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A39852 A letter from a gentleman of quality in the country, to his friend, upon his being chosen a member to serve in the approaching Parliament, and desiring his advice being an argument relating to the point of succession to the Crown : shewing from Scripture, law, history, and reason, how improbable (if not impossible) it is to bar the next heir in the right line from the succession. E. F. 1679 (1679) Wing F14; ESTC R19698 29,065 21

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and that giveth the Kingdoms of men to whom he will as the holy Scriptures tell us And who being the Creator of Nature can alone when it pleaseth him controul her Methods and Operations as appeareth by the Interruptions of the Succession in the cases of David Solomon Jehu and the like And they that from these and other instances of this nature do fancy they may maintain the Lawfulness of impeaching the Succession of the Crown in the true Line may as well infer that they may lawfully rob and spoil their Neighbours because God commanded the Israelites to spoil the Egyptians In those cases we are bound to the Law but not to the Example I come now to Records of Parliament which shall be three in number First that of the 39 H. 6. wherein the daring Rich Plantagenet D. of York by his Council exhibited to the Lords in full Parliam a Writing containing his Right and Claims to the Crowns of England and France Against which Claim it was objected on the King's part That the same Crowns had been entailed by Act of Parliament upon the King's Grandfather King Henry the Fourth and the Heirs of his Body from whence the same King Henry the Sixth did lineally descend The which Act say the King's Friends there is of Autoritee to defeat eny mannere Title made to eny person for so are the words To which Objection the said Duke of York answereth I shall cite the words of the Record as they are entered up in the old English That if King Henry the Fourth might have obteigned and rejoysed the seyd Corones of England and Fraunce by Title of Enheritaunce Descent or Succession he neither needed nor would have desired or made them to be granted to him in such wise as they be by the seyd Act. The which taketh noo place neither is of any force or effect against him that is right Enheritor of the seyd Corones as it accordeth with God's Laws and all natural Laws saith the Roll. And this Answer of the Duke of York to the King's Title and his said Claim is afterwards by express Act of the same Parliament declar'd and recognized to be good true just lawful and suffisaunt as it is there worded And at the same time for preventing Effusion of Bloud an Accord by the free consent of the said Duke is likewise established That King Henry the Sixth shall during his Life enjoy the Crown and that from thenceforth the Duke of York should be reputed Heir Apparent to the Crown The next Record is that of 1 Ed. 4. wherein after that Parliament hath in a long Pedigree disclos'd the Title of the same King Edward to the Crown as being in a right line descended from Lionel Duke of Clarence third Son to King Edward the Third and upon the death of his Father the above mentioned Richard Plantagenet next Heir of the Bloud Royal they immediately add these very words Knowing also certainly without doubt and ambiguity that by God's Law and Law of Nature he i. e. King Edward the Fourth and none other is and ought to be true rightwys and natural Leige and Soveraigne Lord. And that he was in right from the death of the seyd noble and famous Prince his Father very just King of the same Realm of England So here it is most expresly declared by two Parliaments of different Complexion and Interest and therefore the more remarkable that the Succession of the Crown of England is inseparably annexed to Proximity of Bloud by the Laws of God and Nature And that a Title of this Sublimity and Grandeur is not at all impeachable even by Act of Parliament And besides the said Parliament of 39 H. 6. doth make the same Declaration to the manifest prejudice of the Title of the King in possession who was ordained also by the same Accord to reign over them during his Life and whom for that reason it must be presum'd they would have favour'd if they had found but the least colour so to have done The last Record is the Statute of Recognition made in the first year of King James by the whole Parliament in which among other things They do in most humble and lowly manner I shall all along use the very words of the Act beseech His most Excellent Majesty that as a Memorial to all Posterity it might be publickly declar'd and enacted in the High Court of Parliament That they being bound thereunto by the Laws of God and Man did with unspeakable Joy recognize and acknowledge that immediately upon the Decease of Queen Elizabeth the Imperial Crown of the Realm ofEngland c. did by inherent Birthright and lawful and undoubted Succession descend and come to His most Excellent Majesty as being lineally justly and lawfully next and sole Heir of the Bloud