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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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for Posterity to strike at the propriety of their Goods contrary to the piety and intention of your Majesty so graciously exprest And these being the true Grounds and Motives of his forbearance to the said Loan shewing such inconveniences in Reason and representing it an Act contradicting so many of your Laws and most of them by the most prudent and happiest of our Princes granted which could not without presumption beyond pardon in your Suppliant in taking to himself the Dispensation of those Laws so piously Enacted by him be violated or impeached In the fulness of all Submission and Obedience as the Apology of his Loyalty and Duty he lowly offers to your most Sacred Wisdom for the satisfaction of your Majesty most humbly praying your Majesty will be graciously pleased to take them into your Princely consideration where when it shall appear as he doubts not but from hence it will to your déep judgment that no factious humor nor disaffection led on by stubbornness and will hath herein stirred or moved him but the just Obligation of his Conscience which binds him to the service of your Majesty in the observânce of your Laws he is hopeful presuming upon the Piety and Iustice of your Majesty that your Majesty according to your innate Clemency and Goodness will be pleased to bestow him to your Favor and his Liberty and to afford him the benefit of those Laws which in all humility he craves Notwithstanding the said Petition he still continued a prisoner in the Gate-house till the general Order of Discharge came Sir Peter Hayman refusing to part with Loan-money was called before the Lords of the Council who charged him with refractoriness and with an unwillingness to serve the King and told him if he did not pay he should be put upon service Accordingly they commanded him to go upon his Majesties service into the Palatinate and having first setled his estate he undertook and performed the journey and afterwards returned into England Archbishop Abbot having been long slighted at Court now fell under the Kings high displeasure for refusing to Licence Doctor Sibthorps Sermon as he was commanded intituled Apostolical Obedience and not long after he was sequestred from his Office and a Commission was granted to the Bishops of London Durham Rochester Oxford and Doctor Laud Bishop of Bath and Wells to execute Archiepiscopal Jurisdiction The Commission as followeth CHARLS by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To the Right Reverend Father in God George Bishop of London and to the Right Reverend Father in God Our Trusty and Welbeloved Counsellor Richard Lord Bishop of Durham and to the Right Reverend Father in God Iohn Lord Bishop of Rochester and Iohn Lord Bishop of Oxford to the Right Reverend Father in God Our Right Trusty and Welbeloved Counsellor William Lord Bishop of Bathe and Wells Greeting WHereas George now Archbishop of Canterbury in the right of the Archbishoprick hath several and distinct Archiepiscopal Episcopal and other Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Powers and Iurisdictions to be exercised in the Government and Discipline of the Church within the Province of Canterbury and in the Administration of Iustice in Causes Ecclesiastical within that Province which are partly executed by himself in his own person and partly and more generally by several persons nominated and authorised by him being learned in the Ecclesiastical Laws of this Realm in those several places whereunto they are deputed and appointed by the said Archbishop Which several places as We are informed they severally hold by several Grants for their several lives as namely Sir Henry Martin Knight hath and holdeth by the Grants of the said Archbishop the Offices and places of the Dean of the Arches and Iudge or Master of the Prerogative Court for the Natural life of the said Sir Henry Martin Sir Charls Caesar Knight hath and holdeth by Grants of the said Archbishop the places or Offices of the Iudge of the Audience and Master of the Faculties for the term of the Natural life of the said Sir Charls Caesar. Sir Thomas Ridley Knight hath and holdeth by the Grant of the said Archbishop the place or Office of Uicar-General to the said Archbishop And Nathaniel Brent Doctor of the Laws hath and holdeth by Grant of the said Archbishop the Office or place of Commissary to the said Archbishop as of his proper and peculiar Diocess of Canterbury And likewise the several Registers of the Arches Prerogative Audience Faculties and of the Uicar-General and Commissary of Canterbury hold their places by Grants from the said Archbishop respectively Whereas the said Archbishop in some or all of these several places and Iurisdictions doth or may sometimes assume unto his personal and proper Iudicature Order or Direction some particular Causes Actions or Cases at his pleasure And forasmuch as the said Archbishop cannot at this present in his own person attend these Services which are otherwise proper for his Cognisance and Iurisdiction and which as Archbishop of Canterbury he might and ought in his own person to have performed and executed in Causes and Matters Ecclesiastical in the proper Function of Archbishop of that Province We therefore of Our Regal Power and of Our Princely Care and Providence that nothing shall be defective in the Order Discipline Government or Right of the Church have thought fit by the Service of some other Learned and Reverend Bishops to be named by Us to supply those things which the said Archbishop ought or might in the Cases aforesaid to have done but for this present cannot perform the same Know ye therefore That We reposing special Trust and Confidence in your approved Wisdoms Learning and Integrity have nominated authorised and appointed and do by these presents nominate authorise and appoint you the said George Lord Bishop of London Richard Lord Bishop of Durham John Lord Bishop of Rochester John Lord Bishop of Oxford and William Lord Bishop of Bathe and Wells or any four thrée or two of you to do execute and perform all and every those Acts Matters and things any way touching or concerning the Power Iurisdiction or Authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury in Causes or Matters Ecclesiastical as amply fully and effectually to all intents and purposes as the said Archbishop himself might have done And We do hereby Command you and every of you to attend perform and execute this Our Royal Pleasure in and touching the premisses until We shall declare Our Will and Pleasure to the contrary And We do further hereby Will and Command the said Archbishop of Canterbury quietly and without interruption to permit and suffer you the said George Bishop of London Richard Bishop of Durham John Bishop of Rochester John Bishop of Oxford and William Bishop of Bathe and Wells any four thrée or two of you to execute and perform this Our Commission according to Our Royal Pleasure thereby signified And We do further Will
our House hath taken this very Session in these words I A. B. do utterly testifie and declare in my conscience That the Kings Highness is the Supreme or Soveraign Governor of this Realm in all Causes c. and to my utmost Power will assist and defend all jurisdictions Priviledges Preheminencies and Authorities granted or belonging to the Kings Highness or united or annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm c. So that your Lordships need not to borrow from our Protestations any Exhortations to us to entertain a Writing in assistance of the Kings Soveraign Power since we stand obliged by the most sacred Bond of a solemn Oath to assist and defend the same if cause and occasion so required So that the onely question between your Lordships and us is whether this Clause should be added to our Petition and received into it as part thereof which to do your Lordships reasons have not perswaded us because so to admit it were to overthrow the fabrick and substance of our Petition of Right and to annihilate the Right pretended by us and the Petition it self in effect For these words being added to our Petition viz. we humbly present this Petition c. with due regard to leave entire your Soveraign Power c. do include manifestly an Exception to our Petition and an Exception being of the nature of the thing whereunto it is an Exception Exceptio est de regula must of necessity destroy the Rule or Petition so far as to the case excepted Exceptio firmat regulam in casibus non exceptis in casibus except is destruit regulam Then this Construction followeth upon our Petition thus enlarged that after we have petitioned that no freeman should be compelled by imprisonment to lend or contribute money to his Majesty without his assent in Parliament nor receive against his will Soldiers into his house or undergo a Commission of Marshal Law for Life or Member in time of Peace we should adde Except his Majesty be pleased to require our monies and imprison us for not lending and send Soldiers into our houses and execute us by Marshal Law in time of Peace by vertue of his Soveraign Power which construction as it followeth necessarily upon this inlargement so it concludeth against our right in the Premises and utterly frustrateth all our Petition neither may it seem strange if this Clause additional which of it self in quality of a Proposition we confess being added to our Petition which also is true should overthrow the very frame and fabrick of it seeing the Logicians take knowledge of such a Fallacy called by them Fallacia a bene divisis ad male conjuncta Horace the Poet giveth an instance to this purpose in a Painter who when he had painted the Hea● of a man according to Art would then joyn to it the neck of a Horse and so mar the one and the other whereas each by it self might have been a piece of right good workmanship The second branch of my Lord Keepe●s rational part was enforc'd out of the last words of this addition by which his Lordship said that they did not leave intire all Soveraign Power but that wherewith his Majesty is trusted for the Protection Safety and Happiness of the People as if his Lordship would infer that Soveraign Power wherewith c. in this place to be Terminum diminuentem a Term of diminution or qualification and in that consideration might induce us to accept it But under his Lordships correction we cannot so interpret it For first we are assured that there is no Soveraign Power wherewith his Majesty is trusted either by God or man but onely that which is for the Protection Safety and Happiness of his people and therefore that limitation can make no impression upon us but we conceive it rather in this place to have the force Termini adaugentis to be a Term of important advantage against our Petition a Term of restriction and that wheresoever his Majesties Soveraign Power should be exercised upon us in all and every the particulars mentioned in the Petition we should without further enquiry submit thereunto as assuming and taking it pro concesso it induced to our Safety and Happiness c. Since therefore as the Petition is now conceived it carrieth the form and face of a Picture which representeth to the life the pressures and grievances of the people with the easie remedies And therefore we hope that his Majestie casting upon it a gracious eye will compassionate his poor Loyal Subjects and afford a comfortable answer I do humbly pray your Lordships not to mar or blemish the grace and face of this Picture with this unnecessary addition and unnecessary I prove it to be according to that Rule Expressio ejus quod tacite inest nihil operatur And Soveraign Power in cases where it hath place and ought to be used is always necessarily understood and though not expressed yet supplyed by reasonable intendment or by the opinion of all Learned men And therefore as it neither is nor can be by us expresly included especially in this Petition where the addition thereof would make such a confusion of the whole sense and substance The Kings Soveraign Power and Prerogative is always able to save it self and if it were not we must without this addition save it to our utmost powers if we will save our Oath and save our selves the true state of the cause thus standing between your Lordships and us the House of Commons doth not a little marvel upon what grounds your Lordships are so earnest to urge upon them this addition to be inserted into their Petition they nothing doubt but that the same proceeded out of a sollicitude and fear which your Lordships have lest otherwise the simple and absolute passage of this Petition might be construed hereafter in prejudice of his Majesties Soveraign Power And this your Lordships sollicitude and fear proceedeth from your love as the Poet saith Res est solliciti plena timoris Amor. But I humbly pray your Lordships to examine with us the grounds of this your sollicitude and fear which grounds needs must be laid either upon the words of the Petition or the intention of the Petitioners Upon the words there is no possibility to lay them for therein is no mention made of the Soveraign Power and were the words doubtful as thus We pray the like things be nor done hereafter under pretext of your Majesties Soveraign Power yet in respect of the Protestations preceding concomitant and subsequent to the Petition such doubtful words ought reasonably to be interpreted onely of such Soveraign Power as was not appliable to the Cases wherein it was exercised and of such Soveraign Power as should be justly practised but there are no such doubtful words and therefore it followeth that your Lordships fear and sollicitude must be grounded upon the intention of the Petitioners Now your Lordships well know that the House of Commons is not
points of Grace to the people but also by the labor we took for the satisfaction of both Houses in those three Articles recommended unto us in both their names by the Right Reverend Father in God the Archbishop of Canterbury and likewise for the good Government of Ireland we are now in hand with at your request but not onely have we heard no news of all this but contrary great complaints of the danger of Religion within this Kingdom tacitely implying our ill Government in this point And we leave you to judge whether it be your duties that are the Representative Body of our people so to distaste them with our Government whereas by the contrary it is your duty with all your endeavors to kindle more and more a dutiful and thankful love in the peoples hearts towards us for our just and gratious Government Now whereas in the very beginning of this your Apology you tax us in fair terms of trusting uncertain Reports and partial Informations concerning your proceedings we wish you to remember that we are an old and experienced King needing no such Lessons being in our Conscience freest of any King alive from hearing or trusting idle Reports which so many of your House as are nearest us can bear witness unto you if you would give as good ear to them as you do to some Tribunitial Orators among you And for proof in this particular we have made your own Messengers confer your other Petitions sent by you with the Copy thereof which was sent us before Between which there is no difference at all but that since our receiving the first Copy you added a conclusion unto it which could not come to our hands till it was done by you and your Messengers sent which was all at one time And if we had had no Copy of it before-hand we must have received your first Petition to our great dishonor before we had known what it contained which would have enforced us to return you a far worse Answer then now we do for then your Messengers had returned with nothing but that we have judged your Petition unlawful and unworthy of an Answer For as to your conclusion thereof it is nothing but Protestatio contraria facto for in the Body of your Petition you usurpe upon our Prerogative Royal and meddle with things far above your reach and then in the conclusion you protest the contrary As if a Robber would take a mans purse and then protest he meant not to rob him For first you presume to give us your advice concerning the Match of our dearest Son with some Pro●●stant we cannot say Princess for we know none of these fit for h●m and disswade us from his Match with Spain urging us to a presen● War with that King and yet in the conclusion forsooth ye protest ye intend not to press upon our most undoubted and Regal Prerogative as if the Petitioning of us in matters that your selves confess ye ought not to meddle with were not a meddling with them And whereas ye pretend That ye were invited to this course by the Speeches of Three honorable Lords yet by so much as your selves repeat of the Speeches nothing can be concluded but that we were resolved by War to regain the Palatinate if otherwise we could not attain unto it And you were invited to advise forthwith upon a Supply for keeping the forces in the Palatinate from disbanding and to foresee the means for the raising and maintenance of the Body of an Army for that War against the Spring Now what inference can be made upon this that therefore we must presently denounce War against the King of Spain break our dearest Sons match and match him to one of our Religion let the World judge The difference is no greater than if we would tell a Merchant that we had great need to borrow Money from him for raising an Army that thereupon it should follow that we were bound to follow his advice in the direction of the War and all things depending thereupon But yet not contenting your selves with this excuse of yours which indeed cannot hold water ye come after to a direct contradiction to the conclusion of your former Petition saying That the honor and safety of us and our Posterity and the Patrimony of Our Children invaded and possessed by their enemies the Welfare of Religion and State of our Kingdom are matters at any time not unfit for your deepest considerations in Parliament To this generality we answer with the Logicians That where all things are contained nothing is omitted So as this Plenipotency of yours invests you in all power upon Earth lacking nothing but the Popes to have the Keys also both of Heaven and Purgatory And to this vast generality of yours we can give no other answer for it will trouble all the best Lawyers in the House to make a good Commentary upon it For so did the Puritan Ministers in Scotland bring all kinde of causes within the compass of their jurisdiction saying That it was the Churches office to judge of slander and there could no kinde of crime or fault be committed but there was a slander in it either against God the King or their Neighbor and by this means they hooked into themselves the cognisance of all causes Or like Bellarmines distinction of the Popes power over Kings in Ordine ad Spiritualia whereby he gives them all Temporal Jurisdiction over them But to give you a direct Answer to the matter of War for which you are so earnest We confess we rather expected you should have given us thanks for the so long maintaining a setled Peace in all our Dominions when as all our Neighbors about are in miserable combustion of War but dulce bellum inexpertis And we indeed finde by experience that a number of our Subjects are so pampered with Peace as they are desirous of change though they knew not what It is true that we have ever professed and in that minde with Gods grace we will live and die that we will labor by all means possible either by Treaty or by force to restore our Children to their ancient Dignity and Inheritance And whatsoever Christian Princes or Potentates will set themselves against it we will not spare any lawful means to bring our so just and honorable purpose to a good end neither shall the match of our Son or ●ny other worldly respect be preferred to this our resolution For by our credit and intervention with the King of Spain and the Arch-Dutches and her Husband now with God we preserved the Lower Palatinate one whole year from any further conquering in it which in eight days space in that time might have easily been swallowed up by Spinola's Army without any resistance And in no better case was it now at our Ambassador the Lord Digbies coming through Heidelburgh if he had not extraordinarily succored it But because we conceive that ye couple this War of the Palatinate with
