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A57919 Historical collections of private passages of state Weighty matters in law. Remarkable proceedings in five Parliaments. Beginning the sixteenth year of King James, anno 1618. And ending the fifth year of King Charls, anno 1629. Digested in order of time, and now published by John Rushworth of Lincolns-Inn, Esq; Rushworth, John, 1612?-1690. 1659 (1659) Wing R2316A; ESTC R219757 913,878 804

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proceeded and said You have heard his Charge made up by his own words and withall I doubt not but you seem to hear the voice of that wicked one Quid dabitis what will you give me and I will betray this State Kingdom and Commonwealth But there are two Observations I might adde a third which is like unto a threefold Cord which cannot be easily broken will draw the Charge more violently upon him The first is of the Time when this Doctrine of destruction was set forth it was Preached in the heart of the Loan and it was Printed in the beginning of that Term which ended in a Remittitur So that you might guess there might be a double Plot by the Law and Conscience to set on fire the frame and estate of this Commonwealth And one of these intailed Foxes was Mr. Manwaring Another note may be taken of the time that is the unseasonableness of it for this Doctrine of the Loan in case of necessity was the year after an assent in Parliament to four Subsidies and three Fifteens which might serve for a sufficient stopple for the Doctors mouth to keep in his Doctrine of Necessity A second observation may be of the Means by which he seeks to destroy this Commonwealth his means are Divinity yea by his Divinity he would destroy both King and Kingdom The King for there can be no greater mischief to a Prince then to put the opinion of Deity into his ears for if from his ears ti should have passed to his heart it had been mortal You know how Herod perished Now this man gives a participation of Divine Omnipotence to Kings and though a part may seem to qualifie yet all doth seem again to fill up that qualification and very dangerously if we remember that God saith of himself I am a jealous God He goes about to destroy the Kingdom and Commonwealth by his Divinity but do we finde in Scripture such a destroying Divinity Surely I finde there that God is a God of order and not of confusion and that the Son of God came to save and not to destroy By which it seems he hath not his Divinity from God nor from the Son of God And that we may be sure he went to Hell for Divinity he names sundry Jesuits and Fryers with whom he consulted and traded for his Divinity But not to belye Hell it self the Jesuits are honester then he for if he had not brought more hell unto them then he found with them he had not found this Divinity in them which he hath brought forth yea in his quotations he hath used those shifts and falshoods for which Boyes are to be whipt in Schools and yet by them he thinks to carry the Cause of a Kingdom But for a conclusion to give the true Character of this man whom I never saw I will shew it you by one whom I know to be contrary to him Samuel we know all to be a true Prophet now we read of Samuel that he writ the Law of the Kingdom in a Book and laid it up before the Lord. And this he did as one of Mr. Manwarings own Authors affirms that the King may know what to command and the People what to obey But Mr. Manwaring finding the Law of this Kingdom written in Books tears it in pieces and that in the presence of the Lord in a Pulpit that the King may not know what to command nor the People what to obey Thus Mr. Manwaring being contrary to a true Prophet must needs be a false one and the Judgement of a false Prophet belongs to him I have shewed you an evil Tree that bringeth forth evil fruit and now it rests with you to determine whether the following sentence shall follow Cut it down and cast it into the fire ABout this time the Mayor of Plimouth certified to the Burgesses serving for that Town in Parliament the Examination of Le Brun a Frenchman Captain of the Mary of Rotchel taken the 16 of May 1628. viz. The Examinate saith That on Sunday being the 17 of April last past he departed from Plimouth Harbor in company with the English Fleet whereof the Earl of Denbigh is General and on the first day of May then following the said Fleet arrived and came at Anchor at Charleboy in the Rode of Rotchel about four of the Clock in the afternoon where at the said arrival they found twenty sail of the King of France his Ships whereof six were Ships of about 300 Tuns and the rest were small Sh●ps and forthwith with the said French Ships put themselves to sail and went in nearer to the fortifications where they also anchored within two Canon shot of the English Fleet and saith That one of his Majesties Ships shot off one piece of Ordinance and no more and that the said French Ships as they returned from the English Fleet shot off oftentimes to them and that the same Fleet remained there until the eighth day of the said moneth of May in which time there was a Wherry sent from the Fleet into Rotchel wherein there were two English and one Frenchman to inquire the state of the said Town and that if they were there safe arrived they should make a fire upon one of the Towers of the Town to give notice thereof which accordingly they did and also to make so many fires more on the Walls of the said Town as they have moneths victuals there but they made not any answer thereof whence it was collected that they had but a small quantity of victuals and said That the said English as he hath heard promised to sink the said French Ships when the waters did increase and the wind came at West-north-west it being then Neap-tides and about two days after the waters did increase and the winds came accordingly and being then intreated to fight with them yet did not but came away without fighting or relieving the Town and saith That on the eighth day of May the said English Fleet weighed Anchor and set sail to depart and four of the French great Ships weighed Anchor also and came after them and shot divers times at the said Fleet and the said Fleet shot at them again and the said Examinate came in company with the said Fleet as far as Bell Isle where he departed from them on the tenth of this instant and lastly saith That during all the time the English Fleet was there the Town of Rotchel shot to the King of France his Ships and Fort but chiefly upon the arrival of the said Fleet there This Examination being communicated to the Councel Table it procured this ensuing Letter from the Privy Councel to the Duke dated the 30 of May 1628. viz. WHereas it is his Majesties pleasure that the Earl of Denbigh shall return back to relieve the Town of Rotchel with the Fleet under his Charge We do therefore pray your Grace to signifie this his Majesties pleasure unto the said Earl and to give him
and Doctor Stuart to inform him of the nature of this cause and the scandal that might arise thereupon and to certifie what the same may amount unto whither to an irregularity or otherwise and what means may be found for redress However this consultation was managed the Archbishop was not deprived but a Plant was growing up that over-topped him whilst he lived and after his decease obtained the Primacy Doctor Laud who was first chosen to the Bishoprick of St. Davids by the Mediation of the Lord Keeper Williams and was consecrated by the Bishops of London Worcester Chichester Ely Landaff and Oxon the Archbishop in the mean time was not thought irregular for the Casual Homicide This Bishop Doctor Laud was looked upon in those times as an Arminian and a fierce opposer of Puritans and while he lived in Oxford suspected to incline to Popish Tenents as may appear by his Letter of Complaint sent to his Patron Doctor Neal then Bishop of Lincoln against a Sermon preached by Robert Abbot Doctor of the Chair in Oxford in which Letter he inclosed this amongst other Passages of the Doctors Sermon viz. That men under pretence of Truth and Preaching against the Puritans strike at the heart and root of Faith and Religion now established among us That this Preaching against the Puritans was but the practice of Parsons and Campions counsel when they came into England to seduce yong Students And when many of them were afraid to lose their places if they should professedly be thus the counsel they then gave them was That they should speak freely against the Puritans and that should suffice And they cannot intend that they are accounted Papists because they speak against the Puritans But because they indeed are Papists they speak nothing against them If they do at any time speak against the Papists they do beat a little upon the Bush and that softly too for fear of troubling or disquieting the Birds that are in it I Came time enough saith Mr. Laud to be at the rehearsal of this Sermon upon much perswasion where I was fain to sit patiently and hear my self abused almost an hour together being pointed at as I sate For this present abuse I would have taken no notice of it but that the whole University apply it to me and my own Friends tell me I shall sink my credit if I answer not Dr. Abbot in his own Nevertheless in a business of this kinde I will not be swayed from a patient course onely I desire your Lordship to vouchsafe me some direction what to do c. The Arminian Sect opposed by King Iames and by his special concurrence lately broken in the Netherlands by the beheading of Barnevalt the cheif of them began in his latter times to spring up in England and was countenanced by the said Prelate who had newly obtained the opinion and favor of the Marquess of Buckingham The Kings main design then not suffering the suppressing of that way which in common judgment was inclined to Popery or he thought to recover all his losses and to salve all misfortunes by the Spanish Match And for this cause he released multitudes of Priests and Popish Recusants then imprisoned which the Spaniards professed to be a great demonstration of the Kings sincere affection to confirm the correspondence and amity between the Crowns And that this enlargement might be the more expedite and less chargeable the King gave directions to the Lord Keeper Williams Bishop of Lincoln THat whereas he had formerly given order for the release of Recusants by removing them from the several Goals of this Kingdom to be bailed before the Justices of his Bench And finding that this course will be troublesome to the poorer sort of them he doth now require that Writs be directed to the Justices of Assizes enabling and requiring them to enlarge such Recusants as they shall finde in their several Goals upon such conditions and securities as were required by the Judges of his Bench. Accordingly the Writs were issued forth under the Great Seal and the Lord Keeper wrote to the Judges on this manner THat the King having upon deep Reasons of State and in expectation of the like correspondence from Forein Princes to the Professors of our Religion resolved to grant some Grace to the imprisoned Papists had commanded him to pass some Writs under the Broad Seal for that purpose Wherefore it is his Majesties pleasure that they make no niceness or difficulty to extend his Princely favor to all such as they shall finde prisoners in the Gaols of their Circuits for any Church Recusancy or refusing the Oath of Supremacy or dispersing of Popish Books or any other point of Recusancy that shall concern Religion onely and not matters of State But a general offence was taken at this Indulgence to Papists and the Lord Keepers Letter to the Judges which how the Keeper endevored to renounce may be seen in his Letter written to a Person of Honor. AS the Sun in the Firmament appears unto us no bigger then a Platter and the Stars are but as so many Nails in the Pummel of a Saddle because of the enlargement and disproportion between our eye and the object So is there such an unmeasurable distance between the deep resolution of a Prince and the shallow apprehensions of common and ordinary people That as they will ever be judging and censuring so they must needs be obnoxious to error and mistaking The King is now a most Zealous Intercessor for some case and refreshment to all the Protestants in Europe which were unreasonable if he did now execute the rigor of his Laws against the Roman Catholicks Our Viperous Countrymen the English Iesuites in France had many moneths before this favor granted invited the French King by writing a malicious Book to put all the Statutes in execution against the Protestants in those parts which were Enacted in England against the Papists and as they falsly informed severely executed Besides these Papists are no otherwise out of prison then with their shackles about their heels sufficient Sureties and good Recognizances to present themselves at the next Assizes and their own demeanor and the success of his Majesties Negotiations must determine whether they shall continue in this Grace But to conclude from the favor done to the English Papists that the King savors the Romish Religion is a composition of Folly and Malice little deserved by a gratious Prince who by Word Writing Exercise of Religion and Acts of Parliament hath demonstrated himself so resolved a Protestant As for his own Letter to the Iudges he said it recited onely four kindes of Recusancy capable of the Kings clemency not so much to include them as to exclude many other Crimes bearing the name of Recusancy as using the Function of a Romish Priest seducing the Kings Leige-people from the established Religion aspersing the King Church or State or the present Government All which Offences being
of Eloquence though never so excellent all this hath somewhat servile and holding of the Subject But your Majesties manner of Speech is indeed Prince-like flowing as from a Fountain and yet streaming and branching it self into Natures order full of Facicility and Felicity Imitating none and inimitable by any c. And there seemeth to be no little contention between the excellency of your Majesties gifts of Nature and the universality and perfection of your Learning for I am well assured of this that what I shall say is no amplification at all but a positive and measured truth which is That there hath not been since Christs time any King or Temporal Monarch which hath been so learned in all Literature and Erudition Divine and Humane For let a man seriously and diligently revolve and peruse the Succession of the Emperors of Rome of which Caesar the Dictator who lived some years before Christ and Marcus Antonius were the best learned and so descend to the Emperors of Graecia or of the West and then to the Lines of France Spain England Scotland and the rest and he shall finde this Judgment truly made For it seemeth much in a King if by the compendious extractions of other Mens Wits and Learning he can take hold of any superficial Ornaments and shews of Learning or if he countenance or prefer Learning and Learned Men. But to drink indeed of the true Fountain of Learning nay to have such a Fountain of Learning in himself in a King and in a King born is almost a miracle and the more because there is met in your Majesty a rare conjunction as well of Divine and Sacred Literature as of Prophane and Humane So as your Majesty stands invested of that Triplicity which in great veneration was ascribed to the Antient Hermes The Power and Fortune of a King the Knowledge and Illumination of a Priest and the Learning and Universality of a Philosopher This Propriety inherent and individual Attribute in your Majesty deserveth to be expressed not onely in the Fame and Admiration of the present time nor in the History or Tradition of the Ages succeeding but also in some solid Work fixed Memorial and Immortal Monument bearing a Character or Signature both of the Power of a King and the Difference and Perfection of such a King Memoria Iusti cum laudibus impiorum nomen putrescit He that hath lately writ the History of Great Britain thus expresseth himself concerning King Iames. HE was a King in understanding and was content to have his Subjects ignorant in many things as in Curing the Kings Evil which he knew a device to ingrandize the vertue of Kings when Miracles were in fashion but he let the World believe it though he smiled at it in his own Reason finding the strength of imagination a more powerful agent in the Cure then the Plaisters his Surgeons prescribed for the Sore It was a hard question whither his Wisdom and Knowledge exceeded his Choler and Fear certainly the last couple drew him with most violence because they were not acquisitious but natural if he had not had that allay his high towering and mastering Reason had been of a rare and sublimed excellency but these Earthly dregs kept it down making his Passions extend him as far as Prophaneness that I may not say Blasphemy and Policy superintendent of all his Actions which will not last long like the violence of that humor for it often makes those that know well to do ill and not be able to prevent it He had pure Notions in Conception but could bring few of them into action though they tended to his own preservation for this was one of his Apothegms which he made no timely use of Let that Prince that would beware of Conspiracies be rather jealous of such whom his extraordinary favors have advanced then of those whom his displeasure hath discontented These want means to execute their pleasures but they have means at pleasure to execute their desires Ambition to rule is more vehement then Malice to revenge Though the last part of this Aphorism he was thought to practise too soon where there were no causes for prevention and neglect too late when time was full ripe to produce the Effect Some paralleld him to Tiberius for Dissimulation yet Peace was maintained by him as in the time of Augustus and Peace begot Plenty and Plenty begot Ease and Wantonness and Ease and Wantonness begot Poetry and Poetry swelled to that bulk in his time that it begot strange monstrons Satyrs against the Kings own person that hanted both Court and Countrey which expressed would be too bitter to leave a sweet perfume behinde him And though bitter ingredients are good to imbalm and preserve dead Bodies yet these were such as might endanger to kill a living Name if Malice be not brought in with an Antidote And the Tongues at those times more fluent then my Pen made every little miscarriage being notable to discover their true operations like small Seeds hid in Earthy darkness grow up and spred into such exuberant Branches that evil report did often pearch upon them So dangerous it is for Princes by a remiss comportment to give growth to the least Error for it often proves as fruitful as Malice can make it But alass good King Here was an end of his Earthly Empire and little did he imagine that the last period to Great Britains Monarchy should not much exceed the time of his own Reign and in the true extent come short of it There is a Book said to be writ by a Knight of Kent and intituled King James Court which renders a further Character of that King we forbear to particularize any thing thereof no name being put to the Book but leave the Reader to his freedom The Bishop of Lincoln then Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England in his Sermon at King Iames Funeral speaking of Solomon and King Iames his Text being 1 Kings 11.41 42 43. hath these Expressions I Dare presume to say you never read in your lives of two Kings more fully parallel'd amongst themselves and better distinguished from all other Kings besides themselves King Solomon is said to be Unigenitus coram Matre sua the onely Son of his Mother Prov. 4.3 So was King Iames. Solomon was of Complexion white and ruddy Cant. 5.10 So was King Iames. Solomon was an Infant-King puer parvulus a little Childe 1 Chron. 22.5 So was King Iames a King at the Age of Thirteen Moneths Solomon began his Reign in the life of his Predecessor 1 Kings 1.32 So by the force and compulsion of that State did our late Soveraign King Iames. Solomon was twice crowned and anointed a King 1 Chro. 29.22 So was King Iames. Solomons Minority was rough through the quarrels of the former Soveraign so was that of King Iames. Solomon was learned above all the Princes of the East 1 Kings 4.30 So was King Iames above all Princes in the
