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A56162 The first and second part of A seasonable, legal, and historicall vindication and chronological collection of the good old fundamentall liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen ... wherein is irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records, proofs, presidents, that we have such fundamentall liberties, franchises, rights, laws ... : collected, recommended to the whole English nation, as the best legacy he can leave them / by William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire.; Seasonable, legal, and historical vindication of the good old fundamental liberties, franchises, rights, properties, laws, government of all English freemen. Part 1-2 Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1655 (1655) Wing P3954; ESTC R19429 161,045 206

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cloak their intentions from the people they took an Oath of all they met Quod Regi Communibus fidelitatem servarent that they should keep Allegiance and Faith to the King Commons Yea Wat Tyler demanded a Commission from the King to behead all Lawyers Escheaters and others whatsoever that were learned in the laws or communicated with the law by reason of their Office conceiving in his minde that this being brought to passe all things afterwards would be ordered according to his own and the common peoples fancy And he made his vaunt putting his hand to his own lips That before scure dayes came to an end ALL THE LAWS OF ENGLAND SHOULD PROCEED FROM HIS MOUTH Which some of late times seem to speak not only in words but deeds by their manifold new laws and Edicts repealing or contradicting our old This their resolution and attempt thus to alter and subvert the Laws and Government upon full debate in the Parliament of 5. R. 2. n. 30. 31. was declared to be High-Treason against the King and the Law for which divers of the chief Actors in this Treasonable Designe were condemned and executed as Traitors in severall places and the rest enforced to a publike submission then pardoned Let these imitators now remember this old President 2. In the Parliament of 11. R. 2. as appears by the Parliament Rols and printed Statutes at large three Privy Councellours the Archbishop of York the Duke of Ireland and the Earl of Suffolk the Bishop of Exeter the Kings Confessor five Knights six Judges whereof Sir Robert Tresylian Chief Justice was one Blake of the Kings Councel at Law Vsk and others were impeached and condemned of High Treason some of them executed as Traitors the rest banished their lands and goods forfeited and none to endeavour to procure their pardon under pain of Felony for their endeavouring to overthrow a Commission for the good of the Kingdome contrary to an Act of Parliament by force of Arms and opinions in Law delivered by these temporizing Judges and Lawyers to the King through threats and terrour at Nottingham Castle tending to subvert the Laws and Statutes of the Realm overthrow the Power Priviledges and proceedings of Parliament and betray not all the House of Lords but only some of the Lords of Parliament Which Judgement being afterwards reversed in the forced and packed Parliament of 21. R. 2. was reconfirmed in the Parliament of 1 H. 4. c. 3 4 5. and the Parliament of 21. R. 2. totally repealed and adnulled for ever and hath so continued Read Statut. at large 3. In the Parliament of 17 R. 2. n. 20. and Pas 17 R. 2. B. Regis Rot. 16. Sir Thomas Talbot was accused and found guilty of High Treason for conspiring the death of the Dukes of Glocester Lancaster and other Peers who maintained the Commission confirmed by Act of Parliament 10. R. 2 and assembling people in a warlike manner in the County of Chester for effecting of it in destruction of the estates of the Realm and the Laws of the Kingdome 4. In the 29. year of King Henry the sixth Jack Cade under a pretence to REFORM alter and abrogate some laws Purveyances and Extortions importable to the Commons whereupon he was called JOHN AMEND ALL drew a great multitude of Kentish people to Black-heath in a warlike manner to effect it In the Parliament of 29 H. 6. c. 1 this was adjudged High Treason in him and his Complices by Act of Parliament and the Parliament of 31. H. 6. c. 1. made this memorable Act against him and his Imitators in succeding ages worthy serious perusal and consideration by all who tread in his footsteps and over-act him in his Treasons Whereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious and errant FALSE TRAYTOR John Cade calling himself sometimes Mortimer sometime Captain of Kent which Name Fame Acts and Feats be to be removed out of the speech and minde of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsly and traiterously purposing and imagining the perpetuall destruction of the KINGS PERSON and FINAL SVBVERSION OF THIS REALM taking upon him ROYALL POWER and gathering to him the Kings People in great number BY FALSE SVBTIL IMAGINED LANGVAGE and seditiously made a stirring Rebellion and insurrection VNDER COLOVR OF JVSTICE FOR REFORMATION OF THE LAWS OF THE SAID KING robbing slaying spoiling a great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraign Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by advice and assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and at THE REQUEST OF THE COMMONS and by Authority aforesaid Hath ordained and established that the said John Cade shall be had named and declared A FALSE TRAYTOR to our said Soveraign Lord the King and that all his Tyranny Acts Feats false Opinions shall be voided abated adnulled destroyed and put out of remembrance for ever And that all Indictments and things depending thereof had and made under the power of Tyranny shall likewise be void adnulled abated repealed and holden for none and that the blood of none of them be defiled nor corrupted but by the Authority of the said Parliament clearly declared for ever And that all Indictments in time coming in like case under power of Tyranny Rebellion and stirring had shall be of no regard or effect but void in Law And all the Petitions delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at Westminster the sixth day of November the 29. of his Reign against his minde by him not agreed shall be taken and put in Oblivion out of Remembrance undone voided adnulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and his Conscience and against his Royal estate and preheminence and also DISHONORABLE and UNREASONABLE 5. In the 8 year of King Henry the 8. William Bell and Thomas Lacy in the County of Kent conspired with Thomas Cheney the Hermite of the Queen of Fairies TO OVER THROW THE LAWS AND CUSTOMS OF THE REALM for effecting whereof they with 200 more met together and concluded upon a course of raising greater forces in Kent and the adjacent Shires This was judged High Treason and some of them executed as Traitors Moreover it was resolved by all the Judges of England in the reign of Henry 8. that an Insurrection against the Statute of Laborers or for the inhansing of Salaries and wages or against any Statute or to remove Councellors or to any other end pretending Reformation of their own heads was TREASON and a levying war against the King BECAVSE IT WAS GENERALLY AGAINST THE KINGS LAW and the Offenders took upon them THE REFORMATION THEREOF which Subjects by gathering of power ought not to do 6. On December 1. in the 21. year of King Henry the 8. Sr. Thomas Moore Lord Chancellour of England with fourteen more Lords of the Privy Councel John Fitz-James Chief Justice of England and Sir Anthony Fitz-Herbert Herbert
frequently universally invaded assaulted undermined by our Kings and their evil Instruments heretofore and others since and thereupon more strenuously frequently vigilantly maintained fenced regained retained by our Nobles Parliaments and the people in all Ages till of late years than any or all of the rest put together though every of them hath been constantly defended maintained when impugned or incroached upon by our Ancestors and our selves 1 That no Tax Tallage Aid Subsidy Custom Contribution Loan Imposition Excise or other Assesment whatsoever for defence of the Realm by Land or Sea or any other publick ordinary or extraordinary occasion may or ought bee imposed or leavied upon all or any of the Freemen of England by reason of any pretended or real Danger Necessity or other pretext by the Kings of England or any other Powers but only with and by their common consent and grant in a free and lawful English Parliament duly summoned and elected except only such antient legal Ayds as they are specially obliged to render by their Tenures Charters Contracts and the common Law of England 2 That no Free-man of England ought to bee arrested confined imprisoned or in any private Castles or remote unusual Prisons under Souldiers or other Guardians but only in usual or Common Gaols under sworn responsible Goalers in the County where he lives or is apprehended and where his friends may freely visit and releeve him with necessaries And that only for some just and legal Cause expressed in the Writ Warrant or Process by which he is arrested or imprisoned which ought to be legally executed by known legal responsible sworn Officers of Justice not unknown Military Officers Troopers or other illegal Catchpolls That no such Free-man ought to bee denied Bail Mainprise or the benefit of an Habe as Corpus or any other Legal Writ for his enlargement when Bailable or Mainprizable by Law nor to be detained Prisoner for any real or pretended Crime not bailable by Law longer than until the next general or special Gaol-delivery held in the County where he is imprisoned when and where he ought to be legally tried and proceeded against or else enlarged by the Justices without denial or delay of Right and Justice And that no such Free-man may or ought to be out-lawed exiled condemned to any kinde of Corporal punishment loss of Life or Member or otherwise destroyed or passed upon but only by due and lawful Process Indictment and the lawful Trial Verdict and Judgement of his Peers according to the good old Law of the Land in some usual Court of publick Justice not by and in new illegal Military or other Arbitrary Judicatories Committees or Courts of High Justice unknown to our Ancestors 3 That the ordinary standing Militia Force and Arms of the Kingdom ought to reside in the Nobility Gentry Freeholders and Trained Bands of the Kingdom not in Mercenary Officers and Souldiers receiving pay and Contributions from the people more apt to oppress inslave betray than protect their Laws Liberties and to protract than end their Warres and Taxes That no Free-men of England unless it bee by special Grant and Act of Parliament may or ought to be compelled enforced pressed or arrayed to go forth of his own County much less out of the Realm into forreign parts against his will in times of Warre or Peace or except he be specially obliged thereto by antient Tenures and Charters save only upon the sudden coming of strange enemies into the Realm and then he is to array himself only in such sort as he is bonnd to do by the ancient Laws and Customs of the Kingdom still in force 4 That no Free-man of England may or ought to be disinherited disseised dispossessed or deprived of any Inheritance Free-hold Office Liberty Custom Franchise Chattles Goods whatsoever without his own Gift Grant or free Consent unless it be by lawful Processe Trial and Judgement of his Peers or special Grant by Act of Parliament nor to be denied or delayed common Right or Justice in any case 5 That the old received Government Laws Statutes Customs Priviledges Courts of Justice legal Processe of the Kingdom and Crown ought not to be altered repealed suppressed in any sort nor any new form of Government Law Statute Ordinance Court of Judicatury Writ● or legal proceedings instituted or imposed on all or any of the Free-men of England by any person or persons but only in and by the Kingdoms peoples free and full precedent consent in a lawful Parliament wherein the Legislative power solely resides 6 That Parliaments ought to be duly summoned and held for the good and safety of the Kingdom every year or every three years at least or so soon as there is just occasion That the Election of all Knights Citizens and Burgesses to sit and serve in Parliament and so of all other Elective Officers ought to be free That all Members of Parliament Hereditary or Elective ought to be present and there freely to speak and vote according to their Judgements and Consciences without any over-awing Guards to terrifie them and none to be forced sequestered or secluded thence by force or fraud That all Parliaments not thus duly and freely summoned elected freely held but unduly packed without due Elections or by forcible secluding securing any of the Members or not summoning all of them to the Parliament and all Acts of Parliament fraudulently or forcibly procured by indirect means ought to be nulled repealed reputed voyd and of dangerous president 7 That neither the Kings nor any Subjects of the Kingdom of England may or ought to be summoned before any Forreign Powers or Jurisdictions whatsoever out of the Realm or within the same for any manner of Right Inheritance Thing belonging to them or Offence done by them within the Realm nor tried nor judged by them 8 That all Subjects of the Realm are obliged by Allegiance Oaths and duty to defend their lawful Kings Persons Crowns the Laws Rights and Priviledges of the Realm and of Parliament against all Usurpers Traytors Violence and Conspiracies And that no Subject of this Realm who according to his Duty and Allegiance shall serve his King in his Warres for the just defence of him and the Land against Forreign Enemies or Rebels shall lose or forfeit any thing for doing his true duty service and allegiance to him therein but utterly be discharged of all vexation trouble or losse 9 That no publick Warre by Land or Sea ought to be made or leavied with or against any Forreign Nation nor any publick Truce or League entred into with Forreign Realms or States to binde the Nation without their common advice and consent in Parliament 10 That the Kings of England or others cannot grant away alien or subject the Crown Kingdom or antient Crown Lands of England to any other without their Nobles and Kingdoms full and free consent in Parliament That the antient Honours Manors Lands Rents
