Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n king_n lord_n say_a 4,832 5 7.2464 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 26 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

upon Summons the Barons had obtain'd their design but how would the change succeeding have been brought to pass so much to the Courts advantage and the other sides prejudice Where 's the politick Casuist that can here slit a ha● between loyal and disloyal deeds Obedience and Disobedience the duty of subjection and open ref●sal thereof According to an Agreement there made in the said Octaves a Parliament was held at Westminster where met as Fabian hath left upon Record the King with his Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons of the Land to begin that Parliament Here was it enacted the King being present that he nor Edward his Son nor none of them should after that day grieve nor cause to be grieved the Earls of Leicester and Glocester the Barons Banerets or Knights the Citizens of London and Barons of the Five Ports nor any other Person o● Persons of high or low Degree that was upon th● Party of the said Earls for any matter of displeasure done against the King and his Son Edward 〈◊〉 any time before that day To uphold this the King 's Sworn before his Lords After that was shew'd and Read a Charter of Pardon concerning the said Cause and a confirmation of the Statutes of the Forrest with many other Acts and Statutes before granted by the King Here was an Act of Oblivion strong enough one would have thought to have indemnified the offending Parties but before the end of the Year we find the Tide quite turn'd through variance and difference arising between the Two Thiefs of the Barons Party and then the King's side prevailing Casheers what was done before Oaths held them not and another Parliament ●●peals and disanuls the former Pardon So that the 〈◊〉 Pardon'd Offendors soon became the reputed Guilty Prisoners upon the old Scores Cancell'd and forgiv'n as was thought a little before The longest Sword will make and mar Laws at pleasure let people say what they will This Party's Might commonly bears down what the other Party calls his Right Edward the King's Son having likewise Sworn to perform the promises which the King had before made in Parliament was deliver'd at liberty and the other Pledg his Cozen upon assurance made ●● abide in the King's Court and not depart without licence of the King and some of the Barons What care do the Barons seem here to have taken to ●●rengthen and confirm their Party against any future ●●●erclaps How sollicitous do they appear to have ●een to prevent an after-Reckoning and all Tenden●ies thereunto Nay how conformable to them did the King and his Son shew themselves likewise ●herein Witness the many Instruments and Bonds ●ade by them for the performance of Covenants and Pactions before agreed on And yet all was soon destroy'd and brought to none effect One of the 〈◊〉 Chiefs helping Penelope-like to unravel the Web they had been so long a Weaving The Ordering the former Statutes made at Oxford which had hitherto so fast united them was the occasion of dissention between the Two Potent Earls ●● Leicester and Glocester to the ruin of the Baron's Party the difference arose as Stow tells us betwee● them for that Leicester not only kept the King an● others as Prisoners but also took to himself the Revenues of the Kingdom which it seems should have been equally devided amongst them So that it wa● the Golden-Apple that seems to have occasion'd th●● so fatal Discord The King indeed and his Lords labour'd for an Union but it fell out well for the King's side and ill for the others that they succeeded not This happen'd between Easter and Whits●●tide In the W●●tsun-Week we hear of Edward th● King's Son secretly departing from the Court at Hereford without Licence and associating himself wi●● the Earl of Glocester and other Lords at Chester fro● whence he hasts to Glocester breaking the Bridges a● he went that he might not be follow'd till he had Assembled his Power The Earl of Leicester was to● wife not to guess at his Intent and therefore in all ha● sends to his Son to Assemble his Forces Simon his So● with his Forces Assembled draws towards Winchest●● and was at first kept out by the Citizens because the● knew not whether he came as the King's Friend an● for that they had also receiv'd a Letter from Edwa●● to that purport But it was not long e're the Ci●● was yielded and then the Castle Besieged after th●● the City had been spoil'd and many of the Je●● therein Inhabiting Slain They were so odious generally to the People that they should be sure to hav● their share to the purpose in the publick Calamity if the Commons might have their Will The Papist● after all their discover'd Plots known Practices an● destructive Principles are not in a vast degree much more hateful to the generality of the English Nation in these Days than where the griping Jews in those Elderly Times At Kenelworth the Baron's Party receiv'd the first ●●ow under this Simon where they were shamefully defeated by Edward and his Host and many Eminent Prisoners taken without the shedding of much Blood At E●yshum in Worcestershire were the Barons disc●mfited with such a total overthrow and the destruction of so many Men of Note on that side that ●is no wonder that their Interest among the People so visibly decay'd for the future and in time was fully lost Soon after this Victory the King and his Son Edward met by whose Authority the Prisoners then in hold were released and many others accus'd and put in for them Not long after was held a Parliament at Winchester where by Authority of the same the Statutes and Ordinances before made at Oxford were Repealed and all Bonds and Writings before made by the King or any other Cancell'd and Broken and all such as had favor'd the Barons disinherited A Rout indeed A Rout first to the Men that would have had the Laws have been kept and then a Rout to the Laws themselves to Parliament Acts and Statutes So destroy first of all the Protestant Men and Women the Subjects of Religion and then the Protestant Religion falls of course What could it at that time avail the defeated Party to plead a former Obedience to the Power then Regnant since the present Powers were otherwise resolv'd If the Parliament in Being will have Obedience paid to a former Parliament esteem'd Treason who dare gainsay it Little boots it the poor weak Beast to cry the Bunch in his Forehead is no Horn when the more powerful Lion says it is After these Parliament Transactions we hear of the King 's re●●ming into his hands all grants before made and give● to any Person After his Sons Victory the King calls not a Parliament at Westminster least possibly it might have been over aw'd by the City of London but assembling it at a place far enough distant and things having there been carried according to the Courts intent and desire now have at London Accordingly
matter meant cried without discretion Ye● Yea Yea nothing regarding the Liberty of the City After the grant thus had of the Commons the said Jo●● Mansell discharged the Mayor Sheriffs and Chambe●lain of their Offices and delivered the Custody thereunto the Constable of the Tower and put in the roo● of the Sheriffs Michael Tony and John Audrian A● over that all Rolls of Tolls and Tallages before mad● were delivered unto the said John Mansel which 〈◊〉 there sealed and redelivered to the Chamberlain Wh●● the Commons had beheld all this business they return●● unto their Houses all confused Do we wonder at the Commons readiness in this afair that they who usually have been such brisk assert● of their Liberties should now be the occasional cause of bringing them into danger We may suppose that this was no proper Common-Hall but rather called by an order from Court and filled with the populace for in those days I do not find there was any express Act made by King Lords and Commons in being to forbid the Council Table from intermeddling in Civil Causes and determining of the Subjects Liberties or so to regulate its Jurisdiction Power and Authority as to leave such matters to be tried and determined in the ordinary Courts of Justice and by the ordinary course of Law Or else we conclude the Restriction of the Common-Hall to the Livery-Men was not then in use so that the Rabble being intermixt it might be no hard matter to get a ●ry raised by some of them in favour of the proceedings ●hen on foot The Mobile being as liable to be wrought ●pon by fear or fair promises as the great and rich to be corrupted by the hopes of Honours and Preferments ●nd the favour of more potent Grandees while as the ●iddle sort of People like the golden mean between ●wo Extreams are not generally so capable of being ●rawn aside after the lure being too many to be brib'd ●nd not few enough to be frighted not so high and wealthy as to aspire after greater Grandeur nor so low ●ean and despicable as to be imposed upon by the empty ●ames of Greatness and Honour without Virtue sprung ●p at first from Vice and nourished by and amidst re●eated Debaucheries This matter thus ordered John Mansell with divers ●f the Kings Council kept their Courts daily the Sun●ays except till the 1st Sunday of Lent which that yea●●as Jan. 25. calling before him 12 Wards of the Ci●y out of every of which Wards were taken 3 men ●o that 36 men were impannelled and sworn to enquire ●f the aforesaid Articles and what Persons of the City ●ad offended in them This Court being thus kept and holden at Guild-Hall no man was called to answer nor no question put to any Person by the said Inquest or any other Upon the foresaid 1st Sunday of Lent the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs with the forementioned Inquest and 4 men of every Ward were charged to appear at Westminster before the King at which appearance they were countermanded till the next morning At which season coming into the Kings Exchequer they found sitting there the Earls of Glocester and Warwick Joh. Mansell Hen. Baa Justices the Constable of the Tower the Custos of the City and divers others of the Kings Council Then was called by name Ralph Richard Hardell that year Mayor Nicholas Batts Nicholas Fiz Josne Mathew Bockerel John Tolesham and John 〈◊〉 Minoure Aldermen Then John Mansell said that the King by his Laws and Inquisition of the Citizens had found them culpable that they had wronged and hurt the Commonalty of his City by divers means as by the sai● Inquisition appeared and forthwith caused it to be read before them When the more part thereof was read he said unto them Thus may you see that the Commonalty of the City hath been by you grievously oppressed and by your means and Counsel the Commonwealth 〈◊〉 the same destroyed as by altering of the Tolls and othe● good ancient Customs turning them to your singular advantage and lucre All which matters the said Ralp● Richard and his Company denied and that the Commons were not grieved or hurt by them or any of them by any such means and offered to be justified and judged by the Law and Customs of the City Then He●●● Baa Justice asked of them whether they would abi●● the adventure of the Inquiry that they had heard re●● before 〈◊〉 stand upon the saying of the other Ward that yet had not be●n sworn but they kept to their 〈◊〉 Answer There John Mansell asked of the Mayor wh●● was their Law and Custom The Mayor answered 〈◊〉 said that for trespass of a Citizen done against the King he should defend himself by 12 Citizens for Murder or slaying of a man by 30 Citizens and for trespass against a stranger by the Oath of six and himself Then after many reasons made by the said John Mansell and also by the Mayor and Aldermen day was given them to appear the morrow before the King and his Councel Upon the day following the King with many of his Lords sitting in the Exchequer the aforesaid Inquisition was read That done the Mayor and Aldermen were called in by name and two Aldermen more which before were not called viz. Arn●ld Thedmare and Henry Waldmode When Ralph Richard Hard●ll had heard ●he King speak in the matter he took such fear that he ●nd Nicholas Batt without further Answer put them●elves in the King's grace saved to them their Li●erties and Franchises of the City But the other six ●esought the King of his wisdom that they might be ●●dged after the Laws and Customs of the City Then was laid to their charge that over many wrongs by ●hem done to the King and the Commonalty of the Ci●y they had alter'd the King's Beam and order'd it to ●e advantage of themselves and other rich men of the City Whereupon the Parties answered and said That ●e alteration of the Beam was not done by them only but 〈◊〉 the advice and consent of 500 of the best of the City ●or where before-time the Weigher used to lean his ●raught toward the Merchandise so that the buyer had ●y that means 10 or 12 pounds in a draught to his ad●antage and the seller so much disadvantage now for ●●differency and equality of both persons it was or●ain'd that the Beam should stand upright the cleft ●ereof inclining to neither party as in weighing of ●old and Silver and the buyer to have allowed of the 〈◊〉 for all things four pounds only in every draught ●fter these Reasons and others by them made the King commanded that upon the morning following a Folk-moot should be called at Paul's Cross and so that Court was dissolved and the Mayor and the others returned to London Upon the morrow the Folk-moot being at Paul's Cross Assembled these six Aldermen hearing the murmuring of the common people and knowing that the Aldermen or Worshipful of the City should have
to have been there kept and that the King and his Lords parted thence all at Discord Besides the mutual Strength of People on either side The Barons had the Acts of Parliament made by the King Lords and Commons for of such I have elsewhere read these Assemblies were composed in those days to fight for which to observe the King and many others had been sworn besides a solemn Curse denounced against the Attempters to break them The King with his Party had the Popes Bull of Absolution the Sentence of the Council of Lords at Westminster and the Judgment given on the Kings side by Lewis the French King for their Incitement Such then being the cause contended for these being the mutual advantages to strengthen either side the difference is brought in the Spring into the Field to be decided All things in a manner thus tending to War the Barons drew towards London that 's their Place of Rendezvous where new Assurances by Writing indented was made between them and the Commonalty of the City without Consent of many of the Rulers thereof Whether they were swayed in their minds to the other side by Reasons they carried in their Pockets I find not or thinking they had most to lose they feared to be the greatest Sufferers if the chance of War should fall cross or else out of Envy and Emulation to the Commons who had already been entrusted with so much Power by the so often named Statutes and were in probability likely to get more if the Barons should prevail or at least keep what they had gotten Hence 't is plain that the Commons of the City were the men that stood by the Lords in defence of the Parliament Acts Many of the Rulers seem not to have appeared Wherefore the Commons as men enraged made to themselves Two Captains Thomas de Pywelden and Stephen Bukkerel whom they named Constables of the City At whose Commandment by tolling the great Bell of St. Pauls all the City should be ready in Arms to give Attendance upon the said Captains About the beginning of Lent the Constable of the Tower Sir Hugh Le Spencer came with a fair Company of men at Arms into the City and desired Assistance of the forenamed Constables who commanded the said Bell to be toll'd By means whereof the People shut their Shops and came out in Arms in great Multitudes who after Proclamation made that they should follow their Captains without knowledge what to do or whither to go followed them unto Thystleworth beyond Westminster and there spoiled the Manour of the King of the Romans Richard the King's Brother setting it on Fire and afterwards with great noise and cry returned unto London This Richard King of the Romans appears to have been a Mediator of Peace between the Two Parties but after this outrage what else could be expected but that he should become the Barons Enemy to the utmost of his Power Though 't is commonly seen that from War most come home by Weeping Cross yet there are still too too many found that desire to fish in troubled Waters Would any but such as were in Love with Blood and Wounds have counselled such a Fact as this in the midst of Civil broils thus to compel the only Mediator of Peace likely to prevail to become a man of War and which was worse an Enemy a powerful Enemy instead of a peaceable Friend In the time of these intestine Jarrs between Men of the same Country and Religion 't was much if the Jews should have escaped free who were strangers of different Rites and Customs and so odious to the Common People That they did not escape the enraged Multitudes Fury we find by mention made of Five Hundred of them said to be slain at one time in London on Palmsunday week The occasion is related to be for that a Jew would have forced a Christian to have given him more than Two Pence a Week for the use of Twenty Shillings This being the stinted Usury then permitted the Jews by the King's Grant According to which rate they might take i● any Summ lent greater or lesser A reasonable man would have thought this might have satisfied the greedy Minds of most ordinary griping Extortioners Eight Shillings Eight Pence by the Year in the Pound Forty three Pounds Six Shillings Eight Pence in the Hundred Usury unconscionable enough of any sense While the Land stood thus divided into Parties the Jews felt the Peoples rage in the City and the Country did not altogether scape tasting the miseries of Civil Wars King Henry by divers places came at length into Sussex with a strong Power whereof the Lords hearing made preparation to go towards him Accordingly in the end of April the Barons with many of the Citizens in the vaward departed from London taking their Journey towards the King and hearing he was at Lewes with a great power by common consent drawing up a Letter sent it in the name of all the Barons to the King But the Answers were so rough and in such a stile that it plainly shewed that the Sword could be the only decider of the Quarrel and final determiner of the Contest so much were their Minds exasperated each towards other though of the same Nation and Kindred The Barons well perceiving by these Answers that there was no other way but to decide the Quarrel by dint of Sword they went forward towards the King Wednesday May the 24th 1263. is the day that may be writ in Red Letters for the great quantity of Blood spilt thereon in the Battle fought at Lewes between the King and his Barons wherein by the Will of Providence the Victory sell to the Barons with such a total rout to the other Party that they took Prisoners the King his Brother his Son with many other Noble-Men to the number of Twenty five Barons and Banerets above Twenty Thousand being slain according to my Author's Account After this so compleat a Victory the other Prisoners being sent elsewhere the Barons kept the King his Brother and Son till they came to London This was the place wherein they had found Shelter and had had such considerable Assistance from the Londoners that there seemed a kind of Obligation lying on them and it implied somwhat of a Recompence due to the City there to shew the Trophies of their Victory Now we may easily conclude that the forenamed Statutes are to stand in full force even by the Kings Consent And so acccordingly we find a Grant made and an Agreement that if any were thought unreasonable they were to be corrected and amended by four Noble Men of the Realm Two of the Spiritualty and Two of the Temporalty And if the four accorded not the Earl of Anjou and the Duke of Brittain were to be Judges in the case To continue this accord the firmer the King's Son and his Brother were to remain the Barons Prisoners till it was compleated A Parliament was also appointed to be
