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A89919 A project for an equitable and lasting peace. Designed in the year 1643. when the affairs stood in ballance before the second coming of the Scots into this kingdom, from a desire to have kept them out then. With a disquisition how the said project may now be reduced to fit the present conjuncture of affairs, in a letter sent to divers prudent persons of all sorts. For preventing the Scots bringing an army into England a third time, or making themselves umpires of our affaires. By a cordiall agreement of the King, Parliament, City, Army, and of all the people in this kingdome among our selves. Nethersole, Francis, Sir, 1587-1659.; England and Wales, Army. 1648 (1648) Wing N498; Thomason E459_16; ESTC R203019; ESTC R205087 17,014 32

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sure to have all the Copies in my own keeping And so I remaine Dated Iunii 1648. the Climacterical yeer of this Kingdome Sir Your most humble servant P. D. Postscript SIR UPon second thoughts I finde it necessary for me to give you a briefe account why I did not publish this Project when it was first designed nor in all the long time sithence elapsed and yet have thoughts of doing it now You may therefore please to understand that my purpose at first was to have printed two Copies thereof the one at London the other at Oxford to avoyde the great prejudice of being reputed partiall But before I could effect this it came to my knowledge that the writer of the Considerations had found meanes to have them put into the hands of certaine persons of prime quality and credit in both places and had found that the corner-stone of his Considerations and of my Project borrowed from him was rejected by some of too great power on both sides as he foresaw and foretold it was like to be This made me give over my purpose at that time And from that time the Designe lay by me as a neglected and uselesse piece till the Army having gotten the King into their power was upon their march from Newmarket with an intention as was voyced to have brought his Majesty up to London without more ado The apprehension I then had that this might prove very dangerous to the Common-wealth to the prosperity whereof and of hit Majesty if I know my owne heart it beateth with an equall pulse stirred me so farre that I was once more determined to have published my concept what and no more was needfull to be transacted before his Majesties returns to his Palace at Westminster and to that end had sent this simple Project to a Licencer In this nick of time forth came the Armies Declaration of the 4. of June 1647. Wherein finding the maine of what I had ever thought very expedient if not altogether necessary to be mainely insisted on by Sir Thomas Fairfax and his Officers and Souldiers I was much rejoyced to see the work whereunto I desired to have contributed my weake indeavours to be taken into abler hands and there I left it Whether his Excellency and his chiefe Officers for the opinion of his common souldiers and their Agitators is to me of no regard be since fallen from what they then declared to be their deliberate and determinate judgement I leave Him and them to give an account to God and the World I am sure t is commonly believed that they onely made shew of being of the minde at large expressed in the forementioned Declaration to ingratiate themselves with the Kingdome till by that meanes they had quietly gotten all the strength thereof into their own and their parties hands And that they are at present the most averse of any other to a Personall Treaty at London On the other side it is too manifest that the generality of the City and Country are perhaps too violent for his Majesties coming thither without ingaging his Royall word to passe the three Praeparatory Bills apprehended like to be of hard digestion to his Majesty and it is further apprehended that the two Houses of Parliament may also happen to be divided upon this point Perchance a middle way may be found as faire and safe as either of the former and not impassable either with his Majesty or with the two Houses This induced me now to submit my conceipt to the censure of wiser men And if for the ground-work it shall be so happy as to receive any measure of approbation from any considerable number of such as your selfe it is not impossible that I may be thereby emboldened to expose it to the eye of the people which I conceive to be sharper than the sight of any one or of any few of the wisest men of the Land Sir I crave your pardon for this addition to your trouble and remained before and ever A PROJECT For an Equitable and lasting PEACE Designed in the year 1643. when the affairs stood in the ballance Printed in the yeare 1648. TO THE KINGS Most Excellent MAJESTIE And to the LORDS and COMMONS assembled in PARLIAMENT The humble petition of P. D. a plain Countreyman a well-wisher of the City and lover of truth righteousnesse and peace in his own name and all theirs that may subscribe hereunto Most humbly sheweth THat whereas in a Petition of both houses of Parliament presented to your Majesty in the beginning of your Reigne it was declared That they found it an undoubted right and constant priviledge of Parliament that no member of Parliament sitting the Parliament or within the usuall times of Priviledge of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without sentence or order of the House unlesse it be for treason felony or for refusing to give surety for the peace And whereas in the Petition of right made to your Majesty by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament in the third yeer of your reigne it was declared That no offender of what kind soever is exempted from the proceedings to be used and punishments to be inflicted by the