Belloc-Lingard - The History of England - CHAPTER VII.


CHAPTER VIII.



Richard Cromwell Protector--Parliament Called--Dissolved--Military

Government--Long Parliament Restored--Expelled Again--Reinstated--Monk In

London--Re-Admission Of Secluded Members--Long Parliament Dissolved--The

Convention Parliament--Restoration Of Charles II.



By his wife, Elizabeth Bourchier, Cromwell left two sons, Richard and

Henry. There was a remarkable contrast in the opening career of these young

men. During the civil war, Richard lived in the Temple, frequented the

company of the Cavaliers, and spent his time in gaiety and debauchery.

Henry repaired to his father's quarters, and so rapid was his promotion,

that at the age of twenty he held the commission of captain in the regiment

of guards belonging to Fairfax, the lord-general. After the establishment

of the commonwealth, Richard married, and, retiring to the house of his

father-in-law, at Hursley in Hampshire, devoted himself to the usual

pursuits of a country gentleman. Henry accompanied his father in the

reduction of Ireland, which country he afterwards governed, first with the

rank of major-general, afterwards with that of lord-deputy. It was not till

the second year of the protectorate that Cromwell seemed to recollect that

he had an elder son. He made him a lord of trade, then chancellor of the

university of Oxford, and lastly a member of the new house of peers. As

these honours were far inferior to those which he lavished on other persons

connected with his family, it was inferred that he entertained a mean

opinion of Richard's abilities. A more probable conclusion is, that he

feared to alarm the jealousy of his officers, and carefully abstained from

doing that which might confirm the general suspicion, that he designed to

make the protectorship hereditary in his family.[1]

The moment he expired, the council assembled, and the result of their

deliberation was an order to proclaim Richard Cromwell protector, on the

ground that he had been declared by his late highness his successor in

that dignity.[2] Not a murmur of opposition was heard; the ceremony was

performed in all places after the usual manner of announcing the accession

of a new sovereign; and addresses of condolence and congratulation poured

in from the army and

[Footnote 1: "The Lord knows my desire was for Harry and his brother to

have lived private lives in the country, and Harry knows this very well;

and how difficultly I was persuaded to give him his commission for

Ireland."--Letter to Fleetwood, 22nd June, 1655.]

[Footnote 2: There appears good reason to doubt this assertion. Thurloe

indeed (vii. 372) informs Henry Cromwell that his father named Richard

to succeed on the preceding Monday. But his letter was written after the

proclamation of Richard, and its contents are irreconcilable with the

letters written before it. We have one from Lord Falconberg, dated on

Monday, saying that no nomination had been made, and that Thurloe had

promised to suggest it, but probably would not perform his promise (ibid.

365); and another from Thurloe himself to Henry Cromwell, stating the same

thing as to the nomination.--Ibid. 364. It may perhaps be said that Richard

was named on the Monday after the letters were written; but there is

a second letter from Thurloe, dated on the Tuesday, stating that the

protector was still incapable of public business, and that matters would,

he feared, remain till the death of his highness in the same state as he

described them in his letter of Monday.--Ibid. 366. It was afterwards said

that the nomination took place on the night before the protector's death,

in the presence of four of the council (Falconberg in Thurloe, 375, and

Barwick, ibid. 415); but the latter adds that many doubt whether it ever

took place at all.]

navy, from one hundred congregational churches, and from the boroughs,

cities, and counties. It seemed as if free-born Britons had been converted

into a nation of slaves. These compositions were drawn up in the highest

strain of adulation, adorned with forced allusions from Scripture, and with

all the extravagance of Oriental hyperbole. "Their sun was set, but no

night had followed. They had lost the nursing father, by whose hand the

yoke of bondage had been broken from the necks and consciences of the

godly. Providence by one sad stroke had taken away the breath from their

nostrils, and smitten the head from their shoulders; but had given them in

return the noblest branch of that renowned stock, a prince distinguished

by the lovely composition of his person, but still more by the eminent

qualities of his mind. The late protector had been a Moses to lead God's

people out of the land of Egypt; his son would be a Joshua to conduct them

into a more full possession of truth and righteousness. Elijah had been

taken into heaven: Elisha remained on earth, the inheritor of his mantle

and his spirit!"[1]

The royalists, who had persuaded themselves that the whole fabric of the

protectorial power would fall in pieces on the death of Cromwell, beheld

with amazement the general acquiescence in the succession, of Richard; and

the foreign princes, who had deemed it prudent to solicit the friendship of

the father, now

[Footnote 1: The Scottish ministers in Edinburgh, instead of joining in

these addresses, prayed on the following Sunday, "that the Lord would be

merciful to the exiled, and those that were in captivity, and cause them to

return with sheaves of joy; that he would deliver all his people from the

yoke of Pharaoh, and task-masters of Egypt, and that he would cut off their

oppressors, and hasten the time of their deliverance."--Thurloe, vii. 416.]

hastened to offer their congratulations to his son. Yet, fair and tranquil

as the prospect appeared, an experienced eye might easily detect the

elements of an approaching storm. Meetings were clandestinely held by the

officers;[a] doubts were whispered of the nomination of Richard by his

father; and an opinion was encouraged among the military that, as the

commonwealth was the work of the army, so the chief office in the

commonwealth belonged to the commander of the army. On this account the

protectorship had been bestowed on Cromwell; but his son was one who had

never drawn his sword in the cause; and to suffer the supreme power to

devolve on him was to disgrace, to disinherit, the men who had suffered so

severely, and bled so profusely, in the contest.

These complaints had probably been suggested, they were certainly fomented,

by Fleetwood and his friends, the colonels Cooper, Berry, and Sydenham.

Fleetwood was brave in the field, but irresolute in council; eager for the

acquisition of power, but continually checked by scruples of conscience;

attached by principle to republicanism, but ready to acquiesce in every

change, under the pretence of submission to the decrees of Providence.

Cromwell, who knew the man, had raised him to the second command in the

army, and fed his ambition with distant and delusive hopes of succeeding

to the supreme magistracy. The protector died, and Fleetwood, instead

of acting, hesitated, prayed, and consulted; the propitious moment was

suffered to pass by; he assented to the opinion of the council in favour of

Richard; and then, repenting of his weakness, sought to indemnify himself

for the loss by confining the

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1658. Sept. 14.]

authority of the protector to the civil administration, and procuring

for himself the sole, uncontrolled command of the army. Under the late

government, the meetings of military officers had been discountenanced and

forbidden; now they were encouraged to meet and consult; and, in a body of

more than two hundred individuals, they presented to Richard a petition, by

which they demanded that no officer should be deprived, but by sentence of

a court-martial, and that the chief command of the forces, and the disposal

of commissions, should be conferred on some person whose past services

had proved his attachment to the cause. There were not wanting those who

advised the protector to extinguish the hopes of the factious at once by

arresting and imprisoning the chiefs; but more moderate counsels prevailed,

and in a firm but conciliatory speech,[a] the composition of Secretary

Thurloe, he replied that, to gratify their wishes, he had appointed his

relative, Fleetwood, lieutenant-general of all the forces; but that to

divest himself of the chief command, and of the right of giving or resuming

commissions, would be to act in defiance of the "petition and advice," the

instrument by which he held the supreme authority. For a short time they

appeared satisfied; but the chief officers continued to hold meetings in

the chapel at St. James's, ostensibly for the purpose of prayer, but in

reality for the convenience of deliberation. Fresh jealousies were excited;

it was said that another commander (Henry Cromwell was meant) would be

placed above Fleetwood; Thurloe, Pierrepoint, and St. John were denounced

as evil counsellors; and it became evident to all attentive observers that

the two parties must soon come into collision. The protector could depend

on the armies

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1658. Oct. 14.]

in Ireland and Scotland. In Ireland, his brother Henry governed without an

opponent; in Scotland, Monk, by his judicious separation of the troops,

and his vigilance in the enforcement of discipline, had deprived the

discontented of the means of holding meetings and of corresponding with

each other. In England he was assured of the services of eight colonels,

and therefore, as it was erroneously supposed, of their respective

regiments, forming one half of the regular force. But his opponents were

masters of the other half, constituted the majority in the council, and

daily augmented their numbers by the accession of men who secretly leaned

to republican principles, or sought to make an interest in that party which

they considered the more likely to prevail in the approaching struggle.[1]

From the notice of these intrigues the public attention was withdrawn by

the obsequies of the late protector. It was resolved that they should

exceed in magnificence those of any former sovereign, and with that view

they were conducted according to the ceremonial observed at the interment

of Philip II. of Spain. Somerset House was selected for the first part of

the exhibition. The spectators, having passed through three rooms hung with

black cloth, were admitted[a] into the funereal chamber; where, surrounded

with wax-lights, was seen an effigy of Cromwell clothed in royal robes, and

lying on a bed of state,

[Footnote 1: For these particulars, see the letters in Thurloe, vii. 386,

406, 413, 415, 424, 426, 427, 428, 447. 450, 452, 453, 454, 463, 490, 491,

492, 493, 495, 496, 497, 498, 500, 510, 511. So great was the jealousy

between the parties, that Richard and his brother Henry dared not

correspond by letter. "I doubt not all the letters will be opened, which

come either to or from your highness, which can be suspected to contain

business" (454). For the principle now professed by the Levellers, see note (I).]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1658. Sept. 26.]

which covered, or was supposed to cover, the coffin. On each side lay

different parts of his armour: in one hand was placed the sceptre, in the

other the globe; and behind the head an imperial crown rested on a cushion

in a chair of state. But, in defiance of every precaution it became

necessary to inter the body before the appointed day; and the coffin was

secretly deposited at night in a vault at the west end of the middle aisle

of Westminster Abbey, under a gorgeous cenotaph which had recently been

erected. The effigy was now removed to a more spacious chamber; it rose

from a recumbent to an erect posture; and stood before the spectators not

only with the emblems of royalty in its hands, but with the crown upon its

head. For eight weeks this pageant was exhibited to the public. As the day

appointed for the funeral obsequies approached, rumours of an intended

insurrection during the ceremony were circulated; but guards from the

most trusty regiments lined the streets; the procession consisting of the

principal persons in the city and army, the officers of state, the foreign

ambassadors, and the members of the protector's family, passed[a] along

without interruption; and the effigy, which in lieu of the corpse was

borne on a car, was placed, with due solemnity, in the cenotaph already

mentioned. Thus did fortune sport with the ambitious prospects of Cromwell.

The honours of royalty which she refused to him during his life, she

lavished on his remains after death; and then, in the course of a few

months, resuming her gifts, exchanged the crown for a halter, and the royal

monument in the abbey for an ignominious grave at Tyburn.[1]

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, vi. 528, 529. Carrington apud Noble, i. 360-369. The

charge for black cloth alone on this occasion was six thousand nine hundred

and twenty-nine pounds, six shillings, and fivepence,--Biblioth. Stow. ii.

448. I do not notice the childish stories about stealing of the protector's

body.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1658. Nov. 23.]



Before the reader proceeds to the more important transactions at home, he

may take a rapid view of the relations existing between England and foreign

states. The war which had so long raged between the rival crowns of France

and Spain was hastening to its termination; to Louis the aid of England

appeared no longer a matter of consequence; and the auxiliary treaty

between the two countries, which had been renewed from year to year, was

suffered to expire at the appointed[a] time. But in the north of Europe

there was much to claim the attention of the new protector; for the king

of Sweden, after a short peace, had again unsheathed the sword against his

enemy, the king of Denmark. The commercial interests of the maritime states

were deeply involved in the issue of this contest; both England and Holland

prepared to aid their respective allies; and a Dutch squadron joined the

Danish, while an English division, under the command of Ayscue, sailed to

the assistance of the Swedish monarch. The severity of the winter forced

Ayscue to return; but as soon as the navigation of the Sound was open, two

powerful fleets were despatched to the Baltic, one by the protector, the

other by the States; and to Montague, the English admiral, was intrusted

the delicate and difficult commission, not only of watching the proceedings

of the Dutch, but also of compelling them to observe peace towards the

Swedes, without giving them occasion to commence hostilities against

himself. In this he was successful; but no offer of mediation could

reconcile the contending

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1658. August.]

monarchs; and we shall find Montague still cruising in the Baltic at the

time when Richard, from whom he derived his commission, will be forced to

abdicate the protectorial dignity.[1]

In a few days after the funeral of his father, to the surprise of the

public, the protector summoned[a] a parliament. How, it was asked, could

Richard hope to control such an assembly, when the genius and authority of

Oliver had proved unequal to the attempt? The difficulty was acknowledged;

but the arrears of the army, the exhaustion of the treasury, and the

necessity of seeking support against the designs of the officers, compelled

him to hazard the experiment, and he flattered himself with the hope of

success, by avoiding the rock on which, in the opinion of his advisers,

the policy of his father had split. Oliver had adopted the plan of

representation prepared by the long parliament before its dissolution, a

plan which, by disfranchising the lesser boroughs, and multiplying the

members of the counties, had rendered the elections more independent of the

government: Richard, under the pretence of a boon to the nation, reverted

to the ancient system; and, if we may credit the calculation of his

opponents, no fewer than one hundred and sixty members were returned from

the boroughs by the interest of the court and its supporters. But to adopt

the same plan in the conquered countries of Scotland and Ireland would have

been dangerous; thirty representatives were therefore summoned from each;

and, as the elections were conducted under the eyes of the

[Footnote 1: Burton's Diary, iii. 576. Thurloe, vol. vii. passim. Carte's

Letters, ii. 157-182, Londorp, viii. 635, 708. Dumont, vi. 244, 252, 260.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1658. Nov. 30.]

