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A56227 A seasonable, historical, legal vindication and chronological collection of the good old fundamental liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen ...; Seasonable, legal, historical vindication of the good old fundamental liberties, franchises, rights, properties, laws, government of all English freemen. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1654 (1654) Wing P4122; ESTC R13248 47,108 63

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would now at last lay seriously to heart and the whole Kingdom and English Nation sadly consider who have found it an Experimental truth of late yeers and no imaginary feigned Speculation The third is The Remonstrance of the whole House of Commons in Parliament delivered in writing to K. James in the Parliament of 7 Iac. anno 1610. which begins thus To the Kings most Excellent Majesty Most gracious Soveraign WHereas we your Majesties most humble Subjects the Commons assembled in Parliament have received first by Message and since by Speech from your Majestie a Command of restraint from debating in parliament your Majesties Right of imposing upon your subjects goods exported out of or imported into this Realm yet allowing us to examine the grievance of these Impositions in regard of quantity time and other circumstances of disproportion thereto incident Wee your said humble Subjects nothing doubting but that your Majestie had no intent by that command to infringe THE ANCIENT AND FVNDAMENTAL RIGHTS OF THE LIBERTY OF PARLIAMENT in poynt of exact discussing of all matters concerning them and their possessions Goods and Rights whatsoever which yet wee cannot but conceive to be done in effect by this command Do with all humble duty make this Remonstrance to your Majestie First Wee hold it AN ANCIENT GENERAL and VNDOVBTED RIGHT OF Parliament to debate freely all matters which do properly concern the Subject and his Right or Estate which freedom of debate being once fore-closed THE ESSENCE OF THE LIBERTY OF PARLIAMENT IS WITHALL DISSOLVED Here the whole House of Commons in a special Remonstrance to King James printed and published by Order of a Committee of the House of Commons for licensing of Books dated 20 Maii 1641. 17 Caroli declare resolve vindicate and maintain One principal ancient Fundamental general undoubted Right of the Liberty of Parliament against the Kings intrenchment on it Of which should they be but once fore-closed the Essence of the Liberty of Parliament is withall dissolved And peradventure it may not be unworthy the most serious Disquisition of the next ensuing nominal or real Parliament to examine whether some Clauses and Restrictions in the 9 12 14 16 17 21 22 24 25 27 30 32 33 36 37 38 39 40. Articles or Strings of the New Instrument intituled The Government of the Common-wealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions thereunto belonging as it was publikely declared at Westminster the 16 day of December 1653. c. do not so much nay farre more intrench upon the ancient Fundamental General undoubted Right and Liberty of Parliament and Parliamentary free Debates to the dissolution of the Essential Liberty of all future Parliaments as this Command of King James did or as the Bishops late Canons imposed on the Clergy in and by the Convocation Anno 1640. ever did and this Clause in their c. Oath then made now imitated by others who condemned it ● A. B. do swear that I will never give my consent TO ALTER THE GOVERNMENT OF THIS CHURCH BY ARCH-BI●HOPS BISHOPS DEANS AND ARCH-DEACONS c. AS IT STANDS NOW ESTABLISHED AND AS BY RIGHT IT OVGHT TO STAND * Resolved by the whole House of Commons and Peers too without one dissenting voyce in Parliament Decemb. 1640. to be a most dangerous and illegal Oath contrary to THE RIGHTS and PRIVILEGES OF PARLIAMENT and to the FVNDAMENTAL LAWS STATVTES OF THE REALM c. and OF DANGEROVS CONSEQVENCE The contriving whereof was objected to the late Arch-bishop of Canterbury in his Original and Additional Articles of Impeachment to be HIGH TREASON for which amongst other thigs he lost his head The fourth is the notable Petition of Grievance of the whole House of Commons in Parliament presented to King James in the seventh yeer of his Reign after their Vote against his right to lay any Impositions on Goods imported or exported without assent of Parliament in these ensuing words THe policy and Constitution of this your Majesties Kingdom appropriates unto the Kings of this Realm with assent of Parliament as well the Soveraign power of making Laws as that of taxing or imposing upon the Subjects Goods or Merchandizes wherein they have justly such a Property as may not without their consent be altered or changed this is the cause that the people of this Kingdom as they have * ever shewed themselves faithful and loving to their Kings ready to aid them in all their just occasions with voluntary Contributions SO HAVE THEY BEEN * EVER CAREFUL TO PRESERVE THEIR OWN LIBERTIES AND RIGHTS WHEN ANY THING HATH BEEN DONE TO PREJUDICE OR IMPEACH THE SAME And therefore when their Princese it her occasioned by war or by their own bounty or by any other necessity have without consent