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A54696 Ursa major & minor, or, A sober and impartial enquiry into those pretended fears and jealousies of popery and arbitrary power with some things offered to consideration touching His Majestie's league made with the King of France upon occasion of his wars with Holland and the United Provinces : in a letter written to a learned friend. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1681 (1681) Wing P2019A; Wing U141_CANCELLED; ESTC R23216 69,552 56

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Nations who were the Mediators for Peace at Cologne emboldened by our home Divisions and want of Supplies lengthened it self beyond all Expectation And hath notwithstanding in the Interim by his Protections Royal and many other Cares taken done as much as he could to keep the Bankers from Arrests Imprisonments and other Ruines impendant often happening and falling upon Men indebted Although if Reports and the Laments of some that were concerned be not much mistaken a great part of that Money was belonging to many of his own Servants who by his Bounty and Places of Profit under him had easily gained it and many of those who so heavily complained of that detention of their Moneys had for their own advantages intrusted it to the Bankers who by an Imaginary Credit far exceeding their own Estates furnishing one man with another man's Money and paying out that which was but the same day or a little before come in had inticed a great part of the Money of the Nation into their hands And some if not many of the Owners did well enough understand that they did not only furnish them and their Credits upon all Emergent occasions of Profit or Accommodation by that kind of alluring much of the Money of the Nation into their Custody but his Majesty also at an high and intollerable Usury which if a strict enquiry were made by His Majesty or Order of Parliament of the particular Owners of the Money brought into the Exchequer by the Bankers and from thence borrowed and made use of by his Majesty upon his Publick and most urgent Affairs would plainly appear And it will be as manifest that he afterwards gave no respite to his Royal Cares and Intentions of Repaying it with the Legal or as much Interest as the Bankers were to pay for it And finding that the Fee Farm Rents amounting unto Seventy thousand pounds per annum sold at Sixteen years Purchase which nothing but a grand Necessity could enforce him to Alien for that many of them being the Tenths were by two several Acts of Parliament annexed to the Imperial Crown of England for the maintenance thereof and were as so many Ties and Obligations which made the Owners of these Lands to be dependant upon the Crown would not reach to a Satisfaction of his other Debts and Expences which having been longer due were more importunate than those of the Bankers did lately in a Speech to the Lords and Commons in Parliament make it his earnest Request that they would take the Necessity and speedy Payment of the Bankers into their Considerations And when nothing of help could be obtain'd for that purpose did by his Letters Patents under his great Seal with great difficulty and hardship order a part of his burdened Revenue to be assigned for the due and orderly payment of the Interest until the Principal Moneys should be justly satisfied and paid So as his doings therein or making use of that Money if impartially and judiciously weighed in the Ballance of Truth and Judgment is not to be called a seizure or forcible taking of the Bankers Money or to be ranked either as to the necessity or the thing it self or the number of the persons concerned with what King Edward the First a Wise and Prudent Prince did do when he in the 22 year of his Reign seized into his hands upon occasion of supplying the Publick Necessities all the Wools in the Kingdom as the Merchants were lading them in the Ports giving them Security for Payment at his own Rates and a long day and a short price and transported them to his own best and readiest Sale and at another time upon a like necessity seized all the Pope's Moneys which had been Collected for him by the Clergy of England amounting to very great Sums of Money towards the Wars of the Holy Land gave Protections to those that had the Custody of it and retain'd and made use of it for his then pressing Publick Affairs two years and more notwithstanding that the Pope had in the mean time sent unto him then hugely formidable threatning Bulls and Letters for it Or the like done by King Edward the Third in the 12 th year of his Reign with all the Tynne or with what King Henry the 6 th did by way of Purveyance of great Store of Grain and Corn and transporting it into Gascony where it was very dear or by Queen Elizabeth of a great deal of Beer Transported and sold to her use beyond the Seas and by defraying a great part of the Charges of her Wars in Ireland with Moneys Coined of Tynne with a promise to make a Satisfaction for it with Moneys made of Silver which was justly performed by her and King James her Learned Successor Concerning all which matters fears and jealousies I can be confident your Sentiments and mine will so little disagree as your Judgment of the Ages past and observations of the rise and progress of our late Troubles and Miseries which brought the greatest Shame and Scandal to the Protestant Religion profest in England and Scotland that ever it had or could have laid upon it and cast an unhappy Reflection upon those that were in the parts beyond the Seas will not refuse me your Company in the Opinion of a Truth so experimented that the fruit of all those Artifices rather than any just cause of any such fears or apprehensions have yielded no better Effects than the Ruine and Confusion of the former Glory and Honour of our Nation by setting up a Rebellious part of the People the Offspring as to some of their Levelling Principles of Wat Tiler and Jack Cade to undo and Rule over the better sort of the People and the Poor to Plunder and rob the Rich. And that therefore they which have been the cause of so many Mischiefs and Evils which their and our Seri Nepotes will have reason enough bitterly to bewail and without God's great Mercy will scarcely live to see eradicated ought better to consult their Conscience the Precepts and Examples of Wisdom Salus Populi Interest of the Kingdom and Honour of the King and Nation and abandoning their former Follies and false Lights which led them and their partakers into so great Sins and made them to be the Causes of so many National Miseries not run themselves and others into the fear of one or two incertain Evils but an Hundred which will be most certain and can never be recalled And I cannot but assure my self that you will be ready to conclude with me that there is no Rational or just Cause of Fear that we can have by any Infection contracted from the now Laws and manner of Government of France under His most Christian Majesty For until their Civil and Intestine Wars and Ill Usage of Charles the Fifth and Charles the Seventh their Kings in their greatest Distresses that Nation had Liberties more than at present they have or are likely to enjoy And that our
