The Prisoners mournful cry, against the judges of the King's Bench. OR An Epistle writ by Lievt. Col. John Lilburne, Prisoner in the Tower of London, unto Mr. justice Roll: Declaring the illegal dealing of himself, and Mr. justice Bacon with him, in reference to his Habeas Corpus. Unto which is annexed his two Petitions to the said judges, and the Petitions of Mr. William Thompson, and Mr. Woodward etc. in which are contained a Lash for Mr. Oliver Cromwell and other his spaniolised Creatures. With divers other remarkable things worth public view. john. 19, 20, 21. For this is condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil. For every one that doth evil, hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. But he that doth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God. Honoured Sir, BEing a sensible English man, I am compelled to struggle for my portion in the Laws and liberties of my native Country, and according to my previledge and right, after all the Council in England, that I could rationally pretend to have any interest in, had given over (through fear) the doing of that for me, which by the duty of their places they are bound to do for me, or any English man else, for his fee; I was necessitated to set my own brains at work to help myself, and reading in that Act that abolished the Star Chamber, I there found, that if any be committed, or restrained by the Warrant or Order of the King, his Heirs or Successors in their own person, or any of his privy Councillors, etc. that in every such case the party committed, upon demand or motion made by his Council, OR OTHER JMPLOYED BY HIM for that purpose, ●n to the judges of the Court of King's Bench, or Common pleas in open Court, shall without any delay upon an● pretence whatsoever, have forthwith granted unto him, a Writ of Habeas Corpus, etc. And pausing upon that clause, viz. Other employed by him, my own reason told me, it must be by some man distinct from a professed Lawyer. So that thereby seeing Council had refused to move for me the Term before, I was a casting about upon which of my private friends to pitch upon to do it for me, Judging it to be my naturally legal right to appoint whom I please, and therefore reasoning the case with others that knew some thing of the Law, I was put upon a Petition, Counsellors at Law telling me, as the case stood with me, a Petition presented in open Court by a friend, is as legal as a motion by a Counsellor at the Bar, notwithstanding any rules or orders made by the Court, for the monopolising profit of the Lawyers to the contrary. Now if this be true in law; you have done me injustice in denying me a Habeas Corpus upon my Petition, and forcing my Solicitor to name Council to move for it against their wills and minds, who it may be, are afraid of an arbitrary destruction from my potent adversaries, who de facto have already done, it upon divers others. Yet they moved, and you granted me a Habeas Corpus to bring my body and cause before you, which by my Petition upon the 25. April last, I certify unto you the Lieutenant, will not obey, and sent it to you in open Court by my Solicitor, who before you was ready to make oath of the delivery of the Habeas Corpus, in which Petition I earnestly press for an Alias, and yet notwithstanding you will not grant it to me though it be my right by Law, whereupon I was delayed (as I conceive by your and my Cuuncells' fearfulness) for 4. or 5. days before I could get it moved, and when upon Saturday lost my Council did move, I am delayed by you (which Sir Edward Cook often saith, is worse than to deny me justice) and can not obtain an Alias from you as by Law I ought, and although I understand a return (whether true or false I know not) is made of my commitments, yet it is neither read in open Court, nor filled in Court, so that I cannot judicially get a Copy of it, to see whether it be true or false, which is a wrong in Law unto me. And that mock return is no Obedience to the Habeas Corpus which commands my body as well as my cause to be returned. Sir, I also understand that before you will grant me an Alias, you have ordered to hear my Council upon Tuesday next, upon the return, when as alas they have many days since sent me word, they are altogether unwilling to plead to the illegallity of my Commitment, or any further saving to the point of a Habeas Corpus. And truly Sir, I cannot much blame them, considering they now see Mr. William Thompson a free man of England, and no Soldier, taken away by Cromwell