man that would not depend upon him among other men had me in his eye for not stooping unto him so as to become his Vassal I that had learned a Lesson which I constantly hold To be no mans servant but the Kings for mine Old Royal Master which is with God and mine own Reason did teach me so went on mine own ways although I could not but observe That so many as walked in that path did suffer for it upon all occasions and so did I nothing wherein I moved my Master taking place which finding so clearly as if the Duke had set some ill character upon me I had no way but to rest in patience leaving all to God and looking to my self as warily as I might But this did not serve the turn his undertakings were so extraordinary That every one that was not with him was presently against him and if a hard opinion were once entertained there was no place left for satisfaction or reconciliation What befel the Earl of Arundel and Sir Randal Crew and divers others I need not to report and no man can make doubt but he blew the Coals For my Self there is a Gentleman called Sir H. S. who gave the first light what should befal me This Knight being of more livelihood then wisdom had married the Lady D. Sister to the now Earl of E. and had so treated her that both for safeguard of her Honor blemished by him scandalously and for her Alimony or maintenance being glad to get from him she was inforced to endure a Suit in the High Commission Court So to strengthen his party he was made known to the Duke and by means of a Dependant on his Grace he got a Letter from the King That the Commissioners should proceed no further in hearing of that Cause by reason that it being a difference between a Gentleman and his Wife the Kings Majesty would hear it himself The Solicitor for the Lady finding that the course of Justice was stopped did so earnestly by Petition move the King that by another Letter there was a relaxation of the former restraint and the Commissioners Ecclesiastical went on But now in the new proceeding finding himself by Justice like enough to be pinched he did publickly in the Court refuse to speak by any Councel but would plead his cause himself wherein he did bear the whole business so disorderly tumultuously and unrespectively that after divers reproofs I was enforced for the Honor of the Court and Reputation of the High Commission to tell him openly That if he did not carry himself in a better fashion I would commit him to Prison This so troubled the yong Gallant that within few days after being at Dinner or Supper where some wished me well he bolted it out That as for the Archbishop the Duke had a purpose to turn him out of his place and that he did but wait the occasion to effect it Which being brought unto me constantly by more ways then one I was now in expectation what must be the issue of this great mans indignation which fell out to be as followeth There was one Sibthorpe who not being so much as a Batchellor of Arts as it hath been credibly reported unto me by means of Doctor Peirce Dean of Peterborough being Vice-Chancellor of Oxford did get to be conferred upon him the Title of a Doctor This man is Vicar of Brackley in Northamptonshire and hath another Benefice not far from it in Buckinghamshire But the lustre of his Honor did arise from being the Son-in-law of Sir Iohn Lamb Chancellor of Peterborough whose Daughter he married and was put into the Commission of Peace When the Lent Assizes were in February last at Northampton the man that Preached before the Judges there was this worthy Doctor where magnifying the Authority of Kings which is so strong in the Scripture that it needs no flattery any ways to extol it he let fall divers Speeches which were distasteful to the Auditors and namely That they had power to put Poll-Money upon their Subjects heads when against those challenges men did frequently mourn He being a man of a low Fortune conceived that the putting his Sermon in Print might gain favor at Court and raise his Fortune higher on he goeth with the Transcribing of his Sermon and got a Bishop or two to prefer this great Service to the Duke and it being brought unto the Duke it cometh in his head or was suggested unto him by some malicious body that thereby the Archbishop might be put to some remarkable strait For if the King should send the Sermon unto him and command him to allow it to the Press one of these two things would follow That either he should Authorize it and so all men that were indifferent should discover him for a base and unworthy Beast or he should refuse it and so should fall into the Kings indignation who might pursue it at his pleasure as against a man that was contrary to his service Out of this Fountain flowed all the Water that afterwards so wet In rehearsing whereof I must set down divers particulars which some man may wonder how they should be discovered unto me But let it suffice once for all that in the word of an honest man and of a Bishop I recount nothing but whereof I have good warrant God himself working means The matters were revealed unto me although it be not convenient that in this Paper I name the manner how they came unto me least such as did by well-doing further me should receive blame for their labor Well! resolved it is That I must be put to it and that with speed and therefore Mr. William Murrey Nephew as I think unto Mr. Thomas Murrey sometimes Tutor unto Prince Charls and the yong man now of the Kings Bed-chamber is sent unto me with the Written Sermon of whom I must say That albeit he did the King his Masters business yet he did use himself temperately and civilly unto me For avoiding of inquit and inquam as Tully saith I said this and he said that I will make it by way of Dialogue not setting down every days conference exactly by it self but mentioning all things of importance in the whole yet distinguishing of times where for the truth of the Relation it cannot be avoided Murrey My Lord I am sent unto you by the King to let you know that his pleasure is That whereas there is brought unto him a Sermon to be Printed you should allow this Sermon to the Press Archb. I was never he that authorised Books to be Printed for it is the work of my Chaplains to read over other mens writings and what is fit to let it go what is unfit to expunge it Murrey But the King will have you your self to do this because he is minded that no Books shall be allowed but by you and the Bishop of London And my Lord of London authorised one the other day Cousens
and written divers Books and know very well what appertaineth to the Schools This is a new kinde of Learning unto me I have formerly found fault that the Author of this Sermon quoteth not the places whereupon he grounds his Doctrine and when I have oft called for them it is replied unto me that I must take them upon the credit of the Writer which I dare not do for I have searched but one place which he quoted in general but sets down neither the words nor the Treatise nor the Chapter and I finde nothing to the purpose for which it is quoted and therefore I have reason to suspect all the rest I pray you therefore in the humblest manner to commend my service to the King my Master and let him know that unless I may have all the Quotations set down that I may examine them and may have that writing wherein I am so ill used I cannot allow the Book Before I go further it shall not be amiss to touch some particulars of that which I sent in writing to the King The first was Page 2. Those words deserve to be well weighed And whereas the Prince pleads not the Power of Prerogative To this Mr. Murrey said The King doth not plead it But my Reply was By what then doth he coerce those Refractories for I have not heard of any Law whereby they are imprisoned and therefore I must take it to be by the Kings Prerogative To the second Page 8. The Kings duty is first to direct and make Laws There is no Law made till the King assent unto it but if it be put simply to make Laws it will cause much startling at it To this I remember not any material thing answered neither to the third Page 10. If nothing may excuse from active obedience but what is against the Law of God or of Nature or impossible How doth this agree with the first Fundamental Position Page 5. That all Subjects are bound to all their Princes according to the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom wherein they live This is a fourth Case of Exception And here before I go to the rest the Doctor did truly hit upon a good point in looking to the Laws and Customs if he could have kept him to it for in my memory and in the remembrance of many Lords and others that now live Doctor Haresenet the then Bishop of Chichester and now of Norwich in Parliament time Preached a Sermon at Whitehal which was afterward burned upon the Text Give unto Caesar the things that be Caesars Wherein he insisted That Goods and Money were Caesars and therefore they were not to be denied unto him At this time when the whole Parliament took main offence thereat King Iames was constrained to call the Lords and Commons into the Banqueting-house at Whitehal and there his Majesty calmed all by saying The Bishop onely failed in this when he said the Goods were Caesars he did not adde They were his according to the Laws and Customs of the Countrey wherein they did live So moderate was our Caesar then as I my self saw and heard being then an eye and ear witness for I was then Bishop of London To the fourth The Poll-Money in St. Matthew was imposed by the Emperor as a Conqueror over the Iews and the execution of it in England although it was by a Law produced a terrible effect in King Richard the Second's time when onely it was used for ought that appeareth Here the Bishop in the Paper excepted divers things as That sometimes among us by Act of Parliament strangers are appointed to pay by the Poll which agreeth not with the Case and that it was not well to bring examples out of weak times whereas we live in better but that it was a marvelous fault the blame was not laid upon the Rebels of that Age. Those are such poor things that they are not worth the answering But my Objection in truth prevailed so far that in the Printed Book it was qualified thus Poll-Money other persons and upon some occasions where obiter I may observe That my refusing to sign the Sermon is not to be judged by the Printed Book for many things are altred in one which were in the other To the fifth Page 12. It is in the bottome view the Reign of Henry the Third whether it be fit to give such allowance to the Book being surreptiously put out To this it was said That being a good passage out of a blame-worthy Book there was no harm in it But before the Question of Sibthorps Treatise the Bishop of Bathe himself being with me found much fault with that Treatise as being put out for a scandalous Parallel of those times To the sixth in the same Page Let the largeness of those words be well considered Yea all Antiquity to be absolutely for absolute Obedience to Princes in all Civil or Temporal things For such Cases as Naboths Vineyard may fall within this Here the Bishop was as a man in a rage and said That it was an odious comparison for it must suppose that there must be an Ahab and there must be a Iezabel and I cannot tell what But I am sure my Exception standeth true and reviling and railing doth not satisfie my Argument All Antiquity taketh the Scripture into it and if I had allowed that proportion for good I had been justly beaten with my own Rod. If the King the next day had commanded me to send him all the Money and Goods I had I must by mine own rule have obeyed him and if he had commanded the like to all the Clergy-men in England by Doctor Sibthorps proportion and my Lord of Canterburies allowing of the same they must have sent in all and left their Wives and Children in a miserable case Yea the words extend so far and are so absolutely delivered That by this Divinity if the King should send to the City of London and the Inhabitants thereof commanding them to give unto him all the wealth which they have they were bound to do it I know our King is so gratious that he will attempt no such matter but if he do it not the defect is not in these flattering Divines who if they were called to question for such Doctrine they would scarce be able to abide it There is a Meum and a Tuum in Christian Commonwealths and according to Laws and Customs Princes may dispose of it that saying being true Ad Reges potestas omnium pertinet ad singulos proprietas To the seventh Page 14. Pius Quintus was dead before the year One thousand five hundred and eighty They make no Reply but mend it in the Printed Book changing it into Gregory the Thirteenth To the last in the same Page weigh it well How this Loan may be called a Tribute and when it is said We are promised shall not be immoderately imposed How that agreeth with his Majesties Commission and Proclamation which are quoted in the Margent
of England And that the arduous and urgent affairs concerning the King State and Defence of the Realm and of the Church of England and the maintenance and making of Laws and redress of mischiefs and grievances which daily happen within this Realm are proper subjects and matter of Councel and Debate in Parliament And that in the handling and procéeding of those businesses every Member of the House of Parliament hath and of right ought to have freedom of spéech to propound treat reason and bring to conclusion the same And that the Commons in Parliament have like liberty and fréedom to treat of these matters in such order as in their judgments shall seem fittest And that every Member of the said House hath like freedom from all Impeachment Imprisonment and molestation other then by Censure of the House it self for or concerning any speaking reasoning or declaring of any matter or matters touching the Parliament or Parliament-business And that if any of the said Members be complained of and questioned for any thing done or said in Parliament the same is to be shewed to the King by the advice and assent of all the Commons assembled in Parliament before the King gave credence to any private information But how the King was moved by the Protestation of the House of Commons will appear by this Memorial Whitehall Decemb. 30. 1621. HIs most Excellent Majesty coming this day to the Council the Prince his Highness and all the Lords and others of His Majesties Privy Council sitting about him and all the Iudges then in London which were six in number there attending upon His Majesty the Clerk of the Commons House of Parliament was called for and commanded to produce his journal-Iournal-book wherein was noted and Entries made of most passages that were in the Commons House of Parliament and amongst other things there was written down the form of a Protestation concerning sundry Liberties Priviledges and Franchises of Parliament with which form of Protestation His Majesty was justly offended Nevertheless His Majesty in a most gracious manner there expressed That he never meant to deny that House of Commons any lawful Priviledges that ever they had enjoyed but whatsoever Priviledges or Liberties they had by any Law or Statute the same should be inviolably preserved unto them and whatsoever Priviledges they enjoyed by Custom or uncontrolled and lawful president His Majesty would be careful to preserve But this Protestation of the Commons House so contrived and carried as it was His Majesty thought fit to be razed out of all Memorials and utterly to be annihilated both in respect of the manner by which it was gained and the matter therein contained For the manner of getting it First in respect of the time For after such time as His Majesty out of his Princely grace and to take away all mistakings had directed his Letters to Secretary Calvert dated at Royston 16 Decembris and therein had so explained himself in the point of maintaining the priviledges of the House of Commons as that most of the said House rested fully satisfied and freed from any scruple of having their liberties impeached And after that by His Majesties Letters directed to the Speaker dated 18 December being Tuesday His Majesty at the humble suit of the House of Commons condescended to make this Méeting a Session before Christmas and for that purpose had assigned Saturday following Now upon this very Tuesday and while the Messengers from the House of Commons were with His Majesty at Theobalds to return thanks unto His Majesty and therewith an excuse from them not to make it a Session in respect of the strait of time whereunto they were driven which deferment His Majesty admitted of at their desires and thereupon gave order for the adjournment of the Parliament until the Eight of February next which was the first day formerly appointed by His Majesty for the méeting together of the Parliament And whilst their messengers were with His Majesty and had received a gracious Answer to return unto their House even that afternoon a Committee was procured to be made for taking their Liberties into consideration And this afternoon a Protestation was made to whom appears not concerning their Liberties and at six a clock at night by candle-light the same Protestation was brought into the House by the Committee and at that time of night it was called upon to be put to the Question there not being the third part of the House then present whereas in all matters of weight their usual custom is to put nothing of importance to the Question till the House be full And at this time many of them that were present expected the Question would have been deferred to another day and a fuller House and some then present stood up to have spoken to it but could not be seen nor heard in that darkness and confusion Now for the matter of the Protestation it is penned in such ambiguous and general words as may serve for future Times to invade most of Rights and Prerogatives annexed to the Imperial Crown the claim of some priviledges being grounded upon the words of the Writ for assembling the Parliament wherein some words viz. Arduis Regni are cunningly mentioned but the word quibusdam which restraineth the generality to such particular Cases as His Majesty pleaseth to consult with them upon is purposely omitted These things considered His Majesty did this present day in full assembly of his Council and in the presence of the Iudges declare the said Protestation to be invalid annulled void and of no effect And did further manu sua propria take the said Protestation out of the Iournal-book of the Clerk of the Commons House of Parliament and commanded an Act of Council to be made thereupon and this Act to be entred in the Register of Council-causes On the Sixth of Ianuary the King by Proclamation dissolved the Parliament shewing that the assembling continuing and dissolving of Parliaments doth so peculiarly belong unto him that he needs not give an accompt thereof unto any Yet he thought fit to declare That in this Dissolution he had the advice and uniform consent of his whole Council And that some particular Members of the House of Commons took inordinate liberty not only to treat of his high Prerogatives and sundry things not fitting to be argued in Parliament but also to speak with less respect to Foreign Princes That they spent the time in disputing Priviledges descanting upon the words and syllables of his Letters and Messages And that these Evil-tempered spirits sowed tares among the corn and by their cunning devices have imposed upon him a necessity of discontinuing this present Parliament without putting unto it the name or period of a Session And lastly he declared That though the Parliament be broken off yet he intended to govern well and shall be glad to lay hold on the first occasion to call a Parliament again at convenient time The King was
drawn upon us and cannot but foresee and fear least the like may hereafter happen and unevitably bring such peril to your Maiesties Kingdoms We are most humble Suitors to your gracious Maiesty to secure the hearts of your good Subiects by the engagement of your Royal word unto them that upon no occasion of Marriage or Treaty or other request in that behalf from any foreign Prince or States whatsoever you will take off or slacken the Execution of your Laws against the Popish Recusants To which our humble Petitions proceeding from our most loyal and dutifull affections toward your Maiesty our care of our Countries good and our confident perswasion that this will much advance the glory of Almighty God the everlasting honor of your Maiesty the safety of your Kingdom and the encouragement of all your good Subiects We do most humbly beseech your Maiesty to vouchsafe a gracious Answer This Petition after a Conference between both Houses was reduced to another form and so presented to the King To which his Majesty returned this Answer My Lords and Gentlemen of both Houses I Cannot but commend your zeal in offering this Petition to me yet on the other side I cannot but hold my self unfortunate that I should be thought to need a spur to do that which my Conscience and duty bindes me unto What Religion I am of my Books do declare my profession and behavior doth shew and I hope in God I shall never live to be thought otherwise surely I shall never deserve it and for my part I wish it may be written in Marble and remain to Posterity as a mark upon me when I shall swerve from my Religion for he that doth dissemble with God is not to be trusted with men My Lords for my part I protest before God that my heart hath bled when I have heard of the increase of Popery God is my Iudge it hath been such a great grief to me that it hath been as Thorns in my Eyes and Pricks in my Sides and so far I have been and shall be from turning another way And my Lords and Gentlemen you shall be my Confessors that one way or other it hath been my desire to hinder the growth of Popery and I could not be an honest man if I should have done otherwise And this I may say further that if I be not a Martyr I am sure I am a Confessor and in some sence I may be called a Martyr as in the Scripture Isaac was persecuted by Ishmael by mocking words for never King suffered more ill Tongues then I have done and I am sure for no cause yet I have been far from persecution for I have ever thought that no way more encreased any Religion then persecution according to that saying Sanguis Martyrum est Semen Ecclesiae Now my Lords and Gentlemen for your Petition I will not onely grant the substance of what you crave but add somewhat more of my own for the two Treaties being already annulled as I have declared them to be it necessarily follows of it self that which you desire and therefore it needs no more But that I do declare by Proclamation which I am ready to do that all Iesuites and Priests do depart by a day but it cannot be as you desire by our Proclamation to be out of all my Dominions for a Proclamation here extends but to this Kingdom This I will do and more I will Command all my Iudges when they go their Circuits to keep the same courses for putting all the Laws in Execution against Recusants as they were wont to do before these Treaties for the Laws are still in force and were never dispenced with by me God is my Iudge they were never so intended by me but as I told you in the beginning of the Parliament you must give me leave as a good horseman sometimes to use the Reins and not alwayes to use the Spurs So now there needs nothing but my Declaration for the disarming of them that is ready done by the Laws and shall be done as you desired and more I will take order for the shamefull disorder of the resorting of my Subjects to all foreign Ambassadors for this I will advise with my Councel how it may be best reformed It is true that the houses of Ambassadors are priviledged places and Major though they cannot take them out of their houses yet the Lord and Mr Recorder of London may take some of them as they come from thence and make them examples another point I will add concerning the education of their children of which I have had a principal care as the Lord of Canterbury and the Bishop of Winchester and other Lords of my Councel can bear me witness with whom I have advised about this business for in good faith it is a shame their Children should be bred here as if they were at Rome So I do grant not onely your desire but more I am sorry I was not the first mover of it to you but had you not done it I would have done it my self Now for the second part of your Petition you have here given me the best advice in the world for it is against the rule of wisdom that a King should suffer any of his Subjects to transgress the Laws by the intercession of other Princes and therefore assure your selves that by the Grace of God I will be carefull that no such conditions be foisted in upon any other Treaty whatsoever for it is fit my Subjects should stand or fall to their own Laws This Petition was furthered by the Duke of Buckingham who still retained the memory of his ill-usage in Spain and the Spanish Ambassador being netled thereat accused him to the King not without some reflection upon the Prince himself with some difficulty they procured a secret entercourse with the King and suggested unto him matters of near and high concernment to his Royal dignity and person They tell him that being besieged and closed up by the Dukes Servants and Vassals he was no more a freeman That he was to be confined to his Countrey-house and Pastimes the Prince having years and parts answerable for publick Government That the Duke had reconciled himself to all popular men such as Oxford Southampton Essex Say and others and sought to raise an opinion of his own greatness and to make the King grow less and that all looked towards the rising Sun Hereupon they advise the King to free himself from this Captivity and eminent Danger and to cut off so ungratefull an affecter of Popularity and greatness and so he should shew himself to be as he was reputed the oldest and wisest King in Europe These secrets were quickly blown abroad and brought to the Dukes Ear. But whatsoever impression the King received from them the thing whereupon he insisted openly was the demand of particular proofs But all their Answers consisted of Arguments against declaring the names of the Conspirators whereupon
