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A28585 The continuation of An historicall discourse of the government of England, untill the end of the reigne of Queene Elizabeth with a preface, being a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England / by Nath. Bacon of Grais-Inne, Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660. Historicall and political discourse of the laws & government of England. 1651 (1651) Wing B348; ESTC R10585 244,447 342

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wage so as none were then compelled to enter into Service by imprest or absolute command nor is there any authority amongst all those cited in Calvins Case that doth mention any such thing but contrarily that Opinion of Thirning is expresse That the King cannot send men beyond Seas to Warres without wages and therefore no man is bound to any such Service by any absolute Legiance as the Reporter would understand the point but if he receiveth wages thereto he by that Contract binds himselfe Secondly it seemeth also to be granted that such as went voluntarily in the Kings Service ever had the Kings pay after they were out of their Counties if the King ruled by his Lawes for by the Statute formerly mentioned the King did likewise confirm the Statute of 18 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 7. which is expresse in that point and the matter in Fact also is evident upon the Records Thirdly touching the Arming of those that were thus Levied as their was a certain Law by which all men were Assessed to certain Armes either by the Service and Tenure of their Lands or by Parliament for such as were not bound to finde sufficient Armes by their Tenure according as is contained in the Statute 25 Ed. 3. Stat. 5 cap. 8. So did Henry the Fourth by the Statute formerly mentioned to be made in his time Confirm that Law of Edward the Third In the Argument of Calvins Case it is much insisted upon to prove the Legiance of an English man to the King to be absolute because he hath power to send men to Warre at his pleasure and he hath onely power to make Warre and if so then hath he absolute power in the Militia As touching the power of sending men to Warre hath been already spoken but as touching the power to make Warre there is no doubt but where a King hath made a League with another King he onely can break that League and so make Warre and that Opinion of Brian must be agreed for good in that sense But if a League be made by Act of Parliament or if the King will have Warre and the Parliament will make a League without him no authority doth in such case avouch that it is the right of the King or that he hath a Legall Power to break that League as he pleaseth Neither in the next place hath the King any right or Legall power to make War with his own Subjects as he pleaseth but is bound to maintain the Peace not onely by his Oath at his Coronation but also by the Lawes whereto he is bound if he will reign in right of an English King For every man knoweth that the grounds of the Statutes of wearing of Liveries was for the maintaining of the Publique Peace And Henry the Fourth amongst other provisions made against that trick hath this That the King shall give onely his Honourable Livery to his Lords Temporall whom shall please him and to his Knights and Esquires meniall and to his Knights and Esquires which be of his retinue and take of him their yearely Fee for Terme of Life and that no Yeoman shall take or weare any Livery of the King nor of none other Lord. And another Law was made within one yeare ensuing confirming the former and providing the Prince may give Liveries to such Lords as he pleases and to his meniall Gentlemen and that they may weare the same as in the Kings Case By both which the King and Prince are both in one Case as touching the power of giving Liveries if the one hath absolute power then hath the other the like If one be under the Directory of Law in that point then is also the other For it is clear that the King is intended by the Statute to be bound from giving Liveries and the people from wearing them otherwise then in especiall Cases and then the Conclusion will be that if the King may not give Liveries to prejudice of the Peace then may he much lesse break the Peace at his pleasure or Levy Men Armes and Warre when he shall think most meet Take then away from the King absolute Power to compell men to take up Armes otherwise then in case of Forrain Invasion power to compell men to goe out of their Counties to War power to charge men for maintenance of the wars power to make them find Armes at his pleasure and lastly power to break the Peace or doe ought that may tend thereto Certainly the power of the Militia that remaineth though never so surely setled in the Kings hand can never bite this Nation Nor can the noise of the Commission of Array Intitle the King unto any such vast power as is pretended For though it be granted that the Commission of Array was amended by the Parliament in these times and secondly that being so amended it was to serve for a President or Rule for the future yet will it not follow that Henry the Fourth had or any Successours of his hath any power of Array originally from themselves absolutely in themselves or determinatively to such ends as he or they shall thinke meete First as touching the amendment of the Commission it was done upon complaint made by the Commons as a greivance that such Commissions had issued forth as had been greivous hurtfull and dangerous And the King agrees to the amendments upon advice had with the Lords and Judges and if it be true that the amendments were in the materiall Clauses as it is granted then it seemeth that formerly a greater power was exercised then by Law ought to have been and then hath not the King an absolute power of Array for the just power of a King can be no greivance to the Subject Secondly if the Commission of Array thus mended was to serve as a rule of Array for the future then there is a rule beyond which Henry the Fourth and his Successors may not goe and then it will also follow that the power of Array is not Originally nor absolutely in the King but from and under the Rule and Law of the Parliament which rule was not made by the Kings own directions but as we are told beyond expectation alterations were made in materiall parts of the Commission and the powers in execution there whereof no complaint of greivance had been made The issue then is if the King had an Universall Power in the Array the Parliament likewise had a generall Liberty without any restriction to correct that power Lastly suppose that this power of the Parliament is executed and concluded by the Commission thus amended and that thereby the Kings Power is established yet can it not be concluded that this Power is Originally or absolutely in the King It s not absolutely in him because it is limited in these particulars First it s not continuall because its onely in case of eminent danger Secondly It s not generall upon all occasions but onely in case of a
shall be imprisoned untill he shall satisfie the Defendant of his damages And furthermore shall make Fine and Ransome to the King But because that the Defendant many times held his advantage even to extremity this course lasted not long but a new Law was made which put the power of awarding damages in such cases into the Chancellor to doe according to his discretion And thus the Chancery obtained power to award damages which they never had formerly and the Chancellor a Precedency both in the Chancery and of the Councell in the Court of Starre-Chamber and in many cases in the Exchequer by the first he had a power in matters of meum and tuum by the last in matters Mei and Regis and by the other in matters Mei and Regni A considerable man certainly he was in the motions of Government but how much more if he be made Arch Bishop of Canterbury Cardinall and Legate è Latere or Arch Bishop Lord Treasurer and Legate è Latere as these dayes had divers times seen Extraordinary advancements bestowed upon the Nobility brings Honour to the Throne but if they be not men of noted worth and uprightnesse they make the Scepter stoope by stirring up of envy in the Nobility and indignation from the People For seldome is it seene that Advancements are fed from the Crowne though they be bred from thence but either maintained by new supplies from the Peoples purses or the ruine or decay of some Offices more ancient then themselves or both And such was the condition of the Chancellor he sucked fat from beneath and blood and Spirits from the Grand chiefe Justiciar of England and so reduced that Honourable Potentate unto the Degree of chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench leaving scarcely unto him the name or title of Lord. One thing more remaineth touching the election or nomination of this Great man At the first he was no better then a Register or the Kings remembrancer or Secretary having also the Honour to advise the King in such matters as came within the circuite of the Writings in his custody and questionlesse Eo usque its sutable to all the reason in the World that he should be of the Kings sole Nomination and Election But when it befalls that in stead of advising the King his word is taken to be the rule and a Judicatory power put upon that and unto this is superadded that Honourable trust of keeping and governing the great Seale of the Kingdome with the continuall growing power occasionally conferred upon him by the Parliament He is now become no more the Kings Remembrancer but the Lord Chancellor of England and Supreame Officer of State And it seemes but reasonable that he should hold his place by publique Election as well as the Grand Justiciar whose Plumes he borrowed and other Grand Officers of State did before him For he that will have his Servant to worke for another must give the other that Honour of Electing him thereto nor was this laid aside or forgotten by these times but a claim was put in for the Election or allowance of this principall Officer amongst others the Parliament obtaining a judgement in the case by the Kings Confession and so the thing is left to the judgement of future Ages Viz. Whether a King that can do no man wrong can dissemble the Royall Assent in Parliament or declare himselfe Legally in that manner by Proclamation CHAP. V. Of Admiralls Court. THis is a third Court that maintained the Kings judicatory power in a different way from that which is commonly called the Common law and by many is therefore supposed to advance the Kings Prerogative but upon mistaken grounds It is very true that the way is different from the common rode both in its originall and in the course of proceedings nor could it other be considering the condition of the Nations and the People of the same interested in common traffique The people thus interested as much differed from the other sort of dry men if they may be so called as Sea from Land and are in nature but as march men of severall Nations that must consenter in some third way for the maintenance of commerce for peace sake and to the end that no Nation may be under any other Law then its owne The condition of the Nations in the times when civillized government began to settle amongst them was to be under the Roman Emperours who having setled one Law in the generall grounds throughout all Nations made the Sea likewise to serve under one rule which should float up and downe with it that men might know upon what tearmes they held their owne wheresoever they went and upon what tearmes to part with it for their best advantage in its originall therefore this Law may be called Imperial and likewise in the process because it was directed in one way of triall and by one law which had its first birth from the Imperiall power and probably it had not been for the common benefit of Europe to have been otherwise at other time or by other directories formed Neverthelesse this became no Gemm of Prerogative to the English Crowne for if England did comply with forraine Natives for its owne benefit it being an Iland full of the Sea and in the common rode from the most parts of Europe that border upon the Sea and of delight in Merchandise it is but sutable to it selfe and it did so comply as it saved the maine Stake by voluntary entertaining those Laws without being imposed upon by Imperiall power for the Saxons came into this Kingdome a free People and so for ought yet appeareth to me continueth to this day I say that in those first times they did take into the consideration of Parliament the regulating of the fluctuating motions of Sea-laws nor were they then or after properly imposed by the Kings Edict For though it were granted that Richard the first reduced the Sea-laws in the Isle of Oleron yet that the same should be done without advise of Parliament in his returne from the holy Land is to me a riddle considering what Histories doe hold forth concerning of his returne through Germany nor can that be good evidence to intitle Kings of England to a power to make and alter Laws according to their private pleasure and interest Nor doth that Record mentioned in the Institutes warrant any such matter but rather on the contrary groundeth the complaint upon laws statutes Franchises and Customes Estabilished and that this Estabilishment was by the King and the Councell This Law was of a double nature according to the Law of the Land one part concerning the Pleas of the Crowne and the other between party and party for properly the Kings authority in the Admiralty is but an authority of Judicature according to Laws established which both for processe and sentence are different from the Common Law as much as the two Elements do differ yet not different in
