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A66131 The Prince of Orange his declaration shewing the reasons why he invades England : with a short preface, and some modest remarks on it. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715.; William III, King of England, 1650-1702. 1688 (1688) Wing W2331; ESTC R3225 30,452 32

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THE Prince of Orange HIS DECLARATION SHEWING THE REASONS Why he Invades ENGLAND WITH A Short PREFACE AND SOME MODEST REMARKS on It. LONDON Published by Randal Taylor near Stationers-Hall MDCLXXXVIII The Prince of Orange's Declaration shewing the Reasons why He invades England with a short Preface and some modest Remarks on it THERE having been various Discourses about the Reasonableness and Iustice of the Dutch Invasion the Prince's great Love and special Care of the Protestant Religion and English Protestants set forth in the most Charming manner and the Desperateness of the Protestant State and Condition painted in the blackest and most frightful Colours Our Natural Leige Lord notwithstanding his Unparallel'd Grace to all represented as designing the greatest Cruelty against his own Subjects strange Stories of ill things whispered and nothing less than a Secret L●●gue between His Majesty of Great Britain and the French King to Extirpate all Protestants entred into These Reports are with so much Art and Cunning spread as to startle the most Considering Protestants of all Persuasions whence nothing could be more eagerly desired than a Sight of the Prince of Orange's Declaration For the Expectations of most Men are That some Extraordinary Secrets some hidden Works of Darkness should be reveal'd and brought to Light as generally those who yet never saw the Prince's Declaration do still believe But there not being one word of any such Treaty we cannot see why it is that the Prince comes Over and if others impartially Peruse the Declaration we doubt not but 't will Convince them that they give no Reason powerful enough to Iustifie so Bloody an Enterprise as this in the Issue must needs be We will therefore give you a true Copy of the Prince's Declaration word for word as it runs in the West THE DECLARATION OF HIS HIGHNES William Henry By the Grace of GOD PRINCE of ORANGE c. Of the REASONS inducing Him To appear in Armes in the Kingdome of England for Preserving of the Protestant Religion and for Restoring the Lawes and Liberties of England Scotland and Ireland IT is both certain and Evident to all men that the Publike Peace and Happines of any State or Kingdome can not be preserved where the Lawes Liberties and Customs established by the Lawfull authority in it are openly Transgressed and Annulled More especially where the alteration of Religion is endeavoured and that a Religion which is contrary to Law is endeavoured to be introduced Upon which those who are most Immediatly Concerned in it are Indispensably bound to endeavour to Preserve and maintain the established Lawes Liberties and Customes and above all the Religion and Worship of God that is Established among them And to take such an effectual care that the Inhabitants of the said State or Kingdome may neither be deprived of their Religion nor of their Civill Rights Which is so much the more Necessary because the Greatnes and Security both of Kings Royall families and of all such as are in Authority as well as the Happines of their Subjects and People depend in a most especiall manner upon the exact observation and maintenance of these their Lawes Liberties and Customes Upon these grounds it is that we cannot any longer forbear to Declare that to our great regret we see that those Councellours who have now the chieffe credit with the King have overturned the Religion Lawes and Liberties of those Realmes and subjected them in all things relating to their Consciences Liberties and Properties to Arbitrary Government and that not only by secret and Indirect waies but in an open and undisguised manner Those Evil Councellours for the advancing and colouring this with some plausible pretexts did Invent and set on foot the Kings Dispencing power by vertue of which they pretend that according to Law he can Suspend and Dispence with the Execution of the Lawes that have been enacted by the Authority of the King and Parliament for the security and happines of the Subject and so have rendered those Laws of no effect Tho there is nothing more certain then that as no Lawes can be made but by the joint concurrence of King and Parliament so likewise lawes so enacted which secure the Publike peace and safety of the Nation and the lives and liberties of every subject in it can not be repealed or suspended but by the same authority For tho the King may pardon the punishment that a Transgressour has incurred and to which he is condemned as in the cases of Treason or Felony yet it can not be with any colour of reason Inferred from thence that the King can entirely suspend the execution of those Lawes relating to Treason or Felony Unless it is pretended that he is clothed with a Despotick and Arbitrary power and that the Lives Liberties Honours and Estates of the Subjects depend wholly on his good will and Pleasure and are entirely subject to him which must infallibly follow on the Kings having a power to suspend the execution of the Lawes and to dispence with them Those Evill Councellours in order to the giving some credit to this strange and execrable Maxime have so conducted the matter that they have obtained a Sentence from the Judges declaring that this Dispencing power is a Right belonging to the Crown as if it were in the power of the twelve Judges to offer up the Lawes Rights and Liberties of the whole Nation to the King to be disposed of by him Arbitrarily and at his Pleasure and expressly contrary to Lawes enacted for the security of the Subjects In order to the obtaining this Judgment those Evill Councellours did before hand examine secretly the Opinion of the Judges and procured such of them as could not in Conscience concurre in so pernicious a Sentence to be turned out and others to be substituted in their Rooms till by the chances which were made in the Courts of Judicature they at last obtained that Judgment And they have raised some to those Trusts who make open Profession of the Popish Religion though those are by Law Rendred Incapable of all such Employments It is also Manifest and Notorious that as his Majestie was upon his coming to the Crown received and acknowledged by all the subjects of England Scotland and Ireland as their King without the least opposition tho he made then open profession of the Popish Religion so he did then Promise and Solemnly Swear at his Coronation that he would maintain his subjects in the free enjoyment of their Lawes and Liberties and in particular that he would maintain the Church of England as it was established by Law It is likewise certain that there have been at diverse and sundry times several Lawes enacted for the preservation of those Rights and Liberties and of the Protestant Religion and among other Securities it has been enacted that all Persons whatsoever that are advanced to any Eccles●astical Dignity or to bear Office in either University as likewise all other that should be put in