lending of the Ships and received fair Answers from them both But the King sent an express and strict Order to Pennington requiring him without delay to put his former Command in Execution for the consigning of the Ship called the Vantguard with all her furniture into the hands of the Marquess D' Effiat assuring the Officers of the Ships that he would provide for their Indempnity and further commanding him to require the Seven Merchants Ships in his name to put themselves into the Service of the French King and in case of backwardness or refusal to use all means to compel them thereunto even to their sinking Upon this Pennington went back to Deep and put the Vantguard into the absolute Power and Command of the French King to be employed in his Service at pleasure and commanded the rest of the Fleet to the like Surrender At the first the Captains Masters and owners refused to yield weighed Anchor and were making away but when Pennington shot they came in again but Sir Ferdinando Gorge came away with the Ship called the Neptune The Companies unanimously declined the Service and quitted the Ships all but one Man who was a Gunner and Pennington hasted to Oxford where the Parliament was Reassembled but as was voiced was there concealed till the Parliament was dissolved On the First of August the Parliament Reassembled at Oxford whether the news of the Ships lent to the French against the besieged Rochellers did quickly flie and exasperate the spirit of that great Assembly against the Duke of Buckingham The Grievances insisted upon were the mis-spending of the Publick Treasure the neglect of guarding the Seas insomuch that the Turks had leisure to land in the Western parts and carry away the Subjects Captives The Commons appointed a Committee to consider of secret Affairs and to examine the Disbursements of the Three Subsidies and the Three Fifteens given to King Iames for the Recovery of the Palatinate and they prepared to assault the Duke Also Mr. Richard Montague was summoned to appear according to the Condition of his Bond and a Committee was appointed to proceed in the further Examination of that business Mr. Montagues Cause was recommended to the Duke by the Bishops of Rochester Oxford and St. Davids as the Cause of the Church of England They shew that some of the Opinions which offended many were no other then the resolved Doctrine of this Church and some of them are curious Points disputed in the Schools and to be left to the liberty of Learned Men to abound in their own sense it being the great fault of the Council of Trent to require a Subscription to School Opinions and the approved Moderation of the Church of England to refuse the apparent Dangers and Errors of the Church of Rome but not to be over-busie with Scholastical Niceties Moreover in the present case they alleage that in the time of Henry the Eighth when the Clergy submitted to the Kings Supremacy the Submission was so resolved That in case of any difference in the Church the King and the Bishops were to determine the Matter in a National Synod and if any other Judge in Matters of Doctrine be now allowed we depart from the Ordinance of Christ and the continual practice of the Church Herewithal they intimated That if the Church be once brought down below her self even Majesty it self with soon be impeached They say further That King Iames in his rare wisdom and judgment approved all the Opinions in this Book and that most of the contrary Opinions were debated at Lambeth and ready to be published but were suppressed by Queen Elizabeth and so continued till of late they received countenance at the Synod of Dort which was a Synod of another Nation and to us no ways binding till received by Publick Authority And they affirm boldly That they cannot conceive what use there can be of Civil Government in the Common-wealth or of External Ministry in the Church if such fatal Opinions as some are which are opposite to those delivered by Mr. Montague be publickly taught and maintained Such was the Opinion of these forenamed Bishops but others of Eminent Learning were of a different Judgment At Oxford in a late Divinity Disputation held upon this Question Whether a Regenerate Man may totally and finally fall from Grace The Opponent urging the Appeal to Caesar the Doctor of the Chair handled the Appellator very roughly saying He was a meer Grammarian a Man that studied Phrases more then Matter That he understood neither Articles nor Homilies or at least perverted both That he attributed he knew not what vertue to the sign of the Cross Dignus Cruce qui asserit and concluded with an Admonition to the Juniors That they should be wary of reading that and the like Books On the Fourth of August the Lords and Commons were commanded to attend his Majesty in Christs-Church Hall in Oxford where he spake unto them in manner following MY Lords and you of the Commons We all remember that from your Desires and Advice my Father now with God brake off those two Treaties with Spain that were then in hand Well you then foresaw that as well for regaining my dispossessed Brothers Inheritance as home defence a War was likely to succeed and that as your Councils had led my Father into it so your assistance in a Parliamentary-way to pursue it should not be wanting That aid you gave him by Advice was for succor of his Allies the guarding of Ireland and the home part supply of Munition preparing and setting forth of his Navy A Council you thought of and appointed for the War and Treasurers for issuing of the Moneys And to begin this Work of your Advice you gave Three Subsidies and as many Fifteens which with speed were levied and by direction of that Council of War in which the preparation of this Navy was not the least disbursed It pleased God at the entrance of this Preparation by your Advice begun to call my Father to his Mercy whereby I entred as well to the care of your Design as his Crown I did not then as Princes do of Custom and Formality Reassemble you but that by your further Advice and Aid I might be able to proceed in that which by your Counsels my Father was engaged in Your love to me and forwardness to further those Affairs you expressed by a Grant of Two Subsidies yet ungathered although I must assure you by my self and others upon credit taken up and aforehand disbursed and far short as yet to set forth that Navy now preparing as I have lately the estimate of those of care and who are still employed about it whose particular of all expences about this preparation shall be given you when you please to take an accompt of it His Majesty having ended his Speech commanded the Lord Conway and Sir Iohn Cook more particularly to declare the present state of Affairs which
orientem ab Occidente a Monster in Nature And one of their own speaking of the two great Lights which God hath placed in the Firmament makes the Pope Luminare majus presidens urbi orbi and the King of Spain Luminare minus ut subdatur urbi dominetur per totum orbem A great flattery and a bold and impudent elusion But I trust as God hath put it into the heart of your blessed Father by that matchless Book of his written to all Christian Monarchs and Princes a Work by which he raised a Monument to himself more lasting then Marble to denounce War to that Adversary of God and Kings the Pope so he hath set your sacred Majesty upon the Throne of your Father to do as many things worthy to be written as he had written things worthy to be read amongst them to restrain that unlimited pride and boundless ambition of Spain to reduce it to their proper current channel who under the title of Catholick King makes his pretence to more Countries and Kingdoms then his own and by color of disguised Treaties he invades the Palatinate and dispossesseth that Incomparable Lady your Royal Sister and the Children of this Kingdom of their right and their antient Patrimony and Inheritance to the discomfort and dishonor of this great and glorious Nation God in his mercy soon repair this breach by your Royal head and I assure my self the hearts the hands and the purses of all good Subjects will say Amen But I may weary your Majesty and lose my self and forget for whom I am a Speaker Custom gives me the priviledge as an humble Suitor on the behalf of the House to present their few Petitions unto your Majesty 1. The first That for our better attending this Publick and important service our selves and our necessary Attendants may with your Majesties tender allowance be free both in our persons and goods from Arrests and troubles according to our antient Priviledges 2. The next That since for the preparing and drawing to conclusion such Propositions as shall be handled in the House Debate and Dispute will be necessary and by variety of opinions Truth is oftentimes best discerned your Majesty will likewise according to your antient usage and priviledge vouchsafe us liberty and freedom of speech from which I assure my self duty and loyalty to your Majesty will never be severed 3. That when occasions of moment shall require your Majesty upon our humble suit and at such times as may best sort with your occasions will vouchsafe us access to your Royal person 4. That the Proceedings of the House may receive a favorable Interpretation at your gracious hands and be free from misconstructions The Houses began their work with rendring thanks to the King for his gracious Answer to their late Petition for Religion An Act was tendred and read To administer an Oath for the rendring a true Accompt of all General and Publick Taxes Rates and Collections Another against Scandalous Ministers It was moved some Provision might be made against Scandalous Livings as well as against Scandalous Ministers The Commons further fell into Examination of the Publick Grieveances and the Carriage or rather Miscarriage of the Fleet to Cadiz The Evil Counsellors about the King Misgovernment and Misimployment of the Kings Revenue An Accompt of the Subsidies and Three Fi●teens granted 21 Iacobi And resolved of a Committee for secret Affairs and another for Grievances to sit every Friday and Wednesday during the Parliament And Mr. Whitby was commanded to the Chair for the Committee for Grievances where were delivered these ensuing Consultations I. The State of the King in the Constant Revenue of the Crown 1. What it was and how for the Introitus and Exitus they are ordered 2. What now it is either in cleer or by Lands by Customs and Impositions or by Casualties 3. The means how it is abated By gifts of Lands ex mero motu and no valuable consideration and this may be revoked By grants of Pensions now 120000 l. before but 80000 l. Good Times have resumed them or contracted them upon Necessity By increase of Houshold from 45000 l. to 80000 l. the Purveyors more and the Tables less furnished then formerly By fruitless Ambassadors with larger allowance then formerly To reduce them to the Ordinary of the late Queen By treble increase of the Privy-Purse By double increase of the Treasury of the Chamber and Great Wardrobe In all by not using the best course of Assignments whereby the Creditors are delayed in the paiment and the King surcharged in the price the Exchequer-man making his profit from the Kings wants II. The Condition of the Subject in his Freedom 1. Formerly in Taxes by Parliaments as by Subsidies and Fifteens spent onely on Defence of the State or Aid of our Allies by Tonage and Poundage imployed in Guard of the Seas Loans rarely and those imployed intirely for the Publick Imposition by Prerogative of old Customs rated easily by the Book of Rates if any either limited to time or measure 2. New Impositions and Monopolies multiplied and settled to continue by Grants Customs Inhannced by the new Book of Rates Tonage and Poundage levied though no Act of Parliament nor Seas guarded the Times the Wayes and the Persons that induce these 3. The Imploiment or Waste of the Treasure What Sums have been granted for the Defence of the State the last Three years How in particular spent and where By what Advice as by the direction of the Council of War appointed by Parliament by full Order of the Council by any other then those and by whom First Publick Treasury is to be examined Secondly The Kings Subjects how many and when transported and imployed as to the Palatinate Count Mansfields Land-soldiers in the last Fleet The Designs where they were sent the Council that directed it the success of the Action and the Return of the persons in number and the Loss Thirdly In Ships and Munition our own The Number and Quantity imployed severally the Number imbarqued in those Ships and what prejudice and discouragement of Trade the Council that directed such Imploiments the several success as at Algier and Cadiz Strangers and those Ships either of Allies or Enemies Allies hired by Contract to serve and how used or taken as Prize if so how then delivered and dealt withal in the course of Justice what success hath followed upon Injustice done them as the Arrest of our Goods in France and Germany whereby our Merchants are at a stand The number and true value of the Goods the Accompt thereof made to his Majesty or his Officers the dismissing and discharging any of them or the Goods viz. by whom the Directions the Pretence the Value of the Goods the Place whither they went Honor of the King which as in all other things consists in what formerly hath been done How formerly we stood a Nation feared renowned victorious We made the Netherlands a
our Countrey That it hath béen the antient constant and undoubted Right and Usage of Parliaments to question and complain of all persons of what degree soever found grievous to the Commonwealth in abusing the power and trust committed to them by their Soveraign A course approved not onely by the examples in your Fathers days of famous memory but by frequent presidents in the best and most glorious Reigns of your Noble Progenitors appearing both in Records and Histories without which liberty in Parliament no private man no servant to a King perhaps no Counsellor without exposing himself to the hazard of great enmity and prejudice can be a means to call great Officers into question for their misdemeanors but the Commonwealth might languish under their pressures without Redress And whatsoever we shall do accordingly in this Parliament we doubt not but it shall redound to the Honor of the Crown and welfare of your Subjects Lastly We most humbly beseech Your Majesty gratiously to conceive that though it hath been the long Custom of Parliaments to handle the matter of Supply with the last of their businesses yet at this time out of extraordinary respect to your Person and care of your Affairs We have taken the same into more speedy consideration and most happily on the very day of your Majesties Inauguration with great alacrity and unanimous consent After a short Debate we grew to the Resolution for a present Supply well-known to your Maiesty To. which if Addition may be made of other great things for your Service yet in Consultation amongst us we doubt not but it will appear That we have not receded from the Truth of our first Intention so to supply you as may make you safe at home and feared abroad especially if your Maiesty shall be pleased to look upon the way intended in our promise as well as to the measure of the gift agreed With like humility we beseech your Majesty not to give ear to the officious reports of private persons for their own ends which hath occasioned so much loss of time nor to judge our proceedings whilst they are in agitation but to be pleased to expect the issue and conclusion of our labors which we are confident will manifest and justifie to your Majesty the sincerity and Loyalty of our hearts who shall ever place in a high degree of happiness the performing of that duty and service in Parliament which may most tend to your Majesties Honor and the good of your Kingdom Unto this Remonstrance the King said He could give no present answer but desired the House to adjourn for a week as the Lords had done and they adjourned accordingly In the interim it was intimated in Writing to the Duke that he should procure his Majesty to signifie to a certain number of Lords that he hath endeavored to divert the Charge against the Duke because his Majesty hath had sound knowledge and experience of his service and fidelity That his Majesty may let them know that he is now pleased to reveal some secrets and mysteries of State That the King his Father finding the Palatinate more then in danger to be lost and his Majesty being in Spain and there deluded and his abode and return both unsafe it was a necessity of State to sweeten and content the Spaniard with the hope of any thing which might satisfie and redeem those Engagements And that therefore the King willed the Duke to yield discreetly to what he should find they most desired and this was chiefly the point of Religion So as in this and all of the like kind the Duke upon his Majesties knowledge was commanded and but the Instrument trusted by the King in this Exigent or if you will say Extremity Upon the same ground though not in so high a degree the sending of the Ships to Rochel may be excused Touching the vast Creation of Nobility his Majesty may declare that his Father who was born a King and had long experience of that Regiment found that this State inclined much to popularity and therefore thought fit to enlarge the number of his Nobles that these being dispersed into several Counties might shine as Lamps of Soveraignty in protecting their own degrees and at their own cha●●e inure the people with respect and obedience to greatness And the King may protest that this was a child of his Fathers best Judgment and the Duke the Instrument thereof And if you say there was money many times given for these Honors nay if you say that money hath been given for places of Clergy and Judicature take this of me it is so in all other Countreys as in France and Spain c. though I am not satisfied in this opinion And if it be said the King should have had the money which the Duke took to his own use I beleeve this last may the King say is more then any man can prove Neither will I deliver what I know therein onely this I will say I know the Dukes particular service and affection towards me and that he and his will lay down themselves and all they have at my feet Is it for a King to use his Servant and Instrument as he doth his Horses and being by hard riding in his service foundred and lame to turn them out to Grass or to the Cart I must therefore may the King say in right of the King my Fathers Honor protect a man though justly seeming guilty yet in my own knowledge innocent Will you therefore deny the King to favor whom he pleaseth which the King never denied to you that are his Subjects Well commend me to my Lords and tell them that if any thing hath been formerly done amiss by others I have power and will to redress it and to prevent the like At this time the King commanded all the Bishops to attend him and when they were come before him being fourteen in number he reprehended them that in this time of Parliament they had not made known unto him what might be profitable for the Church whose cause he was ready to promote And he laid this Charge upon them that in the Cause of Bristol and Buckingham their Consciences being their Guides they should follow onely proofs and not rumors The Commons sent again to the Duke by Sir Iohn Epsley to let him know that they were passing Articles against him and that they had given the Messengers leave to take Notes thereof out of the Clerks Book whereof he might take a Copy if he pleased and that they expected his Answer that day before ten of the Clock if he pleased to send any This the Duke signified to the Lords who did not think fit that he should answer as appears by the ensuing Report made by Sir Iohn Epsley This day his Grace gave us this Answer after he had moved the Lords that he should with great care make all due acknowledgment of your respect and favors in giving him this notice