confusion in stead of Law CAHP. VI. Of the Churchmens Interest BUt the Churchmens interest was yet more tarte standing in need of no lesse a lay then that of the Kings Authority for that the King is no lesse concerned therein then the People and the rather because it was now growne to that pitch that it is become the Darling of Kings and continually henceforth courted by them either to gaine them from the Papall Jurisdiction to be more ingaged to the Crowne or by their means to gaine the Papall Jurisdiction to be more favourable and complying with the Prerogative Royall The former times were tumultuous and the Pope is gained to joyne with the Crowne to keep the people under though by that means what the Crowne saved to it selfe from the people it lost to Rome Henceforth the course of Affairs grew more civill or if you will graced with a blush of Religion and it was the pollicy of these times whereof we now Treat to carry a benigne aspect to the Pope so farre onely as to stave him off from being an enemy whiles Kings drove on a new designe to ingratiate and ingage the Churchmen of their owne Nation unto its owne Crowne This they did by distinguishing the Office or Dignity of Episcopacy into the Ministeriall and Honourable parts the later they called Prelacy and was superadded for incouragement of the former and to make their work more acceptable to men for their Hospitalities sake for the maintenance whereof they had large Endowments and Advancements And then they reduced them to a right understanding of their Originall which they say is neither Jus Divinum nor Romanum but that their Lordships Power and great Possessions were given them by the Kings and others of this Realm And that by vertue thereof the Patronage and custody of the Possessions in the vacancy ought to belong to the Kings and other the Founders and that unto them the right of Election into such advancements doe belong and not unto the Pope nor could he gain other Title unto such power but by usurpation and incroachment upon the right of others But these Great men were not to be wonne by Syllogismes Ordinarily they are begotten between Ambition and Covetousnesse nourished by Riches and Honour and like the Needle in the Compass turn ever after that way Edward the Third therefore labours to winne these men heaped Honour and Priviledges upon them that they might see the gleanings of the Crowne of England to be better then the vintage of the triple Crown Doubtlesse he was a Prince that knew how to set a full value upon Churchmen especially such as were devout and it may be did somewhat outreach in that course For though he saw God in outward events more then any of his Predecessors and disclaiming all humane merits reflected much upon Gods mercy even in smaller blessings yet we finde his Letters reflect very much upon the Prayers of his Clergy and loved to have their Persons nigh unto him put them into places of greatest Trust for Honour and Power in Judicature that not altogether without cause he had thereby purchased unto his Kingdome the name and repute of being a Kingdome of Preists But all this is but Personall and may give some liking to the present Incumbents but not to the Expectants and therefore the Royall Favor extended so far in these times as to bring on the Parliament to give countenance to the Courts and Judiciary power of the Ordinaries by the Positive Law of the Kingdome although formerly the Canons had already long since made way thereto by practice I shall hereof note these few particulars ensuing Ordinaries shall not be questioned in the Kings Court for Commatation Testamentory Matters or Matrimoniall Causes nor other things touching Jurisdiction of Holy Church Things formerly bred by the Canon nourished by continuall practise allowed by Ordinance of Parliament or Grant from Kings in Parliament are now confirmed by solemne concurrence of the whole representative Body of the Kingdome to have and to hold with Warranty And yet the sense is not so generall as the words nor doth it seeme much other then a Confection made for the Arch Bishops appetite to cure a distemper between him and the King for the Civill Judge lost nothing hereby nor would the Crowne as may appear by a Law of equall Authority with the former for though an Executor or Administrator may cheat yet it tells us that Ordinaries onely can oppresse and extort from dead men and therefore in such cases doth provide remedy by inquiry and Indictment before the Kings Justices They shall have Cognisance of Vsury during the Delinquents life and the King after the Delinquents death The difference ariseth from the different end the first being to reforme the Person by Church-censures and to urge him to restitution the latter is for the Kings Fine or Forfeiture For as touching the Usurers estate the offence was in the nature of Felony forfeiting both Lands and goods to the King after the Delinquents death And it seemeth the manner was to Indict the Delinquent during his life and that stuck to him as a deadly arrow in his side till he died Nor did it lye in the power of the Ordinary by Ecclesiasticall censure so to reforme the Offender as to cleare him to the King unlesse the party offending made his peace with the King by Composition and thus the Law continued for ought appeareth to mee till the time of Henry the Eighth They shall have Cognisance of avoydance of Benefices of Right They shall certifie Bigamy and Bastardy had beyond the Sea and whether a Prior be perpetuall or dative The first of these concerning avoydance of Churches it seemeth was somewhat doubtfull in point of Practice for that the Civill Judge used to determine all manner of avoydances as well in Fact as of right but by this Statute they are restrained onely unto avoydances in Fact so as after this Statute it is holden that avoydances by death shall be tried by the Countrey but if the avoydance be by Deprivation Resignation Creation or otherwayes it shall be tried by the Ordinary because by common intendment he is more connusant of the thing then Countrey people But as touching the point of Bigamy the matter is more doubtfull in regard that commonly the marriage of a second Wife or Widow is a matter in Fact done in the face of the People and of which they take notice especially where the life of man is concerned which rather requireth the judgement of his Peires then where the outward maintenance onely is ingaged Neverthelesse because the main point is whether the Party be a Clerk or not and the same anciently rested upon the Certificate of the Ordinary It s by this Law again allowed to him to try and certifie this point of Bigamy also although the Statute of Bigamists might seeme to Intitle the civill Magistrate thereto as the Law
b. fol. 7. a. which is a word of a vast extent serving rather to amaze mens apprehensions then to inlighten them and therefore the Reporter did well not to trouble himself or the Reader in the clearing or proof thereof but left the Point rather to be beleived then understood nor shall I in the Negative for God himself can have no other Legiance from an English man then absolute Legiance and Kings being as other men subject to erre especially in this Point of Prerogative are much rather subject thereto being misled by such Doctrines as these are The Scripture determines this Point and cuts the knot in sunder The third property of English Legiance which the Reporter insisteth upon is that it is indefinite which he explaineth to be Proprium quarto modo so as it is both Universall and Immutable fol. 5. b. fol. 12. and neither defined by Time Place or Person As touching the Time and Person the Reporter inlarged not at all therefore I shall onely leave the Reader to chew upon the Point supposing himself in the first times of Edward the Fourth when Henry the Sixth was then alive and let him resolve to which of them his Legiance had been due considering them both in their naturall Capacity as the Reporter would have it But as touching the Place it s reported that English Legiance is not onely due from an English man to an English King in England but in all places of the Kings Dominion though otherwise Forrain as to the power of the Law of England yea saith the Reporter as farre as the Kings power of Protection doth extend And yet this had not been enough if the Premises be granted for if this Legiance whereof we speake be absolute and omni soli semper then is it due to the King from an English man ubivis Gentium Neverthelesse to take the Reporter in a moderate sense it is worth consideration whether English Legiance in the dayes of Edward the Third extended as far as the Kings power of Protection when as he had the Crown of France in a Forrain right to that of England In this the Reporter is extreamly Positive upon many grounds which he insisteth upon First he saith that Verus and Fidelis are qualities of the minde and cannot be circumscribed within the predicament of Vbi and upon this ground he might conclude that this Legiance is due to the King from an English man all the world over as well as in all the Kings Dominions but concerning the ground it may be denied for though simply in it selfe considered as a notion Verity or Fidelity are not circumscribed in place yet being qualities of the soul and that being in the body in relation thereunto it may be in the predicament of Vbi for where ever that Body and Soul is there is Faith and Truth according to its modell which though not absolute and indefinite yet if according to the Lawes of the place wherein the man is he is truely said to be Verus Fidelis Secondly the Reporter argueth that the Kings Protection is not Locall or included within the bounds of England therefore also is not the Legiance for Protectio trahit Legiantiam Legiantia Protectionem Had this reason been formed into a Syllogisme it had appeared lesse valuable for the Protection of an English King qua talis of an English man is locall and included within the bounds of the Kingdome But if the same King be also King of France or Duke of Aquitane and an English man shall travell into those parts he is still under the same Kings Protection yet not as King of England but as King of France or Duke of Aquitane otherwise let the party be of France or Aquitane or England all is one he must be whether French or English under an unlimitted absolute Protection without regard had to the Customes or Lawes of the place yea contrary to them which I beleive the Reporter never intended to affirme Thirdly the Reporter falleth upon the matter in Fact and tells us that the King of England did many times De facto grant Protections to Persons in places out of the English Confines and it will not be denied But never was any absolute and indefinite Protection so granted for the Protection extends to defence from injury and all injury is to be expounded and judged according to the Lawes of the place Nor doe any the Presidents vouched by the Reporter clear that the King of England did grant as King of England Protection to any English man in any parts of the Kings Dominion beyond the Seas which was not qualified according to the Lawes and Customes of that place especially it being apparent that an English King may hold Dominion in Forrain parts in Legiance under a Forrain King as Edward the Third held the Dutchy of Guien and therefore cannot grant absolute Protection in such place nor receive absolute Legiance from any person there being Fourthly the Reporter saith that the King of England hath power to command his Subjects of England to goe with him in his Warres as well without the Realm of England as within the same therefore the Legiance of an English man to his King is indefinite and not locall or circumscribed by place or within the Kingdome of England Although the first of these be granted yet will not the inference hold for possibly this may arise from the constitution of a Positive Law and not from naturall or absolute Legiance nor doth any authority by him cited justifie any such Legiance But I cannot agree the first for it is not true that the King hath any such power from his own Personall interest nor doe the authoritie of former Ages warrant any such matter for a fuller disquisition whereof I shall refer the Reader to the eleventh Chapter ensuing because the Whole matter concerning the Militia commeth there to be handled in course Fifthly to close up all the rest the Reporter brings The Testimony of the Judges of the Common Law out of the Testimony of Hengham wherein an Action was brought by a French woman against an English man who refused to answer because the Plaintiffe was a French Woman and not of the Legiance or Faith of England This was disallowed by the Judges because Legiance and Faith was referred to England and not to the King Thereupon the Defendant averred that the Plaintiffe is not of the Legiance of England nor of the Faith of the King And upon this Plea thus amended the Plaintiffe gave over her Action The Reporter from hence observeth that Faith and Legiance is referred to the King indefinitely and generally and therefore it is so due to him The reason might have had more force had the Object of Allegiance or the nature thereof been the point in question but neither of them comming to debate and Allegiance being subjected to England and Faith to the King I see not what more can be concluded from hence but that Allegiance
