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A83496 Speeches and passages of this great and happy Parliament: from the third of November, 1640, to this instant June, 1641. Collected into one volume, and according to the most perfect originalls, exactly published. England and Wales. Parliament.; Mervyn, Audley, Sir, d. 1675.; Pym, John, 1584-1643.; Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, 1593-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing E2309; Thomason E159_1; ESTC R212697 305,420 563

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proceedings of the Assembly of which if those that were Officers and Ministers there had been come to Town upon whose help I rested for my particular instruction I should have been better able to have given you an accompt And His Maiesty was pleased to let you know that when there was an occasion of any particular you may be satisfied in it According to His Maiesties command 24. of September all the Peeres were summoned all except some few did meet where His Maiesty was In the first place pleased to declare unto us His resolution to call a Parliament and to all our ioyes and contents as he hath now done it to yours and ours declared that there was nothing he did more desire then to be rightly understood of His people And whosoever he be that shall go about effect it I am sure he cannot to attempt or indeavour to alter this gracious declaration and resolution of His Maiesty or whosoever shall go about to poyson the hearts of His good Subiects with an opinion that it can be so or lesson the affection of His loving Subiects for certainly never Subiects of the world better loved their King then the English nor ever did ever English-men better love a King then now if I say there be any suc● may acurse and punishment fall up 〈◊〉 But ●et the Royall Throne be for ever H●● Majesty was then pleased to tell us the cause for which 〈◊〉 had called us together In the first place it was touching an answer to a petition that had b●en since his coming to York And before His assembly sent unto him from those His Subiects of Scotland that were at Newcastle The first thing that His Maiesty desired their advice in was ●●e answer to that petition The next thing His Maiesty conceived And all that were there were of one opinion with one voyce and consent that it was not fit His Maiesty should disband His Army so long as the Scotch Army was on foot And His Maiesty wished them to take into their consideration what way to have maintenance for His Army in the mean time His Maiesty having opened the cause of calling them together was pleased to expresse himself that He would leave to the Lords their freedom of Debate and himself was ready to have been gone from the Councell but at the humble suite of the Lords he stayed And I am perswaded that nothing was of that ioy to them as His Maiesties presence with such freedome of discourse did every man deliver himself with such grace and sweetnesse did his Maiesty hear them and such content did they take in His moderating guiding and directing those Councells My Lords as holding it most necessary took the latter of those two considerations propounded by His Maiesty to their thoughts and that was the supplying and supporting His Maiesties Army till this Parliament might take some course in it His Maiesty and my Lords did declare themselves as before I have opened unto you that they could never attempt nor have the least thought to make by any Act or Order any thing tending to the Subiect but that it might be left wholly to the supream Jurisdiction And therefore not seeing any other way they resolved by letter to addresse themselves to the City of London And with their letters they sent half a dozen of my Lords My Lord Privy Seal my Lord of Clare who was appointed to go but his urgent occasions preven●ed him Viscount Cambden Lord Coventry Lord Goring and _____ And these Lords they did expresse the joy and content they took in the Kings grace and confidence they had of His gracious assistance was such that they did freely offer themselves and as I dare say there is none but is yet ready to enter into security with His Maie●ty And the City gave an answer fit for the Chamber of the King and part of the money is already lent and will be ready I assure my self to supply the rest For the other part the first thing propounded by His Majesty was touching the answer that was to be given to that petition and to the demands of the Subjects in Scotland upon which occasion His Majesty was pleased by those great Officers and Ministers of His that knew best and understood the laws and usages of that Kingdome to expound their demands particularly and to make appear unto their Lordships upon every one wherein they had expounded the Articles of pacification which His Majesty ever desired might be the Square and Rule of the treaty with them My Lords tooke into consideration what was fit to be done for his Majesty then professed as he did oft and as he hath done it during the time of that Councell to be wholy ruled guided and directed by their advice f r the honor of this Nation and saf●ty of it he did leave it to their wisedomes and considerations against whose advice and without whose judgements and advice he would do nothing My Lords howsoever they had received this information and explanation upon every particular of their demands yet in justice they thought it was fit to hear what could be said on the other side how the objection might be answered and what objection might be made by them against that which seemed to be plain enough For this purpose they were all of opinion and his Majesty was pleased to be of the same opinion that some Lords selected and trusted by that great Councell should Treate with those Subjects of Scotland upon all those particulars to the end that they might see what they did cleerly intend to the end that if a firm peace which was most desired from us might be had or a just Warre to be begun My Lords of the great Councell that were appointed for that purpose were the Earles of Bedford Hertford Essex Salisbury Warwick Bristow Holland and Barkeshire The Barons were the Lords Wharton Paget Rimbolton Brooke Pawlet Howard of Esaich Savile and Dunsmore After which choice some generall insurrections proceeding from the debate and discourses in that great Councell a Commission under the great Seale was given unto them to enable them to treate and conclude as they in their wisedomes and Judgements should thinke fit The place appointed for this treaty was at Rippon where the Lords Commissioners wanted the happinesse of that that they and we had at Yorke of his Maiesties presence And that might be the occasion that more time was spent in it then otherwise would have been yet my Lords omitted not their parts but were desirous to look into the depth to see the utmost extent of their demands But before those of Scotland could come to the maine treaty to explaine themselves touching their demands they made a preparatory demand of maintenance for their Armie and did go so high as to demand Forty thousand Pounds a moneth My Lords that were very unwilling to do any Act or make any order whatsoever as I have opened unto you for the sustenance maintenance and
SPEECHES AND PASSAGES Of This GREAT and HAPPY Parliament From the third of November 1640 to this instant June 1641. Collected into One Volume and according to the most perfect Originalls exactly published LONDON Printed for William Cooke and are to be sold at his shop at Furnifalls-Inne-gate in Holbourne 1641. The Contents HIS Majesties first speech Novem. 3. 1640. His Majesties second speech Novem. 5. 1640. His Majesties third speech to both houses Jan. 25. 1640. His Majesties speech at the passing of the Bill for a Trieniall Parliament His Majesties Letter sent by the Prince in the behalf of the Earl of Strafford to the Lords The Lords Answer That Bishops ought not to have voyce in Parliament Lord Keepers speech in the upper house of Parliament Novem. 3. 1640. Master Speakers speech Fol. 1. Lord Digbyes speech Novem. 9. 1640. concerning grievances and the trieniall Parliament Lord Digbyes second speech for trieniall Parliament Fol. 12. The Honourable Nathaniels Fynes his speech Fol. 22 Master Rous his speech before the Lords against Doctor Cousins Doctor Mannering and Doctor Beale Fol. 45 The second speech of the Honourable Nathaniel Fynes Fol. 49 Lord D●gbyes speech concerning Bishops London petition Feb. 9. Fol. 65 Lord Finch his accusation Fol. 76 Lord Falklands speech after the reading the Articles of the Lord Finch Fol. 83 Sir Edward Deering first speech Fol. 88 His second speech Fol. 90 His third speech Fol. 93 His fo th speech Fol. 97 M●ster Bagshawes speech concerning Bishops and the London petition Fol. 99 Sir Benjamin Ruddyers first speech Fol. 103 His second speech Fol. 110 His third speech Fol. 113 Master Pyms Message for the commitment of my Lord Strafford Fol. 116 Articles against the Lord Strafford Fol. 117 Further impeachment of Thomas Earl of Strafford Fol. 120 Earl of Bristows speech D●cember 7 Fol. 143 Master Mynards speech in reply to the Lord Strafford Fol. 145 The Earl of Bristows speech upon the delivering of by him the Scottish Remonstrance Fol. 150 His Majesties speech to both Houses Feb. 3. 1640. Fol. 159 Londoners fi●st petition Fol. 161 Their grievances by the Prelates Fol. 162 Resolution of the sixt demand by the Commons Fol. 171 The Scots Answer to the resolution Ibid. The Peares demand upon the foresaid Answer Fol. 172 The Scots Commissioners Answer Ibid. Articles against Secretary Windibanck Fol. 174 A speech made by the Lord Finch in the Commons House N●vem 21. 1640. Fol. 169 Master Grimstons second speech Fol. 179 A messuage sent by the Queen to the House of Commons by Master Comproller Fol. 185 The report of the Kings messuage by the Lords to the House of Commons Jan. 29. 1640. Fol. 184 Sir Thomas Rows speech Fol. 185 Lord Falklands speech Fol. 188 Master Pyms speech after the Articles of Sir George Ratcliff Fol. 198 His second speech after the reading of the Articles Fol. 202 Master Speakers speech presenting these Bills for shortning of Michaelmas term pressing of Maryners for the remainder of sixe Subsidies Fol. 204 Master Pleadwels speech Fol. 206 Sir Thomas Rowes reports to the Committe Fol. 209 M●ster Rigbyes answer to the Lord ●ineb his last speech Fol. 221 Master Wallers speech Fol. 224 Master Hollis his speech delivered with the Protestation Fol. 232 Orders for the taking of the Protest●tion Fol. 236 Master Grimstons third speech Fol. 205 Lord Digbyes speech upon the Bill of attainder of the Lord Strafford Fol. 213 Lord Straffords speech on the Scaffold Sixteen queres Fol. 233 Captain Audleyes Mervirs speech Fol. 237 His speech at the peachment of Sir Richard Boulton Knight and others Fol. 249 Articles against Sir Richard Boulton 256 Sir Thomas Wentworths first speech March 22 1637 His second speech April 21 1628. Fol. 259 A petition to the Lord Deputy Fol. 262 A speech against the Judges Fol. 267 A discourse concerning the power of Pears in Parliament Fol. 275 Sir John Hollands speech Fol. 281 Sir Edward Hales speech Fol. 284 Sir Johns Wrayes speech concerning the Commons Fol. 288 Sir John Wrayes second speech Fol. 290 Preamble with the Protestation Fol. 300 Bill of Attainder against the Earl of Strafford Fol. 303 Vicount Newarks fi●st speech for the right of Bishops Fol. 305 His second speech for their Temporall affaires Master Peards against the oath Exofficio Fol. 313 Master Speakers letter to Sir Jacob Ashley Fol. 315 Articles against the Bishop of Bath and Wells Fol. 318 Sir B. Ruddyers speech Fol. 3●6 His Speech concerning the Queenes Joynture Fol. 317.321 Lord Andevers speech concerning the Star-Chamber An order May 10 1641. that no English shall frequent the Ambassadors to hear Masse Lord Finch his Lletter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 324 Lord Keepers speech to his Majesty in the name of both the Houses Fol. 325 Declaration of the Scots touching the maintenance of their Army Fol. 326 The humble Remonstrance delivered by the Lord Keeper Fol. 528 The Earl of Straffords Letters to his Majesty Fol. 332 E●●l of Straffords Petition before be died to both Houses Fol. 225 The Lord Falklands first speech in Parliament Fol. 336 Sir Jo. Culpeppers speech Fol. 342 Mr. Bagshawes speech 7 No. 1640. Fol. 545 Petition of the Earl of Straf for examination of witnesses Fol. 343 Order concerning the prices of Wine Fol. 350 Sir Tho. Rowes speech concerning B●asse mony Remonstrance of the Parliament in Ireland Fol. 321 A Message from the House of Commons to his Majesty His Majesties answer Fol. 328 Vote concerning the Cannons Ibidem Order concerning Monopolies Fol. 329 Order against Monopolies Ibidem The Scottish Commissioners thanks to his Majesty Fol. 330 The humble Remonstrance of the Mr. Wardens of Vintners Ibidem Petition of Oxford Fol. 383 Sergeant Glanvils speecd Fol. 388 Secretary Windebancks Letter to the Lord Chamberlain Fol. 393 Lord Andevers speech concerning pacification Fol. 327 An Order against drinking on the Sabbath day Fol. 401 Sir John Wrayes occasionall speeches 1 Concerning Religion Fol. 401 2. Vpon the Scottssh treaty Fol. 403 3. Impeachment of the Lord Strafford Fol. 404 4. Vpon the Strafford 〈◊〉 knot Fol. 406 5. Vpon the same 〈…〉 6. A seas●nable 〈◊〉 or a loyall Covenant Fol. 408 Mr. Hid●● Argument Fol. 409 Mr. White c●●cerning Episcopacy Fol. 417 Cities second ●●tition The Kentish Petition Sir John Wrayes ninth speech Lord Digbies speech Fol. 455 Mr. Pyms speech Fol. 458 Sir Thomas Barringtons speech Accusation of Sir George Ratcliffe Fol. 504 The charge of the Scottish Commissioners against Canterbury Fol. 505 Sir Henry Vanes speech against Bishops The Charge of the Scotch Commissioners against the Lievtenant of Ireland Fol. 519 The Scotch Commissioners demand concerning the six●h Article Fol. 525 The English Peeres demand concerning the preceding Articles Fol. 531 The Scotch Commissioners answer to the demand Ibid. Captain Audley Mervins speech concerning the Judicature of the Parliament The Speakers speech at the presenting of the bill of Tunnage and Poundage His Majesties speech concerning it Mr. Pyms Relation of the
