AN ANSWER to a most pernicious and factious PETITION, framed against the SCOTS in IRELAND: Together with the Vindication of a Gentleman from the false Aspersions of Mayor ROBERT ORMESBY: As also some serious QUERIES to be presented To the said Major in behalf of the STATE. LONDON, Printed in the Year. 1647. An Answer to the infamous and scandalous Libel, presented by way of Petition to the Right Honourable, Sir THOMAS FAIRFAX his Excellency, in the name of the English now about London inhabiting, having interest in the Baronies of Raphoe and Kilmacrennan in the County of Donnegall and Kingdom of Ireland. The Petition is thus Sheweth, WHereas the English Gentry had the greatest share of the baronies of Raphoe and Kilmacrennan, and other Lands in the County of Donnegal, lying on that side of the Mountains, and were possessed of several Castles, houses and places of strength. So it is, That Sr. William Stewart, and Sr. Robert Stuart (upon the Rebellion) raising of the Scots Nation, two Regiments of foot, and two Troops of horse, have quartered them in those parts, and not suffering any but their own Nation to have Command in in their Regiments, have so oppressed the poor English by settling Garrisons amongst them, quartering upon those that live there, and absolutely disposing of all English men's Lands at their mere will and pleasure, that the poor English are quite undone, and likely to be utterly rooted out of those parts, unless some timely provision be made to free those poor souls, that yet remain, from their heavy pressures, and to Countenance the English to sit down upon their own again. And Sr. William Stuart being now dead, It is the humble Request of the English now in London, who have relation to those parts, that advantage may be taken of this opportunity, to sand over some deserving English Gentleman, to Command the said Sir William his Regiment of Foot and Troop of horse, and to sand with him 300. English which may tender him considerable, and subdue all mutinous endeavours to oppose him; And that his head quarter may be at Liffer, which is a very fine English Plantation, a Corporation and a considerable place of strength, within ten miles of Derry, and so very ready to second the English there; And that the rest of the Garrisons in those parts may be made and commanded by him: That so the languishing and poor oppressed English may be put into some heart to live, and hope to be freed of their heavy pressures, and enjoy their own. And whereas the said Sir William Stuart was viceadmiral of Ulster, it is desired the same may be conferred upon the Lord Folliot, Governor of Derry, and the Governor for the time being. The Answer is as followeth. SAith, That upon the breaking out of the horrid Rebellion of Ireland, Commissions were granted to Sir William Stuart, and Sir Robert Stuart to raise their Regiments of Foot, and Troops of horse, which being so raised were put into the establishment and Parliaments pay. And further saith, That every word and sentence set forth in the Petition against the said Colonels, their Regiments and Troops in oppressing the English, inhabiting in the aforesaid places, either by settling of Garrisons, or disposing of their Lands at their pleasure, to the undoing of the English, or that they made use of their own Nation, not suffering any Englishman to have Command amongst them, is altogether untruth, and a most wicked and National aspersion. For to answer the last, First. There was not an Englishman in that Country that could wear a sword, but was employed either as an Officer or Soldier according to his quality. As may appear by the list of Colonels, Lieutenant Colonels, Majors, Captains, and other inferior Officers of the English Nation in those parts; And to this hour none of that Nation in those parts are without Employment, except such as retired and withdrew themselves from bearing a share, and opposing the common Calamity. 2. As for oppressing them by sessing or laying Garrisons on the English; so much as was preserved from fire with the hazard and loss of many men's lives (who might have withdrawn themselves as others did, who came here to England) It was afterwards divided equally by advice and consent of the Inhabitants of the Country, as well English as Scots, amongst the Officers and Soldiers of the four Regiments lying in those parts; As by a division under their hands may appear, for preservation of the Soldier's lives, which was nothing upon the matter for such a multitude, together with the Inhabitants of the Country. If hungry bellies and desperate necessity had not extorted both food and raiment from the Rebels, who formerly had rob those who were alive of both Nations. And as for those Lands that were wasted by the Rebels, and recovered again by the Soldiers, which are now beginning in some few places to be possessed and inhabited, for the ease of those few quarters that have born Soldiers these six years, and