OBSERVATIONS ON THE HISTORY Of the Reign of KING CHARLES': Published by H. L. Esq. FOR Illustration of the Story, and Rectifying some Mistakes and Errors in the Course thereof. Horat. de art Poet. Hunc veniam petimúsque, damúsque vicissim. Tacit. Hist. Lib. 1. Fidem professis in corruptam, nec amore quicquam, nec odio dicendum est. LONDON, Printed for John Clarke, at his shop under S. PetersChurch in Cornhill, 1656. To the worthily esteemed H. L. Esq. The Author of the History of the Reign of King CHARLES. Sir, I Have read your History of the Reign of King CHARLES, and am sorry I had not so mu●…h acquaintance with you, as to see your Papers, before you put them to the Press: which had I done, I should have advertised you of many things, wherein I find, that either your intelligence, or your diligence failed you, or your judgement is not well informed, or that you have been biased from the mark of truth, by the excess and transport of your own affections. But being as it is, I beseech you to accept with a friendly hand, that which with ingenuity mixed with freedom, is here offered to you, and hope you will not be offended, if your History is become the text of so free a Commentary. I know full well quam facile sit inventis addere, how easy a thing it is to add to another man's endeavours, and raise a superstructure upon that foundation, which hath been laid without our trouble; but I am not ignorant withal, that many times the pains of the Commentator, are greater than their were whom he doth illustrate. Without which helps to guide us to the understanding of most ancient Writers, how many of them had been thrown aside with disdain and scorn (as S. Ambrose is reported to have dealt with the Satyrs of Perseus) because no●… easily intelligible even to Learned men. I doubt not but it was your purpose, faithfully and impartially to inform your Reader in the truth of things; in which if you have failed by reason of any of the respects before recited, these following Observations, will serve both as a Supplement, to make good some points wherein. I find your Book defective, and a Correction of some other passages, in which I find you are mistaken. Between us both the History will be made more perfect, and consequently the Reader will be better satisfied: which makes me somewhat confident, that these few Notes, will be so far from making your History less vendible than it was before, that they will very much advantage and promote the sale. And if I can do good to all, without wrong to any, I ●…ope no man can be offended with my pains and industry. For my own part, as I first undertook this business with a mind free from love, or hatred, or any of those other affections, which preingagements in a party do possess men with, so I have carried it all along with such impartiality and confidence, as may witness for me that I prefer Truth before Interest; and that none of Hugh Peter his three great Giants, that is to say, Gyant-Fear, Gyant-Selfe, and Gyant-Relations, (which commonly obstruct the passage to all good intendments) have been able to prevail upon me. And for yourself, I desire you would please to know, that I have your parts and person in an high esteem, and have not took this task in hand, to detract any thing from those just honours which you have acquired, but only to rectify your judgements, and lay before you and your Reader the true state of things. That modest freedom I have used, in these Observations (especially the first and last) many perhaps at the first sight seem unpleasing to you. And yet so far I am from d●…spair of pardon, that I conceive my ingenuity at the last may deserve your thanks: it being ordinary with most men, who are under the hands of the Chirurgeon, to be impatient with him, and exclaim against him whilst their Wounds are dressed, and yet to honour and commend him when the Cure is wrought; howsoever you will gain this by it, that if you do proceed to the end of the Story, as you somewhere intimate, you will be hereby made more careful of the grounds you go on, and render the Second Part less capable of such Animadversions than the First hath been: which I more earnestly desire, than to engage myself in a second trouble, to which I hope you either will give no occasion, or pardon me if I do. October 8. An Advertisement to the READER. Reader, THou 〈◊〉 here some Obser●…tions upon the History of the Reign of King CAARLES, not long since published, which had come s●…ner to thy hands if there had been as much spe●…d made at the Press, as there was at the Pen. But this is not the only injury the delay hath done us; for the extreme cold weather overtaking the Printers at their first entrance on the work hath so benumbed the fingers of the Compositors, and dulled the eyes of the Correctors, that thou art like to find a greater Errat●… than thou could●… reasonably expect in so small a Volume. The principal and most material I have here subjoined, by which I desire thee to amend and correct the Book before thou settest thyself to the Reading of it. That pains being taken, the Book will be more acceptable unto all that read it, and I hope every one that reads it, will receive both profit and contentment 〈◊〉 to his pains and charge. ●…or though t●…se Observations may probably be of most satisfa●…ion to such as have the Hi●…ory by th●…m, yet I conceive that even to those who have it not, they will yield some benefit, by giving them a 〈◊〉 account of many passages (exceeding necessary for the right understanding of the ●…ate of things) which our Author either hath omitted, or else misreported, or finally, not so clearly apprehended as he should have done. The disputations of Machiavelli may be read with light and profit, without recourse unto the Decades of Titus Livius, whom he makes the Argument of his discou●…ses; and we may read with like content the Observations of Malvezzy on the beginning of the Annals of Co●…nelius Tacitus, and yet not have that Author by us. This said, I have no more to add, but to commend my pains to thy good acceptance. And so fare thee well. OBSERVATIONS On the History of the Reign of King CHARLES. INtending a few Observations on the newly publ●…d History of the Reign of King Charles, to make it thereby the more useful to myself and others, I have thought it fit and necessary to prepare my way, by offering some considerations at the Author's style, which by reason of many lofty, but 〈◊〉 words, no English Reader can climb over. And the first word of this kind which I take notice of in the Book itself, is, Repandous] a new Latin, English word Fol. 1. of our Authors making; of which, and others of that stamp, extracted from the Greek, Latin, French and Spanish (but all disguised, like the Soldiers of the Duke of Britain, in an English habit) his book contained so vast a medley, as if it had been framed at Babel, before the scattered company were united into Tongues and Languages. The History of a King of England, intended for the use and b●…nefit of the English Nation, aught to be given us in such words, as either are originally of an English stock, or by continual usage, and long tract of time, are become natural and familiar to an English ●…are; and not in such new minted terms, and those too of a foreign, and outlandish Race, as are not to be understood without help of Dictionaries. It is true indeed, that when there is necessity of using either terms of Law, or Logical notions, or any other words of Art whatsoever they be: an Author is to keep himself to such terms and words, as are transmitted to us by the Learned in their several Faculties. But to affect new Notions, and indeed new Nothings, when there is no necessity to incite us to it, hath something in it, which deserveth ●… more strict enquiry. It is observed of th●… Romanists, by Doctor Fulke, and other●… of our Divines, that when they could n●… longer keep their followers from having the Scriptures laid before them in the English tongue, they so endeavoured to dim the light thereof by a dark Translation, that seeing they might see, but not understand; and to that end did thrust into it many obscure words, both Greek and Latin, which neither by long use were known, nor by continual custom made familiar to an English Reader. Of which sort, you may take these few as a taste of th●… rest. That is to say, Acquisi●…ion, Advent, Adulterate, Agnition, Archisynagogue, A●…imos, Comm●…ssations, Condign, Contristate, Depositum, Didrachme, Dominical day, Donaries Evacnated from Christ, Euro- Aquilo, Epinanited, Holocaust, Hosts, Neophyte, Paraclete, Parasceve, Pasch, Praefinition, Presence, Prevaricator, Proposition, Loaves, Repropitiate, Resuscitate, Sabbatis●…, Super-edified, Sancta-sanctorun, Victims, words utterly unknown to any English Reader, unless well grounded, and instructed in the Learned Languages, and consequently their whole Translation useless to most sorts of men. I cannot say that the Author of the History which we have in hand, was under any such neces●…ity of writing, as the R●…mists were, or that it did affect obscurity on any such design, as the Rhemists did; but I may very warrantably and justly say, that in the Coining of new words, not to be understood by a common Reader, he hath not only out-vied the Rhemists, but infi●…tely exceeded all that have gone before him. A vein of writing, which two the great Masters of the Greek, and Roman Eloquence had no knowledge of, who used such words in their addresses to the people, as were illius temporis auribus accommodata (as it is in Tacitus) accommodate and fitted to the times they lived in, and easily intelligible unto all that heard them. Loquendum est cum vulgo, was the ancient rule. And certainly to speak so as to be understood by the meanest hearer, to write so, as to be comprehended by the vulgar Reader, is such a principle of Prudence, as well becometh the practice of the greatest Clerks. But it is with this our Author, as with many others, who think they can never speak elegantly, nor write significantly, except they do●… it in a language of their own devising, as if they were ashamed o●… their Mother-tongue, or thought it no●… sufficiently curious, to express their fancies. By means whereof, more Frenc●… and Latin words have gained ground up on us, since the middle of the Reign o●… Queen Elizabeth, then were admitted by our Ancestors (whether we look upon them as the British or Saxon race) not only since the Norman, but the Roman Conquest, a folly handsomely derided in an old blunt Epigram, where the spruce Gallant thus bespeaks his Page or Laquay: Diminutive and my defective slave, Reach my Corpse coverture immediately, 'Tis my complacency that rest to have; 'T insconse my person from Frigidity. The boy believed all Welsh his Master speak Till railed English, Rogue go fetch my Cloak. I had not given myself the trouble of this Observation, but to meet the humour of some men, who if pretenders to French or Latin tongues, pretend to an authority also of creating words, and giving us new forms of speaking, which neither King nor Keisar hath the power to do. Monies and Coins are forthwith currant, and universally admitted, as soon as they receive the stamp of Supreme Authority. But it is not in the power of Kings or Parliaments to ordain new words, without the liking and consent of the common people. Foreign Commodities, not Customed, are not safely sold; and Foreign words, till licenced, and approved by custom, are not fitly used. And therefore it was well said by an able Grammarian, to a great Emperor of Rome, Homines donare civitate potes, verba item non potes; that is to say, that he might naturalise whole Nations, by giving them the privileges of a Roman Citizen, but that it was not in his power to do so with words, and make them Free (as one might say) of the Latin tongue. In this case, Custom and Consent, and the general usage, are the greatest Princes, and he that doth proceed without their authority, hath no authority at all to proceed upon: It being no othsrwise with new Words, then with new Fashions in Apparel, which are at first ridiculous, or at least unsightly, till by continual wearing, they become more ordinary. And so it is resolved by Horace, in his Book, De Arte Poetica. Multa renascenter quae nnnc cecidere cadentque, Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula, si volet usus; Quem penes arbitrium est, & vis & norma loquendi. In English thus, Many old words shall be resumed and some, Now in great honour, shall as vile become, If use so please; to which alone belongs, The power to regulat●… and di●…ect our tongues. But lest our Author should affirm with Cremulius Cordus in the story, Adeo factorum innocens sum ut verba m●…a arguantur, that we are fain to cav●…l with him for his words, for want of greater matter to except against; I shall forbear the prosecution of this Argument, till the close of all, and pass to such material points as shall come before me. To whom the Prince returned answer, Fol. ●…. that he would empower the Earl of Bristol, to give his Master all satisfaction in that particular,] that is to say (for so you must be understood in the words foregoing) that he would make a Pr●…xie to the Earl of Bristol to celebrate (in his name) the Marriage with the Lady Infanta▪ But there was no such Proxy made to the Earl of Bristol, that being a power and trust thought worthy of the Catholic King, and Don Charles his Brother, as appear plainly by the public Instrument made to that effect, bearing date August the 8 Anno 1623. which being sealed by the Prince in due form of Law, it was indeed committed to the custody of the Earl of Bristol, by him to be delivered to the King of Spain, and Don Charles his Brother, or to either of them, as soon as the Dispensation should be brought from Rome, and this was all the Power which the E●…rle of Bristol had, which yet he had no power to execute, as it after proved. The Loyal hearted English could not distinguish ●…ol. 3. between the Spanish match, and Charles his ruin.] That some of the Loyal hearted English were of that opinion, I shall easily grant, but they had other Opinions also, which did Bias with them; especially one opinion, that the near Allianc●… with that Crown, would arm the King with power to suppress that F●…ction, which began then to be dreadful to him, and have since been the ruin of Charles, and his whole Posterity. But other English hearts there are, of no less Loyalty, and of as great affection to the Royal Family, and as great Zealots of the true Protestant Religion here by Law established, who think otherwise of it, and that the ruin of Prince Charles might by this match have been prevented. The Spaniard for the most part found a more steady friend, than the wavering French. What else there was (which might confirm them on the Post-fact) in this persuasion I shall reserve unto myself. But you proceed and tell us, after Folio 5. That England ever found the Spaniard a worse Friend, than an Enemy.] For this I think you have no reason, the amity and correspondence between the Nations having continued firm, and most inv●…olate for many Ages, and never broke (if not of late) but by the English, or on their occasions. First, by the Invasion of Spai●…e by the ●…lack Prince, in the time of Don Pedro of Castille, and the War carried thither not long after by the Duke of Lancaster; n●…xt, on the breach made with Charles the fifth, by King Henry the Eighth, in pursuance of the injury don●… unto him, in casting off Queen Katherine, that great Emperor's Aunt; and finally by Queen Elizabeth, supporting the revolting Netherlands against Philip the second, their natural and most lawful Prince. If on this last and greatest provocation the Spaniard took up arms against us, he had all the reason in the world for his justification. Who per●…iving upon the whole sum, ●…bid. that the sly Spaniard practised to make an aftergame of the Palatinate.] King James was not to be told that now (I mean upon the Prince's return from Spain) there being no such thing as the restoring of the Palatinate to the Prince Elector, i●… all the Articles of the Treaty, which wer●… sworn between them. That was reserve●… as an aftergame, but yet intended to b●… played by the Spanish Court, to the mos●… honour and advantage of the Engli●… Nation, thereby to gain the better welcome to the Royal Bride, when she cam●… amongst us. For thus I find it in a Letter from the Earl of Bristol, dated th●… 28. of October, not long after the Prince'●… coming home. For the business of the Palatinate, as 〈◊〉 will appears by the joint disppatch which Si●… Walter Aston, and myself wrote of th●… 23. of November, that we were assured, not by the Conde of Olivares, only in this King's name, but severally, by all the Councillors, that a settled resolution was taken in Council, on the 16. of November, that this King should procure his Majesty's entire satisfaction, and hereof the Cardinal Ca●…ala, and divers other Councillors that prof●…ssed the●…selves particularly affected to the King and Prince's service, came to give Sir Walter Aston and myself the P●…rabein. The Conde of Olivares entreated 〈◊〉 both, in this King's name, to assure his Majesty thereof, upon our honours, and upon our lives if need were. And thus much was to have been delivered unto us in writing, before we would have passed to the Disposories, as will plainly appear by this above mentioned dispatch, of the 23. of November. Besides, the Princess had now made this business her own, and had therein most earnestly moved the King her Brother, & written unto the Conde of Olivares, and had set her heart upon the making of herself graceful, and welcome to the King and Kingdom, by overco●…ing this business. These are the words of Bristol's Letter, and these give me no small assurance of the integrity and good meaning of the Court of Spain, as ●…o that particular. Which being met, and the business propounded, Fol. 4. it was entertained with an unanimous consent, and a motion made, that an Ambassador should be sent over to negotiate the Treaty.] I somewhat doubt of your intelligence in this relation, the Marriage of the Prince, containing such a Branch of the Royal prerogative, as King James was not likely to communicate with his Houses of Parliament. For when he was Petitioned by both Houses not long before, that for the avoiding of some dangers, which did seem to threaten the whole Kingdom, he would Marry the Prince to a Lady of the Protestant Religion; he entertained the motion with no small disdain, and checked them in his answer, for entrenching on his just Prerogative. And though King Charles acquainted the two Houses of Parliament with his intent of Marrying the Princess Mary, to the Heir of Orange, yet we must look upon him at that time, as encumbered with the greatest difficulties, that ever any Prince lay under; one that had wholly lost himself on their Love and Courtesy, and therefore was to hold fair with th●…m in the greatest matters. And yet he did not bend thus low, nor communicate the affair unto them, till the Articles of the Marriage were in a manner concluded, as appeareth plainly by his Majesty's Speech in the House of Lords, Fol. 213. But when it was required of him as a Duty, not an Act of Grace, in the fifth of the nineteen Propositions which were sent to Yerke, that none of his Children should be Married without their consent; though he was then in such a necessitous condition, as few Princes ever were reduced to, yet would he by no means s●…sfie their demands therein. In the style of the Court he went for Great Ibid. Britain's Solomon.] It cannot be denied, but that he was an Universal Scholar, as you tell us afterwards, the greatest Scholar (without doubt) for so great a King, that these last Ages of the world have presented to us; but that he was Great Britain's Solomon, that is to say, either the wisest Man, or the wisest King of the British Nations, I am not Courtier enough to defend or say. It is true indeed, that he much pleased hims●…lfe with boasting of his King's craft, as he used to call it, but as Imbold a French Captain was wont to say, that he could never see where that great wit of the Florentines lay, which was so much talked of in the world; so I have heard many wise men say, that they could never find what that Kingcraft was: It being no hard matter to prove, that in all public Treaties and Negotiations, and many private Conferences and debates of Council, he was out-witted, and made use of unto other men's ends, by almost all that undertook him. And on●… might say, (I fear●… too truly) that by putting off the Majesty belonging to a King of England, that so he might more liberally enjoy himself; neglecting the affairs of State, and cares of Government, to hunt after pleasures; deserting the imperial City, to sport himself at Roiston, Newmarket, and such obscure places (which were to him as the Isle of Capre was to Tiberius Caesar) and finally by letting loose the Golden reins of Discipline, held by his Predecessors with so strict a hand; he opened the first gap unto those confusions, of which we have since found the miserable and woeful consequences. But I know not what temptation hath drawn this note from me, I go on again. A stout adversary he was to the Arminians, Fol. 5. and Semi-Pelagians, whom he called, as Prosper before him did, the Enemies of God's grace.] In this short sentence there are many things to be considered. 1. What these Arminians were, which our Author speaks of. 2. Whether they were the Enemies of God's grace or not? and 3. what the reason was why King James showed himself so great an adversary to them, as you say he did. And first for the Arminians (as you call them) they were a branch of the Sect of Calvin, to whose Discipline in all particulars they conformed themselves, and to his Doctrines in the most, differing only in the matter of Predestination, & the points subordinate; but managing tho●… differences with a better temper, than their Opposites did. Nor were these differences only controverted in the School of Calvin, but had been many times disputed with great heat and passion, betwixt the Franciscans and Dominicans in the Church of Rome. The rigid and moderate Lutherans in the Church's Protestant. The rigid Lutherans, who look on Flacius Illyricus (a man of a turbulent and fiery nature) as their Head and Captain, and with them the Dominieans (or black Friars) go the same way as Calvin and his followers do●…; and these proceed upon the authority of Saint Augustine, whose zeal against the P●…lagian Heresies transported him into such inconvenient expressions, as the wis●…st men may fall into on the like occasions. The moderate Lutherans, of which Melancthon, a sober and right learned man (and therefore not unfitly called the Phoenix of Germany) was the principal leader, and with them the Franciscan Friars (and of late the Jesuits) go the same way which the Arminians since have followed; grounding themselves upon the constant current of the ancient Fathers, who lived and flourished, ante mala certamina Pelagiana, before the authority of Saint Augustine, in canvasing and confuting the Pelagian Heresies, carried all before it. For Doctor James Hermin, the University Reader, in the University of Leidon, preferring the Doctrine of Melancthon in these points, before that of Calvin, not only maintained it in the Schools, but preached it also in the P●…lpit as occasion was; not that he was the first of the School of Calvin, that professed this way, but that he was of better parts, and of greater Learning, than any who before had undertaken it. And being he was a man of such parts and Learning, and that his doctrine was conceived to be more Rational in itself, far more agreeable unto the Justice and Mercy of Almighty God, and more conducing unto Piety, then that of the Rigid Calvinist was esteemed to be, it quickly found great multitudes of followers in the B●…lgique Churches; and these, not only of the Vu●…gar, but the Learned sort, of which last rank I may reckon Episcopius, Corvinus, Bertius, Tilenus, John G●…rard, Vossius, (for his abilities in Learning, made a Prebend of Canterbury) and that great magazine both of Divine and Humane literature, Hugo Grotius: These are the men who commonly are nicknamed Arminians, and these the rigid Calvinists have endeavoured to oppose, to the public hatred, by fastening on them many horrid Blasphemies, and gross absurdities, which cannot properly and of right be charged upon them. For in the continuation of the History of the Netherlands, writ by one ●…rosse (as I remember) a fellow of no Parts, or Judgement, and so more apt to be abused with a false report: It is affirmed that there was a Synod called at D●…rt, to suppress the Arminians, and that the said Arminians held amongst other Heresies; first, that God was the Author of Sin, and secondly, that he Created the far greatest part of mankind only, of purpose for to damn them, with several others of that kind; which every man of Reading knows, not only to be the Consequence and Results of Calvin's Doctrine, but to be positively maintained and taught by some of his followers. By these, and such like sub●…ill and malicious practices, they endeavoured to expose their adversaries to the public hatred, and make them odious with the people; till at the last, those poor men might have said most justly, as once the Primitive Christians did, under the burden of the like Calumnies and Imputations, Condemnati sumus quia nominamur, non quia convincimur, as Tertullian hath it; the name of an Arminian carried a Condemnation in itself, without any conviction: 2. But if they were the Enemies of the Grace of God, and that King James so conceived of them, they did undoubtedly deserve all this and more; but certainly whatsoever King James might please to call them, I am sure he had little reason for it, those whom you call Arminians, speaking as Honourably and Religiously of the grace of God, as the most Orthodox writers in the Primitive times. It is true ind●…d, that the Pelagians did ascribe so much to the powers of Nature, in the Conversion of a Sinner, and the whole work of Regeneration, ut gratiam Dei necessariam non putarent, that they thought the Grace of God 〈◊〉 be together unnecessary (as Lyrinensis tells us of them.) If the Arminians (as you call them) were of this opinion, they were the Enemies of God's Grace, there is no doubt of that. But look into the five Articles which they exhibited in their Remonstrance to the States of Holland, and after to the Assembly at Dort, and you will find the contrary; it being there affirmed expressly in these following words, Gratiam Dei Staivimus esse principium, progressum & complementum omnis boni; ●…deo ut ne ipse quidem regenitus absque praecedente sive praeveniente ista, excitante, prosequente, & cooperante gratiâ, bonum cogitare velle, aut peragere possit, u●…isve ad malum tentationibus resistere: It a ut bona opera actionesque quas quis cogitando potest adsequi gratiae Dei in Christo adscribenda sint. We teach say they, that the Grace of God is the beginning and promotion and accomplishment of every thing that is good in us; insomuch that the Regenerate man can neither think, will, nor do any thing that is good without this grace preventing, Cooperating, and Assisting, and consequently that all good works which any man in his life can attain unto, are to be attributed and Ascribed to the Grace of God. Call you those men the Enemies of God's grace, as you seem to make them? I hope Saint Augustine was no enemy of the grace of God, in giving us this Golden sentence; since gratia Dei praeveniente ut velimus, & subsequent ne frustra velimus, ad pietatis opera nil valemus; that is to say, Without the grace of God preventing, that we may will the things which are good, and following or assisting that we do not will them to no purpose, we are not able to do any thing in the works of piety. Say not these men the same as S. Austin doth? and saying the same, why are they called the Enemies of the Grace of God, whilst he is honoured with the title of the Champion and Defender of it? But some will say that they ascribe more unto the freedom of the will, then may stand with Grace, and consequently overthrow all the former building. If so, they are more cunning than I thought they were. But these plain dealing men do assure me otherwise, for thus they say, (in the same Articles as before) Homo salvificam fidem non habet à se, neque ex liberi sui arbitrii viribus, sed necesse est ut ab ●…o in Christo, per spiritum ipsius sanctum regeneretur at●…ue renovetur intellectu, affectibus, voluntate, omnibusque viribus, ut salutaria bona recte possit intelligere, meditari, velle, atque perficere; That is to say, A man hath not saving Faith in, and of himself, nor by the strength of his own Free will, but it is necessary that he be regenerate, and renewed in Christ by the Holy Ghost, in his understanding, affections, will, and all the other powers of Nature, that so he may both understand, meditate, will▪ and bring to pass the things which appertain to his Salvation. I grant indeed, that they ascribe somewhet more to the will of Man, than the rigid sort of Lutherans and Calvinians do●…, who will have a man drawn forcibly and Irresistably, with the cords of Grace, velut in animalon quiddam, like a senseless stock, without contributing any thing to his own eternity; but they ascribe no more unto it, then what may stand both with the Grace and Justice of Almighty God, according to that Divine saying of Saint Augustine, viz. Si non est Gratia Dei quomodo salva●… mundum? si non est liberum arbitrium, quomodo judicat mundum? were it not for the Grace of God, no man could be saved, and were there not a Freedom of Will in M●…n, no man with justice could be damned. If they that speak so much of the Grace of God, and so little of the Will of Man in the workings of it, must notwithstanding be the Enemies of the Grace of God; I fear the Church of England will be found in a sorry case, whose Doctrine in these points is the very same, and thus delivered in the tenth Article of her Confession, viz. The condition of Man after the Fall of Adam, is such, that he cannot turn and prepare himself by his own natural strength, and good works to Faith and calling upon God: wherefore we have no power to do good works pleasant and acceptable to God, without the Grace of God by Christ preventing us, that we may have a good Will, and working with us, when we have that good will. Saint Augustine, and the Church of England, and all Orthodox Christians are as much Enemies of God's Grace (for aught I can see, as any of those poor despised ones, whom you call Arminians. 3. But than it may be justly asked, what moved King James to be so stout an stout of theirs, as you say he was? and for that the reasons may be many, for 1. he had his education in the Kirk of Scotland, where all the Hetrodoxies of Calvin were received as Gospel, and therefore could not suddenly cast off those opinions which he had sucked in as it were with his nurse's milk. 2. He was much governed at that time by Doctor Montague then B●…shop of Winchester, and Dean of his Majesty's Chapel Royal, who having been a great stickler in these Predestinarian Controversies, when he lived in Cambridge, thought himself bound to beat down all opponents by the King's Authority, which he could not overbear by the strength of Argument; and finding the Kings will inclineable to his own persuasions in these points, put him upon many harsh, and severe expressions against these poor men, especially in his Declaration against Vorstius, where he strikes most at them. But thirdly, the greatest motive with K. James, was, Reason of State the Arminians (as you call them) being united into a party, under the countenance & command of 〈◊〉 Olden Barnevell and by him used to undermine the power of Mawrice, then Prince of Orange; who as he was a great Patron of the Rigid Calvinians, so was he to that King a most dear confederate. B●…sides, the King considered this division in the Belgic Provinces, as a matter of most dangerous ●…ature, and utterly destructive of that peace, unity, and concord which was to be the greatest preservation of the States United: whom therefore he exhorteth in the same Declaration to take heed of such infected persons, their own Countrymen being already divided into Factions upon this occasion, which was a matter (as he saith) so opposite to unity (which was indeed the only prop and safety of their State next under God) as of necessity it must by little and little bring them to utter ruin, if wisely & in time they did not provide against it, So that K. James consid●…ring the present breach as tending to the utter ruin of those Estates, and more particularly of the Prince of Orange, his most dear Ally, he thought it no small piece of Kingcraft to contribute toward the suppres●…ion of the weaker party; not only by blasting them in the said Declaration with reproachful names, and sending such of his Divines to the Assembly at Dort, as he was sure would be sufficiently active in their Condemnation; which being done, his own turn served therein to his full contentment, and Bishop Montague his great Director in those businesses being also dead; he began to show himself more favourable unto their opinions than before he did: especially on the coming out of the Answer to the Romish Gaggar, composed by another Montague then Pr●…bend of Windsor, and afterwards L. Bishop of Chichester, and at last of Norwich, (a man of less Courtship, but of far more Learning than the other was) whos●… judgement in those points he liked very well, as being more consonant to the Doctrine of the Church of England, and more agreeable to the Tenor of approved Antiquity. But I have stayed too long on this Observation. I must now go forwards. The King's Corpse on the 4th of May was Fol. 6. conveyed to Westminster, and there inhumed, etc.] Our Author tells us in the end of his Preface what an esp●…ciall care he hath of his Temporalities (as his own word is) in assigning unto every action it's own proper time, and yet he fails us here in the first beginning: For, neither was the body of that King interred on the 4th of May, nor the Letters of procuration kept undelivered till the 8th (as he after te●…ls us) nor the Marriage celebrated after the Funeral of the King, as is there declared: though possibly in the intention of King Charles (for the reasons there delivered) it had been so resolved on at the first designation of those Royal pomps: For, upon Sunday May the 1st, the Marriage was celebrated at the Church Nastre Dame in Paris; on Tuesday May the 3d, the news thereof came unto the Court, and was welcomed the same night with Bells and Bonfires in all parts of London; on Saturday May the 7th, was King James interred, and on Sunday morning May the 8th, there came an Order from the Lords of the Council to the Preachers appointed for St. Paul's Cross (as I have heard him say more than once or twice) requiring him that in his Prayer before the Sermon he should not pray for the Queen by the name of Henrietta Maria, but by the name of Queen Mary only. And yet it is true too which he after telleth us, that is to say, That the Marriage was celebrated in Paris on the 11th of May. But then he is to understand that this was on the 11th of May in the French Account, which following the Gregorian Calendar anticipates ten days in every Month; that being the 11th day of the Month to them, in the new Style (or stylo novo, as they phrase it) which is the first day of the Month in the old Style and Account of England. He sent Letters of Prolucution to the Ibid. Duke of Chevereux.] If it be asked why the King when he was only Prince of Wales should look no lower for a Proxy than the King of Spain, and being now the mighty Monarch of Great Britain, should pitch upon so mean a Prince as the Duke of Chevereux; it may be answered that the Duke of Chevereux was a Prince of the house of Guise, from which his Majesty was extracted: Marry of Lorraine Daughter to Claud of Lorraine the first Duke of Guise, being Wife to James the fifth of Scotland, Grandmother unto James the sixth, and consequently great Grandmother to King Charles himself. From Canterbury his Majesty took Coach Fol. 7. for Whitehall, where the third after his arrival, etc.] If our Author meaneth by this, that his Majesty went in Coach but some part of the way only, he should then have said so; but if he mean that he went so all the way to Whitehall, he is very much out: their Majesty's passing in Coach no further than Gravesend, and from thence in the●…r Royal Barge by water unto his Palace at Whitehall, accompanied or met by all the Barges, Boats, and Wherries which could be found upon the Thames; the Author of these Observations beholding from Tower-wharf that magnificent passage. For as man is without a female Consort, Fol. 9 so is a King without his supreme Council a half form sterile thing.] Our Author in these words, and the rest that follow, maintains a Paradox most dangerous to supreme Authority in making Parliaments so necessary to all Acts of State, as if that Kings, or they that have the Supreme power could do nothing lawfully but what they do with their assistance, and by their consent; which were it so, a Parliament must be coordinate to Kings (or such as have the power of Kings) not subordinate to them. Nor need the Members write themselves by the name of His Majesty's most loyal and most humble Subj●…cts, but by the name of Partners and Associates in the Royal power: which doctrine, of what ill consequence it may be in Monarchical Government, I leave Counsellors of State to consider of. His speech being ended, the King vailed Fol. 11. his Crown, a thing rare in any of his Predecessou●…s.] Our Chroniclers tell us of King James, that at his first coming to the Crown of England, he used to go often to the Tower to see the Lion (the reputed King of Beasts) baited sometimes by Dogs, and sometimes by Horses; which I could never read without some r●…gret, the baiting of the King of Beasts seeming to me an ill presage of those many baitings which he (a King of Men) sound afterwards at the ha●…s of his Subjects. And Mr. Prin tells us of K. Charles, that on the day of his Coronation he was clothed in white, contrary to the custom of his Predecessors, who were on that day clad in purple. White is we know the colour of the saints, who are represented to us in White robes by S. John in the Revelation: And Purple is we know the Imperial and Regal colour, so proper hereto sore unto Kings and Emperors, that many of the Constantinoplitan Emperors were called Porphirogeniti, because at their first coming into the world they were wrapped in purple. And this I look upon as an ill presage, that the