DIE Martis, 2 die Augusti.
PRAYERS.
The Lord Kymbolton was appointed to be
Speaker this Day.
Ld. Balmerino and Justice Heath.
Ordered, That the Cause of the Lord Balmerino
and Justice Heath shall be heard on Thursday next; and
the Judge, or his Agents, to attend.
Captains Slingsby and Wake to be bailed.
Ordered, That the Cause against Captain Slyngsby
and Captain Wake shall be heard on Monday next; in
the mean Time, they may be bailed, with sufficient
Sureties.
Letter from Justice Reeve, about Lord Brooke's Indictment.
A Letter from Justice Reeve, directed to the Speaker
of this House, was read, dated the 21st of July, 1642,
declaring the Manner and several Passages at Warwicke,
when the Lord Brooke was indicted. (Here enter it.)
Declaration of Reasons for the Parliament's taking up Arms.
The Lord Viscount Say & Seale reported from the
Committee some Alterations in the Declaration of both
Houses, declaring the Reasons, why the Parliament takes
up Arms of Defence, etc.
The Amendments being read; it is Ordered, That
this House agrees with the House of Commons in this
Declaration, with the Amendments and Additions now
read. (Here enter it.)
A Message was sent down to the House of Commons,
by Sir Robt. Rich and Mr. Page:
Answer to the H. C. with it, and that the Lords are ready to procced against the Lord Mayor.
To deliver to them the Declaration; and to let them
know, that this House agrees unto it, with the Amendments and Alterations; also to give them Notice, that
their Lordships are ready to proceed against the Lord
Mayor.
Gentleman Usher's Charges.
This House received a Bill of Charges from the Gentleman Usher; and the House referred it to the (fn. *) Perusal of Doctor Aylett and Doctor Heath, who are to examine the Particulars, and report the same to this House
To-morrow Morning.
The Messagers return this Answer:
Answer from the H. C.
That they will send up a Committee, presently, to
manage the Evidence concerning the Lord Mayor; and
that they do agree with their Lordships in the Amendments and Alterations in the Declaration now sent
down.
Lord Mayor at the Bar.
His Defence continued.
A Committee of the House of Commons being come,
the Lord Mayor was brought to the Bar, as a Delinquent, by the Gentleman Usher; and the Counsel of
the Lord Mayor proceeded in the Defence; and Mr.
Chute desired Leave to produce Two New Witnesses to
the Second Charge, which the Committee of the House
of Commons excepted against. And both Sides being
commanded to withdraw, the House took into Consideration; and it was Resolved, upon the Question,
That the Lord Mayor shall be admitted to examine
these Two Witnesses, in this Cause, and at this Time.
And the Committee of the House of Commons and
the Lord Mayor being called in, the Speaker told him
the Resolution of the House as abovesaid.
And then Sir Jo. Gaire, Alderman, was produced,
upon Oath; who said, "He remembers that, about the
End of February last, there was a Meeting at the
Lord Mayor's House, at the Request of some Commoners, concerning a Petition which Mr. Benyon had
made, and the Aldermen were to give their Opinion
therein; who, having read it, withdrew themselves, to
consider of it; and the Lord Mayor assented to it as
much as any of the rest."
Sheriff Clarke, upon Oath, spoke to the same Purpose, concerning the Paper that was sent to the Recorder.
Next, Mr. Herne made the Lord Mayor's Defence to
the Fourth Article of the Charge, for not punishing
a notorious Riot.
He desired "it might be observed the Persons upon
whom the Riot was committed;" and said, "That divers Inferences (fn. *) are given in Evidence, which are not
charged in the Entertainment; and his bidding them
go to the Committee, and feasting of them."
He said, "That a Riot cannot be committed by a
single Person.
"That the Evidence given by Mr. Dod, etc. is too
general, but not a Ground for the Lord Mayor to proceed upon.
"There was but One of the Three Men brought before the Lord Mayor, to be bound over concerning
the Riot.
"That the Lord Mayor ought not to have delivered
the Informations out of his Hands, being the King's
Evidence.
