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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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and instruct them that knew too little and so in time he should pass for currant amongst them all It was no hard matter for the King to accomplish this the greater part of the Kindom being pre-ingaged unto his Title and of them many depending upon him for livelihood if he failed they must look to lose all But the present occasion urged more importantly the Title to the Crown was already put to the question by the pretentions of one that named himself Duke of York And it is now high time for the Law to declare it self to direct the people in such a Case What shall the people do where Might overcomes Right or if days come like those of Henry the Sixth wherein the Subjects should be between Two Mill-stones of one King in Title and another King in possession for whom must they take up Arms If for Edward the Fourth then are they Traitors to Henry the Sixth If for Henry the Sixth then are they Traitors to Edward the Fourth And so now if for Henry the Seventh then they may be Traitors to the Duke of York If for the Duke of York then are they Traitors to Henry the Seventh For though the Duke of York was said to be but a contrivance of the House of Burgundy yet a great part both of the great men and others were of another opinion and the King himself was not very certain of his condition for the space of six years thereby This puts the Title of Allegiance and that power of the Militia to the touch at length both King and Parliament come to one conclusion consisting of three particulars First That the King for the time being whether by right or wrong ought to have the Subjects Allegiance like to that of the wise Counsellor of that brave King of Israel Whom the Lord and his People and all the men of Israel chuse his will I be And this is not onely declared by the express words in the Preface of the Law but also by the Kings own practice For he discharged such as aided him against Richard the Third then King by pardon by Parliament but such as aided him being King by declaration of the Law. Secondly That this Allegiance draweth therewith ingagement for the defence of that King and Kingdom Thirdly That the discharge of this Service whereto the Subjects are bound by Allegiance ought not to be imputed unto them as Treason Nor shall any person be impeached or attained therefore The first and the last of these need no dispute The Second is more worthy of consideration in the particular words set down in the Statute viz. That the Subjects are to serve their Prince in his Wars for the defence of him and the Land against every Rebellion Power and Might reared against him and with him to enter and abide in Service in Battle Wherein two things are to be considered the Service and the time or occasion The Service is to serve the Prince in his Wars and with him to enter and abide in service in Battel which is the less to be stood upon because there is a condition annexed if the case so require which must be determined by some Authority not particularly mentioned Albeit that whatsoever is therein set down is onely by way of supposal in a Preface annexed to the Law by the King and permitted by the Commons that were as willing the same should be allowed as the King himself both of them being weary of Wars and willing to admit this Conclusion for the better security of them both in these doubtful times But to lay all these aside for the Case is not stated till the Cause be considered all this must be onely when and where the King's Person and Kingdom is endangered by Rebellion Power or Might reared against him So as the King's Person must be present in the War for the defence of the Kingdom or no man is bound by his Allegiance to hazard his own life And then this point of Allegiance consisteth onely in defending the King in the defence of the Land or more particularly in defending the King's Person he being then in the defence of the Land and defending him in order to the defence of the Land. So as no man can rationally infer from hence that the King hath an universal power of Array when he pleases because the King when he pleases may not levy War nor make other War than a defensive War when the Land is endangered or when need shall require as another Statute hath it But who shall determine this need or danger neither in these or any other Laws is mentioned either out of want of occasion or by reason of the tenderness of the times wherein both Prince and People were willing to decline the Question Secondly the persons that are to do this service are to be considered of and although they are indefinitely set down under the word Subjects it may be supposed that the word is not to be taken in so large a sence as to comprehend all of all Ages Sexes Callings and Conditions in regard that even by the Common-Law some of each of these sorts are discharged from such service But it may seem the King was neither satisfied with the expressions of this first Law concerning the occasion or time of this service nor did he see sufficient ground under the notion of bare Allegiance to desire more New ways are by him found out his Patentees were not a few and although few or none could ever boast much of any cheap Purchases gained from him for he was wont to be well paid beforehand for his Patents either by Money or that which was as beneficial to him yet he was resolved that their holding should be no less advantageous to him than their having And therefore in plain words he lets them know that notwithstanding former consideration upon which they had their Patents at the first they must fight for him if they will live upon him and either adventure their Lives or their Benefit chuse they which and if they find fault with their condition he touches them with the Law of their Allegiance And thus he makes way to intimate a claim of a more absolute Allegiance for being to shew the Equity of the Law in regard of their Allegiance he tells them That every Subject is bound by his Allegiance to serve and assist his Prince and Soveraign Lord at all seasons when need shall require General words that affirm nothing in certainty yet do glance shrewdly upon an absolute and universal assistance Then coming to drive the Nail home it is said that the Patentees are bound to give their attendance upon his Royal Person to defend the same when he shall fortune to go in his person to Wars for the defence of the Realm or against his Rebels and Enemies And as another Statute addeth Within the same Realm or without and according to their Allegiance and not to depart without especial License or
demise he died a death meet to be for ever blotted out of the thoughts of all Subjects but to be had in everlasting remembrance of all Kings For if a Kingdom or Parliament misleads the King at the worst he is but misled by his Council but if he be drawn aside by favorites he must thank his own lust in the one he hath but the least share in the burthen in the other he must bear the whole CHAP. LXV Of the condition of the Nobility of England till the time of Edward the Third NOw was Prerogative mounted up to the highest pitch or endeavoured so to be either through the weakness or power of these Kings of whom the first and last had little to ground upon but their own will and the other I mean Edward the first had more wisdom and power but was otherwise distracted by foraign and more urgent employments so as the work fainted before it came to its full period The contest was between the King and Barons who till those days were rather the great and richer sort of men than Peers although they also were of the number I am not so sharp-sighted as to reach the utmost intentions of the Lords but their pretences are to such publick nature as it is plain that if their private interest was wrapped up therein they were inseparable And I shall never quarrel the Lords aim at private respects whenas it is plain the publick was so importantly concerned and yet I will not justi●ie all that I find written concerning their Words and Actions The Speech of the E. of Cornwal to his his elder Brother and King Henry the Third I will neither render up my Castle nor depart the Kingdom but by the judgment of the Peers and of Simon the E. of Leicester to the same King that he lyed and were he not a King the Earl would make him repent his word and of the Lords that they would drive the King out of his Kingdom and elect another and of the E. Marshal to Edward the first that he would neither go into Gascoine nor hang and such other do savour of passion especially that of the E. of Leicester and the Lords and may seem harsh and unmannerly and yet may admit of some allay if the general rudeness of the time the King 's injurious provocations and the passions of cholerick men be weighed together Yet will not all these trench upon the cause nor render the state of the Lords too high or disproportionable to their place in the policy of the Kingdom of England as things then stood I say it was not disproportionable for where the degree of a King was mounting up to such a pitch as to be above Law the Lords exceeded not their places in pressing him with their Counsels to conform to the Laws and in maintaining that trust that was reposed in them in keeping off such sinister Counsels and invasions as might violate the Laws and Liberties or hinder the current of Justice concerning which I shall shortly state the case and leave it to the censure of others The Government of the people of this Nation in their original was Democratical mixt with an Aristocracie if any credit be to be given to that little light of History that is left unto us from those ancient times Afterwards when they swarmed from their hive in Forreign parts and came over hither they came in a warlike manner under one conducter whom they called a King whose power whatever in the War yet in time of peace was not of that height as to rule alone I mean that whereas the Lords formerly had the principal executory power of Laws setled in them they never were absolutely devested of that power by the access of a King nor was the King ever possessed of all that power nor was it ever given to him but the Lords did ever hold that power the King concurring with them and in case the King would not concur the people generally sided with the Lords and so in conclusion the King suffered in the quarrel From this ground did arise from time to time the wandrings of the people in electing and deposing their Kings during the Saxon times Nor did nor could the Norman Williams shake off this co-partnership but were many times as well as other ensuing Princes perswaded against their own minds and plotted desires Nor can it otherways be supposed where Councils are setled for whereto serve they if notwithstanding them the King may go the way of his inordinate desire If the Lords then did appear against these Kings whereof we treat in cases where they appeared against the Laws and Liberties of the people it was neither new nor so heinous as it is noised for them who are equally if not more entrusted with the Common-wealth than the King by how much the Counsellors are trusted more than the Counselled to be true for the maintenance of their trust in case the King shall desert his But the greater question is concerning the manner by Threats and War. It is as probable I grant that the Lords used the one as the other for it was the common vice of the times to be rugged yet if we shall add to what hath been already said first that Knight-service was for the defence of the Kingdom principally Secondly that the greatest power of Knight-service rested with the Lords not only in propriety and ownership but in point of direction for the benefit of the Commonwealth and lastly that the state of the times now was such as the Kingdom was oppressed by strangers Counsels and the Counsels of the Kingdom rejected that instead of Law Garrisons of strangers ruled that no man could own his own that the Subjects were looked upon as enemies and of all this the King made the principal instrument who had ruled and over-ruled in this manner and so was resolved to continue I shall leave it to the better judgement of others what other healing plaister was to be had for such a sore Albeit it cannot be denied that more due respects might have been tendred to Kingly dignity than was in those times practised And yet there was a difference also in the occasions of War for certainly that last War with Edward the second was more fatal and yet less warrantable and in the issue declared that there was more of the Queen therein than of the Lords who knew a way of removing Favourites from the King without removing the King from the Kingdom or driving him out of the World. In all which nevertheless it cannot be concluded that the Lords party was encreased more than in the former Kings times for the loss of the field in Henry the Thirds time against the Prince kept them in awe all the succeeding Reign although they were not then tongue-tyed and their second loss against Edward the Second which was yet more sharp questionless quelled their spirits although they lost no right thereby and encreased the Kings party much
and nothing shall hinder it but the special reservation of the donor and yet he saith that such gift or grant taketh not away the right of the Lord Paramount in his Tenure albeit the gift be in free Alms. Nevertheless it seemeth to be such restraint that the Templars and Hospitallers were fain to find out a new way which was to protect mens Tenements from execution of Law by levying crosses thereon albeit the right of the Lords was not barred and therefore Edw. 1. provided a Law to make this also in nature of a Mortmain within the Statute made in the seventh year of his Reign called the Statute de Religiosis by which it was enacted that in case of such alienations in Mortmain the Lord should have liberty to enter if he failed then the Lord Paramount or if he failed the King should enter and dispose of the same and that no license of Mortmain should be sued out but by the mean Lord's assent and where part of the premises remain still in the Donor and the original Writ mentioneth all the particulars And thus at length was this issue for the present stayed which hitherto wasted the strength of the Kingdom and by continual current emptying it into the mare mortuum of the Clergie consumed the maintenance of Knight service by converting the same to Clerk-service No Judge shall compel a Free-man to make Oath without the Kings command So is the sence of the Law rendred by an ancient Authour and I hope I shall not wrong the Text if I affirm that the Ecclesiastical Judge was included within the equity though properly he be not Balivus for the Law intends to shew that it is a liberty that the Subject hath not to be compelled to take Oath without the Kings especial command and by consequence it sheweth also that the King at that time and until then had the directory of Oaths for it was an ancient Liberty given in the Kings Charters unto such as they pleased viz. to impose Oaths and to punish for breach of Oath and this passed under the word Athae or Athas and so Edmund the Saxon King gave to the Abbey of Glastenbury amongst other Athas Ordulas and the Church-men that first procured vacations from Suits of Law during holy times procured a Law also to be setled by Edward the Saxon King and Gunthurne the Dane that Ordeal and Oaths should be forbidden upon the holy Feasts and lawful Fasts And a wonder it is how it escaped the gripe of the Clergie so long who catched at any thing that had but a glance of Gods worship in it And if this were the Subjects Liberty not to be compelled to Swear surely much more not to be compelled to accuse himself unless by the Law he be especially bound for it is Glanvil's rule Ob infamiam non solet juxta legem terrae aliquis per legem apparentem se purgare nisi prius convictus fuerit vel confessus in curia But the power of the Clergie now was grown strong and they begin to remember themselves and that Oaths are of a holy regard and they men for holiness best able to judge when and to whom they shall be ministred and therefore now they begin to enter their claim and to make a sure Title they get a grant from Pope Innocent to Steven Langton Arch-Bishop of Canterbury of a faculty of licensing administration of Oaths during the time of Lent and he accordingly enjoyed it during the mad time of Henry the Third But Edward the first quarrelled it and left it questionable to Edward the Second who being in his condition as a lost man had less care of such smaller matters and therefore allowed that his Judges of Assizes should be licensed by the Arch-bishop to administer Oaths in their Circuits in the sacred times of Advent and Septuagessima and this course continued till Henry the Eighth's time The Clergie having thus gotten the bridle gallop amain they now call whom they will and put them to their Oaths to accuse other men or themselves or else they are Excommunicated Henry the Third withstood this course if the Clergie-mens complaints in the times of that King Artic. 