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A41682 Londinum triumphans, or, An historical account of the grand influence the actions of the city of London have had upon the affairs of the nation for many ages past shewing the antiquity, honour, glory, and renown of this famous city : the grounds of her rights, priviledges, and franchises : the foundation of her charter ... / collected from the most authentick authors, and illustrated with variety of remarks. Gough, William, 1654?-1682. 1682 (1682) Wing G1411; ESTC R24351 233,210 386

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matter meant cried without discretion Ye● Yea Yea nothing regarding the Liberty of the City After the grant thus had of the Commons the said Jo●● Mansell discharged the Mayor Sheriffs and Chambe●lain of their Offices and delivered the Custody thereunto the Constable of the Tower and put in the roo● of the Sheriffs Michael Tony and John Audrian A● over that all Rolls of Tolls and Tallages before mad● were delivered unto the said John Mansel which 〈◊〉 there sealed and redelivered to the Chamberlain Wh●● the Commons had beheld all this business they return●● unto their Houses all confused Do we wonder at the Commons readiness in this afair that they who usually have been such brisk assert● of their Liberties should now be the occasional cause of bringing them into danger We may suppose that this was no proper Common-Hall but rather called by an order from Court and filled with the populace for in those days I do not find there was any express Act made by King Lords and Commons in being to forbid the Council Table from intermeddling in Civil Causes and determining of the Subjects Liberties or so to regulate its Jurisdiction Power and Authority as to leave such matters to be tried and determined in the ordinary Courts of Justice and by the ordinary course of Law Or else we conclude the Restriction of the Common-Hall to the Livery-Men was not then in use so that the Rabble being intermixt it might be no hard matter to get a ●ry raised by some of them in favour of the proceedings ●hen on foot The Mobile being as liable to be wrought ●pon by fear or fair promises as the great and rich to be corrupted by the hopes of Honours and Preferments ●nd the favour of more potent Grandees while as the ●iddle sort of People like the golden mean between ●wo Extreams are not generally so capable of being ●rawn aside after the lure being too many to be brib'd ●nd not few enough to be frighted not so high and wealthy as to aspire after greater Grandeur nor so low ●ean and despicable as to be imposed upon by the empty ●ames of Greatness and Honour without Virtue sprung ●p at first from Vice and nourished by and amidst re●eated Debaucheries This matter thus ordered John Mansell with divers ●f the Kings Council kept their Courts daily the Sun●ays except till the 1st Sunday of Lent which that yea●●as Jan. 25. calling before him 12 Wards of the Ci●y out of every of which Wards were taken 3 men ●o that 36 men were impannelled and sworn to enquire ●f the aforesaid Articles and what Persons of the City ●ad offended in them This Court being thus kept and holden at Guild-Hall no man was called to answer nor no question put to any Person by the said Inquest or any other Upon the foresaid 1st Sunday of Lent the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs with the forementioned Inquest and 4 men of every Ward were charged to appear at Westminster before the King at which appearance they were countermanded till the next morning At which season coming into the Kings Exchequer they found sitting there the Earls of Glocester and Warwick Joh. Mansell Hen. Baa Justices the Constable of the Tower the Custos of the City and divers others of the Kings Council Then was called by name Ralph Richard Hardell that year Mayor Nicholas Batts Nicholas Fiz Josne Mathew Bockerel John Tolesham and John 〈◊〉 Minoure Aldermen Then John Mansell said that the King by his Laws and Inquisition of the Citizens had found them culpable that they had wronged and hurt the Commonalty of his City by divers means as by the sai● Inquisition appeared and forthwith caused it to be read before them When the more part thereof was read he said unto them Thus may you see that the Commonalty of the City hath been by you grievously oppressed and by your means and Counsel the Commonwealth 〈◊〉 the same destroyed as by altering of the Tolls and othe● good ancient Customs turning them to your singular advantage and lucre All which matters the said Ralp● Richard and his Company denied and that the Commons were not grieved or hurt by them or any of them by any such means and offered to be justified and judged by the Law and Customs of the City Then He●●● Baa Justice asked of them whether they would abi●● the adventure of the Inquiry that they had heard re●● before 〈◊〉 stand upon the saying of the other Ward that yet had not be●n sworn but they kept to their 〈◊〉 Answer There John Mansell asked of the Mayor wh●● was their Law and Custom The Mayor answered 〈◊〉 said that for trespass of a