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A54636 Miscellanea parliamentaria containing presidents 1. of freedom from arrests, 2. of censures : 1. upon such as have wrote books to the dishonour of the Lords or Commons, or to alter the constitution of the government, 2. upon members for misdemeanours, 3. upon persons not members, for contempts and misdemeanours, 4. for misdemeanours in elections ... : with an appendix containing several instances wherein the kings of England have consulted and advised with their parliaments 1. in marriages, 2. peace and war, 3. leagues ... / by William Petyt of the Inner-Temple, Esq. Petyt, William, 1636-1707. 1680 (1680) Wing P1948; ESTC R15174 115,975 326

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in divers Places assembled and required to lend certain sums of Money unto your Majesty and many of them upon their refusal so to do have had an Oath administred unto them not warrantable by the Laws or Statutes of this Realm and have been constrained to become bound to make appearance and give attendance before your Privy Councel and in other Places and others of them have been therefore imprisoned confined and sundry other ways molested and disquieted and divers other Charges have been laid and levied upon your People in several Counties by Lord Lievtenants Deputy Lieutenants Commissioners for Musters Justices of Peace and others by Command or Direction from your Majesty or your Privy Councel against the Laws and free Customs of the Realm And where also by the Statute called the Great Charter of the Liberties of England it is declared and Enacted That no Freeman may be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Freehold or Liberties or his free Customs or be Outlawed or Exiled or in any manner destroyed but by the lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land And in the 28th year of the Reign of K. Edward the III. it was Declared and Enacted by Authority of Parliament That no man of what Estate or Condition that he be should be put out of his Land or Tenements nor taken nor imprisoned nor disinherited nor put to death without being brought to answer by due process of Law Nevertheless against the tenour of the said Statutes and other the good Laws and Statutes of your Realm to that end provided divers of your Subjects have of late been imprisoned without any cause shewed and when for their deliverance they were brought before your Justices by your Majesties Writs of Habeas Corpus there to undergo and receive as the Court shall order and their Keepers commanded to certifie the causes of their detainer no cause was certified but that they were detained by your Majesties special Command signified by the Lords of your Privy Councel and yet were returned back to several Prisons without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer according to the Law And whereas of late great company of Souldiers and Mariners have been dispersed into divers Counties of the Realm and the Inhabitants against their wills have been compelled to receive them into their Houses and there to suffer them to sojourn against the Laws and Customs of this Realm and to the great grievance and vexation of the People And whereas also by Authority of Parliament in the 25th year of the Reign of K. Edward the III. it is Declared and Enacted That no man should be forejudged of Life or Limb against the form of the great Charter and the Law of the Land and by the said great Charter and other the Laws and Statutes of this your Realm no man ought to be adjudged to death but by the Laws established in this your Realm either by the Customs of the same Realm or by Acts of Parliament And whereas no Offendor of what kind soever is exempted from the Proceedings to be used and Punishments to be inflicted by the Laws and Statutes of this your Realm nevertheless of late divers Commissions under your Majesties Great Seal have issued forth by which certain persons have been assigned and appointed Commissioners with Power and Authority to proceed within the Land according to the Justice of the Martial Law against such Souldiers and Mariners or other dissolute persons joyning with them as should commit any Murther Robbery Felony Mutiny or other Outrage or Misdemeanour whatsoever and by such summary Course and Order as is agreeable to Martial Law and as is used in Armies in time of War to proceed to the Tryal and Condemnation of such Offendors and them to cause to be executed and put to death according to the Law Martial By pretext whereof some of your Majesties Subjects have been by some of the said Commissioners put to death when and where if by the Laws and Statutes of the Land they had deserved death by the same Laws and Statutes also they might and by no other ought to have been judged and executed And also sundry grievous Offendors by colour thereof claiming an exemption have escaped the Punishments due to them by the Laws and Statutes of this your Realm by reason that divers of your Officers and Ministers of Justice have unjustly refused or forborn to proceed against such Offendors according to the same Laws and Statutes upon pretence that the said Offendors were punishable only by Martial Law and by Authority of such Commissions as aforesaid which Commissions and all other of like nature are wholly and directly contrary to the said Laws and Statutes of this your Realm They do therefore humbly pray your most Excellent Majesty that no man hereafter be compelled to make or yield any Gift Loan Benevolence Tax or such like Charge without common Consent by Act of Parliament and that none be called to make answer or take such Oath or to give attendance or be confined or otherwise molested or disquieted concerning the same or for refusal thereof and that no Freeman in any such manner as is before mentioned be Imprisoned or Detained And that your Majestie would