Tudor rose French fleur-de-lis Scottish thistle Charles R. TRusty and Well-beloved, We Greet you well. In these great and insupportable afflictions and calamities under which the poor Nation hath been so long exercised, and by which it is so near exhausted; We cannot think of a more Natural and proper Remedy, then to resort to those for Counsel and Advise, who have seen and observed the first beginning of our Miseries, the progress from bad to worse, and the mistakes and misunderstandings which have produced and contributed to inconveniences which were not intended; and after so many Revolutions, and the observation of what hath attended them, are now trusted by Our good Subjects to repair the Breaches which are made, and to provide proper Remedies for those Evils, and for the lasting Peace, Happiness and Security of the Kingdom. We do assure you upon Our Royal word, that none of our Predecessors have had a greater esteem of Parliaments, than We have, in our judgement, as well as from our obligation; We do believe them to be so vital a part of the constitution of the Kingdom, and so necessary for the Government of it, that We well know, neither Prince, nor people can be in any tolerable degree happy without them; and therefore you may be confident, that we shall always▪ look upon their Counsels as the best We can receive, and shall be as tender of their Privileges, and as careful to preserve and protect them, as of that which is most near to Ourselves, and most necessary for Our own preservation. And as this is our opinion of Parliaments, that their Authority is most necessary for the Government of the Kingdom, so we are most confident, that you believe, and find that the preservation of the King's Authority is as necessary for the preservation of Parliaments; and that it is not the name, but the right constitution of them, which can prepare, and apply proper remedies for those Evils, which are grievous to the People, and which can thereby establish their peace and security. And therefore we have not the least doubt, but that you will be as tender in, and as jealous of any thing that may infringe Our Honour, or impair Our Authority, as of your own Liberty and Property, which is best preserved, by preserving the other. How far we have trusted you in this great affair, and how much it is in your power to restore the Nation to all that it hath lost, and to Redeem it from any Infamy it hath undergone, and to make King and People as happy as they ought to be; you will find by our enclosed Declaration, a Copy of which we have likewise sent to the House of Peers, and you will easily believe that we would not voluntarily, and of Ourselves have reposed so great a trust in you, but upon an entire confidence that you will not abuse it; and that you will proceed in such a manner, and with such due consideration of us who have trusted you, that we shall not be ashamed of declining other assistance (which we have assurance of) and repairing to you for more natural and proper remedies for the evils we would be freed from, nor forry that we have bound up our own interest so entirely, with that of our Subjects, as that we refer it to the same persons to take care of us who are trusted to provide for them. We look upon you as wise and dispassionate men, and good Patriots, who will rail up those Banks and Fences which have been cast down, and who will most reasonably hope, that the same prosperity will again spring from those Roots from which it hath heretofore and always grown; nor can we apprehend that you will propose any thing to us, or expect any thing from us, but what we are as ready to give, as you to receive. If you desire the advancement and propagation of the Protestant Religion, we have by our constant profession and practice of it, given sufficient Testimony to the World, That neither the unkindness of those of the same Faith towards us, nor the Civilities and Obligations from those of a contrary Profession, (of both which we have had abundant evidence) could in the least degree startle us, or make us swerve from it; and nothing can be proposed to manifest our zeal and affection for it, to which we will not readily consent. And we hope in due time Ourselves to propose somewhat to you for the propagation of it, that will satisfy the World, that we have always made it both our care and our study, and have enough observed what is most like to bring disadvantage to it. If you desire Security for those, who in these calamitous times, either wilfully or weakly have transgressed those bounds which were prescribed, and have invaded each others Rights, We have left to you to provide for their security and Indemnity, and in such a way as you shall think just and reasonable; and by a just computation of what men have done and suffered, as near as is possible, to take care that all men be satisfied, which is the surest way to suppress and extirpate all such uncharitableness and animosity as might hereafter shake and threaten that peace, which for the present might seem established. If there be a crying sin, for which the Nation may be involved in the Infamy that attends it, We cannot doubt but that you will be as solicitous to Redeem and Vindicate the Nation from that guilt and infamy, as we can be. If you desire that reverence and obedience may be paid to the fundamental Laws of the Land, and that Justice may be equally and impartially administered to all men, it is that which we desire to be sworn to Ourselves, and that all persons in