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A33531 English-law, or, A summary survey of the houshold of God on earth and that both before and under the law, and that both of Moses and the Lord Jesus : historically opening the purity and apostacy of believers in the successions of ages, to this present : together with an essay of Christian government under the regiment of our Lord and King, the one immortal, invisible, infinite, eternal, universal prince, the Prince of Peace, Emmanuel. Cock, Charles George. 1651 (1651) Wing C4789; ESTC R37185 322,702 228

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or suffered by the supremacy of power so that truly the Law saith the King can do no wrong that is the Law by the supremacy of power enables him not to do wrong and to speak out the whole truth to men of the meanest understanding This law and the right understanding and executing of it is the highest Prerogative of any of Gods Vicegerents in higher or lower sphears and is the agreed Rule of common good as before-said Now our great error and delusion of late was to give that to the person which was due to the Office and to subjugate the Office to the person and not the person to the Office which the Law would never admit for the Law that is the purity yea tanscendencie of Reason leaves the person of the Prince naked in case of Male Action though it censures not in all male administration where it admits him positively to judge I shall give you an example to illustrate for if the King enters a mans house disguised and offers to vitiate his wife daughter c. and be slain of the father husband c. it is but as the death of an ordinary person and truly by the principles of the setled Law be he known it is no more I shall put but one Example more A Traytor is by vertue of the Kings Writ brought before the Judge Arraigned and Condemned the King grants no pardon which I suppose he in such Cases cannot generally though it was done customarily nor uses no legal peaceably way but by force personal sets himself in Act by his Guard to take this Traytor out of the hands of that Justice to which in his Politick capacity he hath Sentenced him and the Sheriffs men defending the Law and the Guard by the personal command of the King seeking the overthrow of it by taking away illegally the prisoner and they fighting about it and the King running in he is slain it is no murder by the principles of the Law which owns not the King in this Act of Tort and Force and takes no notice of the death of that person as King who in Law dies not for the Law cannot now take notice of it because out of his Sphear by this it is evident to what end the Magistrate is cloathed with so called Prerogative namely the advance of publike interest Now as in this sort it gives to the supream Magistrate the glory of the Courts of Justice and the disposings of them as one part of Prerogative so knowing the honor of the Supream Power cannot be maintained but by some set way as it seems the Ancients provided here so much of all sorts of provision both for the Kings Family as also for his Stable at the so called Kings price exceedingly abused besides the so called setled revenues of the Crown namely Crown lands Fee-Farm Rents c. So it also provided for Emergencies and that both for charges upon the sea and also for the land by Customs now so called Fines Forfeitures wrecks of the sea how unjustly soever land deserted of the sea lands of Ideots Treasure found goods without owners Tythes of lands out of Parishes and the like And upon these or any other matter if any debt did accrue it was satisfied to the King that the Commonwealth might not lose before any private person could be satisfied one penny the abuse of this was grown intolerable but I here treat of Settlements and how long since it was in the Kings case it matters not for no slipping of time could prejudice the Kings Title as in case of a common person who was tied to sue within such a time or the time might be pleaded in Bar as was justly enacted Now the reason of this was just and good preferring publike and universal good before private and particular yet this proved offensive oft-times because it was made the instrument to absolute Injustice while restitution was made to the King to the evident destruction of a stranger that is a third person whom the Law left remediless yea though utterly undone and begging from door to door It was also for the same reason construed to be Law that in all Grants made by the King they should be taken most beneficially for him and that they should not erre to any other construction then what was manifested in the body of the Grant that is the plain letter must be taken and no implicite construction of Law shall be taken advantage of against the good of the Commonwealth as against a particular party And lastly In case of Grants it is void if it appears that the King was deceived in his Grant truth these originally just things after the fatall wisdom of the Law was politickly perfected came to be made the Mystery of Iniquity for it was said the Grants were made according to these received Rules for the Kings sole benefit whereby he that was once made the Kings Officer was ever after scandalized for a Knave and he that was once the Kings Farmor Grantee or Debitor his estate was alwayes after esteemed incombred Now this was more feared when it was granted to him by Judgement of the Judges that he in Temporals might by a Clause of Non obstante dispence with any Statute Law and that though the Statute saith such dispensations should be utterly void as it was in the time of Henry the seventh the beginning was in Edward the fourth not so plain Acts of Parliament bind not the King unless especially named Now these unhinged all our Liberties for by the one he was not bound except named and by the second he might dispence how-ever named therefore these how ever used I cannot reckon as legal Prerogative I now proceed with Prerogative called Just that is That the King or Supream Power for the benefit of the Commonwealth have the estates of those that die without heir for no private or particular heir being the publike is rightly preferred so if they purchase who have no right as Aliens they have also given him those Royal Mines of gold and silver lest such things in Subjects should raise them so high as they should be able by leavying Arms to contest for the Supremacy and attempt a Tyranny Now this if agreed as agreed is most just They gave him some honorary respects meerly as for example That the Lord should not seise his Villein in his presence how justly may well be Quaeried For if just to be done why not more just before him To which may be added That Amerciaments Fines c. which had no exact literal Rule as offences made by Statute punishable by the Justices at Sessions with unlimited Fine or Amerciaments were said to be by vertue of his Prerogative as his Iustices that is they were to Fine at discretion that is according to the nature of the fact respect had to the Law that is saving his Freehold or not to the value of his Freehold or so that he should not for to pay that Fine be
others either preferred before or above them yet even in this time the name of religion was venerable and truly the faith of many or rather the credulity or superstition of most with abundant charity was everywhere perspicuous love of God drew some but Pride Lust Covetize Ambition Ease and such like drew a multitude to speak of the multitude of vain and superstitious attractives I count needless as fitting rather itching ears then solid heads yet this gangrene over spred the whole body of the Christian Common-wealth and it was no miracle for miracles were become common and now the Church slept in greater security then before for who durst oppose the word of the Pope and the sword of Princes for seeing fire and faggot the ax and halter were now in the hands of the chief Christians what cause of fear to the servants of Christ and what need the Kings fear if they had the Pope to their friend yet divers of them repined seeing so much of the temporall estate each day slipt away under Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction so called as that in the time of Henry the fourth of England when it was complained of in Parliament that the third part of the Land and revenue of the whole kingdome was in the Church-mens hands and it was petitioned to take some away the first publick act of the people of England against the jurisdiction and estate of the Bishop of Rome although in the case of Johns grant of the kingdome to the Pope to hold in fee of him The Lords dis-owned the power of the king to grant as having no more but a trust in the kingdome but they did not hint that his Holiness could not take and it was vain when they saw he gaped for more then he took and took more then was his due The succeeding Kings were either so given to forreign wars or troubled with the intestine divisions of the houses of York and Lancaster that now they were forced to own Parliaments yea to take the chief strength of their Title from their determinations There had been a Law made formerly to have Parliaments once a year for as the Kings of England sought to avoid those publick conventions of the most potent Lords and popular Commons for divers most evident reasons as they conceived and upon their unjust grounds truly destructive to their Royalty for there their actions were continually questioned the actors by personal command of the Kings against Law or labouring the abolishing the Laws either fined or hanged or otherwise punished and though some Parliaments went cross to others some even justifying the acts of kings against Law and their abettors this invalidates not the power of the Parliament but confirms it for by these Acts the kings after made Title so that here the Parliament got into their hands and that upon motion of the kings even the power of appointing the king and this arose from that bloody contention between those two houses But you will ask was not the Title clear yes without doubt but the Estates that is the Parliament upon the great dislike of the present Government their hearts being alienated from a dissolute and riotous Prince sought out the man among them of the Race with whom the potent men could drive the best bargains for Riches Honor and promotion and ever or mostly though the love and zeal of the Laws Liberties but especially of Religion gave the first blow to the quarrel and suited it yet interest espoused wedded owned and enjoyed it so easie are the best natures to be corrupted and depraved by outward excellencies or esteemed excellent things But it may be Quaeried what all the succession of Princes all this while did for the Church truly all they could both by themselves and Subjects multitudes of Churches Monasteries Fryeries Nunneries Abbies Chappels all planted in the most pleasant delicious places of the Nation admirable and costly structures richly furnished largely endowed both with lands and yearly profits of Tythes onely to send a brother to preach and now the common maintenance of the Church or Church-men ceased and was made proper and after was drawn into that civil order which we now call a Parish being a limitation of the bounds of the Church for care of souls and maintenance and though indeed there was so great a sufficiency yet even then many of the Clergy were in want it may be the Pope thought it fit some of Christs Servants should be like their Master I mean of that so called and justly at first the Fryers of Saint Francis Order according to their stile commonly called the Begging Fryers for so they did upon conscience of the Rule of our Saviour Go forth into all the world take no care for any thing one coat no money not a staffe no nor sandalls these went bare-foot preached diligently expecting onely what God moved peoples hearts to bestow upon them for they beleeved that God that said The labourer is worthy of his hire would not suffer them while they laboured to want That Rome testified against Rome admitting truth for truth though living in Errour yea many of these preached against the Errours I say not of the Church but of the Court of Rome wisely as it was beleeved covering their mothers nakedness with the Fig-leaves of their temporal acquests but all were not so politick some spake plainly against the Bishop of Rome in all Ages and preached Rome Babylon and the Pope Antichrist and it might well be for Rome come to the height of outward greatness so that the Mahumetans who look for an earthly Paradise excelling and abounding in all carnall delicacies could not have desired more it fell into the sink of enormity all debauchery riotousness and prophaneness and exalted it self not onely against God kicking with the heel now she was fat but above God under the power of the Keyes for she dispensed with the very Commandments of the Almighty giving licence not onely to unlawful but even to incestuous marriages which hath filled Christendom so called with all those horrible and direful effects of wrath upon all Nations which now of late years have fallen out especially upon the Kings Princes and great men the great Merchants whose lusts would admit no denyal and so traded with this spirituall harlot for some of her trash and paint to give a colour to all their incests murders perjuries lyes adulteries rapines thefts extortions and such like and let all the families of Europe look to themselves they boast to be descended of Kings ally'd to all the great Princes of Europe but have they not therewith an allyance to the judgement which will it is probable follow these sins till the blot be utterly worn out and let them look to it they hold not but by this beast and will be destroyed with her mistake not I say not all Kings or kingly power or Rule or Government but the issue of Incest and the spawn of unlawfull Lusts I must now return to the
