A LETTER Agreed unto and subscribed by the Gentlemen, Ministers, Freeholders and Seamen of the County of SUFFOLK. PRESENTED To the Right honourable, the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, And Common council of the city of LONDON. Assembled, January 30 1659. RIGHT honourable, PLEASE you to accept this Paper as a testimony, that we are highly and gratefully sensible of those Breathings and essays towards Peace, which your Renowned City has lately declared to the World: And we earnestly wish, that our serious and unanimous Concurrence, may ripen them to a perfect Accomplishment. We are willing to consider it as an Omen of Mercy, when we observe the Nation in general, lifting up its vows to Heaven for a Free and Full PARLIAMENT. 'Tis that alone, in its Genuine Sense, which our Laws prescribe and present to us, as the great Patron and Guardian of our Persons, Liberties, and Proprietics, and whatsoever else is justly precious to us. And if God shall, by your hand, lead us to such an obtainment, after-Ages shall bless your Memory. 'Tis superfluous to spread before you, your Merchandise decayed, your Trade declined, your Estates withered. Are there not many within your Walls, or near them, that in your ears deplore such miseries as these? Your Lordship may believe, that our Prayers and Persons shall gladly promote all lawful means for our Recovery. And we entreat, that this cheerful suffrage of ours may be annexed, as a label to your Honourable Intendments. This Letter was delivered according to its Superscription, by Robert Broke, Philip Parker, and Thomas Bacon, Esquires. LONDON, Printed for Thomas Dring. 1659.