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

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is such that it is one of the most destructive for there is no conscience of an oath with the most and though it be visible there is no due punishment Gentlemen you that are at the Stern whom God hath lifted up in the height of his power and placed in seats of Eminency do not trifle away your precious time let speedy care be taken to settle this poor distracted Nation look not to your own works and let the Lords lie still there appeared in you a strong dependance upon God give not wicked men cause to blaspheme Rowze up your selves and consider God hath a controversie with the Nation and will not be appeased with all Offerings except Justice and Righteousness be done Let the Complaints of the poor afflicted distressed come to your ears who have great wrongs injuries and oppressions and none to relieve them Yea let the cryes of quiet peaceable men come to your ears who are oppressed only because not willing to return evil for evil rayling for rayling stroak for stroak action for action To sue is to perplex their minds ruine their estates if they have it and bring them at least to a wanting condition who lived well not to sue to be sued and forced to compound at the legal Theeves Will. If poor the Law is chargeable equity unreasonable and get a Lord Chief Justice Warrant so called Order of Reference it is derided not obeyed after much expectation loss of time and some expence by the poor Sutor You are on earth in Gods place and must to him give an account let not your eyes sleep till these works of Righteousness be setled There is great complaint of Inns Alehouses Taverns c. encreasing under your Regiment for the Lords sake look speedily about you let not your Officers as the Kings set your honor to sale for the increase of their Fees you are yet in a slippery place the promises and engagements upon you are great and the expectations of the people high and those most considerable of your own party are the highest their spirits breath after just Liberty they see how you toss and tumble all the Rubbish of the Government of the world to find fit stones for your building Truly they dare say among all the Christian Princes practised Rules Edicts Orders Statutes Laws c. you cannot find materials enough to lay one step to the Throne of pure Justice in the supremacy of power and they therefore much fear lest you should stumble at the same stone of offence with them and place the excellency of your eminency in power to do rather then doing Justice and when you get a little strength to stand on your selves to think and by power make good you are as they accountable to none but God there is no clearness in the walkings and actings of men because yours are not so But most will hope as they pray for better things and although they knowing the great burthens which are upon your shoulders cannot desire so much as some do neither will they nor dare they as others think much less say most likely to render your actions odious that you seek nothing but your selves and because you do not all that is desired therefore cry out you sit to do nothing No all may see you have done great things but it is desired that some things of conceived necessity for your establishment be speedily ordered until with the whole they may be in due time established or setled As first for the breeding up of all youth that all Schools be supplyed with able honest and religious School-masters all according to one form and rule setled by the Supream Magistrate And so the Universities where the youth are yet rather poysoned then profited and though the humerous conceit of Caps and Capping and such like be justly waved that such a decency be ordered in the habits of youths as may not adapt the mind to licentiousness many wise men placing much in things of that nature and to that end that all youths habits of both sexes at least may be ordered throughout the whole Nation but especially apprentices and servants of all sorts So as at least to distinguish not shame that of shame only affronting not reclaiming and for all servants to be admitted their services by Testimonial under a penalty to the Master or Dame their wages to be set by the Magistrate or some appointed universality and absolute conformity in these even to unity may be pressed without just scruple of conscience For to speak once for all to make acts of common reason intendment and benefit for particular places by them in supremacy of power because by them asked and not by others is exceeding selfish which who ever hath purchased out a particular act can easily resent Therefore it is justly desired such things to be generally the same For prohibiting of new Inns Taverns c. and ousting those erected within seven or ten years unless allowed by your Commissioners and upon due and set cause to disable the remainder and allow others or fine to some purpose as receiving any to tipple on the Lords Day or dayes of publike either prayer or humiliation And that all things may hold a proportion that all Offices Honorary fiduciary or profitable be so distributed that the work intended may be done or the neglecters punished and that such as are faithful may know certainly to whom to make their addresses for many errors are seen and felt and the State is sensible of them in part as by the careful Orders issued out from the Right Honorable the Councel of State appears But how to execute them and not be caught in the witty springes of our present Cabalistical Law no Justice of Peace can determine and generally the more knowing and able the more wary at least in opening of the fruitless or rather destructively fruitful niceties past whereby the many are cooled to action For if they apprehend men dangerous That live high and yet can give no account how they come by it what should they do To imprison for no cause visible is hard to some not to do it destructive with others to prison in the Gaole chargeable and the place having no labor to busie body or mind fatall in Bridewell shameful and generally work they will not and all this from the want of due Law Next our Lawyers are eminently favourers of nicety of Law and open it to the ruine of publick safety for from an opinion that Lead is parcel of the free-hold of the Church to rob all Churches so called is so frequent that it is feared they will soon come to pull down houses No saith the Learned sue him and he hath nought to recompence the same so there must be visible actuall force with Guns c. to evidence a forcible detainer or the indictment lies not whereby possessions are kept oft times ten years together many seven sue they dare not the Law is so nice dubious and