perswade her or her Learned Successor notwithstanding the Horrid design of the Gunpowder Treason against him and his Posterity and the wiser as they should be and better part of his Subjects Assembled in Parliament to be more than prudentially rigorous to that Party whose Friends in other Countries might retalliate any Severity used to theirs And although she made some fierce and smart Laws to affright those that called themselves Catholicks for principles inconsistent with the Safety of her Soveraignty and its Government which in all these Acts of Parliament appeared to be more against the Emissaries from Rome which came to Seduce and lead them into such dangerous Errors than to forbid any thing that was Innocent in the private Devotions religious and practical part of it that Great Queen and King well understanding that they could not by any Rules of State Justice or Modesty of which Princes when there is not so great Inequality as to give them an absolute Dominion over one another are usually very tender require any Ease or Liberties for Protestants living under other Princes and their Laws when they can neither promise or perform Mutualities or Reciprocations And therefore the Learned King James when the House of Commons in Parliament had Petitioned him to give some stop to the growth of Popery one Cause whereof they assigned to be the Interposition of Foreign Princes Embassadors and Agents in favour of Papists Answered That they might rest secure that he would never be weary to do all he could for the Propagation of the Protestant Religion and Suppression of Popery but the manner and form they were to remit to his Care and Providence who could best consider of times and seasons but his Care of Religion must be such as on the one part he must not by the hot Persecution of our Recusants at home irritate Foreign Princes of a contrary Religion and teach them a way to plague the Protestants in their Dominions with whom he daily interceeded and at that time principally for ease to them of our Profession that live under them And in the 21 th year of his Reign in a Speech which he made in Parliament declared to the Lords and Commons That it was true that at times for Reasons best known to himself he did not so fully put Laws in Execution against Recusants but did wink and connive at some things which might have hindred more weighty Affairs But he did never in all his Treaties agree to any thing to the overthrow and dissolution of those Laws but had in all a chief care of the preservation of that truth which he ever professed for as it was a good Horseman's part not always to use his Spurs and keep strait the Reins but sometime to suffer the Reins to be more remiss So it was the part of a Wise King and his Age and Experience in Government had informed him sometimes to quicken the Laws with Executions and at other times upon just Occasions to be more remiss But as God shall Judge him he never thought or meant nor ever in any word expressed any thing that savoured of it and prayed them to root out Jealousies which were the greatest Weeds in their Garden For certainly to Consiseate two parts of three of a Papist's Lands or disinherit the next Heir if bred up in that Religion can never amount to the avail of Protestants in Transilvania Hungary Bohemia Silesia Moravia Poland Upper or Lower Austria Piedmont Flanders Brabant and the rest of the Belgick Provinces nor under those which were United and Confederate the Hause-Towns Bearne and some other of the Cantons of Switzerland and the bad enough already used Multitudes of Huguenots in France Nor can the Persecution or destroying of the greater part of the Protestants beyond the Seas to gratifie the humerous pretences and causeless fears of the more Imprudent and lesser part of the Protestants of England be by any rule of right reason adjudged to be for the Protestant Interest And upon the like advice and reason may our fears of any Invasion upon our Properties and just Rights disappear and vanish as soon as they shall with any eye of Judgment be but looked upon nor will ever be able to endure the touchstone of Truth when our Liberties are so Impregnable and fortified by very many of our good Laws and Liberties and by our Magna Charta and Charters de Foresta more than Thirty times confirmed by Acts of Parliament for those great Charters were never singly or by themselves so many times confirmed by Acts of Parliament When by that excellent Law and Charter freely granted in the Ninth year of the Reign of King Hen. 3. No Freeman may be taken or Imprisoned or be disseised of his freehold Liberties or free Customs be Outlawed or Exiled or in any manner destroyed but by the lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land no man shall be amerced for a small fault or if for a greater saving to him his Contenement and a Merchant saving to him his Merchandize Earls and Barons shall not be amerced but by their Peers the King will not sell deny or defer any Man either Justice or Right No Man of the Church shall be amerced after the quantity of his Spiritual benefit but after the quantity of his Lay-tenement and the quantity of his Offence and a Villain shall not be amerced but saving his Wainage and that all things done to the contrary shall be void Sureties or Pledges shall not be Charged for any Debts of the King if the Debtor hath Goods and Chattels to pay the Debt and is ready to pay None shall be Distreined for more Service than is due Common Pleas shall not follow the King 's Court. Those that do commit Redisseisin shall be Imprisoned and not delivered without special Commandment of the King and shall make Fine to the King for the Trespass By an Act of Parliament made in the Third year of King Edward the First none shall be attached by any occasion nor fore-judged of life or limb nor his Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels seised into the King's hands against the form of the Great Charter and the Law of the Land No City Burrough or Town nor any Man shall be amerced without reasonable Cause and according to the quantity of his Trespass that is to say every Freeman saving his Free-hold and Merchant saving his Merchandize a Villain saving his Gainure and that by his or their Peers By an Act of Parliament made in the 25th year of his Reign The King will take no Aids or Prizes but by the Common consent of the Realm saving the ancient Aids and Prizes due and accustomed Aids and Taxes granted to the King shall not be taken for a Custom No Officer of the King by themselves or any other shall maintain Pleas Suits or Matters hanging in the King's Court for Lands Tenements or other things to
have in the making of other Laws from time to time been careful upon all occasions to erect and build to help to guard and protect their Liberties Rights and Priviledges together with the very great care which the Judges restraining all non obstantes of Acts of Parliament and Regal Dispensations unto what the Law allows or to the King 's particular Concernments do take in all their Judgments and Decisions Expositions Applications and Interpretations of Laws to assist and support the just Rights and Proprieties of the Subjects in their Lands and Estates and not in the least to prejudice them in their Common Assurances by Fines and Common Recoveries The Severity used by divers of our Kings in the Punishment of Briberies Extortions or Byassed and Illegal flattering Opinions of Judges The Oaths of the Lords and others of the King 's Privy Council who are usually the Greatest Noble and most concerned Men of Estate and Interest of the Nation Oath of the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England well and truly to serve the King and his People and to do right to all manner of People according to the Law and Usages of the Realm Oaths of the Judges to do equal Law and execution of Right to all the King's Subjects rich and poor without having regard to any