the Houses its true that sad Presidents have beene of later times in that kinde and so for want of due attendance Parliaments have been inforced to adjourn to prevent a worse inconvenience but these are infirmities better buried in silence then produced as Arguments of power seeing its evident that Kings themselves were no greater gainers thereby then an Angry man is by his passions It is true also that Kings may make Lords and Corporations that may send their Burgesses to the Parliament and thus the King may make as many as he will as the Pope did with the Bishops in the Councill of Trent yet cannot he unmake them when he pleases nor take the Members from the Parliament without attainder and forfeiture according to the knowne Law Neither can all these Instances prove that the Kings of England have the sole and supreame Power over the Parliament Nor did the Parliament in these times allow of any such Authority and therefore proceeded for the reforming of themselves by themselves in many particulars as the Statutes do hold forth And first in the point of Elections for an error in that is like an error in the first Concoction that spoiles the whole Nutriment they ordained that the Election of Knights shall be at the next County Court after the Writ delivered to the Sheriffe That in full Court betweene the houres of eight and nine in the morning Proclamation shall be made of the day and place of the Parliament That the Suters duely summoned and others there Present shall then proceed to the Election notwithstanding any Prayer or Commandement to the contrary That the names of the Persons elected whether present or absent they be shall be returned by Indenture betweene the Sheriffe and the Elizors and that a Clause to that end shall be added to the Writ of Summons This was enough to make the Sheriffe understand but not to obey till a penalty of one hundred pound is by other Lawes imposed upon him and a yeares imprisonment without Baile or Mainprise besides damages for false return in such Cases and the party so unduely returned Fined and deprived of all the wages for his service Thus the manner of Election is reduced but the Persons are more considerable For hitherto any man of English blood promiscuously had right to give or receive a Vote although his residency were over the wide World But the Parliament in the time of Henry the Fifth reduced these also whether they were such as did chuse or were chosen unto their proper Counties or else rendered them uncapable to Vote or serve for any County And the like Order was made for the Burroughs Viz. That no Person must serve for any City or Burrough nor give Vote in Electing such as shall serve for that Towne unlesse they be both Free and Resiants within that City or Burrough A Law no lesse wholsome then seasonable For the times of Henry the Fourth had taught men to know by experience That a King that hath Souldiers scattered over the Kingdome can easily sway the County-Courts and make Parliaments for their owne tooth Yet this was not enough For all Elizors though of the meanest sort yet are still able to doe as much hurt with their Vote as those of the best sort both for wisedome and publique minde can doe good by theirs This made Elections much subject to parties and confusions and rendered the Parliament much lesse considerable A remedy hereunto is provided in the minority of Henry the Sixth Viz. That no man should give his Vote in Elections in the County unlesse he hath forty shillings yearely in Free Lands or Tenements and this is to be testified upon Oath of the Party And more plainly it is ordered within two yeares after that each Elizor shall have Frank Tenement of that vallue within the same County And thus the Freemen yeilded up their liberty of Election to the Free-holders possibly not knowing what they did Neverthelesse the Parliament well knew what they did this change was no lesse good then great For first these times were no times for any great measure of Civility The Preface of the Statute shewes that the meanest held himself as good a man as the greatest in the Countrey and this tended to parties tumults and bloodshed Secondly where the multitude prevaile the meaner sort are upon the upper hand and these generally ignorant cannot judge of Persons nor Times but being for the most part led by Faction or Affection rather then by right Understanding make their Elections and thereby the Generall Councell of this Nation lesse generous and noble Thirdly there is no lesse equity in the change then policy for what can be more reasonable then that those men onely should have their Votes in Election of the Common Councell of the Kingdome whose Estates are chargeable with the publique Taxes and Assessements and with the wages of those persons that are chosen for the publique Service But above all the rest this advancing of the Free-holders in this manner of Election was beneficiall to the Free-men of England although perchance they considered not thereof and this will more clearly appeare in the consideration of these three particulars First it abated the power of the Lords and great men who held the inferiour sort at their Devotion and much of what they had by their Vote Secondly it rendered the body of the people more brave for the advancing of the Free-holder above the Free-man raiseth the spirit of the meaner sort to publique regards and under a kinde of Ambition to aspire unto the degree of a Free-holder that they may be some what in the Common-wealth and thus leaving the meanest rank sifted to the very branne they become lesse considerable and more subject to Coercive power whiles in the mean time the Free-holder now advanced unto the degree of a Yeoman becomes no lesse carefull to maintain correspondency with the Lawes then he was industrious in the attaining of his degree Thirdly by this means now the Law makes a separation of the inferiour Clergy and Cloystered people from this service wherein they might serve particular ends much but Rome much more For nothing appeareth but that these dead Persons in Law were neverthelesse Fsee-men in Fact and lost not the liberty of their Birth-right by entering into Religion to become thereby either Bond or no Free-Members of the people of England Lastly as a binding plaister above the rest First a Negative Law is made that the Persons elected in the County must not be of the degree of a Yeoman but of the most noted Knights Esquires or Gentlemen of the Countrey which tacitely implies that it was too common to advance those of the meaner sort whether by reason of the former wasting times Knights and Esquires were grown scant in number or by reason of their rudenesse in account Or it may be the Yeomanry grew now to feel their strength and meant not to be further
have a Parliament wherein the People should have no more Religion then to beleive nor Learning then to understand his sense nor wisedome then to take heed of a Negative Vote But it befell otherwise for though it was called the Lack-learning Parliament yet had it well enough to discern the Clergies inside and Resolution enough to enter a second claime against the Clergies Temporalties and taught the King a Lesson That the least understanding Parliaments are not the best for his purpose For though the wisest Parliaments have the strongest sight and can see further then the King would have them yet they have also so much wisedome as to look to their own skins and commonly are not so venterous as to tell all the World what they know or to act too much of that which they doe understand But this Parliament whether wise or unwise spake loud of the Clergies superfluous Riches and the Kings wants are parallel'd therewith and that the Church-men may well spare enough to maintaine fifteen Earles fifteen hundred Knights six thousand two hundred Esquires and one hundred Hospitalls more then were in his Kingdome This was a strong temptation to a needy and couragious Prince but the Arch-Bishop was at his elbow the King tells the Commons that the Norman and French Cells were in his Predecessors time seized under this colour yet the Crowne was not the richer thereby he therefore resolves rather to add to then diminish any thing from the maintenance of the Clergy Thus as the King said he did though he made bold with the Keyes of Saint Peter for he could distinguish between his owne Clergy and the Romane The People are herewith put to silence yet harbour sad conceits of the Clergy against a future time which like a hidden fire are not onely preserved but increased by continuall occasions and more principally from the zeal of the Clergy now growing fiery hot against the Lollards For that not onely the People but the Nobles yea some of the Royall blood were not altogether estranged from this new old way whether it was sucked from their Grand-Father Duke John or from a Popular strain of which that House of Lancaster had much experience I determine not These were the Dukes of Bedford and Glocester Bedford was first at the Helme of Affaires at home whiles the King acted the Souldiers part in France as ill conceited of by the Clergy as they sleighted by him At a Convocation once assembled against the Lollards the Duke sent unto their Assembly his Dwarfe as a great Lollard though he was a little Man and he returned as he went even as Catholique as any of them all Non tam dispectus à Clero quam ipse Clerum despiciens atque eludens This and some other sleights the Clergy liked not they therefore finde a way to send him into France to be a Reserve to his Brother And in his roome steps forth Humphrey Duke of Glocester that was no lesse coole for the Romane way then he Henry the Fifth was not more hearty in Romes behalf for although he was loath to interrupt his Conquest abroad with contests at home yet he liked not of advancements from Rome insomuch as perceiving the Bishop of Winchester to aspire to a Cardinals Hat he said that he would as well lay aside his own Crowne as allow the Bishop to take the Hat Nor was he much trusted by the Clergy who were willing he should rather ingage in the Wars with France then minde the Proposalls of the Commons concerning the Clergies Temporalties which also was renued in the Parliament in his dayes Above all as the Lancastrian House loved to looke to its own so especially in relation to Rome they were the more jealous by how much it pretended upon them for its favour done to their House And therefore Henry the Fourth the most obleiged of all the rest looked to the Provisors more strictly then his Predecessors had and not only confirmed all the Statutes concerning the same already made but had also provided against Provisors of any annuall Office or Profit or of Bulls of Exemption from payment of Tythes or from Obedience Regular or Ordinary and made them all punishable within the Statute and further made all Licenses and Pardons contrary thereto granted by the King void against the Incumbent and gave damages to the Incumbent in such vexations for the former Lawes had saved the right to the true Patron both against Pope and King And thus the English Kings were Servants to the Church of England at the charges of Rome whiles the Popedome being now under a wasting and devouring Scisme was unable to help it selfe and so continued untill the time of Henry the Sixth at which time the Clergy of England got it selfe under the power and shadow of a Protector a kinde of Creature made up by a Pope and a King This was the Bishop of Winchester so great a Man both for Birth parts of Nature Riches Spirit and Place as none before him ever the like for he was both Cardinall Legate and Chancellour of England and had gotten to his aide the Bishop of Bathe to be Lord Treasurer of England Now comes the matter concerning Provisors once more to be revived First more craftily by collogueing with the Nobility who now had the sway in the Kings minority but they would none An answer is given by the King that he was too young to make alteration in matters of so high Concernment yet he promised moderation The Clergy are put to silence herewith and so continue till the King was six yeares elder and then with Money in one hand and a Petition in the other they renue their Suit but in a more subtill way For they would not pretend Ro●e but the English Churches liberties they would not move against the Statutes of Praemuniri but to have them explained it was not much they complained of for it was but that one word Otherwhere which say they the Judges of the Common Law expound too largely not onely against the Jurisdiction of the Holy Sea but against the Jurisdiction of the English Prelacy which they never intended in the passing of those Lawes Their Conclusion is therefore a Prayer That the King will please to allow the Jurisdiction of their Ecclesiasticall Courts and that Prohibitions in such Cases may be stopped But the King either perceiving that the Authority of English Prelacy was wholly dependent on the Sea of Rome and acted either under the shadow Legatine or at the best sought an Independent power of their own Or else the King doubting that the calling of one word of that Statute into question that had continued so long might indanger the whole Law into uncertainty declined the matter saving in the moderation of Prohibitions Thus the English Clergy are put to a retreat from their reserve at Rome all which they now well saw yet it was hard to wean them The Cardinall of Winchester was a
by Law The first served as a scare for though it were but by Proclamation men might justly fear that he that was so stout against the Pope would not stick to scourge his owne Subjects out of his way in the time of his heat The King thus entered the Lists both against Pope and Cardinall now under Praemuniri whereof he died meets the English Clergy thus loosing their top-gallant standing up in the reare against him and talking at large Neverthelesse the King stops not his carreere puts them to the rout for maintaining the power Legatine They soon submit crave pardon give a summe of money and perfume their Sacrifice with that sweet Incense of Supreame Head of the Church of England This was done not by way of Donation for the Convocation had no such power but by way of acknowledgement in flat opposition to the Jurisdiction of the Pope It became the common subject of discourse amongst all sorts but of wonderment to the Pope Yet for fear of worse he speaks faire for he was not in Posture to contest but all would do no good the Queen had appealed to Rome the Pope by Woolsies advice makes delayes The Parliament espying the advantage at once tooke all appeales to Rome away and established all sentences made or to be made within this Land notwithstanding any Act from Rome and enjoyned the English Clergy to administer the severall acts of publique worship notwithstanding any inhibition or excommunication from any forrain pretended Power The grounds upon the preamble of the Law will appeare to be two First that the King of England is supream head in rendring Justice within the Nation in all causes therein arising which is more then the recognisance of the Clergy two yeares before this Act did hold forth yet this acknowledgment is not absolute but in opposition to Forraine pretentions Secondly that the Clergy in England having Power may in matters spirituall determine all doubts without forrain help and administer such duties as to their place do belong not hereby determining that the Church-men ever had such Power by Law nor that they ought originally to have such Power They never had it for no sooner were they disjoyned from the Laity in these affaires but immediately they were under the Pope and received their Power from him And De jure they cannot