DIE Martis, 7 die Decembris.
PRAYERS, by Mr. Sallawey.
Domini præsentes fuerunt:
Comes Manchester, Speaker.
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Comes Pembrooke. Comes Salisbury. Comes Mulgrave. Comes Stamford. Comes Rutland. Comes Northumb. Comes Warwicke. Comes Denbigh. |
Ds. North. Ds. La Warr. Ds. Wharton. Ds. Dacres. Ds. Howard. |
Ld. Goring tenders himself to the House.
The Speaker acquainted the House, "That, on Saturday last, the Lord Goringe came to him, and acknowledged the Favour of this House, in granting
him a Pass to come into England; and that he is
ready to obey any Commands of this House, and desires their Lordships Favour, that he may attend some
of his own Employments."
Petitions from Middlesex, Hertford, and Bucks;—and Answers thereto.
A Petition was presented to this House, by divers
Gentlemen of Midd.; which, being received, was read:
(Here enter it.)
And the Speaker, by the Direction of the House,
returned them this Answer:
"That this House acknowledges the constant and
faithful Services of the County of Middlesex to the
Parliament and Kingdom, for which Thanks was returned: That their Lordships are very sensible of the
Burdens of the Kingdoms, especially Free Quarter,
and will use their Endeavours for their Satisfactions,
according to their Desires."
A Petition was also presented by divers Gentlemen of
the County of Hertford; which was received, and read.
(Here enter it.)
And the Speaker, by the Direction of the House, returned them this Answer:
"That their Lordships return them Thanks, for their
constant good Affections expressed to the Parliament
and Kingdom; acknowledging that County hath been
very instrumental in affording their Endeavours upon
the Commands of the Parliament: That this House
will use their Endeavours to have the Burdens of
the Kingdom eased."
A Petition was also presented, by divers Inhabitants
of the County of Bucks; which was read.
(Here enter it.)
And this Answer was returned: "That this House
cannot but own the Readiness the County of Bucks
hath expressed to the Commands of the Parliament,
for which their Lordships return them Thanks; and
that their Lordships will use their Endeavours to free
them from the Burdens which lie upon them, that
so they may go on in their Callings chearfully."
Sir H. Mildmay and Sir T. Cheek.
Ordered, That the Cause between Sir Henry Mildmay and Sir Thomas Cheeke is put off till Monday Morning
next.
Remonstrance from the Army.
Colonel Sir Hardressse Waller and Colonel Whaley presented to this House a Paper from the General and the
Council of War:
They said, "They had delivered the like Paper to
the House of Commons; and, in regard the Business
was concerning Monies to supply the Army with,
and the constant Settling of their Pay, they will expect an Answer from them."
The said Paper, being a Remonstrance, was read.
(Here enter it.)
Message to the H. C. for Committees to meet, about the London Agents.
A Message was sent to the House of Commons, by
Sir Edw. Leech and Mr. Page:
To desire that the Committee the London Agents
may meet To-morrow in the Afternoon, and afterward
de Die in Diem.
(fn. *) "An humble Representation from his Excellency
Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Council of the
Army, concerning their past Endeavours, and
now final Desires, for the putting of the Soldiery into constant Pay, for the immediate
disburdening the Kingdom of Free Quarter,
the Prevention of any further Increase of Arrears, and in order to the better disbanding
of Supernumeraries, and other Things concerning the Soldiery; humbly presented to
the Right Honourable the Houses of Parliament, by Colonel Sir Hardresse Waller and
Colonel Whaley, Decemb. 7, 1647.
Remonstrance from Sir T. Fairfax and the Council of War, for the Contribution to be enlarged, for the Pay of the Army;—for a constant Settlement of their Pay;—for an absolute Indemnity for the Officers and Soldiers;—about disbanding supernumerary Forces;—for a Provision to be made for Maimed Soldiers, &c.—and for Freedom from Pressing.
"Since, by the Blessing of God, the Speakers and
Members of both Houses (that had been driven
away) were without Blood restored, and have been
ever since secured, to sit and attend their Duty in Parliament; with what Patience God hath given us to
wait for the Resolutions of those Things we have insisted on, or offered, tending to the future Security
of the Parliament, the just Satisfaction of the Soldiery, and the Ease and Settlement of the Kingdom,
we need not use many Words to set forth; the Expence of above Four Months Time in quiet Expectation thereof, with so little Satisfaction, does sufficiently speak.
"As to what Fruit we have found in any Thing
done to any of those Ends, we are sorry we can say
so little thereof, or that we have Occasion to say so
much to the Delays, Neglects, and Obstructions
thereof, as now we are constrained to do.
"But whatever those Delays or Neglects have been,
or where-ever the Fault hath been, we are sure the
Blame thereof hath been laid upon us almost on all
Hands; and this is the Fruit we have found from
the Hands of Men, of all our patient Waiting hitherto.
"It is not unknown, what Reproaches and Scandals
in this Kind have been cast upon us, and what Use
and Advantage hath been made of those Delays,
thereby to work upon the Impatience of the Soldiers
and Country, to incense the Country against the Army, and both the Country and Army against us, as
if it had been our Fault alone that no more was
done: And to what an Height of Scandal and Discontent against us the Pretence hereof was driven, or
what desperate Endeavours have been thereupon, to
withdraw the Soldiers from the Officers (as having
betrayed, or failed and neglected, both theirs and the
Kingdom's Interest), to divide and distemper the Army, and to engage both the Soldiery and many other
well-affected People (under the same Notion and Pretence) in Ways of Distraction and Confusion, and (as
we accounted them) of most imminent Dangers, both
to the Parliament, City, and Kingdom, we need not
now spend Time to express; we believe all that
wished well to the Public were so deeply sensible
thereof, as they cannot so suddenly forget it; and
others (who had any Thing to lose or hazard), though
perhaps, so far as they had Hopes the Army might
that Way have destroyed itself, they might have
some secret Rejoicing at it, and may now be sorry
the Business is so well over without that Offer; yea,
so far as they considered the bottomless Depth and
endless Danger of it, they could not but be affected
with it, so as we need not mention it, save to mind
Men of what Danger and Mischief God hath
therein delivered them from, and whence the greatest
Advantage to the Rise and Growth of it was, even
from Delays and slow Proceedings in those Things
which the long Expectations of the Soldiery and
Kingdom have been set upon, and to observe how
apt both the Soldiery and People, through tedious
Delays, in such Cases, are to hearken to any Party,
and try any new Way proposed, under the Notion of
more speedy and effectual, though perhaps so far
from real Remedy, as that it indeed endangers the
utter Loss of their End, with Ruin and Destruction
to both.