that he found not absolutely buxome that is without any scruple to yeild compliance to his absolute will he by his power removed and displaced to this end after one contest with one he changed the stile of the Pattent this raised an odium and at least he must bear the blame for by whose insinuations or abuses so ever it was done Yet while no man can force a resolved man who can force a King and the last and great Act being his the whole was adjudged to him yet not alone An other Act of great judgement to his end was the constant use of proclamations declarative not only of the Law but his pleasure in other lands called Edicts or Acts of the King alone or his saying or will resolved into Law these were at first put out upon things benificial for the Subject and were as it were a temporary Law of exigency or provision by the King for what the Law was either being antiquated and now revived or els that for which there was no Law in the case yet necessary to be provided for and so was a time of Tryal or an Act of probation against the next Parliament And these powers were never denyed Kings formerly or but seldome being but seldome used and generally upon good grounds so that no disobedience followed but at last his proclamations were divers of them though carrying a colour of Law slighted But he being of a very quiet spirit could not enter a contest but sought to work his end an other way and that was to call Parliaments And to create new Honors and so over-vote and consequently over-power the Parliament debasing Spirits by dependance and this having a strong influence upon the Gentry dulled now with long peace a natural politique of this Prince and not the least conducing to his end if he could or would have known when to have taken up the sword as he supposed they would for they were generally so besotted of these Court bables of honor that upon his or a great mans letter who their Lordships pleased was made a Parliament man and the House of Lords and Commons the Bar or Clyff against the Torrent of Tyranny was become an inlet to that Ocean but there was one great jealosie still which was a bar and this was the Kings excessive prodigality to his own Nation who were as greedy to aske as he to give so that the English grew a little I may say a great deale discontented especially the understanding sort But more upon the judgement so called given concerning the naturalization of a Scot ipso facto by the Union of the Crowns in one person as if all the rights priviledges and immunities of the free-born people of England were become hereditary to the Scottish Nation by one born in Scotland being next of blood and so inheriting the Crown of England And though great and wise men had their hands in this work and saw no evill in it yet they that were as wise though not so great and more uninterested and so less questionable were otherways minded supposing that this extraordinary favour to that Nation the seconding and approving of it by so many wise men and supposed affectionate patriots zealous of the liberty of the English Nation though it seemed to them as but a wise and civill policy and Act of munificence not much to be supected of danger carried hay in the Horn namely by this and such like plots fitted them to introduce and continue quietly what they all thought fit of necessity to be done the order of episcopacy in that Church and with that the whole liturgie of the Church of England with all those rites and ceremonies thought requisite as in the Church of England which the King upon petition of some Ministers at his first coming to the Crown was fully resolved in I mean in the conference at Hampton Court and the consequence of it By which he was resolved not to alter what the late Queen Elizabeth had established But these men believed that as this was indeed aimed at and this aime publikely allowed so that there was an other intention which lay hid and undiscovered and that was to force Scotland in case of opposition by English Armes and to provoke each other to these several works by a short kind of policy the Scot was engaged so as he must yeild what was his chiefest glory And if he yeilded not the English thus disrellished would be quick to the quarrel This I say not to be the Kings aime No I believe he might see no more then the plain surface matter and never be able to discover either this intended by some or that other politique which I now relate intended by others who yet drove on the same design but as supposing that it was a certain way to involve the two Nations in a War which their conditions required but his resolution was to keep all quiet and truly knowing of the Scotch temper he urged but inforced not commanded but compelled not and though he better approved Englands Hierarchical order he would not utterly reject the rigidity of the Scotch Presbytery though he had found some cross dealings at their hands which in England would have been called the scandal of the Crown and were not altogether savouring of a Christian modesty and humility were it but for the Kirk to command a Fast on that day the King had appointed a solemn Feast of State and that after the Feast was publikely known and divulged I mention but a peccadillo and that under a supposition because I would not apply that to things which may be was and will be only the errour of persons during the reign of these two princes Elizabeth and James notwithstanding the many complaints of the excess and defects of the Laws in their several respects yet nothing was done truly worthy the supream powers by them claimed there were some particular streams or rivulets of errour amended or at least pretended by particular Statutes both in giving Laws where none were and amending what was amiss but out alas the Ocean whence all these had their rise was still the same Three special Statutes I must here remember of James one to punish with death him or her that had two wives or two husbands but not made death to commit Adultery yet as I have heard canvassed at the same Parliament this Statute severely executed The second as rigidly which was concerning them that were or are delivered of Bastards pretended dead born and having no witness present to be taken as murderers The last was the regulating of the number of Attornies for good cause there specified which never was so much as in the least observed nor a Judge ever questioned for it yet this as to the world and in carnall respects of as necessary concernment as the other I shall not progress further here concerning ought being now come to the portall of the Theater of all Quaeries in the multitude of questions
performed or otherways adorning Churches the several Manners Places Times of bowing gesture and order of pronunciation at or in reading all not only discoursed of but applauded and generally practized adoration at the entery of the Church and also at departure and that to the East all for uniformity the great and special pretence of the so called Church that is the Bishops the Fathers of the Church according to their own stile Bowing or Genuflexion or Adorations to at or of the name of Jesus Extream unction Confirmation Pennance all practised yea a Nuntio of the Pope but not so owned yet well known and which troubled the people most of all a raile of wood or other partition betwixt the so called Priest and people at the receiving the Sacrament so called of the Altar and this of necessity and the words of administration purely Popish as yet in the directory But all persons without question in the parish admitted to the Sacrament as by Law was established these things setled they haste for power to the further setlement of the Church in power and purity and by the Kings power they are convened and called the sacred Synod where they Act with large commission and fearing counter-buffs of Providence by them called Fortune they denied the Pope but admitt Popery in its full height and to evidence the Antichristianisme they establish their Hierarchy with an oath with that famous clause of c. labouring as the brood of old Rome to bring all Temporal jurisdiction under ecclesiastick censure and this was the condition of the Church or Churchmen or Clergy men so called I shall now as shortly give you a veiw of the civill State as the necessity of perspicuity will well permit You have heard upon what a politique Basis William so called the Conqueror founded his Empire which yet from evident causes declining even in the space of his own and Sons Raign did evidently shew the frailty of all humane wisdome and therefore might well in the space of six hundred years be brought to nothing and truly once for all to say it I am in my conscience perswaded that King Charles did see the want of Law in this land to govern the Nation rightly and upon that foundation sought to mould the kingdom to the similitude of other Nations for it is a sure and certain principle that States grow old and Laws c. And if not reduced by reformation there is a necessity of a new formation Now the chief thing which a Prince looketh at is the power of War or the Sword and this so far as the power rested in the King which was his Tenure was clean lost and gone for the many transmutations of possessions had made many litigious questions partly through the corruption of officers not duly awarding process against alienators without license partly other defects of certain boundaries and partly the evill of time which had through divers discents parcelled great estates into many persons So that there were many Tenants but few Knights and what was at first an honor to hold of the King or by Knights service because the Tenants Son and Heire should yet come to the education of a Lord paramount or higher then the Father and so should be bettered both for Arts and Arms the Kings of late years had made them absolutely but the fees of their Servants and the Heirs of gallant men were as bad as slaves to the will of the Kings Grantee whereby they were yoaked unequally in marriage or their estates were generally squeised of sometime a third sometimes a fourth or fifth part in the Court of Wards so that they that should have been the Princes guard as it were being thus prejudiced in their minority and drinking in hastily the complaints of their friends bewailing their Wardships as an insufferable vassalage could not heartily seek to maintain that power whose subsistence was their ruine to eternity in all their progeny and through the long tract of time it was grown to this that almost any great or rich mens Son must be a Ward all Titles of Lands being so exceedingly intricated that it was almost impossible to clear it and this rigor was never higher then in the daies of this King so that it is evident for a setled Militia for his own defence he had none but had left himself naked to the strokes of any timely opposition Next as he had robbed himself thus of power so had the example of all the Kings in part and the power from jealousie in other part devested the Lords of all power military by dependencies of Knights service The Oathes of homage and fealty the Kings had respited them to enhanse a revenue and the Lords were not willing to urge that which had been so fatall to many their predecessors through their dependencies and being now grown generally loose lazy or worse from the long peace we had enjoyed they had no contests but at Tennis Drinking Dicing or worse sports and sometimes a Law suite These yet sunk many of their estates and they had no waies of raising them but by the Kings sole favour for there were no Lords now that had absolute power in any County this made them wholly quiet and the rather because to be of an active warlike spirit gave cause of jealousie to a Prince especially of any who were not meerly his creatures namely of ancient popular Nobility that is their Ancestors of great repute with the people Many therefore retired themselves lived privately and quietly in respect of the Court but few of them with great love in the Countries where they were resiant carrying too severe a hand towards their Tenants by racking of Farme-rents and otherwaies as Lords of Mannors enhansing fines as all the Gentry also at their own wills enclosing of Commons for private profit and by the evill example both of themselves Servants and Retainers bringing a general Lewdness Looseness ād debauchery in religion and civill manners into all the quarters of the Nation For the Country still at least as far as it may or can imitates the Court and so downward by this means a general almost universal pravity and corruption stole upon and got possession of the English Nation not that I think to speak once for all that England was worse in any respect eirher for civill or Ecclesiastick government then any other Christian kingdom no but that it had departed from that purity of Government which it self held forth and had in some measure exercised yet was then taxed to hold forth little of a true Christian Government at all for first though the Sabboth was held moral yet it was prophaned and that by publique authority as by the book of sports which also gave such a loose to the power of the master of the family that he could not govern by an exact rule that power being before too much broken and this opened a gap to all inordinate walking towards magistracy in other both superior and
