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A33823 English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, the Habeas Corpus Act ... II. The proceedings in appeals of murther, the work and power of Parliament, the qualifications necessary for such ... III. All the laws against conventicles and Protestant dissenters with notes, and directions both to constables and others ..., and an abstract of all the laws against papists. Care, Henry, 1646-1688. 1680 (1680) Wing C515; ESTC R31286 145,825 240

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own Bond to pay the Charges of carrying back the Prisoner if he shall be Remanded by the Court or Judge to which he shall be brought according to the true intent of this present Act and that he will not make any Escape by the way make Return of such Writ 3 And bring or cause to be brought the Body of the party so Committed or Restrained unto or before the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England for the time being or the Judges or Barons of the said Court from whence the said Writ shall Issue or unto and before such other person or persons before whom the said Writ is made returnable according to the Command thereof 4 And shall then likewise certifie the true Causes of his Detainer or Imprisonment unless the Commitment of the said party be in any place beyond the distance of twenty Miles from the place or places where such Court or Person is or shall be Residing and if beyond the distance of twenty Miles and not above one hundred Miles than within the space of twenty days after such the delivery aforesaid and not longer III. And to the Intent that no Sheriff Goaler or other Officer may pretend ignorance of the import of any such Writ 2 Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all such Writs shall be marked in this manner Perstatutum Tricesimo primo Caroli Secundi Regis and shall be signed by the person that Awards the same 3 And if any person or persons shall be or stand Committed or Detained as aforesaid for any Crime unless for Fel●ny or Treason plainly expressed in the Warrant of Commitment in the Vacation time and out of Term it shall and may be lawful to and for the person or persons so Committed or Detained other than persons Convict or in Execution by Legal Process or any one on his or their behalf to Appeal or complain to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper or any one of His Majesties Justices either of the one Bench or of the other or the Barons of the Exchequer of the degree of the Coif 3 And the said Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper Instices or Barons or any of them upon view of the Copy or Copies of the Warrant or Warrants of Commitment and Detainer or otherwise upon Oath made that such Copy or Copies were denied to be given by such person or persons or any on his her or their behalf attested and subscribed by two Witnesses who were present at the delivery of the same to award and grant an Habeas Corpus under the Seal of such Court whereof he shall then be one of the Judges 5 To be directed to the Officer or Officers in whose Custody the party so Committed or Detained shall be returnable immediately before the said Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper or such Justice Baron or any other Justice or Baron of the Degree of the Coif of any of the said Courts 6 And upon service thereof as aforesaid the Officer or Officers his or their under Officer or under Officers under Keeper or under Keepers or Deputy to whose Custody the party is so Committed or Detained shall within the times respectively before limited bring such Prisoner or Prisoners before the said Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper or such Justices Barons or one of them before whom the said Writ is made Return able and in case of his absence before any other of them with the Return of such Writ and the true Causes of the Commitment and Detainer 7 And thereupon within two days after the party shall be brought before them the said Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper or such Justice or Baron before whom the Prisoner shall be brought as aforesaid shall discharge the said Prisoner from his Imprisonment taking his or their Recognizance with one or more surety or sureties in any sum according to their discretion having regard to the Quality of the Prisoner and Nature of the Offence for his or their appearance in the Court of Kings Bench the Term following or at the next Assizes Sessions or General Goal-delivery of and for such County City or Place where the Commitment was or where the Offence was Committed or in such other Court where the said Offence is properly Recognizable as the Case shall require and then shall Certifie the said Writ with the Return thereof and the said Recognizance or Recognizances