9. be true and notwithstanding the same the Law holds its course and in pursuance thereof we find an attachment upon a prohibition in this form ensuing Put the Bishop of N. to his pledges that he be before our Justices to shew cause why he made to be summoned and by Ecclesiastical censures constrained Lay-persons men or women to appear before him to swear unwillingly at the Bishops pleasure to the great prejudice of our Crown and Dignity and contrary to the custom of the Kingdom of England And thus both King and Clergie were at contest for this power over the peoples Consciences to which neither had the right otherwise than by rules of Law. Bigamists shall not be allowed their Clergie whether they become such before the Council of Lyons or since and that Constitution there made shall be so construed Whatsoever therefore their Synods in those times pretended against the married Clergie it seemeth by this Law that they had Clergie that were married once and again and yet before and after the Council were admitted as Clerks in the judgment of the Law. But the general Council interposes their authority and deprives them that are the second time married of all their priviledges of Clergie It was it seemeth twenty years and more after that Council before the Church-men in England were throughly reformed for either some were still Bigami at the making of this Law or as touching that point it was vain nor is it easie to conceive what occasion should after so long a time move such exposition the words of the Constitution being Bigamos omni privilegio clericali declaramus esse nudatos Now whether this slow Reformation arose from the defect in Law or in obedience thereto may be gathered from some particulars ensuing First it is apparent that the Canons of general Councils eo nomine had formerly of ancient times gotten a kind of preheminence in this Nation but by what means is not so clear In the Saxon times they were of no further force than the great Council of this Kingdom allowed by express act For the Nicene Faith and the first five general Councils were received by Synodical confirmations of this Kingdom made in the joynt meeting both of the Laity and Clergie and during such joynt consulting the summons to the general Councils was sent to the King to send Bishops Abbots c. but after that the Laity were excluded by the Clergie from their meetings and the King himself also served in the same manner the Summons to the general Council issued forth to the Bishops immediately and in particular to each of them and to the Abbots and Priors in general by vertue whereof they went inconsulto Rege and sometimes Rege
renitente and appeared either personally or by proxie Others came as parties to give and receive direction or hear Sentence in matters tending to spiritual regards And for this cause issued Summons even to Kings as at the Council of Lyons aforesaid it is said that the Pope had cited Regis terrae alios mundi principes dictum principem meaning Henry the third the matter was for assistance to the holy War and to determine the matter between Henry the third and his Clergie men And as in that case so in others of that kind Kings would send their Embassadors or Proctors and give them power in their Princes name interessendi tranctandi communicandi concludendi First of such matters quae ad reformationem Ecclesiae universalis in capite membris then of such as concern fidei orthodoxae fulciamentum Regumque ac principum pacificationem or any other particular cause which occasionally might be inserted So long then as Kings had their votes in the general Councils they were engaged in the maintenance of their decrees and by this means entred the Canon-law into Kingdoms Nor was the vote of Kings difficult to be obtained especially in matters that trenched not upon the Crown for the Pope knowing well that Kings were too wise to adventure their own persons into foraign parts where the general Councils were holden and that it was thrift for them to send such Proctors that might not altogether spend upon the King's purse allowed Bishops and Clergy-men to be Proctors for their Princes that in the Negative they might be pii inimici and less active but in the Affirmative zealous and so make the way wider by the Temporal and Spiritual vote joyned in one Neither did Kings onely save their purse but they also made their own further advantage hereby for by the engagement and respect which these their Proctors had in Councils they being for the most part such as were had in best esteem obtained better respect to the cause that they handled and speedier dispatch Nevertheless the case sometimes was such as could not expect favour and then as the King's temper was they would sometimes ride it out with full sail and to that end would either joyn with their Ecclesiastcal Proctors some of the Barons and great men of their Realm to add to the cry and make their affairs ring louder in the ears of fame although the Pope had the greater vote or otherwise would send an inhibition unto their Proctors and their assistants or an injunction to look to the rights of the Crown as Henry the Third did at the Council at Lyons and this sounded in nature of a Protest and within the Realm of England had the force of a Proviso or Saving But if the worst of all come to pass viz. that the Council passed the cause against Kings without any Inhibition or Injunction yet could it not bind the Law of the Land or Kings just Prerogatives no not in these times of Rome's hour and of the power of darkness For at a Synod holden by Arch-bishop Peckham An. 1280. the Acts of the Council of Lyons were ratified and amongst others a Canon against non-residency and pluralities and yet neither Council nor Synod could prevail for in Edward the Second's time an Abbot presenting to a Church vacant as was supposed by the Canon of pluralities the King whose Chaplain was disturbed enjoyned the Abbot to revoke his presentation upon this ground Cum igitur c. in English thus Whereas therefore that Decree bindeth not our Clerks in our service in regard that the Kings and Princes of England from time to time have enjoyed that liberty and prerogative that their Clerks whilst they attend upon their service shall not be constrained to undertake holy things or to be personally resident on their Benefices c. And if this present Law be considered whereof we now treat which took leave to enact a sence upon a former Canon so long since made and which is all one to mak● a general Council will or nill it to tread in the steps of an English Parliament or which is more mean to speak after the sence of an English Declaration that had not yet attained the full growth of a Statute as was then conceived it will evidently appear that the power of a council made up of a mixture of a few votes out of several Nations or the major part of them being unacquainted with the Laws and Customs of Nations other than their own was too mean to set a Law upon any particuler Nation contrary to its own original and fundamental Law. And as the Voters sent to the grand Councils from England were but few so neither were the Proctors as may appear from this that Pope Innocent out of his moderation if we may believe it and to avoid much expence as he saith did order that the number of Proctors in such cases should be few But in truth the times then were no times for moderation amongst Popes and their Officers and therefore it was another thing that pinched for multitude of Proctors if their number had not been moderated might perhaps if not prevail yet so blemish the contrary party that what the Pope should get must cost him loss of spirits if not bloud And although the Bishops being fast Friends to the Pope by vertue of their Oath did prevail in power and the Pope had the controul of the Council yet the exceeding number of the Proctors on the contrary might render their conclusions somewhat questionable in point of honesty as being made against the mindes of the greater number of persons present though their votes were fewer To avoid this difficulty therefore for more surety-sake the Popes enlarged the number of Voters for whereas it seemeth to be an ancient rule that onely four Bishops should go out of England to the general Council in after-ages not one Bishop could be spared unless in cases of great and emergent consequence as may appear by the Pope's Letter to Henry Third and the case required it for the oppressions of the Pope began to ring so loud as the holy Chair began to shake Neither did Kings confine themselves to any certain number of Proctors notwithstanding the Pope's moderation but as the case required sent more or less as unto the Council at Pisa for the composing and quieting that great Schism in the Popedom Henry the Fourth sent solemn Embassadors and with them nigh eighty in all But unto the Council at Basil Henry the Sixth sent not above twelve or thirteen as Mr. Selden more particularly relateth And unto the Council at Lyons formerly mentioned the Parliament sent but six or seven to remonstrate their complaints of the extortions of the Court at Rome their Legates and Emissaries The sum of all will be that the Acts of general Councils were but Counsels which being offered to the sence of the Parliament of England might grow up
redemption of their Captive King for Knighting of the Kings Son and for his Daughters Marriage because these three might be due by the Common-Law the two latter by custom the former by common right although mentioned from the late disaster of King Richard which King John might with shame enough remember and expect the same measure from the censure of an unquiet conscience I shall not enter into debate concerning the omission hereof in the later Charters possibly it might seem a tautology Nor concerning the restriction as if it did imply that the Burgesses had Vote only in cases of general assesments but shall leave it to the consideration of the Reader No Distress shall be taken for greater service or other matter than is due Distresses are in nature no other than a summons in act or the bringing of a man to answer by seizure of part of his Goods and it was used by the Saxons as hath been shewed and because the rich men under colour of seeking their right many times sought for wrong and though they could not prevail in the issue yet prevailed so far that the Defendant could not escape without charge and hinderance therefore the Law provided a Writ of remedy against unjust vexation which Glanvil remembreth us of and yet because that remedy also carried with it matter of charge and disturbance to the Plaintiff and so the remedy might be worse than the disease therefore the Law defined distresses by circumstances of person matter time and place under penalties of fine and amercement besides the recompence to the party first it must not be taken but by leave from the Kings Court unless in case of matters due by common right and upon complaint made by the Plaintiff The King sent out a Summons in this manner Henricus Rex Ang. Hominibus Abbatis de Ramsey salutem Precipio quod cito juste reddatis Abbati Domino vestro quicquid ei debetis in censu firma debitis placitis quod si nolueritis ipse vos inde constringat per pecuniam vestram And in all cases of matters due by common right the distress never was done in an arbitrary way but by Judicial Act in the Lord's Court. Secondly no distress for suit shall be made out of the Fee nor against any person but such as are of that Fee. Nor shall any distress be made in the King's High-way or open street but by the King's Officer and special Writ because distress is incident to service and that is due as from the Fee and therefore by common right the same must be recovered from the Fee and such as owe service in the same but the High-way or open street are more properly a Franchise belonging to the King although the Soil haply may be the Lords And therefore it was an old Law that they should be under the King's safeguard Sit pax publica per communes vias and no violence must be there tolerated but by the King 's special Writ which presupposeth the especial notice taken by the King of the nature of the occasion A moderation also must be observed in the taking of the distress for it must not be excessive and also in keeping thereof for if the owner will he may replevy the same according to the ancient course and the Sheriff must grant replevy if it be demanded although formerly no replevy was without special Writ and yet that also not always readily obeyed for the times were such as the Lords were bold with the King's Courts and Ministers and refused the order of the Law. Now in such cases wherein the matter concerned contempt of the King's Authority a Fine was set upon the Offender but in case it concerned onely a Tort done to the party he was amerced The one is called Redemption because the penalty otherwise must lie upon the person if it be not redeemed by pecuniary Fine the other is called Amercement which is originally a satisfaction unto the party wronged by recompence out of the personal Estate of the Delinquent Thirdly as touching the matter of the distress it must not be of Plough beasts or Sheep unless in case of damage fesant if other distress may be had for the Law had a care of such Cattel as were most of publick concernment and which was the main stock of subsistence so far as Justice would allow And therefore the unjust taking of any man's Cattel by any person whatsoever is liable to the same penalties that unjust distresses are Fourthly concerning the using of the distress it must not be sold no not in the King's case till fifteen days be past after it is taken nor must it be carried out of the County but it must be so impounded as the owner may come to feed it and it must be discharged if the owner give security of satisfaction before the return of the Writ Fifthly the intent of the distresses must be that which is just and therefore not for other suit than by the Feoffment is due or else by Prescription and in case many are joyntly seized the suit shall be by one and the rest shall contribute Nor must any man be compelled to shew his Title to his Land by distress The Common-pleas shall be holden in one certain place The Office of Judge of the Common-pleas was in my opinion distinct and several from that of the Crown-pleas nor though one and the same man might execute both Authorities doth it therefore follow that it was by one and the same power as if being Judge he had thereby power in all matters of the Common-pleas and also of the Crown For though it be true that Bracton saith The King hath one proper Court wherein are the Chief Judges which both by his own Testimony and Briton's also did hear and determine Causes of all sorts yet is it true also that it was by Appeal or Writ of Errour as in case of false Judgment and that the King had plures curias which doubtless had their proper work And in the time of Henry the second it is clear that six were especially assigned for the Common-pleas throughout the whole Realm and yet by another especial Commission or Letters-Patents the same men might also have power to determine matters of the Crown as at this day in their several Circuits This Law therefore doth not as I conceive work any alteration but onely in this that whereas formerly the Judges of Common-pleas attended on the King's Court continually as all other Judges did and whither the King removed they did the like which was a great uncertainty and grievance unto the Commons henceforth they are fixed to a certain place Assize of Novel Disseisin and Mortdancester shall be determined in the proper County onely and by the Justices itinerant sent by the King or his Chief Justices The Law was so declared in Henry the second 's