King laying aside his Purple, the Robe of Majesty, should clothe himself in White, the Robe of Innocence; as if thereby it were fore-signified that he should divest himself of that Regal Majesty which might and would have kept him safe from affront and scorn, to rely wholly on the innocence of a virtuous life, which did expose him finally to calamitous ruin. But as all ill presages, none like that which our Author speaks of, I mean the veiling of his Crown to this his first Parliament; which I consider of the Introduction to those many veiling of the Crown in all the Parliaments that followed: For, first he vailed his Crown to this, in leaving Montague in their hands, and his Bond uncancelled, (as you tell us after Fol. 12.) notwithstanding that he was his sworn Chaplain and domestic Servant, and that too in a business of such a nature as former Parliaments used not to take cognizince of; he vailed his Crown unto the next, when he permitted them (as you tell us, Fol. 25.) to search his Signet Office, and to examine the Letters of his Secretaries of State, leaving him nothing free from their discovery; a thing not formerly practised: he vailed his Crown unto the third, first in the way of preparation to it, releasing all the Gentlemen whom he had imprisoned, for their refusal of the Loane, many of which being elected Members of the following Parliament, brought with them both a power and will to avenge themselves by the restraint of His Prerogative within narrower bounds; next in the prosecution of it, when hearing that the Parliament had granted him some Subsidies, not a man dissenting, he could not restrain himself from weeping, (which tenderness of his was made good use of to his no small damage) adding withal, and bidding his Secretary tell them (as our Author tells us, Fol. 77.) he would deny them nothing of their Liberties which any of his Predecessors had granted to them; and finally in the close thereof when He enacted the Petition of Right, and made it pass into a Law, of which our Author tells us, Fol. 87. That never Arbitrary power since Monarchy first founded did so submitters fasces, so veil its Sceptre; never did the prerogative descend so much from perch to popular lure, as by that Concession. He vailed his Crown unto all three, by suffering the House of Commons to set up a committee for Religion, to question Manwaring, Sibthorp, and divers others for Doctrinal matters, which if erroneous were more proper to be censured in the High Commission or the Convocation, to which the cognizance of such Causes doth of right b●…long; and not unto a Consistory of Lay. Elders, which though it might consist of the wisest men, yet were they for the most part none of the greatest Clerks. He vailed his Crown also unto the Scots, when having power to bring them under his command, he yielded to the Pacification at Berwick, not more unto his own dishonour than to their advantage; which drew him on first to abolish the Episcopal Government (the greatest prop of hi●… Estate) in the Church of Scotland, and after at their instance to call a Parliament in England, and by the terrou●… of their Arms first to give way that the Lords of the Privy Council (in referenc●… to the Trial of the 〈◊〉 of Strafford) should be examined upon oath, in points debated and resolved on at the Council Table; that being done, to yield to a Triennial Parliament, to be called (upon his default) by Sheriffs and Constables, and finally to perpetuate that Parliament to his own destruction. What other vailing of the Crown followed upon this, we shall hereafter see upon another occasion. In this Session of Parliament was Mr. Ibid. Montague questioned for publishing certain Books prejudicial to the Protestant cause, etc.] Somewhat of Mr. Montague we have seen before, and shall now add, that his Books contained nothing prejudicial to the Protestant Cause, or to the established Doctrine of the Church of England, but only to the calvinistical Sect who had imposed their Heterodoxies upon credulous men for the received Doctrines of the Church. This Mr. Mount●… disavowed in his Answer to the Romish Gagg●…r, and severing private men's Opinions from the Church's Doctrines to be defended by their own Patrons and abettors▪ which so offended that whole Party that an Information was intended and prepared against him, which being made known unto King James, he did not only give him his discharge and quietus est, and grant him leave (in regard the Accusation was divulged, and the clamour violent) humbly to appeal from his Defamers unto His most sacred cognizance in public, and to represent his just defence against their slanders and false surmises unto the world, but also to give express order unto Doctor White then Deane of C●…l slay (cried up, when L●…cturer of St. Paul's, for the stoutest Champion of this Church against those of Rome) for the authorising and publishing thereof, which was ●…one accordingly. So he in his Epistle Dedicatory to the late King Charles. These are the Books, The Answer to the Romish Gagger: and, the Defence thereof, ca●…led, Appello Caesarem: so prejudicial (is you say) to the Protestant Cause, and therefore fit to be in●…ed on by the House of Parliament. The cause of that restraint (v●…z: the grant F●…l. 12. of Tonage and Poundage for no more than one year) being a design to reduce it to the rate settled in Qu●…n mary's days.] And had they brought it unto that, their Grant would have been like the Apples of Sodom, goodly and beautiful to the eye, sed levi tactu pressa in vagum pulverem fatiscunt (saith the old Geographer) but never so gently handled fell to dust and ashes; a nut without a kernil, and a painted nothing. And yet they might have made the King some fair amends, if they had brought the Subsidies to the same rate also, or to the rates they were at, in her Father's days, when as one single Subsidy of four shillings in the pound was estimated to amount to eight hundred thousand pounds of good English money, which is as much as eight whole Subsidies did amount to when King Charles c●…me unto the Crown. The Divinity School was appointed for Ibid. the House of Commons.] And qu●…stionlesse this giving up of the Divinity School unto the use of the House of Commons, and placing the Speaker in or near the Chair●… in which the King's Professor for Divinity did usually read his Public Lectures, and moderate in all Public Disputations, first put them into a conceit that the determining in all points and Controversies in Divinity did belong to them: As Vibius Rufus in the story, having married Tully's Widow, and bought Caesar's Chair, conceived that he was then in a way to gain the Eloquence of the one, and the Power of the other: For, after this we find no Parliament without a Committee for Religion, and no Committee for Religion but what did think itself sufficiently instructed to manage the greatest Controversies of D●…vinity which were brought before them: with what success to the Religion here by Law established we now see too clearly. Most of the Voters of this Remonstran●… Fol. 15. flew high, and impetuously pressed in upon the Duke.] And this makes good that saying of the wise Historian, Quam breves & infausti Romani populi amores, that the D●…rlings and Affections of the Common People (take which sense you will) are of short continuance. It was not long since that this very man was cried up in Parliament for the great ornament and honour of the English Nation, the chief preserver of this Kingdom from the Spanish practices, no attribute sufficient to set forth his praises, no honour large enough to requite his merits. Now on the sudden he is become the subject of a popular h●…d, tossed from one Parliament to another like the Ball of Fortune, many times struck into the hazard, and at last quite tossed out of the Court, and-tumbled into his grave by a desperate Ruffian. But as I have been told by some intelligent man, this sudden alteration came another way, and not from any premeditated purpose in the Parliament men, who after voted this Remonstrance: For having an ill eye to the B●…shop of Lincoln, and a design to make h●…m lighter by the Seal; the B●…shop to prevent the danger, and divert the humour, proposed the Duke of Buckingham unto some leading men amongst them as the fitter game, offering to furn●…sh them with matter, and to m●…ke good that matter by sufficient evidence; which coming not long a●…ter to the ears of the Duke, to whom he had done many ill▪ offices when he was in Spain, he procured the Seal to be taken from him; of which more anon. And who (i.e. Sir Robert Mansell) had Fol. 17. an unquestionable right to the chief conduct of this Enterprise upon the Duke's default.] I b●…lieve not so. For though Sir Robert were Vice-admiral, and had the subordinate power to the Duke of Buckingham in all things which concerned that Office, yet in the present Enterprise he had not any thing at all to pretend unto: the Lord Admiral himself not acting in occasional services or great employments at the Sea in regard of his Office, but as he is empowered by special Commission from the King, which he may grant to any other as He sees cause for it. A thing so obvious in the course of our English stories, that I need bring no examples of it to confirm this truth. And the first thing resolved upon was. Fol. 20. His solemn Initiation into Regality, and setting the Crown upon His head.] As sol●…mne as the King esteemed it, yet our Author as it seems thinks more poorly of it: For, he not only censureth it for a vanity, though a serious vanity, but thinks that K●…ngs are idle in it, though idle to some better purpose than in 〈◊〉 and Dances. Are not all Christian K●…ngs wi●…h whom the Rites of Coronation are accounted sacred, much concerned in this, and the Scriptures more? are not the Ceremonies of Anointing and Crowning Kings of great antiqu●…ty in all Nations throughout the World directed by the holy Spirit in the Book of God? exempl fi●…d in Saul, David, Solomon, but most particularly in the inauguration of Jehoash, the 2 of Kings 11. 12. where it is said that Jehojada the high Priest brought forth the King's son and put the Crown upon him, and gave him the testimonies, and they made him King and anointed him, and clapped their hands, and said, GOD SAVE THE KING. Was this a Pageant think we of t●…e high Priests making to delight the Soldiery, or a solemnity and ceremony of Gods own appointing to distinguish his Vicegerents from inferior persons, and strike a veneration towards them in all sorts of men whether Priests or people? He that shall look upon the Coronation of our Saviour, the placing of the Crown upon his head, and putting the Sceptre into his hands, and bowing of the knee before him, with this acclamation, Hail King of the Jews, will therein find a pattern for the Inauguration of a Christian King: In which there is not any thing of a serious vanity, (as our Author calls it) but a grave, pious, and religious conformity to the Investiture and Coronation of their supreme Lord. I could enlarge upon this subj●…ct, but that I think better of our Author than some of our Historians do of Henry Duke of Buckingham, of whom it is observed that at the Coronation of King Richard the third, he cast many a squint eye upon the Crown, as if he thought it might be set on a fitter head. But our Author passeth from the Coronation to the following Parliament. In order whereunto, he tell●… us that The Lord Keeper Williams was displaced Ibid. and his place was disposed of to Sir Thomas Coventrie.] Our Author is here out again in his Temporalities, the Lord Keeper Williams not being displaced betwixt the Coronation and the following Parliament but some months before: For the Great Seal was taken from him in October three months and more before the day of the Coronation; Sir Thomas Coventrie sitting in 〈◊〉 as Lord Keeper, both in the Michaelmas Term at Reading, and in the Candlemas Term at Westminster. The like mistake he gives us in his Temporalities touching B●…shop Land, whom he makes Bishop of bath and Wells, at the time of his affl●…cting in the Coronation; whereas indeed he was at that time Bishop of St. David's only, and not translated to the Bishopric of bath and Wells till September following. And that I may not trouble myself with the like observation at another time (though there be many more of this nature to be troubled with) I shall crave leave to step forth to Fol. 96. where it is said, That the Articles of Lambeth were so well approved of by King James, as he first sent them fi●…st to the Synod of Dort as the Doctrine of our Church, where they were asserted by the suffrage of our British Divines; and after that commended them to the Convocation held in Ireland to be asserted amongst the Articles of Religion established Anno 1615. and accordingly they were] This is a very strange Hysteron Proteron, setting the cart before the horse, as we use to say. For, certainly the Articles of Lambeth being made part of the Confession of the Church of Ireland, Anno 1615. as indeed they were, could not before that time be sent to the Assembly, or Synod at Dort, which was not held till three years after, Anno 1618. And this I take to be from what more than a superannuating as to call it in his Temporalities, though he be confident in his Preface that he stands secure not only from substantial falsehoods, but even from circumstantial also, in assigning all both things and actions their proper times. How ill this confidence is grounded we have seen in part, and shall see more hereof hereafter, as occasion serveth. Who loved the Bishop (if Fame belies her Fol. 21. not) better than was fit.] I think our Author with more prudence might have spared this Note, especially having Fame only for the ground thereof, which is so infamous●…n ●…n Historian (as a learned Gentleman hath well noted) that no wise man would build on the credit of it. If Fames and Libels should once pass for H●…storicall truths, few Kings, or Favourites, or Ministers of great affairs (or indeed who else) would go with honour to their graves, or live with glory in the mouths of the next Posterities. Wilson, a creature and dependent of the Earl of Warwick, whom you accuse elsewhere of partiality in the business of the Earl of Essex, leaves the like stain upon his Lady; but out of zeal to the good cause indevoureth to acquit the B●…shop from the guilt thereof, by saying, that he was Eunuchus ab utero, an Eunuch from his Mother's womb, which all that knew that Prelate most extremely laughed at. And what had he for his authority but Fam●… and Libels, purposely scattered and divulged amongst the people to disgrace that Family, by the malicious Contrivers of the Public ruin. The honour of Ladies in the general is a tender point, not easily repaired if wronged, and therefore to be left untouched, or most gently handled. For which cause possibly S. 〈◊〉 adviseth that we give honour to the Woman as the weaker vessel, and weaker vessels if once cracked by ungentle handling, are either utterly broken: or not easily mended. And for this Lady in particular whom these two Authors toss on the breath of Fame, I never heard but that she was a person of great parts and honour, and one that never did ill offices to any man during the time of her great power and favour both with King and Queen. So that we may affirm of her, as the Historian doth of Livia that great Emperor's Wife, Potentiam ejus nemo sensit, nisi aut levatione periculi, aut accessione dignitatis, that no body ever found her power, but either in lessening his deserved punishments, or adding some respects to him for his well-deserving. Nor seemed the question in the sense of Fol. 29. many, which was the Traitor, but which was the most.] That is to say, whether the Duke of Buckingham, or the Earl of Bristol were the greater Traitor, though it appeareth not (for any thing which our Author tells us) that any treason was proved against either of them: For had the Duke proved his Charge of Treason against the Earl, he had both power and opportunity enough to have wrought his ruin; or had the Earl proved the like Charge against the Duke, the Commons needed not have troubled themselves with a new Impeachment, containing nothing but Encroachments on the Royal favour, and some miscarriages which at another time, and in another man would have been connived at. Our Author gives us a full Copy of the Earls Charge against the Duke; but of the Duke's Charge against the Earl (whether out of Partiality or want of Information) he affords us nothing. I shall therefore add so much in the way of supplement, as to subjoin three or four of the principal Articles of the Charge against him, leaving them here as they were left in the House of Peers, without any further prosecution than the Narrative only. It was then charged upon the Earl, 1. That having certified King James by several Letters out of Spain that the Treaty of the Match was in a very good forwardness, the Prince at his arrival there, found it nothing so, there being little done in relation to it. 2. That in the time of his negotiation by Letters unto his late Majesty and otherwise, he counselled and persuaded the said King's Majesty to set at liberty the Jesuits and Priests of the Romish Religion, and to grant and allow unto the Papists and Professors of the same, a free toleration, and silencing the Laws made and studing in force against them: 3. That at the Princes coming into Spain, the said Earl of Bristol cunningly, falsely, and traitorously moved and persuaded the Prince (being then in the power of a foreign King of the Romish Religion) to change his Religion, and used many dangerous and subtle insinuations to that effect. 4. That in pursuance of the said traitorous design, he used these words unto the Prince, That the State of England did never any great thing, but when they were under the obedience of the Pope of Rome, and that it was impossible they should do anything of note otherwise. 5. That a Proposition being made by the King of Spain touching the Palatinate, which was, That the eldest Son of the Prince Palatine should marry with the Emperor's Daughter, but must be bred up in the Emperor's Court: the said Earl delivered his opinion, That he thought it unreasonable. And when the danger was presented, in regard of the alteration of the young Prince's Religion, which must needs follow thereupon, the said Earl answered, That without some great action the peace of Christendom would never be had. Comparing these with those that were charged upon the Duke, it will appear that they both concurred in one design, which was to ●…ender each o●…her suspected in matter of Loyalty & Religion, though by so doing they made good sport to all their Enemies and the world to boot; Many good men (as our Author calls them) being passing jocund at the contest. But it was resolved by the Judges, that by Fol. 45. their Restraint (i. e. the Restraint of Sir Dudley Diggs, and Sir John Eliot) no reason being given to the House for it, the whole House was Arrested.] The Judges were wise men, and would not strive against the stream (as the saying is) for otherwise I can see no reason of their resolute precedents to the contrary, there are many in the times foregoing, of which I shall instance in two only, and those two in a Parliament held in the 35 year of the so much celebrated Reign of Queen Elizabeth. The first is this, Mr. Peter Wentworth and Sir Henry Bromely delivered a Petition to the Lord Keeper, desiring the Lords of the Upper House to be Suppliants with them of the Lower House unto Her Majesty for entailing of the succession of the Crown, whereof a Bill was ready drawn by them. Her Majesty was highly displeased herewith as contrary to Her former straight command, and charged the Council to call the parties before them. Sir Thomas Henage (being then Vice-Chamberlaine and one of the Lords of the Privy Council) sent for them, and after speech with them, commanded them to fo●…ar the Parliament, and not to go out of their several lodgings: After they were called before the Lord Treasurer, the Lord Buckhurst, and Sir Thomas Henage; Mr. Wentworth was committed by them to the Tower, Sir Henry Bromely with Master Richard Stevens, to whom Sir Henry Bromely had imparted the matter, were sent to the Fleet, as also Mr. Welch the other Knight for Worcestershire. In the same Parliament one Mr. Morris Attorney of the Duchy of Lancaster (who is to be my second instance) moved against the hard courses of the B●…shops, Ordinaries, and other Ecclesi●…sticall Judges in their Courts, used towards sundry learned and godly Ministers and Preachers, and spoke against subseription, and oaths; and offered a Bill to be read against Imprisonment for refusal of such Oaths: which coming to the Queen's knowledge, and Mr. Coke (afterwards Sir Edward Coke) than Speaker of the House of Commons, being sent for and admonished not to admit of that or any such Bills if they should be offered, the said Mr. Morrice (as I have been credibly informed) was taken out of the House by Sergeant at the Arms, but howsoever, sure I am, that he was committed unto Prison for the said Attempt. And when it was moved in the House by one Mr. Wroth, that they might be humble Suitors to Her Majesty, that she would be pleased to set at liberty those Members of the House that were restrained. To this it was answered by all the Privy Counselors which were then Members of the House, that Her Majesty had committed them for causes best known to Herself, and to press Her Highness with this suit would but hinder them whose good is sought: That the House must not call the Queen to account for what sh●… doth of her Royal Authority, That the causes for which they were restrained, may be high and dangerous, That Her Majesty l●…h no such questions, neither doth it become the House to search into such matt●…rs. Whereupon the House desisted from interposing any further in their beha●…f. And thus we see that no fewer than five Members (that is to say, Wentworth, Welch, Bromely, Stevens, and M●…rrice) ●…ut off at one time from the House of Commons without any remedy, or any Decl●…ration of the Judges, that any such Arrest as is here pretended was laid upon the House by their Imprisonment. So resolut●… was Queen Elizabeth to maintain Her Prerogative; though King Charles yei●…ded to the times and released His Prisoners upon this Declaration of the Judges, and a Remonstrance of the Commons in pursuance of it; which was another vailing of his Crown, before no●… mentioned, because reserved u●…to this place. For the Lords feared an ancient Order▪ Ibid. that no Lords created sedent●… Parliamento, should have voice during that Session, etc. Upon which, their suffrage was excluded.] The Lords had been to blame indeed, if when the Judges had declared for Law in 〈◊〉 of the House of Commons, they could not make an Order to serve them●… both ancient alike▪ and of like Authority, because both contrary to the practice and proceedings in foregoing Parliaments. But whereas our Author▪ writeth, that u●…on the finding out of this Order, the suffrage of the new Lords (that is to say, Kimbolton, Imbercourt, and Tregote) was excluded for this Session: I somewhat doubt his intelligence in that particular, and that I do for these two Reasons, First, because in the long Parliament which began in Novemb. An. 1640. when the prevailing Parties in both Houses were better backed than they were at this present; the Lord●… Seymour, Littleton, and Capell, created sedente Parliamento, and the Lords Digby, Rich, and Howard of Charleton called to the House of Peers by especial Writ were all admitted to their Votes in that S●…ssion of Parliament without any dispute. And secondly, whereas it was offered to the King (being then in a far lower condition than He was at th●…s present) in the last of the Nineteen Propositions which were sent to York, That His Majesty would be graciously pleased to pass a Bill for r●…straining Peers made hereafter, from sitting or voting in P●…liament, unless they were admitted thereunto with the consent of both Houses of Parliament; the King did absolutely refuse to assen●… unto it; as appear clearly by his Answer unto those demands. The affection of the Peers so elevated Ibid. him, that he received the Attorneys Charge with such an undaunted spirit, and returned so home an Answer as the House was amply satisfied with it.] In all this there was nothing strange, that either the Earl of Bristol should receive the Attorneys Charge with such an undaunted courage (as you say he did) being so backed and elevated by the affection of the House of Peers, as you say he was; or that the House should be so amply satisfied with his Answer, to whom they had before showed so great affections. It was not the Answer but the Person which prevailed most with them; as on the other side in the business of the Duke of Buckingham, the Answer fared the worse for the Persons sake, of whom you tell us in this place, That the ill opinion which the Peers had of him, did as much depress him, as it did elevate the other. For though the Duke his Answer to his Impeachment so contrived and inlaid with mod●…sty and humility that it was like to have a powerful influence towards the conversion of many, (as our Author tells us, Fol. 53.) yet was it so far from giving any (and much less ample) satisfaction, as Bristols did, that it b●…came a new grievance to his Adversaries, who thereupon resolved on the prosecution, for fear it might be thought that themselves were worsted, if the poor Gentleman should have m●…de but a saving game of it. So true is th●…t of Velleius Paterculus, saying, Familiar est hominibus, invidiam non ad causam sed ad voluntatem personasque diriger●…, that is to s●…y, that it is usual with most men to govern themselves in m●…tters of this inviduous nature, not by the merits of the cause, but by the intercesse of their own passions, and the ●…espect or disrespect which they bear the persons▪ But all would not smooth the asp●…rity of Fol. 64. this illegal Tax, etc.] The money which was then required of the Subj●…ct, was not imposed on them in the way of a Tax▪ (if I remember it aright) but required of them as a Loan●…, and that too in a way which might seem to have some Loyal●…y in it: For whereas the Parliament had passed a Bill of Subsidies, and that the said Parliament was dissolved before the Bill passed into an Act; His Majesty was advised that He had good grounds to require those Subsidies of the Subject, which the House of Commons in their names had assented to; and yet not to require them by the name of Subsidies, but only in the way of Loane, till the next Parliament should enable Him to make payment of it, or to confirm His Levying of those moneys by a subsequent Act. But this devise, though it brought in good sums of money for the present, yet by the Articles of some men, who were resolved, That the King should have no other assistance towards the maintenance of His wars than what He could procure-by His compliance with His Houses of Parliament; it brought forth those effects which our Author speaks of. So miserable was the King's condition at this time, that having formerly been made the Instrument to break off all Treaties with Spain, and declare a War against that King, at the earnest solicitation of the House of Commons, He was so wilfully deserted (I dare not say betrayed) by those that engaged Him in it. Where for three days all was so calm on Fol. 69. both sides as if they had sworn a Truce, etc.] This was the first great error in the Enterprise of the Isle of the: And the second was as bad as this, viz: their not taking in of the little Fort called La Pray: For, had the Duke marched directly on, he had in all probability taken both the Town and Citadel of St. Martin, the Fortifications being then unfinished, and the people in no small dismay for the rout of their Forces; whereas the loss of those three days gave time and leisure enough to Mounseiur de Toyrax Governor of the place to complete his Works in such a manner that they were thought impregnable by our ablest Soldiers. Or had he took the Fort of La Pray in his pissage by it, he had not only hindered the French from bringing new Forces by that Postern to the relief of the Town, but might have used the same to make good his Retreat, when the necessity of his affairs should compel him to it. Both which miscarriages I have heard a Person of great Honour well skilled in the Art M●…litary, and no professed friend unto the Duke, not to impute so much to the Duke himself, who was raw, ignorant, and unexperienced in the Wars; as to Sir William Courtn●…y, and Sir John Borrows, two great Soldiers, who had the Conduct of his Counsels, the one being no less famous for his service at Bergan ap Zone, than the other was for his courageous holding out in defence of Frankendale. And yet there was another thing no less contributing to the loss of the whole design than these two miscarriages, viz: the negligence or long stay of the Earl of Holland, who being sent out with a new Fleet for carrying Ammunition, Arms, and Victuals towards the continuance of the Siege, and guarding the passages into the Island, trifled out so much time at Court, and made so many Halts betwixt that and Plymouth, that he had not found his way out of that Haven when the Duke came back. It's true, the issue of this Action was not answerable to the Expectation, and yet I cannot be of our Authors mind, (who telleth us, Fol: 71.) That the Isle of the was so inconsiderable, as had we lost there neither blood nor honour, and gained it into the bargain, it would have ill rewarded our preparation and charge of the Expedition.] For, had the English gained the Island, they had not only preserved the Town of Rochel, but by the advantage of that Town, and the Isle together, might easily have taken in the Isle of Oleran, and made themselves Masters of the greatest part of the loss of Aquitaine, if the ambition of the King had carried Him unto F●…rraign Conquests. And a Commission granted by the King Fol. 71. to five Bishops, Bishop Laud being of the Quorum to execute Episcopal Jurisdiction within his Province. The cause impulsive to it was a supposed irregularity, etc.] In this and the rest which follows, and touching the sequestration of the Archbishop of Canterbury, our Author runs himself into many errors. For, first Bishop Laud was not of the Quorum, no more than any of the other, the Commission being granted to the Bishops of London, Durham, Rochester, Oxford, and bath and Wells, or to any four, three, or two of them, and no more than so. Secondly, the irregularity or supposed irregularity of the said Archbishop was not touched upon in this Commission, as the impulsive cause unto it, the Commission saying only in the General, That the said Archbishop could not at that present in his own person attend those services, which were otherwise proper for his Cognizance and Jurisdiction, and which as Archbishop of Canterbury he might and ought in his own person to have performed and executed, etc. Thirdly, this supposed irregularity was not incurred upon the casual kill of the Keeper of his (the Archbishops) game, as our Author telleth us, but for the casual kill of the Lord Zouches Keeper in Bramhill Park, where the Archbishop had no game, nor no Keeper neither. Fourthly, it was conceived by many pious and Learned men, that there was something more incurred by that misadventnre than a supposed irregularity only; insomuch that neither Dr. William's Elect Bishop of Lincoln, nor Dr. Carew Elect Bishop of Exeter, nor Dr. Laud Elect Bishop of St. David's, (besides some others) would receive Cons●…cration from him, though it be true that the Learned Bishop Andrews (as our Author tells us) did do the Archbishop very great service in this business, yet was it not so much for his own sake, or an opinion which he had, that no irregularity was incurred by that misadventure; but to prevent a greater mischief: For, well he saw that if the Archbishop at that time had been made Irregular, Dr. Williams then B●…shop of Lincoln, and Lord Keeper of the Great Seal (a man in great favour with King James, but in more with the Duke) would presently have stepped into that See; and he knew too much of the man to venture that great charge and trust of the Church of England to his car●… and government, the dangerous consequerces whereof he was able to foretell without the spirit of prophecy. The King of Denmark being reduced Fol. 73. almost to a despondence and quitting of his Kingdom.] Which as it was an occasion of great grief unto his Confederates, so ●…o the Emperor himself it grew no mat●…er of rejoicing. For, I have heard from ●… person of great Nobility, that when the ●…ewes came first unto him, he was so far from showing any signs of joy, that he rather seemed much troubled at it; of which being asked the reason by some of the principal men about him, He returned this Answer, As long (said he) as this Drowsy Dane was in the Head of the Protestants Army, we sh●…uld have wormed them out of their Estates one after another; but he being made unuseful to them, by this defeat, we shall have them bring the Swedes upon us; and there (said he) is a gallant young Fellow who will put us to the last card we have to play. And so it proved in the event, for th●… next year the King of Great Britain and his Brother of France negotiated with Gustavus Adolphus King of Sweden (then being in war against the Pole) to carry his Army into Germany, which was done accordingly: what his successes were our Author telleth us hereafter in the course of this story. They who lately were confined as Prisoners, Fol. 75. are now not only free, but petty Lords and Masters, yea and petty Kings.] I cannot choose but marvel what induced our Author unto this Expression of making the Gentlemen assembled in the House of Commons not only petty Lords, but even petty Kings. I have heard that K. James once said in a time of Parliament (but whether in the way of jeer, or otherwise, I am not able to say) That there were now five hundred Kings besides himself. And I know well what great advantage hath been made of those words of His; whereof to any man that rightly understands the Constitution of an English Parliament, the Commons are so far from being either Lords or Kings, that they are not so much as a part of the Supreme Council; it being easy to be evidenced out of the Writ which commands their attendance that they are called only to consent and submit to such resolutions and conclusions (ad faciendum & consentiendum his quae tum ibidem de communi Consilio dicti regni nostri (faciente Deo) contigerit ordinari, So the Writs instruct us) as should be then and there agreed on by the King's great Council, or the great Council of the Kingdom. Think you that men no otherwise empowered than so, could take upon them in themselves, or be reputed by our Author, as Lords and Kings? And yet it may be I may wrong them, for our Author telleth us that Their Estates modestly estimated were Ibid. able to buy the House of Peers (the King excepted) though an hundred and eighteen. thrice over.] In this there is one thing that I doubt, and two things which I shall take leave to consider of. The thing I doubt of is that the Estates of the Gentlemen assembled in the House of Commons howsoever estimated, should be able to buy the House of Peers, though it had contained thrice as many as it did, that is to say, three hundred fifty four of the Lay-Nobility. Assuredly the B●…ronage of England must needs be brought exceeding low, when the Gentlemen by chance assembled in the Lower House (and not called out of purpose for such an experiment) could buy the House of Peers thrice ov●…r; there being not above five hundred of the one, and thrice one hundred and eighteen, that is to say, above three hundred and fifty of the other rank: by which account every Gentleman must be able to buy his two Lords and a half one with another, the which I think no wise man can imagine. The first thing I consider of is, why our Author should leave out the Bishops for Spiritual Lords in this va. luation, as if they were no Members of the House of Peers: for that he doth not reckon them into the bargain is evident enough by the calculation, there being at that time an hundr●…d and eighteen Temporal Lords in the Upper House. Assuredly the B shops had sat there longer in their Predecessors than any of the Lay-Nobility in their noblest Ancestors; and had as good right of sitting and of voting there, as either the Prerogative Royal, o●… the Laws could give them. And it was ill done of our Author to exclude them now, and not well done (by him that should have kept them in) to exclude them afterwards. The Rights and Privileges of holy Church, confirmed in the first Article of the Magna Charta, and sworn to by all Kings succeeding, were never so infringed as by that exclusion. But the King soon found the sad effect; and consequents of those ●…vil Counsellors by which He was persuaded to it; the next thing which was done in Parliament being the taking away or abrogating of His own Negative Voice, and passing all subsequent Laws and Ordinances without His consent. And by this means, they brought to pass another point, which, as it seems, was aimed at from the beginning of that Parliament; it being told Sir Edward Dering (as he himself informs us in the Collection of his Speeches) That if they could bring the Lords to sit in the House of Commons, and the King to be but as one of the Lords, than their work was done. This brings me to the second thing which I am to consider of, and that is why our Author should make the King to be no other than a Member of the House of Peers; for when he tells us that the Gentlemen in the House of Commons were able to buy all the House of Peers, except the King, it must needs follow that the King must be accounted of as one of that House, the said exception notwithstanding. So that by turning the B shops out of the House, and bringing the King into their place, he hath quite altered the right constitution and form of Parliaments; which anciently consi●…ed of the Lords Spiritual, the Lords Temporal, and the Commons, as the three Estates, over all which the King presided as the Supreme Head. Its tru●… indeed that the King having passed away the B shops Votes did after by a strang●… improvidence in a Message or Declaration sent from York on the 17th of June, reckon Himself as one of the three Estates, which being once slipped from His pen, and taken up by some leading men in the Houses of Parliament, it never was let fall again in the whole agitation of those Controversies which were bandied up and down between them. Nor did many of the Kings own party see the danger of it, who taking it for granted that the