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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

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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
declare the Oath for some few small minute petty fancied Inconveniences invalid and of no binding force But be it by the Power of the Sword or by whatsoever Claim else Canutus held the Crown we nevertheless find him to have Govern'd the Land honourably after that he came to be sole King and it may be to the Content of many of his Subjects for 't was the Memory doubtless of his Repute that set and kept the Crown upon the Heads of both his Sons otherwise of themselves of little Worth or Value if compar'd with their Father One remarkable worthy Act of Canutus's is recorded amongst others viz. That in the Nineth Year of his Reign he call'd a Parliament so my Author terms it at Oxford where amongst other things it was enacted That Englishmen and Danes should hold the Laws of Edgar lately King In the Transactions of these Times we may believe the City of London had no small Share a● being probably at length pretty well pleas'd with the Father's Reign whereupon the Citizem mav be supposed to conduce at least in some measure to the settling his Sons on his Throne For Harold Harefoot is said by some to have dyed at London after a Three Years Reign and the other of Canutus's Sons Hardicanute was joyfull● Receiv'd and Crown'd at the same City In Edward the Confessor's days the Land being not much troubled with intestine Broils there happ'ned but little Occasion for trying London's Strength And thereupon I find no great mention of that Honourable City unless in a Passage or two as about Edward the Outlaw's dying therein and of the King 's being there some time before with his Councill when Earl Goodwin was charg'd to come to Court and render into the King's Hands all his Knights-Fees-that he and Harold his Son held in England The Effect whereof was the Outlawing of the foremention'd Goodwin for his Disobedience and departure out of the Land with his Sons by Authority of a Parliament call'd alittle after In this King's Reign also we hear at both Ears of the evil Manners among the Bishops the Chief of the Clergy of their Voluptuousness Gluttony Leachery Covetuousness Wordly Pomp c. as also of their Endeavours to excuse their Manners by answering that they were suitable to the Times A generall Corruption among Men of a Religious Habit being the Common Forerunners of great Turns and Changes in a Land as it fell out here soonafter this King's Decease This is the King to whom according to the Annalist Stow we are indebted for the Common Law gather'd out of the Laws and Ordinances of the Mercian's West Saxons Danes and Northumbers What Spirit was in the Men of those Times is ●n part manifested in the Message sent to Harola by the Inhabitants of Northumberland when he was ●ent thither by the King to do Correction upon those who had risen against his Brother Tostus their Duke for a cruell Act by him committed taking away what he had and chasing him out of ●he Country Continuing together in a considerable Body they gave him to understand that they were freely born and freely nourish'd and might suffer no cruelness of Dukes That they had learned of their Elders and Sovereigns to maintain Freedom or to suffer Death and to live in quietness under an easy Duke Upon which Message their Pardon was procur'd them of the King and another Duke assign'd Within less then a year after Edward the Conf●ss●r's Death we read of the landing of Duke W●ll●●m with his Normans at H●stings in Suss●x who came with a strong Army to demand the Crown of Harold who had no Title but what he claim'd by the Power of his Sword and the Dukes Claim also went but upon a limping Foot As great as the Duke's Host was enough it seems by the Event to help to win a Crown we find London so Strong as to hold him out when he and his Army came thereto till he had given good Assurance that he and his People would pass through the City without tarrying which was also observed accordingly When Harold was utterly over-thrown by these Normans and so room made for the Title of Edga● Atheling to take place we find the Londoners among the chief of those who were upon Associating themselves each to other to defend his Right to th● utmost of their Powers This Agreement indee● was afterwards broken but by the making of it we are well enough assured that the C●tys Strengt● was then esteem'd very considerable Another Argument let me produce out of Stow'● Annalls where it is recorded that Edwin an● Marcar both then Powerfull Earles the One ●● Mercia the other of Northumberland after Harold Death came to London and solicited the Citizen to erect one of them to the Kingdom Though this their enterprise was frustrated yet doubtless it may prove Londons