commanders of the forces, the members, with one solitary exception, proved

themselves the obsequious servants of government.[1]

It was, however, taken as no favourable omen, that when the protector, at

the opening of parliament, commanded the attendance of the Commons in the

House of Lords, nearly one-half of the members refused[a] to obey. They

were unwilling to sanction by their presence the existence of an authority,

the legality of which they intended to dispute; or to admit the superior

rank of the new peers, the representatives of the protector, over

themselves, the representatives of the people. As soon as the lower house

was constituted, it divided itself into three distinct parties. 1. The

protectorists formed about one-half of the members. They had received

instructions to adhere inviolably to the provisions of the "humble petition

and advice," and to consider the government by a single person, with the

aid of two houses, as the unalterable basis of the constitution. 2. The

republicans, who did not amount to fifty, but compensated for deficiency

in number by their energy and eloquence. Vane, Hazlerig, Lambert, Ludlow,

Nevil, Bradshaw, and Scot, were ready debaters, skilled in the forms of the

house, and always on the watch to take advantage of the want of knowledge

or of experience on the part of their adversaries. With them voted

Fairfax, who, after a long retirement, appeared once more on the stage. He

constantly sat by the side, and echoed the opinions of Hazlerig; and, so

artfully did he act his part, so firmly did he attach their confidence,

that, though a royalist at heart, he was designed by them

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, vii. 541, 550. Ludlow, ii. 170. Bethel, Brief

Narrative, 340. England's Confusion (p. 4), London, 1659.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Jan. 27]

for the office of lord-general, in the event of the expulsion or the

abdication of Richard. 3. The "moderates or neuters" held in number the

medium between the protectorists and republicans. Of these, some wavered

between the two parties; but many were concealed Cavaliers, who, in

obedience to the command of Charles, had obtained seats in the house, or

young men who, without any fixed political principles, suffered themselves

to be guided by the suggestions of the Cavaliers. To the latter, Hyde had

sent instructions that they should embarrass the plans of the protector,

by denouncing to the house the illegal acts committed under the late

administration; by impeaching Thurloe and the principal officers of state;

by fomenting the dissension between the courtiers and the republicans;

and by throwing their weight into the scale, sometimes in favour of one,

sometimes of the other party, as might appear most conducive to the

interests of the royal exile.[1]

The Lords, aware of the insecure footing on which they stood, were careful

not to provoke the hostility of the Commons. They sent no messages; they

passed no bills; but exchanging matters of state for questions of religion,

contrived to spend their time in discussing the form of a national

catechism, the sinfulness of theatrical entertainments, and the papal

corruptions supposed to exist in the Book of Common

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, i. 766; vii. 562, 604, 605, 609, 615, 616. Clarend.

Pap. iii. 423, 424, 425, 428, 432, 434, 436. There were forty-seven

republicans; from one hundred to one hundred and forty counterfeit

republicans and neuters, seventy-two lawyers, and above one hundred

placemen.--Ibid. 440. They began with a day of fasting and humiliation

within the house, and four ministers, with praying and preaching, occupied

them from nine till six.--Burton's Diary and Journals, Feb. 4.]

Prayer.[1] In the lower house, the first subject which called forth the

strength of the different parties was a bill which, under the pretence of

recognizing Richard Cromwell for the rightful successor to his father,

would have pledged the parliament to an acquiescence in the existing form

of government.[a] The men of republican principles instantly took the

alarm. To Richard personally they made no objection; they respected his

private character, and wished well to the prosperity of his family; but

where, they asked, was the proof that the provisions of the "humble

petition and advice" had been observed? where the deed of nomination by his

father? where the witnesses to the signature?--Then what was the "humble

petition and advice" itself? An instrument of no force in a matter of such

high concernment, and passed by a very small majority in a house, out of

which one hundred members lawfully chosen, had been unlawfully excluded.

Lastly, what right had the Commons to admit a negative voice, either in

another house or in a single person? Such a voice was destructive of the

sovereignty of the people exercised by their representatives. The people

had sent them to parliament with power to make laws for the national

welfare, but not to annihilate the first and most valuable right of their

constituents. Each day the debate grew more animated and personal; charges

were made and recriminations followed: the republicans enumerated the acts

of misrule and oppression under the government of the late protector; the

courtiers balanced the account with similar instances from the proceedings

of their adversaries during the sway of the long parliament; the orators,

amidst the

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, 559, 609, 615.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Feb. 1.]

multitude of subjects incidentally introduced, lost sight of the original

question; and the speaker, after a debate of eight days, declared that he

was bewildered in a labyrinth of confusion, out of which he could discover

no issue. Weariness at last induced the combatants to listen to a

compromise,[a] that the recognition of Richard as protector should form

part of a future bill, but that at the same time, his prerogative should be

so limited as to secure the liberties of the people. Each party expressed

its satisfaction. The republicans had still the field open for the advocacy

of their favourite doctrines; the protectorists had advanced a step,

and trusted that it would lead them to the acquisition of greater

advantages.[1]

From the office of protector, the members proceeded to inquire into the

constitution and powers of the other house; and this question, as it was

intimately connected with the former, was debated with equal warmth and

pertinacity. The opposition appealed to the "engagement," which many of the

members had subscribed; contended that the right of calling a second

house had been personal to the late protector, and did not descend to

his successors; urged the folly of yielding a negative voice on their

proceedings to a body of counsellors of their own creation; and pretended

to foretel that a protector with a yearly income of one million three

hundred thousand pounds, and a house of lords selected by himself, must

inevitably become, in the course of a few years, master of the liberties of

the people. When, at the end of nine days, the speaker was going to put the

question, Sir

[Footnote 1: Journals, Feb. 1, 14. Thurloe, 603, 609, 610, 615, 617. Clar.

Pap. iii. 424, 426, 429. In Burton's Diary the debate occupies almost two

hundred pages (iii. 87-287).]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Feb 14.]

Richard Temple, a concealed royalist, demanded that the sixty members from

Scotland and Ireland, all in the interest of the court, should withdraw.[a]

It was, he said, doubtful, from the illegality of their election,

whether they had any right to sit at all; it was certain that, as the

representatives of other nations, they could not claim to vote on a

question of such high importance to the people of England. Thus another

bone of contention was thrown between the parties; eleven days were

consumed before the Scottish and Irish members could obtain permission to

vote,[b] and then five more expired before the question respecting the

other house was determined.[c] The new lords had little reason to be

gratified with the result. They were acknowledged, indeed, as a house of

parliament for the present; but there was no admission of their claim of

the peerage, or of a negative voice, or of a right to sit in subsequent

parliaments. The Commons consented "to transact business with them" (a new

phrase of undefined meaning), pending the parliament, but with a saving of

the rights of the ancient peers, who had been faithful to the cause; and,

in addition, a few days later,[d] they resolved that, in the transaction of

business, no superiority should be admitted in the other house, nor message

received from it, unless brought by the members themselves.[1]

In these instances, the recognition of the protector, and of the two

houses, the royalists, with some exceptions, had voted in favour of the

court, under the impression that such a form of government was

[Footnote 1: Journals, Feb. 18, March 28, April 5, 6, 8. Thurloe, 615, 626,

633, 636, 640, 647, Clar. Pap. iii. 429, 432. Burton's Diary, iii. 317-369,

403-424, 510-594; iv. 7-41, 46-147, 163-243, 293, 351, 375.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. March 10.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. March 23.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. March 28.]

[Sidenote d: A.D. 1659. April 8.]

one step towards the restoration of the king. But on all other questions,

whenever there was a prospect of throwing impediments in the way of the

ministry, or of inflaming the discontent of the people, they zealously lent

their aid to the republican party. It was proved that, while the revenue

had been doubled, the expenditure had grown in a greater proportion;

complaints were made of oppression, waste, embezzlement, and tyranny in the

collection of the excise: the inhumanity of selling obnoxious individuals

for slaves to the West India planters was severely reprobated;[1] instances

of extortion were daily announced to the house by the committee of

grievances; an impeachment was ordered against Boteler, accused of

oppression in his office of major-general; and another threatened against

Thurloe for illegal conduct in his capacity of secretary of state. But,

while these proceedings awakened the hopes and gratified the resentments of

the people, they at the same time spread alarm through the army; every man

conscious of having abused the power of the sword began to tremble for his

own safety; and an unusual ferment, the sure presage of military violence,

was observable at the head-quarters of the several regiments.

[Footnote 1: Clar. Pap. iii. 429, 432. Thurloe, 647. Burton's Diary, iii.

448; iv. 255, 263, 301, 403, 429. One petition stated that seventy persons

who had been apprehended on account of the Salisbury rising, after a year's

imprisonment, had been sold at Barbadoes for "1550 pounds' weight of sugar

a-piece, more or less, according to their working faculties." Among them

were divines, officers, and gentlemen, who were represented as "grinding at

the mills, attending at the furnaces, and digging in that scorching island,

being bought and sold still from one planter to another, or attached as

horses or beasts for the debts of their masters, being whipped at the

whipping-posts as rogues at their masters' pleasure, and sleeping in sties

worse than hogs in England."--Ibid. 256. See also Thurloe, i. 745.]



Hitherto the general officers had been divided between Whitehall and

Wallingford House, the residences of Richard and of Fleetwood. At

Whitehall, the Lord Falconberg, brother-in-law to the protector, Charles

Howard, whom Oliver had created a viscount,[1] Ingoldsby, Whalley, Goffe,

and a few others, formed a military council for the purpose of maintaining

the ascendancy of Richard in the army. At Wallingford House, Fleetwood and

his friends consulted how they might deprive him of the command, and reduce

him to the situation of a civil magistrate; but now a third and more

numerous council appeared at St. James's, consisting of most of the

inferior officers, and guided by the secret intrigues of Lambert, who,

holding no commission himself, abstained from sitting among them, and by

the open influence of Desborough, a bold and reckless man, who began to

despise the weak and wavering conduct of Fleetwood. Here originated the

plan of a general council of officers,[a] which was followed by the

adoption of "the humble representation and petition," an instrument

composed in language too moderate to give reasonable cause of offence, but

intended to suggest much more than it was thought prudent to express. It

made no allusion to the disputed claim of the protector, or the subjects of

strife between the two houses; but it complained bitterly of the contempt

into which the good old cause had sunk, of the threats held out, and

the prosecutions instituted, against the patriots who had distinguished

themselves in its support, and of the privations to which the military were

reduced

[Footnote 1: Viscount Howard, of Morpeth, July 20, 1657, afterwards created

Baron Dacre, Viscount Howard of Morpeth and earl of Carlisle, by Charles

II., 30 April, 1661.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. April 6.]

by a system that kept their pay so many months in arrear. In conclusion, it

prayed for the redress of these grievances, and stated the attachment of

the subscribers to the cause for which they had bled, and their readiness

to stand by the protector and parliament in its defence.[1] This paper,

with six hundred signatures, was presented to Richard, who received it with

an air of cheerfulness, and forwarded it to the lower house. There it was

read, laid on the table, and scornfully neglected. But the military leaders

treated the house with equal scorn; having obtained the consent of the

protector, they established a permanent council of general officers; and

then, instead of fulfilling the expectations with which they had lulled his

jealousy, successively voted, that the common cause was in danger, that

the command of the army ought to be vested in a person possessing its

confidence, and that every officer should be called upon to testify his

approbation of the death of Charles I., and of the subsequent proceedings

of the military; a measure levelled against the meeting at Whitehall,

of which the members were charged with a secret leaning to the cause of

royalty.[2] This was sufficiently alarming; but, in addition, the officers

of the trained bands signified their adhesion to the "representation" of

the army; and more than six hundred privates of the regiment formerly

commanded by Colonel Pride published their determination to stand by their

officers in the maintenance "of the old cause."[3] The

[Footnote 1: "The Humble Representation and Petition, printed by H. Hills,

1659."--Thurloe, 659.]

[Footnote 2: Thurloe, 662. Ludlow, ii. 174.]

