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B04487 An impartial collection of the great affairs of state. From the beginning of the Scotch rebellion in the year MDCXXXIX. To the murther of King Charles I. Wherein the first occasions, and the whole series of the late troubles in England, Scotland & Ireland, are faithfully represented. Taken from authentic records, and methodically digested. / By John Nalson, LL: D. Vol. II. Published by His Majesty's special command.; Impartial collection of the great affairs of state. Vol. 2 Nalson, John, 1638?-1686. 1683 (1683) Wing N107; ESTC R188611 1,225,761 974

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and Deputy-Lieutenants how affected to the Religion and to present their Names to the House and that where there is want that Arms and Ammunition may be supplyed By this Means they got a true account of all those who were their Friends and who their Enemies who were therefore to be displaced as disaffected to Religion and Popishly inclined as all those who were for Episcopacy were vogued to be and besides hereby they gave a General Alarm and Amazement to the Whole Nation to believe that those Fears and Jealousies with which they bewitched the People into Rebellion were grounded upon the foundations of Truth and real Danger which was the Occasion of this Inquiry into the state of the Militia Upon this a Message was sent to the Lords to acquaint them with a dangerous Conspiracy to seduce the Army against the Parliament and to increase the Fears and Jealousies among the People Message to the Lords about the Conspiracy to seduce the Army an Order was sent from the Commons to the Lord Mayor of London to take care of the City Guards The Message to the Lords was in haec verba Mr. Hollis who carried up the Message read it in these words Message about the Conspiracy of the Army That the House of Commons hath received such Information as doth give them just cause to suspect that there have been and still are secret practices to discontent the Army with the proceedings of Parliament and to ingage them in some Design of dangerous Consequence to the State and by some other mischievous ways to prevent the happy success and conclusion of this Parliament And because the timely discovery and prevention of these dangerous Plots doth so nearly concern the safety both of * Yet afterwards they did all that was possible to persuade the People that the King was in this Conspiracy King and Kingdom they desire your Lordships would be pleased to appoint a select Commitee to take the Examinations upon Oath of such persons and Interrogatories as shall be presented unto them by the Directions of the House of Commons and in the presence of such Members of that House as shall be thereunto appointed with Injunction of such Secrecy as a business of this nature doth require They have Ordered That such Members of their House as shall be thought fit shall upon notice be ready to be Examined and they desire your Lordships would be pleased to order the like for the Members and Assistants of your own House And further it is desired That your Lordships will forthwith send to his Majesty to beseech him in the Name of the Parliament upon this great and weighty occasion that no Servants of his Majesties of the Queen or Prince may depart the Kingdom or otherwise absent himself without leave from his Majesty with the humble advice of the Parliament until these Examinations be perfected Whereupon it was Ordered That this House will joyn with the House of Commons in all that they desire and these Lords following were Deputed to take the Examinations Earl of Bath Earl of Essex Earl of Warwick Earl of March Viscount Say and Seal Lord Wharton Lord Paget and Mr. Serjeant Glanvile and Mr. Attorney General to write and set down the Examinations There being never a Bishop in the Committee A Salvo for the Bishops a Memorandum was entered in the Journals MEmorandum Whereas none of the Lords the Bishops are joyned with the aforesaid deputed Lords it was declared by the House that it should be no prejudice to the Lords the Bishops This being done the Lord Great Chamberlain the Lord Steward the Lord Chamberlain the Earl of Dorset and the Earl of Newcastle were appointed to wait on his Majesty with the aforesaid request of the Parliament to which they brought this Answer THat his Majesty hath willingly granted it The Kings Answer concerning his Servants and gave a present Command to the Lord Chamberlain the Earl of Newcastle and the Earl of Dorset to give notice hereof to all under their Charge that none do depart the Kingdom without the King's License but to be forth-coming upon demand which accordingly they have already done After which the Oath of Secrecy was given to Serjeant Glanvile and Mr. Attorney in these words YOV shall Swear The Oath of Secrecy given by the Lords to Serjeant Glanvile and Mr. Attorney assistant to the Committee of Lords to Examine the Conspiracy The Persons accused That in your writing and setting down of the Examination of the Witnesses to be produced before the Lords deputed to take Examinations upon Interrogatories to be produced by the House of Commons concerning the English Army in the North and in all things concerning the same You shall well truly and faithfully behave your selves and not discover the same before the end of this Parliament or Publication granted or leave of this House first obtained The Persons Accused of this Design of seducing the Army against the Parliament were Sir John Suckling Mr. Henry Percy Brother to the Earl of Northumberland Mr. Henry Jermyn Colonel Goring Mr. William Davenant Captain Palmer Captain Billingsley and Sir Edward Wardourn and Warrants were issued out against them to bring them under the Examination of the House of Commons This day there passed little of Moment Thursday May 6. the Commons being taken up with Reading several Bills one for the security of the True Religion the Safety and Honour of his Majesties Person the just Rights of the Subject and