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A47884 A memento treating of the rise, progress, and remedies of seditions with some historical reflections upon the series of our late troubles / by Roger L'Estrange. L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. 1682 (1682) Wing L1271; ESTC R13050 109,948 165

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must have it in his Power to Oppress his People or the People have it in theirs to Destroy their Soveraign and betwixt the Ills of Tyranny and Rebellion all the world knows the Disproportion Wherefore let Subjects hope and believe the best of their Prince his Will and Inclination without medling with his Power for it is not less his Interest to be well Obey'd and Belov'd then it is theirs to be well Govern'd Yet when a Prince by Exigencies of State finds himself forc'd to waive the Ordinary Path and Course of Law the Less he swerves the Better and the more unwilling he appears to Burthen his People the more willing shall he find them to serve him Especially he should be Cautelous where men's Estates or Freedoms are the Question to make the Necessity as Manifest as is possible and the Pressure as Light and as Equall as Consists with his Honour and Convenience Mixing however with This General Indulgence such a Particular Severity where his Authority is Disputed that the Obedient may have Reason to Love his Goodness and the Refractary as much to Fear his Displeasure By These Means may a Prince preserve himself from the Hatred of his People without exposing himself to their Contempt and in Order to the avoiding of That too wee 'l take up This Observation by the way That Subjects do Generally Love or Hate for their own Sakes but when they despise a Prince it is for some Personall Weakness or Indignity in himself Nothing makes a Monarch Cheaper in the Eyes of his People than That which begets an ill opinion either of his Prudence or Courage and if they find once that he will either be Over-reach'd or Over-aw'd they have his measure By Courage here we do not intend a Resolution only against Visible and Pressing Dangers but an Assurance likewise and Firmness of mind against Audacious and Threatning Counsels The Prudence we intend is of a more extensive Notion and from the most Mysterious Affairs of Royalty descends to the most Private and Particular Actions of a Princes Life It enters into his Cabinet-Counsells and Resolves his Publick Acts of State his very Forms of Language and Behaviour his Exercises and Familiar Entertainments In fine It is scarce less Dangerous for a Soveraign to separate the Prince from the Person even in his dayly Practises and Conversations then to permit Others to Divide Them in their Arguments And in a word to secure himself from Contempt it behoves a Monarch to Consider as his most Deadly Enemies such as Brave his Authority and by no means to allow even in his most Acceptable Servants and most Familiar Humours too great a Freedom toward his Person Not but that a Soveraign may in many Cases Familiarize with his Subjects and by so doing win the Reputation of a Wise and Gracious Prince Provided that the sweetness of his Nature cause him not to forget the Severity of his Office and that his Stooping to his People prove not an Emboldening of them to come up to him This is a Course to Prevent Sedition in the First Cause and check it in the Bud. But if it come once to shew it self and spread there is first Requisite upon a Clear and Open Proof a Speedy Execution of Laws to the Vtmost Rigour I say upon a Clear and Open Proof for in such cases 't is of great Advantage to a State to make the Crime as evident as the Punishment that the People may at once Detest the Fact and Approve the Iustice. I say Likewise a Speedy Execution for Delay brings many Inconveniences It gives a Faction Time to Contrive and Vnite and Boldness to Attempt for it looks as if they that sit at the Helm were either more sensible of the Danger or less mindfull of their Duty then becomes them Lastly whereas it is added to the utmost Rigour My meaning is not to extend the Severity to a Multitude of Offenders but to Deterre the Generality by making some few and Dreadfull Examples Nay my Advice should be to Pick these Few too They should not be Fools Madmen or Beggers but the Boldest the Wisest the most Circumspect and Wealthy of the Party the Leaders and first Starters of the Quarrel to shew that neither Confidence should Protect them nor their Shifts and Politicks avail them But above All let not their Money save Them for That 't no other then Setting of a Price upon the Head of the Soveraign Another Expedient to Stop a spreading Mischief is for a Prince to keep a watchful Eye over Great Assemblies which are either Irregular and Lawless or Regular and Constant or Arbitrary and Occasional Concerning the First It is seldom seen where the Manner of a Meeting is Tumultuary that the Business of it is not so too and where Many Concur in One unlawful Act 't is no hard matter to perswade them to agree in Another So that to frustrate the Ends and prevent the Consequences of such Meetings the surest