and Ireton from the House of Commons Door; and violently carried to White-Hall, and there by Marshal Law by them, etc. condemned to die, to the subvertion of the laws of the land, for they deserve the Earl of strafford's punishment, and you will not do your duty speedily to relieve him, which it may be they may think may shortly be their own case, if they should be bold, and effectually plead the Law for me, and therefore they leave that part of my plea to myself, when I come to the Bar, which I am ready and willing at my peril to undertake, and therefore do earnestly entreat you, as either justice or honour dwells within your breast, without any further delay, to grant me another Habeas Corpus, (with a large penalty in it) which is my right by Law, for the denial of obedience to the first by my Gaoler, is against Law, or which offence he is subject by law to be fined as the pleasure and discretion of the Court which he hath disobeyed. And I wish my Council may have oritory enough to agrivate the offence, and press for a large fine upon him. 2. To an action upon the case for false imprisonment, upon which action the party grieved shall recover great damages. a 3●. Ed. ●. Rot 71. & 79. Corum rege Hilli. & ●●. part inst. fol 53. & 13. Ed. 2. c. 39 see the exposition of it, in 1. part in f. 451. 452. & Rastalls book of entries folio 501. 6●6. 3 He may be indicted for his offence and contempt of the Law, and upon his conviction, he is to be fined, imprisoned, and to be at the mercy of the King. b West. 1. being 3. Ed. 1. ch. 15. at the end see also the exposition upon it, 2. part inst. fo. 191. and 28. Ed. 1. ch. 16. But alas Sir to what purpose is all this, if I cannot enjoy the benefit of the Law from your hands, and therefore Sir, I humbly entreat you to be an effectual instrument to command my body before you according to your duty, to plead for my life and the lives of my distressed wife and little children, that are all wrapped up in mine now dying a linger death, worse than the sword to any heroical mind, and either effectually according to your oath, do me speedy justice, without any more fearful delays, or else cease to be a judge. And therefore let nothing before you be done in my absence about the merit of my cause, for my Council dare not press my business home, neither can I well press it upon them, because I have nothing considerable to requite them if they should suffer therefore. But if you will go on with your intentions to morrow, than I entreat you that if I cannot speak in person before you, that I may speak unto you by my pen, what my Council dare not say for me. And that my Plea which I have fitted to plead myself when I shall be brought before you, may be read in open Court with my Council at the Bar, and I shall so fare willingly lay aside at present my privileges, as to abide your judgement upon reading my Plea, and hearing my Council upon it, for all that I desire is but to be laid to the true touchstone of the Law, and my guilty conscienced adversaries shunning that clearly thereby declare, they are workers of iniquity, and dare not abide the light, john 3, 19.20.21. Sir my extremities and sufferings are transcendent, and if you will not do me justice for justice sake, know that I have writ these lines on purpose to leave you without excuse, knowing there is a righteous God in heaven that judgeth righteously, and hears the sighs and groans of his poor oppressed and distressed Prisoners, and many times even on earth punisheth judges with the law of like for like, unto whom I mournfully commit my cause, and now as my last legal hopes, if from your hands I can get no justice, but must be exposed by your hard heartedness to ruin and destruction, than a desperate disease must have a desperate cure, and the will of God be done, for like a man of mettle and resolution that neither fears Legions of Devils nor men, death nor hell, (assuredly knowing my portion is in heaven with the Lord of glory, in whose bosom I shall one day rest,) I am resolved to perish, but shall take my leave, yet, to subscribe myself Your affectionate friend and servant john Lilburne. From the Tower of London 1. May, 1648. If you please, I entreat you to show this to your Brother, Mr. justice Bacon. My forementioned first Petition the 19 April, 1648. verbatim thus followeth. To the honourable the Judges of the King's bench. The humble Petition of Lievt. Col. john Lilburne Prisoner in the Tower of London, Shows, THat your Petitioner is an Englishman, and thereby