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A28585 The continuation of An historicall discourse of the government of England, untill the end of the reigne of Queene Elizabeth with a preface, being a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England / by Nath. Bacon of Grais-Inne, Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660. Historicall and political discourse of the laws & government of England. 1651 (1651) Wing B348; ESTC R10585 244,447 342

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occasion of the Death of Pope Julio is to be seen Lastly she was no good Queen not onely because she gave up the Peoples Liberties in Ecclesiasticall matters to the forrain Jurisdiction of Rome but undertook too much therein by far upon her own account and in Civil Affairs though De jure She was not inferior to any of her Progenitors yet She would have it declared by the Parliament as if the consideration of her Sex or birth had made som hesitation in her minde and when she had made all clear she commending her self thereby to the Prince of Spain with her self indangered likewise that trust of the Nation which she had received and cast such a shadow upon her own Supremacy as in many things it is hard to be discerned Lastly In her whole course uneven sometimes appearing like the eldest Daughter of Henry the Eighth at other times like a Fem covert led by the will of her Lord and Husband that wanting Supremacy himself rendred her thereby beneath her self For First She married by Act of Parliament as if She were not at her own disposing professing as much in her speech to the Londoners upon the Kentish rebellion so a difference was made between the two Sisters the marriage of the one being by advice of Parliament and the abstinence of the other against the same Nor is the same altogether irrationall for by the one the Government of the Nation is indangered and by the other otherwise Secondly By her marriage She became doubly married one way relating to her Person unto her King the other relatintog her trust unto her Councell For where a Forraine mighty King is so nigh the Helme its dangerous to trust the same to his Wife without the joynt concurrence of the Lords The matter in fact declared no less for many times She had steered quite wide had not the Lords been more stiff to their principles then She. The first yeare of her marriage was Hony-moon with her She thought nothing too dear for the King and that her self was but meanly married unless her Husband were as compleat a King in her Nation as any of her Predecessors although contrarily the higher he was advanced the meaner She became Thirdly By her marriage She adventured her Title of Supremacy of jurisdiction For Phillip as King had the Honour stile and Kingly name and so had the precedency he had to do also with the jurisdiction for by the Articles of the marriage he was to aid the Queen in her administration of the Kingdome and maintenance of the Lawes Writs and Commissions passed under his name He also sate in Parliament voted therein and joyned in the Royall Assent Lastly Joyned in the publication and execution of all Lawes To him also was Allegiance due and therefore the Crime of Treason was equally against his as the Queens Crown and Dignity saving that it was reserved to be as against him onely during the time of Coverture and yet had the Queen left issue by him it would have been a hard adventure for the Lawers to have given their opinion in that case seeing the King had been Guardian to his Children during their minority Lastly The whole power and jurisdiction resting in them both joyntly could not inable them to make or dissolve Courts at will nor conclude orders and directions in cases of Plea and conveyance nor process concerning the same I shall sum up all in this on econclusion if neither of these three had an absolute Legislative power either in matters concerning the Church or Common-Wealth if no absolute jurisdiction in case either of Life Member or Estate If they neither can create unite or alter any Court either concerning the Triall and determining the Estates of the People or their own Revenue If not alter or make any new process in Courts of Law If not order common assurances of Lands or Estates And Lastly If they have no power in determining the last appeal and definitive sentence in matters of controversy but all must rest upon the sentence by Parliament there must certainly be found out a further sense of that grand Title of Supremacy of jurisdiction power superiority pre-eminence and Authority then by the common vogue hath bin made The Title of supremacy was first formed in the behalf of Henry the eighths Claime in matters Ecclesiasticall which by the Statute is explained under these words of power To visit correct repress redress Offences and Enormities This Power and no other did Queen Elizabeth claime witness the words of the Statute in her own time But in the framing of the Oath of Supremacy in her time not only in causes Ecclesiastical but temporal which never came within the Statutes and publique Acts in Henry the sevenths time are inserted and if any thing more was intended it must come under the word Things which also was inserted in the said Oath and yet if the words of the Statute of Queen Elizabeth formerly mentioned be credited the word Things ought to comprehend no more then the word Causes and then the Power of Queen Elizabeth in the Common-Wealth will be comprehended in these words of Supremacy to visit correct repress redress Offences and Enormities for the Supremacy in the Church and Common-Wealth is the same in Measure and what more then this I cannot understand