them After all were our Case as bad as the Declaration represents it How comes his Highness to be concern'd in it It is in his own words certain and evident to all Men that Sovereign States whether Monarchies or Commonwealths are independent and have no Right to interpose otherwise than by friendly Offices in one anothers Affairs but violate the Laws of Nations as often as they do Every Government holds within itself all those who are concern'd in the Redress of Abuses when they happen and the Laws inform us who they are Nor is any thing more inconsistent with Government than the interposition of Foreign Powers nor more deeply resented by the Laws of all Nations than abetting of it Turn the Tables and let all these dismal Stories as som perhaps are be told of Holland and be never ●o true I refer it to all Mankind to Holland to his Highness himself whether the King of England would not pass for a very bad Neighbour and a very bad Man if he should take the cognizance from the States and himself compose their Disorders by War The immediate Concern insinuated relates I suppose to the prospect of Succession to which if the calamities of War be the proofs of his tender Affection to our Nation it will soon wish the Right of his Highness were farther removed than it is thô it has now pleased God the Right should not be immediate even in his Royal Consort But the most immediate Right to Succeed is no Right to intermeddle before the Succession falls I am Successor to my Father but cannot therefore dispose of his Estate chuse his Tenants for him and appoint what Covenants he shall make in his Leases any more than a stranger to his Bloud And yet it follows that upon these Ground his Highness can no longer forbear to Declare that Counsellors in chief Credit with the King have openly overturned Religion and the Laws and subjected them in all things relating to Conscience Liberty and Property to Arbitrary Government If these were the true Grounds of his Highness he could as little forbear to Declare against many perhaps all Nations in which there are more rational and more real causes of complaint to be found by one who would look after them But put it to Mankind and all Mankind must Declare that these Grounds are no Grounds and which no party will allow to justify another which disturbs them Put it to the Nation and all the Nation must Declare that every Man enjoys his Conscience his Liberty and his Property even to the Envy of their less happy Neighbours and that there has been no proceeding against a single Man but for his single Misdemeanor and this not by Arbitrary but Legal Power And then to asperse His Majesty with overturning all Laws under the name of Evil Counsellors Why let His Counsellors be never so bad they are worse whose Service his Highness has used in Penning this Declaration Men whose Brains reach no farther than to Copy from their Rebellious Ancestors of 41 by whose example it is too sadly known whom they meant by Evil Counsellors and what they intended to do with Him. And yet his Highness leads his Name to such Men and giving Credit to such Counsellors himself talks of Evil Counsellors in Credit with the King. To these general Premises the Declaration adds a List of particulars whereof the first is the Dispensing Power And this his Highness takes the pains to moot and tell us how far it goes and where it must stop and that a Sentence has been obtained for it from the Judges Those Judges should in reason understand the Matter better than those on whose Information his Highness has thought fit to relye As I take it for a Parliamentary Business I leave it untoucht to the Wisdom of a Parliament believing all I can say will be said and considered there and resolving to acquiesce in their determination In the mean time How does this justifie Foreign Arms Here is the Case Kings are not bred at the Inns of Court but must trust Lawyers for Law as well as Physicians for Physick The oppression of Conscience-Laws deafens His Majesties Ears with perpetual Complaints and His tenderness of His Subjects prompts Him to relieve them He adviseth with those of the Profession and they inform Him He may by His Dispensing Power relieve them Legally and he does it Every body is not content and he refers the whole to a publick Legal Tryal Pray what better or other Advice could his Highness have given What could he do more himself if it had been his own Case And if I may be so bold Does he always do so much Unfortunate Majesty and Unfortunate Mankind If every Nation must be justly liable to the calamities of War in which a King happens to have a Counsellor who in point of a Law of his own Country differs in Opinion from a Prince of another Upon this Point it is further Declared that these Evil Counsellors secretly examined the Opinions of the Iudges and procured such to be turn'd out as could not in Conscience concur in their pernicious Sentence Why then those bad Counsellors were not bad enough to desire Men should Act against their Conscience and the pernicious Sentence was given according to Conscience But this again is His Highnesses Case He has the nomination of Men to Employments as well as the King And I humbly refer it to his Conscience whether before he nominate he do not satisfy himself that his Nominê be a Man on whom he may rely for the Service which he expects from him Is it justice to fall out with the King for doing what he does Himself and all Princes in the World and all private Men who have Employments at their disposal After minding us that we have a Crowned King and have had Laws enacted in England for preservatiou of our Rights Liberties and Religion The Declaration repeats again that Evil Counsellors have in effect annulled all those Laws contrary to the Kings Promise and Oath Strange descant upon this short plain Song The King has Dispenc'd with one Law and that in the interval of Parliament from which he promises Himself it will be taken away and which the Parliament design'd by his Highness as free as it shall be we find by the Declaration must take away and this upon Information which he had reason to trust that he might according to Law. Will the Rhetorick of his Highnesses Pen-men make this pass for a breach of Promise and Oath for annulling and abolishing all Laws when we see with our Eyes the establisht Religion actually maintained and assist every day at the Divine Service of it when we see the Judges Sit and Suitors obtain effectual Decrees and Sentences from them and effectual execution elsewhere when we see no Dispensation nor Inclination to it in any thing save in relief of an Oppression which the whole Nation as far as I perceive consents should not be continued