seemes to be this particular case yet seeing that I am pressed by both Houses to give way to his because I will avoid the inconveniencie of giving so great discontent to my people as I conceive this Mercy may produce therefore I doe remit this particular Cause to both the Houses But I desire them to take into their consideration the inconveniencies as I conceive may upon this occasion fall upon my Subjects and other Protestants abroad especially since it may seeme to other States to be a severity which surprise having thus represented I think my selfe discharged from all ill consequence that may ensue upon the execution of this person FINIS To the Right Honourable the Commons House of Parliament The humble Petition of many of his Majesties Subjects in and about the Citie of London and severall Counties of the Kingdome THat wheras the government of Archbishops and Lord-Bishops Deanes and Archdeacons c. with their Courts and ministrations in them hath proved prejudiciall and very dangerous both to the Church and Common-wealth they themselves having formerly held that they have their jurisdiction or authority of humane Authority till of these later times being further perused about the unlawfulnesse that they have claymed their calling immediatly from the Lord JESVS CHRIST which is against the Lawes of this Kingdome and Derogatory to his Majestie and his State Royall And whereas the said government is found by wofull experience to be a maine cause and occasion of many foule evils pressures and grievance of a very high nature unto his Majesties Subjects in their owne Consciences liberties and ●st tes as in a Shedule of particulars hereunto annexed may in part appeare We therefore most humbly pray and beseech this Honourable Assembly the premisses considered that the said government with all its depend●nces roots and branches may be abolished and all lawes in their behalfe made voyd and the government according to Gods word may be rightly placed among us and we your humble Supplyants as in duty we are bound will daily pray for his Majesties long and happy raigne over us and for the prosperous successe of this High and Honourable Court of Parliament c. A Particular of the manifold Evils Pressures and Grievances caused practized and occasioned by the Prelates and their Dependants I. FIrst the subjecting and enclining all Ministers under them and their Authority and so by degrees exempting of them from the Temporall power whence followes II. The faint-heartednesse of Ministers to preach the truth of God lest they should displease the Prelates as namely the Doctrine of Predestination of Free-grace of Perseverance of Originall sinne remaining after Baptisme of the Sabbath the Doctrine against universall Grace Election for Faith fore-seene Free-will against Antichrist non-Residents humane Inventions of Gods worship all which are generally with-held from the peoples knowledge because not relishing to the Bishops III. The encouragement of Ministers to despise the temporall Magistracie the Nobles and Gentry of the Land to abuse the Subjects live contentiously with their neighbours knowing that they being the Bishops creatures they shall be supported IV. The restraint of many godly and able men from the Ministry and thrusting out of many Congregations their faithfull diligent and powerfull Ministers who lived peaceably with them and did them good onely because they cannot in Conscience submit unto and maintaine the Bishops needlesse devices nay sometimes for no other cause but for their zeale in Preaching or great Auditories V. The suppressing of that godly Designe set on foot by certaine Sects and sugred with many great gifts by sundry well-affected persons for the buying of Impropriations and placing of able Ministers in them maintaining of Lectures and founding of Free Schooles which the Prelates could not endure lest it should darken their glories and draw the Ministers from their dependance upon them VI. The great encrease of idle lewd and dissolute ignorant and erroneous men in the Ministry which swarme like the Locusts of Egypt over the whole Kingdome and will they but weare a Canonicall Coat a Surplisse a Hood bow at the name of JESVS and be zealous of Superstitious Ceremonies they may live as they list confront whom they please preach and vent what errours they will and neglect preaching at their pleasures without controule VII The discouragement of many from bringing up their Children in learning the many Schismes errors and strange opinions which are in the Church great Corruptions which are in the Universities the grosse and lamentable ignorance almost every where among the people the want of preaching Ministers in very many places both of England Wales the loathing of the Ministry and the generall defection to all manner of prophanenesse VIII The swarming of lascivious idle and unprofitable Books and Pamphlets Play-books and Ballads as namely Ovids fits of Love the Parliament of Women came out at the dissolving of the last Parliament Barnes Poems Parkers Ballads in disgrace of Religion to the encrease of all vice and withdrawing of people from reading studying and hearing the word of God and other good Books IX The hindring of godly Books to be Printed the blotting out or perverting those which they suffer all or most of that which strikes either at Poperie or Arminianisme the adding of what or where pleaseth them and the restraints of reprinting Books formerly lycensed without relycensing X. The publishing and venting of Popish Arminian and other dangerous Books and Tenets as namely that the Church of Rome is a true Church and in the worst times never erred in Fundamentals that the Subjects have no propriety in their Estates but that the King may take from them what hee pleaseth that all is the Kings and that he is bound by no Law and many other from the former whereof hath sprang XI The growth of Popery and encrease of Papists Priests and Jesuits in sundry places but especially about London since the Reformation the frequent venting of Crucifixes and Pop sh Pictures both engraven and printed and the placing of such in Bibles XII The multitude of Monopolies and Pattents drawing with them innumerable Perjuries the large encrease of Customes and Impositions upon Commodities the Ship-monies and many other great burthens upon the Common-wealth under which all groane XIII Moreover the Offices and Jurisdictions of Arch-bishop● Lord-Bishops Deanes Arch-Deacons being the same way of Church Government which is in the Romish Church and which was in England in the time of Poperie little change thereof being made except onely the head from whence it was derived the same Arguments supporting the Pope which doe uphold the Prelates and overthrowing the Prelates which doe pull downe the Pope and other reformed Churches having upon their rejection of the Pope cast the Prelates out also as Members of the Beast Hence it is that the Prelates here in England by themselves or their Diciples plead and maintaine that the Pope is not Antichrist and that the Church of Rome is a
resolutions NOte That because some doubts were raised by severall persons out of the Commons House concerning the meaning of these words contained in the Protestation lately made by the Members of that House viz. The true Reformed Protestant Religion expressed in the Doctrine of the Church of England against all Popery and Popish Innovations within this Realme contrary to the same Doctrine The House of Commons did declare That by those words was and is meant only the publick Doctrine professed in the said Church so farre as it is opposite to Popery and Popish Innovations And that the said words are not to be extended to the maintaining of any forme of Worship Discipline or Government nor of any Rites or Ceremonies of the Church of England MY Lords The House of Commons have commanded me to present unto your Lordships this Protestation Every member in that House hath made it not one refusing it and they have sent it unto your Lordships with an assurance of your Lordships concurrence in the same zeale and affection for the publick safety And it is their desire your Lordships would likewise make the same Protestation which I humbly leave to your Lordships wisdomes Directions for more orderly making of the foresaid Protestation IT is thought fit that the Protestation which the Parliament late y made be taken by the Citie of London in the severall Parish Churches in the afternoon of some Lords day after Sermon before the Congregation bee dissolved by all Masters of Families their sons and men-servants in manner and forme following viz. First That forthwith notice of this intention bee given to the Minister Church-wardens and some other mee persons of each Parish in London Liberties and adjacent Parishes and some of them to give notice to the rest of the Parishioners Secondly That the Minister be entreated if he please to acquaint his Parish in his Sermon either forenoon or aftternoon with the nature of the businesse more or lesse as hee shall think fit for the better and more solemne taking of the said Protestation or if the Minister refuse it that some other bee intreated to preach that will promote the businesse or if neither of these may bee had that some other convenient course bee taken by some well affected to the businesse to stay the Parish and communicate the matter to them Thirdly That the Minister or Ministers of every Congregation first take it in his or their owne person reading the said Protestation in so distinct a voyce that all present may conveniently hear it and that all the Assembly present doe make the same Protestation distinctly after this manner every man taking this Protestation into his hand IA. B. doe in the presence of Almighty God freely and heartily promise vow and protest the same which the leading person took naming the person Fourthly That there be a Register Book wherin every man taking this vow or Protestation subscribe his name with his owne hand or mark and that the names bee taken of such as doe refuse the same Fifthly That all the Parishioners abovesaid whether in Towne or out of Towne be earnestly requested to bee present at their owne Parish Church in the afternoon of that Lords day whereon it shall be taken that every man may take it in their owne place and if any bee necessarily absent that they may bee desired to take it the next Lords day after or so soon as may bee with conveniency Sixthly and lastly That all whom it doth not immediately concerne bee earnestly requested to depart FINIS Mr. Grimstons Speech in the High Court of Parliament M. SPEAKER THese Petitions which have beene now read they are all Remonstrances of the generall and universall grievances distempers that are now in the State and Government of the Church and Commonwealth and they are not them alone But his Majesties gracious Expressions the first day of Parliament that calls me up to speak at this present contrary to my owne Intentions Mr. Speaker his Majestie who is the head of the body politique and the Father of the Common-wealth hath complained first declaring his sensiblenesse of our sufferings and amongst other things hath put us in mind of our grievances and hath freely left it to our selves for our redresse and repaire therein to begin and end as we shall think fit And this drawes mee on with much cheerefulnesse and zeale to contribute my poore endeavours to so great a work And Mr. Speaker I conceive it will not be altogether impertinent for your direction and guidance in that great place which by the favour of his Majestie and this House you now possesse a little to recollect our selves in the remembrance of what was done the last Parliament and where we ended It will likewise be very considerable what hath bin done since that Parliament and who they are that have beene the Authors and Causers of all our miseries and distractions both before and sithence Mr. Speaker the last Parliament as soone as the House was setled a Subsidiarie ayd and supply was propounded and many Arguments used to give the precedencie before all other matters and Considerations whatsoever On the other side a multitude of Complaints and Grievances of all sorts aswell concerning our Eternall as our Temporall estates were presented and put in the other ballance The wisedome of that great Councell waighing both indifferently and looking not onely upon the dangers then threatne● from Scotland which are now upon us but likewise taking into their consideration the Condition and Constitution of the present government here at home concluded that they were in no capacity to give unlesse their grievances were first red ressed and removed For Mr. Speaker it then was and still is most manifest and apparent that by some judgements lately obtained in Court of Justice and by some new wayes of Government lately st rted up amongst us the Law of property is so much shaken that no man can say he is Master of any thing But all that we have wee hold as Tenants by courtesie and at will and may be stripped of it at pleasure Yet Mr. Speaker desirous to give his Majestie all possible satisfaction and contentment as well in the manner of supply for expedition as in the substance and matter of it wee confined and limitted our selves but to three particulars onely and to such matters as properly and naturally should have reference and relation to those three heads 1. The first was the priviledges of Parliament 2. The second matters of Religion 3. The third the propriety of our goods and Estates And we began with the first as the great Ark in which the other two Religion and property are included and preserved Mr. Speaker the violations complained of the last Parliament touching our priviledges were of two sorts either such as had beene done in Parliament or out of Parliament Concerning the violations of the first sort it was resolved by vote that the Speaker refusing to put a question being
Speaker who can frame an argument aright unlesse he can tell against what he is to argue Would you confute the Convocation-house they were a holy Synod they were Commissioners will you dispute their Commission they will mingle all power together and perhaps answer they were something else that we neither knew nor imagined unlesse they would unriddle themselves and owne what they were wee may prosecute non-concludent Arguments Mr. Speaker I have conferred with some of the Founders of those Canons but I professe here that I could never meet with any one of that assembly who could well answer to that first question of the Catechisme What is your name Alas they were parted before they knew what they were when they were together The summe of all the severall answers that I have received do all together amount unto this They were a Convocationall Synodicall Assembly of Commissioners Indeed a threefold Chaemera a Monster to our Lawes a Cerberus to our Religion A strange Commission where no Commissioners name is to be found A strange Convocation that lived when the Parliament was dead A strange holy Synod when the one part never saw nor conferred with the other But indeed there needed no conference if it be true of these Cannons which I read of the former Quis nescit Canones Lambethae formari priusquam in Synode ventilentur Well Mr. Speaker they have Innovated upon us wee may say it is Lex talionis to Innovate upon them and so I hope we shortly shall doe In the meane time my humble motion is that every member of that assembly who voted their Cannons may come severally to the Barre of this House with a Book of Cannons in his hand and there unlesse he can answer that Catechisme question as I called it better then I expect he can conceptis verbis in such expresse termes as this honourable house shall then think fit he shall abjure his owne Issue and be commanded to give fire to his owne Canons And this motion I take to be just The fourth Speech of Sir Edward Deering Concerning the Arch-Bishop and divers other Grievances Mr. Speaker YEsterday we did regulate the most important businesse before us and gave them motion so that our great and weighty affaires are now on their feet in their progresse journying on towards their several periods where some I hope will finde their latest home Yet among all these I observe one a very maine one to sleepe sine die give me leave to awaken it it is a businesse of an immense weight and worth such as deserves our best care and most severe circumspection I meane the Grand Petition long since given in by many thousand Citizens against the domineering Clergy Wherein for my part although I cannot approve of all that is presented unto you yet I do clearely professe that a great part of it nay the greatest part thereof is so well grounded that my heart goes cheerefully along therewith It seemes that my Countrey for which I have the honour to serve is of the same minde and least you should thinke that all faults are included within the walls of Troy they will shew you Iliacos intra muros peccatur extrae The same grievances which the City groanes under are provinciall unto us and I much feare they are Nationall among us all The pride the avarice the ambition and oppression by our ruling Clergie is Epidemicall it hath infected them all There is not any or scarce any of them who is not practicall in their own great cause in hand which they impiously doe mis call the Piety of the times but in truth so wrong a Piety that I am bold to say In facinus jurasse putes Here in this Petition is the disease represented here is the cure intreated The number of your Petitioners is considerable being above five and twenty hundred names and would have been foure times as many if that were thought materiall The matter in the Petition is of high import but your Petitioners themselves are all of them quiet and silent at their owne houses humbly expecting and praying the resolution of this great Senate upon these their earnest and thrice hearty desires Here is no noyse no numbers at your doore they will be neither your trouble nor your jealousie for I doe not know of any one of them this day in the towne so much they doe affie in the justice of their Petition and in the goodnesse of this house If now you want any of them here to make avowance of their Petition I am their servant I doe appeare for them and for my selfe and am ready to avow this Petition in their names and in my owne Nothing doubting but fully confident that I may justly say of the present usage of the Hierarchy in the Church of England as once the Pope Pope Adrian as I remember said of the Clergy in his time A vertice capitis ad plantam pedis nihil est sanum in toto ordine Ecclesiastico I beseech you read the Petition regard us and relieve us Master BAGSHAWES Speech in Parliament Febr. 9 th 1640. Concerning Episcopacy and the London Petition Mr. Speaker I Was yesterday and the time before for the retaining of the London Petition and am in the same minde still and therefore doe now rise up against the proposall of that question which is now called for Whether Episcopacy it selfe be to be taken into consideration by the Committee wherein I doe distinguish of a twofold Episcopacy the first in Statu puro as it was in the Primitive times the second in Statu corrupto as it is at this day and is so intended and meant in the London Petition Now I hold that Epistopacy in this latter sence is to be taken into consideration as a thing that trencheth not onely upon the right and liberties of the Subject of which I shall have occasion to speake hereafter But as it is now it trencheth upon the Crowne of England in these foure particulars wherein in I know this House will willingly heare me First it is maintained by the Bishop of Exeter in a Booke which he hath writ to this purpose that Episcopacy it selfe both in the office and in the jurisdiction is de Iure Divino of Divine right which position is directly contrary to the Lawes of England of which I will cite but two or three in stead of many more The Statute of Carlisle 35. Ed. 1. mentioned in Caudries case in the fifth Report saith that the Church of England is founded in the state of Prelacie by the Kings of England and their Progenitors Which likewise appeares by the first Chapter in Magna Charta in these words Concessimus Deo Ecclesiae Anglicanae omnes libertates c. and in the twentie fifth yeare of Edward the third in the French Roll which I have seene there the Archbishop and Clergie petition the King for their liberties in these words thus Englished That for the reverence of God and