are now impoverished, and almost reduced to a total devastation; It is no prejudice to the owners who live in England far from danger, that some trenches and houses be set upon their land, to make them habitable, when the enemy shall be reduced and beaten out of the field; for what can men expect of waste lands, when the land which was never destroyed by the enemy pays no rent at all? The Soldiers being necessitated to provide bread in some place till the Parliaments great occasions give them time to provide better for these Regiments in those parts. For if the Soldiers should have left the Country, when they got no Provisions from the Parliament either for back or belly, than the occasion of that scandalous Libel had been taken away long ere now, and the Country possessed peaceably by the Irish, till the Parliament of England should get leisure to make a new Conquest of Ireland. But if those Petitioners will either provide bread for the said Regiments, or be Instruments to move the Parliament to provide bread, which is a reasonable desire, they shall be presently possessed of their respective Claims or holdings, whereof they were dispossessed by the Rebels. And whereas the Petitioners (who are named poor souls) desire to be relieved from the pressures of the Scots, by taking advantage of the opportunity of Sir William Stuarts death, by sending over an English man to Command Sir William Stuarts Regiment and Troop, and three hundred English men with him to make him considerable, that he may more easily suppress the mutinous endeavours of those that oppose him: As this desire is pernicious and factious (favouring of much malice) so it is unnecessary, In respect the Parliament of England hath settled the command in chief of that Regiment and of the three other Regiments in Lagan upon an English man of such integrity and worth, as that he is above envy or exception, Sir Charles Coote, Lord Precedent of Counaught; who also hath a Commission from the Parliament, Authorising him to dispose of the quarters and Garrisons of those four Regiments and Troops as he in his Judgement shall find most advantageous for the service. And as for sending over 300. men to oppose mutionous endeavours, It is very well known, that mutiny hath been a stranger to us in those parts hitherto, or any falling out amongst our Officers, but like an entire wall cemented together with brass couplets, we have all of us been united together, which with the goodness of our cause and the blessing of God hath made us hitherto, maugre all the malice and power of the Irish, unvanquishable. And it is our desire th●t the Doctrine of Mutinee be never taught nor professed amongst us, since disobedience is as the sin of Witchcraft. Nevertheless we concur with the Petitioners in this; That the three hundred English men be sent over with convenient provisions for their subsistence, otherwise a greater burden will be added to those former pressures, and make the cry greater. And as for a Colonel to command the Regiment and Troop; we doubt not but Sir Charles Coot, Lord Precedent of Connaught, Commander in chief, hath such confidence in Sir John Cunningham, Lieutenant Colonel to the Regiment; and Captain John Stewart, Lieutenant to the Troop, and such proof of their faithfulness and zeal to the service, who have served in their several places these six years without reproof, the Lieutenant Colonel, raising and arming his Company at his own charge, and to this hour quartering them upon his own Inheritance (together with another Company of Colonel Mervins Regiment) and who is likewise engaged in great sums for Provisions for the Regiment, not as yet discharged by the Parliament. And likewise Mayor Arskin, whose estate in times of peace was worth 1000 l ' per annum, aught to be considered. We say these men recommended by Sir Charles Coote, who have served out their several Apprenticeships, aught to be made Freemen, and no stranger placed over their heads, unless something can be proved against their faithfulness to the Parliaments service; and they doubt not but the Parliament is so noble and generous towards those that have deserved well, That now when they cannot well reward them for their great services, they will not put dishonour upon them, by displacing them, and excluding them from that, for which they have served almost as long as Jacob did for Rachel, both in the heat of the day, and cool of the night. As for that desire, that the Town of Lifford may be the head-quarter. If Sir Charles Coot, Lord Precedent, think it convenient, we submit most willingly to that Order. As to that part that the three hundred English being at Lifford, will be more ready to second the English; It is a most pernicious expression proceeding from the spirit of contention, and a son of Belial, which cannot be read nor spoken without some secret horror, by any ingenious or honest man, thereby secretly importing, that the English are in