Royal of this Realm And that by the goodness of God Almighty and lawful Right of Descent His Majesty was King of England c. And to this Recognition we do say they most humbly and faithfully submit and oblige our selves and posterities for ever untill the last drop of our bloud be spent And all the Judges of England some time after in the great Case of Calvin in the Exchequer Chamber do resolve That King James his Title to the Crown was founded upon the Law of Nature viz. by inherent Birthright and Descent from the Bloud Royal of this Realm So that this Parliament doth not in the least manner pretend to give any Title to King James or his Posterity by their own Act and Establishment but on the contrary doth expresly recognize that the same King 's Right and Title to the Crown doth accrue to him by the Laws of God and Man onely as the said Judges do by the Law of Nature viz. as next and sole Heir of the Bloud Royal. By all which it doth most manifestly appear That in the Opinion of the three several Parliaments the Succession of the Crown is united to Proximity and Nextness of Blood by the Laws Divine Natural and Human And a threefold Cord of this Sanctimony and Strength is not easily broken to say nothing of the said Resolution of all the Judges of England in the Point which as our Books tell us in matters of Law is of the most sacred Authority next unto the Court of Parliament This being thus made out I come now to prove That Statute-Laws contrariant to the Laws of God and Nature are ipso facto null and void And here I shall first observe That by a profound Polity of our Law the sole Power of expounding Statute-Laws whether relating to Church or State is intrusted and lodged in the Judges of the Common Law as King Charles the first hath noted in his Speech to both Houses upon passing the Bills of 3 d of his Reign And as the Authorities of Law are very clear now the Judges have exerted this constructive Power in expounding Statute-Laws sometimes even null and void
Arthur of Britain who was the Son of Geossry John's Eldest Brother as all the Histories of that time do observe and lament And therefore wanting that Title which God Nature and the immutable Customs of this Realm give to the Right Heir he was constrain'd to pray in Aid of the People and to patch up a Title from them by Election The Story is this as I have extracted it out of Matthew Paris a learned Monk who lived in that time and who became afterwards Chronologer Royal to King Henry the third Son of the said King John John saith the Monk upon the Death of his Brother King Richard the first was advanced to the Throne by the favour and help of the great Ministers of State and at his Coronation in the presence of the Clergy Nobility and Populace Hubert Arch-bishop of Canterbury and Chancellor of England a Man of profound Subtilty and Reach tells them all in a very fine Harangue That no Man whatsoever was to succeed in the Kingdom here upon any previous Reason unless he were freely Elected by the universality of the People with consideration had of his Moralities and other personal Vertues after the Example of Saul's Election and then he added That John was a well qualified Person in that kind and that therefore they ought to choose him for their King But when the said Hubert was afterwards demanded why in so great an Assembly he durst broach so notorious a falshood viz. That the Monarchy of England was Elective O saith he this I did out of certain Revelations and Prophesies that I have received That John will at some time or other endanger the Realm and bring all into confusion Et ne haberet liberas habenas hoc faciendi ipsum Electione non Successione haereditaria eligi debere affirmavi for so are the Historian's Words And that I might curb him with this Bridle from effecting these things I did pronounce him admitted to the Crown by Election not by hereditary Succession So then we see here that the pronouncing the Monarchy of England to be Elective was done only by way of Umbrage and Dissimulation and to serve a turn at a certain Crisis and juncture of time And the truth is the People did accordingly afterwards check this unfortunate King with the same Bridle and reduc'd him to a very low condition and they chose Lewis the French King's Son their King And this was the consequence of King John's Election by the People and Invasion of the Right of his Nephew which Tenure was good only so long as he could maintain it with his Sword and so likewise is the Tenure of Pyrats and Robbers when they have ravish'd the Properties of other Men. Secondly For King Henry the fourth he was likewise King de facto only and not de Jure for he laid violent hands upon the Crown by the treasonable and barbarous Deposition and Murder of his natural Lord and Soveraign King Richard the second after whose Death without Issue the legal Title remain'd in the House of Clarence being the elder Line and so King Henry the fourth was constrain'd to truckle under an Election by the People and their Establishment in Parliament which Establishment was ipso facto void