[Footnote 3: The Humble Representation and Petition of Field Officers, &c.

of the Trained Bands. London, 1659. Burton's Diary, iv. 388, note.]

friends of the protector saw that it was time to act with energy; and, by

their influence in the lower house, carried the following votes:[a] that no

military meetings should be held without the joint consent of the protector

and the parliament, and that every officer should forfeit his commission

who would not promise, under his signature, never to disturb the sitting,

or infringe the freedom of parliament. These votes met, indeed, with a

violent opposition in the "other house," in which many of the members had

been chosen from the military; but the courtiers, anxious to secure the

victory, proposed another and declaratory vote in the Commons,[b] that the

command of the army was vested in the three estates, to be exercised by

the protector. By the officers this motion was considered as an open

declaration of war: they instantly met; and Desborough, in their name,

informed Richard that the crisis was at last come; the parliament must be

dissolved, either by the civil authority, or by the power of the sword. He

might make his election. If he chose the first, the army would provide for

his dignity and support; if he did not, he would be abandoned to his fate,

and fall friendless and unpitied.[1]

The protector called a council of his confidential advisers. Whitelock

opposed the dissolution, on the ground that a grant of money might yet

appease the discontent of the military. Thurloe, Broghill, Fiennes, and

Wolseley maintained, on the contrary, that the dissension between the

parliament and the army was irreconcilable; and that on the first shock

between them, the Cavaliers would rise simultaneously in the

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, 555, 557, 558, 662. Burton's Diary, iv. 448-463,

472-480. Ludlow ii. 176, 178.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. April 18.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. April 21.]

cause of Charles Stuart. A commission was accordingly signed by Richard,

and the usher of the black rod repeatedly summoned the Commons to attend in

the other house.[a] But true to their former vote of receiving no message

brought by inferior officers, they refused to obey; some members proposed

to declare it treason to put force on the representatives of the nation,

others to pronounce all proceedings void whenever a portion of the members

should be excluded by violence; at last they adjourned for three days,

and accompanied the speaker to his carriage in the face of the soldiery

assembled at the door. These proceedings, however, did not prevent Fiennes,

the head commissioner, from dissolving the parliament; and the important

intelligence was communicated to the three nations by proclamation in the

same afternoon.[1]

Whether the consequences of this measure, so fatal to the interests of

Richard, were foreseen by his advisers, may be doubted. It appears that

Thurloe had for several days been negotiating both with the republican and

the military leaders. He had tempted some of the former with the offer

of place and emolument, to strengthen the party of the protector; to the

latter he had proposed that Richard, in imitation of his father on one

occasion, should raise money for the payment of the army by the power of

the sword, and without the aid of parliament.[2] But these intrigues were

now at an end; by the dissolution Richard had signed his own deposition;

though he continued to reside at Whitehall, the government fell into

abeyance; even the officers, who had hitherto frequented

[Footnote 1: Whitelock, 677. England's Confusion, 9. Clarendon Papers, 451,

456. Ludlow, ii. 174. Merc. Pol. 564.]

[Footnote 2: Thurloe, 659, 661.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. April 22.]

his court, abandoned him, some to appease, by their attendance at

Wallingford House, the resentment of their adversaries, the others, to

provide, by their absence, for their own safety. If the supreme authority

resided any where, it was with Fleetwood, who now held the nominal command

of the army; but he and his associates were controlled both by the meeting

of officers at St. James's, and by the consultations of the republican

party in the city; and therefore contented themselves with depriving the

friends of Richard of their commissions, and with giving their regiments

to the men who had been cashiered by his father.[1] Unable to agree on

any form of government among themselves, they sought to come to an

understanding with the republican leaders. These demanded the restoration

of the long parliament, on the ground that, as its interruption by Cromwell

had been illegal, it was still the supreme authority in the nation; and

the officers, unwilling to forfeit the privileges of their new peerage,

insisted on the reproduction of the other house, as a co-ordinate

authority, under the less objectionable name of a senate. But the country

was now in a state of anarchy; the intentions of the armies in Scotland

and Ireland remained uncertain; and the royalists, both Presbyterians and

Cavaliers, were exerting themselves to improve the general confusion to

the advantage of the exiled king. As a last resource, the officers, by

an instrument in which they regretted their past errors and backsliding,

invited[a] the members of the long parliament to resume the trust of

[Footnote 1: See the Humble Remonstrance from four hundred Non-commissioned

Officers and Privates of Major-general Goffe's Regiment (so called) of

Foot. London, 1659.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. May 6.]

which they had been unrighteously deprived. With some difficulty,

two-and-forty were privately collected in the Painted Chamber; Lenthall,

the former speaker, after much entreaty, put himself at their head,[a] and

the whole body passed into the house through two lines of officers, some

of whom were the very individuals by whom, six years before, they had been

ignominiously expelled.[1]

The reader will recollect that, on a former occasion, in the year 1648, the

Presbyterian members of the long parliament had been excluded by the army.

Of these, one hundred and ninety-four were still alive, eighty of whom

actually resided in the capital. That they had as good a right to resume

their seats as the members who had been expelled by Cromwell could hardly

be doubted; but they were royalists, still adhering to the principles which

they professed during the treaty in the Isle of Wight, and from their

number, had they been admitted, would have instantly outvoted the advocates

of republicanism. They assembled in Westminster Hall;[b] and a deputation

of fourteen, with Sir George Booth, Prynne, and Annesley at their head,

proceeded to the house. The doors were closed in their faces; a company of

soldiers, the keepers, as they were sarcastically called, of the liberties

of England, filled the lobby; and a resolution was passed that no former

member, who had not subscribed the engagement, should sit till further

order of parliament.[c] The attempt, however, though it failed of success,

produced its effect. It served to countenance a belief that the sitting

members were mere tools of the military, and supplied the royalists with

the means of masking their

[Footnote 1: Ludlow, 179-186. Whitelock, 677. England's Confusion, 9.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. May 7.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. May 7.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. May 9.]

real designs under the popular pretence of vindicating the freedom of

parliament.[1]

By gradual additions, the house at last amounted to seventy members, who,

while they were ridiculed by their adversaries with the appellation of the

"Rump," constituted themselves the supreme authority in the three kingdoms.

They appointed, first, a committee of safety, and then a council of state,

notified to the foreign ministers their restoration to power, and, to

satisfy the people, promised by a printed declaration[a] to establish a

form of government, which should secure civil and religious liberty without

a single person, or kingship, or house of lords. The farce of addresses

was renewed; the "children of Zion," the asserters of the good old cause,

clamorously displayed their joy; and Heaven was fatigued with prayers for

the prosperity and permanence of the new government.[2]

That government at first depended for its existence on the good-will of the

military in the neighbourhood of London; gradually it obtained[b] promises

of support from the forces at a distance. 1. Monk, with his

[Footnote 1: Journ. May 9. Loyalty Banished, 3. England's Confusion, 12.

On the 9th, Prynne found his way into the house, and maintained his right

against his opponents till dinner-time. After dinner he returned, but was

excluded by the military. He was careful, however, to inform the public of

the particulars, and moreover undertook to prove that the long parliament

expired at the death of the king; 1. On the authority of the doctrine laid

down in the law books; 2. Because all writs of summons abate by the king's

death in parliament; 3. Because the parliament is called by a king regnant,

and is his, the king regnant's, parliament, and deliberates on his

business; 4. Because the parliament is a corporation, consisting of king,

lords, and commons, and if one of the three be extinct, the body corporate

no longer exists.--See Loyalty Banished, and a true and perfect Narrative

of what was done and spoken by and between Mr. Prynne, &c., 1650.]

[Footnote 2: See the Declarations of the Army and the Parliament in the

Journals, May 7.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. May 13.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. May 17.]

officers, wrote to the speaker, congratulating him and his colleagues on

their restoration to power, and hypocritically thanking them for their

condescension in taking up so heavy a burthen; but, at the same time,

reminding them of the services of Oliver Cromwell, and of the debt of

gratitude which the nation owed to his family.[1] 2. Lockhart hastened to

tender the services of the regiments in Flanders, and received in return a

renewal of his credentials as ambassador, with a commission to attend the

conferences between the ministers of France and Spain at Fuentarabia. 3.

Montague followed with a letter from the fleet; but his professions of

attachment were received with distrust. To balance his influence with the

seamen, Lawson received the command of a squadron destined to cruise in the

Channel; and, to watch his conduct in the Baltic, three commissioners, with

Algernon Sydney at their head, were joined with him in his mission to the

two northern courts.[2] 4. There still remained the army in Ireland. From

Henry Cromwell, a soldier possessing the affections of the military, and

believed to inherit the abilities of his father, an obstinate, and perhaps

successful, resistance was anticipated. But he wanted decision. Three

parties had presented themselves to his choice; to earn, by the promptitude

of his acquiescence, the gratitude of the new government; or to maintain by

arms the right of his deposed brother; or to declare, as he was strongly

solicited to declare, in favour of Charles Stuart. Much time was lost in

consultation; at length the thirst of resentment, with the lure of reward,

determined him

[Footnote 1: Whitelock, 678.]

[Footnote 2: Thurloe, 669, 670. Ludlow, ii. 199. Journals, May 7, 9, 18,

26, 31.]

to unfurl the royal standard;[1] then the arrival of letters from England

threw him back into his former state of irresolution; and, while he thus

wavered from project to project, some of his officers ventured to

profess their attachment to the commonwealth, the privates betrayed a

disinclination to separate their cause from that of their comrades in

England, and Sir Hardress Waller, in the interest of the parliament,

surprised the castle of Dublin.[a] The last stroke reduced Henry at once to

the condition of a suppliant; he signified his submission by a letter

to the speaker, obeyed the commands of the house to appear before the

council,[b] and, having explained to them the state of Ireland, was

graciously permitted to retire into the obscurity of private life. The

civil administration of the island devolved on five commissioners, and

the command of the army was given to Ludlow,[c] with the rank of

lieutenant-general of the horse.[2]

But the republican leaders soon discovered that they had not been called

to repose on a bed of roses.[d] The officers at Wallingford House began to

dictate to the men whom they had made their nominal masters, and forwarded

to them fifteen demands, under the modest title of "the things which they

had on their minds," when they restored the long parliament.[3] The house

took them successively into consideration. A committee was appointed to

report the form of government the best calculated to secure the liberties

of the people; the duration of the existing parliament was

[Footnote 1: Carte's Letters, ii. 242. Clar. Pap. 500, 501, 516.]

[Footnote 2: Thurloe, vii. 683, 684. Journals, June 14, 27, July 4, 17.

Henry Cromwell resided on his estate of Swinney Abbey, near Sohan, in

Cambridgeshire, till his death in 1674.--Noble, i. 227.]

[Footnote 3: See the Humble Petition and Address of the Officers, printed

by Henry Hills, 1659.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. June 15.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. July 6.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. July 18.]

[Sidenote d: A.D. 1659. May 15.]

limited to twelve months; freedom of worship was extended to all believers

in the Scriptures and the doctrine of the Trinity, with the usual exception

of prelatists and papists; and an act of oblivion, after many debates, was

passed, but so encumbered with provisoes and exceptions, that it served

rather to irritate than appease.[1] The officers had requested[a] that

lands of inheritance, to the annual value of ten thousand pounds, should be

settled on Richard Cromwell, and a yearly pension of eight thousand pounds

on her "highness dowager," his mother. But it was observed in the house

that, though Richard exercised no authority, he continued to occupy the

state apartments at Whitehall; and a suspicion existed that he was kept

there as an object of terror, to intimate to the members that the same

power could again set him up, which had so recently brought him down. By

repeated messages, he was ordered to retire; and, on his promise to obey,

the parliament granted him the privilege of freedom from arrest during six

months; transferred his private debts, amounting to twenty-nine thousand

six hundred and forty pounds, to the account of the nation, gave him two

thousand pounds as a relief to his present necessities, and voted that

a yearly income of ten thousand pounds should be settled on him and his

heirs, a grant easily made on paper, but never carried into execution.[2]

[Footnote 1: Declaration of General Council of Officers, 27th of October,

p. 5. For the different forms of government suggested by different

projectors, see Ludlow, ii. 206.]

[Footnote 2: Journals, May 16, 25, July 4, 12, 16.--Ludlow (ii. 198) makes

the present twenty thousand pounds; but the sum of two thousand pounds is

written at length in the Journals; May 25. While he was at Whitehall, he

entertained proposals from the royalists, consented to accept a title and

twenty thousand pounds a year, and designed to escape to the fleet under

Montague, but was too strictly watched to effect his purpose.--Clar. Pap.

iii. 475, 477, 478.]

[Sidenote: A.D. 1659. July 12.]

But the principal source of disquietude still remained. Among the fifteen

articles presented to the house, the twelfth appeared, not in the shape

of a request, but of a declaration, that the officers unanimously owned

Fleetwood as "commander-in-chief of the land forces in England." It was the

point for which they had contended under Richard; and Ludlow, Vane, and

Salloway earnestly implored their colleagues to connive at what it was

evidently dangerous to oppose. But the lessons of prudence were thrown

away on the rigid republicanism of Hazlerig, Sydney, Neville, and their

associates, who contended that to be silent was to acknowledge in the

council of officers an authority independent of the parliament. They

undertook to remodel the constitution of the army. The office

of lord-general was abolished; no intermediate rank between the

lieutenant-general and the colonels was admitted; Fleetwood was named

lieutenant-general, with the chief command in England and Scotland, but

limited in its duration to a short period, revocable at pleasure, and

deprived of several of those powers which had hitherto been annexed to

it. All military commissions were revoked, and an order was made that a

committee of nine members should recommend the persons to be officers in

each regiment; that their respective merits should be canvassed in the

house; and that those who had passed this ordeal should receive their

commissions at the table from the hand of the speaker. The object of this

arrangement was plain: to make void the declaration of the military, to

weed out men of doubtful fidelity, and to render the others dependent

for their situations on the pleasure of the house. Fleetwood, with his

adherents, resolved never to submit to the degradation, while the privates

amused themselves with ridiculing the age and infirmities of him whom they

called their new lord-general, the speaker Lenthall; but Hazlerig prevailed

on Colonel Hacker, with his officers, to conform; their example gradually

drew others; and, at length, the most discontented, though with shame

and reluctance, condescended to go through this humbling ceremony. The

republicans congratulated each other on their victory; they had only

accelerated their defeat.[1]

Ever since the death of Oliver, the exiled king had watched with intense

interest the course of events in England; and each day added a new stimulus

to his hopes of a favourable issue. The unsettled state of the nation,

the dissensions among his enemies, the flattering representations of his

friends, and the offers of co-operation from men who had hitherto opposed

his claims, persuaded him that the day of his restoration was at hand.

