THE HONOUR OF THE English Soldiery, Illustrated by way of Parallel, betwixt Them, and those of other NATIONS, in point of Discipline and Behaviour; Especially of FRANCE. Occasioned by several Relations, sent over, touching the Barbarous Tyranny of the FRENCH Soldiery, and their FOREIGN AUXILIARIES. Set forth as a warning to ENGLAND, against admitting the Scots, or any other Foreiners under any pretence whatsoever. Barbarus has Segetes? LONDON, Printed by Tho. Newcomb, 1651: The Honour of the English Soldiery, Illustrated by way of Parallel, betwixt them, and those of other Nations, in point of Discipline and Behaviour; especially of FRANCE. AS often as I contemplate the good Order and Discipline of the old Roman Militia (whereby that Queen of Cities became Lady of the world) comparing it with ours, it seems to me as if the famous Manlii, the Fabii, and the Scipio's, were revived again among the gallant Commanders and Captains of the English Nation; For, without controversy, those ancient Heroes may here find their Parallels in every Punctilio of true valour and honour, not any whit inferior in Civil or moral Endowments: But if to the accomplishments of nature, we add those also that are Spiritual; by how much Grace excels Nature, Christian piety morality, so fare we may conclude, that as the present persons and Actions take their rise from mor Noble Principles and designs, so they must needs transcend the highest examples of old Rome, and appear much more excellent, every way, than all the Monuments and Triumphs of the Roman virtue. How great then is the happiness of this Nation (even in the midst of misery) that notwithstanding, through the continued Plots and malice of her Enemies, she be constrained still to keep a Militia on foot for her necessary defence, yet the matter is carried, through the care and severity of those which Command, that so good Order is observed among the Soldiery, as it equals, if not exceeds the strictest Pattern of the Roman Discipline! Time was (you may remember) not long since, when the poor people were wont to tremble at the very name of approaching Soldiery; Let the North consider how it was harassed by the insulting Cavalier, and fare worse afterwards by the pernicious and most merciless Scot, who like the Locust, devoured what the Palmer-worm had left, utterly drained them of their wealth and provisions, cleared both man and beast (driving all away) to the impoverishing and starving of many Thousands, in the Northern Counties; nor did they abate one tittle of the like inhumanity, all along the Country, in that their memorable march (to no purpose) to the siege of Hereford. Let the West likewise remember, what it suffered by that wretched crew under Goring and Grenviel; neither let it be forgotten by the whole Land, how much every part did groan under the cruelty of Rupert, and his implacable pack of Foreiners and Plunderers; whose rapacious lusts knew no measure, nor their eyes any pity, wheresoever they came. Nor is it possible; that the Midland Counties and Frontiers should forget the devastations, burn free-quarters, and plunders, made by the incursions of both the Parties, as well Parliamentary, as Royal; For in those days, little better was the constitution of many even of the Parliaments Forces, who were too much infected with the High-Boys, Dammees and Ranters; so that the poor people in all parts, were ground to powder (like Corn in the mill) betwixt two disagreeing Parties, who both seemed to agree in the same point of inhumanity, to enhance the miseries and sorrows of an afflicted Kingdom. But in process of time, it seeming good to the wisdom of Parliament, to alter the Commander in Chief, and establish a new model of the Militia (as it now stands to this day) especial care was taken in the first place to put such only in place of Command, as were men of known principles of integrity and Piety; and the whole mass of the Soldiery (especially the Cavalry) was made up for the most part, of men of the same temper; such as engaged upon internal respects of Conscience and duty, not out of Mercenary, or any other inferior considerations; by which means it came to pass, that the Army was soon freed from all the inconveniences and extravagancies of the former establishment. The noble and serious behaviour of the good, wrought a shame in the bad; and as for those whom good example and their own ingenuity could not amend, the Laws and Ordinances of War were put in quick execution to restrain them; so that either for fear or shame, there followed an universal change in the behaviour of the Soldiery Military Discipline was soon revived after the strictest examples of ancient Severity; Quarters were discharged, Plunder and Oppression avoided; drunkenness, swearing, lasiviousness, and all kinds of Luxury, were cashired; the work of God was better minded and carried on for the works sake; Religious exercises and Conventions frequented, Godliness advanced, and the power of godliness made the only rise of preferment: In the intervals of Action they lived like Saints, and at the point of Action, behaved themselves like Lions, being resolved to triumph, even in death, as an Army of Martyrs. In which posture and resolution they continue to this very day. Whose houses have they at any time causelessly burnt, in a vain humour of revenge and ostentation? whose wives, or daughters have they ravished? What Towns do they ransack? What Villuges do they spoil and abuse? Whose exen, whose sheep, whose provisions have they taken, and not paid for them, or made restitution? If any Nation in the world may glory in a Soldiery, sure, none more than England; yea, none so much: For, it can be no Hyperbole to use this expression after a Noble Person; that since the days of the Israelits, under the conduct of Moses and Joshua, not any age, Commonweal, or Kingdom, is able to produce one Instance (in all points equal) of so noble a Military Discipline and Institution. And if no former age, certainly much less the present; the whole