out of any publique Act of this Nation Now in regard Offences and Enormities are properly against Lawes the power to visit and correct must also be regulated according to Laws either of War or Peace nor do these five words Jurisdiction Power Superiority Pre-eminence and Authority contain any more Supremacy or other sense for two of them speakes only the rank or degree of the Queen in government Viz. Superiority and Pre-eminence belongeth only to her and not to any other Forrain power And two other words do note her Right and Title thereto by Power and Authority committed to her And the other word denotates the thing wherein She hath Superiority and power Viz. In jurisdiction the nature of which word Vlpian speaking of the nature of a mixt government explaineth thus Quando servata dictione juris judiciorum fit animadversio so as this supreame Authority in jurisdiction is no other then supream power to visit correct redress Offences or determine matters in doubt by deputing fit persons to that end and purpose according to the Law and this is all the Supremacy that appeareth to me belonging to the Crown in these times CHAP. XXXVI Of the Power of the Parliament during these times WHen the Throne is full of a King and he as full of opinion of his own sufficiency and Power a Parliament is looked upon as an old fashion out of fashion and serve for little other then for present shift when Kings have run themselves over Head and Eares A condition that those of that high degree are extremly subject unto but where the Crown is too heavy for the wearer by reason of infirmity the
Livery so long as he may live without care and spend without controll For by this time the humour of his great Grand-father budded in him he pawned his heart to young men of vast desires and some say so inordinately as he prostituted his chastitie unto them And it s no wonder if the Revenues of the Crowne are insufficient for such Masters Thi● the people soon felt and feared their own Free-holds for they are bound saith he not to see the Crowne deflowred for want of maintenance it s very true nor to see the Crowne deflowred of its maintenance A Parliament therefore is called in which diverse Lords associate and prepare Physick for the Kings lavish humour which being administred wrought for ten yeares after till it had purged him of his life and the Kingdome of their King It was an Act of Parliament that gave power to fourteen Lords and others to regulate the Profits and Revenues of the Crowne and to doe Justice to the People this was to continue for one whole yeare The Parasites no sooner found the effect hereof to their Cost but the King growes sicke of it and findes an Antidote to over-rule Acts of Parliament by Acts of Privy Councell declares this ill-favoured Commission voide and the Contrivers Advisers and Inforcers Traytors To make it more Majesticall he causeth the Judges to Subscribe this Order and so it becomes Law in repute This foundation thus laid he buildeth in hast an Impeachment of these Commissioners of high Treason and supposing that they would not readily stoope himselfe stoopes lower for he would put his Right to triall by battell which was already his owne by the judgement of the Masters of the Law For so they may be well called seeing they had thus Mastered it In this the King had the worst for he lost his Honour and himselfe God hath a care of common right even amongst Idolaters Then comes the Parliament of Wonders wherein the Kings Party are declared Traytors and the chiefe Judges with their Law judged by another Law The King not medled with thinks it high time to come out of his Minority and assumes the Government of the Kingdome and himselfe to himself being now three and twenty yeares of age old enough to have done well if he had cared for it But resolving to follow the way of his owne will at length it led him to his owne ruine onely for the present two things delayed it Viz. The Authority Wisedome and Moderation of his Unckles especially of the Duke of Lancaster now come out of Spain and the great affection which the King pretended to the Queen who had also gained a good opinion amongst the People The benevolent aspect of the People not for their owne advantage but for the Publick quiet procured many Parlies and interviewes between the King and People and many Lawes for the upholding of the Court and Government although both Warre Lawes Justice and Councells all are faint as all is faint in that man that hath once dismanned himself This he perceives well enough and therefore Peace he must have by any means The Queen dies himselfe being nigh eight and twenty yeares old takes a Creature like a Wife but in truth a Childe of eight yeares old and this is to get Peace with France It s no wonder if now he hunts after unlawfull game and that being ill taken brings all things out of order For abused Marriage never wants woe Civill men are now looked upon as severe Cators and his Unckles especially the Duke of Glocester with a jealous eye which accomplished his death in the conclusion The Dukes of Lancaster and Yorke forsake the Court Favorites step into their roomes The old way of the eleventh yeare is re-assumed Belknap and others are pardoned and made of the Cabinet The Pardon of the Earle of Arundell is adnulled contrary to the advise of the major part and the Arch Bishop the Earles brother is banished The Lords forsake the wilfull King still the Kings jealousie swells The Duke of Hertford is banished or rather by a hidden Providence sent out of the way for a further worke The Duke of Lancaster dies and with him all hope of moderation is gone for he was a wise Prince and the onely Cement