"To prevent the Progress of this growing Danger
to all, we have lately exposed ourselves to the utmost Hazard; and being acted therein from some
Clearness in our Consciences that the Fault of those
Delays lay not upon us [as was scandalously suggested], and a Confidence in God that He would appear to vindicate that Measure of Truth and Integrity
He had given us in the Thing, though with many
Failings and Miscarriages on our Part; we were led
forth by Him, without any Artifice whereby to vindicate or excuse ourselves, nakedly to cast ourselves
and the Business upon Him; and, to His Praise we
must speak it, He hath appeared in an answerable
Issue, whereof the Parliament and Kingdom hath had
an Account, and wherein they may see, and we wish
they may with us take Notice and be mindful of, the
Mercy and Goodness of God in our Deliverance,
(fn. *) more added to all the rest; and therein the Army,
which, in casting off all Bonds of Order and Government, was like to have been let loose, to be a Plague
and Bane both to the Kingdom and itself, once more
reduced unto that Temper and Discipline, which may
render it, through and under God, a further Security and Stay to the Kingdom, and in due Time
bring it to a quiet Disbanding, when just Satisfaction
with Settlement and Safety shall admit.
"But [as hath in Part been done already] we must
again mind the Parliament upon what Terms this hath
been wrought: The General [as we all with and under
him] stands engaged to the Army, for the lawful
Prosecution of the Soldiers Concernments, and some
general fundamental Things for the Kingdoms; and
(in Confidence of the Parliament' good Acceptance
of the Service thereby done, and of their real Intention and promised effectual Resolution to give Satisfaction in those Things) hath in a Manner undertaken
for the Parliament therein.
"We wish we may see a Cause to acknowledge a
just Sense of his Excellency's good Affection and Service in that Business, or at least of their own Engagement, or the Kingdom's Concernment therein;
and that we had not Cause to apprehend, either a
strange Neglect thereof growing upon many, or
rather (in some) the sad Symptoms of an evil Eye at
the Service itself, as if they did regret the happy
Composure of those Distractions begun in the Army,
and the Re-uniting of it, or did grudge the good Hand
of God towards it and the Kingdom therein, that in
Mercy would not suffer it to run on in these Distractions, to its own Ruin and the Kingdom's; for, though
it be most evident, that, had God given up the
Army to cast off the Reins of Government and Order,
and to go on in those distracting and confounding
Ways (which it was endeavoured to be drawn into),
both it and other Forces of the Kingdom were like
ere this Time to have been engaged in Blood one
against another, or else united only in some desperate
Course of rending and tearing out the Bowels and
Vitals of the Kingdom, and plucking up or endangering all Foundations of Order, Peace, and Government therein (yea, and of all Right and Property
too); yet the Envy and Malignity of some Mens
Spirits against this Army, and against the Interests
of good Men therein, seems to be such, as if they
had rather have been it so, than that this Army
should again be an united Piece. And we clearly
apprehend the same Principles (that swayed heretofore) (fn. *) now again prevailing, as if there were no Good
so desirable, or Evil so formidable, which the Breaking of this Army (with as much Ignominy and Confusion as may be) would not, in their Account, countervail; and if such an envious and evil Spirit be
indeed lodged and working in the Hearts of any, we
desire God in Mercy to convince them of it, lest He
confound them for it. For our Parts, having the
Witness of God in our Consciences, that, though
we are not without weak and frail Workings of our
fleshly Hearts in all our Ways, yet, for the Main, we
have in all our Engagements, from the Beginning of
the War, had the Work of God and the Kingdom
in our Eye, and not our own; and that, since the
Army (by the oppressive Provoking and spiteful Proceedings of Men acted by the aforesaid envious
Principles against it) was raised into such Resolutions;
and driven into such a Posture, as put it past the
Power of the Officer to bring it to a quiet Disbanding
without further Satisfaction and Security, it hath
been our main End in continuing with it, and almost
our whole Work, to keep it within Compass and
Moderation, to with-hold it from Extremities of all
Sorts, and from that Mischief to the Kingdom, or
itself, which our withdrawing and taking off our
Hands from the Government of it would have let
it loose unto; to make Use of it, and of the Providence that brought it to that Pass, (if possible) to
some good Issue, for the just Liberty, Safety, and
Settlement of the Kingdom; and bring the Army to
some Bottom of seasonable Satisfaction, wherein it
might acquiesce, and at last come to a quiet Disbanding; and (in Transaction of all this), with all Tenderness and Patience, to preserve [if possible] the
Authority and Peace of the Kingdom, and prevent
new Broils, which several Parties and Interests have
been so apt unto.
"Having, we say, the Witness of these Things
within us; when, on the other Side, we consider
what unworthy Requitals for all this we meet with
from the Hands of Men; how we are loaded with
Reproaches for it, and rendered the only Disturbers
of the Kingdom, and the Authors of its Burdens,
as if for private Ends or Designs we kept up the
Army; and how generally most Men (even of the
Parliament Party, for whose Preservation, and for
Prevention of whose Ruin amongst others, we have
exposed ourselves to all Hazards therein) do, either
from Disaffection, or Design to divide and break the
Army, with-hold or obstruct all Supplies and Satisfaction, which might keep it in Order, Union, or
Repute: We confess, when we consider these Things,
we are ready to apprehend that God doth herein
seem most justly to upbraid our Care and Solicitousness to preserve a People given up (as we begin to
fear) to their own Destruction, and which seem to
choose it, rather than not to have their own factious
Interests or Envy fulfilled, rather than to own their
Preservation in the least Degree by those whom God
hath appeared willing to use for their Preservation
and Deliverance.
"And rather than we would further incur the Odium
and Scandal of being the only Public Disturbers and
Oppressors (so unworthily cast upon us, merely for
our Good-will, and Endeavours to prevent greater
Mischiefs), we are apt to choose rather to withdraw
from our present Station (though with Hazard of
our Personal Safeties, and the Loss not only of any
imagined Benefit of future Employment, but even
our Arrears for what Service we have done); and so,
leaving all to whatever Confusion God in His
Righteous Judgement may see good to bring upon the
Nation, to cast ourselves wholly upon Him, to preserve and provide for us in the Midst thereof; or, if
God in Mercy intend better Things to the Kingdom,
or hath found aught in us (which we confess He
may) rendering us unworthy to be any further Instruments thereof, we should desire, with Meekness
and Rejoicing, to see any other whom He finds, or
the Kingdom judgeth, more worthy to take up our
present Charges: But, finding not as yet any such
clear Discharge as would (to our Apprehensions)
fully acquit us before God or Man to leave the Army
or Kingdom in their present Condition, we shall, in
Discharge of our Duty to the utmost, add this One
Essay more to bring both into a better, if God in
Mercy see it good: We shall therefore Once more
beg the Parliament timely to consider and provide
effectually for those Things expressed in the late
Remonstrance published at the several Rendezvous
of the Army, upon his Excellency's continued Conjunction, wherein the Discontents in the Army were
quieted, the Distractions composed, and the due
Order and Discipline of it recovered and submitted
to.