race of mankind being degenerated from the pure Principles of Martial and Moral honesty, and the reins let lose to all sorts of luxury; But above all others, among the Soldiery, as you may see in the Nations round about us, where the people are made miserable examples of their cruelty and Tyranny. In Poland the Villagers are quite eaten up betwixt their own Countrymen and the Cossacks. How sad is the condition of poor Germany, groaning still under the variou s Pressures of the Swedish, Spanish, and Imperial Forces! Even as miserable as the State of Flanders and the Frontiers, under the cruel exactions of the Spaniard on the one side, and the plundering Lorainer on the other. And though, out of all these Countries, we might furnish you with such Relations, as would move stones to pity; yet in regard we have many fresh Instances brought to hand, by Letters of a late date from our neighbours of France, it is much more convenient to publish them, as timely warning-pieces to us in England, to beware of admitting Scots or others into this Land, considering the present miserable state of that delicious Kingdom, under the intolerable Tyranny of their own, and those Foreign Auxiliaries, who pretended they came in there for their assistance. A true Relation of what happened about the City of Rheims since May 20. 1651. And the pitiful estate of the Country. Out of several Letters written from the said City of Rheims, May 27. 1651. WE are here fall'n into a despair, by the disorder committed in the Country by the Soldiery. The Regiments of Estampes and of Palluau the Foreigner, have been here, and have received the Estape, and yet have committed such excesses as will make one tremble to think on. The Regiment of Palluau have burnt part of the Suburbs of Espernay, have ravished women and maids in the Country, and carried away all the horses of the poor Ploughman, wheresoever they have passed, they have plundered the gentlemen's houses, and have taken from one alone 200 sheep, with all his horses and cattles: They have killed or wounded to death several persons, and they do hunt the poor Ploughman, as one should hunt a hare in Champagne: nothing dare appear before them: The of the Villages of Chenay and St. Thierry, have been wholly carrried away by them: In a word, it is no worse a desolation then if an Army of hungry Barbarians had marched through the Province. I should give you too much sorrow, if I should enlarge more upon the miseries of this forsaken Country. Another of the said 27. of May. The misery is such here, that I think it cannot be helped by the hands of men, be their minds never so much affected to the remedy of it: God must touch the hearts of the Grandees, and make them have a feeling knowledge of the public desolations, and give them an efficacious will to remedy them: I know they hear enough of them, by the frequent recitals they have of them, but what comes into their ears, doth not come to their hearts, as it would do should they see it. The last day of May. I could add to the Relation I have formerly sent you of our miseries, but the little while you are resolved to stay, keeps me from telling you any thing more, but that it is impossible to hinder the ravish, rapts, burn, murders, and plunderings which are continued here with as much liberty, as if they were not forbidden. Three days since a Captain killed with his own hands and in cold blood, within a musket shot of our Gates, a poor Country man who was coming hither with his wife and a child of six years old he led by the hand, the Country man not having so much as said a word to him. I do mention that murder, not that it is alone, but because it seems more odious. The greatest misery is, that there is no Justice done, and that the Officers and Soldiers are assured of the impunity, of what crime soever they may commit. The greatest hurt done to them, is to restore what is in esse, when they pass through some City where they are not the stronger: it is to be feared lest those who are to prevent those disorders, and do not use the authority they have in hand, do fall into the disgrace, which ordinarily attends the injustice of those who want care or courage to repress the crimes. Things are grown to such a height, that there is no excuse now for such as are to stop the public violences. I dare say no more, but that I wish those who have in their hands the protection of the people, be as willing to help them, as they are knowing their oppressions. Of the third of June. You ought to expect nothing from me but complaints of our miseries, for although in my former Letters I have acquainted you with the chiefest circumstances, yet the evil is carrried to the extremity, and time producing every moment, some new subjects of disgrace. I am forced to tell you that the Soldiers have lately killed the Curate of Baconne, and a Country man of the same place, who remained alone in the Village, whom they wounded with three shot of a firelock in the head. They have plundered the Village of Nauroy, which is in the Dominion of l'Hospital, where they left nothing, and killed two Inhabitants and wounded all the rest, one only excepted who is fled. They have forced the house called du Nuyseman belonging to Madame de St. Pier, have plundered it, killed Nicholas du Pont her farmor, and carried away all her horses and . No body dares appear abroad in the Country, where robberies, murders, burn, ravish and randsoming are more frequent and more free than in the enemy's Country. Two or three things are the causes of that. 1. The impunity that reigns absolutely every where. 