challenge such power but by a positive Law such as this Law of Henry the eighth which also giveth but a restrictive and limited power Viz In matters testamentary of divorce matrimony tithes oblations and obventions So as if they will challenge such power they must thanke the Parliament for it and use the same accordingly as persons deputed therunto and not in their owne right or right of their places In all this the Kings supremacy is but obscurely asserted and rather by implication shewing what in reason may be holden then by declaration of what was making way thereby First into the opinions of men before they were enjoyned to determine their actions but within two yeares ensuing or thereabout the Law is made positive The King shall be taken and accepted the onely supreame head on earth of the Church of England and have power to visite correct represse redresse reforme restraine order and amend all such errours heresies abuses offenses contempts and enormities as by any manner of spirituall authority or jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed Which in the preamble is saide to be made to confirm what the Clergy in their Convocation formerly had recognized The corps of his Act is to secure the Kings Title the Kings Power and the Kings Profit As touching the Kings Title it is sayde that in right it did formerly belong to him which is to be granted by all so far as the Power is rightly understood But as touching the Kings Profit it cannot be saide that the whole lump thereof did belong to the King because much thereof was not so ancient but De novo raised by the Popes extortion and therefore the true and reall Profits are by particular Acts of Parliament ensuing in speciall words devolved upon him The nature of this power is layd downe in this Statute under a three fold expression First it is a visitatory or a reforming Power which is executed by inquiry of offences against Lawes established and by executing such Lawes Secondly it is an ordinary jurisdiction for it is such as by any Spirituall authority maybe acted against irregularities and thus the Title of supreame Ordinary is confirmed Thirdly it is such a Power as must be regulatd by Law and in such manner as by any spirituall Authority may lawfully be reformed It is not therefore any absolute arbitrary Power for that belongs onely to the supreame Head in Heaven Nor is it any legislative Power for so the Law should be the birth of this Power and his Power could not then be regulated by the Law nor could ever Ordinary execute such a Power nor did Henry the eighth ever make claime to any such Power though he loved to be much trusted Lastly this Power was such a Power as was gained formerly from the King by forraine Usurpation which must be intended De rebus licitis and once in possession of the Crown or in right thereto belonging according to the Law for the King hath no Power thereby to confer Church-livings by Provisorship or to carry the Keyes and turn the infallible Chaire into an infallible Throne In breife this Power was such as the King hath in the Common-wealth neither legislative nor absolute in the executive but in order to the Unity and Peace of the Kingdome This was the right of the Crowne which was ever claimed but not enjoyed further then the English Scepter was able to match the Romish Keyes And now the same being restored by Act of Parliament is also confirmed by an Oath enjoyned to be taken by the People binding them to acknowledge the King under God supreame head on earth of the Church of England Ireland and the Kings Dominions in opposition to all Forraine jurisdiction And lastly by a Law which bound all the People to maintaine the Kings Title of Defender of the faith and of the Church of England and Ireland in earth the supream head under the perill of Treason in every one that shall attempt to deprive the Crowne of that title We must descend to particulars for by this it will appeare that these generall Lawes concerning the Kings refined title contained little more then matters of Notion otherwise then a generall barr to the Popes future interests And therefore the Wisdome of the State as if nothing had been already done did by degrees parcell out by severall Acts of Parliament the particular interests of the Popes usurped Authority in such manner as to them seemed best And First concerning the Legislative Power in Church government It cannot be denied but the Pope De facto had the Power of a negative vote in all
rest upon this Law for within three yeares following another Law is made to confirme what was then already done by the King and a larger power granted to the King to change and alter as to his Wisdome shall seeme convenient Thus the Kings injunctions already set forth were established all opposall to them inhibited and the King hath a power of Lawing and Unlawing in Christs Kingdome and to stab an Act of Parliament in matters of highest concernment And the reason is the King will have it so and who dares gain-say it as Cranmer said the King loves his Queene well but his own opinion better for new things meeting with new love if it be once interrupted in the first heat turnes into a displeasure as hot as the first love nor had either party great cause to boast in their gainings for none of them all had any security but such as kept close to a good conscience All this though much more then any of his Predecessors ever attained was neverthelesse not enough till his Title was as compleat The Pope had fashioned him one now above twenty yeares old for his service done against Luther and others of that way and sent it to him as a Trophee of the victory this was Defender of the faith which the King then took kindly but laid it up till he thought he had deserved it better and therefore now he presents it to the Parliament who by a Statute annexed it to the Crown of England for ever now made triple by the Royallizing of that of Ireland amongst the rest A third Prerogative concerned the Kings Power in temporall matters and now must England look to it selfe for never had English King the like advantage over his people as this man had His Title out-faced all question Left rich by his Father trained up in the highest way of Prerogative absolute Lord of the English Clergy and of their Interest in the People of a vast spirit able to match both the Emperour and French abroad and yet more busie at home then all his Predecessors A King that feared nothing but the falling of the Heavens the People contrarily weary of civill Wars enamored with the first tastes of Peace and Pleasure whiles as yet it was but in the blushing child-hood overawed by a strange Giant a King with a Pope in his belly having the temporall Sword in his Hand the spirituall Sword at his command Of a mercilesse savage nature but a word and a blow without regard even of his bosome companions what can then the naked relation of a Subject do with such an one if providence steps not in and stops not the Lions mouth all wil be soon swallowed up into the hungry maw of Prerogative To set all on work comes Steven Gardiner from his Embassage to the Emperor sad apprehensions are scattered that the motions abroad are exceeding violent and sudden that the Emperor and French King are fast in nothing but in change according to occasion that like the Eagle they make many points before they stoop to the prey That if the motions at home do wait upon debates of Parliament things must needs come short in execution and the affaires of this Nation extreamly suffer A dangerous thing it is that the King should be at disadvantage either with the Emperour or French King for want of power in these cases of suddaine exegencies and for some small time during the juncture of these importent affaires that seeing likewise at home the point concerning Religion is comming to the Test the mindes of men are at a gaze their affections and passions are on their tiptoes It s reason the King should steare with a shorter Rudder that this care might meete with every turne of providence which otherwise might suddainly blow up the Peace and good Government of this Nation These and the like represented a faire face to that which followed and made way for the King without shame to ask what no King before him suffered ever to enter into conceit I meane a Legislative power to this effect That Proclamations made by the greater part of the King for the time being and his Councell whose names hereafter follow with such penalties as by them shall be thought meet shall be of equall force to an Act of Parliament provided it shall not extend to forfeiture of Estates or Priviledges nor to losse of Life but in cases particularly mentioned in the Law provided no Proclamation shall crosse any Statute or lawfull or laudable Custome of this Realme All which at length comes to be demanded by a formall Bill with as ill favored a preface as the matter it self which was much worse ere it was well licked in the House of Commons and when all was done proved a Bare still Whatever it was it passed in manner above said neither much to the desire of the Commons that so much was given nor to the good liking of the King that there was no more For in stead of a Legislative power which he grasped at for himself he received it in common with his Councell and so becomes ingaged neither to alter nor destroy that Brother-hood if he intended to reape any fruit of this Law leaving the point in doubt whither his gaine or losse was the greater For this Law thus made for this King these Councellors and these times and occasions can be no president to the future unlesse to informe Kings that the Parliament hath a power to give more Authority and prerogative to Kings then they or the Crowne have by common right and to give it with such limitations and qualifications as seemeth good to them And secondly that even Henry the eighth acknowledged that the Legislative power was not in the Crown nor was the Crowne capable thereof otherwise then it was conferred by the Parliament Onely Steven Gardiner might glory in this atcheivement having for the present obtained much of his ends by perswading the King that forrain Princes estranged from him not so much for his departure from the Pope as for some apprehensions they had of his departure from that way of Religion and Worship which they apprehend every Christian ought to maintaine And therefore if he meaned to gaine better correspondency amongst these Princes he must ingage more resolvedly to the fundamentalls of the Worship though he shook of some sleighter ceremonies with the Romish supremacy for he knew that they were willing enough with the later though the other could not go downe with them thus did forraine correspondency float above when as the Church as then it stood was underneath and gave the tincture to every wave And it was holden more safe by the Romish party to trust the King thus attempered with the legislative power in the Church matters then the rough Parliament whose Course steered quite wide from the Roman shore as if they never meant to look that way any more though Cranmer and the cheif Officers of State and of the Houshold
their work is to lead the Kings Conscience in dark wayes or rather into them commonly he hath a devout outside and that is the Kings Idol but if while his eye be towards Jerusalem his minde be towards the dead Sea the King is his and then the blinde leads the blinde Like some Ignis fatuus to such as know it not No man is so well knowne by his company as Kings are by these men and these men by their Actions Although some have bin so witty as to cheat the whole generation of Mankinde by entertaining holy men to be their Chaplains themselves the mean time without any sparke of that holy Fire Yet this King was not so cunning he had a Confessor of his own choice and according to his owne heart who was complained of as a grievance and the Parliament removed him So nigh they adventured even to invade the Kings owne conscience if it may be called conscience that will acknowledge no Law but that of its owne minde Thirdly The Kings Revenue was under the check and controll of the Parliment for it befalls some Princes as other men to be somtimes poore in abundance by riatous flooding treasure out in the lesser currents and leaving the greater channells dry This is an insupportible evill because it is destructive to the very being of affaires whether for Warr or Peace For the Kings treasure is of a mixt nature much of it being intended for publique service as himselfe is a publique person And for this cause he hath Officers of severall natures attending upon this treasury Some for land some for Sea some for the generall treasure of the Kingdome some for that of the houshold and some for the privy purse the common end of all being to maintaine state in time of peace and strength against time of Warr because it s no easie matter to maintaine the just proportions for each of the said ends it is the lesse wonder that such a brave Prince as Edward the Third should Labour under want for maintenance of the Warrs and so lavish a Spendthrift as Richard the Second should Labour under more want to maintaine his port and countenance in peace And therefore though it be true that the publique treasure is committed to the King as the cheife Steward of the Realme yet it is as true that he is but a Steward and that the supreame survey of the Treasure resteth in the Parliment who are to see that the treasure be not irregularly wasted to reduce the same into order and for that end to call the Treasurers and Receivers to account to see to the punishing of such as are unfaithfull and encouraging of others that are faithfull for when by extravagant courses the Treasure is wasted by extraordinary courses it must be supplied which ever is out of the Subjects purses And in such cases it is great reason that they should observe which way the course lies of such expenses If then in such cases sometimes the Parliament hath stayed the issuing out of the Kings Revenue for some time or otherwise viewed and examined the same charged it with conditions 22 E. 3. n. 29.14 R. 2. n. 15. limitted it to certaine uses and in case of misuser refused to levy or make payments the case will be without dispute that the Parliament ordered the publique treasure