Citizen done against the King he should defend himself by 12 Citizens for Murder or slaying of a man by 30 Citizens and for trespass against a stranger by the Oath of six and himself Then after many reasons made by the said John Mansell and also by the Mayor and Aldermen day was given them to appear the morrow before the King and his Councel Upon the day following the King with many of his Lords sitting in the Exchequer the aforesaid Inquisition was read That done the Mayor and Aldermen were called in by name and two Aldermen more which before were not called viz. Arn●ld Thedmare and Henry Waldmode When Ralph Richard Hard●ll had heard ●he King speak in the matter he took such fear that he ●nd Nicholas Batt without further Answer put them●elves in the King's grace saved to them their Li●erties and Franchises of the City But the other six ●esought the King of his wisdom that they might be ●●dged after the Laws and Customs of the City Then was laid to their charge that over many wrongs by ●hem done to the King and the Commonalty of the Ci●y they had alter'd the King's Beam and order'd it to ●e advantage of themselves and other rich men of the City Whereupon the Parties answered and said That ●e alteration of the Beam was not done by them only but 〈◊〉 the advice and consent of 500 of the best of the City ●or where before-time the Weigher used to lean his ●raught toward the Merchandise so that the buyer had ●y that means 10 or 12 pounds in a draught to his ad●antage and the seller so much disadvantage now for ●●differency and equality of both persons it was or●ain'd that the Beam should stand upright the cleft ●ereof inclining to neither party as in weighing of ●old and Silver and the buyer to have allowed of the 〈◊〉 for all things four pounds only in every draught ●fter these Reasons and others by them made the King commanded that upon the morning following a Folk-moot should be called at Paul's Cross and so that Court was dissolved and the Mayor and the others returned to London Upon the morrow the Folk-moot being at Paul's Cross Assembled these six Aldermen hearing the murmuring of the common people and knowing that the Aldermen or Worshipful of the City should have
of the Realm so much by Conque●● as on Conditions accordingly here 's menti●● made of one Grant The Occasion of Stephen's coming to the Crow● contrary to his own former Oath swore to Ki●● Henry and in prejudice to Maud's Claim is R●corded by one Author to have been the Oath one Hugh B●got sometime King Henry's Stewar● who swore that the Late King in his presence little before his Death chose this Stephen for 〈◊〉 Heir by reason that he had received some disco●tent at his Daughters hands Whereunto the 〈◊〉 giving easy Credence admitted him King 〈◊〉 Favour of the Londoners did doubtless at th● time condu●● not a little to his advantage in p●●ferring him an able Man before a weak Woma● For Stow's Annals inform us That he was receiv●● by the Londoners when he had been repulsed at ●ther Places certainly it redounded to his 〈◊〉 Benefit afterwards as hath been related before Another Addition of Strength might be his not imposing heavy Taxes upon the People which it may be increased their Love to him and made so many side with him As indeed we find upon his first Admission that he sware among other things before the Lords at Oxford to forgive his People the Tax of Danegelt Neither do I read of any Taxes that he raised upon the Commons It is affirmed positively in the C●ll●ction of Wonders and Remarkable Passages that he raised none with which Stow likewise agrees So that a King 's needless laying of many heavy and grievous Taxes upon his People occasions him to lose much of their Love and his forbearing it when he hath Power in his hands unites his Subjects Hearts the faster to him But instead of Taxes we read of this Kings permission given to his Lords to build Castles or Fortresses upon their own Grounds Many whereof we find pulled down in the next King's time they having been the occasion of many Miseries in the Land and the ready means to foment Civil Wars therein which generally brings greater Damages to the Common●lty than a few Impositions and Taxes can be presumed to do This King Stephen was twice Crowned but for what cause or for what intent is not so easily known whether it was that he thought his Imprisonment had diminished somewhat of his Royalty or else thinking by a second Coronation to ●lude the Force of the Oath made at the first I find not delivered Certain it is soon after my Author tells of his taking away a Castle from the Earl of Chester who before had appeared against him on Maud's side with a very considerable Strength but had been afterwards reconciled to the King But what is much more considerable we read not long after of the King 's new danger and ill Success and of his Party being weaken'd particularly by the loss of London For Duke Henry after King coming into England with a great Army after some small Success gets up to London and wins the Tower as much by Policy and fair Promi●es saith my Author as by Strength Then he