ruine and destruction of the Kingdome of England and of his Majesties Subjects and of altering and subverting of the fundamentall Laws of this Kingdome And shortly after the said Earle of Strafford returned into England and to sundry persons declared his opinion to be that his Majesty should first try the Parliament here and if that did not supply him according to his occasions he might use then his Prerogative as he pleased to levie what he needed and that he should bee acquitted both of God and man hee tooke some other courses to supply himselfe though it were against the will of his Subjects 23. That upon the thirteenth day of Aprill last the Parliament of England met and the Commons house then being the representative Body of all the Commons in the Kingdome did according to the trust reposed in them enter into debate and consideration of the great grievances of of this Kingdome both in respect of Religion and the publike libertie of the Kingdome and his Majestie referring chiefly to the Earle of Strafford and the Archbishop of Canterbury the ordering and disposing of all matters concerning the Parliament He the said Earle of Strafford with the asistance of the said Archbishop did procure his Majesty by sundry speeches and messages to urge the said Commons house to enter into some resolution for his Majesties supply for maintenance of his warre against his Subjects of Scotla●d before any course was taken for the reliefe of the great and pressing grievances wherewith this Kingdome was then afflicted Whereupon a demand was then made from his Majesty of 12. Subsidies for the release of ship-money onely and while the said Commons then assembled with expressions of great affection to his Majestie and his service were in debate and consideration of some supply before resolution by them made he the said Earle of Strafford with the helpe and assistance of the said Archbishop did procure his Majesty to dissolve the last Parliament upon the 5. day of May last and upon the same day the said Earle of Strafford did treacherously falsely and maliciously endeavour to incense his Majesty against his loving faithfull Subjects who had been members of the said house of Commons by telling his Majesty they had denyed to supply him And afterward upon the same did treacherously and wickedly counsell and advise his Majesty to this effects viz. that having tryed the affections of his people he was loose and absolved from all rules of government and was to doe every thing that power would admit and that his Majesty had tryed all ways and was refused and should be acquitted both of God and man that he had an Army in Ireland meaning the Army above mentioned consisting of Papists his dependants as is aforesaid which he might imploy to reduce this Kingdome to obedience 24 That in the same month of May he the said Earl of Strafford falsly treacherously and maliciously published and declared before others of his Majesties Privie Counsell that the Parliament of England had forsaken the King and that in denying to supply the King they had given him the advantage to supply himselfe by other wayes and divers other times he did maliciously wickedly and falsely publish and declare that seeing the Parliament had refused to supply his Majesty in the ordinary and usuall way the King might provide for the Kingdome in such waies as he should hold fit and that he was not to suffer himselfe to be mastered by the frowardnesse of the people And having so maliciously slandered the said house of Commons he did with the helpe and advice of the said Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Finch late Lord Keeper of the great Seal of England cause to be printed and published in his Majesties name a false and scandalous book entituled his Majesties Declaration of the causes that mooved him to dissolve the last Parliament full of bitter and malicious invectives and false and scandalous aspersions against the said house of Commons 25 That not long after the dissolution of the said last Parliament viz. In the moneths of May and Iune he the Earle of Strafford did advise the King to goe on rigorously in leavying the Ship-money and did procure the Sheriffes of severall Countries to be sent for for not leavying the Ship-money divers of which were threatned by him to be sued in the Starre-Chamber and afterwards by his advice were sued in the Star-chamber for not leavying the same and divers of his Majesties loving Subjects were sent for and imprisoned by his advice about that and other illegall payments And a great loane of a hundred thousand pounds was demanded of the City of London and the Lord Major and the Aldermen and the Sheriffes of the said City were often sent for by his advice to the Councell Table to give an account of their proceedings in raising of Ship-money and furthering of that loane and were required to certifie the names of such Inhabitants of the said City as were fit to lend which they with much humility refusing to doe he the said Earle of Strafford did use these or the like speeches viz. That they deserved to be put to Fine and Ransom and that no good would be done with them till an example were made of them and they were laid by the heeles and some of the Aldermen hanged up 26 That the said Earle of Strafford by his wicked Counsell having brought his Majesty into excessive charges without any just cause he did in the month of Iuly last for the support of the said great charges counsell and approve two dangerous and wicked Projects viz. To seize upon the Bullion and the money in the Mint And to imbase his Majesties Coyne with the mixtures of Brasse And accordingly we procured one hundred and thirty thousand pounds which was then in the Mint and belonging to divers Merchants Strangers and others to bee seized on and stayed to his Majesties use And when divert Merchans of London owners of the said Bullion came to his house to let him understand the great mischiefe that course would produce here and in other parts what prejudice it would bee to the Kingdome by discrediting the Mint and hindring the importation of Ballion hee the said Earle told them that the City of London dealt undutifully and unthankfully with his Majesty and that they were more ready to helpe the Rebell than to helpe his Majesty and that if any hurt came to them they may thank themselves and that it was the course of other Princes to make use of such monies to serve their occasions And when in the same Moneth of Iuly the Officers of his Majesties Mint came to him and gave him divers reasons against the imbasing the said money hee told them that the French King did use to send Commissaries of Horse with Commission to search into mens estates and to peruse their accounts so that they may know what to levie of them by force which they did accordingly leavie and turning
that the Parliament was broken he tels the King he had 8000 foot and 1000 horse to reduce this Kingdome to obedience My Lords consider in what a sad time this man tooke to infuse this sad Counsell into the Kings eare My Lords he doth advise the King that he was absolved from all rules of government but if no rule of government what rule of obedience Surely he meant to reduce us to a chaos and confusion c. would have us without all rule of government or obedience My Lords those that he would have brought to reduce us were Papists Enemies of our Religion This strikes us neer my Lords and is the griefe of our hearts that an Irish army should be brought into England to reduce us My Lords I hope we were nere so far gone as to need an army to reduce us to obedience My Lords he had raised this Army and if such Counsell had taken effect in his Majesties eare he like proud Haman would have thought to have been Generall of the Army And thus my Lords you see this Lord of Strafford falls upon a Counsell which might make an irreconcileable difference to subdue us by his power The Earle of Bristowes Speech in the High Court of Parliament upon the delivering of by him the Scottish Remonstrance and Schedule of their charges OUr Ancestors were accustomed to heare propositions in an other manner We represent unto you a very distressed estate sad tidings and dishonourable to our Nation That we should suffer our Countrey to relieve an Army that is come against us This may seeme to withdraw from the greatnes and honor of this Nation but I am sorry it should be thought a Nationall dishonour as the case now standeth But I wish it may light upon those that have been the ill instruments by their imprudent Counsells to bring this Kingdome into such an unhappy businesse that hath produced miserable effects and Calamities But let us labour to build the honour of this Nation and if ill and wicked men have brought this great dishonour great let the honour be when a state is so distressed by wisdom and prudence to relieve it I doe remember when the Common-wealth of Rome was in great distresse after the great Battayle of Cannae they gave thankes that the Counsell did not despaire of the safety of the Common-wealth and me thinkes there is no cause to despair If those ill Counsels and ill ways have brought us to this Calamity shall hereafter bee turned to wise prudent and setled wayes if God may so blesse us that we again prove happy for this Nation the strength and Scituation of it would hardly be brought to this condition were it not for want of Vnity and for discord among our selves When a happie Vnitie among our selves I doubt not to see the honour of this Nation set vp againe by the wisedome of his Majesty and prudent endeavour of this assembly this whole Monarchy once reunited I meane the 3. Kingdomes will render us very considerable abroad His Majesty hath granted our brethren in Scotland their demands in matter of Religion and liberty and doubt not but with humility and duty may likewise obtaine what wee shall desire concerning religion and libertie graciously from his Majesties hands And I am most confident his Majestie may expect from us all that duty affection and assistance as he hath just cause to expect from good people If God shall blesse us and this whole Monarchy with unity love and concord certainly these great Armies that do now trouble us and are ready to offend one an other may shew a capability with united mindes and well designed to effect great matters and may by unity of Counsell raise us up againe in the world to a good estimation and as great an honour as ever I hope God will blesse us with good Counsells and that the King as a gracious good and prudent Prince and all his Subjects joyning in this way no doubt but God will bring us againe to a convenient condition of consistancie yea since our armies are vnited under one King and Nation and in one Iland from a state gasping it will bee easie thence to bring us to a condition of prosperity therefore let us procure and maintaine a good correspondency amongst our selves and for the proposition it much started us at first but I must say thus much That where wars have fallen between Nations it is not unlawfull nor great dishonour to let men part upon reasonble conditions though with good consideration our Kings passed many times into France and returned with recompence but this a friendly demonstration of one Nation to another there is great difference in point of honour if we consider the state wherein wee now are two Armies in the field and consider it was not through our default nor the fault of the Kingdome that we are brought into these calamities The Instruments will bee made an example and the dishonour will light upon them and then certainly we doe conceive a wise and prudent Senate to apply themselves to some things by necessity is no dishonour A State lying gasping and bleeding to restore it is an essentiall part of honour This is that I had in command to say unto you His Majesties Speech to both the Houses of Parliament February 3. 1640. HAving taken into my serious consideration the late Remonstrance made unto mee by the House of Parliament I give you this answer That I take in good part your care of the true Religion established in this Kingdome from which I will never depart as also for the tendernesse of my safety and security of this State and Government It is against my minde that Popery or Superstition should any way encrease within this Kingdome and will restraine the same by causing the Laws to be put in execution I am resolved to provide against the Jesuites and Papists by setting forth a Proclamation with all speed commanding them to depart the Kingdome within one Moneth which if they faile or shall returne then they shall be proceeded against according to the Lawes Concerning Resettie I give you to understand that the Queene hath alwayes assured me that to her knowledge hee hath no Commission but onely to entertaine a personall correspondence betweene her and the Pope in things requisite for the Exercise of her Religion which is warranted to her by the Articles of Marriage which give her a full Liberty ●f Conscience yet I have perswaded her that since the misunderstanding of the Persons condition gives offence shee will within a convenient time remove him Moreover I will take a speciall care to restraine my Subjects from resorting to Masse at Denmark house St James and the Chappell of Ambassadors Lastly concerning John Goodman the Priest I will let you know the reason why I reprived him that as I am enformed neither Queene Elizabeth nor my Father did ever avow that any Priest in their times was executed meerely for Religion which to me
