The Earl of PEMBROOKES SPEECH TO NOL-CROMWELL, Lord Deputy of IRELAND.
With his Royall Entertainment of him at his Mannor of Ramsbury in Wiltshire, on his Journey to Ireland; On Thursday, July 12. 1649.
Taken Verbatim by Michael Oldisworth, and by him Recommended to one of his Lordships Tenants, to see it carefully Printed and Published.
⟨July 30 th⟩ NOD-NOL, Printed by the Printer of the House of Lords, 1649.
The Earl of PEMBROOKES SPEECH TO NOL-CROMWELL, Lord Deputy of IRELAND.
DAmme, I may say King well enough; for be-God I know no man fitter to be King then your self: Hath not your Honor Conquered all that the Kings in England have Conquered for many Generations? My Chaplain read me a Chapter, and said, That all Generations should call her blessed: but Sink me, I am sure all the Generations in England are damn'd if they call not your Honor blessed; and I am bound to blesse you too for coming hither; and you have done a blessed work too, in removing that Tyrant King, that man of Sin; and you are a going on with another blessed work, and that is Reducing of Ireland; your Honor hath happily subdued [Page 4] the Levellers; strengthned and enriched your friends, and impoverished your Enemies; you have taken away the House of Lords; Damme, I never affected the Lords House, nor Gods House neither; and for the Lords Prayer, I have done what I can to abolish it: because I would not have the people so much as put in mind of Lords; Sink me, if I know any more Lords then my Lord Fairfax and your Self; and if the people will say the Lords Prayer, then let them pray for your Lordships, as it becomes good Christians: the Land is yours, you have wone it by the Sword; and then, you are not only Lords but Landlords, and all the people in England your Tenants, and ought to pray for you, and pay you Rent too; Damme, I am your Tenant, and though I am old and cannot fight for you, yet I am not so old, but I can pay you Rent: 'Tis true I am a member of Parliament; and so (as yet) free from Taxes; yet I were an ill member if I would not force my Tenants to pay you Rent; Damme, I had forgot my self, for they be your Tenants, and pay you as much, or more Rent, then they do me. 'Zbloud, would they had more heavier Taxes on them for me, because they grumble: I am informed by my man Michael, that they curse the Parliament; which I hold to be Treason, if not high treason; for, if to say, our Government is tyrannical, be high treason; Cursing must needs be high treason; nay blasphemy too: and if your Lordship shall give me power but to Hang and Draw▪ Refuse me if a Traytor shall live; Damme, the Rogues won't stick to say, That we are Traytors our selves, although we are the Keepers of their Liberties; and if we keep their Liberties, we ought to keep their Money too, their Law and Religion, nay, their very Wives. if▪ it please us: and if we suffer some to be kill'd to preserve the rest, be God, I think 'tis State policy: if we spend three parts of their means, to preserve the fourth; I see no reason but the fourth should be at our disposing; so long as we are the Keepers; My Lord, I will speak unto you in a Parable, I am (I thank your Honors) made chief Keeper of C [...]ringdon Park, that was the late Kings; there have I Heards of Deer; My Lord, are not these Heards of Deer at my disposing? If I kill one heard, that the rest may have the more pasture, who ought to contradict it? and if I, or my Keeper make their Skins pay for Paling or Fencing [Page 5] in my Park; Damme, 'tis the part of a good Keeper, and such good Keepers I hope are the Parliament, and every Member thereof; and if they be good Keepers, will they not keep their own? and if they can keep their own, nature teaches, that they may as well keep others: I keep a Pack of Doggs, and Damme, I think they have as deep mouths as any; but imagine another has a Dogge, has a deeper mouth then my whole kennell; ought I not (if my Neighbor or Tenant deny me this Dogge) to force him from him, to make compleat my Cry?
My Lord,
You have so much Money and Men to go to
Ireland; it may be a Million, and about ten thousand men; if you want a Million more, and twenty thousand men more, to make the Irish
Cry; Damme, if they will not raise the Men, and find the Money, they may be made
Cry themselves: you may, and ought to take it where you can find it; Necessity must not observe a Law in these dayes; My Lord, if you are necessitated, you may command
me to fight as old as I am; Damme, I were a Rogue if I should deny yee; yet I think I hate fighting my self as much as any man in
England; yet though I hate it in my self, my Lord I would not have you think that I hate it in your Honor; no, my Lord, I hope I have more wit then so; I honor
Valour in whomsoever I find it: Had not your Honors
V
[...]lour been tryed▪ at
Marston-Moor, we had been all Myr'd and Moor'd too before this time; or had you not Rowted the
Scots, we had not scap'd so
Scot▪ free as we do, nor enjoy'd the good things of the Land: Damme, 'tis an unthankful Land, and a blind Land, for they understand not, they see not the
blessings that you have won them; but I hope there is no Member of Parliament but understands, and is sensible enough of them: Damme, I am sensible, and if your Honor loves Hunting, you shall be sensible that in my old dayes I deserve a Park as well as the City of
London; I love a Cry of Doggs better then a pair of Organs: Mistris
May loves them too, and I love her as well: Sir, I am a Member for
Bark-shire, and then (if I should not love
barking and
bawling too, I should n
[...]t love my Country) my Lord, when
[Page 6]
old Doggs bark, they give
Counsel; but if they bite, they bite sor
[...]; Damme, we must
bark and
bite too, and all little enough; for ought I can understand; we must learn to hunt men, as well as we do Hares, or Foxes either.