power and authority should be so too. In a word, there is nothing that you can propose, that may make the Kingdom happy, which we will not contend with you to compass; and upon this confidence and assurance, we have thought fit to send you this Declaration, that you may, as much as is possible, at this distance, see our heart, which when God shall bring us nearer together (as we hope he will do shortly) will appear to you very agreeable to what we have professed, and we hope that we have made that right Christian use of our affliction; and that the observation and experience we have had in other Countries, hath been such, as that we, and we hope all our Subjects, shall be the better for what we have seen and suffered. We shall add no more but our Prayers to Almighty GOD, That he will so bless your Counsels, and direct your endeavours, that his Glory and Worship may be provided for, and the Peace, Honour, and Happiness of the Nation may be Established upon those foundations which can best support it; And so we bid you farewel. Given at our Court at Breda this 4th/14. day of April, 1660. in the twelfth year of our Reign. Superscribed, To our Trusty and well-beloved, The Speaker of the House of Commons. CHARLES R. TRusty and Well-beloved, We greet you well: It cannot be believed, but that We have been, are, and ever must be, as solicitous as We can, by all endeavours to improve the Affections of Our good Subjects at home, and to procure the assistance of Our Friends and Allies abroad; for the recovery of that Right, which by the Laws of God and Man, is unquestionable; and of which We have been so long dispossessed by such force, and with those circumstances, as We do not desire to aggravate by any sharp expressions, but rather wish, That the memory of what is passed, may be buried to the World; that We have more endeavoured to prepare, and to improve the affections of Our Subjects at home, for Our Restoration, then to procure assistance from abroad, to invade either of Our Kingdoms, is as manifest to the World: And We cannot give a better evidence, that we are still of the same mind, then in this conjuncture, when common Reason must satisfy all men, That We cannot be without assistance from abroad, We choose rather to send to you, who have it in your own power, to prevent that ruin and desolation which a War would bring upon the Nation, and to make the whole Kingdom owe the Peace, Happiness, Security, and Glory it shall enjoy, to your Virtue; and to acknowledge that your Armies have complied with their Obligations, for which they were first raised, for the preservation of the Protestant Religion, the honour and dignity of the King, the privileges of Parliament, the liberty and property of the Subject, and the Fundamental Laws of the Land; and that you have vindicated that trust, which others most perfidiously abused and betrayed. How much We desire and resolve to contribute to those good ends, will appear to you by our enclosed Declaration, which We desire you to cause to be published for the Information and Satisfaction of all good Subjects, who do not desire a further effusion of precious Christian blood, but to have their peace and security founded upon that which can only support it; an Unity of affections amongst ourselves, an equal Administration of Justice to Men, restoring Parliaments to a full capacity of providing for all that is amiss, and the Laws of the Land to their due veneration. You have been yourselves witnesses of so many Revolutions, and have had so much experience, how far any power and authority that is only assumed by passion and appetite, and not supported by Justice, is from providing for the happiness and peace of the people, or from receiving any obedience from them, without which no Government can provide for them; that you may very reasonably believe, that God hath not been well pleased with the attempts that have been made, since he hath usually increased the Confusion, by giving all the success that hath been desired, and brought that to pass without Effect, which the Designers have proposed, as the best means to settle and compose the Nation; and therefore We cannot but hope and believe, that you will concur with Us in the remedy we have applied, which to humane understanding is only proper for the Ills we all groan under; and that you will make yourselves the blessed Instruments to bring this blessing of Peace and Reconciliation upon King and People, it being the usual method in which Divine Providence delighteth itself, to use and sanctify those very means which ill men design, for the satisfaction of private and particular Ends and Ambition, and other wicked purposes, to wholesome and public Ends, and to Establish that Good which is most contrary to the Designers; which is the greatest Manifestation of God's peculiar Kindness to a Nation, that can be given in this world. How far we resolve to preserve your Interests, and reward your services, we refer to our Declaration; and we hope God will inspire you to perform your Duty to Us, and to your Native Country, whose happiness cannot be separated from each other. We have entrusted our Well-beloved Servant Sir John Greenvile one of the Gentlemen of Our Bedchamber, to deliver this unto you, and to give Us an account of your Reception of it, and to desire you in Our Name, that it may be published. And so we bid you farewel. Given at Our Court at Breda this 14. of April 1660. In the twelfth Year of Our Reign. Received 1. May 1660. To our trusty