abstracts of such particular Cases as he thought fit to insist upon to be presented to his Highness and the Councel who would thereupon cause an Examination to be made of the particulars and would give Order that right should be done as the Cases should require It was now also agreed That at the next meeting they should proceed to a perusal of all the rest of the Matters remaining to be Treated on that after a view of the whole they might come to particular Resolutions and Agreements March 1655. The Mayor Aldermen and divers of the Common Councel of London being sent for came to the Protector who told them the reasons of his appointing Major-Generals in the several Counties as a means to preserve the Peace to suppress wickedness and to encourage Goodness and haveing found the good effects hereof in the Counties he thought fit to appoint Major-General Skippon for the same end in the City And that all care should be had of their Immunities and Government Orders published of the Sessions in Middlesex for the punishment of Rogues Intelligence of the King of Sweden's Successes in Poland That Bishop Goodman of Glocester dyed a Papist A Declaration for a Fast-Day Some Prizes taken of Ostend A Soldier that killed a Gentleman in Lincolne was sent to the Goal The Queen of Sweden imbarqued with 5000 new raised Foot to carry to her Husband into Prussia Letters from Scotland of Popery increasing there From Ireland of new designs of Rebellion care taken for prevention of both The Articles of
which was furthered by Whitelocke's advice to the Protector 20. The Commissioners of the Treasury made several reports to the Protector and Council of Arrears of money due to the state and upon advice with them his Highness and the Council made several orders for the Collecting and bringing in of those Arrears December 1657. 1. News of the King of Sweden's proceedings in the Isle of Funen 3. The distaste between the Protector and Bradshaw was perceived to increase 6. Order for the prosecution of some persons who had committed very great wasts and spoils in Forests 7. The Protector was perswaded to take to heart and to further the relief of the poor persecuted Protestants in the Vallies of Piedmont and to send an Agent to the Duke of Savoy to negotiate for favour to them as other Princes had done 11. Writs of Summons under the great Seal were sent to divers persons to sit as Members in the other House of Parliament The Form of the Writs was the same with those which were sent to summon the Peers in Parliament They were in all sixty among whom were divers Noblemen Knights and Gentlemen of ancient Families and good Estates and some Colonels and Officers of the Army Their Names were as followeth The Lord Richard Cromwell the Protectors eldest Son The Lord Henry Cromwell his other Son Lord Deputy of Ireland Nathaniel Fiennes John Lisle Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal Henry Lawrence Lord President of his Highness Privy Council The Lord Charles Fleetwood Robert Earl of Warwick Edmund Earl of Mulgrave Edward Earl of Manchester William Viscount Say and Seal Lord John Cleypole Master of the Horse Philip Viscount Lisle eldest Son to the Earl of Leicester Charles Viscount Howard Philip Lord Wharton Thomas Lord Fauconbridge Lord John Desborough Lord Edward Mountague Generals at Sea George Lord Eure. The Lord Whitelocke Sir Gilbert Pickering Colonel William Sydenham Sir Charles Wolseley Baronet Major General Philip Skippon Lord Strickland Colonel Philip Jones Sir William Strickland Francis Rous Esq John Fiennes Esq Sir Francis Russel Baronet Sir Thomas Honnywood Knight Sir Arthur Hasilrigge Baronet Sir John Hobart Sir Richard Onslow Knight Sir Gilbert Gerard. Sir William Roberts Knight John Glyn Oliver St. John Lords chief Justices William Pierpoint Esq John Jones Esq John Crew Esq Alexander Popham Esq Sir Christopher Pack Sir Robert Tichborn Edward Whalley Esq Sir John Barksted Knight Lieutenant of the Tower of London Sir George Fleetwood Sir Thomas Pride Richard Ingolsby Esq Sir John Hewson James Berry Esq William Goffe Esq Thomas Cooper Esq Edmund Thomas Esq George Monk Commander in chief of his Highness Forces in Scotland David Earl of Cassils in Scotland Sir William Lockart Sir Archibald Johnston of Warriston William Steele Lord Chancellour of Ireland The Lord Broghil Brother to the Earl of Corke in Ireland Sir Matthew Tomlinson 16. Colonel Sir John Reynolds who commanded the English Forces that joyned with the King of France was in a Pink coming over with Colonel White and others from Mardike for England and upon Goodwin Sands the Pink was cast away and all their men in her were drowned Among them was one William de Vaux a young man a good Scholar and very ingenious and being in a great storm in a former Voyage he vainly said That if ever he went to Sea again he would be contented that God should let him be drowned And now being again at Sea the Judgment imprecated by him did fall upon him and he was now drowned 24. The Commissioners of the Treasury prepared the business of the Contract with Commissioners for the Excise and new Impost 25. Some Congregations being met to observe this day according to former solemnity and the Protector being moved that Souldiers might be sent to suppress them he was advised against it as that which was contrary to the Liberty of Conscience so much owned and pleaded for by the Protector and his friends but it being contrary to Ordinances of Parliament which were also opposed in the passing of them that these days should be so solemnized the Protector gave way to it and those Meetings were suppressed by the Souldiers January 1657. 1. Whitelocke having lent Mr. Rushworth some Manuscripts he attended Whitelocke to shew him his Historical Collections as his Highness had ordered 3. A Meeting of the Gentlemen of the County of Bucks at Merchant-Taylors Hall where they had a great Feast 9. The Lord Willoughby petition'd the Protector for his Highness Order to go into the Country to dispatch some necessary business in relation to his Estate and promising to return to Prison which Petition the Protector granted 12. The Protector resolved to have a Collection for the poor persecuted Protestants of Piedmont 20. The Parliament met according to their Adjournment and the Members of the other House summoned by Writ met and sate in the Lords House as the Lords used to do formerly The Protector came thither and the Speaker with the House of Commons being sent for by the Black Rod came to the Lords House where the Protector made a solemn Speech to them but was short by reason of his Indisposition of health and after him the Lord Commissioner Fiennes spake to them more at large My Lords and Gentlemen of both the most honourable Houses of Parliament AMongst the manifold and various Dispensations of God's Providence of late years this is one and it is a signal and remarkable Providence that we see this day in this place a Chief Magistrate and two Houses of Parliament Jacob speaking to his Son Joseph said I had not thought to have seen thy face and lo God hath shewed me thy seed also Meaning his two Sons Ephraim and Manasseh And may not many amongst us well say some years since We had not thought to have seen a Chief Magistrate again amongst us and lo God hath shewn us a Chief Magistrate in his two Houses of Parliament Now may the good God make them like Ephraim and Manasseh that the three Nations may be blest in them saying God make thee like these two Houses of Parliament which two like Leah and Rachel did build the House of Israel May you do worthily in Ephrata and be famous in Bethlehem May it be your great business to procure the peace the safety and the prosperity of these three Nations and these things too not for themselves only but in order yet to greater and higher ends the advancement of the Kingdom of Christ amongst us and the Glory of God in the good of all men but especially of the Churches of God amongst men which as they are God's most precious Jewels and his chiefest care so must they also hold the choicest place in the eyes and in the hearts of all those that act under him and are cloathed with his power and authority In order to the great and glorious end you may please in the first place to reflect upon the Posture that