be composed if this will not do let a Magistrate allow a legal controversie Then let his Case be set down specially as it is after the nature of an Action upon the Case and let Oath be of the truth of it and that he is able to make it good by Law let the Case barely be stated no Conceits no Opinions but the naked truth which the Complainant is to make good Let this alwayes be within twelve moneths after cause of Action Then let a Summons go to the Defendant by a sworn Officer from the Court or the party or some other making Oath of the Summons if he appears not let a Note be fixed to his door under a severe penalty to any one to take off requiring appearance or to shew Cause if neither be done let the Trial immediatly be awarded if he appear let the day of hearing be ordered and entered in the Court-book and that truly by the Clerk under a severe Fine immediatly to be deducted by abatement in his Salary after which time let a Jury of twelve or six men for it is not the number that doth the work I think six best but that contest is not worth the while the alteration of an old received way is the greatest objection be warned not under the penalty of twenty or one hundred pounds and nothing ever paid but of ten or five shillings to be assuredly levied to the States use immediatly of Course unless sick in bed or otherwise imployed in the Service of the Commonwealth in the County above twenty miles or hindred by Providence which Causes sworn and allowed may excuse or essoyn him for not summoned the Officer is sworn and must admit no present contest Now the men must be knowing understanding men and of estate to answer dammages if that be continued if they give a false Verdict which is just being they are properly Judges of the dammage now if they and the Judge differ upon the Law let them do it at their peril for the Case let it be stated the Judges and their hands with the Counsel present set to it and let the yearly Judges decide it and if the Judge be faulty let him otherwise the Jury be fined to the State and if they give a false Verdict that is go not truly according to what is truly alledged and proved unless they or some of them of their own knowledge know the thing of which they are bound to give the Court publike Cognizance for Juries as other Judges are under a Rule of Reason and Common Justice then Jurors must be of the next inhabitants to the place where the fact was Committed of the vicinage neer dwellers so that they know the parties their lives and conversations and thereby judge But there ought to be no relations of Consanguinity or Affinity within three degrees for although spiritual or publick relations ought to be preferred above natural yet this is now little known less regarded Lastly he must not be who is a Jury-man a common Swearer Drinker Company-keeper nor ejected any congregation as an evil person an offender against the peace and quiet of the Nation or one that hath declared his opinion before sworn It is agreed it is best object against the Juror before sworn but what the court is mistaken in ought not to be proceeded in therefore till they be as we say gone from the bar just objections may be offered but the Judge must not allow objections as to favor or surmises after sworn if it be let it be proved for let no Juror after sworn be dismissed but the reason recorded and this proof is easie and then let him be fined When Judgement ought to be and Execution And when void IUdgement ought immediately to follow Execution unless some just cause and that only in Law be offered and for execution notwithstanding the cause which may be for delay alledged let the goods be secured or the money deposited or no cause allowed And if the party be present let him enter caution immediately to perform the judgement or otherwise to imprison his person is not dispriviledge if he be able till he performs it let the caution be setting his hand to the judgement which ought to amount in Law to above all Statutes or Customary Judgements alwayes provided if the execution be not within twelve moneths upon any Judgement whatever the Judgement to be void for the long hanging of judgements and other securities is also legall injustice I say no more Offendors in impannelling Juries Imbracers and the like FOr offendors in putting in knowingly unfit Jurors in any kind let them be fined and the Fines high and deducted out of their salary if any in hand otherwise by distress besides loss of that place and disabled of any other for at least some years for it must be perjury for he is a sworn Officer For drawers of Iurors or informers of them aforehand to draw them to one party let all be upon presentment and tryed and fined What Distresses are lawful THe Law is just that no man be destrained in that whereby he principally earns his living if ought else be But to distrain one man for a Fine due from a Hundred Town c. this is hard without speedy remedy is unjust let this be generally committed to a Court and right done as the fact appears that is let an equal rate be and the Constable and Overseers gather it and pay it immediately with respect to his dammage adjudged and set and if they will not let the Court enforce the rate and all charges upon it and so in all other Cases What to be done in cases of waste c. IN case of waste let the forfeiture be certain for Tenants for year by Lease let it be their Term except an incom be and for that let a Jury mitigate For Guardians of Infants Tenants for life and the like let it be treble dammages those to be assessed by a Jury What to do in Commons THis is a matter of large extent and is one of the great sores of England which wants healing Our Commons are either appendant appurtenant or by reason of vicinage and were originally the relief of the beasts of the Plow and for the breed of young Cattel for the Freeholders and do primarily belong to them and as their Farm was so might they put upon the Common greater or lesser quantity of Cattel according to proportion But long since the rule of Commoning was lost and Commons are become the ruine of the generalty of the poor to whom Commonage belongs not For first they get a Cow in Summer and live idlely of that and not providing against winter they buy dear in the Spring and sell cheap at winter and the rich so long as the purse payes not few regard how things go by this at last miserable and remediless beggery ensues besides the general neglect of Commons as of all matte●… of publick interest whereby many poor are undone