Kingdome are firmly established So William Watson a Secular Priest chargeth Father Parsons the English Jesuite and his Jesuited companions in their Memorial for Reformation of England when it should be reduced under the power of the Jesuites as Parsons was confident it would be though he should not live to see it written at Sevil in Spain Anno Dom. 1590. that they intended to have Magna Charta with our Common Fundamental Laws and Liberties abrogated and suppressed thus expressed by William Watson in his Quodlibets pag. 92 94 95. Father Parsons and the Jesuites in their deep Jesuitical Court of Parliament begun at Styx in Phlegeton have compiled their Acts in a compleat Volume intituled THE HIGH COVRT OF REFORMATION FOR ENGLAND And to give you a taste of their intent by that base Court of A TRIBE of TRAITORS sawcily like to Gade Jack Straw and Tom Tiler VSVRPING the AVTHORITY of both STATES ECCLESIASTICAL and TEMPORALL in all their REBELLIOVS ENTERPRICES these were principall points discussed set down and so decreed by them c. He first mentions three of them relating to Church-men Scholars and Church and Colledge-Lands which were to be put in Fee off●●s hands and they all to be reduced unto Arbitrary Pensions c. And then proceeds thus to the Fourth The fourth Statute was there made concerning the COMMON LAWS of this LAND and that consisted of this one principal point That ALL THE GREAT CHARTERS of ENGLAND MUST BE BURNT the manner of holding Lands in Fee simple Fee tail Kings service Soccage or Villanage brought into villany scogg●●y and popularity and in few the Common Law must be wholy annihillated abolished and troden down under foot and Caesars civill Imperials brought amongst us and sway for a time in their places All whatsoever England yeelds being but base barbarous and void of all sence knowledge or discretion shewed in the first Founders and Legifers and on the other side all whatsoever is or shal be brought in by these out-casts of Moses stain of Solon and refuse of Lycurgus must be reputed for metaphysical seme-divine and of more excellency than the other were Which he thus seconds Quodlibet 9. Article 2. p. 286. First it is plain that Father Parsons and his Company divide it amongst them how they list have laid a plot as being most consonant and fitting for their other Designments That the Common Laws of the Realm of England must be forsooth either abolished utterly or else bear no greater sway in the Realm than the Civil Law doth And the chief reason is for that the State of the Crown and Kingdome by the Common Laws is so strongly settled as whilest they continue the Jesuites see not how they can work their wills And on the other side in the Civil laws they think they have some shreds whereby they may patch a cloak together to cover a bloody shew of their Treasons for the present from the eys of the Vulgar people Secondly the said good Father hath set down a course how every man may shake off all authority at their pleasures as if he would become a new Anabaptist or King John of Leydon to draw all the world into Mutiny ●ebellion and Combustion And the Stratagem is how the Common people may be inveigled seduced to conceit to themselves such a liberty or prerogative as that it may be lawfull for them when they think meet to place and displace Kings and Princes as men do their Tenants at will hirelings or ordinary Servants Which Anabaptistical and abominable Doctrine proceeding from a turbul●nt tribe of Traiterous Puritan●s and other Hereticks this treacherous Jesuite would now foist into the Catholick Church as a ground of his corrupt Divinity And p. 330 332. He intends to alter and change all Laws Customs and Orders of this Noble Isle He hath prejudiced the law of Property in instituting Government Governours and Hereditary Princes to be BENEPLACITVM POPVLI and all other private possessions ad bene-placitum sui c Whether any such new deep Jesuitical Court of Parliament and high Court of Reformation for England to carry on this old Design of the Jesuites against our Laws hath been of late years sitting amongst us in or neer Westminster or elswhere in secret Counsel every week as divers intelligent Protestants have informed me and Hugh Peters reported to divers on his own knowledge being well acquainted with their Persons and practises of late years it concerns others neerer to them and more able then I to examine Sure I am a greater man by far then Hugh Peters in an Assembly of Divines and others for reconciling all dissenting parties not long since averred to them on his own knowledge That during our late innovations distractions subversions in Church State and overturning of Laws and Government the common adversary hath taken many advantages to effect his designes thereby in civill and spiritual respects That he knew very well that Emissaries of the Jesuites never came over in those swarms as they have done since these things were on foot That DIVERS GENTLEMNE CAN BEAR WITNES WITH HIM that they had a CONSISTORY AND COUNCEL ABROAD THAT RULES ALL THE AFFAIRS OF THE THINGS IN ENGLAND That they had fixed in England in the limits of most Cathedrals of which he was able to produce the PARTICULAR INSTRUMENT an Episcopal power with Archdeacons and other persons to pervert seduce and deceive the people And all this whiles we were in this sad and deplorable distracted condition Yea most certain it is that many hundreds if not some thousands of them within these few years have been sent over from Forraign Seminaries into England under the disguises of converted Jews Physitians Chyrurgions Mechanicks of all sorts Merchants Factors Travellers Souldiers and some of them particularly into the Army as appears by the late printed Examination of Ramsey the Anabaptized New-dipped Jesuite under the mask of a Jewish Convert taken at New Castle in June 1653. and by sundry severall late instances I could name To pretermit all instances of diverse particular Jesuites come over into England not only within these few years but moneths discovered by persons of credit with Sir Kenelm Digby who though the son of one of the executed old popish Gunpowder Traitors a dangerous active seducing Jesuited papist if not a professed Jesuit who in the years 1638 and 1639. conspired with the Popes Nuncio and a Conclave of Jesuites sitting in Council at London to subvert our Religion introduce a universall tolleration of the popish Religion in our kingomes new modle and shake our former established government and to poyson destroy the late King himself in case he consented not to them therein and for this very purpose both plotted raised promoted the first Wars between the Protestants of England and Scotland which he abetted all he could by his letters and secret Collections of moneys from all the Papists throughout England and elswhere who
Parliament set on Impositions either within the Land or upon commodities exported or imported by the merchants they have in open Parliament complained of it in that it was done without their consents and thereupon never failed to obtain a speedy and full redresse without any claim made by the Kings of any Power or Prerogative in that point And though the Law of property be original and carefully preserved by the Common Laws of this Real WHiCH ARE AS ANCIENT AS THE KINGDOME IT SELF yet those famous Kings for the better contentment and assurance of their loving Subjects agreed THAT THIS OLD FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT observe the words should be further declared and established by Acts of Parliament wherein it is provided That no such Charge shall ever be laid upon the People without their common Consents as may appear by sundry Records of former times We therefore your Majesties most humble Commons assembled in Parliament following the example of this worthy care of our Ancestors and out of our Duty to those for whom we serve finding that your Majesty without advice of your Lords and Commons hath lately in times of Peace Set both greater Impositions and farre more in number than any your Noble Ancestors did ever in time of Warre do with all humility present this most just and necessary Petition unto your Majesty THAT ALL IMPOSITIONS SET WITHOVT ASSENT IN PARLIAMENT MAY BE QVITE ABOLISHED AND TAKEN AWAY And that your Majesty likewise in imitation of your Royal Progenitors will be pleased that a Law in your time and during this Session of Parliament may be also made to declare That all Imposition of any kinde set or to be set upon your people their Goods or Merchandises save onely by common Consent in Parliament are and shall b● Void wherein your Majesty shall not onely Give your Subjects great Satisfaction in point of their Right but also bring exceeding joy and comfort to them who now suffer partly through the abating of the price of Native Commodities and partly through the raising of all Forraign to the overthrow of Merchants and shipping the causing of general dearth and decay of all wealth among your people who will be thereby no lesse discouraged than disabled to supply your Majesty when occasion shall require In which memorable Petition the whole House of Commons resolve in direct terms 1. That the Subjects of England have old original Fundamental Rights and more particularly in the Property of their Goods exempted from all Impositions whatsoever in times of peace or war without their common consent in Parliament declared and established both by the ancient and common law of England and sundry Acts of Parliament and records of former times 2. They declare the constant vigilant care zeal of our ancestors and former Parliaments in all ages inviolably to maintain defend preserve the same against all enchroachments together with their own care duty and vigilancy in this kind in that very Parliament 3. They relate the readinesse of our Kings to ratifie these their Fundamental Rights by new Acts of Parliament when they have been violated in any kinde 4. They declare the benefit accruing both to Prince and People by the inviolable preservation and establishment of this old Fundamental right and the mischiefs accruing to both by the infringment thereof by arbitrary illegall impositions without full consent in Parliament 5. They earnestly in point of Conscience prudence and duty to those for whom they served Petition his Majesty for a new Law and Declaration against all new Impositions and Taxes on inland Goods or Merchandises imported or exported without the peoples free consent in Parliament as null void utterly to be abolished and taken away Whether it will not be absolutely necessary for the whole English Nation and the next ensuing National or reall Parliament to prosecute enact establish such a Declaration and Law against all such former and future arbitrary illegal oppressive Taxes Impositions Excises that have been imposed and continued for many years together on the whole kingdome by new extravagant self-created usurping ARMY-OFFICERS and other Powers without free and full consent of the people in Lawfull English Parliaments against all former Laws Declarations and Resolutions in Parliaments to their great oppression enslaving undoing in far greater proportions multiplicity and variety than ever in former Ages without the least intermission and likewise against their late declared designe to perpetuate them on our exhausted Nation without alteration or diminution beyond and against all presidents of former Ages both in times of Peace and War for the future by the 27 28 29 30 39. Articles of the Instrument entituled The Government of the Common-wealth of England c. I remit to their most serious considerations to determine if ever they resolve to be English Freemen again or to imitate the wisdome prudence zeal courage and laudable examples of their worthy Ancestors from which they cannot now degenerate without the greatest Infamy and enslaving of themselves with their Posterities for ever to the arbitrary wils of present or future Vsurpers on their Fundamental Rights and Liberties in an higher degree then ever in any precedent Ages under the greatest Conquerours or Kings after all their late costly bloody Wars for their Defence against the beheaded King 5 The fifth is A learned and necessary Argument made in the Commons House of Parliament Anno 7. Jacobi to prove That each Subject hath a Property in his Goods shewing also the extent of the Kings Prerogative in Impositions upon the Goods of Merchants exported or imported c. by a late learned Judge of this Kingdome printed at London by Richard Bishop 1641. and Ordered to be Published in Print at a Committee appointed by the Honorable House of Commons for examination and Licensing of Books 20. Maii 1641. In which Parliamentary Argument p. 8. 