the composition of the Commons House that was really
of consequence, and here appearances promised well
for Richard. The total number of the members,
by the returns, was 558, of whom 482 were from English
counties and burghs, 25 from Wales, 30 from Ireland,
and only 21 from Scotland. Some fifty of the
total number were resolute pure Republicans, among
whom may be noted Bradshaw (Cheshire), Vane (Whitchurch
in Hants), Scott (Wycombe), Hasilrig (Leicester), Ludlow
(Hindon), Henry Neville (Reading), Okey (Bedfordshire),
and Weaver (Stamford); and there was a considerable
sprinkling of Anti-Cromwellians of other colours besides,
including Lord Fairfax (Yorkshire), Lambert (Pontefract),
Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper (Wilts), and Major-General
Browne (London). But Thurloe was there to represent
the Government in chief (returned by Cambridge University,
but by several other places also); and he could count
about a hundred sure English adherents on the benches;
among whom were Sir Edmund Prideaux (Saltash), Sir
William Ellis (Grantham), together with his own subordinate
in the Council-office, William Jessop (Stafford), and
Milton’s assistant in the Foreign Secretaryship,
Andrew Marvell (Hull). There were not a few Army-officers
of the Wallingford-House party; but, on the whole,
this element did not seem to be particularly strong
in the House. Among the members for Scottish
constituencies were the Marquis of Argyle (Aberdeenshire),
Samuel Desborough (Midlothian), the Earl of Tweeddale
(East Lothian), Colonel Adrian Scroope (Linlithgow
group of Burghs), Swinton of Swinton (Haddingtonshire),
Colonel Whetham (St. Andrews, &c.), and Monk’s
brother-in-law, Dr. Thomas Clarges (Aberdeen, Banff,
and Cullen). Ireland had returned, among her
thirty, Sir Hardress Waller (Kerry, &c.), Sir Jerome
Zanchy (Tipperary and Waterford), Sir Charles Coote
(Galway and Mayo), and two Ingoldsbys. The Scottish
and Irish representatives were, almost to a man, Government
nominees. Altogether, Thurloe’s anxiety
must have been about the yet unknown mass of 300 or
so, some scores of them lawyers, others country-gentlemen,
and many of them young, that formed the neutral stuff
to be yet operated upon. Among these, in spite
of the oath of fidelity to the Lord Protector, there
were indubitably not a few who were Stuartists at
heart; but most wavered between Republicanism and
the Protectorate, and it was hopeful for Thurloe in
this respect that so much of the mass was Presbyterian.
Ludlow, who did not at first take his seat, tells
us that he at last contrived to do so furtively without
being sworn, and seems to hint that Vane did the same.
There was negligence on the part of the doorkeepers,
or they were confused by the multitude of strange
faces; for a stray London madman, named King, sat
in the House for some time, in the belief that, as
one of that name had been elected for some place,
he might possibly be the person.[1]
[Footnote 1: List in Parl. Hist. III. 1530-1537; Ludlow, 619 et seq.]