had Opportunity enough to caress the C●tizens being so near them and it may be he got not the Tower without their Consert if not by their Affistance Hereby we find that he retrieved what his Mother's Haughtiness before had lost and so having got the City's Affection and Power he was in a fair way to obtain his Desires as he did not long after For we quickly read of Mediators and Treaties of Peace between these two Competitors which took Effect at last though the Interest and Policy of some hindered it for a time In Conclusion the King was fain to consent to the adopting the Duke his Heir so that he might Reign during his Life Which justly to perform the King being sworn with his Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the next place we hear of their riding up to London as if to bind the bargain it was requisite to ask the consent of that Honourable City whose Favour seems to have been of so great weight in those unsettled Times as to turn the Scales twice once in the King's behalf and erewhile on the Duk●'s Such was their Influence such their Power as to pull down and set up in a manner whom the Citizens pleased Happy was this Agreement to the Land by settling peace therein as beneficial likewise was it to the Duke it being a fair Step to the Throne whereon we find him mounted within a little time For not long after this Accord we hear of the King's Death Whether the Troubles of his Mind or Diseases of his Body brought him to his End vexation for the disappointment of his Designs in being after a sort compelled to adopt his Competitor his Enemy for his Son and Heir or Grief for the loss of London's Favour which helped to effect so great a Turn in his Affairs I shall not determine It might be one it might be the other or neither or all conjoyned that became the occasional Causes so to phrase it of his Death I like not to be very positive where I am not very certain Stephen's Death making thus way for Henry to ascend the English Throne he became one of the ●reatest Kings that ever ruled this Land for the Largeness and Extent of his Territories if we reckon the Inheritance he enjoyed from his Father the Land he held by the Title of his Mother the Dowry he had with his Wife and what he ob●ained by the Success of his Arms Yet notwith●tanding all this he lived not free from Troubles ●nd intestine Broils which sprung much out of his ●wn Bowels So that the Glory of his Youth be●an somewhat to be eclipsed by the Misfortunes of ●is elder Years He Crowned his eldest Son li●ing King sometime before the middle of his ●eign to the end as one Author affirms that he ●ight have full Power and Authority to rule this ●and and People while his Father was busied in ●ther Countrys where some of his Lands lay This ●ight be one Reason but the King having learnt 〈◊〉 experience to his Mother's Loss and his own ●ost how easy it was for Stephen to attempt and ●ain the Crown being present on the Spot while ●●e right Heir was far distant in the vacancy of the ●hrone may be supposed in his intent to have designed the hinderance of such an Intrusion for the future by Crowning the next Heir King while he himself lived I read that Stephen had some such design to have Crowned his Son King in his own days as he declared at a Parliament called at London An. Reg. 17 to have fixt the Crown the surer to his Posterity But the B●shops refused the Deed Which I do not find they did so much out of Conscience or in Favour to M●●d's Title as by the Command forsooth of the Pope who in those days was very apt to be clapping his Fingers into almost ever● ones Pye where he thought any good pickin● might be had This King Henry got but little by Crowning
one that please may peruse at his leasure in the forecited Place We likewise find there declared the severa● Wards of the City as they stood in Fabian's Time together with the Parish-Churches and other Religious Houses within and without summed up to the Number of One Hundred Sixty Eight This King Richard in the Beginning of whose Reign we first hear of the Name of Bailiffs give● to the Rulers of London having taken a Voyag● into the Holy-Land according to the Religion o● those Times and done his Devoir for the Recovery of it according to his Strength the Clergy-men had reason to esteem well of him to humour whose designs he had undertaken so chargeable 〈◊〉 Enterprize So accordingly we find that the Ecclesiastucks stuck as close to him as any of his Subjects in his Adversity For in his Return from the Holy War as 't was term'd Richard being Shipwrack't took and imprison'd by the Duke of Austria and long detain'd by the Emperour he was compell'd to redeem himself after a Year and three Month's Imprisonment at a large Ransom An hundred thousand Pounds were either presently paid or good Pledges left behind him to ascertain the full and true Payment A vast Sum in those days when Wheat was esteem'd at a high Price being sold at fifteen Shillings the Quarter as we find it in the fifth Year of King John's Reign about half a dozen Years after So that for this Ransom were sold the Ornaments of the