Edward 4.6 or by Bill and an Act of Parliament to attaint the Party An Order was made in the Upper-House of Parliament 21 Iac. That any Peer shall have Counsel in case Criminal or Capital and upon the Accusation of the Earl of Bristol in Parliament he made a motion for Counsel which matter was commended to the King by the Lords with voucher of the said former Order The King returned Answer that this was contrary to the Fundamental Laws of the Realm but inasmuch as it was for his Benefit and Prerogative with which he may dispence therefore out of his grace he would allow the Earl of Bristol to have his Counsel with protestation that he would advise in the general and the same Order was made without his privity and without hearing the Justices or his Counsel And upon the Trial of the Lord Middlesex in a Case Criminal and not Capital afterward that is to say Friday after upon the assembly of all the Justices the Attorney of the King by commandment of the King demanded their opinion and they with one voice agreed That where the Trial is upon Indictment no Counsel in Fellony or Treason is to be allowed unless a matter of Law happen or upon the Indictment or upon Plea of the Defendant or upo● Evidence and in such Cases the Prisoner may have Counsel but not otherwise The Lords by Order referred to the Justices this Question Whether the King may be a Witness in case of Treason Secondly Admit that this be for Treason done when he is privy Whether in this case he may be a Witness or not and before the Resolution this Message and Command came from the King to the Justices that in this general Question they do not deliver any opinion but if any point come in particular they upon mature deliberation may give their advice And this was declared by the Cheif Justice in the Upper House of Parliament and the said Matter surceased Sitting this Parliament the Duke of Buckingham was deputed Procurator by several Peers whose Votes on any occasion he had power to make use of viz. By the Earls of Bath Exeter Cumberland Northumberland Lord Teinham Colchester Tunbridge Evers Darcy Meynel Noel St. John of Basing Mansfield and Roberts Whereupon the House of Peers made an Order That after this Session no Lord of this House shall be capable of receiving above two Proxies nor more to be numbred in any Cause voted About a fortnight after the Charge was given in against the Earl of Bristol the Earl gave in his Answer which we have chosen to insert here for the Readers more conveniency though a little out of time And having the Answer in his hand ready to deliver to their Lordships he did crave leave that by way of Introduction he might speak a few words and began thus I Am not insensible upon what disadvantages I come to tryal in this Cause For first I am faln into this Majesties heavy displeasure and am to encounter with a potent Adversary highly in favor and am accused for Treason for which all Counsel and Friends abandon me as a man infected with the Plague I am become bound and under restraint whereas a man who is to encounter for his life and honor and with a strong Adversary had need to come upon equal terms But as to the Matter I finde my self charged with divers Articles of High Treason but looking into them with the eyes of my best understanding with the opinion also of my Council lately assigned me and taking them apart one Article from another I finde not any thing in them like Treason or that hath so much as the shew or countenance of a fault either in act or words onely by laying all things together and by wresting the wrests with a strained Construction directly contrary to the true sence and meaning of them and the occasion whereupon they were spoken it is informed and that by way of inference onely That the intent was evil and the matter to prove the intent to be evil depends upon two props viz. Ill affection to Religion and too much affection to Spain which if I shall clear the Inference grounded upon these props will fall of it self Therefore I crave leave of your Lordships before I give my Answer to the Charge that I may give you an account of these two particulars and I humbly beseech you that what I shall speak in my just defence may not be conceived to proceed of vain ostentation And first for Religion I was in my Childhood bred in the Protestant Religion and rather after the stricter manner then otherwise When I grew in years fit I travelled into France Italy and Rome it self In all which Travels I can produce some that I consorted withal who will witness with me that I ever constantly used the Religion I professed without the least prevarication no man being able to charge me that so much as out of curiosity I ever was present at any of the exercises belonging to the Roman Religion or did the least act of Conformity to any of their Rites or Ceremonies Secondly After my return home I was received into the service of his late Majesty of Blessed Memory whom I served some years as a Gentleman of his Privy Chamber and Carver in which time none of his Majesties Servants received the Holy Sacrament frequented Sermons and other exercises of our Religion more then I. Thirdly In that time of my youth not to avoid idleness but out of affection to Religion I translated that excellent Book of our Faith and great Points of our Religion Written by Monsieur Moulins which his late Majesty having sometimes after seen approved so well that he would needs have it Printed which accordingly was Printed in the name of Mr. Sampford my Chaplain to whom I gave the honor But it was my own act as Mr. Sampford will not deny though to this hour I had never before spoken of it Fourthly About Seven or eight and twenty years of my age I was employed Ambassador into Spain in that great business of the Treaty of the Marriage and whereas others before me carried with them but one Chaplain I had two viz. Mr. Sampford and Mr. Boswel and at my arival at the Court of Spain I caused it to be published that such a day God willing I purposed to have a Communion to the end that such English as were in the Town might resort thither Whereat the Duke De Lerma and other the great Ministers of Spain took offence and told me they might well perceive I brought no good affection to the business I came about that would so publickly and avowedly in that Court where never the like was done proclaim there a Communion and with high expression perswaded me to decline it Whereunto I answered I came to do my Master service which I would heartily and effectually endeavor but would not omit my service to God no though my Master commanded And at
his Book and he will have you do this Archb. This is an occupation that my old Master King Iames did never put me to and yet I was then yong and had more abilities of body then now I have so that I see I must now learn a new lesson but leave it with me and when I have read it I shall know what to say unto it a day or two hence you shall understand my minde When I had once or twice perused it I found some words which seemed unto me to cross that which the King intended and in a sort to destroy it and therefore upon his return a day or two after I exprest my self thus Mr. Murrey I conceive that the King intendeth that this Sermon shall promote the service now in hand about the Loan of Money but in my opinion it much crosseth it for he layeth it down for a rule and because it should not be forgotten he repeateth it again That Christians are bound in duty one to another especially all Subjects to their Princes according to the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom wherein they live Out of this will men except this Loan because there is neither Law nor Custom for it in the Kingdom of England Secondly In my judgment there followeth a dangerous Speech Habemus necessitatem vindicandae libertatis For this was all that was then quoted out of Calvin no mention being made of any the other words which are now in the Printed Copy For when by the former Rule he hath set men at liberty whether they will pay or no he imposeth upon them a necessity to vindicate this Liberty and Vindicare may be extended to challenge with violence cum vi But for my part I would be most unwilling to give occasion to Sedition and Mutiny in the Kingdom Again here is mention made of Poll-Money which as I have heard hath already caused much distaste where the Sermon was Preached Moreover what a Speech is this That he observes the forwardness of the Papists to offer double according to an Act of Parliament so providing yea to profess that they would part with the half of their Goods where he quoteth in the Margent Anno 1 Caroli the Act for the Subsidy of the Layty whereby Popish Recusants were to pay double when indeed there is no such Act. And in the fifth place it is said in this Sermon that the Princes of Bohemia have power to depose their Kings as not being Hereditary which is a great question Such a one as hath cost much blood and must not in a word be absolutely defined here as if it were without controversie I pray you make his Majesty acquainted with these things and take the Book with you where it is to be noted That all this time we had but one single Copy which was some time at the Court and sometime left with me Murrey I will faithfully deliver these things to the King and then you shall hear further from me Some two or three days after he returneth again unto me and telleth me That he had particularly acquainted the King with my Objections and his Majesty made this Answer First For the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom he did not stand upon that he had a President for that which he did and thereon he would insist Archb. I think that to be a mistaking for I fear there will be found no such President King Henry the Eighth as the Chronicle sheweth desired but the Sixth pa●t of mens estates Ten groats in the pound our King desireth the whole Six parts full out so much as men are set at in the Subsidy Book And in the time of King Henry although he were a powerful King yet for that Taxation there began against him little less then a Rebellion so that he held it wisdom to desist and laying the blame upon Cardinal Wolsey professed That he knew nothing of the matter Murrey Secondly The King saith for the words Habemus necessitatem vindicandae libertatis he taketh them to be for him and he will stand on his Liberty Thirdly For Poll-money he thinketh it lawful Fourthly It is true there was no such Act passed and therefore it must be amended and yet in the Printed Book it is suffered still to stand Such slight and I may say slovenly care was had by them that published this Sermon And fifthly For that of Bohemia he hath crossed it out of the Book Some other matters there were against which I took exception but Mr. Murrey being a yong Gentleman although witty and full of good behavior I doubted that being not deeply seen in Divinity he could not so well conceive me nor make report of my words to his Majesty And therefore I being lame and so disabled to wait on the King did move him That he would in my name humbly beseech his Majesty to send the Bishop of Bathe and Wells unto me and I would by his means make known my Scruples and so I dismissed Mr. Murrey observing with my self that the Answers to my Five Objections especially to two or three were somewhat strange As if the King were resolved were it to his good or to his harm to have the Book go forth After one or two days more the yong Gentleman cometh to me again and telleth me That the King did not think it fit to send the Bishop of Bathe unto me but he expecteth I should pass the Book In the mean time had gone over one High Commission day and this Bishop who used otherwise very few days to fail was not there which being joyned to his Majesties Message made me in some measure to smell that this whole business might have that Bishops hand in it especially I knowing in general the disposition of the man The mindes of those that were Actors for the publishing of the Book were not quiet at the Court that the thing was not dispatched and therefore one day the Duke said to the King Do you see how this business is deferred if more expedition be not used it will not be Printed before the end of the Term at which time it is fit that it be sent down into the Countreys So eager he was That either by my Credit his undertakings might be strengthned or at least I might be contemned and derided as an unworthy fellow This so quickned the King that the next Message which was sent by Mr. Murrey was in some degree minatory That if I did not dispatch it the King would take some other course with me When I found how far the Duke had prevailed I thought it my best way to set down in writing many Objections wherefore the Book was not fit to be published which I did modestly and sent them to the King The words were these which I culled out of the Written Sermon 1. Page 2. Those words deserve to be well weighed And whereas the Prince pleads not the Power of Prerogative 2. Page 8. The Kings duty is
hear one day So when your Soveraign in the Parliament time had spoken sharply to both Houses commanding them to go together again and to give more money and commanding them to meddle no more with the Duke of Buckingham you came the next day and thought to smooth all taking the glory of qualifying disturbances to your self whereas if you had read Books of true State Government wherewithal you are not acquainted sweet things are personally to be acted by Kings and Princes as giving of Honors and bestowing of noted benefits and those things that are sour and distasting are to be performed by their Ministers you go the contray way But as before the whole House falleth on fire some sparks do flie out So before the Message of the King was brought me by the Secretary there were some inklings that such a thing would follow And upon the naming of me by occasion it was said by a Creature of the Dukes That it would not be long before the Archbishop should be sequestred that was the word So well acquainted are the Dukes followers with great actions that are likely to fall out in State Accordingly on Tuesday the Fist of Iuly One thousand six hundred twenty and seven the Lord Conway came unto me to Croyden before Dinner time having travelled as he said a long journey that morning even from Oatlands thither he would say nothing till he had dined then because he was to return to Oatlands that night I took him into the Gallery and when we were both sat down we fell to it in this manner MY Lord I know you coming from Court have somewhat to say to me Secretary It is true my Lord and I am the most unwilling man in the World to bring unpleasing news to any person of quality to whom I wish well and especially to such a one as of whose Meat I have eaten and been merry at his House But I come from the King and must deliver his pleasure I know who you are and much more with very civil language Archb. I doubt not my Lord but you have somewhat to say and therefore I pray you in plain terms let me have it Secre. It is then his Majesties pleasure that you should withdraw your self unto Canterbury for which he will afford you some convenient time Archb. Is that it then I must use the words of the Psalmist He shall not be afraid of any evil tydings for his heart standeth fast and believeth in the Lord. But I pray you what is my fault that bringeth this upon me Secre. The King saith you know Archb. Truly I know none unless it be that I am lame which I cannot help it is against my will and I am not proud of it Secre. The King bad me tell you That if any expostulation were used Archb. No I will not use any expostulation if it be his pleasure I will obey I know my self to be an honest man and therefore fear nothing But my Lord do you think it is for the Kings service in this sort to send me away Secre. No by God! I do not think it and so yesterday I told the King with an Oath but he will have it so Archb. I must say as before He shall not be afraid of any evil tidings for his heart standeth fast and he believeth in the Lord. But I pray you my Lord is the King precisely set upon my going to Canterbury there are questions in Law between me and that Town about the Liberties of my Archbishoprick which I by my Oath am bound to maintain and if I should be among them I have many Adversaries of the Citizens I have there some Tenants and the Dean and Chapter are interessed in the Question I would be unwilling that my Servants and their people should fall together by the ears while I am in the Town His Majesty knoweth this difference to be between us by the token that a Suit which I lately brought against them by a Quo Warranto in the Kings Bench was stopped Justice being denied me which is not usual to be denied to any Subject and the King well knoweth by whose means it was stayed I have therefore another House called Foord Five Miles beyond Canterbury and more out of the way his Majesty may be pleased to let me go thither Secre. I can say nothing to that but I will acquaint the King with it and I conceive nothing to the contrary but that his Majesty will yield so much unto you I have a second Charge to deliver unto you and that is That his Majesty will not have you from henceforth to meddle with the High Commission he will take care that it shall be done otherwise Archb. I do not doubt but it shall be better managed then it hath been by me And yet my Lord I will tell you that for these many years that I have had the direction of that Court the time is to come that ever honest man did finde fault that he had not there Justice done Secre. It is now Vacation time and so consequently little to do and by Michaelmas his Majesty may set all in order Archb. I am sorry that the King proceedeth thus with me and letteth me not know the cause Secre. Although I have no Commission to tell you so it is for a Book which you would not allow which concerned the Kings Service Archb. If that be it when I am questioned for it I doubt not but to give an honest Answer Secre You will never be questioned for it Archb. Then am I the more hardly dealt withal to be censured and not called to my Answer Secre. Well my Lord I will remember that of Foord and will your Grace command me any more Service Archb. No my Lord but God be with you onely I end where I began with the words of the Prophet He shall not be afraid for any evil tydings for his heart standeth fast and believeth in the Lord. It comforted me not a little that the word was now out My confining must be for not allowing of a Book I had much ado to forbear smiling when I heard it because now it was clear it was not for Felony or Treason that was laid to my charge nor for intelligence with the Spaniards or French nor for Correspondency with Jesuites or Seminary Priests or any other grievous crime I thank God for that I had almost forgotten that among many other memorable Speeches that passed between us I used this one That peradventure the King might be offended at me because I was no more present at the matter of the Loan but said I my lameness hindered me therein and I hoped thereby to do my Master better service because if ever course be taken to reconcile the King and his people which if it be not this Kingdom will rue it in the end I would hope among many other to be a good Instrument therein since my hand hath not been in those bitternesses which
onely an Award and no Judgement and in the L. Chief Justice his Argument there was no word spoken that the King might commit or detain without cause For the King to commit a man is indignum Regi Mercy and Honor flow immediately from the King Judgement and Justice are his too but they flow from his Ministers the Sword is carried before him but the Scepter in his hands These are true Emblems of a good King The Law admits not the King power of detaining in Prison at pleasure In antient times Prisons were but pro custodia carceres non ad poenam sed ad custodiam Admit the King may commit a man yet to detain him as long as he pleaseth is dangerous and then a man shall be punished before his offence Imprisonment is a Maceration of the body and horror to the minde it is vita pejor morte Mr Selden last of all produced the Statutes Presidents and Book-Cases which were expresse● in point to the Question in hand and the House commanded that Case in the Lord Chief Justice Andersons Book all of his own hand-writing to be openly read And for the President● cited by the Kings Council in 34 years of the Queen as the Opinion of all the Judges certainly there was a great mistake in it and the mistake was the greater when it passed as currant by the Judges of the Kings-Bench in the last Case of the Habeas Corpus And that the truth of the Opinion may clearly appear let us read the words out of the Lord Chief Justice Andersons Report out of the Book written with his own hand which will contradict all those Apocrypha Reports that go upon the Case The words of the Report were these Divers persons fueront committes a several temps a several prysons sur pleasure sans bon cause parte de queux estiant amesnes en banck le Roy. Et parte en le Commune banck fuerunt accordant a le ley de la terre mise a large discharge de le imprisonment pur que aucunt grands fueront offendus procure un commandment a les Iudges que ils ne fera ainsi apres Ceo nient meins les Iudges ne surcease mes per advise enter eux ils fesoint certain Articles le tenour de queux ensus deliver eux al seignieurs Chancelor Treasurer eux subscribe avec touts lour mainies les Articles sont come erisnoint We her Majesties Iustices of both Benches and Barons of the Exchequer desire your Lordships that by some good means some order may be taken that her Highness Subjects may not be committed or detained in prison by commandment of any Noble man or Councellor against the Laws of the Realm either else to help us to have access to her Majesty to the end to become Suitors to her for the same for divers have been imprisoned for suing ordinary Actions and Suits at the Common-Law until they have been constrained to leave the same against their wills and put the same to order albeit Iudgement and Execution have been had therein to their great losses and griefs for the aid of which persons her Majesties Writs have sundry times been directed to sundry persons having the Custody of such persons unlawfully imprisoned upon which Writs no good or lawfull cause of imprisonment hath been returned or certified Whereupon according to the Laws they have been discharged of their imprisonment some of which persons so delivered have been again committed to prison in secret places and not to any common or ordinary Prison or lawfull Officer or Sheriff or other lawfully authorized to have or keep a Goal So that upon complaint made for their delivery the Queens Courts cannot tell to whom to direct her Majesties Writs and by this means Iustice cannot be done And moreover divers Officers and Serjeants of London have been many times committed to Prison for lawfull executing of her Majesties Writs sued forth of her Majesties Court at Westminster and thereby her Majesties Subjects and Officers are so terrified that they dare not sue or execute her Majesties Laws her Writs and Commandments Divers others have been sent for by Pursevants and brought to London from their dwellings and by unlawfull imprisonment have been constrained not only to withdraw their lawfull suits but have been also compelled to pay the Pursevants so bringing such persons great sums of money All which upon complaint the Iudges are bound by Office and Oath to relieve and help by and according to her Majesties Laws And where it pleaseth your Lordships to will divers of us to set down in what Cases a Prisoner sent to custody by her Majesty or her Councel are to be detained in Prison and not to be delivered by her Majesties Court or Iudges We think that if any person be committed by her Majesties command from her person or by order from the Council board and if any one or two of her Council commit one for high Treason such persons so in the Cases before committed may not be delivered by any of her Courts without due Trial by the Law and Iudgement of acquittal had Nevertheless the Iudges may award the Queens Writ to bring the bodies of such Prisoners before them and if upon return thereof the causes of their commitment be certified to the Iudges as it ought to be then the Iudges in the Cases before ought not to deliver him but to remand the Prisoner to the place from whence he came which cannot conveniently be done unless notice of the cause in general or else in special be given to the Keeper or Goaler that shall have the Custody of such a Prisoner All the Iudges and Barons did subscribe their names to these Articles Ter. Paschae 34 Eliz. and delivered one to the L. Chancellor and another to the L. Treasurer after which time there did follow more quietness then before in the Cause before mentioned After the reading of this Report Sir Edw. Cook said That of my own knowledge this Book was written with my L. Andersons own hand it is no flying report of a young Student I was Solicitor then and Treasurer Burley was as much against Commitment as any of this Kingdom It was the White Staves that made this stir Let us draw towards a conclusion The Question is whether a Feeman can be imprisoned by the King without setting down the cause I leave it as bare as Aesops Crow they that argue against it Humores moti non remoti corpus destruunt It is a Maxime the Common-Law hath admeasured the Kings Prerogative that in no Case it can prejudice the Inheritance of the Subjects had the Law given the Prerogative to that which is taken it would have set some time to it else mark what would follow I shall have an Estate of Inheritance for life or for years in my Land or propriety in my Goods and I shall be a Tenant at will for my liberty I shall have