"The Cross in Cheapeside is a Boundary of a great
many Inheritances of Houses in Cheapeside.
"That People had fastened Ropes, to pull down the
Cross, on Candlemas-day; and the Lord Mayor did
double the Watch, and caused some of the Trained
Bands to prevent the Tumult, and gave out his Warrants to this Purpose."
Sheriff Clarke said, "That, on Candlemas-day last,
about Four a Clock in the Afternoon, the Lord Mayor
sent for him, and he found many People at the Lord
Mayor's, examining the Business concerning the Cross;
and he sent forth Warrants to Captain West and Captain Manwaring, to come with the Trained Bands, to
suppress the Tumult; and he called the other Sheriff,
and made Proclamation to command the Tumult to
depart. The Prentices demanded their Fellow Prisoners out of Prison, committed by the Lord Mayor;
and went to the Compter, and did begin to pull down
the House for them; but Captain Foster, with his
Trained Bands, prevented it. That from the 11th
of January he had Power, by Parliament, to raise
the Trained Bands."
Henry Wall, a Constable, said, "He found Two fighting before his Door. He commanded the Peace, but
the Tumult being so great, the Gentleman escaped;
but he brought Bennett to the Lord Mayor, but was
released because he could not keep him longer, for
his Doors were threatened to be broken open. That
he had then in his Hands a Precept for Double
Watch."
Myles Smith said, "He came with a Javelin in his
Hand, and was knocked down Three Times, and the
Cooper cut his Javelin in Three Pieces. The Compter
Gates were likely to have been broken down, because
the Prentices thought that some of their Fellows were
committed there."
A Recognizance was read, wherein Turrell, Temple,
and Waldow, is bound over to the Sessions by the Lord
Mayor.
"That Bingham and Smith were never brought before the Lord Mayor.
"That an Action was brought against Smith, and nothing could be recovered against him, but he was
discharged by the Jury."
Henry Bingham, upon Oath, said, "He was never
brought before the Lord Mayor."
Smith said the like.
Meredith said, "He was of Counsel with Temple,
and he was discharged by the Jury."
To be proceeded in Tomorrow.
It being now late, they withdrew; and Ordered,
That To-morrow Morning, at Nine a Clock, this Business is to be further proceeded in.
Parliament's Declaration of Reasons for taking up Arms.
"We, the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled, having taken into serious Consideration the present State and Condition of imminent Danger in which
the Kingdom now stands, by reason of a malignant
Party prevailing with His Majesty, putting Him upon
violent and perilous Ways, and now in Arms against
us, to the hazarding of His Majesty's Person, and for
the Oppression of the true Religion, the Laws and Liberties of this Kingdom, and the Power and Privilege
of Parliament; all which every honest Man is bound
to defend, especially those who have taken the late
Protestation, by which they are more particularly
tied unto it, and the more answerable before God
should they neglect it: Wherefore we, finding ourselves engaged in a Necessity to take up Arms likewise for the Defence of these, which otherwise must
suffer and perish, and having used all good Ways and
Means to prevent Extremities and preserve the Peace
of the Kingdom (which good Endeavours of ours the
Malignity of our Enemies hath rendered altogether
successless and vain), do now think fit to give this Account unto the World, to be a Satisfaction unto all
Men of the Justice of our Proceedings, and a Warning
unto those who are involved in the same Danger with
us, to let them see the Necessity and Duty which
lies upon them, to save themselves, their Religion, and
Country, for which Purpose we set out this ensuing
Declaration:
"That it appears, by the Answer which His Majesty
hath given to the humble Petition for Peace, presented
unto Him by both Houses of Parliament, and those
Demands which He makes, that the Design which
hath been so long carried on, to alter the Frame and
Constitution of this Government both in Church and
State, is now come to Ripeness, and the Contrivers of
it conceive themselves arrived to that Condition of
Strength that they shall be able to put it in present
Execution; for what else can be signified by the demanding of Hull, the Fleet, and the Magazine, to be
immediately delivered up, all our Preparations of
Force to cease, and the defensive Arms of the Parliament to be laid down, and the Parliament to be
adjourned to another Place, than that we should,
out of the Sense of our own Inability to make Resistance, yield ourselves to the cruel Mercy of those
who have possessed the King against us, and incited
Him to violate all the Privileges, and revile the Persons and Proceedings, of the Parliament; or else, if
(as it can not be otherwise conceived) we do not grant
what is so unreasonable and destructive, forthwith to
bring on that Force which is prepared against us, by
the Concurrence and Assistance of Papists, and ambitious and discontented Clergy, Delinquents obnoxious
to the Justice of Parliament, and some ill-affected Persons of the Nobility and Gentry, who, out of their
Desire of a dissolute Liberty, apprehend and would
keep off the Reformation intended by the Parliament.