Church Prelate's Rings and Crosses with the Vessels and Chalices of the Churches throughout the Land Wool of White Monks and Cannons and also twenty seven Shrines scrap't and spoil'd of the Gold and Silver laid on them in former Times No Priviledge of Church then regarded no Person spar'd A costly Voyage indeed it prov'd to the Land undertaken to satisfie the Clergy-men's Ambition and therefore they might well be content to bear much of the Charges and use their utmost Endeavours in the Imprison'd King's Vindication And so the Pope did as far as Curses would go to which was imputed those Mischiefs that befel the Duke of Austria and his Country a little after as the Effects of the Pope's Indignation The Power and Esteem of this City's Favour in those Times of the King's Captivity we need but remark out of Neubrigensis who acquaints us That when the Chancellour being then Bishop of Ely and Governour of the Land dreaded the Force of the opposite Lords who strove to suppress him for his Insolency and ill Government he retir'd to London and humbly intreated the Citizens not to be wanting to him in that point of time But they being not unmindful of his former Behaviour rather favour'd the other Party whereupon the proud haughty Prelate was compell'd to resign his Office which he had so ill manag'd and depart to the no small Benefit to the Land in those troublesome Times At London likewise was it that the Lords consulted together for the ordering the Land in the King's Absence which after the late ill Governour had been discarded and after an Oath of Fideli●y to the absent Prince was put into another's Hands When King Richard was delivered as soon as he landed at Sandwich we find him coming straightway to London as the fittest Place it seems to receive him and assist him So accordingly we read of his Reception there with all Joy and Honour in so splendid a Pomp that the German Nobles present beholding it affirm'd That if the Emperour had known of such Riches in England he would not have dimiss'd the Ransom'd King under an Intol●erab●e Price A little afte● we hear of his riding thence with a convenient ●●r●ngth to recover the Places that stood out 〈◊〉 him After this by a Councel of Lords call'd at Winchester having deprived his Brother John of his Honours and Lands for his Rebellion he took care to have himself crown'd King of England anew As if the Force of his former Coronation was impaired by his Imprisonment or else he thought by this politick Shift to take off all Obligations that might haply lie on him for any thing done before As indeed we quickly after read of a Resumption of all Patents Annuities Fees and other Grants m●de before his Voyage But then it 's affirmed to be done by the Authority of a Parliament call'd after his Coronation After these Passages two State-Informers are ●oted to have ri●en up promising the King great Matters the Scenes of whose chief Acts were either laid or to have been laid at London One of them the Abbot of Cadonence warning the King of the Fraud of his Officers by vertue of a Warrant from him called divers Officers before him at London to yield to him their Accounts This Place was made choice of by him as the fittest it seems wherein to ingratiate himself with the common People by ●o plausible an Act as bringing offending Officers to con●igne Punishment But Death soon cut him off and so put an end to all his Designs The other Informer call'ed William with the Long Beard reported to be born in London of a sharp Wit having shew'd the King of the Outrage of the Rich who as he said in publick Payments spar'd their own and pi●led the Poor and being upheld by him became the Patron and Defender of poor Men's Causes and stirred up the common People to a desire and love of Freedom and Liberty by blaming Rich Men's Excess and Insolence Hereupon he was followed with such numbers of People that being called before the King's Councel upon suspicion of a Conspiracy the Lords were fain with good words to dismiss him for the present for fear of the Multitude attending him and commanded certain to seize on him in the Absence of his numerous Abettors But those thus commanded mistaking the time and so failing in their intended Design he escaped and took Sanctuary in St. Mary Bow Church where his Strength quickly grew so great by the Access of the Multitude that he was not easily taken hold of nor without shedding of Blood However being at last taken after that the Heads and Rulers of the City had diminish'● the People he with other his Adherents wa● arraign'd before the Judges cast condemn'd an● hang'd very shortly after even the following da● saith the Chronicle so desirous were the rich an● great Men to have him out of the way as soo● as they could But as his Plea of Freedom was ●● acceptable to the Commons in his Life-time th●● he became a Terror to the Great so after 〈◊〉 Death he ceased not for a while to be a Dread 〈◊〉 many by reason of a Rumour raised and banded about among the Commons of his Innocenc● and favourably received of the People even to 〈◊〉 approving of him as an holy Man and Martyr an● making Pilgrimages to the Place of his Execution to the no small trouble of those that had a han● in his Death At last the Flame of this Dev●tion was somewhat cool'd by the
