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A51196 Great Britain's just complaint for her late measures, present sufferings, and the future miseries she is exposed to with the best, safest, and most effectual way of securing and establishing her religion, government, liberty, and property upon good and lasting foundations : fully and clearly discovered in answer to two late pamphlets concerning the pretended French invasion. Montgomery, James, Sir, d. 1694. 1692 (1692) Wing M2504; ESTC R30525 61,135 64

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his imprisonment of the E. of Feversham who was a publick Messenger and Peer of England and under the Cognizance of none but the King his imprisoning and banishing King James from his own Pallace though acknowleged as the just Monarch by his own Declaration his banishing the French Embassador out of England as soon as he came to London and before the Administration was put into his Hands by which these Kingdoms were ingaged without their own Consent in a War with France without so much as any pretence of Entertainment given to their Abdicated Monarch being a considerable time before K. James's retreat thither were direct possitive and most Solemn Acts of Sovereignty before ever the Crown was confer'd upon him and are so many plain and evident Indications of that early Ambition I have charged upon him And in farther Evidence that all his Designs from the very first were aimed at the Crown and the Crown Vested too with the most towring Prerogatives When the Convention was Deliberating upon some future Provisions against Arbitrary Power the Prince sent my Lord Wharton to several Lords and Mr. Coulin to Sir Edward Seymor and Mr. Hambden and other Commoners to let them known That if the House insisted so much upon Limitations that he would return again and leave them in the lurch to the Mercy of King James So generously Tender was this great Deliverer of our Religion and Liberty As to the Dispencing Power assumed by King James I do not pretend to justifie it I am heartily sorry that so bad a Measure was taken to carry on and establish so desirable and necessary a Good and Birth right of Mankind as Liberty of Conscience which carries its own native Beauty and Usefulness so visibly stampt upon it as could never have failed to obtain an Establishment from the Reason and Judgement of an English Parliament But this would have so much united the Hearts and Affections of English Subjects with their King and laid such an invincible rub in the Way of the Prince's ambitious Designs that it became one of the nicest and most sicklish Points to manage the hardest to ward off and the most dextrous and artful part of their Game there was no downright opposing of so general and desirable a Good 〈◊〉 was easier to poyson and divert 〈◊〉 The King was first put upon Establishing this Liberty by a Proclamation that so the Parliament might be prejudiced against a Thing which otherwise they would have granted upon the account of the first Measure taken about it but finding that the general Good and Benefit which was to be reaped from this Liberty would have digested and sweetned this Pill from a pretence of saving the King's Honor from a Foyl and making all sure though really with a design to ruin Him and baffle the Thing they put him upon the Regulating and Closetting Projects and upon obliging the Clergy to read his Proclamation for Liberty of Conscience from their Pulpits This did alarm the Bishops as was designed and obliged them to think upon Petitioning against it upon which those Beautefeux being afraid lest the KING should call in his Proclamation having always found it hard enough to bring Him to such Methods they ordered the business so that the Bishops were so long in presenting of their Petition to the King that though their Reasons had convinced and satisfied Him there was not time enough to countermand his former Orders though never so willing Upon which they took occasion to incense the King against them as if they had delay'd their Petition so long with design to embroyl Him with his People and so they run the Bishops into the Tower and from thence to the Barr. This is the true History of the Dispencing Power and of the Bishops Persecution which was so warmly and bitterly urged against the King as undeniable Proofs that his Inclination to Catholicks was too strong for the Laws But to speak plain English I hope those Stretches in favour of Catholicks which were Criminal in King James are not become more Legal and Meritorious in King William the exercise of the Dispencing Power in their favours I hope is as much a fault now as ever The Charge will be denied but I shall make it good when I come to discourse upon the Third Motive to the King's Restauration Are not Catholicks employ'd now in the Army thô not qualified by Law It will be alleg'd they are Foreigners so much the worse for an English Catholick will still have some regard for the Laws and Liberties of his Countrymen whereas a mercenary Foreigner is absolutely at the disposal of his Master Are not the Catholicks as much Countenanced and in the exercise of as much Liberty for their Religion as ever The necessity of humouring a Confederacy which must support us the great Strength of which are Catholicks may be urged as a very good Reason for this but if we examine it to the bottom this threatens our Religion more than any Indulgence was granted them by King James When the Catholicks of England hold their Liberty merely from the favour of the Protestants of England they must be thankful for it and humble under it but when they come to derive their Favours Immunities and Liberty from the necessity of our Circumstances and humble Regard and Deference we must pay to Catholick Princes without whose Assistance and Friendship we cannot Subsist their Spirits Hopes and Haughtiness will be enlarged by it They must make grateful acknowlegements to those Catholick Princes by whose kind Influences they injoy their Liberty This begets a Correspondence with and Dependance upon Foreign Princes and we do not know how far by the Instigation of Catholicks here those Princes may be prevailed upon to improve the necessity we have of their Allyance to the advantage of those of their own Religion amongst us The House of Austria within our remembrance was the most zealous Champions for the Roman Religion and the dependance of the Catholicks of England upon that House hath been always terrible and troublesom to this State And though their Losses and the growth of France hath humbled and levelled all the towring Thoughts and Ambition of that Family which did so much exercise both the Councils and Forces of their Neighbours yet since by our Assistance that House is to recover its Losses and France to be reduced within its ancient bounds with their lost Provinces the House of Austria may resume their old Designs They were but covered up not extinguished concealed through Weakness to be discovered upon a greater Encrease of Strength and Vigour in which case we may come to be whipt for our present Politicks May the great God avert those dangers and difficulties which inviron us and visibly threaten the Religious and Civil Concerns of these Kingdoms We have been pulling Destruction with both our hands upon our selves and desperately risking our Religion and Civil Rights without any necessity and unless we repent and repair
Abdication and our late Measures I come next to examine how exactly the Prince hath fulfilled and made good unto us the pretended Ends and Designs of his Declaration how well he hath kept the Original Contract we made with him and what benefit we may expect to reap for the future by this Revolution I shall take his Conduct in both Kingdoms joyntly under Consideration since he hath not only united them in the same Declaration but likewise issu'd out a Declaration apart for Scotland intimating thereby That the Oppressions in that Kingdom were more weighty and numerous than here and that the Arbitrary Designs of our Prince did always first commence there to make a Precedent for this Kingdom and that the Conduct and Posture of Affairs there did always certainly Prognosticate to the curious Observer what was designed to be Copied and Executed here I do not pretend to give a particular detail of the present Administration in that Kingdom but there are some considerable Errors have been acted there which have made a Noise and rais'd such publick Complaints there as hath convey'd the Knowledge of them here to us The assuming a Power of Dispensing with the due Execution of Laws enacted by King and Parliament for Security of Religion Liberty and Happiness of the Subject is much urged against King James as a great Motive to the Prince's undertaking A Dispensing Power assumed by any Prince doth fatally threaten the Liberties of a People where it is practised and makes them Tenants at Will for those Privileges which the Laws of the Land hath given them a Freehold in This is really such an important Point and of such Consequence for the Subject to have been cleared that it was indispensably the Duty of a Reforming Prince Convention of Estates and Parliament to have decided this Controversie and placed such Marks and Boundaries for the future so plain and obvious both to Prince and People that each might have known their particular Rights and governed themselves for the future accordingly But our Parliaments have thought fit to leave it where they found it dark and undecided to this day and the Prince hath discovered he was well enough pleased with this Omission by taking as large and broad Steps that way as any can be charged upon King James The Irish Treaty furnisheth us with a convincing Proof of this where such Indulgences were gran●ed unto them solely and si●g●y by his own Authority with relation to the exercise of their Religion pro● of their Arms dispensation from Oaths and security against ●rsuits for their Plunderings as were directly contrary to the Laws of the Land the Safety Rights and Privileges of the Protestant Subjects of that Kingdom This Treaty I do acknowledge was afterwards ratified by Parliament but though in some Cases the Authority of Parliament may give a legal Being for the future yet that new Life commenceth only from the date of their Sanction and doth not justifie preceeding Errors and the many Difficulties which arose in both Houses about the Ratification was a clear Innuendo how dangerous and illegal they judg'd the Treaty to be How strangely are we altered King James's exercise of this Dispensing Power could neither be forgotten nor attoned for but King William's stretch that way shall obtain a Parliamentary Approbation such is the Justice and unbyassed Integrity of these Times But we need not look so far as Ireland for Instances We have our personal Liberties secured to us by positive and express Statutes and Methods appointed by our Law whereby to recover our Liberties when lost with such severe Animadversions against those who obstruct the due course of Law in obtaining of our Freedom with such great and considerable Damages appointed in that case as plainly enough Points out unto us the Value and Worth of this true English Privilege It is the choisest piece of our Magna Charta and Original Contract and for my part I should much rather allow a Prince to dispence with Penal Statutes and issue out a Proclamation for Liberty of Conscience than to sport himself at Pleasure with my personal Freedom without which there can be no relish in any other Enjoyment and yet there never was a Reign wherein our Birth-right in this hath been more abused spoiled and broken in upon The English Subjects have been put into Proclamations and clapt into Prisons for High Treason and refused the benefit of their Habeas Corpus though there was no Information upon Oath against them according as the Law appoints to warrant such a Procedure Nay so grosly frequently and impudently have our publick Ministers affronted the Laws upon this Head that they have found themselves obliged to apply to Parliament for Pardon For we have found out a new Trick in this Government and reforming Age first to act all imaginable Violences against the best and choisest of our Laws and than to obtain either a Ratification or Pardon in Parliament whereby they have struck our English Constitution and the Liberty of the Subject Dead at one Blow by Debauching our Parliaments into a Confederacy against in place of Protecting the Liberties of the People and so making the Nation as it were Felo de se No period of History doth furnish us with such wholesale Merchants for our best and most valuable Rights neither do we know when this Trade shall be at an end or when our Rulers will be weary of Tricking us out of our Liberties We have a fresh Instance of late of the Knowledge and Learning of our Judges When the Earls of Huntington Midleton and others moved at the Barr for their Habeas Corpus there was no Information upon Oath against them to warrant a refusal otherways to be sure we should have heard of it But Aaron Smith must make Affidavit that they had Evidence for the High Treason charged against them which could not be got ready and so by his Liberty and Freedom of Conscience save in some measure the Credit of the Court By this fine new Knack they were all remitted back to Prison again Such Judges may at last come to be fit enough for the Bench even under a Conquest but in the mean time all such Expedients which are not warranted from the Statutes do rather prove the Injustice of the Court than fulfil the Law and however it may be Gilded we cannot but see and feel the bitter Pill we must swallow Was not the Habeas Corpus Act suspended for many Months It 's true this was done by Parliament but so much the worse if our own Delegates in whose Hands we trust the care but not the intire surrender of our Liberties make a Complement of that which is not in their Power to the Ambition or Necessities of any Prince Parliaments can no more justly over-turn Foundations than the Prince can Such Privileges as are derived from King and Parliament upon the account of the Subjects Temporary Conveniences are trusted to the review of the same Court