of Parlament set on Impositions either within the Land or upon Commodities exported or imported by the Merchants they have in open Parliament complained of it in that it was done without their consents AND THEREUPON * NEVER FAILED TO OBTAIN A SPEEDY AND FULL REDRESS without any ‖ Claim made by the Kings of any Power or Prerogative in that point And though THE LAW OF PROPERTY BE ORIGINAL and carefully preserved by the Common Lawes of this Realm WHICH ARE AS ANCIENT AS THE KINGDOM IT SELF yet those famous Kings for the better contentment and assurance of their loving Subjects agreed THAT THIS OLD FVNDAMENTAL RIGHT observe the words should be further declared AND ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT wherein it is provided That no such Charge should ever be laid upon the People without their common consents as may appear by sundry Records of former times We therefore your Majesties most humble Commons assembled in Parliament * FOLLOWING THE EXAMPLE OF THIS WORTHY CARE OF OVR ANCESTORS AND OVT OF OVR DVIY TO THOSE FOR WHOM WE SERVE finding that your Majesty without advice of your Lords and Commons hath lately in times of Peace SET BOTH GREATER IMPOSITIONS AND FAR MORE IN NVMBER THEN ANY YOVR NOBLE ANCESTORS DID EVER IN TIME OF WAR do with all humility present this most just and necessary Petition unto your Majesty THAT ALL IMPOSITIONS SET WITHOVT ASSENT IN PARLIAMENT MAY BE QVITE ABOLISHED AND TAKEN AWAY And that your Majesty likewise in imitation of your Royal PROGENITORS will be pleased that a Law in your time and during this Session of Parliament may be also made to declare THAT ALL IMPOSITIONS OF ANY KIND SET OR TO BESET VPON YOVR PEOPLE THEIR GOODS OR MERCHANDIZES SAVE ONLY BY COMMON CONSENT IN PARLIAMENT ARE AND SHALL BE VOYD wherein your Majesty shall not only GIVE YOVR SVBJECTS GREAT SATISFACTION IN POINT OF THEIR RIGHT but also bring exceeding joy and comfort to them who now suffer partly through the abating of the price of Native Commodities and partly through the raising of all Forein to the overthrow of Merehants and Shipping the causing of general dearth and decay of all wealth
grievous because they have been pursued by imprisonment contrary to the Franchises of this Land c. which the Commons House proved by many Statutes and Records in all Ages in that Conference to the full satisfaction of the Lords House since published in print The seventh is The Vote of the a whole House of Commons 16. December 1640. Nullo contradicente entred in their Journal and printed in Diurnal Occurrences p. 13. That the Canons made in the Convocation Anno 1640. ARE AGAINST THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM the Property and Liberty of the Subject the Right of Parliament and contained divers things tending to Faction and Sedition The eighth Authority is b The Votes of both Houses of Parliament concerning the security of the Kingdom of England and Dominion of Wales 15. Martii 1641. Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to be forthwith printed and published as they were then by themselves and afterwards with other Votes and Orders Resolved upon the Question nemine contradicente That in case of extream danger and of his Majesties refusal the Ordinance agreed on by both Houses for the Militia doth oblige the people and ought to be obeyed by THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THIS KINGDOM A very vain false absurd and delusory Vote if there be no such Laws as some now affirm The ninth punctual Authority is a A second Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the Commission of Array printed by their special Order of 12 Januarii 1642. wherein are these observable passages The main drift of the Answer is to maintain That the King by the Common Law may grant such a Commission of Array as this is upon this ground because it 's for the defence of the Kingdome And that the power which he hath to grant it by the Common Law is not taken away by the Petition of Right or any former Statute but the King notwithstanding any of them may charge the Subjects for defence of the Kingdome so as the charge imposed come not to himself nor to his particular advantage These Grounds thus laid extend not to the Commission of Array alone but to all other Charges that his Majestie shall impose upon his Subjects upon pretence of Defence of the Kingdom for there is the same reason of Law for any other Charge that is pretended for Defence as for this If his Majestie by the Common Law may charge his Subjects to finde Arms and other things in the Commission enjoyned because they are for Defence of the Kingdom by the same reason of Law he may command his people to build Castles Forts and Bulworks and after to maintain them with Garisons Arms and Victuals at their own charges And by the same reason he may compel his subjects to finde Ships and furnish them with Men Ammunition and Victuals and to finde Souldiers pay Coat and Conduct-Money provide Victuals for Souldiers and all other things NECESSARY FOR AN * ARMY these things being as necessary for Defence as any thing that can be done in execution of this Commission And for that exposition of the Petition of Right and other Statutes therein noted if