ad idem dash not the Common-wealth twice against one Rock We have Grievances we must be eased of them who shall ease us No Nation hath a people more loving to the King then we but let the King think it and believe it there is a distance betwixt him and us before we can have his heart we must remove it Our disease is not so great but that it may be cured it is the Kings Evil which must be cured with Gold let us imitate Iacob who wrestled with the Angel and would not let him go I would we could wrestle with the King in duty and love and not to let him go in this Parliament till he comply with us We must take heed of too much repetition and over-beating of Grievances it is dangerous and it may make a further separation He that talks too much of his Grievance makes the party that is the cause of it make an apology and to justifie it and that is dangerous let us do as Poets in a Tragedy that sometimes have Comical Passages and so a generous mind will sink presently Sure a due presentation of such Grievances to such a King with moderation will take place with him In all deliberations go the safest way The old way I have heard is first to remove Grievances we must not ty and bind our selves by all that was done before I have gone over the Thames in former times on foot when it was all an Ice but that is no argument to perswade me by to do the like now because I did so once THe House waving the Debate of the Propositions proceeded with Grievances by Confinement and Designation for forain imployment in which points several Gentlemen delivered their opinion COnfinement is different from Imprisonment and it is against the Law that any should be confined either to his House or elswhere I know not what you can call a Punishment but there is some ground of it or mention thereof in Acts of Parliament law-Law-books or Records but for this of Confinement I finde none indeed Jews have been confined in former times to certain places as here in London to the old Iury The Civilians have perpetual Prisons and coercive Prisons upon Judgements in Court Carcer domesticus is a confinement for madmen I Was imployed in 88. in that service it was then thought fit that Recusants should be confined in strong places but it was not held legal and when the Navy was dispiersed they were set at liberty and the Parliament petitioned the Queen for a Law to warrant the Confinement Hereupon it was resolved That no freeman ought to be confined by any command of the King or Privy Councel or any other unless it be by Act of Parliament or by other due course or warrant of Law And then the House proceeded to the Debate concerning Designation to forain Imployment TOuching Designation to forain Imployment Sir Peter Hayman opened his own Case I have forgot my imployment unto the Palatinate I was called before the Lords of the Councel for what I know not I heard it was for not lending on a Privy Seal I told them if they will take my Estate let them I will give it up give I will not When I was before the Lords of the Councel they laid to my Charge my unwillingness to serve the King I said I had my Life and my Estate to serve my Countrey and my Religion They put upon me if I did not pay I should be put upon an imployment of Service I was willing after ten weeks waiting they told me I was to go with a Lord into the Palatinate and that I should have imployment there and means befitting I told them I was a Subject and desired means some put on very eagerly some dealt nobly they said I must go on my own purse I told them Nemo militat suis expensis some told me I must go I began to think What must I none were ever sent out in that kinde Lawyers told me I could not be so sent having that assurance I demanded means and was resolved not to stir upon those tearms and in silence and duty I denied upon this they having given me a Command to go after some twelve days they told me they would not send me as a Soldier but to attend on an Ambassador I knew that stone would hit me I setled my troubled estate and addressed my self to that Service THis is a great Point that much concerns the Commonwealth if the the King cannot command a Subject to his necessary service and on the other side it will be little less then an honorable banishment to the Subject if he may Our Books say the King cannot compel any to go out of the Realm and an action brought against him he cannot plead in Bar that he is by command from the King in forein service but the King may give him his protection 5 E. 3. N. 9. in the Parliament Roll there was an Ordinance whereby the King had power to send some to Ireland it is ordained that such Sages of the Law and Soldiers where need shall be though they refuse to go and excuse themselves if their excuses be not reasonable the King may do to them according to right and reason If the King by Law could do this of himself and send them to Ireland his own Dominion he would never have taken power from his Parliament and if men do not according to that Law there is no imprisonment prescribed NO restraint be it never so little but is Imprisonment and forain imployment is a kind of honorable Banishment I my self was designed to go to Ireland I was willing to go and hoped if I had gone to have found some Mompessons there There is a difference when the Party is the Kings servant and when not 46 E. 3. this was the time when the Law was in its height Sir Richard Pembridge was a Baron and the Kings Servant and Warden of the Cinque-ports he was commanded to go to Ireland and to serve as Deputy there which he refused He was not committed but the King was highly offended and having Offices and Fees and Lands pro servitio suo impenso the King seized his Lands and Offices I went to the Parliament Roll 47. E. 3. where I found another precedent for forain imployment they that have Offices pro consilio or servitio impenso if they refuse those Lands and Offices so given are seized but no commitment IF any man owes a man displeasure and shall procure him to be put into forain imployment it will be a matter of high concernment to the Subject We know the Honor and Justice of the King but we know not what his ministers or the mediation of Ambassadors may do to work their own wrath upon any man IF you grant this Liberty what are you the better by other priviledges what difference is there between imprisonment at home and constrained imployment
and ought not to be denied and is directe● to the Keeper of the Prison in whose custody the Prisoner remains commanding him that after a certain day he bring in the body of the Prisoner cum causa detentionis and sometimes cum causa captionis and he with his return filed to the Writ bringeth the Prisoner to the Bar at the time appointed and the Court judgeth of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the retu●n and if they finde him baylable committitur Marescallo the proper Prison belongeth to the Court and then afterward traditur in ball But if upon the return of the Habeas Corpus it appear to the Court that the Prisoner ought not to be bayled nor discharged from the Prison whence he is brought then he is remanded and sent back again to continue till by due course of Law he may be delivered and the ent●y of this is remittitur quousque secundum legem deliberatus fuerit or remittitur quousque c. which is all one and the highest award of Judgement that ever was or can be given upon a Habeas Corpus Your Lordships have heard the resolution of the House of Commons touching the enlargement of a man committed by the command of the King or the privy Councel or any other without cause shewed of such commitment which resolution as it is grounded upon Acts of Parliament already shewen the reason of the Law of the Land being committed to the charge of another to open unto unto you so it is strengthened by many Precedents of Records He then produced twelve Precedents full and directly in the point to prove that persons so committed ought to be delivered upon bayl which were distinctly opened and read to their Lordships then he also offered to their consideration other kind of Precedents which were solemn resolutions of Judges things not of Record but yet remain in Authentick Copies which Precedents and Authorities we omit for the length thereof He then proceeded and said The House of Commons desiring with all care to inform themselves fully of the truth of the resolution of the Judges in the 34. year of the Queen cited in the case of Sir Iohn Heveningham by the Kings Councel as Arguments against his not being bayled have got into their hands a Book of select Cases collected by the reverend and learned Judge Chief Justice Anderson all written with his own hand which he caused to be read being the same which hath been already mentioned in the Collections of this Parliament which Precedents saith he do fully resolve enough for the maintenance of the ancient and fundamental point of Liberty of the Person to be regained by Hab. Corp. when any is imprisoned Then he concluded that having thus gone through the charge committed to him by the House of Commons he should now as he had leave and direction given him lest their Lordships should be put to much trouble and expence of time in finding and getting Copies at large of those things which he had cited offer also to their Lordships Authentick Copies of them all and so left them and whatever else he had said to their Lordships further consideration LAst of all Sir Edward Cook took up the Argument as to the rational part of the Law and began with this Introduction Your Lordships have heard 7. Acts of Parliament in point and 31. Precedents summarily collected and with great understanding delivered which I have perused and understand them all throughly 12. of the Precedents are in terminis terminantibus a whole Jury of Precedents and all in the point I am much transported with joy because of the hope of good success in this weighty business your Lordships being so full of Justice and the very Theme and Subject doth promise success which was Corpus cum cansa the freedom of an English man not to be imprisoned without cause shewn which is my part to shew and the reason and the cause why it should be so wherein I will not be prolix nor copious for to guild Gold were idle and superfluous And after he had cleared some doubts made of the Statute of Westminster which saith That the Sheriffs and others in some cases may not replevin men in Prison he proceeded further and said That all those Arguments offered unto your Lordships in this last conference are of a double nature 1. Acts of Parliament 2. Judicial Precedents For the first I hold it a proper Argument for your Lordships because you my Lords temporal and you my Lords spiritual gave your assent unto those Acts of Parliament and therefore if these cannot perswade you nothing can For the second which are Judicial Precedents it is Argumentum ab authoritate and Argumentum ab authoritate valet affimative that is I conceive though it be no good Argument to say negatively the Judges have given no opinion in the point 3. It is good Law which I fortifie with a strong Axiome Neminem oportet sapientiorem esse legibus Now these two arguments being so well pressed to your Lordships by my Colleagues I think your Lordships may wonder what my part may be it is short but sweet it is the Reason of all those Laws and Precedents and Reason must needs be welcome to all men for all men are not capable of the understanding of the Law but every man is capable of Reason and those Reasons I offer to your Lordships in affirmance of the antient Laws and Precedents made for the Liberty of the Subject against Imprisonment without cause expressed 1. A re ipsa 2. A minore ad majus 3. From the remedies provided 4. From the extent and universality of the same 5. From the infiniteness of the time 6. A Fine The first general Reason is a re ipsa even from the nature of Imprisonment ex visceribus causae for I will speak nothing but ad idem be it close or other Imprisonment and this Argument is three-fold because an imprisoned man upon will and pleasure is 1. A Bond-man 2. Worse then a Bond-man 3. Not so much as a man for mortuus homo non est homo a Prisoner is a dead man 1. No man can be imprisoned upon will and pleasure of any but he that is a Bond-man and villain for that Imprisonment and Bondage are Propria quarto modo to villains now Propria quarto modo and the species are convertible Whosoever is a Bond-man may be imprisoned upon will and pleasure and whosoever may be imprisoned upon will and pleasure is a Bondman 2. If free men of England might be imprisoned at the will and pleasure of the King or his commandment then were they in worse case then Bondmen or villains for the Lord of a villain cannot command another to imprison his villain without cause as of disobedience or refusing to serve as it is agreed in the year books And here he said that no man should reprehend any thing that he said out of Books or Records he said he would prove
People to pray for him hoping that God would enable him by some satisfactory benefit to make amends and comfort his Subjects for those pressures To these temporal Precedents of antient times which were alledged he added an Ecclesiastical Precedent out of a book called Pupilla Oculi being published for the instruction of Confessors in the Title De participantibus cum excommunicatis fol. 59. All the Articles of Magna Charta are inserted with this direction Hos articulos ignorare non debent quibus incumbit confessiones audire infra provinciam Cantuariensem He likewise remembred the Proclamation 8. Iac. for the calling in and burning of Doctor Cowel's book for which these reasons are given For mistaking the true state of the Parliament of the Kingdom and fundamental constitution and priviledges thereof For speaking irreverently of the Common Law it being a thing utterly unlawful for any Subject to speak or write against that Law under which he liveth and which we are sworn and resolve to maintain From these Precedents he collected that if former Parliaments were so careful of false rumors and news they would have been much more tender of such doctrines as these which might produce true occasions of discord betwixt the King and his People If those who reported the King would lay Impositions and break his Laws were thought such hainous offenders how much more should this man be condemned who perswaded the King he is not bound to keep those Laws If that great King was so far from challenging any right in this kinde that he professed his own sorrow and repentance for grieving his Subjects with unlawful charges If Confessors were enjoyned to frame the Consciences of the People to the observance of these Laws certainly such Doctrine and such a Preacher as this would have been held most strange and abominable in all these times The third general part was the conclusion or prayer of the Commons which consisted of three Clauses First they reserved to themselves liberty of any other accusation and for this he said there was great reason that as the Doctor multiplied his offences so they may renew their accusations Secondly they saved to themselves liberty of replying to his Answer for they had great cause to think that he who shifted so much in offending would shift much more in answering Thirdly they desire he might be brought to examination and judgement this they thought would be very important for the comfort of the present age for security of the future against such wicked and malitious practises And so he concluded that seeing the cause had strength enough to maintain it self his humble suit to their Lordships was That they would not observe his infirmities and defects to the diminution or prejudice of that strength NOt long after the Commons by their Speaker demanded Judgement of the Lords against the Doctor who not accounting his submission with tears and grief a satisfaction for the great offence wherewith he stood charged gave this Sentence 1. That Dr. Manwaring Doctor in Divinity shall be imprisoned during the pleasure of the House 2. That he be fined one thousand pounds to the King 3. That he shall make such submission and acknowledgement of his offences as shall be set down by a Committee in writing both at the Bar and in the House of Commons 4. That he shall be suspended for the time of three years from the exercise of the Ministery and in the mean time a sufficient preaching Minister shall be provided out of his livings to serve the Cure This suspension and provision to be done by the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 5. That he shall be hereafter disabled to have any Ecclesiastical Dignity or secular Office 6. That he shall be for ever disabled to preach at the Court hereafter 7. That his said Book is worthy to be burnt and that for the better effecting of this his Majesty may be moved to grant a Proclamation to call in the said Books that they may be all burnt accordingly in London and both the Universities and for the Inhibiting the printing thereof upon a great penalty Doctor Manwarings submission was in these words MAy it please this Honorable House I do here in all sorrow of Heart and true Repentance acknowledge the many Errors and Indiscretions which I have committed in preaching and publishing those two Sermons of mine which I called Religion and Allegiance and my great fault in falling upon this Theame again and handling the same rashly and unadvisedly in my own Parish Church of St. Giles in the Fields the fourth of May last past I do humbly acknowledge those three Sermons to have been full of many dangerous Passages Inferences and scandalous Aspersions in most part of the same And I do humbly acknowledge the Justice of this Honorable House in that Judgement and Sentence passed upon me for my great offence And I do from the bottom of my Heart crave pardon of God the King and this Honorable House and the Church and this Common-wealth in general and those worthy Persons adjudged to be reflected upon by me in particular for these great Errors and Offences Roger Manwaring Another Message was brought from his Majesty by the Speaker Tuesday 5 of June HIs Majesty wished them to remember the Message he last sent them by which he set a day for the end of this Session and he commanded the Speaker to let them know that he will certainly hold that day prefixed without alteration and because that cannot be if the House entertain more business of length he requires them that they enter not into or proceed with any new business which may spend greater time or which may lay any Scandal or Aspersion upon the State-government or Ministers thereof SIr Robert Phillips upon this occasion expressed himself thus I perceive that towards God and towards man there is little hope after our humble and careful endeavors seeing our Sins are many and so great I consider my own infirmities and if ever my Passions were wrought upon then now this Message stirs me up especially when I remember with what moderation we have proceeded I cannot but wonder to see the miserable straight we are now in What have we not done to have merited Former times have given wounds enough to the peoples Liberty we came hither full of wounds and we have cured what we could and what is the return of all but misery and desolation What did we aim at but to have served his Majesty and to have done that that would have made him Great and Glorious if this be a fault then we are all Criminous What shall we do since our humble purposes are thus prevented which were not to have laid any aspersion on the Government since it tended to no other end but to give his Majesty true information of his and our danger And to this we are enforced out of a necessity of duty to the King our Countrey and to Posterity but we
bring in Popery and the professors of those opinions the common disturbers of the Protestant Churches and incendiaries in those States wherein they have gotten any head being Protestants in shew but Iesuites in opinion which caused your Royal Father with so much pious wisdom and ardent zeale to endeavour the suppressing of them as well at home as in the neighbour Countreys And your gracious Majesty imitating his most worthy example hath openly and by your Proclamation declared your mislike of those persons and of their opinions who notwithstanding are much favoured and advanced not wanting friends even of the Clergy near to your Majesty namely Doctor Neale Bishop of Winchester and Doctor Lawd Bishop of Bath and Wells who are justly suspected to be unsound in their opinions that way And it being now generally held the way to preferment and promotion in the Church many Schollars do bend the course of their Studies to maintain those Errors Their Books and opinions are suffered to be printed and published and ●n the other side the imprinting of such as are written against them and in defence of the Orthodox Church are hindred and prohibited and which is a boldnesse almost incredible this restraint of Orthodox Books is made under colour of your Majesties formerly mentioned Proclamation the intent and meaning wherof we know was quite contrary And further to encrease our feares concerning Innovation of Religion we finde that there hath been no smal laboring to remove that which is the most powerful means to strengthen and encrease our own Relgion and to oppose both those which is the diligent teaching and instruction of the people in the true knowledge and worship of Almighty God And therefore means have been sought out to depresse and discountenance pious and painful and Orthodox Preachers and how conformable soever and peaceable in their disposition and carriage they be yet the preferment of such is opposed and instead of being encouraged they are molested with vexatious courses and pursuits and hardly permitted to Lecture And in those places where are no constant preaching Ministers whereby many of your good people whose souls in this case we beseech your Majesty to commiserate are kept in ignorance and are apt to be easily seduced to error and superstition It doth not a little also encrease our dangers and fears this way to understand the miserable condition of your Kingdome of Ireland where without controll the Popish Religion is openly confessed and practised in every part thereof Popish Iurisdiction being there generally exercised and avowed Monasteries Nunneries and other superstitious Houses newly erected re-edified and replenished with men and women of several Orders and in a plentiful manner maintained at Dublyn and most of the great Towns and divers other places of the Kingdome which of what ill consequence it may prove if not seasonably repressed we leave to your Majesties wisdome to Iudge But most humbly beseech you as we assure our selves you will to lay the serious consideration thereof to your royal and pious heart and that some speedy course may be taken for redresse therein And if now to all these your Majesty will be pleased to adde the consideration of the circumstances of time wherein these courses tending to the destruction of true Religion within these your Kingdomes have been taken here even then when the same is with open force and violence prosecuted in other Countreys and all the reformed Churches in Christendome either depressed or miserably distressed We do humbly appeal unto your Majesties Princely Iudgement whether there be not just ground of feare that there is some secret and strong co-operating here with the enemies of our Religion abroad for the utter extirpation thereof and whether if those courses be not speedily redressed and the profession of true Religion more encouraged we can expect any other but misery and ruine speedily to fall upon us especially if besides the visible and apparent dangers wherewith we are compassed about You would be pleased to remember the displeasure of Almighty God always bent against the neglect of his holy Religion the stroaks of whose divine Iustice we have already felt and do still feele with smart and sorrow in great measure And besides this feare of Innovation in Religion we do in like faithful of charge of our duties most humbly declare to your Majesty that the hearts of your people are full of feare of Innovation and change of Government and accordingly possessed with extreame griefe and sorrow Yet in this point by your Majesties late Answer to our Petition of Right touching our Liberties much comforted and raised againe out of that sadnesse and discontent which they generally had conceived throughout the whole Kingdome for the undue courses which were the last year taken for raising of moneys by loanes then which whatever your Majesty hath been informed to the contrary there were never any moneys demanded nor paid with greater grief and general dislike of all your faithful Subjects though many partly out of feare and partly out of other respects yet most unwillingly were drawn to yeeld to what was required The Billeting of Souldiers did much augment both their fears and grief wherein likewise they finde much comfort upon your gracious Answer to our petition of Right and to that we presented to your Majesty concerning this particular Yet we most humbly beseech your Majesty that we may informe you that the still continuance and late re-enforcing of those Souldiers the conditions of their persons many of them not being Natives of this Kingdome nor of the same but of an opposite Religion the placing of them upon the Sea Coast where making head amongst themselves they may unite with the Popish party at home if occasion serve and joyne with an invading enemy to do extreame mischief and that they are not yet dismissed doth still minister cause of Iealousie in your loving Subjects For that the Souldiers cannot be continued without exceeding great danger of the peace and safety of your Kingdom The report of the strange and dangerous purpose of bringing in German Horse and Riders would have turned our doubts into despaire and our feares into a certainty of confusion had not your Majesties gracious message for which we humbly give you thanks comforted us by the assurance of your Royal word that they neither are nor were intended by your Majesty for any service in England but that they were designed for some other forreigne employment Yet the sight of the Privy Seale by which it seemeth they were to be leavied the great summe of money which upon examinations we found to be paid for that purpose gave us just cause of feare That much about the same time there was a Commission under the Great Seal granted unto the Lords and others of the Privy Councel to consider of other ways for raising of moneys so particularly by impositions gave as just cause to suspect that whatsoever was your Majesties gracious intention yet there wanted not those