delivered to them in the House It was reported that Whitelocke Fiennes and L'Isle were not continued Commissioners of the Seal because the House Resolved That the Commissioners should not be Members of the House Vote for Fleetwood to be Lieutenant General of the Forces 5. At the Council of State Whitelocke and Colonel Sydney and Sir Robert Honywood were named to go Commissioners to the Zound to mediate a Peace between the Kings of Sweden and Denmarke Whitelocke was not willing to undertake this service especially to be joyned with those who would expect precedency of him who had been formerly Ambassador Extraordinary to Sweden alone and he knew well the overruling temper and height of Colonel Sidney he therefore endeavoured to excuse himself by reason of his Old Age and Infirmities but the Council pressed it upon him 6. Vote That all Commissions to Officers of the Army be signed by the Speaker And this distasted the Army The like for the Officers of the Navy Vote That this Parliament shall not continue longer than May 7th 1660. 7. Referred to the Council of State to take care for the next Circuits Votes for Commissioners for Ireland and recalling of Colonel Henry Cromwell 8. Colonel Hacker and his Officers had their Commission given them by the Speaker at the Table in the House and likewise several of the Sea Captains 9. Upon a Letter from Bradshaw the House dispensed with his attendance as a Commissioner of the Seal during his Indisposition of health Fleetwood and other Officers had their Commissions in the House An Address from the Town of Aylesbury 10. Referred to the Council of State to put in Colonel Fitch Lieutenant of the Tower this was Haslelrigg's Creature and to put him in that place offended the City 11. Lambert and his Officers took their Commissions from the House Reference to the Council of State to treat with the Ambassador of the States 13. Order for the Council to bring in names for Judges for next Circuit and for them to prepare Instructions for Lockart to go Ambassador into France Commissions given in the House to more Officers 14. A Committee named to give audience to an Agent from Hamburg More Officers had their Commissions in the House and an Address was presented from Bedfordshire 16. The business of the Agents of the Hans Towns in Germany referred to the Council of State Judges voted by the House for this Summers Circuit and Tyrell Fountain and others Voted to be Serieants at Law Divers Officers received their Commissions in the House 17. Vote to send a Publick Minister into Holland and the Council to prepare Instructions Colonel Sydenham and other Officers took their Commissions from the Speaker 18. Reference to a Committee touching a Grant to Colonel Overton of five hunder pounds per ann out of the Earl of Levens Estate 20. Judges Voted for this Summers Circuit and referred to the Council to take care that the People be not wronged by Bayliffs and Juries Order for a Bill to reform abuses in Clerks Atturnies Sollicitors and Lawyers and many Orders for monies 21. Several Addresses to the Parliament Letters of high complement from General Monk to Whitelocke and that the conduct of the Vnion betwixt England and Scotland being left to Whitelocke he wished he might see him there 22. Addresses to the Parliament Sea Officers took their Commissions from the Speaker Whitelocke got excused from going one of the Commissioners to the Zound Letters from Colonel Henry Cromwell in Ireland of his Submission to this Parliament and an Address from the Army there 23. The business of the Envoy from the King of Sweden and the other of the Dutch referred to the Council 24. Whitelocke Sir Henry Mildway and Sir John Trevor appointed to attend the French Ambassador to his audience to morrow Divers Addresses to the House and Divers Officers took their Commissions from the Speaker 25. Vote that the Speaker be Custos Rotulorum of Oxon and Berks. 27. Upon a Petition against Tithes the House voted That for the Incouragement of a Godly Preaching learned Ministry throughout the Nation the payment of Tithes shall continue as now they are unless this Parliament shall find out some other more equal and comfortable maintenance both for the Ministry and satisfaction of the People Addresses from Ireland to the House Some Friends to the Commissioners of the Seal propounded that all might take out a General Pardon 28. Instructions voted for the Plenipotentiaries going to the Zound 30. Mr. Downing voted to go Agent into Holland Several Commissions given in the House to Officers of the Army July 1659. 1. Vote for Steel and Corbet to be Serjeants at Law and the Instructions agreed for the Commissioners for Ireland Several Officers received their Commissions 2. The Publick Ministers of the Kings of Sweden and of Denmarke and of the Duke of Holstein referred to the Council of State for their audience 4. Vote to exempt Richard Cromwell from all Arrests for Debts 5. Order for clearing of White-hall from any Lodging there except Members of Parliament and Council of State The Bill of Indemnity still in debate 6. Vote to stop the Sale of Hampton Court. Henry Cromwell gave an account to the Council of State of the condition of Affairs in Ireland 7. Colonel Desborough and other Officers received their Commissions in the House 9. Colonel Alured appointed Captain of the Life-guard to the Parliament and Council Several Officers took their Commissions Mr. Hugh Windham made a Judge 11. Several Officers took their Commissions 12. Audience for the Portugal Ambassador 13. Commissions received in the House 14. Act of Indemnity published and several Acts for several Militia's in London and in Counties Sir John Gore suspected to be in a Plot against the Parliament 15. More Officers received their Commissions in the House and the House settled the Militia in several Counties 16. Order for a way to pay Richard Cromwells Debts being in all 29640 l. and referred to a Committee to provide a comfortable maintenance for him 18. Orders to suppress Riots in Enfield Chase Lieutenant General Ludlow and other Officers had their Commissions in the House 19. The House was busie in settling the Militia and giving Commissions to Officers and receiving Addresses and appointing Judges of the Admiralty 21. Addresses to the House Order for Serjeant Bradshaw to take his Oath as Commissioner of the Seal 22. Order for Letters to be sent from the Speaker to the Members of Parliament that are absent to attend the House Bradshaw took this Oath in the House To be true faithfull and constant to this Commonwealth without a single Person Kingships or House of Peers 23. The House proceeded in settling the Militia 25. Letters from the Duke of Tuscany to the Parliament referred to the Council of State Power to the Council to issue money for the publick