My Lord Keeper did first let us know that his Majesty had commanded the Lords Commissioners of the great Councell to give an account of their Treaties at Yorke and Rippon to both Houses and of his Majesties gracious intentions in a businesse so much importing the honour and safety of the Kingdome that there might be made a faithfull relation with all candor and clearnesse which was the summe of his Majesties instructions His Lordship declaring that my Lords of the upper House for the saving of time had thought fit to give this account to a Committee of both Houses which hath occasioned the meeting at this Conference and election being made of the Earle of Bristoll by the Lords Commissioners he began his Narration directed to the Lords of the upper House and to the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the house of Commons and thus the Earle of Bristoll began That the Lords Commissioners intended not to looke further back into the businesse then the Acts of their own imployments They did intend to give no account of the pacification interrupted nor war renewed no account how the Armies in England Ireland and by Sea were designed nor of any occasion They purposed not to lay fault upon any man nor to enquire into the cause why the Scots as they pretended from necessity were drawne to enter this Kingdome nor why the Kings Army when service was to be done was out of the way But that those through whose hands these have passed might hereafter give their own account His Lordship told us that his Majesty was pleased to call his great Councell at Yorke to whom he made two propositions The first was how his Army which seemed to be in distresse for want of pay should be relieved and maintained To this to shew their duties to the King the Lords resolved to ingage themselves and to that purpose to send chosen Deputies to London to negotiate a supply The second proposition was that after the Scots had passed Northumberland taken Newcastle and possessed the Bishopricke of Duresme they sent a Petition to his Majesty which containeth in generall termes a desire to have their grievances taken into consideration Which Petition and Answer thereunto was read unto us A. N. A. and presented for our clearer understanding Upon receipt of his Majesties Answer the Scotish Lords sent his Majesty a second Petition directed in a Letter to the Earle of Lanrick K. Q. in which they made their particular demands and declared that according to his Majesties command they would advance no further and this Petition was also read and delivered unto us of which his Lordship desired that great Assembly to take especiall notice for that much of the future discourse would depend upon it The businesse thus stated at the great Councell the second proposition was what Answer should be made to that Petionary Letter and in what manner it should be carried In which his Majesty required their Councell Whereupon the Lords replyed that it was impossible for them to give any well grounded advice unlesse the true state of his affaires and the Condition of his Army were laid before them Whereupon his Majesty commanded the Earle of Traquaire N. L. to make the Narration of the Scotish businesse and their late Acts of Parliament and the Lord Lievtenant generall to give an account in what condition the Army stood and what was answered by my Lord Lievtenant was read in his owne words Besides this declaration the Earle of Bristoll delivered upon a further enquiry how the state of the businesse then stood That the Scots Army had passed Northumberland without resistance that they had disputed the passage of the River of Tyne at Newburne where our horse retyred in disorder that his Majesties foot Army consisting of twelve or fourteene thousand men in Newcastle likewise retired to Yorke whereby the Towne of Newcastle a place of great consideration was without one stroke strucken fallen into the Scots hands and the Bishopricke of Duresme drawn under Contribution That in this state the Gentry of the Bishopricke repayred to Master Treasurer who carryed them to his Majesty from whom they were referred to my Lord Lievtenant of the Army who gave them this answer positively That they could looke for no help nor protection from the King and therefore they might use the best meanes they could to preserve their lives and estates Whereby those distressed Provinces the ancient Bulwarks of this Kingdome full of brave and valiant men being now fallen into the power of an Army which of necessity must live were forced to consent to a contribution by Treaty and a very heavy one though such without which the Scotish Army could not subsist The agreement was 350. l. a day for the Bishopricke of Duresme 300. l. a day for Northumberland 200. a day for the Towne of Newcastle in all 850. l. a day which should it continue would amount unto 300000. l. for one yeare These Gentlemen much lamented their estates that the Scots should be irritated as they call it by being proclaimed Traytors His Lordship made a little digression and asked leave to speake truth in such language as the Scots had presented their state unto them That having proclamation made against them being threatned with a great Army of thirty or forty thousand men another of ten thousand out of Ireland and by Parliament declared Traytors and Rebels and having heard of another Army providing of eight or ten thousand by shipping to hinder their Trade at least their Commerce with England that they were drawne together by necessity as they pretended of defence further alledging that it was a common discourse of which they had seene papers that they should bee reduced into a Province which would be but one Summers worke and therefore they having drawne their power together as any Nation would doe and being assembled and their Country being poore taking advantage of the time and that all those Armies that should oppose them were out of the way and those unfortunate Provinces left like a list of Cloath they were forced to enter in England that thus they had lamented and thus the state stood before the Lords when it was examined in the great Councell Thus their Lordships found that the Scots had increased their confines neere fourescore miles in England and had passed the Rivers of Tweed and Tyne and that the River of Tees the boundary of Yorkeshire Duresme being possessed was not to be defended being foordable in many places by forty horse a front that if the Scots should passe that River there was no possibility to hinder them from comming to Yorke or to any part of England without hazarding a Battell which my Lord Lievtenant had declared unto them he would not advise for though the Kings Army consisted of seventeene or eighteene thousand good bodies of men yet being untrained and unused to Armes he would be loath to hazzard such an Adventure upon them but if they
should advance to Yorke hee might make good that Citie This being the case as it was presented my Lords advised his Majesty that they conceived the fittest way was that the Scots and their grievances might bee heard And whereas their maine Complaint had beene that their Petitions to his Majesty had beene conveyed by Conduits of an evill rellish that there might be chosen such Lords Commissioners of whose integrity they could not doubt Whereupon his Majesty was pleased to referre the choyce of the Commissioners to the great Councell who made the election with the assent of his Majesty The Commissioners names N. B. to whom power was given under the great seale of England to heare whatsoever the Scots would lay before them and to enter into Treatie with them and to give safe conducts and to do all things preparatory to a Treaty The first place of meeting was appointed at North-Allerton but some inconveniences being found it was by consent transferred to Rippon For the inducement of this meeting N. B. a Letter of the Lord Lanricks to the Scots Commissioners was read and given unto us The Treaty thus settled the Lords to be imployed receiving instructions from his Majesty by the consent of the great Councell it was agreed they should treat upon the whole businesse propounded by the Scots and left to their discretion to treate of a Cessation of Arms as the ordinary fore-runner of all Treaties of Peace When their Lordships came to Rippon the Cessation of Armes was the first proposed but being entered upon it the Scots Commissioners did let their Lordships know that there was something necessary first to be done that the Countreys where they lay were become poore that they could not thinke as their affaires stood of returning home that his Majesty had restrayned them from passing further so that a Treaty in this Exigent was worse then a Warre unlesse meanes might be thought upon how they might subsist and hereupon they did propound that if it were expected that they made no further progresse therein obeying his Majesties command which nothing but invincible necessity should force them to transgresse by plundring the Countreys they must have maintenance for their Army This motion seemed very strange to their Lordships that it should be demanded to provide a maintenance for the Scots when the Kings owne Army was in great distresse yet the necessity seemed to be such on both sides that the Lords appointed some of their Company to repaire to the King at Yorke to acquaint his Majesty with the Scots demand Upon debate of the businesse though it were of hard digestion to his Majesty the Lords and the whole Kingdome that they whose Ancestors had been called to advise upon the Ransome of Kings should now come to consult how to maintaine an Army got into our owne bowels Therefore their Lordships would not proceed without the knowledge of his Majesty and the great Councell where it was found necessary not for maintaining the Scots Armies for they might easily supply their owne wants by plundring in which course they might get a million whereas five thousand pounds would serve but for two months but to preserve the Countreys from utter ruine and the Scots from further advancing to give to their Lordships Commission to treate for a competency of maintenance during the Treaty The first demand was forty thousand pounds a moneth which by Treaty was reduced thus That instead of giving them any allowance they should bee left to their proportion of that contribution already agreed upon by the Counties as lesse dishonourable then to assigne them maintenance This point being thus settled N. D. E. their Lordships proceeded to the Treaty of Sessions and both were agreed and concluded his Lordship proposing the Articles themselves to bee read for more satisfaction His Lordship proceeded that these preparatives being settled at Rippon twenty miles from Yorke and the time far spent and the Parliament approaching their Lordships resolved to bee humble suitors to his Majesty that the generall Treaty might be transferred to London by consent of both parties thereunto agreeing Here his Lordship proposed the reading of a Letter whereby this translation of the Treaty was moved which was done and delivered unto us To this Letter his Majesty made a gracious answer and consented to transferre the Treaty to London where some of the Scots Commissioners are already arrived and the rest within a day or two expected Their Lordships having proceeded in the Treaty as far as they could goe repaired to Yorke and both Articles concluded were read in his Majesties presence and that they declared that they had in all things punctually observed their Instructions whereupon his Majesty required them to give their counsell whether he should ratifie and signe these Articles or not To which the Lords made answer that they had served his Majesty in quality of Commissioners Ambassadours and had duly observed their Instructions but now He being pleased to aske their advice they would bee glad to serve him according to their consciences and therefore besought his Majesty for leave to retire themselves and consult of the businesse to which his Majesty was graciously pleased to consent Upon resolution considering the great strait into which his Majesties affaires were reduced they concluded to advise his Majesty to signe and craved leave to present unto his Majesty a declaration of their reasons which were accepted and read in the great Councell And their Lordships held it necessary to bee read againe in that great Assembly N. G. as the rest of their Councell These reasons being read his Majesty was pleased to ratifie the Articles in expresse words also read unto us His Lordship concluded this Narrative as the full account of the Treaty N. D. and proceeding in it to his Majesties ratification and craved leave in the next place to present the hard and wofull condition in which his Majesties affaires then stood in the North First that by consent a contribution of 850. l. a day was agreed That there was already some doubt that the Countries were not able to beare it On the other side it was objected by the Scots that it was impossible if the payment should faile to keepe their promise or to obey his Majesty but that they should be necessitated against their will to plunder the Country These doubts considered it was declared by my Lord Lievtenant that the Counties of Cumberland and Westmerland being at pleasure under the Scots power it was reasonable that in subsidium they should contribute some helpe to their Neighbours But hee declared since their Lordships coming away the Commissioners left at Duresme had written that it was impossible for them to proceed in the agreement which if it were broken on their part the Scots would alledge an impossibility to consent to starve so that if some meanes were not found by which those Counties engaged might bee relieved hee was affraid all their labour and Treaty
bowels and viper-like working our destruction They finde Jesuites and Priests conspiring with ill Ministers of State to destroy our Religion they find ill Ministers conjoyned together to subvert our Lawes and Liberties They find obstructions of Justice which is the life bloud of every State and having a free passage from the Soveraigne Power where it is primarily seated as the life bloud in the heart and thence derived through the severall Judicatories as through so many veines into all the parts of this great collective Body doth give warmth and motion to every part and member which is nourished and enlivened by it but being once precluded stopped and seared up as the particular must of necessity faint and languish so must the whole frame of Government bee dissolved and consequently Soveraignty it selfe which as the heart in the body is Primum vivens ultimum moriens must dye and perish in the generall dissolution and all things returne as in the beginning in antiquum Chaos They find the propriety of the subject invaded and violated his estate rent from him by illegall Taxations Impositions Monopolies and Projects almost upon every thing which is for the use of man not onely upon superfluities but necessaries and this to enrich the vermine and caterpillers of the Land and to impoverish the good subjects to take the meate from the children and give it to dogges My Lords If we find these things so wee must conceive they must bee ill counsels which have brought us into this condition These counsels have put all into a combustion have discouraged the hearts of all true English men and have brought two Armies into our bowels which as the Vulture upon Prometheus eate through our sides and gnaw our very hearts Hinc dolor sed unde medicina Heretofore Parliaments were the Catholicon the Balme of Gilead which healed our wounds restored our Spirits and made up all the breaches of the Land But of late yeeres they have beene like the Fig-tree in the Gospel without efficacy without fruit onely destructive to the particular members who discharge their duties and consciences no way beneficiall to the Common-wealth Nobis exitiabile nec Reipub. profuturum as he said in Tacitus commonly taken away as Elias was with a whirle-winde never coming to any maturity or to their naturall end whereas they should bee like that blessed old man who dyeth plenus dierum in a full age after hee hath fought a good fight and overcome all his enemies as the shock of wheat which cometh in in due season to fill our Granaries with Corne uphold our lives with the staffe of bread For Parliaments are our panis quotidianus our true bread all other wayes are but Quelques choses which yeeld no true nourisshment breede no good bloud This very Parliament which hath sate so long hath all this while but beaten the ayre and striven against the streame for I may truely say winde and tide have still been against us The same ill counsels which first raised the storme which almost shipwrackt the Common-wealth do still continue they blow strong like