the Citizens the pledges in the 〈◊〉 of London and the Four last mention'd to be 〈◊〉 in the Tower of Windsor were deliver'd The 〈◊〉 renam'd Stewards were also discharged and the 〈◊〉 chose of themselves for Mayor William Fiz 〈◊〉 and for Sheriffs Thomas de la Founde and Grego●● de Rokis●y as Fabi●n acquaints us For Levying of 〈◊〉 foresaid Fine were set as well Servants and Cove●●nt-men as Housholders and many refus'd the Liberties of the City to be quit of that charge 〈◊〉 which we may give some part of a guess at the 〈◊〉 of the fine what a considerable summ● 〈…〉 marks was in those days before the ●●dies were 〈◊〉 into Europe some hundreds of years This controversy with London being thus 〈◊〉 towards an end the King had leasure to mind 〈◊〉 suppressing the remains of the Baron's Party 〈◊〉 de Mountford upon certain conditions was 〈…〉 be at large in the Kings Court and so 〈◊〉 a Season But when the King was come to London suddenly departed to Winchelsea where he accomp●nied with the Rovers of the Sea till after some 〈◊〉 taken he departed from them into France and 〈◊〉 himself into the Service of the French King So 〈◊〉 an end of the Potent Earl of Leycester's Family in E●●land This Powerful Earl bid fair for the Rule of 〈◊〉 whole Kingdom but had he reviv'd the Battail● 〈◊〉 a Conqueror how much further he 〈◊〉 have gone I may think but not positively 〈◊〉 mine Another Act of the Kings this year in order to 〈◊〉 total rooting out of the Barons remains was his ●●ing a Seige to Kenelworth-Castle with a mighty 〈◊〉 but this prov'd a task not quickly at an end Now 〈◊〉 time comes to revenge old slights and neglects 〈◊〉 sides Strangers prepar'd to come over into Engl●●● the Queen had also purchas'd a curse of the 〈◊〉 a womans aid to accurse all the Barons their 〈◊〉 and helpers Commissions were directed to 〈◊〉 Bishops of England to execute but they for fear 〈◊〉 the Barons are said to have deny'd and deferred 〈◊〉 Execution and Sentence of the said curse Wherefo●● she made new labour to the Pope and had it gran●●● that the said Bishops should be corrected for their di●●bedience Whereupon Octobon the Pope's Legate 〈◊〉 Councel by him and the Clergy held this year at Paul's ●●ch in London suspended those Bishops and sent 〈◊〉 to Rome to be absolv'd of the Pope A pretty 〈◊〉 to go nine Miles with Waltham's calf to Suck a 〈◊〉 In the 50th year about Christmas was Kenelworth 〈◊〉 yielded after near half a years Siege upon 〈◊〉 of life Limb Horse Armes and all things 〈◊〉 in the Castle to the defendants belonging and 〈◊〉 to carry them away and not to be disinherited 〈◊〉 is it any wonder that they had such 〈◊〉 granted them if that be true which Stow relates 〈◊〉 that at the King 's coming to besiege the Castle 〈◊〉 force was so great and those in the Castle so 〈◊〉 daunted at their Enemyes presence that they 〈◊〉 ●pen their Gates and never closed them day no● 〈◊〉 and come whoso would they came to their 〈◊〉 Thus you see the King found it no easy matter 〈◊〉 to suppress the remainders though he had 〈◊〉 power'd the heads of the Baron's party About 〈◊〉 were the Wardens of the five Ports reconcil'd to 〈◊〉 King by favour of Edward the King's Son Observe 〈◊〉 by the way his policy In his Father's time he 〈◊〉 to crush that power which might have 〈◊〉 him in his own Reign and having pretty well 〈◊〉 it he after seems a pretender to Popularity 〈◊〉 mediating with his Father in behalf of many that ●ddressed themselves to him for reconciliation It much ●ails to apply our selves to a fit Intercessor So have known a Stepmother when requested prevail with 〈◊〉 Father her Husband in her Son in Law 's behalf 〈◊〉 he himself could not The Conditions of this reconciliation of the Barons ●●que Ports are not unworthy of the remark We 〈◊〉 that in Anno. 47. these Wardens of the five Ports 〈◊〉 the Sea with Ships that no Strangers should enter the Land to the King's Aid In 48 we are told 〈◊〉 they rob'd and spoild all men that they might 〈◊〉 sparing neither English Merchants nor others 〈◊〉 which preys as the Common Fame-went the 〈◊〉 of the Land had a good part In 49. we find 〈◊〉 Londoners alledging for themselves in mitigation 〈◊〉 the great Fine required of them that they had 〈◊〉 great part of their Substance by the Rovers of 〈◊〉 Sea among whom are named the Wardens of 〈◊〉 Cinque Ports And yet notwithstanding all these 〈◊〉 Harms done they are Recorded to have had all 〈◊〉 former Priviledges confirmed to them and 〈◊〉 was Granted That if any English-man or 〈◊〉 would Sue for Restitution of Goods by them 〈◊〉 taken or for the Death of any of their Friends ●●fore Slain that all such Complaints should 〈◊〉 Sued in their Courts there to have their 〈◊〉 determin'd and not elsewhere What grea● Assurance could these Barons desire for their own ●●curity They might well promise themselves imp●nity when they were in such fair probability to 〈◊〉 their own Judges in their own Cause unless we 〈◊〉 suppose Juries were to be chosen elsewhere 〈◊〉 we might in good reason that the King would 〈◊〉 to such Terms of Accomodation had we it not up●● Record that the common Fame at that Day ran 〈◊〉 the said Wardens of the Five Ports had then the D●minion of the Sea Whereupon the King was after sort compell'd to follow their Pleasures When Man is to take an unpleasant Potion after he 〈◊〉 drunk up the greatest part thereof it not rarely ha●pens that the Remains in the bottom are harder 〈◊〉 get down than was all the rest About the Feast of Philip and Jacob we hear of 〈◊〉 King's holding a Parliament at Northampton● 〈◊〉 which were confirm'd the old Franchises and Libert●●● by the King's Progenitors before Granted in the City ●f London with a new Grant for the Shire of Mid●lesex 'T is good to make things as sure as we 〈…〉 this Parliament were likewise disinherited many Noble-men of the Land who before-time had taken the Barons Party For which cause they accompa●●ed together Robbed in divers parts of the Land ●ook Lincoln and spoil'd it and after Ransomed many of the Rich Burgesses of the Town And taking the ●sle of Ely so strengthened it that they held it long 〈◊〉 Anno 51 At the choosing of the Mayor of London ● Controversie arose between the Rulers and Com●ons of the City Wherefore by advice of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen Sir Roger Leyborn a Courtier plain enough by his Actions related before with others ●ame to Guild-hall being Armed under their Gowns ●nd upon Fryday following Alhallon day called the Commons to the Election of the new Mayor How ●●ee was this Election likely to be whither men came ●ecretly Armed to assist their Party Fabian tells us ●hat the best of
of his Disposition weakness of his Judgment or fondness of 〈◊〉 Affection grounded mostly on humour an● fancy having grasp'd all publick affairs in Church and State into their own hands too too oft make no better use thereof than to Hector over those who were before their Superiours suppress their Equals oppress their Inferiors and inslave the poor Commons the easier thereby to raise themselves and their own Families upon other mens ruins When these things happen and the reins of Government fall into such men's hands the rich are sure to be the greatest sufferers and such as have most of this Worlds goods are certain to be most watch'd and carpt at and all opportunities greedily laid hold on to bring them under the Lash that they may be squeez'd like Spunges and large sums exacted of them to buy out their Pardons and procure forgiveness till another occasion offer it self to make them be thought Offenders anew of this London sufferings in the fifteenth of this King are attesting proofs For the Londoners having refus'd to lend the King mony as was requested and some abuses being offer'd to the Merchant Stranger that proffered to lay it down Stow tells us the King was marvellously inrag'd hereat and calling a Council of his Nobles at Stamford causes the Mayor Sheriffs and best of the Citizens to be Arrested and afterwards the Mayor and Sheriffs being depos'd sends them to several Prisons there to be kept till he and his Council had consider'd and decreed what should be done with them and it was also further determined that from thenceforth the Londoners should not chose nor have any Mayor but that the King should appoint one of his Knights to be Ruler of the City their Priviledges were revok'd their Liberties disannull'd and their Laws abrogated Neither was this all The Terms likewise and the Courts of Kings Bench Common-pleas Chancery c. Were remov'd from London to York such was the displeasure conceiv'd against them by the King or the ill Offices done them by some busie Courtiers about him For Fabian gives us another account of this affair and says the occasion arose from a contest between the Citizens and the Bishop of Salisburies Servants about one of their fellow Servants who had taken a Loaf out of a Bakers basket openly in the streets and then broke his head with his Dagger for attempting to regain it which grew so high the Citizens striving to have the offender seiz'd on and Committed to Ward and the Bishops Servants rescuing him and shutting up their Gates that the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs had much ado by their perswasion presence and Authority to stop further outrages and contain the multitude within bounds though at last they effected it and dismis'd the people home in peace and quietness But the angry Bishop so highly resented this business notwithstanding the fault sprung Originally out of his own House that he and the Arch-Bishop of York incens'd the King all they could against the Londoners even so far that one expresly affirms he was once resolv'd to have utterly ruin'd and destroy'd the whole City A very sharp punishment certainly for such an offence and for a City publickly endow'd with such transcendent Grants and Priviledges as not to be lyable to a just legal seizure of her Liberties and Franchises unless for Treason or Rebellion done by the whole City as hath been before observ'd in the first of Edward the third and the seventh of this present King Now how Treason or Rebellion could be justly charg'd upon the whole City at this time and in these instances which soever of them we give credit to I cannot well conceive The most methinks that could be made of it in the worst construction could amount no further than a Riot notwithstanding the great and hainous matters laid unto the Mayors charge though not a syllable prov'd that I read of as that he no otherwise Rul'd the City but suffered the Citizens to make such assaults upon the Kings head Officers to the Kings great dishonour and hazard of the Kings Treasure then in his Custody The Statute of the twenty fifth of Edward the third which makes it Treason to slay the Treasurer must surely have been very far stretched to have brought the whole City within the compass thereof because some of the meaner Citizens assaulted the Treasurers House upon an injustice first done by one and ●n affront afterwards offered by others of his own Servants in refusing to deliver the Offender or ●uffer the Constable to enter to seize him he himself being as many Miles distant at that time as Windsor is from London and so not capable of receiving then the least injury in his own person ●uch less to be kill'd out-right without which no Treason lies in the Case upon this Act. But if ●he King and Council would have it so or at least ●ct as if it were so contrary to an establish'd ●aw and his own Grand-Fathers grant who ●ould who would who durst contradict Here ●as no Parliament then Sitting that I read of ●o House of Commons in Being nor Lords erough present their Friends to stave off the first brunt though at length we hear of a Reconciliation depending before a Parliament was call'd and that too by the mediation of powerful Friends some of them no less than the Principal Lords besides the Queen her self Baker and Stow name the Duke of Gloucester the Kings Uncle who was ever reputed by the Commons a great Friend and Patriot to his Country and his untimely end afterwards severely reveng'd on the Actors and Contrivers thereof and made the occasional cause of enraging the People against the King himself who within few years after the aforesaid Dukes violent Death was publickly dethron'd by such as under the popular pretence of reforming ill Government aim'd at their own Advancement to the chiefe●● Honours Preferments and Dignities in Church and State Through this Noble Peer's Suit and Mediation among others we hear the King was somewhat pacified and by little and little abated the rigour of his purpose calling to mind the divers honours and great gifts he had received of the Londoners as certainly the securing his right to the Crown against the ambitious pretensions of his aspiring Uncle and th● defending his Life and Person from the furiou● Outrages of his mutinous Commons were no mean pieces of Service done him by them whereupon he determined to deal more mildly with them and gives them hopes of Grace and Pardon Fabian tells us of a Reverend Bishop a Spiritual Lord that joyn'd with the Queen 〈◊〉 procure the Kings favour for them and 〈◊〉 their Liberties restor'd them again That the Queen did successfully interceed in their behalf we may perhaps not without some shew of reason conclude from the many great rich and costly Presents made her by the Citizens at the Kings publick entrance into the City about the latter end of August in the same Summer Nay one Writer goes
Law to the Destruction of the Duke of Gl●ucester and the Earls of Arundel and Warwick at Shrewscury For that the King against his Promise procured the Duke of Ireland sundry Rebells about Cheshire where diverse Murders by him were committed For that the King against his own Promise and Pardon at the Solemn Procession apprehended the Duke of Gloucester and sent him to Callice there to be choked and murdered beheading the Earle of Arundel and banishing the Earl of Warwick and the Lord Cobham For that the Kings Retinue and rout gathered out of Cheshire about the apprehension of those Nobles committed diverse Murders Rapes and other Fellonies besides refusing to pay for their Victuals For that the King condemned the Nobles aforesaid for divers rodes made within the Realm contrary to his open Proclamation For that the King doubly Fined Men for their Pardons For that the King to oppress his whole subjects procured in his last Parliament that the Power thereof was committed to certain Persons For that the King being sworn to Minister right did notwithstanding enact in the last Parliament that no mediation should be made for the Duke of Lancaster contrary to his said Oath For that the Crown of England being freed from the Pope and all other forraign Power the King notwithstanding procured the Popes Excommunication on such as brake the last Parliament in derogation of the Crown Statutes and Laws of the Realm For that the King banished the Duke of Lancaster for 10 years without any Cause as the same King openly affirmed For that the King unlawfully revoked the Letters Patents made to the said Duke of Lancaster in An. 21. For that the King contrary to the Laws and will of the Justices suffered Sheriffs to continue longer than one year and placed such therein as were unfit For that the King repayed not to his Subjects debts of them borrowed For that the King in the time of Truce and Peace exacted great Subsidies and wasted the same about frivilous matters For that the King refused to execute the Laws Saying that the Laws were in his Mouth and Breast For that the King by procuring by Statutes that he might be free as any of his Progenitors did under colour thereof subvert Laws according to his Will For that the King procured Knights of the Shires to be made to serve his own will For that the King enforced Sheriffs to be Sworn to execute all Commandemens under the Great Seal Privy Seal or Signet contrary to their accustomed Oaths For that the King to wrack mony from his Subjects procured 17 several Shires to submit themselves to his Grace whereby great sums of mony were Levied For that the King being Sworn to observe the Liberties of the Church notwithstanding at his Voyage into Ireland enforced diverse Religious Persons to give Horse Armour and Carts For that the Justices for their good Councel given to the King were with evil Countenance and threats rewarded For that the King of his own Will in passing into Ireland carried with him the Treasures Reliques and other Jewels of the Realm which were used safely to be kept in the Kings own Coffers from all hazard and for that the same King cancelled and razed sundry Records For that the King by writing to Forreign Princes and to his own Subjects is reputed universally a most variable and dissembling man For that the King would commonly say among the Nobles that all Subjects Lives Lands and Goods were in his hands without any forfeiture For that the King suffered his Subjects to be condemned by Marshal-Law contrary to his Oath and the Laws of the Realm For that the Subjects being only bound by their Allegiance were yet driven to take certain New Oaths for serving the folly of the King For that the King by his private Letters would charge the Ecclesiastical Ministers in any new Canonical matter to stay contrary to his Oath For that the King by force in his Parliament banished the Arch Bishop of Canterbury without any good Ground For that the King by his last Will passed under the Great Seal and Privy Signet gave unto his Successors certain Money and Treasure upon Condition to perform all the Acts and Orders in the last Parliament which being ungodly and unlawful he meant as ungodlily to dy in For that the King in the 11th of his Reign in his Chappel in the Manour of Langley in the presence of the Duke of Lancaster and Yorke and others received the Sacrament of the Lords Body that he would never impeach the Duke of Gloucester his Uncle for any thing before done and yet to the Contrary procured him to be murdered For that the King most fraudulently and untruely against his own Oath Banished the Arch Bishop of Canterbury and wasted his Goods in which Article in private Conference between the said Arch Bishop the King in a manner prophesied and doubted that the like would happen of himself and thereupon shewed a special Token to the Arch Bishop That if he sent the same at any time that the Arch Bishop should look that the King would come to him These were the Imputations laid to his charge and that they were then thought true or at least not contradicted is self-Evident all seeming highly desirous of a Change and few dispos'd to espouse the depos'd Kings Cause and Interest so furious and violent was the Current of the Times as to bear away well nigh all before it That Parliament being so full of the new Kings Favourers and so empty of the old Kings true and cordial Friends that I remember to have read of but one viz. the Loyal Bishop of Carlisle who after a little Demur of a few dayes time upon a Motion made in Parliament about the disposal of King Richard stood up boldly and undauntedly for his old Lord and Master in the midst of his professed and declared Enemies and known Deserters His Speech as a rare Example of Fidelity giving us the very Quintessence of Loyalty I shall venture to set down out of Sir Richard Bakers Chronicle with the Consequents as follows My Lords The Matter now propounded is of marvellous Weight and Consequence wherein there are two Points chiefly to be considered The First whether King Richard be sufficiently put out of his Throne The Second whether the Duke of Lancaster be lawfully taken in For the First How can that be sufficiently done when there is no Power sufficient to do it The Parliament cannot for of the Parliament the King is the Head and can the Body put down the Head You will say but the Head may bow it self down and may the King resign It is true but what force is in that which is done by force And who knows not that King Richard's Resignation was no other But suppose he be sufficiently out yet how comes the Duke of Lancaster to be lawfully in If you say by Conquest you speak Treason For what Conquest without Arms And can a Subject take Arms