into the said Court where such appearance is to be made 6 Unless it shall appear unto the said Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper or Justice or Justices Baron or Barons that the party so Committed is Detained upon a Legal Process Order or Warrant out of some Court that hath Jurisdiction of Criminal matters or by some Warrant Signed and Sealed with the Hand and Seal of any of the said Justices or Barons or some Justice or Justices of the Peace for such matters or offences for the which by the Law the Prisoner is not Bailable IV. Provided always and be it Enacted That if any person shall have wilfully neglected by the space of two whole Terms after his Imprisonment to pray a Habeas Corpus for his Enlargement such person so wilfully neglecting shall not have any Habeas Corpus to be granted in Vacation time in pursuance of this Act. V. Be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any Officer or Officers his or their Under-Officer Under-Officers Under-Keeper or Under-Keepers or Deputy shall neglect or Refuse to make the Returns aforesaid or to Bring the Body or Bodies of the Prisoner or Prisoners according to the Command of the said Writ within the Respective times aforesaid or upon demand made by the Prisoner or Person in his Behalf shall Resuse to deliver or within the space of six hours after demand shall not deliver to the Person so demanding a true Copy of the Warrant or Warrants of Commitment and detainer of such Prisoner which he or they are hereby Required to deliver accordingly all and every the Head Gaolers and Keepers of such Prisons and such other Person in whose Custody the Prisoner shall be detained shall for the first Offence forfeit to the Prisoner or Party Grieved the sum of one hundred pounds 2. And for the second Offence the sum of two hundred pounds and shall and is hereby made Incapable to Hold or Execute his said Office 3. the said penalties to be Recovered by the Prisoner or Party grieved his Executors or Administrators against such Offenders his Executors or Administrators by any Action of Debt Suit Bill plaint or Information in any of the King's Courts at Westmin wherein no Essoign Protection priviledge Injunction Wager of Law or stay of Prosecution by Non vult ulterius prosequi or otherwise shall be Admitted or Allowed or any more than one Imparlance 4. And any Recovery or Judgment at the Suit of any Party Grieved shall be a sufficient Conviction for the first Offence and any after Recovery or Judgment at the suit of a Party Grieved for
or make payment in deceit of our said Lord the King and of his People 7. And if a Man Slay the Chancellor Treasurer or the Kings Justice of the one Bench or the other Justices in Eyre or Justices of Assize and all other Justices Assigned to Hear and Determine being in their Places doing their Offices 8. And it is to be understood that in the Cases above rehearsed that ought to be judged Treason which extends to our Lord the King and of his Royal Majesty 9. And of such Treason the Forfeiture of the Escheats pertaineth to our Lord as well of the Lands and Tenement holden of other as of himself 10. And moreover there is another manner of Treason that is to say when a Servant slayeth his Master or a Wife her Husband or when a Man Secular or Religious slayeth his Prelate to whom he oweth Faith and Obedience 11. And of such Treason the Escheats cught to pertain to every Lord of his own Fee 12. And because that many other like Cases of Treason may happen in time to come which a man cannot think nor declare at this present time it is Accorded That if any other Case supposed Treason which is not above specified doth happen before any Justices the Justices shall tarry without any going to Judgment of the Treason till the Cause be shewed and declared before the King and his Parliament whether it ought to be judged Treason or other Felony 13. And if percase any Man of this Realm Ride Armed covertly or secret with Men of Arms against any other to Slay him or Rob him or Take him or Retain him till he hath made Fine or Ransome for to have his deliverance it is not the mind of the King nor his Council that in such Case it shall be judged Treason but shall be judged Felony or Trespass according to the Laws of the Land of old time used and according as the Case requireth 14. And if in such Case or other like before this time any Justices have judged Treason and for this cause the Lands and Tenements have come into the Kings hands as forfeit the chief Lords of the Fee shall have the Escheats of the Tenements holden of them whether that the same Tenements be in the Kings hands or in others by Gift or in other manner 15. Saving always to our Lord the King the Year and the Waste and the sorfeitures of Chattels which pertain to him in the Cases above named 16. And that the Writs of