the better discovering and punishment of Popish Recusants as also another Bill for Subsidies With which guilded baits they not only Angled for Popular Favour but also endeavoured to hide their Antimonarchical Designs against his Majesty by these specious pretences of endeavouring to study his Safety and Honour The House was this day informed That the Persons against whom the Warrants were Issued upon the Accusation of their endeavouring to seduce the Army were not to be found whereupon at a Conference it was desired that all the Ports might be stopped upon which the Lords made this Order Ordered The Order of the Lords for stopping the Ports That all the Ports of England shall be forthwith stopped until the pleasure of this House be further known and none to depart the Kingdom except Sir Thomas Roe and such as he will be answerable for who is to give in their names to this House And in particular stay is to be made of Henry Percy Esq Henry Jermyn Esq Sir John Suckling Knight William Davenant and Captain Billingsly that they depart not out of this Kingdom but are to be apprehended and safely conducted with all speed unto this House Directed To the Right Honourable Algernon Earl of Northumberland L. High Admiral of England To James Earl of March Lord Warden of the Cinque-Ports To Jerom Earl of Portland Captain and Governour of the Isle of Wight To George Goring Esq Governour of Portsmouth After which Sir Philip Carteret Lieutenant
Governour under Sir Thomas Jermyn of the Isle of Jersey having given an Account of the state of the Isle was Ordered to repair to his Charge there and if Mr. Percy Mr. Jermyn c. were there to apprehend them and cause them to be safely conducted to the House of Lords A Conference was this day appointed to be had with the Lords Fri day May 7. Heads of a Conference about the present dangers of Portsmouth and the French to acquaint them that divers persons who were suspected to have a hand in the Conspiracy and that in order to the discovery of it should have been Examined were gone that new Informations were brought to the Commons of several French Forces lay in Piccardy to be Transported into England probably into Portsmouth and to desire their Lordships to joyn with this House for the Discovery of these Practices and that some Forces may be drawn out of Wiltshire and Barkshire for securing of Portsmouth Sir Walter Erle was also ordered to go down into Dorsetshire to take care of the preservation and safety of that County Sir Hugh Cholmley to go to the Lords to desire them to move his Majesty that the Earl of Essex in this time of danger may be made Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire A Proclamation was drawn to bring in Mr. Percy c. WHereas Henry Percy Esq Henry Jermyn Esq Proclamation to bring in Mr. Percy Sir John Suckling Knight William Davenant and Captain Billingsly being by order of the Lords in Parliament to be Examined concerning designs of great danger to the State and mischievous ways to prevent the happy Success and Conclusion of this Parliament have so absented and withdrawn themselves as they cannot be Examined His Majesty by the advice of the said Lords in Parliament doth strictly charge the said Henry Percy Esq Henry Jermyn Esq Sir John Suckling William Davenant and Captain Billingsly to appear before the said Parliament at Westminster within Ten days after the Date hereof upon pain to undergo such forfeitures and punishments as the said Lords shall order and inflict upon them The Earl of Bristol Reported to the Lords House Earl of Bristols Report about disbanding the Irish Army May 7. That his Majesty had taken a resolution for the disbanding of the new Irish Army to that purpose an estimate hath been given in to the King of the Charges that 10000 l. will now do it Whereupon there is order taken for the speedy Raising and Returning of Moneys to that intent And Sir Adam Loftus Vice-Treasurer of Ireland hath engaged himself to repay in September next those Monies shall be disbursed by the Earl of Cork and others in the interim for that purpose That likewise there is care taken how to dispose and imploy the said Soldiers that they may not be troublesome to that Country to that purpose there are Eight Colonels and Captains Nominated who will take off these Men and Transport them to Forreign Parts which his Majesty will give way unto if it be to a Prince that he is in Amity with provided that these Commanders do give the King and Parliament an Account both of their Persons and their Imployers before they have the Command of the Soldiers Mr. White Chair-man of the Committee for Scandalous Ministers Saturday May 8. Reports the matter of Complaint exhibited against Edward Finch Vicar of Christ-Church London Upon which these Votes passed Resolved c. Votes about Mr. Finch Vicar of Christ-Church London That the said Edward Finch is guilty of practising Innovations in the Church Non-Residency foul Extortion neglect of the Duty of his Function and prophaning the Sacrament a Man of prophane Life scandalous in his Doctrine and Conversation and a hinderer of preaching Resolved c. That the said Edward Finch is a man unfit to hold any Benefice or Promotion in the Church Mr. White is Ordered to transmit this Case to the Lords that the Parish may be eased of him Thus early did they begin to strike at Root and Branch of Episcopacy for all those who were obedient to their Governours in the Church or thought God Almighty ought to have bodily Worship and Adoration in those places where he has put his Name and made them Houses of Prayer all those who thought kneeling at the Receiving the Holy Sacrament necessary or any other decent Postures Gestures or Vestments that might outwardly signifie inward Veneration and Homage Lawful and Expedient were upon the slightest Accusations voted Guilty of Innovation Prophaneness and unworthy of any Promotion in the Church And as Mr. Symmons Vindicat of King Charles p. 73. Symmons in his Vindication of King Charles who was an Eye-witness of this terrible