that it became the fixt Metropolis of the Nation Yet in the Time of the Saxon's Heptarchy we find mention made of this Noble City several times and on several Occasions As upon account of Mordred's choosing this City to be Crown'd in when he rebell'd against King Arthur The holding of it by Mordred's Son against Constantine Son of Cador till he was slain The Flying away of the Bishops of London and York and other Ministers with their Goods and Reliques for fear of the Saxon's Cruelty under Ethelfride Whereby the Commonalty were left without Spiritual Guides the City without Her chief Pastors The setting up an Arch-Bishoprick there by Austine the Monk and the making of Melitus Bishop of the same in Ethelbert's Days The Building of St. Pauls either by the same Ethelbert or else by Sigebert King of the East-Angles as some affirm In this Ethelbert's Time we read in Fabian of the Building the First Church of Westminster in Honour of St. Peter by a Citizen of London in the West-End of London in a Place called Thorny now Westminster which before was over-grown with Bushes and Briars But Stow affirms Sebert King of the East Saxons to have Built it In the Time of Ethelwolph Son of Egbert King of the West-Saxons London is said to be spoild by the Danes and so not likely then to be of any great Strength though we find the Danes drawing themselves thitherward in Alured or Alfred's Days after an Agreement concluded between them But now again begins this City to be often mentioned in Story and grows more Famous every Day after that King Alured having Victoriously repeal'd the Danes return'd thereunto repair'd those Places that before had been injur'd by the Danes and committed it to the Guiding of Ethelred Earl or Duke of Mercia who was his Son-in-Law by Marrying his Daughter Elfleda Hence may we date another Beginning as it were of it's Glory and Lustre from this new Resurrection out of the Ashes of its former Ruines Some of the next News we hear of this Honourable City is of the Londoner's beating away the Danes who Landing in Sussex and comeing to the Town of Lewes and thence towards London had Builded a Castle near the River of Lewes the more to annoy the Country but the Citizens Valour with the Countrys Help soon demolished it In the Reign of Edward the Eldest Son to the forenamed Alured we find London thought so considerable that the King took it under his own Rule not entrusting even his own Sister therewith thinking it probably too important a Charge to be committed to any Subject never so nearly related to him because of the Power that would accrue to the Possessor thereof and the Danger might thereby happen to him the King in those troublesome Times upon any the least Difference arising between them When Egelred or Etheldred Son of Edgar rul'd the Land we read of the Danes coming to London they being ready enough to haunt any Place that could afford them Spoil and Pillage but we find that then they were repel'd by the Citizens The City it seems was strong enough to defend their own But soon after that another sad Accident befell the City against which it was not so well able to defend it self viz. A great Fire whereby a large Part of it was destroyed So rare is it for any thing great in this World to arrive at it's Greatness from small Beginnings without being Subject to many Mischances and meeting with many Turns and Changes of Fortune before it can arrive at the height of its Grandeur Fabian tells us in his Chronicle that the City had then the most Building from Ludgate towards Westminster and little or none where the Chief or Heart of it now is except that in diverse Places there were Houses but they stood without Order This he professes to have known by an Old Book in the Guild-Hall named Domesday But where-ever the Building stood in those Days or how great Harm soever the Fire did it nevertheless it continued of such Strength and Riches that the Danes were willing to have got it into their own Power and in Order thereunto besieged it but that they took it at that season I read not Yet some Years after I find the Londoners sending Gifts and Pledges to the Danes to divert them then coming towards London 'T was in Egelred's Days that the Danes thus harrassed the Land and did almost whatever they pleased selling the English Men Peace for their Money and then breaking it again at their Pleasure to get a greater Sum. This gave the first Occasion to the Imposition of that Tax upon the Land called Danegelt And the Pride and Lordly Imperiousness of the insulting Danes gave Original to the opprobrious Name of Lurdane as now it is esteem'd though then it was Lord Dane a Term the English were for fear compell'd to give those proud lazy Danes that Rul'd and Domineer'd in many of their Houses at the right Owner's cost Neither is it much to be wondred at that this Land was brought into so great Misery by these Hectoring Strangers when as we fi●d Dissention amongst the Lords and such treacherous Dealing that whatsoever was devis'● by Some for the Hurt of their common Enemies it was quickly by Others of the same Councel betra●'d and made known to them The King giving himself to a vicious and incontinent Life and to get Money any manner of way sticked not to 〈◊〉 Men of their Possessions for small or seigned Causes according to the History and after cause them to redeem their own for great Sums of Money In London 't was that I find this unfortunate Egelred more than once residing for his own Security it seems more than for any Aid he attempted to get of the Londoners to defend his Land Here he fell sick died and was also Buried and with him some of the English Men's Shame and Dishonour For Edmund Ironside his Son favoured by the Londoners and some other Lords was Crown'd in that City and thence departing with his Strength so hotly pursued Canutus the Danish King that he was several Times put to the worst and in fair likelihood to have been utterly over-thrown had not the false Edric who having got an Habit of Treachery in Egelreds Days could not so easily for●ake his Old base Conditions oft disappointed King Edmund by his Treacherous Dealing By ●his Edric's Treachery I have read That Edmund lost his Life afterwards for which Fact the ●alse Traytor expecting a great Reward at the ●ands of Canutus had his Head exalted according ●o the others Promise above all the Lords of Eng●and it being stricken off pitch'd upon a Spear ●nd after set upon the highest Gate of London But about the King's Death and Edric's Authors are found much to vary Neither is it any marvel that Writers differ so often and so much in their Relations of Things done so many Ages since Whenas in things but as it were of yesterday we
of the Realm so much by Conque●● as on Conditions accordingly here 's menti●● made of one Grant The Occasion of Stephen's coming to the Crow● contrary to his own former Oath swore to Ki●● Henry and in prejudice to Maud's Claim is R●corded by one Author to have been the Oath one Hugh B●got sometime King Henry's Stewar● who swore that the Late King in his presence little before his Death chose this Stephen for 〈◊〉 Heir by reason that he had received some disco●tent at his Daughters hands Whereunto the 〈◊〉 giving easy Credence admitted him King 〈◊〉 Favour of the Londoners did doubtless at th● time condu●● not a little to his advantage in p●●ferring him an able Man before a weak Woma● For Stow's Annals inform us That he was receiv●● by the Londoners when he had been repulsed at ●ther Places certainly it redounded to his 〈◊〉 Benefit afterwards as hath been related before Another Addition of Strength might be his not imposing heavy Taxes upon the People which it may be increased their Love to him and made so many side with him As indeed we find upon his first Admission that he sware among other things before the Lords at Oxford to forgive his People the Tax of Danegelt Neither do I read of any Taxes that he raised upon the Commons It is affirmed positively in the C●ll●ction of Wonders and Remarkable Passages that he raised none with which Stow likewise agrees So that a King 's needless laying of many heavy and grievous Taxes upon his People occasions him to lose much of their Love and his forbearing it when he hath Power in his hands unites his Subjects Hearts the faster to him But instead of Taxes we read of this Kings permission given to his Lords to build Castles or Fortresses upon their own Grounds Many whereof we find pulled down in the next King's time they having been the occasion of many Miseries in the Land and the ready means to foment Civil Wars therein which generally brings greater Damages to the Common●lty than a few Impositions and Taxes can be presumed to do This King Stephen was twice Crowned but for what cause or for what intent is not so easily known whether it was that he thought his Imprisonment had diminished somewhat of his Royalty or else thinking by a second Coronation to ●lude the Force of the Oath made at the first I find not delivered Certain it is soon after my Author tells of his taking away a Castle from the Earl of Chester who before had appeared against him on Maud's side with a very considerable Strength but had been afterwards reconciled to the King But what is much more considerable we read not long after of the King 's new danger and ill Success and of his Party being weaken'd particularly by the loss of London For Duke Henry after King coming into England with a great Army after some small Success gets up to London and wins the Tower as much by Policy and fair Promi●es saith my Author as by Strength Then he had Opportunity enough to caress the C●tizens being so near them and it may be he got not the Tower without their Consert if not by their Affistance Hereby we find that he retrieved what his Mother's Haughtiness before had lost and so having got the City's Affection and Power he was in a fair way to obtain his Desires as he did not long after For we quickly read of Mediators and Treaties of Peace between these two Competitors which took Effect at last though the Interest and Policy of some hindered it for a time In Conclusion the King was fain to consent to the adopting the Duke his Heir so that he might Reign during his Life Which justly to perform the King being sworn with his Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the next place we hear of their riding up to London as if to bind the bargain it was requisite to ask the consent of that Honourable City whose Favour seems to have been of so great weight in those unsettled Times as to turn the Scales twice once in the King's behalf and erewhile on the Duk●'s Such was their Influence such their Power as to pull down and set up in a manner whom the Citizens pleased Happy was this Agreement to the Land by settling peace therein as beneficial likewise was it to the Duke it being a fair Step to the Throne whereon we find him mounted within a little time For not long after this Accord we hear of the King's Death Whether the Troubles of his Mind or Diseases of his Body brought him to his End vexation for the disappointment of his Designs in being after a sort compelled to adopt his Competitor his Enemy for his Son and Heir or Grief for the loss of London's Favour which helped to effect so great a Turn in his Affairs I shall not determine It might be one it might be the other or neither or all conjoyned that became the occasional Causes so to phrase it of his Death I like not to be very positive where I am not very certain Stephen's Death making thus way for Henry to ascend the English Throne he became one of the ●reatest Kings that ever ruled this Land for the Largeness and Extent of his Territories if we reckon the Inheritance he enjoyed from his Father the Land he held by the Title of his Mother the Dowry he had with his Wife and what he ob●ained by the Success of his Arms Yet notwith●tanding all this he lived not free from Troubles ●nd intestine Broils which sprung much out of his ●wn Bowels So that the Glory of his Youth be●an somewhat to be eclipsed by the Misfortunes of ●is elder Years He Crowned his eldest Son li●ing King sometime before the middle of his ●eign to the end as one Author affirms that he ●ight have full Power and Authority to rule this ●and and People while his Father was busied in ●ther Countrys where some of his Lands lay This ●ight be one Reason but the King having learnt 〈◊〉 experience to his Mother's Loss and his own ●ost how easy it was for Stephen to attempt and ●ain the Crown being present on the Spot while ●●e right Heir was far distant in the vacancy of the ●hrone may be supposed in his intent to have designed the hinderance of such an Intrusion for the future by Crowning the next Heir King while he himself lived I read that Stephen had some such design to have Crowned his Son King in his own days as he declared at a Parliament called at London An. Reg. 17 to have fixt the Crown the surer to his Posterity But the B●shops refused the Deed Which I do not find they did so much out of Conscience or in Favour to M●●d's Title as by the Command forsooth of the Pope who in those days was very apt to be clapping his Fingers into almost ever● ones Pye where he thought any good pickin● might be had This King Henry got but little by Crowning
one that please may peruse at his leasure in the forecited Place We likewise find there declared the severa● Wards of the City as they stood in Fabian's Time together with the Parish-Churches and other Religious Houses within and without summed up to the Number of One Hundred Sixty Eight This King Richard in the Beginning of whose Reign we first hear of the Name of Bailiffs give● to the Rulers of London having taken a Voyag● into the Holy-Land according to the Religion o● those Times and done his Devoir for the Recovery of it according to his Strength the Clergy-men had reason to esteem well of him to humour whose designs he had undertaken so chargeable 〈◊〉 Enterprize So accordingly we find that the Ecclesiastucks stuck as close to him as any of his Subjects in his Adversity For in his Return from the Holy War as 't was term'd Richard being Shipwrack't took and imprison'd by the Duke of Austria and long detain'd by the Emperour he was compell'd to redeem himself after a Year and three Month's Imprisonment at a large Ransom An hundred thousand Pounds were either presently paid or good Pledges left behind him to ascertain the full and true Payment A vast Sum in those days when Wheat was esteem'd at a high Price being sold at fifteen Shillings the Quarter as we find it in the fifth Year of King John's Reign about half a dozen Years after So that for this Ransom were sold the Ornaments of the Church Prelate's Rings and Crosses with the Vessels and Chalices of the Churches throughout the Land Wool of White Monks and Cannons and also twenty seven Shrines scrap't and spoil'd of the Gold and Silver laid on them in former Times No Priviledge of Church then regarded no Person spar'd A costly Voyage indeed it prov'd to the Land undertaken to satisfie the Clergy-men's Ambition and therefore they might well be content to bear much of the Charges and use their utmost Endeavours in the Imprison'd King's Vindication And so the Pope did as far as Curses would go to which was imputed those Mischiefs that befel the Duke of Austria and his Country a little after as the Effects of the Pope's Indignation The Power and Esteem of this City's Favour in those Times of the King's Captivity we need but remark out of Neubrigensis who acquaints us That when the Chancellour being then Bishop of Ely and Governour of the Land dreaded the Force of the opposite Lords who strove to suppress him for his Insolency and ill Government he retir'd to London and humbly intreated the Citizens not to be wanting to him in that point of time But they being not unmindful of his former Behaviour rather favour'd the other Party whereupon the proud haughty Prelate was compell'd to resign his Office which he had so ill manag'd and depart to the no small Benefit to the Land in those troublesome Times At London likewise was it that the Lords consulted together for the ordering the Land in the King's Absence which after the late ill Governour had been discarded and after an Oath of Fideli●y to the absent Prince was put into another's Hands When King Richard was delivered as soon as he landed at Sandwich we find him coming straightway to London as the fittest Place it seems to receive him and assist him So accordingly we read of his Reception there with all Joy and Honour in so splendid a Pomp that the German Nobles present beholding it affirm'd That if the Emperour had known of such Riches in England he would not have dimiss'd the Ransom'd King under an Intol●erab●e Price A little afte● we hear of his riding thence with a convenient ●●r●ngth to recover the Places that stood out 〈◊〉 him After this by a Councel of Lords call'd at Winchester having deprived his Brother John of his Honours and Lands for his Rebellion he took care to have himself crown'd King of England anew As if the Force of his former Coronation was impaired by his Imprisonment or else he thought by this politick Shift to take off all Obligations that might haply lie on him for any thing done before As indeed we quickly after read of a Resumption of all Patents Annuities Fees and other Grants m●de before his Voyage But then it 's affirmed to be done by the Authority of a Parliament call'd after his Coronation After these Passages two State-Informers are ●oted to have ri●en up promising the King great Matters the Scenes of whose chief Acts were either laid or to have been laid at London One of them the Abbot of Cadonence warning the King of the Fraud of his Officers by vertue of a Warrant from him called divers Officers before him at London to yield to him their Accounts This Place was made choice of by him as the fittest it seems wherein to ingratiate himself with the common People by ●o plausible an Act as bringing offending Officers to con●igne Punishment But Death soon cut him off and so put an end to all his Designs The other Informer call'ed William with the Long Beard reported to be born in London of a sharp Wit having shew'd the King of the Outrage of the Rich who as he said in publick Payments spar'd their own and pi●led the Poor and being upheld by him became the Patron and Defender of poor Men's Causes and stirred up the common People to a desire and love of Freedom and Liberty by blaming Rich Men's Excess and Insolence Hereupon he was followed with such numbers of People that being called before the King's Councel upon suspicion of a Conspiracy the Lords were fain with good words to dismiss him for the present for fear of the Multitude attending him and commanded certain to seize on him in the Absence of his numerous Abettors But those thus commanded mistaking the time and so failing in their intended Design he escaped and took Sanctuary in St. Mary Bow Church where his Strength quickly grew so great by the Access of the Multitude that he was not easily taken hold of nor without shedding of Blood However being at last taken after that the Heads and Rulers of the City had diminish'● the People he with other his Adherents wa● arraign'd before the Judges cast condemn'd an● hang'd very shortly after even the following da● saith the Chronicle so desirous were the rich an● great Men to have him out of the way as soo● as they could But as his Plea of Freedom was ●● acceptable to the Commons in his Life-time th●● he became a Terror to the Great so after 〈◊〉 Death he ceased not for a while to be a Dread 〈◊〉 many by reason of a Rumour raised and banded about among the Commons of his Innocenc● and favourably received of the People even to 〈◊〉 approving of him as an holy Man and Martyr an● making Pilgrimages to the Place of his Execution to the no small trouble of those that had a han● in his Death At last the Flame of this Dev●tion was somewhat cool'd by the
had the Shee● done to be used thus Sure the Pope shewed himself hereby a Lord of Lords though he pretends t● call himself a Servant of Servants From such proud●● haughty Servants Liberanos His Popeship woul● fain be esteemed a Father of Christians but here 〈◊〉 dealt very hardly with many of the Sons of the Church A sad Case indeed were we poor Christians of the Common Herd in should our Religion allow us at every turn to be sent to the Devil because the ambitious Pretences of our Governour would not suffer them to agree well together among themselves But we know already or have heard of to much of these Priest's Pride to think them th● most humble the most mortisied Men in th● World The professed and avowed Principles o● some of them tell us too too plainly that w● are not to take all they say to be either Law o● Gospell Neither do every one of their Action oblig●●●● always to think that they believ● themselves in all they affirm They may indeed sometimes tell a fair smooth Tale when they are got a little higher than their Neighbours ●nto a place where they know they must not be presently contradicted but when they be come down upon plain even Ground we find them 〈◊〉 for the most part much like other men Nay some of them it may be an Ace or two worse More Proud more Ambitious more Worldly more Covetous in a word more debauch'd in Principles and Practises I could quickly name 〈◊〉 if I list among us Protestants of the Reformed Religion of the Church of England as some delight to stile themselves the Persons the Time and the Place the Diocess the Shire the Hundred the Parish where lives a double Benefic'd-man 〈◊〉 so strong an English Church man in Word and Deed as not justly to be taxed with the imputation of a Phanatick by such as know the manner of his Converse who was not many years since depriv'd both of Office and Benefice for none of the greatest Faults that ever was Surely the Parish where the Offence was not comitted deserved not so ill at the Reverend Bishop's Hands as to be deprived of the Use and Benefit of their Pastor Neither know I wherein the harmeless Parishoners of the other Place had so highly offended as to merit the loss of their Head Shepherd's over-sight unless we must fancy them accessary to his Young Curate's indiscretion in not bowing ●ow enough at the Church door to a stately Dame of the Parish So if my Memory deceive me not have I some where read it observ'd and it seems also verified in the History that though the Name of King 's was thrown quite out of Rome yet the Power some industriously strove still to retain The Conditions where on King John was 〈◊〉 concil'd to the Pope were to this purport Th●● he should admit the Arch-Bishop to his See pe●ceably to enjoy the P●ofits and Fruits thereof permit the Prior his Monks and Others befor● exil'd for the Arch-Bishop's Cause to re-enter th● Land without trouble or future Molestation together with Restitution to them to be mad● of all Goods taken from them by his Officers 〈◊〉 the time of this variance And that he should lik● wise yield up into the Pope's Hands all his Righ● and Title to the Crown of England with all R●venues Honours and Profits belonging to the sam● as well Temporal as Spiritual to hold it ever a●ter both He and his Heirs from the Pope and h● Successors as the Pope's Feodarics These Articles thus granted and the Lord sworn to maintain them the King upon his bended Knees taking the Crown from his Head del●vered it to the Pope's Legate resigning it into th● Pope's hands both in Word and Deed and afte● five days resumed it of the same Hands by Virtu● of a Bond or Instrument made unto the Pope whic● I have here transcribed out of Mathew of Paris History that such as care not what Religion ge● uppermost in the Land may know what they are 〈◊〉 expect if Popery should once get suc● a head as t● come in again JOhannes Dei Gratia Rex Angliae c. Omnibus Christi fidelibus hanc Chartam inspecturis salutem in Domino Vniversitati Vestrae per hanc Chartam sigillo nostro Munitam Volumus esse notum quod cum Deum Matrem Nostram Sanctam Ecclesiam Offenderimus in multis proinde Divina Misericordia plurimum indigeamus nec quid digne offerre possimus pro satisfactione Deo Ecclesiae debita facienda nisi nosmet ipsos bumiliemus et regna nostra Volentes nos ipsos humiliare pro illo qui se pro nobis humiliavit usque ad Mortem Gratia Sancti Spiritus inspirante non vi interdicti ●ectimore coacti sed nostra bona spontaneaque Voluntate ac communi Conci●io Baronum Nostrorum Conserimus libere concedimus De● Sancti● Apostolis ejus Petro Paulo Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae Matronae Nostrae ac Domino Papae Innocentio ejusque Catholicis successoribus totum Regnum Angliae totum Regnum Hiberniae cum omn● Jure pertinentijs suis pro Remissione Omnium Peccatorum Nostrorum totius Generis Humaki ta● pro vivis quam pro defunctis 〈◊〉 modo illa ab eo Ecclesia Romana tanquam secundarius recipiente● tenentes in praesentia Prudenti● Viri Pandulphi Domini Papae Subdiaconi et Familiaris Exinde praedict● Domino Papae Innocentio ejusque Catholicis successoribus Ecclesiae Romanae secundum subscriptam forma● fecimus juravimus homagi●m ligium in praesentia Pandulphi si coram Domino Papa esse poterimus eidem faciemus Successores nostros et Haeredes de Vxore nostra in perpetuum obligantes ut simili modo summo Pontifici qui pro tempore fuerit Ecclesiae Romanae sine contradictione debeant fidelitatem praestare homagium recognoscere Ad indicium autem hujus nostrae perpetuae Obligationis concessionis Volumus et Stabilimus ut de proprijs et specialibus redditibus nostris praedictorum regnorum pro omni servitio ●t consuetudine quae pro ipsis facere debemus salvis per omnia Denarijs Beati Petri Ecclesia Romana mil●e marcas Esterlingorum percipiat an●uatim in festo scilicet Sancti Michaelis quingentas Marcas et in Pascha quingentas Septingentas scilicet pro Regno Angliae et trecentas pro Regno Hiberniae Salvis nobis et Haeredibus nostris justitijs Libertatibus et Regalibus nostris Quae omnia sicut supra scripta sunt rata esse volentes atque firma obligamus nos et successores nostros contra non venire et si nos vel aliquis successorum Nostrorum contra haec attentare praesumpserit quicunque ille fuerit nisi rite commonitus resipuerit cada● a jure Regni Et haec charta Obligationis et concessionis nostrae semper firma permaneat Teste meipso apud domum Militum Templi