and other Lands to the said Title of Earl of Arundel 11. An Act to assure the Joynture of the Lady Francis Nevil and to enable the Lord Abergavenny to sell Lands 12. An Act concerning the Lands of William Earl of Devon 13. An Act to confirm the Estates of the Lord Morlies Tenants in Tatham and Gressingham 14. An Act for reestating of Lands of William Morgan Esq and discharging the trust concerning them 15. A Declararation of the Commons against Doctor Manwaring 16. An Act to enable Dutton Lord Gerrard to make a Joynture to any Wife that he shall hereafter marry and to provide for younger children and the securing of Portions for Alice Frances and Eliz. Gerrard sisters of the said Lord Gerrard 17. An Act for restitution in blood of Carew Rawleigh Esq and to confirm Letters Patents made to the Earl of Bristol by King James 18. An Act for the Naturalizing of Isaac Ashley Henry Ashley Thomas Ashley and Bernard Ashley sons of Sir Jacob Ashley Knight 19. An Act for Naturalizing of Samuel Powel 20. An Act for the naturalizing of Alexander Levingston Gent. 21. An Act for the naturalizing of John Trumbal and of William Beere Edward Beer and Sidney Beere and Samuel Wentworth 22. An Act for the amendment of a word miswritten in an Act made An. 21. Iac. R. to enable Vincent Lowe Esq. to sell Lands c. 23. An Act for naturalizing of Sir Robert Ayton Knight 24. An Act for confirmation of Letters Patents made by King James to John Earl of Bristol 25. An Act for naturalizing of John Aldersey Mary Aldersey Anne Aldersey Eliz. Aldersey and Margaret Aldersey c. 26. An Act for the naturalizing of Daniel Delingue Knight 27. An Act for the naturalizing of Sir Robert Dyel Kt. and George Kirk Esquire 28. An Act for the naturalizing of James Freese In the Interval between the two Sessions there happened many remarkable passages DOctor Manwarings Sermons intituled Religion and Allegiance were suppressed by Proclamation the King declaring that though the grounds thereof were rightly laid to perswade obedience from Subjects to their Sovereign and that for conscience sake yet in divers passages inferences and applications thereof trenching upon the Laws of this Land and proceedings of Parliaments whereof he was ignorant he so far erred that he had drawn upon himself the just censure and sentence of the High Court of Parliament by whose judgement also that Book stands condemned Wherefore being desirous to remove occasions of scandal he thought fit that those Sermons in regard of their influences and applications be totally suppressed Then a Proclamation came forth declaring the Kings pleasure for proceedings with Popish Recusants and directions to his Commissioners for making compositions for two parts of three of their Estates which by Law were due to his Majesty neverthelesse for the most part they got off upon easie tearms by reason of compositions at undervalues and by Letters of Grace and protection granted from time to time to most of the wealthiest of them This was seconded with another Proclamation commanding that diligent search be made for all Priests and Jesuites particularly the Bishop Calcedon and others that have taken Orders by authority from the See of Rome that they be apprehended and committed to the Goale of that County where they shall be found there to remaine without Bayle or Mainprize till they be tryed by due course of Law and if upon trial and conviction there shall be cause to respit the execution of any of them they shall not lie in the Common Goals much lesse wander about at large but according to the example of former times be sent to the Castle of Wisbitch or some other safe prison where they shall remain under strait and close custody and be wholly restrained from exercising their function and spreading their superstitious and dangerous doctrines Hereupon the Privy Councel wrote to the Bishop of Ely a Letter of the tenour following WHereas his Majestie hath beene informed that the Romish Priests Jesuites and Seminaries lurking in this Kingdome do obstinately and maliciously continue their wonted practises to supplant the true Religion established and to seduce his people from obedience stirre up sedition and subvert the State and Government so far as it lieth in their power his Majesty hath therefore commanded us to signifie unto your Lordship that it is his expresse will and pleasure according to his Declaration in Parliament and his Royal Proclamation since published you shall forthwith prepare and make ready the Castle of Wisbitch in the Isle of Ely to receive and lodge all such Priests Jesuites and Seminaries and other prisoners as shall be hereafter sent thither and there treat and governe them according to such instructions and directions as shall be prescribed by this board The Jesuites taken in Clarken-well being then in several prisons it was ordered by the Councel they should all be removed to Newgate and such of them as were not as yet convicted and condemned should be proceeded against untill they were condemned and then that they all should be sent to the Castle of VVisbitch according to the Proclamation in that behalf and the Attorney General was required to take course to entitle the King to the goods taken in the house which was designed for a Colledge and accordingly they were proceeded against and but onely one convicted which proceeding was questioned in the ensuing Session of Parliament And upon Information that there was a greater concourse of Recusants in or near London then had been usual at other times the Privy Councel sent to the Lord Mayor to require him to cause diligent search to be made within the City and Liberties thereof and to finde out what Recusants did inhabit or remaine there as House-keepers Inmates or Lodgers or in any manner and to return a certificate to the board both of their names and qualities distinguishing which were Trades-men that were there by occasion of their Trades according to to the Statute in that behalf and which were of no Trade but resorted thither from other parts of the Kingdom Iuly 15. being St. Swithins day Sir Richard VVeston Chancellor of the Exchequer was made Lord Treasurer of England and the same day was Bishop Laud translated to the Bishoprick of London About the same time Master Montague formerly mentioned was designed to the Bishoprick of Chichester upon the decease of Bishop Carleton Neverthelesse his Appello Caesarem was thought fit to be called in the King declaring that out of his care to maintain the Church in the unity of true Religion and the bond of peace to prevent unnecessary disputes he had lately caused the Articles of Relgion to be reprinted as a rule for avoiding diversities of opinions and considering that a Book written by Richard Montague now Bishop of Chichester intituled Apello Caesarem was the first cause of those disputes and differences which since have much troubled the quiet
agreed in one that he ought not by the Law to be tortured by the Rack for no such punishment is known or allowed by our Law And this in case of Treason was brought into this Kingdom in the time of Henry 6. note Fortescue for this Point in his Book de laudibus legum Angliae see the preamble of the Act 28. H. 8. for the Trial of Fellony where Treasons are done upon the Sea and Statute 14. Edw. 3. Ch. 9. of Jaylours or Keepers who by duresse make the prisoners to be approvers Since the last Session of Parliament certain Merchant who traded in Wines had been committed to the Fleet for the non-payment of an Imposition of 20. s. the Tun and were now at liberty upon their entring into bond for the payment of that Imposition Moreover the King in full Councel declared his absolute will and pleasure to have the entry of 2. s. 2. d. the hundred upon all Currens to be satisfied equally with that of 3. s. 4. d. before the landing of that Commodity it being a duty laid by Queen Elizabeth who first gave being to the Levant Company and which had been paid both in his Fathers time and his own and that their Majesties were equally possessed of the whole summe of 5. s. 6. d. the hundred by a solemn and Legal Judgement in the Exchequer and he straightly charged his Councel to examine the great abuse in this point and to make a full reparation to his Honour by inflicting punishment as well upon Officers as Merchants that for the future they may beware of committing such contempts And Divers Merchants of London having forcibly Landed and endeavoured to carry away their Goods and Merchandises from the Custom-house Key without payment of duties were summoned to the Councel-table And the Councel was informed against them that they had caused great and unlawful assemblies of people to be gathered together to the breach of the Kings Peace and Mr. Chambers was committed to prison by the Lords of the Councel for some words spoken at that time Michaelmas 4. Car. Richard Chambers being in Prison in the Marshalsie Del hostel de Roy desired an Habeas Corpus and had it which being returable upon the 16. day of October the Marshall returned that he was committed to prison the 28. day of Septemb. last by command of the Lords of the Councel The Warrant verbatim was That he was committed for insolent behaviour and words spoken at the Councel-Table which was subscribed by the Lord Keeper and twelve others of the Councel The words were as information was given though not expressed in the Return That such great Customes and Impositions were required from the Merchants in England as were in no other place and that they were more screwed up then under the Turk And because it was not mentioned what the words were so as the Court might adjudge of them the Return was held insufficient and the Warden of the Prison advised to amend his Return and he was by Rule of the Court appointed to bring his prisoner by such a day without a new Habeas Corpus and the Prisoner was advised by the Court That in the mean time he should submit to the Lords and Petition them for his enlargement The Warden of the Prison bringing the Prisoner in again in Court the 23. day of October Then Mr. Iermin for the Prisoner moved That forasmuch as it appeared by the Return that he was not committed for Treason or Felony nor doth it appear what the words were whereto he might give answer he therefore prayed he might be dismissed or bailed But the Kings Attourney moved That he might have day untill the 25. of October to consider of the Return and be enformed of the words and that in the interim the Prisoner might attend the Councel-Table and Petition But the Prisoner affirmed that he oftentimes had assayed by Petition and could not prevail although he had not done it since the beginning of October and he prayed the Justice of the Law and the inheritance of a Subject Whereupon at his importunity the Court commanded him to be bailed and he was bound in a Recognizance of four hundred pounds and four good Merchants his Sureties were bound in Recognizance of one hundred pound a piece that he should appear here in Crastino animarum and in the interim should be of the good behaviour And advertized him they might for contemptuous words cause an Indictment or Information in this Court to be drawn against him if they would The Lords of the Councel were much dissatisfied with the Bailing of Chambers Whereupon the Judges were ●ent for to the Lord Keeper at Durham House where were present besides the Lord-Keeper the Lord Treasurer Lord Privy Seal and the Chancellor of the Dutchy And the Lord Keeper then declared unto them that the said enlargement of Chambers was without due regard had to the Privy Councel in not first acquainting them therewith To this the Judges answered that to keep a fair correspondency with their Lordships they had by the Lord Chief-Justice acquainted the Lord Keeper in private therewith before they baild the party And that what they had done as to the bailing of the prisoner was according to Law and Justice and the conscience of the Judges To this it was replied that it was necessary for the preservation of the State that the power and dignity of the Councel Table should be preserved and that it could not be done without correspondency from the Courts of Justice so they parted in very fair tearms On Thursday the 27. of November Felton was removed from the Tower to the Gate-house in order to his tryal and was the same day brought by the Sheriffs of London to the Kings-bench Bar and the indictment being read he was demanded whether he were guilty of the murder therein mentioned he answered he was guilty in killing the Duke of Buc. and further said that he did deserve death for the same though he did not do it out of malice to him So the Court passed sentence of death upon him whereupon he offered that hand to be cut off that did the fact but the Court could not upon his own offer inflict that further punishment upon him neverthelesse the King sent to the Judges to intimate his desire that his hand might be cut off before execution but the Court answered that it could not be for in all murthers the Judgement was the same unlesse when the Statute of 25. E. 3. did alter the nature of the offence and upon a several indictment as it was in Queen Elizabeths time when a Felon at the Bar flung a stone at a Judge upon the Bench for which he was indicted and his sentence was to have his hand cut off which was accordingly done and they also proceeded against him upon the other indictment for Felony for which he was found guilty and afterwards hanged and Felton was afterwards hung up
Religion the precedency of Tunnage and poundage And in the Commitee Mr. Pymme spake as followeth TWo diseases there be said he the one old the other new the old Popery the new Arminianism there be three things to be inquired after concerning Popery 1. The cessation of the Execution of Laws against Papists 2. How the Papists have been imployed and countenanced 3. The Law violated in bringing in of superstitious ceremonies amongst us especially at Durham by Mr. Cozens as Angels Crucifixes Saints Altars Candles on Candlemas day burnt in the Church after the Popish manner For Arminianisme let it be advised 1. That a way be open for the truth 2. That whereas by the Articles set forth 1562. and by the Catechism set forth in King Edward the sixths days and by the writing of Martin Bucer and Peter Martyr who were employed in making our Articles and by the constant professions sealed by the blood of so many Martyrs as Cranmer Ridley and others and by the 36. Articles in Queen Elizabeths time and by the Articles agreed upon at Lambeth as the Doctrine of the Church of England which King Iames sent to Dort and to Ireland and were avowed by us and our State his Majesty hath expressed himself in preserving unity in Religion established though his royal intention notwithstanding hath been perverted by some to suppresse the truth Let us shew wherein these late opinions are contrary to those setled truths and what men have been since preferred that have professed these Heresies what pardons they have had for false doctrine what prohibiting of Books and writings against their doctrine and permitting of such books as have been for them Let us inquire after the Abettors Let us enquire also after the pardons granted of late to some of these and the presumption of some that dare preach the contrary to truth before his Majesty It belongs to the duty of Parliament to establish true Religion and to punish false we must know what Parliaments have done formerly in Religion Our Parliaments have confirmed general Councels In the time of King Henry 8. the Earl of Essex was condemned for countenancing books of Heresie For the convocation it is but a Provincial Sinod of Canturbury and cannot bind the whole Kingdom As for York that is distant and cannot do any thing to bind us or the Laws For the High-Commission it was derived from Parliament Wednesday 28. Secretary Cook delivered another message to the House concerning the precedency of Tunnage and Poundage declaring that his Majesty intends not thereby to interrupt them as to Religion so that they do not intrench on that which belongs not to them which message was seconded by Sir Thomas Edmonds in these words I am sorry the House hath given cause to so many messages about Tunnage and Poundage after his Majesty hath given us so much satisfaction you may perceive his Majesty is sensible of the neglect of his businesse we that know this should not discharge our duties to you if we should not perswade you to that course which should procure his Majesties good opinion of you You your selves are witnesses how industrious his Majesty was to procure you gracious Laws in his fathers time and since what inlargement he hath made of our Liberties and still we give him cause to repent him of the good he hath done Consider how dangerous it is to alienate his Majesties heart from Parliaments Master Corriton replied WHen men speak here of neglect of duty to his Majesty let them know we know no such thing nor what they mean And I see not how we do neglect the same I see it is in all our hearts to expedite the Bill of Tunnage and Poundage in due time our businesse is still put back by these Messages and the businesse in hand is of God and his Majesties affairs are certainly amisse and every one sees it and woe be to us if we present them not to his Majesty The House resolved to send an answer to the King that these messages are inconvenient and breed debates and losse of time and did further resolve that Tunnage and Poundage arising naturally from this House they would in fit time take such a course therein as they hoped would be to his Majesties satisfaction and honour and so again agreed to proceed at present in matters of Religion Sir Iohn Eliot upon this occasion spake to this purpose I have always observed said he that in the proceedings of this House our best advantage is order and I was very glad when that noble Gentleman my Country-man gave occasion to state our proceedings for I fear it would have carried us into a Sea of confusion and disorder and having now occasion to present my thoughts in this great and weighty businesse of Religion I shall be bold to speak a few words There is a jealousie conceived as if we meant to dispute in matters of faith it is our profession this is not to be disputed it is not in the Parliament to make a new Religion nor I hope shall it be in any to alter the body of the truth which we now professe I must confess amongst all those fears we have contracted there ariseth to me not one of the least dangers in the Declaration that is made and publisht in his Majesties name concerning disputing and preaching let not this my saying bear the least suspition or jealousie of his Majesty for if there be any misprision or Error I hope it is those Ministers about him which not only he but all Princes are subject unto and Princes no doubt are subject to mis-informations and many actions may be intitled to their Names when it is not done by themselves Antiochus King of Asia sent his Letters and missives to several Provinces that if they received any dispatches in his name not agreeable to justice Ignoto se litteras esse scriptas ideoque iis non parerent and the reason of it is given by Gratian because that oftentimes by the importunity of Ministers Principes saepe constringuntur ut non concedenda concedant are drawn to grant things by them not to be granted and as it was in that age so it may be in this And now to the particular in the Declaration we see what is said of Popery and Arminianism our Faith and Religion is in danger by it for like an Inundation it doth break in at once upon us It is said if there be any difference in Opinion concerning the seasonable interpretation of the 39. Articles the Bishops and the Clergy in the Convocation have power to dispute it and to order which way they please and for ought I know Popery and Arminianism may be introduced by them and then it must be received by all a slight thing that the power of Religion should be left to the persons of these men I honour their profession there are among our Bishops such as are fit to be made examples for