entailed and entitled to the benefit of all the laws of England which by your Oaths a Which is printed in Pultons collect. of Statutes fol. 144. and the people's prerogative. p. 10. you are sworn indifferently and equally without fear or partiality to administer grat●s to all persons rich and poor, without having regard to any person notwithstanding any command whatsoever to the contrary, though signified under the great b See the 9 H. 3. ch. ●9. & 2. Ed. 3. ch. & 14. Ed. 3. ch. 14. & 11. R. 2. ch. 10. and the Petition of R●ght, the 3d. C. R & 2. part inst. fo. 56. & 4. part inst. fo. 68 Seal or the little Seal, or any otherwise, yet it shall not delay, or disturb common right, nor you cease to do it in any point according to the law of the Land. Now forasmuch as a Habeas Corpus is part of the law of England, and ought not by law to be denied to any man c See 2. H, 5. ch. 2. Petition of right, 3. C. R, & the act that abolished the Star-Chamber 17. C.R. & 2. part inst. 53. 55. 189. 615, 616. & 4. part f. 71. whatsoever that demand it, which though your petitioner earnestly endeavoured the last Term to obtain, yet could not prevail with his Counsel to move for it, although ●e hath almost this two years been detained in prison in the Tower of London, without all shadow of Law or justice, and by the Lieutenant thereof, hath been divorced from the society of his wife, debarred from the free access of his friends, deprived of the use of pen; ink and paper: all which usages are against the express Laws and Statutes of this Land, your Petitioners Birthright and inheritance. d 2. pa● inst. f. 56. 63, 97. 5 26. and 4. part folio. 41. Therefore your Petitioner humbly prayeth, according to his Right, and your Oaths, the benefit of a Habeas Corpus, (and that he may have it Gratis, e † See the 26. of Magna Charta. and the exposition upon it in the 2. part inst fol. 42. & 3. Ed. 1. ch. 26. and the exposition upon it in the 2. par. in. f. 210. see also f. 74. 533, 535. and the stat. of the 11. H. 4. No. 28. not printed in the Stat. book, but is printed in the 3. pa●. inst. fol. ● 46, 224, 225. according to the law of the Land, and your oaths) to bring his body and cause before you in open Court, there to receive your award and judgement, according to the declared law of England. And your Petitioner shall pray, john Lilburne. Tower the 19 April, 1648. My forementioned second Petition of the 25. April 1648. thus followeth. To the Honourable the judges of the KING'S BENCH, The humble Petition of Lievt. Col. John Lilburne, Prisoner in the TOWER of LONDON. SHOWETHS, THat upon a Petition delivered to your Honours upon Tuesday last, being the 19 present you were pleased to assign council to move for a Habeas Corpus to bring your Petitioners body and cause before you, which accordingly you were pleased to grant upon their motion, and to make the writ retournable this present Tuesday, at which time, after a long causeless and unjust imprisonment, your Petitioner hoped to have been brought before you to have pleaded for his life, which hath been strongly endeavoured by his potent adversaries, in his unjust imprisonment, to be taken away from him, having kept him most illegally in a chargeable imprisonment, almost two years together, without ever laying any crim legally to his charge, or bringing him legally to any Bar of justice to a legal Trial, keeping almost 3000l, of his own proper right from him, and in his hard and extraordinary chargeable imprisonment have not yet allowed your petitioner a penny to live upon although an allowance according to his quality, be his right by the custom of the place where he is a Prisoner, divers rich Members of the present house of Commons having from the present King enjoyed the same, * Mr. Walter Long confessed about a year ago, he spent the King whilst he was Prisoner in the Tower 1500. l. in Wine and good Cheer, and yet by this Parliament he had 5000, l. voted him for his said sufferings, and so had Mr▪ Seldon and all the rest of his fellow sufferers, & some of them it is said have already received all their money. not withstanding the peaceable possession of their great estates in the beginning of his reign. Yet notwithstanding this, and all other earnest endeavours, your Petitioner hath with unwearied industry used to bring himself to the Bar of justice, there to receive but so much favour as every Traitor, Murderer, or Rogue ought to enjoy, viz, the benefit of the Law, professing unto you that is all the Favour, Mercy, Pity, and Compassion