These persons have conspired together to ruin this
Parliament, which alone hath set a Stop to that Violence so long intended, and often attempted, for the
Alteration of Religion, and Subversion of the Laws
and Liberties of the Kingdom.
"How far we were plunged in a miserable Expectation of most evil Days, and how fast this growing
Mischief prevailed upon us before the Parliament,
needs not now be declared, it being so fresh and
bleeding in every Man's Memory. Religion was
made but Form and Outside; and those who made
Conscience to maintain the Substance and Purity of
it, whether Clergy or others, were discountenanced
and oppressed, as the great Enemies of the State.
The Laws were no Defence nor Protection of any
Man's Right; all was subject to Will and Power,
which imposed what Payments they thought fit, to
drain the Subjects Purse, and supply those Necessities
which their ill Counsels had brought upon the King,
or gratify such as were Instruments in promoting
those illegal and oppressive Courses. They who yielded
and complied, were countenanced and advanced; all
others disgraced and kept under; that so, Men's Minds
made poor and base, and their Liberties lost and gone,
they might be ready to let go their Religion whensoever it should be resolved to alter it; which was,
and still is, their great Design, and all else made Use
of but as instrumentary and subservient to it.
"When they conceived the Way to be sufficiently
prepared, they resolved at last to put on their Masterpiece in Scotland (where the same Method had been
followed), and more boldly to unmask themselves, in
imposing upon them a Popish Service-book; for well
they knew the same Fate attended both Kingdoms,
and Religion could not be altered in the one without
the other: God raised the Spirits of that Nation to
oppose it, with so much Zeal and Indignation, that it
kindled such a Flame as no Expedient could be found
but a Parliament here to quench it.
"This Necessity brought on this Parliament; and the
same Necessity gave it in the Beginning Power to act
with more Vigour and Resolution than former Parliaments had done, and to set upon a Reformation of
the great Disorders both in the Ecclesiastical and Civil
State, which drew a more particular Envy and Odium
upon it than was usual to the Generality of Parliaments, and was a Cause that those who had swallowed up in their Thoughts our Religion and Liberties,
and now saw themselves defeated by this Means,
bended all their Endeavours, and raised all their
Forces, to destroy it.
"First, whilst the Scottish Army remained here, they
endeavoured to incense the Two Nations, and engage
their Armies one against the other, that, in such a
Confusion as needs must have followed, the Parliament might not be able to sit; and those Forces destroying one another, might open some Opportunity
for them to gain their Ends upon both Kingdoms;
and that then, as their Need, so the Being of the
Parliament, might cease. The Wisdom of the Parliament prevented that Mischief, and composed those
great Differences betwixt the King and the Kingdom
of Scotland. That Plot failing, they endeavoured to
turn the English Army against the Parliament. This
was discovered; the chief Actors fled, and the Danger
avoided. Then they labour to stir up the Scottish
Army against us; but such was the Faithfulness and
Affection of those our Brethren, that they could not
effect it.