Persecution informs us All Accusations against any though the best Ministers by the most malicious and lewdest persons were invited by Ordinance incouraged and admitted of without any proof at all And it can be no wonder that the Orthodox Clergy suffered so deeply both in their Reputation and Estates when not only their Accusers which mostly were the several Sectaries in their Parishes or such others as went about to defraud them of their just Dues were their most inveterate Enemies but their Judges too were frequently both Parties in promoting and managing those Accusations and by their open favouring their Accusers shewed the partiality of Enemies The Faction saw the absolute necessity of getting the power of the Sword into their hands both to justifie what they had already done and to support them in what they intended by their pretended Reformation which was totally to abolish Episcopacy in the Church and to clip the Wings of Prerogative if not wholly to take away the Government of Monarchy it self Now to the accomplishment of this design upon the Militia Navy Forts Magazines and Strength of the Nation all Arts imaginable were used to gain the People the great pretences were Liberty Property and Religion for as Mr. Hambden one of the principal Grandees of the Faction told a private friend without that they could not draw the People to assist them The great Rubb in their way to the gaining of the People they knew would be the Loyal and Orthodox Bishops and Clergy these therefore were to be removed that so Creatures of their own might be introduced into Corporations and especially into the City of London who might from the Pulpit preach the Oracles of Sedition and Rebellion delude the People animate and incourage them to assist the Parliament in this Glorious Reformation by putting the power of the Sword into their hands That they might effect this they did not only obtrude Lecturers by order of the House upon most Churches of Note in London and elsewhere but by their means and the restless malice of the Sectaries were perpetually Petitioning and Articling against the Episcopal Clergy And to encourage this Trade of Parson-hunting as the factious Sectaries called it and which did extreamly tie them to the Parliament a pretended Order of the
the Report The Limitations were That all those who had suffered damage by the Customers either in Goods or otherwise might notwithstanding this Composition take their remedy at Law for Reparation And that the petty Customers should also come in upon Composition and then have the benefit of the Act of Oblivion An Order was also sent to the Master and Wardens of the Company of Vintners to command that notice be given to the whole Company that the Patent of Abel and Kilvert being Voted Illegal they should sell their Wines as formerly viz. French Wines at Six-pence per Quart and Spanish Wines at Twelve-pence the Quart This day a Commission was presented to the House of Lords Several private Bills passed by Commission directed to the Lord Privy Seal Lord Great Chamberlain and to Earl Marshal or any two of them to give the Royal Assent to three private Bills viz. One Entituled An Act to enable the Marquess of Winton to grant Estates for three Lives or 21 years c. of Lands in the County of Southampton c. reserving the old Rents Another Entituled An Act for Naturalization of Dorothy Spencer Daughter of Henry Lord Spencer Baron of Wormleighton And the third Entituled An Act for the enabling a Sale and Leasing of Lands for payment of the Debts of Thomas late Earl of Winchelsea The Lords Commissioners in their Robes sitting upon a Form set across the House between the State and the Keeper's Woolsack the House of Commons being sent for came with their Speaker then the Clerk of the Parliament presented upon his knee the Commission unto the Lords Commissioners and the Lord Privy Seal after he had acquainted the Peers and the House of Commons with his Majesties pleasure herein he delivered the Commission to the Clerk of the Parliament who carried it to his Table and read it which being done the Clerk of the Crown read the Titles of each Bill severally after which the Clerk of the Parliament pronounced the Royal Assent severally and then the Commons returned to their own House The Commons being returned Mr. Taylor a Barrister Thursday May 27. Mr. Taylor Burgess for Windsor expelled the House and Burgess for the Burrough of Old Windsor was expelled the House and Voted uncapable of ever being a Member of Parliament to be committed Prisoner to the Tower during the pleasure of the House to be carried down to Windsor there to make publick Recantation of what he had spoken and from thence to be returned back to the House of Commons to receive further Sentence And it was Ordered That a Writ should be presently issued out for a new Election in his Room The words for which he was Expelled and thus severely treated were attested by John Hall Mayor of Windsor Mr. Broughton and Mr. Waller That Mr. Taylor should in discourse about the death of the Earl of Strafford say That the House of Commons had not his Vote to the Bill of Attainder against Thomas Earl of Strafford for that to do it before the Lords had finished the Trial upon the Articles of Impeachment Exhibited by the Commons against him was to commit murther with the Sword of Justice An Act for the utter abolishing and taking away of Arch-Bishops Bill for Root and Branch read twice Bishops their Chancellours and Commissaries Deans Deans and Chapters Arch-Deacons Prebendaries Chanters and Canons and other Under-Officers out of the Church of England was read the first time and upon the debate of the House for a second reading the House was divided Yeas 139 Noes 108 so the Bill was read the second time and committed to a Committee of the whole House A Bill was also read the first time for granting to his Majesty the Duty of Tonnage and Poundage Bill for Tonnage Poundage read twice Holmer the Printer bailed and a second time in the Afternoon This day Holmer