that held the joynts of the Kingdome in correspondency And he was ill requited for all his Estate is seised upon The Duke of Hertford and his Party are looked upon by the People as Martyrs in the Common Cause and others as Royalists Extremities hasten on and Prerogative now upon the wing is towering above reach In full Parliament downe goes all the worke of the tenth and eleventh yeares Parliament which had never bin if that Parliament had continued by adjournment The King raiseth a Power which he calleth his Cuard of Cheshire men under the terror of this displaying rod the Parliament Kingdom are brought to Confession Cheshire for this service is made a Principality thus goes Counties up and Kingdoms down The Kings Conscience whispers a sad Message of dethroning and well it might be for he knew he had deserved it Against this danger he intrenches himself in an Act of Parliament That made it Treason To purpose and endeavor to depose the King or levy War against him or to withdraw his Homage hereof being attainted in Parliament And now he thought he was well guarded by Ingagement from the Parliament but he missed the right Conclusion for want of Logique For if the Parliament it self shall depose him it cannot be made a Traytor or attaint it selfe and then hath the King gain'd no more then a fals birth But the King was not thus quiet the sting of guilt still sticks within and for remedy he will unlaw the Law and gets it enacted that all Procurers of the Statute of 10. Richard the Second and the Commission and Procurers of the Kings assent thereto and hinderers of the Kings proceedings are adjudged Traitors All these reach onely the branches the root remains yet and may spring again and therefore in the last place have at the Parliament it self For by the same its further declared That the King is the sole Master of the Propositions for matters to be treated in Parliament and all gainsayers are Traitors Secondly That the King may dissolve the Parliament at his pleasure and all gainsayers are Traitors Thirdly That the Parliament may not proceed against the Kings Justices for offences by them committed in Parliament without the Kings consent and all gainsayers are Traitors These and the like Aphorismes once Voted by the Cheshire men assented unto by the Parliament with the Kings Fiat must passe for currant to the Judges and if by them confirmed or allowed will in the Kings opinion make it a Law for ever That the King and all Parliaments is Dominus fac primum and Dominus fac totum But the Judges remembred the tenth yeare and Belknaps intertainment and so dealt warily their opinion is thus
the power that made them I shall leave the particulars to be inquired into by them that shal minde it elsewhere and only touch so much as shall reflect upon the maine Government This power was executed by Deputies diversly according as the times and opportunities were for Warr or peace and either transitu or partu What was done in time of Warr or whiles this Shipp is out of the English Seas comes not to our purpose and therefore I shall not meddle with that further then this that in the first times Kings were wont to divide the worke of judicature and of Warr into severall hands The power of Warr and Peace they committed unto men of approved courage and Skill in that service and therefore generally not to the men of highest ranke who had neither minde nor Skil for a worke of such labour dyet and danger this power passed under divers names sometimes by grant of the custody of the Sea coasts somtimes of the parts and Sea coasts somtimes by being made Captain of the Sea men and Marriners and somtimes Admiral of the Ships It was a great power and had bin much greater but that it suffered a double diminution the one in the time for three or four years commonly made an end of the command of one man and at the best it was quam diu Regi placuerit the other diminution was in circuit of the power for all the Maritine coasts were not ordinarily under the power of one man but of many each having his proper precinct upon the South or North East or Western shotes and under the title of Admirall in the times of Ed. the first and forwards who brought that title from the holy Land neverthelesse about the end of the times whereof we now treat the custody of the whol Sea began to settle in one hand under the title of Admirall of the English Seas and the place was conferred upon men of the greatest ranke and so continued ever afterward The power of jurisdicton or judicature all this while remained distinct and it seemes was settled in part in the power of the Sheriffe and Justices For by the Law the Sheriff and Justices had cognisance of matters betweene the high water and the low water marke and what was done Super altum mare was within the directory of the Admirall these were but few things and of small considerablenesse the principall of them being concerning Warr or peace and those only within the English Seas But after Edward the third had beaten both the French and Spaniards at Sea the people grew much more towards the Sea and became so famous that the greatest Lords thought the Regiment of Sea affaires worthy of the best of their ranke and were willing with the title of Admirall whiles they left the worke to others and so the Admirall became a person of more honour and lesse worke then he had been formerly The greatnesse of the honour of this place thus growing soone also began to contract greatnesse of power beyond what it had formerly and this was principally in matter of jurisdiction For not contented with the power of a cheife Justice of Warr and Peace within the Seas which was his proper dominion the