Scire Facias be granted in such Case against the Land-Tenants without other Original and without allowing any Protection in the said Suit 17. And that of the Lands which be in the Kings hands Writs be granted to the Sheriffs of the Counties where the Lands be to deliver them out of the Kings hands without delay The Comment TReason is derived from Trabir which signifies Treacherously to betray when it concerns the Government and the Publick 't is called High Treason but against particular Persons as a Wife killing her Husband a Servant his Master c. it is Petty Treason High Treason in the Civil Law is called Crimen Laesae Majestatis a Crime wronging Majesty but in our Common-Law-Latine Alta proditio and in an Indictment for this offence the word Proditorie must be in Before the making this Act so many things were charged as High Treason That no Man knew how to behave himself Now by this Statute the particulars of that Grand Crime are reckoned up and all others excluded till declared by Parliament And the settling of this Affair was esteemed of such Importance to the Publick-Weal That the Parliament wherein this Act passed was called long after Benedictum Parliamentum the Blessed Parliament The substance of this Statute is branched out by my Lord Cook 3d. part of Instit. Fol. 3. into six Heads viz. The first concerning Death by compassing or imagining the death of the King Queen or Prince and declaring the same by some Overt Deed. By killing and murdering of the Chancellor Treasurer Justices of either Bench Justices in Eyre Justices of Assize Justices of Oier and Terminer In their Places doing their Offices The second is to Violate that is to Carnally know the Queen the Kings Eldest Daughter unmarried the Princes Wife The third is Levying War against the King The fourth is Adhering to the Kings Enemies within the Realm or without and declaring the same by some overt Act. The fifth is Counterfeiting of the Great the Privy Seal or the Kings Coin The sixth and last by bringing into this Realm Counterfeit Mony to the likeness of the Kings Coin Now as to the particular Exposition of the several parts of this Statute 1. When a man doth compass c. in the Original it is Quant Home which extends to both Sexes but one that is Non compos mentis or an Infant within the Age of discretion is not included but all Allens within the Realm of England being thereby under the Kings Protection and owing a Local Allegiance if they commit Treason may be punisht by this Act but otherwise it is of an Enemy 2. To compass and Imagine Is to contrive design or intend the death of the King but this must be declared by some Overt Act. But declaring by an open Act a design to Depose or Imprison the King is an Over Act to manifest the compassing his death For they that will depose their King will not stick to Murder him rather than fail of their end and as King Charles the First excellently observed and lamentably experienced There are commonly but few steps between the Prisons and the Graves of Princes 3. By the word King is intended 1. A King before his Coronation as soon as ever the Crown descends upon him for the Coronation is but a Ceremony 2. A King de Facto and not de Jure is a King within this Act and a Treason against him is punishable thô the Right Heir get the Crown 3. A Titular King as the Husband of the Queen is not a King within this Act but the Queen is for the word King here includes both Sexes 4. What is to be understood by the Kings Eldest Son and Heir within this Act I answer 1. A second Son after the death of the first Born is within the Act for he is then Eldest Secondly The Eldest Son of a Queen Regnant is as well within the Statute as of a King Thirdly The Collateral Heir Apparent or Presumptive is not within this Statute Roger Mortimer Earl of March was in Anno Dom. 1487. 11 Rich. 2. Proclaimed Heir Apparent Anno 39. Hen. 6. Richard Duke of York was likewise Proclaimed Heir Apparent and so was John de la Poolen Earl of Lincoln by Rich. 3. And Henry Marquess of Exeter by King Henry the 8. But none of these or the like are within the Purview of this Statute saith my Lord Coke 3 Instit fol. 9. 5. Note Whereas in the Printed Statute-Books it is there