the East-wind that brought the Locusts over the land These counsels crosse our designes east difficulties in our way hinder our proceedings and make all that we doe to be fruitlesse and ineffectuall they make us to bee not masters of our businesse and so not masters of money which hath been the great businesse of this Parliament that we might pay the Armies according to our promises and engagements For My Lords our not effecting of the good things which wee had undertaken for the good of the Church and Common-wealth hath wounded our reputation and taken off from our credit Is it not time then my Lords that wee should unite and concentrate our selves in regard of this Antiperistasis and circumvallation of hurtfull and malitious intentions and practices against us My Lords it is most agreeable to nature and I am sure most agreeable to reason in respect of the present conjuncture of our affaires for one maine engine by which our enemies work our mischiefe is by infusing an opinion and belief into the world that wee are not united amongst our selves but that like Sampsons Foxes we draw severall waies and tend to severall ends To defeate then the counsels of those Achitophels which would involve us our Religion our King our Lawes our Liberties all that can bee neere and deare unto an honest soule in one universall and generall desolation to defeate I say the counsels of such Achitophels the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons knowing themselves to bee specially intrusted with the preservation of the whole and in their consciences perswaded that the dangers are so imminent that they will admit of no delay have thought fit to declare their united affections by entring into an Association amongst themselves and by making a solemne Protestation and Vow unto their God that they will unanimously endevour to oppose and prevent the counsels and the Counsellors which have brought upon us all these miseries and feares of greater to prevent the ends and bring the Authors of them to condign punishment and thereby discharge themselves both before God and man The Protestation your Lordships shall have read unto you together with the grounds and reasons which have induced the House of Commons to make it which are prefixed before it by way of Preamble The PREAMBLE WEe the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons house in Parliament finding to the great griefe of our hearts that the designes of the Priests and Jesuites and other Adherents to the See of Rome have of late beene more boldly and frequently put in practice then formerly to the undermining and danger of the ruine of the true reformed Protestant Religion in His Majesties Dominions established And finding also that there have beene and having just cause to suspect that there still are even during this sitting in Parliament indeavours to subvert the fundamentall Lawes of England and Ireland and to introduce the exercise of an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government by most pernicious and wicked Counsels Practices Plots and Conspiraces And that the long intermission and unhappy breach of Parliaments hath occasioned many illegall Taxations whereupon the Subject hath been prosecuted and grieved And that divers Innovations and Superstitions have beene brought into the Church multitudes driven out of His Majesties Dominions Jealousies raised and fomented betwixt the King and His people a Popish Army levied in Ireland and two Armies brought into the bowels of this Kingdome to the hazzard of His Majesties Royall Person the consumption of the Revenues of the Crowne and Treasure of this Kingdome And lastly finding great cause of Jealousie that indeavours have been and are used to bring the English Army into a misunderstanding of this Parliament thereby to incline that Army with force to bring to passe those wicked Counsels Have therefore thought good to joyne our selves in a Declaration of our united affections and
publike service as well to prove a sentence not then in rerum natura both Law and charity in a benigne construction of these two ends will allow the more favourable Another objection is whispered that the entrance is not found in the Clerk of the Parliaments Role This is no matter to the validity of his election for his priviledge commenced 40 dayes before the Parliament therefore this and the like are to be judged of as accidentia quae possunt abesse adesse sine subjecti interitu Truely Mr. Speaker my memory and lungs begin to prove Traytors to me Another objection if omitted may be judged by these of what strength and maturity they even as by the coynage of a penny one may iudge of a shilling What hinders then since here is wa●er but that he may be baptized Here are no non obstant's to be admitted in his new Pattent of Denization the common law the Statute law the Canon the Civill law plead for his admittance the writ of election the exemplification of the Sheriffs return all presidents of all ages all reports plead for his admittance our fore-fathers Ghosts the present practice of Parliaments in England plead for his admittance the Kings successive commands command and confirm his admittance Away then Serieant and with the hazarding power of our Mace touch the Marshals gates and as if there were Divinity in it they will open and bring us our Olive branch of peace wrested from our stock that with welcome Art we may ingraft him to be nourished by a common root Thus the King shall receive the benefit of an able subject who is otherwise civiliter mortuus we enjoy the participation of his labour and posterity both ours and this CAPTAINE AVDLEY MERVINS Speech to the Lords in the Upper house in the Parliament March 40. 1640. Concerning the impeachment of Sir Richard Bolton Knight Lord Chancellor of Ireland Iohn Lord Bishop of Derry Sir Gerrard Lowther Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and Sir George Ratcliffe Knight with high Treason by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House My LORDS I Am commanded by the Knights Citizens and Bur-Burgesses of the Commons House to present unto you Irelands Tragedie the gray headed Common Lawes funerall and the Active Statutes death and obsequies this dejected spectacle answers but the prefiguring Type of Caesars murther wounded to the death in the Senate And by Brutus his bosome friend our Caesars image by reflexion even the fundamentall Lawes and Statutes of this Kingdome the sole means by which our estates are confirmed our liberties preserved our lives secured are wound to death in the Senate I mean in the Courts of Justice and by Brutus too even by those persons that have received their beings and subsistence from them so that here enters those inseparable first Twins Treason and Ingratitude In a plain phrase My Lords I tender unto you Treason High Treason such a Treason that wants nothing but words to expresse it To counterfeit the Kings Seale to counterfeit the Kings money it is Treason but this dyes with the individuall partie To betray a Fort is Treason but it dies with a few men To betray an Army is a Treason but it dyes with a limited number which may be reinforced again by politique industry To blow up both Houses of Parlament is Treason but succeeding ages may replant Branches by a fruitfull posterity but this High Treason which I do move in the name of the Houses of Commons charge and impeach Sir Richard Bolion Knight Lord Chancellour of Ireland and Sir Gerard Lowther Knight Lord Chief Iustice of the Common Pleas Iohn Lord Bishop of Derry Sir George Ratcliffe Knight is in its nature so far transcending any of the former that the rest seem to be but petty Larcenies in respect of this What is it to subvert the fundamentall Lawes of this Kingdome High Treason What is it with a contumacious malice to trample under feet the rich legacies of our forefathers purchased with sweat and expence I mean the Statute lawes what is it but High Treason What is it through an Innate Antipathie to the publick good to incarcerate the liberty of the Subject under the Iron and weighty chains of an arbitrary Government High Treason What is it since his Majestie the most amiable and delightful portraiture of flourishing and indulgent Justice to his Subjects to present him personated in their extrajudiciall censures and judgements but to possesse it possible the hearts of his loyall Subjects of this Kingdome That he is a bloody and devowring Tyrant and to provoke their never dying alleageance into a fatall and desperate Rebellion What is it to violate the sacred Graunts of many of his Majesties Progenitors Kings and Queenes of England confirmed under the broad Seale being the publique faith of this Kingdome by an extrajudiciall breath grounded upon no record What is it to insent a surreptitious clause forged by some servile brain in the preamble of our last Act of Subsidies by which the Kings most excellent Majesty and the Earl of Stofford are placed in one and the same sphear allowing them but equall influencies to nourish the alleageance of this Kingdome what is this but to extoll other then Regall Authority and to crucifie the Majestie of our most gracious Soveraign betwixt the two Theeves of Government Tyranny and Treason My Lords having such a full and lasting Gale to drive me into the depth of these accusations I cannot hereby steere and confine my course within the compasse of patience since I read in the first volumes of their browes the least of these to be the certain ruine of the Subject and if prov'd a most favorable Prologue to usher in the Tragedie of the Actors Councellers and Abetters herein What was then the first and main question it was the subvertion of the fundamentall Lawes of this Kingdome let then magna Charta that lies prostrated besmeared and groveling in her own gore discount her wounds as so many pregnant and undeniable proofs mark the Epethite Magna 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confirmed by 30. Parliaments in the succession of eight Kings the violation of which hath severall times ingaged the Kingdome of England in a voluntary sacrifice a Charter which imposeth that pleasant and welbecomming oath upon all Soveraigntie to vindicate and preserve the Immunitie thereof before the Crown incircle their Royall Temples in this oath of so high consequence and generall interest his Majesty doth in a manner levie a fine to his Subjects use for avoiding all fraudulent conveyances in the Administration of Justice And this oath is transplanted unto the Judges as the Feoffees in trust appointed between his Majestie and the Subject and sealed by his Majesties provident care with that imphaticall penalty that their estates and lives shall be in the Kings mercy upon the violation of the same either in whole or in part neither hath the deserved punishment for the breach of this oath
it that it may quadrare with the great Charter of our liberties and the Laws of this Kingdom This Court hath for many yeers together ridden upon the back of the common Law Courts which ought to have been subservient to them Each river must be kept within its own bounds and it is unpossible to have two Suns shine together in one Firmament They have likewise many superfluous Courts which I conceive might very well be spared as their Officiall Courts and Commissary Courts Sir they are no better than cozening Lotteries where the Kings Subjects are detained of their moneyes and where their Judges and inferiour Officers do like Physitians that alway cure themselves though they destroy their patients I confesse I could willingly give my consent that they should keep their Chancellors Court and an Archdeacon Court if such limits and bounds were put upon them as by the wisedom of this House may easily be done The Chancellor is custos consciencie the Keeper of the Bishops conscience and the Archdeacon is oculus Episc the Bishops eye And as I would not take away their consciences or their eyes so I would not have them like Briarius have their finger in every businesse This Sir I have shortly presented you with my opinion that is that I am not willing it that should be referred to or committed upon the point of subversion but I am willing it should be referred upon the point of reformation And if the sence of the House shall run that way I doubt not but at the Commitree I shall make it manifest that my heart stands affected with as much zeal for the having a reformation as any man that sits within these walls DENSELL HOLLIS Esquior His speech at the deliverie of the Protestation to the LORDS May the fourth 1641. My Lords THe Kuights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons having taken into their consideration the present estate and condition of this Kingdome they finde it surrounded with variety of pernicious dangers and destructive designes practises and plots against the well being of it and some of those designes hatched within our owne bowells and Viper-like working our own destruction They finde Jesuits and Priests conspiring with ill ministers of State to destroy our Religion they finde ill ministers conioyn'd together to subvert the Lawes and liberties They finde obstructions of Justice which is the life-bloud of every State and having a free passage from the Soveraign power where it is as primarily seated as the life-bloud in the heart and there derived from the severall Judicatories or through so many veins into all the parts of this great collective Bodie doth give warmth and motion to every part and member which is nourished and inlivened by it But being once precluded stoppd and reared as the particular must of necessity faint and languish so must the whole frame of government be dissolved And consequently Soveraignty it selfe which as the heart in the body is primum movens ultimum moriens must dye and perish in the generall dissolution and all things as in the beginning in antiquum Chaos My Lords They finde the property of the Subject invaded and violated his estate rent from him by illegall taxations Monopolies and proiects almost upon every thing that is for the use of man not only upon superfluities but necessaries and that enrich the Vermine and Caterpillers of the Land and impoverishing good Subiects to take the meat from the Children and give it to Dogs My Lords if the Commons finde these things they conceive they must needs be ill counsels that have brought us into this condition These Counsels have put all into a combustion have discouraged the hearts of all true English men and brought two Armies into our bowels which is the Unlture upon Prometheus eats through and sucks and gnaws our very hearts out Hic Dolor sed ubi Medicina Heretofore Parliaments were the Catholicall the balm of Gilead which healed our wounds restored our spirits and made up the breaches of the Land But of late years they have been like the Fig-tree in the Gospel without effecacie without fruit onley destructive to their particular members who discharged their duties and consciences no way beneficiall to the Common-welth Nohis exitiale nec Reipublico profuturum As he saith in Tacitus being taken away still as Elias was with a whirle-wind never comming to any maturity or to their naturall end whereas they should be like the blessed old ma● who dieth plenus dier●●● in a full ago after he had fought a good fight and overcom● all his enemies Or as the sh●cke of wheat w●ich commeth in due season to fill our Garnaries with corn uphold our lives with the staffe of bread for Parliaments are our panis quotidianus our true bread all other waies are but Quelkachees which yeeld no true nourishment bread nor good blood The very Parliament which hath sate so long hath but beat the Ayre and strive against the streame I may truly say the wind and tyde hath still been against us The same ill counsell which first raised the storm and almost shipwrackt the Common-wealth they still continue they blow strong like the East wind that brought the Locusts over their Counsells crosse our designes cast difficulties in our way hinder our proceedi●gs and make all that we do to be fruitlesse and ineffectuall They make us not masters of our busines and so not masters of many which have been the great busines of this Parliament that we might pay the Armies according to our promises and engagements For my Lords our not effecting of the good things which we have undertaken for the good of the Church and of the Common-wealth hath wounded our Reputation and taken off from our credit Is it not time then my Lords that we should unite and concentrate our selves in regard of this Anteparisiasis of hurtfull and malicious intentions and practises against us My Lords it is most agreeable to nature and I am sure most agreeable to reason in respect of the present coniuncture of our affairs for one main Engine by which our enemies work our mischief is by infusing an opinion and b●lei● into the world that we are not united among our selves But like Sampsons Foxes we draw severall wayes and tend to our severall ends To defeat the Counsels of these Achitophels which would involve us Our Religion our being our Lawes our liberties all that can be neere and deere unto an henest soule in one universall and generall desolation to defeat I say the Counsels of evill Achitophels the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons knowing themselves to be specially entrusted with the preservation of the whole and in their Conscience are perswaded that the dangers are so eminent as they will admit of no delay have thought fit to declare their united affections by entring into an assosciation amongst themselves and by making a solemne Protestation and vow unto their God that they will