That the opportunity might not be forfeited by his own backwardness, he

announced[a] to the leaders of the royalists his intention of coming to

England, and of hazarding his life in the company of his faithful subjects.

There was scarcely a county in which the majority of the nobility and

gentry did not engage to rally round his standard; the first day of August

was fixed for the general rising; and it was determined[b] in the council

at Brussels that Charles should repair in disguise to the coast of

Bretagne, where he might procure a passage into Wales or Cornwall; that the

duke of York, with six hundred veterans furnished by the prince of Condé,

should attempt to land from Boulogne on the coast of Kent; and that the

duke of Gloucester should follow

[Footnote 1: Journals, passim. Ludlow, ii. 197. Declaration of Officers, 6.

Thurloe, 679. Clarend. Hist. iii. 665.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. June 4.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. July.]

from Ostend with the royal army of four thousand men under the Marshal

Marsin. Unfortunately his concerns in England had been hitherto conducted

by a council called "the Knot," at the head of which was Sir Richard

Willis. Willis, the reader is aware, was a traitor; but it was only of late

that the eyes of Charles had been opened to his perfidy by Morland, the

secretary of Thurloe, who, to make his own peace, sent to the court at

Bruges some of the original communications in the writing of Willis. This

discovery astonished and perplexed the king. To make public the conduct of

the traitor was to provoke him to farther disclosures: to conceal it, was

to connive at the destruction of his friends, and the ruin of his own

prospects. He first instructed his correspondents to be reserved in their

communications with "the Knot;"[a] he then ordered Willis to meet him on

a certain day at Calais;[b] and, when this order was disregarded, openly

forbade the royalists to give to the traitor information, or to follow his

advice.[1]

But these precautions came too late. After the deposition of the protector,

Willis had continued to communicate with Thurloe, who with the intelligence

[Footnote 1: Clar. Pap. iii. 514, 517, 518, 520, 524, 526, 529, 531, 535,

536. Willis maintained his innocence, and found many to believe him. Echard

(p. 729) has published a letter with Morland's signature, in which he is

made to say that he never sent any of the letters of Willis to the king,

nor even so much as knew his name; whence Harris (ii. 215) infers that the

whole charge is false. That, however, it was true, no one can doubt who

will examine the proofs in the Clarendon Papers (iii. 518, 526, 529, 533,

535, 536, 542, 549, 556, 558, 562, 563, 574, 583, 585), and in Carte's

Collection of Letters (ii. 220, 256, 284). Indeed, the letter from Willis

of the 9th of May, 1660, soliciting the king's pardon, leaves no room for

doubt.--Clar. Pap. 643. That Morland was the informer, and, consequently,

the letter in Echard is a forgery, is also evident from the reward which

he received at the restoration, and from his own admission to Pepys.--See

Pepys, i. 79, 82, 133, 8vo. See also "Life of James II." 370.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. July 18.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. August 7.]

which he thus obtained, was enabled to purchase the forbearance of his

former opponents. At an early period in July, the council was in possession

of the plan of the royalists. Reinforcements were immediately demanded from

the armies in Flanders and Ireland; directions were issued for a levy of

fourteen regiments of one thousand men each;[a] measures were taken for

calling out the militia; numerous arrests were made in the city and every

part of the country; and the known Cavaliers were compelled to leave the

metropolis, and to produce security for their peaceable behaviour. These

proceedings seemed to justify Willis in representing the attempt as

hopeless; and, at his persuasion, "the Knot" by circular letters forbade

the rising, two days before the appointed time.[b] The royalists were thus

thrown into irremediable confusion. Many remained quiet at their homes;

many assembled in arms, and dispersed on account of the absence of their

associates; in some counties the leaders were intercepted in their way

to the place of rendezvous; in others as soon as they met, they were

surrounded or charged by a superior force. In Cheshire alone was the

royal standard successfully unfurled by Sir George Booth, a person of

considerable influence in the county, and a recent convert to the cause of

the Stuarts. In the letter which he circulated, he was careful to make

no mention of the king, but called on the people to defend their rights

against the tyranny of an insolent soldiery and a pretended parliament.[c]

"Let the nation freely choose its representatives, and those

representatives as freely sit without awe or force of soldiery." This was

all that he sought: in the determination of such an assembly, whatever that

determination might be, both he and

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. August 13.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. August 29.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. August 2.]

his friends would cheerfully acquiesce.[1] It was in effect a rising on

the Presbyterian interest; and the proceedings were in a great measure

controlled by a committee of minister, who scornfully rejected the aid of

the Catholics, and received with jealousy Sir Thomas Middleton, though a

known Presbyterian, because he openly avowed himself a royalist.

At Chester, the parliamentary garrison retired into the castle, and the

insurgents took possession of the city. Each day brought to them a new

accession of strength; and their apparent success taught them to augur

equally well of the expected attempts of their confederates throughout the

kingdom. But the unwelcome truth could not long be concealed; and when they

learned that they stood alone, that every other rising had been either

prevented or instantly suppressed, and that Lambert was hastening against

them with four regiments of cavalry and three of foot, their confidence

was exchanged for despair; every gentleman who had risked his life in the

attempt claimed a right to give his advice; and their counsels, from fear,

inexperience, and misinformation, became fluctuating and contradictory.[a]

After much hesitation, they resolved to proceed to Nantwich and defend the

passage of the Weever; but so rapid had been the march of the enemy, who

sent forward part of the infantry on horseback, that the advance was

already arrived in the neighbourhood; and, while the royalists lay

unsuspicious of danger in the town, Lambert forced the passage of the river

at Winnington.[b] In haste, they filed out of Nantwich into the nearest

fields; but here they found that most of their ammunition was still at

Chester;[c] and, on the suggestion that the position was

[Footnote 1: Parl. Hist. xxiii. 107.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. August 16.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. August 18.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. August 19.]

unfavourable, hastened to take possession of a neighbouring eminence.

Colonel Morgan, with his troop, attempted to keep the enemy in check; he

fell, with thirty men; and the rest of the insurgents, at the approach of

their adversaries, turned their backs and fled. Three hundred were made

prisoners in the pursuit, and few of the leaders had the good fortune to

escape. The earl of Derby, who had raised men in Lancashire to join the

royalists, was taken in the disguise of a servant. Booth, dressed as a

female, and riding on a pillion, took[a] the direct road for London, but

betrayed himself at Newton Pagnell by his awkwardness in alighting from

the horse. Middleton, who was eighty years old, fled to Chirk Castle; and,

after a defence of a few days, capitulated,[b] on condition that he should

have two months to make his peace with the parliament.[1]

The news of this disaster reached the duke of York at Boulogne, fortunately

on the very evening on which he was to have embarked with his men. Charles

received it at Rochelle, whither he had been compelled to proceed in search

of a vessel to convey him to Wales. Abandoning the hopeless project, he

instantly continued his journey to the congress at Fuentarabia, with the

delusive expectation that, on the conclusion of peace between the two

crowns, he should obtain a supply of money, and perhaps still more

substantial aid, from a personal interview with the ministers, Cardinal

Mazarin and Don Louis de Haro.[2] Montague, who had but recently become a

proselyte to the royal cause,

[Footnote 1: Clar. Hist. iii. 672-675. Clar. Pap. iii. 673, 674. Ludlow,

ii. 223. Whitelock, 683. Carte's Letters, 194, 202. Lambert's Letter,

printed for Thomas Neucombe, 1659.]

[Footnote 2: Both promised to aid him secretly, but not in such manner as

to give offence to the ruling party in England.--Clar. Pap. iii. 642.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. August.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. August 24.]

was drawn by his zeal into the most imminent danger. As soon as he heard of

the insurrection, he brought back the fleet from the Sound, in defiance of

his brother commissioners, with the intention of blockading the mouth

of the Thames, and of facilitating the transportation of troops. On his

arrival he learned the failure of his hopes; but boldly faced the danger,

appeared before the council, and assigned the want of provisions as the

cause of his return. They heard him with distrust; but it was deemed

prudent to dissemble, and he received permission to withdraw.[1]

To reward Lambert for this complete, though almost bloodless, victory,

the parliament[a] voted him the sum of one thousand pounds, which he

immediately distributed among his officers. But while they recompensed his

services, they were not the less jealous of his ambition. They remembered

how instrumental he had been in raising Cromwell to the protectorate; they

knew his influence in the army; and they feared his control over the timid,

wavering mind of Fleetwood, whom he appeared to govern in the same manner

as Cromwell had governed Fairfax. It had been hoped that his absence on the

late expedition would afford them leisure to gain the officers remaining in

the capital; but the unexpected rapidity of his success had defeated their

policy; and, in a short time, the intrigue which had been interrupted by

the insurrection was resumed. While Lambert hastened back to the capital,

his army followed by slow marches; and at Derby the officers subscribed[b]

a petition, which had been clandestinely forwarded to them from Wallingford

House. In it they complained that adequate rewards were not conferred on

the deserving; and

[Footnote 1: Journals, Sept. 16. Clar. Pap. iii. 551. Carte's Letters, ii.

210, 236. Pepys' Memoirs, i. 157.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. August 22.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Sept. 14.]

demanded that the office of commander-in-chief should be given to Fleetwood

without limitation of time, and the rank of major-general to their

victorious leader; that no officer should be deprived of his commission

without the judgment of a court-martial; and that the government should be

settled in a house of representatives and a permanent senate. Hazlerig,

a man of stern republican principles, and of a temper hasty, morose, and

ungovernable, obtained a sight of this paper, denounced[a] it as an attempt

to subvert the parliament, and moved that Lambert, its author, should be

sent to the Tower; but his violence was checked by the declaration of

Fleetwood, that Lambert knew nothing of its origin; and the house contented

itself with ordering all copies of the obnoxious petition to be delivered

up, and with resolving[b] that "to augment the number of general officers

was needless, chargeable, and dangerous."[1] From that moment a breach was

inevitable. The house, to gratify the soldiers, had advanced their daily

pay; and with the view of discharging their arrears, had raised[c] the

monthly assessment from thirty-five thousand pounds to one hundred thousand

pounds.[2] But the military leaders were not to be diverted from their

purpose. Meetings were daily and nightly held at Wallingford House; and

another petition with two hundred and thirty signatures was presented by

Desborough, accompanied by all the field-officers in the metropolis; In

most points it was similar to the former; but it contained a demand that,

whosoever should afterwards "groundlessly and causelessly inform the house

against their servants, thereby creating jealousies, and casting scandalous

imputations upon them, should be

[Footnote 1: Journ., Aug. 23, Sept. 22, 23. Ludlow, ii. 223, 227, 233,

244.]

[Footnote 2: Ibid., May 31, Aug. 18, Sept. 1]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Sept. 22.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Sept. 23.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. Oct. 5.]

brought to examination, justice, and condign punishment." This was a

sufficient intimation to Hazlerig and his party to provide for their own

safety. Three regiments, through the medium of their officers, had already

made the tender of their services for the protection of the house; Monk,

from Scotland, and Ludlow, from Ireland, wrote that their respective armies

were animated with similar sentiments; and a vote was passed and ordered

to be published,[a] declaring it to be treason to levy money on the people

without the previous consent of parliament, a measure which, as all the

existing taxes were to expire on the first day of the ensuing year, made

the military dependent for their future subsistence on the pleasure of

the party. Hazlerig, thus fortified, deemed himself a match for his

adversaries; the next morning he boldly threw down the gauntlet;[b] by one

vote, Lambert, Desborough, six colonels, and one major, were deprived of

their Commissions for having subscribed the copy of the petition sent to

Colonel Okey; and, by a second, Fleetwood was dismissed from his office

of commander-in-chief, and made president of a board of seven members

established for the government of the army. Aware, however, that he might

expect resistance, the republican chieftain called his friends around him

during the night; and, at the dawn of day, it was discovered that he had

taken military possession of King-street and the Palace-yard with two

regiments of foot and four troops of horse, who protested aloud that they

would live and die with the parliament.[1][c]

[Footnote 1: Journals, Sept. 28, Oct. 5, 10, 11, 12. Ludlow, ii. 229, 247.

Carte's Letters, ii, 246. Thurloe, vii. 755. Declaration of General Council

of Officers, 9-16. True Narrative of the Proceedings in Parliament, Council

of State, &c., published by special order, 1659. Printed by John Redmayne.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Oct 11.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Oct 12.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1659. Oct 13.]