way is for the Soveraign to employ his Authority Tamely and strictly to Prohibit them If That does no Good He has no more to do but Instantly to Scatter Them by force and single out the Heads of the Riot for Exemplary Punishment Touching Conventions which are Regular and Steady It concerns the Chief Magistrate not to be without his Creatures and Discoverers in Those Assemblies and to see that they be well Influenc'd as to the Government For Instance when the People Meet to Choose Officers when Those Officers meet to Advise upon Business 't is worth the while for a Prince to learn how the Pulse Beats and Principally to Over-watch Churches and Courts of Iudicature Both in regard of the hazard of Errours in Matters of Law and Religion and of the Multitude being ever in readiness and humour to Entertain them As to Meetings Arbitrary and Occasional heed must be taken to the Persons assembling the Occasion which brings them Together and the Matter whereupon they Treat which we shall handle in their proper Places and so pass from Generals to Particulars beginning with the CHURCH Sect. I. By what Means Heresies and Schisms may be kept out of the CHURCH Their Encrease hinder'd and the Seditious Consequences of Them Prevented With the Remedies of Other Mischiefs arising from Disorders in the CHURCH SInce so it is that Divisions in the Church have no further Interest in This place than as they Lead to Seditions in the State the shortest Cutt I know will be to Reduce all of that Tendency to Sir Francis Bacon's Notable Comprizal of them under Two Properties If a New Sect have not Two Properties fear it not for says He it will not spread The one is the Supplanting or the Opposing of Authority established For Nothing is more Popular than That The Other is the giving Licence to Pleasures and a Voluptuous Life For as for Speculative Heresies such as were in Ancient Times the Arrians
and Provincial Governments Call it a Guard still for the very Name of the Other sounds like a Grievance The One supposing only the Peoples Care of their Soveraign the Other intimating the Soveraigns Jealousie of his People Let me not be understood as in allowance of This Over-proportion for such a Guard is but an Army in Disguise There may be Temporary Occasions indeed for Temporary and Extraordinary Levies but the word Temporary is commonly attended with such a Train of Reasons for Perpetuity that if the Occasion be not very Manifest the World is apt to doubt of the Necessity Not that the Generality have any Right to judge of or Debate the Grounds of a Change but I suppose that Their Opinions and After-feelings will not be deny'd to have some Influence upon the Event of it To Conclude That Pince is Great Safe and Happy that Commands by his Armes Abroad and Governs by his Laws at Home The Apprehension of Conspiracies and Plots in my opinion weighs not much or if there be any danger the failing is rather in the Constitution or Administration then in the want of Power to keep the People quiet Good Laws and Good Officers will do the Business without an Army and if the Instruments be bad The Hazzard's Ten times greater with it It will be needful here for the Clearing of the Question to make a Particular Enquiry concerning Seditions and that 's the Point we 'l handle in the Next Chapter which for Order sake we shall divide into Seven Sections with their Subdivisions as occasion shall require CAP. IX Of Seditions in Particular and shewing in what manner they arise from These Seven Interests The Church the Bench the Court the Camp the City the Countrey and the Body Representative IN the first Chapter of this Tract we have touch'd upon the Matter and Causes of Seditions in General We must be now a little more Particular The Scene 's Vtopia and we 'l Divide it into Seaven Interests The Church the Bench the Court the Camp the City the Countrey and the Body Representative the least considerable of which being in any great disorder hazzards the whole and That either by engaging in some Actual Violence against the Government or by some Irregularity of Proceeding that may Provoke or Cause it Of These in their Course and first of the Church § I. Seditions arising from the CHURCH THose Troubles in the State which derive from Distempers in the Church proceed either from Faction Ignorance or Scandal The Strongest Tie upon Reasonable Nature is Conscience and the Stubbornest Consciences are Those that do they know not What they know not Why. In Truth what is Conscience without Vnderstanding but as well-meaning Madness And That 's the Fairest Sense my Charity can afford to the Blind Zeal of a Transported Multitude If Conscience bids them Kill the King Rob the Church and Tear up the Foundations of Both Governments They 'l do it Nay More This has been done and Providence it self Proclaim'd for the Doer of it Great Heed should then be taken what Persons are Entrusted with the Care of Souls since the Consequence of a Factions Preacher and a Mistaken Conscience proves many times the Ruine both of Prince and People Under the Note of Faction I comprize all Opinions delivered Publickly and with Design against