it practicable And as to the miraculous and enterprizing Faith of Priests and new Converts the zeal folly and warmness of their Brains will always prevent any real Mischiefs nay K. James his Reign even upon the supposition that it were as bad as is alledged is an undeniable Proof that the Protestant Religion cannot be undermined nor the Popish Religion Established in these Kingdoms by the Address or Authority of any Prince I shall give it for granted that all imaginable Methods were taken for propagating the Popish Religion that they were indulged in the publick Exercises of it that Court Preferments were thrown upon them meerly upon the account of their Religion without any Vertue or M●rit to Intitle them to it that Protestants were absolutely and upon all occasions discourag'd that it was endeavour'd to make the World ●e●●●ve that all Favours and Preserments were for the one and nothing but Dis●races and Frowns for the other that there was the greatest Care Pains and Application in the World made use of to make the Army and Courts of Judicature I do belive by this supposition I have out-done all that the most malicious Enemies will urge against K. James and yet all the World knows what little Progress was made how few Converts were gained and how really weak their best and surest Precautions did appear when it came to the touch If so many of his Subjects Soldiers and Servants were prevailed upon by Fears and Jealousies which were maliciously and industriously heightened above what any reason which was given for them could well bear what must then have been the Consequence if by real publick and undoubted Discoveries the King's intentions to ruin the Established Religion had been made unquestionably plain and evident Nothing less than an universal Defection and his perpetual Banishment from the Hearts and Affections of every English Man could have followed The Catholicks of Britain are not one of a hundred they have neither Heads Hearts nor Hands enough to force a National Conversion As the Protestants are the most Numerous so the Laws and Constitutions are upon their side their Civil Rights and Liberties are twisted together with their Religious and whosoever strikes at the last must infallibly wound the first It is not easie to overturn the Laws and Fundamental Constitutions whereby Religious and Civil Rights are secured to free born People we are in Possession by our Laws of our Religion and of that Liberty which distinguisheth our Happiness from that of other Subjects we love it and know it 's true worth we value and esteem our selves above other People upon the account of our native Freedoms and we will not easily part with 'em all Attempts and Designs upon them have been unsuccessful Ambitious Princes and Arbitrary Ministers may be forming Projects and Designs fortifying them the best way they can and making Parties for it but our Constitution together with the Protestant Religion which is now become part of it and our Laws will prove always too hard for them at last Nothing can expose or betray our Religion and Constitution to any danger but overmuch fondness in the People to a Prince who under some popular Mask and Pretence covers close and fatal Designs against either Let us but examine the present condition of our neighbouring States and we shall find that Raptures of Love in the people hath overturned more Constitutions and built up more Despotick Governments than the Force or Address of Princes could ever do It is commonly received for a Truth That Love is blind and credulous and certainly holds good with relation to a Political Affection There is a certain allowable Jealousie in the People which is very consistent with the Duty Affection and Respect due to the Prince and guards and protects their Laws and Constitution Without some Measures of this Jealousie the Constitution will be always in danger and this Antidote can never be wanting in the Protestant Subjects of Britain under a Popish King His Religion gives us such a lively and active Jealousie of him and his Designs makes us so watchful and puts us so much upon our guard that all the Efforts of such a Prince thô never so dextrous supported by so weak and inconsiderable a Party as the Catholicks of Britain can never endanger Religion and Liberty Rather his Circumstances and Inclinations to those of his own Religion their ease and quiet might have been improved into farther and more real Securities for Religion and Liberty by a wise and discreet Treaty orderly managed in Parliament To all this it may be alledged That though the Catholicks of Britain be not a Party sufficient to carry on and effectuate such Designs yet the Forces of the Hector of France were still at the Command and Service of his Dear and Faithful Ally for carrying on so good and meritorious a Work as that of Reducing again Great Britan into the Bosom of the Roman Church This is maliciously and artfully enough suggested but let us examin it a little How does it appear that King James was become so lost to all Reason Morality and Discretion as to resolve to call in a French Power to over-run a Countrey which was his own and destroy a People who were living peaceably under him by which from one of the most Considerable and Potent Monarchs of Europe he became the Least and most Contemptible His refusal of French Troops and Assistance when threatened with a Foreign Invasion seems to be no great Proof of this and his betaking himself at that time to the Love and Affection of his Subjects as it was a plain discovery he was not Conscious to himself of any real Design which could destroy that mutual Love and Confidence betwixt Prince and People which is a Debt due from the one to the other however his Measures might have been Traduced or maliciously Poysoned so it may let us see how improbable it is to imagine that a Prince could ever form Designs of destroying a People whose Affections he durst trust in such an Extremity Again What Reason is there to imagine that the French King vvould be so ready to furnish Troops and be at the Charge of such a Reformation He is generally allowed to be a Prince who studies his own Interest the most of any and fits all his Maxims his Conduct and Allyances exactly to it and never takes a step which upon the remotest view may seem to cross the Interest of his Crown and Monarchy And if it do appear as certainly it will to any judicious thinking Man that the Reducing Great Britain to the Bosom of the Roman Church may greatly endanger the Crown of France than all ●●●rs of a French Reformation will fall to the Ground The English Pretences to the most considerable Maritime Provinces nay upon the Crown of France it self are generally known and Histories can inform us how troublesome how dangerous and how successfully they were many times carried on against those Monarchs partly
Troops which were under Pay by their unheard of Plunderings Robberies and Oppressions committed upon the poor Protestants within their Lines gave such Examples of Insolence and loose Discipline that the Irish could be no longer restrained as formerly thô they never acted so extravagantly as the others And I dare appeal to all the Irish Protestants if the greatest part of the ruine of that miserable Country be not due to the Plunderings Abuses and want of Discipline in King William's Army which though Protestant and Reformers did far outdoe the wild Irish in desolating the Country without regard to Friend or Foe And I have heard many Irish Protestants affirm That their Preservation and Protection was due to K. James's own particular Care over them As to the Proceedings of the Irish Parliament he did so much wrestle against them was so little Master of himself and Actions and so much in the hands of Irish that he is rather to be pitied than blamed for them And 't is very hard and unreasonable that when a King is forced from a Throne by his Protestant Subjects and opposed by them in his Endeavours after the recovery of his Inheritance and so necessitated to betake himself to the Assistance Protection and Services of Catholicks unless he would Renounce his undoubted Rights which neither the Laws of God nor Man oblige him to that Acts of Grace which his Circumstances and the necessity of their Assistance forced from him should be charged upon him as Crimes Let us labour for his Restauration let us get him into our hands and deliver him from that cruel Necessity which carries him farther than his Inclinations would otherwise do and whenever he is at liberty to act as an Englishman he will convince us that he is such The Treatment that Charles I. met with is a sad Instance of the Vanity of all human Greatness and a lasting Reproach to our Nation but reacheth a more pertinent and apposite Reproof to K. William's Conduct than K. James's The most considerable and important points which occasioned those fatal Disputes betwixt that Prince and his People were illegal Imprisonments the undue refusal of Liberty to Prisoners upon Bail the free quarterings and Plunderings of Soldiers and the unwarrantable exacting of Money from the Subject without Consent of Parliament Are not all these illegal and arbitrary practices frequently repeated in this Government and without any Precedent from K. James's Reign The many Pages imploy'd by the Author of A Letter to a Friend concerning the French Invasion to prove That the Non-swearing Protestants as well as others can merit nothing by their endeavours for the King's Restauration but a bare Pardon at most discovers more Logick and Method in dividing of his Text than true solid and convincing Reason For since a few Scotish Gentlemen who had acted warmly and vigorously against him and could contribute but little to his Service were able to procure not only Pardon but those great and important Securities for their Religion and the Liberties of their Country which K. William had refused to the Desires and Addresses of a Parliament that had given him the Crown and pre engaged his Consent before the Gift Is it to be imagined That so many worthy Prelates Lords Gentlemen and inferiour Clergy who have testified so much Zeal Firmness and Fidelity by their Sufferings joyn'd with the early Repentance and vigorous Endeavors of others for his Service who have been hitherto blinded and misled will not prove of more Weight Importance and Consideration with him be as kindly treated and their Country for their sakes Or rather will not all Securities for Religion and Liberty be granted from a due regard to their Application as well as from his own Inclination Neither is it to be feared that any of their former Measures which unhappily and accidentally have contributed towards that Ferment which begot this Revolution will be remembred against them since the King is sensible how far he himself was imposed upon as well as his Subjects by the Cunning and Artifice of wicked and corrupted Ministers which were about him And whatever Jealousies this Author may labour to infuse into the minds of People of the firey and lax Principles of the Jacobites with Relation to the Protestant Religion Church of England and English Liberties there are Jacobites whose Principles are better more fixed and rational who have already and will upon all occasions never fail to give greater and more generous Testimonies of their zeal and affection for the Establishment and Security of those great Concerns than any can be brought by our present Ministers and topping Reformers and who will never be found with this Author in justifying a Conquest of their native Country The Caution which is given us against another Revolution lest the Monarchy receive more vigour from a Restauration than is convenient for the Liberties of the Subject which the Author fortifies from an Instance in the Return of Charles II. at which time betwixt zeal flattery and fear the King encreased in Power and the People lost their Liberties concludes very strongly against himself and for what I have been all along pressing If we do but consider the true reason of those Concessions made in favour of the Monarchy upon the Return of K. Charles the Nation was so wearied out exhausted and undone by the Tyrannies and Executions Taxes Imprisonments and other arbitrary Courses against their Liberties and Properties that were practiced during that Anarchy which intervened betwixt the Murther of the Father and Return of the Son that upon a Prospect of some Relief by the reestablishment of the antient Monarchy the People fell into such Raptures of Joy which never fails of making Subjects so liberal to Princes as many times occasions a hearty but late Repentance If K. William continue a little longer to oppress our Liberties and drein our Purses or if the Title of Conquest be advanced we shall be infallibly exposed to the like hazard again which cannot be prevented but by an early Return to our Duty whilst we have some Patience Wit and Money left to enable us to take care of our selves and our Posterity The hard and difficult Questions which this Author thinks he hath gravelled us with and the obligation of the Oaths of Allegiance to K. William comes next to be considered The first Question is Whether we think our selves bound in Conscience to fight for Popery against the Protestant Faith I Answer not nor doth this Answer make any thing for King William since in no Sense can the fighting for the Restauration of King James be called the fighting for Popery against the Protestant Religion for it is both K. James's Interest and his Inclination to return upon a Protestant Foot and by assisting him in it we vindicate the Honor of our Religion and rescue it from the Dangers which threatens it from this Reign The second Question is Whether we think our selves bound in Conscience to fight for
