and we, who by Law are Free, may hereby come to be made Slaves by Law. If then you are Free and resolve to be so, if you have any regard to God's providence in giving you a claim to so excellent a Consti∣tution, if you would not void your own Rights, nor lay a Foundation of Vassallage to your unborn Followers, the poor Posterity of your Loyns, for whom God and Nature, and the Constitution of the Govern∣ment have made you Trustees, then seriously weigh these following Particulars.
I. In your present Election Receive no man's Gift or Bribe to chuse him; but be assured, that he will be false to you, that basely tempts you to be false to your Country, your self and your Children. How can you hope to see God with peace, that turn Mercenaries in a matter, on which depends the Well-being of an whole Kingdom for present & future times? since at a pinch One good Man gains a Vote & saves a Kingdom; and what does any County or Burgess-Town in England know, but all may depend upon their making a good Choice? But then to sell the Providence of God, and the dear-bought purchase of your painful An∣cestors for a little Money (that after you have got it, you know not how little a while you may be suffered to keep it) is the mark of a Wretched Mind: Truly such ought not to have the power of a Free-man, that would so abuse his own and hazard other mens Freedom by it: he deserves to be cast over Board, that would Sink the Vessel, and thereby drown the Company embark't with him.
Honest Gentlemen will think they give enough for the Choice, that pay their Electors in a constant, painful and chargeable Attendance; but Such as give Money to be chosen, would get Money by being chosen, they design not to serve you, but themselves of you; and then fare you well. As you will answer it to Almigh∣ty God, I entreat you to shew your Abhorrence of this Infamous Practice: It renders the very Constitu∣tion contemptible, that any should say, I can be chosen, if I will spend Money or give them Drink enough; and this is said not without reason, Elections, that ought to be serious things, and gravely and reasonably perform'd, being generally made the occasions of more Rudeness and Drunkenness, then any of the Wild May-games in use among us.
Thus by making men Law-breakers, they are it seems made fit to chuse Law-makers, their Choice being the purchase of Excess. But must we alwayes owe our Parliaments to Rioting and Drunkenness? and must men be made Ʋncapable of all Choice, before they chuse their Legislators? I would know of any of you all, if in a difference about a private property, an Horse or a Cow, or any other thing you would be as easie, indifferent and careless in chusing your Arbitrators? Certainly you would not; with what reason then can you be unconcern'd in the Qualifications of men, upon whose fitness and Integrity depends all you and your Posterity may enjoy? Which leads me to the other Particulars.
II. Chuse no Man that has been a Reputed Pensioner; 'tis not only against your Interest, but it is dis∣graceful to you and the Parliament you chuse. The Representative of a Nation ought to consist of the most Wise, Sober and Valiant of the People, not Men of mean Spirits or sordid Passions, that would sell, the Interest of the People that chuse them, to advance their own, or be at the Beck of some great Man, in hopes of a Lift to a good Employ: pray beware of these. You need not be streightned, the Coun∣try is wide and the Gentry numerous.
III. By no means chuse a Man that is an Officer at Court, or whose Employment is durante beneplacito, that is, at Will and Pleasure; nor is this any Reflection upon the King, who being one Part of the Go∣vernment, should leave the other free, and without any the least Awe or Influence to bar or hinder its pro∣ceedings. Besides, an Officer is under a Temptation to be byast; and to say true, an Office in a Par∣liament man, is but a softer and safer word for a Pension: the Pretence it has above the other, is the danger of it.
IV. In the next place, Chuse no Indigent Persons, for those may be under a temptation of abusing their Trust to gain their own ends: for such do not Prefer you, which should be the end of their Choice, but Raise themselves by you.
V. Have a care of Ambitious men and non-Residents, such as live about Town and not with their E∣states, who seek honours and preferments above, and little or never embetter the Country with their Ex∣pences or Hospitality, for they intend themselves and not the Advantage of the Country.
VI. Chuse no Prodigal or Voluptuous Persons, for besides that they are not Regular enough to be Law-makers, they are commonly Idle; and though they may wish well to your Interest, yet they will lose it rather then their Pleasures; they will scarcely give their Attendance, they must not be relied on. So that such Persons are only to be preferred before those, that are Sober to do mischief; whose de∣bauchery is of the mind: Men of Injust Mercinary and sinister Principles, who, the soberer they be to themselves, the worse they are to you.
VII. Review the Members of the last Parliaments, and their Inclinations and Votes, as near as you can learn them, and the Conversation of the Gentlemen of your own Country, that were not Members, and take your measures of both, by that which is your True and Just Interest at this Critical time of the day, and you need not be divided or distracted in your Choice.
VIII. Rather take a Stranger, if recommended by an unquestionable Hand, than a Neighbour Ill-af∣fected to your Interest. 'Tis not pleasing a Neighbour, because rich and powerful, but Saving England, that you are to eye: Neither pay or return private Obligations at the cost of the Nation; let not such Engagements put you upon dangerous Elections as you love your Country.