are to be ordered by Tutors than Children and therefore this may be annexed to the rest of the Liberties as well as the other Nevertheless it seemeth that the Laws took them into their regard in respect of their Estates which might be abused to the prejudice of the Publick rather than out of any respect had to their persons Now because there is a difference between the disability of these persons the one being perpetual the other temporary therefore is there also by these Laws a difference in the disposal of their Estates for the Tutor had a right in the disposing of the one and but a bare authority or power in providing for the other Secondly the person of the Tutor is to be considered Anciently it was the next kindred grounded as I conceive upon the natural affection going along with the blood and this so continued in custom until these times for though the Mirrour of Justice saith that Henry the First brought in that course of giving the custody of these disabled persons to the King as hath been formerly observed yet Bracton that wrote long after the time of Henry the First speaking of these kind of persons saith Talibus de necessitate dandus est tutor vel curator not so much as mentioning the King in the case And in another place speaking of such as are alieni juris saith that some are under the custody of their Lords and others under their Parents and friends But let the time of the entrance of this Law be never so uncertain it is now a declared Law that the King in such cases is the common Curator or Tutor of all such persons as he is a Chief Justice rendring to every one his right The King shall have the Wrecks of the Sea. What shall be called a Wreck the Statute at West 1. declareth viz. Where the Ship so perisheth that nothing therein escapeth alive and these are rather in their original committed to the King as a Curator than given him as a Proprietor although that Custom hath since setled a kind of right which may perhaps be accounted rather a Title by Estoppel For the fundamental ground is that the right owner cannot be manifested and therefore the King shall hold it and if the right owner can be manifested the King shall hold it till the owner doth appear The Heir in Socage-tenure shall have an Action of Waste and an account against his Guardian for the profits of the Lands and Marriage The Heir in Socage being under age shall also be under custody of such Guardian of the next kinred who cannot challenge right of Inheritance in such Lands so holden as if the Lands descended from the Father's side the Mother or next of the kinred of the Mothers side shall have the custody and so if the Lands descend from the Mother the Father or next kinred of the Father's side shall have the custody And this custody bringeth with it an Authority or Power onely and no Right as in case of the Heir in Knight-service and therefore cannot be granted over as the Wardship in Knight-service might but the Guardian in Socage remaineth accomptant to the Heir for all profits both of Land and Marriage The full age of Tenant in Socage is such age wherein he is able to do that service which is Fourteen years for at such age he may be able by common repute to aid in Tillage of the ground which is his proper service But the Son of a Burgess hath no set time of full Age but at such time as he can tell Money and measure Cloath and such work as concerns that calling Widows deforced of their Dower of Quarentine shall by Action recover damages till they recover their Dower They shall also have power to devise their crop arising from her Dower It was used that the Heir should have the crop with the Land but this Statute altered that former usage and yet saved the Lord's liberty to distrain if any services were due Writs de consimili casu granted in cases that fall under the same Law and need the same remedy and such Writs shall be made by agreement of the Clerks in the Chancery and advice of such as are skilful in the Law. It was none of the meanest Liberties of the Freemen of England that no Writs did issue forth against them but such as were anciently in use and agreed upon in Parliament And it was no less a grievance and just cause of complaint that Kings used to send Writs of new impression to execute the dictates of their own wills and not of the Laws of the Kingdom as the complaints of the Clergy in the times of Henry the Third do witness Nevertheless because many mens cases befel not directly within the Letter of any Law for remedy and yet were very burthensome for want of remedy it is provided by this Law that such emergent cases that do fall within the inconvenience shall be comprehended within the remedy of that Law. Aid to make the Son of the Lord a Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter shall be assessed after the rate of twenty shillings for a Knights Fee and twenty shillings for twenty pounds in yearly value of Socage-tenure The uncertainties of Aids are by this Law reduced and setled as touching the sum and thereby delivered the people from much oppression which they suffered formerly Nor was onely the particular sum hereby but also the age of the Son when he was to be made a Knight viz. at the age of Fifteen years too soon for him to perform Knight-service but not too soon for the Lord to get his money And the Daughter likewise was allowed to be fit for Marriage at Seven years of age or at least to give her consent thereto albeit that in truth she was neither fit for the one or other and therefore it must be the Lords gain that made the Law and it was not amiss to have the aid beforehand though the marriage succeeded not for many years after and if the Lord died in the interim the Executors having Assets paid it or otherwise his Heir CHAP. LXVIII Of Courts and their Proceedings BEsides the Courts of Justices itinerant which were ancient as hath been said other Courts have been raised of later birth albeit even they also have been of ancient constitutions and divers of them itinerant also and some of them setled in one place The work of the Justices itinerant was universal comprehending both the matters of the Crown and Common-pleas That of Oyer and Terminer is onely of Crown-pleas originally commenced and enquired of by themselves and granted forth upon emergent crimes of important consequence that require speedy regard and reformation Justices of Gaol-delivery have a more large work that is to deliver the Gaols of all criminal offenders formerly indicted or before themselves Justices of Assize and Nisi prius are to have cognizance of Common-pleas onely and
sad experience of the latter Government of Kings in these times had taught the Knighthood of England to hold for the future Ages No Tenant in ancient Demesnes or in Burgage shall be distrained for the service of a Knight Clerks and Tenants in Socage of other Mannors than of the King shall be used as they have been formerly Tenants in ancient Demesne and Tenants in Burgage are absolutely acquitted from foreign service the one because they are in nature of the King's Husbandmen and served him and his Family with Victual the other because by their Tenure they were bound to the defence of their Burrough which in account is a Limb or Member of the Kingdom and so in nature of a Castle guard Now as touching Clerks and Tenants in Socage holding of a Subject they are left to the order of ancient use appearing upon Record As concerning the Clergy it is evident by what hath been formerly noted that though they were importunate to be discharged of the service Military in regard that their profession was for Peace and not for Bloud yet could they never obtain their desire for though their persons might challenge exemption from that work yet their Lands were bound to find Arms by their Deputies for otherwise it had been unreasonable that so great a part of the Kingdom as the Clergie then had should sit still and look on whilst by the Law of Nature every one is engaged in his own defence Nor yet did the profession of these men to be men for Peace hold always uniform some kind of Wars then were holden sacred and wherein they not onely adventured their Estates but even their own Persons and these not onely in a defensive way but by way of invasion and many times where no need was for them to appear Tenants in Socage also in regard of their service might plead exemption from the Wars for if not the Plough must stand still and the Land thereby become poor and lean Nevertheless a general service or defence of the Kingdom is imposed upon all and Husbandmen must be Souldiers when the debate is who shall have the Land. In such cases therefore they are evocati ad arma to maintain and defend the Kingdom but not compellable to foreign service as the Knights were whose service consisted much in defence of their Lord's person in reference to the defence of the Kingdom and many times policy of War drew the Lords into Arms abroad to keep the Enemy further from their borders and the Knights then under their Lords pay went along with them and therefore the service of Knighthood is commonly called servitium forinsecum Of these Socagers did arise not onely the body of English Foot-men in their Armies but the better and more wealthy sort of them found Arms of a Knight as formerly hath been observed yet always under the pay of the common Purse And if called out of the Kingdom they were meer Voluntiers for they were not called out by distress as Knights were because they held not their Land by such service but they were summoned by Proclamation and probably were mustered by the high Constables in each Hundred the Law nevertheless remaining still entire that all must be done not onely ad fidem Domini Regis but also Regni which was disputed and concluded by the Sword. For though Kings pretended danger to the publick oftentimes to raise the people yet the people would give credit as they pleased Or if the King's Title were in question or the Peoples Liberty yet every man took liberty to side with that party that liked him best nor did the King's Proclamation sway much this or that way It is true that precedents of those times cry up the King's power of arraying all Ships and men without respect unless of age or corporal disability but it will appear that no such array was but in time of no less known danger from abroad to the Kingdom than imminent and therefore might be wrought more from the general fear of the Enemy than from the King's command And yet those times were always armed in neighbouring Nations and Kings might have pretended continual cause of arraying Secondly it will no less clearly appear that Kings used no such course but in case of general danger to the whole Kingdom either from foreign Invasion as in the times of King John or from intestine Broils as in the times of Henry the third and the two Edwards successively And if the danger threatned onely one coast the array was limited onely to the parts adjacent thereunto Thirdly it seemeth that general arrays were not levied by distress till the time of Edward the first and then onely for the rendezvouze at the next Sea-coast and for defence against foreign Invasion in which case all Subjects of the Kingdom are concerned by general service otherwise it can come unto no other account than that Title Prerogative and therein be charactered as a trick above the ordinary strain Fourthly those times brought forth no general array of all persons between the ages of sixteen years and sixty that was made by distress in any case of Civil War but onely by Sheriffs summons and in case of disobedience by summons to appear before the King and his Council which sheweth that by the common Law they were not compellable or punishable Lastly though these arrays of men were sometimes at the charge of the King and sometimes at the Subjects own charge yet that last was out of the road-way of the Subjects liberty as the subsequent times do fully manifest And the like may be said of arrays of Ships which however under command of Kings for publick service were nevertheless rigged and paid out of the publick charge The sum of all will be that in cases of defence from foreign Invasion Kings had power of array according to the order of Law if they exceeded that Rule it may be more rightly said they did what they would than what they ought CHAP. LXXI Of the Peace WAR and Peace are two births by several venters and may like the day and night succeed but can never inherit each to other and for that cause they may claim to belong to one Father and that one and the same power should act in both and yet it is no good Maxime That he that is the chief Commander in War ought to be the chief in the order of Peace For it naturally befalls that War especially that which we call Civil War like some diseases in the body does rather breed ill humours than consume them and these must be purged by dieting the State and constant course of Justice unto which the rugged Waves of War have little or no affinity if they have not enmity Nevertheless the wisdom of our Ancestors thought it most meet to keep their Kings in work as well in time of Peace as of War and therefore as they anciently referred the principal care thereof to the Lords who together