My Lord,
You are now a going a hunting of
Rebels into
Ireland; and therefore I have said the more concerning
hunting; I wish you good sport, that you may catch your
Game, I mean the
Game-Royal; a good
hound upon the Chase will not leave the hot scent to follow a Rascal Deer; My Lord, you have been well
flesht; pursue the ROYAL-GAME, the rest, any Curre will pull down.
My Lord,
I am an Old man, and can ill ride a Horse; Damme, I had rather ride an Asse that will not throw me; then ride a Horse to lay me in the Dirt: If I were a horseman, and as yong as ever I was, it should not be
Ireland, nor
Scotland neither, that should keep me back; Refuse-me if I was ever backward for the good of the State; I was, I confesse, Lord Chamberlain to the late King; I swore
Allegiance to Him and His Heirs; Sinkme, I have been too much addicted to Swearing, but what of that? if I forswear again what I have sworn, I am the more excuseable; an Oath is binding but for the time, and you know there is a time for all this; a time to break Oathes, as well as keep them, if the State requires it: We must be Obedient; Obedience is better then Sacrifice, and if I be not as Obedient as another, then I am a Rebel, and a Traytor, and deserve as much to suffer as the late King, the Lord
Capel, or any else.
My Lord,
You are welcome, and all these Gentlumen as welcome as your self; you have honored me in giving me a vsiite, and I hope I shall be able to visite the House of
Commons before Michaelmas;
[Page 7] where I make no doubt, but I shall give consent to the making such Laws as shall make this Nation glorious; for if we do not afflict them; then they cannot be
glorious; 'tis afflictions must wean them from the
World; and if they be weaned from the World, then they may the better seek after heaven, where is all real Glory; thus we made the late King a glorious King; Damme, I think he had the better of it, if he had a Crown of Glory for his Earthly Crown; though we have his Lands and Goods to boot; we cannot live alwayes to enjoy them; 'tis true we have the profit of them for a time; but what can we profit by them in the end, when we come to render an account? We are but the Peoples
Stewards as well as He; and as we are
Stewards, we are to be intrusted with their
Goods and
Lives; and if we make not use of them as we should, pray who can call us to an account here? I know there is no
Earthly pow
[...]r above us; but Confound-me, I am half of the judgement that there is a
Heavenly power above us, and that is our King, our Prince, that ought to
Rule us, and his
Rule is in this World, and the Aire: mistake me not my Lord, I do not mean the Prince of the
Aire that rules in the Children
of diso
[...]edience, that the wicked Cavaliers serve▪ I mean the
Spirit; we are led by the
Spirit, have our
rules from the
Spirit (and not from Scriptures, that's Superstition) and dare not but do what the
Spirit moves us too; and if we do amisse, it is the
Spirit that works it in us, and not we; and if the
Spirit bid me kill my King, must I not do it? Damme if it were my Father or my Mother, or my dull Wise either, I should spare them no more then the fire did my house, when it burnt it to the ground.
My Lord,
I perceive a
Spirit that now hath a working in Nature, which
Spirit doth personate me, and hath made many
Speeches in my Name, which I utterly Renounce; Nay my Lord, your Honors are not free from this vile Calumnious Spirit, even under your very
Noses; My Lord, I have been jeared into sickness, and had dy'd if I had not been jear'd out of it again; they brought me so neer my Grave, that they made my
Will; and I think I had dy'd▪ but that I was loth the wicked should have their
Will of me: Damme, I hope to live yet to make my
Will
[Page 8] my self, and in it remember your Honor; if your Honor
will do me the favour, as to send to the
Parliament, to tell them what they put forth in my
Name; 'Zbloud, I had better have no
name, then no
fame; and
Iudge-me, I have as little as can be among the
Common sort. My
Lord, I beseech▪ you let this
Spirit be conjur'd down, or else we must
down our selves, and if any thing other then
good should happen to us by reason of the
ungodly abroad, I fear a
great many at
home will take their parts; it is good to
prevent in time,
my Lord, to quench the flame before it get too
high, or else it may happen to
burn our fingers.
My Lord, I hear
Ormond is 30000 strong, besides what
Inchiquin, Ards, and
Monro is; besides your old
Enemies are come to assist them, at
Kildare, Eyron, Dives, Langdale, Ashton, Hopton, and the Devil and all: And if they get
Ireland my Lord, we may ere long hang up
our pipes, and
our selves too;
My Lord; the way I would wish you, is to
treat with the Earl of
Darby, about the
rendring the
Isle of Man; you'l get a
Crown too boot; if we
must have a
King, (as the people will never be quiet else) as good
you as another;
Damme, we must have a
King; for so many
men, so many
minds; Lilburn will have one thing, another party another, a third another, and then we fall together by the
eares; then comes the Prince and parts us; What will become of us then? No my Lord, win a
Crown and wear it; 'tis but taking down the
Excize, or making at the beginning of your
reign some seeming▪ good Law, as
Richard the
3d did, and that will win the peoples affections to you.
My Lord, I am an ill Orator, and something given to swearing, which I hope will not be much distasteful unto you, considering I am an old man; and Damme, old men are subject to old infirmities; if your Honor lives, you will be old your self as I am; Swounds, I wish you long life; and could with a good Conscience say, Vive le Roy; a Pox Confound-me if I could not; 'zblood, I am something short winded since my sickness; but Dam-me, Ram-me, Sink-me, if I mean not what I say; and so for this time I make an end; desiring your Honor to sit, and taste of that Welcome your Humble Subject and Servant can make you.
Vera Copia.
Ramsbury, July 12. 1649.