in these words We cannot safely give unless we be in possession and the proceedings in the Exchequer nullified as also the information in the Star-Chamber and the annexion to the Petition of Right for it will not be a gift but a confirmation neither will I give without the removal of these interruptions and a Declaration in the Bill that the King hath no right but by our free gift if it will not be accepted as it is fit for us to give we cannot help it if it be the Kings already we do not give it Hereupon the House ordered that the Barons of the Exchequer be sent unto to make void their injunction and order concerning the staying of Merchants goods to which the Barons returned this answer Whereas the Honourable House of Commons by order of the 12. of this instant February have appointed that notice shall be given to the Lord Treasurer Chancellor Barons of the Exchequer of a Declaration made by Sir Iohn VVolstenholme Abrah Dawes and Rich. Carmarthan in the House of Commons that the goods that the Merchants brought into the Kings Store-house and laid up there for his Majesties use were detained as they conceive onely for the duty of Tunnage and Poundage and other sums comprized in the Book of rates which notice was given to the end the said Court of Exchequer might further proceed therein as to justice shall appertain Now the Lord Treasurer Chancellour and Barons out of their due respect to that honourable House and for their satisfaction do signifie that by the Orders and Injunctions of the said Court of Exchequer they did not determine nor any way touch upon the right of Tunnage and Poundage and so they declared openly in Court at the making of these Orders neither did they by the said Orders or Injunctions barr the Owners of those goods to sue for the same in a lawful course but whereas the said Owners endeavoured to take the same goods out of the Kings actual possession by Writs or Plaints of Replevin which was no lawful action or course in the Kings case nor agreeable to his Royal Prerogative therefore the said Court of Exchequer being the Court for ordering the Kings Revenue did by those Orders and Injunctions stay those Suits and did fully declare by the said Orders that the owners if they conceived themselves wronged might take such remedy as the Law alloweth Richard Weston Iohn Walter Tho. Trevor Lo. Newburgh Iohn Denham George Vernon The Answer of the Lord Treasurer and Barons instead of satisfaction expected by the House was looked upon as a justification of their Actions whereupon a motion was made to go on to consider of their proceedings and whether ever the Court of Exchequer held this course before for staying of Replevins and whether this hath been done by Prerogative of the King in his Court of Exchequer A report was made from the Committee concerning the pardons granted by the King since the last Session to certain persons questioned in Parliament and the reporter informed the House that they do finde upon examination that Dr. Sibthorpe and Mr Cosens did solicite the obtaining of their own pardons and that they said the Bishop of Winchester would get the Kings hand to them and it did also appear to the Committee that the Bishop of Winchester did promise the procuring of Mr. Montagues pardon that Dr. Manwaring solicited his own pardon and that the Bishop of Winchester got the Kings hand to it Mr. Oliver Cromwell being of this Committee informed the House what countenance the Bishop of Winchester did give to some persons that preached flat Popery and mentioned the persons by name and how by this Bishops means Manwaring who by censure the last Parliament was disabled for ever holding any Ecclesiasticall dignity in the Church and confessed the Justice of that Censure is nevertheless preferred to a rich Living If these be the steps to Church preferment said he what may we expect A Petition from the Booksellers and Printers in London was also presented complaining of the restraint of Books written against Popery and Arminianism and the contrary allowed of by the only means of Dr. Laud Bishop of London and that divers of the Printers and Booksellers have been sent for by Pursuivants for ●rinting Books against Popery and that Licensing is only restrained to the Bishop of London and his Chaplains and instanced in certain Books against Popery which were denyed to be Licenced Upon which occasion Mr. Selden declared that it is true there is no Law to prevent the Printing of any Books in England only a Decree in Star-Chamber and he advised that a Law might be made concerning Printing otherwise he said a man might be Fined Imprisoned and his Goods taken from him by vertue of the said Decree which is a great Invasion upon the Liberty of the Subject The House of Commons being informed that an Information was preferred in the Star-Chamber against Richard Chambers and others concerning some matters that fell out about their refusal to pay Tunnage and Poundage since the last Session of Parliament because the same was not granted by Act of Parliament they referred the same to a Committee to examine the truth of their proceedings and that whither they ought not to have priviledge of Parliament in regard they had then a Petition depending in Parliament to protect them against the said proceedings and Sir William Acton Sheriff of London being examined before the Committee concerning some matters about the Customers and not giving that cleare Answer which he ought and as the House conceived he might have done was therefore committed to the Tower of London And a Question mas made in the House at that time whether the House had at any time before committed a Sheriff of London to prison to which Mr. Selden made Answer that he could not call to mind a president of sending one Sheriff of London to prison but he well remembred a president of sending both the Sheriffs of London to the Tower and instanced the Case Friday February 13. the Parliament fell into consideration of the great increase of Popery and it was moved to examine the releasing of the Jesuites that were arraigned at Newgate whereof one onely was condemned though they were ten in number and they all Priests and had a Colledge here in London about Clerken-well these men said some could not attempt these acts of boldness but that they have great countenancers Hereup●n Secretary Cook declared that a Minister of State having notice of these ten persons and this Colledge intended to be kept at Clarkenwell acquainted his Majesty with it and I should not discharge my duty if I should not declare how much his M●jesty referred it to the especial care of the Lords of the Councel who examining the same sent those ten persons to Newgate and gave order to Mr. Attourney to prosecute the Law against them He further added
schismatick because the one opposeth the spirituall truth the other the temporall And as schism of it self is not heresie so sedition without other adjuncts is not treason Bracton f. 112 113 118. hath been objected that he makes sedition treason I will grant to them Hengham also who is to the same purpose for in those Books it is called Seditio Regis Regni To them I answer 1. That they are obscure For what signifies seditio Regis or tumultus Regis shall it be the same thing in sense with seditio contra Regem It seems that the said Authors neither remember Law nor Language 2. Although they reckon sedition amongst the crimes lesae Majestatis yet that is not to be regarded for they are obsolete Authors and are not esteemed as Authors in our Law as it is in Pl. 356. and C. 8.35 but they may be used for ornament and they are good marks to shew to us how the Law was then taken but not to declare how the Law is at this day they are no binding authority and if they be yet we have them of our side likewise For in his 14 Book Glanvill saies That a man accused of such a crime shall be bayled and that the Accuser shall give pledges And Bracton saies That if no accuser appears they shall be set at liberty And Hengham reckons amongst the crimes laesae Majestatis the breach of the Peace and so does Glanvil also Fleta who was a follower of Bracton and transscribes much verbatim out of him calls Sedition Seductionem of the Lord the King And 12 Edw. 1. the Statute of Rutland which prescribes Lawes for Wales enacts That the Sheriff shall enquire in his Turn de seductoribus Domini Regis and it is not apparent whether he intend those which seduce the King or his People And in latter times Seditio is called Sedutio In the time of Henry the seventh the Earl of Northumberland being a great and potent Peer and the King standing in awe of him caused him with twenty four others of great quality to enter in an obligation of twenty thousand pound which Obligation is in the hands of Sir Robert Cotton unto Him that if the said Earl knew Treason Sedution Losse c. to be intended to the King that he should reveal it 3. Also Crimen laesae Majestatis which is the phrase of the Civill-Law is more generall then treason and the old Authors which have been cited much follow the Civill-Law which hath this expression and Sedition by the Civill-Law is Treason But it was resolved 11 R. 2. n. 14. We are not governed by the Civill-Law And the Mirrour of Justices the principall copy whereof is in Benet-Colledge Library in Cambridge and there is also a copy in Lincolns-Inne Library Nor Britton in his Book who writ in the name of the King have not the word Seditio in them And I affirm confidently that there cannot be shewen any Record Book or Statute after the making of the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. in which Seditio is taken as a capitall offence And yet the Mirrour of Iustices reckons up severall kinds of Treasons which he divides into Treasons against the Celestiall or Terrestriall Majesty against the Celestiall Majesty as Schism Heresie Miscrea●●y and according to this the Book of 5 R. 2. Tryall 54 is to be understood which saies That a Miscreant shall forfeit his Lands because it is a kind of Treason And also he shewes divers Treasons against the King as the deflouring of the Kings eldest Daughter c. but not a word of Sedition But admit that Sedition imports a greater offence than Tumult yet there is no colour to say that it is Treason for 25 Edw. 3. is a flat Barre that I may use the Inner-Temple phrase to any thing to be treason which is not contained in it unlesse it be made treason by any speciall Act afterwards and 25 Edw. 3. does not make it Treason Stamford cites Glanvill and Bracton and other antient Books to shew what was Treason before the said Statute and what not And be saies That it was a great doubt what shall be said Treason saving that all agree that any thing that tends to the death of the King was Treason 3 ly Now examine the words against Us those words make not the crime more heinous as the case is I agree that if the words had been Sedition to take away the life of the King it would have been treason yea the very thought of treason is treason though none can judge thereof till it be produced in act 19 H. 6.47 b. by Newton 13 Jac. B. R. John Owen's case the writing of a Letter whereby he intended the death of the King was treason but it is not expressed that the raising of this sedition was with such intent whereby this differs from all the cases which can be put in which there is such an intent of the death of the King Also this Raising of sedition against Us shall not be intended treason for if it had been so the King would have so exprest it by the word Treason For as in his gracious disposition he will not extend a fault beyond the magnitude thereof so he will give to every offence the true and genuine name If the Return had been against Our Person it had been more certain that it concerned the King immediately this may be against any point of his Government And the proper and naturall signification of the words against Us is as much as Against Our Authority Our superintendency against Our Peace Crown and Dignity which are the usuall words in every Indictment of Felony Every breach of the Peace is against the King The usuall Return upon every ordinary Writ out of this Court is That the party be before Us and contempt to this Court is Contempt against Us and it is in the nature of sedition to the King Contempts to the Court of Star-chamber are Contempts against Us and upon them Commissions of rebellion issue and if the parties are brought in upon such Commissions yet they are baylable untill their conviction The King styles himself Us in Writs and every disobedience to any Writ may be said Sedition against Us. Routs riots illoyall assemblies may well be said and called Sedition against Us And for such offences a man shall not be restrained of his liberty upon an it may be Such a Return is necessary by which the Court may be truly informed of the offence For the Writ of Habeas Corpus is to submit and receive what the Court shall ordain And this Return of this nature is not to be compared to Writs which are generall and make a brief narration of the matter and are pursued and explained by subsequent declarations And yet I urge not that the Return ought to be as certain as an Indictment for an Indictment of Murder is not good if it lack the word Murdravit But the Return upon an Habeas corpus q.
sustained and undergone by him for his service done to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That the sum of five thousand pounds shall be assigned for the dammages losses sufferings and imprisonment sustained and undergone by Mr. Strode late a member of this House deceased for service done by him to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That Mr. Benjamin Valentine shall have the sum of five thousand pounds paid unto him for the dammages losses sufferings and imprisonments sustained and undergone by him for his service done to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That the sum of five hundred pounds shall be bestowed and disposed of for the erecting a Monument to Sir Miles Hobert a Member of the Parliament of tertio Caroli in memory of his sufferings for his service to the Common-wealth in that Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That Mr. Samuel Vassell shall have the sum of ten thousand four hundred forty five pounds twelve shillings two pence paid him for his losses and dammages sustained for denying to pay Tunnage and Poundage not granted by Act of Parliament in pursuance and obedience to a Declaration and Vote of this House Resolved c. That this House doth declare that they will in due time take Mr. Vassell into further consideration for his imprisonment and personall sufferings Ordered That it be recommitted to the Committee who brought in this Report to consider how the severall sums of mony this day ordered to be paid for dammages to the severall Members and others before named for their sufferings in the service of the Common-wealth may be raised FINIS AN INDEX Alphabetically digested relating to the Principal Persons and Matters contained in this Book A. ABbot Archbishop his advice concerning the Palatinate War p. 12 In disgrace at Court p. 61. his Letter to the King against Toleration of Popery p. 85. Still in disfavor p. 435. A Commission to sequester him ●b his Narrative at large containing the true cause of his being sequestred from p. 438. to 461. His Speech concerning the Petition of Right p. 552 Abbot Doctor p. 62 Acts passed in Parliament p. 152 195 644 Alford Master p. 568 Allured Master his Letter to the Duke p. 91. Another concerning the Duke p. 621 Ambassadors private Instructions p. 18 Anhault Prince made General of the Bohemians p. 14 Arminians p. 62 111 177 180 181 479 Arundel Earl p. 368 c. Ashley Serjeant questioned for words p. 552 Aston Sir Walter p. 14 60 106 107 113 114 Le Assembli des notables c. p. 691. And p. 14. Appendix Aske Mr. His Argument for Master Stroud p. 18. Appendix B. BAcon Lord Chancellor p. 28 29 31 162 Barkley Serjeant his Argument against Mr. Stroud Appendix p. 21 Barkshire Earl p. 376 Barons of the Exchequer sent unto about Merchants g●ods p. 666 667 Beecher Sir William p. 430 Bethlem Gabor assists the Bohemians p. 12 Bohemians vide Palatinate Book of Bounty prohibited p. 417 Bramston Serjeant upon the Habeas Corpus p. 463 Bristol vide Digby Buckingham writes unto Gundamor of King James dissatisfaction about the Palatines War p. 16. Goes with the Prince into Spain p. 76. Made Duke p. 78. A Letter sent to him from Mr. Allured p. 91. His Narrative to both Houses of Parliament p. 119. The truth thereof attested by the Prince p. 16. The Popes Letter to him p. 80. His head demanded by the Spanish Ambassador p. 126. The Duke is justified of both Houses ibid. And by King James who called him his disciple p. 127. Is accused again by the Spanish Ambassador p. 144 Renders an account in Parliament of the Fleet p. 190. And also speaks on his own behalf p. 191. Queries in Parliament concerning the Duke p. 221. Sir John Elliot concerning the Duke p. 224. The Kings Speech on behalf of the Duke p. 225. Lord Keeper to the same purpose p. 227. The Duke explains the Kings and the Lord Keepers Speech in Parliament p. 229. And renders an account of his Negotiation in the Low Countreys and elswhere p. 231. Is vindicated by the Lord Conway p. 235. The Commons present a Remonstrance against him p. 247. Private advice given him p. 250. The Dukes answer to a Message from the Commons p. 251. Articles exhibited against him by Bristol p. 266. The Kings Message on behalf of the Duke against Bristol p. 270. Impeached by the Commons p. 307. managed at a Conference by Eight Members p. 306 307 308 c. Private suggestions on behalf of the Duke p. 360. The Kings Speech on his behalf p. 361. A Message from the Commons against him p. 361. His Speech against them p. 367. Sir Dudley Carlton concerning him p. 362 363. Dissatisfied at the release of Sir John Elliot p. 365. Sir John Elliots explanation concerning him p. 366. Is chosen Chancellor of Cambridge p. 375. His Letter to that University p. 377. The Kings Letter on his behalf p. 378. His Speech in Parliament before he gave in his Answer p. 379. His Plea and Answer to the Impeachment p. 380 c. The King prefers an Information against him in Star-Chamber p. 417. Sets sail with the Fleet p. 429. Lands his Army at the Isle of Rhee p. 430. And had a hot encounter with the French p. 431. Omits to take in the little Fort ibid. Lays siege to the Cittadel at St. Martins ibid. Retreats with the Army from Rhee p. 469. Declared cause of all grievances p. 615. Desires to clear himself concerning some words supposed to be spoken by him p. 639. And charges one Melvin for speaking words against him ibid. Is slain at Portsmouth p. 647. The King receives news of his Death ibid. Burlacy Sir John p. 15 Burroughs Captain p. 15 40 Burroughs Sir John slain at Rhee p. 200 C. CAlthrop Mr. p. 464. Appendix 49 Carlile Earl p. 173 Carlton Sir Dudley p. 76.362 363 Carmarthen Mr. his Answer about Customs p. 668 Cautionary Towns in the Netherlands delivered up p. 3 Chambers Mr. questioned at the Council and committed p. 651. Brings his Habeas Corpus ibid. is bailed p. 652. his Goods seised on for not paying of Customs p. 653. A Writ of Replevin denied him ibid. Proceedings in Star-Chamber against him p. 680. His Sentence p. 681. His submission tendred p. 682. His refusal thereof p. 683. His Plea in the Exchequer against the jurisdiction of the Court of Star-Chamber ibid. Brought upon Habeas Corpus p. 686. His Petition to the long Parliament p. 687. His Death p. 689 Charls Prince his Letter to Philip the Fourth of Spain about the Match p. 59. Goes disguised into Spain p. 76. Had a sight of the Princess Henrietta Maria as the passed through France ibid. His reception and entertainment in Spain p. 77. Endeavors used to make him change his Religion p. 78. The Popes Letter to him ibid. His Answer thereunto p. 82. Swears to
take up their Winter Quarters A Letter of the Duke of Buckinghams to Gondomar touching King Iames his bent to the German War Octob. 25. Frederick's Forces totally routed in the Battel at Prague His calamity joined with loss of Honor. An Order at the Council-Table for recovering the Palatinate The Spaniards flatter the King Private Instructions to the Spanish Ambassador into England The King calls a Parliament The Protestant Union declines in Germany The Palatine propounds a Peace to the Elector of Saxony The King puts forth a Proclamation forbidding discourse of State-affairs The Kings Speech to the Parliament * Buckingham The Lo. Digby sent Ambassador into Flanders and Mr. Gage to Rome The Palatine and his Princess go into Holland The Emperor proceeds severely with the Bohemians Imperial Protestant Towns reconcile themselves to the Emperor and intercede for the Palatine but in vain Grievances proposed in Parliament Sir Giles Mompesson imprisoned but escapes beyond Sea 19 Iac. An. 1621. The Kings Speech to the Lords Sentence given against Sir Giles Mompesson And Sir Francis Michel his Compartner in Projects Lord Chancellor Bacon accused and convicted of Bribery Sir Henry accused by the Commons Gondomar reviled and assaulted in London streets Sir Rob. Mansel sent into the Mediterranean Sea The Emperor calls in question the Authors of the Commotions in Bohemia The King intends to adjourn the Parliament The Commons take it not well The King resents it The Commons Declaration touching the Palatinate The King by Proclamation reforms the late grievances handled in Parliament Puts forth another Proclamation against Talking of State-affairs The King is sollicited from Spain to enlarge his favors towards Catholicks The chief heads of the Lord Digby's Embassie to the Emperor The Emperors Reply to those Demands The L. Digby's second Proposal to the Emperor The Emperors Answer The English Ambassador goes to the Duke of Bavaria The Emperors Letter to Don Baltazar de Zuniga The Parliament begins again Nov. 20. The Substance of the Lord Keepers Speech Lord Digby's Speech Lord Treasurer's Speech The Commons Petition and Remonstrance to the King At this time the Protestants are ill treated in France The Kings Letter to Sir Tho. Richardson The Commons send the Remonstrance accompanied with another Petition The Kings Answer to the later Petition The Lord Keepers judgment touching the Kings sharp Answer The Lo. Digby to the Peers The Commons Protestation The King takes the Protestation out of the journal-Journal-book with his own hand In the mean time the King dissolves them Some Eminent Members of the Parliament in Prisoned Others sent for punishment into Ireland The Council write to Judges concerning such as speak of State Affairs The Palatine spoiled of his hereditary dominions The terms which King Iames desires the Emperor to accept in behalf of the Palatine The Emperors Answer to King Iames Ian. 14. 1621. King Iames to Philip the Fourth of Spain King Iames his Letter to the King of Spain Prince Charls to the King of Spain King Iames his Letter to the Lord Balthazar of Zuniga The Privy Council by the Kings command issue out an Order for raising Money for the defence of the Palatinate Archbishop Abbot not relished at Court an advantage taken against him Bishop Laud suspected to incline to Popish Tenents while he was of Oxford as appears by a notable passage The Arminians begin to be favored by the King by means of Bishop Laud. Favors shewed to Recusants by the Kings Order Iacobi 20. 1622. The Lord Keepers Letter excusing the Kings favor towards Papists The Kings Letter to the Archbishop for regulating the Clergy Directions concerning Preachers The new K. of Spain Philip the Fourth procures the Popes assent to the Match The Infanta cools in t●e Palsgraves business The pretended Obstacles of the Treaty removed Heidelburgh besieged New Conditions demanded of the King before the Pope gives a Dispensation The Kings Answer to the said Demands The King sends his Resolution to Digby in Spain now made Earl of Bristol Likewise a Letter was ●ent to ●ondomar 〈◊〉 recalle● into Spain The Answer to the Memorial presented by the Earl of Bristol to the Spanish King Bristol gives the King hope of the Match Heidelburgh taken The King provoked sends his former Resolutions with anew dispatch into Spain In the mean time Manheim is taken The Emperors Intentions to King Iames not good Nor the King of Spains witness his Letter to Conde Olivares Olivares Answer Bristols Answer from the King of Spain The Popes Demands signed by the King and Prince Frankendale block'd up by Papenheim The King writes to Bristol The Electorate conferred upon the Duke of Bavaria in the Diet at Ratisbone The Protestant Princes plead for the Palatine's restitution The Catholick Princes reply The Protestants reassume the argument The Emperor takes up the debate Sir Dudley Carlton Resident at the ●●gue sends his judgment of the matter to the Marquis of Buckingham The Prince and the Marquis of Buckingham go to Spain Buckingham visits Olivares and by him is conducted to the King Orders for the Prince's entertainment The Prince sees the Infanta Is entertained honorably by the King Makes his entrance publiquely into Madrid The King sends the Prince two Golden Keys The Grandees are commanded to attend his Highness The Marquis of Buckingham made Duke The people talk that the Prince is come to change his Religion Endeavors to make the Prince change his Religion * Quare Apostoli●is literis hortamur Catholicam Majestatem ut eum Principem redigere suaviter conetur sub Romanae Ecclesiae ditionem cui veteres Magnae Britanniae Domini coronatum caput imperii fasces Coelo plaudente submiserunt Quare te monemus ut ad Catholicum Regem religiosus Consiliarius accedas easque rationes despicias quibus insigne aliquod beneficium Britanniae Regnis Romanae Ecclesiae in praesenti rerum opportunitate comparetur Res ipsa magna atque gravissima est quare eum verbis amplificare non debemus Regnum Coelorum Britanniae Principi patefacere Regnum Britanniae sedi Apostolicae restituere incipiet qui Regii istius Adoloscentis animum Catholicae Religionis studio inflamaverit atque haeriticae impietatis odio impleverit c. The Pope's Letter to the Prince of Wales There is another Copy of the Princes Letter to the Pope published by several hands somewhat different from this Allurements to make the Prince change his Religion The Prince stedfast in his Religion Is not well dealt with in his Address to the Infanta The Dispensation is at last procured The Dispensation comes clogged Olivares proposes ways of Accommodation The King of Spain proffers to engage himself on the behalf of the King of England and the Prince His Ghostly Fathers approve his intentions The Match is declared publickly The Archbishops Letter to the King against Toleration of Popery Articles sworn to by the King Prince and Privy Council The Oath Private Articles sworne to by the King in