Person to deny no man Common Right by the King's Letters nor none other Mans nor for none other Cause Oaths of the King's Serjeants at Law well and truly to serve him and his People and as duly and hastily speed such Matters as any Man shall have against the King in the Law as they may lawfully do without delay or tarrying the Party for his lawful Process The Oaths of other Serjeants at Law well and truly to serve the King and his People and truly Counsel them Oaths of the Justices of Peace to do equal right to the Poor as to the Rich after the Laws and Customs of the Realm and Statutes thereof made Oaths of the Sheriffs to do right to Poor as well as Rich in all that belongeth to their Office to disturb no Man's Right nor to do wrong to any Man And the Oaths of the Escheators Clerks of the Chancery and Coroners with the Oaths of the Officers of Courts Under-Sheriffs and Bailiffs well and to execute Justice All which several Degrees of Men in the Nation would be as unwilling as any others to have the Lives Liberties and Estates of themselves and their Posterities or dearest Relations sacrificed to a lawless and unlimitted Power of their Kings and Princes And the Oaths of our Kings at their several Coronations to conserve the Liberties of the People and observe all the good Laws made by their Royal Progenitors and Predecessors with the Impossibility that ever the Lords and Commons in Parliament Assembled will consent to the abrogating of any of the aforesaid Laws and reasonable Customs be felones de se or deliver up themselves and their Posterities to the absolute Will and Pleasure of their Succeeding Kings and Princes may abundantly evidence how safely and securely the Property and Liberties of the People until Rebellion foolishly fancied Fears and Jealousies with their Discords distrust and plundering of one another shall put them under such another yoke as Oliver Cromwell had cheated them into may rest and are like inviolably to continue for ever protected against any the Incroachments of Arbitrary Power whilst they live under their King 's ancient Government Of which His late Majesty was so careful and so willing to dislodge all manner of Jealousies out of the Minds of his Subjects as he did in the Third year of his Reign give his Royal Assent as they call'd it unto their Petition of Right and made it an Act of Parliament wherein he not only Confirmed their Magna Charta and Charta Forestoe but the Act of Parliament assented unto by King Edward the First De Tallagio non Concedendo The Act of Parliament made in the First year of the Reign of King Edward the Third cap. 6. The Act of Parliament made in the 25 th year of the Reign of the aforesaid King That no Man should be compelled to make any Loans to the King against his will The Statutes of the 28 E. 3. ca. 3. 37 E. 3. ca. 18. 38 E. 3. ca. 9. 42 E. 3. ca. 3. 11 R. 2. ca. 9. 17 R. 2. ca. 6. and 1 R. 3. ca. 2. Charged all his Officers and Ministers to serve him according to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm as they tendered the Honour of his Majesty and the Prosperity of the Kingdom Banished as he hoped for ever all their Fears of the Infringing of their Liberties and given cause of Content to them and that Parliament to such a satiety such a fulness and nè plus ultra as unless they would have been Consortes Imperii and require to have a share in his Regality and Government there was no more to be asked or requested of him or granted by him Imprisoned shortly after in the Tower of London John Earl of Clare and the greatly Learned Selden for but having Copies in their Custody of some Florentine and Foreign Laws and Customs proposed by Sir Robert Dudley a Titular Duke of Tuscany to be imitated by him here in England as a means to raise Money by Impositions laid upon the People and caused his Attorney General to exhibit a Bill against them in the Star-Chamber for Disquieting his Subjects with Fears and Jealousies And was so ready from time to time to Condescend to their Infirmities and give Satisfaction to them in all their Concerns and Scruples as he suffered those two great Cases of the Habeas Corpus and the Ship Money wherein his necessary Prerogative for the good of himself and his People was not a little concerned to be publickly and solemnly argued in the Course and Method of the Laws in foro Contradictorio before the Judges and shewed no displeasure afterwards but much kindness unto Justice Hutton and Justice Croke who in the Case of the Ship Money had in their Arguments and Opinions delivered thereupon against him in the Exchequer Chamber dissented from all the rest and greater number of the Judges And His now Royal Majesty treading the good old Paths of Queen Elizabeth his Grandfather King James and his Royal Father doth in all Matters of difficulty in the absence of Parliaments where the Laws and Justice of the Nation are likely to be more than ordinarily concerned consult and advise with the Judges hath not long ago Superseded one of them for some harsh usage and discontent given to the Countrey in his Circuits and takes all the care he can to choose and make Judges and his Learned Council at the Law out of the most able honest experienced and eminent practisers of it and hath but lately in several of his Speeches in Parliament declared and promised that he would give his consent unto any good Laws
England by Inheritance And their mutual Rancors and Displeasures with the grand Contests of them and their Parties to procure the Statutes of Articuli super Chartas de Tallagio non Concedendo were not healed without the Aids and Subsidies of his People The mis-government and mis-leading of King Edward the Second by his several Favorites Peirce Gaveston and the Spencers did not hinder him from the Supplies of his People King Edward the Third after a fifteenth of the Temporalty a twentieth part of the Goods of the Cities and Burroughs and a tenth of the Clergy granted unto him by Parliament in the Eighth year of his Reign having consumed much Treasure in his Wars made for the Kingdom of France which he claimed as his Inheritance wherein the English Nation more than for the Grandeur and Honour of their Prince were not much concerned but were jealous until an Act or Declaration of the King in Parliament was procured to the contrary that the Conquest of France might have caused England to have been afterwards dependant upon that greater Crown and Kingdom was notwithstanding the seizure and taking into his hands the Goods and Estates of three Orders of Monks viz. The Lombards Cluniacks and Cistertians and all the Treasure committed to the Custody of the Churches through England for the Holy War forced to revoke divers Assignations made for Payment of Moneys though he had received Three Millions of Crowns of Gold for the Ransom of John King of France whom his Son the Black Prince had taken Prisoner and was not put to lose any of his Honour Friends Estate or Interest for want of the necessary Assistance of his Subjects who for the maintenance of those and other his Wars were howsoever well content to give him half of the Laieties Wool and a whole of the Clergies and at another time the ninth Sheaf the ninth Fleece and ninth Lamb for two years and after many other Taxes and Aids granted in several Parliaments of his Reign and a Commission sent into every Shire to enquire of the value of every man's Estate The Treasure of the Nation being much exhausted found the People so willing to undergo that and other Burdens which those successful Wars had brought upon them as the Ladies and Gentlewomen