this fully free Parliament his Highness will refer the inquiry into the Birth of the pretended Prince of Wales to Vote him I suppose a Prince Prettyman the Son of Nobody For we know what the References of Conquerors signifie and what the freedom of their Arbitrators But it is time to leave talking when such things are said and think of other Weapons than Pens Would his Highness be content to refer his own Birth For though there be nothing of suspicion in it yet the nothing on his side is nearer to something than on the side of the Prince of Wales For one may suspect that he who talks at this rate was not born of an English Mother But after all there wants something still His Highness designs new Laws but Acts barely prepared have not the perfection of Laws Suppose the King should prove resty somewhere and advise upon it Why his Highness has found an Expedient He will himself concur in every thing that may procure the Peace witness his War and Happiness of the Nation that is just what he pleases He will take care that a Parliament shall be called in Scotland He will study to bring Ireland into a state that the settlement be observed and the Protestant and British Interest secured And as soon as the state of the Nation will admit he promises to send back his Foreign Forces and in the mean time invites and requires all Peers and all Persons whatsoever to c●me and assist him against all such as shall endeavour to ●ppose him That is in short He will be King of England For none pass Bills into Acts by their Concurrence but Kings To take care for calling Parliaments and for the settlement and security of the Kings Dominions belongs to none but the King And he who means to send his Forces away certainly means to stay himself And that we may not be ignorant in what condition he means to stay he takes the King upon him by way of Anticipation For no body can require the assistance of all his Subjects of all sorts but the King. So many Stories in the Declaration of a Prince which are the Entertainment of our Coffee-Houses and which we now perceive from whence they came so many dismal Idea's of our Misery who live a great deal more at ease th●n they do in Holland so much Trouble and so much Charge purely in Ch●●y to our Neighbours for no other design than to have a free Parliament Ass●mbled sounded untowardly and we could not forbear to suspect some de●ign ●t bottom though we had not found it own'd But if he had not told us ●o himself we should hardly have suspected that Interest could have drawn the Prince of Orange to dethrone the King unprince his Son and seize the Crown for himself But now we understand his Highness we will ende●vour his Highness shall understand us and our Protestant 〈…〉 better than he does We love our Princes for all we can be angry and talk more freely than they dare in other Countreys and will sooner dye at their Feet than Strangers shall injure much less dethrone them We love our Country and we love our Honour and before England shall become the Prey of Holland will take order they shall find nothing in it but Grass and Trees no Men for them to use as they did at Amboina We profess a Protestant Religion which teaches us not to rise in Arms against our King by whomsoever we are required but true Loyalty and Fidelity to him and his lawful Successors and to defend him against all attempts whatsoever against his Crown Person or Dignity and the World shall see we are no bad Scholars of so good a Mistress In a word we know and we Honour William Henry Prince of Orange but we know not William Henry King of England otherwise than for an Enemy Animadversions upon the Additional Declarations of his Highness THE Premises are so very plain that his Highness thought it necessary to take notice of them himself Against the Apprehensions of a Conquest he alledges the disproportion of his Forces and the joyning of English with him That disproportion is not his Fault and would have been tho he had brought Holland it self in his Fleet and all the Men in it But can he not design a Conquest for all that We were Conquered by the Normans and bare Twelve Thousand Suedes bid fair for the Conquest of Germany as little proportion as Normandy had to England or Sweden to Germany We can Conquer our selves tho Holland cannot which if we do we Conquer for him under whom we Fight For the General wins the Battel who ever Fight it And this of necessity his Highness must design unless he design to be beaten For Victory and Conquest are but two Names for one thing Neither is he a Man to be at all this ado to make a Conquest and not make the most of it when he was done neither can he do otherwise tho he would For as he has no Right to Act here by Law he must of necessity Act by Right of Conquest And we humbly beseech him not to declare us out of common Sense and into a belief that he is not capable of intending what we see he is actually doing But Enemies to their Country of all Men in the World one would least expect should be magnified for Integrity and Zeal and constant Fidelity and who cannot joyn in a wicked attempt of Conquest to make void their own lawful Titles to their Honours Estates and Interests Must we believe again they cannot joyn in an Attempt in which his Highness himself tells us they do joyn Nor void their Titles when they actually did void them the very moment of the first Overt Act which made it known they thought of that wicked Attempt And then the Fidelity the Integrity and Zeal of Treason is unintelligible Language in England But I have already observed that his Highness speaks in the Language of a Protestant Religion which is not Established here and in likelihood never will by a Parliament truly free The Kings Concessions are treated as a seeming Relief pretended Acts of Grace an imperfect Redress upon which no weight is to be laid because Solemn Promises have been broken a plain Confession of the Violation set forth in the Declaration and defective because they may again be taken up His Highness takes care that nothing shall be replyed upon breach of Promise by giving no instance where it was broken But to my grief here is greater Work in hand It had been shorter and not much plainer said I am resolved at any rate to come and be King. For as the pretence of the Declaration was that the King had taken up some things and the pretence of the Addition that he has laid them down 't is palpable that the Expedition was unalterably resolved without any care or thought of the good of England or its Concerns save only to borrow a pretence which might
any Imployment Civill or Military should declare that they were not Papists but were of the Protestant Religion and that by their taking of the Oaths of Allegance and Suprermacy and the Test yet these ●vill Councellours have in effect annulled and abolished all those Lawes both with relation to Ecclesiasticall and Civill Employments In order to Ecclesiasticall Dignities and Offices they have not only without any colour of Law but against most expresse Lawes to the contrary set up a Commission of a certain Number of persons to whom they have committed the cognisance and direction of all Ecclesiasticall matters in the which Commission there has been and still is one of His Majesties Ministers of State who makes now publike profession of the Popish Religion and who at the time of his first professing it declared that for a great while before he had believed that to be the only true Religion By all this the deplorable State to which the Protestant Religion is reduced is Apparent since the Affairs of the Church of England are now put into the hands of Persons who have accepted of a Commission that is manifestly Illegal