Power otherwise 't is hard to believe these two potent Earls would have applied themselves to the Citizens that they would chuse one of them for King and upon the Failure of their Design would have quietly departed without shewing some resentment had not the City been too strong easily to be dealt with or slightly to be anger'd with Safety and Security The other more rightful Heir was the Person pitch'd upon But the other Nobles of the Realm not powerfully assisting and Edward Atheling not being it seems of Ability sufficient to manage his own Concerns himself and undertake so great a Charge 't is no wonder that this Renowned City suffering it self to be born down the Stream with the Times submitted it Self with the rest of the Land to Duke William who made some pretence to a Title Whereas Harold could shew nothing for his but his Sword And therefore it may be 't is that we read not in antient Histories that I remember of this Citys assisting him to defend himself against Duke William's Power Here now is a great Change indeed The Power and Strength of the Kingdom turned from both the Britains and Saxons and devolved upon the Normans by means of this King William the Date of whose Reign begins reckoning immediately after Harold's Death October the Fourteenth Anno Christi 1066 according to Chronology In this King who himself by the General consent of Writers was basely Born is founded the Succession for higher they care not much to go who keep such a stir about our Princes inheriting according to their Birth-right Though if this be made the fixt unalterable Rule of Twenty Six Kings and Queens reigning Successively upon recourse to the History of their Reigns we shall meet with a dozen at least of them who cannot be denied but to have come to their Crowns with Flaws in their Titles Nay if we reckon in the Number such as may have been controverted upon that Account we may safely add the other Half dozen That from the general Rules there are many exceptions we learnt almost as soon as we went to our Grammar-School This King William is
much like that which I find in a modern Author thus Englished BY the Authority of God Omnipotent of the Son and of the Holy Gh●st and of the glorious Mother of God the Virgin Mary and of the bl●ssed Apostles Peter and Paul and of all other Apostles and of the holy Martyr and Archbishop Thomas and of all the Martyrs and of the blessed Edward King of England and of all Confessors and Virgins and of all the Saints of God We excommunicate and Anathematize and sequester from our ●oly Mother the Church all those which henceforth knowingly and maliciously shall deprive or spoil the Church of her right and all those that shall by any Art or Wit rashly violate diminish or change secretly or openly in deed word or Counsel by crossi●g in part or in whole those Ecclesiastical Liberties or ancient approved Customs of the Kingdom especially the Liberties and free Customs which are contained in the Charters of the Common Liberties of England and the Forrests granted by our Lord the King to the Archbishops Bishops Prelates Earls Barons Knights and Freeholders And all those who have published or being published have observed any Statutes Ordinances thing against them or any thing therein contained which have brought in any Customs to the contrary or 〈◊〉 served them being brought in and all Writers of such O●dinances or Councils or Executioners and all such as sh● presume to judge according to such Ordinances All 〈◊〉 every such Persons as are or at any time shall be knowingly guilty of any such matters shall ipso facto incur th● Sentence such as are ignorantly guilty shall incur the sa●● if being admonished they within 15 days after amend 〈◊〉 For everlasting memory whereof we hereunto put our Sea● Thus far the words of the Curse Nor was the ma●ner of pronouncing less solemn in open Parliament 〈◊〉 King with all the chief Nobility of the Realm in the Robes and the Bishops in their Vestments with bu●●ing Tapers in their Hands standing to hear this 〈◊〉 read and immediately as soon as the Charters and 〈◊〉 were read and signed all throwing down their Tape●● extinguished and smoaking cry out So let all 〈◊〉 who incur this Sentence and go against this Curse 〈◊〉 extinct and have no better savour than these Snuffs 〈◊〉 then the King having stood all this while with 〈◊〉 hand upon his Breast said with a loud voice So 〈◊〉 me help I will observe all these things sincerely and fait●fully as I am a man as I am a Christian as I am Knight and as I am a King crowned and anointed But what could any one think these so solemn 〈◊〉 would avail without a suitable Power and strength Arms to make them good per force When as 〈…〉 known that there lived in those days a Clergy-man Rome who pretended to dispense even with the Almig●ty's Laws whose Power was at that time openly pr●fessed to be believed sufficient