did willingly Sacrifice their Jewels to the Payment of his Souldiers That Unfortunate Prince Richard the Second his Grandchild tossed and perplexed with the Greatness Ambition and Factions of his Uncles and the subtil underminings of John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster the most powerful of them fatally continued and pursued by Henry of Bullingbrook his Son Duke of Hereford was not in all those his Distresses so unhappy but that although the Commons in Parliament had by their Petitions unto him complained That for want of good Redress about his Person and in his Houshold and Courts the Commons were daily pilled and nothing defended against the Enemy and that it would shortly undo him and the whole Estate yet they were so mindful of their Soveraign and themselves as they not only afforded him very great Aids and Assistances but in the Fourteenth year of his Reign the Lords and Commons in Parliament did Pray That The Prerogative of the King and his Crown might be kept and all things done or attempted to the contrary might be redressed and that he might be as free as any of his Royal Progenitors were And in the Fifteenth year of his Reign did in Parliament require him That He would as largely enjoy his Prerogative as any of his Progenitors notwithstanding any Statute and namely the Statute of Gloucester in the time of King Edward the Third the which Statute they utterly repealed out of their tender affection to the King King Henry the Fourth Fifth and Sixth although well understood to have been Kings de facto not de jure for so not seldom have been the Pleadings at the Law of their Acts of Parliament and although the later of those Kings being Crowned King of France in his Infancy and in Possession of that Kingdom was by his Meek and Pious rather than Prudent Government a great part of the Cause of the Bloody Contests betwixt the Two Houses of York and Lancaster which ruined very many of the Nobility and Gentry by taking their several Parties and were by their Discords the loss of all the Kingdom of France but Calice And that Richard Duke of York had in Parliament so claimed and wrestled for the Crown as he was declared Protector of the Kingdom of England enjoyed notwithstanding the care and good will of their Subjects upon all occasions either at home or abroad in times of Peace or War by their Contributions of Subsidies King Edward the Fourth in the brunt and hottest of the long continued bloody Contentions of the two great Houses and Families of York and Lancaster after nine Battels won by himself attested by his Surcoat of Arms which he wore therein hung up as a Trophy in the Cathedral Church of St. George at Windsor and his many struglings with King Henry the Sixth and his Party in losing and gaining the Crown again War with France and compelling the crafty Lewis the 11 th the King thereof to demand a Peace and consent to pay him 75000 Crowns towards his War Expences and a Tribute of 50000 Crowns yearly during the life of King Edward notwithstanding that he had in the second year of his Reign sate in a Michaelmas Term three days together in his Court of Kings Bench and gathered great Sums of Money of the People of England by his Privy Seal towards his Wars with the Scots and in the Seventh year of his Reign resumed by Act of Parliament all the Grants which he had made since he took Possession of the Realm raised great Sums of Money by Benevolences and Penal Laws had in the Eighth year of his Reign granted him by Act of Parliament two fifteens and a Demy and in the Thirteenth year of his Reign a Subsidy towards his Wars with France when the Actions Courage and Wisdom of Parliaments were so incertain as there was in the space of half a year one Parliament Proclaiming King Edward an Usurper and King Henry a Lawful King and another Proclaiming King Edward a Lawful King and King Henry an Usurper King Henry the Seventh although that he sometimes declared That he held the Crown as won in Battel by Conquest of King Richard the Third and at other times by his better Title from the House of York and his Marriage with the Lady Elizabeth the Daughter of King Edward the Fourth and avaritiously took all the ways possible for the enriching of his Treasury had divers great Aids and Subsidies granted unto him by Parliament King Henry the Eighth notwithstanding that he had after many great Subsidies and Aids both as to the Money and manner of Collecting it granted unto him his Heirs and Successors by several Parliaments and the first Fruits and Tenths of
Ursa Major Minor OR A Sober and Impartial ENQUIRY Into those Pretended Fears and Jealousies OF Popery and Arbitrary Power WITH Some Things offered to Consideration touching His MAJESTIE' 's League made with the King of FRANCE upon Occasion of his Wars with Holland and the United Provinces IN A LETTER Written to a Learned FRIEND LONDON Printed for H. S. MDCLXXXI SIR IF a very long and sad for many years together often repeated Experience with the sence of very many National and Universal needless Miseries which are so certainly to be believed as all the People of the Nation the wickedly-gaining Party by it only excepted may safely make Affidavit of it were able to obtain any thing or prevail with us not one but every man should think that it was and would be a duty Incumbent upon every English-man and true Lover of his King and Countrey for there be too many Counterfeits who do not well understand either the one or the other to abhor and fly as the affrighted Greek and Relator of the Strength and Gigantine Cruelties of the monstrous Polyphemus did with a Fugite ô Fugite from the Phantasms of those ungrounded Fears and Jealousies which usher'd in and fomented that Subversion of our Religion Laws and Liberties especially when it is not yet gone out of memory how many Dismal and ever to be lamented Effects and Calamities the inflamed and affrighted Vulgar and too hasty and inconsiderate Factious part of the People in the Years 1641 and 1642. with the Fancies of Popery and Arbitrary Power and Dangers rushing in upon us viz. a Plague-Plaister supposed to have been Attempted to be delivered to their great Champion Mr. John Pym to Infect and Destroy him Horses kept and trained under Ground the Lord Digby in his Coach and six Horses upon his ordinary occasions appearing at Kingston upon Thames in a Warlike manner with many other dressed up Bugbears not enough to affright old Women and young Children have brought upon us and that a Bloody and Costly War Murder of their King and fellow Subjects Rapine and Spoil of each other the washing over in Blood and almost Destruction of Three Kingdoms and the Ruine of Church and State have been the Products of them And when all was done could not assign any other Ground or Cause for it than Rebellion that Sin of Witchcraft and the Relish and Content which was found in the violation of all the Commandments in the second Table of the dreadfully by God himself pronounced Decalogue and as much as they could of the first and by yielding up their Discretions to the first Summons of their Fears of Imaginary apparitions of Dangers have made themselves to be well deserving or fit for the Reproach or Castigation which St. Paul used to a far less intoxicated People O ye foolish Galatians who hath bewitched you Though your Learning long Conversation and large acquaintance with history together with your curious recherches and retrospection into the Affairs of the World and Ages past a great Insight into the Politiques and a strict watch and observation kept upon the Causes