and well-beloved General Monck. to be by him communicated to the Precedent and Council of State, and to the Officers of the Armies under his Command. HIS MAJESTY'S DECLARATION CHARLES REX, CHARLES, By the Grace of God, King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc. To all our loving Subjects of what Degree or Quality soever, Greeting. If the General Distraction and Confusion, which is spread over the whole Kingdom, doth not awaken all men to a Desire, and Longing, that those Wounds which have so many years together been kept bleeding, may be bound up, all We can say will be to no purpose: However, after this long silence, We have thought it our Duty to Declare how much we desire to contribute thereunto; and that, as We can never give over the hope in good time to obtain the Possession of that Right, which God and Nature hath made Our Due; So We do make it our daily Suit to the Divine Providence, that He will in Compassion to Us and Our Subjects, after so long Misery and Sufferings, remit, and put Us into a quiet and peaceable Possession of that Our Right, with as little Blood, and Damage to our People as is possible: Nor do We desire more to enjoy what is Ours, then that all Our Subjects may enjoy what by Law is theirs, by a full and entire Administration of justice throughout the Land, and by extending Our Mercy where it is wanted and deserved. And to the end that the fear of punishment may not engage any conscious to themselves of what is passed to a perseverance in guilt for the future, by opposing the quiet and happiness of their Country, in the Restoration both of King, Peers, and People, to their Justice, Ancient and Fundamental Rights, We do by these presents Declare, That We do grant a Free and General Pardon, which We are ready upon demand, to pass under Our Great Seal of England, to all Our Subjects of what Degree or quality soever, who within Forty days after the publishing hereof, shall lay hold upon this Our Grace and Favour, and shall by any public Act Declare their doing so, and that they return to the Loyalty and Obedience of good Subjects; Excepting only such persons as shall hereafter be excepted by Parliament, those only excepted, let all Our Subjects, how faulty soever, rely upon the Word of a King, solemnly given by this present Declaration, That no Crime whatsoever committed against Us or Our Royal Father before the Publication of this, shall ever rise in judgement, or be brought in question against any of them, to the least endamagement of them, either in their Lives, Liberties, or Estates, or (as far forth as lies in Our power) so much as to the prejudice of their Reputations, by any Reproach or term of distinction from the rest of Our best Subjects: We desiring and Ordaining that henceforward all Notes of Discord, Separation, and difference of Parties be utterly abolished among all Our Subjects, whom We invite and conjure to a perfect union among themselves, under Our Protection, for the Re-settlement of our just Rights and theirs, in a Free Parliament, by which, upon the Word of a King, We will be advised. And because the passion and uncharitableness of the times have produced several opinions in Religion, by which men are engaged in Parties and Animosities against each other, which when they shall hereafter unite in a freedom of conversation, will be composed, or better understood, We do declare a Liberty to Tender Consciences, and that no man shall be disquieted, or called in question for differences of opinion in matter of Religion, which do not disturb the peace of the Kingdom, and that We shall be ready to consent to such an Act of Harliament, as upon mature deliberation shall be offered to Us, for the full granting that Indulgence. And because in the continued distractions of so many years, and so many and great Revolutions, many Grants and Purchases of Estates have been made to, and by many Officers, Soldiers and others, who are now possessed of the same, and who may be liable to Actions at Law, upon several Titles; We are likewise willing that all such differences, and all things relating to such Grants, Sales, and Purchases shall be determined in Parliament, which can best provide for the just Satisfaction all men who are concerned. And we do further Declare, That We will be ready to consent to any Act or Acts of Parliament to the purposes aforesaid, and for the full satisfaction of all Arrears due to the Officers and Soldiers of the Army under the Command of General Monck, and that they shall be received into Our Service upon as good pay and conditions as they now enjoy. Given under Our Sign Manual, and Privy Signet at our Court at Breda, this 4 th'/ 14: Day of April 1660. in the twelfth year of Our Reign. Tuesday May 1. 1660. Resolved upon the question by the Commons Assembled in Parliament (nemine contradicente) THat a Committee be appointed to prepare an Answer to His Majesty's Letter, expressing the great and joyful Sense of this House of His Gracious Offers, and their humble and hearty Thanks to His Majesty for the same, and with professions of their Loyalty and Duty to His Majesty; and that this House will give a speedy Answer to His Majesty's Gracious Proposals. Resolved, etc. (nemine contradicente) THat the Letters from His Majesty, both that to this House, and that to the Lord General, with His Majesty's Declaration which came enclosed, and the Resolve of this House thereupon be forthwith Printed and Published. Wil Jessop Clerk of the Commons House of Parliament.