the Printer who was committed to the Gate-house for printing an Elegy upon the Earl of Strafford which then were called scandalous Verses was admitted to Bail An Estimate of the Debt of the Kingdom was this day brought into the House by the state of which Account it appeared Friday May 28. The state of the publick Debts Bill for raising mony and disbanding the Armies read a second time Bills against H. Commission Court and Pluralities engrossed Saturday May 29. That there was a Debt of seven hundred seventy three thousand nine hundred pounds due to the two Armies the City and several private persons who had lent mony upon Parliamentary Credit which brought on the Consideration of the Bill for Raising Mony and Disbanding the Armies which was read a second time Mr. Rigby Reports the Bills for taking away the High Commission Court and against Pluralities with the Amendments which were both Ordered to be engrossed Little of moment passed this day in the Commons House most of it being spent in debates about Raising Mony to defray the great Debt into which the Kingdom was plunged by the coming in of the Scottish Army to be assistant in the Glorious Reformation of Religion and Establishment of the Subjects Liberty for which guilded Words the Nation was to part with their real Treasure And it was but an untoward Omen how expensive these great Patriots were like to prove for the future who began so early to shew the People that little less than a Million of Mony must be laid down as the Earnest for this imaginary purchase It was this day Ordered Several Lords examined about the Conspiracy of the Army That the Earls of Newcastle and Carnarvan and the Lord Bishop of Chichester shall be attended with this Order and that their Lordships be desired to repair unto the Lords Committees appointed by this House to take the Examinations concerning certain late practises concerning the Army in the North at Two of the Clock this Afternoon at the Lord Keeper's Lodgings near the Parliament House to be examined by them A Case having been depending between Thomas Nash Nash and Kynnaston's Case determined in a Writ of Error and Charles Kynnaston about Errors in a Writ of Error and Council having been fully heard at the Bar of the Lords House on both sides their Lordships Voted the said Errors alledged by the Plaintiff Nash to be frivolous and thereupon awarded the following Order upon it In Suprema Curia Domini Regis Parliament ' Inter Thomam Nash Quer ' Carolum Kynnaston Defendentem in placito transgr ' ejectionis Firmae Super quo visis premissis per Cur ' Parliament ' Domini Regis nunc hic diligent ' Examinat ' plenius intellectis tum Record ' Process ' predict ac Judic ' predict ' super eisdem Reddit ' quam predict ' Causa pro Errore prodict ' predict ' Thom ' in Forma predict ' assignat ' allegat ' videtur predicta suprema Curia Parliament ' hic quoad Record predict in nullo vitiosum aut defectivum
confessed he had taken to be secret Exceptions taken against the L. Digby for words concerning Goring's Oath saying he was a perjured man After a warm Debate upon it and he had in his Place Explained himself yet the House not being satisfied with it he was ordered to withdraw A Petition was this day read in the House of Lords The Factious Sectaries disturb the People at the Communion declaring the great Disorders committed in the Parish Churches of Saint Saviours and St. Olaves in Southwark in time of the Administration of the Communion hereupon it was Ordered That the Names of the particular Offenders be given in to this House and then this House will give such Order therein as stands with Justice and the Desert of the Cause These were the Men for Reformation whom nothing not the most Sacred Duty of Christian Religion could keep within the bounds of Decency and Order The Lords finding themselves Extremely Pressed by the bringing Writs of Errors upon Judgments into their House whereby the Publique Affairs were much retarded Order of the Lords about Writs of Error made this Order Ordered That such persons that bring in Writs of Error into this House upon a Judgment given in a Court of Justice and if it appear that there is no Just Cause of Error in the said Judgment but merely for delay of Justice and Execution that then such Costs is to be given against the Parties that bring the Writ of Error as the House shall think fit to give in that Case And that the Record shall be remitted whence it came that the Defendant may take out Execution upon the Judgment The House of Commons Sitting late the last Night upon the Debate concerning the Lord Digby Wednesday June 9. and some persons calling for Candles which the major part opposed being inclined to rise but by mistake the Candles being brought in Sir William Widdrington and Sir Herbert Price sent to the Tower for bringing in Candles against the desire of the House and Sir William Widdrington and Sir Herbert Price taking them from the Serjeant without a General Command which occasioned a great disturbance in the House Mr. Hollis made a Speech in aggravation of their Offence shewing That the House of Commons being a Rule and Example of Order there ought to be no Disorders within those Walls for that if there were such within well might it be Expected there would be without and that it might be the occasion of shedding much blood among themselves if upon such a difference Parties should have sided one against another Whereupon though both the Gentlemen made their Submission and craved the Pardon of the House yet they were immediately committed Prisoners to the Tower during the Pleasure of the House The House then fell upon the last Nights Debate concerning Colonel Goring's Discovery and it was Resolved Vote in favour of Colonel Goring's discovery c. That Col. Goring in his Depositions concerning the Discovery has done nothing contrary to Justice or Honor but has therein deserved well of the Commonwealth and of this House By this time I doubt not but the Reader 's Curiosity will prompt him to know the meaning