and who have executed it contrary to all Law and that now one of their chieffe Members has abjured the Protestant Religion and declared himself a Papist by which he is become Incapable of holding any Publike Imployment The said Commissioners have hitherto given such proof of their submission to the directions given them that there is no reason to doubt but they will still continue to promote all such designs as will be most aggreable to them And those Evill Councellours take care to raise none to any Ecclesiasticall dignities but persons that have no zeal for the Protestant Religion and that now hide their unconcernedness for it under the specious pretence of Moderation The said Commissioners have suspended the Bishop of London only because he refused to obey an order that was sent him to suspend a Worthy Divine without so much as citing him before him to make his own Defence or observing the common formes of Processe They have turned out a President chosen by the fellows of Magdalen Colledge and afterwards all the Fellows of that Colledge without so much asciting them before any Court that could take legall cognissance of that affair or obtaining any Sentence against them by a Competent Judge And the only reason that was given for turning them out was their refusing to choose for their President a Person that was recommended to them by the Instigation of those Evill Councellours Tho the right of a free Election belonged undoubtedly to them But they were turned out of their freeholds contrary to Law and to that expresse provision in the Magna Charta that no man shall l●se life or Goods but by the Law of the land And now these Evill Councellours have put the said Colledge wholly into the hands of Popists tho as is abovesaid they are Incapable of all such Employments both by the Law of the Land and the statutes of the Colledge These Commissioners have also cited before them all the Chancellours and Archdeacons of England requiring them to certifie to them the names of all such Clergymen as have read the Kings declaration for Liberty of Conscience and of such as have not read it without considering that the reading of it was not enjoined the Clergy by the Bishops who are their Ordinaries The Illegality and Incompetency of the said Court of the Ecclesiasticall Commissioners was so notoriously known and it did so Evidently appear that it tended to the Subversion of the Protestant Religion that the Most Revernd Father in God William Archbishop of Canterbury Primate and Metropolitan of all England seeing that it was raised for no other end but to oppresse such persons as were of Eminent Vertue Learning and Piety refused to sit or to concurre in it And tho there are many expresse Lawes against all Churches or Chapells for the exercise of the Popish Religion and also against all Monasteries and Convents and more particularly against the order of the Iesuites yet those Evill Councellours have Procured orders for the building of severall Churches and Chappels for the Exercise of that Religion They have also procured diverse Monasteries to be Erected and in contempt of the Law they have not only set up severall Colledges of Iesuites in diverse places for the corrupting of the youth but have raised up one of the Order to be a Privy Councellour and a Minister of State. By all which they do evidently shew that they are restrained by no rules of Law whatsoever but that they have subjected the Honours and Estates of the subjects and the Establisht Religion to a Despotick power and to Arbitrary Government In all which they are served and seconded by those Ecclesiasticall Commissioners They have also followed the same methods with Relation to Civill affairs For they have procured Orders to examine all Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants Sheriffs Justices of Peace and all others that were in any Publike Imployment if they would concurre with The King in the Repeal of the Test and Penal Laws and all such whose Consciences did not suffer them to comply with their designes were turned out and others were put in their places who they believed would be more Compliant to them in their Designes of defeating the Intent and Execution of those Laws which had been made with so much care and caution for the Security of the Protestant Religion And in many of these places they have put professed Papists though the Law has disabled them and warranted the subjects not to have any regard to their Orders They have also invaded the Priviledges and seised on the Charters of most of those Towns that have a right to be represented by their Burgesses in Parliament and have procured surrenders to be made of them by which the Magistrates in them have delivered up all their Rights and Priviledges to be disposed of at the pleasure of those Evill Councellours who have thereupon placed new Magistrates in those Towns such as they can most entirely confide in and in many of them they have put Popish Magistrates notwithstanding the Incapacities under which the Law has put them And whereas no Nation whatsoever can subsist without the administration of good and impartiall Justice upon which mens Lives Liberties Honours and Estates doe depend those Evill Councellours have subjected these to an Arbitrary and Despotick power In the most important affairs they have studied to discover before hand the Opinions of the Judges and have turned out such as they found would not conform themselves to their intentions and have put others in their places of whom they were more assured without having any regard to their abilities And they have not stuck to raise even professed Papists to the Courts of Judicature notwithstanding their Incapacity by Law and that no Regard is due to any Sentences flowing from them They have carried this so far as to
contrary to the Ancient custome shall be considered as null and of no force and likewise all Magistrates who have been Injustly turned out shall forthwith resume their former Imployments as well as all the Borroughs of England shall return again to their Antient Prescriptions and Charters And more particularly that the Antient Charter of the Great and Famous City of London shall again be in Force and that the Writts for the Members of Parliament shall be addressed to the Proper Officers according to Law and Custome That also none be suffered to choose or to be chosen Members of Parliament but such as are qualified by Law And that the Members of Parliament being thus lawfully chosen they shall meet and sit in Full Freedome That so the Two Houses may concurre in the preparing of such Lawes as they upon full and free debate shall Judge necessary and convenient both for the confirming and executing the Law concerning the Test and such other Lawes as are necessary for the Security and Maintenance of the Protestant Religion as likewise for making such Lawes as may establish a good aggrement between the Church of England and all Protestant Dissenters as also for the covering and securing of all such who will live Peaceably under the Government as becomes g●od Subjects from all Persecution upon the account of their Religion even Papists themselves not excepted and for the doing of all other things which the