"And amongst these Things, since the greatest and
most immediate and pressing Evil to the Soldiery is
Want of Pay, and to the Country the Disorders,
Exactions, and Abuses of the Soldier, with the Burden and Annoyances of Free Quarter (thereby enforced), and which (if once provided for) gives Time
of Consideration for other Things; we shall first
apply to that, either to obtain a present Remedy, or
at least to acquit and discharge ourselves in that
Point.
"Of the many Evils thereof, both to the Soldiery
and Country, we have long been sadly sensible, and
many Ways and often expressed our Sense thereof;
but we have been most troubled at it, since that Necessity which heretofore enforced it (videlicet, the
Streightness of the Quarters the Parliament had to
raise Money in) was taken away, and all Parts of
the Kingdom have been cleared from any Enemy,
and free for the equal levying of Money to supply
the Necessities of the Whole: And it seems a Matter
of Wonder to us, or an Argument of great Improvidence (at best), that, since that Time, the Soldiery
(though much lessened in Number) should be no
better paid or provided for than before. From the
Sense of these Things, we have made frequent Addresses to the Parliament, for a sufficient Establishment and Provision of Pay for the Army and other
Forces of the Kingdom, until they might with Safety
to the Kingdom, and just Satisfaction or Security to
themselves (in Point of Arrears, Indemnity, &c.),
be disbanded, or otherwise employed out of the Kingdom. We have long waited with Patience, as aforesaid, for some Fruit of our Addresses, at least in this
Point: But what through the Difficulty or Delay of
getting Things passed in Parliament to this Purpose,
or of putting in Execution those Ordinances that have
been passed, and the Neglect or Slowness of Country
Committees, Assessors, or Collectors, to do their Duty
therein; what through the Malignancy of some who
(in Design to break or distract the Army as aforesaid), for Want of Pay, and to disaffect the Country
thereto by necessitated Free Quarter, do industriously
retard all Supplies of Money; and what through the
general Backwardness of all (especially in the City of
London) to part with it; we have yet found little
Fruit of all our Addresses and Endeavours in this
Kind, there being not as yet an Establishment of
Contribution for Pay of the Soldiery any whit near
proportionable to the Numbers that are yet kept up,
or any effectual Execution of the Powers already
given for raising of the Taxes already charged upon
the Kingdom; so as we remain yet as far as ever
from that Supply of Pay to the Army, or other
Forces, whereby either the Burden and Grievances
of Free Quarter can be taken off, or the Necessity
of the Soldiery competently supplied, or their Discontents in any Measure removed, or Disorder prevented, or good Discipline preserved; and (which is
most sad) in the Garrisons of the Kingdom (and those
of most Importance) where the Soldiery have not, nor
can well have, that Benefit of Quarter for their Subsistence (as the Army and Field Forces have, yet) they
have very long been without any Supply of Pay at
all; so as divers poor Soldiers in some of them have
actually starved and died for Want, in Attendance
upon their Duties, others forced by Extremity of
Want to quit their Service, and the rest ready to
starve, or quit the Garrisons to any that will possess
them: And as it is most apparent that the present
Proportion of Tax (if duly levied) could not competently supply them and others too (in an equal Distribution thereof, considering the Number that are
yet in Being); so the Committees in many Countries
(where such Garrisons are that have engaged with
the Army) do refuse to levy those small Proportions
of Money that have been assigned for the present
Relief to such Garrisons; but are content to see the
aforesaid Miseries of the Soldiery, and Danger to
the Garrisons, rather than do their Parts to give the
least Remedy to either; divers of them telling the
Soldiers plainly (as we are informed), "That, if
they had declared against the Army, they should not
have wanted; but, having engaged with it, they
must expect neither Quarter nor Pay, but what they
get from the Army."
"If we, or this poor Army, have deserved such
Hatred and Despite (especially from pretending
Friends to the Parliament and the Kingdom's Interest)
we would fain be plainly told and convinced wherein.
Otherwise we cannot but account it most unchristian
and inhuman Dealing, and such as can have no better
Root than most envious Faction, void of all Regard
to Public Interest; and we would have all such know,
that, if we had borne the same Mind, or could have
allowed ourselves by Power to pursue the Ruin of
adverse Parties by indirect or unchristian Ways, or
otherwise to set up a Party of our own, and suppress
all others, or if we had not still (according to our
First Principles) loved much more the Ways of Common Right and Freedom, and the Proceeding in all
such Things by Parliament in order thereunto; or if
we had not, in the Way of ordering our Affairs since
the Army's Engagement, consulted more the preserving of Peace in the Kingdom, and to prevent the
Rise of any new War, than our own Advantage or
Security; we could (to speak as Men with the Power
and Advantages God hath put into our Hands)
long ere this Time (as yet also we might) have put
the Army and all other Forces engaged with it
into such a Posture, as to have assured themselves
of Pay while continued, and probably to have
made our Opposers, in the Kingdom and City
too, willing to have followed us with Offers of
Satisfaction, as to Arrears and other Dues that
concern the Soldiery; or we could have told how
to prosecute those Advantages we have had, to
the Suppression, if not Destruction, of adverse Parties and Interests, so as they should not (probably) have had those Foundations or Possibilities to grow up again to our further Trouble or
Danger (as now they seem to have); and all this
with Reason and Justice enough too; but that we have
studied the Preservation and Good of all, without
Ruin or Destruction to any, as far as we could; and
have (through God) been acted therein, in some
Measure, with that Mildness, Moderation, Patience,
and Love, that becomes the Name of Christ: And
we are yet confident, we shall at last lose nothing by
it.
"But (to return to our Purpose), as to the Inconveniencies and Dangers of a new Provision for the
Soldiery in Point of Pay, the Parliament hath had
sufficient Cautions and Warnings, especially in the
late Distractions; and though, while the Danger
thereof continued visible, it was largely professed (if
that Danger could be removed, and the Army reduced into Order and Discipline) we should have
what Provision we would with Reason in that Point,
and the same (with much more) upon the First Hopes
of overcoming that Danger was as largely promised:
Yet, now the Danger is over, we see little better Care
of Performance than before; but, after many Days
since elapsed, and some spent in professed Consideration of it, the whole Care of that Business seems to
be wrapt up in One bare Vote; videlicet, ["That
all supernumerary Forces shall be disbanded."]
"As to which Matter of disbanding Supernumeraries (so it be with reasonable Satisfaction in Point of
Arrears); we are so far from opposing or obstructing it,
that (for the speedy Easing of the Kingdom's Burdens
by it) we shall readily give all Furtherance and
Assistance to it, and shall (by and by) offer that Encouragement thereto, as will demonstrate the same;
and on such Terms we should ourselves most gladly
be of those Supernumeraries that should come first to
Disbanding.
"But as to the Thought of present Disbanding all
Supernumeraries (according to the Vote); first, we
cannot but wish it be considered, whether, with any
Respect at all to the Service and Relief of Ireland,
the Parliament can well disband them all; unto which
Service (as there might have been a great Advancement of Assistance long since, but for the Prevalence of Faction and Design to break that Force that
might have afforded it, as we have formerly remonstrated), so we have more lately contributed our
Parts, in the Offer and Designation of a very considerable Force thereunto; and there hath wanted
nothing but Resolution and Money, with Expedition to send them over, which was not within our
Power.