Lord Admirall gained the same within the low water marke and in the maine streames below the next Bridge to the Sea and in all places where Ridells were set and yet these places were within the body of the County Nor did he indeavour lesse to gaine in matters of distributive justice for although he had a legal jurisdiction in things done upon the open Sea so farr as to defend order determine and cause restitution to be made in cases of damage done unjustly yet was it no lesse difficult to keep this power within its own bounds then the watry Element upon which it floated but it made continual waves upon the franchise of the Land and for this cause no sooner had these great men savored of the honour and authority of that dignity but comes a Statute to restrain their Authority in the Cognisance of Cases onely unto such matters as are done upon the main Sea as formerly was wont to be and within two yeares after that Act of Parliament is backed by another Act to the same purpose in more full expressions saving that for Man-slaughter the Admiralls power extended even to the high water marke and into the main streams And this leadeth on the next consideration Viz. What is the subject matter of this Jurisdiction and Authority I shall not enter into the depth of particulars but shall reduce all to the two heads of Peace and Justice The Lord Admirall is as I formerly said a Justice of Peace at Sea maintaining the Peace by Power and restoring the Peace by setting an Order unto matters of Difference as well between Forrainers as between the English and Forrainers as may appeare by that Plea in the fourth Institutes formerly mentioned Secondly That point of Justice principally concerneth matters of Contract and Complaints for breach of Contract of these the Admirall is the Judge to determine according to Law and Custome Now as subservient unto both these he hath authority of command over Sea men and Ships that belong to the State and over all Sea men and Ships in order to the service of the State to arrest and order them for the great voyages of the King and the Realme and during the said voyage but this he cannot doe without expresse Order because the determining of a voyage Royall is not wholly in his power Lastly the Lord Admirall hath power not onely over the Sea men serving in the Ships of State but over all other Sea men to arrest them for the service of the State and if any of them run away without leave from the Admirall or power deputed from him he hath power by inquiry to make a Record thereof and certifie the same to the Sheriffs Maiors Bayliffs c. who shall cause them to be apprehended and imprisoned By all which and divers other Lawes not onely the power of the Admirall is declared but the originall from whence it is derived namely from the Legislative power of the Parliament and not from the single Person of the King or any other Councell whatsoever But enough hath been already said of these Courts of State in their particular Precincts One generall interest befalls them all that as they are led by a Law much different from the Courts of Common Law so are they thereby the more indeared to Kings as being subservient to their Prerogative no lesse then the Common Law is to the Peoples liberty in which condidition being looked upon as Corrivalls this principall Maxime of Government will thence arise That the bounds of these severall Lawes are so to be regarded that not the least gap of intrenchment be laid open each to other least the fence once broken Prerogative or Liberty should become boundlesse and bring in
these times to more Sobriety Some delight in Forrain Commodities and Manufactures is doubtlesse profitable both for Trade and Shipping so as what is Imported exceeds not what is Exported for too much of that makes the Domestick Commodity contemptible the Nation poore and the People want work because its a noted vanity of this Nation That they love things far fetcht and dear bought As a cure therefore to this disease English Cloath by Law is injoyned to be worn by all Persons under the Degree of a Lord and so the former Inhibition of Importation of Forrain Cloathes was strengthened thereby And because the English Clothiers should not take advantage hereby to rais the price of their Cloathes to their own covetous pin Therefore the Law also settled a certain price and measure the same before sale was to be allowed upon view and for the goodnesse of the Cloathes and perfect working thereof Lawes were likewise made against Exportation of all such as were not perfectly made A fourth step in the advancement of Trade was the compelling men to work for when publique imployment calls men forth for service in the Feild their minds once in Commotion or upon the Wing can hardly settle any where or stoop to the Perke again unlesse upon hope of prey or gain to be gotton thereby Such were the times of Edward the Third wherein partly for that cause and partly for the scarcity of men left from the Sword and Pestilence not onely work-men were scarce and deare but even the Masse it self was grown stately the private delights of Kings and great Men and scarce vouchsafeing to be seen by common gaze but at a great distance The Priests had little Charity and the Poore had as little money so as no penny no Pater Noster A sick and very crazy time questionlesse was it when the Clergy were stately and the Poore idle The Preists wages for this cause are now settled and they that would get much must get many littles and doe much but the greater sore was amongst the poorer sort either they would not serve or at such wages as could not consist with the price of the Cloaths and the subsistance of the