whereupon he demanded Judgment whether the Plaintiffe ought to maintain that Appeal he had brought To which the Plaintiffe demurred in Law And in this Case three points were adjudged by Sir Christopher Wray Sir Thomas Gawdy and the whole Court First That the matter of the Bar had been a good Bar of the Appeal by the Common Law as well as if the Clergy had been Allowed For that the Defendant upon his Confession of the Indictment had prayed his Clergy which the Court ought to have granted and the deferring of the Court to be advised ought not to prejudice the Party Desendant albeit the Appeal was Commenced before the Allowance of it The second point adjudged was that this Case was out of the Statute of 3 Hen. 7. For that the words of that Act are If it fortune that the same Felons and Murderers and Accessaries so Arraigned or any of them to be Acquitted or the Principal of the said Felony or any of them to be Attainted the Wife or next Heir of him so slain c. may have their Appeal of the same Death and Murder against the Person so Acquitted or against the said Principals so Attainted if they be alive and that THE BENEFIT OF HIS CLERGY THEREOF before be not had And in this the Defendant Holcroft was neither Acquitted nor Attainted but Convicted by Confession and the Benefit of the Clergy only prayed as is aforesaid so as the Statute being penal concerning the Life of Man and made in Restraint of the Common Law was not to be taken by Equity but is Casus Omissus a Case Omitted and left to the Common Law As to the Third is was objected that every Plea ought to have an apt Conclusion and that the Conclusion in this Case ought to have been Et petit judicium si praediit Thomas Holcroft Iterum de eadem morte de qua semel Convictus fuit Respondere compelli debeat And he does ask judgment if the above mentione Thomas Holcroft shall be obliged to answer againe for the same death he was once Convicted of But it was adjudged that either of both Conclusions was sufficient in Law And therefore that exception was disallowed by the Rule of the Court. Note the ancient Law was that when a Man had judgment to be hanged in an Appeal of Death that the Wife and all the Blood of the Party slain should draw the Defendant to Execution and Gascoigne said Issint fuit in diebus nostris so it was done in our Days And thus much occasionally about Appeals which we the rather inserted because the practice thereof through I know not whose negligence has been almost lost or forgot till some few Years ago a Woman in Southwark revived it against one that killed her Husband and got a pardon for it but she Prosecuted him on Appeal had judgment against him and he was Executed since which time the same Course has been frequently talkt of and brought but for the most part to the shame I think of those Women or Children who make such Compositions for their Husbands or Fathers Blood they have been by some secret Bargains or Compensations husht up and seldom effectually followed Two other Statutes of King Edw. 3. Anno 4. Edw. 3. cap. 14. A Parliament shall be holden once every year ITem It is accorded that a Parliament shall be holden every year once and more often if need be Anno 36. Edw. 3. cap. 10. A Parliament shall be holden once in the year ITem for maintenance of the said Articles and Statutes and Redress of dibers MISCHIEFS and GRIEVANCES which daily happen a Parliament shall be holden every year as another time was ordained by Statute The Comment BEfore the Conquest as the Victory of Duke William of Normandy over Harold the Usurper is commonly though very improperly called Parliaments were to be held twice every year as appears by the Laws of King Edgar cap. 5. and the Testimony of the Mirrour of Justices cap. 1. sect 3. For the Estates of the Realm King Alfred caused the Committees some English Translations of that ancient Book read Earls but the word seems rather to signifie Commissioners Trustees or Representatives to meet and ordained for a PERPETUAL USAGE that twice in the year or ostner if need were in time of Peace they should Assemble at London to speak their Minds for the guiding of the People of God how they should keep themselves from Offences live in quiet and have right done them by certain Vsages and sound Judgments King Edward the first says Cook 4. Instit fol. 97. kept a Parliament once every two years for the most part And now in this King Edward the Thirds time one of the wisest and most glorious of all our Kings It was thought fit to Enact by these two several Statutes That a Parliament should be held once at least every year which two Statutes are to this day in full Force For they are not Repealed but rather Confirmed by the Statute made in the 16th of our present Soveraign King Charles the Second Cap. 1. Intituled An Act for the Assembling and holding of Parliaments once in three years at the least The words of which are as follow Because by the ancient Laws and Statutes of this Realm made in the Reign of King Edward the third Parliaments are to be held very often your Majesties Humble and Loyal Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled most Humbly do beseech your most Excellent Majesty that it may be declared and Enacted 2 And be it declared and Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that hereafter the sitting and holding of Parliaments shall not be intermitted or discontinued above Three Years at the most but that within three years from and after the Determination of this present Parliament so from time to time within three years after the Determination of and other Parliament or Parliaments or if there be occasion more or oftner Your Majesty your Heirs and Successors do Issue out your Writs for calling Assembling and holding of another Parliament to the end there may be a frequent calling Assembling and holding of Parliaments once in three years at the least Agreeable to these good and wholsome Laws are those gracious Expressions and Promises in His Majesties Proclamation touching the Causes and Reasons of Dissolving the two last Parliaments Dated April 8. 