Two Houses of Parliament shall find necessary for the Peace Honour and Safety of the Nation so that there may be no more danger of the Nations salling at any time hereafter under Arbitrary Government To this Parliament wee will also referre the Enquiry into the birth of the Pretended Prince of Wales and of all things relating to it and to the Right of Succession And Wee for our part will concurre in every thing that may procure the Peace and Happines of the Nation which a Free and Lawfull Parliament shall determine Since wee have nothing before our eyes in this our undertaking but the Preservation of the Protestant Religion the Covering of all men from Persecution for their Consciences and the Securing to the whole Nation the free enjoyment of all their Lawes Rights and Liberties under a Just and Legall Government This is the designe that wee have Proposed to our selves in appearing upon this occasion in Armes In the Conduct of which Wee will keep the Forces under our Command under all the Strictnes of Martiall Discipline and take a speciall Care that the People of the Countries thro which wee must march shall not suffer by their means and as soon as the State of the Nation will admit of it Wee promise that we will send back all those Forreigne Forces that wee have brought along with us Wee doe therefore hope that all People will judge rightly of us and approve of these our Proceedings But wee chiefly rely on the blessing of God for the successe of this our undertaking in which Wee place our whole and only Confidence Wee do in the last place invite and require all Persons whatsoever All the Peers of the Realme both Spirituall and Temporall all Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants and all Gentlemen Citisens and other Commons of all ranks to come and assist us in order to the Executing of this our Designe against all such as shall Endeavour to Oppose us that so wee may prevent all those Miseries which must needs follow upon the Nations being 〈◊〉 vnder Arbitrary Government and Slavery And that all the Viole●ces and disorders which have overturned the whole Constitution of the English Government may be fully redressed in a FREE AND LEGALL PARLIAMENT And Wee do likewise resolve that as soon as the Nations are brought to a state of Quiet Wee will take care that a Parliament shall be called in Scotland for the restoring the Ancient Constitution of that Kingdom and for bringing the Matters of Religion to such a Settlement that the People may live easy and happy and for putting an end to all the Injust Violences that have been in a course of so many years Committed there We will also study to bring the Kingdom of Ireland to such a State that the Settlement there may be Religiously observed and that the Protestant and British Interest there may be secured And we will endeavour by all possible means to procure such an establishment in all the Three Kingdoms that they may all live in a happy Union and Correspondence together and that the Protestant Religion and the Peace Honour and Happiness of those Nations may be established upon lasting Foundations Given under our Hand and Seal at our Court in the Hague the Tenth day of October in the year of our Lord 1688. WILLIAM HENRY PRINCE OF ORANGE By his Highnesses special Command C HUYGENS. THus you have an exact and full Account of the Prince of Orange's Declaration And can you find one word of a Treaty with France to extirpate all Protestants Or can you imagine that if they had the least reason for such a Talk they who aggravate every little thing would let this Declaration pass without the least mentioning of what is so momentous and important And is there any thing more than a Violent Presumption suggested about the Prince of Wales And is the very Noise of such a Presumption reason enough to justifie a real War As for the other things urg'd are they not Redressable by a Parliament and so far as it 's possible without one already Redressed 'T is a Parliament then that is the main thing to be insisted on which though Chosen as the last was would be too feeble an Argument to clear the present Invasion from the charge of being Injust and Unrighteous The Great Men of this Kingdom ever thought a Parliament Irregularly chosen more eligible than either a War or a rash Enquiry into the manner of the choise Did Queen Elizabeth's Parliament admit of a Words being spoken to bring Queen Mary's Parliament into doubt Did they not look on it as most dangerous to do so And although by the Triennial Bill the long Parliament in the late Kings Reign was actually dissolved Nine Months before it thought on the Repeal thereof yet even after 't was destroy'd by it the Dissolved Parliament sate and repealed the Dissolving Bill and made the Conventicle-Act the Test-Laws repealed the Writ De Haeretico Comburendo and pass'd the Habeas Corpus Bill into a Law. But was the Assembly that Acted thus Irregularly ever call'd to an Account for it or any of their Laws declared Void and Null Or was it ever esteemed a Good Reason for a War And yet this is much more than hath been ever done by His Present Majesty Besides 't was the late King that took away the Charters and those who were entring on Violent Courses for their Restauration were proclaimed Traytors and several executed for it whilst all the Pulpits throughout England sounded of the Horridness Blackness Vileness
Devilishness of that Conspiracy And is what was Black and Horrid then become Noble Great Generous and Glorious now Thus much was also a part of the late Duke of Monmouth's Declaration and yet a Parliament chosen by the Garbled Corporations proclaim'd him a Traitor and Attainted him But doth the Blood of Monmouth as well as of the forementioned Conspirators and of all those in the West lye on the Iudges Iuries Nobility and other Gentry of the Church of England that had a hand in condemning such as by violent Methods would have restor'd the Charters If these things could not vindicate the Presbyterian Plotters in the late King's Reign or Monmouth's Rebellion it cannot excuse the present Undertaking for this doth infinitely exceed these and the late Civil War too for neither of them brought in a Foreign Power upon us as now is done But it must be observed that how great soever our Grievances have been yet now all that Relief can reasonably be desired is granted us The Ecclesiastical Commission actually broken up the Bishop of London the Master and Fellows of Magdalen Colledge and the Ancient Charters of Cities and Burroughs actually restored all things on the ancient Bottom for the Calling a Free Parliament which His Majesty would have done before this time had not the Prince of Orange hindred him and as soon as the Prince of Orange departs the King will call one whereby all the Prince's Pretensions are taken away and nothing more remains for him to do but to return home or contend for the Crown Yet the Prince would have us believe that though he is not satisfied with this yet he intends no such thing as the Crown or a Conquest of us as appears by his Highnesses Additional Declaration His Highnesses Additional Declaration AFter we had prepared and printed this our Declaration wee have understood that the subverters