King was only one of the three Estates (a Member of the House of Peers, as our Author makes Him) were forced to grant in pursuance of the said disputes, that the two Houses of Parliament were coordinate with the King, not subordinate to Him: and what could follow thereupon, but that they might proceed (as they did) without Him, that of co-ordinat a se invicem supplent, being a most undoubted Maxim in the Schools of Logic. The Attorney pleading eagerly though Fol. 78. impertinently for the King.] How eagerly the Attorney pleaded for the King, I am not able to say, but it appeareth even by our Author himself, that his Plea was pertinent enough, and drew so many of ●…he Lords into his opinion, that the Poular party, or Lower-House-Lords (as ●…ome call them) in the House of Peers ●…urst not adventure it to vote till the Lord Say (by drawing that House into a Committee) made this Proposition, That the Lords who were against the Liberties of the Subject should with subscription of their Names enter their Reasons to remain upon Record, that Posterity might not be to seek (for so it followeth in our Author) who they were who so ignobly betrayed the Freedom of their Nation: and that this done and not before they should go to voting. Upon which terrible Proposition the Lords shrunk aside, as afterwards they did in the late long Parliament, Anno 1641. (when frighted by the menaces of Dr. Burgesses Myrmydons) in the business of the Earl of Strafford; and in the year 1642. on the like threatening motion made by Mr. Hollis, for passing the great Bill of the Militia. Some say that when the multitude were Fol. 88 be labouring him with stones and cudgels, they said that were his Master the Duke there, they would give him as much.] And questionless they meant as much as they said, the Duke being made so odious by the continual prosecution of his Adversaries in both Houses of Parliament, and the Remonstrance made against him by the House of Commons at the end of the last Session; that it was thought by most men that the Duke's life and the Publiqne safety could not stand together. On which inducements that fatal blow was struck by Felton as it after followeth, fol. 90, & 94. But whereas our Author tells us, fol. 90. that he declared as much in certain papers which were sticked to the linings of his hat. I think he is something out in that, there being nothing found in his hat, or elsewhere about him, but a few loose papers, such as might well become those m●…n who make God the Author of their sins. His first ascribing of the fact to the late Remonstrance was made to one Dr. Hutchenson (Chaplain in Ordinary ●…o the King, and then in the course of his attendance) sent by the King of purpose assoon as the sad news was brought unto H●…m, to try if he could learn out of him upon what motives he committed that most horrible murder; and afterwards again and again, both at the time of his examination before the Lords of the Council, and finally at the very instant of h●…s execution. But to return again to the threatening words used by the people in the murder of Doctor Lamb, I well remember, that this bald Rhyme was spread about not long after in pursuance of them, viz: Let Charles and George do what they can▪ The Duke shall die like Doctor Lamb. And I remember also that about the same time there came out a Chronogram▪ in which the Numeral letters of Georgius Dux Buckinghamiaes. viz: M. D. C. X. V. V. V. I. I. I. made up the year 1628. to which thes●… Verses were subj●…yned, and being made by chance must needs be thought a strange Prognostication of that which followed, viz: Since with this year thy name doth so agree, Then shall this year to th●… most fatal be. And in the upshot were fined (as was reported) Fol. 89▪ six thousand pounds.] And this is all the City suffered for Lamb's death, not that they paid six thousand pounds, or ●…t any such Fine was imposed upon them, but that they were abused with this false Report. But to say truth (I hope my Masters of the City will excuse me for it) a fine of 60000 li. had been little enough to expiate such a dangerous Riot, and so vi●…e mu●…r, in which both Mayor and Magistrates had contracted a double guilt: Fi●…t, in not taking care to suppress the R●…ot, which in a discontented and u●…quiet City might have gathered strength, and put the whole Kingdom into blood before its time. And ●…econdly, in not taking order to prevent the murder, or bring the Malefactors to the B●…rre of Justice. The pun●…shment of the principal Actors in this barbarous Tragedy migh●… possibly have preserved the life of the Duke of Buckingham; and had the City smarted for not doing their duty, it might in probability have prevented the like Riot at Edinburgh, Non ibi consistunt exempla ubi coeperunt, saith the Court-Historian, Examples seldom ●…nd where they take beginning, but ei●…her first or last will find many followers. And though Lamb might deserve a far greater punishment, than the fury of an ungov●…rned Multitude could 〈◊〉 upon him; yet suffering without Form of Law, it may very well be said that he suffered unjuftly, and that it was no small piece of injustice that there was no more justice done in rev●…nge thereof. Connivance at great crimes adds authority to them, and makes a Prince lose more in strength than it gets in love. For howsoever ma●…ers of Grace and Favour may oblige some particular persons, yet it is justice (impartial and equal justice) that gives satisfaction unto all, and is the chief supporter of the Royal Throne. God hath not put the sword into the hands of the supreme powers that they should bear the same in vain, or use it only for a show or a sign of sover●…ignty; for then a scabbard with a pair of hilts would have served the turn. In his Will he bequeathed to his Duchess Fol. 91. the fourth part of his Lands for her Joynt●….] And that was no gr●…t Jointure for so great a Lady. I never heard that the whole estate in lands which the Duke died d●…d of (of his own purchasing or procuring under two great Princes) came to Four thousand pounds per annum, which is a very strong Argument that he was not covetous, or did abuse his Master's favours to his own enriching. And though he had Three hundred thousand pounds in Jewels (as our Author tells us) yet taking back the sixty thousand pounds which he owed at his death, two hundred forty thousand pounds is the whole remainder; a pretty Ald●…ans Estate, and but hardly that. Compare this poor pittance of the Dukes with the vast Estate of Cardinal Ric●… (the favourite and great Minister of the late French King) and it will seem no greater than the Widow's mit●… in respect of the large and cost y Offerings of the Scribes and Pha●…: The Cardinal's Estate being valued at the time of his death at sixty millions of Franks in rents and moneys, which amount unto six millions of pounds in our English estimate, whereas the Dukes amounted not to a full third part of one million only. Such was the end of this great Duke, not known to me either in his F●…owns or his Favours (nec beneficio nec injuria notus, in the words of Tacitus) and therefore whatsoever I have written in relation to him will be imputed (as I hope) to my love to truth, not my affections to his person. His body was from thence conveyed to Fol. 94. Portsmouth and there hung in chains, but by some stole and conveyed away Gibbet and all.] Our Author is deceived in this, for I both saw the whole Gibbet standing, and some part of the body hanging on it about three years after; the people being so well satisfied with the death of the Duke, that though they liked the murder, they had no such care of the Wretch that did it. That which might possibly 〈◊〉 him was, the l●…ke injury done by some Puritanical Zealots to the public Justice in taking down (by stealth) the body of Enoch ap Evans that furious Welshman who killed his Mother and his Brother for kneeling at the blessed Sacrament of the Lords Supper, and for those 〈◊〉 fact●… was hang●…d in chains not far from Shrewsbury. The Narrative whereof was published in print by one Mr. Studly, and to him I ref●… the Reader, if he desire any farther satisfaction in it. After this Mr. Montague ' s Book called Ibid. Appello Caesarem was called in by Proclamation.] This Proclamation beareth date the 17th day of January: In which it was to be observed that the Book is not charged with any false Doctrine, but for being the first cause of those disputes and differences which have since much troubled the quiet of the Church. His Majesty hoping that the occasion being taken away, m●… would no longer trouble themselves with such unnecessary disputations. Whether His Hi●… did well in doing no more, if the Book contained any false Doct●… in it; or in doing so much, if it were done only to please the Parliament (as our Author tel●… us) I take not upon me to determine. Bu●… certainly it never falleth out well with Christian Princes, when they make Religion bend to Policy, and so it happened to this King, the call in of Montague's Book, and the advancing of Dr. Barnaby Potter (a thoroughpaced Calvinian) unto the 〈◊〉 of Carl●…sle at the same time also, could not get him any love in the hearts of His people, who looked upon those Acts no otherwise than as tricks of King craft. So true is that of the wise Historian (whom I named last) inviso s●…mel Principe, 〈◊〉 bene facta▪ ceu male facta premunt, that is to say, when P●…inces once are in discredit with their Subjects, as well their good actions as their bad, are all counted grievances. For 〈◊〉 informations were Fol. 96. very pregnant, that notwithstanding the Resolution of the Archbishop of Canterbury, and other reverend Bishops and Divines assembled at 〈◊〉, Anno 1595. etc.] Our Author in this Folio gives me work enough by setting out the large spreading of Arminianism, and the great growth of Popery in the Church of England. First, for Arminianism, he telleth us that the proofs thereof were very pregnant. How so? Because the nine Articles made at Lambeth, had not of late been so much set by, as he and the Committee for Religion did desire they should. Why m●…n? The Articles of Lambeth were never looked on as the Doctrine of the Church of England, nor intended to be so looked on by the men that made them, though our Author please to tell us in following words, That they were made of purpose by the said Archbishop and Divines to deliver and declare their opinions concerning the sense of the nine and thirty Articles in those particulars. For though those Articles might and did deliver their opinions in the points disputed, yet were they but opinions still, and the opinions of private and particular men are no public Doctrines. Therefore to set this matter right, I will first lay down the true occasion of the making of these Articles. Secondly, of what authority they were when made and agreed upon. And thirdly, what might move King James to recommend them first to the Church of Ireland, and after to the Assembly at Dort, and not (as our Author tells us) by a strain Hysteron Proteron to the Assembly at Dort first, and to Ireland afterwards. And fi●…st for the occasion of these Articl●…s we may please to know, that the first Reformers of this Church look neither on the Lutheran or Calvinian Doctrines as their Rule and Guide, but held themselves unto the constant current of approved antiquity: To which the Melancthonian way b●…ing thought most consonant, was followed not only by Bishop Hooper in his Treatise on the Ten Commandments, and by Bishop Latimer in some pass ges of his Sermons; but also by the Compilers of the Book of Articles, and the Book of Homilies, the public Monuments of this Church in points of Doctrine. But the Calvinian way having found some entrance, there arose a difference in the judgements of particular men touching these Debates; the matter being controverted pro and con by some of the Confessors in prison in Qu. mary's days. After whose death many of our exiled Divines returning from Geneva, Basil, and such other places where calvin's Dictates were received as Celestial Oracles, brought with him his Opinions in the points of Predestination, Grace and Per●…everance; which they dispersed and scattered over all the Church; by whose authority, and the diligence of the Presbyterian party, (than busy in advancing their holy Discipline) it came to be universally received for the only true and Orthodox Doctrine, and was so publicly maintained in the Schools of Cambridge. Insomuch that when Peter Baro a Frenchman, Professor for the Lady Magaret in that University, revived the Melancthonian way in his public Lectures, and by his Arguments and great Learning had drawn many others to the same persuasions; complaint was made thereof by Dr. Whitakers, Dr. Willet, Mr. Chatterton. Mr. Perkins, and certain others to the Ld. Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr. Whitgift) desiring his assistance to suppress that F●…ction, which was like to grow by this means in that University. On which complaint the said Archbishop calling to him to Lambeth Doctor Richard Fletcher then Bishop of London and Doctor Richard Vaughan then Elect of Bangor, did then and there with the advice o●…▪ Dr. Whitakers, Dr. tindal, and some other Divines (most of them Parties to the suit) agree on these nine Articles (which our Author peaks of) to be sent to Cambridge for the ●…termining and comp●…g of the present Controversies. And this was done ●…pon the 26th of November, Anno 1595. and being so done and sent accordingly to Cambridge, Dr. Baro found himself so discouraged and discountenanced, that at the end of his first three years he relinquished his Professourship, and retired not long after into France; leaving the University in no small disorder for want of such an able Instructor to resort unto. We are to know also, that amongst others of Baro his followers, there was one Mr. star Barret, who in a Sermon preached in St. mary's Church, not only defended Baro his Doctrine, but used some offensive words against Calvin, Beza, and some others of the Reformators, for which he was convented before the Heads of the University (amongst which Doctor James Montague then Master of Sidney Coll. and a great stickler in this quarrel, was of great authority) and by them May the 5th next following, was enjoined to recant, and a set form of Recantation was prescribed unto him: which though he read publicly in the Church, yet the contentions and disputes grew greater and greater till the coming down of the nine Articles from Lambeth, hastened with greater earnestness upon this occasion. Secondly, these Articles being thus made and agreed upon, we are next to see of what authority they were in the Church of England, and how long they continued in authority in the Schools of Cambridge: concerning which we are to know, that the making of these Articles being made known to Queen ELIZABETH by William Lord Burly Lord Treasurer of England, and Chancellor of that University (who neither liked the Tenets, nor the manner of proceeding in them) she was most passionately offended that any such innovation should be made in the public Doctrine of this Church; and once resolved to have them all a●…ted of a Praemunire. But afterwards upon the interposition of some friends, & the reverend esteem She had of that excellent Prelate, the Lord Archbishop, (whom She used to call Her black Husband) She let fall Her anger; and having favourably admitted his excuse therein, She commanded him speedily to recall and suppress those Articles: which was done with so much care and diligence, that for a while, a Copy of them was not to be found in all that University, though afterwards by little and little they peeped forth again. And having crept forth once again, it was moved by Dr. Reynolds in the Conference at Hampton Court, A●…. 1603. That the nine Assortions Orthodoxal, as he termed them, conclu●…ed upon at Lambeth, might be inserted into the Book of Articl●…s (that is to say, of the Church of England.) The King was told (who never had heard before of those nine Assertions) that by reason of some Controversies, arising in Cambridge about certain points of Divinity, My Lords Grace assembl●…d some Di●…ines of especial note to set down their opinions, which they drew into nine assertions and so sent them to the University for the appeasing of those quarrels: Which being told His Majesty, answered, That when such Questions arise among Scholars, the quietest proceeding were to determine them in the University, and not to stuff the Book with all conclusions Theological, Conf. p 24. 40. 41. So that these nine Assertions being first pressed at Cambridge by the command of Qu. Elizabeth, and afterwards esteemed unfitting to be inserted into the Book of Articles by the final judgement of King James; there is no reason in the world, why any man should be traduced of Arminianism, or looked on as an enemy of the true Religion here by Law established, for not conforming his opinions to their no-authority. It is not the meeting of a few B●…shops and Divines in the Hall at Lambeth, but the body of the whole Clergy lawfully assembled in Convocation, wh●…ch hath authority in determining Controversies in Faith, and to require conformity to such determinations and conc●…usions as are there agreed on: When the nine Articles of Lambeth shall be so confirmed, our Author may declare them for the Doctrine of the Church of England, and traduce all men for Arminians which subscribe not to them. Thirdly, in the last place we are to see what moved King James to recommend these Articles to the Church of Ireland, and afterwards to the Assembly at Dort. And herein we must understand that Dr. James Montague, at that King's first entrance on this Crown, was made Dean of the Chapel, (which place he held not only when he was Bishop of Wells, but of Winchester also) who being a great stickler in the quarrels at Cambridge, and a great master in the art of Insinuation, had cunningly fashioned King James unto these opinions, to which the King's education in the Kirk of Scotland had before inclined him. So that it was no very hard matter for him (having an Archbishop also of his own persuasions) to make use of the King's authority, for recommending those nine Articles to the Church of Ireland, which he found would not be admitted in the Church of England. Besides, the Irish Nation at that time were most ten●…ciously addicted to the E●…rours and cor●…uptions of the Church of Rome, and therefore must be bended to the other extreme, before they could be straight and Ortho●…ox in these points of Doctrine, which reason might work much upon the spirit of that King, who used in all his Government (as a piece of King-craf●…) to balance one extreme by the other, countenancing the Papist against the Puritan●…, and the Puritan sometimes against the Papist, that betwixt both the true Religion and the Professors of it might be k●…pt in sa●…ety. On what account these nine Articles were commended to the Assembly at Dort we have showed before, and upon what account they were abolished in the Church of Ireland, we shal●… see hereafter. In the mean time our Author telleth us that By the prevalency of the Bishops of London Ibid. and Westminster the Orthodox party were depressed, & the truth they served was scarce able to protect them to impunity.] A man would think our Author were Chairman at the least in a Committee for Religion; for he not only takes upon him to declare who are Orthodox in point of Faith, and what is truth and not truth in matter of controversy, but censureth two great Bishops (both of them Counsellors of State) for depressing both. This savoureth more of the party than of the Historian, whom it might better have become to have told us only that a Controversy being raised in matters of a Scholastical nature, those Bishops favoured the one party more than they did the other, and not have laid it down so majesterially that they disfavoured the Orthodox party and depressed the truth, or that the truth they served was scarce able to protect them to impunity.] A very heavy Charge which hath no truth in it. For I am very confident that neither of these Bishops did ever draw any man within the danger of punishment, in relation only to their Tenets in the present Controversies, if they managed them with that prudence and moderation which became men studiously affected to the Gospel of Peace; or were not otherwise guilty of creating disturbances in the Church, or ruptures in the body of the Commonwealth. On which occasions if they came within the danger of 〈◊〉 censures, or fell into the power of the High Commission; it was no reason that their Tenets in the other points (were they as true as truth itself) should give them any impunity, or free them from the punishment which they had deserved. But it hath been the constant artifice of the Church's Enemies, not to ascrib●… the punishment of Factions and schismatical persons to the proper cause, but to their orthodoxy in Religion, and zeal against Popish superstitions, that so they might increase the number of Saints and Confessors against the next coming out of the Book of Martyrs. But Arminianism being as some say, but a bridge to Popery, we will p●…sse with our Author over that Bridge to the hazard which was feared from Rome; and that he telleth us came two ways: First, By the uncontrolled preaching of several Ibid. points tending and warping that way by Montague, Goodman, Cousins, and others.] And here again I think out Author is mistaken: For neither Montague nor Cousins were questioned for preaching any thing which warped toward Popery, but the one of them for writing the Book called Appello Caesarem, the other for publishing a Body of Devotions according to the Hours of Prayer: in neither of which an equal and judicious Reader will find any Popery, unless it be such part-boyled Popery as our Author speaks of, whereof more anon: And as for Goodman (our Author might have called him Bishop Goodman, though now he be but Goodman Bishop, as he calls himself) though he preached something once which might warp toward Popery, yet he did not preach it uncontrolled, being not only questioned for it, but sentenced to a Recantation before the King. He telleth us of some others, but he names them not, and till he names them he says nothing which requires an Answer. So that the first fear which flowed from Rome, being ebbed again, we next proceed unto the second; which came, saith he, from The audacious obtruding of divers superstitious Ibid. ceremonies by the Prelates, as erecting of fixed Altars, the dapping and cringing towards them, and the standing up at Gloria Patri.] Our Author is more out in this than in that before, for I am confident that no Bishop in the times he speaks of, did either command the erecting of fixed Altars, or the bowing or cringing towards them; nor have I heard by any credible report, that any such fixed Altars were erected, as he chargeth on them. So that I might here end this observation without farther trouble. But because the placing of the Communion Table Altarwise did carry some resemblance to the Altars used in the Church of Rome, and that some such thing was done in some Churches much about this time; I shall here show upon what reasons it was done, and how far they that did it might be justified in it. The Reader therefore is to know that by the late neglect of decency and good order in most Parish Churches of this Land, the Communion Table had been very much profaned by sitting on it, scribbling and casting hats upon it in Sermon-time; at other times by passing the Parish accounts, and disputing businesses of like nature, to the great scandal and dishonour of our Religion. For remedy and redress whereof, it seemed good unto some Bishops and other Ordinaries, out of a pious zeal to the Church's honour, and for the more reverend administration of the holy Sacrament, to g●…ve way that the Commun on Table might be removed from the body of the Chancel where of late it stood, and placed at the East end thereof all along the wall, in the same place and posture as the Altars had been situated in the former times: For which permission I doubt not but the Bishops and other Ordinaries had sufficient ground both from law and practice. And first for Law, there passed an Act (and it was the first Act of Queen Elizabeth's Reig●…) for restoring to the Crown the ancient jurisdiction and rights thereof: by virtue of which Act, and the Authority which natu●…ally was inherent in Her Royal person, she pub●…ished certain Injunctions, Anno 1559. in one of wh●…ch it was thus ordered and enjoined, that is to say, That the holy Table in every Church be decently made and set in the place where the Altar stood, and there commonly covered as thereto belongeth, and as shall be appointed by our Visitors. In the same Parliament there passed also another Statute for confirmation of the Book of Common Prayer, wherein it was enacted, That if it shall happen that any contempt or irreverence be used in the Ceremonies or rites of the Church by the misusing of the Orders appointed in this Book, the Queen's Majesty may by the like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitan, or deign and publish such further Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for the advancement of God's glory, the edifying of his Church, and the due 〈◊〉 of Christ's mysteries and Sacraments. And in pursuance of this Act there came out first a Book of Orders, Anno 1561. and afterwards a Book of Advertisments, Anno 1565. so made and authorized as the Law required. In the first of which it was appointed, That in such Churches where the steps were not taken down the Communion Table should be placed on the steps where the Altar stood, and that there be fixed on the wall over the Communion board the Tables of God's precepts, imprinted ●…or the said purpose. And in the second it was ordered, That the Parish should provide a decent Table, standing on a frame for the Communion Table, which they shall decently cover, etc. and shall set the ten Commandments upon the East wall over the said Table. Lay these together, and the Product will be briefly this, that the Communion Table was to stand where the Altar stood, above the steps, and under the Commandments, and therefore to be placed Altarwise all along the wall. And that this was the meaning of them appeareth by the constant practice of the Royal Chapels, many Cathedrals of this Land, the Chapels of great men, and some Parochial Churches also, in which the Communion Table never stood otherwise than in the posture of an Altar since the Reformation, without the least suspicion of Popery, or any inclinations to it: But of this more hereafter in another place. Secondly, the next thing here objected is bowing or cr●…ging (as my Author calls it) toward the said Table so transposed and placed Altarwise, which many of the Bishops used, but none of them ever did obtrude upon any other, who in this point were left unto the liberty of their own discretion. That adoration towards the Altar, or Eastern part of the Church (be it which it will) was generally used by the best and most religious Christians in the Primitive times, our Author (if he be the man he is said to be) being well versed in the Monuments and Writings of most pure Antiquity, cannot choose but know; and therefore must needs grant also that it is not Popery, or any way inclining to it: or if it be, we shall entitle Popery unto such Antiquity, as no learned Protestant can grant it. 'tis true indeed, that this bowing toward the East, or Altar, had been long discontinued in the Church of England. And I have been informed by persons of great worth and honour, that it was first revived again by Bishop Andrews; of whom our Author telleth us, Fol. 64 that he was studiously devoted to the Doctrine of the Ancient Fathers, and Primitive, not only in his aspect and gesture, but in all his actions. This in a man so Primitive in all respects, so studious of Antiquity, as our Author mak●…s him; so great an enemy to the Errors and Corruptions of Rome as his Apology against Cardinal Bellarmine, his Answer to Cardinal Peron, and his Tortura Torti, have declared him to be, would blast his Fame by the reviving of a Popish ceremony: and if it were no reproach nor dishonour to him to be the first that did revive it, I see no reason why it should be counted an audaciousness in the rest of the Prelates to follow the Primitive and uncorrupt usage of the Church, countenanced by the Example of so rare a man: though I confess audaciousness had been a term too modest, had they obtruded it on the Clergy by their sole authority, as is charged upon them in this place. Thirdly, the next audaciousness here spoke of, is the obtruding of another Ceremony on the Church of England, that is to say, the standing up at Gloria Patri. Never obtruded I am sure, nor scarce so much as recommended, there was no cause for it; the people in so many pl●…ces of this Realm being accustomed thereunto as well as unto standing up at the Creed and Gospels, without any interruption or discontinuance▪ I grant ●…deed that the Rub●…cke of the common-prayer-book neither requireth standing at the Gospels, or the Gloria Patri, and yet was standing at the Gospels of such General usage in all the parts of this Land, that he that should have used any other gesture, would have been made a laughingstock, a contempt, and scorn to all the residue of the Parish. B●…sides the Rubric of the Church requiring us to stand up at the Creed, obligeth us by the same reason to stand up at the Gospels and the Gloria Patri; the Gospel's being the foundation of the Creed, as the Gloria Patri is the abstract and Epitome of it, or were it otherwise, and that the Rubric which requireth us to stand at the Creed gave no authority to the like posture of the body in the Gloria Patri, yet many things may be retained in a Reformed Church without special Rubrics to direct them, ex vi Catholicae consu●…tudinis, by virtue of the general and constant usage of the Church of Christ, especially where there is no Law unto the contrary, nor any offence committed against Faith and Piety. If it be asked why standing at the Gloria Patri should be discontinued in some places when standing at the Gospels was retained in all, there being no more authority for the one than the other; I will give the Reader one Answer, and my Author shall help him to another. The answer which I shall give is this, that though the Rubrics did require, that the Gloria Patri should be said at the end of every Psalm, throughout the year, and at the end of Benedictus, the Magnificat, and the Nunc dimittis, yet was this order so neglected in most parts of the Realm, as Puritanism and Innovation did gain ground upon it that it was very seldom used. And when the Form itself of giving glory to God was once laid aside, no marvel if the gesture which attended it was at last forgotten. If this suffice not, I sh●…ll borrow our Authors help for a further answer, who telleth us of Archbishop Abbot, fol. 127. That his extraordinary remissness in not exacting strict Conformity to the prescribed Orders of the Church in the point of Coremony, seemed to resolve those legal determinations to their first Principle of Indifferency, and led in such an habit of Inconformity, as the future reduction of those tender-conscienced men to long discontinued obedience was interpreted an Innovation: than which nothing in the world could be said more truly. I have said nothing of the Ancient and General usage of those several Ceremonies, because the Question is not now of the Ancient usage, but whether and how far they were to be used, or not used in the Church of England according to such Rubrics, Laws, and Ganons which remain in force. Nor shall I add more at the present, than that I think our Author hath not rightly timed the businesses in dispute between us, the placing of the Communion Table A●…tarwise, bowing or cringing toward it; and standing at the Gloria Patri, not being so generally in use at the time of this Parliament as to give any scruple or offence to the greatest Zealots: or if they were, they could not honestly be fathered on Archbishop Laud, as countenanced or brought in by him in the time of his government, of which more hereafter: our Author now draws toward an end, and telleth u●… finally, But th●…se were but part-boyled Popery, Ibid. or Popery obliqu●….] So then the Ceremonies abovementioned how Primitive soever they were must be damned for Popery, though it be only part boiled and oblique Popery, as our Author calls it; and with that brand, or by the name of English Popish Ceremonies (as the Scotish Presbyterians term them) the rest as well as these may be also blemished: but let them call them what they will, we see now by a most woeful and lamentable experience that the taking away of these part boiled Poperies, these English Popish Ceremonies, or whatsoever e●…se the malignity of any men shall please to call them, the substance of Religion hath been much impaired; and by this breaking down of the Pale of the Vineyard, not only the little Foxes have torn off her elusters, but the wild Boars have struck at her very root. I have no more to add●… now, but a witty and smart Epigram made on this, or the like occasion, and is this that followeth. A learned P●…late of this Land Thinking to make Religion stand, With equal poise on either side, A mixture of them thus he tried: An Ounce of Protestant he singleth, And then a Dram of Papist mingleth, With a Scruple of the Puritan, And boiled them all in his brainpan; But when he thought it would digest The scruple troubled all the rest. The greatest danger was from Popery direct. Ibid. And from this the danger appeared very great, etc.] And here I thought I should have heard, that some points of direct and down right Popery had been obtruded by the B●…shop, and Prelatical Clergy; but on the contrary, I find all silent in that case, and good reason for it. Whence then appeared so great a danger? not from the introducing of Popish Doctrin●…s, but increase of Papists, and that not only in some Counties of England, but in the Kingdoms of Scotland and Ireland also: with those of Scotland and Ireland I forbear to meddle, though the Committee for Religion having an Apostolical care of all the Churches, did take them also into their consideration; marvailing only by the way, how our Brethren of the Kirke, (who stood so high upon the terms of their Independency) could brook, that their affairs should be so much looked into by an English Parliament. But where our Author telleth us, that in some Counties of England, the Papists were multiplied to some thousands of Families, more than there were in Queen Elizabeth's time, there may be very good reason given for that: for since the death of Qu●…en Elizabeth, the Holidays had been made days of common labour, and yet all sports prohibited on the Sunday also: the Common-prayer-Book either quite neglected, or so slubbered over, that there was no face of Regular Devotion to be found amongst us; the Churches in most places kept so slovenly, and the behaviour of the people so irreverent in them, that it is no marvel that men desirous to worship God in the beauty of holiness, should be induced to joyn●… themselves to such societies of men, as seemed to have more in them of a Christian Church. The King having thus dissolved the Parliament, Fol. 101. etc.] That is to say, after so many indignities, and provocations, as were given unto him by the disorder & tumultuous carriage of some of the Members, which our Author very handsomely and ingenuously hath described at large; it was the opinion of most men, as our Author telleth us, Fol. 132. that the dissolution of this Par●…lament was the end of all: And certainly there was very good reason why it might be thought so, the King never having good success in any of his Parliaments, since his first coming to the Crown; and withal, having an exampl●… before his eyes, of the like discontinuance of assembling the three Estates in the Realm of France, by the King then Reigning, and that upon far less provocations than were given King Charles. For whereas in an Assembly of three Estates, Anno 1614 the third Estate, which represents our House of Commons, entrenched too busily upon the liberties of the Clergy, and some preeminencies and exemptions which the Nobility enjoyed by the favour of some former Kings; it gave the King so great offence, that he resolved first to dissolve them, and never after to be troubled with the like Impertinencies. Nor was there since that time, any such Assembly, nor like to be hereafter, in the times ensuing, those Kings growing weary of that yoke, which that great Representation did endeavour to impose upon them. But because he would not cut off all communication betwixr himself and his people, he ordained another kind of meeting in the place thereof, which he called La Assembli des natables, that is to say, the Assembly of some principal persons; composed of some selected persons out of every Order or Estate (of his own nomination) whereunto should be added some Counsellor out of every Court of Parliament (of which there are eight in all in France) throughout that Kingdom; which being fewer in number, would not breed such a confusion, as the general Assembly of the States had done before, and be withal more pliant and conformable to the King's desires; and yet their Acts to be no less obliging to all sorts of people, than the others were. Such an Assembly as this, (but that the Clergy had no vote in it) was that which was called here by my Lord Protector, immediately after the dissolving of the late long Parliament, who possibly had his hint from this Institution. And this may teach all Parliaments in the times succeeding, to be more careful in their Councils, and use more moderation in pursuance of them, especially when they meet with an armed power, for fear they should not only interrupt, but cut off that spring, from whence the Blessings both of Peace and Happiness, have formerly been der●…ved on this Church and State. No man can love his F●…tters though they be of Gold. If therefore Parliaments should find no way to preserve the Liberty of the peopl●…, but to put fetters on the Prince or Power that calls them, if from being Counsellors, at the best they shall prove Controulers, they must blame no body but themselves. In the mean time that saying of Paterculus may be worth their noting, Non turpe est ab eo vinci quem vincere esset nefas; it i●… no shame (saith he) to submit to those, whom it were sin to overcome. To which he answered, that he ever was, Fol. 102. and wo●…ld be ready to give an account of his sayings, and doings in that place, whensoever he should be called unto it by that House, where (as he taketh