An Extract out of Several LIBELS. Remarks upon Sir W. smith's Speech at Hicks-Hall. 1. ALL Considering People will now see that Conventiclers are not Baldwin. Punished and Ruined for Holding Conventicles, but for being zealous for the Protestant Religion, and Government by Advice of Parliament against Popery, and Clandestine Arbitrary Counsels. Postscript. The Third Part of the No Protestant Plot. 2. The Best and Wisest of the King's Subjects are filled with Jealousies Baldwinâ–Ş that it is through a Concert with the French Monarchy, that Parliaments are either Called, Prorogued, or Dissolved, etc. Pag. 21. Line. 1. 3. Such is is the Papists Influence upon Public Ministers, and so great Baldwin. is their Power in all our Counsels, that we can neither obtain the having the Principal Conspirators brought to Legal Trial, nor procure any Effectual Provision towards the Saving ourselves, and securing our Religion, from their Cruelty and Rage, & Deinceps. Page 25. Line 18. 4. Macnamarra told Smith that He had been with Sir L. J. who had given Baldwin. him a Long Lesson, which nevertheless he had learned, though it was very long. To that height of Impudence & Villainy was this Varlet arrived, through the Encouragement, and Protection, which he received from Some Great Persons, whom it would have better become to have Employed their Authority and Power according to the Rule of Justice, and Honour. P. 96. 97. 5. That called Treason in the Earl of Argyle, which the Common Reason Baldwin. of Mankind, and all the Law of the World Justifies. P. 15. Line 12. Rights of the Kingdom. 6. Let us Discuss it by Law and Reason, what is our Legal Fealty? how Jo. Kidgell & Ri. Baldwin. made? how Limited? how Kept, or how DISSOLVED, P. 11. 7. Allegiance was ad Legem; to the Laws, the Kingdom, and the Kingdoms Kidgell & Baldwin. Good or Profit, together with the King, P. 18. 8. [If an English King was Elective by the Common Law, the Kingdom Kidgell & Baldwin. might Prescribe against Late Statutes. P. 25.] And then he says that the King was Elective by the Common Law, referring to Hubert's Speech at the Coronation of King John. 9 Which seemeth most Rightly to State the Nature of Succession, as it Kidgell & Baldwin. was in This Kingdom. So that All did Amount but to this, that if a King had such Children, so Qualified, and so Educated that they were above others in Virtue, Wisdom and True Worth; (or at lest Caeteris Pares) they were the most likely Candidates for the Crown. P. 75. The Ignoramus-Justices. Being an Answer to the Order of Sessions at Hicks-Hall. 10- Some Directions to the Officers that may be Threatened or Persuaded Janeway. to Act by such Unwarrantable Orders, from such IGNORAMUS-JUSTICES. Title-Page. Reflections. Tyranny, and Popery, Num. [1] Confederacy with France, [2] Popish Ministers and Counsels, [3] Subornation in the King's Ministers, [4] Argyle Justified, [5] Our Allegiance may be Dissolved. [6] Allegiance to the Kingdom, [7] If the Kingdom was Elective by the Common Law it continues so, [8] He Pronounces that so it was, and Concludes that so it is. [9] The Middlesex Bench called IGNORAMUS-JUSTICES. [10]