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A52220 England bought and sold, or, A discovery of a horrid design to destroy the antient liberty of all the free-holders in England, in the choice of members to serve in the Honourable House of Commons in Parliament, by a late libel entituled, The certain way to save England, &c. Nalson, John, 1638?-1686. 1681 (1681) Wing N101; ESTC R10091 15,117 14

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England Bought and Sold OR A DISCOVERY OF A HORRID DESIGN TO Destroy the Antient Liberty Of all the FREE-HOLDERS IN ENGLAND In the Choice of MEMBERS to Serve IN THE Honourable House of Commons IN PARLIAMENT By a Late Libel Entituled The Certain Way to Save ENGLAND c PROV xvi 28. A Tale-bearer maketh Strife and a Whisperer separateth chiefest Friends LONDON Printed for T. O. 1681. England bought and sold c. THERE was never any Design so black and Criminous but found some persons so Profligate as to become its Patrons there wanted not an Iscariot for Thirty pieces of Silver to betray his Master nor a popular pretence saving of the State lest the Romans should come and take away their Place and Nation to put the better colour upon the Murder of our Saviour And a nearer Instance will abundantly refresh our Memories without more than the trouble of remembring Jan. 30. 1648. The worst Surfeits are taken by the most lushious Fruits and no Poyson can be so dangerous as that which has the name of an Antidote written upon the Box. There was never any mischief in State or Kingdom but the People were first drawn in to believe that the Projectors were their Friends and then those Juglers pre-possess them with false apprehensions of things and undertake to redress all their Grievances They are prodigal in their fair Promises and flattering Speeches like Absalom when they intend the foulest Enterprizes Certainly the happiness of a People consists in Peace which is the Mother of all desirables of this World and Peace most certainly depends upon the due Subjection and Obedience of the People to their Sovereign and the wise and wholsome establishments of Laws And therefore they who design to subvert the one or disturb the other always represent the Laws uneasie or the Sovereign unjust and apply their whole endeavours to create foment and increase Mis-understandings between the Prince and his People Whoever goes about to divorce these two whom God hath joyned together ought to be reputed an Enemy to both a betrayer of his Country and a most dangerous Incendiary a pestilent Fellow and a mover of Sedition Now as the greatest Artifice is to conceal the Act so I find the Author of this Libel by which he pretends to save England so great a Master in the Talent of deceiving that he might have been Tutor as he is certainly the Scholar to that old guilded Serpent who deceived Eve For he has not planted his Battery against any particular part of the Government That would have been too visible but he has undermined the very Foundation and has endeavoured to spoil the whole frame not by open breaking the whole but by altering the weights which keep the Movement right and in due order He has first violated the greatest Priviledge of the People of England indeavouring to rob them of that ancient right liberty and freedom of Election of persons to represent them in Parliament imposing upon them by the specious way of Advice Restrictions Limitations Rules and Directions in their Choice Secondly He has violated the priviledge and honour of the Commons-House in Parliament who have ever endeavoured to have their Reputation secured by the freedom of the Election of their Members And I remember that even the Commons of that Parliament of November the Third 1640. who are sufficiently memorable and possibly for which this Libeller has a veneration when some great Lords only writ a Letter Recommendatory about the Election of an inconsiderable Burrough voted it a high breach of Priviledge And yet our pert Libeller or Legion for any thing I know has had the confidence to write and for expedition to Print a Letter Recommendatory and disperse it to all the Counties and Cities Burroughs and Corporations of England thereby to forestal the Elections One of which Letters by mistaking his person came to be discovered and you shall presently see the Tenor of it Thirdly He has by many false disloyal not to say traiterous Insinuations indeavoured to defame His Sacred Majesty and the established Government and to bring a general Odium upon both thereby to alienate the affections of the People from their natural Liege-Lord to the impairing of his Honour Justice and Wisdom the great supporters of his Imperial Scepter Crown and Dignity Fourthly He has indeavoured to heighten the present unhappy mis-understandings and to possess the People with Fears