and null in Law against the House of York which married afterwards with the said House of Clarence as I have evidently proved by the Roll of Parliament of 39 o of Henry the sixth recited by me at large here in the beginning of this Discourse And indeed this very King Henry the fourth well knowing how much a Title to the Crown by the Common Law and Inherent Birth-right exceeded a Title by Statute and Suffrage of the People made his solemn Claim to the Crown in Parliament by Descent from King Henry the third which though it was the meerest figment and pretence that ever was as all the World knows yet he thought he might with more security rely upon that though fictitious than popular Establishment though real The Story is considerable and therefore I shall extract my Account thereof from the Roll of Parliament of that time Forthwith saith the Record upon vacancy of the Realm by Deposition of King Richard the second Henry Duke of Lancaster rising from his Seat and standing up so that he might be well seen by the People and humbly crossing his Forehead and Breast calling upon our Saviour's Cross he claim'd and challeng'd the Realm of England thus void in his Mother-Tongue under this very form of Words In the Name of Fader Sonne and Holy Gost I Henry of Lancastre challenge this Rewme of Ynglonde and the Crown with all the Membres and Appurtenances al 's I that am descendit be Ryght Lyne of the Blood comynge fro the gude Lord King Henry therde and thorghe that right that God of his Grace hath sent me with helpe of my Kin and of my frends to recover it and which Rewme was in poynt to be ondone for defaut of governance and un endoying of the gude Laws So we see here that the Title he laid stress upon was Al 's descendit be right line of the bloud comynge fro the gude Lord King Henry Therde he meant from Edmund second Son of King Henry the Third from whom the same Henry the Fourth by the Mother's side lineally derived and who would fain have fac'd down the World that the said Edmund was elder Brother to King Edward the First contrary to his own knowledge and that of all Mankind in that Age and the express Testimony of Matthew Paris who was Chronologer Royal to the said King Henry the Third at the time of the Birth of the said Edmund and Polydore Virgil and all our Historians Thirdly For King Henry the Seventh he was also King de facto but not de jure the legal Title abiding at that time in Elizabeth the eldest Daughter of King Edward the Fourth with which Elizabeth the same King Henry did afterwards marry Now because the Claim of the same King Henry the Seventh to the Crown is not generally understood and it will conduce much to my present purpose to clear that matter I shall crave leave here briefly to open it It is to be known then that King Henry the Seventh laid claim to the Crown as descending in a right line from John Duke of Somerset eldest Son to John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster by his third Wife Katharine Swinford by which Katharine the same John of Gaunt had Issue the said Duke of Somerset and other Children before Marriage with her and during his Marriage with his second Wife the Lady Constance Daughter and Heir of Peter King of Castile So the said Children were plainly all Bastards by our Law and by consequence not capable of inheriting any thing After the death of his second Wife John for the passionate affection which he bare to his Children by Katharine married her and some time after procured them by Act of Parliament
Persons and their Rights that in any wise may or might claim an Interest to the same Crown in Possession or otherwise shall during the Life of the Queen's Majesty be judged a High Traitor and therefore the same Queen had little reason to scruple the passing a Bill of this Nature But I much doubt whether a Common Law-Prince who owes his Title only to God Nature and the immutable Customs of the Nation unless under like Circumstances with King Henry the Eighth would have assented to an Act so derogatory to the Regalties for the manifest Inconveniencies that might insue to himself and posterity by such Assent and Condescention Some of which I have discovered in the beginning of this Discourse in my second Reason why the Succession of the Crown is annexed to Proximity of Blood Secondly Wise men do not only consider Things that are acted but more especially the Season and Junctures of Time when those things were acted and Sir Edward Coke a great Master in the Science of our Law doth frequently admonish us That the true Scope and Design of our Statute-Laws are oftentimes not at all intelligible without the help of the Chronicles and Memoirs of that Age wherein the said Statute-Laws were made Of which there cannot be a more pregnatn Instance than this here And therefore I will in Charity believe That the Contrivers of this Objection did never rightly inform themselves of the History and true Reason of making this Statute which in Truth was this Some time before this Statute Mary Queen of Scots Dowager of France and the Mother of our King James being