2. The want of paying the Soldiers: 3. the necessity which is in the Province, were no bread being to be found the Soldiers take the liberty to run and to plunder whatsoever they meet withal. The Ministers of State may be assured of two things: first that the Province is wholly ruinated without restource, and that shortly it will be more desolate than ever Lorraine hath been; 2. That before the King's army be in a body it will be ruinated by the famine and want, nothing absolutely being to be found here for its substsience either of men or horses. I think that all the remainder of the people here are going to resort to Paris to beg their bread, which cannot but bring an infection's air there and such diseases as the necessity hath produced among them. Of the 5. of june. I told you in my last part of the disorders committed here by the Soldiery, but as every day begets some new violence; so you shall have no Letter of me, but it will tell you some new misery we are at present somuch surrounded on all parts, and the advenues so much possessed, that it is impossible either to come in or to go out without danger both of life and of the goods; all Soldiers without exception running as so many hungry wolves upon the way, and not sparing the lives nor the goods of such as fall into their hands: They do unteame the horses from the Ploughs and do carry them away. And Saturday last they took within sight of the Town the horses of the Carriers who were bringing Victuals, wood and necessaries for the Inhabitants, and left their wagons upon the way: in two or three hours they took away above 100 horses and misused those who offered to resist. I think that if over the despair hath been excusable; such as in this unhappy age shall be forced to a defence, will have a lawful excuse. The 3 Instant one of our villages was assaulted in the night by 200. Men of Pallnau, who forced it, killed one of the Inhabitants and wounded all the rest, one only excepted, they took a way all the horses and Cows, stripped a Gentleman who is a Gens d'arme to the King, having very scurvily used him before: His complaint having been addressed to me here, I have arrested three Officers until the Commander hath given satisfaction. The same day Mr. de Fremont's house, whom you know was forced and plundered, and the soldiers having undermined the Dungeon, he and his son in Law Mr. de Maisieres was forced to run away through the Soldiers with their Pistols cocked in their hands. Yesternight the Village of Bourgoigne was plundered and the women striped stark naked. Never France saw such extremityes. The last year though full of misery was nothing near comparable to this. I esteem that now the only hand of God is able to help us, since the earthly powers if they can, they will not. I cannot but grief you by the rehearsal of these calamities, but you must be partaker of the miseries of the Province, though you be absent. Of the 7. of june. I would end here the recital of our miseries, should I not be confident you will stay till the arrival of my Lord Bishop of Chaalons, who goes to witness the desolation of the Province, not being able to see any longer the violence and oppression, without giving warning to those who have the remedy in their hands. I have told in my last how the Gentleman's houses have lost the privileges and the respect, which covered them from the insolency of the Soldiery; they were not long since a shelter to some of our Citizens, who enjoyed the protection which the birth of the Nobles gave them hitherto, but now they are no more, regarded than others, and their houses look no otherwise now then so many storehouses, where the Country people hath gathered the remainder of their wrack, that it might be so much the more easily carried away. They are not content to plunder the Nobleman's houses; but themselves are ignominiously stripped, and their Wives and Daughters are not free from that dishonour. Many in their presence have been stripped to their very smocks, and we could not keep our tears, when we saw persons of that condition, who have several times ventured their lives and estate for the service of the King and Kingdom, run away to us in rags they had borrowed of some poor Countrymen to hid their nakedness. I dare not exaggerate theevill, lest the readers of these fruitless Stories, and those who will not remedy them, as they are bound by their authority, think it is rather an amplificated discourse then a true Story. Yet I think myself obliged to tell you again that the disorder is infinitely above what I can tell or write. The King's Subjects are no less molested, then if they were in the hands of the Barbarians their enemies, for their blood, their goods, their quietness, their honour are no way spared. A Maid some two days since flying (to save her honour) from the hands of some unhappy Soldiers who pursued her very narrowly, her zeal to the preservation of her chastity caused her death; these mad fellows not able to overtake her afore she came into the Village of Sillery, where she intended to have saved herself, shot at her, so that she fell down dead and her corpse was thrown by these Villains into a fen. Yesternight the Mills of Tinqueux, of the Abbess and of the Archbishop, and the Folleries, have been forced and plundered, and what soever was found in carried away, which causeth here a great heat, because abundance of Merchants interessed in the taking of the Merchandises, which have been valued, have kept such quarter, that Mr de Bezancon, hath been forced to get on horseback and repair to the place where the Regiment doth quarter, to take an order about it. Thus much for the Soldiery. Of the same 7. of june. Mr. de Bezancon is come back from Pevy, where was the regiment of Languedoc, who have made terrible disorders in these parts: the said Mr. de Bezancon hath been forced to go thither in person, to make use of the King's authority, and cause such things as remain in esse of their plunderings & robbery to be restored. The evil doth daily increase: You heard of the death of the Curate of Baconne, as he was treating for the randsome of that poor village. Mr. de Neuville hath been plundered at Nauroy; Mess. de Fremont and de Maisieres have had the like fortune; but he that hath had the hardest measure is Mr. de Vilette, dwelling upon the Parish of Pevy, whose house was totally plundered Sunday last at night, he, his Wife and four children turned out and stripped to