11. 16. I finde these direct Passages That the New Impositions contained in the Book of Rates imposed on Merchandizes imported and exported by the Kings Prerogative and Letters Patents without consent in Parliament is against the natural Frame and Constitution of the Policy of this Kingdome which is JVS PVBLICVM REGNI AND SO SVBVERTETH THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF THE REALM and introduceth a new Form of State and Government Can any man give me a reason why the King can only in Parliament make Laws No man ever read any Law whereby it was so ordained and yet no man ever read that any King practised the contrary therefore IT IS THE ORIGINAL RIGHT OF THE KINGDOME AND THE VERY NATURAL CONSTITUTION OF OUR STATE AND POLICY being one of the highest Rights of Soveraign Power If the King alone out of Parliament may impose HE ALTERETH THE LAW OF ENGLAND IN ONE OF THESE TWO MAIN FUNDAMENTAL POiNTS he must either take the Subjects Goods from them without assent of the Party which is against the law or else he must give his own Letters Patents the force of
one of the Judges of the Common Pleas exhibited sundry Articles of Impeachment to King Henry the 8. against Cardinal Wolsey That he had by divers and many sundry wayes and fashions committed High Treason and NOTABLE GRIEVOUS OFFENCES by misusing altering and subverting of his Graces Laws and otherwise contrary to his high Honour Prerogative Crown Estate and Dignity Royal to the inestimable great hinderance diminution and decay of the universal wealth of this his Graces Realm The Articles are 43. in number the 20 21 26 30 35 37 42 43. contain his illegal arbitrary practises and proceedings to the subversion of the due course and order of his Graces Laws to the undoing of a great number of his loving people Whereupon they pray Please therefore your mostexcellent Majesty of your excellent goodnesse towards the Weal of this your Realm and subjects of the same to set such order and direction upon the said Lord Cardinal as may be to terrible example of other to beware to offend your Grace and your Laws hereafter and that he be so provided for that he never have any Power Jurisdiction or authority hereafter to trouble vex or impoverish the common-wealth of this your Realm as he hath done heretofore to the great hurt and dammage of every man almost high and low His poysoning himself prevented his legal judgement for these his Practises 7. The Statute of 3. and 4. Ed. c. 5 6. enacts That if any persons to the number of twelve or more being assembled together shall intend go about practise or put in use with force and arms unlawfully of their own authority TO CHANGE ANY LAWS made for Religion by authority of Parliament OR ANY OTHER LAWS OR STATUTES OF THIS REALM STANDING IN FORCE OR ANY OF THEM and shall continue together by the space of an houre being commanded by a Justice of Peace Mayor Sheriffe or other Officer to return or shall by ringing of any Bell sounding of any Trumpet Drumme Horn c. raise such a number of persons to the intent to put any the things aforesaid in ure IT SHALL BE HIGH TREASON and the parties executed as Traytors After this the Statute of 1 Mariaec 12. Enacted That if twelve or more in manner aforesaid shall endeavour by force to alter any of the Laws or Statutes of the Kingdome the offenders shall from the time therein limited be ad●udged ONELY AS FELONS whereas it was Treason before but this Act continuing but till the next Parliament and then expiring the offence remains Treason as formerly 8. In the 39. year of Queen Elizabeth divers in the County of Oxford consulted together to go from house to house in that County and from thence to London and other parts to excite them to take arms for the throwing down of inclosures throughout the Realm nothing more was prosecuted nor assemblies made yet in Easter Term 39. Elizabeth it was resolved by all the Judges of England who met about the Case that this was High Treason and a levying war against the Queen because it was to throw down all inclosures throughout the Kingdom to which they could pretend no right and that the end of it was TO OVER THROW THE LAWS AND STATUTES for inclosures Whereupon BRADSHAW and BURTON two of the principal Offenders were condemned and executed at Ainstow Hill in Oxfordshire where they intended their first meeting 9. To come nearer to our present times and case In the last Parliament of King Charls Anno 1640. The whole House of Commons impeached Thomas Earl of Strafford Lord Deputy of Ireland of High Treason amongst other Articles for this crime especially wherein all the other centred That he hath TREASONABLY ENDEAVOURED by his Words Actions and Counsels TO SUBVERT THE FUNDAMENTALL LAWS and GOVERNMENT OF ENGLAND and IRELAND and introduce an arbitrary and Tyrannical Government This the whole Parliament declared and adjudged to be High Treason in and by their Votes and a special Act of Parliament for his Attainder for which he was condemned and soon after executed on Tower-Hill as a Traytor to the King and Kingdome May 22. 1641. 10. The whole House of Commons the same Parliament impeached William Laud Arch-bishop of Canterbury of HIGH TREASON in these very terms February 6 1640. First That he hath traiterously endeavoured to subvert the Fundamental Laws and Government of this Kingdome of England and instead thereof to introduce an arbitrary and tyrannical Government against Law And he to that end hath wickedly and TRAYTEROVSLY advised his Majesty that he might at his own will and pleasure levy and take mony of his Subjects without THEIR CONSENT IN PARLIAMENT and this he affirmed was warrantable by the law of God Secondly He hath for the better accomplishment of that his Traiterous Designe advised and procured Sermons and other Discourses to be preached printed and published in which the Authority of Parliaments and the force of the Laws of this Kingdome have been denyed and absolute and unlimitted Power over the Persons and Estates of his Majesties Subjects maintained and defended not onely in the King but in himself and other Bishops against the Law Thirdly He hath by Letters Messages Threats and Promises and by divers other wayes to Judges and other Ministers of Justice interrupted perverted and at other times by means aforesaid hath endeavoured to interrupt and pervert the course of Justice in his Majesties Courts at Westminster and other Courts TO THE SUBVERSION OF THE LAWS OF THIS KINGDOME whereby sundry of his Majesties Subjects have been stopt in their just suits deprived of their lawfull Rights and subjected to his Tyrannicall will to their ruine and destruction Fourthly That he hath traiterously endeavoured to corrupt the other Courts of Justice by advising and procuring his Majesty to sell places of Judicature and other Offices CONTRARY TO THE LAWS and CUSTOMES in that behalf Fifthly That he hath TRAITEROUSLY caused a a Book of Canons to be compiled and published without any lawfull warrant and Authority in that behalf in which pretended Canons many matters are contained contrary to the Kings Prerogative to the Fundamentall Laws and Statutes of this Realm to the Rights of Parliament to the Property and Liberty of the Subject and matters tending Sedition and of dangerous consequence and to the establishing of a vast unlawfull presumptuous power in himself and his successors c. Seventhly That he hath traiterously endeavoured to alter and subvert Gods true Religion BY LAW ESTABLISHED and instead thereof to set up Popish Religion and Idolatry And to that end hath declared and maintained in Speeches and printed Books diverse Popish Doctrines and Opinions contrary to the Articles of Religion ESTABLISHED BY LAW He hath urged and enjoyned divers Popish and Superstitious Ceremonies WITHOUT ANY WARRANT OF LAW and hath cruelly persecuted those who have opposed the same by corporal punishment and imprisonments and most unjustly vexed others who refused to conform thereunto by
ALL CAUSES RELATING TO THE EXCISE from time to time against all Sutes or Actions brought or other molestations against them by the Parties grieved who are usually Fined Imprisoned enforced to pay Costs of Sute only for suing for relief yea which I cannot think of without horrour and amazement ALL COVRTS OF JUSTICE OF THIS COMMON-WEALTH and ALL JUDGES and JUSTICES OF THE SAME SHERIFS COVNSELLORS ATTURNIES SOLICITORS and ALL OTHER PERSONS are thereby expresly required to conform themselves accordingly in all things WITHOVT ANY OPPOSITION OR DISPVTE WHATSOEVER as the precise words of their Ordinance of 17 March 1653. proclaim to all the Nation Which declares further That IT IS NECESSARY to provide A CONTINVAL SVPPLY for the carrying on the weighty Affairs of this Common-wealth OVT OF THIS REVENVE OF EXCISE And do not these Clauses compared with the 27. 29. Articles of their Instrument clearly discover a fixed Resolution in these new Legislators to continue and perpetuate upon the whole Nation this importable Grievance of Excise from year to year without intermission or end to be leavied by the means aforesaid to hinder all and every the Freemen of England from endeavouring to free or exempt themselves or their Posterities from it hereafter by any Sute Action Habeas Corpus or other legal remedy in any Court of Justice whatsoever yea peremptorily positively to prohibit enjoyn all Courts of Justice Judges Justices Sheriffs Counsellours Atturnies Solicitors with all other persons of this Common-wealth both for the present and future Ages to give them the least legal assistance advice or relief against the same or against any Officers or Assistants which shall forcibly l●a●ie it by distress Fines Imprisonnents Confiscation of Goods Sequestrations Sales of their personal or real Estates or otherwise I appeal then in the behalf of all the Freeborn People of England the Souls and Consciences of these new Ordinance-makers with all the Executioners of them in any kinde before all the Tribunals of Heaven and Earth whether they have not by these their Dismal Ordinances more desperately irrecoverably totally finally as much as in them lies undermined subverted and quite blown up at once all the Foundations of our hereditary Fundamentall Properties Liberties Laws for eternity and levelled them to the dust then the worst of all our Kings or former Councill-tables ever did Deprived the whole Nation and every particular Free-man in it of all future benefit of our Laws Statutes and Courts of Justice for their just relief against this intolerable Oppression and thereby reduced us to the condition of the most slavish captivated fettered Bond-slaves and conquered Vassals under heaven without any visible means or hopes of future enfranchisement under a pretext of fighting for maintaining protecting enlargeing our former properties and freedomes to a more miserable sordid servile condition than either we or our Ancestors sustained under the worst of al our Kings and their most pernicious Counsellors who never in any age attempted tither to make or impose such Extravagant enslaving Ordinances or Excises with such strange penalties Forfeitures Imprisonments Sequestrations sales most unrighteous Monstrous Inhibitions of all legal suites means for cheirrelief in Courts of Justice as they have done King Charles himself though condemned beheaded by them for the worst of Tyrants and Oppressors permitting his Subjects free Liberty to dispute the Legality of Fines for Knight-hood Ship mony Tonnage Poundage Loanes Excise and other Impositions not only in his Parliaments where they were fully debated without restraint and Laws passed against them afterwards by his own Royall assent thereto but likewise in all his other Courts where they were first brought in question Yet now in our N●w Free State under these greatest pretended Patrons of our Laws and Liberties all Courts Judges Justices and other Officers must conform to these illegall Impositions and their tyrannicall waies of inforcement without any opposition or dispute whatsoever