Clothier Lawes therefore are made to compell them to work and to settle their wages so as now it s as beneficiall to them to serve the meaner sort of Clothiers as the richer sort For the Master must give no more nor the Servant take more and thus became labour currant in all places A fifth means to advance Trade was the setling of a Rule upon Exportation and Importation this wrought a double effect Viz. The inriching of this Kingdome with Forrain Commodities and the maintaining of Shipping which was and is a principall means not onely of riches but of strength unto all Sea bordering Countries especially regard being had to these three Considerations First that Importation do bring in more profit then Exportation disburseth Secondly that both Exportation and Importation be made by Shipping belonging to this Nation fo farre as may consist with the benefit of this Nation Thirdly that the Exportation be regulated to the overplus saving the main stock at home The truth of the first will be evident from this ground That no Nation can be rich that receives more dead Commodities from abroad then it can spend at home or vend into Forrain parts especially if it be vended in its proper kinde and not in money and therefore the Lawes provided that no Merchant should Export more money then he Importeth and what he doth Export must be of the new stamp which it seemeth was inferiour in vallue to the old yet the times may prove so penurious that this rule may be waved for a season The second is no lesse beneficiall for as it is in Warre so in all Trades the greater the number is that is imployed the more effectuall the issue will be and therefore though it in the generall be more beneficiall that all Exportation and Importation might be by our own shipping yet in regard times may be such as now they were that the shipping of this Nation is more then ordinarily imployed for the service of the State And that every Nation striveth to have the benefit of Exportation by Vessels of their owne And lastly in regard the case may be such as Importation may be at a cheaper rate by Forrain Vessels and Exportation likewise may for the time be more prejudiciall to this Nation if done by our own shipping then those of other Nations Therefore the course must be changed so far forth as will stand with the occasions of the State and common profit of this Nation And for these causes and such like in the times whereof we now Treat the Lawes often varied sometimes no Staple Commoditie must be Exported in English bottomes sometimes all must be done by them and within a yeare again that liberty was restrained and after that liberty given to Forrainers to Export as formerly The third and last Consideration is as necessary as any of the former for if Trade be maintained out of the maine Stock the Kingdome in time must needs be brought to penury because it is their Magazine and for this cause it was provided that all Wooll should remaine at the Staple 15 dayes to the end it might be for the Kingdomes use if any one would buy they must doe it within that time otherwise it might be Exported The sixth means of advancement of Trade was the settling of the Staple for as it was an incouragement to the first establishing of the Manufacture that the Staples were let loose so when the Manufactures had taken roote the Staple especially now fixed to places within this Kingdome brought much more incouragement thereto First for preserving a full Market for whiles the Commodity lies scattered in all places the Market must needs be the leaner partly in regard the Commodity lies in obscurity and partly because when it is known where yet it s not easily discovered whether it be vendible or not and besides small parcells are not for every mans labour and the greater are not for every mans money Secondly Staples are convenient for the stating of the generall price of the Commodities in regard the quantity of the Commodity is thereby the more easily discovered which commonly maketh the price And the quantity of the Commodity thus discovered will not onely settle the price to it selfe but also ballance the price of the Manufacture Thirdly the Staple having thus discovered the quantity of the Commodity will be a ready way to settle the quantity of the main Stock that must be preserved and regulate Exportation as touching the overplus But it cannot be denied that the first and principall mover of the making of the Staple was the benefit of the Crown for when the Commodity was gone beyond the Sea it importeth not to the Subjects in England whether the same be sold at one place
by Law The first served as a scare for though it were but by Proclamation men might justly fear that he that was so stout against the Pope would not stick to scourge his owne Subjects out of his way in the time of his heat The King thus entered the Lists both against Pope and Cardinall now under Praemuniri whereof he died meets the English Clergy thus loosing their top-gallant standing up in the reare against him and talking at large Neverthelesse the King stops not his carreere puts them to the rout for maintaining the power Legatine They soon submit crave pardon give a summe of money and perfume their Sacrifice with that sweet Incense of Supreame Head of the Church of England This was done not by way of Donation for the Convocation had no such power but by way of acknowledgement in flat opposition to the Jurisdiction of the Pope It became the common subject of discourse amongst all sorts but of wonderment to the Pope Yet for fear of worse he speaks faire for he was not in Posture to contest but all would do no good the Queen had appealed to Rome the Pope by Woolsies