"But if (with respect to that Service and the Safety
of this Kingdom) the Parliament can yet lessen
their Forces so much as to bring them near the Compass of Sixty Thousand Pounds a Month's Pay; yet
we wish it be withal considered, how many those
Supernumeraries are that must to come to be presently disbanded (which, to bring the Residue within that Compass, would be little less than Twenty
Thousand of one Sort or other); and (if so) how
great a Sum it would require to give any reasonable
Satisfaction to so many in Point of Arrears in Hand;
and (by the Hardness of getting so much Money as
to piece up the Month's Pay to the Army) we have
much Reason to doubt how long the Parliament
will be in raising such a Sum together, or where they
will suddenly find Money to give competent Satisfaction to the Proportion but of a Regiment or Two
upon a present Disbanding: And unless they be provided with present Money, to give reasonable Satisfaction to so many at once as would to that End come
to be disbanded, the Parliament must either turn
them off presently with extreme Dissatisfaction and
Disobligation (which would render them apt to rise
again with any Party against the Parliament, who
would give them Hope of better Dealing, or but of
Revenge) or else must continue them until better
provided.
"And though there were Money ready for a competent Part of Arrears in Hand, yet it will be necessary however that they be continued some Time;
for the stating of their Accompts, and giving Debentures for the Remainder; for (besides the Injustice and Dissatisfaction of turning the Soldiers off
without that) we presume the Parliament hath had
too much Experience already of the bottomless ill
Consequences of not ascertaining their Accompts and
Arrears before Disbanding, and not keeping the
same registered together, by the endless Clamours
and Outcries of particular Persons for Arrears, and
the vast Sums expended thereupon, without End of
Satisfaction; (the Persons, or their State of Arrears,
through Neglect of taking such Accompts before
Disbanding,) having never been certainly known, nor
any End either of their Number or Claims; and the
Dispatch of such Accompts for those that remain
before Disbanding will certainly take up some Time,
(we doubt) some Months. Now, if thus any Part of
the Supernumeraries (above what the Sixty Thousand Pounds a Month will pay) shall, either for the
Time of stating their Accompts or longer (for Want
of present Money to disband withal), be continued,
both they and all other Soldiers in the Kingdom
must so long remain without constant Pay, and consequently go upon Free Quarter the while, unless the
Tax for their Pay be (for the mean Time) proportionably increased; for, the Sixty Thousand Pounds
a Month not affording any Assignment for such
Supernumeraries Pay, those must of Necessity go
unpaid the while, and consequently upon Free Quarter; and their going any where upon Free Quarter
will hinder the coming in of the Contribution of
those Parts which should be to pay some others, and
so they likewise must go upon Free Quarter the
while, which will in like Manner hinder the Pay,
and necessitate the like Free Quartering of others;
so as all will that while be equally hindered of constant Pay, and forced to take Free Quarter still.
But, besides these aforementioned certain and visible
Occasions of Delays, to the present Effect of the Vote
for Disbanding all Supernumeraries, we doubt it
will find many other Difficulties and Obstructions
to the speedy and effectual Dispatch thereof, and
prove not so easy or so well executed as voted; so
that, though we with that Business of disbanding
Supernumeraries put into a Way of as speedy Execution as may be, yet, upon all these Considerations,
we cannot imagine that Vote to be absolute and sovereign, nor so speedy or timely a Cure of the Soldiers
Wants and Discontents, or the Country's Grievance
in their Free Quarter, as the Nature of the Malady
and Temper of the Patient requires.
"We shall therefore offer our final Advice for some
other; first setting down the Particulars, and then
shewing the Efficacy and Benefit thereof.
"The Particulars (which we have in Part heretofore propounded to the Parliament) are these:
"1. That the Parliament do forthwith enlarge
their Monthly Contribution, for Five or Six
Months, to the full Proportion of the Pay
of all the Forces now in Being within this
Kingdom (or at least of so many of them as
they are not provided with present Money to
disband), and to a considerable Proportion
(videlicet, about Ten Thousand Pounds a
Month) over, which (by a near Estimate)
we conceive would well be by the Addition
of Forty Thousand Pounds per Mensem to
the present Sixty Thousand Pounds, and
with less we believe it cannot be; and the same
Committees to be appointed, and to have the
same Power for the levying of this as for the
former Sixty Thousand Pounds, and the same
Penalties for Neglects or Defaults therein as for
the Arrears of former Taxes to the Army.
And for more speedy passing of this, unless
some visible Inequality in the Rates of Countries could be readily rectified without Delay
to the Passing of it, we with it might (being
but for that short Space) pass according to
the same Rates as the Sixty Thousand Pounds.
And for the Kingdom's better Satisfaction
herein, it may be Resolved and Declared,
"I. That, upon this Enlargement, and the
effectual levying of it in the respective
Counties, no Free Quarter at all shall
(from within a Month at most after passing the Ordinance) be taken, in any
County or Place where it shall be duly
levied and paid.
"II. That it is intended this Enlargement
of Tax shall not be continued beyond
the Space of the Months limited; and
that, in the mean Time, as the Parliament can find Money and Safety to disband and lessen their Forces, so (if that
Lessening be considerable) they will by
Degrees lessen the said Tax proportionably.
"2. We desire that, for the more sure and effectual levying of the whole Tax, the General and Committee of the Army, or One of
them, may have Power (in case of any County Committees Neglect or Failing therein)
to add new Men to any the respective Committees; who (thereupon) (fn. *) are to have the
same Power as the Committees named in the
Ordinance have.
"3. That, for more sure and ready Payment of
the Soldiery out of this, the Forces which cannot or are not provided for to be forthwith
disbanded may be immediately assigned to
several Counties, or Associations of Counties,
out of whose Taxes they shall be paid; and
that the General may have Power accordingly to make such Distribution and Assignments, giving Notice and Account thereof to
the Committee of the Army; and they thereupon to take Order for the Payment of the
Forces so assigned immediately, out of the
Counties or Associations to which they are
assigned; and that the Payment be made according to due Musters, and according to the
last Establishment (as to the Rate of each
Officer's Pay); and the Surplusage of any
County's Taxes, above the due Pay of their
Forces so assigned to be paid out of them,
to be (at the Care and Oversight of the same
Committee for the Army) called for and paid
into the common Treasury, for such general
Uses as shall be found necessary, relating to
the Forces and Service within this Kingdom,
by Warrant from the General or Committee
for the Army, according to the usual Course
of Limitations heretofore; and the Remainder
or Surplusage of the said Taxes of the whole
Kingdom (above the Uses aforesaid) to be
for the Supply and Relief of the Forces already in Ireland, or other Public Uses, as
the Parliament shall think fit: And the same
Committee likewise, with the Treasurers, to
take Care for the methodizing and balancing of the whole Accompts, and to have
Power for the employing of Officers needful
for the Dispatch and Accommodation of this
Service, and to make Allowance of Salaries
to them (within some reasonable Limitation);
particularly that there be Allowances for so
many Deputy Commissaries of Musters as,
upon the Practic of this Distribution, the
General and Committee shall find needful:
And the Treasurers General, out of their Salary (in regard of this Accession to it), to maintain so many Deputy Treasurers as the General and Committee of the Army shall find
needful to be employed, and reside in such
several Parts of the Kingdom as the General
shall find convenient for that Service.