Terrors and dismal Apprehensions of I know not what Despotick power Tyranny and Arbitrary Government that is coming in upon them and that their ALL Lives Liberties Religion and Estates are at Stake with such fulsomly Rebellious reflections upon the King and Government as may animate the People by a desperate effort of Sedition to Rebel against their most Gracious Sovereign Fifthly He has cunningly aspersed and vilified a great number of His Majesties most Dutiful and Loyal Subjects of all Orders and Ranks as Enemies to the Kingdom Pentioners Courtiers romoters of a Popish Interest and Succession and defames by whole-Sale many worthy Gentlemen of most approved Loyalty and Fidelity to their King and sound principles in the Protestant Religion as by Law Established thereby to incapacitate them from being Elected to serve their King and Countrey as Members of Parliament by rendring them suspected and odious to the Electors And indeed the whole drift of the Libel is to prevent such as are of known Integrity to the King and the Church from coming into the next House of Commons and to persuade them to choose Men of large Principles as he calls them which I need not I think explain for he does it himself as you shall see hereafter This is a great and heavy charge but I will make it out true to a Tittle and yet shall draw but a few strictures upon a Libel for which at some times the Author would not only have lost his Ears but hazarded the Head that framed it and let him have a care Justice and the Vengeance both of Heaven and of Kings that have long Arms. The Letter will make good the first and second Articles and the Book both them and all the rest The Letter was superscribed and sent by the Post and has the Post-mark Feb. 5. stamped upon it but the Contents to the Surprize of many worthy Gentlemen to whom they were directed were in Print as follows SIR THere is newly published a small stitched Book well worth the serious perusal of all your Electors and I think if you would put your self to the small charge of buying a parcel of them for your Countrey People It may be one great means of keeping them tight and steddy in their Choice of good Protestants and true Englishmen for their Members in the next ensuing Parliament whereupon depends the Weal or Woe both of King and Kingdom not only in this but in future Ages It has comprised in it all the material things that were in any of the former sheets upon the same
Doctor saith Exposing and Declaiming against His Majesties Person Counsels and Actions in Parlliament For adds he by what Counsels you have been defeated in the Dissolution of Parliaments you cannot be ignorant And upon this like Gavan at a Quakers Meeting or Whitebread at a Conventicle he falls a Canting of what an excellent spirit was poured upon them in their last Elections Even such a spirit as fell upon the Jews Exorcists Acts xix 16. which in some places inspired the Dissenters with such Fury as to beat wound and kill those who opposed their Choice of such as were in the Opinion of Dissenters particular Friends to their Opinions and Practices or had been in Actual Arms against the late King and His present Majesty But he proceeds and I must keep pace with him in his dirty Road tho we travel to different Quarters In his second Qualification They must be men throughly principled in the Protestant Religion very good and why could it not be added as now by Law Established are the Lawless Protestants the best Protestants and they who obey the Laws the worst We must come to distinction then I find since the very word Portestant admits of Ambiguity All lay claim to it Quakers who are no Christians and Anabaptists who are very ill ones and all others by what names soever dignified or distinguished will all challenge the Name of Protestants which of these doth he mean and what Protestant Principles those of the Law Protestants or Lawless Protestants We shall not need to go far for a Resolution They are the large Principles that he means such as will not sacrifice his Neighbours Property to the frowardness of his own Party in Religion Now tho this is plainly level'd at such Gentlemen as have in obedience to the Law and discharge of their Consciences prosecuted Dissenters not out of frowardness but necessity as considering what a dangerous influence their pretences of Religion have had upon the State yet in the next page to clear his Counsel and Truth and make it plain you shall see a double portion of the excellent spirit of Ned Coleman and of the late Lord Stafford poured upon him when he tells the People Pag. 10. That the great Interest of England at this day is to tolerate the tolerable to bear with the weak to encourage the conscientious and to restrain none but such as would restrain all besides themselves Lo here Toleration and Persecution both