Lawes and Statutes of this your Realme And whereas by the expresse Lawes and Statutes thereof that is to say by the Statute called the Great Charter of the Liberties of England and by a Statute made in the 28. yeere of the reigne of your most noble Progenitor King Edward the third it is declared and enacted That no Freeman may be taken or imprisoned but by the lawfull judgement of his Peers or by the Law of the Land nor without being brought to answer by due processe of Law And whereas by two other Acts of Parliament the one made in the 38. yeer of your said glorious ancestor it is ordained and assented That all they that make suggestions to the King himselfe be sent with the suggestions before the Chancellour Treasurer and his great Councell and that they there finde sureties to pursue their suggestions and that then processe of the Law be made against the persons in that manner accused and that if he that maketh the complaint cannot prove his intent against the Defendant by the processe limited as aforesaid he shall be commanded to prison there to abide till he hath made gree to the parry of his damages and of the slander that he hath suffered by such occasion and after shall make fine and ransome to the King According to and by the meanes of which good Lawes and Statutes so enacted and declared as aforesaid justice hath heretofore proceeded against all offenders without exception and all innocent subjects of this kingdome of what condition soever have in former times found themselves sufficiently secured against false accusers untill the moneth of January in the seventeenth yeere of your Majesties reigne At which time Articles of high treason and other misdemeanours having by your Majesties Atturney been preferred against certaine
persons among which Articles these two were the principall That they have traitorously indeavoured to subvert the very Rights and being of Parliaments and that for the compleating of their trayterous designes they have indeavoured as farre as in them lay by force and terrour to compell the Parliament to joyne with them in their other trayterous designes and to that end have actually raised and countenanced tumults against the King and Parliament yet this heavy charge against the said persons being themselves members of Parliament was not further prosecuted against them neither was the suggestor thereof made knowne through whose default it belongeth not to your Petitioners to inquire or judge otherwise than in our private consciences so farre as the said default is one of the hinges upon which the justice of the late Warre hath been and ought to be turned But as one the one side we humbly conceive that either justice ought to have been prosecuted against the said accused persons and the suggestor of the said Articles according to the Lawes already in being or if upon this occasion there were any defect found in the above-recited Lawes and Declarations of Law then some sufficient provisionall Ordinance in amendment of that defect might have been devised and applyed to the present case by the wisedome and authority of your Majesty and your Parliament that justice might have proceeded So on the other side we hope we may presume to say because in truth we think that no inconvenience which might have occurred through any legall proceeding either against the said accused persons or their secret accuser can any way countervaile the many mischiefes which have ensued upon the interruption thereof For in your Petitioners poore observation grounded on divers Declarations of your Majesty and of your two Houses of Parliament particularly that of your Majesties of the twelfth of August 1642. and that other of the Lords and Commons of the beginning of the said moneth the obstruction of justice in this case first hath been the scandalous occasion whether given or taken of a like stoppage in the case of many other offenders and more especially of some not long before and of others soon after by Parliament accused of the same horrid crime of having intended force against the Parliament which accusation notwithstanding was not further prosecuted against them And this unluckie disturbance of the due course of justice in the supreme Court and Councell of the kingdome occasioned a fatall division in it and them and was the true rise of the two actions at Warre the one between your Majesty and your Parliament and the other between the Parliament and your Majesty which hath since overrun this whole Land with such violence that no preeminence of the Crowne or liberty of the Subject how well established soever have been able to stand before it But force throughout prevailing above right a sea of confused disorder brake in upon us and a face of barbarous anarchy for a time covered this whole Realme In tender consideration whereof and prevention of that utter desolation which must needs speedily overwhelme this miserable kingdome if an other like floud of civill warre should rise upon it your Petitioners humbly prostrate at your Majesties feet do there implore your gracious protection And do most humbly pray your Majesty as they do also your Parliament that due and speedy justice may passe upon all persons of what degree or quality soever that may be found guilty of any intention of over-awing or over-ruling your Majesty or your Parliament before or since the beginning of the late War the cursed issue of that highest misdemeanour and treason can be devised against your Majesty and this your kingdome and respectively declared to be such by your Majesty and by your two Houses of Parliament Or if this in which there seemeth to have been some difficulty in time of peace should now be grown lesse possible after so long a warre That then for the time past your Majesty of your owne Princely clemency and by authority of