Counsellors said We had wicked Counsell and another said that the Councill and Judges sought to trample under feet the liberty of the Subject and a third traduced Our Court of Star-Chamber for the Sentence given against Savage they passed without check or censure by the House By which may appear how far the Members of that House have of late swollen beyond the rules of moderation and the modesty of former times and this under pretence of priviledge and freedom of speech whereby they take liberty to declare against all authority of Councill and Courts at their pleasure They sent for Our Sheriff of London to examine him in a cause whereof they had no jurisdiction their true and antient jurisdiction extending onely to their own Members and to the conservation of their priviledges and not to the censure of forrain persons and causes which have no relation to their priviledges the same being but a late innovation And yet upon an enforced strain of a Contempt for not answering to their satisfaction they commit him to the Tower of London using that outward pretext for a cause of committing him the true and inward cause being for that he had shewed himself dutifull to Us and Our commandements in the matter concerning Our Customs In these innovations which We will never permit again they pretended indeed Our service but their drift was to break by this means through all respects and ligaments of Government and to erect an universall over-swaying power to themselves which belongs onely to Us and not to them Lastly in their proceedings against Our Customers they went about to censure them as Delinquents and to punish them for staying some goods of some factious Merchants in Our Store-house for not paying those Duties which themselves had for●erly paid and which the Customers without interruption had received of all other Merchants many years before and to which they were authorised both by Our great Seal and by severall directions and commandements from Us and Our Privy Councill To give some colour to their proceedings herein they went about to create a new priviledge which We will never admit That a Parliament-man hath priviledge for his goods against the King the consequence whereof would be That he may not be constrained to pay any Duties to the King during the time of priviledge of Parliament It is true they would have this case to have been between the Merchants and Our Farmers of Our Customs and have severed them from Our interest and commandment thereby the rather to make them lyable to the censure and punishment of that House But on the other side We holding it both unjust and dishonorable to with-draw Our self from Our Officers in any thing they did by Our commandement or to disavow any thing that we had enjoyned to be done upon Munday the 23d of February sent a message unto them by Secretary Cook thanking them for the respect they had shewed in severing the interest of Our Farmers from Our Own interest and commandment Neverthelesse We were bound in honour to acknowledge a truth that what was done by them was done by our expresse commandement and direction and if for doing thereof Our Farmers should suffer it would highly concern Us in honour Which message was no sooner delivered unto them but in a tumultuous and discontented manner they called Adjourn Adjourn and thereupon without any cause given on Our part in a very unusuall manner adjourned untill the Wednesday following On which day by the uniform wisdom of Our Privy Council We caused both Houses to be adjourned until the second day of March hoping that in the mean time a better and more right understanding might bee begotten between Us and the Members of that House whereby the Parliament might come to a happy Issue But understanding by good advertisment that their discontent did not in that time digest and passe away We resolved to make a second adjournment untill the tenth of March which was done as well to take time to Our Self to think of some means to accommodate those difficulties as to give them time to advise better and accordingly We gave commandment for a second adjournment in both Houses and for cessation of all businesse till the day appointed which was very dutifully obeyed in the Higher House no man contradicting or questioning it But when the same commandment was delivered in the House of Commons by their Speaker it was streight-waies contradicted and although the Speaker declared unto them it was an absolute right and power in Us to adjourn as well as to prorogue or dissolve and declared and readd unto them divers presidents of that House to warrant the same yet Our commandment was most contemptuously disobeyed and some rising up to speak said They had businesse to do before the House should be adjourned Whilst the Duke of Buckingham lived he was intituled to all the distempers and ill events of former Parliaments and therefore much endeavour was used to demolish him as the onely wall of separation between Us and Our people But now he is dead no alteration was found amongst those envenomed spirits which troubled then the blessed harmony between Us and Our Subjects and continue still to trouble it For now under the pretence of publick care of the Common-wealth they suggest new and causlesse fears which in their own hearts they know to be false and devise new Engines of mischief so to cast a blindnesse upon the good affections of Our people that they may not see the truth and largenesse of Our heart towards them So that now it is manifest the Duke was not alone the mark these men shot at but was onely as a near minister of Ours taken up on the By and in their passage to their more secret designes which were onely to cast Our Affairs into a desperate condition to abate the powers of Our Crown and to bring Our Government into obloquy that in the end all things may be over-whelmed with Anarchy and Confusion We do not impute these dysasters to the whole House of Commons knowing that there were amongst them many religious grave and well-minded men but the sincerer and better part of the House was over-born by the practises and clamours of the other who carelesse of their duties and taking advantage of the times and Our necessities have enforced Us to break off this Meeting which had it been answered with like duty on their parts as it was invited and begun with love on Ours might have proved happy and glorious both to Us and this whole Nation We have thus declared the manifold causes We had to dissolve this Parliament whereby all the world may see how much they have forgotten their former engagements at the entry into the War themselves being perswaders to it promising to make Us feared by Our enemies and esteemed by Our friends And how they turned the Necessities grown by that War to enforce us to yield to Conditions incompatible with Monarchy And now that
dares not but give advice to follow where God leads apprehending the work of God in this and that of Hungary That by peece and peece the Kings of the Earth that gave their power to the Beast shall leave the Whore and make her desolate That he was satisfied in Conscience that the Bohemians had just cause to reject that proud and bloody man who had taken a course to make that Kingdom not Elective in taking it by the Donation of another The slighting of the Viscount Doncaster in his Ambassage gave cause of just displeasure and indignation Therefore let not a Noble Son be forsaken for their sakes who regard nothing but their own ends Our striking-in will comfort the Bohemians honor the Palsgrave strengthen the Princes of the Union draw on the United Provinces stir up the King of Denmark and the Palatines two Uncles the Prince of Orange and the Duke of Bouillon together with Tremouille a rich Prince in France to cast in their shares The Parliament is the old and honorable way for raising of Money and all that may be spared is to be turned this way And perhaps God provided the Iewels which were laid up in the Tower by the Mother for the preservation of the Daughter who like a Noble Princess hath professed that she will not leave her self one Iewel rather then not maintain so religious and righteous a Cause Certainly if countenance be given to this Action many brave Spirits will offer themselves Therefore let all our Spirits be gathered up to animate this business that the World may take notice that we are awake when God calls The Life and Zeal of these Expressions from a Person of such Eminency may discover the Judgment and Affection of the Anti-Spanish party in the Court of England But the King was engaged in those ways out of which he could not easily turn himself Besides it did not please him that his Son should snatch a Crown out of the Fire And he was used to say That the Bohemians made use of him as the Fox did of the Cats foot to pull the Apple out of the Fire for his own eating In the mean while before the King could answer the Palsgrave desiring advice in that behalf the Bohemians had wrought and prevailed with him to accept of their Election whereof he sent Advertisement into England excusing the suddenness of the Action for that the urgency of the cause would admit of no deliberation King Iames disavowed the Act and would never grace his Son in Law with the stile of his new Dignity But Sir Richard Weston and Sir Edward Conway were sent Ambassadors into Bohemia to close up the breach between the Emperor and the Elector Palatine The King being not a little troubled and jealous that the Palatines nearness to him might give cause of suspition to his Brother of Spain that this Election had been made by his procurement or correspondence with the German Protestants commands his Agent Cottington to give that King plenary Information of all proceedings As That his Ambassador being sent to compound the differences and to reduce the Bohemians to the quiet obedience of the Emperor instead of finding the Emperor so prepared and such a way made for his Mediation as was promised and expected received answer That the business was already referred to four of the Electors insomuch that no place was left for his Authority to interpose Of this exclusive answer as he had just cause to be sensible considering that he had entred into that Treaty meerly at the instance of the King of Spain and his Ministers so there followed a further inconvenience That the Bohemians having long expected the fruit and issue of this Mediation and finding little hope by this means did instantly as out of desperation Elect the Count Palatine for their King Wherefore being tender of his own honor and reputation especially in the opinion of the King of Spain he would not have it blemished by the least misunderstanding And for that end he tendred to his view such Letters as from time to time he had written to the Princes of the Union and to the Palatine himself whereby he might plainly see his dislike of the Bohemians engaging against their King and his industry to contain those Princes in peace and quietness and to make a fair Accord between the disagreeing parties Reply was made as touching the answer given to the Viscount Doncaster That he was admitted a Compounder in such form as was possible the Arbitration having been committed by the late Emperor into the hands of three of the Electors and the Duke of Bavaria that nevertheless he might have proceeded in the Negotiation and by his Masters Authority have over-ruled any difficulty which might have hapned on the Emperors side on whose behalf the reference was made if he had reduced the Bohemians to the acceptance of any reasonable conditions But he presently to the Emperors great disservice labored to suspend the Election of the King of the Romans till the Bohemian Controversie were first compounded which was absolutely to defeat King Ferdinand of that Crown and to disturb and put in danger his Election to the Empire This was the more confirmed by his desire to make Bonfires in Liege when the Count Palatine was made King of Bohemia As touching the Kings integrity in the whole business the satisfaction tendred was received with great applause and it was further said That it would gain the more authority and estimation if he should continue to disclaim that which had been done so contrary to his opinion and against his Friends and Allies as are all the Princes of the House of Austria But the Lot was cast in Germany and for the Palsgrave there was no going back forces pour in a main on both sides The King of Poland aided the Emperor in Hungary to bound and check the incursions of Prince Bethlem the Duke of Saxony did not brook his Fellow Electors advancement to Regal Majesty and condemned his joyning with Bethlem Gabor Who saith he came in with the Turks consent to make a desolution in the Empire King Frederick visited the several parts of his Kingdom to confirm the people to him and to receive the Oath of Fidelity And the Emperor published a Proscription against him wherein he proclaims him guilty of High Treason excludes him out of the publick peace and declares his resolution to prosecute him as the publick Enemy of the Empire and a contemner of his Imperial Majesty and absolves all his Subjects from their Oaths and Duties to him and commands all persons whatsoever to abandon him and his adherents Christian Prince of Anhalt was appointed Generalissimo of the Bohemian Forces and governed all affairs which was some eclipse and discontent to Thurne and Mansfet who had hitherto stood the shock of the Imperial Armies The Princes of the Union raised forces for the defence of the Palatinate and their own interest
beforehand for the defence of the Palatinate and the maintenance of his Children expelled out of their Countrey and for the raising of an Army for that recovery That he had procured a short Truce and did hope to obtain a general peace But the charges of sending Ambassadors over Christendom or an Army into the Palatinate in case a peace were not setled could not be borne but by the Grant of more Subsidies Moreover he protested before God That he would not dissolve the Parliament till the matters in agitation were finished Soon after the Lord Chancellor Bacon was proceeded against and a Conference of both Houses was held concerning him Where first the Commons observed his incomparable good parts which they highly commended secondly They magnified the place he held from whence Bounty Justice and Mercy were to be distributed to the Subjects whither all great Causes were drawn and from whence there was no Appeal in case of injustice or wrong done save to the Parliament Thirdly He was accused of great Bribery and Corruption in this eminent place and the particulars were laid open Then they concluded that this matter which concerned a person of so great eminency might not depend long before their Lordships but that the Examination of Proofs be expedited that as he shall be found upon tryal either he or his accusers might be punished After this the Marquess of Buckingham Lord Admiral declared to the House of Lords That he had received a Letter from the Chancellor expressing that he was indisposed in health but whither he lived or died he would be glad to preserve his Honor and Fame as far as he was worthy desiring to be maintained in their good opinions without prejudice till his cause was heard that he should not trick up Innocency with cavillation but plainly and ingenuously declare what he knew or remembred being happy that he had such Noble Peers and Reverend Prelates to discern of his Cause That he desired no priviledge of greatness for subterfuge of guiltiness but meaned to deal fairly and plainly with their Lordships and to put himself upon their Honors and Favors But the Charge came home upon him insomuch that he abandoned all defence and onely implored a favorable judgment in this humble Submission and Supplication to the House of Lords May it please your Lordships I Shall humbly crave at your hands a benign interpretation of that which I shall now write For words that come from wasted spirits and oppressed mindes are more safe in being deposited to a noble construction then being circled with any reserved Caution This being moved and as I hope obtained of your Lordships as a protection to all that I shall say I shall go on but with a very strange entrance as may seem to your Lordships at first For in the midst of a state of as great affliction as I think a mortal man can endure Honor being above Life I shall begin with the professing of gladness in some things The first is That hereafter the greatness of a Iudge or Magistrate shall be no sanctuary or protection to him against guiltiness which is the beginning of a Golden Work The next That after this example it is like that Iudges will flie from any thing in the likeness of Corruption though it were at a great distance as from a Serpent which tends to the purging of the Courts of Iustice and reducing them to their true honor and splendor And in these two points God is my witness though it be my fortune to be the Anvile upon which these two effects are broken and wrought I take no small comfort But to pass from the motions of my heart whereof God is my Iudge to the merits of my Cause whereof your Lordships are Iudges under God and his Lieutenant I do understand there hath been heretofore expected from me some justification and therefore I have chosen one onely justification instead of all others out of the justification of Job For after the clear submission and confession which I shall now make unto your Lordships I hope I may say and justifie with Job in these words I have not hid my sin as did Adam nor concealed my faults in my bosome This is the onely justification which I will use It resteth therefore That without Fig-leaves I do ingenuously confess and acknowledge that having understood the particulars of the Charge not formally from the House but enough to inform my conscience and memory I finde matter sufficient and full both to move me to desert my Defence and to move your Lordships to condemn and censure me Neither will I trouble your Lordships by singling these particulars which I think might fall off Quid te exempta juvat spinis de pluribus uva Neither will I prompt your Lordships to observe upon the proofs where they come not home or the scruple touching the credits of the Witnesses Neither will I represent to your Lordships how far a Defence might in divers things extenuate the Offence in respect of the time and manner of the guilt or the like circumstances but onely leave these things to spring out of your more noble thoughts and observations of the evidence and examinations themselves and charitably to winde about the particulars of the Charge here and there as God shall put into your minde and so submit my self wholly to your Piety and Grace And now I have spoken to your Lordships as Iudges I shall say a few words unto you as Peers and Prelates humbly commending my Cause to your noble mindes and magnanimous affections Your Lordships are not simply Iudges but Parliamentary Iudges you have a further extent of Arbitrary power then other Courts and if you be not tyed by ordinary course of Courts or Precedents in points of strictness and severity much less in points of Mercy and Mitigation And yet if any thing which I shall move might be contrary to your honorable and worthy End the introducing a Reformation I should not seek it But herein I beseech your Lordships to give me leave to tell you a story Titus Manlius took his Sons life for giving battel against the Prohibition of his General Not many years after the like severity was pursued by Papitius Cursor the Dictator against Quintus Maximus who being upon the point to be sentenced was by the intercession of some particular persons of the Senate spared Whereupon Livie maketh this grave and gratious observation Neque minus firmata est Disciplinae Militaris periculo Quinti Maximi quàm miserabili supplicio Titi Manlii The Discipline of War was no less established by the questioning of Quintus Maximus then by the punishment of Titus Manlius and the same reason is in the Reformation of Iustice. For the questioning of men in eminent places hath the same terror though not the same rigor with the punishment But my Cause stays not there for my humble desire is That his Majesty would take the Seal into his hands which is
require of you by these Presents is Which we do promise in the name of Us our Heirs and Successors to repay to you or your Assigns within Eighteen moneths after the paiment thereof unto the Collector The person whom we have appointed to collect it is To whose hands we do require you to send it within Twelve days after you have received this Privy-Seal which together with the Collectors Acquittance shall be sufficient Warrant unto the Officers of our Receipt for the repaiment thereof at the time limited Given at c. The Collectors of this Loan were appointed to pay into the Exchequer the Sums received and to return the Names of such as discovered a disposition to delay or excuse the paiment of the Sums imposed Amidst the preparations for War with Spain the Privy-Council issued out Warrants for the disarming of Popish Recusants grounding their Order upon the Petition of the late Parliament HIs Majesty and we of his Council having received information from so many several parts of the bold and impudent spéeches used by many Romish Catholicks of this Realm declaring how much they are offended with the gracious satisfaction given by his Majesty to the Lords and Commons in Parliament in the points concerning the Conservation of true Religion as it is at this day by Authority preached in the Church of England And having just cause to doubt that many violent Papists through the instigation of Iesuited Priests may be inclined to take part with such as we well understand at this time practise with the Kings Subjects to raise stirs and tumults which they do not only foment by perswasions and instigations but with promise of assistance and seconding them with Arms their pretext being Religion but their ends Conquest pushed thereunto by an unlimited Ambition to a General Monarchy of which we have too large and clear proof And although we do not misjudge and condemn all his Majesties Subjects Romish Catholicks but believe that many of them will imploy their Arms and lives in his service Yet because we are not able to distinguish betwéen the well and worse-affected We have seconded with one Advice his Majesties Princely inclination following the example of his wi●e Predecessors of happy memory and government to take out of the possession of all Romish Recusants convicted or justly suspected according to the Acts of State heretofore expressed all such Martial Ammunitions Arms and Weapons as shall be found in their houses or discovered to be in the houses of any other persons belonging by right to any of the said Romish Recusants But so that the said Arms be only taken to be safely kept and the Property to be reserved to the Owners according to the former Presidents in like Cases This Design proceeded and the Council directed their Letters to these Lords Recusants viz. The Marquis of Winchester and the Lord St. John his son Lord Viscount Mountague Lord Viscount Colchester Lord Peter the Earl of Castlehaven Lord Morley Lord Vaux Lord Eures Lord Arundel of Warder Lord Tenham Lord Herbert Lord Windsor requiring them to render their Arms and Furniture thereunto belonging together with all their Habiliments of War to be removed into places convenient and to remain there till the King shall determine otherwise Moreover the Privy-Council having received information from the Lords-Lieutenants in divers parts of the Kingdom That there was great and unaccustomed Resort to the houses of Papists and that other Courses justly to be suspected were held among them Authorised the Lords-Lieutenants to examine the truth and reason of such Assemblies and Entertainment and of the conveyance and intercourse of Letters as also to enquire and search if there were any preparation of Men or Arms or Practice of Arms or endeavors of Alteration among persons discontented with the present Government In the mean time the Fleet was ready and Ten brave Regiments were designed for this Expedition The Duke not going in person Sir Edward Cecil was created Lord Viscount Wimbleton and made Commander in Chief In the Choice of the Officers for this service Sir Robert Mansel an experienced Sea-Commander was neglected which much disgusted the Mariners The Common Censure that passed both upon the Duke and this Enterprise may be known by the Lord Cromwels free language to the Duke in this Letter THey offer to lay wagers the Fleet goes not this year And that of necessity shortly a Parliament must be which when it comes sure it will much discontent you It is wondred at that since the King did give such great Gifts to the Duchess of Chevereux and those that then went how now a small Sum in the Parliament should be called for at such an unseasonable time And let the Parliament sit when it will begin they will where they ended They say the Lords of the Council knew nothing of Count Mansfield's Iourney or this Fleet which discontents even the best sort if not all They say it is a very great burden your Grace takes upon you since none knows any thing but you It is conceived that not letting others bear part of the burden you now bear it may ruine you which Heaven forbid Much discourse there is of your Lordship here and there as I passed home and back And nothing is more wondred at then that one Grave man is not known to have your ear except my good and Noble Lord Conway All men say if you go not with the Fleet you will suffer in it because if it prosper it will be thought no act of yours and if it succeed ill they say it might have been better had not you guided the King They say your undertakings in the Kingdom will much prejudice your Grace And if God bless you not with goodness as to accept kindly what in duty and love I here offer questionless my freedom in letting you know the discourse of the world may much prejudice me But if I must lose your favor I had rather lose it for striving to do you good in letting you know the talk of the wicked world then for any thing else so much I heartily desire your prosperity and to see you trample the ignorant multitude under foot All I have said is the Discourse of the World and when I am able to judge of Actions I will freely tell your Lordship my mind Which when it shall not always incline to serve you may all Noble thoughts forsake me But whilst the English Fleet was preparing for this Voyage great Reports were given out that the Spaniard would land Forces upon the Coast of Essex Wherefore the Earl of Warwick was commanded with Three thousand of the Trained Bands of Essex to secure the Port of Harwich and Langer-Point which service he performed with much readiness But upon the Blocking up of Dunkirk with Ships belonging to the English and to the States of the United Provinces his Lordship was ordered to dismiss his men Presently after Advertisements came to