other aggravating Circumstances Bonds have been imposed by Authority of Council without Warrant of Parliament as may appear from 〈◊〉 publick Proclamations and many Thousands of Soldiers have been maintained upon free Quarter and for many Months together countenanced and abetted in it by the Government and the Funds for reimbursing the Countrey which were appointed by Parliament have been otherways diverted The Commissionating the Officers of the Army to sit as Judges upon the Lives and Estates of the Subjects and the putting People to death without a legal Tryal Jury and Record were complained of in the Declaration were thought good Reasons for Fore-faulting of K. J. and were provided against upon this last Setlement of the Crown And yet both the caution given by the Sentence against K. J. and the future Provision made by the Estates prove to weak to restrain this Government from practising the same things by ordering and impowering Colonel Hill and Lieutenant-Colonel Hamilton to put Glencou and all the Males of his Clan under Seventy to death which was partly executed upon them without any legal Tryal Jury or Record Neither can their former Enmity and opposition to the Government furnish any Apology for so barbarous a Murther since they had all either actually taken the benefit of the Indemnity then granted and so were Pardoned or had Protections in their Pockets which put them under the immediate care and safeguard of the Government It may pusle the best Heads to find out the reason why Irish Papists though stated Enemies should be indulged to the prejudice of our Laws and Rights and yet Protestants though formerly Enemies barbarously Massacred when indemnify'd and under protection unless K. W. be resolved from the Obligations he is under and the Deference he must pay to the Pope and Popish Princes to imbrace every occasion of destroying the one and cherishing the other By the Declaration we are assured That the Prince will concur in every thing that may procure the Peace and Happiness of these Nations and which a free and lawful Parliament shall determine and yet how many necessary and useful Bills for the Happiness of the Nation have been stifled by the Interest Intreigues and Sollicitations of the King himself his Ministers and Courtiers and the Royal Assent refused to many Bills in our Neighbouring Kingdom And in this to the Bill about Judges which was thought so necessary an expedient for the Establishing of Justice and to cut off their servile Dependance upon the Court which was charged as such a blemish upon the Judges in K. James's Reign and was always look'd upon as dangerous to the Lives and Liberties of the English Subjects We were assured that the only design of the Prince's Undertaking was The preservation of the Protestant Religion the covering all Men from Persecution for their Consciences and the securing to the whole Nation the free injoyment of all their Laws Rights and Liberties under a just and legal Government How well and truly he hath confined himself within these Limits and other Bounds he prescribed to himself in his Declaration may partly appear from what hath been said and shall yet be made more clear and evident by a true and impartial Enquiry into his Conduct and some considerable Stretches which have been made in Points not glanced at by the Declaration because they were Strains of Absolute and Despotick Power which K. James's Reign did not furnish us with any Instances of the like The Power of imposing Taxes is unquestionably lodg'd in Parliament and the People of this Island have a natural Right unto and Dominion over their Properties and the Prince cannot share with them in it in whole or in part except in so far as they consent to it themselves by their Representatives in Parliament And our Parliaments though abundantly liberal in other respects have never indulged the least Liberty to our Monarchs on that head being so far tight to their Trust and their Constituents Interest And the Estates of both Kingdoms judg'd it necessary upon the present Settlement of the Crown to assert the Peoples Right in it and plainly to express it as one of the Conditions of that Settlement And yet the Privy Council of the Kingdom of Scotland have openly and avowedly in Contempt of the antient Laws and late Original Contract by their publick Proclamations commanded and appointed under the severest Penalties the Subjects of that Kingdom at their own Charge and Expence to furnish a great number of Horses for the use and service of the Army and for carrying Ammunition and Provision of Victuals with Men to attend the said Horses And I am informed That when upon cool and second Thoughts the Council considering what they had done how illegal it was and the danger they had run themselves into by it thought fit to apply unto the Parliament for an Approbation it was refused them Extravagant Bail was complained of and provided against by the States of both Kingdoms and yet it is daily and frequently imposed and exacted many times far above the Value of their Estates The Freedom of Elections to Parliament from the Bribes and Directions of Court and Courtiers was expresly conditioned by the States of both Kingdoms upon their Tender of the Crown How well that is kept and observed may appear from the bare faced and open Applications made to Counties Corporations and particular Electors for the Choice of such and such Persons with Threats and promises of Reward Nay I have known Three thousand Pounds expended for secret Service to prevent the Election of a Person who had been eminently Serviceable to this Government bec●me he was found tighter to the ●nterest of his Country than to the Court for there never was a Reign wherein the Interest of King and People are more confidently stated as contradistinct than in this though it be only the Consent and pretended Interest of the People gives Birth Rise and Title to it The frequency of Parliaments for redressing of Grievances the amending strengthning and preserving of the Laws with all Freedom of Speech and Debates in them was insisted upon and fundamentally established by the States of both Kingdoms when they elected their present Majesties to the Throne How well this is observed and made good to both Kingdoms is obvious enough It is not for redressing of Grievances amending or preserving the Laws they are assembled but for giving of Money The craving Necessities of the State the pressing Circumstances of the Consederates and foreign Affairs the early Preparations of the French King an honourable Peace the Good of the Protestant Religion and Fears of King James are become the cruel and everlasting Topicks the common and ordinary Stale whereby the true Intent of Parliaments is baffled and the Money business quickened and finished The last is now so much the business of Parliaments and the firit so little that it is an equal Wager that this Court may come at last to plead Prescription against
that Case we have injured slighted and despised to the last degree Nay upon the Issue of a successful War against France we may be obliged to undergo the same Fate So far will this War in any Event be from terminating in an Establishment of our present Settlement that it doth visibly tend to the contrary This will appear no Paradox to any Man who doth exactly weigh the different Interests and Politicks of the several States of Europe with Relation to us and amongst themselves Such a curious and diligent Observer will quickly discover how much more agreeable King James's Restauration would be to the secret concealed Interest of all our Neighbouring States than the Prince of Orange's present Royalty The good Intentions of France towards it is not to be doubted The House of Austria after their Pretences upon France are satisfied do certainly become Favourers of King James's Restauration both upon the account of Religion and to remove a Dutch Stadtholder from being King of Britain thereby to facilitate their antient Pretences upon those revolted Provinces The Dutch will heartily agree to his Restauration to get rid of their Stadtholder who presseth so hard upon their Liberties they will be in no more Fears from France from this supposed Issue of the War and the Interest of England would always oblige its Monarch to cover and protect them from the Ambition of the House of Austria The best Wishes of Sweden cannot be wanting were it only by the Admission of the Prince of Wales's Right to place the Prince of Denmark a Remove farther from the Crown since his Accession to the Royalty amongst us by Vertue of his Princess's Title might endanger the Conquests which that Crown hath made upon Denmark And since the Politicks of Denmark with relation to us are solely levell'd at his Brother's Interest whenever the Indignities done to the Prince and Princess of Denmark shall oblige them to resume that Duty and Loyalty which is due from them to their kind old Father who is still ready to receive them and to secure unto them those Advantages which they can never expect from the Pr. of Orange the Concurrence of that Crown towards King James's Restauration can be no longer wanting I do but hint at things which are of sufficient Importance to make all true Englishmen who love their Country and their Liberties to bethink themselves seriously how to cover and secure all those great and valuable Rights from the Oppression of the P. of Orange the Miseries Poverties and Dangers which will inevitably attend either a successful or unsuccessful War We have thrown our selves into a State-Hurricane from which there is no way of escaping but by restoring the just and legal Government of this Nation into its antient and unquestioned Channel Having fully established and made out the first three Motives assigned for K. James's Restauration I shall enquire a little into the fourth and last viz. the Securing of the Protestant Religion for all future Ages This appears a great Paradox to the Author of The Pretences to the French Invasion examined at which he falls into Exclamations against Mankind as the oddest Piece of the Creation for believing such incredible things But it is not his bold impudent and false Assertions supported only by empty and noisy Eloquence which can hide the Danger from us that our Religion as well as our Liberties and Properties lies under from this Revolution For clearing the Truth and Weight of this Motive I shall make it evident That our Religion was in no probability of being overturned by K. James's Practices before this Revolution That it was in our power to have secured it even against our Fears and Jealousies without any Breach upon the antient Government That the Dethroning of Monarchs upon the Pretence of Religion hath been fatal and destructive to all the several Protestant States who attempted it That according to all appearance it will be equally fatal in our Case and Circumstances And lastly I shall make it evident from a full and distinct Answer to all the Arguments adduced by the Authors against King James's Restauration that the best surest and most infallible way whereby to secure the Protestant Religion our Liberties and Properties upon lasting and durable Foundations is by returning to our Duty and restoring our Abdicated Monarch by as general a Consent as he was chased away by us It is very natural and common with Mankind and with Princes as well as others