and all Counsellors Attornies Solicitors and others must neither argue nor advise nor act in any kinde against them And is this the glorious old antient English Liberty Freedome Property Law and free course of Justice wee have spent so many millions of Treasure so many years of publique Consultations warres Prayers Fasts Tears and such Oceans of precious christian Protestant English blood inviolably to maintain and perpetuate to posterity If any Free-born English men whatsoever dare publikely averre it let them do it at the perill of their infamy execration in all future ages yea of their own heads and Souls If they cannot but now absolutely disavow it let them with shame and indignation disclaim renounce such illegall Ordinances Excises as most detestable both to God and all true-born English free men The 2 is The present continuing Impositions of Customes Tonnage and Poundage upon Goods Merchandizes imported and exported without any grant thereof by Parliament by a new Printed Paper entituled an Ordinance of March 23 1653. thus peremptorily imposing them without any Prologue or Inducement to satisfy the people either in Equity or Justice much lesse in their Legality in respect of those who thus impose them for sundry years yet to come Be it ordained by his highness the Lord Protector with the advise and consent of the Councell that one Act of Parliament though no Act at all by any known Laws Statutes Law-books Records Customes or Constitutions of the Realm bu● a meer Nullity entituled an Act for the Continuation of the Customes until the 26 of March 1653 and all clauses and powers therein contained are and ARE HEREBY CONTINUED and SHALL and DO STAND IN FULL FORCE UNTILL THE 26 DAY OF MARCH in the year of our Lord 1658. c. By which these New Legislators by their own inherent Superlative Power presume to impose this Tax upon the whole Nation without any grant in Parliament for full 5 years space not only contrary to the Presidents in all former Kings raigns who never claimed nor received it but by speciall grant in Parliament but likewise contrary to this memorable Remonstrance made by the whole House of Commons in the Parliament of 3 Caroli never yet Printed to my knowledge Most gracious Soveraign your Majesties most loyall and dutifull Subjects the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled being in nothing more carefull than of the Honour and Prosperity of your Majesty and the Kingdome which they know doth much depend upon that union and relation betwixt your Majesty and your people do with much sorrow apprehend that by reason of the incertainty of their continuance together the unexpected interruptions which have been cast upon them and the shortness of time in which your Majesty hath determined to end this Session they cannot bring to maturity and perfection divers businesses of weight which they have taken into their consideration and resolution as most important for the common good Amongst other things they have taken into especiall care the preparing of a Bill
for the granting to your Majesty such a Subsidy of Tonnage and Poundage as might uphold your Profit and Revenue in as ample manner as their just care and respect of Trade wherein not only the prosperity but even the life of the Kingdom doth consist would permit But being a work which will require much time and preparation by Conference with your Majesties Officers and with the Merchants not only of London but of other remote parts they finde it not possible to bee accomplished at this time wherefore considering it will be much more prejudicial to the Right of the Subject if your Majesty should continue to receive the same without Authority of Law after the determination of a Session then if there had been a recess by Adjournment only in which case that intended Grant would have related to the first day of the Parliament and assuring themselves That your Majesty is resolved to observe that your royal Answer which you have made to the Petition of Right of both Houses of Parliament yet doubting lest your Majesty may be mis-informed concerning this particular case as if you might continue to take those Subsidies of Tonnage and Poundage and other Impositions of Merchants without breaking that Answer they are forced by that duty which they owe to your Majesty and to those whom they represent to declare THAT THERE OVGHT NOT ANY IMPOSITION TO BE LAID VPON THE GOODS OF MERCHANTS EXPORTED OR IMPORTED WITHOVT COMMON CONSENT BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT WHICH IS THE RIGHT AND INHERITANCE OF YOVR SVBJECTS FOVNDED NOT ONLY VPON THE MOST ANTIENT AND ORIGINAL CONSTITVTION OF THIS KINGDOM BUT OFTEN CONFIRMED AND DECLARED IN DIVERS STA●VTE LAWS And for the better manifestation thereof may it please your Majesty to understand That although your royal Predecessors the Kings of this Realm have often had such Subsidies and Impositions granted unto them upon divers occasions especially for the guarding of the Seas and safeguard of Merchants yet the Subjects have been ever careful to use such Cautions and limitations in those Grants as might prevent any Claim to be made that such Subsidies do proceed from duty and not from the free gift of the Subject and that they have heretofore limited a time in such Grants and for the most part but short as for a year or two and if it were continued longer they have sometimes directed a certain space of resensation or intermission that so the Right of the Subject might be more evident At other times it hath been granted upon occasion of Warre for certain numbers of years with Proviso that if the Warre were ended in the mean time then the grant should cease And of course it hath been sequestred into the hands of some Subjects to bee imployed for guarding of the Coasts and it is acknowledged by the ordinary Answers of your Majesties Predecessors in their assents to the Bills of Subsidy of Tonnage and Poundage that it is of the nature of other Subsidies proceeding from the good will of the Subject Very few of your Predecessors had it for life until the reign of Henry 7. who was so farre from conceiving he had any right thereunto that although he granted Commissions for collecting certain Duties and Customs due by Law yet he made no Commission for receiving the Subsidy of Tunnage and Poundage until the same was granted to him in Parliament Since his time all the Kings and Queens of this Realm have had the like Grants for life by the free love and good will of the Subject and whensoever the people have been grieved by laying any Impositions or other Charges upon their Goods and Merchandizes without authority of Law which hath been very seldome yet upon complaint in Parliament they have been forthwith releeved saving in the time of your royall Father who having through ill counsel raised the Rates of Merchandizes to that height at which they now are yet he was pleased so farre to yee●d to the complaint of his people as to offer that if the value of these Impositions which he had set might be made good unto him he would bind himself and his Heirs by Act of Parliament never to lay any other which offer the Commons at that time in regard of the great burthen did not think fit to yeeld unto Nevertheless your loyal Commons in this Parliament out of their especial zeal to your Service and special regard of your pressing occasions have taken into their considerations so to frame a Grant of Subsidy of Tunnage and Poundage to your Majesty that both you might have been better enabled for the defence of your Realm and your Subjects by being secure from all undue Charges be the more encouraged cheerfully to proceed in their course of Trade by the encrease whereof your Majesties profit and likewise the strength of the Kingdom would be very much augmented But not being now able to accomplish this their desire there is no course left unto them without manifest breach of their Duty both to your Majesty and their Country save only to make this humble Declaration THAT THE RECEIVING OF TONNAGE and POVNDAGE and OTHER IMPOSITIONS NOT GRANTED BY PARLIAMENT IS A BREACH OF THE FVNDAMENTAL LIBERTIES OF THIS KINGDOM and CONTRARY TO YOVR MAJESTIES ROYAL ANSWER TO THE SAID PETITION OF RIGHT And therefore they do most humbly beseech your Majesty to forbear any further receiving of the same and not to take it in ill part from those of your Majesties loving Subjects WHO SHALL REFVSE TO MAKE PAIMENT OF ANY SVCH CHARGES WITHOVT WARRANT OF LAW DEMANDED And as by this forbearance your most excellent Majesty shall manifest unto the World your ROYAL JUSTICE IN THE OBSERVATION OF YOVR LAWS so they doubt not hereafter at the time appointed for their coming again they shall have occasion to express their great desire to advance your Majesties HONOVR and PROFIT The King dissolving this Parliament on a sudden and continuing to take Tonnage and Poundage by his Royal Prerogative without any Act of Parliament sundry Merchants upon the Commons Remonstrance refused to pay the same whereupon their Goods were seised of which they complaining in Parliament 16 Caroli were Voted full Reparations against the Customers with Dammages for the same And to prevent the Kings Claim thereunto by right with all future Demands and Collections thereof from the Subject without grant in Parliament they Declared and Enacted by three special Acts of Parliament 16 17 Caroli That IT IS and HATH BEEN THE ANTIENT RIGHT OF THE SVBJECTS OF THIS REALM That NO SUBSIDY CVSTOME IMPOST OR OTHER CHARGES WHATSOEVER OVGHT OR MAY BE LAID OR IMPOSED UPON ANY MERCHANDISE EXPORTED OR IMPORTED BY SUBJECTS DENIZENS OR ALIENS WITHOVT COMMON CONSENT IN PARLIAMENT and that if any Customer Controller or any other Officer or Person should take or receive or cause to bee taken or received the said Subsidy or any other Impost upon any Merchandize whatsoever
exported or imported except the same be due by Grant IN PARLIAMENT shall incur the penalties and forfeitures OF A PREMVNIRE to the which the King gave his Royal Assent And to prevent any future prescription thereunto by the King they discontinued it for some time and then granted it specially from Month to Month or some short space with sundry limitations and the penalty of A PREMVNIRE if otherwise received by several New Acts of Parliament to which the King gave his assent These Acts the King himself in his Proclamation of the sixteenth of December in the eighteenth year of his reign stiles THE FENCES OF THE SVBJECTS PROPERTY received from Vs and understood by Vs as one of THE GREATEST GRACES THE CROWN EVER CONFERRED ON THE SVBJECT And by that Proclamation he prohibited all his Subjects both the paiment and receipt of any Monies for Customs or other Maritine Duties contrary to this Act by any Ordinance of both Houses of Parliament under pain of a PREMUNIRE and of being likewise proceeded against as ill-affected persons to the Peace of the Kingdome Whereupon the Lords and Commons in their answer to this Proclamation though they declared that the intent and meaning of that penall Clause of a PRAEMVNIRE and other Forfeitures in these new statutes which likewise disable every person Customer Officers who should take or receive or cause to be taken or received any such subsidy or imposition upon any Merchandize during his life to sue or implead any persons in any action reall mixt or personal in any Court whatsoever was only to restrain the Crown from imposing any duty or payment on the Subjects without their consent in Parliament and that it was not intended to extend to any case whereunto the LORDS and COMMONS GIVE THEIR ASSENT IN PARLIAMENT which they never did to this New White-hall Ordinance nor the pretended Act recited in it therefore the imposers and receivers of it by vertue thereof without such assent in Parliament are within the penalties of the aforesaid Statutes Yet to avoid the danger of a Praemunire in their Officers by exacting it only by an Ordinance of both Houses without a speciall Act of Parliament they did by their first Ordinances impose and demand Customes Tonnage Poundage and new Imposts not as a Legal Duty but only BY WAY OF LOANE til the Act of Parliament for their future continuance should be assented to by the King as their Declaration of 31 December 1642. and their Ordinance of the same date concerning the subsidy of Tonnage and Poundage attest By what coulor of Law Iustice Right this antient birth-right of all English Subjects so lately declared by three Acts of Parliament to which most of our late and present White-hall Grandees were parties comes to bee lost and forfeited by our contests to preserve it or how the Customes Imposts of Tonnage and Poundage can bee now imposed continued on or exacted from the Subjects by any Powers Officers or persons Whatsoever and levied by severest penalties Forfeitures Imprisonments Seisures by pretext of this White-hal Ordinance though no waies granted by common consent and Act of Parliament without incurring a Praemunire and forementioned penalties disabilities or without subverting the Fundamental Liberty Property