DIE Mercurii, 14 die Julii.
PRAYERS, by Mr. Taylor.
Domini præsentes fuerunt:
Comes Manchester, Speaker.
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Comes Kent. Comes Warwicke. Comes Mulgrave. Comes Midd. Comes Stamford. Comes Suffolke. Comes Northumb. Comes Sarum. |
Ds. North. Ds. Grey. Ds. Lawarr. Ds. Hunsdon. Ds. Willoughby. Ds. Howard. |
E. of Stamford, Leave to be absent.
Ordered, That the Earl of Stamford hath Leave to
be absent from this House till October next.
Petition from the City Apprentices, &c.
A Petition was this Day presented, and read, from
the Young Men and Apprentices of the City of London;
which they intend for the Glory of God, the Peace of
this Kingdom, and the Vindication of this Parliament.
(Here enter it.)
They withdrew.
And being called in again; the Speaker, by the Directions of the House, gave them this Answer: "That
this House gives them hearty Thanks, for their good
Affections expressed in their Petition, and also for
their pious Expressions: As to the Particulars in their
Petition, this House will take them into Consideration."
L. Finch's Petition.
A Petition of the Lord Fynch was read; desiring, "to
have Leave to come into England." (Here enter it.)
Ordered, To be taken into Consideration on Friday
Morning next.
Sir H. Mildmay and Sir T. Cheek, concerning the Barony of Fitzwalter.
Upon (fn. *) hearing the Counsel this Day of Sir Henry
Mildmay Plaintiff, and Sir Tho. Cheeke Defendant: It is
Ordered, That the Counsel of Sir Henry Mildmay
Knight, and the Counsel of Sir Thomas Cheeke Knight,
do make their several Pedigrees, Titles, and Proofs for
the same, and to shew them each to other; and that
each Side may take their Exceptions thereunto: And
that being done, and presented to this House, their
Lordships will take Order for the further Proceedings
thereupon, as the Case shall require: It is further Ordered, That in case any Difference should be between
the Counsel, then the Judges, or any Two of them,
are to be repaired to, for reconciling (fn. †) the Differences in
the stating of the Cases, if they can: And lastly it is
Ordered, That this be reported to this House upon
the 19th Day of October next.
Holbech's Affidavit.
Upon reading the Affidavit of Martin Holbeech: (Here
enter it.) It is Ordered, That the Persons therein
mentioned shall be attached, as Delinquents.
Message from the H. C. with Orders.
A Message was brought from the House of Commons,
by Sir Wm. Allenson, &c.
To desire their Lordships Concurrence in these Particulars:
1. An Order for One Thousand Pounds, out of
Weavers Hall, to be paid, upon Accompt, to Lieutenant
General Massie. (Here enter it.)
Agreed to.
2. An Order for paying One Thousand Pounds, out of
the Moiety of the Receipts at Goldsmythes Hall, to Lieutenant General Massey, upon Accompt. (Here enter it.)
Agreed to.
3. An Order concerning Clifford's Tower.
(Here enter it.)
Agreed to.
The Answer returned was:
Answer.
That this House agrees to all the Particulars now
brought up.
Lincoln Circuit.
Ordered, That, for this Time, Mr. Justice Rolls
shall go this Circuit of Lyncolne, &c. alone.
Ordinance for the E. of Pemb. to be Chanc. of Oxford.
An Ordinance was brought in, for restoring the Earl
of Pembrooke to be Chancellor of the University of Oxford; which was read Twice, and Agreed to, and to
be sent to the House of Commons for their Concurrence.
Ordinance to confirm the Officers appointed by the Revenue Committee.
The Earl of Sarum reported a Paper from the Committee of the Revenue, with an Ordinance concerning
the confirming of the Places of Officers and Receivers
which have been bestowed by the said Committee;
which was read Twice; and Ordered, That a Schedule
of the Names of the Persons be brought in to this
House.
Ordered, That the Remonstrance from Ireland shall
be read To-morrow Morning.
Petition of the Apprentices of London, for the Safety of the King:— Settlement of Church Government;—Payment of the Army, and disbanding it; &c.
"To the Right Honourable the House of Peers
assembled in the High Court of Parliament.
"The humble Petition of divers Well-affected
Young Men, and the Apprentices, of the
City of London;
"Humbly sheweth,
"That your Petitioners have with the forwardest
been ever ready, in this common Cause of Religion,
Laws, and Liberties, to adventure their Lives for the
Preservation thereof; which we hoped, after so much
Expence of Blood, and (by God's Providence) such
happy Success of your Armies, would have been
settled to us and our Posterity in a lasting Peace: Yet,
to the Grief of our Hearts, your Petitioners cannot
but take Notice how, in these unhappy Times of
Distraction, divers discontented Persons labour to
sow new Seeds of Discord and Division amongst us,
whereby Incendiaries and Malignants are encouraged,
your faithfullest Friends discountenanced, the Privileges of Parliament violated, Magistracy opposed,
the Public Worship of God slighted, and the Liberties and Property of the Subjects much endangered:
All which your Petitioners laying sadly to Heart, and
having more before their Eyes the Glory of God
and the Happiness of His Majesty's Kingdoms than
their own Private Interests (which we shall readily
sacrifice for the Public) do in all Humility most
humbly pray,
"1. That, according to our solemn League and Covenant, His Majesty's Royal Person may be defended; and that His just Power and Greatness (in the Preservation and Defence of the
true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdoms)
may be established.