"After this, they carry the King into Scotland; to try
if a Party could be there raised, to suppress first the
good Party in that Kingdom; and, so strengthened
from thence, the better to compass their intended Purposes here. At the same Time, the Rebellion in Ireland, an Egg likewise of their hatching, breaks out:
But their Plot failed in Scotland. Yet, upon Hopes
of Success there, such Preparatives were here, and
such Recourse of ill-affected Persons to this Town,
that the Parliament thought it necessary, for their
own Security, to have a Guard. The King, upon His
Return, instantly dismisses that Guard, and puts another upon us; which produced such ill Effects, as we
were glad to dismiss them, and rather run any Hazard than have such a Guard.
"Thus left naked, presently some Members of both
Houses are unjustly charged with Treason; and the
King comes, with a Troop of Cavaliers, to the House
of Commons, to fetch those away by Force whom He
had caused to be so unjustly accused; the greatest
Violation of the Privileges of Parliament that ever
was attempted, and so manifest a Destruction of the
Right of the Subject, which is only preserved by Parliament, that the City of London took a pious and
generous Resolution, to guard the Parliament themselves; which so grieved and enraged those wicked
Persons, who had engaged the King in that last, and
all those other Designs and Practices against the Parliament, that they make Him forsake Whitehall, under
Pretence that His Person was there in Danger, a
Suggestion as false as the Father of Lies can invent.
Then do they work upon Him, and upon the Queen;
persuade Her to retire out of the Kingdom, and
carry Him further and further from the Parliament,
and so possess Him with a Hatred of it, that they cannot
put Words bitter enough into His Mouth, to express
it upon all Occasions. They make Him cross, oppose,
and inveigh against, all the Proceedings of Parliament;
encourage and protect all those who will affront it; take
away all Power and Authority from it, to make it
contemptible, and of less Esteem than the meanest
Court; draw away the Members, commanding them
to come to Him to Yorke, and, instead of discharging
their Duty in the Service of the Parliament, to contribute their Advice and Assistance to the Destruction
of it; endeavour to possess the People, that the Parliament will take away the Law, and introduce an arbitrary Government, a Thing which every honest
moral Man abhors, much more the Wisdom, Justice,
and Piety of the Two Houses of Parliament; and, in
Truth, such a Charge as no rational Man can believe,
it being impossible so many several Persons as the
Two Houses of Parliament consist of (about Six Hundred), and in either House all of equal Power, should all
of them, or at least the major Part, agree in Acts of
Will and Tyranny, which make up an arbitrary Government; and most improbable that the Nobility and
chief Gentry of this Kingdom should conspire to take
away the Law, by which they enjoy their Estates, are
protected from any Act of Violence and Power, and
differenced from the meaner Sort of People, with
whom otherwise they would be but Fellow Servants.
"To make all this good upon the Parliament, and
either make the Kingdom believe it, or so awe it as
nobody shall dare say the contrary, Force is prepared, Men are levied, and the malignant Party of
the Kingdom (as was before specified), that is, Papists,
the Prelatical Clergy, Delinquents, and that Part of
the Nobility and Gentry which either fear Reformation or seek Preferment, by betraying their Country to serve the Court, have combined to bury the
Happiness of this Kingdom in the Ruin of this Parliament, and, by forcing it, to cut up the Freedom of
Parliament by the Root, and either take all Parliaments away, or, which is worse, make them the Instruments of Slavery, to confirm it by Law, and leave
the Disease incurable.
"That done, then come they to crown their Work,
and put that in Execution which was first in their Intention; that is, the changing of Religion into Popery
and Superstition.