be too credulous of Monk's pretences 19. Monk's Commissioners sent away to him the Agreement made here by them according to the Powers which he gave them and expected his confirmation thereof Letters that Grave Rantzow was to come Ambassadour hither from the King of Denmark That General Monk had summoned a Convention in Scotland of two Persons for each Shire and one for each Borough The Committee of Safety holding it convenient and necessary for divers weighty Reasons to adjourn the remaining part of the present Term from Saturday the 19th of this instant November until the first day of the next Term to prevent the discontinuance of any Process Suits or Causes now depending or any inconvenience to the people thereby Ordered that Writs be issued and passed under the Great Seal of England in usual form for that purpose 20. Letters that when Captain Pool moved to send into England to be truly informed of the proceedings here Monk clapt him up in prison where he yet continues And that many of Mank's Souldiers were dissatisfied Mr. Barker and Mr. Caryl Ministers sent to Monk could perswade nothing with him nor have any but general and uncertain Answers from him 21. That many of Monk's men were dissatisfied and that Mr. Collins his Chaplain had left him 22. The General Council of Officers of the Army made choice of Commissioners to agree upon the qualifications of the Members for the next Parliament or Supream Delegated Authority and desired them to meet in the Horse-Chamber at Whitehall 23. Letters from the North of Lambert's being at Newcastle and that many of Monk's Officers and Souldiers came in to him A Letter from Monk was delivered to the Common-council of London which was not relished well by them 25. Monk's three Commissioners that were here were very confident that he would approve what they had agreed which was fully according to his Instructions Some Members of the former Council of State gave out Commissions sealed by them for raising of Forces Morley Walton Reynolds Scot Haslerigge Nevil and others of them met often Monk had a Convention in Scotland to whom he propounded 1. That he having a Call from God and Man to march into England to settle the Peace there that in his absence they would preserve the Peace in Scotland To this they answered That they could not engage for it wanting Arms but they would endeavour it 2. That if Troubles did arise they would assist him to suppress them To this they answered That they were incapable to do it and it would be imprudent in them to engage in these new troubles 3. He required money of them which they promised to levy Monk caused an Engagement to be signed by the Horse And Major General Morgan was forward to assist Monk 26. The Committee proceeded in preparing a Form of Government wherein Vane was hard to be satisfied but did much stick to his own apprehensions 28. Letters of Monk's March from Edenborough towards England with Bag and Baggage 29. Order to seal a Commission to Mr. Sadler Mr. Taylor and others for Probate of Wills 30. Letters from Monk to Fleetwood full of complements and expressions of his earnest desire of a speedy settlement of the present Differences And because he perceived in the Agreement signed by Fleet-wood that there are some things remain there untreated of and unagreed upon it was the resolution of him and his Officers to add two more to the number to have conference with the like number to be appointed here to put a final end to the business which he desired might be as soon as possible Upon consideration of this Letter some of the Committee declared their opinions That this was only a delay in Monk to gain time and be the better prepared for his design to bring in the King and to bring the Army here and their Party into more streights for want of Pay which he had got for his Forces And therefore advised to fall upon Monk presently to bring the matter to an issue before his Souldiers were more confirmed and Fleetwood's Party discouraged But this advice was not taken but a new Treaty consented to by Commissioners on each part to be at Newcastle The Committee of Safety set forth a Proclamation prohibiting the subscribing of Papers under colour of Petitions for the promoting of designs dangerous to the Peace of the Commonwealth They ordered that there be a Committee appointed to receive an account of Mr. Downing's transactions as a publick Minister for this Commonwealth with the States General of the united Provinces of the Netherlands And what other things he hath to offer in relation to this affair That the Lord Whitelocke Mr. Strickland Alderman Ireton General Desborough Colonel Berry and Mr. Holland or any two of them be a Committee to receive the said Account from Mr. Downing to morrow December 1659. 1. The Lord Fanshaw was released from his Imprisonment 3. Several Commissions of the Militia were sealed for Westminster and Essex Order of the Lord Mayor for preservation of the Peace of the City An Address to Fleetwood from the Officers under Lambert for expediting the Treaty with Monk 4. Some of the Forces about London began to be discontented for want of Pay and to favour the proceedings of Monk for restoring the Parliament an inchanting word And the Forces in the North were not well settled 5. Upon some disturbances in London some Forces marched into the City to keep the Peace and were there affronted by the multitude whereupon two of the rabble were killed and the rest were dispersed Intelligence that Colonel Whetham Governour of Portsmouth and the Garrison there had declared for the restoring of the Parliament and that Colonel Morley a Parliament man was there with them to incourage them therein whereupon the Committee order a party of Horse and Foot to march thither to reduce them 6. The General Council of the Armies of the three Nations met at White-hall to consider of a Form of Government A Committee of Aldermen of London came to the Committee of safety and excused the late tumult in the City and that they had no Hand in it 7. The General Council of the Officers considered of the Government The Committee of safety took care about the Militia Intelligence that Colonel Zankey with his Irish Brigade obeyed the orders of Monk and that Berwick was his Head Quarters 8. Great perplexity about the Publick Affairs 9. Sir George Booth was released upon security A Petition was delivered to the Common Council from many Citizens desiring to have such a Parliament as was 1642. The Petition was laid aside as a design to bring in the Common Enemy And they sent a Committee to Fleetwood to conferr with him who met at White-hall 10. Intelligence that Haslerigge Morley and Walton were in Portsmouth that Colonel Norton refused to engage with them
a Gentleman of worth and fidelity dwelling among them Collonel Tichburne to have that charge that he would acquaint his Officers with their kind Invitation and desired that all may labour and study for unity and peace After this the General viewed the Stores and gave some Orders to the Lieutenant and twenty pounds to the Warders and Officers 10. The Lords desired the Concurrence of the Commons to the Declaration of Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army mentioning the grounds of their coming up to London with the Army and after a long debate it was upon the question laid aside for that time Both Houses past an Ordinance for the continuing the two Speakers Commissioners of the Great Seal for a month longer Order That the twenty five thousand pounds stayed by the Apprentices and sent to the Tower should be sent for the service of Ireland and Sir Thomas Fairfax to send a Convoy with it to the Sea side Two Aldermen and four Commoners attended the General for his answer to their Invitation which he excused That he could not accept because of the many and great Affairs touching the settlement of the Kingdom wherewith he and his Officers were at present taken up and returned thanks to the City They were preparing a Bason and Ewer of Gold of the value of about one thousand pounds for a present to the General Letters from Berwick That Pulpits in Scotland urge the necessity of that Kingdom To maintain the ends of the Covenant against all violation and that many Souldiers are entertained there and Letters from Collonel Lambert