your Parliament would be pleased to passe an act of oblivion and to grant your full and free pardon to all the aforesaid respectively accused persons and to all other that may be guilty of the same misdemeanour and treason as also to all those that have been involved in the late warre through the failer of due and timely justice in those originall and criticall cases And howsoever that for the time to come the Militia of the kingdome may by act of Parliament be for ever setled in such a way as may safegard the Parliament and all the Members of both Houses thereof and above all your Majesties sacred person aswell against all tumultuary assemblies of the people as from all attempts by way of force though under pretence of authority from the King Which we humbly conceive is not impossible to be done without making a divorce between the Scepter and the Sword which have been for so many ages joyned in marriage by the providence of God and Law of the Land And that in and by the same act of Parliament severe defences may be made against all other unlawfull practises that may be found to be any way to the prejudice of that intire freedome which ought to be maintained in all Parliamentary proceedings by all that wish well to their King or Countrey That immediately upon the passing of this Act the whole souldiery in this kingdome may be disbanded the Committees for the safety of the respective Counties dissolved and that your Majesty thereupon returning to Westminster all other matters either now in difference between your Majesty and your Parliament or between the two Houses thereof or mentioned in your Majesties most gracious Message of the twentieth of January 1641. or in any other Propositions and desires either of your Majesty or of the Lords and Commons especially those which concern the purity of Religion of the Worship of God and right government of his Church may by the united authority of your Majesty and of your Parliament be setled in such a manner that the Throne of the kingdome of Jesus Christ may be erected in the due height thereof in this Realme and the Throne of his Vicegerent therein may not be abased nor any liberty of any the freemen of this kingdom infringed in the least degree without your Majesties and their free and full consent in Parliament it being as we humbly conceive altogether unjust and unlawful and therfore clearly cannot be either profitable or durable for the Kings or Subjects of England to attempt the making of any change even to the better of the Lawes and present Government in any other fashion That as the most probable and powerfull meanes to put an end to all strife and to prevent all partialitie or suspicion of partialitie in these supreme Resolutions all the Members of both Houses of Parliament may by an Ordinance be enjoyned to take such an Oath as may be
A PROJECT For an Equitable and lasting PEACE Designed in the year 1643. when the affairs stood in ballance before the second coming of the Scots into this Kingdom from a desire to have kept them out then WITH A Disquisition how the said Project may now be reduced to fit the present conjuncture of affairs In a Letter sent to divers prudent persons of all sorts For preventing the Scots bringing an Army into Enland a third time or making themselves Umpires of our affaires By a cordiall Agreement of the King Parliament City Army and of all the people of this kingdome among our selves Pro me praesente Senatus hominumque praeteria viginti millia vestem mutaverunt Quum omnes boni non recusarent quin vel pro me vel mecum perirent armis decertare pro mea salute nolui quod vincere vinci luctuosum reip fore putavi Cicero in Orat. ad Quirit post Redit Saluberimum est Reip. si magna Imperia diuturna non sint ut temporis modus imponatur quibus Juris non potest Tit. Liv. Printed in the yeare 1648. A LETTER sent to divers prudent Persons of all sorts SIR I Humbly pray you to take the paines to peruse first the Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament of the fourth and his Majesties of the twelfth of August 1642. After them the considerations dedicated to the Lord Major and Aldermen of the City in the yeare 1642. Comparing the second sheet therof with a part of the Declaration of the Army of the 14. of June 1647. from those words But because neither the granting of this alone c. to these we desire that the right and freedome of the people to represent c. And in the last place the Project I send you with this built upon the same foundation which was first layed in the Considerations and which the army once thought firme enough to support their hops of Common and equall right and freedome to themselves and to all the freeborn people of this Land at as much leisure as you may obtaine from your many other great occasions and with as much attention as you may think fit to bestow upon a piece of no more worth bearing these thoughts in your minde while you are reading it 1. Whether it had not been honorable for the King and his Party safe for the Parliament and theirs and equitable for both to have made a Peace upon the termes therin designed at the time of the writing thereof which was upon the first newes of the Scots resolution to come into Enland the second time and from a desire to have kept them out then by agreeing among our selves 2. Whether under favour and with all humblenesse be it written it had not been more conducible to the Reformation and establishment of Religion in the Kingdomes of England and Ireland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government according to the Word of God which ought to be the onely rule thereof and to the extirpation of Popery Superstition Haeresie Schisme Prophanenesse and whatsoever may be found contrary to found Doctrine and the power of godlinesse And to the preservation and