it should hold doth it not overthrow as well the Petition it self as all other Lawes that have been made for the Subjects benefit against Taxes and other Charges either in this or any other Parliament These Positions thus laid down and maintained DO SHAKE THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE KINGDOM THE ANCIENT BIRTH-RIGHT OF EVERY SUBJECT both for THE PROPERTY OF HIS GOODS AND LIBERTY OF HIS PERSON Nay they strike at the root of Parliaments What need his * Majesty call Parliaments to provide for Defence of the Realm when himself may compel his Subjects to defend it without Parliaments If these grounds should hold what need the Subjects grant Subsidies in Parliament for Defence of the kingdom in time of real danger if the king for defence at any times when he shall only conceive or pretend danger may impose Charges upon his Subjects without their consent in Parliament Upon that which hath been said in this and our former Declaration we doubt not but all indifferent men will be satisfied that this Commission of Array is full of danger and inconvenience to the Subjects of England AND AGAINST THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE LAND both for PROPERTY OF GOODS AND LIBERTY OF PERSON c. 2. As it is against THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM so no Statute makes it good c. And the Lords and Commons do upon the whole matter here conclude that they are very much aggrieved that after so many Declarations and solemn Protestations made by his Majesty to rule by the known Laws of this Land his Majesty by advice of his ill-Councellors should be perswaded to set such a Commission on foot which is so clearly contrary TO THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THIS LAND the Right of Property and Liberty of the Subject contrary to form●r Resolutions of Parliament and to the Petition of Right I am certain the generality of the Nation are now as much and more aggrieved that some who were Parties to this Declaration and others who have made as many or more Declarations and Protestations as his Majesty ever did to rule by the known Laws of the Land should since this far exceed his Majesty in the like or more exorbitances in the Militia Excises Taxes Impositions Imprisonments arbitrary extravagant proceedings and capital executions in new-erected Courts of Injustice as diametrically contrary as the Kings Commissions of Array to the Fundamental Laws of the Land four times together so stiled and insisted on as such in this one Declaration of both Houses the Right of Property of the Subject contrary to former Resolutions and the Petition of Right yea which is most abominable to their own Declarations Remonstrances Votes Protestations Vows Solemn Leagues and Covenants in Parliament to their own eternal Infamy as well as the peoples intolerable oppression and Slavery who thereupon may justly conclude and protest against them as both Houses did in the close of that Declaration against the Array viz. * And the Lords and Commons do and shall adhere to their former Votes and Resolutions That all those that are Actors in putting of this Commission of Array in execution shall be esteemed disturbers of the Peace of the Kingdome and the Properties and Liberties of the Subject The tenth evidence is a the Vote and Letter of both Houses of Parliament sent to his Majesty at Oxford 9. March 1643. in answer to his Majesties of the third of March wherein there is this passage We the Lords and Commons assembled in the Parliament of England c. have resolved with the concurrent advice and consent of the Commissioners of Scotland to represent to your Majesty in all humility and plainness as followeth That this present Parliament convened according to the known and FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE KINGDOM the continuance whereof is
A Seasonable Historical Legal VINDICATION AND CHRONOLOGICAL COLLECTION Of the good Old Fundamental Liberties Franchises Rights Laws of all English Freemen their best Inheritance Birth-right Security against Arbitrary Tyranny Egyptian Slavery and Burdens of late years most dangerously undermined oppungned and almost totally subverted under the specious feigned Disguise of their Defence Enlargement and future Establishment upon a sure Basis IT is an universal received Principle and experimental Truth beyond all contradiction That no natural structure no arteficial Building no Civil or Ecclesiastical Corporation Realm Reipublicke Government or Society of men no Art nor Science whatsoever can possibly be erected supported established preserved or continued in their being or well being without FOUNDATIONS whereon as they were at first erected so they must necessarily still depend or else they will presently fall to utter ruine Hence it is to wave all Humane Authorities in so clear a Verity that in God's own sacred uner●ing a Word of Truth we find frequent mention of the natural b FOUNDATIONS of the vast natural Fabrick of the Earth Heavens and World it self of the Artificial Material c FOVNDATIONS of the material Temple wals City of Gods own most famous city Ierusalem and of private houses of the Spiritual d FOUNDATION of the Spiritual Temple City Ierusalem and whole Church of God even Iesus Christ himself of the Doctrinal e FOUNDATIONS and first principles of Religion Christianity Salvation yea of the Political f FOUNDATIONS of Kingdoms Reipublikes Churches Governments States which being once shaken undermined subverted razed or destroyed bring unavoidable ruine and desolation upon them Psal. 11. 