daring Spirits yet do we not meet with a whisper in story of any turbulent or aspiring humour in them or the people during those tenderer times of that King's Reign But after that he came to know more in himself than was to be found and to outreach his abilities having some of the Lords ready at his Elbow to help him these changed the King's course although the general part of that noble Band kept still their Array and retaining the body of the people in due composure thereby declared themselves to be the King's Friends though the others were Richard's Favourites so as he was fain to stoop to occasion and submit to be a King that would have otherwise been more or less And thus the Lords were become Supporters to the Crown Studds to the Throne and a Reserve to the People against the violent motions of an unbridled mind in their King who seeing them so united and endeavouring to break them into parties to obtain his desire lost both it and himself It is a degree of cleanly modesty to impute the miscarriages of unruly Kings to their Council For however during their minority Counsellors are more rightly Officers of State yet when Kings will be their own men their Counsellors are no other than the breath of the King 's own breast and by which a King may be more truly discerned than any man by his Bosom-friends Edward the Third was a man of a publick Spirit and had a Council suitable to his aim Richard the Second a man that desired what him pleased would have what he desired and a Council he had that served him in all For God answers the desires of mens hearts in Judgement as well as in Mercy and a sore Judgement it is both to King and People when the corrupt desires of the King are backed by a flattering Council It must be granted that the Privy Council of Kings hath been an old Ginn of State that at a sudden lift could do much to the furthering of the present estate of publick Affairs Nevertheless through the Riot of Kings their designes generally tended to make more work for the Parliament than to dispatch to do much rather than well like works for sale rather than for Master-piece and sometimes to undermine yea to out-face the Parliament it self like some unruly Servants that will put away their own Masters Nor can it otherwise be expected unless the King 's elected ones be turned into the Parliaments Committee or that constant annual Inquisition by Parliament be made into their actions for occasional inquiries breed ill blood though no attainder be nor are they easily undertaken whereas constancy in such cases makes the worst to be resolved but into a matter of common course The natural and original power of the Privy-Council is very obscure because there are several degrees of them that occasionally have been used all of whom may deserve the name of Privy-Council in regard of the Parliament which is the most publick Council of all the rest and always hath a general interest in all Causes in the Kingdom The first of these is that which was called The Grand Council of the King which as I think was not the House of Lords who are called by Summons and were onely to attend during the Parliament but a body made up of them and other wise men of his own Retinue And of this it seems there was a constant body framed that were sworn to that service for some in these times were sworn both of the Grand Council and the Privy-Council and so entred upon Record The second of these Councils was also a great Council and probably greater than the other but this was called onely upon occasion and consisted of all sorts like a Parliament yet was none An example whereof we have in the Ordinances concerning the Staple which at the first were made by the King Prelates Dukes Earls Lords and Great men of the Kingdom one out of every County City and Burrough called together for that end their results were but as in point of trial for six Moneths space and then were turned into Statute-law by the Parliament These two are Magna Concilia yet without power further than as for advice because they had no ancient foundation nor constant continuance Another Council remaineth more private than the other of more continual use though not so legally founded and this is called the King's Privy-Council not taking up a whole House but onely a Chamber or a Table signifying rather communication of Advice than power of Judicature which more properly is in Banco And yet the power of this grew as virile and Royal as it would acknowledge no Peer but the Parliament and usurped the representative of it as that had been of the whole Kingdom The ambition thereof hath ever been great and in this most notoriously evident that as it had swallowed up the Grand Council of Lords it seldom can endure the mention of a Parliament but when Kings or Affairs are too rugged for their own touch The Platform of their power you may behold in this their Oath 1. That well and lawfully they shall counsel the King according to their best care and power and keep well and lawfully his Counsels 2. That none of them shall accuse each other of any thing which he had spoken in Council 3. And that their lawful Power Aid and Counsel they shall with their utmost diligence apply to the King 's Rights 4. And the Crown to guard and maintain save and to keep off from it where they can without doing wrong 5. And where they shall know of the things belonging to the Crown or the Rights of the King to be concealed intruded upon or substracted they shall reveal the same to the King. 6. And they shall enlarge the Crown so far as lawfully they may and shall not accounsel the King in decreasing the Rights of the Crown so far as they lawfully may 7. And they shall let for no Man neither for love nor hate nor for peace nor strife to do their utmost as far as they can or do understand unto every man in every Estate Right and Reason and in Judgement and doing right shall spare none neither for Riches nor Poverty 8. And shall take of no Man without the King's leave unless Meat or Drink in their Journey 9. And if they be bound by Oath formerly taken so as they cannot perform this without breaking that they shall inform the King and hereafter shall take no such Oaths without the King's consent first had All which in a shorter sum sounds in effect that they must be faithful Counsellors to the King's Person and also to his Crown not to decrease the true Rights but to enlarge them yet all must be done lawfully And Secondly that they shall do right in Judgement to take no Fees nor any other Oath in prejudice of this The first of these concern the publick onely at a distance and yet
not a Fine is set upon them if others run away from their Conduct a Writ issued to the Serjeant at Arms to apprehend them if they were not arrayed then the Recognizances of such as undertook the work are estreated All plunder or spoil committed by the Souldiers in their Conduct was to be satisfied by the Conductor or Commander that received their Pay or Charges for their Conduct And although the Charges for Conduct had formerly de facto been defrayed sometimes by the County by virtue of Commissions that issued forth both for the raising and conducting of them yet was this no rule nor did Edward the Third claim any such duty but disclaimed it and ordained by Act of Parliament That both the Pay and Conduct-money should be disbursed by the King from the time of their departure from their several Counties For to this end and for the safeguard of the Realm and for the maintenance of the Wars of Scotland France and Gascoign the King had supply from Aids Reliefs Wardship● Marriages Customs and Escheats Nor did the Parliament grant any particular Aid by the Assessment or publick Tax but when they evidently saw the burthen of War to be extraordinary as it befel in the Conquest of so great and potent a Realm as France was Wherein although the Taxes were many yet so well ordered were they and with that compliance from the King that the people endured them with much patience so long as the King lived Lastly in all these Cases of Foreign Wars for of such Cases onely these Laws are to be understood it was especially provided That no man should be distrained or urged against his will to go out of his County But in case of defensive War the course was otherwise for all men in such cases are bound by the Law of Nature to defend their own Country from Invasion in order to the safety of their own Estates and Habitations They were arrayed or gathered together by Commission of Array from the King armed according to the Laws formerly mentioned and not by Arbitrary order of the Commissioners And by virtue of such Commissions they were drawn forth and led to places where need required Sometimes to one Coast sometimes to another yet not altogether at the Kings pleasure for the Parliament upon occasion set rules of Restriction and generally exempted the North-parts beyond Humber from being drawn Southward and left them as a reserve for the defence of the Marches bordering upon Scotland and sometimes ordered the Array should be executed onely in some particular Counties and other times wholly exempted the County adjacent within six miles of the Sea-coast And because the King might under colour of a defence array the people where no such occasion led the way and command them out of their Counties a Statute is made that states the Case wherein such Array shall be the words whereof are variously set forth in the Books in print whether determinatively or carelesly I cannot tell but all of them to differ in sence one from another and from the Truth Some of the common Books have the words thus None shall be distrained to go out of their Counties unless for cause of necessity and of sudden coming of Strangers or Enemies into the Kingdom Others read it thus But where necessity requireth and the coming of strange Enemies into the Kingdom The Kings Answer to the Parliaments Declaration concerning the Commission of Array would read it thus Vnless in case of Necessity or of sudden coming of strange Enemies c. But the words in the Roll are these Et que nulls ne soient distresses d'aller hors de les Countees si non pur Cause de necessity de suddaine venue des Stranges Enemies en Reyaulme In English thus word for word And that none be distrained to go out of the Counties if not for cause of Necessity of sudden coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdom which words determine the point That none shall be by Commission of Array drawn out of their County but in case of necessity And secondly that this case of necessity is onely the coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdom so as probably the Invasion must be actual before they be drawn out of their Counties and not onely feared and it must be a sudden Invasion and not of publick note and common fame foregoing for then the ordinary course either of Parliament or otherwise must be used to call those that are bound by Statute or Tenures or Voluntiers to that service seeing every Invasion is not so fatal as to require a Commission for a General Array Against what hath been thus noted the judgement of Sir Edward Coke in Calvin's Case lies yet in the way who affirmeth that the Subjects of England are bound by their Legiance to go with the King in his Wars as well within the Realm as without and this Legiance he telleth us is that natural Legiance which he saith is absolute and indefinite c. and not local which if not so then were not the English bound to go out of England an inference that is neither necessary nor is the thing affirmed certain It is not necessary because English men may be bound to go out of England by vertue of their Tenures particular Contract or else by special Act of Parliament and not by vertue of that natural Legiance which in truth is nowhere Now for the maintenance of the point the Reporter alledgeth two Statutes affirming the thing and common practice and lastly Authorities of the Judges of the Common Law. As touching the Statutes one in Henry the Seventh's time and the other in Edward the Sixth's time I shall speak of them in the succeeding times when we come at them for they are no Warrant of the Law in these times whereof we now treat much less is the modern practice of these later days a demonstration of the Law in the times of Edward the Third nor of the nature of the Law in any time seeing that it is obvious to times as well as particular persons to do and suffer things to be done which ought not so to be and therefore I shall for the present lay those two Considerations aside But as touching the Opinions of the Judges of the Common Law two Cases are cited in the Affirmative which seem in the Negative and the rest conclude not to the point The first of the two Cases is the opinion of Justice Thirning in the time of Henry the Fourth word for word thus A Protection lies for the Defendant in a Writ upon the Statute of Labourers and yet the Defendant shall not have such matter by way of Plea viz. That the King hath retained him to go beyond the Sea for the King cannot compel a man to go out of the Kingdom that is as the Reporter saith Not without Wages intimating thereby that if the King shall tender Wages to
Peace for whilst Henry the Sixth was in France which was in his Tenth year from St. George's day till February following the Scots propound terms of Peace to the Duke of Gloucester he being then Custos Regni which he referred to the Order of the Parliament by whom it was determined and the Peace concluded in the absence of the King and was holden as good and effectual by both Kingdoms as if the King had been personally present in his full capacity CHAP. XXIII A Survey of the Reigns of Edward the Fourth Edward the Fifth and Richard the Third THe Reign of Henry the Sixth was for the most part in the former parts of it like Fire buried up in the Ashes and in the latter parts breaking out into a Flame In the heat whereof the Duke of York after Fealty given by him to Henry the Sixth and Dispensation gotten from the Pope to break his Faith lost his life and left his Son the Markgrave to pursue his Title to the Crown which he claimed by Inheritance but more especially by Act of Parliament made upon the agreement between Henry the Sixth and his Father This was Edward the Fourth who nevertheless reserved himself to the Election of the Lords and was by them received and commended to the Commons in the Field By which means he gaining the possession had also encouragement to maintain the same yet never held himself a King of full Age so long as Henry the Sixth lived which was the one half of his Reign Nor did he though he held many Parliaments scarce reach higher than at reforming of Trade which was a Theam well pleasing to the people next unto their Peace which also the King carefully regarded For although he had been a Souldier of good experience and therewith successful yet as one loath to trust too far either the constancy of the people of his own Opinion or the fortune of War with his neighbouring Princes he did much by brave countenance and discourse and yet gained repute to the English for valour after the dishonourable times of Henry the Sixth He had much to do with a wise King of France that knew how to lay out three or four calm words at any time to save the adventure of his peoples bloud and make a shew of money to purchase the peaceable holding of that which was his onely by force until the wind proved more fair to bring all that continent under one head In his Government at home he met with many cross Gales occasioned principally by his own rashness and neglect of the Earl of Warwick's approved friendship which he had turned into professed enmity and so weakned his own cause thereby that he was once under water his Kingdom disposed of by new intail upon the Heirs of Duke Clarence and so the Earl of Warwick remained constant to the House of York though this particular King was set aside Nor did he in all this gain any thing but a Wife who though his Subject and none of the greatest Family neither brought any interest unto her Lord and Husband amongst Foreign Princes brought nevertheless a Pearl which was beyond all which was the purchase of the Union between the two Houses of York and Lancaster and a peaceable succession in the Throne for a long while to come It must be granted that there fell therewith an unhappy inconvenience in the raising of a new Nobility of the Queens Kindred of whom the ancient Stock of Nobility thought scorn and yet they were so considerable as to be envied A Wound hard to be cured and yet easily avoided by such as know how to deny themselves And therefore can be no prejudice unto that conclusion That for an English King to marry his own Subject is more safe for the King