so dangerous a condition, that they needed seconding against the Scots, or as if the Scots had a purpose to invade them. O coelum quid ad haec non sudas, O terra quid non dehiscis; Should they who have lived so sweedy together, tied by many relations, and inviolable bands of amity since the first Plantation, now near fifty years, confirmed by interchangeable ties, bonds of affinity, and so mutually engrafted in one another's affections, that they are become one Tree, though of several stocks. As if they, we say, should invade one another, which is as impossible (or at lest as unlikely) as if a man should be so mad, as to tear his own flesh. For our part, if ever such a day shall dawn, we wish it may be without perfect light. Touching that desire of the Admiralty of Ulster, which Sir William Stuart had during his life-time, that it may be conferred upon my Lord Folliot. To this it is answered, That Sir Charles Coot procured that place to be settled on Sir William Stuart about three years since. And now the Committee of the Admiralty, having designed a Ship of force, and a Pinnace to lie upon the Bay of Sligo, Ballishannon, Kilbeggis, Do: Lochswilly and Lochfoyle; and hath given power to the said Sir Charles Coot to command those upon any design for the Parliaments advantage, he having the command of the Land Forces in those places: The said Committee therefore have thought it most convenient for his Lordship to have the Admiralty of Ulster, as being most proper for him, who hath the command of the Ships, to exercise that place, and have resolved to report it so to the House. September the ninth, 1647. The Vindication of Captain John Cunningham, from the false aspersions cast upon him by Mayor Robert Ormesby, concerning his Troop, alleged by Ormesby, never to have been raised, occasioned in taking of a List of the Officers name at Derby-house, the 28. of August last, in Master Frost the Secretary's chamber, for a dividend of some monies to be given unto the several Officers towards their journey into Ireland. 1. IN Answer hereunto, Captain Cunningham saith, That by virtue of a Commission from General Major Monro, he did levy a Troop, which attended the Scottish Army for one whole year, in the Province of Ulster, and amongst other good services done by him, and that Troop against the bloody Irish Rebels in the County of Longford, Cavan, Ardmagh, and Westmeath, that one day's service at the bridge of Fynna may be sufficient to equal, yea over-value all the actions done by Mayor Ormesby since the day of his birth to this hour. 2. That the said Troop, by virtue of a Commission from Sir Charles Coote, Lord Precedent of Connaught, granted unto Captain Cunningham, was afterwards brought into the service of that Province. 3. That it was levied, and transported from Ulster thither without pay or levie-money from the State; so likewise (soon after) for want of quarter, means, or other encouragement from the Parliament, they dispersed, as divers other Troops of the like nature did, taken on by Commission from the Lord Precedent, as by his Lordship's special Letters and Certificats may appear; wherein his Lordship most nobly engageth himself for them to the State, that upon the settlement of means upon them, these Troops so dissolved, speedily to being into the Field again, and faithfully to serve the State, as formerly they have done. 4. That this Troop being so levied without charge to the State, so it dissolved without any prejudice unot the Army there, or Parliament here, by any unworthy act of Captain Cunninghams', or dishonour unto him whatsoever, which Mayor Ormesby so much endevoureth to lay upon him, though this same Ormesby most unworthily lost his own Troop, foot Company, and Garrison, as followeth. That in the year 1645. the English Garrisons in the Province of Connaught having taken horses, and other considerable prey by force from the Rebels there; Mayor Robert Ormesby out of which got together about 80. of those plundered horse, from some of our own soldiers without charge to him (upon the matter;) good horses than being sold for a crown, or noble the piece, but the most part of them he got for nothing. And having procured Commission from Sir Charles Coot, Lord Precedent, to command them as a Captain of a Troop of Horse, was by his Lordship listed and put into pay; which with that Troop and a foot Company (whereof at that time he was only Captain) he was betrusted to keep the Garrison of Toulske in the County of Roscomen. That by the strength of the English Garrison in that County, they were all put into a very good condition of livelihood, by forcing the Irish inhabitants thereabouts into contribution. That by this means the said Major Ormesby had at lest brought into his Garrison of Tulske, fourteen hundred pounds per annum, duly paid in money, Grain, and other provisions, by the protected Rebels for the maintenance of his Troops and foot Company, besides his