mention their preparations 11. The Lords sent again to the Commons for their Concurrence to the Declaration of Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army and for Nulling the forced Votes and after a long debate the Commons agreed upon an Expedient and referred it to a Committee to be drawn up for Nulling the forced Votes by a Repeal yet so as the fomenters of that force and the Mutineers might be proceeded against Mr. Brittan of London sent for to answer abusive Speeches against Captain Brain of Southwark for assisting Sir Thomas Fairfax and an Order of thanks and indemnity passed both Houses for those of Southwark the like Orders passed for the Committee and Forces of Hertford-shire and for Collonel Blunt and his Forces in Kent Orders for a Committee to inquire what Arms c. have been taken out of the Publick Stores in the late Tumult and to have them restored And for one hundred pounds for the poor Visited people in Westminster and for suppressing of Stage-Plays Bull-baitings Dauncing on the Ropes c. Upon a complaint to the General and his Councel of War at Kingston That Members of Parliament and other rich men were exempted from Quartering and the poorer sort thereby oppressed the General and his Councel of War made an Order to take off those exemptions and that all alike should bear the burden equally Some Gentlemen out of South-Wales came to the General declaring the Good affections of those Countries and readiness to joyn with the General and Army The Brewers of London Petitioned the General to be a means to take off the Excise of Beer and Ale from them 12. The Thanksgiving-day kept by both Houses together Divers Reformed Officers who disclaimed having any hand in the late Tumult Petitioned the General That he would be a means they might have part of their Arrears Certain Ministers Petitioned the General complaining That divers Delinquent Ministers who were put out of their Livings do now trouble and seek to out those Ministers whom the Parliament put in and particularly That Dr. Layfield counterfeited a Warrant from the General to remove a Minister from his Living in Surrey into which he was placed by the Parliament The General and Councel of War declared their dislike of the proceedings and to clear themselves therein and to endeavour to bring such Offenders to punishment 13. Reference to a Committee to consider of a gratuity for Mr. Marshal and Mr. Nye for their pains as Ministers to the Parliament and their attendance of the Commissioners in the Army The Lords desired the Commons Concurrence to a Declaration That the Commissioners of the Militia of London now acting upon a forced Ordinance called the Apprentices Ordinance did act unwarrantably but upon the question it was laid aside But they concurred to another Ordinance to appoint a Committee of Lords and Commons to examine the force put upon the Houses by the Apprentices and Malignants July 26. and the chief actors in it some whereof were apprehended The Lords desired the concurrence of the Commons in approving the Declaration subscribed by the Lords and Commons who absented themselves by reason of the late violence upon the Houses An Ordinance was sent up to the Lords for vindication of the Army Letters from Ireland certified a very great defeat given by Collonel Jones to the Rebels near Trimme with a List of those killed and taken viz. Lieutenant General Burne Collonel Plunket Earl of Fingale Collonel Butler Collonel Waring Collonel Eynod Earl of Westmeath Lieutenant Collonel Rochford Preston's Son killed forty Officers taken three hundred Foot left to the mercy of the Horse seven thousand Foot Arms taken three hundred of the Gentry killed one hundred and fifty Oxen taken three thousand Foot killed four pieces of Ordnance taken great Pillage and Preston's Cabinet of Papers The Marquess of Ormond and Lord Roscommon came into England and had a Ticket to reside near Gloucester 14. The House gave fifty pounds to the Messenger that brought the good news from Ireland and Ordered twenty five thousand pounds more for the Forces there and thanks to the Commissioners Upon a report by the Commissioners in the Army of their proceedings the House approved them and gave their Commissioners thanks Upon a Letter from the General Orders for some maintenance for the Kings servants who were not in Arms against the Parliament Order for one thousand five hundred pounds for the Garrison of Lynne An Ordinance Committed for taking away the jurisdiction of the County Palatine of Durham The King removed to Oatlands and Sir Thomas Fairfax Quartered at Kingston The Judges Sat at Hereford but the people came not in so that there was but little to do either for Judges or Lawyers and the Judges especially Clerk were very froward upon it 16. The Houses Sat not Letters from the North informed That Collonel Lambert in a Speech to the Forces there acquainted them that he was sent by his Excellency to take upon him the Charge and Conduct of the Forces in that Northern Association and hoped to find their ready concurrence with him but he was answered only with silence That they met at a General Rendezvous about five thousand of them and there again Collonel Lambert made a Speech to them to the effect as before and That his Excellency had taken equal care of them
for their Pay as for the rest of his Army That he was sent down to Command them by the General not of his own seeking or for private Interest and desired their complyance then they gave him a loud acclamation and had Orders to go to their several Quarters The News of the Parliaments being restored by the Army and the City of London agreeing with the Army hindered the intended proceedings of the Estates of Scotland Great resort was from London to the King at Oatlands 17. Upon the question it was carried in the Negative by three Votes That the Declaration should not pass that the proceedings in the House from July 26. to Aug. 6. were forced and that sitting not to be a free Parliament A Petition and Congratulation was presented to the General of many thousands Young men and Apprentices of London for his great services to the Kingdom and City which they acknowledg with thankfulness and as they refused to comply with those who lately acted against the Army so they resolved to live and dye with his Excellency and the Army in settling His Majesties Rrights the Parliaments Priviledges and the Peace and Freedom of the Nation To this the General gave a respectful and grateful answer The Councel of War Sat close about a Declaration of their proceedings in behalf of the Parliament the Kingdom and themselves 18. Order for a day of Thanksgiving for the great success in Ireland and for one thousand pounds for Collonel Jones one thousand pounds to Collonel Fenwicke and other gratuities to other Officers in this service and for Supplies for Ireland Upon a Letter from Mr. Nicholls one of the Eleven Members now under restraint in the Army Order to the General to discharge him or send him up to the Parliament for his Tryal A Complaint by Letters from the Scots Commissioners for breach of the Union in staying Mr. Chieseley their Secretary at Newcastle the Copy hereof sent to the General and that he give Order for Mr. Chieseley's release 19. Letters from the General to both Houses with the Remonstrance of the Army touching their late proceedings and chiefly driving at The purging of the Parliament by expunging such Members as did Act and Vote in the time that the Speakers and the rest were forced from the House The House of Lords approved of this Remonstrance and Voted a Letter of thanks to the General and to signifie to him that they would take care for the Punishment of those Delinquent Ministers and others by whose practises Ministers put into Livings by the Parliament had been disquieted and outed in which the Commons Concurred but did nothing upon the great Remonstrance The Examination of Collonel Ennis who sought to go beyond Sea under another name referred to a Committee Order for eight thousand pounds for Plymouth Garrison and to Treat with the General about the lessening of the Charge there 20. Order for a Collection for the poor English Irish here and for one hundred pounds for the poor visited people in St. Martins Parish and for a general Contribution for the visited City of Chester and an Ordinance for twenty thousand pounds for Ireland Mr. Strickland had leave to come to England Upon another debate the Ordinance passed For declaring all Votes Orders and Ordinances passed in one or both Houses since the force on both Houses July 26 until Aug. 6. 