Lambert mustered about three thousand men. His first care was to intercept

the access of members to the house, and to prevent the egress of the

militia from the city. He then marched to Westminster. Meeting the speaker,

who was attended by his guard, he ordered the officer on duty to dismount,

gave the command to Major Creed, one of those who had been deprived of

their commissions by the preceding vote, and scornfully directed him to

conduct the "lord-general" to Whitehall, whence he was permitted to return

to his own house. In Westminster, the two parties faced each other; but the

ardour of the privates did not correspond with that of the leaders; and,

having so often fought in the same ranks, they showed no disposition to

imbrue their hands in each other's blood. In the mean time the council

of state assembled: on the one side Lambert and Desborough, on the other

Hazlerig and Morley, appeared to support their pretensions; much time

was spent in complaint and recrimination, much in hopeless attempts to

reconcile the parties; but the cause of the military continued to make

converts; the advocates of the "rump," aware that to resist was fruitless,

consented to yield; and it was stipulated that the house should cease to

sit, that the council of officers should provide for the public peace,

arrange a new form of government, and submit it to the approbation of a new

parliament. An order, that the forces on both sides should retire to their

respective quarters, was gladly obeyed; the men mixed together as friends

and brothers, and reciprocally promised never more to draw the sword

against each other.[1]

[Footnote 1: Whitelock, 685. Journals, Oct. 13. Clar. Pap. iii. 581, 590.

Ludlow, ii. 247-251. Ludlow's account differs considerably from that

by Whitelock. But the former was in Ireland, the latter present at the

council.]



Thus a second time the supreme authority devolved on the meeting of

officers at Wallingford House. They immediately established their favourite

plan for the government of the army. The office of commander-in-chief,

in its plenitude of power, was restored to Fleetwood; the rank of

major-general of the forces in Great Britain was given to Lambert; and all

those officers who refused to subscribe a new engagement, were removed from

their commands. At the same time they annulled by their supreme authority

all proceedings in parliament on the 10th, 11th, and 12th of October,

vindicated their own conduct in a publication with the title of "The Army's

Plea,"[1] vested the provisional exercise of the civil authority in a

committee of safety of twenty-three members, and denounced the penalties of

treason against all who should refuse to obey its orders, or should venture

to levy forces without its permission. An attempt was even made to replace

Richard Cromwell in the protectorial dignity;[a] for this purpose he came

from Hampshire to London, escorted by three troops of horse; but his

supporters in the meeting were out-voted by a small majority, and he

retired to Hampton Court.[2]

[Footnote 1: See Declaration of the General Council of Officers, 17. The

Army's Plea for its Present Practice, printed by Henry Hills, printer to

the army, 1659, is in many parts powerfully written. The principal argument

is, that as the parliament, though bound by the solemn league and covenant

to defend the king's person, honour, and dignity, did not afterwards

scruple to arraign, condemn, and execute him because he had broken his

trust; so the army, though they had engaged to be true and faithful to the

parliament, might lawfully rise against it, when they found that it did not

preserve the just rights and liberties of the people. This condition was

implied in the engagement; otherwise the making of the engagement would

have been a sin, and the keeping thereof would have been a sin also, and so

an adding of sin to sin.]

[Footnote 2: Whitelock, 685, 686. Ludlow, ii. 250, 286, 287. Clar. Pap.

591. At the restoration, Richard, to escape from his creditors, fled to the

continent; and, after an expatriation of almost twenty years, returned to

England to the neighbourhood of Cheshunt, where he died in 1713, at the age

of eighty-six.--Noble, i. 228.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Oct 26.]

Of all the changes which had surprised and perplexed the nation since

the death of the last king, none had been received with such general

disapprobation as the present. It was not that men lamented the removal of

the Rump; but they feared the capricious and arbitrary rule of the army;

and, when they contrasted their unsettled state with the tranquillity

formerly enjoyed under the monarchy, many were not backward in the

expression of their wishes for the restoration of the ancient line of their

princes. The royalists laboured to improve this favourable disposition; yet

their efforts might have been fruitless, had the military been united among

themselves. But among the officers there were several who had already made

their peace with Charles by the promise of their services, and many

who secretly retained a strong attachment to Hazlerig and his party in

opposition to Lambert. In Ireland, Barrow, who had been sent as their

representative from Wallingford House, found the army so divided and

wavering, that each faction alternately obtained a short and precarious

superiority; and in Scotland, Cobbet, who arrived there on a similar

mission, was, with seventeen other officers who approved of his proposals,

imprisoned by order of Monk.[1]

From this moment the conduct of Monk will claim a considerable share of the

reader's attention. Ever since the march of Cromwell in pursuit of the king

to Worcester he had commanded in Scotland; where, instead of concerning

himself with the intrigues and parties in England, he appeared to have no

other occupation

[Footnote 1: Ludlow, ii. 237, 252, 259, 262, 300. Clar. Pap. iii. 591.

Carte's Letters, 266.]

than the duties of his place, to preserve the discipline of his army,

and enforce the obedience of the Scots. His despatches to Cromwell from

Scotland form a striking contrast with those from the other officers of the

time. There is in them no parade of piety, no flattery of the protector, no

solicitation for favours. They are short, dry, and uninteresting, confined

entirely to matters of business, and those only of indispensable necessity.

In effect, the distinctive characteristic of the man was an impenetrable

secrecy.[1] Whatever were his predilections or opinions, his wishes or

designs, he kept them locked up within his own breast. He had no confidant,

nor did he ever permit himself to be surprised into an unguarded avowal.

Hence all parties, royalists, protectorists, and republicans, claimed him

for their own, though that claim was grounded on their hopes, not on

his conduct. Charles had been induced to make to him repeatedly the most

tempting offers, which were supported by the solicitations of his wife and

his domestic chaplain; Monk listened to them without displeasure, though he

never unbosomed himself to the agents or to his chaplain so far as to put

himself in their power. Cromwell had obtained some information of these

intrigues; but, unable to discover any real ground of suspicion, he

contented himself with putting Monk on his guard by a bantering postscript

to one of his letters. "Tis said," he added, "there is a cunning fellow in

Scotland,

[Footnote 1: "His natural taciturnity was such, that most of his friends,

who thought they knew him best, looked upon George Monk to have no other

craft in him than that of a plain soldier, who would obey the parliament's

orders, and see that his own were obeyed."--Price, Mystery and Method of

his Majesty's happy Restoration, in Select Tracts relating to the Civil

Wars in England, published by Baron Maseres, ii. 700.]

called George Monk, who lies in wait there to serve Charles Stuart; pray

use your diligence to take him and send him up to me."[1] After the fall

of the protector Richard, he became an object of greater distrust. To

undermine his power, Fleetwood ordered two regiments of horse attached

to the Scottish army to return to England; and the republicans, when the

military commissions were issued by the speaker, removed a great number of

his officers, and supplied their places with creatures of their own. Monk

felt these affronts: discontent urged him to seek revenge; and, when he

understood that Booth was at the head of a considerable force, he dictated

a letter to the speaker, complaining of the proceedings of parliament, and

declaring that, as they had abandoned the real principles of the old cause,

they must not expect the support of his army. His object was to animate the

insurgents and embarrass their adversaries; but, on the very morning

on which the letter was to be submitted for signature to his principal

officers, the news of Lambert's victory arrived;[a] the dangerous

instrument was instantly destroyed, and the secret most religiously kept by

the few who had been privy to the intention of the general.[2]

To this abortive attempt Monk, notwithstanding his wariness, had been

stimulated by his brother, a clergyman of Cornwall, who visited him with a

message from Sir John Grenville by commission from Charles Stuart.

After the failure of Booth, the general dismissed him with a letter of

congratulation to the parliament, but without any answer to Grenville, and

under an oath to keep secret whatever he had learnt

[Footnote 1: Price, 712.]

[Footnote 2: Id. 711, 716, 721.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. August 23.]

respecting the past, or the intended projects of his brother.[1] But the

moment that Monk heard of the expulsion of the members,[a] and of the

superior rank conferred on Lambert, he determined to appear openly as the

patron of the vanquished, under the alluring, though ambiguous, title of

"asserter of the ancient laws and liberties of the country." Accordingly,

he secured with trusty garrisons the castle of Edinburgh and the citadel

of Leith,[b] sent a strong detachment to occupy Berwick, and took the

necessary measures to raise and discipline a numerous force of cavalry. At

Leith was held a general council of officers; they approved of his object,

engaged to stand by him, and announced their determination, by letters

directed to Lenthall, the speaker, to the council at Wallingford House, and

to the commanders of the fleet in the Downs, and of the army in Ireland.

It excited, however, no small surprise, that the general, while he thus

professed to espouse the defence of the parliament, cashiered all the

officers introduced by the parliament into his army, and restored all

those who had been expelled. The more discerning began to suspect his real

intentions;[2] but Hazlerig and his party were too

[Footnote 1: All that Grenville could learn from the messenger was, that

his brother regretted the failure of Booth, and would oppose the arbitrary

attempts of the military in England; an answer which, though favourable

as far as it went, still left the king in uncertainty as to his real

intentions.--Clar. Pap. iii. 618.]

[Footnote 2: Ludlow, ii. 269. Whitelock, 686, 689, 691. Price, 736, 743.

Skinner, 106-109. Monk loudly asserted the contrary. "I do call God

to witness," he says in the letter to the speaker, Oct. 20, "that the

asserting of a commonwealth is the only intent of my heart."--True

Narrative, 28. When Price remonstrated with him, he replied: "You see who

are about me and write these things. I must not show any dislike of them.

I perceive they are jealous enough of me already."--Price, 746. The fact

probably was, that Monk was neither royalist nor republican: that he sought

only his own interest, and had determined to watch every turn of affairs,

and to declare at last in favour of that party which appeared most likely

to obtain the superiority.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Oct. 17.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Oct. 18.]

elated to dwell on the circumstance, and, under the promise of his

support, began to organize the means of resistance against their military

oppressors.

Monk soon discovered that he was embarked in a most hazardous undertaking.

The answers to his letters disapproved of his conduct; and the knowledge of

these answers kindled among his followers a spirit of disaffection which

led to numerous desertions. From the general of an army obedient to his

commands, he had dwindled into the leader of a volunteer force, which it

was necessary to coax and persuade. Two councils were formed, one of

the colonels of the longest standing, the other of all the commissioned

officers. The first perused the public despatches received by the general,

and wrote the answers, which were signed by him as the chairman; the other

was consulted on all measures respecting the conduct of the army, and

confirmed or rejected the opinion of the colonels by the majority of

voices. But if Monk was controlled by this arrangement, it served to screen

him from suspicion. The measures adopted were taken as the result of the

general will.

To the men at Wallingford House it became of the first importance to win

by intimidation, or to reduce by force, this formidable opponent. Lambert

marched against him from London at the head of seven thousand men; but the

mind of the major-general was distracted by doubts and suspicions; and,

before his departure, he exacted a solemn promise from Fleetwood to agree

to no accommodation, either with the king, or with Hazlerig, till he had

previously received the advice and concurrence of Lambert himself.[1] To

Monk delay was as necessary as expedition was desirable to his opponents.

In point of numbers and experience the force under his command was no

match for that led by Lambert, but his magazines and treasury were amply

supplied, while his adversary possessed not money enough to keep his army

together for more than a few weeks. Before the major-general reached

Newcastle, he met three deputies from Monk on their way to treat with the

council in the capital. As no arguments could induce them to open the

negotiation with him, he allowed them to proceed, and impatiently awaited

the result. After much discussion, an agreement was concluded in London;

but Monk, instead of ratifying it with his signature, discovered,[a]

or pretended to discover, in it much that was obscure or ambiguous, or

contrary to the instructions received by the deputies; his council agreed

with him in opinion; and a second negotiation was opened with Lambert at

Newcastle, to obtain from him an explanation of the meaning of the officers

in the metropolis. Thus delay was added to delay; and Monk improved the

time to dismiss even the privates whose sentiments were suspected, and to

fill up the vacancies in the regiments of infantry by levies among the

Scots. At the same time he called a convention of the Scottish estates at

Berwick, of two representatives from each county and one from each borough,

recommended to them the peace of the country during his absence, and

obtained from them the grant of a year's arrears of their taxes, amounting

to sixty thousand pounds, in

[Footnote 1: See the Conferences of Ludlow and Whitelock with Fleetwood,

Ludlow, ii. 277; Whitelock, 690.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Nov. 19.]

addition to the excise and customs. He then fixed his head-quarters at

Coldstream.[1]

In the mean while the detention of Lambert in the north by the artifices of

Monk had given occasion to many important events in the south. Within

the city several encounters had taken place between the military and the

apprentices;[2] a free parliament had become the general cry; and the

citizens exhorted each other to pay no taxes imposed by any other

authority. Lawson, though he wavered at first, declared against the army,

and advanced with his squadron up the river as far as Gravesend. Hazlerig

and Morley were admitted into Portsmouth by the governor, were joined by

the force sent against them by Fleetwood, and marched towards London, that

they might open a communication with the fleet in the river. Alarm produced

in the committee of safety the most contradictory councils. A voice

ventured to suggest the restoration of Charles Stuart; but it was replied

that their offences against the family of Stuart were of too black a dye to

be forgiven; that the king might be lavish of promises now that he stood in

need of their services; but that the vengeance of parliament would absolve

him from the obligation, when the monarchy should once be established. The

final resolution was to call a new parliament against the 24th of January,

and to appoint twenty-one conservators of the public peace during the

interval. But they

[Footnote 1: Price, 741-744. Whitelock, 688, 699. Ludlow, 269, 271, 273.

Skinner, 161, 164.]

[Footnote 2: The posts occupied by the army within the city were, "St.

Paul's Church, the Royall Exchange, Peeter-house in Aldersgate-street, and

Bernet's Castle, Gresham Coledge, Sion Coledge. Without London, were the

Musses, Sumersett-house, Whitehall, St. James's, Scotland-yeard."--MS.