"4. That, the Security for Arrears being settled
as hath been already and is again hereafter
propounded, the Parliament would speedily
send down Commissioners to the Army, and
appoint the like for other Forces of the Kingdom, to state Accompts, and give Debentures, whereby the Soldier may, before Disbanding, have his Arrears ascertained to him
as a clear Debt, to be paid him out of that
Security; and that One Office or Registry
may be appointed, into which all Accompts
so taken may be returned, and all the Arrears
registered to be paid in Order as is hereafter
expressed: And for this Office we offer, That
Two Registers, with Four Clerks, may be
allowed, to have reasonable Salaries out of
the Revenue issuing out of the said Security. And this we desire may be hastened, for the speedier Preparation to the
Work of Disbanding; that such as are to be
disbanded may be ready for it by that Time
the Parliament can provide Money wherewith to disband any of them; and that so, by
disbanding the Supernumeraries as fast as may
be, Way may be made for the speedier lessening and taking off the Taxes by Degrees.
"Now, for the Advantage and Benefit of the Things
here propounded, they will appear as followeth; videlicet, Whereas, upon the former Supposition (that
the putting off the Soldiery that are to be continued
into a Way of constant Pay do depend only upon
the Disbanding of all Supernumeraries, whom the
present Tax will not extend to pay), it's most evident (as before demonstrated) that none can be put
into present Pay, but all must go on upon Free
Quarter, so long as until every One of the said Supernumeraries be disbanded; (which, whatever may
be imagined,) though no other Difficulties or Obstructions should happen than what are now visible,
as beforementioned, would not be effected, nor (we
doubt) provided for in Three or Four Months Time:
We wish it prove so soon; but we much fear Interruptions or Delays will happen, to make it much
longer: And all that while (Free Quarter continuing
as before) the Burden thereof (besides the Annoyances), though it fall more lightly upon some Parts
and heavier upon others, yet in the Whole it damnisies the Kingdom as much as the said increased
Contributions come to. The Soldiers also must have
(besides his Quarters) some Pay in Hand the mean
while (otherwise he can neither subsist, nor be kept
in Order); yet still he accounts (at least) Half of
his Pay for the remaining Time in Arrear to him,
so as that further Debt doth also grow upon the
Kingdom's Score. Now contrariwise (the Things
we have propounded being granted) that bare Contribution answers all; for we dare undertake, within a Fortnight after granting of them, all the Forces
of the Kingdom shall be assigned where and how to
receive their Pay constantly till disbanded, and so no
more Free Quarter shall henceforth be taken, no Part
of the Kingdom any more unequally oppressed there
by, nor any further Debt of Arrears henceforth
incurred upon the Kingdom, and the Work of disbanding Supernumeraries not at all hindered, but much
facilitated thereby. And as the Parliament finds
Money and Safety to disband any of them, they may
by the same Degrees either lessen the Tax proportionably, or will have so much more Surplusage
thencefrom, towards Relief of Ireland, or towards
Disbanding of others, or any other Public Uses.
"And now, for Furtherance and Encouragement in
the Matter of Disbanding (those Things aforementioned being granted), we shall (for the Army and
other Forces engaged with it) offer, and agree to,
these Rules following:
"1. That such of the said Forces as shall come
to be disbanded as Supernumeraries shall (out
of the Monies to be raised upon the Security
for Arrears) have the full Moiety of their Arrears first made good to them, as Monies
come in hereupon, before those which fall out
to be continued shall receive any Part of
theirs; and after that, (when those that continue shall have received the like Proportion
of theirs, then) those that shall be disbanded
to receive the other Moiety or full Remainder
of their Arrears, before those that continue
any more.
"2. That those of them which shall disband shall
(as Monies come in upon the said Security)
receive their Proportions of Arrears in the
same Order and Course as they disband (of
which Order and Course a Remembrance to
be entered and kept in the aforesaid Registry
of these Accompts); the Persons of the Regiment, Troop, or Company, first disbanding,
and so the rest in Course, to receive first what
was due to them at Disbanding (to make up
their First Moiety) by Two equal Portions;
and likewise to receive their Second Moiety
at Twice, by equal Portions, in the same
Course as they disband.
"Now, for our Desire in the First Proposition aforegoing, to have the Increase of Contribution extended
to the Proportion of Ten Thousand Pounds a Month
(by Estimate) over and above what we think the
just Pay for the Soldiery now in Being in the Kingdom, and not ready for present Disbanding, will come
to; the Reason is partly, that there may be (certain)
some present Supply out of it for the Force in Ireland, and partly because, if the Contribution should
be set scant of, or but just answerable to, the Pay of
the Soldiery, the many Contingencies and accessary
Charges (not to be foreseen,) and the probable Failings of full levying the Contribution in some Parts,
would necessitate the going of some upon Free Quarter (which would disturb the Order and constant Pay
of the Whole); and it would also require much Time
to proportion the Forces to be assigned upon the
several Counties exactly to the Contributions of them,
which would make it long ere Free Quarters could
be taken off, since none could be assigned where to
be paid, until the Pay of each Part of the Soldiery
were exactly computed, and all of them as exactly
distributed according to each County's Tax; whereas, the Taxes being laid to a sufficient Proportion
above the just Pay, we can immediately make Distributions and Assignments (fn. *) by Estimate, so as to be
sure the Taxes of each County exceed the Pay of the
Soldiers assigned to it: And though so One County
have more and another fewer Soldiers assigned to
them than (upon an exact Distribution according to
the Number and Pay of the Soldiery) their just Proportion would come to; yet, none having so many
but that their Taxes will do more than pay them, no
Part will bear above its due Proportion of Charge;
and those Parts which have least Numbers of Soldiers
assigned upon them, yet will bear their due Proportion of Charge, either in Pay to the Soldiers, or in
the Surplusage of their Tax above it, which, being
collected into the common Treasury, will be for Relief to Ireland, or other Public Uses, so as the Surplusage (either in particular Counties above their particular Assignments, or of the whole Kingdom's Taxes
above the Pay of the whole Soldiery in it) will be no
Loss. But (as to some present and certain Relief
for Ireland out of it, upon Supposition of the Hundred Thousand Pounds a Month) we shall (besides
the Surplusage of every County's Tax above the Pay
of the Soldiers to be assigned to it) forecast in the
Distributions and Assignments, to levy the Taxes of
some Counties (and that as many as may be), to come
entirely into the common Treasury, for the Relief of
Ireland, without (fn. *) assigning any of the Forces in England to be paid out of them.