1647. to be null and void 21. Upon a Letter from Sir Thomas Fairfax Order for thirty pounds a week for Sick and Wounded Souldiers four shillings eight pence a week for each of them and an Ordinance passed for Judges and Justices to put it in execution Order for a months Pay for the Army to be borrowed of the City Upon a report touching the late Tumults Order That the Lord Mayor and Aldermen do call a Common Councel by Tuesday next and that the Clerk who attended the Committee of the Militia and of the Safety do deliver over the Books Papers and Warrants in his hands or be committed to the Sergeant Mr. Hollis Sir Philip Stapleton Sir William Waller Sir William Lewys Sir Jo. Clotworthy and Mr. Long being in a Vessel going towards Callis were pursued by a Frigot of the Parliament and taken within six Miles of Callis and by their desire brought back to Captain Batten who dismist them to their Voyage again and chid those that apprehended them The High Sheriff entertained the Judges and Lawyers very nobly at Shrewsbury The Ordinance pass'd both Houses for relief of Ministers put into Livings by the Parliament Another for a Collection for the poor visited Persons in Chester and an additional Ordinance concerning the sale of Bishops Lands A false Allarm of Scots Forces being upon the Borders Letters from Ireland informed That the Lord Inchequin had taken divers Castles from the Rebels in the County of Limricke That he defeated a Troop of the Rebels near Balling garry slew twenty three of them and took the rest That he beat the Rebells from a Pass near Limricke and killed about an hundred of them and took two hundred horses and two hundred Cows and took in New castle within a mile of Limricke some of his Forces got over the River Shannon and got eight thousand head of Cattle and five thousand Sheep and struck such a terror into the Rebels that they burnt the Earl of Thomond's Castle Bonratty which they had Garrisoned and fled away That they took in Grace-Castle and put all the Rebels there to the Sword and took eight hundred head of Cattle and Garrons They stormed and burnt the Abbey of Adare where four Fryars were burned and three taken they took Fox's Castle and put all in it to death 24. A Letter from the General touching Mr. Anthony Nicholls one of the eleven Members sent up Prisoner with the Grounds of his detainment by the Army and a further accusation of High Treason against him Ordered that he be continued in safe Custody but he escaped from Denham one of the Serjeants Deputys in whose Custody he was Denham being examined concerning the escape confessed That he took Mr. Nicoll's word as a Gentle-man to be a true Prisoner but he brake his word and escaped The House committed Denham and ordered all the Ports to be stopped for the apprehending of Mr. Nicolls and revoked the Pass formerly granted to Mr. Nicolls Upon a report by Mr. Corbet touching the Force upon the Parliament and Commitment of some of the Offenders the House approved of their Commitment and ordered an impeachment of high Treason to be brought in against Col. Chapman and Lieutenant Collonel Baines and of high misdemeanor against Col. Vaughan A Petition from the Brewers to take off the Excise of Beer and Ale They were told if they paid not the Excise by a day they should be distrained to pay The Common-Council excused themselves that they could not advance a Months pay by way of loan for the Army The
Souldiers whil'st they were on Shore behaved themselves very civilly and payed for what they took and any that were debaucbed were severely punished That there was much seeking of God by Prayer for a Blessing on them Letters that the Cavaleers endeavoured to raise Differences betwixt the 2 Nations but since the News of the late Defeat in Ireland they are very still Letters from York That one Morrice and one Blackbourn were arraigned before Baron Thort and Judge Puleston for levying War against the Kingdom they pleaded not guilty but desired as they were Marshal Men that they might be tryed by Marshal Law which was denyed to them Morrice at last said he would be tryed by God and the Countrey and 17 Witnesses proved foul Crimes against him He had two Sheets of Paper written with Matters of Law and Statutes many of which he pleaded and urged the case of the War betwixt the two Houses of York and Lancaster the difference of which from his case was shewed by the Judges Then he produced a Commission from the King when he was Prince the Judges told him that the Prince was a Subject as well as he and must be tryed by the same Law He was found guilty of Treason and manacled with Irons at which he said What a Martial Man Ironed the like President was never before known He desired to have a strong Guard saying Let me be damned if I escape but it was denyed so was a Copy of his Indictment and to have Councel or to be exchanged He and Blackbourn were both condemned Letters from Chester That Lieutenant General Jones having put Dublin into a good posture was marched forth with 1000 Horse and 3000 Foot and sat down before Tredah That Ormond executed many for Runawayes That the Markets are full again at Dublin Letters from Paris That Prince Charles received an account from Ormond of this Defeat given him by Jones and blamed Inchequins Horse and others that betrayed him and ran away and Inchequin by his Letters to the Prince complained against Ormond for fighting when he was gone from him with 2000 Horse That Ormond diswaded the Prince from coming into Ireland 21 The House sate and received Letters from the Lieutenant of Ireland of his then being setting Sail for Ireland and offering to their consideration the Removal of Penal Statutes that inforce the Consciences of honest conscientious Men. The House ordered the Committees to make their Reports touching the Ease of tender Consciences And an Act to be brought in for Commissioners to be chosen in all Countries to make choice of fit and able Men to be made Ministers that cannot conform to the present Ordinance for Ordination of Persons to Preach Orders about Monies for the maimed Souldiers and about Disbursements for disbanding Souldiers The House was acquainted with divers Papers taken in a French Mans Trunk at Rye discovering a popish Design to be set on Foot in England with Commissions from the Bishop of Chalcedon by Authority of the Church of Rome to Popish Priests and others for settling the Discipline of the Romish Church in England and Scotland Referred to Mr. Attourney General to make a further Examination of this Business and report it to the House Some sent to seize Books of Lieutenant Collonel Lilbourn newly Printed were perswaded by him to look to their own Liberties and let the Books alone Letters that the Lieutenant of Ireland was safely landed at Dublin and all his Men with him in about 40 Ships That Commissary General Ireton with about 60 Ships more full of Men Arms and Provisions were with a good Wind sailing for Munster 22 Petitions of the Miners of Derbyshire