be pleased to remove the said Souldiers and Mariners and that your People may not be so burthened in time to come And that the foresaid Commissions for proceeding by Martial Law may be revoaked and adnulled And that hereafter no Commissions of like nature may issue forth to any Person or Persons whatsoever to be executed as aforesaid least by colour of them any of your Majesties Subjects be destroyed or put to death contrary to the Laws and Franchises of this Land All which they most Humbly Pray of your most Excellent Majesty as their Rights and Liberties according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm And that your Maiestie would also vouchsafe to declare that the awards doings and proceedings to the prejudice of your People in any of the premisses shall not be drawn hereafter into Consequence or Example and that your Majesty would be also graciously pleased for the further comfort and safety of your People to declare your Royal Will and Pleasure That in the things aforesaid all your Officers and Ministers shall serve you according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm as they tender the Honour of your Majesty and the Prosperity of this Kingdom Which Petition being read the 2d of June 1628. the King's Answer was thus delivered unto it THe King willeth that Right be done according to the Laws and Customs of the Realm and that the Statutes be put in due execution that his Subjects may have no cause to complain of any wrong or oppressions contrary to their just Rights and Liberties to the preservation whereof he holds himself in Conscience as well obliged as of his Prerogative But
our most Christian King in His blessed and famous Purposes and Proceedings to the establishing both of true Christian Religion in this His Church of England and Ireland and of a Christian Policy in the civil State of the same c. and after they granted the Subsidies It is far from my thoughts to delight in raking into the misfortunes of any much less of great men but in all Ages it hath been allowed to publish the Memoirs of ill men to the intent to deter Posterity from acting and committing such Crimes and Offences which we find were severely punished both by God and Men. And whoever will take the pains to run over the ancient Historians and Records of the Kingdom will find that the Troubles in Richard the 1st's time the Barons Wars the Confusions in E. 2 d's time the woful Distractions in the Reign of R. 2. and H. 6. had their source and rise from one grand Cause the extravigant and insufferable Dominion and Power of Minions or Favourites with their Partisans which K. James rightly calls Pests and Vipers of a Common-wealth who notwithstanding their spetious glosses and pretences of Loyalty to the Crown rather then suffer themselves to be questioned and punished by Law for their Arbitrary and Illegal Acts Resolved to run the hazard of and see the ruine and destruction both of Prince and People My Lord Bacon after he was Sentenced in Parliament meeting with Sir Lionel Cranfield after Earl of Middlesex whom King James had then newly made Lord Treasurer My Lord Bacon having first congratulated his advancement to so Eminent a Place of Honour and Trust told him between jest and earnest That he would recommend to his Lordship and in him to all other great Officers of the Crown one considerable Rule to be carefully observed which was to Remember A Parliament will come I do not believe that his Lordship had the Spirit of Divination But certain it is that two years after in the Parliament 21. and 22. of that King the Commons Impeached the Earl for what and what the Judgement was thereupon hear the Record Messuage sent to the Commons by Mr. Serjeant Crew and Mr. Attorney General viz. That the Lords are now ready to give Judgment against the Lord Treasurer if they with their Speaker will come and demand the same Answered They will attend presently The Lords being all in their Robes the Lord Treasurer was brought to the Bar by the Gentleman Usher and the Serjeant at Arms his Lordship made low obeysance and kneeled until the Lord Keeper willed him to stand up The Commons with their Speaker came and the Serjeant attendant on the Speaker presently put down his Mace The Speaker in their Name to this Effect viz. The Knights Citizens and Burgesses in this Parliament assembled heretofore transmitted unto Your Lordships several Offences against the Right Honourable Lionel Earl of Middlesex Lord High Treasurer of England for Bribery Extortion Oppressions and other grievous Misdemeanours committed by his Lordship And now the Commons by me their Speaker demand Judgment against him for the same The Lord Keeper Answered The High-Court of Parliament doth adjudge 1. That Lionel Earl of Middlesex now Lord Treasurer of England shall lose all his Offices which he holds in this Kingdom and shall be made for ever uncapable of any Office Place or Imployment in the State and Commonwealth 2. And that he shall be Imprisoned in the Tower of London during the Kings pleasure 3. And that he shall pay unto our Sovereign Lord the King the Fine of 50000 l. 4. And that he shall never sit in Parliament more 5. And that he shall never come within the Verge of the Court. Ordered That the Kings Councel draw a Bill and present the same to the House to make the Lands of the Earl of Middlesex liable unto his Debts unto the Fine to the King unto Accompts to the King hereafter and to Restitution to such whom he had wronged as shall be allowed of by the House So that the familiar saying of my Lord Coke is very remarkable That no Subject though never so Potent and Subtile ever confronted or justled with the Law of England but the same Law in the end infallibly broke his Neck THE CASE OF George Ferrers Esq IN the Lent Season whilst the Parliament yet continued one George Ferrers Gent. Servant to the King being elect a Burgess for the