low birth became the head Leader of the Scots against the Kings Power and had Created him no little trouble in Scotland but now in revenge was his head set upon London-Bridge and his four quarters sent into Scotland to be set upon the Gates of some Towns in that Land About this time we hear likewise of several Nobles of Scotland coming to the Kings Parliament at Westminster and there voluntarily Sworn in the Presence of the King and his Lords to be true to the King of England and to keep the said Land to his use against all other Persons Among these is named Robert le Bruce who not long after sends to the Pope for a dispensation of his Oath raises more Commotions in Scotland and gets to be Crowned King thereof at Saint Johnstons Anno Thirty four But when King Edward had overthrown the Scots Army and taken many of the Nobles he sent the Bishop of Saint Andrews and Bastoon with the Abbot of Scoon to the Pope with report of their Perjury and how they were taken Armed in the field to shed the blood of Christian men And the Temporal Lords he sent into England to the Tower of London who were afterwards Arraigned at London and put to death and their Heads set upon London-Bridge The longest Sword carries away the Bell. If the Scots had prevail'd in the like sort against King Edward it 's a question whether they would not have done much after the same manner How would they have then vaunted themselves and their Cause for the most rightful whereas being Conquer'd they suffer'd as Rebels That the weakest goes to the Wall is a known saying Yet as strong powerful and succesful as this King Edward was we find he cared not to meddle himself with the Spiritual Lords taken in the field fighting against him but rather chose publikely to send them to the Pope with an high offence laid to their charge to be punished at his pleasure Whereby we may presume he gratified the Popes Ambition in making him as it were the sole Judge of their offences and yet thereby doubtless sufficiently secur'd himself against those men of the Church his late Enemies for the future Could the Pope in Civility and Gratitude refuse to revenge the King in punishing these Clergy-men for fighting against him who had thus highly mounted the power and Authority of the Triple Crown above his own in this matter to the publick view of the world If the Popish Clergy in those times were grown so formidable that this Triumphant King in the midst of his Victorious Arms thought it safer to remit these Clergy-men's offences to the Popes Correction than punish them himself for I think it was policy more than zeal that made him act thus what weak matches were the other Puny Princes to them in those days of their worldly Prosperity Pomp and Grandeur Now their wings are pretty well clipt by the escape of so many people Nations and Countries out of this Popish House of Bondage let Crowned Heads and free States be careful that they suffer not the Popes wings to grow again or permit their Sworn Vassals the Jesuits to imp them anew with fresh Feathers lest they mount up again over their heads to their Ancient greatness or take a flight higher than ever they did Now the French King through the base connivance of some others Treachery and many great Mens careless negligence is become Europe's Terror if Popish Plots and designs should ●nce so far take effect as treacherously to de●rive our present King of his life and Crown and ●ntroduce a Popish Successor into the English Throne how far they might in time proceed towards the extirpation of that pestilent Northern Heresy as Mr. Coleman out of his Extraordinary ●●ndness to the Religion from which he himself ●postaliz'd has been pleased to term the Protestant Religion o●t of these parts of the world I submit ●o the better Judgments of more able Politicians Hast we now hence from this Edward the first who died in the five and thirtieth year of his Reign after a charge given to his Son in divers points upon his blessing and Oaths taken of some of his chief Nobles to keep the Land for his Sons use and to Crown him King as soon as they conveniently could after his death at Burgh upon the Sands beyond Carlile in his return into England unto Edward the Second where I could find matter enough to exercise my Pen were I minded to describe all the disorders and troubles that hapned throughout the Land under his unprosperous Reign We need not wonder that this Prince met with so unhappy a fate at his End when as we find him at the very beginning immediately transgressing his dead Fathers commands by recalling Gaveston from his Banishment contrary to his Father's charge on his Death Bed he entailing his curse on him if he should presume it as Stow tells us governing himself wholly by his advice affecting him so much as to affirm that he should succeed him in the Kingdom if he could effect it If I should endeavour perfectly to delineate th● many Crosses