3. Psal. 82. 5 6. Ier. 50 17. 51 15 16. Mic. 1. 6 7 9. even as we daily see Castles Wals Houses to fall instantly to the ground and become an heap of Confusion when their Foundations are blown up decayed or demolished Upon which consideration those publike Laws which establish fence fortifie support the Foundamental Constitutions Rights Liberties Priviledges of any Nation Kingdome Reipublike essential to their being and subsistence as a free or happy people against the Invasions Vnderminings Encroachments of any Tyrants Vsurpers Oppressors or publike enemies are usually stiled FUNDAMENTAL LAWS and have ever been reputed so sacred inviolable immutable in all ages upon any Preterces of Necessity or publike Safety that most Nations and our own English Ancestors above others have freely chosen to hazard yea lose their Estates Lives in their just defence against such exorbitant Tyrannical Kings and other Powers who by force or policy have on leavoured to violate alter or subvert them rather then out of Cowardize Scottishnesse Carelessenesse or want of cordial love to the Publike to suffer the Last infringement repeal or alteration of them to the inthralling of Themselves or their Posterities to the arbitrary Wills of such Domineering Tyrants and Vsurping Poners Now because after all our Old and New many yeers bloody costly dangerous Contest and Wars for the maintenance of our Good Old Fundamental Liberties Laws Rights Priviledges against all secret or open underminers of them I clearly behold with grief of heart that there is a strang monstrous Generation of New TYRANNICAL STATE HERETICKS sprung up amongst us who are grown I desperately impudent as not onely to write but publikely to assert in Print in a Books printed by AUTHORITY even in Capitals in the very Title-page That the Free-men and People of England have no such unalterable Fundamental Laws and Liberties left them by their fore-fathers as our Ancestors heretofore contested for both in the Field and Parliament-House with William the Conqueror Henry the first King John Henry the third Edward 1 2 3. Richard the second with other Kings and Princes and our late Parliaments and Armies too with King James and King Charles That neither Magna Charta nor the Petition of Right nor the Laws for trying Malefactors by Juries of their peers are Fundamentall or unaltera●le but that the STATE-PHYSITIANS or rather Mountebanks of our time who are not tied up to them but left free unto themselves may lay them quite aside either in part or whole as they see cause Yea having now attained to such a super-transcendent Authority as may as they assert DAY ASIDE ALL PARLIAMENTS and PARLIAMENTARY WAYES and appoint SOMETHING ELSE as more seasonable and proper to us and as Providence makes way for it if they see it more conducing to the safety and good of the Common-wealth that is to their own private Interests Honours Profits Securities Designes Oppressions Rapines gilded over with this specious pretext And then ●●●emptorily conclude That to plead for these and other Fundamental Laws and Liberties as unalterable though the onely 〈◊〉 and Badges of our Freedom is nothing else but to 〈◊〉 the Nation for by such a Principle People doe 〈…〉 their Liberty but are brought under such a kind of Tyranny out of which AS BEING WORSE THAN THE AEGYPTIAN BONDAGE there is no hope of deliverance An absurd Tyrannical Paradox transcending any I ever yet met with in any Author stripping us naked of all our long enjoyed Laws Liberties Franchises Great Charters at once tending onely to reduce and perpetually inthral us under such an absolute AEGYPTIAN BONDAGE and Tyranny without any hope of future deliverance from it which some now endeavour to entail on us and our posterities for ever by an Iron Law and Yoke of Steel in stead of restoring to us that Glorious Freedome which we have so long expected from them in vain And because I find the Generality of the Nobility Gentry Clergie Commonalty of our Nation after all their late yeers expensive bloudy wars and Parliamentary Disputes for the defence and preservation of these our Ancient Hereditary Fundamental Charters Laws Liberties Priviledges so strangely degenerated both from themselves and their Heroick prudent Ancestors as that they are more readily inclined upon every occasion out of a base un-Christian un-manly un-English fear or Scottish cowardice and stupidity wittingly to desert betray surrender them all up into the hands of any invading Vsurpers without the least Publike Claim Dissertation Defence or Dispute then diligently or couragiously to contend for them as of late they did So as that which Paul once taxed in the slavish besotted Corinthians 2 Epist. 11. 20. may be most truly averred of our degenerated infatuated English Nation Ye suffer if a man bring you into bondage if a man devour you if a man take of you if a man exalt himself above your Laws Liberties Franchises Parliaments Kings Nobles Properties Lives Conscience and a all that is called God or worshipped if a man smite you on the face notwithstanding all their manifold late b Protestations Vows Covenants Remonstrances Declarations and Publike Engagements to the contrary And withal after diligent enquiry discovering scarce one man of Eminencie or Power in the Nation nor so much as one of my degenerated temporizing Profession of the Law even