by the ●●nerality of E●rope to absolve all manner of Oaths and Covenant● and from whom Dispensations more than a good ma● might be had for Money The confirmation of the fo●mentioned Acts we may believe well paid for by the Parliament For we read of a Tax called Scutage that ●s 40 s. of every Knights Fee through England then granted to the King which extended to a large summ of Money viz. Six score Thousand Pounds or more For upon occasion of this large Tax I find the number of the Knights Fees in England at those days in posses●ion of Spiritualty and Temporalty summ'd up by my Author to 60000 l. and above Upon supposition that ●he Clergy paid nothing it is said that the Tax would ●ot have amounted over the summ of 64000 l. where●y we may guess what a deal of the Land even almost ●ne half was then belonging to the Clergy Devotion as the times went then brought forth Riches and the Daughter since devoured the Mother Nov. the 6th we are told the King came to St. Pauls and command●ng a Folk-moot to be assembled according to the for●er Ordinances made asked license of the Commonal●y of the City to pass the Sea and promised there in ●resence of a great multitude of People that he would ●e a good and gracious Lord unto the City by the ●outh of Sir Hugh Bygot Chief-Justice and to main●ain their Liberties unhurt whereupon the People for ●y made an exceeding shout Observe here the turn of ●hings the Courtiers seem to have sought not long time ●●nce to oppress the Head Rulers of the City by a Folk-●oot of the Commons Now the King to prevent the ●ffect of ill mens advice hath bound himself to ask their ●ave before he goes out of the Land for a season E're while the Folk-moot or Common-Hall was abused to ●●rve for a property to destroy their own Cities Liber●●es Now the conservation of the whole Nations wel●●re is put into their hands What greater Evidence can ●e demanded to prove this Honourable Cities Power ●nd Influence than to find the Citizens entrusted by ●ing Lords and Commons with so high a charge We may presume the Reason of entrusting the Commons of the City with so large a Grant as the Kin● could not pass the Sea without License first obtain'● of them was to prevent the Evil and Mischief th●● might happen to the Land by advice of ill Counsello● who might be persuading the King at every turn to g● out of the Realm he having also Lands beyond the 〈◊〉 that they might have the better opportunity to 〈◊〉 out their own ends though to the Peoples oppressio● in his absence What trouble affliction and oppressio● the land suffered under this Kings Uncle Richard th● first 's Imprisonment at the Hands of the Kings Office●● who rak'd and pill'd what they could of Clergy 〈◊〉 Laity on pretence of raising Money for the Kings R●demption I had rather send the Reader back to pag. to satisfie himself where I have related somwhat of th● charge of the Kings Ransom than stay to repeat it ov●● again A fuller description the curious may meet wi●● in Neubrigensis l. 4 cap. 35. treating particularly ther●of Some I believe may have observed in these unsettl●● times that they have fared much better and more e●sily avoided the malitious attempts of their Fellow Su●jects who have liv'd as it were in the Sunshine of th● Kings pres●nce than such who being many scores ●● may be Hundreds of Miles distant have liv'd so ●● phrase it in the shadow I know not but 〈◊〉 ●resence of the head Governour 〈◊〉 as needful always 〈…〉 as is the General in 〈◊〉 Army Cert●in enough it is by the History that 〈◊〉 this Kin● Henry was thus absent from his Kingdom 〈…〉 ways in France that Dissention arose'● Engla●d between the Kings Son Edward and the 〈◊〉 of Gloucest●r which might have immediately broug●● no small trouble to the Land had not there been gre●● endeavours used to prevent it wherein this Honourab●● City shew'd much of her
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
of E●●lish men Do you think they will alter their m●ners by shifting their Habitations That 〈◊〉 Blackamore will ever change his Skin by com● into a colder Climate Let us look a little upon the first Discoveries 〈◊〉 their late grand Plot so often inculcated upon 〈◊〉 Nation by His Majesties many Royal Proclamati●● and Speeches that no Loyal Spirits can any 〈◊〉 doubt of the Truth of it who give any deference deferenc● the Word of a King and we shall find there 〈◊〉 ●ain Design after our King's Murder to have rooted ●ut the Gentry of the Nation whose Lives should it ●●ems have been offered up as so many Sacrifices to ●ppease the injur'd Ghost of their Murder'd Prince ●ome of your Women perhaps they might have con●escended to have sav'd for their Lusts your little ●hildren for Slaves the Poor and b●ser sort for their ●ervants but the Men of Substance must in likelihood ●ave gone all to pot as Obstacles to their cruel in●●nded Design And yet still 't is but a