and of the Earl of Rutland referred to a Committee Petition of the City of London for more Houses to set the poor on work referred to a Committee The Arrest of a Member of the House not one that sate was referred to be examined by a Committee An Act passed touching Plantations about Florida near Virginia Letters of great Complaints of the Taxes in Lancashire and That the meaner sort threaten to leave their Habitations and their Wives and Children to be maintained by the Gentry That they can no longer bear the Oppression to have the Bread taken out of the Mouths of their Wives and Children by Taxes And that if an Army of Turks come to relieve them they will joyn with them Reasons against the arresting of Mens Persons were presented to the Members of Parliament 23 The Arrears of the Fee-Farm Rents of Carlisle remitted by the House The King of France had prohibited all Trade with England the English Merchants took this as a Breach of the League and thereupon addrest themselves by Petition to the Councel of State desiring them to report this matter to the House The Councel reported the whole matter to the House who upon long debate thereof Voted That no Wines Wool or Silk of the Growth of France and usually vended in this Nation shall from thenceforth be imported into any Port thereof or vended here upon forfeiture of the Goods and Ship that shall import them Upon the Question whether Linnen Cloth should be likewise prohibited It was resolved in the negative in regard of the general and necessary use thereof and they referred it to the Councel of State to bring in an Act according to these Votes Letters That when the Lieutenant of Ireland landed at Dublin he was most Heroically entertained with the resounding Eccho of the great Guns round about the City and great concourse of People to see him to whom he made a very grateful Speech with his Hat in his hand and there was a great cry that they would all live and dye with him That the next day after the raising of the Siege of London Derry Sir Charlet Coot Summon'd the Garrison that was near to it in the Possession of the Enemy and that within two dayes the new Fort Slogh Castle and other Forts were delivered up to him with the Ammunition and Artillery all upon Quarter 24 Order for 20 l. for the buryal of Mr. Powel a reduced Officer A Letter from Sir Charles Coot to the House That Charles Coot his Brother had concluded a Peace with M. G. Row O Neal and his Reasons for the doing of it were for Preservation of the Garrison of London Derry and the English Interest in those parts After reading of the Articles and a long Debate Ordered that a Copy of a Declaration of the House upon M. G. Monks joyning with Owen Roe O Neal should be forthwith sent to Sir Charles Coot and in vindication of his Honour they Voted That they approved of the Fidelity Care and Vigilancy of Sir Charles Coot in Preserving the English Interest in Ireland and holding out London Derry against the Scots They referred it to the Councel of State to take care for the sending of these Votes to Sir Charles Coot and for relieving him with
Provisions and Ammunition Order for 100 l. to Mr. King who brought the Letters from Sir Charles Coot for his good Service Referred to the Councel of State to examine the Business of Captain Kesar mentioned in Sir Charles Coots Letter and to send for and secure him if they find cause 25 By Vote the House declared That all such English and Scots and all others that have ingaged for the Parliament of England in the Nation of Scotland and have revolted from that Service and all such as have or shall adhere unto or joyn with Charles Stuart eldest Son of the late King in that Nation are Traytors and shall have their Estates confiscate and their Persons proceeded against by Martial Law Order for these Votes to be Printed and Published and a Copy of them to be sent to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Order to forbid proceedings in the Composition of the Earl of Derby because he holds the Isle of Man against the Parliament By two Printed Papers and three Letters to the Committee of the Army for discovery of Criminal Offenders Mr. Speaker was taxed for an ill Member and that he had conveyed a great Sum of Money to the King and Matters of Falsehoods and Breach of Trust are charged on him Upon the Order of the General the Officers of the Army certifyed under their Hands That they never examined any matter touching the Speaker nor had any Order from his Excellency for that purpose to authorize it That they find the same Business had been Judicially heard before a Committee of Parliament and by them reported to the House who declared those complaints raysed and prosecuted falsely malitiously and scandalously against the Speaker and that exemplary Punishment be inflicted upon the Prosecutors The Officers of the Army conclude their Certificates That they humbly conceive the said Information raysed and promoted since the Judgement of the House as aforesaid was a practice to bring an Odium upon the Speaker who hath so highly merited from the publick An Advertisement published That if any Countryman be injured by the Souldiers taking of Free-Quarter contrary to the Act that upon Complaint to the Judge Advocate of the Army and Proof thereof made he shall have Satisfaction out of the Pay of the Souldier and Protection from the Army 27 The House sate not Letters from Dublin to the Councel of State of some Correspondence betwixt the Governour of Tredagh and Lieutenant General Jones and that Ormond came thither with 1500 Horse and 2000 Foot That Owen Roe O Neal conceiving that he had merited from the Parliament desired a Convoy for his Men to serve the Spaniard but nothing was granted Letters that the Scots Army was full of Malignants and the Nation full of Feares That nothing will give Satisfaction there but the Kings putting Malignants from him and granting the particulars of the Covenant Letters from Mr. Peters to the Councel giving them an account of the Fleets setting sail for Ireland c. Lieutenant Collonel Morrice Governour of Pontfract Castle for the King was executed according to the Sentence of the Court Marshal Letters that 5 Men of War wearing the Scots Colours set upon 5 Ships of the Parliaments killed 4 of their Men wounded 18 and did much Prejudice to the Ships The Governours of the new Corporation in London for setting the poor to work sent their Warrants requiring the Church-Wardens and Overseers of the Poor in every Parish to return the Names to them of all such as are able to work and have not meanes to maintain themselves and of all who are not able to work and want Livelyhood 28 Order for such as neglect to take out Discharges upon their Compositions for Delinquency to be taken into Custody The Act passed prohibiting the Importing of any Wines Wool or Silk from France into England or Ireland An Act passed for admitting the Purchasers of Bishops Lands to pay the whole purchase Money by Weavers-Hall Bills Another Act passed touching the second 40000 l. charged on the Excise and Goldsmiths-Hall 29 The Publique Thanksgiving day Solemnized The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland shortly after his landing at Dublin published a Proclamation reciting the great Mercies of God to that City particularly in the late Defeat given to the Rebels who incompassed it round about and finding that notwithstanding the Goodness of God to them yet by profane Swearing Cursing and Drunkenness his holy Name is dayly dishonoured and blasphemed contrary to the Laws of God and the known Laws of that Land and to the Articles of War He commands the Major and Magistrates of the City and the Officers of the Army to put in due Execution the Laws against such Offenders and that he will punish the neglect and contempt