just suits deprived of their lawfull Rights and subjected to his Tyrannicall will to their ruine and destruction Fourthly That he hath Trayterously endeavoured to corrupt the other Courts of Justice by advising and procuring his Maiesty to sell places of Judicature and other offices contrary to the Laws and Customes in that behalf Fifthly He hath Trayterously caused a Book of Canons to be compiled and published without any Lawfull warrant and authority in that behalf in which pretended Canons many matters are contained contrary to the Kings prerogitive to the Fundamentall Laws and statutes of this Realm to the Rights of Parliament to the property and Liberty of the subject and matters tending to sedition and of dangerous consequence and to the establishing of a vast unlawful presumptuous power in himself and his successors c. Seventhly That he hath trayterously endeavoured to alter subvert Gods true Religion BY LAW EST ABLISHED and instead thereof to set up Popish Religion and Idolatry And to that end hath declared and maintained in Speeches and printed Books divers popish doctrines and opinions contrary to the Articles of Religion ESTABLISHED BY LAW Hee hath urged and enjoyned divers popish and superstitious Ceremonies WITHOUT ANY WARRANT OF LAW and hath cruelly persecuted those who have opposed the same by corporal punishments and imprisonments and most unjustly vexed others who refused to conform thereunto by Ecclesiastical Censures Excommunication Suspension Deprivation and Degradation contrary to the Laws of this Kingdome 13. He did by his own authority and power contrary to Law procure sundry of his Majesties Subjects and enforced the Clergy of this Kingdome to contribute towards the maintenance of the war against the Scots That to preserve himselfe from being questioned for these and other his Trayterous Courses hee hath laboured to Subvert the Rights of Parliament and the ancient Course of parliamentary proceedings and by false and malicious slanders to incense His Majesty against Parliaments All which being proved against him at his Tryall were after solemn Argument by Mr. Samuel Brown in behalf of the Commons House proved and soon after adjudged to be High Treason at the Common Law by both Houses of Parliament and so declared in the Ordinance for his Attainder for which he was condemned and beheaded as a Traytor against the King Law and Kingdom on Tower-hil January 10. 1644. 11. In the a same Parliament December 21. Ian. 14 February 11. 1640. and Iuly 6. 1641. Sir John Finch then Lord Keeper chief Justice Bramston Judge Berkley Judge●Crawley Chiefe Baron Davenport Baron Weston and Baron Turnour were accused and impeached by the House o● Commons by several articles transmitted to the Lords of High Treason for that they had Traitorously and wickedly endeavoured to subvert the Fundamentall Laws and established Government of the Realm of England and instead thereof to introduce an arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against Law which they had declared by traiterous and wicked words opinions judgment and more especially in this their extrajudical opinion subcribed by them in the case of ship-money viz. We are of opinions that when the good and safety of the kingdome in general is concerned and the whole kingdome in danger your majesty may by wr●● under the great Seal of england without consent in parliament command all your subjects of this your kingdome at their charge to provide and furnish such a number of ships with men victual and ammunition and for such time as your Majesty shall think fit for the defence and safeguard of the kingdome from such danger and peril and we are of opinion that in such case your Majesty is the sole Judge both of the danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided and likewise for arguing and giving judgment accordingly in Master Iohn Hampdens case in the Exchequer Chamber in the point of ship money in April 1638. which said opinions are Destructive to the Fundamentall Laws of the Realm the subjects right of propriety and contrary to former Resolutions in parliament and the petition of right as the words of their several Impeachments run Sir John Finch fled the Realm to preserve his head on his shoulders some others of them died through fear to prevent the danger soon after their Impeachments and the rest put to Fines who were less peccant 12. Mr. Iohn Pim in his Declaration upon the whole matter of the Charge of High Treason against Thomas Earle of Stafford April 12. 