to have some more particular regard towards those of their own Religion to wish them well and to endeavour their ease when it lies in their Power so that it was nothing extraordinary to find King James labouring to give his Catholick Subjects a Right and Title to that ease and security which the Laws of the Land had deprived 'em of I do not believe that Liberty of Conscience in general and the covering of People from Persecution on that score can be rationally condemned as destructive and ruinous to the Protestant Religion we ought to have a better Opinion of the Principles of our Faith and be better convinced of their Truth and Excellency than to be afraid to have 'em bassled or shaken much less ruined by the Reasons of any other Persuasion That Religion which dares not shew its Face publickly and stand the shock of all its Adversaries without skeening it self under the Severity of Penal Laws furnisheth great Suspicion to curious and prying Men of its weakness and insufficiency But this I hope is not our Case our most holy Religion is built upon that Rock of Ages which can never be shaken is fortified by the Testimonies of the Law and the Prophets and expressly contained in the Word of God or derived from thence by clear and necessary Consequences and can subsist by its own worth and excellency without robbing the rest of Mankind of that Liberty their Birth-right Intitles them to and enslaving Consciences So that King James his Principle about Liberty of Conscience if duly and legally Established will be allowed But it is the Method we complained of which discovered some farther Design than bare Liberty of Conscience and thereby did visibly threaten our Civil Rights and Liberties and endanger our Religion Why truly the Measures taken were unjustifiable but we know to whose Council and Advice they were owing The whole was a Plot upon that Prince to spoil the Project of Liberty of Conscience which would have rivitted him in his Throne and to improve his Inclinations for the Roman Religion to his own ruin and destruction But suppose something more was intended by some than a bare Liberty perhaps the opening a Door of Preferment to Catholicks or the propagating that Religion over this Island Such an undertaing is irrational foolish and desperate can never be accomplished and the impossibility of it is so plain and obvious that no Man who understands the World and knew England and English Men so well as King James did could believe
It seems God Almighty did always discover more of Passion and Worldly Designs than true Zeal for Religion in those Undertakings and I am afraid That since we deserve the like Charge our Punishment may be the same unless by a seasonable and early Repentance we prevent it The first Example I find in History is Zisca's War in Bohemia against the Emperor Sigismond which thô managed as successfully in the beginning as any thing we can flatter our selves with yet had an end very fatal to the Reformation in that Kingdom The Civil Wars in Germany managed by the Elector of Saxony and the Landgrave of Hesse against Charles V. had no better Issue many Imperial Cities and Provinces were lopt off from our Communion and the principal Actors themselves were remarkably Sufferers by it and their Families wear the Scars of it to this day The second Bohemian War under the Elector Palatine whom they had chosen for their King was yet more fatal to that Kingdom than the first and almost ruined the King of Denmark did exceedingly weaken the Protestant Interest in Germany and laid the Foundation for the present Grandure of France which is so terrible to Europe at this time Upon the Event of that War the Civil Rights and Liberties of the Subject as well as the Protestant Religion in the Kingdom of Bohemia were intirely ruined and extinguished The principal Electorate of the Empire together with the Palatinate of Bavaria were wrested out of a Protestant and placed in a Popish Family Several other Protestant Princes and States were lost and the French possessed of both the Alsatias which hath since given infinite Disturbances to that Empire And the Hungarian War commenced first upon pretence of Religion and came at last to be managed by Tekely hath quite buried the Protestant Religion in Hungary and Transilvania and it is very Remarkable That so long as they kept Petitioning as Subjects Though with Arms in their Hands for the free Exercise of their Religion they were constantly Victorious and got into the absolute Possession of the greatest part of that Kingdom and might have fully secured their Religion and Liberties by Concessions and Immunities which the Emperor offered them in repeated Treaties And yet no sooner was the Crown given to Tekely and an Allyance made with the Turks to support him in it but by a series of Misfortunes all their former Successes were unravelled and their Affairs reduced to the miserable Condition we now see them in What sad alarms may such Instances give us How truly do they point at our Case and perhaps our Fate Can any of the above-mentioned Examples discover such plain and visible Marks of worldly Ambition Self-interest and corrupted Designs and Artifices for their Original as have evidently actuated the Contrivers of and principal Agitators in our Revolution And yet how fatally were they punished And can we hope to escape The Emperor Ferdinando was in a worse Condition to resist the Elector Palatine backed by the Protestant Princes of Germany countenanced by Br●●an and Holland and the present Emperour Rodolph was under harder Circumstances to support a War against his Hungarian Rebels and the Turkish Power than any that France hath to graple with from Us and our Allies and yet their numerous Armies and strong Allies could not secure them from those Miseries which did at last overtake them There is no way for us to get safe from the Precepices we have been walking upon to retrieve our Religion from the desperate Danger we have run it into and to setle and secure it but by a National returning to our Duty which will sufficiently atone for so general a Defection by resuming that Treaty we so foolishly br k off and refused and thereby securing Religion and Property by those Concessions which our Sovereign is still ready to grant us Let us put it home to him and lay it at his own Door let him have it in his Choice to return by his People if he pleaseth convince him that his Protestant Subjects upon securing their Religion and Liberties will repair their former Errors by contributing heartily towards his Restauration And if he decline to return upon a Protestant and English Foot there is an end of the Controversie and of all Disputes amongst Protestants for Religion and Liberty will never be Sacrificed by true English Men. I am come in the last place to the Objections raised by the new Authors against King James's return which are stuffed with virulent false and sophistical Reasonings and in a great Measure taken off by what hath been already said The first thing they endeavour to frighten us with is a Conquest and with Popery and Slavery as the necessary Consequences of it since it is impossible K. James can return otherways because K. William will not Abdicate I abhor the thoughts of Conquering my native Countrey as much as any Man more it seems than The Author of a Letter to a Friend who would allow of it in the Person of K. William and I am against it in any Case But by whom are we to be Conquered and to whom must the Conquest belong Are we to be Conquered by such Troops as K. James in point of Prudence and according to the practises of all Ages in the like Case must bring with him for the defence of his Person and the untying of that Force which the Prince hath put upon us I know no reason why it may not be as Lawful for K. James to bring Fifteen thousand Men to assist him in recovering his Throne as it was for the P. of O. to bring the like Number to chase him out of it and that without giving any Jealousie to us of a Conquest Thrice that Number were too few to make a Conquest of this Island and I hope they will be so well seconded and so far out numbered by the Accession of his own Subjects upon a feeling Discovery of the Pr. of Orange's Tyranny as well as of the Injustice done their King as may justly Stamp it a Revolution brought about by English Men who have Conquered their Passions and not their Countrey rescued and not enslaved the Nation and who have preserved and not endangered their Religion Is this imaginary Conquest to make us Slaves to the Fr. King or Catholicks and Slaves to K. James I cannot believe the first For I do not think K. James so much in love with the French King as to make him a Present of Three Crowns to the prejudice of Himself and his Posterity and so become either his Subject or his Vassal These are suppositions fit only to pass upon Children deserves no serious Answer and plainly shews the weakness of the Cause which can furnish no better Reasons wherewith to defend it As to the last The French King will never force us to be Catholicks for the Reasons already assigned and it doth as little agree with his Interest to have us Slaves to our Monarch Friendships are
GREAT BRITAIN's JUST COMPLAINT FOR HER Late Measures Present Sufferings And the Future Miseries She is exposed to With the Best Safest and most Effectual WAY of Securing and Establishing Her Religion Government Liberty Property Upon Good and Lasting Foundations Fully and Clearly Discovered In ANSWER To Two Late Pamphlets concerning the Pretended French Invasion Printed in the Year MDCXCII Great Britain's Just Complaint FOR Her Late Measures Present Sufferings and the Future Miseries She is Exposed to THE last great Revolution in Britain which doth so much exercise the Heads Hands Purses and Pens of the Inhabitants of this Island is not to be paralel'd by any Instance from ancient or modern History When we have ransackt the Annals of all the Nations of Europe and travell'd as far as the Indies to find an Example we shall at last be forced to acknowledge after all Circumstances are exactly weighed That we have been blindly following the Dictates of our own personal Prejudices and intoxicated Judgments rather than tracing the Footsteps of our Predecessors or of the most zealous Assertors of publick Liberties in other Nations I do not deny that in every Province and Kingdom of the Universe we may find Instances where Subjects have been at last necessitated by force of Arms to secure themselves their Religion and Liberties against such violent and repeated Acts of Tyranny in their Princes as did visibly endanger the Frame of the Government it self as well as the Safety of every Individual And many Princes have lost their Crowns by a tract of Cruelties and Exorbitances in Government and an incorrigible Obstinacy and Deafness to all the humble Petitions and repeated Complaints of their Subjects But we scorned to be confined within such ancient Rules to be regulated by the Practices of our Forefathers or to be taught at the Expence or by the Experience of others We have walked without Guides amidst dark and dangerous Precipices Our Fears have overrun our Reason we have taken things upon Trust without searching them to the bottom and we have been imposed upon by the cunning and artificial Disguises of self-designing and ambitious Men to overlook a most infallible way of securing Liberty and Property to all future Ages which the Ambition of the Prince of Orange and the hard Circumstances of our own King had put into our hands We have vacated a Throne for the pretended Disertion of a Prince violently forced away by a surprizing Defection of his Children Servants Subjects and Soldiers and under the terror of dangers threatning his Life and Liberty We have justified this Severity by enumerating Miscarriages in Government which though Errors and Mistakes were very far from overturning Foundations and which the King was put upon by the artifice and cunning of his Son in-law who was grasping at his Crown And we have obstinately refused all Treaties when offered whereby Grievances might have been redressed and provided against for the future and we have ventured upon such Steps as have no Precedent and furnished an Example for History which will be found too desperate and expensive for imitation Yet so far hath this Poyson spread and diffused it self that though the pretended Reasons of our Proceedings appear at last to be empty false and forged though the principal Actors are ashamed of their former grounds and love the sound of Conquest better than that of a Deliverance and are countenanced in it by the Practises as well as Inclination and Maxims of our present Monarch there are some People who would gladly continue the Cheat and amuse us still with a Hodge-podge of Right of Succession Election and Conquest and the lofty and agreeable sound of Religion Liberty and Property which appears to be as little the care as it was the design of our principal Reformers Hence it is That we have of late been entertained with two famous Pamphlets the one entituled The pretentions of the French Invasion examined Licensed