of this Proclamation with the severest Punishment of the Law 30 The Act for relief of Prisoners of Debt was after a long Debate and difference in Opinion ordered upon the Question to be ingrossed Debate touching Fees and Salaries of the Officers belonging to the House The Arrears of Sir Adam Lostus referred to the Committee for Irish Affairs Letters from Holland That the Prince his Men run away from him for want of Mony That 2 Irish Frigots brought into Dunkirk 6 Hull Ships for Prizes Letters from Dublin That the English Fleet which came thither with the L. Lieutenant strikes a great Terrour into the Enemy That Trumpets came to Jones from Ormond Inchequin and others but he sent them back with this Answer That now all Addresses must be made to the L. Lt. Cromwel 31 Order that Serjeant Dandey Serjeant at Arms to the Councel do proclaim the Act for prohibiting the Importation of Wines Wool and Silks from France Debate touching Mr. Warners Case An Act passed touching the West-India Islands and making them subordinate to the Government of England Order for an Act to prohibite the Brewing of Ale or Beer above 10 s. the Barrel Report by the Councel of a Letter from the Lieutenant of Ireland giving an Account of his Condition after his safe Arrival and laying open his necessities for Supplies and speedy Recruits Referred to the Councel of State to consider of the Letter and Desires of the L. Lieutenant and to answer his Expectation so far forth as it may not increase the Charge of this Common-Wealth Order for Payment of the 200 l. formerly given to Captain Poulton Order for 1200 l. for C. Fielder late Governour of Portsmouth for his Service there and 1148 l. for his Arreares out of concealed Delinquents Estates to be discovered by him Upon a Report from the Councel of their Opinion That Sir Kenelm Digby is a dangerous Person and to know the pleasure of the House concerning him they Voted That he was not within the compass of the Votes for compounding for his Delinquency And that he be injoyned to depart the Common-Wealth within 20 days and not to return without leave of the House under pain of Death
were to be left to the Parliament and he thanked them for their respects to him Four thousand pounds seized upon as money to be sent to the King Addresses to Monk in his march from the Gentry of several Countries to the same effect with that in Northamptonshire He came to S. Albans and the High Sheriff of Hertford-shire met him he expressed all Duty and Obedience to this Parliament The L. Richardson Sir John Hobbert and Sir Horatio Townsend brought an address from Norfolk to the Parliament for the secluded Members to be re-admitted or a free Parliament Lawson and his Officers courted Monk 30. Upon Letters from Monk from S. Albans the House agreed to the quartering of his Forces as he propounded This Day the business appointed touching Fleet-wood Whitelocke Strickland and others was put off for a week longer Orders for money for the Forces of Monk 31. Officers approved and a Bill committed for approving the actions of G. Monk An Address to the Parliament from the Water-men protesting their fidelity and joy February 1659. 1. Dr. Clargies made Commissary G. of the Musters Letters from Monk to the Parliament and Monk made Keeper of S. Jame's Park Order for Sir Henry Vane to be taken into custody and sent to Raby Order for the Souldiers in and about London to march forth to make room for Monk's Souldiers Divers Addresses made to Monk and great resort to him Addresses to the City of London to the same effect as to Monk from some Counties 2. Several Commissions given by the Speaker to Officers of the Army Votes for money for the Army Votes touching the Admiralty 3. Commissions delivered to Officers of the Army and Letters to bring in the Assessments Referred to the Council of State to examin the business of the tumult Yesterday in London which was for a free Parliament 4. Commissions delivered to Officers of the Army and a Sheriff named Order that Commissioner G. Monk do attend the Parliament to receive their sense in relation to his signall and faithfull services and Scot and Robinson to accompany him Debate upon Qualifications of Members to sit in the next Parliament Letters of a Declaration of Kent for the secluded Members and a free Parliament but hearing that Monk had declared to submit to the settlements which this present Parliament should make they desisted Some of the Foot Souldiers who were to march out of Town to make room for Monk's Souldiers fell into a mutiny and kept Somerset-house as a Garrison but being assured of a months Pay and by the care of their Colonel Sir John Lenthall they were quieted and marched out Another tumult of Apprentices declaring for a free Parliament was suppressed by a party of Horse of the Army and many of the mutineers imprisoned Monck marched into London in all State with his Horse and Foot and came to White-hall where his quarters were provided for him The Speaker met him in the Strand and Monk alighted and the Speaker came out of his Coach and they embraced each other with extraordinary signs of kindness This Evening Monk was at the Council and visited by all the Members of Parliament against whom he was come and by the Grandees in Town Cockerams Regiment at Graves-end in a Mutiny Monk sent some Troops of Horse to reduce them 6. Divers of the King's party came from beyond Sea into England and talked very high and that they were sure that the King would be in England very shortly Orders for the Lent Circuits and about the Admiralty and for the profits of the Office of Custos Brevium to be for the Navy And so for the Profits of the Court of Admiralty and of probate of Wills and Orders about the Ingagement and the Government of Scotland and for money for the Army Commissions delivered to Officers Scot reported that Monk was come to attend the House and was in the Court of Wards The Serjeant at Armes was sent for him and brought him into the House accompanied with Scot and Robinson after his obeysance a Chair of Velvet being set for him on the Left Hand within the Bar the Speaker desired him to sit down but he desired to be excused and stood behind the Chair whilst the Speaker made a Speech to him magnifying his service and merits and giving him the hearty thanks of the House Monk answered him extolling the mercy of their restitution and acknowledging the goodness of God to him in making him instrumental therein which was but his duty and deserved not the Honour they had done him He told them of the many Addresses to him in his journey for a free and full Parliament and that this Parliament would determine their sitting That as to the secluded Members he answered them that this Parliament had already given their judgment in which all ought to acquiesce and that no Parliament had admitted new Members to sit without a previous Oath or engagement and he now saith it to the Parliament that the less Oaths and engagements are imposed the settlement will be the sooner attained and he hoped the Parliament would be carefull that neither the Cavalier nor Phanatick Party have yet a share in the Civil or Military Power Then he spake of Ireland and of Scotland who feared nothing more than to be over run with Phanatick Notions and he desired a settlement there and their favour to that Nation Part of his Speech troubled and amused some of his Masters of the Parliament and how himself pursued what he pretended will afterwards appear 7. Orders for a great Seal for Scotland and another for Ireland Commissions delivered by the Speaker An Additional Act of Sequestrations passed And an Order to take into consideration on Triday next the Cases of the Members of Parliament against whom matters have been obiected 8. Lists of Officers approved Debate of Qualifications of future Members of Parliament Letters of a great tumult in Bristoll for a free Parliament but quieted by promising an Address to the Parliament for it The Mutineers of Colonel Cockram's Regiment at Gravesend reduced and some of them taken The Dutch Ambassadour had audience at the Council of State 9. The Council of State finding the City of London generally inclined to the bringing in of the King or to have forthwith a free Parliament for that end and suspecting that they might disown the Parliaments Authority and set up for themselves and that the Presbyterians there and in the Countries joyned with the Cavaliers herein the Council made some Resolutions which they reported to the Parliament and were approved by them and Votes passed That the Commissioners for government of the Army do appoint Forces to be in London for preserving the Peace thereof and of the Commonwealth and for reducing of the City to the Obedience of Parliament And that the Commissioners take care that the Posts and Chains in London be