Town of Plimouth in the County of Devon in going to the Parliament-house was Arrested in London by a Process out of the Kings-Bench at the Suit of one White for the sum of two hundred Marks or thereabouts wherein he was late aforecondemned as a Surety for the Debt of one Welden of Salisbury which Arrest being signified by Sir Thomas Moyle Kt. then Speaker of the Parliament and to the Knights and Burgesses there order was taken that the Serjeant of the Parliament called S. J. should forthwith repair to the Compter in Breadstreet whither the said Ferrers was carried and there to demand delivery of the Prisoner The Serjeant as he had in charge went to the Compter and declared to the Clerks there what he had in commandment But they and other Officers of the City were so far from obeying the said Commandment as after many stout words they forcibly resisted the said Serjeant whereof ensued a Fray within the Compter-gates between the said Ferrers and the said Officers not without hurt of either part so that the Serjeant was driven to defend himself with his Mace of Armes and had the Crown thereof broken by bearing off a stroke and his Man strucken down During this Brawl the Sheriffs of London called Rowland Hill and H. Suckley came thither to whom the Serjeant complained of this injury and required of them the delivery of the said Burgess as afore but they bearing with their Officers made little account either of his Complaint or of his Message rejecting the same contemptuously with much proud language So as the Serjeant was forced to return without the Prisoner and finding the Speaker and all the Knights and Burgesses set in their places declared unto them the whole Cause as it fell out who took the same in so ill part that They all together of whom there was not a few as well of the Kings Privy-Councel as also of his Privy-Chamber would sit no longer without their Burgess but rose up wholly and repaired to the Vpper House where the whole case was declared by the mouth of the Speaker before Sir T. Audley Kt. then Lord Chancellor of England and all the Lords and Judges there assembled who judging the Contempt to be very great referred the punishment thereof to the Order of the Common House They returning to their places again upon new debate of the Case took order that their Serjeant should eftsoon repair to the Sheriffs of London and require delivery of the
must without doubt fall upon them But to return back V. Anno 3 Caroli primi Dr. Manwaring was impeached in Parliament by the Commons for preaching and printing several Sermons with a wicked and malicious intention to seduce and misguide the Conscience of the King touching the observation of the Laws and Customs of this Kingdom and the Rights and Liberties of the Subjects thereof and to incense his Royal Displeasure against his Subjects and to scandalize subvert and impeach ●he good Laws and Government of this Realm and the Authority of the High Court of Parliament to alien his Royal Heart from his People and to cause Jealousies Seditions and Divisions in the Kingdom Whereupon he had Judgment 1. To be imprisoned during pleasure of the House of Lords 2. Was fined a 1000 l. to the King 3. To make such submission and acknowledgment of his Offences in writing both there and at the Bar of the Commons House 4. Suspended for the term of 3 years from exercising the Ministry 5. Fo● ever disabled to preach at Court 6. That he should be for ever disabled to have any Ecclesiastical Dignity or Secular Office 7. That his said Books were worthy to be burnt and that for the better effecting of that his Majesty was to be moved to grant a Proclamation to call them in to be burnt in London and both the Vniversities and to prohibit their Reprinting This was the Judgment of the Lords The Doctor made his submission upon his knees first at the Bar of the House of Lords and after on his knees at the Bar of the House of Commons His Submission was this I do here in all sorrow of heart and true repentance acknowledge those many Errors and Indiscretions which I have committed in preaching and publishing those two Sermons of mine I call Religion and Allegiance and my great fault in falling upon this Theam again and handling the same rashly scandalously and unadvisedly in mine own Parish-Church in St. Giles in the Fields the 4th of May last past I do humbly acknowledge those three Sermons of mine to be full of many dangerous passages and inferences and scandalous aspersions in most parts of the same And I do humbly acknowledge the Justice of this Honourable House in that Sentence and Judgment pass'd upon me for my great offence and I do from the bottom of my heart crave pardon of God the King this Honourable House the Church and the Commonwealth in general and those worthy Persons reflected upon by me in particular for these great Errors and Offences Roger Manwaring After all which the Lords ordered the Bishop of London to suspend him according to the Clause expressed in the part of the Judgment against him The Doctor after got a Pardon and was made a Bishop which occasioned great Disturbances in the House of Commons in 4 Car. 1. The Charge and Articles against the Doctor drawn out of his own Books Article I. 1. That his Majesty is not bound to keep and observe the good Laws and Customs of the Realm concerning the Right and Liberty of the Subject to be exempted from all Loans Taxes and other Aids laid upon them without common Consent in Parliament 2. That his Majesties Will and command in imposing any charges upon his Subjects without such consent doth so far bind them in their consciences that they cannot refuse the same without peril of eternal damnation Article II. 1. That these Refusers had offended against the Law of God 2. Against the Supreme Authority 3. By so doing were become guilty of impiety disloyalty rebellion disobedience and liable to many other Taxes