and beneficial for the Kingdom than to marry a Stranger But Edward the Fourth did not long lie underneath upon the next fair Gale he comes from beyond the Sea and like his first Predecessor of the House of Lancaster claims onely his Dutchy which no man could in reason deny to be his right and therefore were the sooner engaged with him in that accoust This was an act that in the first undertaking seemed modest but when it was done appeared too bold to adventure it upon the Censure of Henry the Sixth and therefore they were not more ready to engage than slack to dis-engage till they were secure in the Kings Interest which not long after ensued by the death of Henry the Sixth Thus Edward the Fourth recovered the Crown to save his Dutchy His Government was not suitable for he came in by the People but endeavoured to uphold himself by Foreign Dependencies as if he desired to spread his Roots rather wide than deep How ill this Choice was the event shewed for Plants that root wide may be strong enough against an outward Storm but they soon grow old barren and rot irrecoverably from beneath Such was the end of this mans Government himself lived and died a King and left Issue both Male and Female the one tasted the Government the other kissed it but neither of them ever enjoyed further than a bare Title Nor was the Government of Edward the Fourth so secured by the Engagements of Foreigners for as he sought to delude so he was deluded both by Burgundy and Scotland to the prejudice of all three Towards his own people his carriage was not so much by Law as by Leave for he could fetch a course out of the old way of rule satisfie himself dissatisfie others and yet never was called to account What was done by Entreaty no man could blame and where Entreaties are countenanced by Power no man durst contradict Thanks to his Fate that had brought him upon a People tired by Wars scared by his success and loth to adventure much for the House of Lancaster in which no courage was left to adventure for it self The greatest errour of his way was in the matter of Revenue the former times had been unhappy in respect of good Husbandry and Edward the Fourth was no man to gather heaps His occasions conduced rather to diffuse and his mind generally led the way thereto so as it is the less wonder if he called more for accommodations than the ordinary Treasury of the Crown could supply Hereto therefore he used expedients which in his former times were more moderate for whilst Henry the Sixth lived he did but borrow by Privy Seal and take Tunnage and Poundage by way of hire Afterwards when no Star appeared but what was enlightned from his own Sun he was more plain and tried a new trick called Benevolence Unwelcome it was not onely in regard of its own nature but much more in the end for it was to serve the Duke of Burgundy in raising a War against France in the first view but in the conclusion to serve his own Purse both from Friends and Foes And yet this also passed without much
also the Civil Magistrate the cognizance in point of Right albeit future times introduced a change herein CHAP. XV. A brief Censure of the Saxon Prelatical Church-Government THis that I have said might at the first view seem to represent a curious Structure of Church-policie which might have put a period to time it self but to speak sine ira studio the height was too great considering the foundation and therefore ever weak and in need of props The foundation was neither on the Rock nor on good ground but by a Ginn screwed to the Roman Consistory or like a Castle in the Air hanging upon a pin of Favour of Kings and great men At the first they thought best to temporize and to hold both these their strings to their Bow but feeling themselves somewhat under-propped by the Consciences of the ignorant people they soon grew wondrous brave even to the jealousie of Princes which also was known so notoriously that the publick Synods rang That the Prelates loved not Princes but emulated them and envied their greatness and pursued them with detraction And if the Cloth may be judged by the List that one example of Wilfrid Archbishop of York will speak much He was once so humble minded as he would always go on foot to preach the Word but by that time he was warm in his Archbishops Robes he was served in Vessels of Gold and Silver and with Troops of Followers in such Gallantry as his Pomp was envied of the Queen A strange growth of Prelacy in so small a space as Eighty years and in the midst of stormy times such as then afflicted this poor Country But this is not all for never doth Pride lead the way but some other base Vice follows I will not mention the lives of the Monks Nuns and other Clerks Malmsbury speaks sufficiently of their Luxury Drunkenness Quarrelling and Fighting Others witness thereto and tell us that the Clergie seldom read the Scripture and did never preach and were so grosly ignorant that Alfred the King being a diligent Translator of Latine Writers into the Saxon Tongue rendreth this reason Because they would be very useful to some of his Bishops that understood not the Latine Tongue Nor were the Presbyters of another dye for that King bewailing their ignorance in his Letter to Wolfegus saith That those which were de gradu spirituali were come to that condition that few of them on this side Humber could understand their Common prayers or translate them into Saxon and so few as I do not saith he remember one on this side the Thames when I began to reign And the Synod that should have salved all covers the Sore with this Canonical Plaister that those of the Clergie that could not say Domine miserere in Latine should instead thereof say Lord have mercy upon us in English. It was therefore a vain thing for the Clergie to rest upon their Works or Title of Divine Right their great Pomp sacred Places and savour of Kings commended them to the Administration or rather Adoration of ignorant people and the favour of the Roman Chair unto the regard of Kings who maintained their interest with the Conclave on the one side and with the People on the other side by their means and so they mutually served one another It cannot be denied but the Pope and Kings were good Cards in those days yet had the Prelacie maturely considered the nature of the Saxon Government so much depending upon the people they might have laid a more sure foundation and attained their ends with much more ease and honour I commend not the base way of Popularity by principles of Flattery but that honourable service of Truth and Vertue which sets up a Throne in the minds of the Vulgar few of whom but have some sparks of Nature left unquenched for though Respect may chance to meet with Greatness yet Reverence is the proper Debt to Goodness without which we look at great men as Comets whose influence works mischief and whose light serves rather to be gazed upon than for direction The foundation thus happily laid the progress of the building was no less irregular in regard of their ends that they aimed at For first they admitted the Laity into their Synods who were not so dull but could espie their ambition nor so base spirited as to live in slavery after conviction This Errour was espied I confess but it was too late and though they reformed it yet it was after Four hundred years labour And in the mean time by the contentions of the Clergie amongst themselves Kings had first learned so much of their Supremacy and the Laity so much of their Liberty as they began to plead with the Clergie and had brought the matter to issue before the Synod could rid themselves of these Lay-Spectators or rather Overseers of their ways and actions A second Errour was the yoking of the Bishops power under that of the Synods for they had little or no power by the Canon that was not under their controul neither in admission or deprivation of Presbyters or others determining of any Cause nor passing sentence of Excommunication And this could not but much hinder the hasty growth of Antichrist's power in this Kingdom Nor could it ever be compleated so long as the Synods had the chief power Nevertheless the inthralled spirits of the Clergie and terrour of the Papal thunder-bolt in continuance of time surmounted this difficulty and Synods became so tame and easily led as if there had been but one Devil to rule amongst them all For if any quick eye or active spirit did but begin to peep or stir the Legate e latere soon reduced him into rank and kept all in awe with a Sub poena of unknown danger A third error was the allowing of peculiars and exemptions of Religious Houses from ordinary jurisdiction and this was an error in the first concoction a block in the way of Prelacy and a clog to keep it down This error was soon felt and was occasion of much mutiny in the body Ecclesiastical but exceeding profitable for Rome not only in point of Revenue by the multitude of Appeals but especially in maintaining a party for the Roman See in case the Prelacy of England should stumble at the Supremacy of Rome Otherwise it seemed like a Wen upon the body rather than any Homogene Member and without which certainly the English Prelacy had thriven much better and the Roman Chair much worse In all which regards I must conclude that the Prelatical Government in England was as yet like a young Bear not fully licked but left to be made compleat by time and observation CHAP. XVI Of the Saxons Common-wealth and the Government thereof and first of the King. HAving already treated of the Saxon Church in order I am now come to the Republick which in all probability will be expected to be suitable to their original in Germany whereunto having
the Diocess of Lincoln into two Diocesses by advice of the Bishops Princes and other wise and holy men and turned the Abbey of Ely into a Bishop's See. But it was their wisdom to preserve the ancient Land-marks and no less both wisdom and care to continue their due Priviledges and Interests to each Every County had its Court and every Court its wonted Jurisdiction No complaint must be to the King's Court if right may be done in the County no distress must be taken but by Warrant from the County and that must be after complaint thrice made The County-court must be called as our Ancestors have appointed Such as will not come as they ought shall be first summoned and in case of default distrained at the fourth default the Complainant shall be satisfied out of the distresses so taken and the King also for his Fine These are the express Laws of the Conquerour's own establishment the last of which also Hen. 1. confirmed by another express Law saving that he would allow but of two Summons and two Distresses before execution And as it was one principal work that he undertook to reduce the Laws into course which had been intermitted during the violent times of his Father and Brother the first of whom never had liberty for reformation and the latter never had will so amongst other Laws he setled those concerning the County-court namely 1. That the Bishops Earls and chief men should be present for direction 2. That it should be holden once each month 3. That the Church-matters should precede and then the Crown-pleas And lastly the Common-Pleas besides some other particulars concerning pleading and proceedings in the handling of Causes Neither were these Causes of a petty regard onely but of greatest concernment One example I shall remind the Reader of and not recite in terminis but refer to Mr. Selden's own Pen. The occasion was this Odo the Conquerour's half Brother was by him made Earl of Kent and therewith had the gift of a large Territory in Kent and taking advantage of the King's displeasure at the Archbishop of Canterbury possessed himself by disseism of divers Lands and Tenements belonging to that See. Lanfrank the succeeding Archbishop being informed hereof petitioned to the King that Justice might be done him secundum legem terrae and the King sends forth his Writ to summon a County-court The Debate lasted three days before the Free men of the County of Kent in the presence of many chief men Bishops and Lords and others skilful in the Laws and the Judgment passed for the Archbishop Lanfrank upon the Votes of the Free men This County-court was holden by special summons and not by adjournment as was allowable by the Saxon Law upon special occasions And this Suit was originally begun and had its final determination in the County-court and not brought by a Tolt out of the Hundred-court as is supposed by an honourable Reporter nor by the ancient Laws could the Suit commence in the Hundred because the Lands and Tenements did lie in several Hundreds and Counties The upshot of all is that the County-courts in those days were of so great esteem that two of the greatest Peers of the Realm one a Norman the other an Italian did cast a Title in fifteen Mannors two Townships with many Liberties upon the Votes of the Free-holders in a County-court and that the Sentence was allowed and commended by the King and submitted to by all In the next place we are to come to the Hundred-courts of which there are by the Normans allowed two sorts the first whereof was holden twice a year This was formerly called the Torn and was the Sheriff's Court hereof little notice is taken saving that by the Laws of Henry the first its work seems to be much designed to the view of free pledges But the more ordinary Court is that which belongs to the Lord of the Hundred unto whom also belong the Fines in cases there concerned This Court is to be holden once in each month and no Suit to be begun in the King's Court that regularly ought to begin in the Hundred No Distringas shall issue forth till three demands made in the Hundred And three Distresses shall then issue forth and if upon the fourth the party appear not Execution shall be by sale of the Distress and the Complainant shall receive satisfaction But by the latter Laws of the same King there are but two Summons allowed and then two Distresses and in case no appearance be Execution shall be for the Complainant and for the King 's Fine Lastly as the case concerned either persons or places sometimes they used to joyn several Hundreds together into one Court but this was by special Commission or Writ As touching inferiour Courts of Towns and Mannors there 's little observation to be had being of too private a regard to come into fame in those rough times yet in Hen. the first 's Laws it is ordered that Town-courts should meet every month and that Lords should hold Pleas either in their own persons or by their Stewards and that the chief man in the Parish with four other of the chiefer sort and the Minister or Parish-Priest should joyn their assistance in that work But in nothing more did the Norman Kings shew their paternal love to the Commonwealth than in the Law of Pledges or Decenners for as of all other Beauties this suffered most blemish from the storm of the Norman Invasion so was it their especial care to renew the life thereof not now amongst the Natives onely but joyning the Normans to the Saxons in the same bond of Brotherhood utterly drowned thereby all memory of Lordly power and so of divers peoples making one conquered even Conquest it self if any were and made all joynt-partners in one common Liberty Every Free-man must be under Pledges to satisfie Justice in case of delinquency Over every nine persons under Pledges there must be one man in Authority View of free Pledges must be to see that the Decennaries be full and if any be departed to enquire the cause and if any be come in whether he be under Pledges or not And thus the Norman Kings had their people under treble guard one of Fealty the other of Association and the third that of Pledges and all little enough to secure that which they in their own Consciences might have some cause to question whether it belonged to them or not CHAP. XLIX Of the Immunities of the Saxon Free-men under the Norman Government THE freedom of an English-man consisteth in three particulars First in ownership of what he hath Secondly in voting any Law whereby that ownership is to be maintained And thirdly in having an influence upon that Judicatory power that must apply that Law. Now that the English under the Normans enjoyed all this freedom unto each Man 's own particular besides what