he had lately made to the Pope'● Ambitious desires and pretensions It was after this Reconciliation that we read in Stow of the Barons coming to St. Edmundsbury and producing the Charter o● King Henry the first which they had received o● the Archbishop Stephen However let the occasional Causes of making an● confirming this grand Charter of our English Libe●ties be what they will whatever were the grounds o● the Barons desiring or the motives of the King 's granting it Upon what Foundation soever so it be sound at the bottom stand these Pacts and Compacts between the King and his Subjects For my part I know no reason why Princes and Great men should not think it their Duty to keep their words firm and inviolable as well as persons of meaner rank and quality 'T was a Romish Cardinal an Italian a Papist living long in the French Government from whom I have heard come the Doctrine of not being a slave to ones word As the Duty so I believe it the Interest of Governours to be just and firm to their Promises otherwise it is a Question how long the people under them will continue firm to theirs when they think they have a convenient opportunity to break them Fear may do much but Conscience I fancy will do but little in this Case to keep the one Party fixt and firm to his Bargain when the other values not to perform the Conditions of their mutual Compact Such as love to talk of nothing but Conquerours and Conquests captivating and inslaving men to Arbitrary Powers as if at feud and defiance with all mankind but themselves and their own Party if my Advice may be taken they would do wisely to stifle such harsh unpleasing Doctrines in their own breasts and not openly produce them in publick view to all without distinction lest one bold confident brazen-fac'd fel●ow or other should start up out of the Vulgar Herd and ask them why the people would not have as good a Title to their Power when they had got the upper hand as those Princes who claim only by Conquest A Question that at first view would seem very plausible to many if well stated without the previous consideration of Oaths Promises and Compacts As for the consequences that some may fancy hid in the belly of it ●ike the Armed Grecians in the Trojan Horse look they to them who find themselves concern'd on either side It 's well enough known what a large tract of ground the French King hath seis'd in the Spanish Netherlands within these few years and brought the People of those Provinces under his own Subjection by force That his title to those lands at first was none of the best is plain enough to such as know his Pretensions As for that shadow of claim which might be fancied to accrue to him by his Queen the late Spanish Kings Daughter that it is clear done 〈◊〉 as far as words and writings could go is manife●● by the Printed Articles of the Pyrenaean Tre●● The best Title I find he had to those Countries 〈◊〉 the Spanish Kings weakness to defend those Subje●● himself together it may be with some unwillingness let them look to the payment of as great an Army 〈◊〉 was thought needful for their defence out of th● own Mony by their own Officers He was made p●●haps to fear lest the Soldiers should have been 〈◊〉 at the Devotion of such as paid them than at his 〈◊〉 rais'd them though he appointed such a 〈◊〉 such Officers and such Soldiers as he thought fit 〈◊〉 had had the sole ordering of them at his own 〈◊〉 and pleasure in all other things but naming the p●●mas●e●s Or rather was it not his prime Councell●● the Spaniards loathness to lose the many picki●● they glean'd out of their Offices in those Count●● by defrauding the Soldiers of their appointed 〈◊〉 and so cheating both King and Country 〈◊〉 good is much bandied up and down among 〈◊〉 words but in truth and reality private interest that which most oversways As for the rest of 〈◊〉 French Kings pretences that he makes use of th● for meer colours is evident by the novel inventio● Dependencies If need be we doubt not but 〈◊〉 Hamball passing over the rugged Alps with his 〈◊〉 my he can either find a way or make one be it 〈◊〉 such a one as his Manifest● at the beginning of late Wars with the Dutch tells us of viz. his 〈◊〉 Glory One of the truest pretensions I believe of Now put the Case and suppose that the Inh●●●tants of these late subdued Countries brought 〈◊〉 the French Kings Subjection by the force of Arms and all former right and title to them 〈◊〉 relinquish'd by their ancient Prince the King Spain in his late Treaties should one time or other ●y some unexpected unseen unthought of accident ●et such power into their hands as to break off these ●rench Chains of Slavery beat the French Kings Of●●cers and Soldiers out of their Country and keep 〈◊〉 at a Bay by the strength of their Arms the ●uestion would be among our Politick Casuists whe●●er they would not have as good right and Title to ●●ace the Government of their Country in what ●●nds they pleased as the French King now hath in ●●tual possession My meaning is of such who shall 〈◊〉 have pass'd away themselves by Oaths Cove●●nts and Compacts That they sit down quietly ●●der the French Government and do not publickly ●●pose is but a silent argument a negative proof at 〈◊〉 They do not openly declare their dissent 〈◊〉 they assent and consent is such a conclusion that 〈◊〉 not well and cleverly follow from the premises ●hat such as are for the present French interest may ●firm let them likewise well prove but methinks 〈◊〉 English men should not be over-ready to disclaim 〈◊〉 Netherlands right when they call to mind that in ●●een Elizabeths days our Governours thought good defend the poor distressed Provinces against the ●yrannical Arbitrary pretences of the Spanish King 〈◊〉 contrary to their ancient priviledges would have ●●duc'd them all by force to Popery and Slavery to ●●pose which their Neighbours especially England powerfully assisted them that the Spaniard was 〈◊〉 at last to declare he would treat with them as ●●th free States before he could get a treaty of peace 〈◊〉 them Such as break ancient Covenants and 〈◊〉 the first stone had need stand upon safe and sure ●ound least they find too many stones flying about 〈◊〉 Ears before the end of the fray We moreo●●● have found the Spaniards within these few years coming into the assistance of these same new 〈◊〉 once his old Subjects against the French Kings Po●er ready in a manner to over-run them We 〈◊〉 have heard likewise of publick Addresses in behalf 〈◊〉 the same side made of late to our present King 〈◊〉 esteem'd the general Consent of the Nation After King John had granted the grand 〈◊〉 to his Lords and every one was departed peaceab●●
into his own Country there were hopes doubtless 〈◊〉 a happy peace to ensue and long to continue But seems those hopes were soon blasted For the 〈◊〉 next year viz. the 15 we read of the late agr●● peace's being violated and broken by the King 〈◊〉 according to my Author persevering in his wro●● would in no wise be induc'd to hold his own gra●● but to execute all things after pleasure nothing ●●ter Law and Justice These violations produc'd new War between King John and his Nobles 〈◊〉 ended not till after the Kings Death So troubles●● was it to the Nation so dangerous to the King 〈◊〉 he should have such ill Ministers about him 〈◊〉 were either authors or followers of no better advi●● then what could not consist with the Kings keepi●● his Royal Word That the Sheep were made 〈◊〉 for the Shepheard to clip shear pill and slay at own will and pleasure is a Doctrine that the 〈◊〉 quiet innocent harmless Sheep would no longer ●●●lingly assent to than while the Knife is held at 〈◊〉 throat how acceptable soever it may be to the 〈◊〉 Wolves and the degenerate Dogs of the 〈◊〉 When King John found himself too weak to ●●tend with his Barons and yet it seems by the 〈◊〉 not willing enough to keep to his former 〈◊〉 he sent beyond Sea and call'd in strangers his Assistance We read that Northfolk and 〈◊〉 were the Lands promised to those strangers 〈◊〉 would come over to aid the King who had a little ●efore got the Pope to disannul the aforesaid Charter ●nd liberties granted ere while by him and excommu●icate the Barons We have mention made in Stow 〈◊〉 or 3 times of strangers coming over So many of ●hem were cast away at one time by Tempest who ●ere coming over Men Women and Children that ●●'s said of 4000 not one escap'd alive So that we ●ay observe 't is an old trick to call in Foreigners ●pon the Natives when Arbitrary designs are on 〈◊〉 When the King was found to have invited ●trangers to his aid the Lords also sent into France ●or help and succour When two Women fall a scol●ing and pulling one anothers head-cloths whoever ●●rst began the fray it is much but both will be in ●●ult before it end London was the place where the ●ords kept themselves together till the expected aid ●nd succour from beyond Sea was brought to them ●nder Lewis the French Kings Son who landing 〈◊〉 England with a strong Army came afterwards to London and was there received Hence he with the Lords departing won many Castles in the Land and 〈◊〉 their return had the Tower of London given up to ●hem by appointment Tho the Tower held long for ●he King yet 't was the City it seems that bare the ●way and adhered to the Lords What a strength ●●ey were of we may observe out of Stow where ●ing John is said to have made hast to besiege Lon●on but the Londoners were hereby so little daunted ●hat they set open their Gates and were ready to meet ●im ten miles off the City whereupon the King with●rew understanding their boldness and multitude ●hen the Major Roger Fitz. Alwyn was accused to be ●●vourable to the Kings Party we find him quickly ●ischarg'd of his Office and one Serle Mercer chosen 〈◊〉 his place so great was the favour of the Citizens to the Barons and their Cause that they spar'd not their own head Officer and Ruler when he lay under th● suspicion of favouring Arbitrary designs so contrary to the mind of the Citizens The War still continuing and King John being not able to prevail tho th● Pope interceded by his Lega●e he had at last ●● some writes all his Arbitrary designs quench'd with a Cup of Poyson at Swinstead Abby about Lincoln Tho another Author is said to affirm that he died ●● the flux at another place Soon after this unhappy unfortunate King John death we meet with an eminent instance of Englis● mens Loyalty as well as of their love of liberty an● freedom for though the King and his Lords were 〈◊〉 so great a difference most of the latter part of hi● Reign and he left the Throne and his life at such 〈◊〉 time when his Barons were likely in outward appearance to be much too strong for him his his surv●ving Heir being but then a Child of about 9 years 〈◊〉 age Yet as if all rancour and animosity against th● King and his Party was dead and buried with him 〈◊〉 his Grave the wheel of affairs was so turn'd as 〈◊〉 were in an instant that Lewis and his strangers we●● disgusted and the young Fatherless Prince was proclaim'd and Crown'd King of the Land at an ag● wherein he was not fit to be left to his own guidan●● without a Tutor It 's plain enough by this instanc● that English hearts were more loyal than naturall● to desire the ruine of their Prince and his Family 〈◊〉 at any time they appear'd in Arms against him in defence of their Lives Liberties and Freedoms ho● ready have they shewed themselves to accord an● submit as soon as those men of ill Principles and A●bitrary practices were remov'd from their Princ● who had rais'd those clouds of discontent betwee● him and his People The chief of those that so soon returned to their Allegiance were the powerful Earls of Pembroke and Chester who drew with them a very considerable re●inue They may be probably thought to hope to ●●nfuse better Principles into their young Prince in his Nonage than appeared by former Arbitrary actions ●o have been in his Father and so model the Go●ernment into a better frame in the time of that pow●r they were as the chief Nobles most likely to ●ave under the King in his younger days Neither ●o I know but somwhat might proceed from re●orse of Conscience The Earl of Chester in the 2d ●ear of the Kings Reign taking his journey into the Holy-Land the Religion of those times having made ●hat the usual way of Expiation Some such intent of ●he Earl stands likewise upon record in one of the Chronicles saith my Author Another very proba●le occasion of this sudden change of Affairs in the Kingdom may be supposed to have risen from the Death-bed confession of a French Nobleman who 〈◊〉 reported to have discovered Lewis's intent to 〈◊〉 destroy and quite root out those English Lords ●hat adhered to him as if in detestation of their dis●oyalty to their own natural English Soveraign When ●he Barons came once to find that he whom they ●ad called in to defend them against their Kings Ar●itrariness intended to violate and break their Co●enants established at first between them when he ●ould come to have opportunity and so turn their ●●plored aid into their certain destruction they ●ight well think they had reason enough to disclaim 〈◊〉 Alliance and endeavour to frustrate his privy in●●ntions by returning to their former Allegiance as 〈◊〉 as a fit season presented it self Conditional
the City gave the Nomination to Aleyn ●●wch and divers of the others cryed upon Thomas 〈◊〉 Thomas at that time Prisoner in Windsor Castle ●herefore the said Sir Roger with the Assistance of ●he Mayor and others took those Persons and sent ●●emun to divers Prisons So that what they could not ●o well get by fair means some seem resolved to ob●ain by force And yet 't is not unlikely but they ●ould be ready enough to bear People in hand that ●uch was a free Election The Act against Disturbance 〈◊〉 Free Elections wherein the King commandeth upon Forfeiture that no man by force of Arms nor by ●alice or menacing shall disturb any to make Free ●lection was not at that time dreaded as not being 〈◊〉 yet enacted for it is plac'd in the third of Edward the First the following King wherefore the Dist●●bers might not then think they had such cause 〈…〉 having the Court also on their side as 〈◊〉 must have had since as soon as ever they should 〈◊〉 acted so imprudently as to bring themselves 〈◊〉 the la●h of that standing Law Observe we here 〈◊〉 Power and Esteem that usually accompanie● 〈◊〉 Mayoralty of this Honorable City since that 〈◊〉 Faction were for choosing one of their own 〈◊〉 Shall I further remark upon the whole of this 〈◊〉 what Party in a Nation 't is that sticks not at 〈◊〉 nor force to effect their Designs when fair 〈◊〉 is too weak to compass them But who will 〈◊〉 me that this will not be offensive Therefore to 〈◊〉 In this Year the Gentlemen who kept the 〈◊〉 Ely and liv'd there like Outlaws broke out 〈◊〉 times and did much harm in Norfolk Suffolk 〈◊〉 Cambridge Shire took Norwich and after spoiling 〈◊〉 carried away with them many of the rich men 〈◊〉 ransomed them at great sums of Mony This 〈◊〉 occasion the story says to Thieves and other 〈◊〉 dispos'd People to do many other hurts and 〈◊〉 in divers places of the Land and the blame was 〈◊〉 to those Gentlemen Then the Pope's Legate labou●● with the King that those disinherited Gentlem●● might purchase their Lands of him by Fine and 〈◊〉 some Whereupon it was agreed that they 〈◊〉 have their Lands again at five Years value some 〈◊〉 excepted and others of small Possessions to 〈◊〉 Fined at the discretion of the King's Councel 〈◊〉 this took no conclusion saith my Author Anno 52. Aleyn Sowch being Mayor Thomas ●●sing● and Robert de Cornehyll Sherists we read of an●ther broyl beginning which was like to have crea●● no little disturbance in the Land had it not 〈◊〉 timely appeas'd and brought to an end by the inte●cession of wise Mediators For Gilbert de Clare Earl 〈◊〉 Glocester formerly a powerful Man among the B●rons Party by reason of difference and disgust ●●ising between him and the no less Potent Earl of 〈◊〉 of the same Party having turn'd to the King's side adding to it such considerable strength that it soon over powr'd the weakend Barons but ●●w upon what occasion Fabian expresses not he refused the King and gathered to him a strong 〈◊〉 in the Marches of Wales To him likewise drew Sir John Eyvile and others of the disinherited 〈◊〉 So that after Christmas he comes with a ●ear Host near unto London When the Mayor and Aldermen of the City were aware of the Earls ●●ming with so strong a Power and not knowing 〈◊〉 he were the Kings Freind they shut the 〈◊〉 against his Fore-Riders And for that neither 〈◊〉 King nor any of his Councel were then near 〈◊〉 City they went unto the Legate at that time ●●dged in the Tower and required his Councel ●hether they should suffer the Earl to enter into the ●ay or not whereunto the Legate answered that 〈◊〉 thought not the contrary for the knew well that 〈◊〉 was the Kings true Subject and Friend Not 〈◊〉 after came a Messenger from the Earl to the ●ayor to have Licence to pass through the City 〈◊〉 Southwark where he intended to lodge with 〈◊〉 People which was granted and so the Earl ●●ssed through the City and was lodg'd in South●ark To him came shortly after by Surry-side 〈◊〉 John Eyvile with a great Company Then the ●ayor kept the Gate of the Bridge shut watch●●g it dayly with armed Men and every night 〈◊〉 the Draw-Bridge to be drawn and the Waterside daily and nightly to be watched with Men in Arms. In short time after the Legate and the Earl agreed in such wise that the Earl by his advice was suffered with certain of his People to be lodged in the City By means whereof he daily drew more and more of his People into it so that finally many things were ordered by him and many of the Commons took his part against the Mayor and Aldermen The Commonalty of the City had had great Power put into their hands by the Statutes made at Oxford as appears before in the Meeting of the Fol●moot at Pauls Cross they had been lately fin'd after the Barons overthrow for their standing in defence of those Parliament-Acts and but the last year had been disturb'd by the Mayor in their Election of a new Mayor by force of Arms and therefore now we may beleive it all remembred What shall we loose so seasonable an opportunity we may suppose they might then think if not to regain our former power yet at least to vindicate our selves against future affronts Here we may note not a little of the Earls policy After he had gathered together his People he comes away to London and getting leave to pass through it 〈◊〉 part of his Forces he settles himself as near the City as he might in Southwark and then by degrees gets himself and his Power into the City hoping doubtless to find a Party therein willing to second him which hopes we perceive by the sequel were not ill grounded Is not this a plain instance of the Cities Power Esteem and Influence in these days If any can produce plainer proof hereof let them as soon as they please I think here 〈◊〉 Mathematical Demonstration matter of Fact not of Fancy In Easter week we read that the Earl took the Keys of the Bridge and of the Gates from the officers of the City and deliver'd them to such as pleased him and received into the City many of the disinherited Perfons and gave them free liberty to pass the Bridge at all hours of the day and night Of all this the Mayor sent word to the King who then was gathering of this Power in Norfolk and made hasty speed towards London In the mean time the Earl with his Company made Bulwarks and ●●●bicanes between the Tower and the City casting 〈◊〉 and Trenches in some places thereof and forf●ited it wonderfully saith my Author Then many of the Citizens fearing a new Insurrection deparred from the City as secretly as they could whose goods the Earl seized to his own use or suffered his men to spoile them at his pleasure