this business can be attributed to his fault since on the one side it will evidently appear to your Lordships that be never moved his Majesty and the Prince to admit of delays but rather to think of some other course and it will on the other side appear by all the Dispatches that he pressed things with the Ministers of Spain to as speedy a conclusion as the uttermost terms of fair Negotiation and good manners would bear And whereas it is pretended that the Spaniards should take occasion by entertaining the said Treaties to abuse his said late Majesty which he knoweth not yet he saith he used all the vigilancie and industry that a careful Minister could do and had from the Spaniards all the assurances by oaths words and writings which could be expected from Christians the which without adding or diminishing he faithfully presented unto his said late Majesty and his said late Majesty was pleased in those times to conceive upon those assurances that they dealt really with him And he conceiveth that his Majesty that now is then Prince and the Duke of Buckingham were pleased to write as much to the late Kings Majesty at their first coming into Spain and that all which the said Earl had written touching that imploiment was there avowed by the Conde Olivarez and Conde Gondomar to the said Prince and Duke at their arrival at Madrid and he hopeth that if that Dispatch may be perused it will as well appear and be adjudged that he served his Majesty with some measure of vigilancie as well as fulness of fidelity III. To the Third Article the said Earl saith That he did not either by words or by Letters to his late Majesty or his Ministers extol or magnifie the greatness and power of the King of Spain nor represented to his late Majesty the supposed dangers that might ensue unto him if a War should happen between him and the King of Spain nor affirmed nor insinuated the same as in the said Article is mentioned but if he did at any time speak or write of the power and greatness of the King of Spain or represented any danger to his said late Majesty that might ensue by entring into Hostility with the said King of Spain it was as a faithful Counsellor and Servant to his Majesty by way of his advice and opinion which he ever delivered sincerely faithfully and truly according to the present occasion and in no wise with such as intent as in the said Article is mentioned nor to any other evil intent and purpose whatsoever But he hath been so far from disswading his late Majesty to take Arms that he hath upon all just occasions advised that all fitting preparations for War might be made as beginning with the year 1621. from which time he is onely charged will appear by his Speech in Parliament presently after his return out of Germany and that he hoped his Majesty would no longer relie upon single Treaties but make all fitting preparations for War and that the Parliament would enable his Majesty thereunto and by the care he took before his going again upon his Ambassage into Spain that the establishment of an Army under his Majesties own Standard of Horse and Foot and under his own pay might be setled and provided for as likewise his advice to the Lords of the Council that his Majesty might have a curb upon the King of Spain upon all occasions by continuing of Sir Robert Mansfields Fleet upon the Coasts of Spain as will appear by his Letter written from Vienna 26 Iuly 1621. mentioned in the Answer to the first Article By all which it appeareth That he labored and endeavored as much as in him lay that his Majesty might be well prepared for any occasions of War that should happen And he no way remembreth to have discouraged or to have spoken or written any thing that might have been understood to have tended to the discouraging of his said late Majesty for the taking of Arms and entring into hostility with Spain or for resisting of him and his Forces from attempting the Invasions of his late Majesties Dominions or the Dominions of his late Majesties Confederates Friends or Allies as by the said Article is charged against him neither remembreth that he had any cause so to do But if he have in any kinde spoken or written of Spain or the power thereof it may have been to his late Majesty or his Majesty that now is by way of discourse speaking of the solidness of the Spanish proceedings of their serious and deliberate debating of business before they resolve on them of the constant pursuing of them when they are once resolved wishing that England and other Nations would therein imitate them For he supposeth the right way to impeach their greatness was to grow as wise as they and to beat them at their own Weapons But otherwise he is confident never to have been heard to speak or write any thing that might give any terror or discouragement to his late Majesty or his cheif Ministers knowing that England well-ordered need to take little terror at the power of Spain having almost in all attempts and enterprises won honor upon them And as for the preventing of dangers that might ensue upon a War though he knew not what is aimed at in that particular yet he is most confident out of the Integrity of his own Conscience That he neither said nor advised any thing but what befitted a faithful Counsellor and an Ambassador which was truly to deliver his opinion as he understood it upon the present occasion And as for affirming that his Majesties quiet should be disturbed and he not to be permitted to Hawk or to Hunt he remembreth not what discourse he may have had or written to any person how fit it might be upon the being broiled in a great War seriously to intend it and to make it our whole work But as he is confident it will appear that what discourse soever it might have been it wanted not true zeal and affection which he hath ever borne to the Kings service And he hopeth it will not be found to want due respect and reverence on his part which he ought to shew to so gratious a Master Neither can it be conceived that the considerations of Hunting and Fowling should be considerations worthy so great and prudent a King to withhold from a War for the good of Christendom and his Kingdom if he should have been justly provoked thereunto IV. To the Fourth Article the said Earl saith That he did not any thing contrary to his duty and alleagiance or contrary to the faith and duty of an Ambassador as by this Article is alleaged but did intend the service and honor of his late Majesty and no corrupt and sinister ends of his own advancement as by this Article is also alleaged And as for the Conferences which is pretended he should hold concerning the Treaty That being told there was little
Scotland and Ireland and they will tell you Sejanus pride was so excessive as Tacitus saith he neglected all Councel mixed his businesses and service with the Prince seeming to confound their Actions and was often stiled Imperatoris laborum socius How lately and how often hath this Man commixed his Actions in Discourses with ACtions of the Kings My Lords I have done you see the Man onely this which was conceived by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses should be boldly by me spoken That by him came all these evils in him we finde the Cause and on him we expect the Remedies and to this we met your Lordships in Conference to which as your Wisdom invites us so we cannot doubt but in your Lordships Wisdom Greatness and Power we shall in due time finde Judgment as he deserves I conclude by presenting to your Lordships the particular Censure of the Bishop of Ely reported in the 11 Rich. 1. and to give you a short view of his faults He was first of all noted to be Luxurious secondly He married his own Kinred to Personages of highest rank and places thirdly No mans business was done without his help fourthly He would not suffer the Kings Council to advise in Matters of State fifthly He grew to such a height of Pride that no man was thought worthy to speak unto him and lastly His Castles and Forts of Trust he did obscuris ignotis hominibus tradere his doom was this Per totam insulam publicè proclamatur periat qui perdere cuncta festinat opprimatur ne omnes opprimat Sir Dudley Diggs having made the Prologu● and Sir Iohn Elliot the Epilogue in the Impeachment of the Duke they were both by the Kings Command committed to the Tower Upon the Impeachment of the Duke a Paper was privately conveyed to the King importing THat this great opposition against the Duke was stirred up and maintained by such as seek the destruction of this free Monarchy Because they finde it not yet ripe to attempt against the King himself they endeavor it through the sides of the Duke The persons agreeing in this one mischeif are of divers sorts and humors First Medling and busie persons who love popular Speeches Secondly Govetous Landlords Inclosers Depopulators c. who being of the Parliament ease themselves in Subsidies and lay it on the true Commons and cry out the grievances are caused by the Duke Thirdly Recusants who hate the Duke for the breach of the Spanish Match Fourthly Persons indebted who by priviledge of Parliament avoid payment Fifthly Puritans and Sectaries though two of them scarcely agree in what they would have Haters of Government and would have the Kings power extinguished in matters Ecclesiastical and limited in Civil Sixtly Male-contents who look upon the Duke with an evil eye because themselves are not preferred Seventhly Lawyers who are very fit in Parliaments to second any Complaint against ●oth Church and King and all his Servants with their Customs Antiquities Records Statutes Presidents and Stories Eighthly Merchants and Citizens who deceive the King of Custom Ninethly Innovators Plebicolae That since the time of Henry the Sixth these Parliamentary discoursings might never be suffered as being but certain symptomes of Subsequent Rebellions Civil Wars and the dethroning of our King and no one Patriot daring to oppose them least he incur the reputation of a Fool or Coward in his Countreys Cause His Majesty therefore strengthned himself ever with some Favorite as whom he might better trust then many of the Nobility tainted with this desire of Oligarchy It behoveth without doubt his Majesty to uphold the Duke against them who if he be but decourted it will be the Corner Stone on which the demolishing of his Monarchy will be builded For if they prevail with this they have hatched a thousand other demands to pull the Feathers of Royalty They will appoint him Counsellors Servants Alliances Limits of Expences and accompt of his Revenue cheifly if they can they will now dazle him in the beginning of his raign Lastly King James and King Charls are the Dukes Accusers in all the Aspersions that are laid upon him King James for the Money destined for the Wars in his time spent in Treaties c. And his Majesty can testifie for the things done in his time And all these though actions of the King are imputed to the Duke Who if he suffer for obeying his Soveraign the next attempt will be to call the King to accompt for any thing he undertakes which doth not prosperously succeed as all men would desire it If it please his Majesty to remove and set aside all these disadvantages he shall find the Charge against the Duke very empty and of small moment And if his Majesty and the Dukes Grace think it no impeachment to their Honors all that the Parliament hath objected against the Duke except two or three things that may receive an Answer is pardoned at the Kings Coronation which benefit every poor Subject enjoyeth May 11. The King came to the Parliament and spake to the House of Peers as followeth My Lords THe cause and onely cause of my coming to you this day is to express the sense I have of all your Honors for he that toucheth any of you toucheth me in a very great measure I have thought fit to take order for the punishing some insolent speeches lately spoken I have been too remiss heretofore in punishing such speeches as concern my self Not that I was greedy of their monies but that Buckingham through his importunity would not suffer me to take notice of them lest he might be thought to have set me on and that he might come the forwarder to his Trial. And to approve his innocencie as touching the matters against him I my self can be a Witness to clear him in every one of them I speak not this to take any thing out of your hands but to shew the reason why I have not hitherto punished those insolent speeches against my self And now I hope you will be as tender of my Honor when time shall serve as I have been sensible of yours And so his Majesty was pleased to depart The same day this following Message was brought from the Commons to the Lords by Sir Nathanael Rich. THe Commons taking into serious consideration the many mischiefs and inconveniences which this renowned Kingdom doth now suffer threatening apparent danger to the King and Common-wealth have by search and disquisition into the Causes thereof found that they do principally flow from the exorbitant power and abusive carriage of the Duke of Buckingham whereof he hath this Parliament béen impeached before their Lordships by the Commons besides an accusation of a Péer in their own House who hath charged him as they are informed of High Treason They therefore with one voice make an entire Declaration That they hold it a thing of dangerous Consequence both for the present and future times that a man of so
in Parliament and in particular touching the Earl of Arundel whereupon we received a gracious Answer That in convenient time we should receive a fuller Answer which we have long and dutifully attended And now at this time so great a business being in handling in the House we are pressed by that business to be humble suitors to your Majesty for a gracious and present Answer Which being read was approved of by the House and the said Committee appointed to present the same unto his Majesty from the House at such time as the Lord Chamberlain shall signifie unto them that his Majesty is pleased to admit them to his presence The 11 of May the Lord President reported the Kings Answer to the said Petition That he did little look for such a Message from the House That himself had been of the House and did never know such a Message from the one House unto the other Therefore when he received a Message fit to come from them to their Soveraign they shall receive an Answer The Lord President further Reported That the Lords Committees appointed to deliver the Petition to the King did thereupon withdraw and required him humbly to desire his Majesty to be pleased to let them know unto what point of the said Petition he takes this Exception and that his Majesty willed him to say this of himself viz. The Exception the King taketh is at the peremptoriness of the Term To have a Present Answer And the King wonders at their impatience since he hath promised them an answer in convenient time Hereupon the House altered their former Petition leaving out the word Present and appointed the former Committee humbly to deliver the same to his Majesty The 13 of May the Lord President reported the Kings Answer to the Petition viz. It is true the word Present was somewhat strange to his Majesty because they did not use it from one House to another but now that his Majesty knows their meaning they shall know this from him that they shall have his Answer so soon as conveniently he can And this his Majesty will assure them it shall be such an Answer as they shall see will not trench upon the Priviledges of the House The Lords having agreed on another Petition to the King wherein they acknowledged him to be a Prince of as much goodness as ever King was The 19 of May the Lord Chamberlain signified to their Lordships That his Majesty being acquainted therewith is pleased that this House attend him at two of the Clock this day in the Afternoon at Whitehall On which day the Lords delivered the Petition to his Majesty who upon the 20 May returned this Answer My Lords I See that in your Petition you acknowledge me a King of as much goodness as ever King was for which I thank you and I will endeavor by the Grace of God never to deserve other But in this I observe that you contradict your selves for if you believe me to be such as you say I am you have no reason to mistrust the sincerity of my Promises For whereas upon often Petitions made by you unto me concerning this business I have promised to give you a full Answer with all convenient speed by this again importuning of me you seem to mistrust my former promises But it may be said there is an Emergent cause for that I have delivered a Member of the Lower-House In this My Lords by your favour you are mistaken for the Causes do no way agree for that he that was committed of the House of Commons was committed for words spoken before both Houses which being such as I had just cause to commit him yet because I found they might be words onely misplaced and not ill meant and were so conceived by many honest men I was content upon his interpretation to release him without any suit from the Lower-House whereas my Lord of Arundel's fault was directly against my self having no relation to the Parliament yet because I see you are so impatient I will make you a fuller Answer then yet I have done not doubting but that you will rest contented therewith It is true I committed him for a cause which most of you know and though it had been no more I had reason to do it yet my Lords I assure you that I have things of far greater importance to lay to his charge which you must excuse me for not no tell you at this time because it is not yet ripe and it would much prejudice my service to do it and this by the word of a King I do not speak out of a desire to delay you but as soon as it is possible you shall know the cause which is such as I know you will not judge to be any breach of your Priviledges For my Lords by this I do not mean to shew the power of a King by diminishing your Priviledges This Answer being read it was ordered That the Committee for Priviledges should meet and consider how farther to proceed with dutifull respect to his Majesty and yet so as it may be for the preservation of the Priviledges of the Peers of this Land and the Liberties of the House of Parliament The 24 of May the Lord President reported the Petition agreed on by the Lords Committees for Priviledges c. to be presented to the King which was in haec verba May it please your most Excellent Majesty WHatever our care and desire is to preserve our right of Péers yet it is far from our thoughts either to distrust or to press any thing that stands not with the affection and duty of most dutiful and loyal Subjects And therefore in all humility we cast our selves before your Majesty assuring our selves in the word of a King that with all conveniencie possible your Majesty will please either to restore the Peer to his place in Parliament or express such a cause as may not infringe our Priviledges The Petition was generally approved and ordered to be presented to his Majesty by the whole House and the Earl of Carlisle and the Lord Carlton to go presently to know the Kings pleasure when they shall attend his Majesty Who being returned reported That his Majesty hath appointed that Afternoon at two of the clock for the same The 25. of May the Lord Keeper delivered the Kings Answer unto the said Petition to be read in haec verba viz. My Lords YOur often coming to me about this matter made me somewhat doubt you did mistrust me But now I see you rely wholly on me I assure you it shall prevail more upon me then all importunities And if you had done this at first I should have given you content And now I assure you I will use all possible speed to give satisfaction and at the furthest before the end of this Session of Parliament This being read the House was moved the second time That all businesses might be laid