unanimously endeavour to oppose and prevent the Counsels and Counsellours which have brought upon us all these miseries and the fears of greater to prevent the ends and bring the Authors of them to condigne punishment and thereby discharge themselves better before God and man The Protestation your Lordships shall have read unto you together with ground and reasons which have induced the House of Commons to make it which are prefixed before it by way of Preamble Then the Protestation was read by Master Maynard Die Mercurii 5 May 1641. IT is this day ordered by the House of Commons now assembled in Parliament that the Preamble togtheer with the Protestation which the Members of this House made the third of May shall be forthwith Printed and the Copies printed brought to the Cleark of the said House to Attest under his hand to the end that the Knights Citizens and Burgesses may send them down to the Sheriffes and Justices of Peace of the severall Shires and to the Citizens and Burgesses of the severall Cities Boroughes and Cinque Ports respectively And the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are to intimate unto the Shires Cities and Boroughes and Cinque Ports with what willingnesse all the Members of this House made this Protestation And further to signifie that as they justifie the taking of it in themselves so the cannot but approve it in all such as shall take it A Preamble with the Protestation made by the whole House of Commons the third of May 1641. and assented unto by the Lords of the upper House the fourth of May last past WE the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House in Parliament finding to the griefe of our hearts that the designes of the Priests and Jesuits and other adherents to the See of Rome have of late more boldly and frequently put in practice then formerly to the undermining and danger of the Ruine of the true reformed Religion in his Majesties Dominions established and finding also that there hath bin and having cause to suspect there still are even during the sitting in Parliament endeavours to subvert the fundamentall Lawes of England and Ireland and to introduce the exercise of an Arbitrary and tyrannicall government by most pernicious and wicked counsells practises plots and conspiracies and that the long intermision and unhappier breach of Parliaments hath occasioned many illegall Taxations whereupon the Subjects have beene prosecuted and grieved and that divers Innovations and Superstitions have been brought into the Church Multitudes driven out of his Maiesties Dominions Jealousies raised and Fomented between the King and his people a Popish Armie leavied in Ireland and two Armies brought into the bowels of this Kingdome to the hazard of his Majesties Royall Person the Consumption of the Revenue of the Crown and the treasure of this Realme And lastly finding the great causes of Jealousie endeavours have beene and are used to bring the English Armie into mis-understanding of this Parliament thereby to encline that Armie by force to bring to passe those wicked counsells have therefore thought good to ioyn our selves in a Declaration of our united affections and resolutions and to make this ensuing Protestation The Protestation I A.B. Do in the presence of Almighty God promise vow and protest to maintain and defend as farre as lawfully I may with my life power and estate the true Reformed Protestant Religion expressed in the Doctrine of the Church of England against all popery and popish Innovation within this Realm contrary to the said Doctrine and according to the duty of my Allegiance I will maintain and defend his Majesties Royall Person Honor and Estate As also the power and priviledge of Parliaments the lawfull Rights and Liberties of the Subjects And every person that shall make this Protestation in whatsoever he shall do in the lawfull pursuance of the same and to my power as farre as lawfully I may I will oppose and by all good wayes and means endeavour to bring condigne punishment on all such as shall by force practice counsels plots conspiraces or otherwise do any thing to the contrary in this present protestation contained and further that I shall in all Just and Honorable wayes endeavour to preserve the union and peace betwixt the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland And neither for hope fear or any other respects shall relinquish this promise vow and Protestation The Bill of Attainder that passed against Thomas Earl of STAFFORD WHereas the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons in this present Parliament assembled have in the name of themselves and of all the Commons of England impeached Thomas Earl of Strafford of high Treason for endeavouring to subvert the Ancient and Fundamentall Laws and Government of his Majesties Realms of England and Ireland and to introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against Law in the said Kingdoms and for exercising a Tyrannous and exorbitant power over and against the Laws of the said Kingdoms over the Liberties Estates and Lives of his Majesties Subjects and likewise for having by his own authority commanded the laying and asseising of souldiers upon his Majesties Subjects in Ireland against their consents to compell them to obey his unlawfull commands and orders made upon pap●r Petitions in causes between party and party which accordingly was executed upon divers of his Majesties Subjects in a Warlike manner within the said Realm of Ireland and in so doing did levie Warre against the Kings Majesty and his liege people in that Kingdome And also for that he upon the unhappy Dissolution of the last Parliament did slander the House of Commons to his Majesty and did counsell and advise his Majesty that he was loose and absolved from the rules of Government and that he had an Army in Ireland by which he might reduce this Kingdom for which he deserves to undergo the pains and forfeitures of high Treason And the said Earl hath been also an Incendiary of the Warres between the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland all which offences have been sufficiently proved against the said Earl upon his impeachment Be it therefore enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the same That the said Earl of Strafford for the haynous crimes and offences aforesaid stand and be adjudged and attainted of high Treason and shall suffer such pain of death and incurre the forfeitures of his Goods and Chattels Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of any estate of Free-hold or Inheritance in the said Kingdoms of England and Ireland which the said Earl or any other to his use or in trust for him have or had the day of the first sitting of this present Parliament or at any time since Provided that no Judge or Judges Justice or Iustices whatsoever shall adiudge or interpret any Act or thing to be Treason nor in any other manner than he or they should or ought to have done before
crime goes not beyond the person that commits it nor can anothers fault be mine offence If they have contracted any filth or corruption through their own or the vice of the times cleanse and purge them thorowly But still remember the great difference between reformation and extirpation And he pleased to think of your Triennall Bill which will save you this labour for the time to come fear of punishment will keep them in order if they should not themselves through the love of vertue I have now my Lords according to my poor ability both shewed the conveniences and answered those inconveniences that seem to make against them I should now propose those that make for them As their falling into a condition worse than slaves not represented by any and then the dangers and inconveniences that may happen to your Lordships but I haue done this heretofore and will not offer your Lordships Grambenbis coctam A Speech in Parliament delivered by Mr. PEARD against the Oath Ex Officio 1640. Mr. SPEAKER I Assure my selfe we are here met to discover and reforme as much as in us lyeth all abuses of the Church and Common-wealth many and great ones have been spoken against some contrary to all Law and some established by new Lawes contrary to all Law The Wolfe having put on the Lions skinne and rapine presuming to passe undiscovered under the robe of Justice But I shall not neede to light a candle to search out that which already the sunne hath made manifest That which I shall speak hath not been spoken but if I shall speak that that shall seeme to be against Law I humbly crave the pardon of this House since if it be law it is summum jus Law without conscience That which I shall speake against is the Oath Ex Officio It is acknowledged by themselves that Administer this Oath that it is unjustly done to tender it to any man unlesse there be a publique Fame or particular Presentment or Articles testified against him I make no question but the practice of this confest Injunction wil be found cōmon amongst them And I hope it shal be severely censured since unjust proceedings upon unjust grounds are double Injustice I shall therefore leave that as a plaine case and examine their best grounds First Fame they say is a just cause for them to take Cognizance of a matter to proceed against it Fame we know may arise upon very small and groundlesse suspitions by secret whisperings creeping at first but quickly gets it wings And as the Poët saith Creseit eundo This is the manner of all Fame if this be Fame their Court shall never want worke as long as a Promooter hath an ill tongue or a knave can slander an honest man Therefore I thinke Fame no good ground to proceed upon If Fame be just what most men speake certainly some men will testifie No man will testifie it is false Let no accusation then stand but out of the mouthes of two or three witnesses of Presentments are a just ground of proceedings in all Courts and upon all causes But neither witnesses nor presentments are or can be a just ground of the Oath Ex officio For if the partie accused be examined no further then is testified then the Oath Ex Officio is superfluous If he be examined further or upon other matters then is testified then a man is made to betray himselfe which is unjust Mr. Speaker such is the Mercy of the Common Law that Murderers and Poysoners are not examined upon the rack but the Civill law upon every occasion racketh the Conscience These are the Lyme-twigs which were set to catch the poore Martyrs in Queene Maries daies And in our daies I dare beleeve it will appeare that some good men are fallen into this snare Mr. Speaker If the foundations faile what shall the buildings doe If the conformity of good men shall undoe them who shall stand I desire nothing but that evill men may suffer I desire the Law may punish not make offenders I desire that our words and actions at this time and at other times may be subject to the Law I would have thought free Mr. Speakers Letter to Sir Jacob Ashley SIR WEE have had cause to doubt that some ill affected persons have endeavoured to make a mis-understanding in the Army of the intentions of the Parliament towards them To take away all mistaking in that kinde the house of Commons have Commanded me to assure you that they have taken the affaires of the Army into their serious Care And though for the present their moneys have not come as they wished and as was due by reason of the many distractions and other Impediments which this House could no wayes avoid yet they rest most assured that they shall not onely have their full pay but the House will take their merits into their further consideration in regard they take notice that notwithstanding their want and endeavours of those ill-affected persons they have not demeaned themselves otherwise then as men of honor and well affected to the Common-wealth which this House takes in so good part that we have already found out a way to get money for a good part of their pay and will take the most speedy course we possibly may for the rest From my house at Charing-Crosse the 4th of this present Moneth of May. 1641. So I remain Your very Loving Friend SIR 'T is the pleasure of the House that this Letter be Communicated to the Army to the end their Intentions may be cleerly understood by them Sir BENJAMIN RUDYERDS Speech Tuesday the 29. Decem. Mr. SPEAKER THe principall part of this businesse is Moneys and now we are about it I shall be glad we may give so much as will not only serve the turn for the present but likewise to provide that it come not quick upon us againe I beleeve that the two subsidies are spent already Wee know how much time this businesse hath cost us if we be but halfe as long about another it may cost more then money For if two Armies should be driven to extreame necessitie and they will be Judges of their owne necessitie we shall not be able to sit here and give more though we would Believe it Sir this is the businesse of all the businesses in the House of all the businesses in the Kingdom If we stand hacking for a little money wee may very thriftily lose all we have this being a businesse of so peremptory and destructive a nature Wherefore Mr. Speaker my humble and earnest motion is that we may dispatch it fully and at once If there should be an overplus of money remaining wee can soone resolve how to dispose of it Foure subsidies will doe the worke if they be given presently for every day tells us that we are not so much Masters of our owne time and occasions as to doe nothing when we would Let us doe this whilest we may though I dwell not