in a breath The Church of England because by the help of the Secular Laws she endeavours to restrain men from running to damnation must be restrained her self This is so large a Gospel-Principle as I am sure Christ never taught I would ask this vir quidam whether he thinks Schism a damnable Sin or not If not then he hath neither Principles nor Religion If he doth believe it so let him read Doctor Stilling fleet 's late Book which hath sufficiently convinced all Dissenters to be Guilty of Schism Would it not be great honour then for a Parliament to Establish Iniquity by a Law and is it then the great Interest of England that the People should have an Act of Parliament to damn themselves by Authority Sure this is Doctrine and Advice fit for none but Jesuits and Devils to Preach Good God! What will not some men do to make a Party His Third Qualification is Men of Courage who will not be Hector'd out of their Duty by the Frouns and Scouls of Men. Let him be who he will he deserves a severe Castigation for two things First For want of due Respect and Manners to his Superiors Secondly For Charging them with such Actions as they are not Guilty of Why there is not the littlest Fop about the Town but would think himself affronted with the name of Hector and yet this piece of Insolence fears not to pin it indefinitely upon the Highest Characters in the Nation His Fourth is Men of Resolution that will stand by and maintain the Power and Priviledges of Parliament for they are the Heart-string of the Nation Then Mr. Parenthesis you have broke the Heart-strings of the Nation for the Fundamental Priviledge of the House of Commons is Freedome of Choice of the Members of which Fraud and Force are equally destructive and which both by your Letter and your Book you have endeavoured to violate Fifthly Men that will prosecute the Plot and search into the bottom of it With all my heart for by Dr. Oats's Narrative your Worship Sir and all that are like you will be found there and the Nation will never be at quiet till such fellows as you who lie sculking there be found out and severely punish'd Sixthly such as will remove and bring to Justice Evil Counsellors Corrupt and Arbitrary Ministers of State that have been so Industrious to give the King wrong Measures to turn things out of their Antient and Legal Channel of Administration and Alienate His Affections from His People Sure the Man is besides himself did ever one take such pains to make a silken Cravat for himself Are you in serious Earnest Sir Would you have all that endeavour to breed misunderstandings between the King and His People severely punish'd Then are you in exceeding danger of the Fate of Haman who built a pair of Gallows of fifty Cubits high for Mordecai no man I will say that for you hath taken more pains or indeavoured with more Art to alienate the Affections of the People from the King vice versa than you have done and by your own Law you know what you deserve As for any other who have done as you say His Majesty who hates all thoughts of Arbitrary Government hath told you He will leave them to the Law and you should have acquainted the People with that Just and Honourable Resolution of His Majesty accordding to Magna Charta Nec ibimus super eum nisi per Legale Judicium parium suorum He will neither displace nor disgrace any Person but by the Legal Tryal of his Peers which is the true Legal Channel and antient Fence against Arbitrary Government Seventhly Men of improvement That 's agreed with him for I am not for picking knots in Rushes And now having shewed the positive Qualifications he comes unto the Negatives And First Not those who with as much Defiance as Error assert the Honourable House of Commons began by Rebellion 49. H. 3. And that they were not till then an Essential or Constituent part of the Legislative Power of the Kingdom For my part I know none that have done it more or in better terms than this Person in the words just recited I perceive this Gentleman is a meer whiffler for without Reflection It being no dishonour to know the true Original either of things or persons had he been conversant with Selden Cambden or any other Antiquary he would have found them no vilifiers of the House of Commons and yet they allow that House no higher a pedigree than