advice makes delayes The Parliament espying the advantage at once tooke all appeales to Rome away and established all sentences made or to be made within this Land notwithstanding any Act from Rome and enjoyned the English Clergy to administer the severall acts of publique worship notwithstanding any inhibition or excommunication from any forrain pretended Power The grounds upon the preamble of the Law will appeare to be two First that the King of England is supream head in rendring Justice within the Nation in all causes therein arising which is more then the recognisance of the Clergy two yeares before this Act did hold forth yet this acknowledgment is not absolute but in opposition to Forraine pretentions Secondly that the Clergy in England having Power may in matters spirituall determine all doubts without forrain help and administer such duties as to their place do belong not hereby determining that the Church-men ever had such Power by Law nor that they ought originally to have such Power They never had it for no sooner were they disjoyned from the Laity in these affaires but immediately they were under the Pope and received their Power from him And De jure they cannot challenge such power but by a positive Law such as this Law of Henry the eighth which also giveth but a restrictive and limited power Viz In matters testamentary of divorce matrimony tithes oblations and obventions So as if they will challenge such power they must thanke the Parliament for it and use the same accordingly as persons deputed therunto and not in their owne right or right of their places In all this the Kings supremacy is but obscurely asserted and rather by implication shewing what in reason may be holden then by declaration of what was making way thereby First into the opinions of men before they were enjoyned to determine their actions but within two yeares ensuing or thereabout the Law is made positive The King shall be taken and accepted the onely supreame head on earth of the Church of England and have power to visite correct represse redresse reforme restraine order and amend all such errours heresies abuses offenses contempts and enormities as by any manner of spirituall authority or jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed Which in the preamble is saide to be made to confirm what the Clergy in their Convocation formerly had recognized The corps of his Act is to secure the Kings Title the Kings Power and the Kings Profit As touching the Kings Title it is sayde that in right it did formerly belong to him which is to be granted by all so far as the Power is rightly understood But as touching the Kings Profit it cannot be saide that the whole lump thereof did belong to the King because much thereof was not so ancient but De novo raised by the Popes extortion and therefore the true and reall Profits are by particular Acts of Parliament ensuing in speciall words devolved upon him The nature of this power is layd downe in this Statute under a three fold expression First it is a visitatory or a reforming Power which is executed by inquiry of offences against Lawes established and by executing such Lawes Secondly it is an ordinary jurisdiction for it is such as by any Spirituall authority maybe acted against irregularities and thus the Title of supreame Ordinary is confirmed Thirdly it is such a Power as must be regulatd by Law and in such manner as by any spirituall Authority may lawfully be reformed It is not therefore any absolute arbitrary Power for that belongs onely to the supreame Head in Heaven Nor is it any legislative Power for so the Law should be the birth of this Power and his Power could not then be regulated by the Law nor could ever Ordinary execute such a Power nor did Henry the eighth ever make claime to any such Power though he loved to be much trusted Lastly this Power was such a Power as was gained formerly from the King by forraine Usurpation which must be intended De rebus licitis and once in possession of the Crown or in right thereto belonging according to the Law for the King hath no Power thereby to confer Church-livings by Provisorship or to carry the Keyes and turn the infallible Chaire into an infallible Throne In breife this Power was such as the King hath in the Common-wealth neither legislative nor absolute in the executive but in order to the Unity and Peace of the Kingdome This was the right of the Crowne which was ever claimed but not enjoyed further then the English Scepter was able to match the Romish Keyes And now the same being restored by Act of Parliament is also confirmed by an Oath enjoyned to be taken by the People binding them to acknowledge the King under God supreame head on earth of the Church of England Ireland and the Kings Dominions in opposition to all Forraine jurisdiction And lastly by a Law which bound all the People to maintaine the Kings Title of Defender of the faith and of the Church of England and Ireland in earth the supream head under the perill of Treason in every one that shall attempt to deprive the Crowne of that title We must descend to particulars for by this it will appeare that these generall Lawes concerning the Kings refined title contained little more then matters of Notion otherwise then a generall barr to the Popes future interests And therefore the Wisdome of the State as if nothing had been already done did by degrees parcell out by severall Acts of Parliament the particular interests of the Popes usurped Authority in such manner as to them seemed best And First concerning the Legislative Power in Church government It cannot be denied but the Pope De facto had the Power of a negative vote in all