upon Bill or information and Cite such parties to appeare as stand accused of any misdemeanour and this was the Infancy of the Starchamber but afterwards the Starchamber was by Cardinall Woolsey 8 H. 8. raised to mans Estate from whence being now altogether unlimited it is grown a Monster and will hourely produce worse effects unlesse it be reduced by that hand which laid the foundation for the Statutes that are ratified by Parliament admit of no other than a repeale Therefore I offer humbly unto your Lordships these ensuing Reasons why it should be repealed First the very words of the Statute cleerly shew that it was a needlesse institution for it sayes they who are to Judge can proceed with no delinquent otherwise then if he were convicted of the same crime by due proces of Law And doe your Lordships holdth is a rationall Court that sends us to the Law and calls us to the Law and calls us back from it againe Secondly divers Judicatories confound one another in pessima republica plurimae Leges The second reason is from circumstance or rather à Consuetudine and of this there are many examples both domestique and forain but more particularly by the Parliaments of France abbreviated into a standing Committee by Philip the King and continued according to his Institution untill Lewis the eleventh came to the Crown who being a subtill Prince buried the volume in the Epitome for to this day when ever the three Estates are called either at the death of the old King or to Crown the new It is a common Proverb Allons voire Le van des Estates My Lords Arbitrary judgements destroy the Common Laws and in them the two great Charters of the Kingdome which being once lost we have nothing left but the name of liberty Then the last reason is though it was the first cause of my standing up the great Eclipse it hath ever been to the whole Nobility For who are so frequently vexed there as Peers and Noblemen and notwithstanding their appeale to this Assembly is ever good whilst that famous Law of the 4 Ed. 3. remaines in force for the holding of a Parliament once a year or more if occasion require yet who durst a year ago mention such a Statute without the incurring the danger of M. Kilverts persecution Therefore I shall humbly move your Lordships that a select Commitee of a few may be named to consider of the act of Parliament it selfe and if they shall thinke it of as great prejudice as I doe that then the house of Commons in the most usuall manner may be made acquainted with it either by Bill or conference who also happily thinke it a burthen to the Subject and so when the whole body of Parliament shall joyne in one supplication I am confident his Majestie will desire that nothing shall remaine in force which his people doe not willingly obey Lunae the 10. of May 1641. IT is this day ordered by the House of Commons now assembled in Parliament that the Lord Maior of London the Justices of Peace of Midlesex Westminster and the Liberties of the Dutchie of Lancaster and those of Surrey that are for the Burrough of Southwarke and the place adjoyning doe imploy their best endeavors to prevent that none of the Kings Subjects doe frequent the houses of any the Embassadors Somerset-house or St. James to heare Masse And that they give an accompt to this House of the Execution of this Order at all such times as by the said House they shall be required My Lord Finch his Letter to my Lord CHAMBERLAINE My most welbeloved Lord THe Interest your Lordship hath ever had in the best of my fortunes and affections gives me the Priviledges of troubling your Lordship with these few lines from one that hath now nothing left to serve you withall but his Prayers Those your Lordship shall never faile with an heart as full of true affection to your Lordship as ever any was My Lord it was not the losse of my place and with that of my fortunes nor being exiled from my deare Countrey and friends though many of them were cause of sorrow that afflicts but that which I most suffer under is that displeasure of the House of Commons conceived against me I know a true heart I have ever borne towards them and your Lordship can witnesse in part what wayes I have gone in but Silence and patience best becomes me with which I must leave my selfe and my Actions to the favourable construction of my Noble Friends in which number your Lordship hath a prime place I am now at the Hague where I arrived on Thursday the last of the last moneth where I purpose to live in a fashion agreeable to the poorenesse of my fortunes for my humbling in this world I have utterly cast off the thoughts of it and my aime shall be to learne to number my daies that I may apply my heart unto wisdome that wisdome that shall wipe all teares from mine eyes and heart and lead me by the hand to true happinesse which can never be taken from me I pray God of heaven blesse this Parliament with a happy both progresse and conclusion if my ruine may conduce but the least to it I shall not repine at it I truly pray for your Lordship and your Noble Family that God would give an increase of all worldly blessings and in the fulnesse of dayes to receive you to his glory if I were capable of serving any body I would tell your Lordship that no man should be readier to make knowne his devotion and true gratitude to your Lordship then Your Lordships most humble and affectionate poore kinsman and servant J.F. Hague Jan. 3. 1640. The Lord KEEPERS Speech TO HIS MAJESTIE at the Banquetting-house at White-hall in the name of both Houses May it please Your Majestie I Am to give your Majestie most humble and heartie thanks in the name of both houses of Parliament and this whole Kingdome for the speedy and gracious Royall assent unto the Bill Entitled An act for preventing of inconveniences happening by the long intermission of Parliaments which as it is of singular comfort and securitie for all your Subjects for the present so they are confident it will be of infinite honor and setlement of Your Majesties Royall Crowne and dignitie as well as comfort to their postiritie The Declaration of the Scots Commissioners to the House of Parliament touching the maintenance of their Army March the 16th 1640. IN the midst of other matters necessitie constraineth us to shew your Lordships that fourescore thousand pounds and above of the Moneys appointed for reliefe of the Northerne Countreys there is no more paid but 18000 l. the Country people of those Countreys have trusted the souldiers so long as they are become weary and unable to furnish them their cattell and victuall being so farre exhausted and wasted as it is scarce able to entertain themselves The Markets are decayed
because there is no mony to buy their Commodities and are become so deare that no sort of victuall is sold but at a double rate And which is hardest of all the Army is stinted by the Articles of Cessation to stay within these two Countyes whose provisions are all spent expecting from time to time the payment of those moneys which were promised for their reliefe and are reduced to such extremity as they must either starve or sore against their will breake their limited bounds unlesse some speedy course bee taken for their more timous payment that so soone as may be the Arreers may be paid And because the continued payment of that monethly summe for reliefe of the Northerne Countreyes is a Burthen to the Kingdome of England our Army is a trouble to the Country where they reside our charges of entertaining our Army besides what is allowed from England is exceeding great And our losses and prejudice through absence and neglect of our affaires not small Therefore that all evills and troubles of both Kingdomes may be removed it is our earnest desire that the Parliament may be pleased to determine the time and manner of Payment of the 300000 l. which they were pleased to grant towards reliefe of their Brethren that there may be no let about this when matters shall be drawing towards an end And that his Majesty and they may give order for Accelerating matters in the treaty that the peace being concluded England may be eased of the burthen of two Armies and we may returne to our owne homes which is our earnest desire Ad. Blaire The Remonstrance of both the Houses of Parliament unto the King delivered by the Lord Keeper January the 29th 1640. May it please your Majesty YOUR loyall Subjects the Lords and Commons now assembled by your Majesties Writ in the high Court of Parliament humbly represent unto your gracious consideration that Jesuits and Priests ordained by authority from the Sea of Rome remaining in this Realme by a Statute made in the 27 year of Queen Elizabeth are declared Traytors and to suffer as Traytors That this law is not so rigorous 27 Eliz. cap. 2. as some apprehend or would have others to beleeve for that it is restrayned to the naturall born Subjects only and doth not extend to any strangers at all That it is enacted in the first year of King James 1 Jac. cap. 4. that all Statutes made in the time of Queen Elizabeth against Priests and Jesuits be put in due and exact execution And for further assurance of the due execution of these laws the Statute of the third year of King James invites men to the discovery of the offenders by rewarding them with a considerable part of the forfeiture of the Recusants estate So that the Statute of Queen Elizabeth is not only approved but by the judgement of severall Parliaments in the time of King James of happy memory adjudged fit and necessary to be put in execution That considering the state and condition of this present time they conceive this law to be more necessary to be put in strict execution then at any time before that for divers weighty and considerable reasons viz. For that by divers Petitions from the severall parts of this Kingdome complaints are made of the great increase of Popery and Superstition and the people call earnestly to have the laws against Recusants put in execution Priests and Jesuits swarme in great abundance in this Kingdome and appeare here with such boldnesse and confidence as if there were no laws against them That it appeares unto the House of Commons by proofe that of late years about the City of London Priests and Jesuits have been discharged out of Prison many of them being condemned of high Treason They are credibly informed that at this present the Pope hath a Nunci● or Agent resident in the City and they have a just cause to believe the same to be true The Papists as publiquely and with as much confidence and importunity resort to Masse at Denmark house and St. James and the Embassadors Chappels as others doe to their Parish Churches They conceive the not putting of these Statutes in execution against Priests and Jesuits is a principall cause of increase of Popery That the putting of these laws in execution tendeth not only to the preservation and advancement of the true Religion established in this Kingdome but also the safety of your Majesties person and security of the State Government which were the principall causes of the making of the Laws against Priests and Jesuits as is manifestly declared in the preamble of the laws themselves which are the best interpreters of the mindes of the makers of them And because the words being penned by the advise and wisdome of the whole state are much more full and clear then any particular mans expression can be they were therefore read as they are vouched those of the 27 year of Queen Elizabeth being thus viz. That the Priests and Jesuits come hither not only to draw the Subjects from their true obedience to the Queen but also to stir up Sedition Rebellion and open hostility within the Realme to the great endangering of the safety of her Royall Person and to the utter ruin desolation and overthrow of the whole Kingdom if not timely prevented and the tenor of the words of the third year of King James are in this manner viz. Whereas divers Jesuits and Priests doe withdraw many of his Majesties Subjects from the true service of Almighty God and the Religion established within this Realme to the Romish Religion and from their loyall obedience to his Majestie and have of late secretly perswaded divers Recusants and Papists and encouraged and imboldned them to commit most damnable Treasons tending to the overthrow of the whole State and Common Wealth if God of his goodnesse and mercy had not within few houres of the intended time of the execution thereof revealed and disclosed the same The Houses did further informe that some Jesuits and Priests had been executed in the time of Queen Elizabeth and King James of happy memory and when any of them have received mercy it was in such time and upon such circumstance as that the same might be extended unto them without dangers whereas now of late there hath been a great apprehension of endevours by some ill agents to subvert Religion and at this present both Kingdomes have a generall expectation of a through reformation And there is already found so ill a consequence of the the late reprieve of John Goodman the Priest that the House of Commons having sent to the Citizens of London for their assistance in the advancement of money for the present and necessary supply of his Majesties army and reliefe of the Northern Counties upon this occasion they have absolutely denyed to furnish the same and how far the like discontent may be effused into other parts of the Kingdom to the interruption of
the question that all Projectors and Monopolizers whatsoever or that have had any share in any Monopolies or that doe receive or lately have received any benefit by any Monopolies or Patten or that have procured any warrant or command for the restraynt or molesting of any that have refused to conforme themselves to any Proclamation or project are disabled by order of this House and if any man have been known to have been a Monopolizer or Pattentee shall repaire to have beene a Monopolizer that he shall nominate him that ony member of this House that is a Monopolizer or Pattentee shall repayre to Mr. Speaker that a new warrant may issue forth or other wise that he be dealt with as a stranger that hath no power to sit here Order against Monopolies and Pattens 25. Nov. 1640. IT is this day ordered in the Commons House now assembled in Parliament that all Pattens and Grants of Monopolies that have been complained of in this house The Scottish Commissioners thanks to his Majesty 30. Decemb. 1640. WEE doe in the Name of the PARLIAMENT and whole Kingdome of Scotland acknowledge in all humility and thankfulnesse in granting our first demand beving fully assured that the Parliament will leave nothing undone that may serve for his Majesties honour the whole Kingdome is Testimony of their thankfulnesse will earnestly pray that God will graunt his Majesty a long and prosperous Reigne Adam Blaire The humble Declaration of the Master and Wardens of Vintners William Abel Alderman of London and the rest of the Court of Assistants of that Company how in what manner the said Company Farmers and Adventurers have proceeded in the Farmes of 40. shillings per tunne and wine Licence IN the yeare 1632. The Lord Weston beeing then high Treasurer of England sent for the Master and Wardens of the Company of Vintners and demanded of them the Vent and consumption of Wines one peny a quart which is 4 pound per tun which they utterly refused alleadging it would be the utter undoing of the retayling Vintners In Anno 1633. a Decree was made by the advice of the Judges of England in the Star-chamber That the Retaylers of wines might not sell or dresse Victuals in their houses which time out of mind they were accustomed to doe And this done without any information or bill or any called to defend or Iustifie their trade or usage of it In Anno 1634. his Majesty questioned the Vintners and Retaylers of Wine for the breach of the said Decree and drew 6000. pounds from the Vintners to be lent him And thereon his Majesty did by order give way to the Retaylers of Wines to dresse and sell Victuals till December then next following at which time his Majesty promised to settle it as he thought fit for him to signe and then to have the Vintners relying upon that Temporary Lycence and of his Majesties gracious Declaration continued to dresse meate beyond the tyme. In Anno 1635. The retaylors of Wines were again questioned for breach of the former Decree by his Majesty and the Lord Cottington then propounded to yeeld to pay somewhat on their vent of Wines to his Majesty which the Retayling Vintners utterly refused to doe In Anno 1636. many retaylors of Wynes were by information in Master Attourneys name questioned in Star-chamber for breach of the decree and so farre proceeded against as that they were served with Processe of that Court to hear judgment That things thus depending Sir Richard Kilvert repayred to Alderman Abell then Master of the Company beeing a meere stranger to Master Kilvert and told him his Majesty bid him command by warrant to prosecute the Vintners in the Star-chamber for selling above the price and breach of the Decree for dressing of meat and against the Merchants scopers and others Intimating further it was his Majesties pleasure that some of the Company of Vintners should attend the Right Honourable Marquis Hambleton concerning the same In October Anno 1637. at Vintners Hall London William Abell Alderman beeing then Mr. of that Company imparted to the Company that Master Richard Kilvert had been lately with him and acquainted him with the former passages At this court the company of vintners taking their busines into their serious considerations weighing how they might hazard