defence of the Kings Majesties person and authority of the rights and liberties of the Parliament of England and the liberties and publique weale of this Kingdome for the King and all the subjects thereof at that time to have come to a Peace among themselves upon the said designed termes than to have continued the Warre by calling in strangers to their respective assistance upon the terms practised by one side and in probability designed by the other 3. Whether it may not be thought more expedient for the two Houses of the Parliament of England and the whole people thereof to come to an Agreement with his Majesty upon the same terms at this time notwithstanding the great alteration of affaires in their favour since the Project was designed than either to ingage in a new War against the Scots with such a division among Englishmen as will be an indubitable consequent if not an antecedent therof or to admit them to be Vmpires in the affairs of England as they will become if the differences between his Majesty and his English Subjects should by Gods mercy come to an Accommodation upon their third as those between his Majesty and the Scots did upon their first bringing an Army into this Kingdome 4. Whether any and what exception can be taken to the justice or equitablenesse of any particular Article of the Project even at this time without having respect to the practicablenesse thereof whereof perhaps there may be lesse doubt ere long though I yet see no other sufficient ground for it but this that methinks the tide is turning Such are the revolutions of humane affairs And lastly in case any of the said Articles shall be judged though neither unjust nor unequall yet impracticable as things now stand whether the said Project may not be reduced to fit the present conjuncture of affaires with some additions abatements or alterations and what alterations abatements or additions may be found just and reasonable for the two Houses of Parliament to insist upon and for his Majesty to yeeld unto in respect of the change and present state of affairs Secondly to passe your censure and let me know your sense upon all the foresaid particulars with the freedome of a freeman of this Kingdome for whom I conceive it to be lawfull with due submission to those in Authority to conferre together in a private way about the best meanes to recover and maintaine a lasting Peace in the Realm especially at a time when there is cause of feare that it may be yet longer discontinued by the coming in of strangers in Armes which is once more our condition at the present And in particular How you conceive the Militia may be setled so as may bee honourable for the King and yet safe for his Parliament and Kingdome of England according as is designed in the Project Vpon the receipt of which favour from you I do hereby engage my selfe to make you a returne of my thoughts upon the fifth and last Article and by way of Advance do now let you know that to the three first I should make a short Answer in the Affirmative to the fourth in the Negative In the last place I do here promise you to keep your Answer to my selfe only if you shall so require me or if I shal publish it with your leave yet never to discover your name if you shall command me to conceale it In exchange of which promise I must crave one from you to suffer no Copie to be taken in writing nor any new Impression to be made either of the Project or of this Letter untill I may finde the season opportune for the Publication of them which I do not as yet And for that reason though I send you them in Print to ease the trouble of transcribing I have made
devised for the sure binding them to give their Votes according to their consciences in all things put to the question And that for the further security and comfort of your people your Majesty would be graciously pleased not onely to give free admittance to such Committees of both Houses of Parliament as may be chosen by them humbly to represent the reasons of their Resolutions to your Majesty and to give satisfaction to any doubts your Majesty upon advisement with your Privy or Learned Counsel may have about them before the giving of your conclusive voice but that of your Princely grace you would condescend so farre as to oblige your self likewise by a voluntary Oath not to deny any thing that to the best of your understanding so informed as aforesaid shall be really for the good of your Subjects and that may advance the true Protestant Religion oppose Popery and Superstition secure the Law of the Land upon which is built as well your Majesties just Prerogative as the proprietie and libertie of the Subject confirme all just power and privilege of Parliament and render your Majesty and your people happy by a good understanding which are your Majesties owne gracious words of engagement in two of your Messages from Notingham That because the desires and mindes of the Commons of this kingdome cannot certainely be understood by the Votes of their Representants in any one Parliament upon which and many other prudent considerations it hath been by our wise Ancestors provided that the Parliament ought to be held at least once every year after the making of which provisiō it was long before any Parliament was continued to a greater length That it may be agreed that immediately after the establishment of all things abovesaid in the manner aforesaid this present Parliament shall be dissolved by the free consent of both Houses But that before the dissolution thereof there may be an Act passed for the assurance of an annuall Parliament in the same manner that a trienniall is now assured with these necesary sup plementall additions thereunto 1. One for the regulating of Elections in such a manner that they may be more free and lesse chargeable as well to the Countrey