A short, legal, medicinal, useful, safe, easie prescription to recover our kingdom, church, nation from their present dangerous, distractive, destructive confusion and worse than Bedlam madnesse seriously recommended to all English freemen who desire peace, safety, liberty, settlement. By William Prynne, Esq; a bencher of Lincolns-Inne. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A56207 of text R219708 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing P4080A). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). 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A56207) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 35623) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2095:15) A short, legal, medicinal, useful, safe, easie prescription to recover our kingdom, church, nation from their present dangerous, distractive, destructive confusion and worse than Bedlam madnesse seriously recommended to all English freemen who desire peace, safety, liberty, settlement. By William Prynne, Esq; a bencher of Lincolns-Inne. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. [8] p. [s.n.], London : printed in the year of General Monck's invasion, 1659. Caption title on p. 3 reads: A short, legal, medicinal, useful, safe, easy, prescription, &c. Signatures: A⁴. Copy imperfect; leaves mutilated at head with loss of pagination. Reproduction of the original in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. eng Catholic Church -- Controversial literature -- Early works to 1800. Religion and politics -- England -- Early works to 1800. Great Britain -- History -- Puritan Revolution, 1642-1660 -- Early works to 1800. A56207 R219708 (Wing P4080A). civilwar no A short, legal, medicinal, useful, safe, easie prescription to recover our kingdom, church, nation from their present dangerous, distractive Prynne, William 1659 3715 122 0 0 0 0 0 328 F The rate of 328 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the F category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words. 2002-04 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-04 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-05 TCP Staff (Michigan) Sampled and proofread 2002-05 John Latta Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-06 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A Short , Legal , Medicinal , Useful , Safe , Easie PRESCRIPTION To recover Our Kingdom , Church , Nation from their present dangerous , distractive , destructive CONFUSION And worse than Bedlam Madnesse ; SERIOUSLY Recommended to all English Freemen who desire Peace , Safety , Liberty , Settlement . By William Prynne , Esq a Bencher of Lincolns . Inne . Judges 19. 30. Consider of it , take advice , and speak your mindes . Prov. 12 , 19 , 20. Deceit is in the heart of them that imagine evil : but to the counsellors of peace is joy : There shall no evil happen to the just , but the wicked shall be filled with mischief . LONDON : Printed in the Year of General Monck's Invasion , 1659. A short , legal , medicinal , useful , safe , easy , Prescription , &c. THe Ambition , Treachery , Turbulency , Avarice , and late infused Jesuiticall Principles of some swaying Officers in the Parliaments Army , aspiring after the Supream Authority , Government , and publick Revenues of our three Kingdomes , having so far corrupted their Judgments , seared their Consciences , depraved their Wills , and hardned their Hearts , as openly , frequently to violate all sacred Oaths , Vows , Covenants , Obligations , Trusts , Commissions , Engagements , to the late King , his Heirs and S●●cessors ; the old Parliament , Kingdome , Nation ; ( for whose defence , they were originally raised , Commissioned ) and to their own new-created Anti-Parliamentary Junctoes , Conventions , Protectors , and Conventicies , which they have all successively subverted , engrossing the Soveraign Royall , and Parliamental Power into their own hands , a opposing and advancing themselves ( by meer Treachery , Perjury , Violence , and other desperate wayes of unrighteousnesse ) like that man of sin , and Mystery of Iniquity , above all that is worshipped and called God ; making no lesse then three publick Revolutions of our Government , and forcibly dissolving two Parliaments ( as they deemed them ) of their own modelling , b convening , within six Moneths space , last past ; and thereby made our formerly renowned Nations , the scorn , reproach , wonder , derision of all the world ; themselves the Monsters of Men , the shame of Christianity , Chivalry ; exposed our three Nations to the uttermost extremity of danger , by new unpresidented Ataxies , Divisions , Encroachments upon their Hereditary Rights , Liberties , Properties , caused a totall decay of all sorts of Trade , Justice , Legall proceedings at home , and occasioned a speedy , much feared Ivasion from our potent combined Popish adversaries abroad , when thus miserably distracted , discontented , impoverished , and totally disabled to repulse them : It is high time for every publick-spirited Elishman , in this strange , distracting Confusion , ( which hath almost as much divided , discontented all conscientious Officers , Souldiers in the Army , Navy , as the people of all Callings , Conditions ) to contribute their best advice , by all just , legall , hopefull , speedy wayes , agreeable with the Lawes of God , and the Land , and those Rights , Liberties of the people , ( the defence whereof all Officers , Souldiers in the Army , have so * frequently , constantly avowed they were principally raised , and Resolved to defend , though they have hitherto failed in their promises ) to recover us ou● of the Labyrinth of our almost inexetricable ●mazing Confusions , settle o● pernicious distractions , and prevent that visible , imm●nent , universall desolation , else likely to fall upon our Church , State , Nation , Rel●gion , beyond all possibil●ty of escape , through the Army Officers rash destructive Counsells , and violations of their Trusts , Oaths , Engagements , both as Souldiers , Christians , and Members of the K●ngdome . The onely just , legall , probable means now left that I can prescribe , both for our Nation , Churches , Armies present and future safety too ( if they will cordially and Christianly submit thereto , as they oug●ht in Conscience , Justice , prudence ) is , 1. For all the antient Nobility of the Kingdome ( the c Hereditary Great Counsell and Counsellors of the Nation in all Actuall Interregnums , and publick Confusions , ( as our Historians , Law-books , and the Commons themselves in the long Parliament Resolved ) both by Custome , Law , Right ) to assemble themselves by Common consent at Westminster , or so many of them at least , or their Heirs if dead , who constantly adhered to the long Parliament ; and there to issue out Writs according to the Statute of 16 Ca●o●● cap. 1. on the third Monday of Nov●mber next , under 12 or more of their hands and Seals , for a free and legall Election of Knights , Citizens , Burgesses , Barons , in every City , County , Borough , Port , according to former usage , to appear at the Parl●ament-house in Westminster , the third Monday in January next ●●●suing , at a Parliament then and there to be held , in such manner and form as this Act prescribes ; wherein such Proposalls and Counsells may by common consent be pursued , as may through Gods blessing , soon restore our pristine Peace , Trade , Honour , Wealth , Prosperity , Felicity , Settlement , and secure us from all future changes . 2ly . For all Freeholders in every County of the Kingdome , at the next County Court in November , to meet together , and make choise of the ablest , honestest , ●●●est , stoutest Gentlemen for their Sheriffs , to keep the Peace of the County , command the Militio , suppresse all Insurrections , elect , return Knights , Citizens , Burgesses , to serve in Parliament , and execute the Office of a Sheriff ; it being their antient legal Right and Priviledge , by speciall Grants of our Kings , both in and out of Parliament , which none in late , or present power ought to encroach upon , or deprive them of , and they are all now bound to exercise and maintain for their own preservation and safety . This their right I shall clearly evidence beyond contradiction . 1 By the peoples ancient Right Edward the Confessors time , or before , in their Folkmo●● to chuse an He●etoke ( a Baron or person of quality ) in every County , in nature of a Ca●●●in , who had the power of the County and Militia in every shire 〈◊〉 et Uicec●mites Provinciatum et Cemitatuum ●ligi beb●nt per singu●os Cemitatus in pleno Folkmoto : as Sheriffs of Provinces and Counties ought to be chosen in every County ; as you may read at large in Mr. Lambards Arckaion , ● . 135 de Hetetochiis ; in Sir Henry Spelmans Glossarium , Dux & Heretochius , p. 232 , 348 349. My Soveraign power of Parliaments , part 2. p. 24 , 25. Cooks 2 Institutes , p. 174 , 175. 