over-confidently accept these councels the truth I shall not prolixly assert God having providentially cut of that Quaere by the Sword of the Hollander but their course lading provision number and quantity of men and Commanders quality of convoy and backs of carriage besides the testimony of divers all tend to demonstrate the same nor for the same reason shall I argue how cross and incoherent we see these Councels were for fools see errors when the cast is plaid which the wise Gamester studied for and could not descry This as it hastened preparations on the Kings part for war so it enforced him while yet unprepared to hold out the Ensigns of peace and what no advices could produce before is now for interest sake granted namely a Parliament wherein all under-hand proceedings for elections not being able such a general dislike being in all men to the King and his proceedings to work and mould it serviceable to the Kings ends he as soon dissolves as calls it This breeding a deeper distast and he not yet fitted and seeing the people now fell upon petitioning rather then rebelling relying upon the Parliaments united power rather then upon their single personal rights and would sooner venture to set down with an unjust loss of part from the Kings power then loose all to his mercy by an unwarrantable course He calls a Parliament again and to this Parliament are brought so many complaints that I fear the bulk of Petitions and Remonstrances will affright our Worthies for looking into them and let much necessary work lye undone not giving due reparations to many persons against publike Theeves and Extortioners Now the Parliament made no great haste and the King was urgent for money which they taking advantage of and of his former not only declining and breaking up or dissolving Parliaments but his neglecting his own Laws that is those to which he had assented they upon the ground laid in his third year insist to have an Act for setling this Parliament till dissolved or prorogued by themselves notwithstanding an act for calling a Parliament every three years thinking no knot too sure to hold what they still found loose which effected with some other things they then fall to work with the Earle of Strafford that had power enough to have done all he intended in an ordinary course of providence had not vain confidence that he could do it when he would as the Almighty determined befooled him he surprized who was the Master-dear the herd flye and though accused by the Kings great Councel yet his Majesty having affections personal notwithstanding the supream publick trust in ordinary gives them his pass and by the means of his Admiral they were set safe a forreign shore and now himself labours to his utmost the safety and preservation of that man who had ruled in Ireland to his utmost in that absolute way he intended his Master here should as the Cardinal Richelieu had done in his France the great pleas on his side were what he had done was for his Master the King by his special command for which he had his warrant and for all Moneys his discharge and if a further offence were it was against no existent Law if Treason c. not within the Law of 25. of Edward the third which was made with much advisement to preserve the Liberty of the Subject and consequently his life by a certain knowledge of his dutie To which it was answered that his trust was to the Commonwealth to the King in his Politique not in his natural capacity and his personal receit warrant or allowance was not sufficient but they had power yea in case he had had a legal allowance or discharge in ordinary yet for the Commonwealths sake which includes both king and people to call him to an account And to the last part that it was against no Law existent They said the Parliament was by the Stat. Judge of Treason de futuro and to orethrow the Laws and government was more then to destroy a person to ruine a kingdom then kill a king and therefore I must agree by importunity forced the King to assent to his death which effected and not dared to be recalled all plots and policies left are used to break up the Parliament by the King yea an attempt made upon some Members to sacrifice to the Ghost of Strafford but all failing and yet manifested the Parliament think fit to have a guard the King practices the Army the Parliament Vote no less then 400000. l. And with that disband the Army the King thus lost every way and the Army in Ireland utterly lost by the grand Rebellion there taking many of them part with the Irish if not most and this still giving harsher resentments to the people whose Liberty was now grown great and the Parliament loth to hinder them while they served their turns many not only sleights but affronts were put on the Kings servants reflecting upon himself The Bishops now shew their sure Rock was he and they wholly cleave to him the Lords many joyn with him many against him and many appear not the Kings Agents whose designs had been nipt here being now in Denmark Holland France c. moved for assistance against the Parliament of England as the Irish Rebels do there they seek the same things and under the same pretexts so that the King is said and not without some ground to be the chief Actor in all so loth he was to call the Irish Rebels This causes the Parliament to talk of raising Armes not only to defend themselves against the King and those with whom he came to the Parliament House and kept still about him being generally a crew of Jovialists debaucht persons But to offend such publike forreign Enemies as under the Kings Name should be brought from other Nations or raised here to which there was such an unanimous loan of all sorts especially the Religious who found a change indeed in their condition That they from that took the hint of the strong affections of the people towards them and upon that Vote the extirpation of Episcopacy the which the King so long contending for and so eagerly ruined himself with them How far this is to be read out of the Revelation I shall not quaere but say it was long foretold out of that prophesy and now fell out they gave themselves now to treat of Reformation of the Church but this rooting up Episcopacy took many from them they had voted and acted against pluralities as to settle the Church and gave the Judges a setled and sufficient salary pretending to take away all other Fees from them but proceeded not The King fled from London the Convocation they follow his shaddow the Parliament call themselves a certain number of men called Ministers from all parts and nominate them the Assembly these sit as the Clergy of England the King after many Traverses having gotten together an Army comes to Oxford whether
of Reformers cause us to fall out with duty But while they fail let us as we should seek the Lord with double diligence I know there is much objected but the matters most eyed are first of purse-concernment as the Taxes or Assessments for the Army the Excise Customs c. wherein many that are contented to pay do yet much repine at the inequality of the levy But as to them I must say I know they in Supream trust have of late done much nay almost as much as in them lies its perticular interest now obstructs the real truth is corrupt principles have such root in us that gain is above all godliness men eminent could be willing all others should have Justice so they might be favored Yet this one thing might well be yet provided for in the Act that persons of not above four pounds per annum and not able to work or having a charge of children and no personal estate to the value of ten pounds and not being Farmers but living upon that should not be charged many now paying twenty shillings per annum to the war who are fitter to receive collection and many worth four or five thousands nay ten thousand pounds personal estate not taxed at all or if at all not above one shilling or one shilling six pence for three months The next matter chiefly eyed was after the alteration of the State from a Monarchy to a Free State or Republike to consider what should now be done to make good that freedom promised and the first or one of the first matters existent as a Law was the Act for Treasons the Objections against the substance of the Act as to the matters what is Treason I for the present omit to relate but pass to the forfeiture which is to the State as to the King and this some humbly conceive not agreeable to the rule of just Freedom hear their reasons shortly They say first That it is unjust to punish the childe for the fathers offence that it is evident that this was not the original Law of England Nature or Nations but the usurpation of Princes Heathen imitated by Christians for profit sake that it is a folly to think love of the estate or of wife or children will deter where the life is not considered and that this layes the same foundation for the State to seek by the rigour of Laws to gain estates to it self as in the King so that now our condition is not bettered in our Liberties for as our Supreames may be more merciful so they may be more rigorous the settled equal Law is the Subjects best priviledge Again In the Act for Treason they say this seeking of interest is evident in the particular of Coynage of money Clipping c. which being a work private much evil may be done and no legal discovery made as late frequent practise in all places hath evidenced but to put a penalty upon the offerer of it would soon give a full stop to it and that is the best Law which effects its ends with least publike or private detriment now to forfeit the piece so clipped filed or rounded would stop the currant but to forfeit that and so much more would dry it up quickly especially if it had an easie Trial as before the next Justice or two next Constables or some certain number of the neighbourhood and the faulty money immediatly to be cut in pieces I speak not of Coyning Stamping Counterfeiting and Washing let due penalties be by Law imposed onely trial speedy and easie The next Act controverted is that of Printing the Objections against which being publikely avowed in Print though some may say more wittily then with found Christian consideration I shall here onely say thus much that as is there in part held forth it is likely to be found the best expedient to stop the current of calumnious Printing not to do things subjecting to scandal and assuredly all moderate men will assert the Magistrate against the Calumniator if to this end the Press were open provided that each man would own his work and like the old Greekish propounder of a new Law write under the peril of his life it might be an useful expedient to take off Tryflers though it might endanger many whose zeal were either too much or knowledge too little I am now come shortly to the great rubb at present which is the Engagement against which none sure but preingaged persons can as matters stand object justly for otherwise to resolve Conscience we must ravel the Successions of all powers for if the actual possession of the Supream power doth not inable to require all Political obedience then surely acquests without just Title are void if so time cannot remedy it if so it concerns all powers to justifie to each Scrupler not onely his pedegree but the justice of it from the beginning I may say of the world but it is plain the Boglers at the work are such as look for an other change It is certain Protection requires Obedience and it is as certain that they are happy in Politicks who in the Changes of Government are so disposed by the Supream Wisdom for mans alone will not avail that they exercise the extream or height of Rigidity or Mercy aright for one is ever found necessary And now I am come to the last great contest the peoples Liberties The questions are first concerning an extraordinary Commission to try sitting the odinary Courts at Westminster For the holding up the hand opening of doors both which were pressed I fear rather to make a party and oppose the present Power then out of Conscience I omit them here The next was Whether in Case of Life a man may have Councel A third Concerning the lawfulness of requiring and taking the general plea not guilty The last Whether the Iury be Iudges meerly of fact or of Law also and to these well may be added two things more namely the Queries concerning maintenance in prison And arresting by an armed power in the time of peace All which indeed are of main concernment to the Nation and people yea even as much as Lives and Liberties matters of the most pretious respect with men and justly to be inquired into wherein I shall only shortly give the general Opinions and Arguments of men wise and desiring just things but withall entreating briefly of the criminal part of our Laws prosecution which hitherto hath been purposely waved I take it that the Law of England according to the rule before said down owns a twofold way of bringing persons criminous to trial which is that of appeal of which I shall onely hint what it was being now a thing as before I said wholly disused namely it is a prosecution of the party be it for Maihem or Felony of any sort and in the name of the party appealing which suit he might by the Law compound for and release yea if it were for murder at least it was