Losses Battails and Bloodshed tha● fell out in the Land under this King and to Writ● in a stile and manner suitable to the matter ● know not but I might well dip my Pen in Bloo● instead of Ink such were the misfortunes of th● Land and unfortunate fates of many Nobleme● thereof For in his Reign there were Beheaded an● put to death by Judgment upon the number of eigh● and twenty Barons and Knights as Fabian Co●putes besides the Noble men slain in Scotland The number whereof one Author expresses to ● mount to two and forty besides sixty and sev●● Knights and Barronets and two and twenty 〈◊〉 over that of name taken in that one Battel of Bannocksborn Unsteadfastness of manners and vileness of Conditions the refusing the Company of Lords and men of honour and haunting the Society of Villains and vile Persons The being given to great drinking and lightly discovering therein things of great Counsel with many other disallowable Conditions related by Historians were blots in this Kings Scutcheon Scarce was old Edwards Obsequies fully finished according to my Author but the young King sends in all hast for his old Companion Piers of Gaveston receiving him with all joy and gladness and advances him to much honour gives him the Earldom of Cornwal and Lordship of Wallingford rules all by his wanton Councel and follows the appetite and pleasure of his body not guiding things by order of Law or Justice Then he Revenges himself and his favourite Gaveston on the Bishop of Chester who had before complained of them and their Outrages in his Fathers Reign by commanding him to the Tower of London and keeping him there strictly many days after When by the means motions and words of many potent Lords of the Realm Gaveston was again sent out of the Land though contrary to the King's pleasure and banish'd
know not of a certainty as not ●●ding it mention'd in the History Possibly there ●ere none or at least they prov'd very ineffectual ●hich I the rather conclude because that when 〈◊〉 had made malitious Rhymes upon the Duke 〈◊〉 fastned them up in divers parts of the City ●●other remedy was found out against them but haply as inefficacious viz. a Sentence of Excommunication at the Dukes request to the Bishops pronounced against them publickly by the Bishop of Bangor the Aldermen of the City assisting him To be Excommunicated did carry somewhat of terror with it in England in those Popish times among the vulgar and might probably again should Providence for our offences ever suffer Popery to be brought back into the Land but among Protestants and knowing understanding men Excommunication upon every slight account and trifling pretext is of little value esteem or regard and no more dreaded perhaps by some than 't was by Rablais when he beg'd it as a great boon of the Pope because the poor Country Woman thought her Faggot Excommunicated when she could not make it burn Besides these Indignities put upon the Duke at London in at and after the aforesaid Tumult of the Common people we are told also that all such as wore the Dukes Sign or Colours were fain to hide them conveying them into their bosoms so great a fea● and dread had seiz'd upon their Spirits Whether these Colours were Parsons Black True Blew Flourishing Green Orange Tawny or Blood Red the Historian hath not so far gratified us a● punctually to set down in his Relation of the●● transactions But if I might have leave to pas● my Verdict herein I should be apt to conjectur● them to have been at least for the most part 〈◊〉 by the Red-letter'd people What sad Prognosticks may we think our Almanack-makers a● star-gazers then gave of the times when the saw England so likely to fall into such Feuds Faction● and disorders as those of the Guelphs and Gibeline● But one good turn 't is that Astrogolers Prognostications use commonly to be like the Popish Oracles old Almanacks soon out of date The City could much sooner influence the Nation than they could make the Stars influence the City in favour of the Dukes cause How the Citizens of London oppos'd the Duke we have seen but he is resolved it seems to shew his bitter resentments upon the next opportunity and accordingly after the Duke had obtain'd his desires of the two Houses of Parliament viz. A Poll-Bill or Tax of all the heads in the whole Realm he caused the King to send for the Major Aldermen and Sheriffs of London who soon came before him then very ill at ease as they were ordered into his Chamber of Presence where after the usual Ceremonies over past a certain Knight of the Court endeavoured by his Ciceronian Rhetorick and the Eloquence of his Oration to perswade the Citizens to confess their great and hainous offences against the King ●nd Duke and to submit themselves to their Mercy See here the Kings Name must be brought ●n right or wrong or else the Dukes cause and ●retensions would signify little But the Londoners were not so to be caught For they answered they had not Conspired against the Duke nei●her had there been any shameful thing spoken or done against him that they did know of or con●ent unto which they were