their shirts: I saw him on Monday night, and he struck horror into me by the recital of the hard usage he had received, the poor rags of Canvas that were given him out of charity to cover his nakedness, drew my tears, specially hearing him grieve for the misfortune of his wife, and of three of his Children, whom he knew not what was become of. The Regiment who hath made that disorder is that of Languedoc, who fired Pevy the 5. instant, and burned some houses: I should never have done, if I should undertake to tell you all the horrible and sad stories, that are acted here. It is easy to judge, we are forsaken by the protection of men, that the ruin of this poor Country is indubitable, and that in our pressing misery God alone is to be our hope and consolation. Of the 10. of june: Since this Letter is to find you still in Paris, I think myself bound in duty to tell you that this night the Village of Isle hath been plundered by the Regiment of Chacq, and four Inhabitants killed on the Holy Sacrament's day. The Baron du Tour's house was fired by 260. Polonois commanded by the Sergens of that Regiment: The house hath been totally plundered, with loss of 4000 Livers. The same Polonois have plundered Chamery, Sermier, and Nogent; the plundering continues in the Country without remedy; for what we do in arresting the Officers, when by chance they come to Town, doth with great pains, produce but little good: An express order of the King to some man of authority, is necessary to arrest and punish the Commanders, and compel them to redress the disorders of their Soldiers Mr. the Bougy, who commands the army in the absence of the Duke de Chaune, came hither yesterday, and goes this day to the quarters of the army, which they are removing a little, but four regiments are left, one company whereof in the licentiousness of the time, is able to ruinated an whole Province. Of the same day. The Castle du Cosson, which last Summer had kept free against the endeavours, of a whole Army, was yesterday the prey of the Poland regiment quartered at Villersalerand: they have taken and plundered all; 260. Soldiers did the work, but the whole regiment of 1200. men was not far off. The Soldiers want bread, and have no Commissaries of the Victuals to provide any, so that they do pillage all the places round about the said Village where they are quartered. Chamery, Sermiers, Villaneuds, Champflery, and others have felt the effects of their hostility. Of the 11. of june. One of our Regiments having carried away all the Cattles of the village of Isle, and the Inhabitants going to have them again, were very ill used; 4. having been killed out right and two deadly wounded. The same Regiment, those of Bougy & Navarre did plunder on the 9 instant Avaux Sur-Aisne, where they committed great excesses both upon the men and the women and maids, part of whom were ravished, with all Kind of imaginable brutality. Of the 12. of june. I have much entertianed you with our misfortunes, and I could wish the end of them should put an end to my Letters: but since they do continue and that every day begets a particular disgrace, I must speak as long as my voice can hold, that I might not incur into the reproach of having concealed the evil from them, who are to stop it. I think I have told you how the Regiment of the Poloneiss, had on the day of the Holy Sacrament, forced the Castle du Cosson, broken open the Gates with Axes, and plundered the house, out of which they carried for the value of about 4000 Livers. My Lord Bishop of Puy, hath the Process verbal of the same in his hand. They have further forced and plundered the Curate's house at Chamery, and carried away his goods whilst he was saying Mass. They have also pillaged the village of Sermier, as you shall see by the Process verbal I do send you. I complained of it to Mr. de Bezancon, and as I was pressing for justice, the commander of that Regiment came, who engaged his word to see the same redressed, and offered presently to take horse and repair to the Regiment for that purpose, leaving an officer as an hostage; but as his intention was not right, and that he thought that being gone himself, he would find one way or another to free his hostage, he hath endeavoured what he could to compass it; but as the business was worth a particular observation, I appointed some guards upon the said Officer by the advice of Mr. de Bezancon; so that the Regiment being out of hope to rescue their officer without repairing the damages, Yesterday about 4. a clock in the evening, the officers of that Regiment seized on 6. Inhabitants hard by the Town, whom they have carried away with them; one is the Son of Mr. le Tresorier Doulet, two are the Sons of Mr. l' Espagnol one of our Sheriffs, two others are the Sons of the late deceased Eleu Cordier, and the last is Mr. Josseteau Bachelor in Divinity Curate of Gueux, who gave out to take the air. I need not to tell you the consequence of that attempt; which once suffered they may come and pull the Magistrates out of their places, when in performance of the King's command they shall go about to repress the public violences in the Country and Towns; you may judge whether this be not a trampling under foot of the Royal authority and a forcing by arms the justice. Mr de Bezancon is gone out in person to moderate such a high insolency, for I dare not hope a punishment, not for want of zeal in him, but because licentiousness hath settled an impunity, and that it seems now it be feared lest the Justices should ruinated the arms, when as the contrary would happen, should it be practised. Our City is in such rumour because of that disorder, that should not the respect and the love due to the King be deeply ingraved in the hearts of our Inhabitants, we should expect some tumult within our Walls, because this violence doth give us no more liberty to go out, then if we were besieged by the enemy. Last friday a Regiment having sent a party of twelve here to go and carry away the Cattle of Isle, the Inhabitants come