taken away and that the Gates of the City be forthwith destroyed And that the Commissioners of the Army do seize some Officers who have not consined themselves according to former Order and they approved what they had done in securing divers Citizens An Address of Divers Citizens presented by Mr. Praise God Barebones of adhering to this Parliament Upon a Letter from Monk the Parliament ordered to send to him the Resolves of the House That the Gates of the City of London and the Port-Cullises be destroyed and that he be ordered to put the said Votes in Execution Monk was not well satisfied that this Order was before directed to the Commissioners for Government of the Army and himself not named therein but left out as a Cypher but upon advise with his Friends he this Day Executed their Order and in the sight of the Citizens took down their Port-Cullises and Gates and took away their Posts and Chains many lookers on admired at it but none offered any Opposition And this night Monk and his Forces quartered in the City where he had many visitants of the chief Citizens and of the secluded Members and others To these he minced and excused this action and assured his confidents that it was still in Order to his and their great design and hardly gave the same account to two men but the thing was done and many amazed that he did it The Parliament finding the Common Council of London to be against them Ordered that it should be discontinued and an Act brought in to constitute a new Common Council They sent thanks to the Lord Mayor for his discreet carriage in this business They debate the Qualifications 10. Commissions delivered to Officers and Lists approved Orders about prize goods A Bill read for appointing Commissioners for the Army which was held no great Policy nor Courtship in Relation to Monk Orders for money for the Souldiers and for the Militia of London and about Trade Reference to the Council to consider what is further to be done for the fafety of the Parliament and City and to suppress seditious meetings 11. Commissions delivered to Officers Orders for Judges for next Circuit Upon a Letter from Monk and his Officers the House ordered thanks to him for securing the City and in answer to their desire for filling up the House they said they were upon the Qualifications Scot and Robinson ordered to carry this answer to him and they much boasted of their intimacy and favour with him The passed an Act to appoint Monk Haslerigge Walton Morley and Alured Commissioners for Government of the Army at which Monk was noted to be discontended and many judged it an Act of no great present Policy but Haslerigge especially did drive on furiously The House adjourned till Monday 12. Monk drew up his Forces in Finsbury dined with the Lord Mayor had conference with him and the Court of Aldermen retired to the Bull-head in Cheapside and quartered at the Glass-House in Broadstreet multitudes of People followed him congratulating his coming into the City making loud shouts and Bonfires and ringing the Bells he heard a Sermon at Pauls with the Lord Mayor Okey was sent with his Regiment to quiet Bristoll 13. Intelligence from Tork of an Address from the City and the Country to the Parliament for the secluded Members and a free Parliament Order for the Serjeant at Armes to carry Sir Henry Vane to his House at Bellew in Lincoln-shire A Proclamation for Lambert to render himself by a Day or to be sequestred Order for the Members of Parliament who acted in the Committee of Safety to attend this day sevennight and the Serjeant at Arms to summon them accordingly The Papers of the Committee of safety ordered to be brought in Orders for money for the Army Debare about the Qualifications The engagement agreed upon to be true and faithfull to the Commonwealth of England and the Government thereof in the way of Commonwealth and free State without a King single Person or House of Lords 14. Order for money for Monk's Forces that came out of Scotland with him as he shall order 15. Letters from Overton from Hull with a Declaration for the secluded Members or a free Parliament and a Letter to Monk with it referred to the Council of State A scandalous Paper against some Members of Parliament referred to a Committee Qualifications agreed upon for future Members of Parliament and an Order for Writs for new Elections to fill up the House An Address to Monk from Oxford-shire for readmitting the secluded Members and that no Previous Oaths or Engagements might be imposed on any that should be Elected Members of Parliament to this Monk answered That the Parliament had these matters under their present consideration and he wished these Gentlemen and all others to acquiesce in their determination Monk removed his Quarters to Alderman Wale's House where he was visited and consulted by the chief Citizens and Ministers and he gave them plausible hopes of their Design being compassed An Address from the North for the secluded Members or a free Parliament and no Taxes till then By Monk's Order many were disarmed in the City 16. Order for the Committee of plundered Ministers to sit and many added Commissioners for the Assessments Mr. Attorney General Reynolds reported Commissions for the Judges of the Admiralty and for Probate of Wills which passed Amendments agreed to the Qualifications 17. Additions to the Commissioners of Assessements A Form of a Writ agreed on for Elections of Members of Parliament 18. The Act of Qualifications past Several Addresses to Monk to the same effect with the former Two Souldiers hanged for disorders Other Souldiers were whipped their Offences were Mutiny and Robbery Some Members of the Parliament now sitting and about twelve of the secluded Members met at Monk's Quarters by appointment and had conference about readmitting the secluded Members And here began the great turn and the design of Monk to take place to the regret of Haslerigge Scot c. A Tumult at Bury appeased It pleased Monk that the secluded Members should sit again and neither Scot nor Robinson nor Hasterigge nor Nevil nor any of that Party could prevail with him to the contrary nor durst any to oppose him and the Spirit of the people generally especially of the Presbyterians ran that way and the Cavaliers agreed to it as the way to bring in the King 19. Other meetings of the secluded Members being had it was agreed That they should take their places in the Parliament on Tuesday next 21. The secluded Members came into the House several of the old Members absented themselves The House being thus changed made a great change in the public Affairs Several Votes were now passed without much debate to vacate all the Votes made by the House 1648 and 1649. against the secluded Members and to set all matters