or rather written by the E. of Nottingham The other is A Letter to a Friend concerning the French Invasion which must be the Offspring of a Person of equal Quality with the former since his Character stamps it legitimate without a License These two Pieces do not in the least answer the Figure which the Authors who are assign'd them make in the World For all along they falsifie disguise or absolutely conceal Matter of fact they labour to impose Falshoods for Truths and their base Alloy as good Coin upon us They advance Positions for undoubted Maxims which have been controverted all the World over and upon this Sandy Foundation they raise their Building and their Reasonings are either false sophisticated or most conclusive on the other side To make good this Charge and acquit my self of the Duty I owe my Country and fellow Subjects in contributing my Mite towards the rectifying their Judgments in such a nice and important Affair wherein our own Peace and Happiness as well as that of our Posterity is so much wrapt up I shall endeavour to make a full and distinct Answer to these Two Pamphlets by a true unbyassed and impartial Deduction of Matter of fact by seting out the publick Councils Designs and Conduct of particular Persons in their true Light without those Disguises which were Art-fully thrown over them and by their own Reasons and Maxims concluding a great deal more forcibly against themselves And to deal fairly by them I shall confine my self to those very Arguments which are assigned by the Author of The French Invasion examined as the Motives upon which the Restauration of King James is desired and endeavoured viz. The repairing the Injury done to the King the setling the Government upon its old Basis the delivering us from the Oppressions we suffer under the present King and the securing the Protestant Religion for the future There is no English-man but must allow these Considerations to be Grave Weighty and Important and if as True as Considerable sufficiently conclusive and persuasive for a speedy Restauration I will then enter upon a particular Enquiry and I do not dispair before I have done to establish the Truth as well as the Importance of those Reasons against the Cavils of those Authors I joyn them together because their Reasonings are much the same equally levelled against the aforesaid Motives and must stand or fall together As to the first Motive Of the repairing the Injury done to King James If it can be made appear That he was unjustly upon false Pretences deprived of his Birth-right by his Subjects who by Nature and Oaths were bound to defend him in it then must it be acknowleged a Duty by all as well as those Authors to repair that Injury done him by restoring his Right again I shall apply my self particularly to the clearing of the Injustice done him since upon that a great part of the Controversie depends and most of the Reasons assigned by these Authors against his Restauration will fall to the ground In
doing of which I must look higher than the begining of King James's Reign the early and unnatural Ambition of the Pr of Orange as well as the necessary connection and series of Affairs oblige me unto it It was not the danger which our Religion and Liberties were threatned with from the Designs and bad Administration of King James and a tender regard to the British Subjects for their Love and Respect to his dearest Consort and Himself with the Interest which his Birth and Marriage gave him in us first induced the Prince of Orange to look towards these Kingdoms and our Affairs The late King Charles notwithstanding of all the tenderness he had discovered for that Prince's Education and care for his Interests in espousing them so vigoursly upon all occasions against the States of Holland who would gladly have secured themselves by depressing him and his Family against those prophetick Fears they lay under for their beloved Rights and Liberties was the first that felt the Effects of his Nephew 's towring and boundless Ambition No sooner did the Prince of Orange find himself reinstated by the Authority and Interest of his Uncle in the Posts of Grandure possessed by his Father and Predecessors and so put into a Condition to appear upon the Stage and mingle in the greatest Affairs of Europe but he gave loose Ranes to his Ambition to range where-ever it could perch and fix without being restrained or frightned by those common Rules or Barriers which Morality and Religion had placed as Spoaks too mean in his Opinion to stop the Careere of a bold and daring Spirit Britain was the Place he fixed his Eye upon neither could Relation or Gratitude place any rubs in his way The lazy Temper of that Monarch addicted to his Pleasures and his being without Children the Religion of his Brother and want of Male Issue together with his own Allyance with the Royal Blood and some Discontents of the People which were begotten and heightned by the Addresses and Malice of a few Grandees promised him a plentiful Harvest in return to his Cabals and Cajoling Insinuations upon which those Grandees were applied unto and as quick and hearty returns made by them with assurance of Zeal Dependance and Fidelity being glad of so considerable a Support Hence sprang all those fatal Divisions which so long time exercised that Prince his Councils and Parliaments To spirit this Party in England and to fix himself one Degree nearer the Crown which he so much long'd for the Prince made his Addresses and was Married to the Lady Mary much against the inclination both of the King and Duke who did very well foresee the Consequence and were afraid of so near a Conjunction with so restless a Spirit But it is well known who disposed the King to agree to the Match for which and other good Services then in betraying his Master he is well rewarded now rather than for any Merits he had to plead upon this Revolution After this Match our Divisions and Discontents past all Bounds nothing less than the interruption of the Royal Line by a Bill of Exclusion would satisfie I know the danger of our Religion from a Popish Successor was pretended but the Prince of Orange's immediate Succession to the Crown in the Right of his Princess was the thing truly intended by the Prince's Agents and Privadoes Nothing else but such a hidden secret Design could have inclined so many Men of Sense and Reason to refuse the great Concessions was offered 'em which without Danger or the bad Consequences of neglecting a just Title did equally secure Religion and Liberty To this Project were Sacrificed all those great and mighty Securities which K. Charles would willingly have Granted in favour of our Religion and Liberties to be rid of that troublesome Bill of Exclusion and thus we lost the greatest and best Establishment we ever had in our view and which would legally peaceably and willingly have been setled upon us without any farther trouble danger or expence So early did this Prince's Ambition become fatal to our Liberties and Properties Hence sprang all those Councils and Measures which did so much Discontent the People and put that King upon the Quo Warranto Project thereby to temper and qualifie Parliaments which the Cabals and Machinations of the Prince had render'd so warm and uneasie to him Hence sprang that Ferment and those bad Humors which gave Life and Motion to the Duke of Monmouth's Invasion and Pretences who all a long had been made a Stale by some though the Prince lay close at the bottom and seemed to favour the Man until at last he perceived that the Duke did in earnest catch at that he so much longed for himself With what regret yea indignation must every English Breast be filled upon that blessed occasion we lost which might have prevented our present Expence of Blood and Treasure and all those Fears and Miseries we are now groaning under and know not when we shall be at an end of It is with unspeakable Grief I am obliged to remember so great a Loss nor do I mention any thing but what is very well known for a Truth to some Persons yet alive and which I have seen clearly verified by some convincing Dispatches which are yet extant and which shall be carefully preserved until they may be with safety produced Doth not Sir W. Temple in his Memoirs licenced and published of late acknowledge the greatest part of what is here asserted as if in this reforming Age People were to make their Court by publishing of Services for which their Posterity may have reason to curse their Ashes Thus we see what fatal Influences the Prince of Orange's Ambition had scattered upon our Councils and Measures during the later end of K. Charles his Reign Neither will he be found less active and successful by himself and Agents during K. James's Administration as will appear from a particular Enquiry into the pretended Abdication This strange and mysterious word which to this day is not well understood neither can be explained nor rightly fitted to what was intended by it either by the Authors of it or by any body else was first made use of in the Kingdom of Naples some Ages ago and begot that fatal Sruggle between the Anjouin and Arroganian Factions which at last quite ruined that flourishing Kingdom and brought it under a foreign Yoke under which it continues to this day I shall not criticize upon it nor examin how improperly it is applied in the Case of King James though that be obvious enough to any Man who understands the Civil Law or the proper and genuine signification of the Word but shall only enquire into the subject matter which according to the Sense of our Reformers amounted to Abdication a Vacancy and that is King James's Disertion and Invasion of the fundamental Laws and Liberties of England As to the first how properly his being forced away may be called a
but these Fundamental Privileges which are the Birth-right of Nations and derived Originally from the Laws of Nature it self such as the Freedom of our Persons and Dominion over our Properties fall only under the Cognizance of Parliaments for their better Establishment against such Breaches as the depraved Nature of Princes and their Ministers will be making upon them The Nature and Design of Societies hath occasioned a partial Submission of these two great native Privileges to the safety of that Body Politick by punishing of Crimes and to the support of it by Taxes which we grant our selves but in no Construction of Reason Sense or Justice can Delegates be understood to be impowered to make an intire surrender of those Rights into the Hands of any Prince were it but for a moment It may be alledged That the safety and necessity of the Government put our Rulers upon such extraordinary Measures If reasons and pretences of State the Secrets of which are always locked up in the Prince his Br●ast can apoligize for such bold Strok s against our most Fundamental Privi●eges and Laws Where is there any Right or Immunity which we can call our own or be ●ssured off Since such pretences shall never be wanting to entitle the Prince to an absolute Dominion over 〈◊〉 Property as well as over our Liberty since the last is more valuable than the first Why may not Reasons of State as justly render him Master of the one as of the other If it was to preserve our Liberties from the insults of King James we placed the Prince upon the Throne we have certainly either mistaken the Disease or the Cure since he cannot be preserved upon it at a cheaper rate than a Sacrifice of what we intended to preserve we are to learn nothing from this Revolution but a surer and more infallible way of enslaving the Subject King James never dreamt of such a Method An English Parliament was hitherto esteemed a Court inseparable from the true Interest of Englishmen but a little more Training under so good a Master may make them change Principles and become in time as complacent and good natur'd as ever the French and Swedish States were Nothing it seems in Gratitude can be refused to our Deliverer But thô Gratitude be a Virtue it ought to have its Bounds lest it run us farther than designed or intended at first even to the destruction of those Rights for the Preservation of which we desire to appear so grateful The King of Denmark in our time by the Merit of some Actions performed for his People and during their first Raptures of gratitude for it sound the way to Enslave them by changing an Elective and Limited into an Hereditary and Despotick Monarchy The admitting of unqualified Persons into Places of Employment and the erecting the High-Commission-Court were thought great Crimes in King James and mighty Errors in Government and yet the first is as frequently practised in the Army as ever and how much further the Prince's dependance upon Popish Confederates may lead him in favour of Catholicks must be owing to their Moderation for we lie at their Mercy upon that head and may come to be made sensible that our Foreign Allyances may prove as troublesome and uneasie to us in favour of Papists as King James's Religion was And as to the last the Prince must either look upon that Court to be no Crime or by favouring the most active Members in it he must