1681. Irregularities in Parliament shall NEVER make us out of love with Parliaments which we look upon as the best Method for healing the distempers of the Kingdom and the only means to preserve the Monarchy in that due Credit and Respect which it ought to have both at home and abroad And for this Cause we are resolved by the blessing of God to have frequent Parliaments And both in and out of Parliament to use OUR UTMOST ENDEAVOURS TO EXTIRPATE POPERY and to Redress all the Grievances of our good Subjects and in all things to Govern according to the
an Author to whom I do not much desire to be beholden Some Senators are drawn from their duties by Pleasure perhaps a party at Tennis Bowles Cards a pack of Dogs a Cock-Fight or a Horse-match a Comedy a Good Fellow or a Mistress And while they are thus employed the Vigilant faction steals a Vote that is worth a Kingdom Some again are so transported with the Vanity of Dress and Language that rather then serve the publick with one hair amiss or in one broken Period they 'l let the publick perish Mallent Rempublicam turbari quam capillos These while their Country lies at Stake are ordering of their heads and Polishing the Phrase shaping the parts of a Set-Speech till it is too late to use it Nothing methinks does less beseem a Grave Assembly then this Facultatula Loquendi this same Rhetorical Twittle-twattle it spins out so much time in tedious Circumstance that it makes a man e'en sick of a good Cause and for the very form prejudge the Reason of it Sloth and Neglect are yet more dangerous in a Senator in regard of Surprizes from the Faction these think a wet day or a cold morning a sufficient discharge of their Attendance and while they are taking t'other Napp or t'other Bottle the Monarch perhaps has lost his Crown or the Subject his Liberty 9. Avoid all those that play the Protestants in Design and are indeed disguised Papists ready to pull off their mask on the first opportunity whenever time serves You may know them by their swaggering for a Popish Successor to maintain the Protestant Religion Their Laughing at the Popish Plot and disgracing the Evidence of it and at the same time affirming without any grounds the reality of a Presbyterian Plot their associating with known Papists and winking at them but eager heats to put the Laws in Execution with the utmost rigour upon Protestant Dissenters These are men whose affection for the Protestant Interest notwithstanding all their fair Speeches may justly be question'd since their practice gives their words the Lye nor will their large pretensions and seeming zeal for the Church of England at all prevail with wise men for we know the Papists themselves when 't is for their Interest will pretend the same thing and speak fair of our Church and rail only upon the Fanaticks when yet in their hearts they hate our Church as much as they do any of the Sects Observe all their Pamphlets the noise is against the Presbyterians and Dissenters but 't is with a design to destroy them first and the Church of England afterwards for when so great a body of Protestants are represented as Disloyal and Dangerous and Crusht and undone the Church of England-men will be left alone and then they hope to deal with them well enough and that this is their aim may be perceiv'd if you observe how zealous the Papists are to stirr up Prosecution against the Dissenters and none more Joyful when it goes on c. Now what 's all this for are they think you indeed and in earnest so very kind to the Church of England for what acqualntance No no 't is all Dissimulation and Roguery a Design which they drive on first to divide and then to ruine us Therefore beware how you chuse any such Tool as they make use of therein The contrary are men that bless God for the most happy discovery of the Hellish Popish Plot and all their wicked shams ever since and would have the bottom thereof fairly searcht into and the Traitors though never so great or potent brought to Condign punishment and in their Conversation zealously direct themselves in an Opposition to the Papal Interest which indeed is a combination against good Sense Reason and Conscience and to Introduce a blind Obedience without if not