the utter undoing of such as had transgressed the Decree if they should be brought to a sentence in Star-chamber made choyse and did intreate Alderman Abell then their master Edward Kinaston Robert Shawe Ralph Moore George Hubburt and Michaell Gardiner For the Committee to waite upon the said Lord Marques Hambleton by whom Master Killvert had intimated his Majesties pleasure should bee made knowne and to impart the same againe unto the Company That Alderman Abell and the rest did attend the Marquesse who told them that his Majesty had given him the Fines of all the Vintners to be imposed in Star-chamber but yet if the Vintners would condescend to pay his Majesty 4 pound a Tunne upon Consumption of wines he could forbeare the fines and all prosecutions should be stayed and himselfe would depend upon his Majesties favour in some other thing And after many attendances and severall reasons offered by them on the behalfe of the Company against paying any thing on the Consumption of Wines and not prevailing beeing then by the Lord Marquesse promised some advancing price and other priviledges and beeing advised by Counsell that wine beeing a forraygn Commodity his Majesty might prohibite the comming of it and impose what he pleased on it thereupon and upon the aforesaid threats and promises after the same was imparted and often debated by the Companie they submitted to the payment of 40. shillings per Tunne 4. pound beeing demanded And soon the 11. of Iune 1638. together with the French and Spanish Merchants they the said Company of Vintners contracted by Indenture Quadrupartite with his Majesty to pay him fourtie shillings per Tunne on all such wines as they bought and Vented and the Company of Vintners beeing enformed that the Farmers of his Majesties Customes and some particular Merchants of the Company of Coopers London moved and sued to his Majesty to farme the sayd Duties and the Company of Vintners well knowing what great hinderance it would bee to them if strangers should come in search their sellers know the particular of what they had bought and sould the Company to prevent many inconveniences desired rather to Farme the duty from his Majesty his Majestic declaring that he would not contract with a generality of company for the same but with some particular members The Company did desire Alderman Abell and nine others freemen of their Company to performe the contract with his Majesty for the same duty who tooke it to farme at 3000. Pounds Per Annum for eight yeares And it was agreed by the Company that the farmers should have no more share of profit and losse in the Farme then other brethren had which should be
sometimes to the great discomfort of many poore soules who for want of money can get no absolution 12 They claim their Office and Jurisdiction to be jure divino and doe exercise the same contrary to Law in their own names and under their own Seals 13 They receive and take upon them temporall Honours Dignities Places and Offices in the Common wealth as if it were lawfull for them to use both swords 14 They cognizance in their Courts and elswhere of matters determinable at the Common Law 15 They put Ministers upon Parishes without the Patrons and without the peoples consent 16 They doe yearly impose Oaths upon Churchwardens to the most apparent danger of filling the land with perjuries 17 They doe exercise Oaths Ex Officio in the Nature of an inquisition even unto the thoughts of mens 18 They have apprehended men by Pursevants without ciration or missives first sent they break up mens houses and studies taking away what they please 19 They doe aw the Judges of the Land with their greatnesse to the inhibiting of prohibition and hindering of Habeas Corpus when it is due 20 They are strongly suspected to be confederated with the Roman party in this Land and with them to be Authors Contrivers or Consenters to the present Commotions in the North and the rather because of a Contribution by the Clergy and by the Papists in the last year 1639. and because of an ill-named benevolence of six Subfidies granted or intended to be granted this yeare 1640. thereby and with these monies to ingage as much as in them lay the two Nations into blood It is therefore our humble and earnest prayer that all this Hierarchicall power may be totally abrogated if the wisdome of this Honourable House shall finde that it cannot be maintained by Gods word and to his glory And your Petitioners shall ever pray c. The Petition of the Citizens of London to both house of Parliament wherein is a Demonstration of their grievances together with their desires for Justice to be excuted upon the Earle of Strafford and other DELINQUENTS To the most Honorable Assembly of the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament The humble Petition of divers Citizens of London SHeweth that notwithstanding his Majesties gracious Answer to the humble Petition of his Loyall Subjects in summoning this Parliament with the great care and endeavoured pains taken by both Houses for the removing the heavy Grievances in Church and Commonwealth whereof the Petitioners have already received some fruit for which they desire to return their most humble and utmost thanks yet neverthelesse they are inforced with all Humility to represent to this most Honourable assemblly some of these Obstructions which doe still hinder that freedome and fulnesse of Trade in this City they have formerly had which considering the numerous Multitude thereupon depending they conceive it not able comfortably to subsist As the unsetled Condition of the Kingdome even since the troubles in Scotland hath caused both strangers and also of our own who did furnish great summs of money to Use to call it in and remit much of it by Exchange unto Forraine pars and stands now in Expectation of what the issue of things may be The stopping money in the Mint which till then was accompted the safest place and surest staple in these parts in the world still doth hinder the importation of Bullyon the Scots now disabled to pay such debts as they owe to the Petitioners and others in the City and by reason of the oppressions exercised in Ireland their debts also are detained there The English Trade by reason of our generall distractions and fears is so much decayed that Country tradesmen can not pay their debts in London as formerly The great summs of money unduly taken by his Majesties Officers and Farmers for impositions upon Merchandize exported and imported and the want of reliefe in Courts of Justice against them The drawing out from the City great summs of money which is the life and spirit of Trade for his Majesties service in the North and being there imployed is not yet returned Besides all which from what strong and secret opposition the Petitioners know not they have not received what so much time and pains might give and cause to hope but still incendiaries of the Kingdoms and other notorious offenders remain unpunished the affaires of the Church notwithstanding many Petitions concerning it and long debate about it remains unsettled the Papists still armed the Laws against them not executed some of the most active of them still at Court Priests and Jesnits not yet banished the Irish Popish army not yet disbanded Courts of Justice not yet reformed and the Earle of Strafford who as now appears hath counselled the plundering of this City and putting it to fine ransome and said it would never be well till some of the Aldermen were banged up because they would not yeeld to illegall levies of moneys hath so drawn out and spent his time in his businesse to the very great charge of the whol Kingdome and his endeavour to obtain yet more all which makes us fear there may be practices now in hand to hinder the birth of your great endeavours and that we lie under some more dangerous plot then we can discover All which premisses with their fears and distractions growing there-from and from things of the like nature the Petitioners humbly offer to the most grave consideration of this most honorable assembly as being the true causes of decay of Trade discouragement of Tradesmen and of the great scarcity of monies with the consequences they labour under And do humbly pray that their said grievances may be redressed the causes of their fears removed Justice executed upon the said Earle and other incendiaries and offenders the rather in regard till then the Petitioners humbly conceive neither Religion nor their lives liberties or estates can besecured And as in duty bound they shall ever pray c. Subscribed to this Petition 20000. all men of good ranke and quality Sir John Wrayes Speech concerning Bishops 1641. THE first challenge for Lordly Primacy hath of old been grounded out of the great Charter by which they hold an Episcopall Primacy or Jurisdiction to be long to their state of Prelacy this is their temporall soundation and main object Here I demand of them unto what Church this great Charter was granted and whether it were not granted unto the Church of GOD in England Let the words of the Magna Charta decide this which are these Concessimus Deo pro●nobis in perpetuum quod Ecclesia Anglicana libera sit habeat omnia Jura sua iutegra libertates suas illaesas Now by this Charter if it be rightly interpreted there is first provision made that honour and worship be yeelded unto God as truly and indeed belong unto him Secondly that not only such Rights and Liberties as the King and his Progenitors but also that such as
subscribing our National oath which was not only impiety and injustice in it self and an utter undoing of his Majesties Subiects but was a weakning of the Scots Plantation to the prejudice of that Kingdome and his Majesties service and was a high scandall against the Kings honour and intolerable abuse to his Majesties trust and authority his Majesties Commission which was procured by the Lievetenant bearing no other penalty then a certification of noting the names of the refusers of the oath But by this his restlesse rage and insatiable cruelty against our Religion and Countrey cannot be kept within the bounds of Ireland By this means a Parliament is called And although by the six subsidies granted in Parliament not long before and by the base means which himself and his Officers did use as is contained in a late Remonstrance that Land was extreamly impoverished yet by his speeches full of oathes and asseverations That we were Traytors and Rebels casting off all Monarchicall Government c. he extorted from them foure new Subsidies and indicta causa before we were heard procured that a Warre was udertaken and forces should be levied against us as a rebellious Nation which was also intended to be an example and president to the Parliament of England for granting subsidies and sending a joynt Armie for our utter ruine According to his appointment in Parliament the Armie was gathered and brought down to the Coast threatning a daily invasion of our Countrey intending to make us a conquered Province and to destroy our Religion liberties and Lawes and thereby laying upon us a necessity of vast charges to keep forces on foot on the West coast to wait upon his comming And as the War was denounced and forces leavied before we were heard So before the denouncing of the War our Ships and goods on the Irish Coast were taken and the owners cast in prison and some of them in Irons Frigats were sent forth to scour our Coasts which did take some and burn others of our Barques Having thus incited the Kingdome of Ireland and put his forces in order there against us with all haste he commeth to England In his parting at the giving up of the Sword he openly avowed our utter ruine and desolation in these or the like words If I returne to that honourable Sword I shall leave of the Scots neither root nor branch How soon he commeth to Court as before he had done very evill offices against our Commissioners cleering our proceedings before the poynt So now houseth all means to stir up the King and Parliament against us and to move them to a present war according to the precedent and example of his own making in the Parliament of Ireland And finding that his hopes failed him and his designes succeeded not that way in his nimblenesse he taketh another course that the Parliament of England may be broken up and despising their wisedome and authority not onely with great gladnesse accepteth but useth all means that the conduct of the Army in the expedition against Scotland may be put upon him which accordingly he obtaineth as generall Captain with power to invade kill slay and save at his discretion and to make any one or moe Deputies in his stead to do and execute all the power and authorities committed to him According to the largenesse of his Commission and Letters Patents of his devising so were his deportments afterwards for when the Scots according to their declarations sent before them were comming in a peaceable way far from any intention to invade any of his Majesties Subiects and still to supplicate his Majesty for a setled peace he gave order to his Officers to fight with them on the way that the two Nations once entred in bloud whatsoever should be the successe he might escape triall and censure and his bloudy designs might be put in execution against his Maiesties Subiects of both Kingdomes When the Kings Maiesty was again enclined to hearken to our petitions and to compose our differences in a peaceable way and the Peers of England conveened at Yorke had as before in their great wisedome and faithfulnesse given unto his Maiesties Counsels of peace yet this firebrand still smoaketh and in that honorable Assembly taketh upon him to breath out threatnings against us as Traytors and enemies to Monarchiall government that we be sent home again in our bloud and he will whip us out of England And as these were his speeches in the time of the Treaty appointed by his Maiesty at Rippon that if it had been possible it might have been broken up So when a Cessation of Arms was happily agreed upon there yet he ceaseth not but still his practises were for war His under officers can tell who it was that gave them Commission to draw near in Arms beyond the Teese in the time of the Treaty at Rippon The Governour of Barwicke and Carlile can shew from whom they had their warrants for their Acts of hostility after the cessation was concluded It may be tryed how it cometh to passe that the Ports of Ireland are yet closed our Country-men for the oath still kept in prison traffique interrupted and no other face of affairs then if no cessation had been agreed upon We therefore desire that your Lordships will represent to the Parliament that this great incendiary upon these and the like offences not against particular persons but against Kingdomes and Nations may be put to a tryall and from their knowne and renowned justice may have his deserved punishment 16. December 1640. THE SCOTTISH Commissioners Demand concerning the Sixt ARTICLE COncerning our Sixt demand although it hath often come to passe that these two have been joyned by the bonds of Religion and nature have suffered themselves to be divided about the things of this World and although our Adversaries who no lesse labour the division of the two Kingdomes then we do all seek peace and follow after it as our Common happinesse do presume that this will be the partition wall to divide us and to make us lose all our labours taken about the former demand wherein by the help of God by his Maiesties Princely goodnesse end Iustice and your Lordships noble and equall dealing we have so fully accorded and to keep us from providing for a firm and well grounded Peace by the wisedome and justice of the Parliament of England which is our greatest desire expressed in our last Demand We are still confident that as we shall concerning this Article represent nothing but what is true just and honorable to both Kingdomes So will your Lordships hearken to us and will not suffer your selves by any slanders or suggestions to be drawn out of that straight and safe way wherein ye have walked since the beginning It is now we suppose known to all England especially to both the honorable Houses of Parliament and by the occasion of this Treaty more particularly to your Lordships That our distresses in our Religion