attended by all the Servants in Ordinary The day following the Privy-Counsellors to the late King with all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal then about London were in the Council Chamber at Whitehall by Eight of the Clock in the morning ready to go together and present themselves to his Majesty but there came in the mean a Commandment from the King by the Lord Conway and Sir Albertus Morton Principal Secretaries of State to the deceased King that the Lord Keeper of the Great-Seal should be sworn of his Majesties Privy-Council and that he should give the Oath to the Lord President by whom all the rest of the late Kings Council should be sworn Counsellors to his present Majesty The Lord Keeper of the great Seal the Lord President the Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury the Lord Treasurer of England the Lord Privy-Seal the Duke of Buckingham Lord Admiral of England the Earl of Pembrook Lord Chamberlain the Earl of Montgomery the Earl of Kellye the Earl of Arundel Earl Marshal of England the Lord Viscount Grandison the Lord Conwey the Lord Brook Mr Treasurer Mr Comptroller the Master of the Wards Mr Secretary Morton Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Master of the Rolls were this day sworn accordingly the Lord Keeper did take an Oath apart as Lord Keeper of the Great Seal the Lord Treasurer as Lord Treasurer of England the Lord President as Lord President of the Kings Privy-Council and the Lord Conwey and Sir Albertus Norton as principal Secretaries of State the Lords which were not of his Majesties Privy-Council repaired by themselves to St Iames's and presented themselves to the King and kissed his hand The Council sat immediately and advised of the most important and pressing matters to be offered to the King for his present service and resolved upon these particulars That a Commission be granted to authorize the Great-Seal Privy-Seal and Signet till new ones be prepared also Commissions for authorizng of Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs and other such Officers for Government that there be a general Proclamation for continuation of Proceedings preservation of Peace and administration of Justice that Letters be prepared for the Ambassadors with foreign Princes to authorize their services to the King that special Messengers be sent unto foreign Princes that the like Proclamations to those of England be sent into Scotland that Commissions be renewed into Ireland to the Deputy and Officers there that the Mint for Coyning of money go on and all things be mannaged by the Officers as then they stood till the Kings pleasure be further known that a Parliament be summoned when the King shall appoint that the Kings pleasure be known concerning the time of his Fathers Funeral and where the Corps shall rest in the mean time as also the time of his Majesties Coronation This being done the whole Council attended the King at St Iames's where the Lord Keeper in the name of all the rest presented their humble thanks that it had pleased his Majesty to have affiance in those that had been Counsellors to his Father to receive them all to be of his Privy-Council the Lord President represented to the King the matters before mentioned which the King allowed and gave order that those of them which required speed should be put in execution and most of the powers he signed presently And first because by the death of the late King the Authorities and powers of the greatest number of Offices and places of Government did cease and fail by the failing of the Soveraign Person from whom the same were derived a Proclamation issued forth signifying his Majesties pleasure that all persons whatsoever who at the decease of the late King were invested in any Office or Place of Government Civil or Martial within the Realms of England and Ireland and namely Presidents Lieutenants Vice-Presidents Judges Justices Sheriffs Deputy Lieutenants Commissaries of Musters Justices of Peace shall continue in their several Offices till his Majesties pleasure were further known In another Proclamation of the same date the King took notice of his Fathers death and that he being his onely Son and undoubted Heir is invested and established in the Crown Imperial of this Realm and all other his Majesties Realms Dominions and Countries with all the Royalties Preeminencies Stiles Names Titles and Dignities to the same belonging and he declared That as he for his part shall by Gods grace shew himself a most benign and gracious Soveraign Lord to all his good Subjects in all their lawfull Suits and Causes so he mistrusteth not but that they on their parts will shew themselves unto him their natural Liege Lord most loving faithfull and obedient Subjects The Council resolved to move the King that his Fathers Funeral might be solemnized within five weeks and within a few dayes after the Ceremonial Nuptials in France and before the Parliament began in England These Resolves the Lord President represented unto the King who accepted of the advices and said he would follow them Moreover he summoned a Parliament to begin the seventeeth of May but by the advice of his Privy-Council Prorogued it to the one and thirtieth of May afterwards to the thirteenth of Iune and then to the eighteenth of the same moneth which Prorogations were occasioned by the Kings going to Dover to receive the Queen April 23. The Body and Herse of King Iames was brought from Theobalds to London being conducted by the Officers of the Guard of the Body all in Mourning every one having a Torch and attended by all the Lords of the Court and great numbers of other persons of quality and was placed in Denmark-House in the Hall of the deceased Queen Anne The seventh of May was the day of Burial the Body and Herse were taken from the said Hall of State and brought in great Pompe and Solemnity to Westminster where the Kings of England use to be interred The new King to shew his Piety towards his deceased Father was content to dispense with Majesty he followed in the Rear having at his right hand the Earl of Arundel at his left the Earl of Pembrook both Knights of the Garter his Train was born up by twelve Peers of the Realm So King Iames who lived in Peace and assumed the title of Peace-maker was peaceably laid in his Grave in the Abby at Westminster King Charles in his Fathers life time was linked to the Duke of Buckingham and now continued to receive him into an admired intimacy and dearness making him Partaker of all his Counsels and Cares and Chief Conductor of his Affairs an Example rare in this Nation to be the Favorite of two succeding Princes The Publick State of Religion and the steering of Church-matters had an early inspection and consultation in the Cabinet Council Bishop Laud who in King Iame's life time had delivered to the Duke a little book about Doctrinal Puritanism now also delivered to the Duke a
Schedule wherein the names of Ecclesiastical persons were written under the letters O and P O standing for Orthodox and P for Puritans for the Duke commanded that he should thus digest the names of eminent persons to be presented unto the King under that Partition King Charles in the entrance of his Reign proceeds with preparations for a War begun in his fathers time the Militia of the Kingdom through the long continued Peace was much decayed and the Musters of the Trained-bands were slight and seldom taken and few of the Commons were expert in the use of Arms wherefore the Lords Lieutenants were commanded by order of the Council to make a general Muster of the Trained Horse and Foot in their several Counties and to see to the sufficiency of the Men Horse and Arms and that all be compleat according to the best modern form and be in readiness for all occasions and especially now the affairs of Christendom stand upon such uncertain Terms and more particularly that the Maritine Towns be well manned and their men duely exercised and the King declared his will and pleasure that the Lord Lieutenants of the several Shires should have the nomination of their Deputy Lieutenants In the beginning of May Warrants were issued forth for a Leavy of Souldiers to be imployed in the service of his Majesties Brother and Sister the Prince and Princess Palatine whereof eight thousand were pointed to Rendezvous at Plymouth by the five and twenty of this Moneth and the charge of Coat and Conduct was ordered to be disbursed by the Country and the Country to be repaid out of the Kings Exchequer after the President of former times in like manner two thousand men were appointed to Rendezvous at the Port of Hull to be transported into the Netherlands for the service of the United-Provinces and two thousand were to be returned thence into England for his Majesties present service the mingling of a good proportion of old Souldiers and Officers with the new raised Companies was the ground of this exchange The remembrance of the late violence committed by Count Mansfield's Army in their passage to Dover occasioned a Proclamation to repress and prevent the like attempts of Soldiers as they now passed through the Counties to the places of their Rendezvous threatning the Offendors with the strictest proceedings against them for an Example of Terror and straitly commanding the Officers who have the charge of the Conduct for the removing of all occasions and pretences of disorders to see their Companies duely paid and provided of all necessaries and to be alwayes present with them and carefully to conduct them from place to place in like manner to prevent their Outrages when they should come to Plymouth or the parts adjoyning a Commission was sent impowering persons of trust upon any robbery fellony mutiny or other misdemeanors punishable with death by Martial Law committed by the Souldiers or other dissolute persons joyned with them to proceed to the trial and condemnation of all such Delinquents in such Summary course and order as is used in Armies in time of War according to the Law Martial and to cause Execution to be done in open view that others may take warning and be kept in due obedience The consummation of King Charles his Marriage with Henrietta Maria Daughter of France was near at hand The Treaty had proceeded far in his Fathers life time but was not in all points concluded the Articles were signed the year before by King Iames on the eleventh of May and by the French King on the Fourteenth of August On the Thirteenth of March this present year the Earls of Carlisle and Holland being then Ambassadors and Commissioners in France for this Marriage King Charls signed the Articles Besides the general there were other private Articles agreed upon in favor of the Papists of this Kingdom That the Catholicks as well Ecclesiasticks as Temporal imprisoned since the last Proclamation which followed the Breach with Spain should all be set at liberty That the English Catholicks should be no more searched after nor molested for their Religion That the Goods of the Catholicks as well Ecclesiastical as Temporal that were seised on since the forementioned Proclamation should be restored to them And on the Tenth of May as the first fruits of this promised Indulgence and favor the King granted unto Twenty Roman Priests a special Pardon of all Offences committed against the Laws then in force against Papists The Dispensation being come from Rome about the beginning of May the Espousals were made in Paris by Cardinal Richelieu The Ambassadors having first presented to the King the Contract of Marriage which was read openly by the Chancellor and his Majesty of France agreed thereunto The Duke of Chevereux likewise shewed his Procuration of power which the King of England had given him concerning the said Marriage The Archbishop of Paris pretended that it belonged to him to perform this Solemnity but the Cardinal carried it as well for the eminencie of his Dignity as for that he was chief Almoner and prime Curate of the Court. Sunday following the day appointed for these Nuptials the Bride went from the Louure about Nine in the morning to be dressed in the Archbishops house and afterwards the King Queen and Princesses and all the Court in rich Attire parted likewise from the Louure and came to the said house of the Archbishop and thence conducted the Bride to a Theatre exected on purpose before the Frontispiece of Nostre-Dame The Duke of Chevereux had Black habit lined with Cloth of Gold and beset with Diamonds The Earls of Carlisle and Holland Ambassadors were both clad in Beaten-Silver and went on each side of the Duke of Chevereux A Canopy being placed upon the Scaffold the King of France and Monsieur his Brother consigned the Queen of Great Britain their Sister into the hands of the Duke of Chevereux and the Marriage was solemnized according to the ordinary Ceremonies of that Church Which being performed they went in the same order and solemnity to Nostre-Dame the Duke of Chevereux going before the King When they came to the door of the Quire they made great Reverence to the King and Queen and then the Ambassadors retired into the Bishops house while Mass was said in the Church The Mass being ended the Duke of Chevereux and the Ambassadors came again to the door of the Quire to take their places and the same Order was observed in returning as in going And so they came from the Church into the Hall of the Archbishops house where the Feast Royal was made in as great magnificence as can be expressed The King sate under a Canopy at the middle of the Table and the Queen of Great Britain at his left hand and the Queen-Mother at his right the Duke of Chevereux sate next the Queen of England and the Earls of Carlisle and Holland next to the Duke To the intent that all
first to direct and make Laws There is no Law made till the King assent unto it but if it be put simply to make Laws it will make much startling at it 3. Page 10. If nothing may excuse from active obedience but what is against the Law of God or of Nature or impossible How doth this agree with the first Fundamental Position Page 5. That all Subjects are bound to all their Princes according to the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom wherein they live This is a fourth Case of Exception 4. Page 11. The Poll-Money mentioned by him in St. Matthew was imposed by the Emperor as a Conqueror over the Iews and the execution of it in England although it was by a Law produced a terrible effect in King Richard the Second's time when onely it was used for ought that appeareth 5. Page 12. It is in the bottome view the Reign of Henry the Third and whether it be fit to give such allowance to the Book being surreptitiously put out 6. In the same Page let the largeness of those words be well considered Yea all Antiquity to be absolutely for absolute Obedience to Princes in all Civil and Temporal things For such cases as Naboths Vineyard may f●ll within this 7. Page 14. Sixtus Quintus was dead before the year One thousand five hundred and eighty 8. In the same Page weigh it well How this Loan may be called a Tribute and when it s said We are promised it shall not be immoderately imposed How that agreeth with his Majesties Commission and Proclamation which are quoted in the Margent It should seem that this Paper did prick to the quick and no satisfaction being thereby accepted Bishop Laud is called and he must go to answer to it in writing This man is the onely inward Counsellor with Buckingham sitting with him sometimes privately whole hours and feeding his humor with malice and spight His life in Oxford was to pick quarrels in the Lectures of the Publick Readers and to advertise them to the then Bishop of Durham that he might fill the ears of King Iames with discontents against the honest men that took pains in their places and setled the truth which he called Puritanism in their Auditors He made it his work to see what Books were in the Press and to look over Epistles Dedicatory and Prefaces to the Reader to see what faults might be found It was an observation what a sweet man this was like to be that the first observable act that he did was the marrying of the Earl of D. to the Lady R. When it was notorious to the World that she had another Husband and the same a Nobleman who had divers Children then living by her King Iames did for many years take this so ill that he would never hear of any great preferment of him insomuch that the Bishop of Lincoln Doctor Williams who taketh upon him to be the first promoter of him hath many times said That when he made mention of Laud to the King his Majesty was so averse from it that he was constrained oftentimes to say That he would never desire to serve that Master which could not remit one fault unto his Servant Well in the end he did conquer it to get him to the Bishoprick of St. Davids which he had not long enjoyed but he began to undermine his Benefactor as at this day it appeareth The Countess of Buckingham told Lincoln that St. Davids was the Man that undermined him with her Son and verily such is his aspiring nature that he will underwork any man in the World so that he may gain by it This Man who believeth so well of himself framed an Answer to my Exceptions But to give some countenance to it he must call in three other Bishops that is to say Durham Rochester and Oxford tryed men for such a purpose and the whole stile of the Speech runneth We and We. This seemed so strong a confutation that for reward of their service as well as for hope that they would do more Doctor Neal Bishop of Durham and the Bishop of Bath were sworn of the Privy Council The very day being Sunday Mr. Murrey was sent unto me with a Writing but finding me all in a sweat by a fit of the Stone which was then upon me he forbore for that time to trouble me and said That on the morrow he would repair unto me again I got me to Bed and lying all that night in pain I held it convenient not to rise the next day And on the Monday Mr. Murrey came unto me which was the Eighth time that he had been with me so uncessantly was I plyed with this noble work I had shewed it before to a friend or two whereof the one was a Learned Doctor of Divinity and the other had served many times in Parliament with great commendation We all agreed That it was an idle work of a Man that understood not Logick that evidently crossed himself that some times spake plausibly and in the end of his Sermon fell so poor and flat that it was not worth the reading Mr. Murrey coming to my Bed-side said That he was sent again by the King and had a Paper to be shewed unto me Archb. You see in what case I am having slept little all this last night but nevertheless since you come from the King I will take my Spectacles and read it Murrey No my Lord you may not read it neither handle it for I have charge not to suffer it to go out of my hands Archb. How then shall I know what it is Murrey Yes I have order to read it unto you but I may not part with it Archb. I must conceive that if I do not assent to it his Majesty will give me leave to reply upon it which I cannot do but in my Study for there are my Books Murrey I must go with you into your Study and sit by you till you have done Archb. It is not so hasty a work it will require time and I have not been used to Study one sitting by me but first read it I pray you The yong Gentleman read it from the one end to the other being two or three sheets of Paper Archb. This Answer is very bitter but giveth me no satisfaction I pray you leave the Writing with me and I shall batter it to peeces Murrey No my Lord I am forbidden to leave it with you or to suffer you to touch it Archb. How cometh this about Are the Authors of it afraid of it or ashamed of it I pray you tell his Majesty that I am dealt with neither Manly nor Schollar-like Not Manly because I must fight with Adversaries that I know not not Shollar-like because I must not see what it is that must confute me It is now Eight and forty years ago that I came to the University and since that time I have ever loved a Learned Man I have disputed