it) he was only to be questioned.] This is the first seed of that Doct●…ine, which after took such deep root in the Houses of Parliament, viz. that no member ought to be questioned for any thing said or done in Pa●…liament, but by the order of the House, of which he was a Member. And to this resolution the Judges of this time seemed to give some countenance, who having before declared, in favour of the House of Commons, that by the Arresting of Digges and Eliot, the whole House was under an Arrest, did now declare that the Star. Chamber (in which Court the King intended to proceed against them) had no Jurisdiction over offences done in Parliament. But this was only in an extrajudicial way, being interrogative to that purpose by the King at Greenwich, as our Author ●…elleth us, Fol. 106. For the same Judges sitting on the seat of Judicature, where ●…hey were to act upon their Oaths, could find both Law and Reason too, to bring their crimes within the cognisance of the Courts of Justice. And several Fines accordingly were imposed upon them, most of which were paid, and the Gentlemen afterwards released from their Imprisonments. If any of them did refuse to pay such Fines as were set upon them, they were men either of decayed, or of small estates, and so not able to make payment of the Fines imposed. Surpassing exultation there was thereat, & Fol. 108. all the Court kept Jubilee, etc.] And there was very good reason for it, not only that the Court should keep a Jubilee at the birth of the Prince, but that surpassing exultation should be thereat in all honest hearts. But I can tell you it was otherwise with too many of the Puritan party, who had laid their line another way, and desired not that the King should have any Children; insomuch that at a great Feast in Friday street, when some of the company showed great joy at the news of the Queen's fi●…st being with Child, a leading man of that Faction (whom I could name were it worth the while) did not stick to say. That he could see no such cause of joy for the Queens being with Child; but God had already better provided for us than we had deserved, in giving such a hopeful Progeny by the Queen of Bohemia, brought up in the Reformed Religion; whereas it was uncertain what Religion the King's Children would follow, being brought up under a Mother so devoted to the Church of Rome. And I remember very well that being at a Town one day's jurney from London, when the news came of the Prince's birth, there was great joy showed by all the rest of the Parish, in causing Bonfires to be made, and the Bells to be rung, and sending Victuals unto those of the younger sort, who were most busily employed in that public joy; But so that from the rest of the houses being of the Presbyterian or Puritan party, there came neither man nor child, nor wood nor victuals, their doors being shut close all that Evening, as in a time of general mourning and disconsolation. Where was an old skulking Statute long Fol. 110. since out of use though not out of force, etc.] The Statute which our Author means was made in the first year of Edward the second, and made more for the benefit and ease of the subject, than for the advantage of the King; This Statute requiring non●… to take the Order of Knighthood, but such as had Twenty pounds per annum of clear yearly rent, whereas before that time all men of Fifteen pound rend per annum were required to take it. This proves it to be very old, but why my Author should call it a skulking Statute, I can see no reason, considering that it lay not hidden under the rubb●…sh of Antiquity, but was an open printed Statute, not only to be seen in the Collection of the Statutes and the Books at large, but in the Abridgements of the same: and being a Statute still in force (as our Author ●…elleth us) might lawfully be put in practice whensoever the necessities of the King should invite him to it. But whereas our Author telleth us, that the persons mentioned in that Statute were not required to be made Knights as was vulgarly supposed, but only ad arma gerenda, to bear Arms, and thereupon telleth us a story of a Sword and a Surcoat to be given unto them, I rather shall believe the plain words of the Statute, than his interpre●…ation of it. The Title of it is in Latin Statutum de Militibus, or a Statute for Knights as the English hath it; the words as followeth, viz. Our Sovereign Lord the King hath granted that all such as ought to be Knights, and be not, and have been distrained to take upon them the Order of Knighthood before the Feast of the Nativity of our Lord, shall have respect to take upon them the foresaid Arms of Knighthood until the Utas of S. Hilary, etc. where certainly to be made Knights, to take upon them the Order of Knighthood, and the Arms of Knighthood, are somewhat more than only and simply to bear Arms, as he fain would have it: were it no otherwise than so, there were some hundred thousands of none or very little estate as fit or fitter to bear Arms than men of Twenty pound rend per annum, which was a plentiful revenue as the times than were; and fitter it had been to have called such men unto a general Muster in their several Counties than to command them to attend at a Coronation. Nor had the Sages of the Law been capable of excuse for their false translations, if they should render ad arma militiae gerenda (for so I think the Latin hath it, though the most significant word thereof be left out by our Author) by taking on them the Arms of Knighthood, if there were nothing more intended than the bearing of Arms; by means whereof the subject of the following Ages might be very much burdened, and the Noble Order of Knighthood no less dishonoured without any remedy. And besides this, in case the letter of the Statute in French or Latin had been only to bear Arms, not to take the order of Knighthood; the late long Parliament would rather have questioned the King's Ministers for their acting by it, then troubled themselves with Repealing it, as they after did. For such was the misery of this King, that all the advantages he had to help himself, must be condemned, as done against the old Laws of the Land, or else some new Law shall be made to deprive him of them, that wanting all other means to support himself, he might be forced to live on the Alms of his Parliament. This Winter the marquis of Hamilton Fol. 112. was very active in mustering up his forces for the King of sweden assistance, etc.] That so it was in the King's intention, I shall easily grant, but that the marquis had no other end in it than the King of sweden assistance, hath been very much doubted, the rather in regard that he raised all or the greatest part of his Forces out of Scotland, where he was grown very popular and of high esteem: For, being gotten into the head of an Army of his own Nation, he had so courted the common Soldiers, and obliged most of the Commanders, that a health was openly began by DavidRamsey (a boisterous Ruffian of the Court) to King James the seventh, and so much of the design discovered by him unto Donald Mackay Baron of Re●… then being in the Marquis' Camp, that the Loyal Gentleman thought himself bound in duty to make it known unto the King. Ramsey denying the whole matter, and the Lord having no proof thereof (as in such secret practices it could hardly be) more than a confident asseveration, and the engagement of his honour; the King thought good to refer the Controversy to the Earl of Lindsey, whom he made Lord high Constable to that end and purpose: many days were spent accordingly in pursuance of it. But when most men expected that the matter would be tried by battle, as had been accustomed in such cases, the business was hushed up at Court, the Lord Ree dismissed to his employments in the wars; and to the minds of all good men the marquis did not only continue in the King's great favour, but Ramsey was permitted to hold the place of a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, which had been formerly procured for him. As for the Army of Scots which the marquis had carried into Germany, they mouldered away by little and little, without doing any thing, which put the Marquis on new Councils of getting that by practise when it was less thought of, which he could not get by force of Arms as the case then stood. Tilly conducted a numerous Army for the Ibid. relief of Rostock, then besieged by the King of Sweden; the King alarmed at his coming, drew out of his Trenches, etc.] In this relation of the great ●…out which the King of Sweden gave to Tilly, there are many mistakes. For neither was that great Battle sought near Rostock a Hanse town in the Dukedom of Mecklenbourg, but near Lipsian a chief Town in the Province of Misnia, some hundreds of miles higher into the Country; nor did the King of Sweden after this great Victory return back with his Army towards Rostock, but in pursuance of his blow marched forward, and made himself master of all those parts of the Country into which he came; nor was this Battle fought in the year 1630, where our Author placeth it, (so much doth he mistake himself both in place and time) but in the year next following. For many had no fancy to the work, merely Fol. 124. because he was the promoter of it.] Our Author speaks here of the repairing of Saint Paul's, and telleth us that it suffered great diminution for the Bishop of London's sake, who was the chief promoter of it, in which he is very much mistaken. The work had been twice or thrice before attempted without any effect, but by his diligence and power w●…s brought in shore time to so great forwardness, that had not his impeachment by the House of Commons, in the late long Parliament, put a period unto his endeavours, it had been within a very few years, the most goodly pile of building in the Christian world. And whereas our Author tells us, that many had no fancy to the work, because he promoted it, it was plainly contrary, his care in the promoting it, being one great reason why so many had a fancy to it, most of the Clergy contributing very largely unto it, partly in reference to the merit of the work itself, and partly in regard of those preferments, which they either had received, or expected from him. The like did most of the Nobility and Gentry in most p●…rts of the Land, knowing the great power and favour which he had wi●…h the King, and the many good offices he might do them, as occasion served. If any had no fancy to it, as indeed some had not, it was rather in reference to the work it s●…lfe, then in relation to the man; it being more in their desires that all the Cathedrals should be ruined, then that any one should be repaired witness that base and irr●…rent expression of that known Schismatic, Doctor Bastwick, in the second part of his Litany, where grudging at the great summ●…s of money, which had been gathered for the repairing of this Church, al'●…ding to the name of Cathedral, he concludes ●…t last (pardon me Reader for defi●…g my pen, with such immodesties) that all the mighty mass of money, must be spent in making a seat for a Priest's arse to sit in. And doubt we not, but many more of that Faction were of his opinion, though they had not so much violence, and so little wit, as to make Declaration of i●…. But should he long defer that duty, they Fol. 125. ●…ight perhaps be inclined to make choice of another King.] I do not think that any of the Scots ever told him so, whatsoever they though●…; or if they did, the King might very well have seen▪ that there was more truth in the Lord of Roes information, than he was willing to believe, and might accordingly have taken course to prevent the practice. But who can save him, who neglects the means of his preservation? So true is that of the Historian, Profecto in eluctabilis fatorum vis cujus fortunam mentare constituit, ejus corrumpit consilia; Assuredly (●…th he) when the unresistable powers of F●…te determine on a man's destruction, they either overthrow or corrupt those Counsels, by which he might otherwise avoid it. A max●…me verified in the whole course and carriage of this King's affairs, neglecting wilfully (to keep up the credit of an old principle which he had embraced) all such advertisements as tended to his preservation. It was a saying of King James, that suspicion was the sickness and disease of a Tyrant, which laid him open to all the subtle practices of malicious cunning; and it was a maxim of King Charles, that it was better to be deceived, then to distrust, which proved a plain and 〈◊〉 way unto those calamities, which afterwards were brought upon him, as may be plainly seen by the course of this History. But the entertainment most of all august Fol. 126. and Royal was that of the Earl of Newcastle, at Welb●…ck, which was estimated to stand the Earl in at least six thousand pounds.] I have showed our Author some mistakes already in his Temporalities (as he calls them) and now I shall show him one or two, besides his misplacing of the battle of Tisfique spoken of before▪ in his Localities also (to give him a fine word of his own complexion.) That the Earl of Newcastle entertained the King at Welb●…k in his passage towards Scotland, is a truth unquestioned. But the magnificent entertainment so much talked of, which cost the Earl the sum of six thousand pounds, as our Author telleth us, was neither made in the time or place which are herein mentioned; that in the time of the Kings going toward Scotland, or returning thence, Anno 1633, but on the last of July, in the year next following; nor was it made at Welbeck, but at Boalsover Castle in Derby shire, about five miles thence; nor for the entertainment of the King only, but of the King and Queen, and their several Courts. The like mistake in matter of Locality (that I may not trouble myself with it at another time) occurreth, Fol. 129. where he telleth us, th●… both their Majesties, with their train of Court Gran●…s, and Gentlemen Revelers, were solemnly invited to a most sumptuous banquet at Guildhall, where that ●…lendent show was iterated and re-exhibited; whereas indeed the entertainment which the City gave (at that time) to the King, was at the house of Alderman Freeman, than Lord Major, scitu●…e in Cornhill n●… the Royal Exchange, and the entertainment which the King gave unto the City, by showing them that glorious Mask, was at the Merchant Tailor's Hall in Thredneedle-street, on the backside of the Lord Major's House, an open passage being made from the one to the other, which, as it was the first Act of Popularity, which the King did in all his R●…ign, so it beg●… a high degree of affection towards him, in the hearts of the Citizens, though it proved only like a Widow's joy, (as the saying is) as soon lost as foun●…. Soon after the Coronation followed an Fol. 126▪ Assembly of Parliament, etc.] In this Parlmany Acts were passed, one for s●…ling a c●…rtain maintenance on the Scotish Clergy, who being robbed of their Tithes by the Lords and Gentry in the beginning of the Reformation, were kept to arbitrary Stipends, which rendered them obnoxious to the power of the great ones, on whose bounty they depended; to remedy this, K. James endeavoured a se●…led maint●…nance on them, after He came to the English Crown, but eff●…cted by the great care and industry of K. Charles, and confirmed this Parliament. How these ungrateful men did requite Him afterwards, our Author will inform us in the course of his History. This done, he hastened home, that is, unto Fol. 127. the Embraces of his dear consort, where he ended his progress July the 20.] The Queen was then at Greenwich, when the King came to her, and to which place he came both suddenly and privately by Post-horses, crossing the water at Black Wall, without making his entrance into London, or his passage by it. Whereas Queen Elizabeth did very seldom end any of her Summer progresses, but she would wheel about to some end of London, and make her passage to White-Hall, through some part of the City; not only requiring the Lord Major and Aldermen in their Scarlet robes, and Chains of Gold, to come forth to meet her, but the several Companies of the City to attend sole●…nly in ●…hcir Formalities as she passed along. By ●…anes whereof, she did not only pre●…erve the Majesty which did of right be●…ong to a Queen of England, but kept the Citizens (and consequently all the Subjects) in a reverend estimation and opinion of her. She used the like Arts also in keeping up the Majesty of the Crown, and service of the City, in the reception and bringing in of Foreign Ambassadors: who if they came to London by Water, were met at Gravesend by the Lord Major, the Aldermen, and Companies in their several Barges, and in that solemn sort conducted unto White Hall stairs, but if they were to ●…ome by Land, they were met in the like sort at Shooter's Hill, by th●… Major & Aldermen, and thence conducted to their lodgings, the Companies waiting in the streets in their several habits. The like she used also in celebrating the Obsequies of all Christian Kings, whether Popish or Protestant, with whom she was in correspondence; performed in such a solemn and magnificent manner that it preserved Her in the estimation of all foreign Princes, though differing in Religion from Her, besides the great contentm●…nt which the people took in those Royal actions. Some other Arts she had of preserving Majesty, and keeping distance with Her people; yet was so popular withal when she saw Her time, that never Majesty and Popularity were so matched tog●…ther. But these being laid aside by K. James who brooked neither of them, and not resumed by King Charles, who had in this point too much of the Father in him; there followed first a neglect of their Persons, which Majesty would have made more sacred; and afterward a mislike of their Government, which a little Popularity would have made more grateful. A very learned man he was, his erudition Ibid. all of the old stamp, sti●…y principled in the Doctrine of S. Augustine, which they who understand it not call Calvianisme.] Of the L●…arning of Archbishop Abbot, and how far it was of the old stamp, I shall say nothing at the present; But whereas our Author makes Calvianisme and the Doctrine of S. Augustine to be one and the same, I think he is very much out in that ●… there being some things maintained by S. Augustine, not allowed by Calvin, and many things maintained by Calvin, which were never taught him in S. Augustine. S. Augustine was a great maintainer of Episcopacy, which the Calvinians have ejecte●… out of all their Churches; and was so strict in defence of the necessity of Baptism, that he doomed all Infants dying without it to the Pains of Hell, and thereby got the name of Infant damastiques; whereas many of the Calvinists make Baptism a thing so indifferent (si habea●… recte, si careas nihil damni, as one telleth us of them) that it is no great matter whether it be used or not. And on the other side the Calvinists maintain a Parity of Ministers in the Church of Christ, conditional obedience to the Civil Magistrate, the suffering of the Pains of Hell in our Saviour's soul, and putting no other sense than that horrid blasphemy on the Article of his Descent, the ineffectuality of the blessed Sacraments (as to the power and virtue which the Ancients did ascribe unto them) and many others of that nature, which are not to be found in all S. Augustine's Works. Therefore the Doctrine of S. Augustine cannot be called by the name of Calvianisme. In the year 1618., King James published Fol. 128. a Command or Declaration tolerating sports on the Lord's day, called Sunday.] Our Author is now come to His Majesti●…s Declaration about lawful sports, being a reviver only of a former Declaration published by King James, bearing date at Greenwich, May the 24th, in the sixteenth year of that King's reign; in his discourse whereof there are many things to be considered: For first, he telleth us, that many impetuous clamours were raised against it, but he conceals the motives to it, and restrictions of it. And secondly, he telleth us that to satisfy and still those ●…lamours, the Book was soon after called in, in which I am sure our Author is extremely out: that Book being never called in, though the execution of it (by the 〈◊〉 of that King's Government) was soon discontinued. Now for the motives which induced that King to this Declaration, they were chiefly four: 1. The general complaints of all sorts of people as he pas●…ed through Lancashire, of the restraint of those innocent and lawful Pastimes on that day, which by the rigour of some Preachers and Ministers of public justice had been laid upon them. 2. The hindrance of the conversion of many Papists, who by this means were made to think that the Protestant Religion was inconsistent with all harmless and modest recreations. 3. That by 〈◊〉 men from all manly Exercises on those days on which only they were freed from their daily labours, they were made unactiv●…, and unable, and unfit for wars, if either Himself or any of His Successors should have such occasion to employ them. And 4▪ That men being hindered from these open Pastimes, betook themselves to Tippling Houses, and there abused themselves with Drunkenness, and censured in their cups His Majesty's proceedings both in Church and State. Next the Restrictions were as many: First, that these Pastimes should be no impediment or let to the public Duties of the Day. Secondly, that no Recusants should be capable of the benefit of them. No●… thirdly, such as were not diligently present at all D●…vine offices which the day required. And fourthly, that the benefit thereof should redound to none but such as kept themselves in their own Parishes. Now to the Motives which induced King James to this Declaration, our Author adds two others which might move King Charles to the reviving of the same; That is to say, 1. The neglect of the Dedication Feasts of Churches in most places upon that occasion. And secondly, an inclination in many unto Judaisme, occasioned by a Book written by one Brabourne, maintaining the indispensible morality of the 4th Commandment, and consequently the necessary observation of the Jewish Sabbath. Though our Author tells us that this Royal Edict was resented with no small regret, yet I conceive the Subjects had great cause to thank Him for his Princely care, in studying thus to free their consciences from those servile yokes (greater than which were never laid upon the Jews by the Scribes and Pharis●…es) which by the preaching of some Zealots had been laid upon them. But our Author is not of my mind, for he telleth us afterwards, that The Divinity of the Lords day was new Fol. 129. Divinity at Court] And so it was by his leave in the Country too, not known in England till the year 1595, when Doctor Bound first published it in his Book of Sabbath Doctrines; nor in Ireland till just twenty years after, when it was thrust into the Articles of Religion then and there established; nor in Scotland till above twenty years after that, when the Presbyterians of both Nations laid their heads together for the subversion of this Church. So new it is, that as yet it cannot plead a prescription of threescore years, much less pretend to the beginning of our Reformation: for, if it could, we should have found some mention of it in our Articles, or our Book of Homilies, or in the Book of Common Prayer, or in the Statute 5 & 6 Edward VI about keeping Holy days, in the two first of which, we find nothing at all touching the keeping of this day; and in the two last, no more care taken for the Sundays than the other Festivals. But our Author still goeth on, and saith, Which seemed the greater Prodigy that Ibid. men who so eagerly cried up their own Order and Revenues for Divine, should so much 〈◊〉 the Lords day from being such, when they had no other existence than in relation to this.] Here is a Prodigy indeed, and a Paradox too, that neither the Order not Revenues of the Evangelical Priesthood have any existence, but in Relation to the D●…vinity of the Lords day. If our Author be not out in this, I am much mistaken. S. Paul hath told us of himself, that he was an Apostle not of men, neither by men, but by 〈◊〉 Christ and God the Father: And what he telleth us of himself, may be said also of the twelve Apostles, and the seventy Disciples, ordained by Christ to preach the Gospel, and to commit the like power to others from one generation to another till the end of all things. S. Paul pleads also very strongly for the Divine right of Evangelicall maintenance to them that laboured in the public Ministry of the Church, concluding from that saying in the Law of Moses, viz: Thou shalt not muzzle the Ox which treads out the corn, and from the maintenance of the Priest which served at the Altar, that such as preached the Gospel should live by the Gospel. And he pleads no less ●…outly for the right of Tithes, where he proves our Saviour Christ to be a Priest after the order of Melchisedeck, from Melchisedecks receiving Tithes of Abraham, or rather from this Tithing of Abraham, as the Greek importeth. And yet I trow the Lords day Sabbath had no such existence, and much less such Divinity of existence, as our Author speaks of, when both the Order and Revenue of the sacred Ministry had a sure establishment, as much Divine right as our Saviour and the holy Apostles could confer upon them. Our Author now draws towards an end, & for our further satisfaction referreth us to something elsc, and that something to be found elsewhere, concluding thus, But of this elsewhere.] And indeed of Ibid. this there hath enough been said elsewhere to satisfy all learned and ingenious men, both in the meaning of the Law, and in point of practice, so that to speak more of it in this place and time, were but to light a Candle before the Sun. All I shall further add is this, that if the Rules and Principles of the Sabbatarians m●…st needs pa●…se for currant, I cannot see by the best light of my poor understanding, but that Brabournes Book may be embraced with our best affections; and that obscure and ignorant Schoolmaster (as our Author calls him) must be cried up for the most Orthodox Divine which this Age hath bred. And was after styled Duke of York.] Ibid. Our Author here accommodates his style to the present times, when the Weekly Pamphlets give that Prince no other Title than the Titulary Duke of York, the pretended Duke of York, the Duke of York so styled, as our Author here. It is true indeed the second Son of England is not born to the Dukedom of York●…, as the first is unto the Titles and Revenues of the Dukedom of Cornwall, but receives that Title by Creation: and though the King did cause this second Son to be styled only Duke of York when he was in his cradle, yet afterwards He created and made him such by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England in due form of L●… The four Inns of Court presenting both Ibid. their Majesties at Whitehall with a gallant Masque, as a symbol of their joint affections.] The Inns of Court used formerly to divide themselves in the like solemnities, Lincoln's Inn joining with one of the Temples, and Gray Inn with the other, b●…t now they all united upon this occasion. One William Prynne an Utter Barrister of Lincoln's Inn had writ a Book (somewhat above a year before) called Histrio Mastix, intended purposely against Stage Plays, but intermixed with many b●…tter and sharp Invectives against the solemn Music used in the Cathedrals and Royal Chapels, against the magnificence of the Court in Masques and Dance, against the Hospitality of the English G●…ntry in the Weeks of Christmas, and indeed what not? In which were also many passages scandalous and dishonourable to the King and Queen, and such as seemed dangerous also to their sacred Persons: For which, an Information being brought against him in the Star-chamber by Master Noye then attorney-general, and the Cause ready to be sentenced, it seemed good unto the Gentlemen of the four Inns of Court to present their Majesties with a Masque, thereby to let their 〈◊〉 and the People see how little Prynne his infection had took hold upon them. A pompous and magnificent show it seemed, as it passed the Streets, but made more glorious by a long train of Christian Captives, who having been many years insl●…ved in the chains of bondage, were sent for a present to the King▪ by the H●…riffe or Emperor of Morocco, in testimony of the assistance received from him, in the taking of Salla, and destroying that known nest of Pirates, effected specially by the benefit and advantage of his Majesty's Ships. An action of so great honour to the English Nation, of such security to trade, and of such consequence for setl●…ng of a free commerce in those parts of Christendom, that I wonder why our Author takes no notice of it. The King's Dominion in the Narrow Fol. 130. Seas was actually usurped by the Holland Fishers, and the right itself in good earnest disputed by a late tract of Learned Grotius called Mare Liberum.] Our Author might have added here that this discourse of Grotius was encountered not long after by a learned Tract of Mr. selden's, which h●… entitled Mare Clausum. In which he did not only assert the Sovereignty or Dominion of the British Seas to the Crown of England, but clearly proved by constant and continual practice, that the Kings of England used to levy money from the Subjects (without help of Parliament) for the providing of ships and other necessaries to maintain that Sovereignty, which did of right belong unto them. This he brings down unto the time of K. Hen. 2d, and might have brought it nearer to his own times, had he been so pleased, and thereby paved a plain way to the payment of Ship-money, but then he must have thwarted the proceedings of the House of Commons in the last Parliament, (wherein he was so great a stickler) voting down under a kind of Anathema the King's pretensions of right to all help from the subject, either in Tonage or Poundage, or any other ways whatsoever, the Parliament not co-operating and contributing toward it. For that he might have done thus we shall easily see by that which followeth in our Author, viz. Away goes the subtle Engineer, and at Fol. 131. length frem old Records progs and bolts out an ancient Precedent of raising a Tax upon the whole Kingdom for setting forth a Navy in case of danger.] Our Author speaks this of Mr. Noye the Attorney General, whom he calls aft●…rwards a most indefatigable Plodder and Searcher of old Records, and therefore was not now to be put to progging, (a very poor expression for so brave a man) to find out any thing which m●…ght serve to advance this business. For the truth is, that a year or more before the coming out of the Writs for ship-money, he showed the Author of these Observations (at his house near Brentford) a great wooden Box, wherein were nothing else but Pr●…ts out of all Records, for levying a Naval aid upon the Subjects by the sole authority of the Ki●…g, whensoever the preservation and safety of the Kingdom did require it of them: And I remember well that he showed me in many of those Papers, that in the same years in which the Kings had received subsidies in the way of Parliament, they levied this Naval aid by their own sole power; and he gave me this Reason for them both: For (saith he) when the King wanted any money either to support his own expenses, or for the enlarging of his Dominions in Foreign Conquests, or otherwise to advance his honour in the eye of the world; good reason he should be beholding for it to the love of his people; but when the Kingdom was in danger, and that the safety of the Subject was concerned in the business, he might, and then did raise such sums of Money as he thought expedient, for the preventing of the danger, and providing for the public safety of himself and his. And I remember too, that ●…se Precedents were written in little bits ●…nd shreads of paper, few of them bigger than ones hand, many not so big; which when he had transcribed in the course of his studies, he put into the coffin of a Pie (as he pleased to tell me) which had been sent him from his Mother, and kept them there until the mouldiness and corruptibleness of that wheaten Coffer had perished many of his papers. No need of progging or bolting to a man so furnished. But more of this Attorney we shall hear anon. In the mean time our Author telleth us, that The King presently issued out Writs to all Ibid. the Counties within the Realm etc. enjoining every County for defence of the Kingdom, to provide Ships of so many Tun, etc.] Our Author is deceived in this, as in many things else. For in the first year of the payment of Ship-money, the Writs were not issued to all the Counties of England, as our Author telleth us, but only to the Maritime Counties, which lying all along the shore, were most exposed unto the danger of a foreign Enemy. But proof being had, that the preparations of that year were not great enough, for the ends intended in the next year, and not before; the like Writs issued out to all Counties in England (that is to say, Anno 1636.) the whole charge laid upon the subject upon that occasion, amounting to 2360001. or there abouts, which being in lieu of all payments, came but to twenty thousand pounds a month, and not fully that. Nevertheless the King upon the Arch-Bishops entreaty, granted them exemption.] I never heard that any such exemption was desired by the Clergy, but sure I am, that no such exemption was ever granted, it being as great an indiscretion in them to seek it, as it would have been a hindrance to the public service, if they had obtained it. The favour which the Archbishop procured for them, was no more than this, that on complaint made by some of the Clergy, how unreasonably they were rated by their neighbours, some of them at a sixth, some at a fourth part of the Tax, which had been laid upon the Parish; he obtained Letters from the King, to all the Sheriffs of Engl●…nd, requiring that the Clergy possessed of Parsonages, should not be taxed above a tenth part of the Land▪ rate of their several Parishes; and that consideration should be had of Vicars accordingly. Which though it were a great and a royal favour (such as became a nursing Father of the Church) yet w●…s it no exemption, as our Author calls it, unless he meaneth an exemptien from the A●…bitrary power of cove●…ous and malicious neighbours, as indeed it was. But our Author goes back to the Attorney, of whom he telleth us, that He became a●…●…inent instrument both of Ibid. good and ill (and of which most, is a great question) to the King's Prer●…gative.] I think no question need be made in this particular. The Ship money had as fair a trial in the Courts of Westm. as any Cause that ever came before those Judges. And as for other projects, and Court suits, he used first to consult the Law, the King's Honour, and the public good, before he would pass any of them; insomuch that he was more cursed by the Courtiers (I speak this on my certain knowledge) for dashing some of their designs, and putting many difficulties upon others of them, than any man can possibly imagine of a public Minister. And whereas our Author telleth us in that which followeth, that he was drawn into the King's service by the lure of advancement, I am confident on the other side, that it was rather a contemplation of doing his duty to the King, than any thought of advancement by it, which drew him to accept that office, so much sought by others: in managing whereof, he declined so much private business to attend the King, and attended that with such an eye to his Master's honour, that I may very safely say, he did not gain so much in the whole time of his service, as his Predecessors, or Successors did after, in any one year of their employment. But in regard 〈◊〉 came without credential Fol. 132. Letters from the Queen of Sweden, he denied him audience, whereupon he returned in some disgust.] In this short passage there are more mistakes than lines. For first, it is not likely that young Oxenst●… (whom he speaks of) came without credential Letters, being treated as he was in the quality of an Ambassador, which without such Letters had not been. Secondly, I am sure that he had a public and solemn audience, my curiosity carrying me to the Court that day, not so much to see the Formalities of such Receptions (to w●…ch I could not be a ●…nger) as to behold the Son o●… so wise a Father, who had so long, with so much p●…udence and success conducted the affa●…s of the Crown of Sweden. Thirdly, If he departed in some disgust, (as by accepting of a rich Ring from King Lewis of France, and refusing 〈◊〉 present of better value, ●…offered by King Charles, it was thought he did) it was not because he was denied a public audience, but because he had proposed some things to the King, for carrying on the war in Germany, in behalf of the Swedes, which the King thought not fit to consent unto, being then in hopes of some accommodation to be made with the Emperor touching the Palatinate. At the same time there was also a Synod Ibid. assembled, wherein the body of Articles form by that Church, Anno 1615. were repealed, and in their places were substituted the 39 Articles of the Church of England, intending to create an uniformity of belief between both Churches.] And certainly the design was pious, and the reasons prevalent; first in relation to the Papists, who made great aim at it, that in the Churches of three Kingdoms, united all under one chief Governor, there should be three several and distinct (and in some points contrary) Confessions, yet all pretending unto one and the same Religion; next in relation to the Puritans, who in the controverted points about Predestination, and the Lords▪ day-Sabbath, when they had nothing else to say, did use to fly for▪ refuge to the Articles of the Church of Ireland, where the Predestinarian Doctrines, and Sabbatarian speculations had found entertainment; and thes●…, and none but thes●… found themselves grieved and troubled at the alteration. Nor was this alteration made by the hand of power, but the power of reason. The matter being canvased and debated in the Convocation there, before it was put unto the vote; and being put unto the vote (notwithstanding the strong interposition of the Lord Primate of Armagh) was carried by the far greater part of voices for the Church of England. But all the service they did this Summer Fol. 136. was inconsiderable, in regard they never came to engagement; only their formidable appearance secured the Seas from those Petit Larcenies and Piracies wherewith they were formerly so molested.] Had this been all, their service had been very considerable; the clearing the Sea of Pirates being of so great benefit and consequence to the trade, and