Diary by Thomas Rugge.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Dec. 8.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Dec. 17.]

reckoned on an authority which they no longer possessed. The fidelity

of the common soldiers had been shaken by the letters of Monk, and the

declaration of Lawson. Putting themselves under the command of the officers

who had been lately dismissed, they mustered[a] in Lincoln's Inn Fields,

marched before the house of Lenthall in Chancery Lame, and saluted him

with three volleys of musketry as the representative of the parliament and

lord-general of the army. Desborough, abandoned by his regiment, fled in

despair towards Lambert; and Fleetwood, who for some days had done nothing

but weep and pray, and complain that "the Lord had spit in his face,"

tamely endeavoured to disarm by submission the resentment of his

adversaries. He sought the speaker, fell on his knees before him, and

surrendered his commission.[1]

Thus the Rump was again triumphant. The members, with Lenthall at their

head, resumed[b] possession of the house amidst the loud acclamations

of the soldiery. Their first care was to establish a committee for the

government of the army, and to order the regiments in the north to separate

and march to their respective quarters. Of those among their colleagues who

had supported the late committee of safety, they excused some, and punished

others by suspension, or exclusion, or imprisonment: orders were sent to

Lambert, and the most active of his associates, to withdraw from the army

to their homes, and then instructions were given to the magistrates to take

them into custody. A council of state was appointed, and into the oath to

be taken by the

[Footnote 1: Ludlow, 268, 276, 282, 287, 289, 290, 296, 298. Whitelock,

689, 690, 691. Clar. Pap. 625, 629, 636, 641, 647.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1659. Dec. 24.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1659. Dec. 26.]

members was introduced a new and most comprehensive abjuration of kingship

and the family of Stuart. All officers commissioned during the interruption

by any other authority than that of Monk were broken; the army was entirely

remodelled; and the time of the house was daily occupied by the continued

introduction of officers to receive their commissions in person from the

hand of the speaker.[1]

In the mean while, Monk, to subdue or disperse the army of Lambert, had

raised up a new and formidable enemy in his rear. Lord Fairfax was become

a convert to the cause of monarchy; to him the numerous royalists in

Yorkshire looked up as leader; and he, on the solemn assurance of Monk that

he would join him within twelve days or perish in the attempt, undertook to

call together his friends, and to surprise the city of York. On the first

day of the new year,[a] each performed his promise. The gates of York were

thrown open to Fairfax by the Cavaliers confined within its walls;[2] and

Monk, with his army, crossed the Tweed on his march against the advanced

posts of the enemy. Thus the flame of civil war was again kindled in the

north; within two days it was extinguished. The messenger from parliament

ordered Lambert's forces to withdraw to their respective quarters.

Dispirited by the defection of the military in the south, they dared not

disobey: at Northallerton the officers bade adieu with tears to their

general; and Lambert retired in privacy to a house which he possessed in

the county. Still, though the weather was

[Footnote 1: Journals, Dec. 26, Jan. 31.]

[Footnote 2: That the rising under Fairfax was in reality a rising of

royalists, and prompted by the promises of Monk, is plain from the

narrative of Monkton, in the Lansdowne MSS. No. 988, f. 320, 334. See also

Price, 748.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Jan. 1.]

severe, though the roads were deeply covered with snow, Monk continued[a]

his march; and, at York, spent five days in consultation with Fairfax; but

to the advice of that nobleman, that he should remain there, assume the

command of their united forces, and proclaim the king, he replied that,

in the present temper of his officers, it would prove a dangerous, a

pernicious, experiment. On the arrival of what he had long expected, an

invitation to Westminster, he resumed his march, and Fairfax, having

received the thanks of the parliament, disbanded[b] his insurrectionary

force.[1]

At York, the general had caned[c] an officer who charged him with the

design of restoring the kingly government; at Nottingham, he prevented with

difficulty the officers from signing an engagement to obey the parliament

in all things "except the bringing in of Charles Stuart;" and at Leicester,

he was compelled to suffer[d] a letter to be written in his name to the

petitioners from Devonshire, stating his opinion that the monarchy could

not be re-established, representing the danger of recalling the members

excluded in 1648, and inculcating the duty of obedience to the parliament

as it was then constituted.[2] Here he was met by two of the most active

members, Scot and Robinson, who had been commissioned to accompany him

during his journey, under the pretence of doing him honour, but, in

reality, to sound his disposition, and to act as spies on his conduct.

He received them with respect as the representatives of the sovereign

authority; and so flattered were they by his attentions, so duped by his

wariness, that they could not see through the veil which he spread over his

intentions.

[Footnote 1: Price, 749-753. Skinner, 196, 200, 205. Journals, Jan. 6.]

[Footnote 2: Ibid. 754. Kennet's Register, 32.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Jan. 12.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. Jan. 16.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1660. Jan. 19.]

[Sidenote d: A.D. 1660. Jan. 23.]

As he advanced, he received at every stage addresses from boroughs, cities,

and counties, praying him to restore the excluded members, and to procure

a free and a full parliament. With much affectation of humility, Monk

referred the deputies to the two delegates of the supreme power, who

haughtily rebuked them for their officiousness, while the friends of

Monk laboured to keep alive their hopes by remote hints and obscure

predictions.[1]

To lull the jealousy of the parliament, Monk had taken with him from York

no more than five thousand men, a force considerably inferior to that which

was quartered in London and Westminster. But from St. Alban's he wrote[a]

to the speaker, requesting that five of the regiments in the capital

might be removed before his arrival, alleging the danger of quarrels and

seduction, if his troops were allowed to mix with those who had been so

recently engaged in rebellion. The order was instantly made; but the men

refused[b] to obey. Why, they asked, were they to leave their quarters for

the accommodation of strangers? Why were they to be sent from the capital,

while their pay was several weeks in arrear? The royalists laboured to

inflame the mutineers, and Lambert was on the watch, prepared to place

himself at their head; but the distribution of a sum of money appeased

their murmurs; they consented to march; and the next morning[c] the general

entered at the head of his army, and proceeded to the quarters assigned to

him at Whitehall.[2]

Soon after his arrival, he was invited to attend and

[Footnote 1: Price, 754. Merc. Polit. No. 604. Philips, 595. Journals, Jan.

16.]

[Footnote 2: Price, 755, 757, 758. Jour. Jan. 30. Skinner, 219-221.

Philips, 594, 595, 596. Clar. Pap. iii. 666, 668. Pepys, i. 19, 21.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Jan. 28.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. Feb. 2.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1660. Feb. 3.]

receive the thanks of the house. A chair had been placed for him within

the bar: he stood uncovered behind it; and, in reply[a] to the speaker,

extenuated his own services, related the answers which he had given to

the addresses, warned the parliament against a multiplicity of oaths and

engagements, prayed them not to give any share of power to the Cavaliers or

fanatics, and recommended to their care the settlement of Ireland and the

administration of justice in Scotland. If there was much in this speech

to please, there was also much that gave offence. Scot observed that the

servant had already learned to give directions to his masters.[1]

As a member of the council of state, he was summoned to abjure the house of

Stuart, according to the late order of parliament. He demurred. Seven of

the counsellors, he observed, had not yet abjured, and he wished to know

their reasons, for the satisfaction of his own conscience. Experience had

shown that such oaths were violated as easily as they were taken, and to

him it appeared an offence against Providence to swear never to acquiesce

in that which Providence might possibly ordain. He had given the strongest

proofs of his devotion to parliament: if these were not sufficient, let

them try him again; he was ready to give more.[2]

[Footnote 1: Journals, Feb. 6. New Parl. Hist. iii. 1575. Philips, 597.

Price, 759. The Lord-general Monk, his Speech. Printed by J. Macock, 1660.]

[Footnote 2: Gumble, 228. Price, 759, 760. Philips, 595. About this time,

a parcel of letters to the king, written by different persons in different

ciphers, and intrusted to the care of a Mr. Leonard, was intercepted by

Lockhart at Dunkirk, and sent by him to the council. When the writers

were first told that the letters had been deciphered, they laughed at the

information as of a thing impracticable; but were soon undeceived by the

decipherer, who sent to them by the son of the bishop of Ely copies of

their letters in cipher, with a correct interlineary explanation of

each. They were astonished and alarmed; and, to save themselves from the

consequences of the discovery, purchased of him two of the original letters

at the price of three hundred pounds.--Compare Barwick's Life, 171, and

App. 402, 412, 415, 422, with the correspondence on the subject in the

Clarendon Papers, iii. 668, 681, 696, 700, 715. After this, all letters of

importance were conveyed through the hands of Mrs. Mary Knatchbull, the

abbess of the English convent in Gand.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 6.]



The sincerity of this declaration was soon put to the test. The loyal party

in the city, especially among the moderate Presbyterians, had long been on

the increase. At the last elections the common council had been filled with

members of a new character; and the declaration which they issued demanded

"a full and free parliament, according to the ancient and fundamental laws

of the land." Of the assembly sitting in Westminster, as it contained no

representative from the city, no notice was taken; the taxes which it

had imposed were not paid; and the common council, as if it had been

an independent authority, received and answered addresses from the

neighbouring counties. This contumacy, in the opinion of the parliamentary

leaders, called for prompt and exemplary punishment; and it was artfully

suggested that, by making Monk the minister of their vengeance, they

would open a wide breach between him and their opponents. Two hours after

midnight he received[a] an order to march into the city, to arrest eleven

of the principal citizens, to remove the posts and chains which had lately

been fixed in the streets, and to destroy the portcullises and the gates.

After a moment's hesitation, he resolved to obey, rather than hazard the

loss of his commission. The citizens received him with groans and hisses;

the soldiers murmured; the officers tendered their resignations. He merely

replied that his orders left nothing to his discretion; but the reply was

made with a sternness of

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 9.]

tone, and a gloominess of countenance, which showed, and probably was

intended to show, that he acted with reluctance and with self-reproach.[1]

As soon as the posts and chains were removed, Monk suggested, in a letter

to the speaker, that enough had been done to subdue the refractory spirit

of the citizens. But the parliamentary leaders were not satisfied: they

voted that he should execute his former orders; and the demolition of the

gates and portcullises was effected. The soldiers loudly proclaimed

their discontent: the general, mortified and ashamed, though he had been

instructed to quarter them in the city, led them back to Whitehall.[2]

There, on the review of these proceedings, he thought that he discovered

proofs of a design, first to commit him with the citizens, and then to

discard him entirely. For the house, while he was so ungraciously employed,

had received, with a show of favour, a petition from the celebrated

Praise-God Barebone, praying that no man might sit in parliament, or hold

any public office, who refused to abjure the pretensions of Charles Stuart,

or of any other single person. Now this was the very case of the general,

and his suspicions were confirmed by the reasoning of his confidential

advisers. With their aid, a letter to the speaker was prepared[a] the same

evening, and approved the next morning by the council of officers. In

it the latter were made to complain that they had been rendered the

instruments of personal resentment against the citizens, and to require

that by the following Friday every vacancy in the house should be filled

up, preparatory to its

[Footnote 1: Journ. Feb. 9. Price, 761. Ludlow, ii. 336. Clar. Pap. iii.

674, 691. Gumble, 236. Skinner, 231-237.]

[Footnote 2: Journ. Feb. 9. Philips, 599.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 10.]

subsequent dissolution and the calling of a new parliament. Without waiting

for an answer, Monk marched back into Finsbury Fields: at his request, a

common council (that body had recently been dissolved by a vote of the

parliament) was summoned; and the citizens heard from the mouth of the

general that he, who yesterday had come among them as an enemy by the

orders of others, was come that day as a friend by his own choice; and that

his object was to unite his fortune with theirs, and by their assistance to

obtain a full and free parliament for the nation. This speech was received

with the loudest acclamations. The bells were tolled; the soldiers were

feasted; bonfires were lighted; and among the frolics of the night was "the

roasting of the rump," a practical joke which long lived in the traditions

of the city. Scot and Robinson, who had been sent to lead back the general

to Whitehall, slunk away in secrecy, that they might escape the indignation

of the populace.[1]

At Westminster, the parliamentary leaders affected a calmness and

intrepidity which they did not feel. Of the insult offered to their

authority they took no notice; but, as an admonition to Monk, they brought

in a bill[a] to appoint his rival, Fleetwood, commander-in-chief in England

and Scotland. The intervention of the Sunday allowed more sober counsels to

prevail.

[Footnote 1: Price, 765-768. Clar. Pap. iii. 681, 692, 714. Ludlow, 337.

Gumble, 249. Skinner, 237-243. Old Parl. Hist. xxii. 94. Pepys, i. 24,

25. "At Strand-bridge I could at one time tell thirty-one fires; in

King-street, seven or eight, and all along burning, and roasting, and

drinking for rumps; there being rumps tied upon sticks, and carried up and

down. The butchers at the May-pole in the Strand rang a peal with their

knives, when they were going to sacrifice their rump. On Ludgate-hill there

was one turning of the spit that had a rump tied to it, and another basting

of it. Indeed it was past imagination."--Ibid. 28.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 11.]