against Conviction And that Principle which Introduces Implicite Faith and blind Obedience in Religion will also Introduce Implicite Faith and blind Obedience in Government so that it shall be no more the Law in the one than in the other but the will and power of the Superiour that shall be the Rule and Bond of our Subjection this is that fatal mischief Popery brings with it to Civil Society and for which all such Societies ought to beware of it and its friends and Abetters which sure none can be but such who are design'd for Slaves by Nature as well as Fortune debaucht lew'd unthinking Animals properly enough called Tories Silly Servile yet conceited and Cruel Creatures altogether of an Irish understanding 10. As for you Citizens Burgesses and Freemen of Cities and Corporations in particular I shall only say That whoever is not fit to be chosen Knight of the Shire is likewise unfit to be chosen a Burgess Neither let the more specious pretences of any man that shall promise to build you a Town-Hall or Relieve you poor with mony or out of his Adjacent Woods or any such Good-morrows deceive you for if so wherein are you wiser than your Horses whom you catch every day and Clap a Bridle into their mouths only by shewing them a few Oats which they are never like to Eat Even the very Mice are too wise to be taken by an Old Bait but will first have the trap ●ew baited before they 'le meddle And yet I have known a Corporation which has been taken TWICE by the same bait But suppose these men do really perform what they promise what Compensation is that if the same men should lay a good Swinging Tax upon your Estates without any real cause or should give up the very power you have of Taxing yourselves or sending your Representatives in Parliament for one bad Parliament may ruiue us what good would the money for your Poor do in such a case more than that when you are thereby reduced to beggery you might perhaps yourselves the Gentry of the Country having no reason to releive you be forc'd to comein for a small share of this their Hypocrital Charity An excellent Reward for Knavish Folly Neither say Oh! this is but one man and can have but one Vote he will do our Town a great deal of good and can do us but little hurt if he would c. For 1. as I told you before one or two Voices have sometimes carried a Vote of great Importance 2. You know not what mischief your bad example may do in other Corporations and if all should do so what a miserable case would you be in Since the Voices of the Boroughs make two thirds of the House Lastly no man can tell the Influence that one running Talkative Ill-man may get over the rest of the House especially over those that weigh words more than Sense or Reason and the Interest of their Countrey Hitherto we have talked Negatives and described such as are not fit to be Chosen Now we came positively to set before you who are fit for such a Trust especially in such a dangerous Juncture as we are faln into In
thereby appears some of them did come to Church and heard divine Service to save the Penalties in the former Acts and yet continued Papists still in their hearts Therefore by this Act they were all to take the Sacrament once a year And if they refused they should forfeit 20 l. the 1st year for the 2d year 40 l. for every year afterwards 60l untill he or she have received the said Sacrament And by the 4th Section the Church Wardens and Constables are to present the monthly absence of all POPISH Recusants but they are not bound by this Act to present any but Papists For from this Act we may observe that none can be Prosecuted upon this Act or any of the other which it refers to which are all those here before rehearsed unless they be POPISH Recusants for so are the express words of the Act. And without doubt should any busy Officer whatsoever Present ot prosecute any person thereupon other than a Popish Recusant the person so presented may Joyn Issue that he is no such person as these Acts intend being not a Papist So that upon the whole matter we may conclude It is an abuse and utterly Illegall to Prosecute Protestants on such Laws as were made solely and wholly against Papists as will further appear in our next Observation and we have heard some Judges have declared so much However I shall here add the Judgment of the House of Commons in the Case for tho I know and own a vote of either or both Houses cannot Repeal a Law nor alter its sense yet certainly the House consisting of so many wise discreet persons a great number of them Excellently Learned in the Laws they are as like to Interpret a doubtful Law and hit upon the true Interpretation how far and to what it does extend as two or three little swaggering Justices or any single Judge At least were I an Officer I should rather incline to credit their opinion not run an hazard by