Franchises Laws Statutes of the whole English Nation in a farre higher degree then ever in former ages I cannot yet discern and all our New Governours Merchants Customers Officers and other persons who have any Cordial affection Love Zeal to their own or the peoples hereditary Rights and Priviledges may do well to demurre in Law upon it till they can satisfy their own and other mens consciences therein to prevent the dangerous consequences of such an ill president to posterity In the Parliament of 1 H. 4. rot Parl. n. 32 33 34 36. These were the principall Articles of impreachment exhibited against King Richard the Second for which hee was forced to depose himself as unfit to Govern and resign up his Crown to King Henry the Fourth That whereas the King of England out of the profits of the Realm and the Patrimony belonging to his Crown might live honestly without oppression of his people so as the Kingdome were not burdened with the extraordinary expences of warre that this King during the Truces between the Realm and the Adversaries thereof gave and squandered away a great part of the Crown-Lands to unworthy persons and thereupon exacted almost every year so many Taxes and Grants of Ayde from his Subjects of the Realm that hee thereby GREATLY and TOO EXCESSIVELY OPPRESSED HIS PEOPLE TO THE IMPOVERISHING OF HIS REALM That the same King being unwilling to keep and defend the just Laws and Customes of his Realm and to do according to his pleasure whatsoever should suite with his desires frequently when the Laws of his Realm were expounded and declared to him by the Justices and others of his Council who requested him to administer Justice according to those Laws said expresly with an austere and frownning Countenance THAT THE LAWS WERE HIS more suo AFTER his own MANER and sometimes THAT THEY WERE IN HIS OWN BREAST and THAT HEE ALONE COULD ALTER and MAKE THE LAWS OF HIS REALM And being seduced with this opinion he permitted not Justice to be done to very many of his Leige people but compelled very many to cease from the prosecution of common Justice That when as afterwards in his Parliament certain Statutes were made which might always bind till they were specially repealed by another Parliament the same King desiring to enjoy so great Liberty that none of these Statutes might so binde him but that he might execute and do according to the pleasure of his own Will which hee could not do of right subtilly procured such a Petition to be presented to him in his Parliament in the behalf of the Commons of his Realm and to be granted to him in the general THAT HE MIGHT BE SO FREE AS ANY OF HIS PROGENITORS WERE BEFORE HIM By colour of which Petition and Grant he frequently did and commanded to bee done MANY THINGS CONTRARY TO THE SAID STATVTES NOT REPEALED GOING AGAINST THEM EXPRESLY and WITTINGLY AGAINST HIS OATH AT HIS CORONATION That although by the Statutes and Customs of his Realm in the summoning of every Parliament his people in every County of the Realm ought to be free to elect and depute Knights for the said Counties to sit 〈◊〉 Parliament both TO RECEIVE their GRIEVANCES and TO PROSECVTE REMEDIES THEREUPON AS IT SHALL SEEM EXPEDIENT TO THEM yet the said King that he might in his Parliament be able to obtain the effect of his rash Will frequently directed his Mandates to his Sheriffs that they should cause to come to his Parliament CERTAIN PERSONS NAMED BY THE KING HIMSELF AS KNIGHTS OF THE SHIRE Which Knights verily favouring the said King he might easily enduce as he frequently did sometimes by divers threats and terrors and sometimes by gifts TO CONSENT TO THOSE THINGS WHICH WERE VERY
PREJVDICIAL TO THE REALM and VERY BVRDENSOME TO THE PEOPLE and specially TO GRANT TO THE SAID KING A SUBSIDY FOR CERTAIN YEARS TO THE OPPRESSING OF His People overmuch That although the Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels of every Freeman by the Laws of the Realm used in all former ages past ought not to be seized unless they had forfeited Yet notwithstanding the said King purposing endeavouring to enervate these Laws in the presence of very many of the Lords and Commons of this Realm frequently said and affirmed That the Life Lands Tenements Goods and Chattles of every one of his Subjects are at his will and pleasure without any Forfeiture by the known Laws which is altogether contrary to the Laws customs of the Realm aforesaid Whether all these high Misdemeanors charged against King Richard have not been revived and acted over and over both by words and deeds in a farre higher degree than ever he was guilty of them by some late present Whitehall Grandees Army-Officers New Instrument-makers Legitors and Imposers of Excises Customs Imposts Tonnage Poundage Contributions for many years yet to come and of that constant Annual Revenue projected intended by them in their 27 Article I remit to their own judgements consciences and our whole Kingdom to resolve and what they demerit for such extravagant high offences for which he lost Crown and Regal power let others determine The 3. particular is their late incumbent Imposition of 6. Moneths new Contribution by a meer Self-enacted Whitchall Jurisdiction without any consent grant in or by the People in Parliament by that they intitle An Ordinance of the 8. of ●une 1654. beginning thus in a most imperial Stile transcending all former Acts of Parliament granting or imposing any Subsidies without any Prologue to sweeten it or court the people to its ready payment Be it Ordained and Enacted by his Highness the Lord Protector with the consent of his Council and it is hereby Ordained That towards the maintenance of the Armies and Navies of this Commonwealth An Assessement of one Hundred and Twenty Thousand Pounds per Mensem for Three Monethe commencing the 24 of Iune 1654 and ending the 29 of Sept. following shall be Taxed Levied Collected and Paid in England and Wales in such sort as is hereafter expressed The full sum of the said Three Months Assessment of One hundred and twenty thousand pounds by the Month to be at once wholly collected and paid in to the Receivers Generall at or before the tenth day of October next c. The Levying thereof upon the refusers hath been by distress of Goods by Souldiers Troopers and quartering them on the refusers till payment and double the value many times paid to and exacted by the Souldiers for their pains adjudged even by some of our New Grandees Votes who prescribe such Taxes and wayes of levying them to be No less then High Treason and levying Warre in Straffords case for which principally he was condemned and lost his head on Tower Hill as a Traytor In this New Whitehall Tax without a Parliament intended as a leading President to bind the whole Nation in perpetuity if now submitted to as the 27 Article intimates there is a double violation subversion of the Fundamental Laws and Properties of the Nation in the Highest degree The first is by the reviving imposing of Ship-mony on the whole Realm and all Inland Counties as well as Maritine for the Maintenance of the Navies by Sea which should be maintained only by the Customs and that in a farre higher proportion than the Shipmony imposed by Writs by our late beheaded King amounting to no less than Forty thousand pounds per Mensem at last by way of Contribution alone besides the Customs Tonnage Poundage and Excise paid towards it This Imposition of Shipmony by the late King though ratified with the advise and consent of his Council many colourable Presidents Records in all former ages and the precedent Resolution of all his Iudges under their hands as just and legally imposed in case of Necessity and Publike danger only without consent in Parliament together with the Iudgement and Proceedings of the Iudges in the Eschequer Chamber in justification thereof were in the last Parliament after solemne debate by the Votes and Iudgements of both Houses on the 20. Ian. and 26 February resolved Nemine contradicent● To be contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm contrary to the Rights and Properties of the Subjects of this Realm contrary to former Iudgements in Parliament contrary to the great Charter and to the Petition of Right and voted to be so declared by the Iudges at the Assizes in the severall Counties the same to be entred and inrolled in the severall Counties by the Clerks of the Assises After which it was for ever damned by a special Act of Parliament to which the King himself gave his Royal assent afterwards cited and enforced by both Houses Exact Collection p. 886. 887. in the case of the Array And those Iudges who argued That the King might lawfully impose Shipmony on the Subjects without a Parliament in cases of Danger and Necessity of which they affirmed him to be the sole Iudge were by all impeached by the House of Commons of High Treason for these Opinions of theirs whereby they trayterously and wickedly endeavoured to subvert The Fundamental Laws and established Government of the Realm of England and instead thereof to set up an Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government against Law of which at large before How any present Powers or Persons then can either impose justify levy enforce it upon any Pretext of Necessity or publique Danger on the whole Nation after all these late Resolutions Iudgements Votes Impeachments and a special Act of Parliament so fresh in memory especially such who were parties to them without incurring the self-same Impeachments and guilt as these Ship-mony Iudges did or a severer Censure then they sustained let their own Conscsences and those who may on● day prove their Iudges resolve them at leasure being past my skill to doe it The 2. is By the imposing of a direct heavy Tax Tallage and Monthly contr●bution and that only for the Maintenance of such a Land Army which hath offered force unto the Members of both Houses subverted destroyed that Parliament Government Laws Libertie for whose preservation they were specially raised Commissioned engaged without yea against the Peoples assent in Parliament which no King of England with the advice and consent of his Council had ever any Right or Power to doe or audacity enough to attempt no not William the Conqueror C●nute Henry the 4th Edward the 4th or Henry the 7th who came principally by power of the Sword to their Soveraign Regall Authorities By what Justice Power Legal Right any other person or persons whatsoever who are neither rightfull Kings nor Parliaments of England in their own or others repute can either impose levy exact such
for such ends by colour of this ill tuned Instrument contrived privatly by themselves alone as most conjecture for their own self-interests to impose perpetuall Imposts Excises Customes Contributions of all kinds on our whole three Kingdoms and Nations which neither they nor their Parliaments though never so grievous extravagant unreasonable or oppressive shall have power to take away diminish alter or regulate in the forecited illegall oppressing violent wayes of levying them unless their Grand Soveraign Lord Protector shall first give his consent thereto which they cannot expect nor enforce and in cale of his refusall they are utterly left remediless he having Thirty thousand armed Mercenary Horse and Foot in severall Quarters by Land and a strong numerous Navy by Sea at his command to keep them under endless Tributes to him and his Successors for ever O England England to omit Scotland and Ireland consider seriously and timely to what a blessed Liberty and long-expected freedome this New invented Instrument and the Irish Harp lately quartered with the English bloody Cross as our Free-State Arms hath now at last reduced thee if these objected Articles must remain inviolable maugre all our Laws Statutes c. to the contrary as our New Tax-masters and their Instruments both literally and practically conclude unlesse you use your uttermost lawfull present diligent joynt Endeavours to prevent it 〈…〉 4ly The whole House of Commons yea some who were parties to this Instrument lately impeached and with the Lords ●ouse by judgement of Parliament condemned beheaded the Earl of Strafford and Archbishop of Canterbury as guilty of High Treason in subverting our Fundamental Lawes Liberties and setting up an arbitrary Tyrannical Government for resolving at the Councel Table before-hand To assist the King to raise Monies on the Subjects to carry on the Warres against the Scots by extraordinary wayes in case the Parliament should prove peevish and refuse to grant such Subsidies as they demanded of them And for Straffords affirming That Ireland was a Conquered Nation and that the King might do with them what he pleased That they were a Conquered Nation and were to expect Lawes as from a Conqueror And that he would make an Act of Councel board in that Kingdom of Ireland as binding as an Act of Parliament And do not the Objectors Contrivers of this New Instrument Articles and those who now vigorously put it in execution in any kind as too many do speak out and do as much as bad as they in each of these particulars nay farre more and worse Do not they after the late violent breaches of our former Parliaments and their own Junctoes by the Army raise monies in more vast proportions by more irregular violent extraordinary wayes by longer continued Taxes Excises Impositions and constant yearly Revenues then they ever did or designed quite out of Parliament by their own arrogated Legislative Tax-imposing Power Do not they by this very Instrument proclaim to all the world that not only Ireland and Scotland but England it self is now a meer Conquered Nation that thereupon they may do with us what th●y please and we must not only expect but receive Lawes from them as Conquerors having already published whole Volumes of new-New-Laws and Ordinances of all sorts at their New-erected Councel board which the Old never did and made them as binding not only to Ireland but England and Scotland too as an Act of Parliament yea farre more binding than any Parliament Acts by binding the hands power of future Parliaments themselves and our three whole Nations as aforesaid and that in Perpetuity which no Parliaments nor Acts of Parliament can do and by repealing nulling all our former Fundamental Laws Charters Liberties Free Government made by Parliaments with our very Parliaments themselves And if so let the Objectors now seriously consider both the Treasonableness unparliamentalness sad Consequences of this Objection and what ill effects it may produce in present or future ages 5ly The Statutes of 25 E. 1. c. 2. 