gracious Pardon of his now Majesty granted to the said Duke and vouchsafed in like manner to all his Subjects at the time of his most happy Inauguration and Coronation Which said Pardon under the Great Seal of England granted the said Duke beareth date the 10. day of February now last past and here is shewn forth unto your Lordships on which he doth most humbly rely And yet he hopeth your Lordships in your Justice and Honor upon which with confidence he puts himself will acquit him of and from those misdemeanors offences misprisions and crimes wherewith he hath been charged And he hopeth and will daily pray that for the future he shall by Gods grace so watch over his actions both publick and private that he shall not give any just offence to any The Duke having put in this Answer earnestly moved the Lords to send to the Commons to expedite their Reply and the Commons did as earnestly desire a Copy of his Answer The next day his Majesty wrote this Letter to the Speaker TRusty and Welbeloved We greet you well Our House of Commons cannot forget how often and how earnestly we have called upon them for the speeding of that Aid which they intended us for our great and weighty affairs concerning the safety and honor of us and our Kingdoms And now the time being so far spent that unless it be presently concluded it can neither bring us Money nor Credit by the time which themselves have prefixed which is the last of this Moneth and being further deferred would be of little use we being daily advertised from all parts of the great preparations of the Enemy ready to assail us We hold it necessary by these our Letters to give them our last and final admonition and to let them know that we shall account all further delays and excuses to be express denials And therefore we will and require you to signifie unto them that we do expect that they forthwith bring in their Bill of Subsidy to be passed without delay or Condition so as it may fully pass the House by the end of the next week at the furthest Which if they do not it will force us to take other resolutions But let them know if they finish this according to our desire that we are resolved to let them sit together for the dispatch of their other affairs so long as the season will permit and after their recess to bring them together again the next Winter And if by their denial or delay any thing of ill consequence shall fall out either at home or abroad We call God and man to witness that We have done our part to prevent it by calling our People together to advise with us by opening the weight of our occasions unto them and by requiring their timely help and assistance in these Actions wherein we stand engaged by their own Councels And we will and command you that this Letter be publickly read in the House About this time there happened at three a clock in the afternoon a terrible storm of Rain and Hail in and about the City of London and with it a very great Thunder and Lightening The graves were laid open in S. Andrews Church-yard in Holborn by the sudden fall of the Wall which brought away the Earth with it whereby many Coffins and the Corps therein were exposed to open view and the ruder sort would ordinarily lift up the lids of the Coffins to see the posture of the dead Corps lying therein who had been buried of the Plague but the year before At the same instant of time there was a terrible Storm and strange Spectacle upon Thames by the turbulencie of the waters and a Mist that arose out of the same which appeared in a round Circle of a good bigness above the waters The fierceness of the Storm bent it self towards York-House the then habitation of the Duke of Buckingham beating against the stairs and wall thereof And at last this round Circle thus elevated all this while above the water dispersed it self by degrees like the smoke issuing out of a Furnace and ascended higher and higher till it quite vanished away to the great admiration of the beholders This occasioned the more discourse among the Vulgar in that Doctor Lamb appeared then upon Thames to whose Art of Conjuring they attributed that which had happened The Parliament was then sitting and this Spectacle was seen by many of the Members out of the windows of the House The Commons agreed upon this ensuing Petition to his Majesty concerning Recusants To the Kings most Excellent Majesty YOur Majesties most obedient and loyal Subjects the Commons in this present Parliament assembled do with great comfort remember the many Testimonies which your Majesty hath given of your sincerity and zeal of the true Religion established in this Kingdom and in particular your gracious Answer to both Houses of Parliament at Oxford upon their Petition concerning the Causes and Remedies of the Increase of Popery That your Majesty thought fit and would give order to remove from all Places of Authority and Government all such persons as are either Popish Recusants or according to direction of former Acts of State justly to be suspected which was then presented as a great and principal cause of that mischief But not having received so full redress herein as may conduce to the peace of this Church and safety of this Regal State They hold it their duty once more to resort to your Sacred Majesty humbly to inform you that upon examination they find the persons underwritten to be either Recusants Papists or justly suspected according to the former Acts of State who now do or since the first sitting of the Parliament did remain in places of Government and Authority and Trust in your several Counties of this your Realm of England and Dominion of Wales The Right Honorable Francis Earl of Rutland Lieutenant of the County of Lincoln Rutland Northampton Nottingham and a Commissioner of the Peace and of Oyer and Terminer in the County of York and Justice of Oyer from Trent Northwards His Lordship is presented to be a Popish Recusant and to have affronted all the Commissioners of the Peace within the North-Riding of Yorkshire by sending a Licence under his Hand and Seal unto his Tenant Thomas Fisher dwelling in his Lordships Mannor of Helmsley in the said North-Riding of the said County of York to keep an Alehouse soon after he was by an Order made at the Quarter-Sessions discharged from keeping an Alehouse because he was a Popish convict Recusant and to have procured a Popish Schoolmaster namely Roger Conyers to teach Schollers within the said Mannor of Helmsley that formerly had his Licence to teach Schollers taken from him for teaching Schollers that were the children of Popish Recusants and because he suffered these children to absent themselves from the Church whilest they were his Schollers for which the said Conyers was formerly complained of
other men of good sort but of lesser quality I have heard some by name to whom exception hath been taken and these are three I know from the Court by a Friend that my House for a good space of time hath been watched and I marvel that they have not rather named sixty then three The first of these is Sir Dudley Diggs a very great Mote in the Dukes Eye as I am informed for it is said That this Knight hath paid him in Parliament with many sharp Speeches If this be so yet what is that to me he is of age to answer for himself But in the time of the late Parliament when the Earl of Carlile came unto me and dealt with me thereabout I gave him my word and I did it truly That I was not acquainted with these things onely being sick as I was I had in general given him advice That he should do nothing that might give just offence to the King and I have credibly heard that when Sir Dudley was last in the Fleet committed from the Council Table he was much dealt withal to know Whether he was not instigated by me to accuse the Duke in Parliament The Knight with all the Protestations and Assurances that could come from a Gentleman acquitted me of the part and whole wherein he did me but right And I do remember when that man now so hated was a great Servant of the Dukes So that if he have now lost him it cannot but be presumed that it is for some unworthy carriage which the Gentleman conceiveth hath by that Lord been offered unto him Moreover How can I but imagine the words and actions of Sir Dudley Diggs have been ill interpreted and reported When I my self saw the Duke stand up nine times in a morning in the Parliament House to fasten upon him words little less if at all less then Treason when by the particular Votes of all the Lords and Commons in both Houses he was quit of those things which the other would have enforced upon him And a little while before he was hastily clapt into the Tower and within a day or two released again because nothing was proved against him And I assure you I am so little interessed in his actions That to this day I could never learn the reason why he was imprisoned in the Fleet although he was kept there for Seven or eight weeks I distinguish the King from the Duke of Buckingham the one is our Soveraign by the Laws of God and Men the other a Subject as we are And if any Subject do impeach another though of different degrees let the party grieved remedy himself by Law and not by Power But to speak further for this Knight I may not forget when he was publickly employed one time to the Hague a second time to Muscovia and thirdly into Ireland about Affairs of the State such opinion was then held of his good endeavors And for mine own part ever since the days of Queen Elizabeth I have been nearly acquainted with him he was my Pupil at Oxford and a very towardly one and this knowledge each of other hath continued unto this time He calleth me Father and I term his Wife my Daughter his eldest Son is my God-son and their Children are in love accounted my Grand-children The second that I have heard named was Sir Francis Harrington a Gentleman whom for divers years I have not seen and who for ought I know was never in my house but once in his life The third was Sir Thomas Wentworth who had good occasion to send unto me and some times to see me because we were joynt Executors to Sir George Savile who married his Sister and was my Pupil at Oxford to whose Son also Sir Thomas Wentworth and I were Guardians as may appear in the Court of Wards and many things passed between us in that behalf yet to my remembrance I saw not this Gentleman but once in these Three quarters of a year last past at which time he came to seek his Brother-in-law the Lord Clifford who was then with me at Dinner at Lambeth For one of the punishments laid upon me it was told me by the Lord Conway That I must meddle no more with the High Commission and accordingly within a few days after a Warrant is sent to the Attorney General that the Commission must be renewed and the Archbishop must be left out This under hand being buzzed about the Town with no small mixture of spight I conceived it to be agreeable to the proceedings with the Lords and Gentlemen which refused to contribute to the Loan they all being laid aside in the Commissions for Lieutenancy and the Peace in their several Countreys For my part I had no cause to grieve at this since it was his Majesties pleasure but it was by the actors therein understood otherwise they supposing that this power gave me the more Authority and Splendor in the Church and Common-wealth To deliver therefore truly the state of this Question It cannot be denied but that it was a great point of policy for the establishing of Order in the Ecclesiastical and consequently Civil Estate also to erect such a Court whereby Church-men that exorbitated in any grievous manner might be castigated and rectified and such sort of crimes in the Layety might be censured as were of Ecclesiastical Cognisance And verily this is of great use in the Kingdom as well for cherishing the Study of the Civil Law as otherwise So that it be kept incorruptible and with that integrity as so grave a Meeting and Assembly requireth That was principally my care who took much pains and spent much money that in fair and commendable sort Justice was indifferently administred to all the Kings people that had to do with us But every one might see that this was to my singular trouble for besides that to keep things in a streight course sometimes in fits of the Gout I was forced by my Servants to be carried into the Court where I could not speak much but with difficulty I was at no time free from Petitions from Examinations from signing of Warrants to call some to release others from giving way to speeding and forwarding Acts of Courts Suitors as their fashion is being so importunate as that in Summer and Winter in the day and in the night in sickness and health they would not be denied These things were daily dispatched by me out of Duty and more out of Charity no allowance being of pay from the King or of Fee from the Subject to us that were the Judges Nay I may say more the holding of that Court in such sort as I did was very expenceful to me out of my private Purse in giving weekly entertainment to the Commissioners the reason whereof was this King Iames being desirous when he made me Archbishop that all matters should gravely and honorably be carried directed me that I should always call
by the Books of our Laws that Liberty is a thing so favored of the Law that the Law will not suffer the continuance of a man in prison for any longer time then of necessity it must And therefore the Law will neither suffer the Party Sheriffs or Judges to continue a man in prison by their power and pleasure It doth speak of the delivery of a man out of prison with as reasonable expedition as may be And upon this reason it hath been resolved that howsoever the Law alloweth that there may be a Term between the Teste of an Original Writ and the Return of the same where there is only a Summons and no Imprisonment of the body yet the Law will not allow that there should be a Term between the Teste of a Writ of Capias and the Return of the same where the body of a man is to be imprison'd insomuch that it will give no way that the party shall have power to continue the body of a man longer time in prison then needs must so tender is the Law of the Subjects Liberty Monday the 27. of November the Attorney-General argued for the King That this was a very great Cause and hath raised great expectation and he was afraid that those Gentlemen whom it concerns have rather advised their Councils then their Councils them For the first Exception That the Return is not positive but hath relation to some others He did conceive it was positive enough For said he the words are Quod detentus est sub custodia mea per speciale mandatum Domini Regis The other words mihi significatum they follow after but are not part of the affirmation made before it And if they will have it as they seem to understand it then they must return the words thus Quod significatum est mihi per Dominos Privati Consilii quod detentus est per speciale mandatum Domini Regis And then it had not been their own proper Return but the signification of another the Lords of the Council The turning of the sentence would resolve this point the thing it self must speak for it self It is clear it is a positive Return that the detaining is by the command of the King and the rest of the Return is rather satisfaction to the Court then any part of the Return And for the other Exception That the Cause of the Cause is returned and not the Cause it self He said Among the Logicians there are two Causes there is Causa causans and Causa causata The Causa causans here in this Case is not the Warrant from the Lords of the Council for that is Causa causata But the primary and original Cause which is Causa causans is Speciale mandatum Domini Regis the other is but the Councils signification or testification or Warrant for him that made the Return And for the other Exception The Cause is imperfect because it shews only the Cause of detaining in Prison and not the Cause of the first Commitment He conceives it is sufficient for an Officer of the Law to answer That the Writ is a Command to make a Return of the detaining of the Prisoner and he accordingly makes a Return of the Detention and if the Keeper of the Prison had only said they were detained per speciale mandatum c. it had been good Then he proceeded to the matter of the Return and to answer the Book-Cases and Records that had been cited by the Council for the Prisoners and to produce Presidents on the Kings behalf which are extant in Print to which the Reader is referred Afterwards Sir Nicholas Hide Chief Justice Justice Dodderidge Justice Iones and Justice Whitlock being upon the Bench and Sir Iohn Heveningham and the forementioned Prisoners being brought to the Bar Sir Nicholas Hide Lord Chief Justice by the consent and direction of the Judges spake to this purpose That the Court hath seriously considered what hath been spoken by either side and are grown to a resolution And that his Brothers have enjoined him to deliver unto you the resolution of the whole Court And therefore said he though it be delivered by my mouth it is the resolution of us all I am sure you expect Justice from hence and God forbid we should sit here but to do Justice to all men according to our best skill and knowledge as it is our oaths and duties so to do But this is a Case of very great weight and great expectation and requires more solemn Arguments then the time will now permit The Exceptions which have been taken to this Return are two the one for the form the other for the substance First for the form because it is not returned as they say positively and absolutely but with reference to a Warrant of the Lords of the Council Now the Court is of opinion That this is a positive and absolute Return upon this reason That the Keeper of the Prison first returns that they are detained by the special command of the King And if they had ceased there it had been positive And for that which follows That it was signified to him by the Lords of the Council this is only to certifie the Court that he returned the Cause truly and not to shew us that he had no knowledge of the Cause but by the signification of the Lords of the Council There is not one word in the Writ that demands the cause why they were taken but why they are detained So that that point in the Writ is sufficiently answered which was only to certifie the cause of the detention And therefore we resolve That the form of this Return is good The next thing is the main point in Law Whether the substance or matter of the Return be good or no Where in the substance is this He doth certifie that they are detained in Prison by the special command of the King And whether this be good in Law or no is the Question Here the Lord Chief Justice did mention the several Presidents and Book-Cases cited by each side too long to be here related And concluded That that which is now to be judged by us is this Whether one that is committed by the Kings authority and no Cause shewn of his Commitment according as here it is upon this Return whether we ought to deliver him by Bail or to remand him back again Where by the way you must know that we can take notice only of this Return That when the Case appears to us no otherwise then by the Return we are not bound to examine the truth thereof but the sufficiencie of the Return We cannot judge upon rumors or reports but upon that which is before us on Record which is examinable by us whether it be sufficient or not Mr. Attorney hath told you That the King hath done it And we trust him in great matters And we make no doubt but the King if you seek to him knowing the cause why you