destroy and invert that old English Maxim That our Kings can neither Err nor be Punished but that evil Counsellors are liable to both The turning out the Fellows of Magdalen College from their Freeholds contrary to that Provision in Magna Charta That no Man should lose his Life or Goods but by the Law of the Land is not to be justified and yet falls much short of the putting People to death under this Government by Martial Law before it was Enacted Few Men will ever scruple to secure their Lives with the loss of their Places The Quo Warranto and Regulation Projects were much to be complained of but we may very easily imagine to whose Practises they were owing by the Countenance and Preferments the Authors and Promoters of those Councils received from this Government neither can the Quo Warrantoing of Charters be so illegal as the Declaration would make us believe since King William himself treads in the same Path by imposing a Governor upon New England upon the Quo Warranto Foot contrary to the Opinion of his Privy-Council Whereas by the Declaration the slighting and rejecting of Petitions delivered by Subjects with Submission and Respect is considered as a high Strain of absolute Power yet when the People of Scotland had secured to themselves the Privilege of Petitioning by their claim of Rights and in pursuance and by virtue of that Privilege the greatest part of that Parliament which placed the Crown upon his Head had humbly addressed unto the present King for his assent to some Votes which they had passed for Establishing of Religion and Liberty and which were agreeable to their antient Laws and Privileges they were scornfully and disdainfully refused and rejected If by the Declaration it was a fault to treat a Peer of England as a Criminal for asserting that the Subjects were not bound to obey a Popish Justice of Peace it cannot be a piece of Justice in King William to pass a Sentence of Banishment upon the Earl of Feversham who is a Peer of England within these few Weeks without so much as alleging a Crime against him Since by the Declaration the obliging People to deliver their Opinion before hand as to the repealing the Test and Penal Laws and the turning out of Employments such as would not promise lustily is represented as so fowl a piece of Collusion The Closetting of Members of Parliament now to pre-engage their Votes in Affairs depending before them and the Disgraces which some obstinate Persons fell under upon it should have been forborn unless King William be dissatisfied with the Prince of Orange's Declaration and the Rules and Maxims therein Established According to the Scottish Declaration the appointing of Judges in an unusual manner and giving 'em Commissions which were not to continue during Life or good Behaviour was highly illegal yet K. William after he got the Crown found he was mistaken in that Paragraph and nominated the whole Bench without subjecting them to a Tryal and Approbation of Parliament according as Law and Custom required did not think fit to continue their Commissions during Life or good Behaviour and appointed them a Lord President thô by express Statute he was to be elected by the Bench. By the Declaration the imposing of Bonds upon whole Counties without Act of Parliament and the permitting of free Quarters to the Soldiers are declared to be high and intollerable Stretches of Government The same hath been practised in this Government with greater Confidence less Compassion and
by the natural Boldness Spirit and Courage of the English far surpassing that of the French but more especially from the Inclination of the French themselves to live under a Government which was so much easier and more agreeable than their own it being natural for People to covet the same Plenty and Freedom which they see is injoyed and possessed by their Neighbour Hence it was that though we lost all our Footing in France yet still our Forces and Enmity was more dreadful to those Monarchs than that of any other State in Europe though more considerable for its native Strength and consining by dry Marches upon 'em and they always Courted our Friendship and Allyance with the greatest Submissions and Applications imaginable And until the Reign of Q. Elizabeth the French did always chuse rather to divert our Invasions with their Money and Treaties than to encounter them by Force being afraid to graple with that Power which they had so often felt to their Cost Since that time neither our Friendship hath been so much Courted nor our Enmity so carefully Avoided as formerly This doth not proceed from the increase of the French Power and decrease of ours though the Revenues and Military Force of France be strangely augmented since ours in proportion hath received the same increase Our Treasure is augmented and that being the Sinews of War quickly furnisheth and maintains every thing else And the other States of Europe are from the Circumstances of Affairs better disposed for Allyances with us than ever they were in the time of our Ancestors So that France is but still France and England in the same Proportion with it as to Force and Revenue and in a more promising Condition of making Allyances and of being more usefully served by them Our Pretences are still the same and every whit as Strong and Just and we as willing and desirous to make Advantage of them and yet we are in no respect so formidable to that Crown as formerly nor in a Condition to shake that State and make such impressions into the Heart of France as our Ancestors have done The true Reason is our difference in Religon for we being Protestants and France Popish this sets the Two Nations at a greater distance from mutual Correspondence and Contrivances which must necessarily preceed and occasion important Revolutions than all their former Animosities Emulation and Duty to their natural Prince could ever do Loyalty to Princes National Considerations and Point of Honor and Reputation do many times give way to present and future Advantages But when Religion and Point of Conscience comes in to gather and cement all those divided Interests together and unite them as it were into one bundle they become the more hard and difficult to overcome This plain and evident Reason cannot escape the Knowledge and Reflection of so wise a Prince as the French King is acknowledged to be The difference in Religion is a much greater Security to him against our Attempts than his Armies Fleets or Strength of his Towns The Sense of Religion doth many times rouze and influence the Courage and Resolutions of Men when other humane Considerations prove to weak to quicken their drooping Spirits Catholicks will fight to the last to escape the Dominion of such as they believe Hereticks when perhaps French Men would be willing enough to come under the English Government which is so much easier and better than their own I do not question but this very Consideration alone will prove strong enough to keep the French King from endeavouring our Reunion to the Roman Church which would make the Pretences of an English Monarch more dangerous than ever by our Union with Scotland which formerly gave such notable Diversions to our Forces both at Home and in France That Prince's Disputes with the Pope for Point of Prerogative shews plainly that he never will indanger his Crown in his own Person or Posterity to serve the Interests and Desires of the Papal Chair from all which we may safely conclude that the Protestant Religion in Britain was in no great danger of being ruined by King James though really as bad as he was represented If our Religion and Liberties were placed so much out of danger of being overturned by the Laws and Franchises we were then in Possession of how much better might we have established them for the future and placed them above the shadow of any Danger by embracing and improving the Offers which our lawful Prince made us of carving out our own Satisfaction and Securities He was surprized with an astonishing Defection of his Subjects with a Conspiracy of a great many Princes and States against him He knew no place but France to retire unto where he might have a Cover for his Head but could have no great Expectations of being quickly restored to his Throne by a Power which had so much other Diversion He was unwilling in his old Age to go into Exile was very desirous to leave a perfect Calm to his Son before his own Death which by the Co rs of Nature and the ordinary Destiny of his Family he could not believe was very remote and had a Love and Kindness to us still as a Father for his disobedient Children All which would have procured us from our lawful King a lasting legal full and happy Settlement would have established our Religion bettered and secured our Liberties upon lasting Foundations without any trouble and with a great deal of innocency How many crimes would have been avoided by following this Method and how many more prevented which will be necessary if we be obstinate to support and maintain the Injustice we have done How many Millions of Money and how many Lives might have been saved or at least more profitably employed by the Conduct and good Husbandry of our Lawful King for the Honour of England restraining the unbounded Pretences of ambitious Neighbours and in giving Peace and Quiet to Europe There is no question but a King who was so unwilling to leave us and had so much of an English Spirit would have gone into any Measures with relation to foreign Affairs that his Paliament should have thought fitting in which case what returns of Glory and Profit would this Nation and Monarchy have reaped from this Blood and Treasure which is now absolutely lost and thrown away and our future Expences and Dangers daily growing upon us with as little hope of Success My heart is so rent and torn with the thoughts of it that my Pen is ready to drop out of my hand as I write But we wantonly longed for an Abdication without examining the true Value of what we refused and the Consequences were to follow upon the other Measures We have made a religious War of it which may be fatally returned upon us and we never considered that Defections upon Pretences for the Protestant Religion seldom or never terminate othervvise than by the Destruction of Religion and Pretenders both
seldom lasting amongst Neighbouring Princes rarely continue during their own Lives and are never transmitted to to their Posterities so many Reasons and Jealousies of State are falling in which occasion frequent and unavoidable Breaches And a King of England who is Absolute and Master of his Subjects would be a great deal more troublesome and dangerous to France than otherways and so it is not very probable that that Monarch will ever contribute to make us a Conquest to K. James and introduce Popery and Slavery amongst us There is one sure way to prevent this danger of Conquest and that is by the vigorous endeavours of every Enlish Man to repair the Injury done to our Abdicated Monarch King William's unwillingness to Abdicate which these Authors threaten us with can't put a stop to it His breaches upon our Laws and Constitution and his violation of the Original Contract made with himself deserves it and it is not all his Partisans and Troops can cover him from Abdication whenever the People of England thinks fit to declare it We are told next by these Authors That K. James is become so in love with the French Government that we shall never so much as have his Promise for securing our Religion and Liberties even though we have no reason to depend upon that or any other Security he can give us since he hath undertaken to the Pope and K. of France to make void all when he is upon his Throne and that it is visible from his Carriage in Ireland to the Protestants there that neither the sad Example of K. Charles the First who suffered for the like Attempts towards Arbitrary Power nor the fresh Remembrances of his own Misfortunes will ever oblige him to lay aside his Arbitrary Designs And however instrumental Protestants may be in his return that Pardon for their former Failings is all can be expected from him without obtaining the least kind regard to their Religion or Liberties on that Score I would gladly know upon what Grounds they assert that K. James will grant no Security at all for Religion and Liberty Have they made the Experiment and been refused It is not a bare Assertion can convince us of the Truth of it since we are assured to the contrary I have heard of a Scotch Plot for Restoring King James the particulars of it I am not acquainted with Only I have been told That upon the Application of some few Gentlemen of that Nation unto him he frankly granted them under the Broad Seal of Scotland all that was proposed for the security of Religion and Liberty and agreed to several Immunities which the P. of O. refused that Nation though he was solemnly engaged to grant them when the Crown of that Kingdom was tendered unto him Here is more than a bare Promise the Concessions are passed under the Broad Seal and granted by him when his Affairs were in Promising Circumstances at the desire of a few Gentlemen