which shew him to be a brave King if he was not a very rich man. Henry the second was more heavy because he had more to do yet find we but one assessment which was Escuage unless for the holy War which was more the Clergy-mens than his Richard was yet a greater burthen his Reign was troublesome to him and he deserved it for from the beginning thereof to the ending could never the guilt of his disobedience to his Father be blotted out but it was more troublesome to the people because it cost so much treasure was managed by such ill Governours except the Archbishop of Canterbury and was unsuccessful in most of his undertakings yet never invaded the liberties of the Commons by any face of Prerogative But what wanted in him was made compleat and running over in his Successor John who to speak in the most moderate sence of his Government being given over to himself when he was not himself robbed the Lords of their authority bereaved the Church of its Rights trod under foot the Liberties of the people wasted his own Prerogative and having brought all things into despair comes a desperate cure the head is cut off to save the body and a president left for them that list to take it up in future ages And thus that which Steven gave Henry the second lost Richard the first would not regain and John could not and so all were gainers but the Crown CHAP. LXI Of Judicature the Courts and their Judges IT is no silent argument that the Commons gain where Laws grow into course and it was the lot of these troublesome times to lay a foundation of a constant Government such as all men might learn which formerly was laid up onely in the breasts of wise experienced men The two most considerable points in Government is the Law and the Execution the latter being the life of the former and that of the Common-wealth I say not that the Law was augmented in the body of it or that the Execution had a freer course than in the best of the former times but both were more and more cleared to the world in many particulars as well touching matters concerning practice of the Law as touching rules of righteousness For the first whereof we are beholding to Glanvil in Henry the second 's time and for the latter to King John or rather the Barons in his time in the publishing of the Grand Charter or an enumeration of the Liberties or Customes of the people derived from the Saxons revived continued and confirmed by the Normans and their Successors which for the present I shall leave in lance dubio to stand or fall till occasion shall be of clearing the point in regard that King John soon repented of his Oath the Bond of his consent and to heal the Wound got the Pope's pardon and blessing thereupon so easie a thing it was for a Son of the Roman Church to pass for a good Catholick in an unrighteous way The execution of the Law was done in several Courts according to the several kinds of affairs whereof some concerned matters of Crime and Penalty and this touched the King's honour and safety of the persons of himself and his Subjects and therefore are said to be contra coronam dignitatem c. The second sort concern the profits of the Crown or treasure of the Kingdom The third concern the safety of the Estates of the people These three works were appointed unto three several Courts who had their several Judges especially appointed to that work Originally they were in one viz. in the supream Court of Judicature the Court of Lords whereof formerly was spoken but after through increase of affairs by them deputed or committed to the care of several men that were men of skill in such affairs and yet retained the Supremacy in all such cases still And because that which concerned the publick Treasure was of more publick regard than the other the deputation thereof was committed probably to some of their own members who in those days were Barons of the Realm and afterwards retained the Title but not the Degree and therefore were called for distinction-sake Barons of the Exchequer The particular times of these deputations appear not clearly out of any monument of antiquity nevertheless it is clear to me that it was before Henry the second 's time as well because Henry the first had his Judex fiscalis as Glanvil so frequently toucheth upon the King's Court of Pleas which cannot be intended at the Court of Lords for that in those days was never summoned but in time of Parliament or some other special occasion But more principally because the Historian speaking of the Judges itinerant reciteth some to be of the Common-pleas which sheweth that there was in those days a distinction of Jurisdiction in Judicatures And it may very well be conceived that this distinction of Judicature was by advice of the Parliament after that the Grand Council of Lords was laid aside by Kings and a Privy-Council taken up unto whom could not regularly belong any juridical power because that remained originally in the grand assembly of the Lords Over these Courts or two of them one man had the prime Title of Chief Justice who then was called Lord Chief Justice of England and whose office was much of the nature of the King's Lieutenant in all causes and places as well in War as Peace and sometimes was appointed to one part of the Kingdom and by reason thereof had the name onely of that part and some other of the other parts The greatness of this Office was such as the man for necessity of state was continually resident at the Court and by this means the King's Court was much attended by all sorts of persons which proved in after-times as grievous the King as it was burthensome to the people Other Judges there were which were chosen for their learning and experience most of them being of the Clergie as were also the under-Officers of those Courts for those times were Romes hour and the power of darkness Other Courts also were in the Country and were Vicontiel or Courts of Sheriffs and Lords of Hundreds and Corporations and Lordships as formerly and these were setled in some place But others there were which were itinerant over which certain Judges presided which were elected by the Grand-Council of Lords and sent by Commission from King Henry the second throughout the Kingdom then divided into Six Circuits unto each of which was assigned Three Justices so as the whole number of Justices then was Eighteen The office was before the coming of the Saxons over hither but the assignation was new as also was their Oath for they were sworn But the number continued not long for within four years the King re-divided the Land into four Circuits and unto each Circuit assigned five Justices making in the whole the number of Twenty and one Justices for the Northern
respect he may be said to be less his own man and more the Kingdoms than any of the inferiour sort This befel in both these Kings in a special manner each entring upon the grand Government of a Kingdom before they were able to understand the work or govern themselves and therefore were under power of Protectors for the guard of their Persons and their Education and of the Parliament for Counsel and Direction in Cases relating to the Kingdom The child of a mean man when its Parents are dead is Filius Amici but a King is Filius Populi to be by them trained up in such manner that he may be Pater Populi when he is come to age In the mean time though he be a King yet his Person like a precious Jem must not out of the Ring but must be directed by Council though under some kind of restraint and the Counsellors all the while no Offenders in such cases against the Prerogative Royal. And therefore though it be true that Kings grow faster than other men and sooner come to full age than they yet Edward the Third now in his sixteenth year might not pass over Sea into France though it were for restoring of Peace but by direction of the Parliament nor is it meet in such cases that Kings should stand upon the Prerogative of a Negative Secondly it may likewise be said That his Family is less his own as he is a man than other mens For private Families are no further under the publick Law than in relation to the publick Peace to punish after breach made but the Families of Kings are looked upon by all in relation to the honour and profit of the Publick not onely because the King's servants have by their nigh attendance upon his person a more powerful influence into his actions which may reflect a malevolent Aspect upon the whole course of affairs if they be not better ordered that are so nigh him but more especially in regard that the government and order of the Royal Family trencheth deep upon the Honour of the Kingdom and Purses of the People who are concerned to see the same accommodated suitable to the State and Port which the Nation would bear forth to the World. And therefore for the Parliament to intermeddle in the King's Family is not foreign nor new Alice Piers was a Familiar if not of the Family of Edward the Third yet both her self and others of that Family were complained of as a grievance Richard the Second was once a young man and ever a young King and what Edward the Third wanted onely in his Youth and in his infirm old Age this man ever wanted for he that knew not how to govern himself how much less could he govern his Family And if in this condition the Parliament become his Stewards to set a yearly Survey and Check upon his Servants and Family in order to the good order of the same and Kingdom other wise men must conclude it did that which was just though Richard the Second and those of his mind think not so But this is not all Kings have not onely such as serve the outward man but some that serve their Consciences of old time called Confessors in these days without name for fear of Superstition yet the thing remaineth still in some well-favoured Chaplain and their work is to lead the King's Conscience in dark ways or rather into them Commonly he hath a devout outside and that is the King's Idol but if while his eye be towards Jerusalem his mind be towards the dead Sea the King is his and then the blind leads the blind Like some Ignis fatuus to such as know it not No man is so well known by his company as Kings are by these men and these men by their actions Although some have been so witty as to cheat the whole Generation of Mankind by entertaining holy men to be their Chaplains themselves the mean time without any spark of that holy Fire Yet this King was not so cunning he had a Confessor of his own choice and according to his own heart who was complained of as a grievance and the Parliament removed him So nigh they ventured even to invade the King 's own Conscience if it may be called Conscience that will acknowledge no Law but that of its own mind Thirdly the King's Revenue was under the check and controul of the Parliament for it befals some Princes as other men to be sometimes poor in abundance by riotous flooding treasure out in the lesser currents and leaving the greater channels dry This is an insupportable evil because it is destructive to the very being of affairs whether for War or Peace For the King's Treasure is of a mixt nature much of it being intended for publick service as himself is a publick person And for this cause he hath Officers of several natures attending upon his Treasury Some for Land some for Sea some for the general Treasure of the Kingdom some for that of the Houshold and some for the Privy Purse The common end of all being to maintain State in time of Peace and Strength against time of War. Because it is no easie matter to maintain the just proportions for each of the said ends it is the less wonder that such a brave Prince as Edward the Third should labour under want for maintenance of the Wars and so lavish a Spendthrift as Richard the Second should labour under more want to maintain his port and countenance in peace And therefore though it be true that the publick Treasure is committed to the King as the chief Steward of the Realm yet it is as true that he is but a Steward and that the Supreme survey of the Treasure resteth in the Parliament who are to see that the Treasure be not irregularly wasted to reduce the same into order and for that end to call the Treasurers and Receivers to account to see to the punishing of such as are unfaithful and encouraging of others that are faithful For when by extravagant courses the Treasure is wasted by extraordinary courses it must be supplied which ever is out of the Subjects Purses And in such cases it is great reason that they should observe which way the course lies of such Expences If then in such cases sometimes the Parliament hath stayed the issuing out of the King's Revenue for some time or otherwise viewed and examined the same charged it with conditions 22. E. 3. n. 29. 14 R. 2. n. 15. limited it to certain uses and in case of misuser refused to levy or make payments the case will be without dispute that the Parliament ordered the publick Treasure as they saw most need But much more if we consider how the greatest part of this Treasure was raised viz. not from the old Revenues of the Crown but by new Impositions Levies and Assessments laid upon the People even what they pleased and in
