A History of Parliamentary Elections and Electioneering in the Old Days Showing the State of Political Parties and Party Warfare at the Hustings and in the House of Commons from the Stuarts to Queen Victoria

CHAPTER II.

Chapter 2438 wordsPublic domain

Influence of administration under Charles I.--Ballad on the Commonwealth--House of Commons: “A General Sale of Rebellious Household Stuff”--The Parliament under the Restoration--Pepys and Prynne on the choosing of “knights of the shire”--Burgesses sent up at the discretion of the sheriffs--The king’s writ--Evils attending the cessation of wages to parliamentary representatives--Andrew Marvell’s ballad on a venal House of Commons--The parliament waiting on the king--Charles II. and his Commons--“Royal Resolutions,” and disrespect for the Commons--The Earl of Rochester on Charles II.’s parliament--Interference in elections--Independence of legislators _versus_ paid members--The Peers as “born legislators and councillors”--“The Pensioner Parliament” coincident with the remission of salaries to members of the Commons--“An Historical Poem,” by Andrew Marvell--Andrew Marvell as a paid member; his kindly relations with his Hull constituents--Writ for recovering arrears of parliamentary wages--Uncertainty of calling another parliament--The Duke of Buckingham’s intrigues with the Roundheads; his “Litany”--Degradation of parliament--Parody of the king’s speech--Relations of Charles II. and his Commons--Summary of Charles II.’s parliaments--Petitioners, addressers, and Abhorrers--The right of petitioning the throne--The Convention Parliament--The Long Cavalier Parliament--The Pensioner Parliament and the statute against corruption--“The Chequer Inn”--“The Parliament House to be let”--The Habeas Corpus Parliament--The country preparing for Charles II.’s fourth parliament--Election ballads: “The Poll,”--Origin of the factions of Whigs and Tories--Whig and Tory ballads--“A Tory in a Whig’s Coat”--“A Litany from Geneva,” in answer to “A Litany from St. Omer”--The Oxford Parliament of eight days--“The Statesman’s Almanack”--A group of parliamentary election ballads, 1679-80--Ballad on the Essex petitions--The Earl of Shaftesbury’s “Protestant Association”--“A Hymn exalting the Mobile to Loyalty”--The Buckingham ballad--Bribery by Sir Richard “Timber” Temple--The Wiltshire ballad--“Old Sarum”--Petitions against prerogative--The royal pretensions to absolute monarchy--The “Tantivies,” or upholders of absolute kingly rights over Church and State--“Plain Dealing; or, a Dialogue between Humphrey and Roger, as they were returning home from choosing Knights of the Shire to sit in Parliament, 1681;” “Hercules Rideing”--“A Speech without-doors, made by a Plebeian to his Noble Friends”--Philippe de Comines on the British Constitution--On freedom of speech--A true Commonwealth--The excited state of parties at the summoning of the Oxford Parliament, 1681--Ballads on the Oxford Parliament--The impeachment of Fitz-Harris, and the proposal of the opposition to exclude the Duke of York from the “Protestant succession”--Squabble on privilege between the Peers and Commons--The Oxford Parliament dismissed, after eight days, on this pretence--“The Ghost of the Late Parliament to the New One to meet at Oxford”--“On Parliament removing from London to Oxford”--“On his Majesty’s dissolving the late Parliament at Oxford”--A “Weeked” Parliament. 22