who had been active against him and who could make no such considerable Addition unto his Party as might induce him to it unless his own Inclinations when free from the pressure of designing Ministers and readiness to rectifie whatever was grievous to the People had put him upon it Can it be doubted after this that he will deny any thing that is necessary for the good and happiness of his Subjects whenever they apply seriously unto him for it But he must make good his Engagements to the Pope and King of France and make void all when he remounts the Throne which his hard Circumstances obliged him to grant If this were made plain unto us there would be a great deal of weight in it all the Evidence we have for it is the Veracity of the Author which goeth no great length being founded only upon supposition that he could not be countenanced by those Princes without such an Engagement This is an Argument that concludes more forcibly against themselves since it is reasonable to imagine that more solemn and sacred Engagements in favour of the Holy Chair and a Conviction of more punctual and ready Performances were necessary to induce the Pope and so many Popish Princes to countenance a Protestants mounting the Throne to the prejudice of a Papist I am yet to learn what were the great Merits of the Irish Protestants since the Revolution the fresh Obligations laid upon him and what were the new Discoveries he gave us there of his hatred to Protestants and irregular Arbitrary Courses I have seen a Book written by Dr. King which these Authors refers us to as sufficient Evidence to make good their Charge but it is so scandalously and notoriously False and stuffed with so many gross Errors and willful Mistakes in point of History and matter of Fact even in many things which fall under my own Knowlege that the Doctor seems to have Calculated his Book for a Virulent false Libel thereby to merit some Benifice from this Government rather than for our Information by a true and impartial History And the World shall be obliged with a particular Account of his Falshoods and Calumnies by a full and impartial Account of those Transactions But to come close home to the Charge Did not the Irish Protestants generally declare for the Prince of Orange Did they not actually either appear in Arms for the Prince or quit the Kingdom And those who stay'd were not they rather lookers on than actors or any ways useful towards the asserting the King's Rights I do not design this as a Satyr against the Protestants of Ireland the Measures taken there gave them much better grounds for their Fears than any we can pretend but only to shew that the Protestants of Ireland contributed no Endeavours towards his Restauration but run generally along with the Stream against it and so cannot be said to have made any new Experiment of his Kindness to and grateful sense of Obligations performed by Protestants They never desired or obtained any new Securities for their Religion and Liberties upon the Account of Services performed for him and so have no fresh Branches of Promise to charge upon him as our Authors do insinuate whereby to deter the Protestants of Britain from contributing towards his Restauration On the contrary we have a very convincing Argument from his Care of his Protestant Subjects there tho' either actually Enemies or at best but idle Spectators and his constant Endeavours to protect them from the Insults and Fury of the Irish of whom he was not fully Master to persuade us of the Gratitude and kind Returns we may exp●ct from him when at liberty and obliged by our Services to express it How carefully did he preserve their Estates and Goods With how much tenderness did he give free Passage to the Women and Children from Londonderry when by denying it he must infallibly have carried the Town With what exact Discipline did he Govern an Army serving without Pay until King William's Protestant reforming
our Prince against the Laws and Liberties of our Countrey I Answer in the Negative and we do assure the World That it is from a tender regard to our Laws and Liberties as well as from a sense of Duty to repair the injury done our Exiled Prince that we resolve to contribute to his return The antient Constitution was broke in upon by the Abdication and our Laws Rights and Liberties have been more eminently and signally over-run during the P. of Orange's Kingship than by any of our most Violent and Arbitrary Princes even when he was under the greatest Obligation clearest and distinct Barriers placed against it and we are possessed with reasonable ●●ars nay a certainty of having 'em ●●i●e ruined and extinguished by his future Conduct which layeth an Obligation upon all true English Men to repair these Breaches made upon the Constitution and to vindi●●●● and restore their oppressed and ●●ined Laws and Liberties by returning K. James and the P. of O. into their proper and respective Stations But we are desired and pressed to have some Care of the Protestant Religion and Church of Christ which will be visibly endang●red by the King's Restauration all Europe over and a due regard for the Rights and Liberties of all the Princes in Europe which will be sacrificed by it that this ought to be more tenderly minded by us since we are Citizens of the World and so the good of Mankind or the greatest part of it layeth a more sacred Obligation upon us and is to be preferred to the particular Interest of our own Prince and Countrey The security of Religion is a Duty never to be forgotten by good Protestants and is never to be endangered and desperately hazarded by honest Men. But alas this hath been little regarded by our late Reformers Have they not quite unhinged our Constitution of which the Protestant Religion was become apart Have they not already and are they not in a fair way to ruine our Laws and Liberties which are the best Fences about our Religion After we are become Slaves we may quickly be made any thing else the multitude of new Converts in France is an undeniable Instance of this Have they not unnecessarily exposed the Protestant Religion to the hazard of a rude and uncertain War from the commencement of which we can form no great hopes of a Successful Issue and that in Conjunction with Allies who are the greatest Enemies of our Religion who when their particular Interests have been served by our Blood and Treasure will certainly give us the slip and nick some Opportunity which our present Circumstances can never furnish them with of Establishing themselves at the Expence of our Religious and Civil Rights and Liberties And finally have we not dethroned our King upon the account of his Religion by which we have commenced a religious War which may come to be fatally retorted upon us and may endanger the whole Protestant Religion in Europe A religious War is carefully to be avoided by Protestants since they are the weakest and no Pretence ought to be furnished to the Catholicks for the like Measure For thô particular Animosities and Interest seem to divide them at present how quickly may these be adjusted by the Necessities of one of the contending Parties and how easie will it be then for the Pope to unite them together under the Banners of Religion to give us and the Protestants of Europe a Rowland for our Oliver This is no Chimera or Dream but we may probably expect to see and feel it A far weaker Pretence viz. the Union established amongst the Protestants of Germany at Leipsick and Smalcald gave Birth to the Catholick League there which over-run all the Protestants forced several Princes and Cities from their Communion and endangered Denmark It is upon such weighty Considerations and to prevent the danger which threatens the Protestant Religion both at home and abroad from our late Measures that all true Englishmen and good Protestants ought to endeavour the Restauration of our King As to the Caution given us to beware how we sacrifice the Rights and Liberties of all the Princes in Europe the greatest part of the Princes and States of Europe are not engaged in this War against France and consequently in no danger by it The two Northern Crowns Moscovy and Poland Portugal all the Princes and States of Italy except Savoy together with the Switzers are in perfect Peace with France and so the Supposition of this Author is absolutely false the Original and Ground of this War is purely private Contests betwixt the Crown of France and House of Austria and such other Princes as that House can draw into their Interest Do we not see that the Princes of Germany themselves who seem to have the most immediate Concern in it and should understand and be more alarmed at the Consequences of it than we do but make Merchandise of their Assistance and engage in and withdraw from this War as it contributes most to their particular Interests and according as they are best paid by the several Principals Do not the Northern Crowns whose Territories and Provinces lie more exposed to the Consequences of this War than our Islands maintain an exact Neutrality which will give their Subjects Possession of the best part of the Trade of Europe We are the only Fools who have been prevailed upon to engage inconsiderately in this War to be at the greatest Charge of it to drein our Blood and Treasure and to hazard our Religion and Liberties by it without so much as proposing any Return to ballance this Expence and Danger Our Conduct is such an Instance of Folly and Madness as amazeth the present and will not find Credit in future Ages As to the Maxim established by the Author upon which he buildeth all his fine Reasoning it is false and Phanatical to perfection Can any Man in his right Wits assert That the Interest of our Prince and Country must give place to the Interests of other States suppose them to be the greatest part of Mankind Much less then to those of the House of Austria which is the present Case Must the Interest of the British Monarchy be postponed to the Interest of the Mahometan and Pagan Countries which make the greatest part of Mankind Or must the Interest of Britain and so of the Protestant Religion which makes a part of it give way to the Interest of the Pope and Catholick Princes which make the greatest part of Europe We may quickly guess what our Fate would be by following such a Rule and may easily be persuaded that the Cause must be very bad which requires such wretched Maxims and Reasonings to ●●pport it The last Question is Whether we would think our selves bound to sight 〈◊〉 him did we believe he would promote the same Designs he did before and what we would think our selves obliged to do in the like case and under the same Circumstances after he had remounted
the Throne The Answer is plain and obvious By this Revolution and the Consequences of it the Prince of Orange's Ambition and share in these Measures with which K. James was loaded being sufficiently discovered to the World together with the Roguery of those Ministers who to serve the Prince's Design forced the King unwillingly enough upon those Steps which we complained of with a design to ruine him by the Restauration and Punishment of th●s● Mi●●ste●● the King and People both will be safe from any repeated Assaults of the Prince's Ambition being so well cautioned by the first and succeeding Ministers will be terrified from such Infidelities for the future The Author supposeth a Case which will not probably fall out and so is not weighty enough to restrain us from assisting our King in the recovery of his Rights which positive Duty obligeth us unto And whenever the like Case occurs such corrupt Ministers who advise such Measures will become a more justifiable and easier Sacrifice for the averting such Dangers than our antient Government and Constitution And it is pleasant enough to imagine that wise and thinking Men can be imposed upon to continue under much more weighty Oppressions gr ater and more visible Dangers threatning both Religion and Liberty by K. William's Government from a fear we may again fall under those lesser Evi●s which we suffered under K. James and which were due rather to the Contrivances of the P. of O. than the King 's own depraved Inclinations And whereas it is complained That such Pangs of Loyalty are unseasonable now and should rather have been employed for keeping him in his Throne than restoring him to it why truly few People did suspect that the Prince did really design what he so seriously and solemnly declared against and every Man was struck into a State Lethargy by the suddenness of the Prince's Attempt the wonderful Succ●ss it m●● with in the beginning and the charmi●g Wh●●l●e of securing Liberty and Property which we are sadly and severely rowzed from at last by unspeakable Oppressions by the expiring Groans of Liberty and Property and by the dreadful View of those Miseries which threaten us from all hands and in all Events As to the Obligations we lie under from the Oaths of Allegiance to the present Government the Author himself acknowlegeth That if we be convinced that our Oaths to King James are still binding upon us the Obligation of the second is voided by it which