"All this while the Two Houses of Parliament have,
with all Duty and Loyalty, still applied themselves
unto His Majesty, and laboured, by humble Prayers,
and clear and convincing Reasons and Arguments, in
several Petitions, to satisfy Him of their Intentions, the
Justness of their Proceedings, their Desire of the Safety
of his Royal Person, and of the Peace of the Kingdom:
And only to preserve that Peace, and prevent the
pernicious Practices of these Incendiaries (such as the
Lord Digby, who at first persuaded the King to get
into some strong Place, that He might there protect
those whom he stiled the King's Servants, but in
Truth such as do divide Him from His Parliament
and Kingdom, and might be revenged upon His Parliament, where, he said, Traitors bore that Sway;
and who had attempted, upon the King's first going
from Whitehall, to raise some Numbers of Horse and
Foot, under the Colour of a Guard for His Majesty,
to be the Foundation of an Army against the Parliament; which, then failing, hath since taken Effect,
and shews what was then in their Thoughts, before
Hull, or the Militia, or any Thing else of that Nature, was in Question), the Parliament thought fit to
secure Hull, lest it might be a Receptacle of such
ill-affected Persons, and what Aid could be gotten
from Foreign Parts; the Fleet under the Earl of
Warwick, to defend the Kingdom, and prevent such
Mischief from abroad; the Magazine of Arms, that
they should not be employed against us; and the Militia of the Kingdom in such Hands as the Parliament
might confide in, to suppress Commotions within ourselves.
"And how necessary all this was to be done, the
succeeding Designs and Practices upon them all do
sufficiently manifest; and great Cause hath the whole
Kingdom to bless God, who put it into the Heads and
Hearts of the Parliament to take Care of these Particulars; for, were those pernicious Persons about the
King Masters of them, how easy would it be for them
to master the Parliament, and master the Kingdom;
and what could we expect but Ruin and Destruction
from such Masters, who make the King in this Manner revile and detest us and our Actions; such who
have embarked Him in so many Designs to overthrow
the Parliament; such who have so long thirsted to see
Religion and Liberty confounded together?
"Let the World now judge what more could be
done by us, than we have done, to appease His Majesty, and regain His Grace and Favour; if (after
the presenting of such a Petition as the last was, so
full of submissive, humble, affectionate Desires of
Peace, so full of Duty and Loyalty, as we thought
Malice itself could not have excepted against it, and
having received so sharp a Return, such Expressions
of Bitterness, a Justification and avowed Protection
of Delinquents from the Hand of Justice, Demands
of so apparent Danger, such Manifestations of an
Intention to destroy us, and with us the whole Kingdom; and this more clearly evidenced by their subsequent Actions, even since these Propositions have
been made unto us, from His Majesty over-running
several Counties, compelling the Trained Bands by
Force to come in and join with them, or disarming
them, and putting their Arms into the Hands of lewd
and desperate Persons, thereby turning the Arms of
the Kingdom against itself) it be not fit for us not
only not to yield to what is required, but also to
make further Provision, for the Preservation of ourselves, and of those who have sent us hither, and
intrusted us with all they have, Estate, Liberty, and
Life, and that which is the Life of their Lives, their
Religion, and even for the Safety of the King's Person, now environed by those who carry Him upon
His own Ruin and the Destruction of all His People;
at least to give them Warning, that all this is in Danger; that, if the King may force this Parliament,
they may bid Farewell to all Parliaments, for ever receiving Good by them; and, if Parliaments be lost,
they are lost, their Laws are lost, as well those lately
made as in former Times, all which will be cut in
sunder with the same Sword now drawn for the Destruction of this Parliament.
"Then, if they will not come to help the Parliament, and save themselves, though both they and
we must perish, yet have we discharged our Consciences, and delivered our Souls; and we will look
for a Reward in Heaven, should we be so ill requited
upon Earth by those of whom we have so well deserved, which we cannot fear, having found upon all
Occasions such real Demonstrations of their Love
and Affection, and of their right Understanding, and
Apprehension of our and their common Danger; especially now that the Question is so clearly stated,
and that it appeareth that neither Hull, nor the Militia, nor the Magazine, are the Grounds of the War,
which is so furiously driven on against us, by a malignant Party of Papists, those who call themselves
Cavaliers, and other ill-affected Persons; but so far
forth only as the Parliament, and all the Members of
both Houses, and all other Persons who have shewed
themselves forward for the Defence of the Sincerity
of Religion, the Laws and Liberties of the Kingdom,
and the just Power and Privileges of Parliament, are
preserved and secured thereby.