2 By Rot Claus. Anno 16 Johannis Regis , part 2. m. 2. dorso . Dominus Rex concessit Baro●…ibus suis , Militibus & liber è tenentibus de Cornubia , qued habeant Vicecomitem de aliquo ipsorum ad Electionem eorum . Idem vero Barones , Mi●…ites , & ●…iberè ten●…ntes conce●…sserunt Willielmo 〈◊〉 , quod h●…beat Hund●…edum de Estweneleser ad feodi firmam , sibi & haeredibus suis imperpetuum , per dimidium marci Argenti , ad ●…estum Sancti Michaelis reddendum . 3ly . By Rot. Pat. An. 5 H. 3. memb. 6. H. Dei gratia &c. Archiepiscopis , Episco i●… , C●…mitibus B●…ronibus , Militibus , libere tenentibus & al●…is omnibus de Com. Corn●…b . salut●…m . 〈◊〉 quod concessimus Vobis quod l●…beram 〈◊〉 electionem el●…gend vobis in Vicecomi●…em nostrum unum de Com. 〈◊〉 . Et ideo veb●…s mandamus quod ●…ligatis tres ●…ideles & discr●…tes de Com Cornu●… . & illos nobis praesentari fac . apud London in Octab. Clausi Pasche , & nos 〈◊〉 ex illis t●…ibus prout nob●…s placuerit . Vobis dabimus ad 〈◊〉 . Et interi●…s commissimus Com. tatum illum Cornub. cum emnibus illis 〈◊〉 ad 〈◊〉 dilecto & fideli nost●…o Reginaldo de Valle●…orta 〈◊〉 . 〈◊〉 que mind ●…mus qualinus eidem Reginaldo usque ad piaedictum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & respondentes in omnibus , tanquam Vic. nostro & 〈◊〉 nostro , 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 , &c. T. 〈◊〉 . de Bu●…go , &c. 〈◊〉 Westm. x●…viij d●…e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5 0. 4y . By B●…t . 10. H. 3. memb. 4. R●…x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , 〈◊〉 , Prio●…ibus , Comitibus Baronibus , Militibus , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & omnibus aliis de communibus 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . 〈◊〉 q●…od 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de . Willo : sil Henr. ad V●…c nost●…um 〈◊〉 . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nost●…um 〈◊〉 . Et ideo vobis mandamu●… quo●… 〈◊〉 Vic nostro 〈◊〉 nobis 〈◊〉 i●…tendentes fitis & 〈◊〉 . In 〈◊〉 &c. Teste Rege apud W●…nton x●…vij die Jan. 5ly . By Mat. Paris , Mat. Westminster , Daniel , and others , who record , That in the 45 year of King Henry the 3d , the King placed new Sher●ff● in every County , displacing the Sheriffs the Barons and people had made ; whereupon the people in eve●y County , manfully resisted the Sheriffs , and would not obey , nor regard nor answer them in any thing , whereat the King was much troubled . Much less then ought they now to ob●y any Sheriffs obtruded on them by the Army Officers , or any other illegal us●rped power . 6ly . By the Statute of Articuli super chartas , Anno 28 E. 1. chap. 8. The King hath granted to his people , that they shall have the Election of Sheriffs in every Shire ( where the Shrivalty is not of fee ) if they w●●● And chap. 13. For as much as the King hath granted the Election of S●eriffs to the Commons of the Shire , the King willeth , that they shall chuse such Sheriffs as shall not charge them , and that they shall not put in any Officer for rewards or bribes . And that they shall not lodge too oft in one place , nor with poor persons , nor with men of Religion . By which Statutes , ( being but confirmations of the peoples former rights by custom , or Kings g●an●s 〈◊〉 which some of them encroached , which was the occasion of these acts ) all Counties used to elect their Sheriffs : And if they elected any mean or unfitting person , as they sometimes did , He then commanded them by his Writs to chuse another who was fit to discharge that Office ; witness this memorable Record ensuing . Cl. 31 E. 2. m. 13. dur●● . Rex Coronatoribus & toti communitati Comitatum Salop. & Stafford . salutem . Cum nuper pro communi utilitate regni nostri inter alia concesserimus populo ejusdem regni , quod habeat si voluerit electionem Vic. in singulis comitatibus dicti regni cum opus fuerit Vicecom . praedict. in eisdem , ubi videlicet Vicecomes de feodo non existit . Ac Rieus : de Harleigh p●r vos in Vic. comitatuum praed●ctorum nuper electus , ad officium illud faciendum minus sufficiens est , sicut ex testimonio fidedigno accepimus : Vobis manda●●● quod aliquem qui melius sciat & possit officio Vic. dictorum comitatum intendere & utilior fuerit ad idem of fictum exequendum in Vic. corundem comitatuum pro vobis , si volueritis , eligatis , & ipsum sic electum per aliquem legalem & circumspectum