the same was also Custos of the City So that according to this Account there pass'd about seven years wherein the Londoners had not the full and free use of their Priviledges and Franchises If this be allowed for a Truth we have but little Reason to marvel that we find the Commons so ready to adhere to such as they might hope would vindicate their former Liberty and the Rulers so averse from joyning with such in diminution of that Regal Power to which they seem wholly to have ow'd theirs and not to any Interest and Favour they had among the Commons of the City Who knows if those Writers words be granted but this might be some Reason of the Earl of Glocester's stirring again again●● the Court designs with a little perhaps of Jealou●y of the Kings Son Edwards overmuch familiarity with his Wife in a Court hinted to us by Stow but plaid by him an year later In Reg. 53. when 〈◊〉 saw the City which had formerly took part with the same side he once was of deprived of their ●●berties and Franchises with little hopes of 〈◊〉 them much through his means by his late 〈◊〉 with Edward the Kings Son to the weakning and overthrow of the Barons Party to which the City had so firmly adher'd In this year by Mediati●● and means of the fame Edward all such difinne●ited Persons as kept the Isle of Ely are said to be reconciled to the King and all Fortresses and De●ence● therein by them made plucked away and destroyed In July Octobon the Pope's Legate who had interested himself so much in the late Transactions departed towards Rome but not without a great Treasure Levi'd we hear of the Church My Author intimates That he made many good Rules therein if they were not only Rules but an● good Rules why should he not be well paid ●or them I don't think these kind of Men did very often Ordain such extraordinary good Rules unless you will call those good which tended to the satisfying the Pope's Avaricious Mind and exalting his and the Clergies Temporal Grandeur Other might be their Pretences but Mony doubtless was 〈◊〉 of their aim when they sent their Legates 〈◊〉 this Land or into other Countries owning the Pope's Jurisdiction and the Event proves it too 〈◊〉 Without all Peradventure it was not for nothing that England was called the Pope's Pack-horse Annals Peterpence Tenths F●rst-Fruits and the like were good Pickings that were drawn hence to Rome And that the Popish Clergy know full well and therefore their fingers are Itching to be Trading here again If the Pope's Mule could once more set his Foot safely on English Ground there 〈◊〉 doubt but they would make us pay for old 〈◊〉 new it should scape them hard else 'T was about Four Years before even in 49 that the Citizens of London compounded with the King 〈◊〉 a Fine of Twenty Thousand Marks and yet in this Year 53 there is another mention made of it as it were hinting to us that it was not yet all Raised or at least that all such that were Assessed towards it had not returned in their demanded Assessment but to avoid that and other Charges had rather chosen to depart from the City with their Housholds and Goods and Inhabit in divers other places of the Land Whence we may without doubt well and truly conclude the scarcity of Coin in those Days and greatness of that Imposed Tax or elfe the Paucity of the Inhabitants of London and smalness of the City in comparison with what it is at this present time If then the City was of such Power and Esteem in those Days as the former passages seem strongly to prove how great and considerable an Influence have we reason to beleive it hath at present upon the rest of the Nation now it is grown by far more Populous and 〈◊〉 more Splendid in Riches Trading and Building● Though many of the Citizens thus fled the City thinking thereby to be acquitred of the Charge of the aforementioned Imposition yet find not that this availed them ought For the others of the City remaining made we are told Instant labour to the King and had it Granted That all such as for the aforesaid cause had carri●d their Goods out of the City should be Distrain●● by the Sheriff of the Shire where they then dwelled and forced to pay all such Sums as they ●●fore were Assessed at Why should not Men 〈◊〉 the Bad with the Good If they desire to enjoy the City's Priviledges in the Day of her Prosperity there is but little reason why they should not lik●wise partake with her in the common Calamity and Adversity In September The Five Citizens viz. Thomas 〈◊〉 Thomas c. sp●ken of before in the Forty 〈◊〉 Year who had hitherto remained Prisoners in Windsor-Tower made an end with Edward the King's Son for great Sums of Mony and were delivered It would have but little availed them to ha●● pleaded the Kings safe Conduct before sent the● under his Seal T was money it seems that must b●y their Deliverance Mony they had doubtless and therefore 't is mony they must produce and so they were ●ain to do or at least agree to pay it before they could get quit out of Edwards Power The 54th year began according to the Chronicle with so hard a frost that the frozen Thames was passable for men and Beasts in diverse places and Merchadize was thereupon brought to London by Land This Forst was not so prejudiaial to their Trading 〈◊〉 the rising and flowing of Thames sometime after 〈◊〉 as injurious and hurtsul about London to the ●●owning of Cellers by the waterside and spoiling 〈◊〉 much Merchandize lying in them But these are ●●●asters we know Commonly happening in this tran●●●ry World witness the late Inundations through ●he great Rains this Spring and the damage sustaind ●●ereby in Fleet-ditch Hockly in the Hole and many ●●her places In this year about the beginning of 〈◊〉 we find that the King gave the Rule of the City 〈◊〉 London to his Son Edward with all Revenues and Pr●fits thereto belonging Whereupon he made Hugh 〈◊〉 son of Othon Constable of the Tower and Custos 〈◊〉 the City About the End of April he commanded ●he Citizens to present to him six Persons able to be ●●●riffs Of whom he admitted to that Office William 〈◊〉 Haddystoke and Anke●yl De Alvern and sware them to be Accountants as their Predecessors were These we read presented in May following at the G●ild-Hall and there charged a new At these days a new Custom or Toll us'd to be paid the King by ●he Citizens which having been let to farme to a Mar●hant Stranger by Edward the Kings Son for 20. ●arks yearly the Citizens unwilling to be under a ●●●angers Rule upon great suit made to the same Ed●ard agreed with him to buy the said Toll free for ●000 Marks In this year the King had granted towards his ●oyage into the Holy Land which
Citizens dis●greement But if such was the effect of the Ci●izens contest what then may we think of those who ●urposely create those differences and stir up danger●us animosities among them upon slight trivial ●orn out pretences that from the like cause or occasion the like effect may follow At Candlemas by discreet and wise peaceable means the forenamed Sir Walter Harvy was set in Authority as Major and so remained the whole year after In the third year the King confirmed the Liberties of the City and granted some new Thus you see after a storm comes fair weather In this year we meet with a Relation concerning Walter Harvy how that in the first year of this King after long controversy and strife with the Aldermen he was made Major of London at a Folkmoot or Common-Hall at Pauls-Cross and so continued that year but in this third year occasion was found to remember and as the event seems to intimate revenge it For being accused of divers perjuries and other detestable deeds contrary to his Oath for them and for making Assemblies of the Commons who favour'd him he was depriv'd of his Aldermanship and turn'd out of the City Council for ever and for keeping the Kings peace within the City for the term of his life was bound to the good behaviour upon the suretiship of twelve persons 'T is not unusual for the Commonalty and heads of the City to be at difference each with other Here 's one who seems a promoter of the Commons power over-power'd himself by his Enemies for making assemblies of the Commons and other Crimes objected to him true or feigned I know not however thence was taken a pretence to thrust him out of his former power These Folkmoots or Assemblies of the Commons seem to have been very unpleasing t● the chief Rulers of the City and their power disgusted as may be guess'd from the fore-pass'd transactions in King Henry's days where we may remember that the Commons were the men wh● had power allotted them by the Parliament at their Folkmoot or Common-hal to grant the King Licence to depart out of the Land for a Season 'T were they who most firmly adher'd to the Barons standing up in defence of those Parliament Statues made at Oxford but few of the chief Rulers of the City comparatively are noted to have appear'd openly in that fam'd contest of the Barons War In the fourth year occasion was taken against Michael Tony upon some demeaours of his in the Welch War to accuse him of Treason of which he was arraign'd judg'd and condemn'd and after drawn hang'd and quartered This man doubtless had been a noted stickler in the Barons War for I find one of that Name among the five persons so long kept in Prison in Windsor Tower after the Barons overthrow till mony bought them out as is before related Princes once highly offended may openly profess to forgive the offending party but they do not however so soon forget him Tho David pardoned Shimei during his life and swore to him not to put him to death with the Sword yet as good a Man as he was he charg'd his Son Solomon to bring down his hoary head to the grave with blood and so accordingly we find an occasion was afterwards taken by Solomon to revenge his former cursing his Father David by commanding Benaiah who went out and fell upon him that he dyed This year was the famous Statute of Mortmain first enacted that no man should give Lands or Rents to the Church without the Kings Special Licence which Statute had afterwards many additions annext to it to make it the stronger For the Lay-fee was in great danger to be devour'd by the Spiritualty such Arts did the Clergy use on mens minds to augment their power and Riches Tho now our Courts of Law are fixt at Westminster yet in these Ancient times it was not so for we read that this King in his sixth year remov'd his Courts of Kings-Bench Chancery Common-Pleas and Exchequer to Shrewsbury and afterwards return'd them back again to the no small damage of the Records thus carried to and fro This King held his Parliament at London in his seventh year for Reformation of his Coyn much clip't and diminish'd This storm fell chiefly upon the Jews by reason of the Inquest charg'd in London to enquire of this matter Whereupon were cast two hundred and ninety seven persons before the Major and other Justices sitting at London and afterwards Executed at sundry times and places My Author hath left upon Record that among these there were but three Englishmen all the rest were Jews or Jews born in England Famous is the 12th year for the Conquering and sub●●●●ing of Wales to the English Scepter and div●sion of it b● King Edward into Shires whereupon were ordain'd Sheriffs and other Officers therein as were then us'd in England David Brother to Lewellyn late Prince of Wales who was condemned to be drawn hang'd and quarter'd as a chief ●●irrer and beginner of the Welsh War in time of a Parliament held at Shrewsbury was shortly after Executed and his head sent to London to be s●t by his Brothers which had been order'd to be plac'd the ●ear before on London-Tower In this year was Edward of Carnarvan born the first of our English Kings since William the first that I read of publickly unking'd and depos'd by his own Subjects The great Conduit standing against Saint Thomas of Acres in Cheapside owes his foundation to this year The 13th year may be noted for the Kings seizing the Franchises and Liberties of London into his own hands on the day kept in Memory of Saint Pauls Conversion so that he discharged the Major Gregory Rokisle and admitted for Custos or Guardian of the City Stephen Sandewich who continued till the Monday following the Purification of the Virgin Mary when being discharg'd Sir John Breton s●ands upon Record charg'd for the residue of the year My Author writes that the cause of this displeasure the King bore to the City is not shewn of a certainty He mentions an old Pamphlet whereby it appears that the Major took bribes of the Bakers and suffer'd them to sell bread lacking six ounces in a penny Loaf for which the King was sore displeased but to him this seem'd no convenient cause that the Liberties of the City should be seiz'd for one man's offence Wherefore he rather supposeth it was for a more grievous cause However it is observable from History that it was a Common thing in Elder times to seize the Cities Charters on pretences slight enough of any sense till the Citizens grew so wise as at convenient seasons to procure new grants and graces to prevent such seizures for the future And that it is not still so feasable and practicable is the grief I believe and heart-burning of some in the world The 14th year of this King may be accounted famous for the Statutes called Additamenta Gloucestriae made at a
low birth became the head Leader of the Scots against the Kings Power and had Created him no little trouble in Scotland but now in revenge was his head set upon London-Bridge and his four quarters sent into Scotland to be set upon the Gates of some Towns in that Land About this time we hear likewise of several Nobles of Scotland coming to the Kings Parliament at Westminster and there voluntarily Sworn in the Presence of the King and his Lords to be true to the King of England and to keep the said Land to his use against all other Persons Among these is named Robert le Bruce who not long after sends to the Pope for a dispensation of his Oath raises more Commotions in Scotland and gets to be Crowned King thereof at Saint Johnstons Anno Thirty four But when King Edward had overthrown the Scots Army and taken many of the Nobles he sent the Bishop of Saint Andrews and Bastoon with the Abbot of Scoon to the Pope with report of their Perjury and how they were taken Armed in the field to shed the blood of Christian men And the Temporal Lords he sent into England to the Tower of London who were afterwards Arraigned at London and put to death and their Heads set upon London-Bridge The longest Sword carries away the Bell. If the Scots had prevail'd in the like sort against King Edward it 's a question whether they would not have done much after the same manner How would they have then vaunted themselves and their Cause for the most rightful whereas being Conquer'd they suffer'd as Rebels That the weakest goes to the Wall is a known saying Yet as strong powerful and succesful as this King Edward was we find he cared not to meddle himself with the Spiritual Lords taken in the field fighting against him but rather chose publikely to send them to the Pope with an high offence laid to their charge to be punished at his pleasure Whereby we may presume he gratified the Popes Ambition in making him as it were the sole Judge of their offences and yet thereby doubtless sufficiently secur'd himself against those men of the Church his late Enemies for the future Could the Pope in Civility and Gratitude refuse to revenge the King in punishing these Clergy-men for fighting against him who had thus highly mounted the power and Authority of the Triple Crown above his own in this matter to the publick view of the world If the Popish Clergy in those times were grown so formidable that this Triumphant King in the midst of his Victorious Arms thought it safer to remit these Clergy-men's offences to the Popes Correction than punish them himself for I think it was policy more than zeal that made him act thus what weak matches were the other Puny Princes to them in those days of their worldly Prosperity Pomp and Grandeur Now their wings are pretty well clipt by the escape of so many people Nations and Countries out of this Popish House of Bondage let Crowned Heads and free States be careful that they suffer not the Popes wings to grow again or permit their Sworn Vassals the Jesuits to imp them anew with fresh Feathers lest they mount up again over their heads to their Ancient greatness or take a flight higher than ever they did Now the French King through the base connivance of some others Treachery and many great Mens careless negligence is become Europe's Terror if Popish Plots and designs should ●nce so far take effect as treacherously to de●rive our present King of his life and Crown and ●ntroduce a Popish Successor into the English Throne how far they might in time proceed towards the extirpation of that pestilent Northern Heresy as Mr. Coleman out of his Extraordinary ●●ndness to the Religion from which he himself ●postaliz'd has been pleased to term the Protestant Religion o●t of these parts of the world I submit ●o the better Judgments of more able Politicians Hast we now hence from this Edward the first who died in the five and thirtieth year of his Reign after a charge given to his Son in divers points upon his blessing and Oaths taken of some of his chief Nobles to keep the Land for his Sons use and to Crown him King as soon as they conveniently could after his death at Burgh upon the Sands beyond Carlile in his return into England unto Edward the Second where I could find matter enough to exercise my Pen were I minded to describe all the disorders and troubles that hapned throughout the Land under his unprosperous Reign We need not wonder that this Prince met with so unhappy a fate at his End when as we find him at the very beginning immediately transgressing his dead Fathers commands by recalling Gaveston from his Banishment contrary to his Father's charge on his Death Bed he entailing his curse on him if he should presume it as Stow tells us governing himself wholly by his advice affecting him so much as to affirm that he should succeed him in the Kingdom if he could effect it If I should endeavour perfectly to delineate th● many Crosses Losses Battails and Bloodshed tha● fell out in the Land under this King and to Writ● in a stile and manner suitable to the matter ● know not but I might well dip my Pen in Bloo● instead of Ink such were the misfortunes of th● Land and unfortunate fates of many Nobleme● thereof For in his Reign there were Beheaded an● put to death by Judgment upon the number of eigh● and twenty Barons and Knights as Fabian Co●putes besides the Noble men slain in Scotland The number whereof one Author expresses to ● mount to two and forty besides sixty and sev●● Knights and Barronets and two and twenty 〈◊〉 over that of name taken in that one Battel of Bannocksborn Unsteadfastness of manners and vileness of Conditions the refusing the Company of Lords and men of honour and haunting the Society of Villains and vile Persons The being given to great drinking and lightly discovering therein things of great Counsel with many other disallowable Conditions related by Historians were blots in this Kings Scutcheon Scarce was old Edwards Obsequies fully finished according to my Author but the young King sends in all hast for his old Companion Piers of Gaveston receiving him with all joy and gladness and advances him to much honour gives him the Earldom of Cornwal and Lordship of Wallingford rules all by his wanton Councel and follows the appetite and pleasure of his body not guiding things by order of Law or Justice Then he Revenges himself and his favourite Gaveston on the Bishop of Chester who had before complained of them and their Outrages in his Fathers Reign by commanding him to the Tower of London and keeping him there strictly many days after When by the means motions and words of many potent Lords of the Realm Gaveston was again sent out of the Land though contrary to the King's pleasure and banish'd