Council and the better digestion of Publick services there and withal to avert so ill an Omen as the choise of me in the beginning of a Parliament ordained I hope for the joy of our own and the envy of other Nations that by your gracious Command the House may reconsult and settle their better thoughts on some more worthy their Election and your Majesties Approbation But his Majesty not admitting his excuse approved of the choise Before the Commons had entred into any Debates this following Letter touching the Inconveniencies and Grievances of the State was communicated to the Members of the House and it was called A Speech without doors To my noble friends of the Lower-House of Parliament IF my Country had held me worthy to have served in this Parliament I had now been made a Member of your Lower-House as formerly I have been in sundry other Parliaments But how unkindly soever she dealeth with me I will ever shew my thankfulness to her and deliver by way of observation what I have heretofore learned in that grave and wise Assembly for admonishment to the elder and a path-way for the younger to walk in Parliaments in my time have been wont to take up some space at the first meetings to settle the House and to determine of unlawfull Elections and in this point they never had greater cause to be circumspect then at this time For by an Abuse lately crept in there is introduced a custom which if it be not foreseen and prevented will be a great derogation to the Honor and a weakning to the power of your House Where the Law giveth a freedom to Corporations to elect Burgesses and forbideth any indirect course to be taken in their Elections many of the Corporations are so base-minded and timerous that they will not hazard the indignation of a Lord Lieutenants Letter who underhand sticks not to threaten them with the charge of a Musket or a Horse at the Muster if that he hath not the Election of the Burgesses and not they themselves And commonly those that the Lords recommend are such as desire it for protection or are so ignorant of the place they serve for as that there being occasion to speak of the Corporation for which they are chosen they have asked their Neighbors sitting by whether it were a Sea or a Land Town The next thing that is required is Liberty of Speech without which Parliaments have little force or power Speech begets doubts and resolves them and doubts in Speeches beget understanding he that doubts much asketh often and learns much and he that fears the worst soonest prevents a mischief This Priviledge of Speech is anciently granted by the testimony of Philip Comines a Stranger who prefers our Parliaments and the Freedom of the Subject in them above all other Assemblies which Freedom if it be broken or diminished is negligently lost since the dayes of Comines If freedom of Speech should be prohibited when men with modesty make repetition of the Grievances and Enormities of the Kingdom when men shall desire reformation of wrongs and injuries committed and have no relation of evil thought to his Majesty but with open heart and zeal express their dutifull and reverent respect to him and his service I say if this kinde of liberty of Speech be not allowed in time of Parliaments they will extend no further then to Quarter-Sessions and their Meetings and Assembles will be unnecessary for all means of disorder new crept in and all remedies and redresses will be quite taken away As it is no manners to contest with the King in his Election of Councellors and Servants for Kings obey no men but their Laws So were it a great negligence and part of Treason for a Subject not to be free in Speech against the abuses wrongs and offences that may be occasioned by persons in Authority What Remedy can be expected from a Prince to the Subject if the enormities of his Kingdom be concealed from him Or what King so religious or just in his own nature that may not hazard the loss of the hearts of his Subjects without this Liberty of Speech in Parliament For such is the misfortune of most Princes and such is the unhappiness of Subjects where Kings affections are setled and their loves so far transported to promote servants as they onely trust and credit what they shall inform In this Case what Subject dares complain or what Subject dares contradict the words or actions of such a servant if it be not warranted by freedom of a Parliament they speaking with humility For nothing obtaineth favor with a King so much as diligent obedience The surest and safest way betwixt the King and his people which hath least scandal of partiality is with indifference with integrity and sincerity to examine the Grievances of the Kingdom without touching upon the person of any man further then the cause giveth occasion For otherwise you shall contest with him that hath the Princes ears open to hearken to his inchanting tongue he informs secretly when you shall not be admitted to excuses he will cast your deserved malice against him to your contempt against the King and seeking to lessen his Authority and so will make the Prince the Shield of his Revenge These are the sinister practices of such servants to deceive their Soveraigns when our Grievances shall be authentically proved and made manifest to the World by your pains to examine and freedom to speak No Prince can be so affectionate to a servant or such an Enemy to himself as not to admit of this indifferent proceeding If his services be allowable and good they will appear with glory if bad your labor shall deserve thanks both of Prince and Country When Justice shall thus shine people will be animated to serve their King with integrity For they are naturally inclined to imitate Princes in good and bad The words of Cicero will then appear That malicious and evil men make Princes poor and one perfect good man is able to make a Realm rich One Case I will instance that is common in the mouths of all men and generally vox Populi vox Dei One of quality in the last Expedition to the Isle of Rhee endeavored to conceale the number of men lost in the last encounter and confidently affirmed their number not to exceed three or four hundred till a Doctor of Physick out of tenderness of Conscience and duty to his Majesty could not dissemble the vulgar and true Report but acquainted his Majesty with Two thousand of his Subjects there lost This was so contrary to the first information and so displeasing to the Informer and his Designs that he caused the Physitians remove from his Highness presence who yet remains in kinde of a banished man The truth of these two Reports is easily determined by the Clerks of the Bands of each Company and is worthy to be discovered for Truth sake Truth being so Noble of it self as
being agreed unto on Monday the 31 of March the aforesaid Petition was presented by his Majesty to both Houses at the delivery whereof the Lord Keeper spake as followeth Most Gracious Soveraign THe Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this present Parliament assembled out of due care of the Glory of Almighty God and of the Honor and Safety of your Majesty do with all humbleness and with one unanimous consent present to your Royal hands the most Loyal desires of all their hearts which is set down in a dutifull Petition which is to quicken the Laws against the Perturbers of the Peace of all States We cannot nor do not forget your Majesties most gracious Acts and Answers on the like Petition they are visible to the world to your Majesties honor and comfort We bend our knees and hearts blessing God and your Majesty therefore yet let it not seem needless that we repair again to your Majesty The Husbandman knows what Weeds are not destroyed at one weeding These are growing Evils they are Weeds of a spreading nature And we that come from all parts do think it our duty to tell your Majesty that Gods Vineyard is not yet cleansed And God himself requires that we pray to him often even for what he means and promiseth to bestow on us But my Message comes from the Pen of both Houses And therefore I humbly beseech your Majesty to lend a gracious ear to hear me read the Petition After the reading thereof his Majesty made this short speech My Lords and Gentlemen I Do very well approve the Method of your proceedings in this Parliament A Jove principium hoping that the rest of your Consultatious will succeed the happier And I like the Preamble of my Lord Keeper otherwise I should have a little suspected that you had thought me not so careful of Religion as I have and ever shall be wherein I am as forward as you can desire And for the Petition I answer first in general That I like it well and will use these as well as other means for the maintenance and propagation of that Religion wherein I have lived and do resolve to die But for the particulars you shall receive a more full Answer hereafter And now I will only add this That as we pray to God to help us so we must help our selves For we can have no assurance of his assistance if we do lie in bed and only pray without using other means And therefore I must remember you that if we do not make provision speedily we shall not be able to put one ship to Sea this year Verbum sapienti sat est Afterwards the Lord Keeper signified unto the House That his Majesty had now given his Answer unto the Petition exhibited by both Houses against Recusants and had commanded his Lordship to read the same Answer in this House and Mr Secretary to read it in the House of Commons Whereupon the Clerk read the first Article of the said Petition and the Lord Keeper read his Majesties Answer unto the same and so each Article thereof The which Petition with the Answers follow in haec verba Most Gracious Soveraign WE your most Loyal and obedient Sub●ects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled Having to our singular comfort obtained your Majesties pious and gracious assent for a Publick Fast to appease the wrath of Almighty God kindled against us and to prevent those grievous Iudgments which do apparently press upon us do in all humility present unto your sacred Majesty all possible thanks for the same And because the publick and visible sins of the Kingdom are the undoubted causes of those visible Evils that are faln upon us Amongst which sins as is apparent by the word of God Idolatry and Superstition are the most haynous and crying sins To the end that we may constantly hope for the blessing of God to descend upon this our publick Humiliation by abandoning those sins which do make a wall of Separation betwixt God and us WE most humbly and ardently beg at the hands of your most Sacred Majesty That your Majesty will be pleased to give continual life and motion to all those Laws that stand in force against Iesuites Seminary Priests and all that have taken Orders by Authority of the Sea of Rome by exacting a more due and serious execution of the same Amongst which number those that have highly abused your Majesties clemency by returning into the Kingdom after their vanishment contrary to your Highness express Proclamation we humbly desire may be left to the severity of your Laws without admitting of any mediation or intercession for them And that such of your Majesties unsound and il affected Subjects as do receive harbor or conceal any of their viperous Generation may without delay suffer such Penalties and Punishments as the Laws most justly impose upon them His Majesties Answer unto the first Article of this Petition TO the first Point his Majesty answereth That he will according to your desire give both life and motion to the Laws that stand in force against Jesuites Seminary Priests and all that have taken Orders by Authority of the Sea of Rome and to that end his Majesty will give strict order to all his Ministers for the discovering and apprehending of them and so leave them being apprehended to the trial of the Law And in case after trial there shall be cause to respit execution of any of them yet they shall be committed according to the example of the best times to the Castle of Wisbitch and there be safely kept from exercising their Functions of spreading their Superstitious and dangerous Doctrine and the Receivers and Abettors they shall be left to the Law THat your Majesty would be pleased to command a surer and strait watch to be kept in and over your Majesties Ports and Havens and to commit the care and charge of searching of Ships for the discovery and apprehension aswel of Jesuites and Seminary Priests brought in as of Children and young Students sent over beyond the Seas to suck in the poyson of Rebellion and Superstition unto men of approved fidelity and Religion And such as shall be convicted to have connived or combined in the bringing in of the one or conveying of the other that the Laws may pass upon them with speedy execution His Majesties Answer to the second Article TO the second Article His Majesty granteth all that is in this Article and to this end will give Order to the Lord Treasurer Lord Admiral and Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports that in their several places they be careful to see this Article fully executed giving strict charge to all such as have place and authority under them to use all diligence therein And his Majesty requireth them and all other his Officers and Ministers to have a vigilant eye upon such as dwell in dangerous places of advantage or opportunity for receiving or
absurd and unreasonable thing to send a Prisoner to a Roman Emperor and not to write along with him the Cause alledged against him send therefore no man a Prisoner without his causes along with him Hoc fac vives and that was the first reason a tuto that it was not safe for the King in regard of Loss to commit men without a Cause The second Reason is That such commitments will destroy the endeavors of all men Who will endeavor to imploy himself in any profession either of War Merchandise or of any liberal knowledge if he be but Tenant at will of his Liberty for no Tenant at will will support or improve any thing because he hath no certain estate Ergo to make men Tenants at will of their Liberties destroys all industry and endeavors whatsoever And so much for these six principal Reasons A re ipsa A minore ad majus A remediis From the extent and universality From the infiniteness of the time A fine Loss of Honor. Loss of Profit Loss of Security Loss of Industry These were his Reasons Here he made another Protestation That if remedy had been given in this Case they would not have medled therewith by no means but now that remedy being not obtained in the Kings Bench without looking back upon any thing that hath been done or omitted they desire some provision for the future onely And here he took occasion to adde four Book Cases and Authorities all in the Point saying That if the learned Councel on the other side could produce but one against the Liberties so pat and pertinent oh how they would hug and cull it 16. H. 6. tit monstrance de faits 82. by the whole Court the King in his Presence cannot command a man to be arrested but an action of false imprisonment lieth against him that arresteth if not the King in his royal Presence then none others can do it Non sic itur ad astra 1. Hen. 7.4 Hussey reports the opinion of Markham chief Justice to Edw. 4. that he could not imprison by word of mouth and the reason because the party hath no remedy for the Law leaves every man a remedy of causless imprisonment he added that Markham was a worthy Judge though he fell into adversities at last by the Lord Rivers his means Fortescue Chap. 8. Proprio ore nullus Regum usus est to imprison any man c. 4. Eliz. Times blessed and renowned for Justice and Religion in Pl. 235. the common Law hath so admeasured the Kings Prerogative as he cannot prejudice any man in his inheritance and the greatest inheritance a man hath is the liberty of his Person for all others are accessary to it for thus he quoted the Orator Major haereditas venit unicuique nostrum a Jure legibus quam a parentibus And these are the four Authorities he cited in this point Now he propounded and answered two Objections First in point of State Secondly in the Course held by the House of Commons May not the Privy Councel commit without cause shewed in no matter of State where secrecie is required would not this be an hinderance to his Majesties service It can be no prejudice to the King by reason of matter of State for the cause must be of a higher or lower nature if it be for suspicion of Treason misprision of Treason or Felony it may be by general words couched if it be for any other thing of smaller nature as contempt and the like the particular cause must be shewed and no individuum vagum or uncertain cause to be admitted Again if the Law be so clear as you make it why needs the Declaration and Remonstrance in Parliament The Subject hath in this Case sued for remedy in the Kings Bench by Habeas Corpus and found none therefore it is necessary to be cleared in Parliament And here ends his Discourse And then he made a recapitulation of all that had been offered unto their Lordships That generally their Lordships had been advised by the most faithful Counsellors that can be dead men these cannot be daunted by fear nor muzled by affection reward or hope of preferment and therefore their Lordships might safely believe them particularly their Lordships had three several kinds of Proofs 1. Acts of Parliament judicial Precedents good Reasons First you have had many ancient Acts of Parliament in the Point besides Magna Charta that is seven Acts of Parliament which indeed are thirty seven Magna Charta being confirmed thirty times for so often have the Kings of England given their royal Assents thereunto 2. Judicial Precedents of grave and reverend Judges in terminis terminantibus that long since departed the world and they were many in number Precedents being twelve and the Judges four of a Bench made four times twelve and that is forty eight Judges 3. You have as he tearmed them vividas rationes manifest and apparent Reasons Towards the conclusion he declared to their Lordships That they of the House of Commons have upon great study and serious Consideration made a great manifestation unanimously Nullo contradicente concerning this great liberty of the Subject and have vindicated and recovered the Body of this fundamental Liberty both of their Lordships and themselves from shadows which sometimes of the day are long sometimes short and sometimes long again and therefore we must not be guided by shadows and they have transmitted to their Lordships not capita rerum Heads or Briefs for these compendia are dispendia but the Records at large in terminis terminantibus and so he concluded that their Lordships are involved in the same danger and therefore ex congruo condigno they desired a Conference to the end their Lordships might make the like Declaration as they had done Commune periculum commune requirit auxilium and thereupon take such further course as may secure their Lordships and them and all their Posterity in enjoying of their ancient undoubted and fundamental Liberties The two next days were spent in the Debate about Billeting of Soldiers upon the Subject against Law THursday the 10. of April Mr. Secretary Cook delivered this Message from the King That his Majesty desireth this House not to make any recess these Easter Holidays that the world may take notice how earnest his Majesty and we are for the publique affairs in Christendom the which by such a recess would receive interruption THis Message for non-recess was not well pleasing to the House SIr Robert Phillips first resented it and took notice That in 12. and 18. Iac. upon the like intimation the House resolved it was in their power to adjourn or sit hereafter said he this may be put upon us by Princes of less Piety let a Committee consider hereof and of our right herein and to make a Declaration And accordingly this matter touching his Majesties pleasure about the recess was referred to a Committee and to consider
do verily believe he doth very well understand what a miserable power it is which hath produced so much weakness to Himself and to the Kingdom And it is one happiness that he is so ready to redress it For mine own part I shall be very glad to see that old decrepite Law Magna Charta which hath been so long kept and lien bed-rid as it were I shall be glad to see it walk abroad again with new vigor and lustre attended and followed with the other six Statutes questionless it will be a great heartning to all the people I doubt not but upon a debating conference with the Lords we may happily fall upon a fair fit accommodation concerning the Liberty of our Persons and Propriety of our Goods I hope we may have a Bill to agree in the point against imprisonment for Loans or privy Seals As for intrinsecal power and reason of State they are matters in the Clouds where I desire we may leave them and not meddle with them at all left by the way of admittance we may lose somewhat of that which is our own already Yet this by the way I will say of reason of State That in the latitude by which 't is used it hath eaten out almost not onely the Laws but all the Religion of Christendom Now I will onely remember you of one Precept and that of the wisest man Be not over wise be not over just and he gives his reason for why wilt thou be desolate If Justice and Wisdom may be stretcht to desolation let us thereby learn that Moderation is the Vertue of Vertues and Wisdom of Wisdoms Let it be our Master-piece so to carry the business that we may keep Parliaments on foot For as long as they be frequent there will be no irregular Power which though it cannot be broken at once yet in short time it will be made and mouldred away there can be no total or final loss of Liberties as long as they last What we cannot get at one time we shall have at another Upon this debate it was ordered That a Committee of Lawyers do draw a Bill containing the substance of Magna Charta and the other Statutes that do concern the Liberty of the Subject which business took up two whole days Thursday the first of May. MAster Secretary Cook delivers a Message from his Majesty viz. to know whether the House will rest on his Royal Word or no declared to them by the Lord Keeper which if they do he assures them it shall be Royally performed Upon this there was a silence for a good space Then Mr. Secretary Cook proceeded This silence invites me to a further Speech and further to address my self Now we see we must grow towards an issue for my part how confident I have been of the good issue of this Parliament I have certified in this place and elsewhere and I am still confident therein I know his Majesty is resolved to do as much as ever King did for his Subjects All this Debate hath grown out of the sense of our Sufferings and a desire of making up again those Breaches that have been made Since this Parliament begun hath there been any dispence made of that which hath formerly been done when means were denied his Majesty being a yong King and newly come to his Crown which he found ingaged in a War what could we expect in such Necessities His Majesty called this Parliament to make up the Breach His Majesty assures us we shall not have the like cause to complain He assures the Laws shall be established what can we desire more all is that we provide for Posterity and that we do prevent the like suffering for the future Were not the same means provided by them before us can we do more we are come to the Liberty of the Subjects and the Prerogative of the King I hope we shall not adde any thing to our selves to depress him I will not divine I think we shall finde difficulty with the King or with the Lords I shall not deliver my opinion as Counsellor to his Majesty which I will not justifie and say here or at the Councel Board Will we in this necessity strive to bring our selves into a better Condition and greater Liberty then our Fathers had and the Crown into a worse then ever I dare not advise his Majesty to admit of that if this that we now desire be no Innovation it is all contained in those Acts and Statutes and whatsoever else we would adde more is a diminution to the Kings Power and an addition to our own We deal with a wise and prudent Prince that hath a Sword in his hand for our good and this good is supported by Power Do not think that by Cases of Law and Debate we can make that not to be Law which in experience we every day finde necessary make what Law you will if I do discharge the place I bear I must commit men and must not discover the Cause to any Jaylor or Judge if I by this Power commit one without just Cause the burthen falls heavy on me by his Majesties displeasure and he will remove me from my place Government is a solid thing and must be supported for our good Sir Robert Philips hereupon spake this That if the words of Kings strike impressions in the hearts of Subjects then do these words upon this occasion strike an impression into the hearts of us all to speak in a plain language we are now come to the end of our journey and the well disposing of an Answer to this Message will give happiness or misery to this Kingdom Let us set the Commonwealth of England before the eyes of his Majesty that we may justifie our selves that we have demeaned our selves dutifully to his Majesty And so the day following they had further Debate upon that matter the House being turned into a Grand Committee and Mr. Herbert in the Chair Some say that the Subject has suffered more in the violation of ancient Liberties within these few years then in Three hundred years before and therefore care ought to be taken for the time to come Sir Edward Cook said That that Royal word had reference to some Message formerly sent his Majesties word was That they may secure themselves any way by Bill or otherwise he promised to give way to it and to the end that this might not touch his Majesties Honor it was proposed that the Bill come not from the House but from the King We will and grant for us and our Successors and that we and our Successors will do thus and thus and it is the Kings Honor he cannot speak but by Record Others desired the House to consider when and where the late promise was made was it not in the face of both Houses Cruel Kings have been careful to perform their promises yea though they have been unlawful as Herod Therefore if we rest upon his Majesties promise