perhaps we 〈◊〉 not sure they would have spared any Nay ra●●er we are morally certain that all of any tolerable 〈◊〉 must have Died if the Deposition of Mr. Bedlow 〈◊〉 often credited remains yet of any value amongst 〈◊〉 from whose Attestation publickly sworn upon ●ath in Ireland's Tryal we find the extent of the ●esign besides the subversion of the Government to ●●ve been the extirpating of the Protestant Religion 〈◊〉 that Degree which was alwaies concluded on in 〈◊〉 the Consults wherein he was that they would not ●●ve any Member of any Heretick in England that ●ould survive to tell in the Kingdom hereafter that ●ere was ever any such Religion in England as the ●●otestant Religion If discovered and so frustrated ●●ntrivances may not sufficiently warn you to be●●re of the Jesuits Intentions to youward Consider ●atters of Fact and see what hath already been 〈◊〉 in other places and so come from thinking what 〈◊〉 been done to what may be done and what 〈◊〉 should be done if some might have their 〈◊〉 minds and desires Cast a look or two upon ●●●emia that once flourishing Land under Wickliff's ●●ctrine Famous for the Martyrdom of John Huss 〈◊〉 Jerom of Prague the Courage of blind Zisca 〈◊〉 his valiant Souldiers and noted also for their ●●●erty of Chusing their Princes See now how much of the Bohemians Antient Liberty or Religi●● is yet remaining amongst them Enough of the p●●ctices and devices the Jesuits used to new 〈◊〉 the Nation after they had once reduc'd it by 〈◊〉 of Arms you may find in the History of the 〈◊〉 Persecution London Printed by B. A. John Walker But to return to King John whence I have 〈◊〉 gressed after his Resignation and Reassumption of 〈◊〉 Crown at the yearly Rent of 900 or 1000 〈◊〉 Silver the Return of the Archbishop and the 〈◊〉 Exiles into the Land we read of the releasing 〈◊〉 annulling of the Interdiction which had lasted years odd months and days but it was not be● that the King according to one of the Articles made restitution to the sufferers which the 〈◊〉 saith amounted in the whole to 18000● Marks would have thought after so much trouble the 〈◊〉 would have been weary of endeavouring after A●●●trary Power But the Event may make us apt to 〈◊〉 that among other inducements to yield to the 〈◊〉 hard terms of Accommodation one migh● some hope to domineer the better over the 〈◊〉 he was reconciled to the Clergy and so take a 〈◊〉 revenge upon such as would not ere while assist against the Pope For not long after the late 〈◊〉 we find mention made of so great 〈◊〉 between the King and his Lords that much 〈◊〉 were raised on either part One occasion alledg●● that the King would not hold Edward's Laws yet he had taken an Oath at the Return of Exil'd Clergy-men into England to call in all 〈◊〉 Laws and put in place of them the Law King Edward if Stow's Annals record the 〈◊〉 Another that the King would have Exil'd wi●●●aw the Earl of Chester for some Advice he given him relating to his Vices which the other did not well digest The King's Party being then the stronger the Lords took the City of London for their Refuge and remained therein Though we read of much harm done this year in London by Fire and of the burning a great part of the Burrough of Southwark yet it seems the City was strong enough to become the Barons Bulwark against the inrag'd King's Ire And siding with them so inhanced the Barons fame that as Stow tells us all except a few went to the Barons side so that King John durst not peep out of Windsor Castle At length by the Prelates Mediation a Peace was made for a while and to establish it the firmer the King and the Lords soon after met with great strength on either side on Berham Down where a Charter was devis'd made and sealed by the King to the Barons content A.C. 1214. according to Falian's account Henry Fitz. Alwyn continued then Mayor of London Ralph Egland and Constantine le Josne being Sheriffs in this 14th year of K. John's Reign Yet in Stow we read of a Meeting appointed in a Meadow between Stains c Windsor where the King granted the Liberties without any difficulty the Charter whereof is dated June 16. An. Reg. 17. As for the loud and clamorous Declamations of such who tell us that the grand Charter of our Lives Liberties and Estates our Properties and Priviledges was gain'd at first by Rebellion and would thus slily as it were insinuate that it was and is retained by like unlawful waies and means We would desire them to give us better proofs for what they say than their own bare Asseverations which will not yet go for currant Coin in all Markets That Edward the Confessor's Laws were very acceptable to the generality of the Nation we have great reason to believe from their continued desire to retain them That William the first granted the use of them to the Nation is sufficiently instanced above That Henry the first used them 〈◊〉 likewise mentioned before for