then thought unpardonable by the Londoners who in words and deeds espoused the Queen's Cause seis'd on the Tower of London and kept it for the Queens use and not long afterwards received her into their City with great Joy and Honour A demonstrative evidence in my opinion of the City's strength and power For if London when she pleas'd could maintain the King's peace in the midst of Arms as was shewn above so inviolably as that none dar'd in opposition to break it and afterwards in the very same age and within the compass of half a dozen years did actually assert the Qeens cause and assist her in her proceedings as was pretended for Reformation of the Realm tho the Consequence thereof was in truth the unfortunate Kings resignation what greater instance can there be to shew her great influence upon the whole Nation in those unsetled times London having so visibly appeared in favour of the Queen the Prince and his party and contributed so much towards this notable revolution of affairs we have no reason to think but that out of Common gratitude her Citizens were to be aboundantly rewarded and that they themselves out of self interest and natural Prudence would so well and wisely look to their own affairs as to make hay while the Sun shines to the procuring new grants and Graces and so accordingly we find the event For in the first year of Edward the third Fabian tells us he confirmed the Liberties and Franchizes of the City making the Major Chief Justice in all places of Judgment within the same next the King every Alderman that had been Major Justice of Peace in London and Midlesex and such as had not been Justice in his own Ward Granting them also the Fee-farm of London for three hundred pounds and that they should not be constrained to go out of the City to ●o fight or defend the Land for any need A priviledge greater than what was claimed as their liberty in his Fathers days when unwilling to engage against the Queen and Prince they refused not to go out on condition of returning the same day as is related before But the most beneficial of all the grants was that the Franchises of the City should not be seized into the Kings hands but only for Treason or Rebellion done by the whole City It having before been a Common thing to have their Liberties seized on as hath been plainly manifested in the Precedent Relation on almost every petty disgust conceived by the Court against them were it but for the pretended offence of a particular Officer or for mony alledged to be owing by the City to some great ones at Court or some such like small trivial pretence But now at this time they took such care to have their Liberties setled and secured by this Royal Grant that it may be thought almost if not wholly a thing impossible for the City to forfeit her Charter and have it justly according to that grant taken from her The bringing of Southwark under the Rule of the City and the power allowed their Major to appoint such a Bailiff there as liked him best was a very advantagious favour at the same time by this King Edward bestowed on London but not comparable with the former grant which may most deservedly be esteemed Paramount to all others A particular Officer may offend and oftentimes does nay many may but for a City a whole City so great and glorious a City as London Traiterously to Rebel and so forfeit all her Liberties Priviledges and Franchises at one clap seems to me so great a contradiction as to imply little less than an Impossibility in Nature not to go a step or two higher This King being one of the most powerful Princes of his time and in the strength of his age very succesful in his Wars against the French King 't is not for us hastily to imagine there was any occasion given for so wise and good a King to contest with his Subjects much less with his Loyal Citizens We are rather to expect to hear of the City's Triumphs and glory the Joy and rejoyceing wherewith she often received her Victorious King returning Conquerour from France the frequent Justings Tiltings and Tournaments shewn thereat for his Recreation and entertainment the Wealth Riches and Ability of her head Officers whereof one to Londons great glory is said to have sumptuously feasted four Kings at once in the thirty first of this Kings Reign besides the famous Black Prince many Noble Knights and others to whom with the King he gave many Rich Gifts the splendor of the Citizens in general o● publick occasions and the harmonious concord of all in their own private and particular concerns relating more especially to the Cities good order and Government This King may be supposed too great and too good either to create or to permit differences and discord at home He had wherewithal to exercise his Wisdom and valour abroad in forreign Countries and such success too in his Enterprizes as might make him both feared and beloved by his Subjects at one and the same time Yet notwithstanding such still was Londons power strength and resolution to maintain her Liberties that this Victorious Prince Conquerour over others having sent out Justices into the Shires to make enquiry about his Officers offences and delinquences and the City of London not suffering as Stow tells us any such Officers to sit as Justices in their City as Inquisitors of such matters contrary to their Liberties he thought good rather to appoint those Justices their Sessions in the Tower for Inquisition of the damages of the Londoners and they refusing unless conditionally to answer there and a tumult thereupon arising among the meaner sort claiming their Liberties he esteemed it greater prudence to wave the Justices sitting as to that place and forgive all offences than to enter into a contest with such powerful tho Loyal Subjects as the Londoners were and such undaunted assertors of their own rights priviledges franchises and liberties For as 't is plain the City was very potent so we may as certainly perhaps conclude the Citizens no less suspicious of any thing done under the shadow of this Kings Authority if but looking towards the least breach of their Priviledges as the Commons of England in general seem to have appeared jealous of their Common liberty when upon this Kings laying claim to the Kingdom of France they procured a Law whereby it was enacted that the King should not Rule England as King of France and so Subject them to the insolencies of a fellow-Subjects Deputyship Would you know what esteem and respect the house of Commons in this King's reign had for ●he City Look in Cotton's abridgment of the Records ●n the Tower and there you may find the Commons ●ver and anon petitioning the King that the City ●f London may enjoy all her Liberties and the King's ●nswers generally to such petitions seem rather to ●rant than
know not of a certainty as not ●●ding it mention'd in the History Possibly there ●ere none or at least they prov'd very ineffectual ●hich I the rather conclude because that when 〈◊〉 had made malitious Rhymes upon the Duke 〈◊〉 fastned them up in divers parts of the City ●●other remedy was found out against them but haply as inefficacious viz. a Sentence of Excommunication at the Dukes request to the Bishops pronounced against them publickly by the Bishop of Bangor the Aldermen of the City assisting him To be Excommunicated did carry somewhat of terror with it in England in those Popish times among the vulgar and might probably again should Providence for our offences ever suffer Popery to be brought back into the Land but among Protestants and knowing understanding men Excommunication upon every slight account and trifling pretext is of little value esteem or regard and no more dreaded perhaps by some than 't was by Rablais when he beg'd it as a great boon of the Pope because the poor Country Woman thought her Faggot Excommunicated when she could not make it burn Besides these Indignities put upon the Duke at London in at and after the aforesaid Tumult of the Common people we are told also that all such as wore the Dukes Sign or Colours were fain to hide them conveying them into their bosoms so great a fea● and dread had seiz'd upon their Spirits Whether these Colours were Parsons Black True Blew Flourishing Green Orange Tawny or Blood Red the Historian hath not so far gratified us a● punctually to set down in his Relation of the●● transactions But if I might have leave to pas● my Verdict herein I should be apt to conjectur● them to have been at least for the most part 〈◊〉 by the Red-letter'd people What sad Prognosticks may we think our Almanack-makers a● star-gazers then gave of the times when the saw England so likely to fall into such Feuds Faction● and disorders as those of the Guelphs and Gibeline● But one good turn 't is that Astrogolers Prognostications use commonly to be like the Popish Oracles old Almanacks soon out of date The City could much sooner influence the Nation than they could make the Stars influence the City in favour of the Dukes cause How the Citizens of London oppos'd the Duke we have seen but he is resolved it seems to shew his bitter resentments upon the next opportunity and accordingly after the Duke had obtain'd his desires of the two Houses of Parliament viz. A Poll-Bill or Tax of all the heads in the whole Realm he caused the King to send for the Major Aldermen and Sheriffs of London who soon came before him then very ill at ease as they were ordered into his Chamber of Presence where after the usual Ceremonies over past a certain Knight of the Court endeavoured by his Ciceronian Rhetorick and the Eloquence of his Oration to perswade the Citizens to confess their great and hainous offences against the King ●nd Duke and to submit themselves to their Mercy See here the Kings Name must be brought ●n right or wrong or else the Dukes cause and ●retensions would signify little But the Londoners were not so to be caught For they answered they had not Conspired against the Duke nei●her had there been any shameful thing spoken or done against him that they did know of or con●ent unto which they were ready to prove before their Soveraign Lord the King and the Duke ●imself The folly of the Common people they ●ffirm'd they could not stay and therefore request●d of the King that he would not punish those ●hat were innocent and ignorant of the Fact but withal promised the Duke for Reverence of the King observe this that they would endeavour to bring in the Common people and compel them by Law to make due satisfaction and more said they we are not able to do for the Duke that may be to his Honour Not able to do more why What would his faction have had them to have done Was his favour to have been purchas'd at no less a price than an intire Resignation of all they had Bodies and Souls Lives Liberties and Estates at Discretion Must they have deny'd their senses and their reason too in charging themselves with what they neither sayd nor did felt heard nor understood to avoid Scandala Magnatum's and the Arbitrary Fin●● of byass'd Juries Leave we such Terms of accommodation to the insulting power and Pride o● Prelatical Consciences to impose upon their underling Curates Such is the continued cause of difference between the Molinists and Jansenists in France while one side fairly offers to disallow certain displeasing Propositions either by themselves or as Jansenius's if shewn to them in hi● works and the other party as pertinaciously insists upon their rejecting them as his becaus● the Pope hath so condemned them Glad we may easily suppose the Londoners were when dismiss'd upon their aforesaid Answer● But it seems the Court was not yet satisfied 〈◊〉 afterwards we read of the Kings sending them 〈◊〉 Command secretly to call all the Citizens together and having made a Wax Candle with th● Dukes Arms in it to carry it solemnly in Procession to Saint Pauls there to burn continually 〈◊〉 the Cities charges which was accordingly performed by the chiefest and richest of the Citizens the meaner commonalty disdaining to be present at such a procession and therefore with indignation departing home when they heard the business and knew the occasion of their being call'd together But neither did this condescention of the greatest give the Duke content he threatned them look't upon it as a reproach and took it in great scorn that they had offer'd thus his Arms in a Wax Taper while he was alive and in good health notwithstanding they affirm'd they had expresly done that which his Father the King had Commanded them and would have done any thing that might have pleased him i. e. in reason For peace and quietness sake possibly and out of respect to the Kings Majesty they would not have refus'd the trouble of putting forth a few honorary Proclamations nor denied him the Complement of a volley or two of Holla's and Huzza's if that would have pleas'd But this did not answer the Dukes Expectations nor satisfie his Ambitious desires they knew he sayd his mind and were not ignorant how to make satisfaction Ay there 't was He would have us sayd the troubled Citizens amongst themselves Proclaim him King but this shall never be done and so they parted worse friends than they were before So much ado was there with one proud haughty Duke most injuriously aspiring to the Crown to the prejudice of his better belov'd Nephew whose claim title and right had been sometime before if I mistake not in my reckoning settled expresly by the Parliament or at least he had been declar'd by his Grand-Father his Heir and Lawful Successor Yet this the Ambitious Uncle thought probably easily to have evaded and
deluded though besides the affections and contrary to the inclination of the rest of the Nation could he but have prevailed upon the Londoners by threats or fair words to have sided with him But their opposition quite spoil'd the Game and kept the Duke off the Cushion a Duke stil so Tryumphant were they in Power Prudence and Loyalty Wherefore to satisfie his restless reven geful Spirit the Duke ceas'd not till he had got the old Major put out and a new one Elected the Aldermen depos'd and others set in their places So little did their late Complicance and humble Procession avail them while the Commonalty remain stiff firm and unshaken as well by the Dukes power and greatness as by his Threats and Menaces He had gain'd a great Ascendent over the weak Kings affections but yet for all that could not sway this Honourable City to his Interests and the Interest of his then prevalent Faction at Court The Citizens Loyalty is plainly shewn beyond denial in Couragiously adhering to the Juster claim and Title of the abus'd Nephew and preferring his Birthright before the Pretensions of his Uncle who Ruling the King and those about him thought also to have over-rul'd the City too Their Prudence is manifest in that they wisely chose to yield many things to the times for peace sake but when neck and all was in danger they would not budg a foot nor stir one step further to humour all the Dukes in Kent or Christendom Neither is their power less conspicuous who not only dar'd but did oppose this high minded Duke in the Days of his Visible Grandeur and prov'd a match by far too hard for him For in a short time comes the News of the Old Kings ●●ing at the point of Death and presently we have the Londoners sending the chiefest and worthiest of their Citizens to the young Prince and his Mother then Resident not far from the City declaring their ready minds and good wills to accept him for their true and Lawful King upon ●is Grand-Fathers Decease beseeching him on the behalf of the Citizens and City of London that he would have the City Recommended to his good Grace submitting themselves only to ●is Rule and bowing to his Will and Pleasure ●nder his Dominion to serve in Word and Deed as being known to be so much at his Devotion as not only ready to spend their Goods and E●●ates for his sake but also to jeopard their lives ●n his behalf as Stow expresses it in John Phil●●ts Oration in the beginning of the life and Reign of King Richard the second who was thus ●o undeniably setled in the Throne of his Fore-●athers by the Cities apparent interest and vi●ible influence upon the Councels of the Nation in that great turn and change of affairs The Cities power seems plainly demonstrated give me therefore leave to bring one instance more of their wisdom caution and prudence in these dangerous because unsetled times before I pass ●n to other particulars The young King being ●hus entred upon the Government it was thought good by the King or those about him to have ●ome care taken to accommodate former differences especially such as had hapned between this potent Duke and the more powerful City Wherefore several persons of Eminency were speedily sent to London to salute the Citizens in the new King's name and acquaint them how the Duke in all things had submitted himself to the Kings will 't was time for 't is certain he had lost the day though not perhaps his high-tow'ring Ambition and that they should do so in like manner and then the King would endeavour a Reconciliation to the City's honour and advantage Fair words and large promises But the worthy Citizens were not Birds to be caught with chaff much less to be hamper'd in a Noose of their own making They were for no Resignations it seems at Discretion though to the dearest Friend alive They knew the King to be but young and weak to help them in such a troublesome business if they should so heedlesly desert their own Cause and put the staff out of their own hands by their own Consent They had enemies enough still they might think at Court as long as the Duke was there and his flattering favourites who might possibly over-rule at least if not over-aw the King to their prejudice should they render all they had at pleasure into his hand by their own voluntary Act and Deed when as they knew themselves well able to defend their liberties and properties in a legal way without hazarding them upon so intire a submission as was required without Reserve Wherefore upon consultation this Medium was at length found out that if the noble persons sent to them with that message would be bound to the Citizens that their submission should not redound to the temporal loss or bodily harm of any Citizen or prejudice of their City they would gladly obey the King's Commandment This those eminent persons of quality undertook by Oath and upon their Knighthood And so upon this surety away go the Citizens to Court and being soon brought before the King besought him as the Annalist words it to reform the peace betwixt the Duke and them affirming that they were ready in all things to submit themselves unto his will and pleasure not as though they confessed they had made any fault against the Duke consider this but as men that came at this time for the benefit of peace and honour as well to the King as the Duke to pacifie the hearts and mitigate the pleasure of both That this was their intent is evident enough from their own request before made to the King that he would vouchsafe to make a good and profitable end of this discord For that they fear'd not the Duke is most certain from the precedent passages and that they were all of a suddain fallen deeply in love with him and his party I can hardly believe No no They love the Nephew too well to dote upon the Uncle and may they always be so minded upon a good account The Citizens having thus prudently though we see not without great caution referr'd themselves to the King the Duke readily accepted of this form of peace as not hoping possibly for such an other opportunity nor expecting so honourable Conditions a second time if refus'd the first and upon his knees became Intercessor to the King to take the cause in hand under the form by the Londoners expressed and so a Reconciliation was made between these two contesting Parties the Duke with an Oath promising them his friendship for the future and in token thereof bestowing a kiss of peace upon each of them before the King at the same time Whereupon the Citizens return'd home with joy and gladness rejoycing that the Duke was brought to such humility who a little before had in great Pride demanded of them for his favour an hundred Hogsheads of Wine and an infinite number of precious
of any of the Kings Officers but only at the Kings Sute Sealed with the Great or Privy Seal except the Kings Justices according to their Charter That they shall by themselves enquire of Customs and impositions hapning or arising within the City That the Major and Chamberlain for the time being shall have the keeping of the City Orphans Lands and Goods No small advantage in those times when the Court of Wards was in being and greatly beneficial still by reason of the Deceits many poor Orphans meet with from Cheating or Insolvent Guardians and Trustees whereas the City's security is unquestionable and her Credit not in the least to be doubted of That the Interpretation of any word or Sentence touching their said Liberties which may severally be taken may be taken according to the intent and Claim of the said Citizens That the City may enjoy all such Liberties as any other Town in the Realm if they have any other than the Citizens have That no protection Royal be allowed in Debt Account or Trespass wherein a Freeman of London is ten pounds with several others By the Answers whereunto we find the Kings Will was that the Citizens of London should in no wise be restrained of any of their Liberties or ancient customs approv'd Such as were most useful and advantagious at the present time were by his Majesty granted and if any appear to have been denyed the denyal seems rather conditional than plain and direct in down right terms So cautious was the King in his Answers so careful not to displease this powerful Coporation and so well advis'd as not to shew himself Ungrateful at his first coming to the Crown to those who had so Cordially erewhile espous'd his interest and so stoutly defended his cause but a little before In the sixth of this King at the request of the Commons the Abridgment tells us it was enacted that the City of London should enjoy all such Liberties as they had in the time of King Edward the third or as were to them confirm'd by the King now and that Victuallers particularly should be ●under the Mayors Rule and have no particular liberties by themselves In the seventh we find it among the Commons Petitions enacted that the Citizens of London shall enjoy all their whole Liberties whatsoever with this Clause licet usi non fuerunt vel ●busi fuerunt notwithstanding any Statute to the Contrary Whether then 't is possible for any Corporate body endowed with so transcendent Priviledges by the publick Act and Deed of the known Legislators of the Land to forfeit and lose them all of a sudden Judge ye At the same time we read of a grant made by the same Authority that the Mayor and Aldermen should take no other Oath in the Exchequer than they did in the time of King Edward the third How careful were the Commons do we see in this Age to prevent the Citizens from being enslav'd in either their Bodies or their Souls They sha'nt be impos'd upon by their good Wills in so much as an Oath much less have Creeds Articles and Oaths by the dozens thrust upon them to Swear and subscribe to In the same year we have the Commons petitioning the King again in the Cities behalf so Sollicitous were they for her good and welfare That free choice may be made of the most able men for Aldermen as well of such as were the year before as of others yearly See we here the House of Commons pleading for a free choice an Election without disturbance threats or menaces and that particular Citizens should not be impos'd upon nor overaw'd And if they had formerly chosen good Men and found them so by experience that they should not be oblig'd next year to pass them by and choose others such as possibly might prove friends to them the backward way and over the left shoulders The Electors might pick and choose as they please which is the benefit of a free Election And as the Commons pray so the King grants as long as there is good Government in the City thereby What could be desir'd more As long as the Aldermen were lyable to be pass'd by every year as well as the Common-Council-Men 't is very unlikely that they should displease the City much less thwart and contradict the Common voice o● her Citizens for a few sprinklings of Court Holy Water Observe this was at the Parliament hel● at Salisbury some scores of Miles from London yet 't was not the distance of place that could breed distance of affection Remove the national assembly to the other end of the Land to the utmost Coasts of Great Brittian yet Londons Name reaches thither 'T is not the place that makes our Westminster Conventions so mindful of her but her Merit her Power her Influence the respect and esteem they have for her Glory Honour and Renown to see her ever continue the fixt unmovable Defendress of the Protestant Religion under the Defender of the Faith In the Ninth the Commons require at the petition of the Mayor and Commonalty of London that the Patent lately made to the Constable of the Tower may be Revok'd The reason is plain 't was prejudicial to the City to have the Victuals brought to her upon her dearest and best beloved Thames made to pay Toll and Custom to another How Glorious and Gracious must we needs think that City to be in the peoples Eyes when we find their Representatives not once nor twice but so constantly almost at every 〈◊〉 pleading her Cause vindicating her Liberties and asserting her Rights And these we know are part of the Legislative power A general act of Oblivion is a Royal Grant not every day bestow'd upon the Subject and a grace not often obtain'd without much importunity and intercession We have reason therefore to believe the Londoners look't upon it as no small favour that at the Common's request the King granted a Pardon to the Citizens of London in the Eleventh of his Reign of all Treasons Felonies and other offences of loss of life For so Pardons run whether the parties were guilty of such crimes and delinquences or not and 't is a salvo that Wise men disdain not sometimes to make use of and why should they not unless a Pardon must of necessity imply a Crime We have heard how careful the House of Commons were under this King to secure the Cities Liberties ascertain her Rights defend her Priviledges and keep off encroachments that she might not be abus'd nor impos'd on Let me next have leave before I pass forwards to give a hint or two to intimate how ready the Commons were to free the City from Annoyances in order both to the Citizens health and the Cities Ornament that nothing offensive either to the Eyes or the Nostrils might be found therein 'T is to be seen Enacted among the Commons Petitions in the sixteenth of this King that all the filth upon Thames side in a certain place