42 E. 3. c 2. yet in force declare All judgements given or to be given by the Justices or any other contrary to the points of the Great Charter to be void and holden for Nought and if any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none Therefore these Instrument Articles and Paper Ordinances made by colour of them in direct opposition to and subversion of the points of the Great Charter and all other Acts for their confirmation must needs be holden for nought and void to all intents to bind this whole Free-born Nation or any one Freeman of England in particular 6. If these Articles and Instrument for the premised reasons and defect of Legal power in the yet unknown Instrument-makers be not void in Law to all intents and purposes as all wise men repute them yet other clauses and Articles of this very Instrument admit it valid and obligatory to our Nations give a fatal blow to all the forementioned Excises Impositions Contributions by colour thereof and to the Objected Articles First the Prologue to the Oath at the close thereof proclaims the Government setled by it to be such as by the blessing of God might be lasting secure Property and answer The Great Ends of Religion and Libertie so long Contended for But these Articles as the Objection and premises evidence do no wayes secure but utterly subvert all Property in the highest degree and answer not but eternally frustrate abolish the Great ends of our Religion condemning all illegal unrighteous Taxes and Tyrannical Usurping Oppressing arbitrary Powers but especially of our Liberties so long contended for and are rather likely to raise new troubles and unsettlements than make the Government lasting as many late Presidents with those ancient ones in Dr. Beard his Theatre of Gods Judgements l. 2. c. 36. to 42. may perswade us Therefore it must be exploded as repugnant to the whole scope of the Instrument 2. The 6. Article of it is fatall and destructive to the objected Articles viz That the Laws shall not be altered suspended abrogated or repealed nor any New Law made Nor any Tax Charge or Imposition laid upon the People but by common consent in Parliament Save Only as is expressed in the 30th Article not 27. Now these objected 27 28 29 Articles being diametrically contrary to every word clause of this 6 Article and agreeable to our Fundamental Laws which the last clause of the Oath obligeth their Protector and his Successors to maintain and to govern the People by which Laws must be all altered suspended abrogated repealed by these Articles alone if reputed valid in giving Power to them to impose any Tax Charge Imposition upon the People without common consent in Parliament and being not within the saving of this or the 30th Article must needs be void and repealed by this very sixt Article and the Oath it self 3. The 30th Article following them diametrically contradicts repeals them in
these words That the raising of Money for defraying the charges of present extraordinary Forces both by Land and Sea in respect of the present warrs shall be by consent of Parliament Save only that the Lord Protector with the consent of the Major part of the Councel for preventing the disorders and dangers which may otherwise fall out both at Sea and Land shall have power until the Meeting of the first Parliament on the 3. September 1654. to raise Monies for the purposes aforesaid The former part of this Article is consonant to and expounded by the 6. forecited which is more generall and the plain sense thereof is this That all monies raised for defraying the Extraordinary Forces both by Land and Sea exceeding the antient standing Garrisons Guards maintained by the old constant Revenues of the Crown without any Tax upon the People shall be by consent of parliament Therefore a fortiori all perpetual standing Taxes Excises Contributions to maintain the ordinary and extraordinary Forces by Land or Sea and ordinary expences of the Government which in respect of their constancy permanency are far more grievous dangerous to the Subject than rare extraordinary ones upon emergent occasions must and ought not to be imposed by their new created Power out of Parliament after the 3 of September It any here object That the latter clause of the 30 Article Save only c. Authorized those at Whitehall without a Parliament to impose Excises Taxes Customs Impositions Contributions forementioned and any other constant annual Revenue they shall settle according to the 27 Article so as it be done before September 3. 1654. Therefore they are all lawfull because imposed before that time by their printed Ordinances forecited I Answer 1. That this saving is utterly void in law to all intents 1. Because it is not only contrary to all our Fundamental Laws Great Charters Statutes but repugnant to the body of the 6 Article and first part of the 30 to which it is annexed 2. Because it assigns the Legislative Tax-imposing Power the inseparable incommunicable Iurisdiction of our Parliaments alone to a new Whitehall Councel by a void instrument made out of Parliament for a certain time which biggest Soveraign power the Parliament it self neither legally may nor can nor ought to transfer by any Ordinance or Act of Parliament to any Committee of their own Members no not for a moment as is both resolved and declared by Act of Parliament 1 H. 4. c. 3. and Rot. Parl. 1 H. 4. n. 26 48 6 6 70. 31 H. 8. c. 8. 34 H. 8. c. 23. and 1. E. 6. c. 12. it being derogatory and destructive to the free State power Rights of Parliaments tending to the great incommodity of the whole Realm and of pernicious example to Posterity as the whole Parliament of 1. H. 4 long since resolved in positive termes 2ly This saving is just like the Popes old Detestable Non Obstante at the close of their Bulls quae omnem subvertit praehabitam Justitiam which subverted all the Justice and Privileges granted before to any in the Body of those Bulls and as pernicious as that Proviso which the House of Lords desired at first to have inserted into the Petition of Right which would have made it Felo de se because it insinuated that the King by his Soveraign power where with the Law had intrusted him for the protection safety and happinesse of his People might impose any Aid Tax Tallage or charge upon his People without a Parliament though by his ordinary power he could not do it which had left the Subjects in worse case than it found them and wholly destructive to it self in all the parts thereof whereupon after a conference had concerning it by the Commons it was totally rejected by both Houses as this Salvo must be for the self same reason 3ly Admit it valid yet it gives power to them to raise moneys for the maintenance by Land and Sea only until September 3. 1654. and no longer as is evident by the very words themselves and the Confession Exposition of those who made the Instrument as most suppose in their True State of the Case of the Commonwealth of England c. 1654. p. 39. 40. in these words This power is to continue only til the sitting of the next Parliament Yea George Smith in his new Treatise intituled Gods unchangeablenesse c. in justification of the present Governour and Government p. 54. writes thus And for his seeking to have power to make Laws and raise mon●ys it is meer calumniation He seeks it not He claimes it not but leaves it to the wisdom of Parliament as appears in Artiole 6. as is thus excepted for and in Cases of safety and necessity till the time that this present Parliament was assembled and yet to be done by him with the advice of his Council so then he seeks not the strength nor treasure of the Nation nor to have it in his own power Therefore they can impose no Taxes Excises nor Contributions by their printed Ordinances to continue after its beginning nor by any future Ordinances as they term them after that time Now the first Tax of Excise forementioned is imposed till the 26 of March 1655 which is 7 months after the 3 of September 1654. The 2 of Customs Tonnage and Poundage is continued til the 26 of March 1658 which is 3 years and 7 months after this 3 of September And the 3 for the 6 Months Contribution reacheth till the 29 of December 1654 which is near full 4 Months after the first sitting of that their next Parliament And any constant yearly Revenue setled by them will far exceed this limited time and all former Taxes Therefore all these premised and all other future Excises Customs Impost Contributions by pretended Ordinances for their levying after the 3 of September exceeding the power and time limited by this Saving must be void and no ways warranted by the very Saving it self and to be opposed as such 4ly To say That although these several impositions continue after the 3 of September 1654 yet they were imposed by their Printed Ordinances before it therefore within this Saving is a most absurd excuse and shift repugnant to the words yea wholly destructive to the 6 Article and first part of the 30 For by this reason had their forecited Ordinances or any other dormant or future Antedated ones yet unpublished imposed Excises Customs Tonnage Poundage Contributions on us for twenty fifty an hundred or a thousand years yet to come before the 3. of September they must have been binding to us and our Posterities during all that space and unavoidable by the people or future Parliaments by this Saving and exposition of it But the words of this Saving giving only Power to raise Monies until the Méeting of the first Parliament not to make New Edicts any time before it to impose and continue Taxes for any time or years after
peremptorily to withstand the firs to prevent a second customary future exaction and payment in like kind pursuing the Poet Ovids old sage Counsel wherewith I shall conclude this point Principiis obsta serò medicina paratur Cum mala per longas invaluere moras How transcendently all the other Fundamental Laws Liberties Rights of our English Freeborn Nation have by late and present Governours and their Instruments been infringed subverted in an higher avowed degree than ever in former ages by forcible tyrannical Proceedings of all kindes in breaking open mens Houses by armed Souldiers and other unsworn illegal Officers Excise-men Sequestrators both by day and night seising their Persons Horses Armes Papers Writings ransacking their Studies Truncks Cabinets upon false surmises suspicions close imprisoning their persons by multitudes without before any examination particular accusation hearing trial in unusual places and some of them in remetest Isles Garrisons under Souldiers Their pressing of men for Land and Sea service and carrying them away perforce by Soldiers Troopers Officers Mariners like so many Prisoners out of their own Counties and the Realm to unnatural unchristian Warrs against their Wills and Consciences Their disinheriting many Thousands of English Freemen of all sorts of their Freeholds Lands Offices Fra●chises Honors Authorities spoyling them and theirs of theirs Goods Chattles Estates Lives in and by Arbitrary Committees Martial other extravagant Courts of highest Injustice Subverting Changing our ancient Fundamental Lawes Statutes and enacting New without the Peoples free consents in Lawfull English Parliaments altering the whole Frame and Constitution of our Monarchy Government and Parliaments themselves Depriving the people of the Free election of their Parliament Members and other Elective Officers contrary to our Lawes Charters Usages securing secluding the Members of Parliament themselves by armed Force dissolving Parliaments by the Sword