Article III. 1. That Authority of Parliament is not necessary for the raising of Aids and Subsidies 2. That the slow proceedings of such Assemblies are not fit to supply the urgent necessity of the State 3. That Parliaments are apt to produce sundry impediments to the just designs of Princes and to give them occasion of displeasure and discontent It was a saying of Themistius in his Consular Oration to Jovinian the Emperor that Some Bishops did not worship God but the Imperial purple This Dr. as I said before after this so solemn a Judgment did in the time of Prorogation between 3 4 Car. 1. get a Pardon and not only so but the Bishoprick of St. Davids which occasioned great debates and disturbances in the Parliament when they reassembled again the power and validity of his Pardon being brought in question and several times argued but the dissolution of the Parliament put an end to the dispute for that time But in the Parliament before the Long Parliament of 1640. the Lords highly resented it as may appear by following proceedings This day was read the Declaration of the House of Commons made tertio Caroli Regis against Dr. Manwaring since Lord Bishop of St. Davids and likewise the Sentence pronounced against him by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the High Court of Parliament which is committed to the consideration of the Lords of the Grand Committee for Priviledges and it was moved that what can be alledged on the Lord Bishop of St. Davids part either by Pardon License or otherwise that it may be produced and seen at the sitting of the Lords Committees for theirfull and clear understanding and better expedition in the business Having taken into consideration the business concerning Dr. Manwaring it was ordered that upon Munday next the Records be brought into the House that the House may determine the Cause touching Dr. Manwaring The business appointed this day concerning Dr. Manwaring is referred until to morrow morning viz. 28 Aprilis The Lord Keeper by command from his Majesty was to let their Lordships know that his Majesty had understood that there was some question concerning Doctor Manwaring now Bishop of Saint Davids and that his Majesty had given command that the said Dr. Manwaring shall not come and fit in Parliament nor send any Proxy to the Parliament thereupon it was ordered to be entred so And between that and the next Parl. as I am informed he died VI. Anno 3 Caroli primi Dr. Mountague was complained of in the House of Commons for writing and publishing several Tenents tending to Arminianism and Popery and that he had committed a contempt against the House Heli the Priest who teaching from without Corrupted Faith bound under Laws of might Not feeling God but blowing him about In every shape and likeness but the right We are to desire to conform our selves to former Parliaments this Cause began here 21. Jac. and then it was commended to the Archbishop But after it was so far from cure that another Book of Appeal came out and the Parliament 1 Caroli sent to the Archbishop to know what he had done who said he had given Mountague Admonition and yet he Printed that second Book without his consent and so it was then debated and the
Subjects are constrained to travel some twenty some four and twenty miles and more to their exceeding great trouble and charges and to the hazarding of their lives many being driven by reason of their Courts being kept so late in the night by Candle-light to travel home in the night-time what weather soever be And he hath made his own Brother Register and keepeth the Office and Records in his own house and there maketh Acts and altereth them at his own pleasure and hath the most part of the profits of the same to himself as is reported his Brother only bearing the name of the Register but the Chancellor's own men for the most part supplying the Office by reason whereof there is such pilling and polling of the Town and Country continually by exacting new Fees and extorting great sums of Money for Probates of Testaments and Letters of Administrations and by causing men to prove Deeds of Gift in their Courts and to examine Titles of Lands and to prove Wills there also though they have been proved above in the Prerogative Courts and by constraining Widows to give up Accompts of their Administration seven or eight years after their Husbands decease taking five Nobles at the least of every one for the same by refusing of Wills fairly Ingrossed and causing the Registers men to write them out again and so putting the Country to a double charge As also by taking great sums of Money of divers persons for Commuting of Penance and not bestowing it upon charitable uses by Excommunicating of men for being in the company of others standing Excommunicated though they knew not of it and taking excessive Fees for the same by citing men and women to their Courts for trifles and taking eleven groats Fee of every one though they clear themselves by citing some to the Courts in the Churchwardens names without their consent or knowledge by delaying of Causes in the same Courts especially about Assessments for the repair of Churches that it hath cost some Parishes 20 l. 30 l. 40 l. some more some less before they could have an end of it by bringing men to their Courts only upon the Judges suspicion and there tendring the Oath Ex Officio upon refusal whereof they have been Excommunicate whereupon some have been driven to Appeal which hath cost some 2 l. some 10 l. some more to their great impoverishing by citing men and women to their Courts for going to another Parish to hear Gods Word preached when they had no Sermon at their own Parish-Church and taking great Fees for the same by citing men to their Courts for opening their Shop-windows upon a Holiday though it hath been Market-day as it hath been accustomed and making men do Penance and pay Fees