"And for that Power desired, for making such
Distributions and Assignments, the Advantages and
Benefits of that Way of Repartition (as to the more
sure and ready Payment of Soldiers) are sufficiently
known and tried: And it is most evident, that without it (if no Soldiers be paid before the Monies be
first collected in the several Counties, and then sent
into the common Treasury for all the Kingdom, and
then sent to the Head Quarters, or thence distributed to the several Forces within the Kingdom, it is
in vain to think that the Soldiers can be supplied
with Money aforehand, or timely enough to make
him pay Quarters; and it is as good (almost) not at
all, as not in Time.
"We have thus propounded a Way whereby all the
Soldiery of the Kingdom may be instantly put in a
Condition of constant Pay (while continued), and
thereby be kept in Order and Discipline; all Free
Quarter (with the Abuses, Exactions, Annoyances,
and unequal Pressures, that accompany it) immediately taken off, no further Debt of Arrears incurred upon the Kingdom, and that which is already
incurred put in a Way to be recovered and overcome in Time; and whereby the supernumerary
Forces may shortly be disbanded by Degrees (as the
Parliament can find Money to do it), and will be
satisfiable to disband with less Money in Hand, without Danger of Disobligation therein; and whereby also
the additional Charge (now propounded) with other
Burdens of the Kingdom may by the same Degrees
be lessened and eased, with Safety and Satisfaction,
until all can be taken off.
"And as it is evident that, if such a Course as this
had been taken sooner, and the Parliament (as they
found the several Parts of the Kingdom cleared from
the Enemy, and eased of the Oppressions they suffered under them) had by Degrees extended an
equal Contribution over all Parts, in a Proportion
sufficient to have paid all their Forces (while they
continued them), the Kingdom had been eased of
Free Quarter, and no further Debt of Arrears to the
Soldiery incurred upon it; for (at least) a Year and
Half ago; those that have been disbanded had not
been put off with so much Disobligation (as some
have been); nor had their Claims and endless Demands since brought such Troubles upon, or drawn
such vast Arrears from, the Parliament and Kingdom;
and those that now remain to be disbanded had been
much easier satisfiable and more readily disbanded:
So, if such a Course (as is here propounded) be
not speedily taken, but the putting of the Soldiery
into a Way of Pay be left to depend only upon the
Disbanding of all Supernumeraries (and that so unprovided for), or so uncertainly and slowly provided
for and proceeded in (as without this Course it is
like to be,) it is most evident (besides unforeseen
Dangers of Discontent both in the Soldiery and Country, of Difficulties to disband, or Interruptions and
Dissatisfactions in it), that the Non-disbanding of
some will so long occasion the Non-payment of all,
and continue Free Quarter with the Inconveniences
thereof upon all, and the Non-payment of all may
hinder the Disbanding of any, and so both Debts
and Discontents grow upon the Soldiery and Kingdom (perhaps) till it pass the Power either of the
General and Officers to compose the one, or the Parliament and Kingdom to satisfy the other.
"Having therefore thus sufficiently discharged ourselves in this Point, so as we shall (we hope) stand
acquitted before God and Men from whatever Evils
ensue upon any further Neglect thereof: We must now
declare, That we find the just Expectations of the
Army herein (especially since the General's late Engagement or Undertakings at the Rendezvous) are so
great and earnest; the Clamours and Outcries to us
from other Forces and Garrisons of the Kingdom
engaged with the Army (for their extreme Necessity,
and our apprehended Neglect of equal Provision for
them) are so sad and pressing; the Discontents of the
Country (from the Oppressions of Free Quarter) are
so full, and yet growing, and almost desperate; and
the Distempers, Distractions, and Dangers, threatened
by all these, are so vast and imminent; as we can
no longer stand under the Burthen or Blame of them:
But, if the Things here before propounded be not
granted and passed effectually (or a certain Course
settled according to the Effect of them) by the End
of this present Week, we can no longer give Account of the Army or other Forces in a regular Way;
but, unless we find Satisfaction in our Judgements to
take some extraordinary Ways of Power, we must
let the Soldiery and Kingdom know, that we cannot satisfy their just Expectation, and thereupon desire that the Charge of the Soldiery may be transmitted to others.
"If the Parliament shall approve and pass what we
have here propounded, we must (for the better Prosecution and Effecting thereof) add, That the superlative Backwardness and Obstinacy, or Disaffection
rather, of those within the City, who have thus long
with-held their Arrears of Taxes (so long since due
to the Army), may not escape either with Victory
therein, or without exemplary Sufferings, (at least)
by strict and speedy levying as well the Penalties as
the Arrears themselves; and (for that Purpose) that
the Parliament would re-assume the Consideration of
the General's late Letters about that Business to the
Committee of the Army, and review that to the
Lord Mayor and Common Council, wherein the ill
Consequences both of the wilful Neglect of the
Thing, and of the Army's withdrawing to a further
Distance before it be done, or of it's continuing longer hereabouts in the dilatory (and perhaps) fruitless
Expectation thereof from the City's own Actings therein, may sufficiently appear.