of this Conspiracy which made as much noise in London and indeed throughout England as ever the famous Conspiracy of Cataline did at Rome I will give him the best Information I can from the Memoires of the Lord Manchester and in his own words TO prevent the Earl of Strafford's Death An Account of the Conspiracy in the Army from the Memoires of the Earl of Manchester saith he several Designs had been upon the Wheel but all failed therefore it was consulted how to Engage the Army in the North to serve the King in order to his Freedom from the Parliaments Fetters metre le Roy hors d' paye as the Royalists termed it This occasioned several Addresses to the Principal Commanders in the North but they were fearful and backward to entertain any Motions or Propositions which might put them upon a breach with the Parliament But Mr. Percy and Mr. Jermin finding a great discontent in those Commanders of the Army who were Members of Parliament as Col. Wilmot Col. Ashburnham and Col. Pollard who thought that their Services had merited much better of the Parliament then that the Scotch Officers and Scots Army should be preferred before them in their Gratuities and in their Pay These Commanders owning that the Parliament had disobliged them gave Mr. Percy a rise to press with greater Earnestness his design of Engaging them to serve the King and to that End an Oath of Secrecy was ●amed and others were admitted into their Confederacy as Mr. J●●●in and Mr. Goring and Propositions were framed But it fell out in this as in most Conspiracies of the like Nature that though the same Oath was taken by all that met together yet it was not taken by all with the same persuasion or intention For Col. Goring whose Ambition was not answered in being promised the Place of Lieutenant General of the Army and finding others employed whose persons he disliked he having a full Information from Mr. Percy and Mr. Jermin of all the Design thought it would tend most to his Security and Advantage to reveal the Conspiracy and being versed in all the Methods of falshood he chose the Time and Means which he thought would be most acceptable and obliging to the Parliament He therefore first imparts it to the Earl of Newport who was his particular Friend and desired him to bring him to some other Lords of the Parliament such as might be most likely to prevent that Mischief which was intended and accordingly the next day about Evening the Lord Newport brought him to the Earl of Bedford and the Lord Mandeville to whom he first made a Protestation of his Fidelity to the Parliament and of his readiness to run all hazards for the Safety of it Then he imparted the substance of the Design and desired them to make what Use of it they thought fit for their own and the Common-wealths Security but not to bring him as the Accuser of the Persons except Necessity did require it The Lords who had this Design revealed unto them thought it necessary to discharge themselves and communicated it to some Members of the House of Commons by whose Advice it was agreed That Goring should repair to his Government at Portsmouth and that so soon as he was gone the Persons whom he had discovered to be Actors in this Design should be apprehended but private Notice being given to Mr. Percy and Mr. Jermin they prevented the Justice of the Parliament by their Escape out of England Mr. Percy with some difficulty and hazzard took Shipping in a private Port in Sussex Mr. Jermin ventured upon Goring's Faithfulness to him and brought unto him a Warrant under the King's Hand to see him safely transported in one of his Frigots which he obeyed with Care and
the performance hereof their Pleasure is That you should continue there to wait upon his Majesty till you receive further direction or that his Majesty be pleased to come away for England Instructions of the Lords and Commons in Parliament to the Committees of both Houses now Attending his Royal Majesty in Scotland I. YOU shall acquaint his Majesty Additional Instructions to the Committee in Scotland That by your Advertisement both Houses have taken Notice of the Examinations and Confessions taken in the Parliament of Scotland concerning a malicious design affirmed to be undertaken by the Earl of Craford and others against the Persons of the Marquiss of Hamilton the Earls of Argyle and Lannerick having taken the same into Consideration they have good Cause to doubt That such ill-affected persons as would disturb the Peace of that Kingdom are not without some malicious Correspondence here which if those wicked Purposes had taken Effect in Scotland would have been ready to attempt some such mischievous Practices as might produce Distempers and Confusions in this Kingdom to the Hazard of the Publique Peace for prevention whereof they have given Order for strong Guards in the Cities of London and Westminster * The Debate about the Remonstrance of the State of the Kingdom in order to their possessing themselves of the Militia was many Weeks before in the House only this was a fair occasion for the attempt and have resolved to take into their Care the Security of the rest of the Kingdom II. You shall further declare to his most Excellent Majesty That the States of his Parliament here do hold it a matter of great Importance to this Kingdom That the Religion Liberty and Peace of Scotland be preserved according to the Treaty and Articles agreed by his Majesty and confirmed by Act of Parliament of which they are bound to be careful not only by Publique Faith in that Treaty but by their Duty which they ow to his Majesty and this Kingdom because they hold it will be a great means of preserving Religion Liberty and Peace in England Ireland and his Majesty 's other Dominions and the Union of all his Loyal Subjects in maintaining the Common good of all will be a sure Foundation of Honor Greatness and Security to his Royal Person Crown and Dignity wherefore they have resolved to Employ their Humble and Faithful Advice to his Majesty the Power and Authority of Parliament