of standing up vigorously in their own defence against the forreign Enemy may be prov'd out of the s●me Author from the great numbers of armed men by the Nobles brought to the Parliament then at London and the Lord Chancellors calling men of Arms out of almost every part of the Realm to the Marches about London to beat back the Frenchmen with their King had they come Let this therefore serve to disprove the Annalists suggestions out of his own mouth and shew the Nobles care for the Cities safeguard in drawing such forces thitherward and their hopes of considerable assistance from the City to help them in the Common cause of self-preservation But suppose without granting it that there were some sparks of fear amongst them 't is questionable whether they did not spring from the mistrust of their principal Magistrates not out of any diffidence and distrust of their own strength or dread of a Foreign Enemies power and puissance For to me 't is an Argument that the Major of London this year look't Courtward since that we read of an endeavour to ingage him in such an horrid design as hath been before spoken of to destroy the principals of the opposite party at a private Supper in London Certainly the King would not have utter'd a syllable of an intreague of this importance to so powerful a Magistrate as my Author affirms he did had there not been hopes of prevailing on him in Reverence at least to the Kings word and desire But upon the Tryal it seems he prov'd himself an honester man in that point whatever his principles and inclinations otherwise were than his Predecessor whom we read of as deeply concern'd in that Plot. Much about this time 't is likewise that a Modern writer tells us that the Londoners incur'd much obloquy for that having before been Pardoned by the King of some Crimes laid to their charge but what nor when committed I find not by him mentioned they were ready to comply with his d●sires and a Jury of them being Impannell'd indited some Lords of many Crimes objected against them But this also is to be imputed to the Magistrates influence and power in calling out men fit for the purpose and not to the whole body of the Citizens For we read just after that when the Mayor thought to have rais'd them against the contesting Lords they resolutely refus'd and absolutely rejected the Motion as is before related So that 't was not having the Mayor at their Beck nor the Power they thought they had among the high Sheriffs of the Counties to procure such men return'd up to serve in Parliament as were nominated by the King and his Council that could shelter the guilty favourites at Cour from the censure of that August Assembly well known afterwards by the name of the Parliament that wrought wonders For on the very first day thereof all the Judges but one were Arrested as they sat in their places question'd for their extrajudicial opinions and Arbitrary actings and severely punish'd by Banishment and Confiscation of their Estates The Lord Chief Justice Tresilian lost his Life at Tyburn and the rest my Author says had all dyed had it not been for the Queens intercession As the Judges were thus brought under the Lash of those Laws which before they had so much abus'd to humour Arbitrary mens designs the better thereby to secure to themselves their own Stations and Offices of Judicature so the Patrons themselves and reputed promoters of these Arbitrary and illegal Actings were reduc't into the same Predicament Several of the chief were impeach'd of no less than High Treason in open Parliament the absent for ever banish'd and many of them in hold either Hang'd or Beheaded upon Tower-hil or at Tyburn notwithstanding they had been ere while Men of Name Power and Authority and in great favour at Court but just before So uncertain is the State of Mortality and so slippery is walking in high places But amongst all those who fell under the stroak of an angry Deity and so shamefully lost their lives by the hands of Justice most memorable is the fate that befel Sir Nicholas Brember Grocer late Lord Mayor of London who for many oppressions and seditions by him caus'd in the City was Beheaded as Stow informs us the Morrow after the Execution of the Lord Chief Justice Tresilian and which is more remarkable with the same Ax he had before prepared for others of his fellow Citizens So just is Providence to suffer the wicked to be insnared by the devices of their own hearts and to fall headlong into the Pit they had dig'd for others Stow tells us the King had oft-times made him Mayor of London against the mind of the Citizens But in Fabian who methinks being once Sheriff of this Honourable City should know best what had been formerly Transacted in that City of whose good order Policy and Government he hath expresly Treated in his Chronicle I don't find but that he was Elected and Chosen Possibly there might be an order made at Court Present the King and sent into the City to further and promote his Election which by the one might be esteem'd an imposing him on the City while the other only took notice of the meeting of the Citizens in order to an Election without relating how the matter was carried or whether he came in fairly by a Majority or else by a strong hand through the working of Court Favourites who influencing the Judges might make that pass for Law which was contrary thereto let the difference of voices be never so great on the other side So have I heard of a place where it was carried by thirteen against twenty one and when the business came to be scan'd over anew it was adjudg'd by vote against the Majority But this was rather the effect of Greatness and Power overruling than the result of Equity and Justice dividing to every one his right That this Man when Mayor met with great opposition from the most eminent of the Citizens I presume concludable from his Resentments and what is in plain words delivered of him by the Annalist how that whilst he was in the full Authority of his Mayoralty he caus'd a Common pair of Stocks in every Ward and a Common Ax to be made to behead all such as should be against him and had Indited eight thousand and more of the best and greatest of the City so resolv'd was he to carry on the design right or wrong to please his Masters and Abettors What kind of principled Man he was we may easily guess as from the aforementioned passages so from the Historians Relations before hinted of him as being deeply concern'd in the Plot before intimated to assassinate the contesting Lords and also afterwards one of the Chief Men that had a hand in laying the Ambuscade spoken of above unwilling the King as he swore to intrap them who upon promise of safe conduct confirm'd by the Oaths of
of England wherein we read at the latter end of the Life and Reign of King Richard the Second That after the Duke was come from Coventry to St. Albans about five or six Miles before his coming to London the Mayor and the Companies in the Liveries with great Noise of Trumpets met the Duke doing more Reverence to him than to the King Rejoycing that GOD had sent them such a Prince that had Conquer'd the Realm i. e. the Court-party within one Months space Whereupon when the Duke was come within two Miles of the City he stopt his Army as if out of Reverence and Acknowledgment and in Submission thereto and ask't Advice of the Commons thereof what they would do with the King who Answered they would He should be led to Westminster upon which to them He was delivered and they led him accordingly to Westminster and from thence by Water to the Tower Nay some of the Londoners publickly shew'd themselves so much His Enemies as to Assemble together with an intent to have met Him without the City and there to have Slain him for his former Severities But the Mayor and Rulers and best of the Commonalty upon Information hereof with some difficulty reclaim'd them therefrom After the Citizens had thus receiv'd the King into their Custody and in effect thereby made a publick Declaration of their Minds and Opinions as to the great Change succeeding the Duke we are told entred London by the chief Gate and Rode through Cheapside to St. Pauls and there Lodg'd for some time so secure was he of the Citys good Will and Affection to him and afterward in October held a Parliament in Westmimster-Hall where the old King's Deposition and the new King's Election were compleated I shall not stay to make a long Paraphrase upon the Cityes proceedings in this Affair it being Matter of Fact and undeniable that the City consented hereto from the aforesaid passages which may be likewise thought very much to have influenc'd the Nation in their Elections to that Parliament if from the Annalists Computation we may safely and truly aver that the Parliament-Men were chosen after these Transactions at London because Forty dayes at least interven'd between this time and the first Wednesday in October whereon he sayes the Parliament began If any be desirous of another Observation I leave them to their own Liberty to infer from History and the Premises that it much conduc't to facilitate the King's Deposition that he had no known and generally acknowledg'd Heir of his own Body lawfully begotten boldly to stand up for Him and strongly plead his Cause in Armour for his own particular Interest as well as out of a due sence of his Duty Neither indeed do I well see how he could have any since that he had none by his first Wife that I read of his second Queen was too young another Heir was publickly pointed out to the Nation and he himself was also loosely addicted as seems plain beyond dispute His Lascivious living being hinted to us in Burton's Historical Remarks of London among the Articles drawn up against him and we have great reason to think it was an imputation too true when we read of several Ladyes expell'd the Court in the Eleventh of his Reign by the Procurement of the contesting Lords and a little before the sitting of the Wonder-Working-Parliament and take Notice out of Cotton's Abridgment of the House of Commons Request in the Twentieth Year for the avoiding the outragious Expences of the King's house and namely of Bishops and Ladyes and the King's Answer thereto made That he would be free therein and that the Commons thereby had offended against him his Dignity and Liberty Such was his Indignation against them for desiring to controul him in this Point and so highly incens'd was he thereat that to Appease him the Exhibiter of the Bill was adjudg'd to dye as a Traytor though upon some great Ones importunity his Life was for that time spared and he himself at length restor'd in Blood and to the recovery of his Goods Livings Lands and Tennements at the next King 's comming to the Crown But how I trow come the Bishops to be complain'd of by the Commons among the Misses Were they such Courters of Ladyes as instead of rebuking to follow or rather give bad Examples to the King and Country Yet now I think on 't these were Popish not Protestant Bishops Though I scarce believe every one of them that to the view of the World gives himself a Protestant Title is able well and truly to plead not Guilty If Noli-fet-ole-chery be a Motto rightly father'd upon one of our Western Diocesans How all things in a manner concur'd to further King Richard's Deposition and that he was actually depos'd hath already been spoken of which nevertheless barely did not content the Party but they would needs have it done in a formal and solemn way First the King must make a publick Renunciation of all Right Title and Claim to the Crown then Commissioners are by the States appointed in their Names to pronounce the Stentence of his Deposition from the Throne and make to him a Resignation of their homage and fealty for their Loyalty seems plainly enough to have been gone before Neither did they think this enough but were resolv'd over and above to leave Articles against him upon Record wherein are expressed the ill things done by others in his Reign and as they say by his Authority whereby they designed to justifie what they had done towards the unhappy Kings Deposition which visibly pav'd the way to his Grave So pernicious is it for Princes to suffer their Authority to be abus'd to shelter other mens Crimes or their Names to be made use of without a Present Resentment to carry on Designs hateful to the People though they never consent thereto themselves as their own Act and Deed. For I hope we may charitably Conclude what the worshipful Knights Sir Mayor and Sir Haughty the other-ill belov'd wight did in laying a trap to catch the Contesting Lords in the 11th year of this King was without the Kings privity because he swore it as in page 〈◊〉 though possibly they shrouded themselves under the shelter of his Authority and pretended his Warrant and Command for what they design'd and endeavoured And perhaps they had as Sir Richard Bak●r words it a warrant Dormant to prosecute the Kings Ends without the Kings Knowledge The Articles and Objections laid against the King are to be found in Cotton's Abridgment 1. H. 4. whence I trust I may securely transcribe them without hazarding the Courteous Readers Displeasure to shew him the grievances of the age as they are there exprest in this form of words Besides the Kings Oath made at his Coronation First for wasting and bestowing of the Lands of the Crown upon unworthy Persons and over-charging the Commons with Exactions For that the King by undue means procur'd divers Justices to speak against the
the Honour and Renown of this so famous and powerful a City without offering at all the attesting Proofs and confirming Evidences that are to be found on Record And if this Attempt shall be well accepted it may haply be an encouragement to some more Learned more Able more Skilful Pen to produce the other more convincing Arguments scatter'd up and down in the Annals Chronicles and other Monuments of Historians and by gathering together all the divided fragments of Remark reduce them into one solid firm and lasting Peice or make better improvement of the Arguments and Evidences here produc'd Come we now to Henry the 5th A Prince not so wild in his Youth when a Subject and by his Father supsected of ambitious designs though● Causlesly and on no better grounds and reaso●● than the Calumnies Slanders and detractions o● evil dispos'd persons about the Court as celebrated when King for the prudent Reformation o● his own Person wise Conduct of his affairs and happy Government of the Realm for his Valour Magnanimity and Heroical Actions and the 〈◊〉 Glorious Achievements of his Reign being one o● the most Martial Princes that ever sate upon th● English Throne and beyond all his Predecesso●● Succesfull in his French Expeditions So that 〈◊〉 Cressy and Poictiers have highly advanced 〈◊〉 Name and Renown of the famous Black Prin●● Agincourt shall eternize Henry of Monm●●●● through all Generations and with this addition 〈◊〉 unparalleld Glory That he liv'd and dyed in th● heighth of Grandeur and his Victories were not sullied with after Reproaches Under therefore so Renowned a Conqueror and so Good a King 't is no marvel that we read of no troubles in our English Jerusalem nor hear of Complaints in her Streets We may expect rather to hear of the Gallantry of Rareeshews and fine sights Pageants and Presents the harmonious concent of Trumpets and Drums and the tunable Musick of Bells the loud sounding Acclamation of People and the unaccountable Number of Bonfires and fire-works the Common consequents of Victories and Tryumphs and the usual Entertainment of Conquerours Wherefore I should now pass on of course to the next Kings reign but that by the way I shall venture to trespass a little upon the Readers Patience and to make an Observation or two upon the grounds and occasional Causes of reviving the War with France which was under this King attended with such a Train of Victories We are to know then from such Authentick Authors as ●abian Baker and the like that the Commons ●arping upon the same string they did in Henry the 4th days viz. the Clergies Temporaltyes by bringing in a Bill to take them away the Bishops to divert the storm put the King upon claiming France as his Right and offered him considerable sums of mony to engage and assist him ●herein whereby the Cloud before hanging over ●heir heads was made to break upon the French Coasts they who by their Office should have ap●●ov'd themselves the Peace-makers of the world 〈◊〉 up the Furies of War destruction and inci●●d their Country-men to sheath their Swords in their Neighbours Bowels to preserve to themselves ●●eir large Revenues and worldly grandeur their much envied Lands Honours and Preferments Another advantage they likewise laid hold on to Promote their own Earthly advancement by making use of this opportunity to suppress the growth and encrease of the Wicklivists the Puritans and Presbyterians of the age whose Numbers began now more and more to encrease in City and Country and grew formidable to the whole Popish Hierarchy These men whom they could not vanquish by dint of Argument so conformable were their Doctrines to the Scriptures they thought it easier to oppress by the Civil Authority and the Power of the Magistrates Sword whereon they had of late set a keener Edg by procuring some laws to be made against them under the Name and Notion of Lollards And yet such was the ill fate of opposing the spreading of the Gospel that these Assertors of it's verity like the Primitive Christians of old dayly encreast in Numbers and Repute under their oppressions and grew every age more mumerous in spight of all the malice and opposition of their cruel and blood thirsty Enemies and much too by the same way and methods the Evidence of truth and influence of good lives and Exemplary Conversations Like the ancient Christians they were driven into holes and secret places into private Conventicles and separate Assemblies And though they were not like them at every turn cal'd upon to be cast to the Lions for disobeying the Emperours Edicts and Commands yet away with them to the fire and to burning of the Hereticks or in a little softer phraise to putting the Kings Laws in Execution were the common outcryes made against them But because the diversity of their Religion and their difference in opinion from the rest of the Nation were not thought Incentives strong enough to stir up the popular Rage Fury a more Compendious way was found out instead of charging on their account all the Mischiefs Miseries and Disasters of the Times to lay the detestable Crimes of Treason and Conspiracy at their doors Hence may we conclude sprung the Informations given into the King of some that had conspir'd suddenly to have Slain Him and his Brethren and of numerous Assemblies meeting in St. Giles's Fields to that End Hereon possibly may we ground the Rumour spread abroad of great offers made of Money by Sir John Oldcastles Favourers to the Scots to invade the Realm in the Kings absence in France of the meeting of Sir John himself who was a known Wicklivist with Douglas the Scot at Pomfract on the same Errand and of Indentures and other Writings made betwixt him and the Duke of Albany containing Instructions to the Scots to besiege Roxborough and Barwick Such Stories may we look upon as Reports likely enough to have been purposely spread abroad to stir up the Peoples Animosities against the Dissenters of the times Hitherto likewise haply may we impute the Original of the Schedules said to be nail'd upon the Church doors in London with threats of an hundred thousand Men ready to rise upon Occasion Stow indeed out of Walsingham the Monk charges them upon Wicklists favourers yet have we reason to suspect the first Author as too partial in the Case and question whether these were not Popish Shams put upon the Nation by the Wicklivists Enemies to raise a colour for an Out-cry against them For at the Parliament of the Fifth of this King we read in Cotton's Abridgment of an haynous complaint against Insurrections in the end mind this they suspect they were Lollards Traitors which made a way for a Request that Commissions at all times be granted to enquire of them Whoever was Originally in fault we may see from this where the blame should light and the severest Prosecution too could the Popish Prelates have had their Will notwithstanding the