as they saw most need But much more if wee consider how the greatest part of this treasure was raised Viz. Not from the old Revenues of the Crowne but by new impositions levies and assesments layd upon the people even what they pleased and in what manner they thought meet and not otherwise Aydes are lawfull if they be legally given by common consent of Parliament Taxes if legally given by Parliament are no lesse lawfull yet they must be collected in such manner and by such means as the Parliaments Order doth direct Loans of monys to the King may be made by them that will but the King must not demand them because the subject hath no means to recover the debt This trick had been lately tryed by Edward the Second much mony he got and it was repaied by the order of the Parliament But of all the rest nothing shewed more absolute authority in the publique Revenue then the care that was had of the Demesnes of the Crown for whereas the expenses of Kings grew so vast that neither the yeerly Revenue could suffice nor aides assesments and taxes could satisfie however ordinary they in these times were become rather then Kings would contiane themselves they would invade their own Demesnes by pauning selling and giving them a way either for love or mony and thus was poverty treasured up against the future both for King and Crown The Parliament espying this leake that was like to undoe all applyed a speedy remedy undoing what was done and undoing some by an act of Resumption and thereby taught Kings to looke to their honor better for the future and people also to take heed of medling with such considerated matters and to know that he that hath such in his possession hath them by a cract title that cannot bee amended but by Act of Parliament Fourthly An English King is no Out-law nor can he do any wrong though the man may he hath a double relation one as a King the other as a man and the uniting of both in one Person hath cheated many a man of his judgement in the Case of Prerogative he hath a double will and these many times contrary equally as in other Relations and in this contrariety sometimes the King overcomes the man and sometimes the man the King so as if any man the King hath much more cause to cry out O miserable Man These divers wills are generally led by diverse rules One of a man w ch many times reacheth no higher then the Affections and if the man be weak they deserve little better name then Lusts The rule of a King is Law or Councells of these in place and unto these in all prudentialls he must submit his judgement and will as he is a King nor can he doe otherwise unlesse he will presume to be wiser then his Councell Sutable hereunto doth that clause in one of the Statutes of these times conclude Viz. That the King is bound by his Oath to passe all Lawes that are for the good of the Kingdome For were the power of election or determination of the Point onely in the King then were the Oath in vain nor is the Parliament at all in case of the Kings dissent to judge of the convenience or inconvenience of Proposalls made for the good of the whole body according to that power which it exercised in these times Nor is it irrationall to inferre here from that if Law and Councell be the rule of a King then the obedience of the people unto this King must be in order to Law and Councell otherwise the disobedience cannot be
was holden to be before this Statute was made In the next place although it cannot be denied but the triall of Bastardy beyond the Sea might as well lye in the Cognisance of the Lay Magistrate as in that of the Ecclesiasticall yet seeing the Clergy had already attained the Cognisance of the thing the place proved but a matter of Circumstance especially they having the advantage of the Civill Magistrate in this That in regard the Ecclesiasticall Persons beyond the Sea had also obtained the Cognisance of that matter amongst themselves their Testimony or Certificate would come with more credit to the Clergy in this Kingdome then to the Civill Magistrate whose Cognisance in such Cases they did disallow Lastly concerning Priories whereas some were presentative and filled by Induction from the Ordinary and others were Donative having their Priors meerly at the will of the Abbot to be placed and displaced as he thought most expedient if then the point in Issue depends upon this knot this Law referreth the triall unto the Ordinary who by common Presumption best knowes whether any Institution and Induction had passed his Registry and Seale or not And thus though a kinde of Judiciall power seemeth to be carried along herewith yet is all in a ministeriall and subservient way unto the Civill Magistrate and neverthelesse with such credit and authority that the main hinge of the Judicatory in such cases depends upon the dash of their Penne. No Bishop nor Archbishop shall be impeached before the Civill Magistrate without the Kings expresse Warrant The former particulars concerned matter of Authority this and others insuing concern matter of immunity which or most of which were formerly for a long time within the Fancy of the Canon but never came to the height of Parlimentary approbation or authority till now that it comes in as a Peace-offering to pacifie the quarrell between the Arch-Bishop Stratford and the King For he being ingaged in the French Warres so resolved to continue and therefore to maintain distempers at home he held neither Honourable nor safe Their Temporalties shall not be wasted during the Vacancy Nor shall they be seised but by Judgement of the Court. The first of these was an ancient Law grounded upon great reason although dulled by time and by covetousnesse of the needy Patrons next to laid aside if not quite put out of countenance So as a new Law must be made to revive it and to abolish that corrupt custome or practice of depredating those Possessions given to a holy use in common supposall contrary to the trust by them undertaken and the use still continuing But the second Branch is in nature of a Law of Restraint set upon the Common Law for the persons of these Spiritualized men were of so aiery constitution as they could not be holden by hands made out of the Clay such as the rude Laity were and therefore the Civill Magistrate upon all occasions used to lay hold upon that whereof there was some feeling which were called Temporalties and thereby drew them to appearance at the Lay Courts for however Spirituall the Clergy were they would not easily part with their Lay Fees But now by this Law the times are so attenuated that the very Temporalties are made so Spirituall as not to be medled with by the Lay Magistrate unlesse upon judgement first obtained against them And sutably thereunto within twelve yeares following another Law was made more punctuall that their Temporalties should not be seised upon for contempts but that their Persons should be seised yet within twenty yeares after that this Law begins to be out of Countenance and the Opinions of the Judges began to grow bold upon the ancient rule that their Temporalties were Temporall though their Persons were Spirituall and that it was more dangerous to imprison the person of a Clergy man then to attache his Possessions And therefore they held that if the Ordinary remove not the Incumbent when the Kings Writ commands him so to doe his Temporalties should be seised And if the Ordinary should certifie one to be a Clerke which is none the like course is to be taken They shall depute the next and most lawfull Freinds of the Intestate to Administer his goods The Statute at Westminster the second having given formerly a kinde of allowance that the Ordinary should be Administrator to the Intestate so far as to answer the Intestates debts lent him thereby an opportunity to possesse himself of the whole to all intents and purposes which being observed by the Parliament by this Law they made way for Administration to fall through the hands of the Ordinary into the lap of Administrators made by the Authority of the Parliament but of the Ordinaries nomination according to the authority hereby to him given These Administrators thus made had a greater power then ever the Ordinary had or could give For though the Ordinary by the Statute at Westminster was bound to pay the Debts of the Testator yet could he never bring Action as the Administrator to all intents by this Law is inabled to doe And though it be true that the Administrator is by this Law ordered to account to the Ordinary yet doth not that intitle the Ordinary to any interest in the personall Estate but onely gives him a bare authority to take the account without any compulsory power by Ecclesiasticall censures to inforce him thereto Secondly it is such an account as is no Evidence in any Court of Record And Lastly if upon the foot of the account any arreare remained or surplusage of Estate the Ordinary could neither recover nor order the same because by the Law anciently the next freinds had the sole interest therein and being by this Statute made Administrators the whole power of ordering the Estate is vested in them To conclude this Statute was made in favour and for the ease of the Ordinaries if they would please so to take it for they could get no benefit by executing the Administration in their owne Persons if they intended to Administer according to the Law The Persons of the Clergy are priviledged from Arrests during the Holy Actions of their Officiating This was plotted since Anselmes time he and his Successors indeavoured by Constitution and Canon continually to minde the Civill Magistrate thereof but could never nurse it up to the Degree of a Law till now they gained the advantages of the times growing into a more tender apprehension of Devotion then formerly The penalty of transgressing this Law is left in generall and therefore did the lesse scare but within three yeares after it was confirmed with a certain penalty of Fine and Imprisonment as to the Kings suite and dammages to the party offended and the Priviledge was inlarged for and during their continuance in the Consecrated ground in order to such Services and not upon Fraud or Collusion to avoyde Arrests But by neither of these Lawes was the
had beene formerly and bold enough to outface small doubts in point of succession for he could for a need outface common civility it selfe This might have lien in his way for he that cannot govern himselfe can much lesse govern a Kingdome Yet a hidden Providence concluded quite contrary and rendred him a cleare testimony of a strange change by the annointing oyle like that of Saul that forthwith had the Spirit of another man So though not hammered thereto by affliction as was Edward the first yet was he his parallell in Government and superiour in successe Being seated in the Throne all men thought it dangerous to abide the adventure of the turne of this Kings Spirit The Clergy had but yesterday tryed the Mastery with the Laity and gained it but by one Vote there was no dealing with the Clergy while Arch Bishop Arundell lived nor with him whiles Henry the fourth lived or his merits were in memory but now they both are dead the Clergy and the Laity are upon even ground this might make the Clergy now not over confident The Lords looked on the King as a man like enough to strike him that stands next The wise men saw he would be doing all men were tired with intestine quarrells and jumped in one that he that would be in action should act abroad where he might get renowne and a purchase big enough for his Spirit Scotland was a Kingdome yet incompetent to the Kings appetite France was the fairer marke and better game and though too big for the English gripe yet the Eagle stooped and sped himselfe so well as within six yeares he fastned upon the Sword and Scepter and a daughter of France and might have seised the Crowne but chose to suffer a blurr to lye upon his title derived from Edward the third rather then to incurr the Censure of Arrogancy over a stooping enemy or to Pluck the fruit from the tree before it was fully ripe which in time would fall into his lap by a better Law then that of the Sword otherwise it might be well conceited that he that hath both right and Power and will not seise disclaimes Besides the King was as well Inheritor to his Fathers Fate as Crowne still he had successe but the end was so farr distant that he died in the way thereto The brave Dauphine of France maintaining Warr after his Father the French King had yeilded up the Bucklers to Henry the fifth till Henry the fifth died and the English did foregoe what they had formerly gotten in France by the Sword of that great Commander Nor did the English gaine any thing in the conclusion of this Warr but an honorable windy repute of being one of the five cheif Nations of Christendome if honor it be to be reputed amongst the Nations a Conquerer of France the cheif Leader unto the dethroning of three Popes at once the election of Pope Martin and of giving a cure to that deadly wound of the Popedome which had spent the bloud of two hundred thousand mens lives lost in that quarrell These forraine ingagements made the King lesse solicitous of point of Prerogative at home and the rather because he knew the way to conquer his private enemies armes and his Subjects hearts without losse of honor in the one or reverence in the other He loved justice above the ranke of his Predecessors and in some respects above himselfe for he advanced Gascoigne for doing justice though to the Kings owne shame He liked not to intrude himselfe into elections and therefore though requested by the Monks of Canterbury he would not nominate a Successor to Arch Bishop Arundell but left the whole worke to them In the authority of his place he was moderate and where his Predecessors did matters without the Lords consent when he made his Uncle the Marquis of Dorcet Duke of Exceter and had given him a pention to maintaine that honor he asked the Lords consent thereto To the Clergy he was more then just if not indulgent led thereto by his Fathers example as being wrapped up in the same Interest as I conceive rather then out of any liking of their wayes now growing more bold upon usurpation then in former times Or it may be that having prevailed in that work in France which to any rationall man