share of preys upon dividend, with the other Garrisons, when they joined in parties, and marched into the enemy's quarters, and besides great store of corn sowed in the ground from time to time by the Officers and soldiers, and many Families of the English, who came to reside at the Garrison of Tulske, having in the year 1645, not less corn and provision in store, than would have maintained all of them in that Garrison in a plentiful Condition for a whole year. That about that time, the Lord Viscount Taaffe, a Rebel, came with a great party of the Linster Rebels, assisted with the Earl of Clanrickard and his Connaught Rebels, all under the command of the Lord Taaffe, authorised by Commission from the Lord marquis of Ormond, to fall upon the English Garrisons of that Province, as was alleged, who had not submitted to the cessation with the Rebleses. That upon their advance into Connaught, they did immediately fall upon the Garrison of Toulske, in the County of Roscomen, whereof Captain Robert Ormesby (now Mayor) had the command with his said Foot company and Troop (consisting of eighty good horses) which the said Major kept within his Trenches of Toulske, and would not be advised at a Council of War by the Lord Presidents brother, (a gallant Gentleman) Captain Richard Coot (now Colonel of Horse) Sir George St. George, Captain King, Captain John Ormesby, his Uncle, and other Captains of the several Garrisons all of them resolving (if Mayor Ormesby would join with them) to stand out in the field with all the Horse, to annoyed the enemy, stop their Provisions, and so to preserve our English Garrisons from being beleaguered, but this Mayor Ormesby would not adhere to their resolution (though it was the only best) and told them in plain terms. Gentlemen I have heard you all, but I will follow my own mind; they desired to know it, but he would not discover his intentions (which soon after to their great grief was discovered) whereupon they departed discontented. That the Enemy approaching near with great eagerness and resolution to gain so considerable a Troop, being assured it was in their power to do, seeing he kept it within his Trenches, and well knowing Mayor Ormesby to be a man of as great words as deeds, stormed his works and entered, fell in close to the Castle-grate (which had a strong Iron-gate on it) where this Mayor Ormesby himself was, and might have held it to this day, but he being overcome with pusillanimity and a panic fear, came suddenly running out of the Castle, calling for mercy, delivered his Pistol charged and cocked, to the Rebel Captain Barnwell, without either parley or quarter. Much like a silly Hare in her thicket, which though she seem to look big, yet with the cry of the Hounds, and noise of the hunters, she is so terrified, that she runs and knows not where: So this great Soldier left the strong hold committed to his charge, from whence he could not be beaten without Cannon; and ran into his enemy's arms, where he behaved himself with great modesty, not speaking a word but mercy, mercy, which Castle the Rebels keeps now to the annoyance of the Parliaments Forces in that Province. Thus was the considerable Garrison and Castle of Toulske most unworthily lost, where the Rebels possessed themselves of all Provisions, Arms, Ammunition, the whole Troop, Foot Company, stripped both Officer, Soldier, and all the English Families, who were residing and had their goods within that place for safety: Than the Rebels they carried this brave Ormesby along with them upon mercy, whom they might have hanged at their pleasure, seeing he had no quarter, yet saved him upon a Design to have Castle-Coot delivered up into their hands, which they conceived might have been effected, by reason Major Ormesby's Father and divers of his nearest Kinsmen were in Castle-Coot and had the Command of the place, men, Ammunitions and Provisions good store. And the same, according to their plot, was delivered up to the Rebel Lord Taaffe, by Mayor Ormesbys Father, his Cousin German, Ensign James Ormesby and his brother in Law, (whilst Mayor Ormesby himself was in the Rebels hands upon mercy:) So that it may be conjectured, and that upon great presumptions, that the place was delivered merely to preserve Mayor Ormesbies' life; It having formerly held out 14. week's siege (being than under the Command of Captain Richard Coote) General Bourke with 4000 men still battering the same with his Ordnance, and was at last forced to leave it with the loss of many of his men. But to return to the matter, the Enemy being much elevated with this good success, having got so considerable a Garrison as Toulske, 80. good Horses, 100 Foot, all their Arms, one whole years Provision, all the Plunder of the English which they had put into that Garrison for safety. That the Rebels forces than drew themselves immediately before the Town and Castle of Elffynne, the Bishop's seat, and Garrison of 100 