be amended but sent to Gaole whither he must go he was irrecoverably lost Now for maintenance in prison originally in such cases as the State was forfeited as in Treasons and Felonies which were tryed very speedily the State was seized by a publick Officer by way of securing and the wife and children if any were continued in the house c. giving security the goods were not imbezeled and nought removed or sold unless for the mainteance of the prisoner the forfeiture then reaching from the time of the fact committed and then though this were just there was this injustice that the forfeiture paid no debts an unjust and unchristian thing yea if opened the loose or inlet to abominable cheating cozenage and knavery Now the Law is that is practice constant that the prisoner maintain himself till himself wife and children are undone by selling all they have for the maintenance of the prisoner and paying Gaole Fees though he be not guilty a most wicked thing and this happily for acts or words no way Treasonable Felonious c. or for such matter which none but a malicious Adversary would have prosecuted And to say the King paid his prisoners Fees is but to argue from matter of fact for take a prison properly it is but as a pound to dammagious beasts and in the proper pound the owner must provide for them and they that offend must provide for themselves or rely on charity It is truth it is but just that in case of so called illegal or in cases dubious whether baylable or not or where baylable yet for good cause denyed and in all extraordinary imprisonments that is by absolute power in limited Monarchy being causes for which the Law provided not it seems reasonable that the same power that commits should sustain untill the Law adjudges the offence for in that case the restraint of a Free-man seems punishment enough now for such a man how he comes into prison that is whether by the ordinary Officer of Justice as a Constable or by an extraordinary hand as by armed men is not material but the Quaere must be rightly stated That is whether in a time of full peace no enemy appearing nor to be feared a Subject may be by Law arrested by an Armed power as to this it is said that considering Law to be the issue of perfect reason it is a matter worth mature advisement for the life of liberty lies in it that is the refuge of the Subject against the powers or authority call them what you wil for commonly the Souldiery are either in body and so obey no common Arrests and Processes of set Courts or dibanded and seldome an active man in his own County and well known will appear in acts of high dispriviledge so that offenders in this kind are seldome worth suing upon a trespass and the law of retaliation rather satiates the brutish then the manly passion or affection and bondage for satisfaction hath been hitherto exploded Others say the crime is to be looked at and then no matter who executes it as in Felony each man may by Law arrest and then if every man will it is neither Riot nor Conspiracy what ever it may be called Others rejoyn to both parts and say that they are sadly distressed to see the various interests of persons leading one way to day another to morrow which their diversity of opinions fully demonstrate They desire plain truth with Iustice and to that end they say that both are lawfull time and person considered and that this consideration is and must be left to the Magistrate who must not stick so in the bare letter that he lose the evident meaning of the Law and ought to be punished as a defaulter against his trust should he not in some causes use extraordinary power for the Commonwealth must not be without sufficient power to defend it self And therefore they say that if the Law doth not provide for such emergencies he ought to be defaulted if he improves not his power to the discharge of his trust that is the peace and safety of the Commonwealth though he incurrs the lurch of the Law according to the old Letter The example was under the late King James at his comming to the Crown when after the death of famous Elizabeth the County of York raised men and armed them against a sort of out-laws which Act was by the letter of the Law Treason c. but upon debate wary enough it was resolved their duty and they had their pardon against which only some object saying that if in reason they offended not why should they be pardoned Now this is answered others might else be imboldened without due cause which say the objector's is nugatory there is nothing of weight in the case more then the Officers Fees of suing out the pardon and to stop that scandal let such pardons issue of course by a day at the Officers penalty so that the party shall not need pay for expedition but as to the case in hand it is propounded that in cases of doubting it were better to assure all fears to let the Souldier be but assistant to the setled officer and not used but in evident necessity but the thing is the same I must agree the prison may be any where by the law which men in point of favour easily plead but touched then the Court of guard is a prison then White-Hall the head-quarters every thing is odious but were this same man put there under what he counted a civility it should be acknowledged it may be therefore of great policy this was left in the Judges brest to endear by such circumstantials where he saw cause but this was altered upon good reason in part and prisons made publick set and certain c. The next thing is to bring the prisoner to his Tryal wherein the Law as I said favouring life gives priviledges of no evident reason in case of crimes worthy of death especially the certain offendor present Truth is if the pretended Law of England did as many of the Officers of it do think one thing and speak another tell them they are to dye while the prisoner knows Mr. Ordinary say the Judge what he will will openly prophanely and unchristian-like of course lye out a Legit though he knows never a letter and his conscience never grumble to give sentence accordingly it were not worthy question but evident reason being its guide why should they question thirty six men without any cause or with a wise Sheriff c. is that so called priviledge ought at all yet this in some cases is highly advanced this past and that he is to plead which ought to be openly the doors not shut during the Tryal the Law of God of England common reason and constant practice of Nations agrees it First he may make all by the Law void in the Letter by an appeal yea I take it also without shewing any cause Next by
multitude of prisoners in Norwich Castle being as per Calender 144. The civil part was there only determined and not the criminal Now I shal omit to speak of the abundance of forfeitures by this means though falling much upon the poor it helps forward the necessity of Levellers in the grossest acceptation by reducing them to absolute beggery I shall onely speak of the triall of the Gaol which will hint matters of some concernment First there was a Commission of Oyer and Terminer next a Commission of the Peace These Commissions are not setled by Act of Parliament in the County but are a part of Prerogative and grantable at pleasure of the Supream Majestie Now there were many Prisoners which were bound over to the next Goal-Delivery these the learned in the Law upon mature deliberation and after great advisement resolve they cannot try consider the reasons which I must own Legally of great weight but hear them by the Commission of Oyer and Ter. they could not be heard for the Recognizance was onely at Gaol-delivery therefore they could not be called by the Commission of the Peace they could not try them for the Sessions of the Peace had before referred them to the trial of a Superior Judge of course for difficulty of the matter but if was agreed that had a Commission of Gaol-delivery come the same men without a Superior Judge or more skill or knowledge in the Law then they had before would have tried them Is not Form the Idol of the world I appeal to the Supream power for the priviledg of the Nation and beseech them that the due rights of a Free Nation may be established in setled Judicatories in the Nation Here also fell out another Quaere at this great Sessions namely what to do in case of an Under-Sheriff who should execute his Office beyond his year contrary to the Statute we found this The High-Sheriff of the County as usually before to the great prejudice of the people of the Nation under the late King did make a bargain with an Attorney to be or find one to be for him such a one as he would undertake for his Under-Sheriff This man contracts with the Kings Sheriff accordingly and himself and his son a young boy as the Justices upon view judged him of about eighteen years of age execute the Office both at the last Assizes and this Sessions and the intervals not having taken any Oath it was demanded of the boy who was Under-Sheriff he answered his father but his name was used he was tried by the Justices to read a precept he could not do it so for double disability he was disallowed by the generalty of the Justices by this practise if the Father were Under-Sheriff he lost two hundred pound by the Statute for this year and two hundred pound more for a year before for it is said he hath served now three years and I beleeve unsworn all the time if due inquiry were made Next the son forfeits 40. pound for executing without Oath yea though unfit but notwithstanding all this two Justices of the Peace present at the debate do the next day swear this Boy thereby sure intending to intricate the business and give the Father leave to plead against his Forfeiture of 200. pound or question for executing the Office unsworn I say no more but I think they deserve a Fine above his besides forfeiture of their Trusts and the rather because the mans integrity and so fitness for the Office is as much questioned as any mans in Norfolk Gent. To sue for this in the Travailes Expenses Delayes Tortures of the Law who will You are the Fathers of the Family if you please to take this notice according to your Trusts who are in the places of Eminency and Supream Power in the Nation from a son a brother a Citizen of the Commonwealth do if not I have satisfied my Conscience the evil lies at your door if you think as they who have gone before you have done to salve all with The Law is open 'T is begging the question We say the door was never so fast shut as now either in the setled Law Courts in Ordinary or new ones of Committees for though the doors be open that is there is easie beginning suits that is it is easie to complain yet the journey is great from the remoteness of places and in Committees 't is so difficult to get them together in the other Courts there is so much business that there are so many obstructions to right especially of poor men or quiet spirits and especially the men of Law are so favoured that there is a dead heart in all men to seek Reformation Remedy this and you will finde complainers enow But if a great man now be complained of for just things as have been offered to be avowed upon Oath yet rather then stand the shock of a suit the wise mans Councel in Ecclesiastes is the poor mans comfort Go not to suit with him that is too mighty for thee compound with him is the way though he requires all thy substance as too little to satisfie his wronged honour brought into question such a one as he scandalized though all his friends know the truth of the case how wisely soever carried that is legally avoiding the reach of the practical Law so called I know no truly wise and prudent man desires a measure exactly just that is such as against which no objection will lie no surely if there be such bad Christians there will be evil men what is desired is not only possible but feasable were there but just endeavours after it were not the diversions so visible it were tolerable but when it s well known that all eyes are upon you when all engagements and Artifices which the Religion held forth or prudence at best suggest have been not only proffered but penally enforced what but a seared conscience will not relent or a nealed face blush Former services do not acquit latter offences the instances of the elder of the Horatii Manlius and other among the Romans and multitudes of other in other places evidence The greatest and mightiest Princes are subject to the same proportionable changes with their meanest Subjects and the Subject hath this advantage he is best able to bear it Our evil hath grown from lenity our remedy must be at least necessary severity and if you be not guilty you may use it freely 'T is offendors cry out so sternly for mercy you are now by true interest and obligation to labour a well grounded peace to this the occasions of publique disgust must be first taken away Remember natural and rational Priviledge the clearing of interested Dependancies take them away they are visible and visibly known Next settle such plain and evidently rational Laws and proceedings as may assure Justice in the end and that Common and Universal Justice that as England is one our Law may be one and that known this will