so affirms the Chronicle That King John himself accorded to them at hi● coming to the Crown we may I doubt not reasosonably believe considering his Title and the Conte●● he was like to have about it If a Negative may be admitted an Argument in the case I do not remember that I have read of any difference between hi● and his Lay-Barons about them till after that he was reconciled to the Pope by the resignation of hi● Crown and performance of the other conditions enjoyned him But after the King 's giving away hi● Crown and resuming it again upon a Foundatio● wholly and altogether new I know not but he migh● think all former obligations void and so would endeavour to have his Will of the Laity when he hop'd he had fixt the Clergy fast enough on his side by th● new condescension
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
pro●ises not being very commonly reputed to bind the 〈◊〉 party when the conditions required are not performed by the other Whatever the true occasio● was London we find the place where this turn 〈◊〉 first publickly declared by proclaiming Henry Ki●● throughout the City Oct. 20. so considerable was ●●ven the reputed favour of the Citizens Lewis abo●● there indeed afterwards a while and the Barous 〈◊〉 his side but his strength so diminished in a litt●● time that he was glad at last to take Money and 〈◊〉 away upon composition even in the 1st year of th● King or beginning of the 2d This K. Hen. being the Son of such a Father who● practices too much betrayed his Principles and 〈◊〉 in so troublesom a time as his Fathers contest 〈◊〉 the Clergy we may be apt to believe he had a 〈◊〉 of his Fathers malady So full of troubles do we 〈◊〉 his Reign such complaints of the Government su●● amendments endeavoured and reformations ma●● one while by the peaceable Councils of the Par●●●ment another while by the compulsive power 〈◊〉 the Barons Swords all which we may impute ●●ther to his own natural inbred disposition or else the over-ruling advices of ill Ministers so 〈◊〉 working upon the Kings Good-nature as upon slig●● pretences to make his power serve their own Inter●●● to carry on their corrupt arbitrary designs So ●●ny were the ups and downs risings and falls chang●● and turns of Fortune in these times such variab●●ness and mutability of Councils in affairs and the 〈◊〉 of London so much concerned in most of the c●●siderable Actions then on foot now in the Kin● favour as soon again out of it one while enjoy●●● their ancient Priviledges and Customs another 〈◊〉 deprived of their Liberties and their Franchises 〈◊〉 upon slight occasions and anon again restored all with addition of new grants that I find it c●●venient through much of this Kings Reign to 〈◊〉 Annals after my Author In the 3d of this King is mention made of a Par●●ament kept at London In the 4th were Proclama●●ons made in London and through the Land that all ●trangers should depart out of the Land except such 〈◊〉 came with Merchandize the intent hereof is said ●● be wholly to rid the Land of such strangers as pos●●st Castles in it contrary to the Kings Will and Plea●●re This year also was the King Crowned the 2d ●●me at Westminster In the 6th was detected a Con●●iracy within London which the King is said to have ●●ken so grievously that he was minded to have ●rown down the City Walls till considering that it ●as only a design of some of the Rascality and not 〈◊〉 the Rulers he assuaged his displeasure taken a●●inst the City Robert Serle was then Mayor Rich. ●●nger Ioseus 〈◊〉 Iosne Sheriffs An. Reg. 7. in a Coun●●● kept at London Stow tells us the King was re●●ired by the Peers Spiritual and Temporal to con●●●m the Liberties for which the War was made a●●inst his Father and he had sworn to observe at the ●●parture of L●wis out of England whereupon the 〈◊〉 commanded the Sheriffs to enquire by the 〈◊〉 of Twelve lawful men what were the Li●●●ties in England in his Grand-fathers time and 〈◊〉 the Inquisition so made up to London Hence 〈◊〉 we observe that England had Liberties and ●●ghts of their own before the Barons War in 〈◊〉 Iohn's days and therefore seem injurious●● upbraided as if they got them first by Rebelli●● The good Government of England which as a ●●dern Author words it was be●ore like the Law Nature only written in the hearts of men came ●pon obtaining the 2 Charters to be exprest in ●●chment and remains a Record in writing though ●●se Charters gave us no more than what was our 〈◊〉 before The 8th is noted for the grant made to the King by his Barony in Parliament of the War● and Marriage of their Heirs A good advantage som●times for the King to fix Noble mens Estates in suc● Families as he best pleased A. R. 9. A Fifteenth was granted to the King to 〈◊〉 him in his right beyond the Seas and he by confirming the great Charter granted to the Barons an● People their rights The 11th year is of note fo● many beneficial Grants made to London by the King The Sheriffwick of London and Middlesex was let 〈◊〉 farm to the Sheriffs of London for 300 l. yearly O● Feb. 18. was granted that all Wears in Thames shoul● be pluckt up and destroyed for ever On March 1●● the King granted by his Charter ensealed that th● Citizens of London should pass Toll-free through th● Land and upon any Citizen's being constrained 〈◊〉 pay Toll in any place of England the Sheriffs 〈◊〉 impowered to attach any man of that place comin● to London with his goods and to keep and with-ho●● till the Citizens were restored all such Moneys 〈◊〉 from them with costs and damages Aug. 18. 