must needs appear above the power of the King and all the Realm of England he looked upon it as more then humane and himself as an instrument of Miracles and was stirred up in his zeal to God according to his understanding in those darke times to give the Clergy scope and to pleasure them with their liberty of the Canon Law that began now to thunder with fire and terror in such manner that neither greatnesse nor multitude could withstand the dint as was evidenced in that Penance inflicted upon the Lord Strange and his Lady in Case of bloodshed in Holy Ground and their hot pursuit of the Lord Cobham unto a death of a new Nature for somewhat done which was sometimes called Treason and sometimes Heresie And thus became Henry the Fifth baptized in the flames of the Lollards as his Father had sadly rendered up his Spirit in the same I say in this he is to be looked upon as one misled for want of light rather then in opposition against the light For in his last Will wherein men are wont to be more serious and sincere amongst his private regards he forgets not to reflect upon Religion to this purpose We further bequeath saith he to the redundant Mercy of the most excellent Saviour the Faith Hope and Charity the Vertue Prosperity and Peace of the Kings our Successours and of our Kingdome of England that God for his Goodnesse sake would Protect Visite and Defend them from Divisions Dissensions and from all manner of deceitfulnesse of Heretiques And thus Piety Justice and Moderation of Henry the Fifth Adorned and Crowned the honour of his Courage and Greatnesse with that honourable Title of Prince of Preists and had he been blessed with a clearer light he might as well under God have obtained the Title of Prince of Princes wanting nothing that might have rendered him a president of Fame BUt the time is now come that the Tide of Englands Glory must turn and the sudden Conquest in France by Henry the Fifth not unlike the Macedonian Monarchy must disgorge it selfe of what it had hastily devoured but never could digest Three things concurred hereunto one dangerous the other two fatall to the flourishing condition of any Nation First the King is a Minor in the least degree that ever any Prince sate on English Throne He entered thereinto neither knowing what he did nor where he was and some say he sate therein in his Mothers lap for his life had been more in the wombe then abroade A sad presage of what followed for many men thinke that he was in a lap all his dayes Nor are the cheife men to be
neverthelesse in that interim three Parliaments had been holden one by the Duke of Bedford and two by the Duke of Glocester in the last of which this Law was made And in truth if wee looke upon this title of the Kingdomes Guardianship in its bare lineaments without lights and shadows it will appeare little better then a Crown of feathers worne onely for bravery and in nothing adding to the real ability of the governing part of this Nation Neither were the persons of these Magnificoes so wel deserving nor did the Nation expect any such matter from them Edward the first was a wise King and yet in his absence chose Edward the second to hold that place he being then not above fourteen yeares of age afterwards Edward the seconds Queen and the Lords of her party were wise enough in their way and yet they chose Edward the third to be the Custos regni then not fourteen yeares old his Father in the meane time being neither absent from the Kingdome nor deposed but onely dismissed from acting in the adminstration of the Government Edward the third follows the same example he first makes his Brother John of Eltham Custos regni and this he did at two several times once when he was but eleven yeares old afterwards when hee was about fourteene Then he made his Sonne the Black Prince upon severall occasions three times Lord Warden of the Kingdome once he being about nine yeares old and againe when he was eleven yeares old and once when about fourteen yeares old Lastly Edward the third appointed his son Lionell Duke Clarence unto this place of Custos regni when as he was scarce eight years old all which will appeare upon the comparing their ages with the severall Rolls of 25 E 1. and 3 5 12 14 16 19 E 3. If therefore the worke of a Custos regni be such as may be as wel done by the infants of Kings as by the wisest Councellor or most valiant man it is in my opinion manifest that the place is of little other use to this Common-wealth then to serve as attire to a comely Person to make it seeme more faire because it is in fashion nor doth it advance the vallue of a King one graine above what his personall endowments doe deserve Hitherto of the title and power the next consideration will be of the original Fountain from whence it is derived wherein the presidents are cleare and plaine that ordinarily they are the next and immediate ofspring of Kings if they be present whithin the foure seas to be by them enabled by Letters Patents or Commission But whether present or absent the Parliament when it sate did ever peruse their authority and if it saw need changed inlarged or abridged both it and them Thus was the Duke of Glocester made Lord Warden in the time of Henry the fifth he being then in France in the roome of the Duke of Bedford the like also in Henry the sixths time when as the King was young for then the Parliament made the Duke of Bedford Lord Warden and added unto that title the title of Protector Afterward at the Dukes going over into France they committed that Service to the Duke of Glocester if I forget not the nature of the Roll during the Duke of Bedfords absence and with a Salvo of his right Nor unlike hereunto was the course that was taken by the Parliament in these sullen later times of Henry the sixth whereof more hereafter in the next Paragraph Lastly the limitation of this high power and title is different according to the occasion for the Guardianship of the Kingdome by common intendment is to endure no longer then the King is absent from the helme either by voluntary deserting the worke or imployment in forrain parts though united they be under the Government of the same King together with this Nation such as are these parts of France and Ireland and Scotland then under the English fee This is apparent from the nature of that statute of Henry the fifth formerly mentioned for if there was need to provide by that Statute that the Kings Arrivall and Personall Presence should not dissolve the Parliament assembled by the authority of the Custos regni then doth it imply that the personall presence of the King by and upon his Arrivall had otherwise determined the Parliament and that authority whereby it sate But the presidents are more cleare all of them generally running in these or the like words In absentia Regis or Quamdiu Rex fuerit in partibus transmarinis It is also to be granted that the Kings will is many times subjoyned thereunto as if it were in him to displace them and place others in his absence yet doe I finde no president of any such nature without the concurrence of the Lords or Parliament and yet that the Parliament hath ordered such things without his consent For when Richard the First passing to the Holy Land had left the Bishop of Ely to execute that place during his absence in remote parts the Lords finding the Bishop unfaithfull in his Charge excluded him both from that place and Kingdome and made the Kings Brother John Lord Warden in his stead But in the Case of the Protectorship which supposeth disability in the Person of the King the same by common intendment is to continue during the Kings disability and therefore in the Case of Henry the Sixth it was determined that the Protectorship doth Ipso Facto cease at the Kings Coronation because thereby the King is supposed able to govern although in later times it hath not so beene holden For Kings have been capable of that Ceremony as soon as of the Title and yet commonly are supposed to be under the rule of necessity of Protectorship till they be fourteen years of age or as the Case may be longer For although Henry the Sixth was once thought ripe when he was eight yeares old yet in the issue he proved scarce ripe for the Crowne at his two and twentieth yeare Neverthelesse the default of Age is not the onely incapacity of Kings they have infirmities as other men yea more dangerous then any other man which though an unpleasant tune it be to harp upon yet it is a Theame that Nations sometimes are inforced to ruminate upon when God will give them Kings in his wrath and those also over to their own lusts in his anger In such Cases therefore this Nation sometimes have fled to the refuge of a Protector and seldome it is that they can determine for how long When Henry the Sixth was above thirty yeares old Richard Duke of Yorke was made Protector and Defendor of the Realme and of the Church It was done if the Record saith true by the King himselfe Autoritate Parliamenti It was further provided by the Parliament that though this was to continue Quamdiu Regi placuerit yet the Duke should hold that place till the Kings Sonne Edward should come
his ends Thus in one Parliament for he could hold no more he gave such content as even to wonderment he could as soone finde an army in the feild to fight for him as the most meritorious of his Predecessors His ill title made him very jealous and thereby tought his best freinds to keep at a distance after which time few escaped that came within his reach and so he served Gods judgement against his adjutants though he understeod it not Amongst the rest the Duke of Buckingham his great Associate both in the Butchery of the two young Princes and usurpation of the Royall Scepter he lived till he had laid the Foundation of better times in the Person of Henry the seventh and then received his reward But an ill Conscience must be continually fed or it will eat up its owne wombe The Kings minde delivered from feare of the Sonnes of Edward the Fourth now dead torments himselfe with thoughts of his Daughter alive ashamed he is of Butchery of a Girle he chooseth a conceit of Basterdizing the Children of Elizabeth Graye that calleth her self Queen of England but this proved too hard to concoct soon after that he goes a contrary way The Lady Elizabeth Graye is now undoubted Wife of Edward the Fourth and her eldest Daughter as undoubted Heire to the Crown And so the King will now be contented to adventure himself into an incestuous Marriage with her if his own Queen were not in the way onely to secure the Peace of the Kingdome which he good King was bound in Conscience to maintain though with the perill of his owne Soule and in this zeale of his Conscience his Queen soon went out of the way and so Love is made to the young Lady But Henry Earle of Richmond was there before and the Lady warily declined the choice till the golden Apple was won which was not long after accomplished the King loosing both the Lady his Crowne and owne life together put an end to much wickednesse and had the end thereof in Bosworth-Feild CHAP. XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament THe seasons now in Tract were of short continuance lives passed away more speedily then years and it may seem uselesse to inquire what is the nature of the Government in such a time when as the greatest work was to maintain life and soul together and when all is done little else is done For though the Title of the House of Yorke was never so clear against that of Lancaster yet it had been so long darkned with a continuall Succession of Kings of the Red-Rose that either by their merit had gained a Throne in the Peoples hearts or by their facility had yeilded their Throne up to the Peoples will as it proved not easie to Convince them that liked well their present Lot and were doubtfull of change or to make them tender of the right of Edward the Fourth above their own quiet Above threescore years now had England made triall of the Government of the Lancastrian Princes and thereof about thirty years experience had they of Henry the Sixth they saw he was a gentle Prince On the other side Edward the Fourth newly sprung up out of a Root watered with blood himself also a Man for the Feild This might well put the minds of the People to a stand what to think of this Man whose nature and ends are so doubtfull and brought nothing to commend him to the good wills of the People but his bare Title which the common sort usually judge of according as they see it prosper more or lesse Add hereunto that Divine Providence did not so clearly nor suddenly determine his secret purpose concerning this change by any constant successe to either part by means whereof the one half of Edward the Fourths reign was spent while as yet Henry the Sixth was in veiw and the minds of men left unassured neither trusting much to Edward the Fourth nor he to them and after that Henry the Sixth was gone out of the way Edward the Fourth could not readily change his posture used Arguments of force and power and for the most part looked like a Man in Armes with his hand on his sword ready to draw upon the next man that stands in his way Thus are the People partly driven and partly drawn into an Oath of Allegiance unto Edward the Fourth under perill of Attainder and the Parliament assured unto him once more For immediately upon the departure of Edward the Fourth beyond Sea after tenne yeares of his Reign the Parliament never staying for the issue of Providence declared the Throne void of Edward the Fourth and Henry the Sixth King The Judges likewise of the Courts at Westminster determined the same thing as may appear by the Law Reports of those times in Print wherein Re-attachments were often granted by them upon discontinuance of processe by this Demise of Edward the Fourth And thus Henry the Sixth is once more King for six moneths Viz. from October to Aprill at which time the ballance turns Edward the Fourth returns gets into the Throne Henry the Sixth is again Dethroned all things are as they were and all confirmed by Act of Parliament For that Body is ever wise enough to side with power rather then to spend much time upon fruitless Orders and Votes that will peirce no Armour and therefore like the times must needs be subject to fits of distemper at the comming in of every Tide and did build and pull down Enact and disenact turn and return the English Crown from Yorke to Lancaster and back again and in conclusion for some time did do little but undo Nor can they be justly censured herein for Councells of men are not ordained to hinder Divine Providence or over-rule Fate but to foresee and close with occasions in the most advantageous way for the Publique good and when both winds and Currents are uncertain to ride at flote till they can discern the most commodious Haven to Winter in To impute therefore fault unto the Parliament in such Cases for want of Uniformity and Immutability of Councells is somewhat like the Notion that Batchelours conceit of Wives they would have but they do not know what other then an Idea of their own Fancy Now if it be inquired which course prevailed in order either to the Kings Royalty or the Peoples Liberty I shall answer neither of these but the House of Yorke prevailed to hold the Crown and might have advanced the Authority thereof had they not falne out amongst themselves for the spoyle and Edward the Fourth was not altogether disposed thereto The successe that he had in the Feild and his Souldiery made him look big like a King of the greater size but Kings sleep not securely upon such pillowes when the Militia is on hors-back it is as ready to be a Guard upon the King as for him and when it is most sober not so easily governed as a Common-wealth And
