[The Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660 by David Masson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660 CHAPTER I 269/295
The speech of Cromwell in assenting to the _Petition and Advice_, May 25, 1657, had been accidentally omitted in the earlier editions of Carlyle's _Cromwell;_ but it was given in the Appendix to the edition of 1657.
It may stand as Speech XIV*.
in the numbering.] The "perfecting of those things" occupied a good deal of time.
What was necessary was to cast the resolutions already come to in supplement to the _Petition and Advice_, or those that might yet suggest themselves, into a valid legal form; and it was agreed, June 4, that, except in as far as it might be well to pass express Bills on specific matters, the best way would be to frame and submit to his Highness a _Humble Additional and Explanatory Petition and Advice_.
The due framing of this, and the preparation of the necessary Bills, were to be work for three weeks more.[1] [Footnote 1: Commons Journals of date, and afterwards.] Meanwhile, in evidence that the Session of the Parliament up to this point, notwithstanding the great business of the _Petition and Advice_ and the Kingship question, had by no means been barren in legislation, the House had gathered up all the Bills already passed, but not yet assented to, for presentation to his Highness in a body. On the 9th of June thirty-eight such Bills, "some of the public, and the others of a more private, concernment," were presented to his Highness by the whole House, assembled in the Painted Chamber, the Speaker, "after a short and pithy speech," offering them as some grapes preceding the full vintage, and his Highness ratifying all by his assent .-- Among these was one very comprehensive Act with this preamble: "Whereas, since the 20th of April, 1653, in the great exigences and necessities of these nations, divers Acts and Ordinances have been made without the consent of the People assembled in Parliament--which is not according to the fundamental laws of the nations and the rights of the People, and is not for the future to be drawn into example--yet, the actings thereupon tending to the settlement of the estates of several persons and families and the peace and quiet of the nations: Be it enacted by his Highness the Lord Protector and this present Parliament," &c.
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