flourishing of this Kingdom. For by this means, and the well-setled peace which we had at home, the greatest part of the wealth, in these parts of Christendom, was carried up the Thames, and managed in the City of London. But this was not all. The King by this Formidable appearanc●… (as our Author calls it) regained the Dominion of the Sea, which had been lately hazarded, if not wholly lost: insomuch as the K●…ng of Spain thought it his best and safest w●…y, to send the money designed for the payment of his Armies in Flanders, in the Ships of English Merchants only. By means whereof, there was brought yearly into England, between 2 & 3 hundred thousand pound in uncoined Bullion, which being minted in the Tower, was no small benefit to the King by the Coinage of it, and no less benefit to the City and the Kingdom generally, in regard the greatest part thereof was still kept amongst us in lieu of such manufactures, and native commodities of this Land, as were returned into Flanders, for the use of that Army. And yet this was not all the service which they did this Summer: The French and Hollanders had ●…tred this year into a Confederacy to rout the King of Spain out of all the Netherlands, in which it was agreed amongst other things. that the French should invest Dunkirk and the other parts of Flanders, with their Forces by Land, whilst the Hollanders did besiege them with a Fleet at Sea, that so all passages into the Country being thus locked up, they might the more easily subdue all the Inland parts. And in all probability the design had took eff●…ct in this very year, the King of Spain no●… being able to bring 8000 men into the field, and leave his Garrisons provided; the people of the other side being so practis●…d on by the Holland Faction, that few or none of them would Arm to repulse those Enemies. But first the formidable appearance of the English Fleet, which 〈◊〉 the Hollanders before Dunkirk▪ and then the insolences of the French at Diest and Tillemont, did so encourage and i●…flame the hearts of the people, that the Armies both of the French and Hollanders, returned back again without doing any thing more than the wasting of the Country. And was not this (think we) a considerable piece of service also? Lastly, I am to tell our Author, that it was not the Earl of Northumberland, (as he tells us some lines before) but the Earl of Lyndsey which did command the Fleet this Summer, Anno 1635. The Earl of Northumberland not being in Commission for this service till the year next following, when all the Counties of the Realm were engaged in the charge. So as the King's discretion was called in Fol. 137. to part the fray by the committing the Staff of that Office into the hands of William Juxton Lord Bishop of London, March the 6th, who though he was none of the greatest scholars, yet was withal none of the worst Bishops.] Our Author still fails in his intelligence, both of men and matter. For, first the occasion of giving the Office of Lord Treasurer to the Bishop of London, was not to part a fray between the Archbishop and the Lord Cottington, who never came to such immoderate heats, as our Author speaks of; but upon very good considerations and reasons of State: ●…or, whereas most of the Lord Treasurers of these latter times had rather served themselves by that Office than the King in it, and raising themselves to the Estates and Titles of Earls, but leaving the two Kings more encumbered with debts and wants than any of their Predecessors had been known to be; it was thought fit to put the Staff of that Offic●… into the hands of a Churchman, who having no Family to raise, no Wife and Chil●…ren to provide for, might better manag●… the Incomes of the Treasury to the King's advantage than they had been formerly: and who more fit for that employment (among all the Clergy) than the B●…shop of London, a man of so well▪ tempered a disposition as gave exceeding great content both to Prince and people; and being a dear friend of the Archbishops, who had served the whole year as Commissioner in that Public trust, was sure to be instructed by him in all particulars which concerned the managing thereof. But whereas our Author tells us of him, that he was none of the greatest scholars, I would fain learn in what particular parts, either of Divine or Humane Learning our Author reckons him defective; or when our Author sat so long in the Examiner's Office, as to bring the poor Bishop unto this discovery. I know the man, and I know also his abilities as well in Public Exercises as Private Conferences, to be as far above the censure of our Aristarchus as he conceives himself to be above such an ignorant and obscure Schoolmaster as Theophilus Brabaurne. It is true, he sets him off with some commendation of a calm and moderate spirit, and so doth the Lord Faulkland too, in a bitter Speech of his against the Bishops, Anno 1641, where he saith of him, That in an unexpected place and power he expressed an equal moderation and humility, being neither ambitious before, nor proud after, either of the Crozier or white Staff. But there are some whom Tacitus calls Pessimum inimicorum genus, the worst kind of Enemies, who under colour of commending, expose a man to all the disadvantages of contempt or danger. The Communion Table which formerly Ibid. stood in the midst of the Church or Chancel, he enjoined to be placed at the East end, upon a graduated advance of ground with the ends inverted, and a wooden traverse of ●…ailes before it.] Of placing the Communiou Table with the ends inverted, we are told before Anno 1628., and if it were then introduced, and so far in practise that notice could be taken of it by the Committee for Religion, no reason it should now be charged on the Archbishop as an Act of his. But granting it to be his Act (not to repeat any thing of that which was said before in justification of those Bishops who were there said to have done the like) we doubt not but he had sufficient authority for what he did in the transposing of the Table to the Eastern wall. The King by the advice of his Metropolitan, hath a power by the Statute, 1 Eliz. c. 2. on the happening of any irreverence to be used by the Ceremonies or Rites of the Church, by misusing the Orders appointed in this Book, (namely, the Book of Common Prayers) to ordain and publish such further Rites and Ceremonies, as may be most for the advancement of God's glory, the edifying of his Church, and the due reverence of Christ's holy Mysteries and Sacraments. And certainly there had been so much irreverence done to the Communion Table standing unfenced as then it did in the middle of the Chancel, not only by scribbling and sitting on it, as before was noted; but also by Dogs pissing against it (as of common course) and sometimes snatching away the Bread which was provided for the use of the blessed Sacrament; that it was more than time to transpose the Communion Table to a place more eminent, and to fence it also with a rail to keep it from the like profanation for the time to come. Nor did the Archbishop by so doing outrun authority, the King having given authority and 〈◊〉 to it a year before the Metropolitical Visitation which our Author speaks of. The Dean and Chapter of S. Paul's (as being Ordinaries of the place) had transposed the Communion Table in Saint Gregoryes to the upper end of the Chancel, and caused it to be placed Altarwise; which being disliked by some few ordinary Parishioners, and an Appeal made from the Ordinary to the Dean of the Arches, the Cause was brought before the King, then sitting in his Privy Council, Anno 1633. who on the hearing of all parties, and the Reasons alleged on both sides, having first testified His dislike of all Innovations; He concludes at last, That h●… did well approve, and confirmed the Act of the said Ordinary, and also gave commandem●…nt that if those few Parishioners before 〈◊〉 did proceed in their said Appeal, than the D●…an of the Arches should confirm the said Order of the aforesaid Deane and Chapter. Here was authority enough, as good authority for the Archbishop to proceed upon in his Visitation, as the Prevogative Royal, the new Statute of the Queen, and the old Laws of the Land could give him. This than was no Anomalous Innovation (as our Author calls it.) The King (it seems) thought otherwise of it, and so did all men studied in the Rules of this Church, and the practice of approved Antiquity who looked upon it as a Renovation of a Rite disused, not as an Innovation or Introduction of a new Ceremony never used before▪ But sure our Author had forgotten when these words fell from him, what he said before, of the Remiss Government of Archbishop Abbot, the titular Archbishop, as he calls him there (but Titular in nothing so much as not doing the duties of his Office) of whom h●… tells us, Fol. 127. that by his extraordinary remissness in not exacting strict conformity to the prescribed. Orders of the Church in point of Ceremony, he led in such an habit of Inconformity, as the future reduction of▪ those tender-conscienced men to long discontinued obedience was interpreted an Innovation. But the Controversy is not only managed betwixt our Author and himself, but as he telleth us afterward between Bishops and Bishops, for as he saith, The Bishop of Lincoln published a Tract Ibid. under a concealed name, positively asserting therein, that the holy Table anciently did in the Primitive times, and aught so in ours according to the Dictates of our Church, stand in Gremio and Nave of the Quire.] The Tract here meant was called The Holy Table, name, and thing: in which the Bishop hath said much, but asserted little: Affirmations are no Proofs in Law, and multitudes of allegations falsified in themselves, and wrested to a contrary se●…ce, make not one good Evidence; yet this is all we are to look for in the Bishop's Book: It being not untruly said in the Answerers' Preface, that he came armed into the field with no other weapons than impudence, ignorance, and falsehoods. And to say truth, it can be no otherwise, when a man writes both against his science and his conscience, as we have very good cause to think this Bishop did. Look on him in the point of practice, and we shall find the Communion Table placed Altarwise in the Cathedral Church of Lincoln whereof he was Bishop, and in the Collegiate Church of Westminster of which he was Dean▪ and in the private Chapel of his House at Bugdon, in which last it was not only placed Altarwise, but garnished with rich Plate and other costly Utensils (one of his own words) in more than ordinary manner. Look on him in his letter to the Vicar of Grantham, and he tells him thus; that your Communion Table is to stand Altarwise, if you mean in that place of the Chancel, where the Altar stood, I think somewhat may be said for that, because the injunctions, 1559. di●… so place it; and I conceive it to be the most decent situation, when it is not used, and for use too, where the choir is mounted up by steps, and open, so that he that officiates, may be seen and heard of all the Congregation. Nor writes he thus only to that V●…ar, but he allows it in that Tract which my Author speaks of, both in Cathedral Churches, and in the King's Chapels, and in the Chapels of great men, which certainly have no more Law for it, than what the Archbishop had for placing it in the Parish Churches, which as the Bishop telleth the Vicar, are to be presidented, by the forms in his Majesty's Chapels, and in the Quires of their cathedrals. If it be asked what moved the Bishop to stickle so stoutly in this business, it may be answered, that he loved to fi●…sh in a troubled water, that being a man which considered only his own ends, he went such ways as most conduced to the ●…ccomplishing of the ends he aimed at. Being in Power and place at Court in the time of K. James he made himself the head of the Popish Faction, because he thought the match with Spain, which was then in treaty, would bring not only a connivance to that Religion, but also a Toleration of it: And who more like to be in favour if that match went on, than such as were most zealous in doing good offices to the Catholic cause. But being by King Charles deprived first of the Great Seal, and afterwards commanded to retire from Westminster, he gave himself to be the head of the Puritan party, opposing all the Kings proceedings both in Church and State (and amongst others this of placing the Communion Table) to make himself gracious with that Sect, who by their shy practices and insinuations, and by the Remiss Government, and connivance of Archbishop A●…ot, had gained much ground upon the people. If it be asked what authority I have for this, I answer, that I have as good as can be wished for, even our Author himself, who telleth us of this Bishop, Fol. 145. That being malevolently inclined (by the King's disfavours) he thought he could not gratify beloved revenge better, then to endeavour the supplanting of his Sovereign. To which end, finding him declining in the affections of his people, he made his Apostraphe, and applications to them, fomenting popular discourses tending to the King's dishonour, etc. And being set upon this pin, no marvel if he entertained the present occasion of making the Archbishop odiou●…, and the King himself less pleasing in the eyes of the Subjects. But of this Bishop, we may perhaps have some occasion to speak more hereafter. In the mean time we must follow our Author, who having done with the Archbishop, goes on to his Instruments (for so he calls them) in which he saith, he was most unhappy. Why so? because saith he, They were not blameless in their lives, Fol. 138. some being vicious even to scandal.] Our Author needed not have told us in his Preface by the way of prevention, that he should be thought no friend to the Clergy▪ we should have found that here in such Capital Letters▪ as any man that runs might read them. Vicious even to scandal? that goes high indeed, and it had well become our Author to have named the men, that so the rest of the Clergy might have been discharged of that ●…oule reproach. For my part I have took some pains to inquire after such instruments and subordinate Ministers of the Archbishop, used in the time of his government, most of them men of great abilities in learning, and though I think they were not blameless in their lives (as who can be that carrieth mortality about him) yet I cannot hear of any vicious persons taken into employment by him, much less●… so scandalously vicious, as our Author makes them. Or were there such, it had been fitter for our Author (who desires to be accounted for a Son of the Church) to have played the part of Sem and Japhet, in finding the nakedness of their spiritual Fathers; then to act the part of Cham and Canaan, in making Proclamation of it unto all the world. It was a pious saying of the Emperor Constantine (reported by Theodoret, lib. I. cap. II.) that the offences of the Priests were to be hidden and concealed from the common people, Ne illis assensi ad delinquendum reddantur audaciores, lest else they should transgress with the greater liberty. As for himself, so tender was he of the credit of his Clergy, that he used oftentimes to say, that found he any of them (which yet God prohibit) in the embraces of a Strumpet, obtecturum se paludamento sceleratum facinus, that with his own Royal robes he would hide from vulgar eyes, both the offence, and the offendor. A noble piety, the piety of Sem and Japhet in the former passage, and the Lord blessed him for it, and enlarged the Tents of his habitation, and Canaan, even the whole Countries of the Gentiles became his servants. From generals our Author passeth on unto one particular, of whom he telleth us that He was bold to say he hoped to live to see Ibid. the day when a Minister should be as good a man, as any Jack Gentleman in England.] This is a heavy charge indeed, the heavier in regard that the fault of this one man (if such men there were) must lay a brand of Insolency on all the rest of the Clergy, thereby to render them obnoxious to the public hatred. And though our Author hath not told us by name who this one man was, yet telling us that he was a high Flyer, and that this high Flyer was deplumed, he gives us some conjectures at the man he drives at, a man (I must confess) of an undaunted spirit, and strong resolutions, but neither so intemperate in his words, or unwise in his actions, as to speak so contemptuously of the English Gentry. For first, we are not sure that such words were spoken, our Author offering no proof for it but only his own word, or some vulgar hear say; too weak a ground for such a heavy accusation to be built upon. But secondly, admitting that such words were spoken, I hope our Author hath heard long since of an ancient by word, that every Jack would be a Gentleman; and therefore cannot choose but know that there is a difference between a Gentleman of Arms and Blood, a true English Gentleman and such JackGentl●…men, as having got a little more wealth together than their next poor neighbours, take to themselves the name of Gentlemen, but are none indeed. And such Jack-Gentlemen as these, as they are commonly most like (either for want of wit, or of manners, or of both together) to vilify their Minister, and despise the Clergy; so if the poor party said whatsoever he was, that he hoped to live to see the time, when a Minister should be as good a man as any Jack-Gentleman of them all, I hope the ancient and true-English Gentry will not blame him for it. Our Author having thus arraigned the whole body of the English Clergy, that is to say, Archbishops, Bishops, and those of the inferior Orders, is now at leisure to proceed to some other business; and having brought his Reader thorough the Disputes and Arguments about the Ship-money, he carrieth him on to the Combustions raised in Scotland, occasioned, as he telleth us, by sending thither a Book of Common Prayer for the use of that Church. Very little differing, as the King was unhappily Fol. 147. persuaded by them from the English.] The King needed no persuasion in this point, the difference between the two Liturgies (whether great or little) being known unto him, before He caused this to be published. 'tis true, his first desire was, that the English Liturgy should be admitted in Scotland without any alteration, and to that end He gave order to the Dean of His Chapel in that Kingdom, about the middle of October, Anno 1633. that it should be read twice every day in the Chapel of His Palace in Holy-rood House; that there should be Communions administered according to the form thereof, once in every Month, the Communicants receiving it upon their knees; that the Lords of the Privy Council, the Officers of Justice and other persons of Public trust about the Court, should diligently attend the same on the Lords days, and that he who officiated on those days, if he were a Bishop should wear his Rochet, but if an ordinary Minister only he should wear the Surplice, and thus he did unto this end, that the people being made acquainted by little and little with the English Liturgy, might be the more willing to receive it in all parts of that Kingdom whensoever it should be tendered to them. But the Scotish Bishops being jealous that this might be an Argument of their dependence on the Church of England, and finding that the Psalms, the Epistles and Gospels, and other sentences of Scripture in the English Book, being of a different Transl●…tion, from that which King James had authoriz●…d to be read in the Churches of both Kingdoms. had given offence unto that people, desired a Liturgy of their own: and that they might have leave to make such alterations in the English Book, as might entitle it peculiarly to the Church of Scotland: which Alterarions being made and showed to the King, he approved well of them; in regard that coming nearer to the first Liturgy of K. Edward the sixth in the Administration of the Lords Supper, (and consequently being more agreeable to the ancient Forms) it might be a means to gain the Papists to the Church, who liked far better of the first than the second Liturgy. July 23. being Sunday, the Dean of Edinborough Ibid. began to read the Book in S. Gyles Church, the chief of that City, etc.] Our Author here doth very well describe the two Tumul●…s at Edinborough upon the reading of the Book, but he omits the great oversights committed by the King and the Lords of that Council, in the conduct and carriage of the business. For had the Book been read in all the Churches of Scotland upon Easter day, as w●…s first intended, it had in probability prevented these tumultuous Riots, which the respite of it for so long gave those which had the hatching of this Sedition, both time enough to advise, and opportunity enough to effect at last: or had the King caused the chief Ringleaders of this Tumult to be put to death, according to the Laws of that Kingdom, assoon as justice could have laid hold on them, He had undoubtedly prevented all further dangers: The drawing of some blood in the Body politic by the punishment of M●…lefactors, being like letting blood in the Body-naturall, which in some strong distempers doth preserve the whole. O●… finally, if the Tumult had been grown so high, and so strongly backed, that justice could not safely be done upon them, had the King then but sent a Squadron of the Royal Navy, which He had at Sea, to block up their Haven, He had soon brought the Edinbourghers unto His Devotion, and consequently kept all the rest of that Kingdom in a safe obedience. But the Edinbourghers knew well enough whom they had to deal with, what friends they had about the King, and what a party they had got in the Lords of His Council which governed the affairs of that Kingdom; and they knew very well (none better) by the unpunishing of the Londoners for the Tumult in the death of Lamb, that the King had rather patience enough to bear such indignities, than resolution to revenge them: So that the King at last was come to that misery which a good Author speaks of, Cum vel excidenda sit natura, vel minuenda dignitas: That he must either outgo His nature, or forgo His authority. The King nothing pleased with these affronts, Fol. 150. yet studious to compose these surges of discontent, sent the marquis of Hamilton down in the quality of an high Commissioner, etc.] We are now come to the rest of the oversights committed in the conduct of this weighty business, whereof the first was, that having neglected to suppress the Sedition at the very first appearance of it, & to strangle that monster in the cradle, he had let a whole year pass●… without doing any thing, but sending one Proclamation after another, which being publicly encountered with contrary Protestations, did but increase their insolences & his own disgraces; the party in the mean time being so well form, that Po●…-guns and such Paper-pellets were able to do no good upon them. The second was, that when it had been fitter for the preservation of his authority to send a Lord General in the head of an Army, for the reducing of that Kingdom by force of Arms, He rather chose to send an high Commissioner to them, to sweeten the distempers and compose the differences; which could not be, but by yielding more on his side, than he was like (by any fair imparlance) to obtain from that. Thirdly, that when he was reso●…ved on an high Comm●…ssioner, he must pitch on Hamilton for the man, whom he had such reason to distrust, as before was hinted; but that the old Maxim of the Lenoxian Family, (of being deceived rather than distrustful) was so prevalent with him. And this he did against the opinion and advice of many of the Lords of that Kingdom, that is to say, the Earl of Sterling principal Secretary of State, the Bishops of Rosse and Breken privy Counsellors both, Sir Robert Spoteswood Lord Precedent of the College of Justice, and Sir John Hay Clerke-Register (or Master of the Rolls as we call him here.) These having secret intimation that Hamilton was designed for this great Employment, came in Post to London, endeavouring to persuade the King to change his purpose, and commending Huntley for that service, who being a man of greatest power in the North of Scotland, and utterly averse from the Covenanters and the rest of that Faction, was thought by them the fittest man for that undertaking. But the King fatally carried on to his own destruction, would not hearken to it, and hereunto the Duke of Lenox did contribute some weak assistance, who being wrought on by the Scots of Hamiltons' Faction, chose rather that the old Enemy of his House should be trusted with the managing of that great affair, than that a Country Lord (as the Courtiers of that Nation called him) should carry the honour from them both. June the six●…, his Commission was read Ibid. and accepted him.] And well it might, it was the fish for which he had so long been angling: For, having lost the Scotish Army, raised for the aid of the King of Sweden without doing any thing, and no occasion being offered to advance another, he fell upon more secret and subtle practices to effect his ends: First, drawing all the Scots which were about the Court of England to be his Dependants, and rest at his devotion wholly: and next by getting himself a strong party in that Kingdom, whose affections he had means enough to restrain and alienate from the King, and then to bind them to himself, insomuch as it was thought by the wisest men of both Nations, that the first Tumult at Edinborough was set on by some of his Instruments, and that the Combustions which ensued, were secretly fomented by them also. And this was made the more probable by his carriage in that great trust of the high Commissioner, thus procured for him; drawing the King from one condescension to another in behalf of the Covenanters, till he had little more to give but the Crown itself: For fi●…st he drew him to suspend, and after to suppress the Book of Common Prayers, and therewithal the Canons made not long before for the use of that Church; next the five Articles of Perth. procured with so much difficulty by King James, and confirmed in Parliament, must be also abrogated; and then the Covenant itself (with some little alterations in it) must be authorized, and generally imposed upon all that Kingdom: And finally, the calling of an Assembly must be yielded to, in which he was right well assured, that none but Covenanters should have voices, that not Lord Bishops only should be censured and excommunicated, but the Episcopacy itself abolished, and all the Regular and Loyal Clergy brought to utter ruin. By all which Acts (I cannot say of grace, but) of condescension, the marquis got as much in gross, as His Majesty lost in the retail, making himself so strong a party in that Kingdom, that the King stood but for a Cipher in the calculation. All being done from that time forwards (especially when the first shows of a War were over) as Hamilton either did contrive or direct the business: For the Covenanters having got all this, thought not this enough, unless they put themselves in Arms to make good their purchases; and having therein got the first start of the King, the King could do no less than provide for himself, and to Arm Accordingly. In order whereunto our Author telleth us that Because it was the Bishop's war, he Fol. 158. thought it requisite they should contribute largely toward the preservation of their own Hierarchy.] I am sorry to see this passage have our Author's pen, whom I should willingly have accounted for a true Son of the Church of England, were it not for this, & some other passages of this nature, which savour more of the Covenanter, than the English Protestant. It is true, the Covenanters called it the Bishop's war, and gave it out, that it was raised only to maintain the Hirarchy, but there was little or no truth in their mouths the while, for the truth is, that though Liturgy and Episcopacy were made the occasions, yet they were no●… the causes of this War; Religion being but the vizard to disguise that business, which Covetousness, Sacrilege, and Rapine had the greatest hand in. The Reader therefore is to know, that the King, being engaged in a War with Spain, and yet deserted by those men, who engaged him in it, was fain to have recourse to such other ways of assistance as were off●… to him: And amongst others, he was minded of a purpose which his Father had, of revoking all such grants of Abbey-Lands, the Lands of B●…shopricks and Chapters, and other Religious Corporations; which having been vested in the Crown by Act of Parl. were by that King's Protectors, in the time of his minority, conferred on many of the Nobility and Gentry to make them sure unto the side, or else by a strong hand of power ●…xtorted from him. Being resolved upon this course, he intends a Parliament in that Ki●…gdome, appoints the E●…rl of Niddisd●…ale to preside therein, and arms h●…m with Instructions for 〈◊〉 of an Act of Revocation accord●…gly, who b●…ing on h●…s way as far as Barwick, was there informed that all was in a Tumult at Edenbobrough, that a rich Coach which he had sent before to Dalkeith was cut in pieces, the poor Horses killed, the people seeming only sorry that they could not do●… the like to the Earl himself. Things being brought unto this stand, and the Parl●…ament put off with a sine die, the King was put to a necessity of some second Counsels; amongst which none seemed so plausible and expedient to him, as that of Mr. Archibald Achison then Procu●…ator or solicitor general in that kingdom, who having first told the King that such as were estated in the lands in question, had served themselves so well by the bare naming of an Act of Revocation, as to possess the people (whom they found apt to be infl●…med on such suggestions) that the true intendment of that Act, was to revoke all former Acts for suppressing of Pop●…ry, and settling the reformed Religion in the Kirk of Scotland; and therefore that it would be very unsafe for his Majesty to proceed that way. Next he advised, that instead of such a general Revocation as that Act imported, he should implead them one by one, beginning first with those, whom he thought least able to stand out▪ or else most willing to conform to his M●…jesties pleasure; assuring him▪ that having the Laws upon his side, the Courts of Justice must, and would pas●…e judgement for him. The King resolved upon this course, sends home the Gentleman, not only with th●…nkes and Knighthood (which he had most worthily deserved) but with instructions and power to proceed therein: and he proceeded in it so effectually to the King's advantage, that some of the impleaded parties being lost in the suit, and the rest seeing that though they could raise the people against the King, they could not ●…aise them against the Laws, it was thought the best and safest way to compound the business. Hereupon in the year 1631. Commissioners are sent to the Court of England, and amongst others, the Learned and right Noble Lord of Marcheston (from whose mouth I had this whole relation) who after a long treaty with the King, did agree at last, that all such as held hereditary Sheriffdomes, or had the power of life and death over such as lived within their jurisdiction, should quit those royalties to the King; that they should make unto their Tenants in their several Lands, some permanent Estates, either for three lives, or one and twenty years, or som●… such like Term, that so the Tenants might be encouraged to build and plant, and improve the Patrimony of that Kingdom; that they should double the yearly rents which were reserved unto the Crown by their former grants, and finally that these conditions being performed on their parts, the King should settle their Estates by Act of Parliament. Home went the Commissioners with joy for their good success, expecting to be entertained with Bells and Bonfires, but they found the contrary; the proud Scots being resolved rather to put all to hazard, than quit that power and Tyranny, which they had over their poor vassals, by which name (after the manner of the French) they called their Tenants. And hereunto they were encou●…aged underhand, by a party in England, who feared that by this agreement the King would be so absolute in those Northern Regions, that no aid could be hoped from thence, when the necessity of their designs might most require it: Just as the Castilions were displeased with the conquest of Portugal, by King Philip the second, because thereby they had no place left to retire unto, when either the King's displeasure, or their disobedience should make their own Country too hot for them. From hence proceeded that ill blood which the King found amongst them, when he went for that unlucky Crown; from hence proceeded the seditious Libel of the Lord Ballmerino, which our Author speaks of, the greatest part of whose Estate was in Abby-Lands; From hence proceeded all the practices of the great ones on that busy Faction, principled only for the ●…uine and destruction of Monarchies; and finally from hence proceeded the design of making use of discontented and seditio●…s spirits (under colour of the Canons and Common-Prayer Book, to embroil that Kingdom, that so they might both keep their Lands, and not lose their Power; the King's Ministers all this while looking mildly on, or acting only by such influences as they had from Hamilton, without either care or course taken to prevent those mischiefs, which afterwards ensued upon it. But from the Ground, proceed we to the Prosecution of the War intended, concerning which, our Author telleth us that The King had amast together, considederable Fol. 159. power, whereof the Earl of Arundel had the chi●…fe conduct.] And so he had, as to the command of all the Forces which went by Land, the Earl of Essex being Lieutenant General of the Foot, & the E. of Holland of the Horse. But then there were some other forces embarked in a considerable part of the Royal Navy, with plenty of Coin and Ammunition, which were put under the command of Hamilton (the King still going on in his fatal over▪ sights) who anchoring with his Fleet in the Frith of Edinburgh, and la●…ding some of his spent men, in a little Ifland, to give them breath and some refreshments, received a visit from his Mother, a most rigid Covenanter. The Scots upon the shore saying with no small laughter, that they knew the Son of so good a Mother, could not do them hurt. And so it proved, for having loitered thereabouts to no purpose, till he heard that the Treaty for the Pacification was begun near Barwick, he left those shores, and came in great Post-haste, as it was pretended, to disturb that business, which was to be concluded before he came thither. But this vile dealing makes me Sea-sick, I return to Land, where I find that All the preparation both of one side, and Ibid. the other, proved only an interview of two Armies, nothing being acted considerable in way of Engagement.] That so it was, is a truth undoubted, but how it came to pass that it should be so, would be worth a knowing. For never did so many of the Lords and Gentry attend a King of England, in an expedition against that people, nor never did they carry with them a greater stock of Animosities, and indignation, than they did at this present. But first, I have been told by some wise and understanding men about the King, that he never did intend to fight (as they afterwards found) but only by the terror of so great on Army, to draw the Scots to do him reason: And this the Covenanters knew as well as he, there being nothing which he said, did, or thought (so far as thoughts might be discovered by signs and gestures) but what was forthwith posted to them by the Scots about him. And this I am the more apt to credit, because when a notable and well experienced Commander offered the King then in Camp near Barwick, that with two thousand Horse (which the King migh●… very well have spared) he would so waste and destroy the Country, that the Scots should come upon their knees to implore his mercy: He would by no means hearken to the P●…oposition. Nor were the Lords and p●…rsons of most note about him, more forward at the last than he. For having given way that the E●…rles of Roxborough and Traquair, and other Nob●…e m●…n of that Nation might repair to York, for mediating some atonement between the King and his people, they plied their busine●…s so well, that by representing to the Lords of the English Nation, the dangers they would bring themselves into, if the Scots were totally subdued; they mitigated the displeasures of some, and so took off the edge of others, that they did not go from York, the same men they came thither, on the discovery of which practice, and some intelligence which they had with the Covenanters, the Earls of Traquair and Roxborough were confined to their Chambers (the first at York, and the second at New. Castle) but presently dismissed again, and sent back to Scotland. But they had first done the work they came for, for never were men so suddenly cooled as the Lords of England, never did men make clearer shows of an alteration by their words and 〈◊〉: in so much that the Scottish Army beginning to advance, and the Earl of Holland being sent with a great body of Horse to attend upon them, he presently sent word unto the King, in what danger he was, and how he stood in fear of being under-ridden (as I take it) by the Galloway Naggs, and thereupon received order to retire Again●…. No marvel if things standing in this condition, the King did cheerfully embrace any overture which rended to a Pacification; or did make choice of such persons to negotiate in it, who were more like to take such terms as they could get, then to fight it out. Amongst which terms, that which was most insisted on by the Scotch Commissioners, because it was most to their advantage, and the King's disabling, was That he recall all his Forces by Land or Ibid. Sea.] Which he did accordingly, and thereby lost all those notable advant●…ges, which the gallantry of his Army, the greatness of his preparations both by Sea and Land, and the weakness of an inconsiderable Enemy, might assure him of. But he had done thus once before, that is to say, at the returning of his Forces and Fleet from Rochel, Anno 1628. at what time He was in no good terms with His Subjects, and in worse with His Neighbours, having provoked the Spaniard by the invading of the Isle of Gadas, and the French by invading the Isle of the, which might have given Him ground enough to have kept his Army (and His authority withal) and when an Army once is up▪ it will keep itself; necessity of State ruling and overruling those Concessions and Acts of Grace, to which the Subjects may pretend in more settled times. But His error