and of this Kingdom for Suppressing of all such as by any Conspiracy Practice or other Attempts shall endeavour to disturb the Peace of Scotland and to infringe the Articles and the Treaty made betwixt the Two Kingdoms III. You shall likewise inform the King That whereas Orders have been given by his Majesty with the Consent of Parliament for the Disbanding the Garrisons of Carlisle and Berwick the first whereof is already wholly disbanded and all the House and Eight Companies of Foot sent out of Berwick and only Five Companies remaining which likewise should have been disbanded at or before the 15th of this Month if they had not been stayed by his Majesties Command signified to Sir Michael Ernley Lieutenant Governor according to direction in that behalf and whereas by Order of Parliament Ships have been sent for the Transporting his Majesties Munition Ordnance and other Provisions in that Town and the Holy Island all which have been of very great Charge to the Commonwealth the Commons now Assembled in Parliament have declared That they intend to be at no further Charge for the longer stay and Entertainment of those Men or for the Demurrage of the Ships if by occasion of this direction they be kept out longer than was agreed upon Ordered That Mr. Speaker do write a Letter to Mr. Secretary Vane that in case the Committee of both Houses be come out of Scotland before the Letter and Instructions now to be sent can be delivered there unto them that then he shall he desired by this House to present the same unto his Majesty Saturday Octob. 23. Order for the Bishops impeached to have Councel This day upon the humble Request of the Bishop of Rochester on his own behalf and the rest of the Bishops which are impeached by the House of Commons before their Lordships concerning the late Canons c. It is Ordered That Mr. Serjeant Jerman Mr. Herne Mr. Chute and Mr. Hales being publiquely named in this House by the said Bishop and approved of by the House shall be assigned to be of Counsel with the Bishops that are impeached With this Proviso nevertheless That if any of the said Counsel shall upon just Cause desire to be Excused here and the House approve of the said Excuse That then he or they shall not be compelled to be of the said Bishops Councel as aforesaid The Commons being met there was a Report made of certain Troopers who had made a disturbance about a Tavern-Reckoning and the Guard in the Pallace-Yard being called to quiet them they fell upon them and cut the Drum but being taken and committed to Custody and one of them saying in Bravado That there were a thousand of them about the Town who if they were there would help them and make the Pallace too hot for the Guards they were Ordered to be sent to the Lords Bar to receive their Censure for this Misdemeanor But it struck such a fear into some of the Members of the Commons House that they immediately Voted what they had so often denied the King though his Word and Honor were engaged to the Spanish Ambassador to let him have some of the disbanded Troops for it was Votes to let the disbanded Soldiers past beyond Sea Resolved c. That the House is of Opinion and holds fit that Orders should be sent to the Officers of the several Ports requiring them to permit all such Soldiers of the late disbanded Army as shall desire it to pass beyond the Seas provided that they take such Oaths and perform such other Duties as are usually required according to the Laws Resolved c. That this House is further of Opinion and holds it fit That such other Soldiers of the late disbanded Army as are Strangers and not Subjects or Natives of this Kingdom shall have liberty to pass out of this Kingdom and to receive Entertainment of any Forreign Prince Sir Gilbert Gerrard carries up the Bill for dissabling all Persons in Holy Orders to exercise any temporal Jurisdiction or Authority and acquainted the Lords That the House of Commons desired there might be all speed in the passing of it for it much concerns the good of the Common-Wealth The Lord General Thanks given to the L. General by the House of Lords the Earl of Holland being now returned and having at a Conference given an Account of the disbanding of the Army It was Ordered by the Lords That this House gives Thanks to the Earl of Holland late Lord General of his Majesties Army in the North for
with the Earl of Strafford trusting too much on the same so High is Pride that at length he presumed to oppose and set himself against the proceedings of the whole House against the said Earl Obstinately refusing to be admonished concerning the same and yet keeping his Friends many of the Lords was by his Majesty as a Baron called to their House and aspiring yet higher obtained his Princes favour not being yet acquainted with his secret Intentions by which means too confident of his safety and security in his Designs adventured openly to comply with the publick Enemies both of King and Country As especially now with this other Person of whom I am to speak this Collonel being by his Majesty advanced to that dignity and trust could not so content himself but imitating the water Toad seeing the Shadow of a Horse seem bigger then it self Swell to compare with the same and so Burst even so this Gentleman having obtained first this Place of Command and afterwards Lieutenant of the Tower and being found of such a Malignant Spirit that he was unfit and uncapable for that great Place of Trust and therefore removed taking the same●● great dishonour to his worth now endeavours by Traiterous and Desperate Actions to defend himself and be revenged of his pretended Adversaries and to that purpose they have between them joyntly raised Arms against the State met together in peaceable Consultations for the good of Church and Common-wealth Mr. Speaker These attempts made by these Persons are of dangerous consequence and this their Insurrection by taking up of Arms without Warrant both from his Royal Majesty and this High Court of Parliament only to do Mischief in raising