hominem ex parte vestra cum literis , vestris patentibus sub sig●●is sex de discretioribus & probioribus Mil. eorund●m comitatuum Thess. & Baronib . nostris de Scaccario in erastino Sancti Michaelis prox suturi sine dilatione praesente●is , ut ipse tunc ibidem praestito sicut mo●is est sacrament● , extunc ea faciat & exerceat , que ad of sicium Vicecomitis peatinent in com . prudictis . Et habeat●s ●bi tunc hoc breve . Scituri , quod si talem per vos electum modo praedicto non praesentaveritis coram prafatis Thess. & Baronibus nostris in crastin● pradicto , praedicti Thes. & Barones extunc nobis de ali● Vicecomite Vobis praeficiendo in defectu vestri providebunt . Teste Rege apud Sarum . vvi . die April . 8ly . By Claus. 12 E. 3. pars 2. m. 15. Claus. 13 E. 3. pars 3. dors . 16. Claus. 14 E. 3. pars 2. m. 3. De Uicecemitibus Eligendis per totam Angliani : wherein are several Writs issued authorizing and commanding the people to elect their Sheriffs in every County throughout England , with other Records to the like effect over-tedious to recite at large . 9ly . By Mr. Lambards Archaion . f. 135. and Sir Edward Cooks 2. Institutes on Magna Charta , p. 174 , 175 , 558 , 559 , 566. who resolve , That Sheriffs in antient times were and oft to be chosen by the Freeholders , of the County in the County Court , as Conservators of the Peace , Coroners , Verderers , Constables , Petty Constables , were then and since Elected likewise by the People ; as well by the Kings Writs , as without them , in cases of necessity . Xly. By the constant custome of all Corporations which are Counties within themselves , having power Annually to chuse Sheriffs only by the Kings Charters , without any special Writ , as London , Bristol , Glocester , York , Canterbury Coventry , &c. use to do . Therefore every County in England and Wales , may do the like without any speciall Writs , being a necessary annuall , antient standing Office , especially in these confused times , when none have any legall Authority to issue out Writs or Commissions to elect or swear Sheriffs , by vertue of the premised Statutes : And the Army-Officers , with other self-created Usurping Powers , may as lawfully obtrude Mayors , Sheriffs , and other Officers on every Corporation of England without their Election , and deprive them of their freedome to elect them ; as thrust Sheriffs , Justices of the Peace , Coroners , or other eligible Officers upon Counties ; and rob them of this their just ancient right and priviledge ; now strenuously to be revived , asserted for their common safety , against all encroachments thereon . The Statute of Westminster 1. ch. 5. enacting , declaring , That all Elections ought to be free , and not disturbed by force of Arms under grea● forfeitu●es by no Great men nor others . 3ly . Let all Counties , Cities , Boroughs , Ports , make choice of the wisest , ablest , stout●st , discreetest Persons , such as are best affected to Peace , Settlement , and the Nations publi●e Interest , for their Knights , Citizens and Burgesses ; not of raw , unexperienced , timorous , or time-serving , unstable , self-seeking , turbulent men . 4ly . Let all Counties , Cities , Noblemen , Gentlemen , Yeomen , Clergy-men , and Freemen of the Nation , unanimously resolve , to obey no new , illegall , tyrannical , upstart Powers , Officers , Conventicles , Committees or Counc●ls of men whatsoever forcibly obtruded on them ; nor to execute any of their Orders or Commands ; but onely to obey such legal Officers as themselves shall legally elect , or a Free Parliament duly elected by them : nor pay any Taxes , Customs , Imposts , Excises , Contributions whatsoever , to any Officers , Souldiers , Collectors , but such as shall be imposed by common consent in a Free and Lawfull Parliament , it being their antient Birthright ( for defence whereof the Army was first raised ) ratified not only by sundry antient Statutes , and the late Petition of Right , but several Acts , Votes , Declarations , Judgments of the last long Parliament of King Charls , acknowledged in the Instrument of Government it self , the late Petition and Advice , the Armies own former Declarations , and the late dissolved Juncto in their very last Knack of the 12. of this instant October , their Plea and Papers since . 