of the Religion and Lawes of those Kingdomes hearing of our preparations to assist the People against them have begun to retract some of the Arbitrary and Despotick powers that they had assumed and to vacate some of their Injust Judgments and Decrees The sense of their Guilt and the distrust of their force have induced them to offer to the City of London some seeming releefe from their Great Oppressions hoping thereby to quiet the People and to divert them from demanding a Re-establishment of their Religion and Laws under the shelter of our Arms They do also give out that we do intend to Conquer and Enslave the Nation And therefore it is that we have thought fit to adde a few words to our Declaration We are Confident that no persons can have such hard thoughts of us as to imagine that we have any other Designe in this Undertaking then to procure a settlement of the Religion and of the Liberties and Properties of the subjects upon so sure a Foundation that there may be no danger of the Nations relapsing into the like miseries at any time hereafter And as the forces that we have brought along with us are utterly disproportioned to that wicked Design of Conquering the Nation if wee were capable of Intending it so the Great Numbers of the Principal Nobility and Gentry that are Men of Eminent Quality and Estates and persons of known Integrity and Zeal both for the Religion and Government of England many of them being also distinguished by their Constant fidelity to the Crown who do both accompany us in this Expedition and have earnestly solicited us to it will cover us from all such Malicious Insinuations For it is not to be imagined that either those who have Invited us or those that are already come to assist us can joyn in a wicked attempt of Conquest to make void their own lawful Titles to their Honours Estates and Interests Wee are also Confident that all men see how little weight there is to be laid on all Promises and Engagements that can be now made since there has been so little regard had in time past to the most solemne Promises And as that Imperfeit redresse that is now offered is a plain Confession of those Violations of the Government that we have set forth so the Defectiveness of it is no lesse Apparent for they lay down nothing which they may not take up at Pleasure and they reserve entire and not so much as mentioned their claimes and pretences to an Arbitrary and Despotick power which has been the root of all their Oppression and of the total subversion of the Government And it is plain that there can be no redresse nor Remedy offered but in Parliament by a Declaration of the Rights of the Subjects that have been invaded and not by any Pretended Acts of Grace to which the extremity of their affairs has driven them Therefore it is that we have thought fit to declare that we will refer all to a Free Assembly of the Nation in a Lawful Parliament Given under our Hand and Seal at our Court in the Hague the 24. day of October in the year of our Lord 1688. WILLIAM HENRY PRINCE OF ORANGE By his Highnesses special Command C HUYGENS. THis Addition doth very fully unfold the Design the Prince will abide amongst us with a Foreign Power and make the Choice of a Parliament impracticable and therefore the Call of one a weak and foolish thing and yet oblige us to distrust every Promise the King makes us lesning what is done and insinuating that all things shall be soon undone And why all these Insinuations but to help us to Unravel the whole Intreague which if it be not for the Crown must be thus The Dutch knowing how the Prince hath ravished from them their Liberties and Priviledges and what danger they are in of being utterly undone if Liberty of Conscience be settled amongst us in England Precipitate the Prince on this Hazardous Undertaking not doubting but they shall be either delivered from the Princes Exercise of a Despotick Power over them or spoil our Liberty to the Continuance and Advance of their own Trade which may be the Reason why in the Entrance into the Declaration what relates to Religion is so worded as to gain the Bishops over to them the more e●sily to effect their Design for says the Declaration the Alteration of Religion is endeavoured and that a Religion which is contrary to Law is endeavoured to be introduced it is not said that the Popish Religion but a Religion contrary to the Law and it 's well known that the Laws are against the Religion of the Dissenters and the Prince's Endeavour shall be to preserve and maintain above all the Religion and Worship of God that is Established amongst us which cannot be understood of the Worship the Dissenters use but of the Hierarchical way that is as contrary to the Prince's own Religion as 't is to that of the Dissenters in England And to perswade the Church men to close with him he Declares That he was most earnestly solicited to come over
in the Bishops Petition Now as unquestionably legal as a Petition is there may be an illegal Petition whether this were so or no the King desired should be legally tryed And a Tryal there was in which the direct Point as I am informed came not to Issue but Not guilty found upon no proof of matter of Fact A Peer too is mentioned to be treated as a Criminal for saying the Orders of a Popish Justice were not to be obeyed And all his Criminal treatment was to refer him to the ordinary course of Law where he likewise waved the direct Point by collateral Exceptions Where may the Oppression be and where the frightful Apprehensions of loss of Life Liberty Honor and Estate in all this Are Judicicial Proceedings already threatned and barr'd And must we have an Army to revenge the wrongs of the Bishops and a Peer who I believe themselves complain of none done them Nor can without complaining that the Law has wrong'd them even when it acquitted them What significations have been made and what Expedients proposed by their Highnesses to his Majesty is not come to my knowledge But if the same Advisers were used in their suggestions which have been in this Declaration it is very likely the King might be sensible they were too ill informed of the Affairs of England to take their Advice If Evil Counsellors have endeavoured to perswade the King that his Highness design'd to disturb the Quiet and Happiness of the Kingdom I am infinitely sorry he would be at all this pains to justifie them For 't is impossible to believe he actually came hither without design to come or that the War he brings with him will not disturb our Peace and the Miseries of it our Happiness What follows is past my understanding The last and great Remedy for all our Evils is the Calling of a Parliament So indeed all Englishmen think and so His Majesty thought who call'd One. Happy we if his Highness had been of the same Opinion but to our Misery he is not who when One was call'd would not let it sit but instead of it brought in Evils past the Remedy even of a Parliament For Votes are not Cannon proof But a Parliament could not yet compassed nor can it be easily brought about Too sadly true For it is neither easy nor possible to bring about a Parliament when defenceless People must break through a Foreign Army to meet and elect Before it was so possible