Sedition and Contention thereby to preserve themselves from being called to an account for their desperate Actions and Disloyal taking up Arms will prove harder to Appease and Suppress then any Troubles we have yet suffered Mr. Speaker I conceive quick dispatch in our Intentions for the Apprehending and Suppressing these Persons is the only means to prevent future danger And to that purpose I desire to present to your considerations these particulars 1. That Warrants may Issue forth for the speedy and private apprehending of them in what places soever they shall be found and immediately to bring them before the House 2. If this cannot be effected to Issue forth Proclamations for their calling in within a certain time perfixed under penalty of being Prosecuted and Proceeded against as Traytors to their King and Country 3. That Warrants be forthwith sent for the Guarding and Securing of all the Ports of this Kingdom and for the Intercepting of all Paquets or Letters intended to be conveyed into Forraign Kingdoms or any brought from thence hither 4. That Order be sent down into the several Counties of this Kingdom where it is suspected either of these Persons have any Friends or Favorites well-wishers to their Cause with command to the Sheriffs and several Officers of such Counties to stand upon their Guard and to raise Force for their own Defence and Safety and to endeavour by all means Possible to apprehend and suppress them and such of their Conspiracy as shall be taken presently to be sent up to this House to be Examined and Prosecuted according as they shall be found 5. That Order may be made by the Parliament that no Officer that shall be found to have a hand in this Plot may be imployed in any Service of publick Command either for Ireland or any other of his Majesties Dominions or any private Affairs of this Kingdom 6. That we may without further delay proceed to Sentence against all Delinquents by this Honourable House accused for any Crime whatsoever in whose Defence or for whose cause these Persons now accused pretend to take up Arms. 7. That his Majesty may be moved Graciously to be pleased to declare himself against these Persons and all others that do any ways pretend to his Authority or Warrant for what they do 8. And Lastly His Majesty may be moved to avert his intended Journey for Portsmouth for the safety and security of his Royal Person til such time as their dangers be removed and the Peace and Vnity of all his Majesties Loyal Subjects be procured and settled And thus Mr. Speaker having presented such things to this House which I humbly conceive to be necessary to suppress and prevent this new danger threatned by those two Disaffected and Male-contented Persons the Lord Digby and Collonel Lunsford I leave the same to the further consideration of this Honourable House desiring from my heart that it would please God to end all the Troubles and Distempers of this Common-wealth and that this High Court of Parliament may prove the firm Settlement of all things amiss both in Church and State After this Mr. Pierpoint Reports from the Committee appointed yesterday for putting the Kingdom into a Posture of Defence That the Opinion of the Committee was Mr. Pierpoint's Report concerning Posture of Defence and the Commons Vote upon it and so it was by the House Resolved upon the Question That the Knights and Burgesses of the several Counties shall by two of the Clock this afternoon deliver in the Names of such Noble Persons as they think fit to be appointed Lord Lieutenants in the several Counties and that those Gentlemen of this House that have Estates in the Bishoprick of Durham shall nominate such a one as they shall think fit to be Lord Lieutenant in that County Sir Richard Cave then acquainted the House That according to the Command of the House he had returned thanks to the States Embassador for his affections Expressed to the service of this State Who answered That he thinks himself much honoured by the acknowledgements of his service from this House and knows that the desires of this House will be upon all occasions very acceptable to his Masters the States It was also Ordered That Alderman Pennington and Mr. John Goodwin do speak with the Executors of Sir James Cambell and to desire them from this House that in the disposing of the Estate which Sir James Cambell hath given for Charitable Vses they will specially take into consideration the War in Ireland which will be an acceptable service to the Common-wealth Serjeant Wild then Reported the Conference had on Thursday night last with the Lords concerning Mr. The Examination of Mr. Attorney General Reported by Serjeant Wild. Attorney's Exhibiting Articles in the Lords House against Members of this House The Conference consisted of two Parts First the Narrative Part That these Articles Exhibited by Mr. Attorney and entred in the Lords House was a Breach of Priviledge of Parliament and that in due time this House would desire that Justice may be done upon Mr. Attorney The Second Part was to Examine Mr. Attorney upon certain Questions and to receive his Answer First He being asked Whether he Contrived Framed or advised the said Articles or any of them if not then