for the same and some for taking Money and delivering of Corn upon Holidays and for divers other trivial matters making men to spend some 20 s. 30 s. 40 s. 50 s. some more some less to the great and general grievance of his Majesties poor Subjects whereupon it is a general complaint that it were far better for the Country to give his Majesty an yearly Subsidie then to be thus in continual vexation by the said Doctor Lamb and his Officers under him in so much that there were so many Petitions put up by the Country to the Honourable Sir Edward ●ook Knight sitting as Judge in that Circuit that the said Doctor Lamb was bound to the good behaviour for the same and yet the grievances offered by him are still continued May it therefore please your Honours in tender consideration of the premisses and in a feeling commiseration of the distressed Estate of the said Town and Country by that means to take such speedy course for their relief as to your Wisdoms shall seem most expedient And they and the whole Country shall ever be bound to praise God for your Honours and to pray for your prosperities c. Math. Sillesby Thomas Martin's Grievance 1. Thomas Martin late of Northampton being of the Parish of All Saints was presented into Dr. Lamb's Court by William Harrison and Arthur Smith Church-wardens of St. Giles's Parish both common Drunkards one of them upon Record by the advice and practice of Mr. Stockwell the Proctor upon a Fame that he having in his hand a Capons Rump should ●ay it would make as good a Churchwarden as the Churchwarden of St. Giles's Mr. Martin denyeth that he spake any such words and could never have his Accuser come in and if there were any such Fame themselves raised it in an Ale-house 2. They presented him likewise upon another Fame that the said Mr. Martin should in the Church-Porch of St. Giles's violently thrust upon the Wife of Humphry Hopkins being with Child to the danger of her life or the Childs The ground of this Presentment was this Mr. Bird being presented to the Viccaridge of St. Giles's at his Induction there was an horrible Riot committed in the Church by the means of Mr. Sibthorp as was supposed against Mr. Bird and one base ●ellow tript up Mr. Bird's heels and threatned to kill him if he would not deliver up his Box of Writings Mr. Martin being Mayor was called for by the Constable to come to prevent Murther where he found the Church-Porch full of the basest People of the Parish and going into the Church perhaps some of his Officers might thrust some out of his way but the Woman protesteth that he never did her hurt neither did she say so neither could they perswade her Husband to bring an Action against him at the Common-Law though they often urged him thereto and so they took this course in the Spiritual Court yet the Riotters were never presented into the Spiritual Court because they were Amici Curie Upon these Presentments Mr. Martin was cited to appear at Rowell 10 miles from Northampton 2 years after the pretended Offences but being detained about the King's Service retained a Proctor to appear for him but the Chancellor said it was a matter of Office and therefore would admit no Proctor to appear for him and presently excommunicated him whereupon he was forced to appeal and since hath used all the means he could to have an end of this Business by some Friends who wisht him to yield to the Doctor or else he would weary him out so that he was forced to give him 50 s. and paid also 3 s. 8 d. for his absolution and yet can get no end of it to this day but is in danger to be called again though it hath cost him 10 l. already 3. Also a Sister of the said Mr. Martins dwelling at Leicester and coming to Northampton was desirous to go to St. Giles's Church to hear Mr. Bird preach and requested one of Mr. Martin's Prentices to accompany her to the Church which he did and they both went thither and there staid Divine Service and Sermon For this the Apprentice was cited to the Court and there troubled from
Spoken Lubricum tantum linguae non est ad judicium trahendum say the Civilians And that his Heart did never conceive the least Derogation of any Order of that most Honourable House on the bare intimation of any one Peer that sitteth in the same One passage in his Answer was That Kellwood and especially Kennedy a Man Condemned to Death in Scotland for Forgery are Persons Infamed and their Credits to be Examined before they be admitted as Witnessess against a Peer of the Realm and a Lord Keeper of the Great Seal as he then was At the end of the Paper was Written Recepi 5. Expedii 9 Martii 1625. John Lincoln This Answer was referred to the Committee for Petitions to consider what 's fit to be done for the clearing of the aspersion laid by the Bishop on the Lords Sub-Committees appointed for the Journal Book and what for the relief of Pinckney for those had certified it to be a true Order Notwithstanding he said it was mistaken by the Clerk and had not obeyed it The Committee Report they find two defects in this Answer 1. That he doth not clearly acknowledge his Contempt in not obeying the Order 2. His Aspersing the Lords Sub-Committees by saying it was a mistaken Order when they had certified it a true one Their Opinion is That the Sub Committee be cleared and the Bishop acknowledge it a true Order and signifie to the House that he is sorry he was so mistaken and thereby given just offence to the House and to the Lords of the Sub-Committee then Acknowledge his Error and ask their pardon so Ordered May it please your most Honourable Lordships YOur Lordships having resolved the order touching Pinkney of the 28 of May 1624. To be an Order of that Most Honourable House truly and justly entered I do most willingly accknowledge as much and am very sorry that through a weak memory and information of some parties interessed who pretendded to have serached the Clerks Book