out to hinder them but presently the whole Regiment fell upon them, killed 4: of them and wounded two more who are a dying, drove away all the Cattle, and took all the Inhabitants prisoners, whom they have sent back, having kept them and misused them 24. hours: As for the Cows they have kept 11. and restored the rest, for they have a pistol a piece. If such disorders are committed with somuch liberty because of the impunity, judge you if upon the high ways & in the Country any thing can be sure, and whether all things are not fallen into a confusion, the particulars whereof I do forbear; else I should write every Post an history and not a private Letter. Pray let My Lord Bishop du Puy see this, that he might obtain of the Queen's bounty some remedy to these mischiefs, which are leading us into a despair. The wound is great and pressing which requires a speedy and powerful awe; the said forces are going from us, and if once they get into the body of the army, hardly justice is to be looked for. Of the 14. of june. This word will be the close of all the circumstances of the impieties and disorders mentioned in my former Letters; and as it is one of the greatest inhumanities that might fall into the apprehension of a man, it comes very fitly the last, that being added to an infinite number of others you have represented to those in authority for a remedy, it might work finally upon their spirit for the obtaining of what divine justice requires of men, and which they should have done upon their first notice of these crying sins, which earth doth not punish. Some Soldiers of the Regiment of Navarre came lately into the Village of Beaumond, under the conduct of a Sergeant to look for women or maidens to full their brutality. Some of them, moved by noise, ran away and escaped by some byways. Those villains who have less humanity, than the Devils themselves cames, into a house in this Village, where they found a poor woman looking to her daughter sick to death, and near her end: at first they fell upon that poor dying creature, who had no strength to defend herself. The mother being wild to see such an abominable spectacle, did what she could to hinder them, and because she disturbed them, they forceably turned her out of the room, and with words which I dare not foul a Letter with, they forceably did shut her out, until those among them who had inhumanity enough to ravish her daughter, had done. Then they leaving her for dead they went away and gave liberty to the mother to come to her daughter again: but the same day they returned to make an end of an action which will make the earth guilty before God, and will make the Land liable to a public Plague, if such an horrible crime be not revenged: They offered to ravish the Mother, but she being stronger, they forced her to run away from the room, and having shut her out again they continued their cruelty upon the daughter, and made her die in the endeavours of a brutality, which the Devil would not do, had he a body: This goes beyond human belief, and truly now adays those that profess to bear arms, have nothing of man but the face. That same Regiment have plundered three days since the Village of Avaux belonging to Mr. le President de Mesmes, carried away all the Cows, Horses, and goods, leaving nothing. I cannot imagine that France can subsist long in that disorder; and I am persuaded that either it draws to her end, or that those, who can stop that confusion, will speedily look to the remedy. Mr. de Besancon with much ado got away the 6 Inhabitants they had carried away, and hath been promised by the Officers some satisfaction out of their pay for the damages done to the Castle of Cosson. Yesterday the Company of the Duke de Valois quartered without order in Cormonstrevil, and upon their march carried away all the horses of the Villages where they came; I dare say no more, I have so many complaints in my hands, that one makes me forget another. One of June 17. Since my Letters in this miserable time cannot be but a sad History of our misfortunes, give me leave to tell you two things, which take away from me all hopes of redress. The first, That although our disasters be well enough known, and that those who are to remedy them, have their eyes opened, yet no order is taken for it, by want of will; for it goes against the common sense of all men, to say that a Sovereign King, who can do whatsoever he pleaseth, wants power to do what he ought to will. Therefore no marvel if in stead of diminishing, the said disorders are increasing daily, even to producing such implieties, as hell itself is not capable of. The second is, That having given us some hope of breathing, by the orders sent for the removing of such Forces as were upon us, new ones are presently sent to take their place; which makes us believe that our ruin is unavoidable, and that in vain we have complained, since the end of our miseries, is the beginning of greater ones. I might say much thereupon, but I choose rather to make it short, telling you only what happened yesterday hereabouts by the violence of the Regiment of Harcourt, who assaulted a Convoy of 10 Carts full of Corn coming from Chaalon hither for the relief of our extreme necessity, wounded two of the Cartmen to death, and all the rest less dangerously, took 7 horses, 22 sacks of corn, and a cart full of Oats. I know not the tenth part of the disorders that happen hereabouts; Judge by the pattern what may be the pieces. I durst not rehears any particulars of the Sacrileges and horrible profanations of the holy things, and of the holy of the holys, which we know, for fear the continual recital of these abominations, and the exposing of these horrors to the public view, do force at last heaven to cause the earth to gape, or send down his thunderbotls and his fire to consume whatsoever might keep the memory of the high impunity of those crimes and execrable impieties. Every one knows the plundering and pillaging of all our Churches last year, both by the enemy's Forces, and