"To which we add, That, till it be done effectually
(and sharply to some), the Distribution of the Forces
to several Committees to be paid (according to what
is before propounded) can neither be effectual nor
safe; and we must therefore desire, that unless it be
thought sit that the whole Kingdom should groan
still under the Oppressions of Free Quarter, and these
adjacent Counties be undone chiesly, while those of
the City (that occasion all) sit free from any Taste
of it, there may be no longer Stop to the drawing-in
of the Army, or a considerable Part of it, to quarter
upon them in the City, who had not paid before
the said Letters, until they shall have paid both the
Arrears and full Penalties. And though our Tenderness of that City's Safety and Welfare, and our
Clearness from the least Thought of Evil towards it,
or any base Design to make the least Advantage to ourselves or the Army by it, hath sufficiently appeared,
as in all our former Demeanments, so in our Carriage of the Business upon our late Advance towards
it (notwithstanding the just Occasions and great Provocations thence so newly given), as also in our innocent March through it, and quiet and patient Waiting
about it for those long due Arrears, without quartering any Soldiers in it; yet now, in Justice, we cannot
but desire that (besides the Levying of the Arrears)
at last (for which we have been put to stay so long)
there may now likewise some Reparation be thought
on, from the City, to the Parts adjacent, for above
One Hundred Thousand Pounds Damage, sustained
through the Army's Attendance here on the City's
Defaults and Delays; which Reparation we (if necessitated thereto, or called upon by the Country)
must in their Behalf demand from the City to the
full. And now also (the rather in order to that) we
must earnestly desire that the Proceedings against
those Citizens and others lately impeached may be
hastened; and, out of their Fines or Confiscations,
some Part of Reparation may be made to the Countries adjacent for the aforesaid Damages, which the
Crimes of those Persons and others in the City did
first bring upon them. And indeed without something done against those Persons, for Example to
others, before the Army's Withdrawing, we do not
see (when it shall withdraw) with what Safety or Freedom the Parliament can sit longer at Westminster;
especially when we find the Common Council (through
the Parliament's and Army's Lenity) to take the
Boldness already (in the Face of both) to intercede
for the Release and Acquittal (or rather Justification)
of those impeached Persons (who indeed are but Fellow Delinquents (we doubt) to most of that Council); as if that so actual, immediate, and horrid a
Force upon both and the whole Houses of Parliament, and the Levying of War in Abetment and Prosecution thereof, and of that concurrent treasonable
Engagement, were already forgotten by them to have
been any Crime: The Consideration whereof, and of
the renewed Confidence of Master Gewen and some
other Members of Parliament (known to have been
Partakers, if not Principals, in the same Things) who
yet presume, and are suffered, to appear again in the
House (as if in those Things there had not been so
much Fault as to render them less worthy of continuing in that highest Trust), makes us begin to
fear that, while so much of the same Leven (through
Lenity and Moderation) is left behind, it may shortly spread, till even the worst of the Eleven Members (notwithstanding their doubled Crimes) be again
called for in, unless the House (by some exclusive
Resolutions and Proceedings) do timely prevent the
same. We hope therefore the Parliament will weigh
these Things, and speedily (ere it be too late) consult
(at least) their own Safety and the Kingdom's, if
not ours and the Army's, their poor Servants, and
something concerned with them (especially) in that
Affair.
"Next, we again more importunately desire, That
those other so near Concernments of the Soldiery (expressed in the General's late Remonstrance at the
Rendezvous) may be speedily considered, and fully
and effectually provided for; in order to which, we
shall here more particularly propound as followeth:
"First, As to the Security for Arrears: Whereas
(in the late Votes or Proposition intended for
that Purpose) the Two Thirds of the Lands
or Compositions of certain Delinquents, assigned towards the said Security, is only of
the Delinquents within the Three First Qualifications of the Sixteenth Proposition; we
desire that may be altered, so as to be Two
Thirds of the Lands or Compositions of all
the Delinquents that have not yet compounded. And next we must desire, That Deans
and Chapters Lands may be added (with Proviso for reasonable Satisfaction or Maintenance to such Persons as, having a present
lawful Interest in any the Revenues thereunto belonging, have not forfeited the same
by Delinquency). These Additions are desired, because the Security as yet voted is
justly estimated not to be sufficient. And since
all that is propounded is but for Security,
if the Security prove to exceed the Arrears
really due, the Surplusage will be free for any
other Public Use, so as the State will not be
damnified by these Additions to the Security.
Lastly (as to this Business), we desire that
the Matters of Security (being resolved on as
desired) may be passed into Ordinance, and
thereby put into a speedy and (fn. *) effectual Way
of raising Monies thereupon.
"Secondly, For Matter of Indemnity: That, if
no Indemnity more absolute can be provided
(to free the Soldiery from all Question for
Things done in the War), but that they must
(in case of Question at Law) fly to some
Committee or Commissioners for Relief; it
may be provided, for the Ease of all, That
(either under the Grand Committee for Indemnity, or otherwise by the immediate Appointment of Parliament) there may be Commissioners in each County impowered to give
Relief in such Cases as the Grand Committee
now are; and those Commissioners to be such
as ordinarily reside in the respective Counties,
and mixed of such as have been Military
Officers to the Parliament, together with such
Inhabitants as have appeared active and faithful for the Parliament in the late War; for
which Purpose we shall (if admitted) offer
Names; and that there may be a severe
Penalty laid upon Judges, or other Officers
of Justice, in case they shall proceed against
any contrary to the Ordinance for Indemnity.
"Thirdly, That sufficient Provision be made, in
a certain and no dishonourable Way, for the
Relief and Support of maimed Soldiers, and
the Widows and Orphans of Men that died
in the Service, to continue during the Lives
of the Maimed and Widows, and during the
Minority of their Orphans; and that the
same Commissioners (to be appointed in each
County for Indemnity as aforesaid), or others
in like Manner mixed, may be impowered
for this Purpose also; and in case of the Death
of any such Commissioners, or their Departure
out of their respective Counties, those that
survive or remain may choose new ones to fill
up the Number.
"4. (fn. †) That, for the just Freedom of Apprentices
who have served the Parliament, there may be
a sufficient Penalty laid upon Masters refusing or delaying to give the same when
their Times are out, accounting the Time
they have served in the War as Part; and
that the Apprentice may have his Action at
Law for that Penalty.
"5. For Freedom from Impresting: That (as no
Freeman of England may be imprested for
any Foreign Service, or other than for the
immediate Defence of it, so) no Soldier that
hath voluntarily served the Parliament in the
late War, for the Liberties of the Kingdom,
may be liable to be prest for any Military
Service at all; and that it may be promised,
that a Certificate of his said Service as a Volunteer, under the Hand and Seal of his Colonel, or other Field Officer under whom he
hath served, may be a sufficient Protection and
Discharge to him from any such Impresting.
"Having thus discharged ourselves in those
Matters which are our most proper and
immediate Business (the Concernments
of the Soldiery), and for which we redouble our Desires, That the Two First
(concerning the putting them into constant Pay while continued, and Provision
for their Arrears) may be first considered, and immediately settled before any
other Business, and then that the rest of
them may also be provided for as soon
as may be: Now, though the Two First
of these want not their equal Concernments to the Kingdom (in the present
taking off the Oppression of Free Quarter, preventing the Increase of Arrears,
and providing or preparing for the more
easy and satisfactory Disbanding of Supernumeraries, and thereby the better easing of the Kingdom's Burthens by Degrees); yet we cannot, in any of our Addresses of this Kind, so far forget those
Things we have formerly declared concerning (more purely) the Public Interest of the Kingdom, and ourselves as
Members of it, but we must herewith
renew our humble and earnest Desires,
that no Time may be lost by the Parliament, for the just Consideration and
Dispatch of these Things, both for the
Redress of common Grievances, Relief
of the Oppressed, and for the Liberty,
Security, Quiet, and some safe Settlements, of the Kingdom; and more especially that these Things of this Nature,
expressed in the late Remonstrance at
the Rendezvous, may in such Settlement
be fully and effectually provided for (and
that) with as much Expedition as may
be. And it is our Heart's Desire and
Hope, that herein the Proceedings and
Resolutions of the Parliament may be
such, and so timous, as that we may not
need any more to remind the Parliament in any of those Things, which (as
far as with Truth or any Safety to that
most obliging Interest of the Public
and to those that have engaged for it,
we may forbear) we are most unwilling
and take no Pleasure to meddle in.
Windsor, 5 Decem. 1647.