"For the many Designs upon the Parliament abovementioned, the Attempts to be possessed of Hull,
and of the Magazine, by sending thither Captain
Legg, a Delinquent to the Parliament for having
had a Hand in the treasonable Practice to bring up
the Army against us, and the Earl of Newcastle in a
disguised Habit, which was a Pursuance of the Lord
Digbye's Advice, and the endeavouring to raise Forces,
under Pretence of a Guard to the King's Person, in
the Winter; all this before we meddled with Hull,
or Magazine, or Militia; shew plainly that our Act
in securing them was not the Cause of the King's
taking up Arms, and exercising Hostility upon His
loving and loyal Subjects, which was in the Thoughts
and Endeavours of those about the King, who then
had, and still have, the greatest Influence upon His
Counsels, before we thought of Hull, or Militia, or
any Thing else of that Nature; and that our resigning of them now would not prevail with Him, to make
Him lay down His Arms, and return to His Parliament, and gratify the earnest and longing Desires of
His People, to enjoy His Presence, Favour, and Protection; but that, if He could recover, either by our
Resignation, or any other Way, (fn. *) Places of so much
Advantage to Him and Weakening to us, Use would
be made of them to our infinite Prejudice and Ruin,
the Intention being still the same, not to rest satisfied
with having Hull, or taking away the Ordinance of
the Militia, but to destroy the Parliament, and be
Masters of our Religion and Liberties, to make us
Slaves, and alter the Government of this Kingdom,
and reduce it to the Condition of some other Countries, which are not governed by Parliaments, and so
by Laws, but by the Will of the Prince, or rather
of those who are about Him.
"Yet willingly would we give His Majesty Satisfaction in these Particulars (and so have we offered
it), could we be secured that disarming ourselves,
and delivering them up to His Majesty (as the Sword
of Justice is already put into the Hands of divers
Popish and other ill-affected Persons, by putting them
into the Commission of the Peace, and other Commissions, and putting out others that are well-affected); so we should not, for our own Destruction,
put the Military Sword into the Hands of those evil
Counsellors and ill-affected Persons who are so prevalent with His Majesty, Papists many of them, or
very late Converts by taking the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance, for which they may very well
have a Dispensation, or Indulgence, to be enabled
thereby to promote so great a Service for the Popish
Cause, as to destroy the Two Houses of Parliament,
and through their Sides the Protestant Religion.
"But we have too just Cause to believe and know,
considering those continued Designs upon us, and the
Composition of the King's Army and of His Council
at this Time, that these Things are desired to be
made Use of to our Destruction, and the Destruction
of that which we are bound by our Protestation to
defend; and Woe to us if we do it not, at least do
our utmost Endeavours in it, for the Discharge of
our Duties, and the Saving of our Souls, and leave
the Success to God Almighty.
"Therefore we, the Lords and Commons, are resolved to expose our Lives and Fortunes, for the Defence and Maintenance of the true Religion, the
King's Person, Honour, and Estate, the Power and
Privilege of Parliament, and the just Rights and Liberties of the Subject, and for the Prevention of
that mischievous Design, which gives Motion to all
the rest, and hath been so strongly pursued these
many Years, the altering of our Religion, which,
if God, in His Mercy, had not miraculously diverted, long ago had we been brought to the Condition of poor Ireland, weltering in our own Blood
and Confusion.
"And we do hereby require all those who have
any Sense of Piety and Honour, or Compassion, to help a distressed State; especially such
as have taken the Protestation, and are bound
in the same Duty with us, unto their God,
their King, and Country, to come in to our
Aid and Assistance; this being the true Cause
for which we raise an Army, under the Command of the Earl of Essex, with whom, in this
Quarrel, we will live and die."
After the Word ["Sway"], add these Words
["who, in the mean Time, promised he would do
Him Service abroad, which, by his own Letters, appears to be the procuring of Supplies against the
Kingdom and Parliament, with which he himself said
he would return, as since he hath done, disguised,
with Store of Arms, in the Ship called The Providence"].
Adjourn.
Nona cras.