by our own, to the full knowledge of the Officers and Commanders, and of such as were appointed to do Justice, yet no punishment made, nor even an intent to do it, so that nothing was left in the Churches for their Ministry, nor even the little metal used in the Baptistery. The rigours and violences committed by the Soldiers upon the Curates and Church-Officers, by the plundering of whatsoever was necessary for their subsistence, and the excesses practised upon their persons, which forced the poor Shepherds to forsake their Flocks and leave them without any help and assistance upon their death bed, which is not denied even to the greatest Criminals condemned to death, are also very well known. The King's Declaration of the 27 of January last, verified in Parliament the 24 of April bears the truth of the report of these Sacrileges and execrable attempts upon the sacred person of the Son of God, and the punishment ordered: but that Declaration hath been without execution; with shame we can say that this year our Churches have not been otherwise plundered, but by losing and carrying away such ornaments as had been begged and given by way of alms in Paris during the last winter, for the restablishing of the exercises of Religion in most of our said Churches, which was wholly ceased, had it not been for that suyply, and which will cease hereafter, notwithstanding our ancient possession which we do justify since the establishment of this State. An extract of some Informations of the violences and disorders committed by General Roze's Forces in the Land of Tierasche in the Diocese of Laon, where they were quartered the last winter, and have wholly ruinated and made desolate the said Country. Of the 30. & last day of April 1651. and the days following. THe Village du Hoquet hath been wholly ruinated by the pillaging of the said Roze's Forces, who murdered 16. Inhabitants there, wounded 10. took and carried away all the Ornaments of the Church, the rest of the Inhabitants for the most part having been starved. The Village of Morguy is also ruinated by the said Forces, the Ploughman dead or fled, after they had lost their goods by the plundering of Castle St. Clement, and in the woods of Val St. Pier, where they are gone for refuge. At Plomion the Church hath been broken in several places, all the glasses broken, and the Ornaments taken away, part of the covert ruinated; Mr. du Beltoy Governor of Bergue's house plundered, notwithstanding the resistance made by the guards there, wherein were all the remainders of the goods and householdstuff of the Inhabitants remaining at the said Plomion: Mr. Flander the Curate hath been stripped, abused and beaten with shedding of blood, and in danger of his life. At St. Geneviefue and d'Olignon all the buildings have been ruinated and demolished, and the Church brought into a very bad posture, having been plundered by the said forces, who have broken, , or carried away whatsoever was in it. At Cherry lez Buchy, they made use of the Church for a Corpse of guards for a long while. Rozoy, Romeroy, Aspermont, Ralimon, Malincau, Hulturquê and St. George, have been wholly ruinated, the houses demolished, and the timber either burnt or carried away for the most part, the said Moligneau and St. George burned down to the ground, the inhabitants dead, or brought to an extreme necessity. The Chapel of Ease to the said Parish made use of during two months as a store-house for the General Rose, so that Mr. Stephen Laureau Priest and Canon of Rozoy, could not obtain leave of the said General to say Mass therein; no not upon the Easter day, nor to celebrate there the divine Service in any wise, during his abode there; though the inhabitants of those places were hindered by the Soldiers to go to the Church of the said Rozoy. At Noircourt most part of the inhabitants have been killed, and there remain but 3 or 4. of 60. Above 300 men women and children have been starved, the Church and the ornaments thereof wholly plundered by the said Forces, who have killed Clement Bugny in the Church, have ravished the women and the maids, and have stripped off their very smocks. Madam de Hautels her house hath been wholly plundered, and the cattles taken and carried away. All the inhabitants of Berlise except two or three, have perished by famine or misery; the Church hath been plundered, the holy Sacrament trampled under foot, the women ravished and stripped stark naked with all imaginable cruelty. At Grand Bieux the Church hath been wholly plundered, the holy Sacrament trampled under foot, and no ornaments left, the village partly burnt down, and the inhabitants ruinated and brought to an extreme misery. At Resigny, Planche, Tyrant, and Petit Havy, most part of the houses have been ruinated and burnt, the Church plundered, the holy Sacrament trampled under foot, all the ornaments taken and carried away, and the inhabitants fled, or forced to beg. At Fondevall, Hovy, Lonnaire, Ropre and Archon, of fifty turning Ploughs there is not one left, the houses demolished everywhere, & the inhabitants brought to an extreme misery: after they have been beaten, stripped, abused & wounded several ways; A maid of about twelve or thirteen years hath been ravished in the presence of Mr Francis Jumelet Curate of the said Fondevall, and several others. It is impossible to write all the cruelties and tyrannies they have practised in this Country. The Church of Archon hath been plundered and ruinated, the ornaments taken, & the persons fled therein put to ransom. The Soldiers have seized on three women, whom they have kept a day and one night, and have violated two of them as it is supposed. At Dolie most of the buildings have been burnt, the Church plundered, and whatsoever belonging to the Inhabitants, for their last subsistence taken from them, part of the said Inhabitants imprisoned and put to ransom. At Yvier the Village hath been plundered and pillaged; the women killed, the Church plundered and profaned, and all the Ornaments and things necessary