Market is over before they arrive or near it They also put exceeding charges upon admissions c. and no accompt but to themselves which in the consequences may be destructive not only to the private person but body politique in amassing Treasure The lesser Corporations were for marking measuring sealing sluffs linnen and woollen with a Crown Seal forsooth and these were his Majesties gratuities to the Lord of c. Marquess c. Q. Mother Lady Nurse Groom of the stool that is the Close stool whether King or Queen high and advantageous honours and this discended to outlandish as in Land commodities yea to pins and brooms and it was said to Rags for paper and Marrow-bones for Kitchin-stuff or grease Next he found one so base as being a Lawyer to take a pattent to have the first motion in the strictest sence or to be heard in all cases before any other which the Judges wisely quashed in the shell hearing him and shewing obedience to power and fulfilled this Patent therein and then declaring by an intimation of a rigid dislike that the Authority pretended could not that is with safety grant it for the Lawyers would be stirred who had the key of Knowledge and they once disaffected might be like a spark in powder All these had their success because they by degrees falling upon persons or trades only they even upon advice desisted generally from more then expostulation some few brought Actions and were killed with delayes and frowns Then the King intends a Master-piece which was at once to quash all controversies by a sleight and sudden judgment having a colour of Law but no substance and this was by an universal charge upon the whole body of Subjects so called Ship-Money which had for foundation thus much The Kingdom was an Isle the defence Shipping the Navy was decayed the King must replenish so he rigs his Ships and sends them forth to take the ayre as the idle ones said but indeed to inure bodies to the Sea settle them under pay and discipline and so engage dependance they return and whereas heretofore the Maritine Counties sent forth Ships and the Land towns paid now the King would provide all Ships and they all should pay now this was clearly done only to inhance the so called Crown Revenue for the Subject saw no Enemy and so no necessity the original cause of that Tax a general peace was held to the out side with all Nations after theslaughter of the gallant English at the Isle of Ree and the dismanteling of Rochel But the upshot was the King must be judge nay sole Judge of this necessity and this is quaeried by the King to his Judges which to prove the assertion before they were all King trodden that is had engaged all their abilities to his meer will two onely of twelve in this so important a business as indeed the whole life of the Subjects Liberty was involved in it as to his estate at first and for denyal of that to his restraint durst assert the truth which two only I shall own as men noble and honest Crook and Hutton and though both or one were by the plurality of Votes ingaged to the first Quaere Whether the King were sole Judge yet upon the Tryal brought by that true Patriot Hambden they righted themselves and the Nation to the utmost and honest Crook spake true plain English reason and good Law while mercinaries blundred upon the work and had they taken Barcley's Argenis and read the discourse betwixt Polyarchus and Hyanisbe touching such taxes they had saved their credits as only declaring the judgement of an Alien to English Liberty and reserved themselves But now 'twixt Truth and Loyalty so called they were confounded and gave no satisfaction no not to the well-affected to absolute powers and by this notwithstanding all power the Subject was enboldned to deny and at last after some two or three yeer the King was enforced to desist and surely his cogitations were for Armies how providence prevented there being so many discourses of it I shall omit only with this hint That these fore-runners manifestly declare that the Arms in Ireland raised by his Commission and continued in England against the same power of Parliament Assertors of the same Common Liberty by the Nation owned and petitioned for were undoubtedly the effects of the same cause namely the subversion of Englands Law and Government the peoples Liberties and all Rights making the King by his meer free will the absolute Arbiter of all actions civil and criminal Thus in brief I have set down some of the visible preparatives to Englands Climaterical Revolution which it now labours under In the discussion of the State of affairs civil and so called Ecclesiastick before but especially in the time of the late King and all shews that plainly there was left no more then an outside Christianity or formal Religion the temper of the clay of the world the pravity of Reason in the depraved principles of policy the iron of reason in the variety of species of Government and the gold of Christian simplicity the gold owned in the Scriptures by Authority allowed the iron in the rational formal profession of the same and the consequences thereof the Clay in the false and unconsequential glosses to make mans rule and absolute Government the higest and last refuge of every man and that for a particular persons end though in publke trust for that trust was said not so much to be for the peoples benefit as his own These things premised I might omit the passages since as being fresh in every mans memory but at the desire of some I shall go on in the way of a cursory Historical Narration repinings and grudgings by and from the actions of the King and his Ministers growing high so that it was not thought fit to proceed without some force ready for fear of insurrections which were indeed desired and therefore the people were afflicted that they might rebell and bring themselves into slavery The King having received the platform of alteration of his State from Thomas Earle of Strafford he is made his Agent to keep on foot a strong Army in Ireland who to speak truth were a company of men fit for as high an attempt as they were intended for but being Jesuited in great if not the greatest part they might have double designs that is rather to embroile all the Kingdomes and fit them for the tooth of the Spaniard their universal Patron then for the Kings absolute settlement in England whom they truly knew not to affect the Popes interest further then it stood with his own which is truly the Maxime of all Princes however they carry it Upon the confidence of this Army he is fooled into a quarrel with the Scots and was undoubtedly made beleeve that to let the Spaniard land 10000. in England was the only way to set all right and Wentworth a man of depth of policy and courage might