Effects and Events of Actions of State and as many of the Reasons and Intrigues thereof as are proper and do usually come to publick View may sufficiently fortifie you against those kind of Impressions which have bespoken and taken up so much room in the Minds of such as are less Cognisant or do too much accustome themselves to make their Designs to be the only measure of their own Errors in Judgment which are not seldom built upon guess or contraries yet lest your great care and vigilance in all the Concernments of the Protestant Religion and the Property and just Rights of the Subjects should raise in you more than ordinary Apprehensions and carrying you down the Rapid stream of those great mistakings bereave you of that Happiness which hitherto hath attended the Temper and Tranquillity of your Mind and make you a Prisoner to those Fears and false Alarms which your more Sedate Thoughts will I assure my self tell you are not to be numb'red amongst those quoe in virum Constantem cadere possint which can ever be able to disturb the quiet and repose of a Man who from the mountains of Time hath looked further than yesterday and by the Rules of Prudence Policy and former Examples may with more certainty than Astrology ever afforded foresee what is likely to happen I have adventured here inclosed to send you my Thoughts and Sentiments which I hope will not want your Candid Reception especially when they shall but bring before you and your judicious Censure the Considerations that there will be enough surely to satisfie and quiet the most timerous or melancholick Persons who too often trouble themselves with their own Imaginations that the increase of Popery since the Statutes of the first and 23 th of Queen Eliz. and 3 d of King James in the year 1638. when Liberty Pretence of Religion and Conscience began to run out of their Wits and never stayed until they came to an Open and Horrid Rebellion hath been so little although the Popish Party have gained too many great Advantages by that and our many Divisions in Matters of Religion and Church Government and our late National Debaucheries and Atheism which do carry too many into the Delusions of Popery As it may if a strict accompt were taken probably enough ascertain us that there hath been rather a Decrease than an Increase of it And that if Commissions which will be no way inconsistent with the Rules and reason of Law and good Government were granted by His Majesty unto Orthodox Loyal Discreet Sober and Unbyassed Persons in every County and City of England and Wales to Inquire and Certifie how many Papists there are therein Resident the Result and Conclusion will assure His Majesty and His great Council of Parliament that there is not above Five in every Hundred of the Nation if so many that are guilty of direct Popery or Infected with it and in Scotland not many more unless that small Number should happen something to be increased by the late addition of the Jesuited Masquerade counterfeit Protestants And their increase in Riches or Estate not like to be much when they that shall be Convict and have no Lands or real Estate are by the Statutes of 29 Eliz. to forfeit and pay 20 l. every Month. And they that have Lands and real Estate are to pay 2 parts the whole in the 3 parts to be divided by the Statute of 3 Jac. ca. 4. And if that should not impoverish their Estates and make them less terrible than the Anakims it would nevertheless be effected by the Maintenance Necessities and corroding of their Priests and Jesuits with the multitude of Papal Exactions and Contributions to foreign Colleges and Religious Houses Pensions Censes Peter-pence Procurations Suits for Provisions Expeditions of Bulls Appeals Rescripts Dispensations Licenses Grants Relaxations Writs of Perinde
of any of their Kings and Princes at once with an Addition afterwards of another Pardon or Abolition of a lesser size for Offences and Forfeitures since committed and did not only restore unto all the Cities Boroughs and Corporations of England and Wales their forfeited Charters Privileges and Liberties but enlarged and gave unto many of them more than they had before And was so unwilling to Punish those that had done him and his Royal Father Mother Brothers Sisters those almost impossible to be forgotten or forgiven most execrable Villanies as he not only Pardoned but gave them profitable Employments who to their shame cozened him all they could and moulded themselves into a Faction of Repeating as many Impieties as they had been guilty of before and was so over Clement and forgiving as he imployed and did not Punish one that was proved to have said after His Majestie 's escape from the Battel of Worcester That if he had been taken he ought to have been stripped stark Naked led through the Streets with a Bridle thrust through an hole bored in his Nose Whipped at a Carts tail and afterwards Hanged Are not to be very angry or take it ill if they be charged with Partiality or Injustice or as great a Reproach as our Blessed Saviour bestowed upon the over-quick-sighted fault-finding Pharisee who could espy a mote as he thought in another's eye but not see a beam in his own but rather retire into themselves and upon a more strict Examination of their past evil Actions abhor themselves in dust and ashes cover their heads with shame weep repent and resolve to walk retrograde and persist no more in the gain-saying of Corah Datham and Abiram wherein they perished When they who would make every body as much afraid as they themselves do seem to fear an Inclination in His Majesty to an Arbitrary Power which he never did or is willing to exercise can almost every day joyn with others in Complaints of the no few of the Subordinate Magistrates usurping it against the mind and direction of the King and his Laws over their fellow Subjects by their Irregular courses Condemning and many times Imprisoning without Jury Trial legal Hearing or Proceedings And easily discern an yearly Custom of an illegally over-strained Power in the Lord Maiors of London Electing and Drinking unto many or more than needs in the Choice of two to be Sheriffs of London and Middlesex for the ensuing year and imposing and taking great Fines of the Refusers unto whom he needed not to have Drank whereby to gain some Thousands of Pounds yearly for the Fines of such as were unwilling or unfit to bear the Charge or Expence of those Offices and Imprison and Constrain them to pay them which are seldom less than 4 or 500 l. upon every such Refuser As if some fatal and successive Annual or fit of Thirst or kind Drinking was at a certain Time of every year to fall upon the Lord Maiors of that City to Drink more often and unto more than he should do And they that shall happen to be so imposed upon are sure to be out of hopes of getting themselves discharged of Imprisonment for not paying the Fine by Writs of Habeas Corpus and Bail which if the King should do every year in the Choice of Three presented unto him to serve as Sheriffs in all other Counties and Places of England and Wales no other City or Place therein making use of such a kind and loving Device to raise Moneys the Habeas Corpora Bells would Ring in all the Courts of Justice in Westminster-Hall and His Majesty would be troubled with the noise thereof And no small Arbitrary Power in their Courts of Orphants in London by Imprisoning a young Man in Newgate without Bail or Mainprise that had lawfully Married a City Orphant and his Father in like manner for contriving it And we may often hear and observe in the Guilds Fraternities and Companies