5ly . If any Officers , and Souldiers of the Army , out of faction , ambition , self-ends , or Jesuitical seduction , shall obstinately , traiterously , maliciously , or tyrannically oppose the People in their Elections of Sheriffs , Knights , Citizens , Burgesses , or levy any Taxes , Excises upon them by armed violence , contrary to all their former-forfeited , now-expired Commissions , Declarations , Engagements ; let them unanimously declare and proceed against them as professed publick Enemies , Traitors to their Native Countrey ; who by their former and late Treacheries , Rebellions , and unwarrantable proceedings against all their Superiors , ( transcending all Presidents in profane or sacred Stories ) have actually in Law , Justice , forfeited not onely all their Commissions , Commands , and Arrears of pay , but their very lives , Lands , Estates ; and that our whole 3. Nations by their Solemn League and Covenant , for their own future preservation , are obliged to bring them to publike Justice , as themselves have proceeded against hundreds , nay thousands of other Delinquents not half so criminal as themselves : and thereupon intreat all other Officers , Souldiers in the Army , who have any fear of God , or love to themselves , their posterities , or Native Countrie remaining in their brests , as Moses did the Congregation of Israel in the Rebellion of Korah , Dathan , and Abiram , who mutinied the People against him and Aaron , Numb. 16. Depart I pray ye from the Tents of these wicked men , and touch nothing of theirs , lest ye be consumed in all their sins . So they gat up from the Tabernacle of Korah , Dathan , and Abiram on every side . And as many Officers , Souldiers , as shall thereupon desert the Tents of their Rebellious Commanders , and contribute their assistance ●…or the speedy calling and safe 〈◊〉 of a F●…ee , Lawfull Parliament , without any ●…uture mutinies , to interrupt o●… d●…ssolve it when convened according to the premised Statute of 16 〈◊〉 , c. 1. let them be assured of their full Arrears , and indempn●…ty fo●… what is past , wh●…ch none else b●…t a Free and Lawful Parliam●…nt can grant them ; all ●…ther Indempn●…ties being vo●…d in Law . And if this will not satisfi●… , let them b●…ware , lest the earth cleave osunde●… that is under them ; and 〈◊〉 swallow them up 〈◊〉 , with their houses , men , goods , and all appertaining to them , and they perish from among the 〈◊〉 , as Korah , 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 , with their families and adherents ●…id , by this or some other exemplary Judgments , and a universal Insurrection of our three whole discontented , oppressed , rained Nations against them , which they may justly fear and expect , if they believe there is a righteous God that judgeth in the earth , a Lord of hosts able to scatter , puni●…h , execute vengeance on them here , and cast them into hell for ever hereafter , for their manifold unlamented , reiterated , transcendent Reb●…llions : or repute these Texts Canonical , which I shall recommend to their saddest Meditations . Prov. 29. 10. He that being often rep●…oved hard●…eth his neck sh●…ll suddenly be destroyed , and that without remedy , ( as the late Anti-Parliamentary Junctoes , and Protectors have been ) Prov. 11. 21. Though hand go in hand , yet the wicked shall not go unpunished . Psal. 68. 21. God shall wound the head of his Enemies , and the hairy scalp of such a one as goeth on still in his Trespasses . Ezech. 24. 14. I the ●…ord h●…ve spoken it , it shall come to passe , I will do it ; I will not go back , neither will I spare , neither will I repe●…t ; but according to thy wayes and accordings I will recompence , and th●…y shall judge thee , saith the Lord . Col. 3. 25. He that doth wrong , shall receive according to the wrong done , and there is no respect of persons w●…th God ; ●…ho can in a moment as easily destroy an whole Army , and great host of men ( as he did * Sennacheribs , 〈◊〉 , and other Armies ) as any one single person . October the 〈◊〉 1659. the day of King-condemning John 〈◊〉 death , and translation to his proper place and arraignment in the Highest Court of 〈◊〉 . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A56207e-190 a 2 Thess. 2. 3. 4. b See their Declaration , May 6. 1659. * See their Collection of Engagements , Remonstrances , &c. for setling the Subjects in their just Liberties and Freedoms , London , 1657. c See my Plea for the Lords , p. 43. 51 , to 60. De Com. Cornub . De V●…Wct . electo in Com. Su●… . & D●…rset . De Vic. elig . * 2 Kings 13. 35. 2 Ch●…on . 13. 16 , 17.