this power within its own bounds than the watry Element upon which it sloated but it made continual waves upon the Franchise of the Land and for this cause no sooner had these great men savoured of the Honour and Authority of that Dignity but comes a Statute to restrain their Authority in the Cognizance of Cases only unto such matters as are done upon the main Sea as formerly was wont to be And within two years after that Act of Parliament is backed by another Act to the same purpose in more full expressions saving that for Man-slaughter the Admirals power extended even to the high water-mark and into the main streams And this leadeth on the next consideration viz. What is the subject matter of this Jurisdiction and Authority I shall not enter into the depth of particulars but shall reduce all to the two heads of Peace and Justice The Lord Admiral is as I formerly said a Justice of Peace at Sea maintaining the Peace by power and restoring the Peace by setting an Order unto matters of Difference as well between Foraigners as between the English and Foraigners as may appear by that Plea in the fourth Institutes formerly mentioned Secondly That point of Justice principally concerneth matters of Contract and Complaints for breach of Contract of these the Admiral is the Judge to determine according to Law and Custom Now as subservient unto both these he hath Authority of command over Sea-men and Ships that belong to the State and over all Sea-men and Ships in order to the service of the State to arrest and order them for the great voyages of the King and Realm and during the said voyage but this he cannot do without express Order because the determining of a voyage Royal is not wholly in his power Lastly the Lord Admiral hath power not only over the Sea-men serving in the Ships of State but over all other Sea-men to arrest them for the service of the State and if any of them run away without leave from the Admiral or power deputed from him he hath power by enquiry to make a Record thereof and certifie the same to the Sheriffs Mayors Bailiffs c. who shall cause them to be apprehended and imprisoned By all which and divers other Laws not only the power of the Admiral is declared but the original from whence it is derived namely from the Legislative power of the Parliament and not from the single person of the King or any other Council whatsoever But enough hath been already said of these Courts of State in their particular precincts One general interest befalls them all That as they are led by a Law much different from the Courts of Common-Law so are they thereby the more endeared to Kings as being subservient to their Prerogative no less than the Common-Law is to the peoples liberty In which condition being looked upon as Corrivals this principal Maxime of Government will thence arise That the bounds of these several Laws are so to be regarded that not the least gap of intrenchment be laid open each to other lest the Fence once broken Prerogative or Liberty should become boundless and bring in Confusion instead of Law. CHAP. VI. Of the Church-mens Interest BUt the Church-mens interest was yet more Tart standing in need of no less allay than that of the King's Authority for that the King is no less concerned therein than the people and the rather because it was now grown to that pitch that it is become the Darling of Kings and continually henceforth courted by them either to gain them from the Papal Jurisdiction to be more engaged to the Crown or by their means to gain the Papal Jurisdiction to be more favourable and complying with the Prerogative Royal. The former times were tumultuous and the Pope is gained to joyn with the Crown to keep the people under though by that means what the Crown saved to it self from the people it lost to Rome Henceforth the course of Affairs grew more civil or if you will graced with a blush of Religion and it was the policy of these times whereof we now treat to carry a benign Aspect to the Pope so far only as to slave him off from being an enemy whilst Kings drove on a new design to ingratiate and engage the Church men of their own Nation unto it's own Crown This they did by distinguishing the Office or Dignity of Episcopacy into the Ministerial and Honourable Parts the later they called Prelacy and was superadded for encouragement of the former and to make their work more acceptaple to men for their Hospitalities sake for the maintenance whereof they had large Endowments and Advancements And then they reduced them to a right understanding of their Original which they say is neither Jus Divinum nor Romanum but that their Lordships power and great possessions were given them by the Kings and others of this Realm And that by vertue thereof the Patronage and custody of the Possessions in the vacancy ought to belong to the Kings and other the Founders and that unto them the right of Election into such advancements doth belong not unto the Pope nor could he gain other Title unto such power but by usurpation and encroachment upon the right of others But these great men were not to be won by Syllogisms Ordinarily they are begotten between Ambition and Covetousness nourished by Riches and Honour and like the Needle in the Compass turn ever after that way Edward the Third therefore labours to win these men heaped Honour and Priviledges upon them that they might see the gleanings of the Crown of England to be better than the vintage of the Tripple Crown Doubtless he was a Prince that knew how to set a full value upon Church men especially such as were devout and it may be did somewhat outreach in that course For though he saw God in outward events more than any of his Predecessors and disclaiming all humane merits reflected much upon God's mercy even in smaller blessings yet we find his Letters reflect very much upon the Prayers of his Clergy he loved to have their Persons nigh unto him put them into places of greatest Trust for Honour and Power in Judicature and not altogether without cause he had thereby purchased unto his Kingdom the name and repute of being a Kingdom of Priests But all this is but Personal and may give some liking to the present Incumbents but not to the expectants and therefore the Royal Favour extended so far in these times as to bring on the Parliament to give countenance to the Courts and Judiciary power of the Ordinaries by the positive Law of the Kingdom although formerly the Canons had already long since made way thereto by practice I shall hereof note these few particulars ensuing Ordinaries shall not be questioned in the King's Court for Commutation Testamentary Matters or Matrimonial Causes nor other things touching Jurisdiction of Holy-Church Things
formerly bred by the Canon nourished by continual practice allowed by Ordinance of Parliament or Grant from Kings in Parliament are now confirmed by solemn concurrence of the whole Representative Body of the Kingdom to have and to hold with Warranty And yet the sence is not so general as the words nor doth it seem much other than a Confection made for the Arch-Bishops appetite to cure a distemper between him and the King for the Civil Judge lost nothing hereby nor would the Crown as may appear by a Law of equal Authority with the former for though an Executor or Administrator may cheat yet it tells us that Ordinaries only can oppress and extort from dead men and therefore in such cases doth provide remedy by enquiry and Indictment before the King's Justices They shall have Cognizance of Vsury during the Delinquent's Life and the King after the Delinquent's death The difference ariseth from the different end the first being to reform the Person by Church-censures and to urge him to restitution the latter is for the King 's Fine or Forfeiture For as touching the Usurer's estate the offence was in the nature of Felony forfeiting both Lands and Goods to the King after the Delinquent's death And it seemeth the manner was to Indict the Delinquent during his life and that stuck to him as a deadly Arrow in his side till he died Nor did it lie in the power of the Ordinary by Ecclesiastical censure so to reform the Of●ender as to clear him to the King unless the party offending made his peace with the King by Composition And thus the Law continued for ought appeareth to me till the time of Henry the Eighth They shall have Cognizance of avoidance of Benefices of Right They shall certifie Bigamy and Bastardy had beyond the Sea and whether a Prior be perpetual or Dative The first of these concerning avoidance of Churches it seemeth was somewhat doubtful in point of practice for that the Civil Judge used to determine all manner of avoidances as well in Fact as of Right but by this Statute they are restrained only unto avoidances in Fact so as after this Statute it is holden that avoidances by death shall be tryed by the Countrey but if the avoidance be by Deprivation Resignation Creation or otherwise it shall be tryed by the Ordinary because by common intendment he is more conusant of the thing than Countrey-people But as touching the point of Bigamy the matter is more doubtful in regard that commonly the Marriage of a second Wife or Widow is a matter in Fact done in the face of the people and of which they take notice especially where the life of man is concerned which rather requireth the Judgment of his Peers than where the outward maintenance only is engaged Nevertheless because the main point is whether the party be a Clerk or not and the same anciently rested upon the Certificate of the Ordinary It is by this Law again allowed to him to try and certifie this point of Bigamy also although the Statute of Bigamists might seem to Entitle the Civil Magistrate thereto as the Law was holden to be before this Statute was made In the next place although it cannot be denyed but the Trial of Bastardy beyond the Sea might as well lie in the cognizance of the Lay-Magistrate as in that of the Ecclesiastical yet seeing the Clergy had already attained the cognizance of the thing the place proved but a matter of circumstance especially they having the advantage of the Civil Magistrate in this in regard that the Ecclesiastical persons beyond the Sea had also obtained the cognizance of that matter amongst themselves their Testimony or Certificate would come with more credit to the Clergy in this Kingdom than to the Magistrate whose cognizance in such cases they did disallow Lastly concerning Priories whereas some were presentative and filled by Induction from the Ordinary and others were Donative having their Priors meerly at the will of the Abbot to be placed and displaced as he thought most expedient If then the point in issue depends upon this knot this Law referreth the Trial unto the Ordinary who by common presumption best knows whether any Institution and Induction had passed his Registry and Seal or not And thus though a kind of Judicial power seemeth to be carried along herewith yet is all in a ministerial and subservient way unto the Civil Magistrate and nevertheless with such credit and authority that the main hinge of the Judicatory in such cases depends upon the dash of their pen. No Bishop nor Arch-Bishop shall be Impeached before the Civil Magistrate without the Kings express Warrant The former particulars concerned matter of Authority this and others ensuing concern matter of immunity which or most of which were formerly for a long time within the fancy of the Canon but never came to the height of Parliamentary approbation or Authority till now that it comes in as a peace-offering to pacifie the quarrel between the Arch-Bishop Stratford and the King. For he being engaged in the French Wars so resolved to continue and therefore to maintain distempers at home he held neither Honourable nor safe Their Temporalties shall not be wasted during the vacancy Nor shall they be seized but by Judgment of the Court. The first of these was an ancient Law grounded upon great reason although dulled by time and by covetousness of the needy Patrons next to laid aside if not quite put out of countenance So as a new Law must be made to revive it and to abolish that corrupt custom or practice of depredating those possessions given to a holy use in common supposal contrary to the trust by them undertaken and the use still continuing But the second Branch is in nature of a Law of Restraint set upon the Common-Law for the persons of these Spiritualized men were of so airy a constitution as they could not be holden by hands made out of the Clay such as the rude Laity were and therefore the Civil Magistrate upon all occasions used to lay hold upon that whereof there was some feeling which were called Temporalities and thereby drew them to appearance at the Lay-Courts for however Spiritual the Clergy were they would not easily part with their Lay-Fees But now by this Law the times are so attenuated that the very Temporalities are made so Spiritual as not to be medled with by the Lay-Magistrate unless upon judgment first obtained against them And suitably thereunto within twelve years following another Law was made more punctual That their Temporalties should not be seized upon for contempts but that their persons should be seized yet within twenty years after that this Law begins to be out of countenance and the Opinions of the Judges began to grow bold upon the ancient rule that their Temporalities were Temporal though their persons were Spiritual and that it was more dangerous to
the issue will be And therefore though it in the general be more beneficial that all Exportation and Importation might be by our own Shipping yet in regard times may be such as now they were that the Shipping of this Nation is more than ordinarily employed for the service of the State And that every Nation striveth to have the benefit of Exportation by Vessels of their own And Lastly in regard the case may be such as Importation may be at a cheaper rate by forein Vessels and Exportation likewise may for the time be more prejudicial to this Nation if done by our own Shipping than those of other Nations Therefore the course must be changed so far forth as will stand with the occasions of the State and common profit of this Nation And for these causes and such-like in the times whereof we now treat the Laws often varied Sometimes no Staple-Commodity must be Exported in English bottoms sometimes all must be done by them and within a year again that liberty was restrained and after that liberty given to Foreiners to Export as formerly The third and last Consideration is as necessary as any of the former for if Trade be maintained out of the main Stock the Kingdom in time must needs be brought to penury because it is their Magazine And for this cause it was provided That all Wool should remain at the Staple 15 days to the end it might be for the Kingdoms use if any one would buy they must do it within that time otherwise it might be exported The sixth means of advancement of Trade was the setling of the Staple for as it was an encouragement to the first establishing of the Manufacture that the Staples were let loose so when the Manufactures had taken root the Staple especially now fixed to places within this Kingdom brought much more encouragement thereto First For preserving a full Market For whilst the Commodity lies scattered in all places the Market must needs be the leaner partly in regard the Commodity lies in obscurity and partly because when it is known where yet it is not easily discovered whether it be vendible or not and besides small parcels are not for every man's labour and the greater are not for every man's money Secondly Staples are convenient for the slating of the general price of the Commodities in regard the quantity of the Commodity is thereby the more easily discovered which commonly makes the price And the quantity of the Commodity thus discovered will not onely settle the price to it self but also ballance the price of the Manufacture Thirdly The Staple having thus discovered the quantity of the Commodity will be a ready way to settle the quantity of the main Stock that must be preserved and regulate Exportation as touching the overplus But it cannot be denied that the first and principal mover of the making of the Staple was the benefit of the Crown For when the Commodity was gone beyond the Sea it importeth not to the Subjects in England whether the same be sold at one place or more or in what place the same be setled until the Manufacture was grown to some stature and then the place became litigious The benefit of Exportation pretended much interest in the setling thereof beyond the Sea but in truth it was another matter of State. For when it was beyond Sea it was a moveable Engine to convey the King's pleasure or displeasure as the King pleased for it was a great benefit to the Countrey or place where-ever it setled or else it moved or stayed according to the inclination of the People where it was either for War or Peace But on the contrary the Interest of the people began to interpose strongly And for these causes the Parliament likewise intermeddled in the place and thus the Scene is altered Sometimes it is beyond the Seas in one place or in another sometimes in England In Edward the Third's time we find it sometimes at Calis sometimes in England In Richard the Second's time we find it again beyond the Seas at Middleburgh thence removed to Calis and after into England Where at length the people understood themselves so well that the Parliament setled the same it being found too burthensome for the Manufactures to travel to the Staple beyond the Seas for the Commodity that grew at their own doors besides the enhansing of the price by reason of the Carriage which