he craves at the hands of all the Adversaries he hath in the World, choosing rather to expose himself to any death in the World, then to a languishing tormenting death in a murdering Goal, which your Petitioner cannot but fear is the determined resolution of his bloody and cruel adversaries, in that Col. Robert Tichburne, the present Gaoler of the Tower, refuseth to return the Body and cause of your Petitioner before your Honours according to the legal command of the said Writ of Habeas Corpus. Now forasmuch as your Petitioner doth aver, and offers upon his life to make it good by Law, that although your Petitioner be committed by two pretended Warrants, yet the Courts that made them, have not the least shadow or colour in law to commit your Petitioner, being they are not, nor never were entrusted by law either divided or conjoined to by the executors of it; † See the 29. ch. of Magna Charta, and the exposition upon it, in the 2. part. ininstituts fol, 46. etc. and the Petition of Right 3. C.R. and the act that abolished the Star-chamber the 17. C, R. and the 5. R. 2, Rot. Parl. num. 45. and 1. H. 4. num 79, and 5. H. 4. chap. 6. & 8. H. 6 ch. 7. and 11. H. 6. chap. 11. 23. H. 6. ch. 11. 15. and 4. H. 8. ch. 8. and 1 and 2, P. and M. ch. 10. and 4. part insti. fol. 25. 1. par, decls. p. 48. 2. 278. and though they had a legal jurisdiction in Law to commit your Petitioner (which they have not) yet by both their warrants there is no legal crime at all expressed wherefore they commit your Petitioner (general charges in Law being no charges nor crimes * 2, par. insti. fo. 52. 53, 315. 318, 591. 615. 616. and 4 pert fo. 39 1. part book dec. pag. 38. 77. ●01. 845. and the votes upon the impeachment of the 11 memb. the petition of Right the 3. C. R and the act that abolished the Star-chamber 17. C. R. printed in my book called the people's prerogative page 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. ) and therefore there is no colour in Law for his imprisonment or detention. Wherefore your Petitioner most humbly prayeth a second Writ, with a strict and severe penalty in it, according to Law, to command his body and cause before you, and that according to the duty of your places, you forthwith grant it to your Petitioner without any further motion of Counsel, it being as legal for your Petitioner to move for it by his Petition, or by any friend he shall depute and appoint, as by a Councillor. And he shall pray, etc. John Lilburne. April 25. 1648. The forementioned Petitions of Mr. Woodward, and Mr. Thompson, etc. thus followeth. To the Honourable the judges of the King's Bench. The Humble Petition of Richard Woodward, and Mary colens, prisoner in the White Lion Southwark. Shows, THat your Petitioners are freeborn people of the English Nation, and are thereby entailed, and entitled to the benefit of all the Laws of England, which by your oaths (a) you are sworn indifferently and equally without fear or partiality to administer Gratis, to all persons rich and poor, without having regard to any person, notwithstanding any command whatsoever to the contrary, though signified under the great Seal, or the little Seal, or any otherwise, yet it shall not delay nor disturb common right, nor you cease to do it in any point (b) according to the Law of the Land. Now for as much as a Habeas Corpus is part of the Law of England, and ought not by Law to be denied to any man whatsoever that demands it, (c) it being your Petitioners Birthright and inheritance, who are now detained in hard durance contrary to Law and justice without bail or Mainprize d 1. part inst. lib. 3. ch. 7. Sect. 439 fo. 260. & 2. part inst. fo. 42, 43. 53. 54. 115. & 3. Ed. 1. ch. 25. See Sir Ed. Cooks exposition upon it, 2. part inst. fo. 186, 189, 190, 315. see also 1, and 2. P. and M. chap. 13. though it hath often been proffered to those, etc. that causelessly committed your petitioners to prison, where they violently and illegally keep them without bringing of them the last Assizes to a trial at Law, as by Law they ought to have done. Therefore your petitioners humbly pray, according to their right, and your Oaths, the benefit of a Habeas Corpus (and that they may have it Gratis according to the Law of England, and your Oaths) to bring their bodies and causes before you in open Court, there to receive your award and judgement according to the declared Laws of England. And your Petitioners shall pray, etc. Richard Woodward. Marry colens. 