Election of a Burgess there 870. Earl of Arundel constituted Lord High Steward of England for Trial of the Earl of Strafford 29. Captain Ashburnham Committed on suspicion of Treason 288. Bailed 377. Gets a Vote for his Pay 477. Voted guilty of Misprision of Treason and expell'd the House of Commons 725. Mr. Ashton Vicar of Panswick Voted a scandalous Minister 238. Assembly of Irish at Swoords Order to Dissolve it 908. Attainder of the Earl of Strafford 103. The Bill read thrice in one day and passed the Commons 157. Mr. St. John 's Argument for it 162. Passes the Lords 192. And the King by Commission 195. Repealed since the King's Restauration 203. Attorney General Ordered to justifie his Charge against Lord Kimbolton and the five Members 843. Which he does 850. House of Commons desire to Examine him 850. Vote of Both Houses against him for Breach of Priviledge 870. Examination of him 873. Votes of the House of Commons against him 874. Ax expresly forbidden to be born before the Earl of Strafford at his coming to Tryal 29. B. BAgshaw of Windsor his Information to the House of Commons 859. A Conference about it 862. Sir William Balfour Lieutenant of the Tower brings the Earl of Strafford to the Bar 37. A false Loon 190. His removal angers the Factious 773. Ballad against the Bishops and Common-Prayer 807. Barnwell a Witness against the Earl of Strafford 36 83. Sir Thomas Barrington a Witness in the Case of the Earl of Strafford 83. Bishop of Bath and Wells inform'd against Dr. Beal referred to the Committee for Scandalous Ministers 773. Beal a Taylor finds out a Plot 647. An Ordinance about it 649. Conference upon it ibid. Sir Henry Bedingfeild Accused 661. Sent for 662. Examined 690. Acquitted 691. Mr. Benson a Member of the House of Commons Charged with selling Protections 595. Expelled the House and declared a Delinquent for so doing 596. Sir John Berkley sent for as a Delinquent 288. Sent to the Tower 490. Order'd to be Examined 492. Voted guilty of Misprision of Treason 725. Order'd to be Bail'd 755 780. Sir Robert Berkley Impeach'd by the House of Commons 332. Articles against him 337. Brought to the Bar of the House of Lords 497. His Petition to the House of Lords 498. Assigned Council 499. His Tryal put off 511. Earl of Berkshire a Witness against the Earl of Strafford 89. Edmund Bern a Witness against the Earl of Strafford 70. Berwick An Order for the Mayor to take care of it 753. Bill of Attainder See Attainder Bill for perpetuating the Parliament passes the Lords 192. And the King by Commission 195. Repeal'd since the Kings Restauration 203. For relief of the Army 238. For abbreviating of Michaelmas Term ibid. For restraining Ecclesiastical Persons from medling in secular Affairs 242. Thrown out of the House of Lords 271. Bill for Abolishing Episcopacy proposed 248. Debated in the House of Lords 255. Private Bills past by Commission 256. Bill for Root and Branch read twice 257. For Tonnage and Poundage ibid. 381. For disbanding the Armies ibid. For taking away the High Commission Court and Pluralities ibid. For taking away the Star-Chamber and regulating the Council-Board 258 271. For Regulating Clerks of the Market 259. For disarming Recusants 260. Against the new Canons ibid. Against Pluralities and Non-Residencies 293. Against Ship-Money 294. A Copy of the Root and Branch Bill 300. Bill against Scandaleus Ministers 309. For taking away the Court of Requests ibid. To prevent Suits for Knighthood ibid. Three Bills brought up to the House of Lords their Titles 393. Bill for the Marches of Wales 394. For Billet-money ibid. For the Northern Counties 409. Seven Bills brought up to the House of Lords their Titles ibid. Bill for securing Religion rejected 411. For imposing the Protestation rejected 414. Eleven Bills passed the King their Titles 431. Six more pass'd by the King and their Titles 438. Bill for a Lord General and Lord High Admiral rejected 719. For Relief of Captives at Argiers 731. Three Bills past the House of Commons their Titles 777. Billet-money undertaken for the Scots by the House of Commons 444. A Bill for Billet-money 394. Captain Billingsley Accused for a Conspiracy to seduce the Army 232. A Proclamation to stop him 233. Bishops their advise against passing the Bill against the Earl of Strafford 192. A Salvo for them 231. Thirteen of them impeached about the New Canons and Oath 418 443. An Order concerning their Answer 449 484. Order that they have Council 495. A Debate in the House of Commons what they are guilty of 497. Debate whether other Bishops shall Vote in their Case 500. Abstract of the grand question upon it 503. Their Council refuse to undertake their Cause 613. A time appointed for their Answer 614. Which they put in by Plea and Demurrer 641. That Voted dilatory and insufficient 645. Conference about them 691 717. Ordered to be heard 711. A second Charge against them by the House of Commons 717. Order to Answer it 718. They adhere to their Demurrer 731. Twelve Bishops their Petition and Protestation 794. Votes of the House of Commons against them 796. Impeached ibid. Taken into Custody ibid. Brought to the Lords Bar 797. Their several Answers ibid. Two of them Committed to the Black Rod the rest to the Tower 799. Desire Council which is granted 812. Order to put in their Answer 836. They Answer 882. They Petition to be speedily Tryed or Bailed 883. Remanded to Prison ibid. Mr. Blaney summon'd for Preaching against the Protestation 288. Sir Richard Bolton Lord Chancellor of Ireland impeached 566. Articles against him 570. Books seized by Order of the High Commission how disposed of 690. Mr. Booth Minister of St. Botolph Aldersgate Petition'd against by the Factious 492. Sir John Borlase made one of the Lords Justices of Ireland 564. Dr. Borlase his History of the Irish Rebellion censured 531. Lieutenant Bowles Voted a Delinquent for raising voluntiers for Ireland 874. Lord Chief Justice Bramstone impeached by the House of Commons 363. Mr. Orlando Bridgman receives a Letter about a Plot 836. Earl of Bristol a Witness in the Case of the Earl of Strafford 83. His Report about disbanding the Irish Army 233. Vote of the House of Commons that he be removed from the King and his Council 793. Lord Bruce introduced into the House of Lords 421. Buckinghamshire Petition to the House of Lords about Malignants c. 834. To the House of Commons about the same 839. To the King concerning Hampden 840. Mr. Burgess Ordered to Preach before the House of Commons 467 513. Sir John Burroughs a Witness in the Case of the Earl of Strafford 93. Busby 's Case an Order in it by the House of Lords 716. Sir John Biron a Message of the House of Commons for removing him from being Lieutenant of the Tower 835. Ordered to appear before them 844. Refuses 845. Votes of the House of Commons about him 846. Brought to the Bar