slightness of their thin-spun pretences and weakness of their groundless Imputations A pretty device to make Riots and Insurrections and then accuse the contrary Party of them as if they had been so Fanatical as tumultuously to meet together vi armis without any Arms about them or Weapons in their hands to disturb the Kings Peace and with no worse design than the Warrant of annual Customs whereon some in an unheard of manner without Law or Reason and contrary to common sence intruded to deprive them of the benefit thereof Out of the forementioned Monkish Writer Stow tells us of an Army of Twenty Five Thousand that were to have met Sir John in St. Giles's Fields and yet for all this great Cry we find not One Hundred taken though he affirms Sixty Nine of them to be condemn'd of Treason upon such kind of proofs perhaps as these whereon the Composer of Sir Walter Rawleigh's Life makes him to have been found Guilty of Treason in the First of King James for which he had the honour to be Beheaded about Forty Years after upon his Return from his unsuccessful Guyana Voyage and Thirty Seven Hang'd But the Record out of the Kings-Bench the most authentick Evidence mentions only That Sir John Oldcastle and others to the number of Twenty Men call'd Lollards at St. Giles did conspire to Subvert the State of the Clergy this it seems then was the principal Offence the rest Aggravations without which the Scales could not have been well weigh'd down and to Kill the King and his Brother and other Nobles as any English Reader may see in Cottons Abridgment at the afore-cited Parliament of the Fifth of this King Where now are any good grounds for this malicious Out-cry upon the Dissenting Wicklivists for Traiterous Plotters and Conspirators And what 's become of the great Army that Fame and Report had Rais'd But perhaps the Inn-keepers in the adjacent Hamlets and neighbouring Villages were not only their familiar Friends but intimate Acquaintance as Mr. Bags ingenuity to the elevating and surprizing of our Minds hath taught us to express it how otherwise this Achilles and his dreadful Army of Mirmidons could have continued thus unseen and slipt away in Disguise seems not reconcileable to Sence and Reason And yet how such great Numbers could have lain hid within the compass of a Readmote or have been put like Homers Iliads in a Nut-shell is a thing that passeth all my understanding to conceive If ever such a thing was as doubtless it never hapned in Europe nor amongst either our antient or modern Reformers certainly then this unconceivable Wonder must have fell out in the Reign of Queen Dick King of no Lands upon the Terra incognita of some other of the Fairy Islands bordering upon Vtopia where Prince Oberon and Queen Mab liv'd in dayly dread and fear of King Arthur Sir Lancelot and Sir Tristram and the rest of the Knights of his round Table or miserably perplext themselves every hour and minute with needless Scruples Jealousies and Suspicions about the unimagin'd Designs of the Noble Duke Ogier to advance himself and his little Mervine who afterwards did such heroick Exploits upon the Souldan of Babylon and his bloody cut-throat Army of Sarazens when he turn'd to the Assistance of the famous C●arlemain and his Peers But laying aside these idle Stories of the Monkish Romancers I pass on from our famous win-All Henry of Monmouth to the unfortunate English lose-All Henry of Windsor a far better Man than King as being more intentive upon the Devotions of the Times than the Government of his Realm and better skill'd in his Beads than his Scepter and therefore seems rather cut out for a Priest than a Prince In this Kings Minority while such great States-men and Patriots as his most renowned Uncles Bedford and Gloucester sate at the Helm and steadily Steer'd the Ship of the Common-Wealth one by his Arms the other by his Arts Honour and Renown attended upon the English Banners in France and the Land at Home in peace and quietness Flourished under the benign Influence of their successful Councels for the most part free from civil Broils and Commotions King Henry being in actual Possession of both Crowns under the conduct of such noble and worthy Directors But when Death had snatch'd away one from his Regency in France and the other was dismist from his Protectorship in England through the course of time The King being grown in Years and come to ripeness of Age though not it seems to such a degree of understanding as might capacitate him to act the part of a King further than in Name and Shew his Affairs in forreign Parts soon went miserably to wrack and being turn'd out of almost all beyond Sea deadly Fewds and Annimosities the usual attendants of ill Success abroad encreast so fast at Home between the Nobles and great Persons of the Realm and such intestine Jars sprung up in the Nation that after many Battles fought and much Royal Blood spilt the York Party prevail'd over the Lancastrians and the poor King himself though the Miracle of Age for Devotion lost his Crown Life and All at last Whether 't was purely the ill success abroad or the ill management of the State at home the unhappy Fate attending the Kings Matching with Queen Margaret to the breach of a former Contract or the unseasonable stirring of her and her accomplices to Suppress Ruine and Root out the other Party whereby they were compell'd for their own Security to link themselves together in the strictest bonds of Confederacy and stand continually upon their own Guard Whether the weakness of the King or the restless Spirit of the Queen too Active for her Sex The much resented Death of the Duke of Glocester or the subtle Arts and Devices of the Duke of York into the particulars whereof I will not now descend as being the Subject of a distinct Treatise by it self and the Popularity of the great Earl of Warwick Whether 't was any of these single or all of them joyntly concurring or rather the over-ruling Providence of an Almighty Being that made this strange Alteration in the Face of things to the dethroning of one Prince the most devoted of his time to religious Exercises and exalting of another as much given to Women as the former to Religion whereby the White Rose overtopt the Red Certain it is the City of London had a great Influence upon these Transactions and the favour the Citizens bore to the Duke of York and his Party contributed highly to the advancing of his Interest above the King Regnants if they were not the only grand causes under Heaven that produc't such wonderful and stupendious Effects This the more clearly to demonstrate I shall not oblidge my self exactly to trace the whole Series of State affairs through the following Princes Reigns nor over-scrupulously confine my self to the Life of this or that King distinctly and apart But design to
redounded so much to his own advantage and the Interest of the York Family which he had for a long time before espoused by the favour he gained thereby among the Commons of the Realm in general and of the City in particular For when he came to London the Analist informs us he kept such an House that six Oxen were eaten at a Breakfast and every Tavern was full of his Meat and whoso had any acquaintance in his House might have had as much Sodden and Rost as he might carry upon a long Dagger All this notwithstanding when upon disgust and discontent he had turned to the other side and became a favourer of the Lancastrians he was never the less disappointed in his aims and expectations from the Londoners For though by his turning sides the York Party had been once routed King Edward taken Prisoner and King Henry resettled once more on the Throne and he had in a manner the whole power of the Land in his hands besides the general Love and Affection the Commons bore to him and the dread and terror the sound of his Name oft struck into his Enemies Hearts it having in effect altered the Fortune and turned the Scales in two Battels one in King Henry's days for the Yorkists another in King Edwards for the Lancastrians yet upon the return of King Edward from beyond Sea whither he had some time before escaped out of Custody into England to recover his Inheritance and regain his Crown and the News of his Marching up to London both sides saith Baker seeking to make the City their Friends the Citizens backwardness to take up Arms in Defence of Old King Henry his Crown and Dignity and inclination to Young King Edward was so apparent that Warwicks own Brother the Arch-bishop of York distrusting the Event secretly sought King Edwards Favour he himself was received into London King Henry was redelivered unto him and the Great Warwick slain not long after at Barnet in a pitch'd Battell to the utter Ruin of the Lancastrian Party for that Age the consequence of this overthrow being enough to read them their succeeding ill Fate at Tewksbury they themselves having sufficient Cause to be daunted with the loss of their most powerful friends and favourers and the Yorkists to be flush'd with their Success in gaining so important a Victory As the Citizens continued thus favourable to the King so I don't find them them chang'd and alter'd in ther Inclinations to the other side till some of the Yorkists themselves by their own hands began to loose and untye those Bonds of Amity Friendship and Fidelity the Late King's Children being dispossest by his own Brother the Duke of Gloucester and the Earl of Richmond the surviving hopes of the Lancastrians had openly declar'd his Intentions and solemnly Sworn to marry King Edward's Eldest Daughter the rightful Heir of all the Yorkists Greatness which afterwards was as honourably as honestly perform'd whereby both Families became united in one Line and the two Roses happily inoculated each upon the other The expression I hope the ingenious Society of Gardiners and Florists will pardon me if harmlesly guilty of an absurdity in translating the term from fruits to flowers Did the Citizens of London appear so zealously on the Yorkists behalf and yield such powerful assistance to carry on their designs What other than can we expect with reason but that King Edward behaved himself very gratefully towards that City which Espoused his flaughtered Fathers Cause against even the Governing Party and contributed so considerably to his own Restauration Though it is but too commonly seen that as mean services are but meanly recompenced or else wholly ' slighted add forgotten so an excess of merit too great to be rewarded brings oftner danger than advantage to the party concerned Evident examples whereof our own and Foreign Histories can abundantly afford us and it is well if the City of London could produce no experience of her own in confirmation of their verity and validity while some others having gotten well by their services to the facilitating their ascent into high Places have no better improved them in the Eyes of the World than in keeping their Coaches their Horses and their Misses and made little other returns of thanks and gratitude to the City but some small slight acknowledgments and concessions and perhaps a few verbal promises and assurance or else forgetting their former needs and necessities have endeavoured most ungratefully to turn their power upon her which they may be thought to have gained chiefly and principally by her means But King Edward it seems or those about him had honester Principles in them or were better tempered For we find in Baker that he furnished his Councel Table for the most part with such as were gracious among the Citizens and we Read in Stow of no less than eleven Aldermen besides the Lord Mayor and Recorder Knighted by him at one time in the Highway betwixt Islington and Shoreditch upon his return from the Battel at Tewksbury in reward of the good service the Londoners had done him As for the jovial Entertainment of the Mayor Aldermen and Commons in Waltham Forrest by the Kings express order and appointment in his presence about an year before he dyed 't is a Subject Treated on by more English Historians than one with the circumstances and consequents thereof the pleasant lodge of Green boughs set up on purpose for them the Complemental condescention of the King in refusing to go to his own Dinner till he had saw them served the Hunting sport he shewed them the plenty of Venison he gave them at their departure and the noble Present of two Harts and six Bucks with a Tun of Wine he sent to the Lady Mayoress and her Sisters the Aldermens Wives to make merry with which they did afterwards at Drapers Hall where without all peradventure the Kings Health went all round the Table if it was then in Fashon but for this I will not put one finger in the fire If we dive into the reasons of the variation of the Pole at London and search into the occasional Causes of the manifest change and alteration of their Affections from thr Family of Lancaster to the House of York we may impute it partly to the losses crosses and unsuccessful management of Affairs under a weak King and a self seeking Court of Lancastrians but chiefly to the encrease of National grievances without timely care taken to redress them and the fixt Resolution of the Court Party to oppress their opposites the Yorkists any manner of ways by right or by wrong for we may easily observe from History and experience such to have been the usual motives to disgusts and the common incitements to discontent Therefore I presume I may draw hence better grounds and reasons of the Cities Love to King Edward than those alledged by Baker out of Comines viz. that he got the Love of the Londoners by owing them
evil May-day when we read of the King 's pardoning the many hundreds Indicted for that day's Riot and Insurrection at the three Queens intercession upon Cardinal Woolsey's Advice and perchance in Complaisance to the City Not to mention that eminent Instance of the King's Charity Love and Affection to the City when in so great a scarcity of Bread therein that many died for meer want he freely and frankly sent thither out of his own Provisions 600 Quarters of Corn which serv'd for a very seasonable Supply till more could be brought from other Parts But as to the former I dare aver it from the consequence of the Contest between the City and the Cardinal in the 17th year of this King out of Stow and thence prove beyond denial how like her self the City always continued in opposing the Arbitrary Power and Exorbitances of over grown Favourites Commissions were sent forth by Order of the Council into every Shire to Levy the Sixth Part of every Man's Substance towards the King's passage into France but this was so vehemently oppos'd by the People as contrary to ancient Laws and Customs and not granted by the Paliament that the King thought good to deny that he ever knew of that Demand and by soothing Letters sent to London and elsewhere he requested only his Subjects Benevolence This was a Term more plausible than a set Demand and a fix'd Contribution and the Cardinal forsooth would needs undertake personally to induce the City's consent thereto and therefore sent for the Mayor the Almen and the most substantial Common-Councel-Men to Westminster thinking by fair Speeches good Words and large Promises to have overperswaded them To him indeed they lent their Ears but we don't find them over hasty to part with their Purses However they sent Deputies to him Four Aldermen and Twelve Commoners to return him their thanks and every Alderman assembles his Ward and makes a Motion for a Benevolence which was openly deny'd them by the Commonalty Then the Cardinal sends again for the Mayor and his Brethren who informs him what they had done Whereupon he would have examined them apart and demands a benevolence of them in the King's Name But for Answer was told by a City Councellor that the Motion was against an Act of Parliament which could not be disprov'd though it was in part gain-said Thereupon the Mayor resolutely denies to grant any thing so that upon his coming home to London all publick endeavours were laid by and it was declar'd that every man should come to the Cardinal and grant privily what he would This was so little grateful to the Citizens and upon the Mayor's endeavours to qualifie them by promising they should be gently treated and exhorting them to go when sent for they were so highly offended thereat that in their fury they would have had several expell'd the Common-Councel and so without further answer angrily departed home Whereby we may be well assur'd of the truth of Hall's Observation that though the Mayor and Aldermen had granted the Demand the Common-Councel would never have assented For we must know this was done at the Common-Councel call'd the next day after my Lord Mayor came from Court The Result therefore of all was in the Issue that the King openly protests in a great Council call'd at York-place now White-hall that his mind was never to ask any thing of his Commons that might sound to the breach of the Laws and so this Project was rejected and laid aside by order of the Kings Letter sent into all Counties For seeing that the City refused how was it possible to perswade the Country who look upon London as their principal Guide and Directress and so generally square their Actions by the Citizens Rule Doth not then this seem a clear Example of the Londoners constant fixedness to their old Principles of Liberty And if the Reader likewise please it may pass for an Instance of the Citizens disclaiming their Mayor's Resolves and the prevalency of the Commonalty over the Magistracy when resolute in their just opposition As an Overplus I shall cast in a Passage out of Baker's Chronicles where we find it upon Record under the Title of King Henry's Taxations how that when in the Fourteenth Year a Tenth Part of all Mens Substance was required by the Cardinal towards the Charges of the King's Wars and he would hav● had every Man sworn to tell what he was worth The Londoners thinking this very hard they were thereupon excus'd for taking the Oath and allowed to bring in their Bills upon their Honesties from whence may be argued either the Strength Greatness and Power of this honourable City whom the Court nor the Cardinal durst not displease or the great respect then shewn her in regard of those many glorious Rays of Influence she sheds all over all the Land when the Word of a Citizen went as far and was as well accepted as another Man's Oath If such then was the Honour and Respect of the City heretofore what may we think it to be now that London hath since receiv'd so considerable an Addition and Augmentation in several respects by the happy concurrence of many more Circumstances to render it eternally famous Was this City able to hold a Contest with so grand a Favourite and potent a Courtier as Cardinal Woolsey and at last to come off with flying Colours to the vindicating her own Rights and the Liberties of all the Nation besides and the forcing King Henry in the strength of his Age as stout as he was to so great a Compliance as hath been hinted before 'T is plain then she was strong and her Citizens not destitute of Spirit Did the King as cruel as he was to others of his Subjects shew himself favourable to London 'T is evident he had great cause and reason so to do unless he was desirous to be tax'd with ungratitude so un-Prince-like a Crime For we may observe the Citizens were ready enough to please him in any thing wherein their All was not concerned and in that I never yet found them ever prone to humour the Follies of any King living Witness their readiness on all Occasions for the Honour of the King to appear in the most splendid Equipage on publick Solemnities Among which the most remarkable in my Opinion were the Coronation of Queen Ann Mother of the never to be forgotten Queen Elizabeth of blessed Memory with the Preparatives thereto the Celebrity of her Attendance by Water from Greenwich to the Tower and her honourable Conveyance from thence through the City amidst the great variety of pleasing Shews and delightful Objects to Westminster particulariz'd in Stow and the glorious appearance of the Citizens at the great Muster in St. Iames's-Park May the 8th Anno 31. to the Number of Fifteen Thousand in bright shining Armour with Coats of white Silk or Cloth and Chains of Gold where the Citizens strove in such sort to exceed each other in bravery of