That the free Subjects of this Realm ought not to be imprisoned without cause shewed But by this Clause a Soveraign Power will be admitted and left intire to his Majesty sufficient to control the force of Law and to bring in this new and dangerous Interpretation That the free Subjects of this Realm ought not by Law to be imprisoned without cause shewed unless it be by Soveraign Power In a word this Clause if it should be admitted would take away the effect of every part of the Petition and become destructive to the whole for thence will be the Exposition touching the Billeting of Soldiers and Mariners in free mens houses against their wills and thence will be the Exposition touching the Times and Places for execution of the Law Marshal contrary to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm The scope of this Petition as I have before observed is not to amend our Case but to restore us to the same state we were in before whereas if this Clause be received in stead of mending the condition of the poor Subjects whose Liberties of late have been miserably violated by some Ministers we shall leave them worse then we found them in stead of curing their wounds we shall make them deeper We have set bounds to our desires in this great Business whereof one is not to diminish the Prerogative of the King by mounting too high and if we bound our selves on the other side with this limit not to abridge the lawful Priviledges of the Subject by descending beneath that which is meet no man we hope can blame us My Lords as there is mention made in the additional Clause of Soveraign Power so is there likewise of a trust reposed in his Majesty touching the use of Soveraign Power The word Trust is of great Latitude and large extent and therefore ought to be well and warily applied and restrained especially in the Case of a King There is a trust inseparably reposed in the Persons of the Kings of England but that trust is regulated by Law for example when Statutes are made to prohibite things not mala in se but onely mala quia prohibita under certain forfeitures and penalties to accrue to the King and to the Informers that shall sue for the breach of them The Commons must and ever will acknowledge a Regal and Soveraign Prerogative in the King touching such Statutes that it is in his Majesties absolute and undoubted Power to grant Dispensations to particular persons with the Clauses of Non obstante to do as they might have done before those Statutes wherein his Majesty conferring grace and favour upon some doth not do wrong to others but there is a difference between those Statutes and the Laws and Statutes whereon the Petition is grounded by those Statutes the Subject hath no interest in the penalties which are all the fruit such Statutes can produce until by Suit or Information commenced he become intituled to the particular forfeitures whereas the Laws and Statutes mentioned in our Petition are of another nature there shall your Lordships finde us to rely upon the good old Statute called Magna Charta which declareth and confirmeth the ancicient Common Laws of the Liberties of England There shall your Lordships also finde us also to insist upon divers other most material Statutes made in the time of King E. 4. and E. 3. and other famous Kings for explanation and ratification of the Lawful Rights and Priviledges belonging to the Subjects of this Realm Laws not inflicting Penalties upon Offenders in malis prohibitis but Laws declarative or positive conferring or confirming ipso facto an inherent Right and Interest of Liberty and Freedom in the Subjects of this Realm as their Birthrights and Inheritance descendable to their Heirs and Posterity Statutes incorporate into the Body of the Common Law over which with reverence be it spoken there is no Trust reposed in the Kings Soveraign Power or Prerogative Royal to enable him to dispense with them or to take from his Subjects that Birthright or Inheritance which they have in their Liberties by vertue of the Common Law and of these Statutes But if this Clause be added to our Petition we shall then make a dangerous overture to confound this good destination touching what Statutes the King is trusted to controll by dispensations and what not and shall give an intimation to posterity as if it were the opinion both of the Lords and Commons assembled in this Parliament that there is a Trust reposed in the King to lay aside by his Soveraign Power in some amergent cases as well of the Common Law and such Statutes as declare or ratifie the Subjects Liberty or confer Interest upon their persons as those other Penal Statutes of such nature as I have mentioned before which as we can by no means admit so we believe assuredly that it is far from the desire of our most Gracious Soveraign to affect so vast a Trust which being transmitted to a Successor of a different temper might enable him to alter the whole frame and fabrick of the Commonwealth and to dissolve that Government whereby his Kingdom hath flourished for so many years and ages under his Majesties most Royal Ancestors and predecessors Our next Reason is That we hold it contrary to all course of Parliament and absolutely repugnant to the very nature of a Petition of Right consisting of particulars as ours doth to clog it with a general Saving or Declaration to the weakning of the Right demanded and we are bold to renew with some confidence our Allegation that there can be no Precedent shewed of any such Clause in any such Petitions in times past I shall insist the longer upon this particular and labour the more carefully to clear it because your Lordships were pleased the last day to urge against us the Statutes of 25 and 28 of E. 1. as arguments to prove the contrary and seemed not to be satisfied with that which in this point we had affirmed True it is that in those Statutes there are such Savings as your Lordships have observed but I shall offer you a clear Answer to them and to all other Savings of like nature that can be found in any Statutes whatsoever First in the general and then I shall apply particular Answers to the particulars of those two Statutes whereby it will be most evident that those examples can no ways sute with the matter now in hand To this end it will be necessary that we consider duely what that question is which indeed concerneth a Petition and not an Act of Parliament This being well observed by shewing unto your Lordships the difference between a Petition for the Law and the Law ordained upon such a Petition and opening truly and perspicuously the course that was holden in framing of Statutes before 2 H. 5. different from that which ever since then hath been used and is still in use amongst us and by noting the times wherein these Statutes
may be for the most part applied to this Statute as well as to the former I adde these further Answers The first of these two Savings is of the same prisage of Wines which is excepted in the 25 Edw. 1. but in some more clearness for that here the word Wines is expresly annexed to the word Prices which I take for so much to be in Exposition of the former Law And albeit these words and of other goods be added yet do I take it to be but a particular Saving or exception which being qualified with the words Ancient due and accustomed is not very dangerous nor can be understood of Prices or Levies upon Goods of all sorts at the Kings will and pleasure but onely of the old and certain Customs upon Wool Woolfels and Leather which were due to the Crown long before the making of this Statute For the latter of the two Savings in this Act which is of the more unusual nature and subject to the more exception it is indeed general and if we may believe the concurrent Relations of the Histories of those times as well as those that are now Printed as those which remain onely in Manuscripts it gave distaste from the beginning and wrought no good effect but produced such distempers and troubles in the State as we wish may be buried in perpetual oblivion and that the like Saving in these and future times may never breed the like disturbance For from hence arose a Jealousie That Magna Charta which declared the ancient Right of the Subject and was an absolute Law in it self being now confirmed by a latter Act with this Addition of a general Saving for the Kings Right in all things by the Saving was weakned and that made doubtful which was clear before But not to depart from our main ground which is that Savings in old Acts of Parliament before 2 H. 5. are no proof that there were the like Savings in the Petitions for those Acts let me observe unto your Lordships and so leave this point That albeit this Petition whereon this Act of 28 Edw. 1. was grounded be perished yet hath it pleased God that the very Frame and Context of the Act it self as it is drawn up and entred upon the Statute Roll and Printed in our Books doth manifestly impart that this Saving came in by the Kings Answer and was not in the Original Petition of the Lords and Commons for it cometh in at the end of the Act after the words le Roy vent which commonly are the words of the Royal assent to an Act of Parliament And though they be mixed and followed with other words as though the Kings Councel and the rest who were present at the making of this Ordinance did intend the same Saving yet is not that Conclusive so long as by the form of those times the Kings Answer working upon the materials of the Petition might be conceived by some to make the Law effectual though varying from the frame of the Petition The next Reason which the Commons have commanded me to use for which they still desire to be spared from adding this Clause to their Petition is this this offensive Law of 28 E. 1. which confirmed Magna Charta with a Saving rested not long in peace for it gave not that satisfaction to the Lords or people as was requisite they should have in a case so nearly concerning them and therefore about thirty three or thirty four of the same Kings Reign a later Act of Parliament was made whereby it was Enacted That all men should have their Laws and Liberties and free Customs as largely and wholly as they had used to have at any time when they had them best and if any Statutes had been made or any Customs brought in to the contrary that all such Statutes and Customs should be void This was the first Law which I call now to minde that restored Magna Charta to the original purity wherein it was first moulded albeit it hath been since confirmed above twenty times more by several Acts of Parliament in the Reigns of divers most just and gracious Kings who were most apprehensive of their Rights and jealous of their Honors and always without Savings so as if between 28 and 34 E. 1. Magna Charta stood blemished with many Savings of the Kings Rights or Seigniory which might be conceived to be above the Law that stain and blemish was long since taken away and cleared by those many absolute Declarations and Confirmations of that excellent Law which followed in after ages and so it standeth at this day purged and exempted now from any such Saving whatsoever I beseech your Lordships therefore to observe the circumstance of time wherein we offer this Petition to be presented to your Lordships and by us unto his Majesty Do we offer it when Magna Charta stands clogged with Saving No my Lords but at this day when later and better confirmations have vindicated and set free that Law from all exceptions and shall we now annex another and worse Saving to it by an unnecessary Clause in that Petition which we expect should have the fruits and effects of a Law Shall we our selves relinquish or adulterate that which cost our Ancestors such care and labour to purchase and refine No my Lords but as we should hold our selves unhappy if we should not amend the wretched estate of the poor Subject so let us hold it a wickedness to impair it Whereas it was further urged by your Lordships That to insert this Clause into our Petition would be no more then to do that again at your Lordships motion and request which we had formerly done by the mouth of our Speaker and that there is no cause why we should recede from that which so solemnly we have professed To this I answer and confess it was then in our hearts and so it is now and shall be ever not to incroach on his Majesties Soveraign Power But I beseech your Lordships to observe the different occasion and reference of that Protestation and of this Clause That was a general●●nswer to a general Message which we received from his Majesty warning us not to incroach upon his Prerogative to which like dutiful and loving Subjects we answered at full according to the integrity of our own hearts nor was there any danger in making such an Answer to such a Message nor could we answer more truly or more properly But did that Answer extend to acknowledge a Soveraign Power in the King above the Laws and Statutes mentioned in our Petition or controll the Liberties of the Subject therein declared and demanded No my Lords it hath no reference to any such particulars and the same words which in some cases may be fit to be used and were unmannerly to be omitted cannot in other cases be spoken but with impertinency at the least if not with danger I have formerly opened my Reasons proving the danger of this Clause and am
Bill shew and declare against Roger Manwaring Clerk Dr. in Divinity That whereas by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm the free Subiects of England do undoubtedly inherit this Right and Liberty not to be compelled to contribute any Tax Tollage Aid or to make any Loans not set or imposed by common consent by Act of Parliament And divers of his Majesties loving Subjects relying upon the said Laws and Customes did in all humility refuse to lend such sums of Moneys without Authority of Parliament as were lately required of them Nevertheless he the said Roger Manwaring in contempt and contrar● to the Laws of this Realm hath lately preached in his Majesties presence two several Sermons That is to say the fourth day of July last one of the said Sermons and upon the 29. day of the same Moneth the other of the said Sermons both which Sermons he hath since published in print in a Book intituled Religion and Allegiance and with a wicked and malitious intention to seduce and misguide the Conscience of the Kings most excellent Majesty touching the observation of the Laws and Customes of this Kingdom and of the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects to incense his Royal displeasure against his good Subjects so refusing to scandalize subvert and impeach the good Laws and Government of this Realm and the Authority of the High Court of Parliament to alienate his Royal heart from his People and to cause jealousies sedition and division in the Kingdom He the said Roger Manwaring doth in the said Sermons and Book perswade the Kings most excellent Majesty First that his Majesty is not bound to keep and observe the good Laws and Customes of this Realm concerning the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects aforementioned And that his Royal Will and Command in imposing Loans Taxes and other Aids upon his people without common consent in Parliament doth so far binde the Consciences of the Subjects of this Kingdom that they cannot refuse the same without peril of eternal damnation Secondly that those of his Majesties loving Subjects which refused the Loan aforementioned in such manner as is before recited did therein offend against the Law of God against his Majesties Supreme Authority and by so doing became guilty of Impiety Dissoialty Rebellion and Disobedience and liable to many other Taxes and Censures which he in the several parts of his Book doth most falsly and malitiously lay upon them Thirdly that authority of Parliaments is not necessary for the raising of Aids and Subsidies that the slow proceedings of such Assemblies are not fit for the supply of the urgent necessities of the State but rather apt to produce sundry impediments to the just designs of Princes and to give them occasion of displeasure and discontent All which the Commons are ready to prove not only by the general scope of the same Sermons and Book but likewise by several Clauses Assertions and Sentences therein contained and that he the said Roger Manwaring by preaching and publishing the Sermons and Book aforementioned did most unlawfully abuse his holy function instituted by God in his Church for the guiding of the Consciences of all his Servants and chiefly of Soveraign Princes and Magistrates and for the maintenance of the peace and concord betwixt all men especially betwixt the King and his People and hath thereby most grievously offended against the Crown and Dignity of his Majesty and against the Prosperity and good Government of this State and Common-wealth And the said Commons by protestation saving to themselves the Liberty of exhibiting at any time hereafter any other occasion or impeachment against the said Roger Manwaring and also of replying to the answers which he the said Roger shall make unto any of the matters contained in this present Bill of Complaint and of offering further proof of the premises or of any of them as the Cause according to the Course of Parliament shall require do pray that the said Roger Manwaring may be put to answer to all and every the premises and that such proceeding examination trial judgement and exemplary punishment may be thereupon had and executed as is agreeable to Law and Iustice. This Declaration ingrossed in Parliament being read Mr. Pym addressed himself to the Lords in this manner THat he should speak to this Cause with more confidence because he saw nothing out of himself that might discourage him If he considered the matter the Offences were of an high nature of easie proof if he considered their Lordships who were the Judges of their own interest their own honour the example of their Ancestors the care of their Posterity would all be Advocates with him in this Cause on the behalf of the Commonwealth if he considered the King our Soveraign the pretence of whose Service and Prerogative might perchance be sought unto as a Defence and Shelter for this Delinquent he could not but remember that part of his Majesties Answer to the Petition of Right of both Houses that he held himself bound in conscience to preserve those Liberties which this man would perswade him to impeach He said further that he could not but remember his Majesties love to Piety and Justice manifested upon all occasions and he knew love to be the root and spring of all other passions and affections A man therefore hates because he sees somewhat in that which he hates contrary to that which he loves a man therefore is angry because he sees somewhat in that wherewith 〈◊〉 ●ngry that gives impediment and interruption to the accomplishment of that which he loves If this be so by the same act of his Apprehension by which he believes his Majesties love to Piety and Justice he must needs believe his hate and detestation of this man who went about to withdraw him from the exercise of both Then he proceeded to that which he said was the Task enjoyned him to make good every Clause of that which had been read unto them which that he might the more clearly perform he prepounded to observe that order of parts unto which the said Declaration was naturally dissolved 1. Of the Preamble 2. The Body of the Charge 3. The Conclusion or Prayer of the Commons The preamble consisted altogether of recital first of the Inducements upon which the Commons undertook this complaint The second of those Laws and Liberties against which the offence was committed The third of the violation of those Laws which have relation to that offence From the connexion of all those recitals he said there did result three Positions which he was to maintain as the ground-work and foundation of the whole Cause The first that the form of Government in any State could not be altered without apparent danger of ruine to that State The second the Law of England whereby the Subjects was exempted from Taxes and Loans not granted by common consent of Parliament was not introduced by any Statute or by any Charter or Sanction of Princes but was