at this time was worse than that, the Combustions of Scotland being raised so high, that the oil of Graces rather tended to increase, than to quench their fl●…me. Had He recalled his Forces only from the Shores and Borders of that Kingdom (which is the most that He was bound to by the Pacification) till He had seen the Scots disbanded, their Officers cashiered▪ (their Forts and Castles garrisoned with English Soldiers, and some good issue of the Assembly and Parliament to be held at Edinborough, He had preserved His honour among Foreign Princes, and crushed those practices at home, which afterwards undermined His peace, and destroyed His glories. But doing it in this form and manner without effecting any thing which He seemed to Arm for, He animated the Scots to commit new insolences, the Dutch to affront Him on Hi●… own shores, and (which was worst of all) gave no small discontentment to th●… English Gentry, who having with great charge engaged themselves in this expedition o●… of hope of getting Honour to the King, their Country, and themselves by their faithful service, were suddenly dismissed, not only without that honour which they aimed at, but without any acknowledgement of their love and loyalty. A matter so unpleasing to them, that few of them appeared in the next years Army, many of them turned against Him in the following troubles, the greatest part looking on His successes with a careless eye as unconcerned in His affairs whether good or evil. But from miscarriages in this War, I might pass next to a mistake which I find in our Author concerning the ancient way of constituting the Scotish Parliaments, of which he telleth us, that The King first named eight Bishops, than Fol. 161. those Bishops chose eight Noble men, those Noble men chose so many Barons, and those the like number of Burgesses▪ etc.] Not altogether so as our Author hath it; for the King having first named 8. Bishops, and the Bishops named 8. Noble men, the Bishops and Noble men together chose 8. Commissioners for the Sheriffdomes, and as many for the Boroughs or Corporations; which two and thirty had the Names of the Lords of the Arricles, and had the canvasing and correcting of all the Bills which were offered to the Parliament before they were put to the Vote. And persuaded His Majesty that the Fol. 163. Cardinal of Richelieu would be glad to serve His Majesty or his Nephew, etc.] That the French Ambassador did endeavour to persuade the King to that belief, I shall easily grant, but am not willing to believe that the King should be so easily persuaded to it; it being the opinion of most knowing men, that this Cardinal had a very great hand in animating the Scots to such a height of disobedience, as we find them in. And this may evidently appear, first by a passage in our Author, Fol. 176. in which we find from the intelligence of Andrea's ab Habernefield, that the Cardinal sent his Chaplain and Almoner, M●…. Thomas Chamberlain, a Scot by Nation, to assist the confederates in advancing the business, and to attempt all ways for exasperating the first heat, with order, not to depart from them, till (things succeeding as he wished) he might return with good news. Secondly, from the Letter, writ by the Lord Loudon, and the rest of the ●…ovenanters to the French King, first published in his Majesty's lesser Declaration against the Scots, and since exemplified in our Author, Fol. 168. of which Letter they could hope for no good effect, but as the Cardinal should make way and provide means for it. Thirdly, by the report of a Gentleman (from whose mouth I have it) who being took Prisoner, and brought unto the Scotish Camp, immediately after the fight near Nuborne, found there the Cardinal's S●…cretary in close consultation with the heads of the Covenanters; which after his restoring to liberty by the Treaty at Rippon, he declared to the King, and offered to make it good upon his Oath. Fourthly, by the impossibility which the Cardinal found in his designs, of driving the Spaniard out of Flanders, and the rest of the Netherlands, unless the King was so disturbed and embroiled at home, that he could not help them: it being heretofore the great masterpiece of the Kings of England, to keep the Scale even between France and Spain, that neither of them being too strong for the other, the affairs of Christendom might be poized in the evener balance. Fiftly, by the free access, and secret conferences, which Hamiltons' Chaplain had with Con, the Pope's agent here, during such time as Chamberlain the Cardinal's Chaplain laboured to promote the business●…. Sixthly, Add hereunto the great displeasure which the Cardinal had conceived against the King, for invading the Isle of the, and attempting the relief of Rochel; and we shall find what little reason the King had to be persuaded to any belief in Cardinal Richelieu, though the Ambassador might use all his eloquence to persuade him to it. And had this presumptuous attempt of the Fol. 165 Hollanders met with a King, or in times of another temper, it would not, it's like, have been so silently connived at.] Most truly spoken, this action of the Hollanders being one of the greatest, and unsufferablest affronts, which ever was pu●… by any Nation on a King of England. I have been told, that complaint being made of King James, of the barbarous Butchery at Amboyna, he fell into a terrible rage, throwing his Hat into the fire, and then stamping on it, and using all the signs of outrageous Passion; but when Time & Sleep had taken off the edge of his Fury, he told the Merchants who attended his answer, That it was then no time to quarrel with the Hollanders, of whom he hoped to make some use for restoring the Palsgrave to his lawful Patrimony. King Charles might make the same answer on this new occasion, he had his head and his hands too, so full of the Scots, that he had no time to quarrel with the Hollanders, though certainly, if he had then presently turned his Fleet upon the Hollanders, (wherein, no question but the Spaniard would have sided with him) he had not only rectified his honour, in the eye of the world, but might thereby have taught the Scots a better lessen of Obedience, than he had brought them to, by the great preparations which he made against them. But this I look on in the Hollanders, as one of the Consequents or eff●…cts of the Scottish dare, for if the Scots who were his Subjects, durst be so bold as to baffle with him, why might not they presume a little on his patience, who were his confederates and Allies, in husbanding an advantage of so great a concernment; and having vailed his Crown to the Scots and English, why might he not veil it to them his good friends and neighbours? At this close and secret Council, December Fol. 167. 5. it was agreed that his Majesty should call a Parliament to assemble, April the 13th.] This secret Council did consist of no more than three, that is, the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and (who must needs be at the end of every business) the marquis of Hamilton. By these it was agreed, that the King should be moved to call a Parliament, the intimation of it to be presently made; but the Parliament itself not to be assembled till the middle of April. In giving which long interval, it was chiefly aimed at, that by the reputation of a Parliament so near approaching, the King might be in credit to take up Money, wherewith to put himself into a posture of War, in case the Parliament should fail him; but then the inconvenience was as great on the other side, that interval of four Month's time, giving the discontented party opportunity to unite themselves, to practise on the Shires and Burroughs, to elect such members, as they should recommend unto them, and finally, not only to consult, but to conclude on such particulars, which they intended to insist on when they were assembled. And though it be extreme ridiculous for me to shoot my Fooles-bable in so great a business, in which such wise men did concur; yet give me leave to speak those thoughts which I had of that advice from the first beginning, reckoning it always both unsafe and unseasonable, as the times than were. I looked upon it as unsafe, in regard that the last Parliament being dissolved in so strange a rupture, the Closets of some Members searched, many of them Imprisoned, and some F●…ned, it was not to be hoped but that they would come thither with revengeful thoughts: and should a breach happen between them and the King, and the Parliament be dissolved upon it▪ as it after was, the breach would be irreparable, as indeed it proved. I looked upon it as unseasonable also, in regard that Parliaments had been so long discontinued, and the people lived so happily without them, that very few took thought who should see the next; and 〈◊〉 that, the neighbouring Kings and States beheld the King with greater veneration than they had done ●…ormerly, as one that could stand on his own legs, and had screwed up himself to so great power, both by Sea and Land, without such discontents and brabbles as his Parliaments gave him. But whatsoever it was in itself, either safe or seasonable, I am sure it proved neither to the men who adv●…sed the calling of it, unless it were to Hamilton only, of which more hereafter. Yet the King was willing to allow them Fol. 168. all the fair dealing he in honour could, hoping to gain upon them by the sweetness of his carriage, but all would not do.] And it is marvel he should hope it, there are some men of so untractable nature, ut eorum superbiam frustra per modestiam & obsequium effugeris, that neither modesty nor obsequiousness can get ground upon them. A Presbyterian and a Scot, are not won by favours, and he that doth endeavour ●…t, doth but lose his labour. Nor could the King be ignorant, of the hard temper of the men whom he had in hammering. I have been told that when the Archbishop of Saint Andrews came to take his leave of him, then setting forwards toward Scotland, he told him plainly, that by the long experience which he had of that Nation, for the space of sixty years and upwards, he knew them to be a people of so cross a grain, that they were lost by favours, and gained by punishments; and therefore that he m●… not hope to win upon them by fair dealing, or by the sweetness of his disposition, as my Author terms it, but must resolve to reduce them to their duty, by such ways of power, as God had then put into hi●… hands. Which counsel, if the King had followed, when he was in the head of that gallant Army, the Scots being then so inconsiderable and so ill appointed, that they had not three thousand Muskets in all their Army (as I have been in●…ormed by persons of great worth and quality) he had then put an end both to their Insolences, and his own great Troubles. And hereunto acordeth one of our modern wits in these following Verses. Not Gold, nor acts of Grace, 'tis Steel must tame The stubborn Scot; Princes that would reclaim Rebels by yielding, do like him, or worse, Who saddled his own back to shame his horse. They invited and procured to their service Ibid. many Commanders from Holland, who still kept their places there, though such Officers as betook themselves to the King's Employment, were instantly cashiered.] ●…his was poor pay for so great a courtesy as the King had done them, by suffering them to beat the Spaniards on his own coasts, under his protection, and being within the compass of the King's Chambers, as the Seamen phrase it, but natuvale est odesse quem laeseris: It is a natural thing (saith Tacitus) to hate the man whom we once have wronged. Nor do men think themselves safe for an injury done, but by disobliging the wronged party, from taking revenge, by heaping more injuries upon him. Nor was this all the injury which the Hollanders offered to the King in the course of this business. They furnished the Scots with Arms and Ammunition to maintain their War, and that too for the most part, (contrary to their wont customs) without ready money. But the truth is, they had some reason to deal●… thus courteously with the Scots. It had been once their own case, and so let them go. To which I answer, true it is, he had too Fol. 182. much, and too long favoured the Romish Faction, but as upon what account it was he favoured them, is uncertain.] Our Author here acquits the Archbishop from the Popish Faith, but leaves him under a suspicion of favouring the Popish Faction; which in a man who cannot tell on what account he favours it, may be thought uncharitable. But both King James and King Charles in several Declarations, and in their several Answers to Parliament Petitions give this reason for it; that is to say, that by showing som●… favours to the Papists here, they might obtain the like favours for such Protestants as lived in the Dominions of Popish Princes. And unto this, which was indeed the greatest motive unto those indulgencies, which had been granted to the Papists by those two King●…: another might be added in justifica●…ion of the Archbishop, if he showed any such favours to the Popish Faction, as he stands here charged with: which is, that seeing the Puritans grown so strong, even to the endangering of our Peace, both in Church and State, by the negligence and remissness of the former Government, he thought it necessary to show some countenance to the Papists, that the balance being kept even between the parties; the Church and State might be preserved (as indeed they were) in the greater safety. And this appeareth to be his chief inducement to it, in regard that when the Protestant p●…rty was grown strong enough, to stand and go without such Crutches, he then declared himself openly against that Faction, as our Author ingenuously informeth us, in that which followeth. He tampered indeed to introduce some Ibid. Ceremonies bordering upon superstition, disused by us, and abused by them; from whence the Romanist●… collected such a disposition in him to their Tenets, as they began to cry him up for their Proselyte. In this passage there are many things to be considered, first that the Ceremonies which the Archbishop tampered to introduce, are not here said to be superstitious, but only to border upon superstition. Secondly, that those Ceremonies are said to be disused, which shows that they were still in force, though not still in use, as our Author telleth us of the Statute concerning Knighthood. Thirdly, that these Ceremonies●…d ●…d been abused by them of the Church of Rome, and therefore being but abused, might lawfully be restored to the Primitive use, for Abusus non tollit usum, as the old rule is. Fourthly, that if the Romanists upon these presumptions cry him up for theirs, it was most ignorantly done, there being nothing which more tended to their destruction, than the introducing of some Ceremonies, which by late negligence were disused. And this was the opinion of the most understanding men amongst them. For I have heard from a person of known Nobility, that at his being at Rome, with a Father of the English College, one of the Novices came in, and told him with a great deal of joy, that the English were upon returning to the Church of Rome, that began to set up Altars, and to officiate in their Copes, to adorn their Churches, and paint the picture of the Saints in their Chancel windows. To which the old Father made reply with some indignation, that he talked like an ignorant Novice, that these proceedings rather tended unto the ruin, than advancement of the Catholic Cause; that by this means the Church of England coming nearer to the ancient usages, the Catholics there would sooner be drawn off to them, than any more of that Nation would fall off to Rome. Whereof (that is to say, the Dissolution Fol. 184. of the Parliament) many laid the blame upon the Bishop of Canterbury.] Though many laid the blame on him, yet all the blame was not laid on him, some part thereof being laid upon the Earl of Strafford, but on neither rightly: both of them avowing in their Answers to that part of their Charge in the following Parliament, that it was done by the general vote of the Privy Council, not a man dissenting. Certain I am, that the Archbishop was so far from having any such thoughts, on Monday morning, May 4. being the day before that unhappy accident, that he was taking care to provide some materials in a business which concerned the Church, of which he was resolved to speak in the House of Peers, on the Wednesday following. Some say that this Dissolution was precipitated upon some intelligence, that the House of Commons meant that day to vote against the War with Scotland, than which there could be nothing more destructive to the King's affairs. And it was probable enough that it was so meant. For first, the Remonstrance of the State of the Kingdom, doth declare no less, where it is said, that the People were like to close with the King, in satisfying his desire of Money, but that withal they were like to blast their malicious design against Scotland, they being very much indisposed to give any countenance to that War: And Secondly, we find that House to be highly magnified ●…in a Scotish Pamphlet, called the Intentions of the Army, for their pious zeal in crossing the intended War, and denying any countenance and assistance towards it. But whatsoever the truth is, most sure I am, that it was secretly muttered about the Court the night before, that Hamilton had prevailed with the King to dissolve the Parliament; who playing (as he used to do) with both hands at once, did with the one, pull back the Commons by his party there, from all compli●…nce with the King, and with the other thrust the King forwards to dissolve that meeting: that by this means the King's affairs being more embroiled than they were before, he might confirm the Scots, and confound the English, and thereby raise himself to the point he aimed at. A sad and unfortunate day it was, and the news so unpleasing unto the Author of these papers whosoever he be, that being brought him by a friend, whilst he was writing some dispatches, it so astonished him (though he had heard some inkling of it the night before) that suddenly the pen fell out of his hand, and long it was, before he could recollect his spirits to return an answer: Having thus said, I should proceed from the dissolving of the Parliament, to the continuing of the Convocation; but I must first remove a block which lieth in my way: our Author telleth us that This Archbishop's Predecessor Penultime, Ibid. was Dr. Whitgift.] Whereas indeed it was not Dr. Whitgift, but Dr. Bancroft, who was the penultimate and last Predecessor saving one unto the Archbishop; Dr. Bancroft coming in between Whit. gift and Abbot, as any who have looked into these affairs cannot choose but know: This Convention was not more unhappily Ibid. dissolved than another was continued. That is, as a witty Gcntleman said well, a new Synod made of an old Convocation.] The witty Gentleman here meant was Sir Edward Deering, who pleased himself exceedingly in one of his witty Speeches (but made withal good sport to most knowing men) in descantin●… on a Synod and a Convocation; the one being a Greek word, the other originally Latin, but both of the same sense and signification: A Provincial Synod, being no other than a Convocation of the Clergy of the Provinces of York●…, or Canterbury; and the Convocation of the Clergy of both Provinces together, being nothing else but a National Synod. So that it was the same Synod, and the same Convocation (call it which you will) as before it was, and not a new Synod, made of an old Convocation, as the witty Gentleman would have it. A Gentleman he was, more witty than wise, but more proud then either; one of sufficient Learning to adorn a Gentleman, but very ill employed in disgracing the Clergy, considering that the most worthy of his Ancestors was of that Profession, and himself allied unto it by some mixed relations. But see how ill this Gentleman sped with his too much wit, being the first that threw Dirt into the Face of the Archbishop, and preferred the first Information which was brought against him; he after flew so high in his commendations (in the Preface to his Book of Speeches) that neither Heylyn whom the Scotish Pamphleteers (in their Laudencium Autocatachrisis) call his Grac●…s Herald, nor Pocklington, nor Dough, nor any of his own Chaplains, in any of their Speeches of him, or addresses to him, ever went so farr●…. Having propounded to the House in that witty Speech which he made against the Canons and Convocation, that every one that had a hand in making those Canons should come unto the Bar of the House of Commons with a Candle in one hand, and a Book in the other, and there give fire to his own Canons, he was so far from seeing it done, that on the contrary, he saw (within a little more than a twelve month after) the Collection of his witty Speeches condemned by that House unto the fire, and burnt in several places by the Public Hangman. And finally, having in another of his witty Speeches defamed the cathedrals of this Kingdom, and that too with so foul a mouth, as if he had licked up all the filth of foregoing Libels, to vomit it at once upon them, he made it his earnest suit not long after to be Dean of Canterbury: which being denied him by the King, in a great discontent he returned to the Parliament, though he hought good to put some other gloss upon it in his Declaration. But of this witty Gentleman we said enough. Proceed we now unto our Author, who telleth us of this new-made Synod, that By a new Commission from the King, Ibid. it was impowered to sit still.] No such matter verily, the new Commission which he speaks of gave them no such power. The Writ by which they 〈◊〉 first called, and made to be a Convocation, gave them power to si●…; and by that Writ they were to sit as a Convocation, till by another Writ proceeding from the like Authority th●…y were dissolved and licenced to return to their several homes. The Commission, subsequent to that, gave them power to Act, to Propose, Deliberate and conclude upon such Canons and Constitutions, as they conceived conducible to the Peace of the Church. And such a Commission they had granted at their first assembling. But being there was a clause in that Commission, that it should last no longer, then during the Session of that Parliament; and that the King thought good to continue the Convocation, till they had finished all those matters which they had in treaty: his Majesty gave order for a new Commission to be issued out of the same tenor with the former, but to expire upon the signification of his Majesty's pleasure. I have been told that it was some time, before some of the Members of the lower House of Convocation, could be satisfied in the difference between the Writ, & the Commisston, though one of the company had fully opened and explained the same unto them: which being made known to the Archbishop, and by him to the King, it was proposed to the Lord Finch, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, the Earl of Manchester, Lord Privy Seal, Sir Edward Littleton, chief Justice of the Common Pleas, Sir John Banks Attorney General, Sir Robert Heath, and Sir Ralph Whitfield the King's Sergeants at Law; who on the 10. of May, subscribed a paper with their hands, to this effect, That the Convocation being called by the King's Writ, was to continue till it were dissolved by the King's Writ, notwithstanding the dissolution of the Parliament. Upon the readi●…g of this paper, in the lower House of Convocation, and the satisfaction there by given to all contrary scruples, they went on to their business, not as a new Synod made of an old Convocation, (quoth the wit●…y Gentleman) but as an old Synod armed with a new Commission. What they did there we shall see anon, but with what danger they sat there, I shall tell you now: The dissolving of the Parliament having bred such discontentments, some papers posted up by Lilborne, so inflamed the Apprentices, and the Riot upon Lambeth House, created such a terror in the Members of the Convocation, that the King was fain to set a guard about Westminster Abbey, for the whole time of their sitting. Poor men, to what a distress were they brought? in danger of the King's displeasure if they ros●…, of the People's fury if they sat; in danger of being beaten up by Tumults while they were at the work, of being beaten down by the following Parliament, when th●… work was done, and after all, obnoxious to the lash of censorious tongues for their good intendments. For notwithstanding their great care, that all things might be done with decency, and to edification, every one, even our Author himself, must have his blow at them. And first, he strikes at the O●…th enjoined in the sixth Canon, for pre●…ervation of the Doctrine and Discipline of the Church here by L●…w established. But to make sure work of it, that the blow may come home indeed, he prepares his way with a discourse against Episcopacy itself, for maintenance whereof (amongst other things) that Oath was framed, telling us positively, that Bishops and Presbyters in Scripture Ibid. phrase are of eq●…ivalent import, and denote the selfsame persons without the least distinction. They whom Holy Text calls Bishops, having an Identity, a s●…enesse of Name, of Ordination, of Office, of all qualifications necessary to that Office, with Presbyters.] I have heard that when Cornelius Burges, was to go out Doctor, he would needs take upon him to answer the Divinity Act; but did it so unluckily, and with such a plentiful want of understanding in the terms of Logic, that Doctor Prideaux said openly to him, Tu possis bene pradicare, sed non potes bene disputare, that he might possibly be a good Preacher, though he were but a very sorry Disputant. The like may be said of our Author 〈◊〉 so, when he plai●… the Historian, in relating of such things, as are buil●… upon good intelligence, he doth it very well, few better; but when he comes to show his opinion, in a matter controverted, and to give his reasons for the same, he doth it very ill, none worse. For first, I do not believe that our Author can easily prove Presbyters and Bishops to be of equivalent import, or comprehended under the same name in the Holy Scripture. But secondly, granting that they be, who that pretends to Logic, can dispute so lamely, as from a Community of names, to infer an Identity or samen●…sse in the thing so named, which is the ground our Author builds on. King's are called Gods in holy Scripture, I have said ye are Gods, Psal. 82. 6. and God doth fr●…quently call himself by the name of King: yet if a man should thence infer, that from this Community of names, there a●…iseth an Identity or sameness between God and the King, he might be worthily condemned for so great a Blasphemer. S. Peter calls our Saviour Christ by the name of Bishop▪ and himself a Presbyter or Priest (an Elder, as most unhandsomely our English reads it) the Bishop of your Soule●…, 1 Pet. 2. 25. I who am also an Elder, 1 Pet. ver. 1. y●…t were it a sorry piece of Logic to conclude from hence, that there is no distinction between an Apostle, and an Elder, the Prince of the Apostles, and a Simple Presbyter, or between Christ the supreme Pastor of his Church, and every ordinary B shop; And thirdly, taking i●… for granted that Bishops have an Identity or sameness in Name, Office, Ordination, and Qualification, with Presbyters, as our Author telleth us they have, it will not follow convertibly that Presbyters have the like Identity, or sameness of Qualification, Ordination▪ Name and Office, which the Bishop hath. My reason is, because a Bishop being first Regularly and Canonically to be made a Priest, before he take the order and degree of a Bish●…p, hath in him all the Qualifications, the Ordination, Name and Office which a Presbyter hath; and something farther superadded, as well in point of Order as of Juvisdiction, which every Presbyter hath not, so that though every Bishop be a P●…iest or Presbyter, yet every Presbyter not a Bishop. To make this clear by an examp●…e in the Civil Government, when Sir Robert C●…cill Knight, and principal Secretary of State, was made first Earl of Salisbury, and then Lord Treasurer, continuing Knight and Secretary as he was before: it might be said, that he had an Identity or sameness in Name, Office, Order and Qualification, with Sir John Herbert the other Secretary; yet could this be said reciprocally of Sir John Herbert, because there was something supper▪ added to Sir Robert Cecil, namely the dignity of an Earl, and the Office of Lord Treasurer, which the other had not. So true is that of Lactantius an old Christian writer, Adeo argumenta ex absurdo petita ineptos habent excitus; So ordinary a thing it is for Arguments built upon weak grounds, to have worse conclusions. Episcopacy being thus knocked down with a painted club, our Author goes on to tell us what great, but unprofitable pains were taken in defence thereof, telling us, that though the Press swarmed with Books, setting forth the right upon which it was founded, yet all advantaged them little. How so? because, saith he, Such a prejudice there was against them, Ibid. and the truth contended for lay then so deep, as few had perspicuity enough to 〈◊〉 it.] That the Press swarmed with Books▪ purposely writ about this time, in defence of the D●…vine Right of Episcopacy, I remember not; but sure I am, it swarmed with many pestilent and seditious Libels, in which the B shops were defamed, and the calli●…g questioned: In answer whereunto (if any of them were thought worthy to receive an answer) it is possible that some●… what may be said upon the by, for Declaration of that Divine Right on which it was founded. Nor was this any new claim never made before, but frequently insisted on by the Bishop, and those that writ in defence of Bishops, in Queen Elizabeth's time; by Doctor Bancroft (than Bishop of London) in the Conference at Hampton Court, and that too, in the presence of Doctor Reinolds (incomparably the most Learned man of the opposite party) who never contradicted him for it, nor confuted him in it; and finally by Bishop Laud in the High Commission, which gave occasion of matter to some public Libellors, but never any serious and solid debate till after the making of these Canons: but be the title never so good, the asserting of it never so frequent, the Books by which it was maintained never so learned, and the reasons in those Books never so convincing; yet if once prejudice come in to persuade the contrary, it is no marvel if all men had not perspicacity enough to discern the truth. It is an old Maxim in Philosophy, that intus existens prohibet ali●…num; never more truly verified, than when men come with prejudice and prepossession to a point in Controversy. But howsoever, though some men blind with prejudice had not the perspicacity of discerning truth, yet some others had; unless the argument be good, that because God layeth such a spirit of insalvation upon some men, that seeing they should see but should not perceive, therefore all other men must be like the Idols in the Psalmist which have eyes and see not. Yet for the opening of the eyes, as well of men willing to be informed as wilfully blinded, no 〈◊〉 had the Smectymnians revived the Controversy, but presently the Divine Right of Episcopacy was maintained and published by Dr. Hall than Bishop of Exeter in his Answer and Reply to their several Tractates, by Churchman in the History of Episcopacy, by Dr. Taylor in a Book, entitled, Episcopacy by Divine Right, by several Tracts of Dr. Hammond both in English and Latin. But lest these should be as much suspected of partiality, as others of prejudice, we shall find the like declared in a Book writ purposely on that subject by Sir Thomas Aston Knight and Baronet, and in the Aerea Mastiques of John Theyre Gent. men no may interessed (but only by their good affections) in the Church's quarrels. And some there are not altogether of so good affections, who have done the like. And first the Lincolne-shire Minister, so much cried up for writing against Altars, or rather against placing the Communion Table Altarwise, doth affirm expressly, pag. 64. that the calling of Bishops is founded upon Apostolical, and (for all the essential parts thereof) on Divine Right. And secondly, the Lord Faulkland (no great friend to Bishops, as was showed before) in a Tract of his against Mr. Henderson before he squinted toward the Court, doth affirm as positively, that there is more to be found for Bishops and Episcopacy in the holy Scripture, than either for the Lords day, or for Infant-Baptism. And thirdly, we shall find, the learned Mr. John Selden is not totally against us in this particular, as appeareth by his retortion of the Argument of Mr. Grimston in the House of Commons. Mr. Grimstons' Argument was this, 1. That Bishops are Jure Divino is of question. 2. That Archbishops are not Jure Divino is out of question: 3. That Ministers are Jure Divino, there is no question. Now if Bishops which are questioned, whether Jure Divino, and Archbishops which out of question are not Jure Divino, shall suspend Ministers that are Jure Divino, I leave it to you Mr. Speaker. Which Mr. S●…lden (whether with greater wit or scorn it is hard to say) thus retorted on him, 1. That the Convocation is Jure Divino is a question. 2. That Parliaments are not Jure Divino is out of question. 