18. April, 1648. To the Honourable the judges of the King's Bench. The humble Petition of William Thompson a free Commoner of England, and no Soldier. SHOWETHS, THat the laws of England are your petitioners inheritance (a) 2. part institutes fol. 56. 63. 97, 526. and 4. part insti. fo. 41. and birthright, by virtue of his being an Englishman, by which inheritance he hath this privilege, that he shall not be restrained of his liberty, imprisoned, passed upon, or condemned, but by the declared laws of England (b) see the Petition of Right made in the 3. C. R. confirmed this Parliament in every particular by the act that abolisheth ship money, see also the act that abolished the Star-Chamber, 17. C. R. and 2. part insti. fo. 46. 47. 50. viz, by a sworn judge of the law, in the ordinary Courts of justice, and by a grand jury and a petty jury of 24, legell men of his equals, and of the neighbourhood, where the crime is pretended to be committed who are judges of matter of (c) See 1. part insti. lib. 2. chap. 11. sect. 193. fol. 135, and chap. 12. sect. 134. fo. 155. 157. and 13. Ed. 1. ch. 38. and 28. Ed. 1. ch. 9 and 34. Ed. 3. ch. 4. and 42. Ed. 3. ch. 11. fact) they are the very words of the Petition of Right, yet notwithstanding may it please you honours, so it is that in Feb. last, your Petitioner was without any the least shadow or colour in law, taken without any warrant in writing by the power of armed Soldiers, and carried by force of Arms prisoner to the Marshal general of the Army, by virtue of the verbal commands of some pretended officers of the Army, and hath ever since been by force of arms against all law and justice kept prisoner in White Hall, where he hath been most barbarously and inhumanly used, and his life endeavoured to be taken away from him by the pretended power of Marshal law, to the high & transcendent violation of Magna Charta the Petition of Right, and all the fundamental laws of England, it being declared by that learned Lawyer Sir Edward Cook in the 3. part of his institutes chapter of murder fo. 52. (which book is published by this present House of Commons for good Law) that for a general of an Army or any other that hath Commission of Marshal authority in time of peace (as now it is, and is so declared by the Parliament in their last Declaration against the Scotch Commissioners) to hang, or execute any man whatsoever (Soldier or other) by colour of Marshal Law, it is absolute Murder, and hath been in Law often so adjudged, as he there declares▪ Now forasmuch as your honours are judges of the Law, and sworn impartially to do equal execution there of, your Petitioner therefore craveth the benefit of a Habeas Corpus gratis, his undoubted right by law, to command his body and cause before you in open Court, thereto receive your award and judgement, according to the declared Law of England. And your petitioner shall pray, etc. William Thompson. White-Hall this 18. April 1648. To fill up this waste paper, I shall desire the Reader to cast his eyes upon my Instructions about my Habeas Corpus, which I gave unto my Solicitor, which thus followeth. Sir, I am in some sense sorry you named my Council at all, for I could have wished I had laid a month in prison longer, so it had been put upon this issue, to have demanded the judges answer positively, whether upon the bare Petition they would have granted me the Habeas Corpus or no- For First, I am suit it is as much my right by a Petition, as a thousand motions, and as they would have done me an inconvenience in denying it, so I am sure I should have done them a greater in conclusion, which in my own thoughts would have been equivalent to my loss. Secondly, This way in not granting it without the motion of a Lawyer, destroys out native and legal rights, for if I authorize you to do it for me in the case I am in, the judge by Law ought to hear you for me as well as any Lawyer in England, as appears by the Act that abolisheth the Star Chamber. 