of Trade and their Mysteries in the City of London an almost unbounded over absolute Power in their By-Laws which should be perused as it is more than a little probable they are not or but very seldom or cursorily by the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England Lord Treasurer and the two Lord Chief Justices and allowed by them or any three of them to be according to the Law together with their giving of unlawful Oaths imposing of Taxes Quarteridges or Fines and Assessements as they please upon the Poorer sort of the Companies of Trades supernumerating their Livery Men in their Companies in making them to be twice as many as they were wont to be and inforcing them to Pay 20 or 25 l. a Man and be at the Charge of a reverend Gown faced with Furrs of Foynes or Budge and Imprison Men for not obeying them and their grinding superfluous Orders The Exactions and Arbitrary Power of the Church-Officers in the City of London and its overgrown Suburb Parishes in the Renting of Pews and Seats in the Churches making Strangers pay great and double Fees for Tolling the Passing Bell and Ringing of a Peal when there was no such Matters taking great Fees for Burying of the Dead in the Church or Chancel near an Husband Wife Father or Mother Brother or Sister where before they have lain there a quarter of a year or a little time they are sure to be taken up again and flung into a Common Vault to lodge amongst those that were Buried far cheaper conniving at or permitting the Parish Clerks Sextons or Grave-makers to sell the broken and sometimes pillaged Coffins of the Dead to be made fewel for fire or Bake-houses cozening the Living and Dead feasting and fatning themselves upon every small Consultation and Parish meeting for the good as they call it or little Business of the Parish as for the putting out a Bastard or Foundling or poor Parish Child to a Beggar to beg with and trouble the Streets withal at a low weekly rate and take the advantage to themselves of reckoning by a greater which have been the cause of such short Memories in Parish Politicks and Governments as the Accompt of a Legacy of Three hundred Pounds per Annum as they may be now demised in Houses and Tenements in a London Suburb Parish for as many hundred years ago for the Building of the Church yet standing upon its old Ruins is so vanished as it is not at all to be found and a royal Charity of One hundred and Twenty pounds given in the year 1625. by King Charles the Martyr in a Time of Pestilence could never be heard of and the Church wardens or Collectors of a near London Parish have been so over-watched for the good of the Parish and thereby rendred so sleepy or Lethargick as they could not good People as they would be thought to be tell which way One Thousand or Two Thousand pounds have escaped out of the Accompt and the fault
Coal and Hops be never so cheap or Ale the best must be taken off and the remainder being only water half boiled flung upon the strengthless grains is sent and served to the House-keeper for 6 s. Beer with the Excise laid upon it and made to be a Drink not fit to give Beasts quickly stinking and souring and by the Opinion of the London Physitians is a great if not an only cause of the Epidemick and now more than formerly Infection or Disease called the Scurvy not so much as heretofore taken notice of in the Bills of Mortality and that Beer though always over-hopped and imbittered to supply the want of Mault the People are constrained to be content with and if they will have it better are to pay Eight shillings a Barrel besides the Excise for that which should be but Six All which or a great part of it might by the Justice and Laws of the Nation be redressed if the Vintners who by a late Trick of glass Bottles now used in most Taverns bespoken and made to be but or not so much as a Pint and an half instead of a Quart and their elder Brethren the Brewers were but put in mind as they ought to be of the Statute entituled Assisa panis Cervisiae made in the 51 year of the Reign of King Henry the Third And another Statute made by that King in the same year called the Statute of the Pillory and Tumbrell both yet in force and unrepealed whereby the Offenders Vintners Brewers and Bakers are to be presented and amerced and for every default the Baker is to be adjudged to the Pillory and the Brewer and Vintner to the Tumbrell which was as it were in a Ducking-Stool now sometimes used over cleaner waters and applied to notorious Scolding and unquiet Women hanging over some muddy and unwholesome water being the Punishment of the Fossa or stinking Pits appropriate by the Grants of divers of our Kings to the Lords or Owners of great Mannors or Liberties having Assisas panis Cervisiae Which ill doings of the Brewers in their unconscionable and unchristian-like Arbitrary Power exercised as far as it can be stretched upon their fellow Subjects are imitated by the Alehouse keepers the Inferior and Retailing Masters of the Tap who would never have it be said or proved that they come short of their Founders great Abilities in the Arts or Knaveries of the Drink Profession or any of their Subtilties or Exactions And therefore to make it go with a double at the least rate or price or much more than it should be have to cheat and cozen the People in to an idle and ridiculous Expence devised several Names for Drinks as they shall please to call them though there be little or nothing of the supposed Ingredients in them as Cock Ale College Ale China Ale Scurvygrass Ale Lymmon or Orange Beer or Ale Hull Ale Northdown Ale Sambach Ale Doctor Butler's Ale cum multis al●●s For which Adoptions sundry of those Promoters of Drunkenness do think they shall serve the Devil for nothing if they be not paid a double or greater rate and by that means and those measures make a shift to clear Four Pounds a Week and put it to griping Usury and in a short time make themselves the Owners of 3 or 400 l. per Annum and some of them 7 or 800 l. per 〈◊〉 And in their Ale-honesty can take no less in the Suburbs of London than a Peny for a Pint of Ale when in Southwark on the other side of the Thames better Brewed and made can be sold for an Half-Peny a Pint. The Woodmongers or Colliers can leap over all our Laws as they list and by Confederacy keep back the Collier New Castle Fleet and make them tarry in the lower part of the River of Thames and send up to London some stragling Cole-Ships to scarce and enhaunce the price of Coles insomuch as until His Majesty after many Complaints and a tired Patience had taken away their Charter they would at every extraordinary Frost or winterly weather never fail to raise the rates of Sea Coles in the space of a few Days or less than a Week unto 5 10 or 20 s. at a time and sometimes as high as 3 or 4 l. a Chaldron to the great Affliction and Impoverishment of the poorer sort of People when they might as they have done since the taking away of their Charter have afforded a Chaldron of Coles with gain enough under 20 s. a Chaldron Neither need we to have any Jury or Inquest impannelled in the search of an Arbitrary Power daily made use of in the City of London and Suburbs thereof by the People over one another the mighty over the weak and the rich over the poor And the Usurer and man of Money when he takes as much above the legal Interest for the loan of his Money as the necessities of the distressed Borrowers can perswade him unto and upon the Severity of an Execution or a forfeited Mortgage of Lands double or treble in value to the Money lent looks as Nebuchadonozer overlook'd