to compass that it was compast Writs were actually gone out and Elections begun which were not stopt by Evil Counsellors But these Evil Counsellors apprehended they should be brought to an account for their Plots and Conspiracies against the Protestant Religion and have endeavoured under the specious pretence of Liberty of Conscience to sow Divisions among them between the Church of England and Dissenters that by their natural Quarrellings They might bring about their Designs both in the Election of Members and in the Parliament it self Why then they design'd a Parliament should sit as evil as they were and as much as they feared to be called to account But if Liberty of Conscience be a Plot against Protestants his Highness must needs be of it himself who declared for it Must we believe the same thing practised by His Majesty will divide Protestants and by his Highness establish a good Agreement Then the asking People their Opinion beforehand the Charters Popish Sheriffs and Mayors are brought in again only to conclude at last that no Parliament can be lawful for which the Elections and Returns are made by Papists and therefore as long as the Authority and Magistracy are in such hands it is not p●ssible to have any lawful Parliament How ill do they understand the Law of England who penn'd this Declaration Every body knows that Elections are made by Freeholders and Freemen not by Sheriffs and Mayors and that a Papist may elect as legally as any body and make a Return if he be in Office as valid Had his Highness suffered the Elections to go on we should have thought the Parliament very lawful but shall not think so of a Parliament made by the Law of Arms where we are chosen and sit with the Sword at our Throats we think there is neither legality nor freedom and that when for a Remedy of the impossibility of a lawful Parliament there is prescribed an impossibility that it should be lawful very ill State-Doctors have been called to Council The Declaration crowns all with the Birth of the Prince of Wales of which it says That great and violent Presumptions induce his Highness to believe that these evil Councellors have published the Queen hath brought forth a Son in order to their ill Designs and that not only his Highness himself but all the good Subjects of these Kingdoms do vehemently suspect that the pretended Prince of Wales was not born by the Queen Such things to come abroad with the Name of the Prince of Orange to them And yet it is but too true that there is a great deal of violence and vehemence in these Presumptions and Suspicions so true that there is in reality nothing else neither Presumption nor Suspicion indeed And this violence and this vehemence must needs be infinitely great which can pretend Suspicions not only utterly void of all Reason but so palpably against it that quite contrary to what the Declaration avers there is neither a good Subject nor a sensible Man who harbours any Doubt in the case And this Consideration I suppose has so long delayed doing any thing for publick Satisfaction As it was not indeed very proper for the King to regard idle Fictions invented and spread by purely obstinate Malice But now he has caused the business to be scanned if we should take toy and suspect without Reason I believe it would trouble his Highness to clear his own or the Princesses Birth as the Birth of the Prince of Wales is cleared And guess they would entertain the slightest suspicion with an impatient Scorn and not allow the greatest vehemence in the World to suspect them into the Children of other Mothers than the Princess of Orange and Duchess of York But as much to seek as we were for a Reason in all alledg'd before this questioning the Birth of the immediate Successor speaks plain We know now what brought his Highness hither and can give a shrewd guess at what will follow on his success For if they be the only good Subjects who believe not we have a Prince of Wales they are like to be in a bad condition who have either sense enough to perceive plain Truths or Conscience enough to boggle at Perjury or Memory enough to remember they have sworn Fidelity to the King and his lawful Successors Beginning now to wind up his Highness minds us of the great interest which the Princess Royal and himself have in this matter and of their Right to the Succession such as all the
World knows Of the Endeavours we used for the Vnited Provinces when they were invaded in a most unjust War in 1672 Of the particular Esteem and Affection which the English Nation has ever testified to both their Highnesses And therefore cannot excuse himself from espousing our Interests to the doing of which he is earnestly solicited by a great many Lords both Spiritual and Temporal by many Gentlemen and Subjects of all Ranks In all which the only thing we can understand is the Succession to which their Highnesses do severally stand i● that degree which all the World knows But there is not a Man in the World who can understand how those who espouse the interest of another because they have an interest of their own espouse any interest but their own nor could his Highness have told us more plainly that he comes for himself not us that all alledged besides is only for fashion-sake and that we might sink or swim for any care of his if he had not been concerned himself Again because we did what we could for the Dutch when they were unjustly invaded no body can understand how Gratitude obliges them to invade us unjustly themselves nor how the particular Affection and Esteem which we have ever testified to their Highnesses should deserve that he should become our Enemy and ruine us for our pains As much Esteem and Affection as the great Qualities of his Highness are like to meet every where he will please to be informed that the strongest Band of ours is his Alliance to the Royal Bloud and must pardon the English if they love not a Man who hates our King the very King whose Sister and Daughter tyed our Affections to him Then who can understand how making War upon us is espousing our Interest our Religion our Laws our Liberties and Properties our Interest and we beseech his Highness to have a little Mercy on us and not oblige us to believe he espouses our Interest by subjecting all we have to the mercy of a lawless Sword. He must likewise pardon us if we believe not on his Word that many Lords many of the Gentry and of all Ranks are Traytors which if it were true he rewards them betimes and by exposing them to be punished by others till it be seasonable to do it himself informs them what they must expect at last But the Spiritual Lords and their Principles are well known and his Highness has experience what they are in the first Bishop near whom he approached He is like to meet the Temporal Lords whom Age keeps not at home or the King's Service employs not elsewhere with the Gentry and all Ranks in the Field and be better informed from themselves that the English are no Traytors and will take care to wipe off this Aspersion from the Nation Alas how little does his Highness know us Many an unwary and many a heated Man speaks Treason here who is for all that honest at Heart and will make it well appear he is when there is occasion