is a plain enough Answer to his own Argument especially when we consider that K. William's manifest Infractions of that Original Contract which we made with him upon the maintaining and preserving of which our Allegiance was expresly founded doth evidently and unanswerably dissolve and make void the Obligation of our Oaths and much better solves all Scruples upon that head than Dr. Sherlock's Providential Reasoning And whereas it is asserted by this Author That Allegiance can never be expounded to a lower Sense than to live peaceably und●r the present Government thô we will not sight for it and not to attempt any thing again●t their P●rsons or Crowns not to hold Correspondence with their Enemies nor to give any assistance to K. James for the recovery of his Thrones in this he hath forgotten their own Practise For our Reformers have taught us That Allegiance may be expounded to a much lower Sense even to the Abdicating the Monarch to whom the Allegiance was due to the filling of his Throne and transferring of that Allegiance to another and would take it very ill to be charged with Perjury for it Quis tulerit Gracchos de seditione loquentes We are exhorted by our Authors to beware of contributing towards K. James's return lest we engage our Country in a Civil War and all the dreadful Consequences of it the Destruction of our People the utter Consumption of our Estates the burning of our Houses the Ravishing of our Wives and Daughters the Extirpation of Families by Sword or Halter and the utter Ruining our Cities Towns and Villages are the infallible Consequences of it The mighty deluge of Blood which was shed and the unspeakable Miseries which overwhelm'd this Nation during the struggle betwixt the Two Roses and our Contests with King Charles I are undeniable Proofs and may convince us how fatal and destructive it is to beget and establish a Competition of Titles to the Crown and to dethrone Monarchs And the Calamities which over-run France and Germany by the Civil Wars which begun upon the Account of Religion may let us see how displeasing it is to God Almighty to have Religion made a cover for ambitious and private Designs This Civil War is already Commenced and we have established those Grounds and s●wen that Seed from which we shall not fail to r●ap a plentiful Harvest of Blood and Ruine without a speed● and vigorous Prevention Nay we have been so fond of entailing certain Misery upon our Selves and Posterities that we have coupled together two of the strongest Motives in the World for a rude and lasting War viz. repeated Breaches in the Royal Line and Succession and the vacating the Throne upon the pretence of Religion either of which seperately hath never failed to ruine whole Nations Provinces and Cities It is obvious at whose Door this is to be Charged they who forced away their King upon the account of his Religion inverted the Nature of our Monarchy and the Succession and refused all Treaties and Securities which were offered them have laid infallible Foundations for those Mischiefs and they who wish and labour for the return of the King are the only true and skilful Physitians who clearly discover and are willing to apply the most proper nay only Cure which remains for our Disease And the Authors Reasonings from the Miseries of a Civil War doth evidently Arraign their own Practises and concludes most forcibly against themselves as the Promoters of it since it is not to be supposed that a just Right and Title is to give place to Force and Usurpation and fall a S●crifice to those Necessities which we first bring our selves under and then plead for our Excuse In the last place we are cautioned against the King's return from the intolerable Payments we must come under for refunding those Sums which he hath borrowed of France to maintain Himself to keep Ireland and to discharge the Forces that come to thrust him on us which will prove a Ten times greater Tax for many Years than those we pay for the support of this Government which are not considerable reckoning the abatement of Chimney-Money and are much easier than what the French are accustomed to and that we have paid as much formerly for assisting France to ruine Europe and maintain Vice at home and so may be very well satisfied with our present Payments which delivers Europe and secures our native Countrey and Religion from utter Destruction Our celebrated Authors could not have finished their fine Pieces with
Reasonings which more perfectly resembled the Pretences Motives and Grounds of this Revolution by their Weakness Falshood and Prevarications How well our present Payments secure our native Countrey and Religion from Destruction may app●ar from the ruine of Ireland the Plunderings and free Quarters practised in Britain the Breaches made upon our ancient Monarchy and Constitution whereby a War is entailed upon Us and our Posterity from the Violences done to our Laws Rights and Liberties and Original Contract made with K. William and from the present visible and eminent Dangers which our Religion and Liberties are threatned with by any probable Issue of this War under a Prince who hath quite overturned the Liberties of his own native Countrey made fair advances towards the ruine of ours and was never yet Successful in any Enterprise he undertook except when he invaded his Father in Law contrary to all Divine and Humane Rules which perhaps God designed as a Scourge to these Nations for our Sins and when he fought Luxemburgh's Out-guards at St. Denis with the Peace in his Pocket contrary to the publick Faith and Law of Nations as if he were Predestinated to be Successful only in Crimes but unfortunate in heroick brave and generous Actions such as restraining the ambitious Encroachments of Princes and vindicating the Rights and Liberties of oppressed Nations having always practised in his own Case what he pretended to reform in another's How little the Deliverance of Europe is carried on by our present Payments is but too evident from the growing Successes of France in Flanders and the taking their most considerable Towns and Fortresses in the sight and under the nose of our present Monarch and those mighty Consederate Armies It is equally false to insinuate That our Payments during King Charles the Second's Reign bore any proportion with the Taxes under this and that they were employed only for assisting France to ruine Europe For the Subsidies we have already paid to this K. which Sir Edward S●ymer who might very well know it assured the House of Commons did amount to 18 Millions before the last Impositions which were granted do far exceed all the Taxes paid to K. Charles joyn'd with the several Payments made to our Edwards our Henries and our Elizabeth who raised the Honour and Reputation of this Nation so high and spread our Conquests so far And it was to King Charles his Authority and Mediation the Peaces of Aix-la-Chapelle and Nimiguen were due which put then a Stop to the French Carreer And I am afraid our present Payments will very hardly bring about a Peace again upon the Foot of those Treaties and we are to take it as a very great Favour for which we are to be thankful to God and our present King if the Taxes we pay during this Government fall any thing short of the French Oppressions and Four Millions a Year over and above an Allowance for the Abatement of Chimney-Money and the ordinary Revenues of the Crown are but inconsiderable Payments in the opinion of these Authors It seems their Court Preferments are great and rich that they are so little sensible of those Taxes which are already become so heavy to this Nation and of which we see no end But the growing Debt to the French King for those Sums already spent upon K. ●ames 's Subsistance and the defence of Ireland and to be farther Exp●nded for his Restauration will quite sink and undo this Nation It appears that these Authors take it for granted That the mercenary Temper of the Dutch in demanding and obtaining Sati●faction for their Expences which 〈◊〉 of a tender regard forsooth to our Liberties they bestowed upon our Deliverance will be exactly copied by other Princes But this is the first Instance of such Merchandise and it is not to be believed that great Princes who study Fame and tenderly regard their Honor and Glory will imitate so base an Example But suppose they should our Author is as wide in his Estimate of this Expence as in his other Reasonings We are frightned with a Charge Ten times bigger for many Years than our present Payments and yet will very much fall short of the half of one Years Tax we pay now The Sums spent upon the King's Subsistence and Ireland doth not amount to Three hundred thousand Lu●dores and as for the Charge of his return I wish and heartily pray that all true English Men would unanimously concur together to prevent the pretence of demanding any such Charges the necessity of Foreign Troops and even the remotest Fears of French Popery and Slavery by returning our King with as general a Consent as he was forced from us which will vindicate the Protestant Religion from the reproach of Deposing Principles and establish it for the nature will rese●●e the ancient Monarchy and Constitution of this Nation upon its old Basi● will repair the Injury done to our lawful King whereby we may legaly obtain those Securities for our Religion and Liberties which we are Courting unsucces fully amidst so many despera●e D●●g●rs and Diff●●●l●●s will infallibly relieve us from the weighty Oppressions and manifest Infractions of our choicest and most valuable Rights which we at present feel and have so much reason to be apprehensive of for the future will deliver us from the heavy Burthen of so many Taxes which we have already paid and which yet must be continued if we design to support a crazy and unjust Settlement any longer which after all our Blood and Expence must certainly fall to the ground and give place to the natural Force and Weight of our ancient Government and Monarchy to the just Title and undoubted Rights of our lawful Sovereign and his Posterity to the Love Affections and native Inclinations of English Men when the present fit is over and to the Interests of our Neighbouring Princes and States which lie visibly cross unto it so soon as their present Differences are at an end And lastly by this Method we shall be secured against those fatal Influences upon our Liberties which never fail to accompany all forced irresistable and unexpected returns of Exiled Monarchs I do humbly beseech Almighty God That of his Infinite Mercy for the good of these Nations and of all Europe he would open the Prince of Orange's Eyes give him a sight and discovery of the Vanity as well as Injustice of possessing his Father's Throne and incline his Heart to establish Religion and Liberty among us and give Peace to all Europe by doing an Act which would bury in Oblivion the famed Instances of Dioclesian and Charles V. and immortalize his Name even by restoring his old Father to his Right and Inheritance Was it really the Danger our Religion and Liberties were in which put him upon coming to Britain this would be an infallible way fully to secure them by new Laws and Concessions against which there lay no Objection Or was it to put himself at the head of the British Forces thereby to give a Check to the towring Ambition of the French Monarch this would more effectually do it for either that King would think himself obliged out of Gratitude to a Prince who is truly a Martyr for a supposed French League to give a reasonable Peace to Europe in order to King James's Restauration or by a Refusal our King was at Liberty to consult his own Interest and to unite with the Consederates by the Advice of Parliament which would make such a general and vigorous Application of the English Forces that way without any fear of Domestick Distraction as would quickly oblige that great Monarch to give ear to Reason and a Peace to his Neighbours And the Glory of having given Peace to Europe and subdued himself would place the Prince of Orange's Name upon the highest Pinnacles of Fame furnish the greatest Character imaginable for History give a great and noble Example to future Ages declare him the Benefactor of the Christian World and oblige all British Subjects to acknowlege that he had most generously contributed his best Endeavours for the securing of the Protestant Religion and the free Enjoyment of all our Laws Rights and Liberties under a just and legal Government according to his Declaration FINIS ERRATA PAge 5. Col. 1. Line 23. r. upon a Review of that bl ssed Occasion p. 8. c. 1. l. 37. de●e in p. 10. c. 2. l. 9. after Troops add to support 〈◊〉 p. 13. c. 2. l. 16. 〈◊〉 it r. th y. p. 14. c. 2. l. 39 r. easie p. 21. c. 1. l. 38. r. was not with p. 22. c. 1. l. ●● l●●e anoth r. p. 26. c. 1. l. 13. dele our p. 27. c. 2. l. 21. r. Princes p. 32. c. 1. l. 13. r. the. p. ●2 c. 1. l. 30 dele upon whole Counties p. 37. c. 1. l. 6. after in add the. dele are l. 23. r. Towns p. 41. c. 2. l. 3. r. scr●ening p. 43. c. 2 l. 4. dele and his Designs p. 4● c. 2. l. 9. r. instanc p. 54 c. 2. l. 32. 〈…〉 fail to furnish