ready to prove before their Soveraign Lord the King and the Duke ●imself The folly of the Common people they ●ffirm'd they could not stay and therefore request●d of the King that he would not punish those ●hat were innocent and ignorant of the Fact but withal promised the Duke for Reverence of the King observe this that they would endeavour to bring in the Common people and compel them by Law to make due satisfaction and more said they we are not able to do for the Duke that may be to his Honour Not able to do more why What would his faction have had them to have done Was his favour to have been purchas'd at no less a price than an intire Resignation of all they had Bodies and Souls Lives Liberties and Estates at Discretion Must they have deny'd their senses and their reason too in charging themselves with what they neither sayd nor did felt heard nor understood to avoid Scandala Magnatum's and the Arbitrary Fin●● of byass'd Juries Leave we such Terms of accommodation to the insulting power and Pride o● Prelatical Consciences to impose upon their underling Curates Such is the continued cause of difference between the Molinists and Jansenists in France while one side fairly offers to disallow certain displeasing Propositions either by themselves or as Jansenius's if shewn to them in hi● works and the other party as pertinaciously insists upon their rejecting them as his becaus● the Pope hath so condemned them Glad we may easily suppose the Londoners were when dismiss'd upon their aforesaid Answer● But it seems the Court was not yet satisfied 〈◊〉 afterwards we read of the Kings sending them 〈◊〉 Command secretly to call all the Citizens together and having made a Wax Candle with th● Dukes Arms in it to carry it solemnly in Procession to Saint Pauls there to burn continually 〈◊〉 the Cities charges which was accordingly performed by the chiefest and richest of the Citizens the meaner commonalty disdaining to be present at such a procession and therefore with indignation departing home when they heard the business and knew the occasion of their being call'd together But neither did this condescention of the greatest give the Duke content he threatned them look't upon it as a reproach and took it in great scorn that they had offer'd thus his Arms in a Wax Taper while he was alive and in good health notwithstanding they affirm'd they had expresly done that which his Father the King had Commanded them and would have done any thing that might have pleased him i. e. in reason For peace and quietness sake possibly and out of respect to the Kings Majesty they would not have refus'd the trouble of putting forth a few honorary Proclamations nor denied him the Complement of a volley or two of Holla's and Huzza's if that would have pleas'd But this did not answer the Dukes Expectations nor satisfie his Ambitious desires they knew he sayd his mind and were not ignorant how to make satisfaction Ay there 't was He would have us sayd the troubled Citizens amongst themselves Proclaim him King but this shall never be done and so they parted worse friends than they were before So much ado was there with one proud haughty Duke most injuriously aspiring to the Crown to the prejudice of his better belov'd Nephew whose claim title and right had been sometime before if I mistake not in my reckoning settled expresly by the Parliament or at least he had been declar'd by his Grand-Father his Heir and Lawful Successor Yet this the Ambitious Uncle thought probably easily to have evaded and
of any of the Kings Officers but only at the Kings Sute Sealed with the Great or Privy Seal except the Kings Justices according to their Charter That they shall by themselves enquire of Customs and impositions hapning or arising within the City That the Major and Chamberlain for the time being shall have the keeping of the City Orphans Lands and Goods No small advantage in those times when the Court of Wards was in being and greatly beneficial still by reason of the Deceits many poor Orphans meet with from Cheating or Insolvent Guardians and Trustees whereas the City's security is unquestionable and her Credit not in the least to be doubted of That the Interpretation of any word or Sentence touching their said Liberties which may severally be taken may be taken according to the intent and Claim of the said Citizens That the City may enjoy all such Liberties as any other Town in the Realm if they have any other than the Citizens have That no protection Royal be allowed in Debt Account or Trespass wherein a Freeman of London is ten pounds with several others By the Answers whereunto we find the Kings Will was that the Citizens of London should in no wise be restrained of any of their Liberties or ancient customs approv'd Such as were most useful and advantagious at the present time were by his Majesty granted and if any appear to have been denyed the denyal seems rather conditional than plain and direct in down right terms So cautious was the King in his Answers so careful not to displease this powerful Coporation and so well advis'd as not to shew