"2. That the Rights and Privileges of Parliament
may be vindicated, and the lawful Liberties
and Property of the Subjects preserved and
maintained.
"3. That the Government of the Church may be
speedily settled, Conventicles (the Seminaries
of Separation) suppressed, and a Toleration
of licentious Liberty effectually declared against.
4. That all Incendiaries, Malignants, and, evil
Instruments, which hinder the Reformation of
Religion, dividing the King from His People,
or One of His Kingdoms from another, or
make any Faction or Parties among the People
(contrary to the solemn League and Covenant),
may be brought to Public Trial, and receive
condign Punishment.
"5. That all Obstructions in the ordinary Course
of Justice may be removed, and the insufferable Abuse of Committees and their Officers
considered.
"6. That the Arrears of your Soldiery of this
Kingdom may be satisfied; and Security
granted for their future Indemnity, for all
Acts done (by them) Tempore et Loco Belli.
"7. That the Army now on Foot may be disbanded, or otherwise disposed of, that so this
almost-exhausted Kingdom may be freed from
those many grievous Taxes and Oppressions
it now groans under.
"8. And whereas there have been, and still are,
great Abuses and insufferable Injuries done to
your Petitioners, by the Sale of Freedoms,
and Foreigners intruding into the Suburbs and
Places near adjacent to this City; whereby
your Petitioners are much discouraged in their
Services, the Freemen of this City prejudiced,
and the Franchises and Liberties thereof infringed;
"We therefore humbly beseech this Honourable
Assembly, to resolve on some Course (as
you in your Wisdoms shall think fit); as
well for the Expulsion of such as have so
unduly crept in amongst us, as for the future Prevention of the like insufferable Injuries that may redound to your Petitioners
hereafter.
"And your Petitioners, being always ready
to adventure their Lives and Fortunes for
your Defence and Preservation, shall ever
pray, &c.
"Subscribed by Ten Thousand Persons at
the least."
Lord Finch's Petition, for Leave to come to England.
"To the Right Honourable the Lords of the
Most Honourable House of Peers, in the High
Court of Parliament.
"The humble Petition of John Lord Finch.
"The Petitioner, with all humble Gratitude, acknowledgeth your Lordships great Goodness towards
him, that, for Five Years Space, hath forborn that
Severity against him, to which your Lordships, by
the Petitioner's Departure out of England and otherwise, were justly provoked.
"In all this his disconsolate Absence, the Petitioner's
Study and Care hath been, to behave himself towards
all your Lordships, and towards the Honourable
House of Commons, that none of you may ever again
take up other Thoughts of him than benign and
compassionate.
"Old Age, many late Sicknesses, and the deep Sense
of his long and present Miseries, give the Petitioner
certain Assurance of a very short Life, which above
all Earthly Things he desires may take End in his
dear and native Soil.
"For this Purpose, he hath directed his humble Petition to the Honourable House of Commons, and is
by these a most humble and earnest Suitor to your
Lordships; humbly begging your most honourable
Favours, for his free Liberty of returning into England.
"Which if your Lordships and that Honourable
Assembly please to vouchsafe unto him, it
shall for ever oblige the Petitioner, by all
Gratitude and Fidelity, and by all other real
Endeavours, so to expire there, that neither
your Lordships nor the Honourable House of
Commons shall have the least Cause to unwish
any the utmost Extent of your Goodness and
Clemency, or the most wished and comfortable
Marks of your good Opinion.
"In these humble Thoughts the Petitioner shall
live and die; and shall, during Life, humbly
and heartily pray to God, for all Happiness
to attend your Lordships, and your most
honourable Proceedings.
"Jo. Finch."
Napper to be instituted to Nuthurst;
Ordered, That Doctor Aylett shall give Institution
and Induction unto William Napper Clerk, Batchelor of
Law, to the Rectory of Nuthurst, in the County of
Sussex, void by the Death of the last Incumbent; salvo
Jure cujuscunque; he taking the National League and
Covenant, and producing his Presentation thereunto
under the Great Seal of England.
Musson to Withybrook;
Ordered, That Doctor Aylett shall give Institution
and Induction unto Richard Musson Clerk, to the Vicarage of Withibrooke, in the Diocese of Coventry and
Litchfeild, void by the Death of Richard Clarke, the
late Incumbent; salvo Jure cujuscunque; he taking the
National League and Covenant, and producing his Presentation thereunto under the Seal of the Masters and
Fellows of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge.
and Bethell to Kirby over Blowes.