the Doctrine Practice or Authority of the Church Reduce it in Short to Haeresie and Schism The former whereof reflecting only upon Matters of Faith concerns rather Religion then Government and lyes beyond the Line of my purpose but in This Place the Latter is the Question and briefly as we may we 'l take a view of the Rise the Method the Design and the Effects of it It is with Church-men as with other Mortals There are of all Sorts Good Bad and Indifferent Some we have known whom neither the Loss of Dignity Fortune Freedom no nor the Loss of Life it self could ever move from the strict Rule of Conscience Magnanimity and Duty Others we have seen to Exercise these Cruelties though Ecclesiasticks themselves upon the Nobler Sort of their own Function And some again we have observ'd to shift with every Turn and Steer by Interest still putting on the Livery of the Prevailing Party Squaring the Rule and Will of Heaven to the Appetites and Passions of Humanity So that upon the whole 't is evident some Clergy-men are Quiet because they have Preferments and Others Troublesom because they want them The Principal Ingredients into Schism are These Ambition Avarice Popularity and Envy The Scope of it is to destroy Authority and advance a Faction Now how to accomplish This is the Great Work for a Rent in the Church signifies nothing without a Sedition in the State and in This manner they proceed First In a Style of Holy Tenderness they slily disaffect the People against the Rights of the Church as in themselves unlawful and utterly Destructive of Christian Liberty To strengthen and advance the Imposture what do they next but rip up all the Failings and shew the Nakedness of their Superiours Still aggravating what they find and creating Scandalous Matter where they want it When the Multitude are once mov'd in Conscience against the Impositions and in Passion against the Imposers their next attempt is upon the Authority and then They divide into Separate Assemblies which under colour of so many Conscientious Dissenters from the Ceremonies of the Church are infallibly so many Contrivers against the Peace of the Kingdom For here comes in the Civil Power to prohibit their Seditious Meetings and Then the Saints they cry are Persecuted The Cause is God's and they are ty'd in Conscience to bind their Kings in Chains and through all Extremities to persue a Reformation This is the Fruit of Tolerating a Faction under a Countenance of Conscience Nor is it any wonder to see those wretches draw their Swords against Their Soveraign in the Field whose Souls are turn'd against him in the Pulpit But 't is Objected that some Ministers do really make a Conscience of Conformity Truly the better for Them if they forbear upon That Accompt but 't is the same thing to the Publick upon what account soever for they Prescribe what they Practise and by the President of Sticking upon a Doubt of Conscience they open a Door to Disobedience upon any Pretence of it breaking the Bond of Vnity in favour of a Particular nicety of Opinion Very notable is The Determination of the Lord St. Albans in This Case In Points Fundamental he that is not with us is against us In Points not Fundamental he that is not against us is with us Let this suffice to shew the Political Inconvenience of Entertaining Schismatical Preachers It may be now a Question How far a Christian Magistrate may justifie the sufferance of any man to exercise the Ministery within his Dominions that 's a profess'd Enemy to Episcopacy Which I Offer with the
Conscience By which Argument the People Govern where there is no express Law and the King only where there is Taking it once for Granted that the Prince is Limited by the Law which Conscientiously he is for in observing the Law he does but keep his own word They presently Conclude that if the King transgress the Rule of his Power he forfeits the Right of it and that for such a Violation he is accountable to the People for whose Behoof the Law was made This is a Specious but a Poysonous Inference and rather adapted to a Mutinous Interest than to a Peaceable and candid Reason Let a Transgression be supposed are there any Laws Paenal upon the Monarch But there are none that warrant Tyranny Right but there are some yet that forbid Rebellion and without questioning the cause that declare all Violences whatsoever upon the Person or Authority of the King to be Crimina Laesae Majestatis or Treason Are there any Laws now on the Other side that depose Kings for Male-administration If none the Law being Peremptorily against the One and only not for the Other what does it but constitute the Subject in all cases accountable for his Resistance to the Sovereign and Leave the Supream Magistrate in all cases to answer for his Mis-government to Almighty God But let the Controversie pass for we are not here so much to enter into the True State of Matters as to deliver their Appearances And now is the time to bring the Faylings and Misfortunes of the Prince upon the Stage and by exposing him Naked before the Multitude to make his Person Cheap and his Government Odious to his People Which they Effect