lay to heart these things First that you are in Gods stead Next that there are many vows upon the Nation for Justice and Righteousness against the then and still continued unchristian uncivil nay inhumane dealings of man with man as man with God c. You stand in the eys of all all your goings are marked and all your failings graven to Record Publick necessities your own consciences and peoples complaints have plucked forth Declarations to men as well as Covenants to God the Obligations to men are still the same if the reason be the same And for our Obligations wherein we lift up our hands to the most high God truly though the Covenant as is said be out of date that is the end of the Covenant for satisfaction to the King to draw him to an union and conjunction with his great Councel be disobliged yet the seeking of the setling of this Nation the three Nations all Nations according to the Rule of Righteousness in love peace and unity yea the drawing of them to uniformity both in Doctrine and Discipline according to the Word of God that is by the evidence of truth and the manifestation of the Spirit is still the duty of all Christians for this had been a duty had the Covenant never have been it was before it and must remain after The present Age is in the learned part very acute at least to censure all persons and then assuredly the actions of Enemies You have many who foment jealousies from the supposed Errings and delays some to one end some to another but all of beleeving the old experimented Rule of the destructiveness of popular Government from the variety and inconstancy the dilatoriness and ambiguousness of their proceedings and unsatisfiedness of so many selfish Interests as are among them this is to bring in the Government of a King again Indeed multitude of occasions makes your proceedings slow-paced Instead of particular Acts which are unsatisfactory settle a compleat body of Government you have means of supplying all indigencies for if you improve your power to evident publick good who will oppose The Royalist and all among the Parliament party agree in many just things yet uneffected Justice is the preservation as foundation of the Throne If you will raign safely walk not in any of the wayes of them that fell before you the president of their punishment as their error is too nigh at hand Let no interest deterr you from your Rule Conserve indeed the real Liberties of the people free us from all those Legerdemains the sleights of Oppression and Tyranny What was unjust gain in the King let not the State demand there depend upon follow providence as far as you will and be as remiss and so called merciful as you please but in things just and evidently conducing to common good be severe and unalterable this is righteous In things difficult and doubtful first use reason and prudence discover the interest opposing and so proceed to afflict this wil breed both fear and love Alter a good and just thing though to a more just by degrees and gently for interests have here lawful pleas but in evidently evil it 's the glory to make speed Connive not there for an hour What is here driven at is the just Reformation of all our Laws the Reduction of them to a Rule and standard of Christian Simplicity You that are of the long Robe both in and out of the house you whose knowledge both divine and humane abounds as your abilities in outward as inward excellencies Judges Councellors and Officers of all sorts look not at ancient Customes but at the common Justice of them not how they restrain particular evils but as they conduce to universal good If you will not admit the opposition of inferiors do nothing but carrying that evidence of reason as may stop the mouths of fools as well as satisfie wise men Let Godliness now in this light be the pretious gain it s the Pearl of great price Surely there are things called Law admitted practically for Law and those opposed and complained of which are so notoriously unjust and irrational so destructive to the Nation as its the admiration of all men they are not amended 't is laid onely to the charge as a matter of Interest to be obstructors see in the day the Lord opposing every evil thing lay down Self and God will stablish you To you Princes and Nobles I say learn by Gods dealings with you to see Thrones and Scepters Powers Civil and Military Riches and Honors Wisdom and all are the gifts of the Almighty Wisdom The Hand of Providence holds them forth and disposeth them as it pleaseth You have been bad Stewardes amend your wayes God hath here and there taken all away otherwhere a great part most have suffered know God is able yet to take away the remainder seek not therefore in passion to break out what ever you do carry God along with you and that not in thought but deed assuredly the judgement else will be more smart and deeper in every change le ts see the Work of God upon your hearts change Profession into Practise of Christianity idolize not the Form but acting sincerely Zeal Holiness Austerity of Life in the avoiding the very appearances of evil but exemplary in Charity and that not onely in giving much but giving well ordering the wayes not of your selves onely but of your Families so that the nobility of your souls in the excellence of graces may speak you illustrious above ancient riches the Vertues or Vices of your Progenitors The same I may say to the Gentry and men of great estate City and Country know God gives you much that you may do much for him wherein is now your excellency Titles Alas they are but like Absoloms Pillar serve but to eternize his faults and miserie Good cloathes large Retinue as Revenew if not larger and they generally idle and so necessarily vicious Coaches and horses bountiful and luxurious fare as much spent to feed and cloath ten as well would satisfie each day one hundred and for one hundred as would plentifully maintain a thousand Is God honored in all this or is the poor profited you may think it for thus did your fathers and so did you but where is the Rule the charges of the Commonwealth if but five shillings are a burthen to you who spend ten pound nay a hundred pound nay a thousand pound in waste and they that have nought follow your example thereby believing they gain credit I now shall speak one word to the Army You have followed Providence make no Selfish Interest your Idol lest Providence forsake you be assured others have many enemies but for you how few are your friends there are great engagements upon you to God who hath with such a continued course given success to your undertakings I am so far from incouraging to Mutinies as I condemn them there are just wayes use them I would
him and that not onely in high and criminal matters concerning his Crown and Dignity the life and honor of his subjects the original due object of the power of the Court now called the Common-Bench or of his Treasure the object of the Court now called the Exchequer or the Court concerning matters of the Income Profit Revenew or Treasure of the King But also of the differences betwixt party and party the object or subject matter call it what you will of the power of the Court now called the Common-Pleas which for ought I can finde authentique to convince me had all one officers which were not many all one Process which was a special Writ for appearance and a trial before the King or such as he appointed in his Court for the King was to be always present and there was also help in case of Equity by the Kings Chancellor in matters of the Summum jus of Law according to the common Lawyers phrase or severest opinion according to the rule of pure conscience that is do as you would be done unto or like a good Christian according to the Episcopal and Church-mens equity in the times of their Regiments now this foundation laid which offered benefit as well as Law to the people who had hereby remedy against the greatest oppressions of great men or Judges in the Courts of the Sheriffs or Lords Courts or Hundred Courts which all at first submitted by way of gradation to each other all to the Kings and so the Courts in Cities and Boroughs and other places incorporate as also Franchises and Liberties which were the evident marks of conquest and granted larger or stricter as the King pleased Now the King plots his own setlement first as being a Norman that is French he wills all our pleadings to be in French for he being as chief Father of the Commonwealth to see to all ought to understand it Next he ought especially for offences criminal or trespasses of force voluntary to have the punishment of the offender as a disturber of the peace of the Commonwealth as well as the particular party to have reparations and therefore he brings in together with Appeals the ancient usage of England which was the challenging of a man to have committed an offence as of treason murder rape felony and the like a kinde of suit in the name of the King called an Indictment and truly all the reason of the introduction that I can see was to advance the end of the Kings gain for here the King hath all the gain all the goods of the party at first from the day of the offence done truth now he hath it in appeal but it was not so for this the old true tale of Kents freedom will be known Evidence for they opposed this part of prerogative and then the father to the bough that is to be hanged upon the arm of a tree the usual and ready way then of dispatch and the son to the plough that is to the improving the inheritance left Concerning the common Law Prerogatives of a Prince or what the Laws of England anciently as by the right and light of natural knowledge granted to their Kings a certainty of land of the Crown Mines of gold and silver Royal fishes lands deserted of the sea and of them who died without heir as the prime person in whom the honor and glory of the people rested I omit to speak at present Truly that this William used Parliaments I finde not though others do for it is evident to the world and he that is not blinde may see he to quiet the people pretended Title but his intention was to make it his absolute conquest he therefore calls Councels where his Lords were present they do what his Will is and there is an end So that grant it a Parliament or National Assembly of the Estates yet it was but to grant or enact what the King desired his Normands had liberty to speak their will what English man durst oppose but the acts of his successor fully demonstrate this who destroys thirty towns and Churches to make a Forrest the Monks of the time durst speak but who else So that now it was evident what Title he claimed by pretend he what he will for the King had still his pretences truly the English were now in great streights they saw their Laws utterly abolished and their lives and estates to lye at the Kings mercy there was no remedy to complain who durst The Bishops yet notwithstanding something interpose but their mouthes are stopped by a command from his Holiness for people must not rise against their Prince but at his will and fill his coffer and you have his Crosier at command for Rome was now at the full height of wickedness but God taking away this sacrilegious Prince he soon opens a way of comfort to the almost cowed English giving them some means of revenge by a royall contest or a quarrel for the Crown this and matters of like nature setled there now ariseth a greater quarrel which hath continued even to these times though with divers parties and upon several grounds and that was betwixt the Lords and the King it seems God would have the English free and though he chastised them he would not forsake them for he makes their enemies the chief assertors of their ancient Liberties for these Lords finde now that they had not the same free priviledges their Ancestors had and claimed their births had now made them English of sharers in principallity they were made meer though greater Subjects The King Lawyers belike had found some flawes in their patents it may be they had done some wrong to their Tenants and were complayned of and the King to anger them that they might forfeit their too large liberties did the poor men right the greatest vexation and Soul or heart-grief a proud great man can have but be the ground what it will many of which are evident and arising as before is said The contest grew high there were things called Parliaments assembled to the end to determine these differences and in them divers good Laws tending to reconciliation were enacted but what was the effect of force ceased in execution when the cause was removed and the Lords armed against their Princes and truly their Tenants took part as the rest did they feared the saving of their faith to their King would prove the forfeiture of their lands to their Lords and now what was intended for the Kings safeguard was his ruine the most immediate Lord carrying all the power the superior Lords all along were strangers So vain a thing is the most prudent settlement of men if Divine providence affords not success But this still remains a sure foundation good Laws are ever the same though the badness of men may enervate and weaken them yea oft times invert them but still as differences grew higher and higher Parliaments were the means of quieting of all which doth