alone without Writ or legall power contrary to Acts and Privileges of Parliament by erecting New Legislative Tax-imposing Self-created Powers not elected by the People at Whitehall and elsewhere not to be paralleld in any age By creating New-Treasons contrary to the old ones and the Statute of 25 E. 3. and condemning sequestring imprisoning executing English Peers and Freemen only for their loyalty Duty to their lawfull Soveraigns and defence of the Rights Privileges Liberties Laws of the Kingdom Parliament Nation according to their Oathes Protestations League Covenant and Gods own Precepts against the publique Enemies Oppugners Vnderminers Subvertors of and Conspirators against them By making publick wars at Land and Sea with our Christian Protestant Brethren and other Nations and concluding Leagues Truces without common consent or advice in Parliament By alienating selling giving squandring away the ancient Demesnes Lands Honours Rents Revenues Rights Inheritances of the Crown of England yea of Scotland and Ireland likewise to Officers Souldiers of the Army and others for pretended Arrears Services or inconsiderable values which should defray all the constant ordinary Expences of the Government publique State Officers Embassadours Garrisons Navy Courts of the Kingdom and ease the People from all kind of Taxes Payments Contributions whatsoever towards them except in extraordinary emergent cases and necessities in times of war requiring extraordinary expences for their publique safety supplied by Aydes and Subsidies granted only by common consent in Parliament only and not otherwise which now must be wholly or for the greatest part defrayed by the People alone out of their own exhausted private estates by endlesse Taxes Excises Contributions as appears by the 27 28 29 30. Articles of their New ill sounding Instrument foreinsisted on whiles others without right or legal Title enjoy the old standing Demesnes Lands Rents Revenues and Perquisites of the Crown for their private advantage without any Acts of Resumption usual in all former ages to keep the Kingdom Nation from becoming Bankrupts and people from oppression which should ease the people of those intollerable constant burthens lately laid upon them against all Justice Law Conscience and make insufferable wasts and spoyles of the stately Houses Timber Wood● Mines Forrests Parkes of the Crown without restraint to the Kingdoms extraordinary prejudice for which they ought to give an Account and make full reparations if the Earl of Devonshires case Cook 11 Reports f. 89 90 91 be Law And by sundry other particulars requiring whole Baronian volumes to recite and specifie to the full is so well known by dayly experience and multitude of Presidents fresh in memory to our whole three Nations that I shall here no further insist upon them all which experimentally confirm the truth of our Saviours own words Iohn 10 1 10. Verily verily I say unto you He that entreth not by the Do●r into the Sheepfold but climbeth up some other way the same is a Theef and a Robber The Theef cometh not but steal and to kill and to destroy Whatever his pretences be to the contrary And this rule of Johannes Angelius Wenderhagen Politiae Synopticae lib. 3. c. 9. sect 11. p. 3. 10. Hinc Regulae loco notandum Quod omne Regnum vi Armata acquisitum in effectis Subditos Semper in durior is Servatutis conditiones arripiat licet a principio Dulcedinem prurientibus spirare videatur which we now find most true by sad sensible experience Ide● cunctis hoc cavendum Ne temere se seduci patiantur FINIS This Epistle should have been printed before the first part but was omitted through hast a See the several Epistles of Frederick the Emperor against Pope Gegory the 9 and Innocent the 4 recorded by Mat. Paris p. 332. to 693. sparsim b See Extra● de Majoritate Obedientia Augustinus Triumphus Bellarminus Becanu● and others De Monarchia Remani Pontificis Hospinia● Hist Jesui l. 3 4. * Henricus de Knighton de Eventibus Angli ae l. 2. c. 14 15. c See Massaeus Vegius Petrus Ribadeniera in vita Ignatii Loyolae Heylins Micracosme p. 179. d See Lewis Owen his Jesuites Looking-glass printed London 1629. the Epistle to the Reader and p. 48 to 58. Jubilaeum sive speculum Jesuiti●um printed 1644. p. 307 to 213. Hospinian Hist Jesuitica l. 2. * Speculum Jesuiticum p. 210. See Romes Master-peice Conterburies Doom p. 435 c. Hidde● works of Darkness 88 144. e Mercure Iesu●le tom 1. p. 67. Speculum Jesuitieum p. 1. 56. f See Lewis Owen his running Register his Jesuited Looking glass The Anatomy of the English Nunnery at Lisbone g De Monarchia Hispanica p. 146 147 148 149 204 234 235 236 185 186. h See Thomas Campanella de Monarchia Hispaniae Watsons quodhbets Co●loni Posthuma p. 91. 10 107. Cardinal de Ossets Letters Arcana Imperii Hispanici Del●h 1628. Advice a tous les Estat's de Europe touches les maximas Fundamentales de Government diss●iennes Espaginols Pa●is 1625. i Set my Speccb in Parliament p. 107. ●o 119. and the History of Independency k Exact Coll●ction p. 651 652 662 666 813
Bull the Jesuites after her decease disswaded the Romish-minded Subjects from yielding in any wise obedience to King James as their Soveraign and entr●d into a Treasonable Conspiracy with the Lord Cobham Lord Gray and others against him to imprison him for the ends aforesaid or destroy him pretending that King Iames was no King at all before his Coronation and that therefore they might by force of Arms lawfully surprise his person and Prince Henry his Son and imprison them in the Tower of London or Dover-Castle till they inforced them by duress to grant a free toleration of their Catholick Religion to remove some evil Counsellors from about them and to grant them a free Pardon for this violence or else they would put some further project in execution against them to their destruction But this Conspiricy being discovered The Traytors were apprehended arraighned condemned and Watson and Clerk two Jesuited Priests who had drawn them into this Conspiracy upon the aforesaid Pretext with some others executed as Traytors all the Iudges of England resolving that King Iames being right Heir to the Crown by descent was immediately upon the death of Queen Elizabeth actually possessed of the Crown and lawful King of England before any Proclamat●on or Coronation of him which are but Ceremonies as was formerly adjudged in the case of Queen Mary and Queed Iane 1 Mariae there being no Interregnum by the Law of ENGLAND as is adjudged declared by Act of Parliament 1 Iac. c. 1. worthy serious perusal 8. their horrid Gun-powder Treason Plot contrived fomented by Garnet Superiour of the English Jesuites Gerard Tensmod and other Jesuites who by their Apostolical power did not onely commend but absolve from all sin the other Jesuited Popish Conspirators and Faux The Sculdier who were their instruments to effect it Yea the Jesuitical Priests were so Atheistical as that they usually concluded their Masses with Prayers for the good success of this hellish Plot which was suddenly with no less then 36 Barrels of Gunpowder placed in a secret Vault under the House of Lords to have blown up and destroyed at once King James himself the Queen Prince Lords Spirituall and Temporal with the Commons assembled together in the Upper-House of Parliament upon the 5 of November Anno Dom. 1605. and then forcibly to have seised with armed men prepared for that purpose the persons of our late beheaded King then Dake of York and of the Lady Elizabeth his Sister if absent from the Parliament and not there destroyed with the rest that so there might be none of the Royal Line left to inherit the Crown of England Scotland and Ireland to the utter overthrow and subversion of the whole Royal Family Parliament State and Government of this Realm Which unparallel'd inhumane bloody Plot being miraculously discovered prevented the very day before its execution in perpetual detestation of it and of the Jesuites and their traiterous Romish Religion which both contrived and approved it the 5 day of November by the Statute of 3 Jacobi ch 1. was enacted to be had in perpetual Remembrance that all Ages to come might thereon meet together publickly throughout the whole Nation to render publick praises unto God for preventing this infernal Jesuitical Design and keep in memory this joyful Day of Deliverance for which end special forms of publick Prayers and Thankesgivings were then appointed and that Day ever since more or less annually observed till this present And it is worthy special observation that had this Plot taken effect It was agreed by the Jesuites and Popish Conspirators before-hand That the Imputation of this Treason should be cast upon the Puritans to make them more Odious as now they father all the Powder-Plots of this kinde which they have not onely laid but fully accomplished of late yeers against the King Prince Royal Posterity the Lords and Commons House our old English Parliaments and Government upon those Independents and Anabaptistical Sword-men whom they now repute and stile the most reformed PURITANS who were in truth but their meer under Instruments to effect them When as they originally laid the Plots as is clear by Campanella's Book De Monarchia Hisp ch 25. and Cardinal Richelieu his Instructions at his death to the King of France And it is very observable that as Courtney the Jesuite Rector of the English Jesuites Colledge at Rome did in the year 1641. when the name of Independents was scarce heard of in England openly affirm to some English Gentlemen and a Reverend Minister of late in Cornwal from whom I had this Relation then and there feasted by the English Jesuites in their Colledge That now at last after all their former Plots had miscarried they had found out a sure way to subvert and ruine the Church of England which was most formidable to them of all others by the Independents who immediately after by the Jesuites clandestine assistance infinitely encreased supplanted the Presbyterians by degrees got the whole power of the Army and by it of the Kingdom into their hands then subverted both the Presbyterian Government and Church of England in a great measure with the Parliament King and his Posterity as Monsieur Militiere a Jesuited French-Papist observes So some Independent Ministers Sectaries and Anabaptists ever since 1648. have neglected the observation of the fifth of November as I am credibly informed and refused to render publick thanks to God for the deliverance thereon contrary to the Act for this very reason which some of them have rendered That they would not mock God in publick by praising him for delivering the late King Royal Posterity and House of Lords from destruction then by Jesuites and Papists when as themselves have since destroyed and subverted them through Gods providence and repute it a special mercy and deliverance to the Nation from Tyranny and Bondage for which they have cause to bless the Lord Performing that for the Jesuites and Powder-Traytors which themselves could not effect The Lord give them grace and hearts to consider how much they acted the Jesuites and promoted their very worst Designes against us therein what infamy and scandal they have thereby drawn upon all zealous Professors of our Protestant Religion and what will they do in the end thereof 9. To omit all other Forraign instances cited in Speculum Jesuiticum p. 124 to 130. where you may peruse them at leisure By their poysoning King Iames himself in conclusion as some of them have boasted 10. By the Popes Nuntio's and a Conclave of Jesuites Conspiracy at London Anno 1640. to poyson our late King Charles himself as they had poysoned his Father with a poysoned Indian Nut kept by the Jesuites and shewed often by Conne the Popes Nuntio to the Discoverer of that Plot or else to destroy him by the Scotish wars and troubles raised for that very end by the Jesuites in case he refused to grant them a