the 29 of May 1624. And to have found there at that day no ground at all for any such Order I have had in my thoughts some scruples to the contrary to the offending of the most Honourable House or any one of the Lords of the Sub-Committee who as I now understand have Subscribed the said Order And I do Humbly desire your most Honourable Lordships in General and those Noble Lords in Particular to Pardon the Errour I have herein committed and I shall pray unto God to bless and prosper your most Honourable Lordships John Lincoln Which Acknowledgment their Lordships all accepted in full satisfaction from the said Lord Bishop XIV Ordered Ensign Reynde to be sent for and brought up as a Prisoner before the Lords to answer a high Contempt against the Parliament The Witnesses who have informed thereof are to be required to attend when Reynde comes Ordered the Serjeant at Arms to make such and so many Deputies for the apprehension of Henry Reynde as the Lord Say shall appoint and his Captain to be warned to bring him hither by a day These men were sworn touching the Information against Henry Reynde Ensign-Bearer to the Souldiers at Banbury viz. George Phillips Obadiah Lord. John Hayns John Hele. And being examined did testifie the insolent and opprobrious Speeches spoken by the said Ensign Reynde against a Peer of the Realm and his contempt of this High Court of Parliament The Lords considering that the said Reynde was by Order of this House sent for by the Serjeant the 27th of May and could not be found but yet came early one Morning to the Clerks Office to understand whether any other cause of Complaint was against him save the Information of those opprobrious Speeches and instantly departed and ever since hides his head Their Lordships Order Elvenston his Captain to be sent for to be here to morrow Morning And the Duke of Buckingham did declare his opinion that the said Reynde deserved a severe censure and promised to the House to lay all the Ports for him and if he can be found or shall ever come into the Army he will cause him to be sent to receive such censure as shall be agreed on against him Captain Elvenston being called before the Lords did affirm that he had not seen his Ensign Henry Reynde this Fortnight and thinks he is not in Town He was commanded to bring him to the House whensoever he shall find him and so soon as he shall understand where he is to inform the House thereof The Lords taking into consideration that Henry Reynde will not be found and Resolving to proceed to a censure against him for his Ignominious Speeches of the Parliament and of the Lord Say they first voted and adjudged him unworthy to bear Arms hereafter or to be accompted a Souldier Then their Lordships propounded divers other parts of a Censure against him but the Duke of Buckingham coming in before the Conclusion thereof his Grace told their Lordships that the said Reynde is now found Whereupon it was Ordered the said Reynde to be brought hither to morrow Morning The Duke of Buckingham excused himself for not bringing of Reynde to his answer according to his promise for that he shifts his Lodging every night but promised again to do his best to bring him to morrow Morning Ordered If Reynde do not appear here to morrow Morning then to proceed against him in the censure The Lords were put in mind of their Order yesterday if Reynde were not brought this Morning to proceed to sentence against him notwithstanding Whereupon the Duke of Buckingham signified unto their Lordships with what care and industry he had endeavoured to bring the said Reynde before their Lordships but he is so apprehensive of their censure which he deserves that he cannot be found Yet his Grace said he doubted not but to bring him to morrow Morning and desired their Lordships to proceed notwithstanding now in their sentence against him and with the more severity because he had so often deceived his Grace The sentence of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament assembled against Henry Reynde Ensign-bearer to the Band of Soldiers Billetted in Banbury for the Ignominious Speeches uttered by the said Reynde against the said Lord Say and Seal And for his contempt of this High Court of Parliament which sentence was this day pronounced against him by the Lord Keeper viz. 1. He the said Henry Reynde is never to bear Arms hereafter but is accompted unworthy to be a Souldier 2. He is to be Imprisoned during pleasure 3. He is to stand under the Pillory with Papers on his Head shewing his Offence at Cheapside London and at Banbury 4. That he is to be Fined at 200 l. unto the King 5. He is to ask forgiveness here of all the Lords of Parliament in general and of the Lord
ꝑ bouche devant nostre dit Seignior le Roy en plein Parlement st feust entrée en Rolle de Parlement de mot a mot en null autre maniere ꝑ ascun voie que le request lour estoit octroiez de quel Cedule issint leverée le tenure sensuit de mot a mot 38. Anno 28 E. 1. A Truce being concluded between the English and French by King Edward's Ambassadors who therein had dishonourably agreed to include the Scots the Ambassadors at the ensuing Parliament were sharply rebuked and corrected not only by the King himself the Prelates and Nobles but by the Commons But to take away exceptions let the Record speak Treugae initae inter Angliae Franciae Reges per eorum procuratores Nuncios Anno gratiae 1031. pro quibus dicti Nuncii Regis Angliae Reprehensi fuerunt non solum per ipsum Regem Praelatos Nobiles sed etiam Communitatem Regni praedicti pro eo quod promiserunt Regem Gentes Scotiae includi in Treugis ex parte Francorum Regis ex parte confederationis prius initae inter Francorum Scotorum Reges praedictos 39. Anno 12 E. 2 A War being between England and France the Pope sent two Cardinals to conclude a Truce between the two Crowns Whereupon King Edward declares Nos pro eo quod Praelatis