been much better relished by Persons of Loyalty To pass by his limping paraphrase upon the first Men that fear God i.e. Halt not between two opinions which yet is not without its design against all those Gentlemen who are zealous for the present Establishment in the Church who are ever represented to the People as halting between God and Baal Popery and Protestantism and in that sense incapacitated by this Gentleman for Representatives of the Commons of England His Second Comment is stollen from the late Rebel-Parliament who are very ill Patterns for the People to choose by Loving Truth i. e. Such as the King and Kingdom may trust All they did in the late Rebellion was for the good of the King and Kingdom they chose into the Parliament all that could be pickt up that had manifested any Animosity against the King or His Government for the good of the King and Kingdom they displaced all His Friends under the notion of Evil Counsellors for the good of the King and Kingdom and they raised an Army against the King under the Earl of Essex for the good of the King and Kingdom they fought against him in the Field and Bullets flew as thick as Hail about His Head for the good of the King and Kingdom and in fine they cut off His glorious Head too for the good of the King and Kingdom And for the Third hating Covetousness he is quite by the Cushion with his i. e. For it clearly intimates that they should chearfully assist their Sovereign with necessary Aids Subsidies and Supplies But he knows what hath gone abroad of late as a State-Maxim If upon any Terms we part with our Money till we are sure the King is ours the Nation is betrayed And yet Cicero a better Orator I cannot say a greater Common-wealths Man positively affirms Imperium sine vectigalibus retineri nullo modo potest which it is to be feared is the true foundation of the fore-recited Maxim And because this Adviser like the Jesuits doth not think the Scripture a sufficient Rule He proceeds to lay down Truths and Counsels as plain as possible he can and by his Recommendatory Letter he would have his Traditions make out the Insuffciency and Obscurity of Old Jethro's Rules who being a Priest or a Prince or both may be thought too much inclining to the Court Party as I suppose Solomon and St. Peter for the same Reasons are quite omitted or otherwise those who Fear God and Honour the King and meddle not with such as are given to change whose Calamity ariseth suddenly and who knows the Ruin of them both might have bid fairly to have been admitted for such Counsellors in whose multitude the safety of King and People too consists And now this Quack State-Doctor begins to talk learnedly of Critical Days and times and I pray consider says he this is a Critical Time upon your well or ill chusing depends your well or ill Being and you had need to do that well which you do not know whether ever you may do again Your Fate may not suffer you to offend twice in this one Particular Indeed this is an Amazing Paragraph This Fellow is the very Epitome of the Consult of the Jesuits at Wild-House as Doctor Oats in his Narrative Deposes That they intended to effect their wicked Plot Pag. 67. by disaffecting the Kings best Friends and Subjects First Charging him with Tyranny and Designs of Oppressing Governing by the Sword and without Parliaments Secondly By aspersing Deriding Exposing and Declaiming against His Person Councils and Actions in Parliament and elsewhere Nothing but the Impudence of a Plotter such a one as the Doctor describes could give the Lye to Majesty The King assures His People he will meet them in frequent Parliaments and here comes an Adviser to tell the People they do not know whether they may ever chuse Members for Parliaments again that their Fate may not suffer them to offend twice in that one Particular which is only in softer words the better to deceive the People to promote the Popish Plot by persuading the Nation they are like to have no more Parliaments These two Paragraphs of Doctor Oats which I have mentioned are in truth the Contents of his whole Book and the Libel is only an culargement upon these two heads of the Plot And if that be the way to Save England God deliver all good Protestants from such Savers and such Salvation And I desire the Reader to carry these Expositors in his mind for he shall find him all along indeavouring to traduce either the King or the Government or both upon which he is so violently bent that he persuades the People to whom for their Edification the Discourse is addressed That Kings have been their Constant Enemies for says he Liberty and Property were rescued by Inches out of the hands of incroaching Violence and this is another of his stabbing parentheses When in truth the People owe all their Liberties Franchises Charters and Immunities and even that great one of Commons to represent them in Parliament to the Bounty and Goodness of former Kings and never any King either did or attempted to deprive the People of the Grants of their Predecessors Let the Charter of London now publickly Printed and Sold be looked into and it will shew from William the Conqueror to His most August Majesty King Charles the Second what vast favors the Kings of England have con-ferred upon that City which it is to be hoped will incline them to Loyalty and Gratitude to His Majesty and to stop their Ears against such