his Babylon walks about like a Mogul or some unlimited Monarch of the East and as pittiless to the Supplication of the lamenting supplicant Borrower and the tears of his Wife and Children as the Hunger-bitten Woolf is with the Lamb under his bloody Paws and Fangs In company of whom do march the insinuating Imp of the Devil called the Tallyman with his closer and more Consumptive secretly biting Usury lending Eighteen Shillings to Market-Men and Women Heglers c. Such as cry necessary Food in the Streets instead of 20 s. upon the Tally and their own Security at the interest and rate of 12 d. duely paid every Week although continued at that pace a year together being a cunning piece of Usury far exceeding that of the Jews who in the Reign of our King Richard the First were by the Common People Massacred and the Caursini the Pope's Brokers banish'd by King Henry the Third for much gentler Usuries followed by that of the lesser Pinching Money Improvers who will lend 10 l. for no longer than a Month and at that or every Months end call fiercely to have it paid in to beget the former or a greater Brocage When all the Trades of London and Westminster and their largely overbuilt Suburbs can by an unreasonable and Arbitrary Power to maintain their unfitting Pride and Luxury impose and put what price they please upon their Work and Commodities and not a few do upon every occasion or opportunity of their interest and advantage break and run over our Magna Charta and other the Laws and Statutes of the Kingdom And when they trust their Customers without which there would be little or no Trade do when such Buyers dream nothing of it clap an hard interest into the price and if need be in writing over their Books again make where it may be undiscernable an addition unto it
League with the French may as little Prejudice us and our Laws and Liberties as it did those of the Dutch when they were in the strictest Alliance or Confederacy with them For no man can be so transported out of himself as to believe that a Neighborhood or a League for Civil and other Respects can work any Prejudice to the Religion Laws and Liberties of the Subjects of either Prince or State not granted away or Contracted for by such Leagues when every days Experience declares the contrary for otherwise the Poles whose King is Elective and their Laws so very much obliging him as he cannot alter the Freedom and Constitutions of the Peoples Liberties would be in danger of the Mahometan Extravagancies of Power to be brought in upon them when their Kings have made any Leagues with the Turks or Grand Seignior and the Sweedish Nation in fear of their Elective King 's introducing the vast and unruly Power of the Muscovite whose Subjects being under a mighty awe Ignorance and enforced Obedience have no more to answer when any State-Affairs are enquired of them than that God and the Great Duke do only know it Insomuch as the Provocation of the Dutch being so great and the Vindication of the Honour of the King Trade of the Nation Safety of the People and Soveraignty of the Sea so necessary as a War with them could not be avoided There was no other either visible or possible means to manage it with Prudence or Success than by the making of the League with France who had pretences of his own to joyn with ours In regard that Land-Armies and Forces were not able alone to bring them to good Terms without the assistance and aid of a great and mighty Navy at Sea which might be able to overcome and beat them in that which was their greatest Strength without which it would have been impossible for the English or French joyntly or seperately ever to have forced them to reason The King of Spain who would heretofore have been glad of such a Part'ner as the English to help to subdue those his formerly truly accompted Rebels of the United Provinces who by the help of the English and French had in a War of almost Sixty years together done him so very much wrong and many Mischiefs was then become so jealous of the growing greatness of France as he found it to be his Interest to assist those that had so greatly damnified him and were no other than his Hogen Mogen Rebels The Swede and Danes greatly concerned in their Trade and the Profit and Gain which they daily received by them in the Baltick Sea would not joyn in any War against them and if they would have been willing were at too great a distance and the forcing of passage would have been as difficult and dangerous as it would have been Chargeable and the like might have been said of the Elector of Brandenburgh who was in League Amity and Interest with them and the most part of the other German Princes being of small Power far off and inconsiderable who might not make War with any Members of the Empire as the Dutch being part of the lower Circle of Burgundy were without the Approbation of the Emperor and their Diets and the Charge and little Success of hiring the Bishop of Munster to raise Forces whereby to make a Diversion and Incumbrance upon them in our former Wars with them had taught us what little good and at how great an Expence that design effected And it is well known that an Army for the intended Recovery of the Palatinate was in the 21 th year of the Reign of King James by an able and select Council of War and the Approbation of the Parliament then thought not to be sufficient with the Aid of the Dutch in their Provisions and passage under the Number of 25000 Foot and 5000 Horse and the Charge of 30000 l. to furnish them with Necessaries And when afterwards Count Mansfeild a second Hannibal and one of the greatest Captains of his time in Christendom had with 12000 Foot and 200 Horse Levied here and encouraged by K. James and the Parliament some promised Aids from France and some other States and Princes undertook to regain that wasted Countrey of the Palatinate Ship'd his Men and was at Sea with them the King of France's denying their Landing at Calice and promised Passage and the Province or States of Zealand when he attempted to Land his Men upon their Coasts making a like refusal the Pestilence and Flux whilst they were at Sea penn'd up and almost stifled in the Ships killed two parts in three of them and the remaining third part mouldring away that Action and all the Design hopes charges and Endeavours of it miscarried and came to nothing And certainly the English War with the Dutch Petitioned for by the Parliament put and carried on with so much reason of State and by so many very Important Necessities might Claim to be as well allowed to be without any detriment to the Interest of the Protestant Religion as other Wars betwixt Protestants heretofore have been upon Civil Accompts and Controversies The Dutch upon a pretence of their better defending themselves against any Attempts or Increase of Power of the Spaniard their then Enemy did take and keep Wesell and some Towns in the Dutchies of Cleve and Juliers and other Frontier Towns belonging to the Elector of Brandenburgh a Protestant Prince the Justice whereof hath not yet been understood by the Learned in Politicks and Affairs of State were not Incumbred with any Accusation of weakening the Protestant Religion and it must needs remain a Problem never to be determined but put upon the File of Eternity what can be the Reason that Oliver Cromwell and his Party of Regicide Rebels about the year 1654. upon far less Provocations should so chearfully be aided and assisted in his Maritine Wars with the Hollanders until he beat them into a Peace and acknowledgment of the English Soveraignty over the Brittish Seas enforced upon them the Act of Navigation That no Commodities Transported into England from thence or of the growth of those Countries or any other Neighbour Countries should be brought by them but in English Bottoms and made them stink in the Nostrils of all Nations and to be guilty of a most horrid Ingratitude in the renouncing the Prince of Orange and his Illustrious Family and taking from them those Offices and Places which they and their Ancestors had in their Defence so dearly purchased and yet his Cromwellian Power was not at all accused for hurting the Protestant Religion or how our Wars with the Dutch in the years 1664. and 1665. upon far less Provocation should be Petitioned for by our Merchants and both Houses of Parliament and willingly contributed unto and not at all believed to be against the Protestant Religion and why the War now made upon greater Affronts and Injuries should be an undermining of