his Crown as it is at last resented by making him in a private manner as a subject to the Pope appear before his Legat to answer his fact Truth is the very Court of England was now tainted with Luthers Doctrine notwithstanding the kings Book and these men taking opportunitie of the kings wrath blow it up to ingratiate themselves and advance their interests by subverting their enemies they instill into the kings eare a Rhetorick pleasing enough to a high and angry spirit namely that he had no dependance on the Pope his Royalme was free True his predecessors either of weak Title at first or controvertible at last of weak parts or in a turbulent State either durst not or did not openly oppose yet truly did what they could to extinguish that power that they beleeved usurped The king upon this resolves to proceed without the Pope and at last having experienced many wayes receives satisfaction and withall to despight the Pope renounces his Supremacie and gains it Enacted by Parliament But to shew his zeal to the Romish Religion he continues the Act so called of the six Article a most bloody and Popish device and executes it by which two conttary Acts a Papist is burnt for denying the Kings Supremacy and a Protestant for affirming the Pope Antichrist and such other matter both at one and the same Stake so that it was evident this Prince sought not the honour of Christ but his own interest but this foundation laid he proceeds a step further which enlightens this somewhat more for the Pope who thought he had as good hold in all his Christendome so called as Henry had in England he first cites then excommunicates him but this Prince all fire by his Colleague in Arms Bourbon assaults and had not Woolsey been truer to Rome then to England had had the Pope his Captive but money not coming timely enough hinders that but he that regards not the father neglects the son Henry therefore throughly angred finds some default in the great Church-men most obvious to Law and least favoured of the people and not at all owned in the word of God as were Bishops Pastors Priests and Ministers He therefore feiseth the rich Abbies Monasteries Nunneries and Frieries and as before the Knights Templers once faln had many sins laid to their charge which it was believed they never did so these had many sins found which it was proved they might well be charged withall which but few ever believed of them as Sodomy Beastiality Murder and the like for Adulteries and whoredoms they were known and he justified his actions by the actions of the late named Cardinal Woolsey who had as he said destroyed little Monasteries to build a great Colledge and he destroyed great ones to support a noble Kingdom intimating that he found that these would be his enemies in his contest against the Pope to whom they were more surely tied then to him so that in case contention came this was so provided for as a dangerous fire hid within his own bowels the lands he exchanged with his Lords Nobles and Servants at easie rates whereby he was little advantaged and they highly obliged whereby he got fast friends against the Papal power and they that would not exchange were noted as favorers of the Pope and from this change first arose our Lay-preachers or Impropriators so called See how God works his ends against his enemies not a title of or for God intended and yet his work done and Henry hath the glory of the first Reformer yea and his Declarations pronounced no less then zeal for Gods Glory but what he truly had others as truly deserved in his Court whose faithfulness to their Prince and zeal for Gods House yet at last by the malignity even of the contrary faction was when his service was ended and the Kings coffers full rewarded with an Axe such fickle things are Princes the sons of men and this is the promise of the faithful in this world of affliction in the life to come eternal felicity this was the first turn of the wheel of wrath against these Apostates from the purity of the Gospel and the practise of the Gospel having left the Service of Christ to serve themselves in the honors riches glories pomps and vanities of the world lusts of the flesh and pride of life and now as wave succeeds wave so doth sorrow sorrows to these children of bitterness for the son makes clean work and hardly leaves a handful of Popelins in England and this was presumed to favor more of conscience because they saw not the hire of the work there was little pay for their pains but he of short continuance Mary though born in unlawful wedlock was notwithstanding the Will of the last King or the Acts of Parliament for disinabling of her through the potency of the Popish party yet by Parliament advanced to the Throne But surely England had now well thriven in knowledge especially from the after Lights to Luther who following his steps went further in the knowledge of the Gospel truth is Luther opposed them and had his followers but the other and more and the opinions increased and spread further And to declare the truth and honor it with respect enough to Luther who deserved much of Gods people as an instrument he had raised up for their benefit his bitterness against his brethren desertors from the errors of Rome as from what they accounted his mistake gave the Papists much advantage to upbraid the dissentions of the Schismaticks so called urging that there was never like to be peace where this gap was opened that the divisions of the Church were subject to the questions or judgements of particular Christians for from hence each man as his understanding or ability was less or more should believe as he listed and trouble the peace of the Church as these Schismaticks had done to prevent which in England it having had some footing as was conceived here through the interest of Henry and the youth of Edward who though begot by a Popish Father was educated by a Schismatick Tutor The Bishops ply it hard by fire and faggot to root out all that followed the way as it was called they had many nick-names in all Ages but here they who were the Lords Wheat had the name from the envious man of the devils Tares cast upon them Lollards and they had as in the Primitive times all evils errors and sins charged upon them they were generally poor and happily the rich thought any way a good riddance especially being so at least accounted of proud minds though in beggars rags and had all those phrases of Scripture applied to them as to those who subverted souls So that here was a great persecution many hundreds were put to death in opposition to the Doctrine of the Church of Rome but the State in policy medled not with the taking away of the Abby-Lands because of the strong party that might have engaged
stirred up in the Raign of King Charles who succeeding his father with all the expectations that might be of the vulgar his entertainment to the Crown was with all congratulations of a high joy such as the high condition of his estate required in a setled Kingdome having enjoyed a continued peace for almost 140. years whereby riches abounded exceedingly but with them pride increased so that spirits grown high they were ready to kick at the prick and the rather in respect knowledge abounded and they were not ignorant of their own strength And what the Romanists foresaw was now held high time to provide for for whether it were the advice of King James or the disposition of Charls or the natural jealousie of Kings or the supream over-ruling decree intending by degrees to fit things to the determinate end I here discuss not but this bright day was soon ore-cast for in the first Parliament which I suppose was called in or about the third year of this King after some order taken for the regulation of evils against the civil peace and some kind of care taken for punishing the great prophaners of the Lords Day the King not well liking the Petition so called of Right being indeed a strong limit to dreaded Prerogative yet grants it and continues the Parliament untill he had obtained seven Subsidies of the people distinct and eight from the so called Clergy and then dissolves it But there was another special reason namely the people were grown exceeding high and fierce against not only the special Favourite of the King the then Duke of Buckingham but secretly taxing the King himself as at least an Abettor to him in the too soon speeding his Father out of this world I beleeve it is evident to most that the Duke committed a crime notorious to all that the King did by dissolving this Parliament hinder the tryal of him but this doth not evidence his guilt though it gives matter of surmize but this may be handled fitlier otherwhere if need requires The breach of this Parliament gave a great disgust to the people the rather because it plainly appeared the King wholly and almost only sought himself for although he had acknowledged by Act the necessity of continuing the Parliament to settle fit remedies for many notorious grievances yet before ought expedited but his own business as it was justly called of the Subsidies He of his so called Royal will annihilates all by nullifying the Parliament as he was said to do and indeed it amounted not to much less for he did at least by his instruments which he owned almost with the same breath he assented to the so called Petition of Right or due Rights of the Subject break it and proceeded so far to aggrandize the power of the Prince that he made the Subject a slave having a speaker fit for his ends a man of as mercinary a spirit as could be for upon some incivility as it was called of some members zealous for Reformation who loth to have the Parliament so fruitlesly dissolved held the Speaker in his Chayre to Vote a Remonstrance to the King he imprisons them seizes their Trunks searches their not only chambers but pockets most of which dyed in restraint being accompted the Martyrs of the peoples Liberties whom the King thought the greatest means of subverting of them as intending still to drive on the contest betwixt the King and his people which was begun in William so called the Conqueror and surely he could not but espy that notwithstanding all endeavors to the contrary the people had still gained upon the Crown and surely what he expressed in full Parliament and which is printed among the Statutes at large more then cleared his jealousies of encroachments upon him which is a sufficient cause to a Prince to stretch his power and surely was as before is said in part with those other reasons annexed not only the cause of that Sessions prorogation the then Parliaments dissolution or rather by not keeping his so called Kingly word annihilation but the not calling of Parliaments till necessity enforced as if he had seen or foreseen the fate which hath since ensued I cannot beleeve him ignorant of all those not onely so called prophesies but of those conjecturall observations of those grand Mathematicians so called which how his wisdom might prevail over I know not but assuredly Princes of all are most easie and subject to be entrapped at least the inquisitive part of them neither shall I here treat of the power of the Stars if at all although I must profess little have hapned in the notorious part of his Reign which such Artists did not more or less foretell But because out of his Reign is as it were raised the fountain of all controversies both divine and humane let us shortly run over the state of the so called Church and Commonwealth and begin with the Church which though not so furnished with large Territories nor multitudes of Religious so called Professors as before those nests of Monasteries Nunneries Fryeries Fraternities Colledges c. being dissolved and confiscated yet to the remaining Arch-Bishops Bishops Provosts Deanes Deanes and Chapters Vicars Vicars Charols Chaunteries Cathedrals sub-Deanes Arch-Deacons c. pardon that short enumeration of many glorious beasts of Babels forest there was a sufficient maintenance to perform the duties required in a Bishop by Paul without any by-encroachment but these men were now grown civil Lords and having contracted Marriage with the world they lay with it and neglected their duty to their Lord and husband the Lord Christ Jesus They had large Palaces of old Babel the same seats in their several Provinces called Diocess the same structures or great Churches the same Attendants for their Courts Juridical were not taken away these all required maintenance and that by reason of worldly pomp in great measure but they had enough for this had not the itch of the flesh brought them as other men to avoid fornication to betake them to their own wives and the same carnal prudence which before prohibited Marriage lest the care of the world and love of children c. should cause imbeselling the Churches so called Revenue the same now wrought unjust seekings of gain by any means to the prejudice of the Church Before the storm in Henry the Eights time many long Leases were made before Queen Elizabeth many more so that to assure maintenance she was enforced the Father of the Church for fleshly children sakes robbing and wasting their spiritual Mother to that prudential Law that they c. could make no new Leases or renew any old but for three lives or 21. years reserving the old rent but as children increased and worldly temptations these Church men could so far dispense as either to coyn old or else new Leases with this blessing from the rule in Law Valet quantum valere potest and these were to their children servants friends or the best friend a