Martyrs more particularly set forth and no Act of Parliament positive in the point But the time is now come when nighest reformation that the thing is settled more to the prejudice of reformation then all the endeavoures foregoing like to the darknesse of the night that is at the Superlative degree when nighest break of Day A Statute is now made that indeed quite blotted out the very name of the Statute of Henry the fourth De haeretico comburendo but made compleat that Statute of 5 Rich. 2. and the other of 2 Hen. 5. both which were formerly neither good in Law nor effectuall otherwise then by Power and gave more settlement to the Ordinaries proceedings in such Cases For the Delinquent might be convict before the Ordinary by Witnesses or might be indicted at the Common Law and the indictment certified to the Ordinary as Evidence yet did the Parliament carve them out their work and in expresse words declared That opinions against the Authority and Laws of the Bishop of Rome were not Heresie and by the same reason might have done more of that kind but that was enough to tell all the World that the Parliament could define what was not Heresie although they did not then determine what was Heresie And thus the judgment of the Romane Church is called into question in one of their fundamentals and the Clergy left in a Muse concerning the rule upon which they were to proceed against this Crime The Parliament within six yeares after undertakes though somewhat unhappily to determine and define certain points of Controversie which had some relation to the Worship of God and the publique Peace and declared the contrary to these determinations to be Heresie and the punishment to be Death and Forfeiture and the triall to be before Commissioners by Jury or testimony of two Witnesses or by examination in the Ecclesiasticall Court or inquisition in the Leete or Sessions of the Peace Upon the whole matter therefore the Ordinary had a particular Power to determine Heresie but the Parliament determined such Heresies as were punishable with Death and Forfeiture by enumeration in the six Articles This was the Clergies Primmer wherin they imployed their study as making most for their designe and laid aside thoughts of all other Heresies as drie Notions or old fashions laid aside and not worthy the setting forth to common sale Secondly the Lesson concerning Marriage was no lesse difficult for the Clergy to take out They were put by their former Authority derived from abroad and their ancient rule of the Canon Law with the Kings leave they do what they do and where they doubt they take his Commission so did the Arch-Bishop of Durham in the Case betweene John and Jane Fisher in the Kings Case the determining part is put to the Parliaments Conclusion and for a rule in other Cases some persons are enabled to Marry which formerly were not Viz Masters of the Chancery and Doctors of the Civill Law and some forbidden Marriage as all Preists by the Statute of the six Articles And unto the rest concerning degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity a particular enumeration is appointed to be observed within which Marriage is declared unlawfull all other further off are made lawfull In all which regards the Cognisance of Matrimoniall Causes is theirs onely by leave Thirdly Residency and Nonresidency was a Theame formerly learned from the Canon Law in which as also in the thing it self the Clergy were the onely skilfull men The rule of the Canon Law was strict enough considering the times but it was not steel to the back The Parliament now undertakes the cause and though it gave in some respects more liberty then the Canon yet stood it better to its tackling and kept a stricter hand upon the reines then was formerly used and by giving a generall rule for Dispensation took away all arbitrary Dispensations and Licences which were formerly granted beyond all rule but that of Silver or Gold and made all practises contrary to the rule damageable to the party Thus far concerning the matters in Cognisance now touching the Power of the Keyes English Prelacy having laid aside the pretentions of Rome they put the World to a gaze to see which way they would go In the inocent infancy of Prelacy it was led by the hand by the Presbytery and would doe nothing without them afterwards having gained some degree of heighth and strength they entred themselves to be Chariot Horses to the Roman Sun till they had set all on fire now unharnest it is expected they should returne to their former wits neverthelesse forgetting their ancient yokefellowes the rurall Presbyters they stable with the King use his name sometimes but more often their owne serving him with Supremacy as he them with Authority beyond their Spheare they raise him above Parliament he them above Councills so as they do what they list let the Plebeian Presbyter wil or nill they are the onely numerall Figures and the other but Ciphers to make them Omnibus numeris absoluti Neverthelesse the Canon still remaines the same Episcopi se debent scire Presbyteros non Dominos nec debent in clerum dominari Episcopus se sedente non permittat Presbyterum stare Episcopi noverint se magis consuetudine quam dispensatione Presbyteris majores Kings may make them Lords but as Bishops they hold their former rank assigned by the Canon as Lords the King never gave them the keyes and as Bishops the Canon did not yet as under the joynt Title of Lord Bishops they hold themselves priviledged to get what power they can two things they reach at Viz. The absolute power of Imprisonment and of Excommunication in all causes Ecclesiasticall The common Law would never yeeld this some Statutes in some cases did pretend First as touching Imprisonment the Statute of Henry the fourth concerning Heresie doth lispe some such Power of what force the same Statute is hath been already observed in case of incontinency of Church-men it is more directly given them by a Statute in Henry the sevenths time before which time the Statute it self doth initimate that an Action did lye against them for such imprisonment which Law also was made uselesse by another in Henry the eighths time who gave away to Statutes for the punishing them at the common Law First with Death which continued for some Months and that being found too heavy it was punished by another Law with Forfeiture and Imprisonment And the same King likewise gave way to a law for the like punishment in case of Heresie By that Law that revoked the Statute of Henry the fourth formerly mentioned although till triall the same was bailable And thus continued till the time of Edward the sixth But as touching Excommunication it was to no purpose for them to struggle the common Law would never permit them to hold possession quietly but did examine their Authority
Justice of Queen Elizabeth to grant Commissions of Array Secundum formam Statutorum and do hurt to no man its true her Commissions of Lord Lievtenancy wanted that limitation in words yet they carried the sense for if the Crown were bound by the Law the Lord Leivtenants were much rather but the danger arose after the death of Queen Elizabeth for when King James came to the Crown under colour of pleasing the People and easing them of a burthen he pleased himself more and made the yoke upon the People much more heavy in the conclusion for where no declared Law is there the discretion of them that have the care lying upon them must be the rule thus came the Scottish blood to have pretentions to a greater Prerogative then all their Predecessors had upon this supposal that the Statute of Queen Mary took away all former Lawes of that kinde and then the taking away of the Statute of Q. Mary takes away all declared Law as to that point But more truly it may be inferred that if all Statute-Laws be taken away then the rule of Tenures at the Common Law must remain in force and no other Nevertheless this Statute of Queen Mary though in force for the present was not a generall rule for Armes in all places of this Nation for the Marches of Scotland were a peculier jurisdiction as to this point They stood in more constant need of Armes then any other part of this Nation in regard of their uncertain condition in relation to their Neighbouring jurisdiction and therfore were the Farmes of these parts generally contracted for upon a speciall reservation of Armes for each particular which being now decaied are again reduced by Queen Elizabeth to their ancient condition in the time of Henry the eighth A second thing which may come under this generall consideration of arming is the arming of places by making of Forts and Castles which was not in the immediate determinate will of the Crown to order as it pleased for though they may seem to be meanes of Peace and present safety yet they are Symptomes of Warr and in the best times are looked upon with a jealous eye especially such as are not bordering upon the Coasts Because that Prince that buildeth Castles within the Land is supposed to feare the Neighbourhood This was more especially regarded in the dayes of Phillip and Mary For when that marriage was to be solemnized it was one of the Articles to provide for the safety of such Forts and Castles as then were maintained to the end they might be preserved free from usurpation for the Use Profit Strength and Defence of the Realme onely by the naturall borne of the same And afterwards when occasion was offered for the building of more of that nature a new power is given to King Phillip and Queen Mary to re-edifie or make Forts and Castles which must be executed by Commission to the Legies for ten years and only within the Counties bordering upon Scotland and these perticularly named in the Statute so as the Crown had not power to build in all places nor to any end they pleased nor to place therein or betrust the same to whom it would Nor yet had Edward the sixth that absolute power although not ingaged in forrain interests as his sister Mary was and therefore whereas Castellanes had been made for life by Patent and so the absolute power of the Crown was barred in the free disposal of the same during such time The Parliament gave the King power to remove such as were not liked or thought faithfull to the publique interest although they gave no cause of Seisure by any disloyal act The like also may be observed of the Ships and Ordnance for they also do belong to the State as the Jewels of the Crown and therefore upon the Marriage of Queen Mary they also are by Articles preserved and saved for the use profit strength and defence of the Realm by the natural born of the same Thirdly as touching the ordering of the Souldiery the matter is not much to be insisted upon for little doubt is to be made but that power that raiseth them also ordereth them to the same ends that they are raised and therefore as the sole power of the Crown doth not the one so neither doth it the other but in cases formerly mentioned and yet in no case though the War b be never so absolutely defensive and the Souldiers raised by the Kings own and onely power yet hath not the King absolute Authority and arbitrary power in the ordering of them when they are raised but he must so behave himself to them as to Free-men according to Laws made by themselves in their Representative in Parliament and therefore are particular Laws made to that end against undue levying and discharging of Souldiers and Defaults in paying of them as also against the Souldiers departing from their Service without Licence or wasting their Arms and such as wilfully absent themselves from Musters as also for the preserving the Castles Forts Ships and Munition for War from being with-holden from their due use or from burning or destroying Lastly as touching the charge of the War and pay of the Souldies It s evident that in all offensive Wars the Souldier was paid by the Crown although they might be said in some manner to be in order to the Defence and Safety of the Nation nevertheless where the same was so apparent to the people it was the common course in these Times to have often Parliaments and often Subsidies which were no less in a good measure satisfactory to the Crown for the Charges of the War then Testimonies of the Peoples good Acceptance of the Government of Affairs and so accepted at their hands The particular Records will warrant all this For of all the Wars in these Times that of 88. excepted not any of them were ever managed at the Peoples charge by Contribution but by Retribution So happy were these Times wherein the People looking upon the Crown as under a kinde of infirmity of Childhood or Womanhood did therefore bear a kinde of compassionate regard thereunto without jealousie at Prerogative could condiscend and allow the Crown its full Grains and somewhat more yea more then was meet for some other Princes to desire or the People to give up and yet more happy were they wherein the Crown knew no interest but in dependence upon the People good and so understanding were rightly understood CHAP. XXXIX Of the Peace IT is but little that can be said of Peace in these Times wherein so little freedom was found from forrain pretentions and intestine irregularities or both and yet the People were never more resolved against the former nor secure against the later and had God to Friend in all But most apparently was this observable in the Times of Queen Elizabeth whose Government took up four parts of five of these Times whereof we