Ordered, That Doctor Aylett shall give Institution
and Induction unto William Bethell Clerk, Master of
Arts, to the Rectory of Kirkby over Blowes, in the
County of Yorke, void by the Cession of John Stanley;
salvo Jure cujuscunque; the said Mr. Bethell taking the
National League and Covenant, and producing his Presentation thereunto under the Hand and Seal, of the
Right Honourable Algernon Earl of Northumberland, the
undoubted Patron.
Taylor and Mardock to be attached, for Contempt of the Order in Behalf of the E. of Leicester.
Ordered, That the Gentleman Usher, or his Deputy,
shall attach the Bodies of Richard Tayler, of the City
of Coventry, and Jeremiah Mardocke, of the said City,
and forthwith bring them before the Lords in Parliament, to answer their Contempt unto this House, for
their disobeying of an Order wherein the Earl of Leicester is concerned; and this to be a sufficient Warrant
in that Behalf.
Holbech's Affidavit concerning it.
"Martin Holbeeche, Gentleman, maketh Oath, That,
upon the 19th Day of June last, he shewed unto
Richard Taylor of the City of Coventry, and Jeremiah Mardock of the said City, being Occupiers of
certain Lands belonging to the Right Honourable
Robert Earl of Leicester, an Order made by the Lords
assembled in Parliament, bearing Date the Seventh
Day of June, 1647; by which Order it was declared,
That the said Earl of Leicester, and all claiming
under him, should, forthwith after Sight of the said
Order, be put into his full and quiet Possession of the
Premises, by the Sheriffs of the said County; and
that the Profits of the said Lands, during all the Time
of his said Disseisure, should be answered to the said
Earl, or his Assigns, as they were formerly paid; and
likewise that a former Order of the Seventh of December was thereby ratified and confirmed in all
Points; and that Obedience should be given to both
the said Orders, as the contrary would be answered
to the Lords assembled in Parliament. And further
deposeth, That he then read the said Order to the
said Taylor and Mardocke, and likewise to the Sheriffs
of the said City of Coventry, and gave each of them
a Copy of the same; whereupon the said Sheriffs
and divers of their Officers, in Obedience to the said
Order, went, with this Deponent and one Thomas
Barlowe Bailiff to the said Earl of Leicester, to the
said Grounds mentioned in the said Order, to deliver
the Possession, according to the Effect thereof: But
the said Taylor and Murdocke, keeping by Force the
Possession of the said Grounds, menaced the said
Sheriffs (being aged Men) with such Speeches and
Actions, that they neither durst or would in any
Wise attempt the Entry of the said Premises, then
severally kept by the said Taylor and Murdock and
others of their Confederacy; and likewise the said
Taylor did then, with much uncivil and abusive Language, revile this Deponent and the said Thomas
Barlowe, who were there with the said Sheriffs, to
require the Delivery of the Possession of the said
Grounds, for and in the Behalf of the said Earl
of Leicester, according to the Effect of the said
Order; to the which Order the said Taylor and
Mardock refused to give Obedience, but with much
Scorn and Contempt slighted and under-valued the
same.
"Jur. 5 Die Julii, 1647.
"Martin Holbeeche.
John Page."
L. Mayor of York to have the Charge of Clifford's Tower.
"Resolved, by the Lords and Commons assembled
in Parliament, That Thomas Dickenson Esquire, now
Lord Mayor of the City of Yorke, shall have the
Care, Charge, and Custody, of Clifford's Tower, in
the City of Yorke."
Order for 1000 l. to Gen. Massie.
"Ordered, by the Lords and Commons assembled
in Parliament, That the Sum of One Thousand
Pounds be charged upon the Monies remaining in
the Hands of Mr. Alderman Bunce and the rest of
the Treasurers at Weavers Hall, and forthwith issued
and paid, by the said Treasurers, unto Lieutenant
General Edward Massey, or his Assigns, upon Accompt; and that the Acquittance of the said Colonel
Edward Massey, or his Assigns, shall be a sufficient
Discharge to the Treasurers aforesaid, for the Issuing
and Payment of the said Sum of One Thousand
Pounds accordingly."
Order for 1000 l. more to him.
"Ordered, by the Lords and Commons assembled
in Parliament, That the Sum of One Thousand Pounds
be charged upon the Moiety of the Receipts of
Monies coming in at Gouldsmiths Hall by Compositions
with Delinquents not engaged for Security to the
City of London, and paid in Course unto Lieutenant
General Edward Massey, upon Accompt; and that the
Commissioners of both Houses (fn. *) sitting at Gouldsmiths
Hall for compounding with Delinquents do forthwith
issue their Warrant to the Treasurers there, for the
Payment of the said One Thousand Pounds unto the
said Colonel Massy, or his Assigns, out of the Moiety of
the said Receipts; and that the Acquittance of the
said Colonel Massey, or his Assigns, shall be a good
Discharge unto the Treasurers aforesaid, for the Payment of the said Sum of One Thousand Pounds accordingly."
Adjourn.
House adjourned till 10a cras.