value to be determined by any two Justices of the Limit by their Warrants without Writ especially at monthly meetings but more especially if they were both poor that is not worth one hundred pound clear or if but one of them the poor being grown lately as well enemies and devourers of one another as the rich That there might be but one waight whether Troy or Aver du-poiz in the Nation and so one measure and one tenure that is Freehold of the State not grantable to any person or persons so called mean Lords as tending to the high advancing of particular interests much more subject to destroy then support the Commonwealth especially that basest badge of slavery and the most prejudicial to the interest of a free Commonwealth the so called Villeni or bond service urging that the Rule of Littleton That Land being the less worthy cannot engage the person of a free man which is more worthy and so that Villenage or now so called Copy-hold is incompatible with freedome and the evil effects of this have appeared in choyce of Representatives as dangerous as ever did any Feife service of the Barons to their Soveraigns the Kings and they say it is just the Comminalty should have right done against inferiour Lords now the Lords have right against the King or State that so while we be freed from the Tyranny of a Prince we may not be worse slaves each to other for they can instance more wicked unchristian merciless and cruel acts in Copyhold Lords then in all the Princes in the world They also desired if the State took Tonnage and Poundage Customes c. that the Seas might be guarded and some said if they did not it was lawful to steal Custome but I put that opinion in a Parenthesis they desired that no person or condition of men might be secured from Law that all evils as appearing might be at appearing rectified and to that end that an easie address might be to Courts of Justice setled in power in the respective bounds both for ending and determining according to Law setled and preparing for remedy to emergent evils by certificate of the matter They said they valued their priviledges as high as any but they would part with their priviledges of men to enjoy the priviledge of just and wise men they therefore would deny themselves things lawful if found inconvenient thus did they submit to the Magistrate and thought not themselves wiser then them whom God set over them but this also admitted that Magistrates were men and might err that the rule of their Government being but perfect reason supposed that infallibility was not tyed to the Seat of Justice if not to the Throne of the Prince and Chair of the Bishop that it was the duty of the Subject with fear and humility to advise of the Law and that no man might oppose the Law but lawfully not to be the Authors of disturbance to the State lest each man might contend for his own opinion until there were as many Laws as men They said that the poor were a parcel of the body politick which ought to be provided for setledly and sufficiently some propounded Commons some concealed Lands some one thing some another but these were mistaken parties generally though well affected they might be for Commons were the Tenants Rights originally not the poors and concealed Lands might now have proved as fatall a Hawk to the State to whom they now belong as Forrest Lands did before to the King for as I have said before all Tenures Titles c. being grown so difficult what might not have been adjudged now concealed as then was Forest These men further allowed and desired that persons should be brought into due degrees the due power of all persons respectively setled the primitive order for security of the Nation by the enforcing the Laws of Tythings for idle vagrant persons Hues and Cryes for Thefts Robberies and such like that due orders of Cities and Walled Towns Bridges and great Roads for Watches c. Regulations of all Trades by certain and just Laws might be renewed Prisons not made the Schools of all Villany but places of due laborious restraint and safe keeping and that specially first for persons criminous next dangerous lusty riotous lazy and idle Publike Offices to be born at the publike charge and no just Office to be the burthen or ruine of a man such as to be a Reader of Inns of Court High-Sheriff Constable Major Sheriff c. of Counties and Cities That all Customes be certain all Fees of Officers with a thousand things more which experience had rendred manifestly holding forth Justice or the foundations thereof Now these just things being so diametrically opposite to the Interest of multitudes who had for their corrupt interest sake or to make a fortune in their own Idolish phrase joyned themselves to the Parliament party were heard but neglected then scandalized to commix Interests with the errors afore-supposed in Levelling in the grossest acceptation so that each rule almost of morall honesty was now miscalled Levelling The reason why I call these just things Levelling is to unmask these Satans and to manifest to all men the strange artifices used to obstruct the truth and take men off from the entertaning true apprehensions of it suggesting to them these jealousies that though the Propositions held forth nothing but seemingly just honest and Christian yet no doubt there was a Snake lay in the grass to eat in pieces the root of Government and debase the Supremacy of Magistracy destroy order annihilate property and introduce the confusion which some as I have said are said to intend and we may justly fear if some timely and just order preventive be not applyed will by these self-seekers be assuredly perfected But all these just Levellers had not the same foundation or principle for their designs though know assuredly all honest men reall and of publike spirits Papist or Kings Protestant that is he that would walk no further in the way of Christ then the Laws of the Land taught him that is beleeving as was by Law established according to the Canon c. yet zealously making conscience of being wiser then his Teachers Presbyter or Independent or of any Sect Opinion or Religion soever were nick-named Levellers by them that found it best fishing in troubled pudled waters But as I say they had several principles The Presbyter founding his Levelling upon the Judicials of Moses stuck to that Rule that the Judicials were Gods own Law given to his own people with whom he had entered a Covenant not only upon Mount Sinai but in the loyns of Abraham father of the faithful that so Abraham is our father and we by faith his seed and so bound Again that the people chosen of God were Types of all Gods people to whom that Law was given in them and living according to that Law should thereby manifest themselves each to other to be the people
Prince must bear sway and hath the preheminence The Heathens in glory of the Prince annexed the Priestly Office to the Superior Power not the Kings to the Priests and under Gods Law Moses was Aarons Prince or Father Aaron Moses Prophet Next the Civil part of Judicature was ever and now is clear and manifest except where interest or humour prevails and let that humour alone and it is ready to swarm into interest immediatly But this you will say determines the first part of the Question but the latter is undetermined To that it is generally answered that what power is necessary for the preservation of the peace of the Nation or Government is proper to the Supream Magistrate but an obliging power that is that simple obedience is to be given to his determination of but dubious matters in points of either Doctrine or pure Church-Discipline I beleeve never was nor will be yielded to him in matters circumstantially Religious otherwise barely civil was as generally agreed and will not now be denyed as concerning the time of Congregating the place and other Circumstantials for preservation of the peace of Church and Commonwealth yea if it were upon good reason the number that were to congregate provided there were enough to constitute a Congregation might be set by the Supream Magistrate and Christians bound to obey but this is only as keeper of the first Table not of the second Now to clear this it is to be known that if it be taken to be the Keeper of the two Tables so called to promote by all lawful means the glory of God as the good of men as all good and just Magistrates will and ought yea if it be by preaching himself or themselves and that either by word or Doctrine as good life they and all Christians are the keepers of both Tables and he or they as supream in power and so as more entrusted with means by God to do most for God then he or they who have the supremacy are by way of eminency the special keepers of them but that they are designed more especially to represent either the Kingly Priestly or Prophetical Office of the Lord Christ as head of his Church without the manifest tokens of more especial Grace and divine Revelation whereby to periodize the Controversies of their own Subjects holding forth to us under the same rule the will of God as the Priests under the Law is not easily discerned nor will I beleeve be strenuously urged The blessings which our Lord and Saviour held forth were meerly tending to his spiritual Kingdome and the propagating of it and given out to the Apostles and in them to all the Church as most sutable to not onely reason generally but the reason of that our King in his Transactions amongst them of this enough at present I come now to the last Quaere of the Prerogative of Princes 14. Whether Male Administration doth ipso facto dethrone Princes and give their Subjects power to depose them 15. And whether Kings and other Supreams may be punished by whom and how THis is a great weighty controversie truly Magistrates that desire to be flattered stand off you can hear nothing safely for your safety is your danger Now what we have said before tends much to the illustration of this point that is the due consideration of the end for which Magistracie is ordained for by the Law of pure Naturals no one is above another namely the preserving few against many weak against strong and right against wrong in Scripture phrase to be a terror to the evil and to that end not to wear the Sword in vain so that while evils are or may be Magistracie is necessary to be Now generally the defects and failings of Governors in themselves are not simply and alone a cause of neglect of obedience to them or the Laws by them for evil men may be good Magistrates but in case the Magistrate seeks to overthrow laws and all Righteous Government altering or crossing wholly the end of his ordination it is in this case clear he is not a Magistrate but he is a Tyrant an usurper an Enemy to Justice but then it is beleeved by some that the light or interpretation of this defection is in every man and so each man judges and may justly withdraw obedience and oppose This is gross ignorance no then every unjust man punished would be ready to rebell and miscall his deficiency Revenge of injury to the publique The Pope by the evill management among Princes of this quarrel brought the decision of all these controversies to his Tribunal and by the steps of seeming justice mounted the Chayre of Antichrist for he finding that the Ambition Pride Lust Covetize of earthly gods had raised up men against them and that many halings and pullings were between the Princes and Potentates of the earth and their Subjects the one to have all the power in their own hands the others to defend what they called sometimes Priviledges sometimes just Rights one while the inheritance of their Ancestors as what they had contended for and delivered to them sealed with their blood otherwhile their proper and natural birthright as dues to the people which no Power or Usurpation of a Prince could divest them of he politickly holding forth the necessity of an Umpire got absolutely into the Chayr of preheminence and deposed Kings for pleasure and Kings and Emperors and all for his profit Who would beleeve that now after five thousand years experience the world should not be able to unriddle this mystery the source of all our controversies is the Judicials not rightly understood for assuredly the Acts of their Kings is no rule for us or ours we are to follow them no further then they follow the light which God gives us all to walk by that is if you will look at their King it must be as bounded not as imitating the Kings of the Nations as not exalting himself over his brethren not as taking away the excellent young men and beautiful Maidens to be his servants and if so that he be under a Rule then he is not to rule not onely not evilly but not so well as he presumes he might unless it be made parcell of his Rule But if he breaks this Rule who shall enforce Now in this case it is plain that a Prince Ruler or inferiour Magistrate doing greater good then his Rule limits is in an error especially if opportunity were of having that enacted into a Law for men are men and to do so opens a door of jealousie 'twixt him and his people Next it stands as a president to his Successor Lastly it absolutely intimates either a neglect of the Law or seeking freedom by degrees from it but if this were evill or detrimental what remedy To clear this there must be a difference taken betwixt things partly destructive to the end of well reigning and wholly for unless wholly destructive threatning the whole community