as to the persons in competition and that returnes may not be so wholly in the power of the Sheriffe and of that party he favoureth as hitherto they have bin and that some more ready easie and certaine way may be devised for the judgement of the lawfulnes and truth of returnes then hath beene in use of late to the manifest hazard of the publique liberty if there should be such a conspiracie of Sheriffes as may be imagined 2. Another for the safe conducting of the Members of both Houses of Parliament to the place appointed for the holding of the Parliament and for their like safe return into their Countries by the Sheriffs of the respective Counties through which they are to passe being therunto required But this only as oft as the Parliament may happen to be assembled without any signification of the personall pleasure and command of the King for the time being 3. And a third as well for the prevention of the unseasonable dissolution of Parliaments without the consent of both houses as for the assurance of the dissolution of every Parliament within the space of one yeere and for the making of two Sessions thereof at such times as by the two houses shall be thought most convenient That if it shall be made appeare upon sufficient proofe that your Majesties sacred person was in any apparent danger or hazard by those tumults at Westminster which have been alleaged for the reason of your departure from thence that in that case it may be publiquely declared and recorded that your Majesty was not to blame in withdrawing your selfe from your Parliament there the rather because your Majesty hath since been pleased to make many gracious offers to give a meeting again to your Parliament if they would adjourne to any other place and this as well before as after the beginning of the late unnaturall Warre But if upon due examination it should be found that your Majesties beliefe of the malice of certaine persons against your sacred person which you thought you had too great reason to feare they intended to seize and of the evident danger not your selfe onely but your Royall Consort and the Princes your children were in by the tumults raised and countenanced by the said persons hath been grounded only upon misinformation and that the failer of the timely discovery of the falsehood and maliciousnesse of such information happened also through your Majesties owne default in not having taken the course by Law directed to that end that in this case your Majestie of your owne meere motion may be graciously pleased to acknowledge and command this to be publiquely recorded as an errour for the preventing of the like in future times That if all or any of the Lords Knights Citizens and Burgesses who before or after the beginning of the late Warre withdrew themselves from the Parliament cannot make it evidently appeare that they could not continue there with such safety of their persons and plenary freedome of voting as all members of Parliament of right ought to enjoy that in this case they or such of them as shall faile in full proof of the point abovesaid may for ever be disabled to fit againe in this or any future Parliament in this kingdome and may be further censured in such a manner as to the wisedome of the respective Houses of Parliament shall seeme just and meete And that howsoever no such Member of either House may be readmitted without making a publique acknowledgment of and submission for their faults no danger how great or certaine soever being sufficient to excuse them for having failed in their duty to their King country either by concealing their minds or by deserting their stations before any one of them lost any one drop of his bloud which hath been the occasiō of so much bloudshed of their fellow subjects It being visible that there could have been no breach between your Majesty and your two Houses of Parliament if all their respective Members had continued at Westminster and had there avowed their be●ng of the same judgement which they have since discovered otherwhere That the publique debt contracted by occasion of the charges of the late warre may be borne by the partakers therein on that side which cannot make it appeare that they had just cause to take up armes because they could not obtaine justice by the Law of the Land in some thing that was either of absolute necessity to be maintained for the publique weale or at least of such importance as was worthy to be contended about by arms there being no other sufficient cause for the beginning of a civill Warre even by them that have unquestionable authority to make one And if both parties should chance to faile in the proofe
to be chosen the main thing to be intended in this case and beyond which humane providence cannot reach to any assurance of possitive good seems to be this viz to provide that however unjust or corrupt the persons of Parliament men in present or future may prove or what ever ill they may do to particular parties or to the whole in particular things during their respective termes or periods yet they shall not have the temptation or advantage of an unlimited power fixt in them during their own pleasures wherby to perpetuate injustice or oppression upon any without end or remedy or to advance or uphold any one particular party faction or interest whatsoever to the oppression or prejudice of the Community and the inslaving of the kingdom unto al posterity but that the people may have an equall hope or possibility if they have made an ill choice at one time to mend it in another and the Members of the House themselves may be in a capacity to taste of subjection as well as rule and may be inclined to consider of other mens cases as what may come to be their own This we speak of in relation to the House of Commons as being intrusted on the peoples behalfe