can the new Modellers of our Government over and over who were parties to this Declaration then Members of the Commons House say so now or read this without blushing and self-abhorrence * Is not a superintendent power in the Army over above against the Parliament or People far more dangerous likely to introduce such an arbitrary Government in the Nation if lest in the General Officers or their Councels power * Did not the imposing a strange New Engagement and sundry arbitrary Committes of Indemnity c. int●r●upt it in the highest degree and the misnamed high Courts of Justice falsifie this whole clause * Exact Collect. p. 4. 12. 34. 61. 243. 260. 321. 500. 502. * See the humble Remonstrance against the illegall Tax of Ship-money briefly discussed p. 2. c. Englands Birth righ their Treatises The Declaration of Sir Thomas Fairfax and the Army under his Command tendered to the Parliament June 14. 1647. concerning the Just and Fundamental Rights and Liberties of the Kingdome * Walsingham Stow Holinshed Speed Grasion Trussel Baker in 5 R. 2. John Stows Survey of London p. 89. to 103 Mr. St. Johns Argument at Law at Straffords Attainller p. 14. * The Statutes at large Stow Holinshed Speed Grafton Baker Trussel in 10 21 R. 2. 1 H. 4. M. St. Johns Speech concerning the Ship-mony Judges p. 28. to 37. and argument at Law at Straffords Attainder * As some of late years have done * M. St. Johns argument at Law at Straffords Attainder p. 13 14 17. * Hall Fabian Holinshed Speed Grafto● Stow Martin Baker * And have not others of late assumed to themselves more Royal power than he resolved to be Treason by 21. ● 3. Rot. Parl. Cooks 3. Institut p 9. * To wit by Cade and his Confederates for the alteration of the laws * See Mr. St. Johns argument against Strafford p. 17. Halls Chronicle and Holinshed * Cooks 3. Institutes p. 9 10. * Cooks 4. Institutes c. 8. p. 89. to 96. * See Speed Hollinshed Grafton Stow Antiquitates Ecclesiae Brit. p. 378. 379. and Godwin in his life * Mr. St. Johns Argument against Strafford p. 14 15. * Cooks 3 Instit c. 1. p. 9 10. Mr. St. Johns Argument at law against Strafford p 15 16. * See the Journals of both Houses Act for his Attainder Mr. Pyms Declaration upon the whole matter of the Charge of High Treason against him Aprill 12. 1641. Mr. St. Johns argument at law at his Attainder and Diurnal Occurrences * See the Commons and Lords Journals his printed Impeachment Mr. Pyms Speech thereat Canterburies Doom p. 25 26 27 38 40. See Chap. 2. Proposition 1. * Do not others now do it who impeached and condemnedhim in an higher degree then he * Is it not so in the New Instrument Article 1. 2 3 4 5 9 10 12 13 16 21 22 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 37 38 39 40. 42. of our New Government and those that compiled and prescribed it to the 3 kingdoms * Are there not more such matters contained in the new Instrument of Government than in these * Have not arbitrary Committees in most places done the like or worse in many cases * Have not others done the like in an higher degree * See the Commons and Lords Journals Diurnal Occurrences p. 15 16 19 37 191 to 264. and Mr. St Johns Speech at a Conference of both Houses of Parliament concerning ship money these Judges Togegether with the Speeches of Mr Hide Mr. Waller M. Pe●rpoint M Denzill Hollis at their Impeachments July 6. 1641. aggravating their offences in Diurnal Occurrences and Speeches p. 237 to 264. * Now others presume to do it without writ of consulting with the judges who condemned it in them See c. 2 Proposition 1. * Have not others been sole Judges of it and other pretended dangers since Nota. * And are they not so now * And did not some at White-Hall do so of late and now too witnesse their volumes of new Declarations Edicts Ordinances there made * Have not others taken up such Principles in their practises proceedings even against Kings Kingdomes Parliament Peers as well as private persons Nota. * Note this all the whole Commons-House opinion then * Is not this an experimental truth now * And were they ever so base cowardly slavish as now * Was ever their power violence so unlimited unbounded in all kinds as now against Kings kingdoms Parliaments Peers People * Is it not most true of late and still Note * See Article 2 2 3 ● 5 10 11 12 13 16 21 22 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 39 p. 45 46. of the Government of the Common-wealth of England c. * Doth not the Declaration of 17 March 1648 and the Instrument of the new Government do it in the highest degree * And others as well as he of far inferiour place estate * But have not our times bred men much bolder than he since this speech was made and he executed * Since he hath many followers * p. 36. * Have none done so since them See Chap. 2. Proposition 1. * Have not other Pioneers and Judasses done the like * This is grown a meer Paradon of late years in Judges souldiers others * What are they now of late times of publike Changes * See 27 H. 8. c. 24. 26. Magna Charta c. 12. 29. 52. H. 3. c. 1 3 5 9 20. 3 E. 1. c. 44 45 46. 13 E. 1. c. 10 12 30 31 35 39 44 45. 25 E. 1. c. 1 2. 27 E. 1. c. 2 3. 34 E. 1. c. 6. 12 E 2. c. 6. 2 E. 3. c. 3. 14 E 3. c. 10. 16. Rastal Justices * Was it ever so frequent a sin as now in all sorts of late Judges Officers Subjects * Do none deserve as severe now * See Cookes 3. Institutes p. 146 147 and page 133. Holinshed page 284 285. Speeds History page 651. Stow Walsingham Daniel in 18 E. 1. * See Cooks 3. Instit p. 145. * Have none of this name or of this Function since done as bad or worse in an higher degree * Let Custodes Legum Libertatum Angliae and those now called Judges remember it * Let the Reporter and others now consider it * 1 Eliz. c. 1 3 Jac. c. 4. 7 Jac. c. 6. * This is nothing incomparison to the late Taxes Ship mony Excises imposed on the subjects without a Parliament amounting to above 20 times as much as the Kings Ship mony and more frequent uncessant and endlesse then it * Are we now beholding to it for any thing against the onely new Law of the longest sword Which takes imposeth what when and how much it pleaseth without accompt or dispute from all sorts and degrees of Persons and that by those who were commissioned trusted engaged by Oaths Protestations Vows League and Covenant to preserve our
laws and properties * Is there any between the late present powers and them further or longer than they please * Are they not so now * It is not so now when others who condemned and beheaded him for a Tyrant say pretenda●d act it over and over Nota. * Worth consideration of those of the long robe * And how mamy are guilty of this Treason See Hos 3 4 5. cap. 10. 3 4. cap. 1. 4. cap. 1. 4. Zech. 9. v. 5. Hab. 1. 10 14 15. Mic. 4. 9 10. Amos 1. 13 14 15. Lam. 5. 16. Ezech. 19. 1. 14. Isay 17. 3. c. 7. 16. Jer. 17. 25. 27. cap. 18. 7 8. cap. 22. 3. to 13. cap. 25. 8 to 38. cap. 51. 20. Proverb 28. 2. Ezech. 17. 14. cap. 29. 14 25 Isa 47 verse 5. Daniel 4. verse 17. * Are they so now and who have dissolved the Ligaments that formerly united and held them together * Have we not many counterfeit laws and Acts of Parliament of law and yet some counterfeit Judges that execute and give them in charge as true ones * See Exact Collection p. 4. 12 243 262. 321. * Surely there are sundry falshoods in it as well as some truths * If we believe themselves in their own cases * Some mens act ons since declare they had some other ground and ayms than this * Those who severe and disjoynt one house from the other and by force armed power seclude exclude and disjoyn the members of the same House one from another so many times one after another justifie it too are the greatest disjoyners of the House and Parliament and very unlikely to make any firm or reall settlement of this Nation * See my Speech in Parliament p. 100. to 108. a See Gratian Caus 2. Qu. 1. 2. Summa Angelica Rosella Hostiensis Tit. Restituito * See Speeds Hist p. 1250. c. Mr. Vicars History of the Gunpowder-Treason The Arraignment of Traytors * Judg. 5. 21. * See the Laws of King Edward the Confessor confirmed by William the Conquerour Lex 55 56 57. The great Charters of King John and Henry 3. c. 29 30. 25 E. 1. c. 5 6. 34 E. 1. De Tallagio c. 1 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. c. 21. Stat. 2. c. 1. 35 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 1. 15 E. 3. Stat. 3. c. 5. 21 E. 3. Rot. Parl. N. 16. 25 E 3. Rot. Parl. N. 16 27 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 2. 36 E. 3. Rot. Parl. N. 26. 38 ● 3. c. 2. 45 E. 3. Rot. Parl N. 42. 11 H. 4. Rot. Parl. N. 50. 1 R. 3. c. 2. The Petition of Right 3 Caroli the Acts against Ship-money Knighthood Tonnage and Poundage 16. 17. Caroli * See Magna Charta c. 29. Cooks Institutes on it 5 E. 3. c. 9 15 E. 3. c. 1 2 25 E. 3. c. 4 28 E. 3. c. 3 37 E. 3. c. 18 42 E. 3. c. 3 2 R. 2. c. 2 4 5 H. 4. c. 10 19 H. 7. c. 10 23 H. 8. c. 8 The Petition of Right 3 Caroli and other Acts in ch 3. 2 H 4. Rot. Parl. N. 60. 69. * 4 E. 3. c. ● 17 R. ● c. 10 * See the Laws of Edward the Confessor and William the Conqueror Lex 35. 55 56 58. Ras●●als Abridgement Tit. Armour 35 E. 3. c. 8. Rot. Parl. N. 23 The Statures for impressing Souldiers 16 1● Caroli 〈◊〉 E. 3. Stat. 2. c 5. 4 H. 4. c. 13. Exact collection p. 878 879. a See Magna Char. c. 29. 5 E. 3. c. 9. 15 E. 3. c. 1 2 21 E. 3. Rot. Parl. N. 28. 1● E. 3. N 35 36 37. ●5 E. 3. c. 4 Rot. Parl. N. 16. 28 E. 3. c. 3. 37 E. 3. c. ●8 42. E. 3. c. 1. 3. 2 R. 2. Parl. 2. c. 2. 7 R. 3. c. 4. 2 H 4. Rot. Parl. N. 60. 69. 15 H. 6. c. 4. The Petition of Right 3 Car. and the Statutes against Ship-money Knighthood Tonnage and Poundage 16 17 Caroli b See 1 Sam. 7. 4 to the end c. 11. 14 15. c. 12. 1. 2 Sam. 5. 1 2 3. c. 16. 18. 1 King 12. 3. to 21. c. 16. 1● c. 20. 7 8. 2. King 11. 1. to 21. c. 21. 24. c. 23. 30. c King Johns Magna Cha●ta Matth. Paris p. 247. 5 R. 2. c. 4. cook● 4. Instit c. 1. My Plea for the Lords My Ardua Regui The Levellers levelled and Epistle before my Speech in Parliament 4 E. 3. c. 14. 36 E. 3. c. 10. 50 E. 3. N. 151. 1 R. 2. N. 95. 2 R. 2. N. 4 5. d See 39 H. 6. c. 1. 17. E. 4. c. 7. ● H. 4. N. 21 22. 48. 1 H. 4. c 3. * See Rastals Abridgement of Statutes Title Provision● Premunire Rome e Leges Edwardi Regis c. 35 Lambards Arch. F. 135 136. Cooks 7. Report Calvins Case f. 6 7. Leges Willielm● Regis Lex 58 59. Seldens Notae ad Eadmerum p. 191. 11 H. 7. c. 1. 18 19 H. 7. c. 1. 25 H. 8. c. 22. 26 H. 8. c. 3. 28 H. 8. c. 7. 1 Eliz. c. 1. 3. 5. 5 Eliz. 2. c. 1. 1 Jac. c. 1 2. 3. Jac. c. 1 2 4 5. 7 Jac. c. 6. The Protestation League and Covenant and the ancient Oathes of Fealty Homage Mayers Sheriffs Free-men * Daniels History p. 78 79. 80. 123. 10. 12 n. 2. r. 8. H 5. r. 9 1. 1. 6. n. 53. 31. H. 6. r. 7. 1. R. 2. n. 14● 1. H. 4. n. 100. 6 H 4. n. 4. 15. 8. H. 4. n. 12. 33. H. 6. n. 47. 4. G. n. 3● 12 E. 4 n. 6. a See my Declaration and Protestation against the illegal detestable oft-condemned new Tax and Extortion of Excise 1654. Exact collection p. 885. Mr. St. Johns Speech concerning Ship-money p. 15 16. * Exact Collection p. 886. Nota. Nota. * And is not this its present sad slavish condition * Do they not so on Beer Salt and other Manufactures for which they now pay Excise * Witness Mr. ●ony amongst others Nota. See the Arguments concerning them in Mr. Hambdins and others cases 2. * See Cook 4. Justi c. 1. Brooks Parliament 4. 76 42. 107. and my Plea for the Lords * See Cooks 4. Justit c. 1. and Rastal Taxes Nota. Nota. Nota. * Though he came in by the Sword as a kind of Conquerour Nota. Nota. * And are not all the Commons Merchants Freemen of England bound to use the same course and make the s●me Declaration now Nota. * And can our p●esent Grandees take it in ill part if we refuse to pay them now being demand●d without Warrant of a Law and the receivers of them in a Premunire by express Act of Parliamen of 16 Caroli made since this Remonstrance a Alderman Chambers Mr. Rolls and others Nota. * Exact Collection p. 790. to 797. * See Historiae Anglicanae Londini 1652. Col. 2750 2751. Halls Chronicle f. 7 8. John Trussel in 23. R. 2. p 46. Grafton p. 401. Nota. * See Mr. St. Johns Argument at his Attainder p. 36. to 52. * See Judge Crooks Judg Huttons printed Arguments my Humble Remonstrance against the Illegal Tax of Shipmony * Printed at the end of Judge Huttoes A●gument amongst the sta●utes of 16 Caroli * Chap 1. p. Diurnal Occurences Speeches p. 191. to 265. Objection Answer * See p. 12 to 20 before the 1 Proposition and Statutes Arguments thereunto specially 23 E. 1. c. 5. 6. 34. E. 1. c. 1 2 3. 14 E. 3. c. 21 and Stat. 2. c. 1. 3 Caroli The Petition of Right * See their Impeachments printed trials Mr. St. Johns Argument at Law against Strafford p. 34 35. * Cook 4 Inst p. 42. 11 R. 2. c. 4. 1 H. 4. rot Parl. n. 143. 2 H. 4. c. 22. 21 R. 2. c. 4 5 6. 1 H. 4. c 7. rot Parl. n 48. 60. 68. * See Sir Edw. Cooks Preface to his 2. Institutes * Jer. 21. 12. c. 22. 3 4 5. Ps 12. 5 Ezech. 18. 5. to 14. c. 22. 12 13 27 29 30. c. 45. 7. to 10. c. 46. 18. Mich. 3. 1. to 5. c. 2. 1 2 3. c. 7. 2. Isa 58. 6. * See True c. p. 17 18. Objection Answer * Math. Paris Hist Angliae London 1640. p. 810. 818 854 875. * See M● Sr. Johns Speech against the ship-money Judges p. 16 17 18 19. Exact Collect p. 885. * See Heylyns Microcosme p. 756 757 758 395 412. 507. 577. 578. 642. 672. 704. * Exact Coll. p. 7. 575. 639 640 641. 807. 836. 850. to 890. * See the Act of Resumption 28 ● 6. 11. 53. a See Cooks 4 Inst●t c. 1. p. 33. Regal Taxes here ch 3. sect 4 5 6. * See 14 E. 3. c. 21. stat 2. c. 1. 5. R. 2. stat 2. c. 2 3 all Acts for 〈◊〉 * See Henry de Knyghton de Eventibus Angliae l. 5. col 2681. to 2690. 2 R. 2. rot Parl. n. 20 21 24. * Q● Curtius Hist l. 7. p. 831. * Qu. Curtius Hist l. 8. * Printed at Nu●●mbergh 1521. * See Revelationum l. 4. c. 104 105. l. 7. c. 16. l. 8. c. 48. Rev●lationes extravagantes c. 73 80. * Revelationum l. 8. c. 48. * Math Paris Hist Angl. p. 517. * De Remedio Amo●s l. 2. * See Mat. Pa●●s p. 306. 308. Grafton p. 90. 149. Daniel p. 78 79 83 123. 1 R. 2. Rot. Parl. to 148. 1 H. 4. n. 100. 6 H. 4. n. 14 15. 8 H. 4. n. 52. 1 H. 5. c. 6. 28 H. 6. rot Parl. n. 53. 31 H. 6. c. 7. 33. H. 6. n. 47. 4 E. 4. n. 39. 12. E. 4. n. 6.