the People However unequall it may seem yet both that and other advantages were gained by the House of Lords after the seperation was once made as many of the ancient Statutes by them only made do sufficiently hold forth which although in the generall do concern matters of Judicature wherin the Lords originally had the greatest share yet other things also escaped the Commons Vote which in after ages they recovered into their consideration again And the condition of the People in those times did principally conduce hereunto For untill the Norman times were somwhat settled the former ages had ever been uncertain in the changes between War and Peace which maintained the distance between the Lords and their Tenants and the Authority of the one over the other savouring of the more absolute command in War And after that the Sword was turned into the plough-share the distance is established by compact of Tenure by Service under perill of default although in a different degree for the Service of a Knight as more eminent in War so in Peace it raised the minde to regard of publique Peace but the Service of the plough supporting all is underneath all yet still under the common Condition of free men equally as the Knight Peace now had scarcely exceeded its minority before it brought forth the unhappy birth of Ambition Kings would be more absolute and Lords more Lordly the Commons left far behinde seldom come into mention amongst the publique Acts of State and as uselesse set aside this was the lowest ebb that ever the Commonage of England indured which continued till Ambition brought on contention amongst the great men and thence the Barons Warrs wherein the Commons parting asunder some holding for the King who promised them Liberty from their Lords others siding with the Lords who promisied them Liberty from the King they became so minded of their Liberties that in the conclusion they come off upon better advantage for their Liberties then either King or Lords who all were Loosers before their reckoning was fully made These Wars had by experience made the King sensible of the smart of the Lords great Interest with the People and pointed him to the pin upon which the same did hang to take which away a Designe is contrived to advance the value of the Commoners and to levell the Peerage that they both may draw in one equall yoke the Chariot of Prerogative The power of the Commons in publique Councells was of some efficacy but not much Honour for their meetings were tumultuary time brought forth a cure hereof the flowers of the People are by Election sent to the Representative and so the Lords are matched if not over-matched the People lesse admiring the Lords and more regarding themselves This was but a dazle an eclips ensues for Kings having duely eyed the Nature of Tenures between the Lords and Commons look upon it as an out-work or block-house in their way of approach Their next endeavour is therefore to gain the Knighthood of England within the compass of their own Fee and so by priority to have their Service as often as need should require by a trick in Law as well for their own safety in time of War as for their benefit in time of Peace This was a work of a continuing Nature and commended to Successors to accomplish by degrees that the whole Knighthood of England is become no more the Lords till Kings be first served and thus the power of the People is wholly devolved into the Kings Command and the Lords must now stand alone having no other foundation then the affections of the People gained by beneficense of Neighbourhood and ordinary society which commonly ingratiates the inferiour rank of men to those of higher degree especially such of them as affect to be popular Henry the seventh found out this sore and taught his Successors the way to avoid that occasion of jealousy by calling up such considerable men to attend the Court without other wage but fruitlesse hopes or under colour of Honour to be had by Kings from the presence of such great men in their great Traines or of other Service of speciall note to be done onely by men of so high accomplishment And by this meanes Lordship once bringing therewith both Authority and Power unto Kings before Kings grew jealous of their greatness in these later dayes is become a meer jelly and neither able to serve the Interest of Kings if the People should bestir themselves nor their own any longer henceforth the Commons of England are no mean Persons and their representative of such concernment as if Kings will have them to observe him he must serve them with their Liberties and Lawes and every one the publique good of the People No mans work is beneath no mans above it the best Honour of the Kings work is to be Nobilis servitus as Antigonus said to his Son or in plain English supreame Service above all and to the whole I now conclude as I found this Nation a Common-Wealth so I leave it and so may it be for ever and so will it be if we may attain the happinesse of our Fore-Fathers the ancient Saxons Quilibet contentus sorte propria A Table of the Principall Matters conteined in this Book A A Betting of Felony made Felony 299 Administration granted to the next of the Kindred 51 Admirals power from the Parliament 41. formerly under many brought into one 42. once gained jurisdiction to the high water-mark 44. and his Power regulated by Law ibid. over Sea-men Ports and Ships 44 Allegiance according to Law 18. vide Supremacy the nature thereof in general 79. its not natural 79 89. not absolute or indefinite 82. not to the King in his natural capacity 86. it obligeth not the People to serve in forrain War 10● it is due to the person of the King for the time being 246 279. what it is in time of War and relation thereunto 247. Henry the seventh and Henry the eighth indeavoured to advance it in relation to the Crown but effected it not 204. Appeals in cases Ecclesiastical restrained from Rome and given in the Kings case to the Convocation and in the cases of the People the Archbishop afterwards to the Delegates and were never setled in the Crown 227 233. vide Archbishop Archbishop hath the lawfull power of the Pope in Appeals and Dispensations Licenses and Faculties 233. the Archbishop of York looseth his jurisdiction over the Scottish Bishops 193 Arrays Commission of Array 178 vide War Assent of the King to Acts of Parliament serveth onely to the execution of the Law and not to the making thereof 21 Association of the People for the common safety before the Statute inabling the same 298 B. BAstardy not to be determined by the Ordinary before Summons to the Pretendors of Title to be heard 156 Bench the Kings Bench at Westminster abated in power by the Commissions of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery
92 165 Benevolence first used by Edward the fourth 184. taken away by Richard the third 185. taken up again by Henry the seventh 196 Bishops not impeachable before the civil Magistrate 49. their Temporalties to be neither seised nor wasted in the vacancy 50. vide Ordinary Buggery made Felony 299 C. CAnons their power anciently in debate 61. such as are not according to the Law are taken away 236 Castles and Gaols restored to the County 113. vide Forts and Fortifications Chancery once an Office afterwards a Court 35. the power grows by Act of Parliament 36 162. the manner of the Proceedings 38. Keeper of the great Seal increaseth in power 162 Chancellor elected by the Parliament 39 Cheshire made a Principality 11 Children carried into Cloisters remedied 163 Clergy priviledged from Arrest 52. discharged of purveyance and free quarter 52. their Temporalties in question 63. the Commons love not their persons 147. their first declining from Rome in the matter of Provisors 150. they gain free process in matters Ecclesiastical 192. their defection from Rome and submission to the Crown 206 Clergy upon Triall but once allowed 257. in some cases disallowed 250 298 Commissioners Ecclsiastical 288. High Commission ibid. Conjuration vide Witchcraft Conservators of the Truce 162 Constables Court vid. Marshals Court Convocation established by Parliament 151. it then undertook great matters but much more after the Clergies forsaking the Pope 229 Councels the Privy Councel ordered by Parliament 21 33 141. of use for suddain motions 27. their Oath 29. and jurisdiction 31. and power 142 Magnum Concilium or the grand Councel of Lords 28 Crown intitled not by Discent 128 277. but intailed 128. vide 188. Womanhood 270. Coverture 273 Custos Regni a formality of State under the Parliaments Order 134. many times conferred upon Children 137. and upon a Woman 252 D. DElegates though named by the King yet by Authority of the Parliament 227 Defender of the Faith 213 Dispensations Licenses and Faculties never in the Crown but by the Parliament given to the Archbishop under Limitations 234 238 Duels ordered by the Martiall as Subservient to the Common Law 108 E. EDward the third his Reign 3. his Title upon Entry by Election ibid. Edward the fourth his Reign though had Title of Inheritance yet entred by Election 181 Edward the fifth approached the Crown by Inheritance but never put it on 184 Edward the sixth his Reign his Title and Possession did meet though he was a Childe and his Sister Mary grown in age 259 Ecclesiastical power vide Prelacy and Prelates Elizabeth Queen her Reign 264. her Title by Election 278 Englishire taken away 95 Episcopacy vide Prelates and Prelacy Errors vide Heresie Exchange ordered by the statute 75 Excommunication 271. the Writ de excommunicato capiendo ordered 289. vide Parliament exportation 72 F. FAlse News punished 112 Felony by riding in armed Troops 95 113 172 257 299 First-fruits regulated 153. taken away from Rome 222 Forcible Entries 173 Forts Fortificacations and Castles ordered by Parliament 252 295 G. GAol-delivery by the Judges of the Benches 92 165. vide Judges Gaols regulated 113 254 Guard for the Kings Person brought in by Henry the seventh 195 Gipsies made Felons 299 H. HEnry the fourth his Reign doubtfull in his Title but rested upon Election chosen by Parliament sitting when there was no King 116 c. Henry the fifth his Reign his Title by an Intail by the Parliament 119 c. Henry the sixth his Reign his Title by the Intail last mentioned though a Childe he is admitted to the Crown 123 c. Henry the seventh first settled a constant Guard his sixfold Right to the Crown and his gaining Prerogative in the Person and Estates of the People ibid. 194 c. Henry the eighth his natural Endowments 199 c. his power in the matters Ecclesiastical 206 c. in Tempoporals 213 c. H. HEresie and Error in Doctrine under the cognisance of the Civil Magistrate 62 156. not punishable by death by Law till Henry the eighths time 216 236. the Writ De Heretico comburendo hath no legal ground in any of those former Times 63 158 161 216 236. Honors vide Parliament Hospitals visited by the Prelacy 154 I. IMportation 70 Judges of Assize 165 244 Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical not originally in the Prelacy nor absolutely 235 Justices of the Peace their residency and quality their number various their work also 109 171. one Justice 112. and the settling of their Sessions ibid. their power to take Bail 254 K. KIngs vide Parliament Allegiance Supremacy Militia L. LAbourers their Work and Wages 70. ordered by the Justices of the Peace 110 Lancaster the Princes of that House freinds to the Clergy in policy 146 Laws made by the Successors of Henry the eighth during their minority annulled 217. Ecclesiastical Laws vide Parliament Leiges by Birth though not born within the Allegiance of England 97 Liveries and Tokens inhibited to the Lords 112 177. and limited in the Kings person 177. means of jealousie between the King and his People 244 Libels in the Spiritual Court to be delivered in Copies upon demand 154 Licenses vide Dispensations Lords their power and jurisdiction in the Parliament 23. in Councel 29 242 Lunacy no impediment in Triall of Treason 258 M. MAry Queen her Reign 261. her Title by Election 278. she prejudiced her Supremacy by Marriage 275 Marque and Reprisal 279 Martials Court 107 Matrimonial Causes after the Reformation by Henry the eighth in the Cognisance of the Clergie by leave 238 Militia 98 175 245 290 vide War Mint 74 142. vide Parliament Monastries dissolved 220 maintained by Henry the fourth 147 Money out of England to Rome stopped 54 N. NAvy Royall as Forts for the publique safety maintained at the publique charge 253 Nisi prius 167 Non-residency 238 Noble Ladies Triall 174 O. OYer Terminer 92 165 Ordinary not to be questioned in the Civil Courts for things under Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 47 49. hath Cognisances of Vsury 47. of Avoidances Bigamy and Bastardy 48. grant Administration 51. visit Hospitals and call Executors to account 154. hath power to fine and imprison 157 239. to keep Courts but the Authority doubtfull 235. have Cognisance of the Heresie 156 236. Matrimony Non-residency 236. In Queen Elizabeths time their jurisdiction left in doubt 286 c. Oath ex Officio first brought in by the Church-men in matters Ecclesiastical 157. afterwards by the Parliament into the Star-chamber in cases criminal 244 P. PArdon of Crimes not absolutely in the King 19 Parliament without the King consisting of three States 117. without the Clergie 58 Parliaments power in ordering of the Crown 127 228 277 In ordering the Kings Person by Protectors 14. vide Protector In ordering their children In ordering their Family 15 129 In ordering their Revenues 16 129 115 In ordering their Councel 141 In the Militia vide Militia and War In conferring places of Honor and Trust