"By the Appointment of his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax and the
Council of the Army.
"John Rushworth, Secretary.
"Decemb. 7. Imprimatur, Gilbert Mabbott."
Petition from Middlesex Inhabitants without the late Lines, against Free Quarter.
"To the Right Honourable House of Peers in
Parliament assembled.
"The humble Petition of the Committee
and Inhabitants of the County of Middlesex, without the late Lines of Communication;
"Sheweth,
"That your Petitioners, by reason of their Neighbourhood to the City, have, upon all Motions of the
several Armies and Parties thereto and from, been
very heavily burthened with Free Quarter.
"That they have very chearfully borne a full Share
in all the ordinary Assessments of the Kingdom, besides some extraordinary.
"That likewise, being but little more than a Third
Part of the said County, they have, for the Preservation thereof, and of the Parliament and City, been at
voluntary Expence, for Three Years Space, amounting in the Whole to above Ten Thousand Pounds,
in the Maintenance of several Guards upon the
Avenues of the said County.
"That, notwithstanding their said Charges and Pressures, the Burden of Free Quarter hath been for
Eighteen Weeks last past very heavy upon them;
and that in a higher Proportion (as they conceive)
than upon other Parts of the Kingdom, by reason of
those greater Numbers disposed hereabouts, that
were particularly assigned for the Safeguard of His
Majesty's Person and the Two Houses of Parliament.
"Wherefore they humbly pray, this Honourable
House will be pleased to free them totally
from this intolerable Burden and Bondage of
Free Quarter, that thereby they may enjoy
the Propriety of their Estates, and the Freedom of their Houses, according to the Petition of Rights, and be the better enabled for
the future to pay all such Assessments as are
or shall be imposed upon them.
"And they shall pray, &c.
Petition from Hertfordshire, for equal Assessments;—to ease them of Free Quarter, and remove the Army;—and for supernumerary Forces to be disbanded.
"To the Right Honourable the Lords assembled
in Parliament.
"The humble Petition of the Inhabitants of
the County of Hertford;
"Sheweth,
"That we have adventured our Lives, and exhausted our Estates, for the re-gaining of our almost
lost and irrecoverable Freedoms; and have been,
through the Blessing of God, instrumental to the
subduing of the common Enemy; by which Means
we hoped before this Time to have had the Foundations of a just Government settled, and our Estates
freed (at the least) from all unequal and illegal Taxations: But we find that we are now subject to greater
Bondage than when we first engaged for Freedom;
inasmuch as we have paid more than our proportionable Assessments with other Counties to the Maintenance of the several Armies; besides the Maintaining of a Militia in our County, and sending our
several Forces, at our own Charge, upon several Expeditions, and main Convoys to several Parts of the
Kingdom, at the particular Charge of the County;
and received upon Free Quarter the greatest Part of
the Earl of Essexe's Army for above Six Months together, for which we never yet received any Satisfaction, though we petitioned for it, and had a Reference to a Committee in Pursuance thereof; besides many other Pressures too tedious to relate:
Notwithstanding all which, the Common Enemy being
subdued, we groan under the intolerable Burden of
Free Quarter, lately forced upon us for Five Months
and more, where many Persons are scarce able to buy
Bread for their own Families, nor make Provision for
the Sowing of their Grounds; being forced, above
their Abilities, to quarter Soldiers; and the best of us
forced to be Soldiers Servants in our own Families,
a Burden every Way unsufferable to Free People;
many of us being thereby utterly disabled to relieve
the Poor, who daily increase, and are ready to starve.
"Therefore, to prevent Desperation, we once more
make our Addresses to this Honourable
House, for timely Remedy in these our sad
Conditions; and do humbly pray as followeth:
"That you would be pleased to equalize our
Taxes with Cities and other Counties; that
some speedy Course may be taken for disbanding of the supernumerary Forces; and that
those which in your Wisdoms you shall think
fit necessarily to be kept on-foot, in reference to the Peace of the Kingdom, may be
disposed of by Allowance of constant Pay;
and that they may provide their own Necessaries, both for Horse and Man.
"That Allowance may be made for the Free
Quarter already taken, proportionably to the
Charge, the Burden thereof having been
hard upon Tenants; that the Army, which
hath lain so long upon us, may be speedily
removed from us, and your Petitioners eased
of Free Quarter, being no longer able to bear
it; that so your Petitioners may have further Encouragement to seek the Lord, for
a further Blessing upon your faithful Endeavours, in reference to the Settling of a firm
Peace, for the Glory of God, and future Good
of the King and Kingdoms."
Petition from Bucks Inhabitants near Windsor Castle, to be relieved from Free Quarter, and the Multitude of Soldiers quartered on them.
"To the Right Honourable the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled.
"The humble Petition of divers Freeholders, Farmers, and Labourers, in that
Part of the County of Bucks which is
near adjoining to Windsor Castle;
"Sheweth,
"That your Petitioners did, on the 22th of Nov'r
last, exhibit to his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairefax
Knight a Petition, a Copy whereof is hereunto annexed; whereupon his Excellency was pleased to
signify to your Petitioners, that they were to apply
themselves to the Parliament for Relief.
"Your Petitioners therefore humbly pray these
Honourable Houses, to view the same Petition, and to take the Sufferings of your Petitioners into Consideration, and give them
a speedy Relief, by such Means as to these
Honourable Houses shall seem fit.
"And they shall, &c."
Petition from them to Sir T. Fairfax, to that Effect.
"To his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairefax Knight,
Commander in Chief of the Forces raised by
the Parliament.
"The humble Petition of divers Freeholders,
Farmers, and Labourers, in that Part
of the County of Bucks which is near
adjoining to Windsor Castle;
"Humbly sheweth,
"That many Soldiers have continually quartered in
those Parts, ever since the First Advance of the Army
under your Excellency's Command towards London,
to the exceeding great Burden of the Inhabitants
thereof (which was formerly humbly represented to
your Excellency in a Petition); but the same Burden hath continued, and is so increased, that in some
of your Petitioners Houses Twenty Soldiers, and in
some Thirty or Forty, have been lately quartered
for divers Days, and still do quarter, in a House together; by which Means (after the great Charges and
Losses which they have sustained during the War)
many both Freeholders and Farmers are become
liable, and expect to be imprisoned, for the Debts
contracted upon them by reason of Free Quarter,
and so impoverished as that they are made unable so
constantly to set the Labourers on Work as formerly,
by which Means the Labourers want Work; so that
(the Prices of Victuals being great, and still increasing,
by Means of the Soldiers and their Horses in these
Parts) many of your Petitioners, as well Freeholders
and Farmers as Labourers, with their Wives and
Children, must perish, unless your Excellency will
be pleased to ease these Parts of the Country from
this Burden.
"Which that your Excellency would be pleased
to do, is the humble Suit of your Petitioners.
"And they shall, &c."
Adjourn.
House adjourned till 10a cras.