1641. before a Committee of both Houses of Parliament in Westminster hall printed and published by order of the house of Commons proves his endeavour to subvert the fundamentall Law of England and to introduce an Arbitrary Power to be High Treason and an offence very hanious in the nature and mischievous in the effects thereof which saith he will best appear if it be examined by that universall and supream Law Salus Populi the element of all lawes out of which they are derived the end of all Lawes to which they are designed and in which they are perfected 1. It is an offence comprehending other all offences Here you shall finde severall Treasons Murthers Rapins Oppressions Perjuries There is in this Crime a Seminary of all evills hurtfull to a State and if you consider the Reasons of it it must needs be so The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt Good and Evill betwixt just and unjust If you take away the Law all things wiill fall into Confusion every man will become a law to himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce many great enormities Lust will become a Law and Envy will become a Law Covetousnesse and Ambition will become Lawes and what Dictates what decisions such Lawes will produce may easily be discemed in the late Government of Ireland and England too since this The Law hath a power to prevent to restrain to repair evils without this all kinds of mischiefes and distempers will break it upon a State It is the Law that doth the King to the alegiance and Service of his people it intitles the people to the Portection and Justice of the King c. The Law is the Bondary the measure betwixt the Kings prerogative and the peoples liberty whiles these move in their own Orb they are a support and security to one another but if these Bounds be so removed that they enter into contestation and conflict one of these mischiefs must needs ensue If the Prerogative of the King overwhelme the liberty of the people it will be turned into Tyranny If liberty undermine the peprogative it will turne into Anarchy The Law is the safegard the custody of all private interests your honours your lives your liberties and estates are all in the keeping of the Law without this every man hath a like Right to any thing and this is the condition into which the Irish were brought by the Earle of Strafford and the English by
this businesse in the Army where it was first coined and return an Accompt hereof to this House These Votes were seconded soon after with these ensuing votes entred in the Commons Journall and printed by their special Order 23. November 1647. A Petition directed to the Supream Authority of England the Commons in Parliament assembled The humble petition of many Free born people of England c. was read the first and second time Resolved upon the Question that this petition is A sedititious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former petition and paper annexed stiled an agreement of the people formerly adjudged by this House to be Destructive to the being of Parliaments and Fundamentall Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Thomas Prince Cheesemonger and Samuel Chidley be forthwith committed prisoners to the Prison of the Gatehouse there to remain prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a Seditious avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agreement of the people formerly Ajudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and fundamentall Government of the Kingdome Resolved c. That Jeremy Jues Thomas Taylor and William Larnar be forthwith committed to the Prison of Newgate there to remain Prisoners during the pleasure of this House for a seditious and contemptuous avowing and prosecution of a former Petition and Paper annexed stiled An Agrement of the people formerly adjudged by this House to be destructive to the being of Parliaments and Fundamentall Government of this Kingdome Resolved c. That a Letter be prepared and sent to the Generall taking notice of his proceeding in the execution according to the Rules of Warre of a mutinous person avowing and prosecuting this agreement in the Army contrary to these Votes at the Rendezvouz near Ware and to give him thanks for it and to desire him to prosecute that Businesse the to bottome and to bring Such guilty persons as he shall think fit to condigne and exemplary Punishment Resolved c. That the Votes upon the Petition and Agreement annexed and likewise the Votes upon this Petition be forthwith printed and published After which by a Speciall Ordinance of both Houses of Parliament 17 December 1647. No person whatsoever who had contrived plotted prosecuted or entred into that Engagement inti●uled The agreement of the people declared To be destructive to the being of Parliaments and Fundamentall Government of the Kingdome for one whole year was to be elected chosen or put into the office or Place of Lord Mayor or Alderman Sheriffe Deputy of a Ward or Common Councel man of the City of London or to have a voice in the Election of any such Officer All these particulars with the Capitall Proceedings against White and others who fomented this Agreement in the Army abundantly evidence the veriey of my foresaid Proposition and the extraordinary guilt of those Members and Souldiers who contrary to their own Votes Ordinances Proceedings and Censures of others have since prosecuted this the like or far worse Agreement to the destruction