for their interest in that great and supreme power of the Common-wealth viz. the Legislative power with the power of finall judgement which being in its own nature so arbitrary and in a manner unlimited unlesse in point of time is most unfit and dangerous as the peoples interest to be fixt in the persons of the same men during life or their own pleasures Neither by the originall constitution of this state was it or ought it to continue so nor does it where-ever it is and continues so render that State any better then a Tyranny or the people subjected to it any better then Vassals But in all States where there is any face of common freedome and particularly in this State of England as is most evident both by many positive laws and ancient constant custome the people have a right to new and successive elections unto that great and supreme trust at certain periods of time which is so essentiall and fundamentall to their freedom as it cannot or ought not to be denied them or withholden from them without which the House of Commons is of very little concernment to the interest of the Commons of England Yet in this we would not be misunderstood in the least to blame those Worthies of both Houses whose zeale to vindicate the Liberties of this Nation did procure that Act for Continuance of this Parliament whereby it was secured from being dissolved at the Kings pleasure as former Parliaments had been as reduced to such a certainty as might inable them the better to assert and vindicate the liberties of this Nation immediately before so highly invaded and then also so much indangered And this we take to be the principall ends and grounds for which in that exigency of time and affairs it was procured to which we acknowledge it hath happily been made use of but we cannot think it was by those Worthies intended or ought to be made use of to the perpetuating of that supreme trust and power in the persons of any during their own pleasures or to the debarring of the people from their right of elections totally now when those dangers or exigencies were past and the affairs and safety of the Common-wealth would admit of such a change Having thus cleared our grounds and intentions as we hope from all scruples and mis-understandings in what follows we shall proceed further to propose what we humbly desire for the setling and securing of our own and the kingdoms rights and liberties through the blessing of God to posterity And therefore upon all the grounds premised we further humbly desire as followeth 3. That some determinate period of time may be set for the continuance of this and future Parliaments beyond which none shall continue and upon which new Writs may of course issue out and new elections successively take place according to the intent of the Bill for Trienniall Parliaments And herein we would not be mis-understood to desire a present or sudden dissolution of this Parliament but only as is exprest before that some certain period may be set for the determining of it so as it may not remain as now continuable for ever or during the pleasure of the present Members and we should desire that the period to be now set for ending this Parliament may be such as may give sufficient time for provision of what is wanting and necessary to be passed in point of just reformation and for further securing the rights and liberties and settling the peace of the kingdom In order to which we further humbly offer 4. That secure provision may be made for the continuance of future Parliaments so that they may not be adjournable or dissolvable at the Kings pleasure or any other wayes then by their own consent during their respective periods but at those periods each Parliament to determine of course as before This we desire may be now provided for if it may be so as to put it out of al dispute for future though we think of right it ought not to have been otherwise before ☞ And thus a firme foundation being laid in the authority and constitution of Parliaments for the hopes at least of common and equal-right and freedom to our selves and all the free-born people of this land we shall hereby for our parts freely and cheerfully commit our stock or share of interest in this kingdome into this common bottome of Parliaments And though it m●y for our particulars go ill with us in one voyage yet we shall thus hope if right be with us to fare better in another These things we desire may be provided for by Bill or Ordinance of Parliament to which the Royall assent may be desired and when his Majesty in these things and what else shall be proposed by the Parliament necessary for securing the rights and liberties of the people and for settling the Militia and peace of the Kingdome shall have given his concurrence to put them past dispute we shall then desire that the rights of his Majesty and his posterity maybe considered of and setled in all things so far as may consist with the right and freedom of the subject and with the security of the same for future Thus the Army the last yeer The lip of sincerity as of Truth is stable for ever Let them now declare their being still of the same mind in the last and capitall Article the Peace is made They under God shall have the honour to have made it And the whole Kingdom will blesse them For though by the Oath of Supremacy I have often taken I think my selfe obliged to adde That his Majesty shall have great cause well to advise upon it before he part with his Privilege of dissolving all future Parliaments without the consent of the Houses upon the experience he hath had of doing it but in one yet by his Majesties having heretofore declared his inclination to treat upon the Proposals of the Army I presume this expedient to agree that Article the hardest of all other to be agreed would not stick with his Majesty FINIS