They solicited the general to return to Whitehall; they completed the bill

for the qualifications of candidates and electors; and, on the day fixed by

the letter of the officers, ordered[a] writs to be issued for the filling

up of the vacancies in the representation. This measure had been forced

upon them; yet they had the ingenuity to make it subservient to their own

interest, by inserting a provision in the act, that no man should choose or

be chosen, who had not already bound himself to support a republican form

of government. But immediately the members excluded in 1648 brought forward

their claim to sit, and Monk assumed the appearance of the most perfect

indifference between the parties. At his invitation, nine of the leaders on

each side argued the question before him and his officers; and the result

was, that the latter expressed their willingness to support the secluded

members, on condition that they should pledge themselves to settle the

government of the army, to raise money to pay the arrears, to issue

writs for a new parliament to sit on the 20th of April, and to dissolve

themselves before that period. The general returned[b] to Whitehall;

the secluded members attended his summons; and, after a long speech,

declaratory of his persuasion that a republican form of government and a

moderate presbyterian kirk were necessary to secure and perpetuate the

tranquillity of the nation, he advised them to go and resume their seats.

Accompanied by a great number of officers, they walked to the house; the

guard, under the command of Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper, opened to let

them pass; and no opposition was made by the speaker or the members.[1]

Hazlerig, however, and the

[Footnote 1: Journals, Feb. 11, 13, 15, 17, 21. Price, 768-773. Ludlow, ii.

345, 351, 353. Skinner, 256-264. Clar. Pap. 663, 682, 688. Gumble, 260,

263. Philips, 600. The number of secluded members then living was one

hundred and ninety-four, of members sitting or allowed to sit by the orders

of the house, eighty-nine.--"A Declaration of the True State of the Matter

of Fact," 57.]

[Sideline a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 17.]

[Sideline b: A.D. 1660. Feb. 21.]

more devoted of his adherents, rose and withdrew--a fortunate secession for

the royalists; otherwise, with the addition of those among the restored

members who adhered to a commonwealth, the republicans might on many

questions have still commanded a majority.[1]

To the Cavaliers, the conduct of Monk on this occasion proved a source

of the most distressing perplexity. On the one hand, by introducing the

secluded members he had greatly advanced the cause of royalty. For though

Holles, Pierpoint, Popham, and their friends still professed the doctrines

which they had maintained during the treaty in the Isle of Wight, though

they manifested the same hatred of popery and prelacy, though they still

inculcated the necessity of limiting the prerogative in the choice of the

officers of state and in the command of the army, yet they were royalists

by principle, and had, several of them, made the most solemn promises to

the exiled king of labouring strenuously for his restoration. On the other

hand, that Monk at the very time when he gave the law without control,

should declare so loudly in favour of a republican government and

a presbyterian kirk, could not fail to alarm both Charles and his

abettors.[2] Neither was this the only instance: to all, Cavaliers or

republicans, who approached him to discover his intentions, he uniformly

professed the same sentiments, occasionally confirming his professions with

oaths and imprecations. To explain this inconsistency between

[Footnote 1: Hutchinson, 362.]

[Footnote 2: Clar. Hist. iii. 720, 721, 723, 724; Papers, ii. 698.]

the tendency of his actions and the purport of his language, we are told by

those whom he admitted to his private counsels, that it was forced upon him

by the necessity of his situation; that, without it, he must have forfeited

the confidence of the army, which believed its safety and interest to be

intimately linked with the existence of the commonwealth. According to

Ludlow, the best soldier and statesman in the opposite party, Monk had

in view an additional object, to deceive the suspicions and divert the

vigilance of his adversaries; and so successfully had he imposed on the

credulity of many (Hazlerig himself was of the number), that, in defiance

of every warning, they blindly trusted to his sincerity, till their eyes

were opened by the introduction of the secluded members.[1]

In parliament the Presbyterian party now ruled without opposition. They

annulled[a] all votes relative to their own expulsion from the house in

1648; they selected a new council of state, in which the most influential

members were royalists; they appointed Monk commander-in-chief of the

forces in the three kingdoms, and joint commander of the fleet with Admiral

Montague; they granted him the sum of twenty thousand pounds in lieu of

the palace at Hampton Court, settled on him by the republican party;

they discharged[b] from confinement, and freed from the penalty of

sequestration, Sir George Booth and his associates, a great number of

Cavaliers, and the Scottish lords taken after the battle at Worcester;

they restored the common council, borrowed sixty thousand pounds for the

immediate pay of the army,

[Footnote 1: Price, 773. Ludlow, 349, 355. Clar. Pap. iii. 678, 697, 703,

711.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. Feb. 21.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. March.]

declared the Presbyterian confession of faith to be that of the church of

England, ordered copies of the solemn league and covenant to be hung up in

all churches, offered rewards for the apprehension of Catholic priests,

urged the execution of the laws against Catholic recusants, and fixed the

15th of March for their own dissolution, the 25th of April for the meeting

of a new parliament.[1]

Here, however, a serious difficulty arose. The House of Commons (according

to the doctrine of the secluded members, it could be nothing more) was

but a single branch of the legislature. By what right could it pretend to

summon a parliament? Ought not the House of Lords, the peers who had been

excluded in 1649, to concur? Or rather, to proceed according to law, ought

not the king either to appoint a commission to hold a parliament, as was

usually done in Ireland, or to name a guardian invested with such power,

as was the practice formerly, when our monarchs occasionally resided in

France? But, on this point, Monk was inflexible. He placed guards at the

door of the House of Lords to prevent the entrance of the peers; and he

refused to listen to any expedient which might imply an acknowledgment of

the royal authority. To the arguments urged by others, he replied,[a] that

the parliament according to law determined by the death of Charles I.; that

the present house could justify its sitting on no other ground but that of

necessity, which did not apply to the House of Lords; and that it was in

vain to expect the submission of the army to a parliament called by royal

authority. The military had, with reluctance, consented to the restoration

of

[Footnote 1: Journals, passim.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. March 3.]

the secluded members; and to ask more of them at present was to hazard all

the advantages which had hitherto been obtained.[1]

Encouraged by the downfall of the republicans, the royalists throughout

the country expressed their sentiments without restraint. In some places

Charles was proclaimed by the populace; several ministers openly prayed

for him in the churches: the common council, in their address, declared

themselves not averse to his restoration; and the house itself was induced

to repeal[a] the celebrated engagement in favour of a commonwealth, without

a single person or a house of peers, and to embody under trusty officers

the militia of the city and the counties, as a counterpoise to the

republican interest in the army. The judges of the late king, and the

purchasers of forfeited property, began to tremble. They first tempted the

ambition of the lord-general with the offer of the sovereign authority.[2]

Rejected by him, they appealed to the military; they represented the loss

of their arrears,

[Footnote 1: Clar. Pap. iii. 704. Ludlow, 364, 365. Price, 773.]

[Footnote 2: Gumble, 270. Two offers of assistance were made to the

general, on the supposition that he might aspire to the supreme power; one

from the republicans, which I have mentioned, another from Bordeaux, the

French ambassador, in the name of Cardinal Mazarin. On one of these offers

he was questioned by Sir Anthony Ashley Copper in the council of state. If

we may believe Clarges, one of his secret advisers, it was respecting the

former which Clarges mentioned to Cooper. With respect to the offer from

Bordeaux, he tells us that it was made through Clarges himself, and

scornfully rejected by Monk, who nevertheless consented to receive a

visit from Bordeaux, on condition that the subject should not be

mentioned.--Philips, 602, 604. Locke, on the contrary, asserts that Monk

accepted the offer of the French minister; that his wife, through loyalty

to the king, betrayed the secret; and that Cooper put to the general such

searching questions that he was confused, and, in proof of his fidelity,

took away the commissions of several officers of whom the council was

jealous.--Memoirs of Shaftesbury, in Kennet's Register, 86. Locke, ix, 279.

See note (K).]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. March 10.]

and of the property which they had acquired, as the infallible consequences

of the restoration of the royal exile; and they so far wrought on the fears

of the officers, that an engagement to oppose all attempts to set up a

single person was presented[a] to Monk for his signature, with a request

that he would solicit the concurrence of the parliament. A second

council of officers was held the next morning;[b] the general urged the

inexpediency of troubling the house with new questions, when it was on

the point of dissolving itself; and by the address and influence of his

friends, though with considerable difficulty, he procured the suppression

of the obnoxious paper. In a short time he ordered the several officers

to join their respective regiments, appointed a commission to inspect and

reform the different corps, expelled all the officers whose sentiments he

had reason to distrust, and then demanded and obtained from the army an

engagement to abstain from all interference in matters of state, and to

submit all things to the authority of the new parliament.[1]

Nineteen years and a half had now elapsed since the long parliament first

assembled--years of revolution and bloodshed, during which the nation had

made the trial of almost every form of government, to return at last to

that form from which it had previously departed. On the 16th of March,

one day later than was originally fixed, its existence, which had been

illegally prolonged since the death of Charles I., was terminated[c] by

its own act.[2] The reader is already acquainted with its history. For the

glorious stand

[Footnote 1: Philips, 603, 606. Price, 781. Kennet's Reg. 113. Thurloe,

vii. 852, 859, 870. Pepys, i. 43. Skinner, 279-284.]

[Footnote 2: Journals, March 16.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. March 14.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. March 15.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1660. March 16.]

which it made against the encroachments of the crown, it deserves both

admiration and gratitude; its subsequent proceedings assumed a more

ambiguous character; ultimately they led to anarchy and military despotism.

But, whatever were its merits or demerits, of both posterity has reaped the

benefit. To the first, we are indebted for many of the rights which we

now enjoy; by the second, we are warned of the evils which result from

political changes effected by violence, and in opposition to the habits and

predilections of the people.

Monk had now spent more than two months in England, and still his

intentions were covered with a veil of mystery, which no ingenuity,

either of the royalists or of the republicans, could penetrate. Sir John

Grenville, with whom the reader is already acquainted, paid frequent visits

to him at St. James's; but the object of the Cavalier was suspected, and

his attempts[a] to obtain a private interview were defeated by the caution

of the general. After the dissolution, Morrice, the confidential friend

of both, brought them together, and Grenville delivered to Monk a most

flattering letter from the king. He received and perused it with respect.

This was, he observed, the first occasion on which he could express with

safety his devotion to the royal cause; but he was still surrounded with

men of hostile or doubtful sentiments; the most profound secrecy was still

necessary; Grenville might confer in private with Morrice, and must consent

to be himself the bearer of the general's answer. The heads of that

answer were reduced to writing. In it Monk prayed the king to send him a

conciliatory letter, which, at the proper season, he might lay before the

parliament; for himself he asked

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. March 10.]

nothing; he would not name, as he was desired, his reward; it was not for

him to strike a bargain with his sovereign; but, if he might express his

opinion, he advised Charles to promise a general or nearly general pardon,

liberty of conscience, the confirmation of the national sales, and the

payment of the arrears due to the army. As soon as this paper had been,

read, he threw it into the fire, and bade Grenville rely on his memory for

its contents.[1]

By Charles at Brussels the messenger was received as an angel from heaven.

The doubts which had so long tormented his mind were suddenly removed; the

crown, contrary to expectation, was offered[a] without previous conditions;

and nothing more was required than that he should aid with his pen the

efforts of the general; but when he communicated the glad tidings to

Ormond, Hyde, and Nicholas, these counsellors discovered that the advice,

suggested by Monk, was derogatory to the interests of the throne and the

personal character of the monarch, and composed a royal declaration which,

while it professed to make to the nation the promises recommended by Monk,

in reality neutralized their effect, by subjecting them to such limitations

as might afterwards be imposed by the wisdom of parliament. This paper was

enclosed[b] within a letter to the speaker of the House of Commons; another

letter was addressed to the House of Lords; a third to Monk and the army;

a fourth to Montague and the navy; and a fifth to the lord mayor and the

city. To the general, open copies were transmitted, that he might deliver

or destroy the originals

[Footnote 1: Clar. Hist. iii. 734-736. Price, 785. Philips, 605. Clar. Pap.

iii. 706, 711. From the last authorities it is plain that Mordaunt was

intrusted with the secret as well as Grenville--also a Mr. Herne, probably

a fictitious name.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. March 26.] [Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. April 2.]

as he thought fit. Notwithstanding the alterations made at Brussels, he

professed himself satisfied with the declaration, and ordered[a] Grenville

to keep the papers in his custody, till the proper season should arrive.[1]

In the mean while, the writs for the new parliament had been issued; and,

as there was no court to influence, no interference of the military to

control the elections, the result may be fairly taken to express the sense

of the country. The republicans, the Cavaliers, the Presbyterians, all made

every effort in their power to procure the return of members of congenial

sentiments. Of the three parties, the last was beyond comparison the

most powerful, had not division paralyzed its influence. The more rigid

Presbyterians, though they opposed the advocates of the commonwealth

because they were sectaries, equally deprecated the return of the king,

because they feared the restoration of episcopacy. A much greater number,

who still adhered with constancy to the solemn league and covenant, deemed

themselves bound by it to replace the king on the throne, but under the

limitations proposed during the treaty in the Isle of Wight. Others, and

these the most active and influential, saw no danger to be feared from

a moderate episcopacy; and, anxious to obtain honours and preferment,

laboured

[Footnote 1: Clar. iii. 737-740, 742-751. Price, 790. Monk had been

assured, probably by the French ambassador, that the Spaniards intended to

detain the king at Brussels as a hostage for the restoration of Jamaica and

Dunkirk. On this account he insisted that the king should leave the Spanish

territory, and Charles, having informed the governor of his intention to

visit Breda, left Brussels about two hours, if Clarendon be correct, before

an order was issued for his detention. The several letters, though written

and signed at Brussels, were dated from Breda, and given to Grenville the

moment the king placed his foot on the Dutch territory.--Clar. 740.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. April 10.]

by the fervour of their present loyalty to deserve the forgiveness of their

past transgressions. These joined with the Cavaliers; their united efforts

bore down all opposition; and, in most places, their adversaries either

shrunk from the contest, or were rejected by overwhelming majorities.[1]

But the republicans sought for aid in another direction. Their emissaries

penetrated into the quarters of the military, where they lamented the

approaching ruin of the good old cause, regretted that so many sacrifices

had been made, so much blood had been shed in vain, and again insinuated to

the officers, that they would forfeit the lands which they had purchased,

to the privates, that they would be disbanded and lose their arrears.[2]

A spirit of discontent began to spread through several corps, and a great

number of officers repaired to the metropolis. But Monk, though he still

professed himself a friend to republican government, now ventured to assume

a bolder tone. The militia of the city, amounting to fourteen thousand men,

was already embodied under his command; he had in his pocket a commission

from Charles, appointing him lord-general over all the military in the

three kingdoms; and he had resolved, should circumstances compel him to

throw off the mask, to proclaim the king, and to summon every faithful

subject to repair to the royal standard. He first ordered[a] the officers

to return to their posts; he then directed the promise of submission to the

new parliament to be tendered to

[Footnote 1: Thurloe, vii, 866, 887. Price, 787. Carte's Letters, ii. 326.