〈◊〉 granted to the Citizens Warren that is free liber●● of Hunting within a certain circuit about Lond●● Yet notwithstanding we read in another Author this years History of the Kings compelling the L●●doners to lay him down a large sum of Money b●sides the 15th part of their moveables because 〈◊〉 sooth they had given Lewis who came to their aid● K. John's days with an Army 5000 Marks at his ●●parture out of England It may be the King 〈◊〉 them some of these Priviledges which cost him ●●thing to induce them to give down their Money 〈◊〉 more willingly and not too much to displease the● whose power was so well known in those days 〈◊〉 afterward experienced to some mens cost Roger 〈◊〉 Mayor Stephen Bockerel and Henry Cobham Sheri●● this year and also the next viz. 12. when the Fran●hises and Liberties of the City were by the King ●onfirmed and to each of the Sheriffs was granted to ●ave 2 Clerks 2 Officers to the Citizens that ●hey should have and use a common Seal This year 〈◊〉 read that the King in a Council held at Oxford ●roclaimed that being of age he would rule himself 〈◊〉 pleasure and forthwith cancelled the Charters of ●iberties as granted in his Nonage Whereupon it ●●llowed says my Author that whoso would enjoy 〈◊〉 Liberties before granted must renew their Char●●rs of the Kings new Seal at a price awarded But 〈◊〉 Barons shortly after declared to the King that ●●cept he would restore the Charter lately cancelled ●●ey would compel him by the Sword Such brisk ●ssertors were they it seems resolved to be of ●●eir Liberties On the 13th while the Bishop of ●ondon was at high Mass in St. Pauls happened sud●enly such dark mists of Clouds and such a Tempest 〈◊〉 Thunder and Lightening that the People got out 〈◊〉 the Church and left the Bishop there in great ●ar with but a small attendance For all the many 〈◊〉 Papists make of their Mass and the wonder●●l power and vertue they would fain persuade us to ●●lieve there is in it it seems then
Chusing of Aldermen who ●hen had the Rule of the City and its Wards and ●ere yearly chang'd as are the Sheriffs In the 29th ●ear Nicholas Bat contrary to a former Ordinance ●eing Chosen Sheriff again was discharg'd and punish'd ●s being convict of Perjury The Mayor likewise Mi●hael Tony Chosen anew for the following year was de●os'd and punish'd after that by Deposition of the Al●ermen he was found guilty in the said Crime What●ver were the grievances and faults committed in the ●est of the Land some we read complain'd of particu●arly among the Clergy the City-Officers shall be sure 〈◊〉 be watch'd if they were not of the side some would ●ave them In the 31th year Pyers Aleyn being Mayor John Voyle and Nicholas Bat Sheriffs the Franchises of London were seized on St. Bartholomews Eve for a Judg●ent pretended to be wrongfully given by the Mayor ●nd Aldermen against a Widdow woman named Mar●aret Vyell and the Rule of the City committed to Will. Haveryll and Edward of Westminster till Lady day when the Mayor and Sheriffs were again admitted 〈◊〉 their Offices How ready were some to carp at the 〈◊〉 of this Honourable Society Rather than fail of an ●casion to diminish the Cities Liberties we find th● here wrongfully making a pretence for upon due E●amination afterwards made the former Judgment 〈◊〉 found good and true In the 32th year Queen 〈◊〉 Wharf was Farm'd by the Commonalty of the City 〈◊〉 50 l. yearly and committed to the Sheriffs charge But 〈◊〉 Fabian's time the Profits were so diminished that 〈◊〉 was worth but little more than 20 Marks one ye● with another That sublunary things ebb and flow 〈◊〉 no strange thing to be wondered at it is so common 〈◊〉 observation Though the Citizens this year enjoy 〈◊〉 their Liberties without interruption the former preten● proving vain and frivolous and falsly grounded yet 〈◊〉 King is said to have been grieved and displeas'd wi●● them for that they would not at his request exchang the Liberties granted aforetime to them by the King 〈◊〉 Middlesex for others to be had in other places 〈◊〉 these Liberties were on either hand I have not found 〈◊〉 may be they had a suspicion they might be trappan'd 〈◊〉 so be lo●ers by the change They were excellent good 〈◊〉 seems at hold-fast and did not like Childrens