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have reason to hope a success of this negotiation so much the more prosperous, if your Majesty would vouchsafe to employ your authority and assistance once again with so much the more urgent importunity; and as you have undertaken for those indigent people that they will be faithful and obedient to their Prince, so you would be gratiously pleased to take care of their welfare and safety, that no farther oppressions of this nature, no more such dismal calamities may be the portion of the innocent and peaceful. This being truly loyal and just in itself, and highly agreeable to your benignity and clemency, which every where protects in soft security so many of your subjects professing the same Religion, we cannot but expect, as it behoves us, from your Majesty. Which act of yours, as it will more closely bind to your subjection all the Protestants throughout your spacious dominions, whose affection and fidelity to your predecessors and yourself in most important distresses have bin often conspicuously made known; so will it fully convince all foreign Princes, that the advice or intention of your Majesty were no way contributory to this prodigious violence, whatever inflamed your ministers and officers to promote it. More especially, if your Majesty shall inflict deserved punishment upon those captains and ministers, who of their own authority, and to

gratifie their own wills, adventured the perpetrating such dreadful acts of inhumanity. In the mean while, since your Majesty has assured us of your justly merited aversion to these most inhuman and cruel proceedings, we doubt not but you will afford a secure sanctuary and shelter within your kingdom to all those miserable exiles that shall flye to your Majesty for protection; and that you will not give permission to any of your subjects to assist the Duke of Savoy to their prejudice. It remains that we make known to your Majesty, how highly we esteem and value your friendship: in testimony of which, we farther affirm there shall never be wanting upon all occasions the real assurances and effects of our protestation.

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"Your Majesty's most affectionate, OLIVER, Protector of the Commonwealth of ENGLAND, &c.

Whitehall, July 29, 1655.”

"To the most eminent Lord, Cardinal MAZA

RINE.

"MOST EMINENT LORD CARDINAL,

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Having deemed it necessary to send this noble person to the king with letters, a copy of which is here enclosed, we gave him also far

ther in charge to salute your excellency in our name, as having entrusted to his fidelity certain other matters to be communicated to your eminency. In reference to which affairs, I entreat your eminency, to give him entire credit, as being a person in whom I have reposed a more than ordinary confidence.

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"Your eminencies most affectionate OLIVER, Protector of the Commonwealth of ENGLAND.

Whitehall, July 29, 1655.”

"OLIVER, Protector of the Commonwealth of ENGLAND, to the most Serene Prince, FREDERICK III. King of DANEMARK, NORWAY,

&c.

"With what a severe and unmerciful Edict, IMMANUEL, Duke of SAVOY, has expelled from their native seats his subjects inhabiting the valleys of Piemont, men otherwise harmless, onely for many years remarkably famous for embracing the purity of religion; and after a dreadful slaughter of some numbers, how he has exposed the rest to the hardships of those desert mountains, stript to their skins, and barred from

all relief, we believe your Majesty has long since heard, and doubt not but that your Majesty is touched with a real commiseration of their sufferings, as becomes so puissant a defender and prince of the Reformed Faith. For indeed, the institutions of the Christian religion require, that whatever mischiefs and miseries any part of us undergo, it should behove us all to be deeply sensible of the same: nor does any man better than your Majesty foresee, if we may be thought able to give a right conjecture of your piety and prudence, what dangers the success and example of this fact portend to ourselves in particular, and to the whole Protestant name in general. We have written the more willingly to yourself, to the end we might assure your Majesty, that the same sorrow which we hope you have conceived for the calamity of our most innocent brethren, the same opinion, the same judgment you have of the whole matter, is plainly and sincerely our own. We have therefore sent our letters to the Duke of SAVOY, wherein we have most importunately besought him to spare those miserable people that implore his mercy, and that he would no longer suffer that dreadful Edict to be in force. Which if your Majesty and the rest of the Reformed Princes would vouchsafe to do, as we are apt to believe they have already done, there is some hope that the anger of the most Serene

Duke may be asswaged, and that his indignation will relent upon the intercession and importunities of his neighbour princes. Or if he persist in his determinations, we protest ourselves ready, together with your Majesty, and the rest of our confederates of the Reformed Religion, to take such speedy methods as may enable us, as far as in us lies, to relieve the distresses of so many miserable creatures, and provide for their liberty and safety. In the mean time, we beseech Almighty God to bless your Majesty with all prosperity.

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"Given at our Palace at Westminster, this 25th of May, in the year of our Lord 1655."

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OLIVER, Protector of the Commonwealth of ENGLAND, &c. to the most Noble the Consuls and Senators of the City of GENEVA.

"We have before made known to your Lordships our excessive sorrow for the heavy and unheard-of calamities of the Protestants inhabiting the Valleys of Piemont, whom the Duke of Savoy persecutes with so much cruelty, but that

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