men, which was delivered up to the Enemy; Also the walled Town and Corporation of James-Town, a Garrison of one hundred, besides many English Inhabitants, yielded up to the Rebels with divers others of the like manner. That all these Towns, Castles, and Garrisons, Arms, Ammunition, Provisions, Men and Horses, might hitherto have been preserved from the Rebels, if the said Mayor Ormesby had been advised by the rest of the Commanders of the several Garrisons before mentioned, especially those who were, by much, his superiors; which not only occasioned the loss of these considerable holds by his wilfulness and pusilanimity, but also Castle-Coote▪ the chief house of Sir Charles Coote, Lord Precedent of that Province, a most gallant, active and faithful servant of the State, so much prejudiced by Mayor Ormesby and those of that name, that so delivered up Castle-Coote, (to the great grief of Captain John Ormesby the Major's Uncle, and Lieut▪ Charles Ormesby the Major's brother, both well-deserving men, who have done very good service) and who merit encouragement from the State, whose Father and self were servants unto the Lord President and his ever renowned father old Sr Charles Coot, and made up under them to some fortune of Inheritance, and rendered capable by their favour of the place of Justice of peace in the Country. And since these troubles, by Sir Charles the Lord Presidents favour in hopes of better carriage in the service, This Ormesby was made Captain and Major of Horse by his Lordship's several Commissions. Yet so ungrateful to his maker is this Ormesby, that upon all occasions he striveth to put particular prejudices, as much as lieth in him, not only on the whole family of the Cootes, but also upon several persons of honour, worth and action, in affinity most faithful, near and dear to Sir Charles Coote, and most zealous in the service of the State, as their sufferings can well witness. Yet this Mayor Ormesby with a seeming show (though in a bold, ilbred, blustering way) of agitating for the public, and therein maketh use of Sir Charles Cootes name, when on the contrary, nothing is more certain, than the working of his own particular ends, as may evidently appear by his high and unmerited hopes and demands from the State. And the said Ormesby, by the former losses aforesaid, occasioned also the loss of the Abbey of boil, Sir Robert King's house, the Fort of Carrickdrumcouske belonging to Sir George Lisedoorne, Knockevicker, with many other holds, and consequently the whole Province of Connaught; But what since thereof hath been regained by Sir Charles Coote Lord Precedent, with the Parliaments Forces under his command, since his Government there. All which may most evidently appear against Mayor Ormesby, if questioned at a Council of War in that Kingdom before the Lord Precedent, at once with Lieut. Roukesby (to which purpose it is desired that the said Ormesbies' person be secured here and he sent over) which Roukesby, who is apprehended in this City, and is by Order of the House to be sent over to Sir Charles Coote to abide trial for his betraying and delivering up of James- Town , with other matters there to be laid to Mayor Ormesby's charge concerning the last defeat given by the Rebels to our Connaught horse, near the Castle of Roscomen, wherein he was Actor. Yet notwithstanding all which apparent agreat prejudice done to the Parliament, by the loss of a Province occasioned by Mayor Robert Ormesby as aforesaid, put many good English Protestant Families a begging in this Kingdom, and many in that Kingdom, who have not wherewithal to carry them hither to be relieved; the loss of so considerable a Troop, Foot Company, Garrison, and plentiful Quarters, Arms, Ammunition and Provisions in the several stores, which will cost the Parliament great sum of money, besides the loss of many English men before those holds and Province can be regained, which by his means merely have been lost. And his own quarters being unworthily lost, as we before related, he came with his wife, father and family, to the Lagan, where he was scarcely well settled, till he and his father began to pry into the secrets of the country, and look for Custodiums, as if the several Colonels and Officers who had fought for the preservation of that country had deserved none, but all been hitherto reserved for him who lived an hundred miles from thence in another Province; and by importunity procured a Custodium from Sir John Clotworthy, and Sir Robert Merideth of Castle Bliaen, and of six quarters of land, which entertains eight score soldiers, which after the rate of fifteen pence a week, amounteth to five hundred and twenty pound a year, for ten pound to be accounted to the State, which will put him in a condition thrice so good as ever he was in his life before; beside his employment, having a Troop of Horse, being Mayor of a Regiment and a foot Company, when hundreds of better men than he & morefaithful to the State, have not bread to put in their mouths, or to cover their nakedness; neither these eight score Soldiers who have faithfully served in many bloody battles against the Rebels, have not any means to relieve them, if this Ormesby take away their quarter upon any pretext whatsoever. That Mayor Ormesby nevertheless, as if no such matter had ever been done by him, applies himself to the Parliament here, with impudence and boldness. First, importunately desiring from my Lord Lile, than Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, a Commission, to command a Regiment of Horse, made up of the several Troops raised and armed in the beginning of the rebellion, by my Lord Cleandeboys, Sir William Stewart, Sir Robert Stewart, and Sir William Col, without the which Troops to attend the Regiments, they would be almost unprofitable. This desire his Lordship most prudently put of to the determination of a Council of War, as being unwilling to discourage him, being a stranger, but his Lordship (by the advice of the said Council of War holden in Salissbury House) found it dangerous to grant that request, which might prove prejudicial to the service, by giving an Irish man, bred in the most remote and barbarous parts of Ireland, the command of so many men of Honour, all of them being Colonels, one of them a Lord Viscount, the other three Knights, and some of these Privy Counsellors and Barronets. And secondly, He likewise Petitions the Committee of Star-Chamber, setting forth how that his Father and he had disbursed 4000 l. in the Parliaments service, and in raising, arming, clothing and maintaining of that Foot Company and Troop of Horse, procures Certificates on his behalf, gets an Order of that Committee for a Report to be made in the House for this 4000 l. to be granted unto him, demands a new Troop for himself, and the Command of a Regiment of Horse, and aims at greater matters with as much confidence as if he had left both Troop and Company in the service, nor never had the said 1400 l. per annum out of his quarters of Toulske for maintaining and clothing of them. Let therefore the premises and particulars herein contained be taken into serious consideration by all well-affected people, whether Mayor Robert Ormesby doth deserve the granting of this 4000 l. unto him by the Parliament, or such additions of greater employments to be conferred upon him, until he be first tried and cleared at a Council of War for the same, or according to his demerits punished, to the terror of others to commit the like hereafter. For if such encouragements should be conferred upon men so highly prejudicial to the State, and others who have been lately here having faithfully served them, and been very fortunate bygiving many great defeats and overthrows to the Rebels, without the lest spot or dishonour whatsoever, and have suffered extremely in their estates, deeply engaged in several sums of money, for raising and arming of their several Regiments, Troops, and Companies, who have humbly Petitioned the State to be relieved of their engagements, having exhausted themselves by long attendance, in which time some of them were Arrested for the engagements of the State, others for old demands before these troubles, and could neither procure their persons protected, relieved, nor any part of their Arrears given unto them whereby to subsist. Notwithstanding they never had any pay from the State six years, but three month's means in commodities. That above forty of those Officers of Ireland had only of late about 300. l. divided amongst them to carry them away, some of them having attended the State here above 15 months, others a lesser time. Than let the world judge what such who have served faithfully and have not received any manner of encouragement from the State shall think, when this Mayor Ormsby who hath done them so great dis-service shall receive the 4000 l. he is now a Petitioner for, and great employments conferred upon him, and who hath received as much as any one of those Officers upon this dividend of the 300. l. to carry him into Ireland and yet not gone, besides 100 l. in ready money which he received at his coming over. Articles whereupon Mayor Ormesby is to be tried at a Council of War. 1 WHether or not did the said Major in June 1645 (he being best acquainted in Connaught) when the British in Ulster went thither, go along with those Forces, and was he not used as a guide through Connaught to the Castle of Shrewl? did not the said Major hinder the English & Scots who resolved to fight the Rebels being drawn up in their way, And did he not allege, That those Rebels were the Earl of Glanrikards friends and Kinsmen, who had not than declared himself in a hostile way? And for the truth hereof let Colonel Conway witness, Sir James Mountgomery, Captain Anteill, Captain Kilner, and many other Officers both English and Scots, who were only strangers in that Province, and directed by the said Major. Yet nevertheless the British were reproachfully branded with that neglect whereof he was the cause, merely to save some of his Country men and acquaintance, neighbours and Kinsmen, he, his father and Ancestors living amongst them, and allied to them by many generations, and whose Estate, if he have any, is amongst them yet in that Province? 