3. That Religion is Jure Divino there is no question. Now Mr. Speaker that the Convocation, which is questioned, whether Jure Divino, and Parliaments, which out of question are not Jure Divino, should meddle with Religion which questionless is Jure Divino, I leave to you Mr. Speaker. And so much for that: our Author now draws towards the Oath, which (by reason of an etc. carelessly left in by him who transcribed it for the Press) he falls on with as much severity, as our witty Gentleman did with scorns, saying of that etc. That, It was of so mysterious import, a●… the very Ibid. imposers, much less the Jurors were not able to decipher what it meant.] And of a mysterious import i●… had been indeed, if not restrained and limited by the following words. The whole clause in the Oath stands thus: Nor will I ever give my consent to alter the Government of this Church by Archbishops, Bishops, Deans, Archdeacon's, &c. as it stands now established, and as by right it ought to stand. In the construction of which Text the &c. as it now stands is a mere impertinency; for being left in, it signifieth nothing, in regard of the restriction following; and being left out, the sense is currant and complete without it. And this, our Author, and the witty Gentleman, and he that pulled down the Cross in S. Paul's Churchyard, and others which writ against this Oath could not choose but see; but that they were not willing to see any thing which might make against them. But whereas our Author telleth us, that neither the imposers nor the Jurors (that is to say, neither the men that voted to the Oath, nor they that were required to take it) were able to decipher what it meant, I find by that, that our Author hath talked with very few of that Convocation. The truth is, that in many Canons which were made before this (as all of them in a manner were) there was a particular enumeration of all persons vested with any Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, that is to say, Archbishops, B●…shops, Deans, Archdeacon's, Deans and Chapters, and other persons having peculiar or exempt Jurisdiction: which having been repeated distinctly and particularly in such of the Canons as were first made, was in the first asserting of this Canon for avoiding of a tautology so often iterated, cut off with this etc. with an intention nevertheless to make the enumeration perf●…ct (and consequently to expunge this etc.) before it came to be engrossed. But the King being weary of the charge and clamour, which the keeping of a Guard on the Convocation did expose Him to, did hasten them to a conclusion by so many Messages, brought by Sir HenVane and others, that in that haste this unlucky etc. was forgotten, and so committed to the Press accordingly. But this etc. is not all which our Author quarrels in the O●…th, telling us next, That To exact an Oath of dissent from Civil Ibid. Establishments in such things of indifferency, was an affront to the very fundamentals of Government,] Our Author taking it for granted that the government of the Church by Bishops is a thing of indifferency (which is a clearer evidence of his own opinion in this point than we had before) is much aggrieved that the ●…lergie should bind themselves by Oath not to consent to any alteration of it; and this he calleth an affront to the Fundamentals of Government; but on what reason, as he doth not tell us, so for my part I am not able to conceive. It is indeed an affront to Government, no●… to submit or yield obedience unto civil Establishments, when made and legally established; but it is no affront not to give consent to any such establishments while they are in treaty: for then the liberty of assenting or▪ dissenting, of yea or nay would be taken away from every Member in the Houses of Parliament, and every man must give cons●…nt to every Bill which is offered to him. Besides there were but few of the Convocation whose consent was likely to be asked, when any change of Church-Government should be set on foot, so that their dissenting or assenting was not much material, but as by their readiness of consenting to such Innovations in the public Government, they might encourage others to proceed against it. Here then is no affront to Government, much less to the Fundamentals of it, the O●…th not binding any man not to yield obedience, but not to give consent to such alteration, no more than it is now at this present time, for many a well-minded man to live quietly and peaceably under the present Government of the Civil State, who never gave consent to the present change. But so (I trow) it was not in the solemn Covenant, in which it was not thought enough to bind men to submit to such alterations as were then contriving, but actually to endeavour the ●…xtirpation of the whole Prelaci●…, that is to say, the Government of the Church by Archbishops, Bishops, D●…ans, Deans and Chapters, Arc●…deacons, and all other Officers which depend upon them. Nor was this ●…quired of the Clergi●… only which had before taken an Oath of Canonical obedience to their several and resp●…ctive Bishops, but even of the Bishops, Deans, Archd●…acons, and Members of Capitular bodies, who having took a former Oath for the preservation of the Lands and Privileges of their several Church●…, must by this Covenant be bound to endeavour their own extirpation, and the subversion of those Churches, and consequently every one of them must be a F●…lo de se, as our Lawyer's phrase it. Our Author hath not done with the Oath, for he finds fault n●…xt. That the Juror therein declares he swears Fol. 1●…. willingly, to which he was to be constrained under the highest penalties.] This is a grievous crime indeed, but such (if any crime it be) as the high Court of Parliament hath been guilty of, in drawing up the Oath of Allegiance, in the third year of King James: In which the party is to swe●…re, that he ●…akes that recognition, not only heartily and truly, but also Willingly 〈◊〉 and yet the ●…aking of that O●…th is imposed on all the Subj●…cts under several Penalties, if any of them should refuse it. A crime it is in both or neither▪ and therefore our Author hath proceeded with great partiality, in faulting that as ill done in the Convocation which passed with so great judgement and authority in the Court of Parliamen●…. Our Author having done with the Oath, goes back to the Canon about Socinianism, which he excepts against, because As the Scots condemned the Arminian Ibid. Tenets, without defining what those Tenets were, so did these the Socinians, not declaring wherein they were culpable.] I am loath to think our Author to be a Socinian, though his advocating for them in such manner may invite me to it; for otherwise the Case he putteth is extremely different. The Arminian Tenets were but few, reduced to five, and not increased in the long agitation of those weighty Controversies, and so might easily have been reckoned and defined when the Scots condemned them: But So●…inianisme is a complication (as the Canon calls it) of so many Her●…sies, that the bare specification and recital of them (which must be made by searching into their Books and Papers) might have taken up the greatest part of the time which the Convocation had to spend in all other businesses. It was as much as they could do to condemn it under that general Notion, to interdict the bringing in▪ printing, and studying such Books as contained those Heresies. And finally, to lay such a brand upon it, as men might know how much these Tenets were abhorred by the Church of England. And yet for all this great care they had little thanks, not only ou●… Author being displ●…ased with their proceedings, but the rise, growth, and danger of Socinianism was not long after charged on the Archbishop and divers eminent Members of that Convocation, by one Mr. Cheynell, and that too in a printed Pamphlet written to that purpose, Anno 1643. So hard a thing it is to keep a good conscience, and to please all parties. From this our Author passeth to the Benevolence which the Clergy granted to the King in that Convoc●…tion, being of Four shillings in the Pound to be paid yearly for six years' next following. Which was beheld (saith he) as an act of Ibid. very high presumption, and an usurpation upon the pr●…minence of Parliament, no Convocation▪ having power to grant any Subsidies o●… aid without confirmation from the Lay-Senate.] With ignorance enough in them that beheld it so▪ or looked upon it as an Act of very high presumption; The English Clergy being the greatest slaves which the Sun ever shined on, if they could not give away their own without leave from others. But whereas our Author puts it down for a Rule in Government, That no Convocation hath power to grant any Subsidies or aid without confirmation from the Parliament; I must let him (and all that shall read him) know, that never was any rule more false, nor more weakly grounded; The Clergy in Convocation having as much power to give away the money of the Clergy, by whom they are chose to that employment; as the Commons in Parliament have to give the money of the Cities, Towns, and Counties, for which they serve. For in the choosing of the Clerks for the Convocation there is an Instrument drawn up and sealed by the Clergy, in which they bind themselves to the Archdeacon or Archdeacon's of their several Dioceses, upon the pain of forfeiting all their lands and goods, se ratum, gratum & acceptum habere, quicquid dicti procuratores sui dixerint, fecerint, vel constituerint, that is to say, to allow, stand to, and perform whatsoever their said Clerks or Proctors shall say, do●…, or condescend unto on their behalf. Greater authority than this, as the Commons have not, so why the Clergy in the Convocation should not make use of this authority, as they see occasion, I can find no reason. Nor is it a speculative authority only, and not reducible unto practice and authority which was then in force, but not then in use, as our Author hath distinguished in another place; but very safely praecedented in Qu●…en Elizabeth's tim●…. For in the year 1585., (if I remember it right, as I think I do) the Convocation having given one Subsidy confirmed by Parliament, and finding that they had not done sufficiently for the Queen's occasions, did after add a Benevolence or Aid of two shillings in the pound to be levied upon all the Clergy, and to be levied by such Synodical Acts and Constitutions as they digested for that purpose, without having any recourse to the Parliament for it; which Synodical Acts and Constitutions the Clergy of this present Convocation followed word for word, not doubting but they had as good authority to do it now, as the Convocation in Q. Elizabeth's time h●…d to do it then; and so undoubtedly they had, whatsoever either our Author here, or any other Enemy of the Church's power can allege against it. Our Author hath now done with the Convocation, and leads us on u●…to the War levied by the Scots, who had no sooner made an entrance, but the King was first assaulted by a Petition from some Lords of England, bearing this inscription, To the Kings most excellent Majesty. The Fol. 189. humble Petition of your Majesty's most loyal and most obedient Subjects, whose names are under-written, in behalf of themselves & divers others.] Concerning this we are to know, that a little before the Scots fell into England, they published a Pamphlet, called the Intentions of the Army; in which it was declared, That they resolved not to lay down Arms till the Reformed Religion were settled in both Kingdoms upon surer grounds, the Causers and Abettors of their present Troubles brought to public Justice, and that Justice to be done in Parliament: and for the Causers of their Troubles they reckoned them in general to be the Papists, Prelates and their Adherents, but more particularly the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Lieutenant of Ireland. In Correspondence hereunto comes this Petition, subscribed by six Earls, one Viscount, and four Barons, being no other than a superstructure upon that foundation, a Descant only on that Plain Song. And presently on the back of that, another is posted to the same effect from the City of London: So that the clouds which gathered behind Him in the South were more amazement to the King than this Northern Tempest, The Petition of the Londoners, (that we may see how well the business was contrived) was this that followeth, To the Kings most excellent Majesty. The humble Petition of your Majesty's loyal Subjects the Citizens of London. Most gracious Sovereign, BEing moved by the duty and obedience which by Religion and Laws your Petitioners owe unto your sacred Majesty, they humbly present unto your Princely and pious consideration, the several and pressing grievances following, viz: I. The great and unusual impositions upon Merchandise imported and exported. II. The urging and levying of Ship-money, notwithstanding which, both Merchants, their goods, and ships have been taken and destroyed by Turks and Pirates. III. The multitude of Monopolies, Patents, and Warrants, whereby trade in the City, and other parts of this Kingdom is much decayed. IV. The sundry Innovations in matters of Religion; the Oath and Canons newly imposed by the late Convocation, whereby your Petitioners are in danger to be deprived of their Ministry. V. The concourse of Papists and their habitation in London, and the Suburbs, whereby they have more means and opportunities of plotting and executing their designs against the Religion established. VI The sudden calling and sudden dissolution of Parliaments, without addressing of your Subjects grievances. VII. The imprisonment of divers Citizens for not payment of Ship-money, and other impositions, and the prosecution of others in the Star. Chamber for non conformity to commands in Patents and Monopolies, whereby trade is restrained. VIII. The great danger your sacred Person is exposed unto in the present War, and the various fears that have seized upon your Petitioners, and their Families, by reason thereof. Which grievances and fears have occasioned so great a stop and destruction in trade, that your Petitioners can neither sell, receive, nor pay, as formerly, and tends unto the utter ruin of the Inhabitants of this City, the decay of Navigation and Clothing, and other Manufactures of this Kingdom. Your Petitioners humbly conceiving the said grievances to be contrary to the Laws of this Kingdom, and finding by experience that they are not redressed by the ordinary Courts of Justice; do therefore most humbly beseech your Royal Majesty to cause a Parliament to be summoned with all convenient speed, whereby they may be relieved in the Premises. And your Majesties, etc. The like Petitions there came also from other parts, according as the people could be wrought upon to promote the business; which makes it the less ma●…vell that Petitions shou●…d come thronging in from all parts of the Kingdom (as soon as the Parliament was begun) craving redress of the late general exorbitancies both in Church and State, as Fol. 129. we are told by our Author. And to deny the Sco●…s any thing, considering Fol. 194. their armed posture, was interprered the way to give them all.] In the Intentions of the Army before mentioned, the Scots declared that they would take up nothing of the Country people without ready money, and when that f●…iled, they would give Bills of Debt for the p●…yment of it. But finding such good correspondence, and such weak resistance after their en●…ry into England, they did not only spoil and plunder wheresoever they came, but would not hearken to a Cessation of Arms, during the time of the Treaty then in agitation, unless their Army were maintained at the charge of the English. And this was readily yielded to, for fear (it seems) l●…t by denying the Scots any thing, we should give them all. I know ind●…ed, that it is neither safe nor prudent, to deny any reasonable request to an armed power, arma t●…nti omnia dat qui justa negat, as the Poet hath it, and thus the story of David and Nabal will inform us truly. But than it must be such a power which is able to extort by force, tha●… those which they cannot otherwise procure by favour, which whether the Scots were Masters of, I do more th●…n question. Exceedingly cried up they were, both in Court and City, as men of most unmatchable valour, and so undoubtedly they were, till they found resistance; their Officers and Commanders magnified both for wi●… and courage, the Common Soldiers looked on as the Sons of Enoch, ●…he English being thought as Grasshoppers in comparison of them, which notwithstanding the Earl of Strafford (than General of the English Army) would have given them battle, if the King had been willing to engage; and signified by Letters to the Archbishop of Canterb●…y, that he durst undertake (upon the p●…rill of his head) to send them back faster th●…n they came, but that he did not hold it concellable, as the case then stood. It is an old saying, & a true, that the Lion is not so fierce as he is painted; nor were the Scots such terrible fellows, as they were reported. For when they met with any who knew how to 〈◊〉 with them, they proved such Lions as the Boy saw the Butcher carry by two and two together upon a Horse; repulsed with shame and ignominy from the walls of Hereford, driven out of the field with foul dishonour in the Fight on Marston-Moor, n●…r York; totally routed by the gallantry and conduct of one man in three several battles, in Lancashire, at Dunbar, at Worcester, the command of their own Country taken from them, and themselves made 〈◊〉 to a people, whom they most despised. But 〈◊〉 they br●…wed, so let them bake, for the thought is taken. James E●…rle of Montrosse having long Fol. 195 and faithfully adhered to the Covenanters, etc.] The reason of which adh●…ring to them, as he afterwards averred unto the King was briefly this. At his return from the Court of France, where he was Captain (as I take it) of the Sootish guard, he had a mind to put himself into the King's service, and was advised to make his way by the marquis of Hamilton; who knowing the gallantry of the man, and fearing a competitor in his Majesty's favour, cunningly told him, that he would do him a●…y service, but that the King was so wholly given up to the English, and so discountenanced and slighted the Scotish Nation, that were it not for doing service for his Country (which the King intended to reduce to the form of a Province) he could not suffer the indignities which were put upon him. This done, he rep●…es unto the King, tells him of the Earls return from France, and of his purpose to attend him at the time appoint●…d; but that he was so powerful, so popular, and of such esteem among the Scots, by reason of an old descent from the Royal Family, that if he were not nipped in the bud (as we use to say) he might end anger the King's interest and affairs, in Scotland. The E●…rle being brought unto the King, with very great demonstrations of affection, on the Marquis' part, the King without taking any great notice of him, gave him his hand to kiss, and so turned aside: which so confirmed in the truth of that false report, which Hamilton had delivered to him, that in great displeasure and disdain, he makes for Scotland, where he found who knew how to work on such humours, as he brought along with him, till by seconding the information which he had from Hamilton, they had fashioned him wholly to their will. How he fell off again, we are told by our Author. Tuesday November the 3. being the day Fol. 196. prefixed, and the Parliament sat, etc.] Touching this day there was a Letter wrote to the Archbishop of Canterbury, advertising that the Parliament of the twentieth year of Henry the Eighth, which began in the fall of Cardinal Wolsey, continued in the diminution of the power and privileges of the Clergy, and ended in the dissolution of the Abbeys, and Religious Houses, was begun on the third day of November; and therefore that for good luck sake, he would move the King to respite the first sitting of it, for a day or two longer. But the Archbishop not he●…ning to this advertisement, the Parliament had their first sitting on Tuesday the third day of November, as our Author telleth us: which Parliament as it begun in the fall and ruin of the Archbishop himself, and was continued in the total dissipation of the remaining rites and privileges of the English Clergy; so did it not end till it had subverted the Episcopal Government, dissolved all Capitular bodies, and left the cathedrals of this Land (not presently ruined I confess, but) without means to keep them up for the time to come. I am no superstitious observer of days and times, and yet am apt enough to think, that the beginning of an Enterprise in a lucky hour, may much conduce to a fortunate and successful end. Certain I am, that Machiavelli hath told us in the first book of his History of Flor●…nce, that when Pope Martin the third had besieged Furly (a chief town of Romondiola or Romagna) Guido Bonatus (a man renowned unto this day for judicious Astrology) persuaded the people of that City, that so soon as he gave them a token, & not before, they should presently assault their Enemies, which they did accordingly, and sped so well by the advice, that all their Enemies were slain, and the siege removed. Our Author having thus named Tuesday for the day of the week, and the third day of November for the day of the month, on which the Parliament began, proceeds in telling us, that the day prefixed being come The Parliament sat.] But where the Ibid. Parli●…ment sat, he telleth us not, though there be all the reason in the world why he should have told it: for who could rationally suppose that a Parliament called at such a time, and on such an occacasion (that is to say, the overrunning of the Northern parts of the Kingdom by a Scottish Army) should be held at Westminster; when York (where the King was there in Person) lay nearer to the danger, and the scene of action, and to the place of treaty betwixt the Nations. These Reasons were sufficient to have moved the King to hold this Parliament at York, and not at Westminster, had He known nothing of the disaffections and engagements of the neighbouring City, as He knew too much. And He had some good precedents too, which might have added no small weight to those weighty Reasons, for when King Edward the first was busy in the Conquest of Wales He called His Parliament to Acton-Burnell, being in the Marches of that Country; and when He turned His Forces to the Conquest of Scotland, He called His Parliament to Carlisle, (if my memory fail me not) being on the Borders of that Kingdom. Had the King made choice of the like place for this present Parliament (which he did afterwards endeavour to alter when it was too late) he had undoubtedly prevented all those inconveniences (or rather mischiefs) which the Pride, Purse, Faction, and tumul●…uousness of the Londoners did afterwards enforce upon him. And yet as if he had not erred enough in calling his Parliament so near London, the Commissioners for the Treaty must also be brought thither by especial order, that they might have the greater opportunity to inflame that City, and make it capable of any impression, which those of the Scotish Nation, should think fit to imprint upon them. For never were men Idolised there, as the Scotch Commissioners, feasted, presented, complemented by all sorts of people; their lodgings more frequented at the public times of Prayers, or Preachings, then ever were the Houses of the Ambassadors of the Pop●…sh Princes, by the opposite party. What ensued hereupon, we shall find in our Author, when he comes to tell us, what multitudes followed Alderman Pennington, and how many thousand hands subscribed the Petition which the Alderman carried, against the Government of B●…shops then by Law established; what greater multitudes thronged down afterwards to the House of Parliament, to call upon the Peers for Justice on the Earl of Strafford. The two main points which the Scotish Covenanters aimed at, in bringing their Army into England. In order whereunto, the E●…le of Strafford is impeached of high Treason now. And Thereupon requested from the Parliament Fol. 199. House, and committed to the usher of the black rod.] Which was the least that probably would be requ●…sted upon such an Impeachment, and that being granted, a question was raised amongst knowing men, whether the Earl of Strafford took his accustomed wisdom and courage along with him, when he came to the Parliament. Some think he failed in point of wisdom, in regard he could not choose but know, that the Scots and scotizing English, had most infallibly resolved upon his destruction; and that Innocency was no armour of proof against the fiery darts of malicious power; that seeing such a storm hang over his head, he rather should have kept himself in the English Army (being then under his command) which he had gained upon exceedingly by his noble carriage, or have passed over into Ireland, where the Army rested wholly at his Devotion; or have transported himself to some foreign Kingdom, till fair wether here (in reference to his own safety, and the public peace) might invite him home; that it was no betraying of his Innocency to decline a trial, where partiality held the Scales, and selfe-ends backed with power, and made blind with Prejudice, were like to overbalance Justice: that if sentence should be passed against him for default of appearance (which was the worst that could befall him) yet had he still kept his head on his shoulders until better times, and in the mean time might have done his Master as good service in the Courts of many foreign Princes, as if he were siitting in White-Hall at the Council table. On the other side it was alleged, that all these points had been considered of, before his leaving of the Army; that whilst he lay so near the Scots in the head of this Army, he had gained (as he thought) certain and assured evidence that the Scots Army came not in, but by imitation; that there was a confederacy made between the Heads of the Covenanters, and some of the leading Members of both Houses, his most capital enemies, to subvert the Government of the Church, and innovate in that of the Civil State; that he had digested his intelligence in those particulars into the form of an Impeachment, which he intended to have offered in the House of Peers, assoon as he had taken his place amongst them; that Mr. Pym, whom it concerned as much as any, fearing or knowing his intendments, followed him so close at the heels, and had his Impeachment so ready in his mouth, that he was ready to give, and did give the blow, before the Earl of Strafford could have time and leisure to effect his purpose▪ This therefore being left undecided, it was said by others, that the Earl showed not that praesentiam animi, that readiness of courage and resolution which formerly had conducted him through so many difficulties, in giving over his design; for though he lost the opportunity of striking the first blow, yet he had time enough to strike the second, which might have been a very great advantage to his preservation. For, had he offered his Impeachment, and prosecuted it in the same pace and method, as that was which was brought against him, it is possible enough, that the business on both sides might have been hushed up without hurt to either. And for so doing he wanted not a fair example in the second Parliament of this King, in which he served for the County of York in the House of Commons, when the Earl of Bristol being impeached of high Treason by the King's Attorney, at the instance and procu●…ement of the Duke of Buckingham, retorted presently a Recrimination or Impeachment against the Duke, and by that means, took off the edge of that great adversary from proceeding further. This I remember to have been the substance of some discourses which that time produced, how pertinent and well grounded, must be left to the Readers judgement. Certain I am, it was much wondered at by many, that a man of so great spirit and knowledge should yield himself up so tamely, on a general Accusation only, without any particular Act of Treason charged upon him, or any proof offered to make good that Charge, not only to the loss of his liberty as a private person, but to the forfeiture of his privilege as a Member of Parliament; all which points were so much insisted not long after by Mr. Pym, and the rest of the Five Members when they were under the like impeachment (though not so general as this) on the King's behalf. But being all these considerations were not thought of or passed over by him, and that the Commons sped so well in their first attempt, it was not wondered at, that they brought the Archbishop (within few weeks after) under the like general Charge of Treason, or that he yie●…ded without any opposition to the like commitment: of whom our Author telleth us, That a mixed accusation, half Scotch, half English, was preferred against him, And on the 18 ●…e was voted guilty of Fol. 202. high Treason, and committed to the Usher of the Black Rod.] To give the true timeing of this business (which our Author doth a little fail in, he may please to know, that on Wednesday the 16 of Decemb. the Canons being voted down in the House of Commons (of which more hereafter) a Committee was appointed to draw up a Charge against him; and the same day (not on the 17, as our Author) he was named an Incendiary by the Scotch Commissioners, who promised to bring in their Complaint against him on the morrow after, the Lord Paget being made the Instrument to serve them in it. No complaint coming from the Scots on Thursday, Mr. Hollis is sent up with the Impeachment on the Friday morning, and presently came in the Charge of the Scotch Commissioners; upon the reading whereof, he was committed to the custody of James Maxwell, Usher of the black Rod, as our Author telleth us. There he continued full ten weeks before any particular Charge was brought against him, during which time he had gained so much on the good opinion of Gin Rider Mr. Maxwells Wife, that she was pleased to say amongst some of her Gossips, That certainly he was a very devout and religiou●… man, but one of the simplest Fellows to talk with that ever she knew in all her life. On Friday Feb. 26. on the ten week's end, the Charge before spoken of was brought up by Sir Henry Vane the younger from the House of Commons: And upon Monday March the first he was conveyed unto the Tower, continuing in the state of a Prisoner from the first to the last above four years before he came unto his last and fatal Trial. But it is time, that we go back unto the place where we left our Author, and we shall find there, that there was not greater care taken to commit this Bishop to the Tower, then to release another from it; of which he saith, that Monday the 16 of Novemb. the Lord Fol. 200. Bishop of Lincoln was set free of his imprisonment in the Tower, upon the suit of the House of Peers to His Majesty, and the next day, being a day of Humiliation, he was brought into the Abbey Church by six Bishops, and officiated there as Dean of Westminster before the Lords.] So shall it be done unto the man whom the People honour. Never was man more honoured for the present both by Lords and Commons, his person looked upon as sacred, his words deemed as Oracles; and he continued in this height, till having served their turn against the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Earl of Strafford, he began sensibly to decline, and grew at last the most hated man of all the Hierarchy. But he was wise enough to foresee the change, and prepare himself for it: For, I remember, that congratulating him for the high esteem, to which he had attained in both Houses of Parliament; and representing to him the many opportunities which he had thereby of doing service to the King, and good to the Church: He told me, that he did not think that the Parliament had any better affections for him than for the rest of his Brethren; that the difference between them stood only thus, that some of them might be more hated than he, but that he was not more beloved than any of them; And finally, (such was the freedom he used with me) that all the courtes●…e he expected from them, was that which Poliphemus promised to Ulysses, that is to say, to eat him last after he had devoured his fellows. How truly this was said the event hath proved. It was unanimously voted by the Commons, Fol. 205. That the Charge imposed upon the Subject for the providing and furnishing of Ships, and the Assessments for raising of money for that purpose (commonly called Ship-money) are against the Laws of the Realm.] Nor was it only voted thus in the House of Commons, but afterwards in the House of Peers, and all proceedings in the Case both at the Council Table, the Star-Chamber, and the Courts of Justice declared null and void: yet for all this, the opinion of the Legality of it was so fixed in the minds of many understanding men, that it could not easily be removed: 1. In regard of the great learning and integrity of the man, by whom it was first set on foot. 2. Because all the Judges had subscribed unanimously to the Lawfulness of it in time of danger, of which danger the King was declared to be the Judge. 3. Because being brought to a public trial, after it had been argued by the Council on both sides in the Courts of Justice, and by all the Judges in the Exchequer Chamber, there passed a definitive sentence for it in behalf of the King. 4. Because voted down by the Houses of Parliament in a mere arbitrary way, than was expected without being brought to a review, neither the King's Council being heard, nor the Judges called to show the Reasons of their opinions. 5. Because it was ordered by the House of Commons, that the Arguments of Justice Crook, and Justice Hutton for the illegality thereof should be put in print: those of the other eight Judges which were for the L●…gallity of it, continuing suppressed; which gave occasion to most men to think that there was more reason for it in those Arguments than was thought fit to see the light. And last of all, because notwithstanding all this care to vote down this Assessment, they were fain to have recourse to the King, for obtaining of an Act of Parliament to secure them from it for the time to come. In the mean time it was thought fit to impeach the Judges of high Treason, that having such a rod over them, they might be sure that nothing should be declared for Law, but as they would have it. Not being satisfied in this Vote, I fear I shall find less satisfaction in that that follows, that is to say, that The Clergy in a Synod or Convocation Ibid. hath no power to make Canons, Constitutions, or Laws, to bind either Laity or Clergy without a Parliament.] This is a new piece of State-doctrine never known before, the Convocation having no dependence upon the Parliament, either in the calling or dissolving of it, nor in the confirmation & authorising of the Acts thereof, but only on the King himself; and not upon the Kings sitting in the Court of Parliament, but in his Palace or Court Royal wheresoever it be. And this appeareth both by the Statute made in the 26 of Henry 8th, and the constant practice ever since. But whereas it was voted also, that the Canons are against the Fundamental Laws of this Realm, and against the King's Prerogative, etc. I am to tell my Author, that before the Canons were subscribed, they were imparted to the King, and by Him communicated to the Lords of the Privy Council, the Judges, and the King's Council, learned in the Laws of this Realm, being then attending, in the hearing of all which they were read, and by all approved: which had been strange, if any thing tending unto faction and sedition, or to the diminution of the Subjects property, and the King's prerogative, or otherwise against the known Laws of the Land, had been found in them. And finally, whereas our Author doth inform us, that this censure passed upon the Canons, upon a full debating of the Cause on both sides, I would fain know by whom it was debated on the behalf of the Clergy. I have some reason to believe that none of the Clergy of that Convocation, who best understood their own business, were called to the debating of it, or that they did appear there, by their Council learned, sufficiently authorized, and instructed to advocate for them; and therefore if any such debating was, it must be managed either by some Members of their own House, or by some London Ministers, purposely called out of the rest to betray the Cause; and be it which of these it will, it is not to be doubt●…d, but their Arguments were either fi●…ted to the sense of the House, or built on such weak promises, as nothing but a Vote of Condemnation could ensu●… upon them. Nor was it thought sufficient to decry the Canons, unless the Canon-makers were kept under by the hand of terror; And therefore, as before, they impeached the Judges, so did they Frame a Bill, for Fineing all the Clergy of that Convocation, according to the place and station which they held therein: By this means keeping them in such awe, that sew of them durst appear in maintenance of their own Authority, or in opposing those encroachments, and Innovations, which day by day were thrust upon them. Toward which work our Nation was so Fol. 210. auxiliary, so assistant, yet at the end brought them in no Bill of charges.] There was no reason why they should, having got more by the bargain than their charges came to. Marry of Scotland then married to Frances the second of France, had taken on her (at that time) the stile and title of Queen of England; and the better to pursue that Title, had put some companies of the French into the Castle of Edinburgh, the town of Lieth, and other places of that Kingdom. The Scots being then busied in the Reformation of the Kirk, looked on these French, as purposely sent thither by the King and Queen to cross their actions, and hold them under the Dominion of the Popes of Rome; and thereupon made suit unto Queen Elizabeth, to supply them with Men, Money, and Ammunition, for driving the Frenchmen out of their Country. And hereunto the Queen most readily assented, knowing full well how much it did import the safety of her Person, and the preservation of her Title, Estate, that the French should not be settled in the Forts and Castles which lay near the borders of this Kingdom. So that by succouring the Scots in such proportion as they had desired, she played her own game as well as theirs. For by dislodging the French, and quitting the whole Country of them, she kept that backdoor shut against all pretenders; and by feeding the most Popular of the Scotish Nobility, ●…ith gifts and pensions, she got herself so strong a party in that Kingdom, that she became more absolute there, than ever any King of Scotland had been before her. The Bishops were excluded by ancient Fol. 219. Canon Laws of the Council of Toledo, to be assistant in cause of Blood or Death, as disagreeable to their Function.] That the Bishops were disabled by some anti●…nt Canons, from sentencing any man to death, and (it may be) from being present when any such sentence was pronounced, I shall easily grant; but that they were disabled from being assistants in such cases, from taking the Examinations, or hearing the Depositions of witnesses, or giving council in such m●…ters as they saw occasion, I believe our Author cannot prove●…●…ertaine I am, that it is. and hath been otherwise in point of practice. And that the Bishops sitting as Peers in an English Parliament, were never excluded before this time, from any such assistances, as by their Gravity and Learning, and other abilities, they were enabled to give in any dark and difficult business (though of Blood and Death) which were brought before him. And I remember I saw about that time a little M●…nuscript Tract entitled, De jure Paritatis Episcoporum, that is to say, of the right of the Peerage of the Bishops, in which their privileges were asserted, ●…s to that particular: But they not willing to contend in a business which seemed so little to concern them, or else not able to strive against the present stream▪ which seemed to carry all before it, suffered themselves to be excluded at that time, without protesting to the contrary, or interposing in defence of their ancient rights. And this I look on as the first degree of their Humiliation. For when it was perceived that a business of so great consequence might be done in P●…rliament, without their council and consent, it opened a wide gap unto their adversaries, first to deprive them of their Votes, and after to destroy even the Calling itself. But this was not the main point which the Commons aimed at, they were resolved to have a close Commits, to take examinations in the business of the Earl of Strafford, and were not willing that any B●…shops should be of it, for fear le●…t favouring the Earl's Cause or Person, they might discover any part of those secret practices which were had against him, and thereby fortify and prepare him for his just defence, when the Cause should come unto a trial. And now it is coming on apace, for our Author telleth us, that Monday the 22. of March was the day Ibid. prefixed of the Earls compearing.] That is to ●…ay, of his appearing a●… Westminster-Hall, where the Lords were to sit as Judges, and the Commons as Prosecutors and Solicitors only. If it be asked how it came to pass that the day was prefixed no sooner, considering that he was accused and committed on the 11. day of November, which was above four months before? I answer, first, that the Examination of so many Witnesses as were used against him, (many of which were sent for out of Ireland by especial warrant) took up no small time. I answer secondly, that in this interval of time there had been some endeavour used by the Royal party, to mitigate the displeasures, and take off the edge of his greatest Adversaries; and it came so far towards an agreement, that there was a designation of some Offices of the greatest, both Trust and Power, to be given amongst them: it being condescended too (if my intelligence or memory fail not) that the Earl of Bedford should be made Lord Treasurer, and Master Pym Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Earl of Essex Governor of the Prince, and that Master Hambden should be his Tutor, the Lord Say Master of the Wards, and Master Hollice principal Secretary in the place of Windebanke, the Deputiship of Ireland was disposed▪ of also, and some Command appointed to the Earl of Warwick in the Royal Navy. And in relation to this purpose, the Bishop of London delivered to the King the Treasurer's Staff, the Earl of Newcastle relinquished the Governance of the Prince, and the Lord Cottington resigned his Offices both in the Exchequer and Court of Wards, there being no doubt but that Bishop Duppa would relinquish the Tutourship of the Prince when it should be required of him: but before all things were fully settled and agreed on, the King's mind was altered, which so exasperated them who were concerned in this des●…gnation, that they pursued the Earl of Strafford with the greater eagerness. And somewhat to this purpose was hinted in the King's Declaration of the 12 of August, in which he signified what overtures had been made by them, and with what importunity for Offices and preferments, what great s●…rvices should have been done for him, and what other undertake even to have saved the life of the Earl of Strafford. By which discovery as he blemished the repute of some principal Members in the eyes of many of the people, so he exposed himself to some disadvantages in the eyes of others, by giving them to understand at how cheap a rate (a rate which would have cost him nothing) he might have saved the life of such an able and deserving Minister. Secretary Vane upon some occasion delivered Folly 246. to his son Sir Henry Vane the key of a Cabinet to fetch some papers laid therein, etc.] What this occasion was is easy to be seen by the sequel of it, especially if compared with those Animosities and displeasures which the Secretary had harboured against the Earl. Sir Henry Vane had obtained of the King not long before, the Manor of Rabie in the Bishopric of Durham, not without hope of being made Baron of that place by His Majesty's favour. On the other side the Lord Lieutenant deriving his descent from the Nevils, Earls of Westmor land, whose Honorary Seat that was, procured himself to be created Baron of Rabie in those Letters Patents, by which he was invested with the Earldom of Strafford. This gave the beginning to that fire which consumed the Earl, but not till it had been much increased on another occasion. There was a thrifty design in Court to save the King the charges of a public table; and to that end it was advised that Sir Henry Vane then Treasurer of the Household should be made one of the principal Secretaryes in the place of Sir John Cook then weak with age, but so that he should still hold the Treasurership in the way of Commendam. Scarce was Vane warm in his new Office when the Earl of Strafford interposed, alleging to the King, that he had no other Correspondent in the Court for the businesses of Ireland but Mr. Secretary Cook, and that if he should be displaced, His Majesty's affairs in that Kingdom might extremely suffer. On this, a sudden stop was made, and Cook restored, continuing in his former Office till the Queen openly appeared in behalf of Vane, who so prevailed that Vane was settled in the place, and Cook dismissed into the Country, as no longer serviceable; which fuel being added to the former fire, made it flame so high that nothing but death or blood could quench it. Insomuch as it was thought by many understanding men, that Sir Henry Vane did purposely misreport the King's Message to the former Parliament for abrogating the Ship-money in hatred to the Earl of Strafford, who had undertaken to manage that Parliament to the King's advantage: and that seeing him to continue still both in power and favour, he fell upon that speeding project which our Author hath related in that which followeth in the story; that by such a cunning piece of malice, he might rather seem to offer him up as a sacrifice to the public justice, than to his own particular hatred, Ah ult io magis publicè vindictae quam privato odio dato videatur, as in the like case the Historian hath it. For the C●…ons were resalved that day Fol. 152. should set a total period to the Earl's defence, and next to speed their Bill 〈◊〉 A●…tainder.] The Commons had now spent a Month in prosecuting their Acousation against the Earl of Strafford, and seeing how little they had gained in order to the point they aimed at, resolved to steer their course by another wind. For finding that their proofs amounted not to a Legal evidence, and that nothing but legal evidence could prevail in a way of Judicature, they called the Legislative power to their assistance; according unto which, both Lords and Commons might proceed by the light of their own consciences, without any further proof or testimony. And so it is affirmed expressly by Mr. St. John then Solicitor General in his Speech made at a Conference in a Committee of both Houses of Parliament, April the 29. 