employing the Toils made for restraining the Wolves and the Foxes to intangle destroy the Innocent sheep meerly because they do not all exactly tread in the very same steps and bite punctually all of one Sort of Grass Sabbati Sexto die Nov. 1680. Resolved Nemine contradicente That it is the opinion of this House That the Acts of Parliament made in the Reigns of Queen Elizabeth and King James against Popish Recusants ought not to be extended against Protestant dissenters And now having discharged these unlawful weapons let 's see what Legal Arms there are or have been really formed against the Sectaries And the first was the very sword of Goliah there was none like it 1. I mean the Act of 35 Eliz. Ca. 1. which some would make us believe has had as many Lives as a Cat intituled An Act to Retain the Queen's Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience This was the first Law that was made since the Reformation against those we commonly called Sectaries Conventiclers or Protestant Dissenters and this Act indeed beyond all dispute was made against them and them only for the Popish Recusants are expresly Excepted out of it as appears by the Act And that the Reader may better judge of the true difference between this Act and those others before recited made against Popish Recusants by the style and expressions I shall here insert the first Paragraph and give you the substance of the rest of it For the preventing and avoiding of such great Inconveniencies and Perils as might happen and grow by the wicked and dangerous practices of seditious Sectaries and disloyal Persons Be it Enacted by the Queen 's most Excellent Majesty and by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same That if any person or persons above the Age of sixteen years which shall obstinately Refuse to Repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common-Prayer to hear Divine Service Established by Her Majesties Laws and Statutes in that behalf made and shall forbear to do the same by the space of one month next after without any lawful cause shall at any time after forty daies next after the End of this Session of Parliament by Printing Writing or Express Words or Speeches advisedly or purposely practise or go about to make or persuade any of Her Majesties Subjects or any other within her Highness's Realms or Dominions to deny withstand and impugn Her Majesties Power and Authority in cases Ecclesiastical United and Annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm or to that end or purpose shall advisedly or maliciously move or persuade any other person whatsoever to forbear or abstain from coming to Church to hear Divine Service or to Receive the Communion according to Her Majesties Laws and Statutes aforesaid or to come to or be present at any unlawful Assemblies Conventicles or Meetings under colour or pretence of any Exercise of Religion contrary to Her Majesties Laws and Statutes or if any person or persons which shall obstinately Refuse to Repair to some Church by the space of one month to hear Divine Service as is aforesaid shall after the said forty daies either of him or themselves or by the Motion Persuasion Inticement or Allurement of any other willingly Joyn in or be present at any such Assemblies Conventicles or Meeting under colour or pretence of any such Exercise of Religion contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm as is aforesaid That then every such person so offending as aforesaid and being thereof lawfully convicted shall be Committed to Prison and there to Remain without Bail or Mainprise until they shall Conform and yield themselves to come to some Church Chapel or usual place of Common-Prayer and hear Divine Service c. Then the Act goes on and provides That if the person do not Conform within three months after Conviction he should Abjure that is be Banisht and swear never to come back without leave And if he will not swear so then the same to be Felony without Benefit of Clergy From which Act these 3 things are observable 1. That the same was wholly intended against the Puritanes or Sectaries for the Papists are expresly exempted by a particular clause Sect. 12. in these words ' Provided that No Popish Recusant or Feme Covert shall be compelled or bound to abjure by vertue of this Act. 2. That Q. Eliz. and her wise Parliament did not intend or take such Protestant Recusants to be within the meaning of or punishable by the other before mentioned Statutes against popish Recusants For if they had so understood they might have punished them sufficiently on those old Laws without giving themselves the trouble of making this new Law against them Frustra fit per plura quod fieri potest per pauciora God and the Law do nothing in vain 3. If it be objected That all those Laws as well as this ought to be construed to one