2. Whether or not the said Major by his Cowardice rendered himself Prisoner to Captain Barnwell in his own Trench, and so basely lost a Troop of good horse, though they cost him nothing, a Foot Company which sheltered themselves in Tulske, and all the goods belonging to the English there, and in General did not the said Mayor occasion all the loss? 3. Did not the said Mayor occasion the loss of Castle Coote, wherein his Father and some of his friends were chief Commanders, to save his life, who submitted himself to the mercy of the Rebels without Quarter, and might have hanged him when they pleased. 4. Did not the said Ormsby loose the battle of Roscomen, by giving a wrong word, and flying himself first, and was never seen for 10 or 12 miles, when as others whom he blames and calumniatess, kirmished all the time in the Rear, receicing the charges of the Enemy till the spent horse were gone and recovered breath: And in this manner most of the Officers behaved themselves in a body near 20 miles together, but he was never seen, alleging that he was shot through the Arm, when a Bullet only grazed on him, as by the scar may yet be seen, his bones being all whole? Queries to be put to Mayor Ormesby by the Lord Precedent of Connaugh concerning the 4000 l. he Petitions the Parliament for. 1 WHere this 4000 l. was in the time of peace, it not being known to his neighbours that he was worth 100 l. of ready money? 2. When gave he out this money for the Parliaments Use? 3. By whose Direction was it and who undertook to pay him? 4. For what commodities to the Parliaments use was that money disbursed and which way could the Parliament be bettered 4000 l. by him? 5. What is become of those pennyworths, and who disposed of them or made use of them to the Parliaments advantage; For if a Merchant give an account he must set down a list of the Commodities, and who received them, when and where, the day of the month, and year of God? 6. Why did the said Major presume to misinform men of honour, quality, and known integrity, who could not be privy to all his Actions in procuring a certificate from them, which certificate he uses as a principal ground to strengthen his Petition for the said 4000 l. Which is to be reported to the house of Commons; And also under colour of that certificate be assumes the glory of the services; performed in Conaught, to himself, when as others far more deserving are passed by with silence. Now, if Mayor Ormesby shall pass free, notwithstanding what can be said against him, or be rewarded for doing nothing, It will be far more favour than the L. Moor, L. Conway, Lord Chichester, Claneboyes or Ards, have had, though all Noblemen: and any of them have suffered more by the Rebellion, & disbursed more than he & all his generation are worth: yet all of them either want their Regiments, possession of their Estates, or their persons lie in Captivity many months for their service to the Parliament; And yet their Petitions, it read, be not granted. But indeed this brave Ormsby takes a better course than any of those Noblemen to achieve his ends, for he is of every Nation and every profession as may best serve his turn. Amongst the Presbyterians he is Presbyterian, amongst the Independents he is an Independent, amongst the Irish he is an Irishman, and that is true indeed; amongst the English he is an Englishman, if he were not betrayed by his Irish accent and breeding; and amongst the Scots, if his God damn-me may be taken, he loves them above all the world. And for his valour, if you believe his own report, it is above that of Achilles and his Mirmidones whereof he had a great purpose to have given sufficient proof with the Venetians against the Turks, had he not been informed that Prince Rupert was to be General of their Army, who hath conceived such indignation against Mayor Ormsby (as himself reports) That the Prince hath vowed he never shall have quarter if he get him in a field: and the reason is, the name of Major Ormsby struck such terror in the Irish, that they durst not sand over the ten thousand they promised the King, for fear of him, lest he had destroyed the whole Kingdom of Ireland in their absence. And to conclude, it may appear by this preceding discourse, that this man lies aming at great promotion, great sums of money, but as yet he is only possessed by hope; howsoever he deserves this Epitaph. Here lies the lusty Phaeton, which took in hand to guide, His Father's Chariot, from the which although he chanced to slide, Yet that he gave a proud at tempt, it cannot be denied. FINIS.