17. C. R. Thirdly, This destroys all poor oppressed men, that have not a Fee to see a Lawyer, who commonly will but move his lips very faintly without it, whereas if the right of Petitioning were kept up, divers that perish and are destroyed in prison would be relieved thereby. Fourthly, This is destructive to the lives and being of all oppressed men, that are committed by potent adversaries, as I am, having both houses and the Grandees of the Army to deal with, the single Grandees of the Army, having already crushen and banished by power and force, tall Cedars in comparison of such little shrubs as Mr. Narborow, and Mr. Cook, unto whom I am so much obliged, that I am not free to press them to do that for me, that that Lawyer must do that will do my business as it ought to be done, their professions being their livelihood, for any thing I know, and if for their honest, resolved resolution in my business they should suffer, I am not able to require them, and truly I am afraid they cannot effectually do me service in the present case, but they must run the hazard of their own unavoidable ruin, and therefore when you give them their fees, press them to this or nothing, viz. To keep the judges close to the right of a Habeas Corpus, to be granted to whoever craves it, by whomsoever committed, and that he is not, nor ought not, nor cannot judicially take cognizance by whom, or for what I am committed, till it appear legally and judicially in open Court before him, and it is my positive instructions, they shall not tell the judge by whom I am committed, and if the judge himself shall tell them by whom I am committed, and so think to bull me and them, I desire them with all their skill to wave that, and press for a Habeas Corpus, and then upon the return it will appear, and I am sure judicially, they or he cannot fix their judgements upon reports, all that I desire is but a Habeas Corpus, to come to the Bar to plead my cause myself, and I shall easily myself make it appear by law, that these that committed me, have not the least shadow or colour in Law to do it, all that I desire without further dispute, is but to have the judges Negative or Affirmative, by virtue of my right in demanding of it, for the judge ought not to inquire by whom I am committed, neither ought they to tell him, but it is enough I am in prison, which you may make Oath of, and it is his duty upon my demand to grant me a writ to bring my body and cause before them, and let them deny it at their peril, for if they do I weigh it not at all, for yet I am not totally prison sick, and I desire no more advantage to trouble them in due time, as bad as a nest of Hornets or Wasps, but their positive deny all. Present my hearty service to Mr Summer my Attorney, and desire a bill from him, and Make his last Terms business even, only take notice I sent him 20. s. and bid him expect and look for the Gaolers answer, and speedily send it to me, but in treat him hereby to go no further without my further instructions, and I shall rest. Yours to serve you, John Lilburne. 19 April 1648. Now O all true hearted English men that love justice and real actions, more than persons and sactions, seriously consider and way my unparaleld condition who was brought into my contest with the House of Lord by Mr. Oliver Cromwell (that usurpers' tyrant thief and murderer as in the 9 to 11. p. of my late plea for a Habeas Corpus I fully prove him to be, and am still ready at the King's Bench-bar to make it good with my life) and when he had brought me into the briers, there like a base & perfidious man leaves me to be scratched in pieces, and not only so: But in the third place, joins with the Earl. of Manchester, etc. (whom he had imeached of Treason, (and against whom he had engaged me) to destroy me, because I will not stoup to the jurisdiction of the House of Lords over Commoners, although by law they have no more than so many Tinkers and Chimney sweepers have, as is fuller proved in my books called the fice man's freedom vindicated, the Anatomy of the present House of Lords, The oppressed man's oppression declared, The Outcries of oppressed Commoners, my Grand Plea before Mr. Maynara of the house of Commons 20. October 1647. The People prerogative, and my Whip for the house of Lords, and in the books called Sir John Maynards' case truly stated, The Royal Quarrel The Plea and Protest of A. B. a Citizen of London, and the late printed Petitions of the imprisoned Aldermen of London, and yet though by all these books the Lords jurisdiction over Commoners in any case by law is leveled with the earth, yet nothing will serve Cromwell's t●ane for my opposition to the Lords in maintaing my own liberties, but my blood, although if he would have helped me to my liberty, and that which the Parliament justly owes me, I have offered him to leave the Kingdom, and totally to refer all differences betwixt us to the final determination of his own General, and for my contest with the Lords wholly to the house of Commons, or the Judges of the Common law, none of which he will embrace, and therefore judge righteously betwixt us. FINIS.