by certain Oblique Discourses from the Press and Pulpit by Lamentable Petitions craving Deliverance from such and such Distresses of Estate or Conscience and These they Print and Publish converting their pretended supplications for Relief into bitter Remonstrances of the Cruelty and Injustice of their Rulers By These wiles are the Vulgar drawn to a dislike of Monarchy and That 's the Queue to a discourse of the Advantages of a Popular Government The next step to the Design of introducing it There 's none of This or That they cry at Amsterdam and in short from these Grudgings of Mutiny These Grumblings against Authority they slide Insensibly into direct and open Practises against it Alas what are These Motions but the sparkling of a Popular Disposition now in the Act of Kindling which only wants a little Blowing of the Cole to Puff up all into a Flame From the Leading and Preparatory Motives to Sedition now to the more Immediate and Enflaming Causes of it which are reducible either to Religion Oppression Privileges or Poverty Subsection I. Seditions which concern Religion THose Seditions which concern Religion referr either to Doctrine or Discipline Haeresie or Schism The Former is a Strife as they say for a better or a worse a Contest betwixt the Persuasion of the People and the Religion of the Government in matter of Faith and tending either to Overthrow the One or to Establish the Other In This Case the People may be in the Right as to the Opinion but never so as to justifie the Practice for Christianity does not dissolve the Order of Society To Obey God rather than Man is Well Let us Obey him then in not Resisting those Powers to which his Ordinance hath Subjected us Touching This with the Brethren's Leave I take it to be the more Venial-Mortal Sin of the Two That is the Rebellion of Haeresie is less unpardonable than That of Schism in regard first that the Subject of the Difference is a matter of greater Import Secondly 't is not Impossible but the Mis-persuasion may be founded upon Invincible Ignorance I do not say that I had rather be an Arrian than a Calvinist but I averr that he is the foulest Rebell that for the Slightest Cause upon the Least Provocation and against the Clearest Light Murthers his Sovereign Those Seditions which are mov'd upon account of Schism are commonly a combination of Many against One of Errour against Truth and a Design that strikes as well at the Civil Power as the Ecclesiastick This being a Subject which both in the first Section of This Chapter and Else-where is sufficiently discours'd upon we shall rather address our selves to the Means Peculiar to a City of comforting and aiding these unquiet agitations as more properly the Business of our present Argument Great Towns have first the Advantage of Great Numbers of People within a Small Compass of Place where with much Ease and Privacy Those of the Faction may hold their full and frequent Meetings Debate Contrive nay and Execute with all Convenience For when the Plot is Laid the Manner and the Time Appointed there 's no more trouble for the Rendezvous the Partie 's Lodg'd already the Town it self being the most Commodious Quarter 'T is in respect of these favourable concurrences that men of Turbulent and Factious Spirits rather make choice of Populous Cities to Practise in Another Hazard may arise from the Temper of the Inhabitants as well as from the Condition of the Place and from the very Humour and Application of the Women in a notion distinct from That of the Men. From the Temper of the Inhabitants first as partaking usually of the Leaven of their Correspondents whom we find very often both Famous for Trade and Notorious for Schism But Men are Generally so good-Natur'd as to think well of any Religion they Thrive under Further their Employment being Traffick or Negotiating for Benefit and their Profession being to Buy as Cheap as they can and to Sell as Dear without any measure between the Risque or Disbursment and the Profit they are commonly better Accountants than Casuists and will rather stretch their Religion to their Interest than shrink their Interest to their Religion They have again so superstitious a Veneration for the Iustice of Paying Mony upon the Precise Hour that they can very hardly believe any man to be of the right-Religion that Breaks his Day And observe it let a Prince run himself deep in Debt to his Imperial City they shall not so much Clamour at him for an ill Pay-Master as upon a Fit of Holiness suspect him for an Heretick or Idolater Proposing a Tumult as the ready way to Pay themselves and That I reckon as the first step into a Rebellion Now how the Women come to be concern'd That first and Then why the City-Dames more then Other It is the Policy of all Cunning Innovatours when they would put a Trick upon the World in matter of Religion which they desire may be Receiv'd with Passion recommended with Zeal and Dispersed with Deligence to begin with the stronger Sex though the Weaker Vessel that excellent Creature Woman And This Course they take out of These Considerations First as That Sex is Naturally scrupulous and Addicted to