himself Ungrateful at his first coming to the Crown to those who had so Cordially erewhile espous'd his interest and so stoutly defended his cause but a little before In the sixth of this King at the request of the Commons the Abridgment tells us it was enacted that the City of London should enjoy all such Liberties as they had in the time of King Edward the third or as were to them confirm'd by the King now and that Victuallers particularly should be ●under the Mayors Rule and have no particular liberties by themselves In the seventh we find it among the Commons Petitions enacted that the Citizens of London shall enjoy all their whole Liberties whatsoever with this Clause licet usi non fuerunt vel ●busi fuerunt notwithstanding any Statute to the Contrary Whether then 't is possible for any Corporate body endowed with so transcendent Priviledges by the publick Act and Deed of the known Legislators of the Land to forfeit and lose them all of a sudden Judge ye At the same time we read of a grant made by the same Authority that the Mayor and Aldermen should take no other Oath in the Exchequer than they did in the time of King Edward the third How careful were the Commons do we see in this Age to prevent the Citizens from being enslav'd in either their Bodies or their Souls They sha'nt be impos'd upon by their good Wills in so much as an Oath much less have Creeds Articles and Oaths by the dozens thrust upon them to Swear and subscribe to In the same year we have the Commons petitioning the King again in the Cities behalf so Sollicitous were they for her good and welfare That free choice may be made of the most able men for Aldermen as well of such as were the year before as of others yearly See we here the House of Commons pleading for a free choice an Election without disturbance threats or menaces and that particular Citizens should not be impos'd upon nor overaw'd And if they had formerly chosen good Men and found them so by experience that they should not be oblig'd next year to pass them by and choose others such as possibly might prove friends to them the backward way and over the left shoulders The Electors might pick and choose as they please which is the benefit of a free Election And as the Commons pray so the King grants as long as there is good Government in the City thereby What could be desir'd more As long as the Aldermen were lyable to be pass'd by every year as well as the Common-Council-Men 't is very unlikely that they should displease the City much less thwart and contradict the Common voice o● her Citizens for a few sprinklings of Court Holy Water Observe this was at the Parliament hel● at Salisbury some scores of Miles from London yet 't was not the distance of place that could breed distance of affection Remove the national assembly to the other end of the Land to the utmost Coasts of Great Brittian yet Londons Name reaches thither 'T is not the place that makes our Westminster Conventions so mindful of her but her Merit her Power her Influence the respect and esteem they have for her Glory Honour and Renown to see her ever continue the fixt unmovable Defendress of the Protestant Religion under the Defender of the Faith In the Ninth the Commons require at the petition of the Mayor and Commonalty of London that the Patent lately made to the Constable of the Tower may be Revok'd The reason is plain 't was prejudicial to the City to have the Victuals brought to her upon her dearest and best beloved Thames made to pay Toll and Custom to another How Glorious and Gracious must we needs think that City to be in the peoples Eyes when we find their Representatives not once nor twice but so constantly almost at every 〈◊〉 pleading her Cause vindicating her Liberties and asserting her Rights And these we know are part of the Legislative power A general act of Oblivion is a Royal Grant not every day bestow'd upon the Subject and a grace not often obtain'd without much importunity and intercession We have reason therefore to believe the Londoners look't upon it as no small favour that at the Common's request the King granted a Pardon to the Citizens of London in the Eleventh of his Reign of all Treasons Felonies and other offences of loss of life For so Pardons run whether the parties were guilty of such crimes and delinquences or not and 't is a salvo that Wise men disdain not sometimes to make use of and why should they not unless a Pardon must of necessity imply a Crime We have heard how careful the House of Commons were under this King to secure the Cities Liberties ascertain her Rights defend her Priviledges and keep off encroachments that she might not be abus'd nor impos'd on Let me next have leave before I pass forwards to give a hint or two to intimate how ready the Commons were to free the City from Annoyances in order both to the Citizens health and the Cities Ornament that nothing offensive either to the Eyes or the Nostrils might be found therein 'T is to be seen Enacted among the Commons Petitions in the sixteenth of this King that all the filth upon Thames side in a certain place