A letter sent from Col: VVhaley, being commanded by the King to declare His Maiesties great dislike of a late pamphlet scandalous to his Majesty: being intituled, His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, touching his inclination for peace, dated the 27. of August 1647. The which pamphlet, his Majesty utterly disavows, as being published without his knowledge or consent. Whalley, Edward, d. 1675? 1647 Approx. 3 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 4 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2013-12 (EEBO-TCP Phase 2). A96268 Wing W1528 Thomason E405_4 ESTC R201874 99862363 99862363 160470

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Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 2, no. A96268) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 160470) Images scanned from microfilm: (Thomason Tracts ; 64:E405[4]) A letter sent from Col: VVhaley, being commanded by the King to declare His Maiesties great dislike of a late pamphlet scandalous to his Majesty: being intituled, His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, touching his inclination for peace, dated the 27. of August 1647. The which pamphlet, his Majesty utterly disavows, as being published without his knowledge or consent. Whalley, Edward, d. 1675? [2], 6 p. Printed by I. Coe, for Henry Overton in Popes-head Ally, London, : 1647. A reply to: His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, concerning his gracious inclination for peace (Wing C2229). Annotation on Thomason copy: "Aug: 31". Reproduction of the original in the British Library.

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eng Charles -- I, -- King of England, 1600-1649 -- Early works to 1800. His Majesties declaration to all his loving subjects, concerning his gracious inclination for peace -- Early works to 1800. Great Britain -- History -- Civil War, 1642-1649 -- Peace -- Early works to 1800. 2020-09-21 Content of 'availability' element changed when EEBO Phase 2 texts came into the public domain 2012-03 Assigned for keying and markup 2012-04 Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2012-05 Sampled and proofread 2012-05 Text and markup reviewed and edited 2013-02 Batch review (QC) and XML conversion
A LETTER SENT FROM Col: VVhaley, BEING Commanded by the KING to declare His MAIESTIES great diſlike of a late Pamphlet ſcandalous to his MAJESTY: Being Intituled, His Majeſties Declaration to all His Loving Subjects, touching his inclination for peace, dated the 27. August 1647.

THE Which Pamphlet, his Majeſty utterly diſavows, as being publiſhed without His knowledge or conſent. Aug: 31

London, Printed by I. Coe, for Henry Overton in Popes-head Ally, 1647.

FOR HIS HONOVRED FRIEND Sr. Arthur Haſlerig, Theſe preſent. SJR,

THere is a paper of the twenty ſeventh Inſtant, (intituled His Majeſties Declaration) made publike, it is patronized upon the King, but I aſſure you, His Majeſty is much abuſed in it; he hath many times to my ſelfe and others expreſſed not onely his diſavowing, but utter diſlike of it; at firſt it ſomthing troubled him, but it being ſo unlike any thing of his, and ſo contrary to his knowne intentions, he was confident it would not gaine credence with any; yet ſince, hearing that divers both in City and Country, and Army, were ſo fondly credulous as to deeme it to be His Majeſties, and ſo were much offended at it, it was the Kings Command J ſhould certifie my friends how extreamely he is wronged, and truly Sir, you would do the King but right, and diſcharge J conceive no more then your own duty to indeavour the finding out the Author, and making him exemplary, and J am confident the King expects ſo much juſtice therein. Here is little newes in Court more then this, that the King yeſterday was a hunting in New Parke, killed a Stag and a Buck, afterwards dined at Syon, ſtayed three or foure houres with his Children, and then returned to Hampton, where there is great reſort of all ſorts of people to him, but not ſo many Cavaliers as is reported, it is confeſſed, no Gentleman is debarted the liberty of kiſſing the Kings hand, yet no ſtranger ſtayes long, we have freſh and freſh appearances, the faces which appeares in the morning, you ſildome ſee in the afternoone, at the fartheſt, but the next day. The Lord Convoway hath taken his leave of the Court for preſent, I have no more to acquaint you with; I ſhall onely againe mind you, that to vindicate the King by diſcovering and puniſhing the Libeller cannot but give great ſatisfaction to his Majeſty: I remaine,

Hampton Court. Aug. 29. 1647. Your very Faithfull and affectionate Servant, Edw: Whaley