falling also upon the Manufactures must needs tend to the damage of the whole Kingdom This was one way indeed and yet possibly another might have been found For if a Computation had been made of the main Stock and a Staple setled within the Kingdom for that and the overplus exported to a Staple beyond the Sea it might have proved no less commodious and more complying It is very true that there are many that call for the Liberty of the people that every man may sell his own Commodity as he pleases and it were well that men would consider themselves as well in their Relations as in their own Personal Respects For if every man were independent his liberty would be in like manner independent but so long as any man is a Member of a Common-wealth his liberty must likewise depend upon the good of the Common-wealth and if it be not good for the Nation that every man should sell his own Commodity as he pleaseth he may claim the liberty as a Free-man but not as an English-man Nor is that liberty just so long as his Country hath an interest in his Commodity for its safety and welfare as in his own person I do not assert the manner of buying the Staple-Commodities by Merchants of the Staple to sell the same again in kind for their private advantage Divers limitations must concur to save it from an unlawful ingrossing nor doth it appear to me that the Staplers in these times used such course or were other than mere Officers for the regulating of the Staple in nature of a Court of Piepowders belonging to some Fair or Market Nevertheless I conjecture that it may well be made evident from principles of State that Marts Markets and Staples of Commodities that are of the proper Off-spring of this Nation are as necessary to Trade as Conduits are to places that want Water The seventh and last means that was set on foot in these times for the advance of Trade was the regulating of the Mint and the current of Money This is the life and soul of Trade for though exchange of Commodities may do much yet it cannot be for all because it is not the lot of all to have exchangeable Commodities nor to work for Apparel and Victual Now in the managing of this trick of Money two things are principally looked unto First That the Money be good and currant Secondly That it should be plentiful As touching the excellency of the Money several Rules were made as against
any Man he must go whither the King shall please to send him which is not onely destructive to the opinion of Thirning concerning the Plea but also though granted is destructive to the Reporter's Judgement in the main point For if an English man may refuse to go without Wages then is he not bound to go by any natural absolute Legiance as the Reporter would have it And as touching the second Case which is Bigot's and Bohun's Case it cleareth the same thing for it was resolved that they ought to go but in manner and form according to the Statutes then is not the ground in the absolute Legiance for that is not qualified but in the positive Statute-law which tieth onely in manner and form and that by voluntary consent in Parliament The rest of the Cases do neither conclude the main point nor the particular thing that the Reporter intendeth For he would imply to the Reader that English men were anciently used to be imprested for the Wars in France and hereunto he voucheth one Authority out of ancient Reports of Law in Edward the Third's time one Anthority in the time of Henry the Fourth and three in the time of Henry the Sixth none of all which do speak one word concerning Impresting And that in Edward the Third doth imply the contrary for the Case is that in a Praecipe quod reddat a Protection was offered by the Defendant as appointed to go beyond the Sea with the Duke of Lancaster and the Plaintiffs Counsel alledged That the Defendant had been beyond Sea with the Duke and was returned To this the Defendant's Counset answered That the Duke was ready to return again and for this cause the Protection was not allowed Yet a Quere is made upon this ground that it might be that the Defendant would not go over with him nor was it proved that he would which sheweth plainly the party was not imprested for then the thing had not been in his power to will or nill The last instance that the Reporter produceth is that of Forinsecum Servitium or Foreign Service and that seemeth to be Knight-service to be performed abroad But this falleth short of the Reporter's intention in three respects First Though it belongeth to the King yet not to him onely but to other chief Lords so saith Bracton Secondly It is not due from every English man. And lastly It is a Service due by vertue of Tenure and then the Conclusion will be That which is due by Tenure of Lands is not due by natural and absolute Legiance and so this Foreign Service arising meerly by compact and agreement between Lord and Tenant and not by the natural duty of an English-born Subject which is the thing that the Reporter drives at in all his discourse will be so far from maintaining the Reporters opinion as it will evidently destroy the same And thus the posture of this Nation in the Field remaineth regular in the rule whatever hath been said against it notwithstanding that in the very instant of Action there may be some irregularity which no doubt both was and ever will be in stormy times Nor did it conquer the Law For though War may seem to be but a sickness of the State yet being in Truth as the Vltimum refugium and onely reserve unto Law beaten to a retreat by opression it is no wonder if this motion or rather commotion that brings on the Law of Peace in the Rear be still and ever subject to rule of Law how unruly soever it self seemeth to be Now because Law imports execution and that presupposes a Trial and it a Court therefore did our Ancestors amongst other Courts not regulated by the Common Law form a Court for the service of War called the Court-Marshal or the Constables Court according as the Office of one or the other had the preheminence The proceedings herein were ordered as I said not accordiag to the Common Law for that is like the Land much distant from all other Nations and the Negotiation of this Island with other Nations as in time of Peace so of War requires a rule common to all those Nations or otherwise no Negotiation can be maintained And for this cause the proceedings in this Court were ever according to the rule of the Civil Law. The work of this Court is principally Judicial and in some cases Ministerial The first reflects upon cause Foreign and Domestick and both of those are either Criminal and such as concern the common Peace of the place of War or more civil relating onely unto private interest As touching the first of these I suppose it is no Bull to speak of a common Peace in the place of War. For a common Peace must be in each party within it self or otherwise no party at private variance can subsist within it self much less make War with the other and therefore in order unto War there must be a Law of Peace for the Trial of Offenders and punishing them for offences committed against the good Government of the War Such as are breaking of Ranks deserting the Standard running away from the Colours Mutinies Murthers Rapes Plundering-private Quarrels disobedience to command and such-like all which do bear the shew of crimes against the common Peace of the Army and the Country Of the second sort are matters concerning Quarter and Contracts in order to the government of the War saving such as are made before either part be inrolled for the War. For if a man doth covenant to serve in the War and keepth not his day at the first Rendezvouz he is to be attached by Writ at the Common Law. Causes Domestical likewise fall under the like division for whatsoever cause may be Forein may also be Domestick because the Army is ever embodied within the Kingdom and must be under the Directory of the Martial law upon the first forming thereof Now though the particular Laws of the Army for the government thereof be ordinarily according to the prudence of the General yet certain Fundamentals have been ab Antiquo made by Custom and the Parliament against which the course of Judicature must not go And as the Parliament saw need it set also particular directions as for the payment of Souldiers Wages for remedy of wastings and plunderings in their own Country and other such emergencies But the execution of all these Laws Originally was in the Marshal of the Army And because that the Army was generally dissolved or such persons engaged in such matters of controversie departed from the Army before the same were concluded therefore the Marshals Court continued in order to the determining of these matters And in continuance of time other matters also crowded into that Society although sometimes under the Directory of the Constable of England as well as at other times under the Marshal more particularly that power of determining matters concerning Torniament a sport that like a Sarcasm tickles the fancy but
and made all practices contrary to the rule damageable to the party Thus far concerning the matters in Cognizance now touching the power of the Keys English Prelacy having laid aside the pretentions of Rome they put the world to a gaze to see which way they would go In the innocent infancy of Prelacy it was led by the hand by the Presbytery and would do nothing without them afterwards having gained some degree of height and strength they entred themselves to be Chariot-horses to the Roman Sun till they had set all on fire Now unharnest it is expected they should return to their former Wits nevertheless forgetting their ancient Yoak-fellows the rural Presbyters they stable with the King use his name sometimes but more often their own serving him with Supremacie as he them with authority beyond their Sphere They raise him above Parliament he them above Councils so as they do what they list let the Plebeian Presbyter will or nill they are the onely numeral Figures and the other but Cyphers to make them Omnibus numeris absoluti Nevertheless the Canon still remains the same Episcopi se debent scire Presbyteros non Dominos nec debent in clerum dominari Episcopus se sedente non permittat Presbyterum stare Episcopi noverint se magis consuetudine quam dispensatione Presbyteris majores Kings may make them Lords but as Bishops they hold their former rank assigned by the Canon as Lord s the King never gave them the Keys and as Bishops the Canon did not yet as under the joynt Title of Lord-Bishops they hold themselves priviledged to get what power they can Two things they reach at viz. The absolute power of Imprisonment and of Excommunication in all causes Ecclesiastical The Common Law would never yield this some Statutes in some Cases did pretend First As touching Imprisonment the Statute of Henry the Fourth concerning Heresie doth lisp some such power of what force the same Statute is hath been already observed In case of incontinency of Church-men it is more directly given them by a Statute in Henry the Seventh's time before which time the Statute it self doth intimate that an Action did lie against them for such Imprisonment which Law also was made useless by another in Henry the Eighth's time who gave a way to Statutes for the punishing them at the Common Law. First with Death which continued for some Moneths and that being found too heavy it was punished by another Law with Forfeiture and Imprisonment And the same King likewise gave way to a Law for the like punishment in case of Heresie By that Law that revoked the Statute of Henry the Fourth formerly mentioned although till Trial the same was bailable And thus continued till the time of Edward the Sixth But as touching Excommunication it was to no purpose for them to struggle the Common Law would never permit them to hold possession quietly but did examine their Authority granted Prohibition enjoyned the Ordinary to grant Absolution where it saw cause Nevertheless in some cases Henry the Eighth gives way to some Statutes to allow them this power as in the ●evying of Tenths In the next place the Prelacy had not this Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in themselves so as to grant it to others but the Parliament did dispose thereof not onely to Bishops but to Chancellors Vicars general Commissaries being Doctors of the Law and not within holy Orders and limiting their Jurisdiction in cases concerning the Papal Jurisdiction and their manner of sending their Process and Citations to draw men from their proper Diocess and also their inordinate Fees in Cases Testamentary The Prelates therefore might possibly make great claim hereof for generally they were still of the old stamp loved to have all by Divine Right and lived they cared not by what wrong But the Laity enclining too much to the new Religion as then it was termed refused to yield one foot unto their pretentions And so like two Horses tied together by their Bits they endeavour after several courses ever and anon kicking one at another yet still bestrode by a King that was joynted for the purpose and so good a Horseman that neither of them could unhorse him till Death laid him on the ground And thus was the Roman Eagle deplumed every Bird had its own Feather the great men the Honours and Priviledges the meaner men the Profits and so an end to Annates Legatine levies Peter-pence Mortuaries Monasteries and all that Retinue the vast expences by Bulls and Appeals to Rome to all the cares expences and toil in attendance on the Roman Chair The beginning of all the happiness of England CHAP. XXXI Of Judicature THese two Kings were men of towring Spirits liked not to see others upon the Wing in which regard it was dangerous to be great and more safe not to be worthy of regard Especially in the times of Henry the Eighth whose motion was more eager and there was no coming nigh to him but for such as were of his own train and would follow as fast as he would lead and therefore generally the Commons had more cause to praise the King for his Justice than the Nobility had Both the Kings loved the air of profit passing well but the latter was not so well breathed and therefore had more to do with Courts which had the face of Justice but behind were for the Kings Revenue Such were the Court of Requests of mean Original mean Education yet by continuance attained to a high growth The Court of Tenths and first-Fruits The Court of Surveyors The Court of the Lord Steward of the Houshold The Court of Commission before the Admiral The Court of Wards The Court of the President of the North The Prerogative Court The Court of Delegates The Court of Commission of Review Others of more private regard And that which might have given the name to all the rest the Court of Augmentation Besides these there were some in Wales but that which concerned more the matter of Judicature was the loss of that grand Liberty of that Country formerly a Province belonging to this Nation and now by Henry the Eighth incorporated into the same and made a Member thereof and brought under the same Fundamental Law a work that had now been long a doing and from the time of Edward the Third brought on to perfection by degrees First by annexing the Tenure of the Marches to the Crown Then upon occasion of their Rebellion by loss of many of their wonted Liberberties Afterwards Henry the Eighth defaced the bounds of divers the ancient Counties and setled them anew and the bounds of the Marches also and appointed Pleas in Courts of Judicature to be holden in the English Tongue And last of all re-united them again to the English Nation giving them vote in Parliament as other parcel of the English Dominions had True it is that from their