discomfited in Battel by her own rebellious Vassals of Scotland she like a Dove pursued by Vultures fled into the bosom of her Kinswoman Elizabeth of England for Protection Elizabeth who inherited her Father's Malaversion to the House of Scotland and contrary to those Royal Sympathies which one Sovereign Prince ought to have for another in Distress and indeed against the Rules of common Hospitality commits Mary to a loathsom Prison The Pope with some of the Catholick Princes and others of her Friends thought this was no very kind Treatment and therefore endeavour not onely to set her at liberty but also to advance her to the Throne the generality of Mankind in that Age looking upon the said Mary's Title to be much clearer than that of the Queen in possession the later being bastardiz'd and render'd incapable of the Crown by solemn Act of Parliament which still stood unrepeal'd and therefore valid in Law at leastwise but a Statute-Queen as I prov'd before And the former deriving as is shew'd above by the Common Law and a direct true line from Margaret the eldest Daughter of King Henry the Seventh and Elizabeth his Queen And besides in the very year this Statute was made there was a Marriage warmly prosecuted between the said Queen Elizabeth and Henry Duke of Anjou who afterwards became King of France upon the death of his Brother Charles the Ninth and no small care was then taken for Establishment of the Succession upon the Issues proceeding from the same Marriage And there is a remarkable Clause among others in the same Statute of 13 viz. That every person or persons of what Degree and Nation soever they be shall during the Queen's Life declare or publish that they have any right to enjoy the Crown of England during the Queen's Life shall be disenabled to enjoy the Crown in Succession Inheritance or otherwise after the Queen's Death Which Clause was most apparently contriv'd against the same Mary and her Son King James So that the plain scope and design of this Statute was utterly and for ever to exclude and disinherit the same Mary Queen of Scots and all her Posterity and to extinguish absolutely that Right to the English Crown which the Laws of God and Nature and the Common Law of England had given to her and them And therefore how any man that pretends Loyalty or Allegiance to His Gracious Majesty that now is who derives his Title lineally from the said Mary Queen of Scots can object this Statute was a Precedent for Exclusion of the next Heir by Act of Parliament I cannot understand And the Objector may do well to consider how far he may enforce this Objection without hazard to his Person and Estate for no man can maintain the validity of this Statute without manifest Derogation and Injury unto his Majesty's Title Thirdly To affirm that the Parliament hath no Power to bind the Succession of the Crown in point of Descent and to affirm that the Parliament hath no power to exclude the next Heir of the Bloud Royal is the same Proposition Now I have proved above That the Succession of the Crown is annex'd to Proximity of Bloud by the Laws of God and Nature and that Acts of Parliament contrariant to those Laws are void So then the Case is no more than this An Act of Parliament ordains that no Person under a certain Penalty shall dare to affirm That Statute-Laws contrary to those of God and Nature are null and void I think no man ever did or doth or will doubt but that such Act of Parliament is absolutely void in it self and that the Judges are oblig'd to expound it so when ever it comes before them in Point of Judgment Lastly This Act of 13 being a Law made as I have proved above in diminution or rather in open and hostile Defiance of the Title of Scotland to this Crown it was by tacit and implied consent of the Law and the whole Nation utterly abrogated upon the first moment of the happy Union of the two Crowns in the person of King James or at leastwise by the solemn and express Repeal here of all hostile and unkind Laws between England and Scotland of which I am sure this of 13 was none of the least I shall draw towards a Conclusion with a certain apposite Note which one of our Latin Historians makes upon the nine days Reign of Jane Grey and the easie Admission of Queen Mary to the Crown Tali constanti veneratione nos Angli legitimos Reges prosequimur ut ab corum debito obsequio c. Such and so constant a Veneration saith he have we Englishmen for our lawful Princes that we are not to be drawn from our Allegiance and Loyalty to them by any colours or specious pretences whatsoever no not with the Bait even of Religion it self of which matter this Case of Jane may be a memorable and plain Instance For though the Foundations of her Government were laid as firm as was possible and the Superstructure also wrought with all the Art and Cunning in the world yet as soon as ever the lawful and undoubted Heir of the Crown appear'd and shew'd her self to the People all this fine and curious Frame presently fell to the ground and was ruin'd as it were in the twincle of an Eye and that principally by the