being stopped and stopped in such maner as we are enjoyned so we must now leave to be a Councel I hear this with that grief as the saddest Message of the greatest loss in the world but let us still be wise be humble let us make a fair Declaration to the King OUr sins are so exceeding great said Sir Iohn Elliot that unless we speedily return to God God will remove himself further from us ye know with what affection and integrity we have proceeded hitherto to have gained his Majesties heart and out of a necessity of our duty were brought to that course we were in I doubt a misrepresentation to his Majesty hath drawn this mark of his displeasure upon us I observe in the Message amongst other sad particulars it is conceived that we were about to lay some aspersions on the Government give me leave to protest That so clear were our intentions that we desire onely to vindicate those dishonors to our King and Countrey c. It is said also as if we cast some aspersions on his Majesties Ministers I am confident no Minister how dear soever can Here the Speaker started up from the seat of the Chair apprehending Sir Iohn Elliot intended to fall upon the Duke and some of the Ministers of State said There is a command laid upon me that I must command you not to proceed whereupon Sir Iohn Elliot sat down I Am as much grieved as ever said Sir Dudley Diggs Must we not proceed let us sit in silence we are miserable we know not what to do Hereupon there was a sad silence in the House for a while which was broken by Sir Nathaniel Rich in these words WE must now speak or for ever hold our peace for us to be silent when King and Kingdom are in this calamity is not fit The question is Whether we shall secure our selves by silence yea or no I know it is more for our own security but it is not for the security of those for whom we serve let us think on them some instruments desire a change we fear his Majesties safety and the safety of the Kingdom I do not say we now see it and shall we now sit still and do nothing and so be scattered Let us go together to the Lords and shew our dangers that we may then go to the King together Others said That the Speech lately spoken by Sir Iohn Elliot had given offence as they feared to his Majesty WHereupon the House declared That every Member of the House is free from any undutiful Speech from the beginning of the Parliament to that day and Ordered That the House be turned into a Committee to consider what is fit to be done for the safety of the Kingdom and that no man go out upon pain of going to the Tower But before the Speaker left the Chair he desired leave to go forth and the House ordered that he may go forth if he please And the House was hereupon turned into a grand Committee Mr. Whitby in the Chair I Am as full of grief as others said Mr. Wandesford let us recollect our English hearts and not sit still but do our duties two ways are propounded To go to the Lords or to the King I think it is fit we go to the King for this doth concern our Liberties and let us not fear to make a Remonstrance of our rights we are his Counsellors there are some men which call evill good and good evil and bitter sweet Justice is now called Popularity and Faction THen Sir Edw. Cook spake freely We have dealt with that duty and moderation that never was the like Rebus sic stantibus after such a violation of the Liberties of the Subject let us take this to heart In 30. E. 3. were they then in doubt in Parliament to name men that misled the King they accused Iohn de Gaunt the Kings Son and Lord Latimer and Lord Nevel for misadvising the King and they went to the Tower for it now when there is such a downfal of the State shall we hold our tongues how shall we answer our duties to God and men 7. H. 4. Parl. Rot. numb 31 32.11 H. 4. numb 13. there the Councel are complained of and are removed from the King they mewed up the King and disswaded him from the Common Good and why are we now retrived from that way we were in why may we not name those that are the Cause of all our evils In 4. H. 3. 27. E. 3. 13. R. 2. the Parliament moderateth the Kings prerogative and nothing grows to abuse but this House hath power to treat of it What shall we do let us palliate no longer if we do God will not prosper us I think the Duke of Buckingham is the cause of all our miseries and till the King be informed thereof we shall never go out with honour or sit with honour here that man is the Grievance of Grievances let us set down the causes of all our dysasters and all will reflect upon him As for going to the Lords that is not via Regia our Liberties are now impeached we are concerned it is not via Regia the Lords are not participant with our Liberties Mr. Selden advised that a Declaration be drawn under four heads 1. To express the Houses dutiful carriage towards his Majesty 2. To tender their Liberties that are violated 3. To present what the purpose of the House was to have dealt in 4. That that great Person viz. the Duke fearing himself to be questioned did interpose and cause this distraction All this time said he we have cast a mantle on what was done last Parliament but now being driven again to look on that man let us proceed with that which was then well begun and let the Charge be renewed that was last Parliament against him to which he made an Answer but the particulars were sufficient that we might demand judgement on that Answer onely IN conclusion the House agreed upon several heads concerning innovation in Religion the safety of the King and Kingdom misgovernment misfortune of our late designs with the causes of them And whilest it was moving to be put to the question that the Duke of Buckingham shall be instanced to be the chief and principal cause of all those evils the Speaker who after he had leave to go forth went privately to the King brought this Message THat his Majesty commands for the present they adjourn the House till to morrow morning and that all Committees cease in the mean time And the House was accordingly adjourned AT the same time the King sent for the Lord Keeper to attend him presently the House of Lords was adjourned ad libitum the Lord Keeper being returned and the House resumed his Lordship signified his Majesties desire that the House and all Committees be adjourned till to morrow morning AFter this Message was delivered the Lords
ends And he vindicated the Duke in point of Religion 'T is true said he his Mother is a Recusant but never any thing more grieved him and never did a Son use more means then he to convert her and he hath no power over her and for his own Lady whom he found not firm in his Religion he hath it used means to confirm her As for Arminians I have often heard him protest and vow against these Opinions It is true many that have skill therein may have some credit with him and make use of his noble nature for their own ends One particular I know well that some Gentlemen and Preachers of great esteem were questioned for a matter wherein there was some error in the manner of which they were presented I told him of them and that they were questioned and he answered me he would do the best he could for to countenance them Sir Benjamin Rudyard gave his judgement that if the matter be urged home it will proclaim the man lowder then we can in words If we name excess of Power and abuse of Power it will reach to the Duke and all others in future times and to a Gentleman of honour nothing is so dear as sense of Honour I am witness and do know that he did many great and good Offices to this House If the forfeiture of my life could breed an Opinion that ye should have no occasion to complain at your next meeting I would pawn it to you Nor let any man say it is fear makes us desist we have shewed already what we dare do And because the imployment of Dalbeer had given much offence Sir Thomas Jermin stood up in his defence and said he had given great evidence of his Trust and Fidelity When the Count Palatine retired himself and the Councel agreed to send a Party under Count Mansfield to make a head and the King sent word to the Palatine to be present in Person Dalbeer went along with him with one more and being in a Village in Germany a Troop of fifty Horse met them Dalbeer went to the Captain and said we are in a Service I will give you so many crowns to conduct us which was done and Dalbeer went along with him In conclusion Iune the 13. it was Ordered upon the Question that the excessive Power of the Duke of Buckingham is the cause of the Evils and Dangers to the King and Kingdom And that this be added to the Remonstrance At this very time being Iune 18. 1628. Doctor Lamb so called having been at a Play-house came through the City of London and being a person very notorious the Boys gathered thick about him which increased by the access of ordinary People and the Rabble they presently reviled him with words calling him a Witch a Devil the Duke's Conjurer c. he took Sanctuary in the Wind-mill Tavern at the lower end of the Old Jury where he remained a little space but there being two Doors opening to several Streets out of the said House the Rout discovering the same made sure both Doors lest he should escape and pressed so hard upon the Vintner to enter the House that he for fear the House should be pulled down and the Wines in his Cellar spoiled and destroyed thrust the imaginary Devil out of his House whereupon the tumult carried him in a croud among them howting and showting crying a witch a Devil and when they saw a Guard coming by order of the Lord Mayor for the rescue of him they fell upon the Doctor beat him and bruised him and left him for dead With much ado the Officers that rescued him got him alive to the Counter where he remained some few houres and died that night The City of London endeavoured to find out the most active persons in this Riot but could not finde any that either could or if they could were willing to witnesse against any person in that businesse This happened to be in Parliament time and at that instant of time when they were about the Remonstrance against the Duke And shortly after so high was the rage of people that they would ordinarily utter these words Let Charles and George do what they can The Duke shall die like Doctor Lamb. What fine the City underwent for this miscarriage we shall observe in order of time Two days after the Privy Councel writ this ensuing Letter to the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs of London WHereas we are given to understand that the fury and outrage of divers dissolute and disorderly person assembled together in great numbers without any resistance made or course taken to suppresse them by the Magistrates to whom it appertained one Lamb was in a barbarous manner slaine and murdered wherewith his Majesty having been likewise made acquainted as he is very sensible of the scandal that may hereby be cast upon the Peace and Government of the Realme in general when the chief City thereof and where his own Person is resident should by the remissnesse and neglect of Magistrates in the Execution of his Laws suffer a fact and misdemeanour of so high a nature to be committed and to passe unpunished So he is very highly displeased thereat and hath therefore commanded us in his name hereby streightly to charge and require your Lordship c. that with all care and diligence you do forthwith enquire out the principal Actors and Abettors therein and to cause them to be apprehended and committed to Prison and to be proceeded with and punished in the sevarest manner that by the Laws of the Realme is provided against offenders in so high a nature And so c. The Commons at this time voted that Doctor Neal Bishop of Winchester and Dr. Laud Bishop of Bath and Wells be named to be those near about the King who are suspected to be Arminians and that they are justly suspected to be unsound in their opinions that way The House was turned again into a Committee concerning the Remonstrance And Mr. Selden proposed that to the excessive power of the Duke should be added the abuse of that power since that abuse is the cause of these evils that it be presented to his Majesty to consider whether it be safe for the King and Common-wealth that a man of his power should be so near his Majesty and it was ordered accordingly All the parts of the Remonstrance being agreed unto it was perfected to be presented to the King being as followeth MOst Dread Sovereign as with humble thankfulnesse we your dutiful Commons now assembled in Parliament do acknowledge the great comfort which we have in your Majesties pious and gracious disposition so we think it a meet and most necessary Duty being called by your Majesty to consult and advise of the great and urgent affairs of this Church and Common-wealth finding them at this time in apparent danger of ruine and destruction faithfully and dutifully to informe your Majesty thereof
that under some colourable pretence might secretly by this as by other wayes contrive to change the frame both of Religion and Government and thereby undermine the frame both of Religion and Government and thereby undermine the safety of your Majesty and your Kingdomes These men could not be ignorant that the bringing in of Strangers for aid hath been pernitious to most States where they have been admitted but to England fatal We do blesse God that hath given your Majesty a wise understanding heart to discern of those courses and that such power produceth nothing but weaknesse and calamity And we beseech your Majesty to pardon the vehemencie of our expression if in the Loyal and zealous affections we bear to your Majesty and your service we are bold to declare to your Majesty and the whole world that we hold it far beneath the heart of any free English man to think that this victorious Nation should now stand in need of German Souldiers to defend their own King and kingdom But when we consider the course formerly mentioned and these things tending to an apparent change of Government the often breaches of Parliament whereby your Majesty hath been deprived of the faithful Councel and free Aids of your people by taking off Tonnage and poundage without graunt thereof by Act of Parliament ever since the beginning of your Majesties Reigne to this present The standing Commission granted to the Duke of Buckingham to be general of an Army in the Land in the time of peace the discharging of faithful and sufficient Officers and Ministers some from Iudicial places and others from the Offices and authorities which they formerly held in the Common-wealth We cannot but at the sight of such an apparant desolation as must necessarily follow these courses out of the depth of sorrow lift up our cryes to heaven for help and next under God apply our selves unto your sacred Majesty who if you could hear so many thousands speaking together do joyntly implore speedie help and Reformation And if your Majesty would be pleased to take a further view of the present state of your Realme We do humbly pray you to consider whether the miserable disasters and ill successe that hath accompanied all your late designes and actions particularly those of Cales and the Isle of Ree and the last expedition to Rochel have not extreamlie wasted that stock of Honor that was left unto this kingdome sometimes terrible to all other Nations and now declining to contempt beneath the meanest Together with our Honours we there lost those and that not a few who had they lived we might have some better hope of recovering it again our valiant and expert Collonels Captaines and Commanders and many thousand common Souldiers and Marriners Though we have some cause to think that your Majesty is not as yet rightly informed thereof and that of six or seven thousand of your Subjects lost at the Isle of Ree Your Majesty received information but of a few hundreds And this dishonour and losse hath been purchased with the consumption of above a million of Treasure Many of the Forts are exceeding weak and decayed and want both men and Munition And here we cannot but with grief consider and complaine of a strange improvidence we think your Majesty will rather call it treacherie That your store of powder which by order of your Privy Councel dated the tenth of December 1626. should be constantly three hundred Last besides a continual supply of twenty Last a month for ordinary expences and were now fit as we conceive to be double the proportion is at this time in the Tower the present Warrants being served but nine Lasts and forty eight pounds in all which we tremble to think of And that notwithstanding this extreame scarcity of powder great quantities have been permitted to be sold out of your Majesties Store to particular persons for private Gain Whereof we have seen a certificate six Last sold sithence the 14th of January last and your Majesties store being unfurnished of powder which by a contract made with Mr. Evelyn by advise of your Lords in Parliament ought to be supplyed monthly with twenty last at the rate of three pound ten shillings ten pence a Barrel Your Majesty hath been forced to pay above seven pound a Barrel for powder to be brought in from beyond Seas for which purpose twelve thousand foure hundred pounds was impressed to Mr. Burlemack the last year and that powder not so good as that by Contract your Maiesty should have by one third part All which are most fearful and dangerous abuses But what the poverty weaknesse and misery of your kingdome is now grown unto by decay of Trade and destruction and losse of Ships and Marriners within these three years we are almost afraid to declare And could we by any other means have been sure that your Majesty should any other way have had a true Information thereof We should have been doubtful to have made our weaknesse and extreamity of misfortune in this kinde to appear But the importunate and most pitiful complaints from all the parts of the kingdome near adjoyning to the Sea in this kinde would rend as we think the stoniest heart in the world with sorrow and the sense we have of the miserable condition your Kingdome is in by reason thereof especially for that we see no possible means being now shortly to end this Session how to help the same adds such a weight of grief unto our sad thoughts as we have not words to expresse it But for your Majesties more exact information therein We beseech you be pleased to peruse the Kalender of particulars which with the Remonstrance we most humblie present unto your Majestie One reason amongst many of this decay of Trade and losse of ships and Marriners is the not guarding of the narrow Seas the regality whereof your Majestie hath now in a manner wholly lost being that wherein a principal part of the Honor and safety of this Kingdome heretofore consisted And now having absolutely neglected it the Town of Dunkirk doth so contiually rob and spoile your Subjects that we can assure your Majesty if some present and effectuall remedy be not forthwith provided the whole Trade of this Kingdome the shipping marriners and all belonging thereunto will be utterly lost and consumed The principal cause of which evils and dangers we conceive to be the excessive power of the Duke of Buckingham and the abuse of that power And we humbly submit unto your Majesties excellent Wisdome whether it be safe for your self or your Kingdoms that so great power as rests in him by Sea and Land should be in the hands of any one Subject whatsoever And as it is not safe so sure we are it cannot be for your service it being impossible for one man to mannage so manie and weightie affaires of the Kingdome as he hath undertaken besides the ordinary duties of those offices which he holds some of which
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
of all the Members of our Church except onely of some schismatical persons who have of late years taken the boldnesse to broach their contrary corrupt opinions we desire should not be called in question or doubt But howsoever it hath pleased your Majesty to our exceeding great comfort by many Testimonies to declare your own constant resolution to maintain the said Religion yet we see how your gracious purposes are therin crost and into what a miserable condition your whole Kingdom is likely by that means to be reduced we shall earnestlie endeavour as that which doth nearly concerne us the safety and prosperitie of your Majestie and people which are in such sort disordered that ruine thereby threatned to both may by Gods blessing be prevented being most heartilie sorrie that these occasions are offered which did thus hinder our proceedings And therefore as well for dignity and necessitie of the matter as for that we conceive it to be the most speedy and effectual way by uniting of all our hearts and endeavours to dispatch all other businesse of importance particularlie those which may seem more immediatlie to respect your Majesties profit We pray that our resolutions of preferring this businesse before all others may be acceptable to your Majestie to whom both in the matter and manner of our proceedings we desire to give all possible satisfaction Whereunto the King thus Answered GEntlemen this Answer being somewhat long may in reason require some time to reply unto it since as most of you cannot but judge this giveth no satisfaction Therefore I shall give you some short notes upon it I cannot think that whereas you alledge that the Bill of Tunnage and Poundage was brought in against the priviledge of your House That you will offer to take so much priviledge from every one of your members as not to allow them the liberty to bring in any Bill whatsoever although it be in your power when it is brought in to do with it what you think good And I cannot imagine you coming together by my power and to treat of things that I propound unto you can deny me that Prerogative to commend or offer my Bill unto you though in this particular I must confess that this Bill was not to have been offered to you in my Name as that Member of your House can bear witness As for the cause of delay in my businesse being Religion there is none of you shall have a greater care for the true preservation of it then my self which since it is confessed by your Answer You must either think I want power which cannot be or that I am very ill councelled if it be in so much danger as you affirm Though I may say much of this I will say no more but that for all this I shall not stop mine ears to you upon this subject so that in form and matter you transgresse not your limits as for Tunnage and Poundage I do not so much desire it out of greediness of the thing being perswaded you will make no stop in it when you once take it in hand as out of a desire to put an end to those Questions that do arise between me and some of my Subjects thinking it a strange thing if you should give Ear to those complaints and not to take the sure and speedy way to decide them Besides I must think it strange that this business of Religion should only be a hinderer of my Affaires whereas I am certainly informed all other things go according to their ordinary course therefore I must still be instant with you that you proceed with Tunnage and Poundage with diligence not looking to be denied in so just a desire and you must not think it strange i● I finding you slack give you such further quickning as I shall find cause Hereupon Secretary Cook did acknowledge that at the presenting of the Bill of Tunnage to be read he said his Majesty much desired it but it was a mistake that his Majesty commanded it Wednesday the 4. of February THe House fell into debate of the Kings Declaration published in print to prohibite dispute or preaching one way or other concerning the matters mentioned in the Declaration alledging in the debate that the main end thereof was to suppress the Puritan party and yet to give liberty to the contrary side and they conceived that Bishop Laud and Bishop Montague mentioned in the last Remonstrance had advised the King to that Declaration Bishop Laud being advanced since the last Session of Parliament to be Bishop of London and Mr. Montague since that time made Bishop of Chichester And a Warrant was grantted to the Attourney General to draw up a pardon for him but whereas the Warrant was but for one the Attourney put four into the pardon viz. Bishop Montague Doctor Cosens Doctor Sibthorp and Doctor Manwaring Tuesday the 10. of February WHilst the House was in debate touching matters of Religion the Ware-house of Mr. Rolls Merchant and Member of the House then sitting in Parliament was locked up by a Pursuevant and himself called forth from the Committee and served with a Subpoenâ This gave occasion of smart debates in the House some said they were made the subject of scorn and contempt others conceived this to be a bone thrown in by them that have drawn a cloud on the true Religion to divert or interrupt them in the prosecution of that matter and they desired the messenger might be sent for and be examined by what procurement this Subpoenâ was taken forth Sir Humphrey May Chancellor of the Duchy and one of the Privy Councel assured the House that this neither proceeded from King nor Councel and therefore desired it might be searched into the bottome And it was afterwards cleared by Master Atturney General by his writing a Letter to Mr. Rolls that the serving a Subpoenâ upon him was a mistake and prayed that a favourable interpretation might be given of that matter Upon report from the Committee for Tunnage and Poundage Sir Iohn Wolstenholme Mr. Dawes and Mr. Carmarthan were ordered to appear at the Barr on Friday next and report was made to the House that Master Atturney notwithstanding his Letter did give order for the processe against Mr. Rolls and that in the Bill preferred in the Exchequer it was expressed the Merchants did plot practice and combine against the peace of the Kingdome This business being a matter of weight the further consideration thereof was appointed for another day and no member might go out of Town without Licence Thursday the 12. of February THe House was turned into a Committee concerning the business of Tunnage and Poundage and several Merchants did Petition that their goods were not only seized but informations preferred in Star-Chamber against them The Committee in their debate inclined that the Merchants might have their goods before they enter upon the Bill for Tunnage and Mr. Noy expressed himself