of our ancient Parliaments and their Priviledges and the fundamentall Government Laws and Liberty of our Nation which I wish they would now sadly lay to heart The third is the memorable Statutes of 3. Jacobi ch 1 2 4 and 5. Which relating the old Gunpowder Treason of the Jesuites and Papists and their infernal inhumane barbarous detestable plot to blow up the King Queen Prince Lords Commons and whole House of Peers with Gunpowder when they should have been assembled in Parliament in the upper House of Parliament upon the fifth of November in the year of our Lord 1605. do aggravate the hainousnesse and transcendency thereof by this circumstance That it was as some of the principall Conspirators thereof confessed purposely devised and concluded to be done in the said House That where sundry necessary and Religious Laws for Preservation of the Church and State were made which they falsely and standerously term Cruel Laws enacted against them and their Religion Both Place and Persons should be all destroyed and blown up at once And by these dangerous consequences if it had not been miraculously prevented but taken effect That it would have turned to the utter ruine overthrow and Subversion Of the whole State and Common-wealth of this flourishing and renowned Kingdome and Gods true Religion therein established by Law and of our Laws and Government For which horrid Treason they were all attainted and then executed as Traytors and some of their Heads Quarters set up upon the Parliament House for terrour of others Even so let all other Traytors Conspirators against our Fundamental Laws Liberties Government Kings Parliaments and Religion treading presumptuously in their Jesuiticall footsteeps * perish O Lord but let them who cordilally love and strenuously maintain them against all Conspirators Traytors Underminers Invaders whatsoever be as the Sun when he goeth forth in his might That the Land may have rest peace settlement again for as many years at least as it had before our late innovations Wars Confusions by their restitution and establishment CHAP. II. HAving thus sufficiently proved That the Kingdome and Freemen of England have some ancient hereditary Rights Liberties Franchises Priviledges Customes properly called FVNDAMENTALL as likewise a Fundamentall Government no wayes to be altered under mined subverted directly or indirectly under the guilt and pain of High Treason in those who attempt it especially by Fraud Force or armed Power I shall in the second place present you in brief Propositions a Summary of the chiefest and most considerable of them which our prudent Ancestors in former ages and our latest reall Parliaments have both declared to be and eagerly contested for as Fundamentall and Essentiall to their very being and well being as a Free people Kingdome Republick unwilling to be enslaved under any yokes of Tyranny or arbitrary power that so the whole Nation may the more perspicuously know and discern them the more strenuously contend for them the more vigilantly watch against their violations underminings in any kind by any Powers or Pretences whatsoever and transmit perpetuate them intirely to their posterities as their best and chiefest inheritance I shall comprise the Summe and Substance of them all in these 9. Propositions beginning with the Subjects Property which hath been more frequently universally invaded assaulted undermined by our Kings and their evill instruments and thereupon more strenuously frequently and vigilantly maintained retained by our Nobles Parliaments and the people in all ages till of late years than any or all of the rest put together though every of them have been constantly defended maintained when impugned or incroached upon by our Ancestors and our selves 1. That no Tax Tallage Aid Subsidy Custome Contribution Loan Imposition Excise or other Assessement whatsoever for Defence of the Realm by Land or Sea or any other publick ordinary or extraordinary occasion may or ought to be imposed or levyed
Liberty of the Subject against Impositions maintained in an Argument in the Parliament of 7. Jacobi printed at London 1641. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments concerning Shipmony both printed at London 1641. By the Case of Shipmony briefly discussed London 1640. by Mr. St. Johns Argument and Speech against Shipmony printed at London 1641. By Sir Edward Cook in his 1. Institutes p. 46. and 57. to 64. and 528. to 537. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons in Parliament against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. to 398. and 850. to 890. and by my own Humble Remonstrance against Shipmony London 1643. The fourth part of the Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 14. to 26. and my Legall Vindications of the Liberties of England against Illegall Taxes c. London 1649. and by the Records and Statutes cited in the ensuing Chapter referring for the most part to the first Proposition The second third and fourth of them are la●gely debated and confirmed by a Conference desired by the Lords and had by a Committee of both Houses concerning the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject 3. Ap●ilis 4. Ca●ol●printed at London 1642. By Sir Edward Cook in his Institutes on Magna Charta c. 29. p. 45. to 57. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. c. 850. to 890. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments against Shipmony By Sir Robert Cotton his Posthuma p. 222. to 269. By my Breviate of the Prelates encroachments on the Kings Prerogative and Subjects Liberties p. 138. c. My new discovery of the Prelates tyranny p. 137. to 183. and some of the ensuing Statutes and Records The fifth and sixth of them are fully cleared and vindicated in and by the Prologues of all our Councils Statutes Laws before and since the Conquest By Sir Edward Cooks 4. Institutes ch. 1. Mr. Cromptons Jurisdiction of Courts Title High Court of Parliament My Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 1 2 3 4. My Legal Vindication against illegal Taxes and pretended Acts of Parliament London 1649 Prynne the Member reconciled to Prynne the Barrester printed the same year My Historicall Collection of the ancient great Councils of the Parliaments of England London 1649. My Truth triumphing over Falshood Antiquity over Novelty London 1645. and some of the Records hereafter transcribed In this I shall be more sparing because so fully confirmed in these and other Treatises The seventh is ratified by Sir Edward Cooks 1. Institutes p. 97 98. 4. Institutes p. 89. and 5. Report Cawdries Case of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Lawes and Rastals Abridgement of Statutes Tit. Provisors Praemunire and Rome 11. H. 7. c. 1. and other Records and Statutes in the ensuing Chapter The eighth and ninth are fully debated in my Soveraign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes Part. 2. p. 3. to 34. Part fourth p. 162. to 170. and touched in Sir Robert Cottons Posthuma p. 174. to 179. How all and every of these Fundamentall Liberties Rights Franchises Lawes have been unparalelledly violated subverted in all and every particular of late years beyond all Presidents in the worst of former ages even by their greatest pretended Propugners their own printed Edicts Instruments Ordinances Papers together with their illegall oppressions Taxes Excises Imposts Rapines violences Proceedings of all kinds whereof I shall give a brief accompt in its due place will sufficiently evidence if compared with the premised propositions Which abundantly confirm the truth of our Saviours words John 10. 1. 10. and this rule of Johannis Angelius Wenderhagen Politicae Synopticae lib. 3. c. 9. sect. 11. p. 310. Hinc Regulae loco notandum Quod omne Regnum Vi Armata acquisitum in Effectu Subdit is Semper in durioris Servitutis conditiones arripiat licet à principio Ducedinem prurientibus 〈◊〉 videatur Ideo cunctis hoc cavendum Nè temrè 〈◊〉 patiantur FINIS a Joh. 17. 17. 2 Cor. 6. 7. Eph. 1. 12. Ja. 1. 18 b 2 Sam. 22. 8 16. Iob 38. 4 6. Psal. 18 15. 102. 25. 1 4. 5. Prov. 8. 29. Isa. 24 18. 40 21. 48. 13. 51. 13 16. Ier. 31. 17. 24 Ephes. 4 4 Heb. 1. 10. 4. 3 9. 26. 1 Pet. 1. 20. c 1 King 5. 17 6. 37. 7. 9 10. Ezr. 4. 13 6 3. Ps. 137. 7. Ezek. 41. 8. Hag. 2. 8. Zech. 4 9 8. 9 Mat. 7 26 27. Luke 6. 48 49. d Isa. 28. 16. 54 11. Psal. 87. 1. 1 Cor. 3. 10 11 12. Heb. 11. 10. 1 Pet. 2. 6. Rev. 21. 14. 19. e 2 Tim. 1. 19. Heb. 6. 1 2. f Ier. 50. 15. Micah 1. 6 7. L●ke 6. 48 49. Mat. 7. 26 27. a Lib. tryed and cast p. 39 40 142 to 4● 154 Canne's Voice from the Temple which perswades the subversion and abolishing of all former Lawes especially for Tythes Ministers support a 2 Thes. 24 b See Exact Collect and a general Collect. 〈◊〉 Ordinances c. c See Culpeper's Lilly's Merlins Almanacks John Can's 2 Voice Lib. tried and cast with many Petitions and Pamphlets against the Law and Lawyers The Order of Aug. 19. 1653. That there should be a Committe selected to consider of a NEW BODY of the Law for the government of this Common-wealth * Summum jus est summa injuria Cic. de Offic●is p. 611. a Lib. tryed and cast p. 39. 40 142. to 148 and elsewhere John Can●●'s 2 Voice from the Temple John Rogers Mene 〈◊〉 Perex p 6. Lilly and Culpeper in their prognostication Anno 1653. 16 4 See the Arimies Proposals b See Math. Par●s p. 2. 6 Magna Chart. 9. 11. ● H. 3. c. 1. 38. 25 E. 1. c. 1 c. 28 E 1 c. 1 c Cook●s 2 Instit. p. 2. Not● See Prop. 1 6 in Chap 2. Nota. * See Cant. D●●m p 19 26 40. D●urn Occu● rences p. 13 See Propos. 1. in chap. 2. * O how are they now degenerated Nota. * And should they not be so now then * And shal we now at last fail herein ‖ How dare then any self-created powers who are neither Kings nor Parliaments now arrogate to themselves or exercise such a super-Regal arbitrary power and prerogative Nota. * And O that we would follow it now again Nota. * And do not those do so who now lay monthly Taxes Excizes Customs and New-Impost on us daily out of Parliament and that for many months and years yet to come against the Letter of their own Instrument and Oath too a See Canterburies Doom p. 19. Diurnal-Occurrences p. 13. b Exact Collection c. p. 112 113. See Chap. 2. P●oposition 3. 7. a Exact Collection p. 850. 854 887 888. * Do not the Army-Officers now enforce them to all this without a Parliament * These Expostulations reach to those at White-Hall now who presume to impose