1641. where it is said, That although single testimony might be sufficient to satisfy private consciences, yet how far it would have been satisfactory in a judicial way where Forms of Law are more to be stood upon, was not so clear; whereas in this way of Bill, private satisfaction▪ to each man's conscience is sufficient, although no evidence had been given in at all. Thus they resolved it in this Case, but knowing of what dangerous consequence it might be hereafter, to the lives and fortunes of the Subjects, a Clause was added to the Bill that i●… should not be drawn into example for the time to come: which because it may seem somewhat strange to them that know it not, I will here add so much of the said Bill as concerns this point: In which said Bill the heads of the Accusation being reckoned up, it followeth thus, viz: Be it therefore enacted▪ by the Kings most excellent Majesty, and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, that the said Earl of Strafford for the heinous crimes and offences aforesaid, stand and be adjudged and attainted of high Treason, and shall suffer such pain of death, and incur such forfeitures of his Goods and Chattels, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments, of any Estate of freehold, or Inheritance in the said Kingdoms of England, and Ireland, which the said Earl or any other to his use, or in trust for him, have, or had the day of the first sitting of this present Parliament, or at any time since. Provided that no Judge or Judges, Justice or Justices whatsoever, shall adjudge or interpret any act or thing to be Treason, nor hear or determine any Treason, nor in any other manner, than he or they should or ought to have done before the making of this Act, and as if this Act had never been made. Thus have we Treason and no Treason in the selfsame action; that being judged Treason in this one man, which never was to be judged Treason in any other. But whatsoever it was, it was conceived that many of the Lords began to show themselves more forwards to comply with the Commons, than they had done formerly. Whereof the King having notice, he thought ●…ol. 253. it high time for him to interpose, etc. and calling both Houses together, May the first, said, etc.] This coming of his Majesty, and the Speech then made, as it relished so ill with the two Houses, that few of them attended on the solemnit●…es of the next day, on which the King's eldest Daughter was married to the Prince of Orange, so gave it no contentment to the E●…rle himself, whose death it rather 〈◊〉, and made sure work of, than it could any wa●…es conduce to his preservation. That passage in the King's Speech, in which he signified, that the misdemeanours of the Earl were so great and many, that he was not fit to serve in the place of a Constable, wrought more impression on the Spirits of that Noble Gentleman, than any kind of death (whatsoever it were) which his Enemies could inflict upon him, though with great modesty he did no otherwise express it, in a letter sent unto the King, then that he could have wished his Majesty had spared his Declaration on Saturday last. But the Earl's friends were as much unsatisfied in the Kings coming at that time, as in that passage of his Speech, giving it out, that the King was put upon it by some of his bosome-Enemies, which were in nearest trust about him, on purpose to set him at greater odds with the House of Commons, and consequently with the people whom they represented, by drawing on himself the envy of that business, howsoever it happened▪ That if the Earl should be attainted notwithstanding by the Votes of the Lords, it wo●…ld be looked upon as a thing done against his will, and no thanks to him; but if he were acquitted by them, who but the King must bear the storm of all popular clamours: That it was possible enough that the curs could be so considerate of▪ their own condition, as not to make a rod for them●…elves, under colour it was intended for another man, and so that Bill of Attainder might have rested there; but had it passed (which was the worst that could happen in it) the King had still the liberty of a Negative voice, or might have yielded at the last, to the importunity of the Commons, with less dishonour, then after such a Declaration, and so publicly made: And finally that by dissenting from the Bill when it came to his turn●…, it could have raised no greater tumults than it d●…d, to compel him to it, and possibly had raised none at all, because he had done it in a Parliamentary and regular way; whereas his coming at that time, and in that manner to the House of Peers, was looked upon as a forestall of their Judgements, and interruption of the Course of Justice by threats and menaces, from whence what fruits could be expected, but the exasperating of the Commons to such acts of violence, as should not only make sure work with the Earl of Strafford, but lay a ground of 〈◊〉 troubles for himself and hi●…. This was the sum of those discourses at that time, which whe●…her they had▪ more of truth, or of passion in them, it is ha●…d to say. But who can go again●…t the workings of that heavenly Providence, ●…hose judgements are past finding out, and his ways unsearchable. What 〈◊〉 hereupon ensued, we shall find in our 〈◊〉, who ●…elleth us withal, of 〈◊〉 people thus drawn together, th●…t They posted upon the gate of Westminster Fol. 256. a Catalogue of those whose 〈◊〉 were for the Earl's acquittal, under the Title of Straffordians.] This paper was not posted up on the Gate of Westminster, but on the corner of the wall of Sir William Brunkards house, in the old Paelace yard in Westminster, with this clause added to the end, This and more shall be done to the Enemies of Justice. The names of which 〈◊〉, since our Author hath not pleased to give us, and that I think it neither dishonourable, nor unsafe to them (being elsewhere Printed) I shall here add in the same order as they stood in the Paper, That is to say, 1. Lord Digbie. 2. Lord Compton. 3. Lord Buckhurst. 4. Sir Rob. Hatton. 5. Sir Thomas Fanshaw. 6. Sir Edward Alford. 7. Sir Nicho. Slanning. 8. Sir Thomas Danby. 9 Sir Geo. Wentworth. 10. Sir Peter Wentworth. 11. Sir Frederick Cornwallis: 12. Sir William Carnaby. 13. Sir Richard Winn. 14. Sir Gervase Clifton. 15. Sir William Withrington. 16. Sir William Pennyman. 17. Sir Patrick Curwent. 18. Sir Richard Lee. 19 Sir Henry Slingsby. 20. Sir William Portman. 21. Mr. Gervase halis. 22. Mr. Sydny Godolphin. 23. Mr. Cook. 24. Mr. Coventry. 25. Mr. Ben. Weston. 26. Mr. Will. Weston. 27. Mr. Selden. 28. Mr. Alford. 29. Mr. Floyd. 30. Mr. Herbert. 31. Captain Digby. 32. Sergeant Hide. 33. Mr. Taylor. 34. Mr. Griffith. 35. Mr. Scowen. 36. Mr. Bridgman. 37. Mr. Fettiplace. 38. Dr. Turner. 39 ●…pt. Charles Price. 40. Dr. Parry Civilian. 41. Mr. Arundel. 42. Mr. Newport. 43. Mr. Holborn. 44. Mr. noel. 45. Mr. Kirton. 46. Mr. Pollard. 47. Mr. Price. 48. Mr. Travanmian. 49. Mr. Jane. 50. Mr. Edgecombe. 51. Mr. Chilchly. 52. Mr. Mallery. 53. Mr. Porter. 54. Mr. White Secret. E. D. 55. Mr. Warwick. These were the men exposed unto the fury of ungoverned people, so mad and violent, that some of them were heard to say, That if they could not have the Lieutenant's life, they would have the Kings. This Protestation being form was the Ibid. next day read in the lower House, and generally taken by all the Members.] Our Author is here out as in that before, the Protestation not being taken the next day after it was framed, but on the very same day before the Memhers were committed to go out of the Honse; and though it was taken generally by all the Members, yet it was not taken by them all, the Lord Digbie and an Uncle of his refusing it. But being taken by all the rest, it was not long after sent to the Lords, by whom (neither out of fear or favour) it was taken also; and afterwards imposed upon all the Subjects by an Order of the House of Commons, July the 30th. 1641. under pain of being thought unfit to bear any Office either in the Church or Commonwealth; the Lords not only not consenting to it, but dissenting from it. Which Protestation (being omitted by our Author, I shall here subjoin, that we may see how punctually it hath been observed by them that took it, and is this that followeth: ay A. B. do in the presence of Almighty God, promise, vow, and protest to maintain and defend, as far as lawfully I may, with my life, power, and estate, the true reformed Protestant Religion, expressed in the Doctrine of the Church of England, against all Popery and Popish Innovations within this Realm contrary to the same Doctrine, and according to the duty of my Allegiance to his Majesty's Royal Person, Honour, and Estate; as also the Power and Privileges of Parliament, the lawful rights and liberties of the subject, and every person that maketh this Protestation in whatsoever he shall do in the lawful pursuance of the same. And to my power and as far as lawfully I may I will oppose, and by all good ways and means endeavour to bring to condign punishment all such as shall either by force, practice, plots, counsels, and conspiracies, or otherwise do any thing, to the contrary of any thing in this present Protestation contained. And further that I shall in all just and honourable ways, endeavour to preserve the union and peace between the three Kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland. And neither for hope, fear, nor other respect shall relinquish this promise, vow, and Protestation. In this perplexity of thoughts he consults Fol. 257. with four Bishops, etc.] Not sent for by himself, but sent to him by the Houses of Parliament to inform his conscience, and bring him to yield unto the Bill; In the nomination of which Bishops they consulted rather their own ends than the King's satisfaction. The persons sent on this employment were the Primate of Armagh, the Bishops of Lincoln, Durham, and Carlisle: of which, the two last being men unskilled in Politic and Secular affairs, depended wholly on the judgement of the other two; and those (as the Houses knew well enough) carried a sharp tooth towards the Lord Lieutenant upon former grudges. The displeasure which the Primate had conceived against him, was for the abrogating of the Articles of Religion established in the Church of Ireland, and settling in their place the Articles of the Church of England, Anno 1633. And this he reckoned on his score, because Dr. Bramall (once Chaplain to the Lord Lieutenant, and) than Bishop of Derrie, had appeared most in it. But he on whose dextetiry they did most depend for this business, was the Bishop of Lincoln, of worse affections than the other, in regard that when the Bishop was under the Star-chamber suit, the Lieutenant than Lord Deputy of Ireland, put off his going thither for a Term or two, of purpose (as it was conceived) to have a fling at him before he went. This struck so deep in the Bishop's stomach, that he would not think ●…imself in safety, where the Earl had any thing to do, and so was like to help him forwards to the other world. Nor speak I this but on some good ground: For when the Bishop, being then Prisoner in the Tower, had made means by the Queen to be admitted to a reconciliation with His Majesty, offering both his Bishopric and Deanery of Westminster, in confidence that the King would so provide for him, that he should not go much less than he was: the King upou the Queens desire sent, the Earl of Dors●…t (from whose mouth I have it) to accept the B●…shops offer on the one side, and on the other side to promise him in his Majesty's name, the next good Bishopric that should fall in Ireland: which Proposition being made, the Bishop absolutely refused to hearken to it, telling the E. of Dorset, that he had made a shift, by the power and mediation of his friends, to hold out against his enemies here for 7 years together, but if they should send him into Ireland, he should there fall into the hands of a man, who once in seven months would find out some old Statute or other to cut off his head. Think you the King was not likely to be well informed in His conscience, when men so interessed were designed unto the managing, and preparing of it? and so it proved in the event. For our Author telleth us, that on the morrow after being Monday, May the 10th, in the morning Fol. 158. His Majesty signed a Commission to the Earl of Arundel, etc. for the passing of the two Bills; one for Continuation of the Parliament during the pleasure of the two Houses: the other for the Attainder against the Earl of Strafford.] And these two Bills he signed (as I have been told) with one pen full of Ink, by one of which he wa●… sufficiently punished for his consenting to the other. By his consenting to the Bill of Attainder, he did not only cut off his right hand with his left, as was affi●…med of Valentinian the Emperor when he caused Aetius to be slain; but found such a remorse of conscience still attending on him that it never left him till his death: A●…d by consenting to the other, He put such an irrevocable power into the hands of his enemies, as was m●…de use of afterwards not only to His own destruction, but to the disherison of His Children, and the undoing of all those who adhered unto Him; who drew Him to the first, we are told by our Author; and who persuaded Him to the last, may be now enqu●…red. Some charge it on the Queen, who being terrified with the Tumults, persuade the King to yield unto it, as the only expedient for appeasing the people: some attribute it to the Lord Say then Master of the Wards, and one of His Majesty's privy Council, who (as it is reported) when the King asked him if a Continuance for seven years might not serve the turn? made answer, That he hoped they should dispatch all businesses in so many months; and that if His Majesty passed the Bill, it should be so far from making the Parliament perpetual, that he was canfident they would desire to be dissolved before three years' end. Most lay the blame of it (as of all things else) on the marquis of Hamilton, who by cutting out so much work for the King in England, was sure to carry on his designs in Scotland without interruption: and I have heard from credible persons that he did brag much of this service when he was in that Kingdom, 〈◊〉 frequently that he had got a perpetual Parliament for the English, and would procure the like for the Scots too before he had done: so hard a thing it is to say by what private persuasions and secret practices He was drawn to that, which proved so prejudicial to Him, that it made H●…m presently grow less in the eyes of His people; insomuch that a Night before the passing of this Act, a Paper was set up near the Gates of Whitehall, importing that on the Morrow next there was to be Acted in the House of Peers a famous Tragie-Comedie, called, [A King and no King.] But as for the public outward motives, which were used to induce Him to, and of the great power He had parted with by this Condescension, you may hear Himself thus speaking in His Declaration of the 12th of August. Upon information (saith He) that credit could not be obtained for so much money as was requifite for the relief of our Army, and people in the Northern parts for preventing the eminent danger the Kingdom was in, and for supply of Our present and urgent occasions, for fear the Parliament might be dissolved before justice should be done upon Delinquents, public grievances be redressed, a firm peace between the two Nations of England and Scotland concluded, and before provision should be made for the repayment of such moneys as should be so raised (though We know what power We parted from and trusted Our Houses with by so doing, and what might be the consequence of such a trust, if unfaithfully managed) We neglected all such suspicions, which all men now see deserved not to be slighted, and We willingly and immediately passed that Act for the Continuance of this Parliament, being resolved it should not be Our fault, if all those particulars were not speedily provided for, which seemed then to be the grounds of their desire. May the 11. he wrote to the Lords this Fol. 160. Letter, the bearer whereof was no meaner person than the Prince of Wales.] In t●…Letter (which our Author passeth ●…o slightly over) there are many things which gave great occasion of discourse to discerning men: 1. That the King having sped so ill by his last address unto the Parliament on the first of May, should put himself upon the hazard of another repulse. 2. That he should send this Letter (of which he could not rationally expect a contenting answer) by the hands of the Prince, as if he would accustom him from his very childhood to the Refusals of his Subjects. 3. That he should descend so much beneath himself, as to be a Supplicant to his People, and yet be in such a diffi●…ence with them, as not to move his own desires, but by the mediation of his Peers. 4. That he should put himself to such a hopeless trouble, as to write to them for the altering or anulling of a sentence passed but the day before, which they had gained with so much danger, and so many artifices; or to desire the Respite of two or three days, for the condemned Gentleman, which was a power he had not parted with by the Act of Attainder. 5. That in the subscription of the Letter he should give himself the name of their Friend, as if by passing the Act for the ●…ntinuance of the Parliament, he had ●…de himself but as one of them, at the best their Equal; for Amicitia est inter Pares, true friendship is amongst Equals only, as the saying is. 6. That he should give himself the title of unalterable, considering that he had publicly declared not long before, that neither fear nor favour should make him do a thing so much against his Conscience, as to act any thing in order to the Condemnation of the Earl of Strafford, with reference to the matters which were charged upon him, and yet should sign the Bill for his Attainder within ten days after. And finally (not to say any thing of the Militia) with the Forts and Navy wherein they had not his consent. But that which gave matter of most amazement, was, that he should subscribe at all, it being a thing so contrary to his own custom, and the custom of his Predecessors, who used to write their names on the heads of those Missives, which were directed to their Subjects: And then that when the Letter was brought back to him without any effect, he ordered that it should be registered in the House of Peers, on a wan hope that they would use to his honour. Assuredly this under-writing of his name in his Letter to this last Parliamement, was of as bad presage to him, as the vailing of his Crown to the first; and his desire to have it put upon the register, did serve as a momento to them, that they should keep him under, now they had him down. For having reduced him to this pass, how easily did they gain from him several Acts for suppressing the Authority of the Clerk of the Market, and the Court of Stannaries, for entrenching the preambulation of the Forests, and the Repealing the old Acts for Knighthood▪ with what a strong hand did they draw him to the abolishing of Ship-money, the Star-Chamber, the High Commission, the Courts of the marquis on the North, the Jurisdiction of all the Ecclesiastical Courts, some privileges formerly enjoyed by the Council Table; besides the many Concessions at the Treaty in the Isle of Wight, which either should have been soon granted, or not at all. All of them certain Testimonies of his being brought under, and all of them encouraged by so strange a submission of himself to the Power and Courtesy of his People, as he caused to be registered in this Letter. Thus died this unhappy Earl. And to Fol. 165. die thus by the stroke of Justice, etc.] The highest Acts of Justice are seldom without some obliquity, or injustice in them. For summum jus est summa injuria, as the saying is. But whether it were so in this case or not, whether he were not sent out of the world, per viam expedientiae, rather than per viam justitiae, as most wise men thought; Posterity free from all engagements of Love or Hatred, will be best able to determine. And so I leave him to his rest in the bed of Peace, with this Epitaph of cleveland's making, to be fixed upon it, that is to say, Here lies wise and valiant Dust, Huddled up 'twixt Fit and Ju●…t: Strafford, who was hurried hence 'Twixt Treason and Convenience. He spent his time here in a mist; A Papist, yet a Calvinist. His Prince's nearest Joy, and Grief; He had, yet wanted all relief. The prop and ruin of the State; The people's violent love, and hate. One in extremes loved and abhorred, Riddles lie here; or in a word, Here lieth blood, and let it lie, Speechless still, and never cry. An Alphabetical Table. Containing the uncouth and unusual Words which are found in our Author; those which are in a different Character, being used by him in a differing sense from that which commonly they carry. A ACquist Accalladoes Ablude Avisoes Affix Adoption Acclaime Asperse Alimprovist Abstruse Appliated Adoequate Anealed August Anthems Acul●…ated Acquiescing Amphibious Accostable Aborted autopsy Atocritie Anniversary A●…nasitie Anomabous Apostrophe Accriminated Agnified aetiology Animadverted Articulate Agression Antagonist Adventitious Alleviate Adiaphorus B BOorne C COmplicated Cuergo Ceremoniale Conflagration Celebrities Culpabilitie Condignity Coition Canceleir Concinnesse Compensate Cognascible Conceded Commensurate Complacence Combustion Caresses Concrete Cal●…lled causality Clientelary confraternity Concriminaries Clancular Consiguration Congelable Chirographie Chachexie D DElatory Dual Destination Depredation Despondence Detrunk Despensation Decussation Donative D●…sponding Decore Decocted Deplumed Desideration Diaphonous Dilapidation Detrenching Decretory Disopsie Delatorians E EXasse Erect Enormitants Exuberancie Extern Elemented Exorated Emerging Ebullitians Emposted Evacuate Equilebrated Excogitate Equiperate Emrod Ematin Embryo Epiphonoma Effigies Emergent Emolument Everteth Excoriated Erudition Eradicated F FUligenous Ferocient Fortuitously Foculent G GErminated Gust Gestation Grison H HOlocaust Halcionian Hectic Hailemen horizontal Hibernall Hypothesis I IMpede Ithacu Incuriou●… Inhumed Iteration Inauspicious Innitiated Intrinsique Incuriasfitie Individuation Impetuously Incendiary Innitiation Inventioned Irritateth Judications Infortunium Joco-seriously Intersect Inflame Inaudable Intent Impunity inorganical Impertinence Insolation Intense Intemorate Imperiositie Inquietude Incantations Incompassible Identity Interfered Jurors Impregned Imminent L LUminaries Luxuriancie Leve-se-quere Luminans M MOlis Magnetic Metuculossitie Morasse Missivus Metastrophe Meamorphusis Mode Meliorate Mercurialists Mutulated Mynatorie N NOnsen●… neutrality Noxiousnesse Narrators Nave Nude O OBliqu●… Ocular Organical Omen Operate Otium Occult Odium Offertory Opine Officiate Onerous P POstlimin●…ted Puisnesse Patrite Procluded Principality Ponderous Postlimineation Pollicitation Parole Precarious Piaculary Protervity Pare-Royall Portentous Pondulous Periclitations Pact Paramonts' Posthume Presidianes' Preponderate Parade Protended Paralious Parashier Philargicus P●…cognition Pr●…cation Pan Angliam Placable Portentous Pertrude Penultimo Palladium Perpending Preterition Promove Propensitio. R REverberation Rependans Remora Recondito Ritention R●…tualities Reciprocated Reductive Respond Ranciditie Reparti Renvoy Relax Relatives Refulgent Recomation Repertory Radiant Rusticitio Researched Recidivatior Recognitante Resu●…ed Ranciditie Reduction. S SIngle unite Superinducted Scintillation Superfetation Seminasities Sterile Synodites Subsortitiously Series Stipulateth Salubrius Stimulated Strictures Statiurch Salvas Simulary Synopsis Susceptible Salitary Suburbicary Superannuate Sedulous Symbol Syteme Supinely Succentoriated Stronded Scheme Sopited T. TEmporalities Temerated temereity Terrene Trepidation Tendancie Transfiguration Transpretation Tempestively Treatment V VAlediction Unanim Veteran Unite Vigil Virile Vanum Vacuity Venialitie Unizon and so I end this table with the Counsel of an old Grammarian, who adviseth thus; Moribus antiquis, praesentibus utere verbis: That is to say, Retain old Virtues, but for bear, New words, not fitted to the 〈◊〉. The End. ERRATA. PAge 4. line 7. deal two p. 5. l. 22. for Coins r. Laws p. 6. l. 6. for able r. old p. 9 l. 23. for no r. on p. 16. l. 12. for 〈◊〉 r. mola ibid. l. 16. for University r. Divinity. p. 21. l. 15. for animalon r. animatum p. 24. l. 21. for and r. but p. 33. l. 21. for House r. Houses p. 41. l. 18. for his r. this p. 44. l. 30. for unreasonable r. reasonable p. 45. l. 21. r. resolutions p. 58. for faciente r. ●…vente p. 64. l. 15. for paper r. prayers p. 76. l. 22. for pressed r. suppressed p. 78. l. 28. for Westmin●… r. Winchester p. 95. l. 6. to no body but themselves, ad●…, in case they should be discontinued for the times to come p. 105 l. 14. for men●… r. mutare p. 106. l. 23. for that r. not. p. 140 l. 11. fo●… finding r. hiding ibid. l. 19 for 〈◊〉 r. offence p. 149. l. 10. for restrain r. ●…range p. 152. l. 11. for then r. therein p. 153. l. 26. for last r. cast p. 154. l. 2. for 1631. r. 16●…0. p. 160. l. 15. for Gadus r. Gades p. 184. l. 26. for yet could this r. yet could not this p. 186. l. 30. for insalvation r. in●…tuation p. 190. l. 25. for asserting r. offering p. 204. l. 27. for Enoch r. 〈◊〉 p. 208. l. 22. for judicious r. judiciary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 more p. 234. l. 8. for cars r. ●…ouse p. 238. l. 9 for committe●… r. admitted ibid. l. 16. for neither r. either p. 143. l. 6. r 〈◊〉 p. 247. l. 13. del. And finally (not to say any thing of the Militia, with the Forts and Navy, wherein they had not His consent, and add the same to the end of the 12 line in the page next following. p. 248. l. 10. for entrenching r. retrench A Table of the principal Observations. A DR. Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, his Irregularity through killing a Keeper casually, 55 His Remissness in not exacting Conformity to the Church's Orders, occasioned the term of Inn●…vations, 〈◊〉 Arminians] what they are, 15 Whether Enemies of God's Grace, 18 What caused K. James to be an adversary to them, 23 Montacus Book, called [Appello Caesarem] licenced by King James his command, 33 Called in again by King Charles, 69 Arminianism called a Bridge to Popery, 80 B BIshops War] falsely so called, 151 Bishops & Presbyters] terms not of equivalent import, 183 Their Office▪ calling defended to be by divine Rght, even Laymen, 185 Mr. Grimstons' Argument against it, retor●…ed by Mr. Selden, 188 Whether they may be assistant in causes of Blood and Death? for which cause they were excluded the House of 〈◊〉 at my Lord of strafford's trial, 224 Earl of Bristol, V. Digby, Duke of Buckingham, V. Viliers, Dr. Burgess his answe●…ing the Act at Oxford, 182 C CAlvinianism, how it differs from S. Augustine's Doctrine, 110 King Charles crowned in White, an Emblem of Innocence; his Predecessors in Purple, an Emblem of Majesty, 29 How he veiled his C●…owne to his subjects, 30, 48 His Maxim, ['Tis better to be deceived, than to distrust,] 105 His Entertainment at Bolsover Castle cost 6000●…. 106 His neglecting those arts for keeping up of Majesty, which Qu: ●…lizah: practised, 109 The true cause of the miscarriage of his Expedition against the Scots, 157 His error in recalling his Forces thence, 160 How the Hollanders affronted him, and made him veil his Crown, 166 clergymen's Vices to be concealed, rather than published, 140 A Minister as good as any Jack-Gentlemen in England well interpreted, 141 The Clergy in Convocation have a power to grant Subsidies, not confirmed by the Commons in Parliament, 196 Coronation, Rites thereof no vain Ceremonies, 37 D SIr Edw: Decring his character, 177 Digby, E. of Bristol, not empowered by proxy to celebrate the Marriage with the Infanta, 8 His impeachment by the D. of Buckingham, 43, 50 F FAme no ground for an Historian, 41 G GLoria Patri, standing up at it retained in our Reformed Church, ex vi Catholicae consuctudinis, 87 H MR. Hamilton's end in raising Forces for Germany, 101 His being sent Commissioner into Scotland, 142 His subtle practices against the King, 149 The Scots speech of him, [That the Son of so good a Mother would do them no hurt,] 156 He the cause of dissolving the short Parliament, 175 Hate, Naturale est odisse quem laeseris, 170 ay K. James, Whether the wisest King of the British Nation, 13 His seeing a Lion (the King of beasts) baited, presaged his being baited by his subjects, 28 Dr. Juxon. Bishop of Lond. why made Lord Treasurer, 130 His moderation and humility in that officce, being neither ambitious before, nor proud after, 132 K KNighthood, the Statute for taking that order, 98 L DR. Lamb his death, the city not fined for it, 66 Lambeth Articles, when made part of the confession of the Church of Ireland, 40 When, and why the articles of Ireland were repealed, etc. or 39 Articles substituted in their places, 127 The occasion of making them the Lambeth articles, 72 Of no Authority in the Ch: of England, 75 What moved K. James to send them to Dort, 23 And put them into the Irish Confession, 77 Dr. Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, Whether a favourer of the Popish faction, 171 Ceremonies renewed by him, tended rather to the ruine, than advancement of the Catholic cause, 173 He no cause of dissolving the short Parl. 174 His being voted guilty of High Treason, and committed to the Bl. Rod, 215 Lyturgie-English, endeavoured by K. Charles to be brought into Scotland, 143 His Error in not suppressing and punishing the Tumults at Edinburgh, when the Scottish service was first read, 145 Bish. of Lincoln, v. Williams. Londoners Petition for redressing of Grievances, 200 M Masks; That of the four Inns of Court, how occasioned, 118 E. of Montrose, the cause of his adhering to the Covenanters, 206 N MR. Noy, Attorney general, his great parts, 121 Integrity, 124 Parliaments not coordinate to Kings, but subordinate, 28 The Members thereof have been imprisoned, 43 Whether Lords created sedente Parliamento, may be admitted to Vote, 48 House of Commons called by Writ only to consent & submit, not to judge, 58 Whether the H. of Commons could 〈◊〉 the H. of Peers (consisting of 118) thrice over, 59 Bishops Members of the H. of Peers, 60 Their Exclusion thence had this consequent, the abrogating of the King's Negative Voice, 60 The King no Member of the H. of Peers, but supreme Head of all, 61 Disorderly and tumultuous carriage of Parliaments, cause of their change and discontinuance, 94 Members presented not to be questioned without the House's Order, 95 Scotc●… Parliament, how called anciently, 162 The Kings calling a Parliament after the Expedition against the Scots, unsafe & unseasonable, 167 That Parliament which was the ruin of Woolsey, and overthrow of Abbeys, began the third of Novem. the same day of the month began our long Parliament, which ruin'd the Archb: of Canterbury, & the whole Church, 207 No reason for holding the Parliam. at Westm. it had been better at York, 209 Who persuaded the King to assent to the Act for a perpetual Parliament, 243 S. Paul's Church, the repairing thereof, 103 People's Darlings of short continuance, 35 Popery, Montacu and ●…osins not questioned for preaching Popery, 81 Placing the Communion Table Altarwise, had both law and practice for it, and therefore was no Popery, 82, 133 Taking away part-boyled Poperies, (or English popish Ceremonies) an impairing the substance of Religion, 90 The reason of so great an increase of Papists in England, was the neglect of Holidays, and Common-prayer, 92 Prince his Marriage, a branch of the royal Prerogative, 12 Puritans rejoiced not at the Prince his birth, 97 Protestation taken by the Parliament, and enjoined the Kingdom, 239 Puritan party, how they were to be sweetened with the great Offices of the kingdom, 226 Religion; House of Commons set up a Cō●…ittee, as a Consistory of Lay-elders, to take cognizance of Causes ecclesiastical, 31 They sat in the Divinityschooles at Oxford Parliament, 34 Isle of Rhee, errors in that Enterprise, 52 S SAbbath; Sports allowed on that day, the motives thereto, and restrictions therein, 112 Divinity of the Lords day Sabbath, a new Doctrine, 114 The P●…iesthoods O der and Revenue under the Gospel, not grounded thereon, 116 Scots; A certain maintenance settled on the Scots Clergy, 107 Scotch Service-book, Tumults at reading thereof, 145 The true occasion of raising up the seditious Scots, 112 Card. Richelieu animated the Scots to rebellion, 162 Scots lost by favours, and gained by punishments, 169 They promised payment for their quarters at their first coming, but afterwards plundered all, 204 Their cowardly carriag, 205 Why freely helped by the English to drive out the French, 223 Sea; The King's dominion in the narrow seas asserted by Selden against Grotius, 128 The King regained his dominion at sea, and secured our coast from piracies, through the benefit of ship-money, 120 Shipmoney, How and why Kings have levied it as a Naval aid, 121 How the Writs issued our, 123 The whole charge thereof amounted to 236000 l. which was bu●… 20000 li. per mensem, 123 Clergy not exempted therefrom, 124 Socinianism charged upon the Members of the Convocation, who made a Canon against it, 195 Spaniards old friends to the English, 9 They intended really to restore the Palatinate to the Prince Elector, 11 Earl of Strafford, v. Wentworth, Synod, or Convocation, rightly continued by the same Writ that called them, 179 Their danger in sitting after the Parliament was up, 181 The Oath, etc. how occasioned, 189 Taken for upholding the Church-government then established. 191 And that willingly, 193 The Clergies power therein to make Canons binding without a parliament, 220 T COmmunion-table, v. Popery, Bowing towards it a primitive custom, (no Popery) revived by B. Andrews, 85 It's setting up within, the Rails Altarwise, to prevent profanation, enjoined by the King's authority, 133 Bishop of Lincoln's Book against it, 136 V SIr George Villers Duke of Bu●…kingham, made the Ball of fortune, 36 His Impeachment by the Birle of Bristol, 43,50 By whom rendered odious to the people, 63 Feltons' motive to murder him, 64 His e●…tate at his death not comparable to Cardinal Richelieu's, 67 W SIr Th: Wentw: 〈◊〉. of Straff▪ not wise in coming to the Parliament, 211 His Trial, why deferred so long, 226 Why ●…ecretary Vane was incensed again●…t him, 228 For want of legal Evidence a Bill of Attainder brought in against him by Legislative power, 230 The King's censure of him in the H. of Lords, 233 The names of those Commons that were for his acquitting, 236 The Bishop of Armagh and Lincoln, with two Bishops more, sent to resolve the King's Conscience, 241 The King's Letter to the Lords in his behalf, 246 Sent out of the world, per viam expedientiae, His Epitaph, 240 Dr. William's B. of Lincoln, an instrument to set the Parliament against the Duke of Buckingham▪ 36 When, and by whose means the great Seal was taken from him, 39 Whether he was Eunuchu●… ab utero or no, 41 Bishop Andrew's opinion of him, 56 His Book called Holy Table, etc. wrote against his Science and Conscience, 136 He was Head first of the Popish, then of the Puritan party, 138 He was set free from the Tower much about the time of the Archbishop's impeachment, 217 Words; New coining of them an Affectation, 4 Y YOrk, The King's second Son, not born, but created Duke thereof. 117 FINIS.