Charming Seducers as this and other Libellers especially if they remember that the first violaters of their Charter and the great Charter of England were the late Usurpers who dethroned and murthered their Lawful King by the very same popular Arts the Fears and Jealousies of Evil-Counsellors and Arbitrary Government Consider saith he you trust the Parliament with your Estates Liberties Religion and Lives And do the People chuse the Parliament too or only the House of Commons Are not the King and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal to be trusted A late Libel has indeed said we want a King and a Government that we may trust c. And now comes in our Commentator and obtrudes the word Parliament as if it only consisted of the Lower House and the whole trust were in them as presently after he adds they have the Interest and Charge of us all upon them For saith he should you be undone in any of these when it 's too late you may lament that you are undone by making such a choice as hath undone you by Law A fair prosecution of the Design and Plot mentioned by Doctor Oats but that will not satisfie him the man is for speaking plain Truths and Counsels and therefore he does it to purpose in the next page How your Expectations have been frustrated your hopes blasted you feelingly bewail Pag. 9. exactly as the
Apostate's Soldiers or the Primitive Christians I have learnt to obey and not dispute the Determinations of Kings and Parliaments and can acquiesce in their definitive Sentence But because this Gentleman hath so recommended Queen Elizabeth in his Postscript and there as in his whole Libel with design to reflect upon His Majesty I will shew him the Pourtraict of that Queens demeanor in a parallel Case of Succession by which the People shall see it is no such Tragical Thing for a Protestant Prince to deny the Importunities of a Parliament in the point of Succession Whereas Princes words do enter more deeply into Mens ears and minds Cambd. Eliz. An. 1566. take these things from our Mouth I that am a lover of the simple Truth have ever thought you likewise to be ingenious Lovers of the same But I have been deceived For I have found that in this Parliament Dissimulation hath walked up and down masked under the vizard of Liberty and Succession of your number some there are which have thought that Liberty to dispute of the Succession and to establish the same is forthwith either to be granted or denyed If we had granted it these Men had had their desire and had Triumphed over us And if we had denyed it they thought to have moved the hatred of our People against us which our mortallest Enemies could never yet do But their wisdom was unseasonable and their Counsels were hasty neither did they foresee the Event Yet hereby we have easily perceived who incline towards us and who are adverse unto us And we see that your whole House may be divided into four sorts For some have been Plotters and Authors some Actors which with smooth words have persuaded some which have consented being seduced with smooth words and some which have been silent admiring such Boldness And these certainly are the more excusable Do ye think that we neglect your Safety and security by the Succession or that we have a will to infringe your Liberty Be it far from us we never thought it But indeed we thought good to call you back when ye were running into the Pit Every thing hath its fit season ye may peradventure after us have a wiser Prince but a more loving towards you ye shall never have For our part whether we may see such a Parliament again we know not But for you take ye heed lest you provoke your Princes Patience nevertheless of this be assured that we think very well of most of you and do imbrace every one of you with our former kindness even from our Heart But to proceed Not such says he as play the Protestants in design p. 17. but are indeed disguised Papists They have industriously fixed the names of Masqueraders and disguised Papists upon all such Gentlemen as are zealous for the Church of England as now by Law established both against Papists and Schismaticks who according to Dr. Oates his Evidence were to be assistant to the carrying on the Plot Ibid. p. 67. by seditious Preachers set up sent out maintained and directed what to Preach in their own or other private or publick Conventicles And 't is such Masquerade Jesuits as this Libeller that laugh at the Plot disgrace and dis-believe the Kings Evidence in this so evident and considerable a particular That if ever Popery comes into England it must come in like the Trojan Horse by him mentioned Milite Plenus by breaking down the Walls of the Church by Toleration the Gates being too narrow to let it in But he goes on and is not content to blast a few but like a Contagion or Pestilence endeavours to sweep away a