Proceribus ac Magnatibus Regni nostri necnon Confederatis nostris quorum interest inconsultis dicte Treugae tunc assentire non poteramus Parliamentum nostrum apud westmonast in Crastino purificationis beate Mariae Virginis ultimo preterito mandaverimus convocari ut tam ipsorum Praelatorum Procerum ac Communitatum dicti Regni nostri quam Confederatorum nostrorum praedictorum habere possemus de liberationem quid agendum foret consultius in hac parte c. And afterwards the Record says Nos habita in dicto Parliamento cum Praelatis Proceribus ac Communitatibus Regni nostri praedictis necnon cum Nunciis ad nos de dictis confederatis nostris accedentibus super hiis deliberatione pleniori licet consideratis qualitate temporis jam currentis facti circumstantiis nobis ipsis visum fuerit periculosum fore multipliciter dampnosum aliquam cessationem seu dilationem ulterius concedere c. Had we had left us the Parliament Rolls of H. 3. E. 1. E 2. and some in E. 3. which are destroyed or lost Truth to which all owe a submission would have more plainly appear'd A QUERE touching the Parliament of Scotland WHat the Constituent parts of the Commune Consilium or Parliament of Scotland was in the time of our King E. 1. near 400 years since and why not the same before is amongst other Authorities proved as I conceive by a grand Record in the Tower of London which declares that the League between the Scotch and French was ratified and confirmed Inter ipsum Francorum Regem em una parte dictum Dominum Johannem de Balliolo ac Prealatos Nobiles ac Universitates Communitates Civitatum Villarum dicti Regni Scotiae pro ipsis eorum Haeredibus Successoribus ex altera Et etiam ad includendum dictum Dominum Johannem caeteros omnes terrae Scotiae predictos in Treugis inter dictos Angliae Franciae Reges initis proipsis eorum Heredibus subditis confederatis ad fines infrascriptos A Query may arise from this Record If the Tenants in capite only compounded and made the Parliament of that Kingdom in former Ages as some hold The Query is this Whether all Prelates Noblemen Universities and Communities of Cities and Towns of Scotland held of the Scotish King in capite Tempore E. 1. For if they held of any other or of him otherwise then in capite How could the Tenants in capite be the only Members of the Parliament according to the exact Enumeration of the constituent Parts mentioned and set down in this great Record which tells us that the League was made 1. On the one part between the King of France 2. On the other part between 1. John Balliol who was then King 2. The Prelates 3. The Nobles 4. The Universities and Communities of the Cities and Towns of the Kingdom of Scotland 5. And that for themselves 6. And for their Heirs and Successors The late proceedings touching Ship-money declared unlawful and all Records and Process concerning the same made void WHereas divers Writs of late time issued under the Oreat Seal of England commonly called Ship-writs for the charging of the Port-Towns Cities Boroughs and Counties of this Realm respectively to provide and furnish certain Ships for His Majesties Service And whereas upon the Execution of the same Writs and returns of Certioraries thereupon made and the sending of the same by Mittimus into the Court of Exchequer Process hath been thence made against sundry Persons pretended to be charged by way of Contribution for the making up of certain Sums assessed for the providing of the said Ships And in especial in Easter-Term in the thirteenth Year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord the King that now is a Writ of Scire facias was awarded out of the Court of Exchequer to the then Sheriff of Buckinghamshire against John Hampden Esq to appear and shew cause why he would not be charged with a certain Sum so assessed upon him Upon whose Appearance and demurer to the Proceedings therein the Barons of the Exchequer adjourned the same Case in the Exchequer-Chamber where it was solemnly argued divers days and at length it was there agréed by the greater part of all Justices of the Courts of Kings-Bench and Common-Pleas and of the Barons of the Exchequer there assembled that the said John Hampden should be charged with the said Sum so aforesaid assessed on him The main grounds and reasons of the said Justices and Barons so agreed being That when the good and safety of the Kingdom in general is concern'd and the whole Kingdom in danger then the King might by writ under the Great Seal of England command all the Subjects of this his Kingdom at their charge to provide and furnish such manner of Ships with Men Victuals and Munition and for such time as the King should think fit for the defence and safe-guard of the Kingdom from such Danger and Peril and that by Law the King might compel the doing thereof in case of refusal or refractoriness and that the King is the sole Judge both of the Danger and when and how the same is to be prevented and avoided According to which grounds and reasons all the Justices of Kings-bench and Common-Pleas and the said Barons of the Exchequer having been formerly consulted with by His Majesties Command had set their hands to an extrajudicial Opinion expressed to the same purpose which Opinion with their Names thereunto was also by His