power absolute and can punish have no rule but prudence in enlarging or restraining them they generally used banishment but this in successive or hereditary alterations upon the same ground of prudence cannot be safe therefore some have immured them and starved them some imprisoned them some cloystered them some privately murthered them but all these were acts of pure power and force and left but an implicite construction of Justice on their actions Our new and unparallelled Transaction doth I know to many seem Heroick and if established by Law upon this president would be an admirable adventure to hold an aw upon the spirits of great men and to that end they desire the explanation of the supream power or Magistrates Trusts and in what cases it shall be lawful to arraign them with the same legal provisions as King Charls tyed his own hands in the Act for a Triennial Parliament but I leave treating of this lest I grate to no purpose I come now to see 16. What are the Priviledges of Parliaments and in them of the Bars to the Supream Power FIrst we must consider that these meetings are according to the Rule of pure Native Law by the advice of many and those duly elected out of the people to avoid confusion to take care for the settlement of all those errors which intervening time produced since such an Assembly last Congregated and that both as to the Actions of the King in his Officers where the King was held unquestionable and therefore which was unjust in some part his servants were punished of the higher Magistrates and inferior Subjects either in a legal way according to the ordinary constitution of the Nation or extraordinary in case of emergencies for which no Law was provided The examples are manifest in both Now the priviledges of these men were and ought so to be whereever such bars are first that the due right of the subject might be preserved that those who were to be of the Parliament were duly chosen that is neither by fear nor favor which was from either open force or private warnings or requests to the friends or dependants of great m●… which were commands which how broken and still are even by Reformers themselves to their shame not of Reformation is evident The next priviledge is that being chosen they being now of special use and imployment for the publick themselves horses goods and menial servants were priviledged from Arrests distresses c. and only they for the law of entertaining by giving protections was a dispriviledge of the common Subjects for whose sake only they were priviledged and no more that other being but a meer Royal corruption by degrees to make them all seekers of interests upon that base Maxime that trusts were to their own benefit The next was to have free liberty to chuse their Speaker who was not to be disallowed but upon good Cause and that Cause they were Judges of for all see else the vanity of the formality if the approbation be upon meer will for then there is the power of Election and this Speaker they may also upon good Cause put out by the Votes of the greater number The next priviledge is That they have a free liberty to treate of all matters the assembling by Kings Writ the being called his great Councel are honors of Time and formal and cannot abridge their necessary liberty of free Treaty c. But their power appears in that they had the Guardianship of the peoples Lives Liberties and Estates and though in the variety of changes they did as all mortal Powers do sometimes submit sometimes inforce as the condition of Times were we must use a true foot and ascribe no more to them then is needful not plead presidents but Supream reason by which they therefore might and ought during the forty dayes Session a convenient time which by convention seems the time set during which the King could not dissolve them to receive Petitions from all places by turning themselves into Committees and hear how matters went with the Nation upon such Representations from the particular Counties Cities and Town therein addressed to the particular Members chosen by them for the aid of the whole Nation and upon these to call some say the Kings all agree all the Kings Officers of all sorts to their Accounts as Treasurers and that both for Land and Sea yea Officers of Peace as all Iudges c. and of War as General or Lord Marshal or by what other name or names on Land or Admiral or c. at Sea Captains of Forts and all others who managed the Revenues so called of the Crown that is for the publike benefit and this power is coincedent to every Bar to Supremacy And truely where this is not it is easie to believe the Supream Majesty may soon pretend all is intrusted to his own Will and for his particular benefit then they may adjudge and sentence but not in Committees but in the whole house otherwise there is no legal proceeding and really and purely this did and was to rest principally in the Representatives of the people who are the Commons the separation of the Houses as with us and the single power of the Lords to Iudge the Commons to accuse yet one Court is much differing from excellent Reason if not contrary to it that so right might be done to the whole Commonwealth against the out-breakings of the King and also to every particular person by restitution against the wrong doer yea though by the Kings Command or Commission if not agreeable to the Law Now the limited times of Parliament were necessary lest otherwayes they should abuse their Power or usurp Supremacy absolute and also become desperate debtors because of priviledge And lastly that while being men and capable of erring their false judgements if any were may be rectified by a new for it was and must be the priviledge of these highest Courts not to have ought done there by any of the Members questioned in any other Court onely Treason Felony and the Peace which being flagitious the excellency of Reason admitted no priviledge to for how could such enormous Transgressors of the Law be righteous Law-Makers The last priviledge is to have pay for their pains by a it should be equal rate upon all the Freeholders in the County that is they who legally had or might have had a Vote in the Choice and this allowance was to be set by Parliament and who could they better trust with a little of their estate then they whom they had formerly instrusted with the whole and this was not due till the end of Parliament So jealous is Reason of all Supremacy in the corrupted state of mankinde And surely none that is not actually in this height but will agree to this just Reason and he that is in if he intends onely a due use of it cannot deny it this is just betwixt these powers and them for whom they are intrusted for
it is plain as before that all eminency of power is solely and onely for the safety of the people wherefore it is fit to see wherein that safety doth consist and to that end we shall Quaere What is and wherein the priviledge of a free Subject doth properly consist HAving seen the great and due care of the Law for the well providing for the Supream Magistrate and that it looks at due both power and maintenance and sets limits in it self against all excess and out-boundings We now come to see after the priviledge of the Subject in the body so called Representative the priviledge of every particular man wherein the Supream reason hath also looked at every one but as a Member of the whole and hath setled that as the greatest priviledge to do most for the publike welfare and well and orderly government of all these in such sort as not onely the principles of Nature but the long experience of of so many Ages and above all the inlightenments of divine Wisdom have handled out to us in such manner as they are without all question And therefore as it is sufficiently manifested that particular men are through power favor riches malice and such like as ready and as desirous to deal unfaithfully injuriously and inhumanely with their neighbours as the Prince with the people therefore most excellent Reason so called Law and above all the divine Wisdom hath held out Magistracy to preserve as aforesaid against these evils by due Laws and the justness of these is the greatest priviledge and to have them like Gall and Wormwood is the highest dispriviledge The special matter wherein we usually place priviledge is first to Life secondly Liberty thirdly Goods and fourthly good Name and the Law for good Cause restrains a mans self in the abuse or ill use of these as well as preserves them to him against others Now that which gives is of more value and more honorable then that given The Heathen expressed it thus More glorious is it to rule Kings set up and pull down Kings then be a King whereby it is evident That the priviledge of the Subject is not to live at lust do as he lists revenge injuries and act Will for Law whether in higher or lower estate that is the Magistrate inferior to Tyrannize over the people without controll nor to execute what laws he hath in his power as he list but according to his rule nor the subject to abuse his fellow-Subject in word or deed much less to arraign the Magistrate and his actions with a forked tongue of envy at his pleasure no nor to misuse or abuse his own time his estate his liberty or power in his place and disobey all Law or at lest question and wrangle it how just so ever if contrary to his interest and how plain so ever yet to enter a contention meerly for pleasure and through his purse-potency to make evil good against his meaner or less favoured neighbour In short it is not to do what ever evil Custome or corrupt Practise or Selfish interest calls Law and due right I shall give you but one example or two among the many thousands of Englands Plague-sores not at all or not sufficiently provided against viz. A. Being a great Merchant and might be trusted upon his own Bond for an hundred thousand pounds takes up sixty thousand pounds with which and twenty thousand pounds with a wife for his son he purchases five thousand six hundred pounds per annum settles it upon the son and his wife and after breaks this and a thousand such gallant Cheates are ordinary and remediless though it will be pretended otherwise So again A. Merchant of London sells upon likeing at a set rate to B. a Merchant in Yarmouth a barrel of Nutmegs and sends them by sea by C. Master B. dislikes them pays double fraight as per agreement and returns them A. sues B. for them and recovers B. sues C. for them and recovers the value is thirty pound originally the costs of suit cometh to one hundred pound which is as much as C. is worth C. upon this being cast at Common Law flies into Chancery or upon Affida discovers that the truth is A. had the barrel of Nutmegs which upon the Trial betwixt C. and B. had been fully proved but that C. not knowing the servants of B. though he knew the name of him to whom the goods were delivered for A. his Master and C. coming to Subpoena him to appear as witness A. justly believing at it ought that the shame and dammage must at last light upon him sheweth C. a wrong man who takes his monye and the Subpoena and appears but can evidence nothing and B. is overthrown Now such and the like Cheates Thefts yea as bad as Robberies are not at all or so slightly and that with so much charge punished as is too much shame for a Barbarous Nation holding forth common Justice to allow So the wretchedness of Juries and the like which are so clean perverted from the first institution that though many honest just wise Patriots eye the first institution with great consideration yet they now see them with hearts of Regret abused and abusing their high trusts and all is pretended the liberty of the Subject So far hath the corruption of interests prevailed upon all estates To rake in this puddle of Negative Priviledge were to draw almost all the ordinary actions and litigations of the Commonwealth into question and arraign all persons in our Apostate pretending Reforming Age. I will not therefore expatiate but come to the Affirmative part of the Question and see wherein the liberty of the Subject doth consist properly and consider the same as I have done the other though tacitely generally and particularly First therefore I say that the priviledge of the Subject is to be governed by righteous and equal Laws the Magistrate executing without partiality his power in and for the preservation of life goods liberty and good name according to a just known and manifest Law for all enormities transgressions offences and crimes whatever This in general In particular it is to have the Supremacy of power so setled known and declared both in point of Revenue honor and power as consists with the best safety of the whole and that whether it be in a State Monarchical or Republical Secondly That the Laws by which they govern be as far as may be certain plain and easie to be understood Thirdly That this Law may extend to all offenders and the higher the trust the greater the punishment and the higher the injury the greater the recompence Fourthly That as the Laws be evaded or difused or misused or new evils encrease for which no head Law is provided evidently that this at the charge of the publike be speedily remedied that so the vitious nature of man may be deterred from acting old or inventing new forms of sinning That these Laws may extend to the Magistrate