for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate and turn aside the just for a thing of nought Blame not before thou have examined the truth understand first and then rebuke answer not before thou hast heard the cause neither interrupt men in the midst of their talk Doth our Law judge any man before it hear him and know what he doth King Agrippa said unto Paul Thou art permitted to speak for thy self Thou shalt not wrest the judgment of the poor in his cause thou shalt not respect persons neither take a gift for a gift doth blind the eyes of the wise and pervert the eyes of the righteous Woe to them that devise iniquity because it is in the power of their hand and they covet fields and take them by violence and houses and take them away so they oppress a man and his house even a man and his heritage Thus saith the Lord God Let it suffice you O Princes of Israel remove violence and spoyl and execute judgment and justice take away your exactions from my people saith the Lord God If thou seest the oppression of the Poor and violent perverting of judgment and justice in a Province marvel not at the matter for he that is higher then the highest regardeth and there be higher then they Per me Richard Chambers Afterwards in the Term of Trinity the 5 yeer of King Charls it is found in the great Roll of this year that there is demanded there of Richard Chambers of London Merchant 2000 l. for a certain fine imposed on him hither sent by vertue of a writ of our said Lord the King under the foot of the great Seal of England directed to the Treasurer and Barons of this Exchequer for making execution thereof to the use of the said Lord the King as is there contained and now that is to say in the Utas of the Blessed Trinity this Term comes the said Richard Chambers in his own proper person and demands Oyer of the demand aforesaid and it is read unto him and he demands Oyer also of the Writ aforesaid under the foot of the Great Seal of England hither sent and it is read unto him in these words CHarls by the Grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To his Treasurer and Barons of his Exchequer health The extret of certain fines taxed and adjudged by Us and our said Council in our said Council in Our Court of Star-Chamber in the Term of St Michael the Term of St. Hillary and the Term of Easter last past upon Thomas Barns of the Parish of St. Clements Danes in the County of Middlesex Carpenter and others severally and dividedly as they be there severally assessed We send unto you included in these presents commanding that looking into them you do that which by Law you ought to do against them for the levying of those fines Witness our Self at Westminster the 21 of May in the yeer of Our Reign the 5 Mutas And the tenor of the Schedule to the said Writ annexed as to the said Richard Chambers followeth in these words IN the Term of Easter the fifth year of King Charles of Richard Chambers of London Merchant 2000 l. which being read heard and by him understood he complains that he is grievously vexed and inquieted by colour of the Premises and that not justly for that protesting that the said great Roll and the matter therein contained is not in Law sufficient to which he hath no need nor is bound by Law to answer yet for Plea the said Richard Chambers saith That he of the demand aforesaid in the great Roll aforesaid mentioned and every parcel thereof ought to be discharged against the said Lord the King for that he said That he from the time of the Taxation o● the aforesaid Fine and long before was a Freeman and a Merchant of this Kingdom that is to say In the Parish of the blessed Mary of the Arches in the Ward of Cheap London And that by a certain Act in the Parliament of the Lord Henry late King of England the Third held in the ninth year of his reign it was provided by Authority of the said Parliament That a Freeman shall not be amerced for a little offence but according to the manner of the said offence and for a great offence according to the greatness of the offence saving to him his Contenement or Freehold and a Merchant in the same manner saving unto him his Merchandize and a Villain of any other then the King after the same manner to be amerced saving his Wainage and none of the said Amercements to be imposed but by the Oaths of good and lawful men of the Neighbourhood And by a certain other Act in the Parliament of the Lord Edward late King of England the first held in the Third year of his reign it was and is provided That no City Burrough or Town nor any man should be amerced without reasonable cause and according to his Trespass that is to say A Freeman saving to him his Contenement A Merchant saving to him his Merchandize and A Villan saving to him his Wainage and this by their Peers And by the same Act in the Parliament of the said Lord Henry late King of England the Third held in the ninth year of his reign aforesaid it was and is provided by Authority of the said Parliament That no Freemen should be taken or imprisoned or disseized of his Freehold or Liberties or free Customs or outlaw'd or banish'd or any way destroyed And that the Lord the King should not go upon him nor deal with him but by a lawful judgement of his Peers or by the Law of the Land And by a certain Act in the Parliament of the Lord Edward late King of England the Third held in the fifth year of his reign it was and is provided by the Authority of the said Parliament That no man henceforward should be attached by reason of any Accusation nor pre-judged of Life or Member nor that his Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels should be seized into the hands of the Lord the King against the form of the great Charter and the Law of the Land And by a certain Act in the Parliament of the Lord Henry late King of England the seventh held in the third year of his reign reciting that by unlawful Maintenances given of liveries signes and tokens and retainders by Indentures Promises Oaths Writings and other Imbraceries of the Subjects of the said Lord the King false Demeanors of Sheriffs in making of Pannels and other false returns by taking of money by Jurors by great ryots and unlawful assemblies the policie and good Government of this Kingdom was almost subdued and by not punishing of the said inconveniences and by occasion of the Premises little or nothing was found by Inquisition by reason thereof the Laws of
are but in the case of Premunire By the Statute of 13. Eliz. chap. 1. for the avoiding of contentious and seditious Titles to the Crown it is enacted by the said Statute That he that shall declare the Successor of the King shall forfeit the moity of his goods c. so that the said offence although it be seditious is not treason by the Common Law nor is made treason by the Statute of 25. E. 3. nor by the Statute of 13 Eliz. By the Statute of 23 Eliz. chap. 2. he that speaks seditious or slanderous news of the Queen shall lose his ears or pay 200 l. and the second offence is made Felony The Statute of 35 Eliz. chap. 1. 〈…〉 seditious Sectaries which absent themselves from the Church they are to be punished 10 l. by the month Out of all which Statutes it may be collected that the word Sedition is taken variously according to the subject in hand And C. 4. Lord Cromwell's case Seditious is referred to doctrine There are offences more high in their nature than sedition which were not treason unlesse so declared by act of Parliament Every rebellious act is sedition yet if such Acts be not within the Statute of 23 Ed. 3. they are not treason 17 R. 2. chap. 8. Insurrection of villains and others is not made treason which proves that before this Act it was not treason And this Act of 17 R. 2. is repealed by the Statute of 1 H. 4. By the Statute of 3 and 4 E. 6. chap. 5. to assemble people to alter the Lawes is made treason if they continue together an houre after Proclamation made This assembly of people was sedition at the Common Law and the very assembly if they after dissolve upon Proclamation made is not treason by the said Statute By the Statute of 14 Eliz. chap. 1. it is made Felony malitiously and rebelliously to hold from the Queen any Castles c. but because this relates not to the Statute of 25 E. 3. it is not treason 2. It seems clearly that this Case is within the Petition of Right in which Magna Charta and the Statutes of 25 and 28 E. 3. are recited The grievance there was That divers have been imprisoned without any cause shewed to which they might make answer according to the Law And upon this Return nothing appears to be objected to which he might answer It appears not what that Act which is called Sedition was This is the very grief intended to be remedied by this Statute To this he cannot answer according to Law It appears not whether this were a seditious act trespasse or slander or what it was at all The words are Sedition against the King This helps not for every offence is against the King against his Crown and dignity that which disturbs the Common-wealth is against the King seditious doctrine is sedition against the King as is before said In 28 H. 6. vide Postrat fol. 19. the Lords and Commons desire the King that William de la Pool may be committed for divers treasons and sundry other heinous crimes and the Petition held not good because too generall Whereupon they exhibit particular Articles against him And therefore upon the whole matter he concluded and prayed that Mr. Long might be discharged from his imprisonment On another day Barckley and Davenport the Kings Sergeants argued for the King That this Return was sufficient in Law to detain them in prison Barckley began and said That the case is new and of great weight and consequence and yet under favour the prerogative of the King and the liberty of the Subject are not mainly touched therein for the case is not so generall as it hath been made but particular upon this particular Return The liberty of the Subject is a tender point the right whereof is great just and inviolable The prerogative of the King is an high point to which every subject ought to submit I intend not to make any discourse of the one or the other I will onely remember what the King hath determined upon them both in his speech which he made upon the Petition of right to wit That the Peoples liberties strengthen the Kings prerogative and that the Kings prerogative is to defend the Peoples liberties Thi● 〈◊〉 settle the hearts of the people concerning their liberty The way which I intend to treat in my Argument is to answer to the objections and reasons which have been made and to give some reasons whereby this Return shall be sufficient The objections which have been made are reducible to four heads 1. By what the prisoner here shall be said to be committed and detained 2. That this Commitment is against the Petition of right 3. That the Cause which is here returned is generall and incertain 4. That the offences mentioned in the Return are but Finable and therefore notwithstanding them the party is bailable For the first it hath been objected that the commitment here was by the Lords of the Privy Councill and the signification of this cause is by the King himself But I say that there is a further matter in the Return for the Lords of the Councill do it by the command of the King and they onely pursue this command I will not dispute whether the Lords of the Councill have power to commit an offender or no it is common in experience 33 H. 6.28 Poign●● case is expresse in it And in the Petition of right it is admitted that they may commit And this is not alledged there for a grievance but the grievance there was because the particular charge of commitment was not shewed Some Books have been objected to prove that the King though in person cannot commit any person 16 H. 6. F. Monstrance de faits 182. But the authority of that Book vanisheth if the case be put at large which was in trespasse for cutting of Trees The Defendant said That the place where c is parcell of the Mannor of D. whereof the King is seised in Fee and the King commands us to cut And the opinion of the Court was that this is no plea without shewing a specialty of the command of the King And there the whole Court saies That if the King command me to arrest a man whereby I arrest him he shall have trespasse or imprisonment against me although it be done in the presence of the King That the following words are to be understood as the principal case was of one command of the King by word and then such command by word to arrest a man is void And 1 H. 7.4 was objected Hussey saies that Markham said to King Edw. 4. that he cannot arrest a man for suspition of Treason or Felony because if he do wrong the party cannot have his action To this I say That the Book there is to be understood of a wrongfull arrest for there is spoken of an action of false imprisonment and a wrongfull arrest cannot be made by the
a great downfal and may serve I hope in it self for an expiation of my faults Therefore if Mercy and Mitigation be in your Lordships power and no way cross your ends Why should I not hope of your favor and commiseration Your Lordships will be pleased to behold your cheif pattern the King our Soveraign a King of incomparable Clemency and whose heart is instructable for Wisdom and Goodness And your Lordships will remember there sate not these Hundred years before a Prince in your House and never such a Prince whose presence deserveth to be made memorable by Records and Acts mixt of Mercy and Iustice. Your selves are either Nobles and compassion ever beateth in the Veins of Noble Blood or Reverend Prelates who are the Servants of him that would not break the bruised Reed or quench the smoaking Flax. You all sit upon a high stage and therefore cannot but be sensible of the change of humane conditions and of the fall of any from high place Neither will your Lordships forget that there are Vitia temporis as well as Vitia hominis and the beginning of Reformation hath the contrary power to the Pool of Bethesda for that had strength to cure him onely that was first cast in and this hath strength to hurt him onely that is first cast in and for my part I wish it may stay there and go no further Lastly I assure my self your Lordships have a noble feeling of me as a member of your own Body and one that in this very Session had some taste of your loving affections which I hope was not a lightning before the death of them but rather a spark of that grace which now in the conclusion will more appear And therefore my humble suit to your Lordships is That my penitent Submission may be my Sentence the loss of my Seal my punishment and that your Lordships would recommend me to his Majesties Grace and Pardon for all that is past Gods holy Spirit be among you The Parliament not satisfied with this general Acknowledgment do require the Chancellor either to confess the particulars of the Charge or they would descend to proof against him Hereupon he came to an express and plain Acknowledgment even to confess his Servants receipt of a dozen of Buttons as a gift in a Cause depending before him and put himself upon their Lordships Mercy And he further said That he was never noted for an avaritious man and the Apostle saith Coveteousness is the root of all evil and hoped their Lordships did finde him in a state of Grace for that in all particular charges against him there were few or none that were not almost two years old Whereas those that have the habit of corruption do commonly wax worse and worse and for his estate it was so mean and poor That his care was now cheifly to satisfie his Debts The Lords afterwards pronounced him guilty of the Charge exhibited against him and in the presence of the Commons gave Sentence That he should undergo Fine and Ransome and be made incapable to bear office c. This Learned Peer eminent over the Christian World for his many Writings extant in Print was known to be no admirer of Money yet had the unhappiness to be defiled therewith He treasured up nothing either for himself or his family for he both lived and died in debt he was over indulgent to his Servants and connived at their takings and their ways betrayed him to that error they were profuse and expensive and had at command what ever he was master of The gifts taken were for the most part for interlocutory Orders his Decrees were generally made with so much Equity that though gifts rendred him suspected for injustice yet never any Decree made by him was reversed as unjust as it hath been observed by some knowing in our Laws About the same time Sir Henry Yelverton was accused by the Commons who by charging him rendred him the less offender and he thereby had the opportunity to speak that at the Bar which he durst not say in the Tower where he was yet a prisoner upon a late Sentence in the Star-Chamber for passing some Clauses in the City Charter when he was Attorney General not agreeable to His Majesties Warrant The matter charged against him by the Commons was for committing divers persons for not entring into Bonds to restrain their own Trades That he signed Dormant Warrants having no Authority for the same That he advised the Patents of Gold and Silver Thred to be resumed into the Kings hands conceiving the same to be a Monopoly and advised the Patentces to proceed by Contract with the King That Four thousand Quo Warranto's were granted by him touching the Patents of Inns and but two to come to trial That he commenced divers Suits in the Exchequer touching the Gold and Silver Thred but did not prosecute the same Which Charge being read unto him he said He thought himself happy in the midst of His Majesties disfavor that His Majesty was pleased to cast the Grace upon him as to send him to this Honorable House That Innocence hath her present Answer but Wisdom requires time Therefore he made it his humble suit for time to give his further Answer adding withal That the cheif Complaint against him was concerning the two Patents of Gold and Silver Thred Inns and Osteries He said That if he deserved well of His Majesty it was in that matter That the King and Subjects were more abused by that Patent then by any other and that he suffered at that day for opposing that Patent as he took it The King being informed of this passage in his Speech came in person to the House of Peers took notice thereof saying It seemed strange unto him that Sir Henry Yelverton should be questioned here upon any thing save the Patent of Gold and Silver Thred For His Majesty did not conceive that any matter was complained of against him touching the Inns and Osteries whereof he was also examined Touching which Patent Mompesson had made complaint to His Majesty that Yelverton refused to send any Proces of Quo Warranto against a multitude of Innkeepers and His Majesty accepted Yelvertons modest Answer That he misliked those proceedings against his Subjects His Majesty to clear himself did lay open the many former just mislikes which he had against Sir Henry and his gentle proceedings against him for the same And when His Majesty intended to question him Buckingham Lord Admiral besought him not to think of any private wrongs done to his Lordship His Majesty added That in the Examination of the business touching the Charter of London Yelverton had first justified himself by His Majesties Warrant and that by that Warrant he might have given away all London from him yet at length he made a good Submission in the beginning but in the end he said he had not wronged His Majesty in his Prerogative And sith that now Yelverton doth tax His