constructions and purposes as well concerning marriage heretofore made by any of the Ecclesiastical or Spiritual persons aforesaid as also such which hereafter shall be duly and lawfully had celebrate and made betwixt the persons which by the Laws of God may lawfully marry Lastly Knighton one of our best and most exactest Historians tells posterity the ancient ends of calling Parliaments in the Speeches made by Tho. de Woodstock Duke of Gloucester the Kings Uncle and Tho. de Arundel Bishop of Ely to King Richard 2d at Eltham in the 12th year of his Reign in the name of the whole Parliament then sitting at Westminster wherein the said Delegates do put that King in mind Quod ex antiquo Statuto Consuetudine laudabili approbata c. saith the Historian That by ancient Statute and Custom laudable and approved which no man could deny the King may once in the year convene his Lords and Commons to his Court of Parliament as to the highest Court of the whole Realm In qua omnis equitas relucere deberet absque qualibet scrupulositate vel nota tanquam Sol in ascensu meridiei ubi pauperes divites pro refrigerio tranquilitatis pacis repulsione injuriarum refugium infallibile querere possent ac etiam Errata Regni reformare de statu gubernatione Regis Regni cum sapientiori Concilio tractare ut Inimici Regis Regni intrinseci hostes extrinseci destruantur repellantur qualiter quoque onera incumbentia Regi Regno levius ad Ediam Communitatis suportari poterunt In which Court say they all equity ought to shine forth without the least Cloud or shadow like the Sun in his Meridian glory where poor and rich refreshed with peace and ease of their oppressions may always find infallible and sure refuge and succour the grievances of the Kingdom redress'd and the state of the King and government of the Realm debated with wiser Counsels the Domestick and Foreign Enemies of the King and Kingdom destroyed and repelled and to consider how the charges and burthens of both may be sustained with more ease to the people Saturday the 18. of March A further Order against Mr. Hall Hall's Retractation to be referred to a certain Committee The Committee to Report Hall's Retractation at the next Session of Parliament Anno 27 Eliz. Jour Dom. Com. Saturday 12 December Contempt in a Member The Serjeant to give warning to Mr. Hall tu attend the House Monday the 21 November Anno 29 Eliz. An. Dom. 1586 Mr. Markham's Complaint against Mr. Hall That he being for ever disabled to be a Member of the House had notwithstanding brought his Writ against the Inhabitants of Grantham for his Wages Who pray the advice and order of the House Friday the 2d of December Referred to a Committee With directions if they think good to move the Lord Chancellor to stay the granting of further Process against the Burrough Tuesday the 21. of March The Ld. Chancellor at the request of the Committee stays further Process against Grantham Mr. Hall frankly remits his Wages to the Burrough of Grantham Ex Journ Dom. Com. Judgment The like President An. 3 Car. 1. Vid. Journ Dom. Com. Journ Dom. Proc. Com. The Bishop of Bristol's Case Ex Journ Dom. Proc. Com. 7 Jac. The Case of Dr. Cowell Men despise and reproach those things whereof they are ignorant It is a desperate and dangerous matter for Civilians and Canonists I speak what I know and not without just cause to write either of our Common Laws of England which they profess not or against them which they know not But their Pages are so full of palpable Errors and gross Mistakings as these new Authors are out of our Charity and their Books out of our Judgment cast away unanswered Coke lib. 10. Lectori Blackwood's Case Jour Dom. Com. Nota. E contra Vide the ancient Rights of the Commons of England asserted or a discourse proving by Records and the best Historians that the Commons of England were ever an essential part of Parliament The Power of Kings in particular of the Kings of England learnedly asserted by Sir Robert Filmer Kt. fol. 1. Printed An. Dom. 1680. King James's first Speech to his first Parliament in England Pulton's Stat. 1 Jac. cap. 2. fol. 1157. King Charles the I. Declaration to all his loving Subjects published with the Advice of his Privy Councel Exact Collections of Declarations pag. 28 29. Journ Dom. Com. Dr. Manwaring's Case Juratores praesentant quod Richardus Empson nuper de London miles nuper Consiliarius excellentissimi Principis Henrici nuper Regis Angl. 17. die Maii Anno Regni dicti nuper Regis 12. diversis vicibus antea postea apud London in Parochia sanctae Brigettae in Warda de Farrington extra Deum prae oculis non habens sed ut filius diabolicus subtiliter imaginans honorem dignitatem prosperitatem dicti nuper Regis ac prosperitatem Regni sui Angliae minime valere sed ut ipse magis singulares favores dicti nuper Regis adhiberet unde magnat fieri potuisset ac totum Regnum Angliae secundum ejus voluntatem gubernaret falso deceptivè proditoriè legem Angliae subvertens diversos ligeos ipsius nuper Regis ex sua falsa covina subtili ingenio contra communem legem Regni Angliae Anderson's 1. Rep. fol. 156. Vide Rushworth ' s Collections fo Judgment against the Doctor Journ Dom. Procerum The Doctor 's Submission Ex Agupeto Diacono Assentatores à Regibus tanquam pestis vitandi 12. nam non utilia consulunt sed quae placent 22. 31. sic Diogenes rogatus quaenam bellua perniciosissime morderet ex feris inquitobtrectator ex cicuribus vero adulator The Lords order the Bishop of London to suspend the Doctor Journ Dom. Proc. die Sabbathi 18 die April 16 Car. 1 21 April 1640. 27 April 1640 28 April 1640. Journ Dom. Com. 3 Car. 1. Dr. Mountague's Case * The Dr. Writ and Published several Tenents tending to Arminianism and Popery * Lord Brook friend to Sir Phillip Sidney in his Alaham. Had done a contempt to the Commons and distrubed the Nation 1 Car. Voted 2 Car. resolved by that Parliament that he had Sowen Sedition And endeavoured to reconcile us to Rome Articles against Mountague Campanella de Monar Hispan Jour Dom. Com. Anno. 27 Eliz. Dr. Parry's Case Journ Dom. Com. 18 Jac. Sir Giles Mompesson's Case Journ Dom. Proc. 18 Jac. The Lords Judgment againw him * Journ Dom. Com. 19 Jac. Sir John Bennet ' s Case Illos extollimus qui fraudibus ac dolis divites facti sunt eos patres legum Justitiae fontes sapientiaeque thesauros appellantes O inconcussa Dei justitia quamdiu haec pateris ab horum igitur scholis in quibus non sat scio an de veritatis inventione an potius de lucri spe major sit disceptatio prodeunt Judices