whole Nation with the Impudent Brand of Irish understanding and Tories A Tory is a Rebel an Out-law a Robber and Murderer and is a Name and Character that exactly fits himself who is so notorious a Robber of his Prince and Murderer of the Reputation of so many worthy and innocent Gentlemen as he hath indeavoured to Defame Whoever have been Neutrals in the grand Contest between Popery and Protestant Religion and particularly in that Branch of it before recited let them be rejected for I joyn with him in opinion That they who are not with the Church of England and the Government as now by Law established are against us and that these only wait the good Hour when they may safely shew their Teeth and bite which now like this Libeller in Policy they hide with all the Artifice Imaginable For his last Qualification of such as have obstructed Parliamentary proceedings by unseasonable and unreasonable insisting upon un-Parliamentary Priviledges he must unriddle it for it is un-understandable by the People and therefore he might have left it unwrit unprinted unpublished and unrecommended by his Letter which hath another UN in it viz. To Undo the Nation His Conclusion is like his Premisses Canting and Cunning without either Truth or Honesty p. 18. and so I leave him to the more just Animadversion of the Laws and his Superiors with this Recommendation that no man hath more artificially endeavoured to ruin the freedome of Elections more maliciously Calumniated His Majesty and the Government nor more wickedly laboured to alienate the Affections of the People from their Soveraigns and by Seditious Forgeries to bring all the Calamities of a Civil War and Ruin upon the Nation For his Postscript I could give him some hints of the Courage of Q. Eliz. mentioned by Cambden Lord Coke and others but I am not for making or enlarging Breaches and I wish he were of the same mind I will only recommend to him by way of supplicant what our Law supposes the most excellent Qualification for persons to be Elected Representatives of the Commons for the Preservation of His Majesties Person the Security of the Protestant Religion and the Government which would have spared him all his pains and carries the stamp of Authority with it It is the Proem of the Act of Parliament of the Thirteenth of Car. 2. cap. 1. An Act for Preservation of His Majesties Person c. THE Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament deeply weighing and considering the Miseries and Calamities of well nigh twenty years before your Majesties Happy Return and withall reflecting upon the Causes and Occasions of so great and deplorable Confusions do in all Humility and Thankfulness Acknowledge your Majesties Incomparable Grace and Goodness to your People in your Free and General Pardon Indempnity and Oblivion by which your Majesty hath been pleased to deliver your Subjects not only from the Punishment but also from the Reproach of their former Miscarriages which unexemplacy Piety and Clemenry of your Majesty hath inflamed the Hearts of us your Subjects with an ardent desire to express all possible zeal and duty in the Care and Preservation of your Majesties Person in whose Honour and Happiness consists the Good and Welfare of your People and in preventing as much as may be all Treasonable add Seditions Practices and Attempts for the time to come And because the Growth and Increase of the late Troubles and Disorders did in a very great Measure proceed from a Multitude of Seditious Sermons Pamphlets and Speeches daily Preached Printed and Published with a transcendent Boldness defaming the Person and Government of your Majesty and your Royal Father wherein men were too much encouraged and above all from a wilful mistake of the Supreme and Lawful Authority whilst men were forward to cry up and maintain those Orders and Ordinances Oaths and Covenants to be Acts legal and warrantable which in themselves had not the least Colour of law or Justice to support them of which kind of Distempers as the present Age is not wholly freed so Posterity may be apt to relapse into them if a timely Remedy be not provided We Therefore c. Now whether this Libeller doth not fall within the descriptions of this Proem as well as many others have done of late and whether they will not all come within the compass of the Act in point of Punishment is not my business to determin I will only recommend to his and all honest mens Consideration a piece of Solomons Wisdom to close with all in English as he hath fronted his with Latin These six things doth the Lord hate yea seven are an abomination to him a proud look a lying tongue and hands that shed innocent blood an heart that deviseth wicked immaginations feet that be swift in running into mischief a false witness that seaketh lyes and him that soweth discord among Brethren FINIS