for the divine service carried away. At Ivier the Church wholly plundered and most part demolished, all the Inhabitants brought to extreme misery, the houses, mills and buildings partly burnt. They have cut the ears of two particular men, Massin Minu and Nicolas Gerard, and then to have a ransom of the said Gerard, they warmed his feet, burnt his shoes and stocking upon his legs; hanged some by the Chin, and practised several other cruelties. The houses of two Gentlewomen of that place having been wholly plundered, their Mills burnt, and they brought to beg. At Landouzy laville the Inhabitants have been plundered & wholly ruinated, after they had contributed six weeks some money to the Forces quartered in the Abbey of Foigny, where the corn of the said Inhabitants was hidden, which was taken and whatsoever was therein, even to the very dishes and trenchers wherewith the Friars had feasted that same day the General Roze. At Janses the Church plundered, the holy Sacrament trampled under foot; having gotten it by force out of the Curate's hands, who defended it with the hazard of his life; all the Ornaments taken away, Mr. James Noel Curate of that place stripped to his Shirt, and so carried from house to house, to show the places where his Parishioners did hid the goods, with threatening to Pistol him every foot, notwithstanding his sickness of a continual Fever he had ever since a seven night before, and would have died of cold, had not a Cavalier given him at last an old sack to put on his shoulders, and an old draibe to cover his nakedness. The Women and the Maidens have been violated in the presence of the Curate, and of his mother, who was above 80 years old, and was stripped, beaten and abused before the great Altar: so that it is impossible to tell all the inhumanities' and cruelties of those Barbarians. At Nancelle the Church plundered, and all the ornaments, the Chalice and the vessel of the holy Oil taken and carried away, with all the householdstuff of the inhabitants, of whom 16 named in the informations, have been killed, others have been starved, and others are brought into an extreme misery. The Curate Mr. Anthony de Migneau stripped and abused: one Neselet killed in cold blood, having promised to give 50. Rixdalers for his ransom, not being able to give 100 which was demanded by the Soldiers for his ransom, he begging several times his life upon his knees. At Harrigny the Church wholly plundered and broken with the Cannon in three places, the holy Host taken in the Ciboire carried away, the Chalices and Ornaments burnt, part of the houses burnt likewise, eight inhabitants killed, two deadly wounded, the others imprisoned and put to ransom of two thousand five hundred Livers; and one Petraué having been stripped and laid down upon the ground, being demanded whether he were well so, was presently killed in cold blood with two Pistols shot by the Soldiers; who likewise did cut off the ears of a poor woman, widow of Nicholas Bohoin, and then cut her head in two pieces with a broad sword. Not half the houses in Harrigny are up. Chironsar's house of the same parish, where was Mr. de Magincourt, was plundered, he and his wife stripped stark naked, the woman having thrown herself out at a window to save herself with great hazard of her life, and the said Mr. de Magincourt tied to a horses tail, & so drawn to Plomion: the Women and the Maidens that were fled there, ravished, three men killed, and five or six wounded. What inhabitants are left in this poor and desolate Country, would have been starved and perished of misery, without the assistance of the extraordinary alms of Paris, which have been increased six Weeks since by 1600 Livers every month, because of the news coming daily of the extreme misery of those wretches. Now behold here (as in a Map) the miseries of poor France under an irregular and insulting Soldiery, from whose hands they could not have had more hard measure, if things had been wrapped up in a sudden confusion under the Conduct of some Foreign Invader. Had Attila and Totila, with the old Goths and Vandals, been revived again to overrun France (as they formerly did Italy & Spain) with a new Inundation, greater breaches could not have been made upon the People's Propriety, nor more barbarous and bloody attempts against their lives and safety. But that which adds to the misfortunes of that Nation more than all, is, that those whose power and pity are concerned in a redress, have so little regard of any remedy; but riding in pompous equipage over the heads of the people, promise themselves that they shall see no sorrow, but seem to sport, and laugh at the many cries and groans that fly to heaven for vengeance; And therefore, without question, it will suddenly come, when the sins of the Amorites are at the full; The time of the deliverance is at hand, and God will cut it short in righteousness; For, the decree of Liberty is gone forth from the holy one, to speak Peace and Freedom to all the afflicted of the earth, even to the Nations that are oppressed round about us: So that if any credit may be given to the 〈…〉 acted of the earth, even to the Nations that are oppressed round about us: So that if any credit may be given to the Saws of old Seers which come by Tradition, we may well say, after them, In England is begun a dance, Shall pass through Italy, Spain, and France. And truly, if we consider the now condition of France, the present motions of Superior and inferior Bodies (though but with an obliqne aspect upon Liberty) in that great constellation of Parliaments, there is some hope that the day of their redemption is drawing nigh; which hope would be much advanced, could we but see them begin to lift up their heads with resolution; but alas, the great obstacles are their Inconstancy, and Luxury, which are the two prime Qualities or Ingredients which constitute the Temper of that Nation, whereby the Major part of them are in a manner disabled from the pursuit of so noble a design, which must be the work of