But Therefore it is that his Highness hath thought fit to go over to England and carry with him a Force sufficient by the Blessing of God to defend him from the Violence of Evil Counsellors Unintelligible Language of Declarations of War To Invade us is called Defending Himself and this where there is no fear of an Assault or any danger save from that very Force which he must needs bring to defend him For without it his single Name not guarded so much as by a Footman had found security and veneration all England over After this true account ●f inducing Reasons Reasons if it please his Penmen For nothing looks like a Reason but one viz. Interest his Highness thinks sit to declare his Intentions As if there needed a Declaration to inform us what Pikes and Muskets intend An Army intends nothing but to Master where it comes the very same which the Saxons and Normans and all Invaders from the beginning of the World to this day intended But his Design is a free and lawful Parliament And for a Preparative the annulling of new and returning of old Charters particularly that of the City of London Restoring of former Magistrates addressing Writs a proper Officers And suffering note to chuse or be chosen but such as are qualified by Law. A Man no wiser than I would think that if his Highness designed nothing but this he might very well have staid at home For all these Preparatives were and he knew were made before he went aboard And a free and lawful Parliament had now been sitting or ready of sit if he would have let it Without more ado it is palpably impossible his Highness should come only to do over again what he knew was done to his hand only to get us a Parliament which he will not suffer us to have and this pretence must of necessity cover some Design thought less taking with Englishmen This Parliament his Highness declares shall meet and sit in full freedom but perhaps not act so For the two Houses must it seems prepare Laws to confirm and execute the Test for the security and maintenance of the Protestant Religion and for a good Agreement between the Church of England and all Protestant Dissenters and covering such from Persecution as will live peaceably not excepting Papists But how will his Highness keep his Word if a Parliament should happen to think the Test needs no Confirmation nor Religion more Laws than are already nor that any Laws can make the Church of England and Dissenters agree However it be they love to have it in their power to confirm or alter or abrogate or let the Laws alone as they are according as the good of the Nation shall require without having their Task prescribed They take themselves for Master-Workmen and who can cut out their Work themselves not for bare Journeymen to make up Work cut out by others But I would gladly know what Protestant Religion means in the Mouth of his Highness In the Language of the Country where he was Born and Bred right Protestancy signifies Presbytery and he is said to be surrounded by Men who so understand it whereof some perhaps might have a hand in this Declaration As the Religion or Church Established by Law had been easily said if it had been meant to my thinking the suspicion is vehement that this free Parliament with a Holland Trumpet in the Speakers Chair is to set up Presbytery at least I am very sure it must if that Trumpet sound it and there is but too much reason to expect it will sound here as it does at home especially when there is not the least intimation to the contrary The pretended Invitation of the Spiritual Lords will be well rewarded with a good agreement with their Dissenting Masters and being covered from Persecution provided they hold themselves content and live peaceably But the comfort is nothing can better shew their Invitation is but pretended To
contribute to the success of the Expedition and to which do or undo was all a case and that nothing shall satisfie him but laying down the Crown nor that neither because it may happen to be taken up again And yet his Highness declares again that he will refer all to a free lawful Parliament Happy we if he would If an English Parliament were to judge whether Foreign Force be lawful Whether it be Integrity Zeal and Fidelity to abet it Whether it can be without a design of Conquest and Conquest without enslaving this Nation to the Arbitrary Pleasure of the Conqueror And twenty such things which must needs enter into the number of the referred All. But to talk of referring all to a Parliament and at the same time refer all to the Sword To talk of the freedom of a Parliament which cannot Vote nor Debate nor so much as make a Motion but in danger of their Lives is purely Talk and not like to ingratiate his Quarrel to a Nation not altogether senseless as much as his Highness seems to think it is when we see the King did call a free Parliament that is actually did refer all to it for calling one is referring all to it which it thinks fit to take into Consideration and that his Highness would not let it sit we need no Declarations to inform us which of the two is truly willing to refer all to a Parliament Two Letters said to be annexed to the Declaration in Holland and addrest to the Seamen and Land Soldiers carry likewise the Name of his Highness In which they are first Cajolled with the Title of Friend as if they were Men to be Cajolled into a Friendship with the Enemies of their Prince and Country and then endeavoured to be debaucht into his Service by motives the most unsuitable to English Natures that were ever found out Danger from Papists Duty to God and Fear of falling into his Hands I perceiv'd we were taken for Fools before must we be taken for Cowards too Men to be frighted even with the Sound of Danger His Highness is like to be informed one day that the English Fear not his Arms much less the Papists who tho they were all embodied are not near so many Soldiers no tho it were less by as many Papists as are in it And yet there are more Holland than English Papists in the Field Moreover that they know their Duty to God obliges them to be true to their Prince and that there is no Honour in Treason Lastly that his Men may fear to fall into their Hands they fear not to fall into his It is said besides that Papists have Sworn the Ruin of the Protestant Religion a piece of News which his Highness would much oblige the whole Nation to Verifie Let the wicked Men be but Named and Convicted and the next Gallows or Tree would save the trouble of Parliaments and References Lastly the Soldiers that they may not be Instruments to defend their Prince and save their Country and themselves from Slavery are desired to believe they are the Instruments to introduce Popery When they are They will pray His Majesty to Dispense with their Service But they find 〈◊〉 Popery in Fighting for the King their Country and the Laws against a Man who Usurps the Crown first and then would cajole them to fix it For besides what has been observed already he writes in the Style of a King Trusty and Well Beloved and joyns the Supporters of England to his Arms in a manner not allowable in Heraldry even tho the Princess Royal were Queen But where we cannot find good Reasons we must take up with bad Pretences FINIS