the Protestant Cause or tend to a Subversion of that Religion more than it did than when Oliver could League with France and its Politick Cardinal Mazarine and set the Dane to Invade the Sweed and after that to put the Sweed upon the Dane on purpose to disenable him from assisting His now Majesty his near Allie and Kinsman without any prejudice supposed to the Protestant Religion of either side and be commended for it Charles the Fifth Emperor Imprisoning the Pope and putting him to a Ransom made him not suspected to be a Calvinist or Lutheran Lewis the 13 th King of France a Catholick Prince could heretofore make a League with the Great Gustavus Adolphus King of Sweeden a Protestant back him with Leagues and yearly great Sums of Money to Deplume the Roman Eagle and make those glorious feats of Arms which he did accomplish to be the Ruine and Disturbance of many a Popish Prince and to be so formidable as to shake the Foundations of the House of Austria and the Pope and all the Partakers of them The now King of France could for a wrong done by others to his Embassadors in the Court of Rome make the Pope himself submit to the setting up of a Pillar of Infamy at Rome to be a witness to the World of the Indignation of the one and Chastisement of the other and hath lately vigorously assisted the now King of Sweden against the Danes and Elector of Brandenburgh being all Protestants and did not think that he forfeited thereby the Title of the most Christian King and a great Maintainer of the Popish Religion of which and much more which might be said there may be as many approved Examples to be met withal in History as there may be well digested Reasons in order to Publick Peace and Tranquility alleadged for it so that they that would Criticise and be over Censorious should if they would be just whilst they Condemn His Majestie 's League with France to be as a strengthening and weighing down of the Balance on the Popish part consider that the last King of France did by his League with Gustavus King of Sweden so advance the Protestant side of the Balance as it endangered all the other side that the Villanies at home against His late Majesty and the setting up of Oliver and his League with France depressing the Spaniard and making France so over-Potent hath ever since turned the Balance and disordered it And that Balances may notwithstanding at other times be rectified and made equilibrious without any damage to the Protestant Religion or the various Profession of it Which League of His Majesty with France and that Active Princes Power and concurrent Interest to enervate the dangerous neighbouring greatness of the Dutch overgrown Republick did so little weaken the Balance on the Protestant part as the Event hath clearly demonstrated it to have been the only means of re-establishing the Prince of Orange his Nephew no remote Heir to the Crowns of England Scotland and Ireland and the Heirs Males of His Body in the Authority and Dignity of Stadtholder of the United Belgick Provinces Generalissimo of all their Forces and Armies by Land and Admiral of their formidable and to a wonder very numerous Fleets of which by the contrivance of Cromwell the Profess'd Enemy of His Majestie 's Royal Line and Family and his encouragement of the Faction of the De Wits he had most ingratefully been deprived concerning which there appears not in the Petition of the Parliament for a War with the Dutch to have been any prospect or design and rendred him thereby together with the access of his Personal Virtues Valour and Wisdom being not yet of the Age of Thirty years not only the great Imitator of his glorious Ancestors on the Fathers and Mothers side but the probability if the over-hazarding of his Person doth not shorten the hopeful race and course of his life of being the greatest Captain of the Christian World an Honour of the Protestant Religion and the strengthening of it And it can therefore be no unwholsome advice not to set our own House on Fire by needless Fears and Jealousies as we have done or make our selves less wise than the Seditious Rabble of Rome who by the Wisdom of Menenius Agrippa were Charmed into a Pacification and quiet of Spirits by the Fable or Apologue of the mutiny of the Members of the Body against the Belly or Paunch which could not be altogether so perillous as ours would be against the Head for until the Laws of God Nature and Nations shall be repealed and the wiser part of the People who have lived in the habitable World can by any of that Party or Children of Contention now living be convinced and brought by any Rules of right Reason or Wisdom to acknowledge that Particulars in a Body Politick are more to be heeded and taken Care of than Universals the lesser part more than the greater a few more than a multitude or that in the Body Natural the Heart Liver Lungs Arms Back Belly Legs Bones Sinews Muscles and Ligaments with Hundreds of little Parts and Particles appertaining to that excellent Frame and Structure of Man's Body can subsist and do well when the Head which gives motion and comfort unto all and the least of them is Sick and ruining for want of its necessary Support and Supply from them in their several Offices We need not be at much pains in the search of Reason that they who do purchase the Occasions or Advantages of Contention which may in the end howsoever contenting and profitable it may seem to be in the beginning or pursuit of it prove to be their own as well as others Irrepairable Ruine and do all that they can to disturb and mud the Waters that refresh and make glad the Valleys of our Syon should justly be accompted to be no wiser in the Event than he who having all his Goods in a Friend's House set on fire by some that designed it and their own Benefit as our Neighbour Dutch were said to have done in the Wars of Bohemia or by some evil Accident would so much forget his Charity and Duty to his Neighbour and care of himself as to refuse to aid or help him either by Water Ladder Buckets or Engines until he should first have called him and his Servants to Accompt and Examination how and where the Fire began by whose negligence or miscarriage what method care and order will be taken to prevent it for the future and what Security he will or can give that there shall be no more such an accident hereafter And whilst he is thus over-running his Discretion and acting his own Folly and new sound Politicks suffer the Fire to do what it list Burn the House and all his own Goods as well as those of his Friends and Neighbours in it When History and the Records and never enough bewailed Experience of times past might have told him and all that