Clar. Pap. iii. 705, 714, 726, 730, 731, 733. It appears that many of the

royalists were much too active. "When the complaint was made to Monk, he

turned it off with a jest, that as there is a fanatic party on the one

side, so there is a frantic party on the other" (721, 722).]

[Footnote 2: Thurloe, vii. 870.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. April 9.]

the privates, and every man who refused to make it was immediately

discharged.[1] At the same time, the friends of the commonwealth resolved

to oppose Lambert, once the idol of the soldiery, to Monk. Lambert, indeed,

was a prisoner in the Tower, confined by order of the council, because he

had refused to give security for his peaceable behaviour; but, with the aid

of a rope, he descended[a] from the window of his bed-chamber, was received

by eight watermen in a barge, and found a secure asylum in the city. The

citizens, however, were too loyal to listen to the suggestions of the

party; he left his concealment, hastened[b] into Warwickshire, solicited,

but in vain, the co-operation of Ludlow, collected from the discontented

regiments six troops of horse and some companies of foot, and expected in a

few days to see himself at the head of a formidable force. But Ingoldsby,

who, of a regicide, was become a royalist, met him[c] near Daventry with

an equal number; a troop of Lambert's men under the command of the younger

Hazlerig, passed over to his opponents; and the others, when he gave the

word to charge, pointed their pistols to the ground. The unfortunate

commander immediately turned and fled; Ingoldsby followed; the ploughed

land gave the advantage to the stronger horse; the fugitive was overtaken,

and, after an ineffectual effort to awaken the pity of his former comrade,

submitted to his fate. He was conducted[d] back to the Tower, at the time

when the trained bands, the volunteers, and the auxiliaries raised in the

city, passed in review before the general in Hyde Park. The auxiliaries

drank the king's health on their knees; Lambert was at the moment driven

under Tyburn

[Footnote 1: Clar. Pap. iii. 715.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. April 11.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. April 13.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1660. April 21.]

[Sidenote d: A.D. 1660. April 24.]

and the spectators hailed with shouts and exclamations the disgrace of the

prisoner.[1]

The Convention parliament (so it was called, because it had not been

legally summoned) met[a] on the appointed day, the 25th of April. The

Presbyterians, by artful management, placed Sir Harbottle Grimstone, one of

their party, in the chair; but the Cavaliers, with their adherents, formed

a powerful majority, and the new speaker, instead of undertaking to stem,

had the prudence to go along with, the stream. Monk sat as representative

of Devonshire, his native county.

To neutralize the influence of the Cavaliers among the Commons, the

Presbyterian peers who sat in 1648, assembled in the House of Lords, and

chose the earl of Manchester for their speaker. But what right had they

exclusively to constitute a house of parliament? They had not been summoned

in the usual manner by writ; they could not sit as a part of the long

parliament, which was now at least defunct; and, if they founded their

pretensions on their birthright, as consiliarii nati, other peers were

in possession of the same privilege. The question was propounded to the

lord-general, who replied that he had no authority to determine the claims

of any individual. Encouraged by this answer, a few of the excluded peers

attempted to take their seats, and met with no opposition; the example was

imitated by others, and in a few days the Presbyterian lords did not amount

to more than one-fifth of the house. Still, however, to avoid cavil, the

peers who sat in the king's parliament at Oxford, as well as those whose

patents bore date after the

[Footnote 1: Kennet's Reg. 120. Price, 792, 794. Ludlow, 379. Philips, 607.

Clar. Pap. iii. 735.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. April 25.]

commencement of the civil war, abstained for the present from demanding

admission.[1]

Monk continued to dissemble. By his direction Grenville applied to a

member, who was entering the council-chamber, for an opportunity of

speaking to the lord-general. Monk came to the door, received from him a

letter, and, recognizing on the seal the royal arms, commanded the guards

to take care that the bearer did not depart. In a few minutes Grenville

was called in, interrogated by the president as to the manner in which he

became possessed of the letter, and ordered to be taken into custody. "That

is unnecessary," said Monk; "I find that he is my near kinsman, and I will

be security for his appearance."

The ice was now[a] broken. Grenville was treated not as a prisoner, but a

confidential servant of the sovereign. He delivered to the two houses the

letters addressed to them, and received in return a vote of thanks, with a

present of five hundred pounds. The letter for the army was read by Monk

to his officers, that for the navy by Montague to the captains under his

command, and that for the city by the lord mayor to the common council

in the Guildhall. Each of these bodies voted an address of thanks and

congratulation to the king.

The paper which accompanied the letters to the two houses,--1. granted a

free and general pardon to all persons, excepting such as might afterwards

be excepted by parliament; ordaining that every division of party should

cease, and inviting all who were the subjects of the same sovereign to live

in union and harmony; 2. it declared a liberty to tender consciences, and

that no man should be disquieted or called in

[Footnote 1: Lords' Journ. xi. 4, 5, 6.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. May 1.]

question for differences of opinion in matters of religion which did not

disturb the peace of the kingdom, and promised moreover the royal assent to

such acts of parliament as should be offered for the full granting of

that indulgence: 3. it alluded to the actions at law to which the actual

possessors of estates purchased by them or granted to them during the

revolution might be liable, and purposed to leave the settlement of all

such differences to the wisdom of parliament, which could best provide for

the just satisfaction of the parties concerned: lastly, it promised to

liquidate the arrears of the army under General Monk, and to retain the

officers and men in the royal service upon the same pay and conditions

which they actually enjoyed. This was the celebrated declaration from

Breda, the royal charter on the faith of which Charles was permitted to

ascend the throne of his fathers.[1]

Encouraged by the bursts of loyalty with which the king's letters and

declaration had been received, his agents made it their great object to

procure his return to England before limitations could be put on the

prerogative. From the Lords, so numerous were the Cavaliers in the upper

house, no opposition could be feared; and the temper already displayed

by the Commons was calculated to satisfy the wishes of the most ardent

champions of royalty. The two houses voted, that by the ancient and

fundamental laws of the realm the government was and ought to be by king,

lords, and commons; they invited Charles to come and receive the crown to

which he was born; and, to relieve his more urgent necessities, they sent

him a present of fifty thousand pounds, with ten thousand pounds for his

brother the duke of York, and five

[Footnote 1: Lords' Journ. xi. 7, 10.]

thousand pounds for the duke of Gloucester. They ordered the arms and

symbols of the commonwealth to be effaced, the name of the king to be

introduced into the public worship, and his succession to be proclaimed

as having commenced from the day of his father's death.[1] Hale, the

celebrated lawyer, ventured, with Prynne, to call[a] upon the House of

Commons to pause in their enthusiasm, and attend to the interests of the

nation. The first moved the appointment of a committee to inquire what

propositions had been offered by the long parliament, and what concessions

had been made by the last king in 1648; the latter urged the favourable

opportunity of coming to a mutual and permanent understanding on all those

claims which had been hitherto subjects of controversy between the two

houses and the crown. But Monk rose, and strongly objected to an inquiry

which might revive the fears and jealousies, the animosities and bloodshed,

of the years that were past. Let the king return while all was peace and

harmony. He would come alone; he could bring no army with him; he would

be as much at their mercy in Westminster as in Breda. Limitations, if

limitations were necessary, might be prepared in the interval, and offered

to him after his arrival. At the conclusion of this speech, the house

resounded with the acclamations of the Cavaliers; and the advocates of the

inquiry, awed by the authority of the general and the clamour of their

opponents, deemed it prudent to desist.[2]

Charles was as eager to accept, as the houses had been to vote, the address

of invitation. From Breda he had gone to the Hague, where the States,

anxious to atone for their former neglect, entertained him with

[Footnote 1: Journals of both houses.]

[Footnote 2: Burnet, i. 88. Ludlow, iii. 8, 9.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. May 7.]

unusual magnificence. The fleet, under Montague,[1] had anchored in the Bay

of Scheveling; and Charles, as soon as the weather permitted, set sail[a]

for Dover, where Monk, at the head of the nobility and gentry from the

neighbouring counties, waited to receive the new sovereign. Every eye

was fixed on their meeting;[b] and the cheerful, though dignified,

condescension of the king, and the dutiful, respectful homage of the

general, provoked the applause of the spectators. Charles embraced him as

his benefactor, bade him walk by his side, and took him into the royal

carriage. From Dover to the capital the king's progress bore the appearance

of a triumphal procession. The roads were covered with crowds of people

anxious to testify their loyalty, while they gratified their curiosity. On

Blackheath he was received[c] by the army in battle array, and greeted with

acclamations as he passed through the ranks; in St. George's Fields the

lord mayor and aldermen invited him to partake of a splendid collation in a

tent prepared for the purpose; from London Bridge to Whitehall the houses

were hung with tapestry, and the streets lined by the trained bands, the

regulars, and the officers who had served under Charles I. The king was

preceded by troops of horsemen, to the amount of three thousand persons, in

splendid dresses, attended by trumpeters and footmen; then came the lord

mayor, carrying the naked sword, after him the lord-general and the duke of

Buckingham, and lastly the king himself, riding between his two brothers.

The cavalcade was closed by the general's life-guard, five regiments

[Footnote 1: Montague had long been in correspondence with the king, and

disapproved of the dissimulation of Monk, so far as to call him in private

a "thick-sculled fool;" but thought it necessary to flatter him, as he

could hinder the business.--Pepys, i. 69.]

[Sidenote a: A.D. 1660. May 23.]

[Sidenote b: A.D. 1660. May 25.]

[Sidenote c: A.D. 1660. May 29.]

of horse, and two troops of noblemen and gentlemen. At Whitehall Charles

dismissed the lord mayor, and received in succession the two houses, whose

speakers addressed him in strains of the most impassioned loyalty, and

were answered by him with protestations of attachment to the interests and

liberties of his subjects. It was late in the evening before the ceremonies

of this important day were concluded; when Charles observed to some of his

confidants "It must sorely have been my fault that I did not come before;

for I have met with no one to-day who did not protest that he always wished

for my restoration."[1]

That the re-establishment of royalty was a blessing to the country will

hardly be denied. It presented the best, perhaps the only, means of

restoring public tranquillity amidst the confusion and distrust, the

animosities and hatreds, the parties and interests, which had been

generated by the events of the civil war, and by a rapid succession of

opposite and ephemeral governments. To Monk belongs the merit of having, by

his foresight and caution, effected this desirable object without bloodshed

or violence; but to his dispraise it must also be recorded, that he

effected it without any previous stipulation on the part of the exiled

monarch. Never had so fair an opportunity been offered of establishing a

compact between the sovereign and the people, of determining, by mutual

consent, the legal rights of the crown, and of securing from future

encroachment the freedom of the people. That Charles would have consented

to such conditions,

[Footnote 1: Whitelock, 702. Kennet's Reg. 163. Clarendon's Hist. iii. 772.

Clarendon's Life by Himself, Continuation, p. 7, 8. Evelyn's Diary, ii.

148.]

we have sufficient evidence; but, when the measure was proposed, the

lord-general declared himself its most determined opponent. It may have

been, that his cautious mind figured to itself danger in delay; it is more

probable that he sought to give additional value to his services in the

eyes of the new sovereign. But, whatever were the motives of his conduct,

the result was, that the king ascended the throne unfettered with

conditions, and thence inferred that he was entitled to all the powers

claimed by his father at the commencement of the civil war. In a few years

the consequence became manifest. It was found that, by the negligence or

perfidy of Monk, a door had been left open to the recurrence of dissension

between the crown and the people; and that very circumstance which Charles

had hailed as the consummation of his good fortune, served only to prepare

the way for a second revolution, which ended in the permanent exclusion of

his family from the government of these kingdoms.



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Belloc-Lingard - The History of England - CHAPTER VII.