a more sober and serious Generation. In the mean time, behold the many exactions and oppressions under which they labour, to serve the lusts of their Lordly Tyrants; and from thence let us take measure of our own Felicity; For, whereas we pay one penny, they pay ten, yea very often the utmost farthing: And to what end is all the Tribute, but to uphold the pride and Tyranny of their Taskmasters? whereas in England the Contributions required, are such as arise only out of present necessity, for preventing the return of that Tyranny which was driven out of the Nation, with the expense of so much Blood and Treasure: Now, what man can be so stupid as not to dispose part of his estate to so noble an end, rather than permit the re-inthroning of an Hereditary Tyrant (a Tyrant both by nature and Interest) to sweep all away with your lives and Fortunes? A Tyrant that sucked in his Father's Principles with his Mother's Milk; that was nursed up with the Blood and Butchery of a Kingdom; one that is undoubted heir of all the Curses of his Family, besides those smaller Curses that attend him; A Tyrant, who, if he return, will bring an innumerable Train of Tyrants at his heels: There is the Tyrant-Cavalier, the Tyrant Scot, and what other Tyrannic Foreiners, God knows. These are they that will tax ye, and toll ye, and tell ye, what a madness it is to mutter at a few Temporary Taxes, when too late ye may chance to find how much it concerns the State to raise them, to preserve you from the hellish miseries that must of necessity overflow all, upon the Return of an enraged Enemy. Regnabit Sauguine multo Ad Regnum quisquis venit ab exilio. His reign will be most cruel and bloody that comes from Banishment to a Kingdom. His declared interest is revenge for the death of his Father, which (might his fury take way) would reach to the whole Nation; and what his fury cannot assault, his Scottish crew of Foreiners will overthrow, whose cruelty will spare neither Friend nor Foe, their quarrel being now at the very name and nation of English; And assure yourselves the bottomless pit of their avarice will swallow all in gross, without making any nice distinction or difference betwixt Presbyter and Independent. Take heed then; you see here what horrid disasters have befallen France by admitting Foreiners into their Country; learn by those sad spectacles there, to avoid the like here among ourselves. Remember what the Scot did in times past, how merciless he was when a friend in Covenant; what will he then not do when he comes in with his unjust and hypocritical pretences, as an Avenger of the Covenant? We know well enough what they hope, what they dream of, and what will be the Word throughout all their marches and Quarters; Arise, kill and slay, and take possession: For, this hath been their cursed hope and designs ever since they were a nation. What remains then, but that for the prevention of these Tyrannies in the future, which now threaten us with open face, men should lay aside all traitorous Animosities, Compliances and Designs; and since the quarrel is become purely Nationall, let us then vindicate the honour and freedom of our Nation with an unanimous consent; if we cannot agree upon other terms, yet let us unite as Englishmen, and dispute afterward among ourselves; for, this instant is the very critical minute of England's necessity, and from hence we must date either our Triumphs, or else an ignoble and ignominious vassalage under a Scottish usurpation. What, shall this gallant warlike Nation be betrayed by her own to the lousy Scot, who dares not look her nobly in the Face? Nothing but our own base Vacillation and Treachery can undo us; For, judge, in reason what such an untutored Rabble can do against so brave an Army? That first beat them home (under Hamilton) to their own doors, with a handful in comparison of the Scottish Numbers; and last year with such another handful beat them (in greater numbers) out of the better half of their Country, that God (who is the Lord of Hosts) might have the praise of the Victory: An Army that, to all worldly advantages, hath hitherto had a special protection from heaven, God having sealed them for his own by many miraculous Successes, to the wonder and envy of the world. Let us rejoice then, and give God thanks, that he hath given us such an Army for our necessary Protection, and not unworthily repine at those poor pence that go to relieve them. One month of Scotch Freequarter and Plunder will grind more than a Twelvemonths Tax; yet their intention is not to stay a month, but for ever; and one Scottish Laird will sit as heavy as ten of the old Danish Lordanes. Look to it, and consider what may follow; what the Scots behaviour will be, and how different from this of the English Soldiery; whose discipline is so exact and noble, that the least piece of vice or violence is very rarely to be found among them; and if at any time, than it is most severely punish●. What Cries of the Country do they occasion, or whom do they abuse in a march, without remedy? It was said of King Alfred, before the Conquest, that by his Severity and diligence he so terrified robbers, that a Traveller might pass safe all over England, with his purse in his hand; the like may be said of our Noble Cromwell, and his incomparable discipline, that any man may pass through the Land, without the least prejudice from the Soldiery; So that whosoever takes a survey of the rude and licentious Courses of the Dutch, French, and Spanish Militia, with the rest of the world, shall find a vast disproportion in the Points of Martial honour and Order, betwixt the English, and those of other Nations: And he may boldly conclude, that for some thousands of years, not any Age or Country under heaven, can produce any one example of discipline in all points equal to the Pattern of England. Veget. 3. lib. cap. ult. Disciplinam militarem Populi Romani debes inquirere, qui ex parvissimis Finibus, imperiam suum poene Solis regionibus, & mundi ipsius fine distendit. FINIS.