play gi●● and take Though some body should have come 〈◊〉 promis'd them in the King's Name that they should ha●● such and such Priviledges in exchange and be gre●● gainers by the Bargain yet how could they tell he 〈◊〉 sufficient Authority from His Majesty to make so larg● a Promise Where were his Credentials I read of 〈◊〉 produced Therefore in my opinion they had but 〈◊〉 great reason to suspect to have had the Dy put upo● them should they have parted with present Priviledg●● in hopes of future Graces A Bird in the hand is commonly reputed worth two in the bush But when th● Bird is carelesly let slip and flown who is that skilf●● Fowler that can be sure of catching a better or perhaps any at all In the 34th year Simon Fitz Marr Alderman of London for his disobedience evil Counsel given to the above-named Widdow with other secret labour and matters by him intended to the City's hurt was discharg'd of his Aldermanship and put out of the Council of the City It behov'd them to turn out of their Society such a one who in contradiction to their former order had once before procur'd the King's Command to make them break it and had given such Advice against them that their Liberties were seized on and their own City Officers for a time discarded for no other than a pretended Crime wrongfully laid to their charge Such false Friends and secret Enemies are most carefully to be watched against as alwaies dangerous too too oft destructive to humane Societies In the 36th year was granted by the King that an yearly Allowance should be made of 7 l. for certain Priviledges or Ground belonging to Paul's Church which Fabian tells us continued also to be allowed in his days by the Barons of the Exchequer to every She●iff when they make their Accounts This same year was also granted for the Citizens more ●ase that where●s before they us'd yearly to present their Mayor to the King in whatsoever place he was in England that hence●orth they should for lack of the King's presence at Westminster present the Mayor when Chosen to the Ba●ons of his Exchequer there to be sworn and admitted as before-times he was before the King Joh. Toleson Mayor Will. Durham Tho. Wymborn then Sheriffs In the 37th ●ear was granted That no Citizen should pay Scavage ●that is Shewage or Toll for any Beasts by them ●rought as they before-time had The swelling of Thames this year drowned many houses about the wa●er side to the damage of much Merchandise Thames is one of the best friends the City has by whose means their Riches grow and increase by importing and exporting her Citizens Wares 'T is also a fast friend even in adversity which the power and malice of her Enemies have never yet depriv'd her of and yet you here find that she sometimes receives damage even from so good a friend If the best friends may sometimes accidentally injure us what would our Enemies do were their power as large as their malice For these two last years past you may here perceive the favour K. Henry openly shew'd to the City by the beneficial Grants he made her Citizens Yet in the 38th that Tyde is turn'd by procurement of Rich. Earl of Cornwall the King's Brother for displeasure he bare to the City for exchange of certain Ground to the same belonging So that the King under colour that the Mayor had not done due Execution upon the Bakers for default in their Sizes seized the Liberties of the City The offence pretended in the 25th year was that the Mayor had received a certain Sum of Money of Bakers Brewers and other Victuallers which his Predecessors also had done before him In this 38th year here is another pretence found out What an easie matter is it for such to pretend faults who must not be contradicted or at least not without a great deal of caution and circumspection The manner of this Seizure according to the Author is thus to be understood That whereas the Mayor and Commonalty of the City had by the King's Grant the City to Farm with divers Customs and Offices for a stinted ascertained Sum the King at this time set in Officers at his pleasure which were accountable to him for all Revenues and Profits accruing and arising within the City But about the 19th of Novemb. the Citizens having agreed with the foresaid Earl for 600 Marks they were soon after restor'd unto their Liberties Oh the powerful commanding force of Money that can so often make enemies friends and friends enemies The Mayor this year Rich. Hardell being sent for with the
Sheriffs by the King newly come to London and lodg'd in the Tower fared better in this year's Mayoralty than he did within some few years after wherein he continued Mayor For being taxt by the King for the escape of one that had slain a Prior related to the King he put off the charge of this matter from himself to the Sheriffs for so much as to them belong'd the keeping of the City-Prisons Whereupon he returned home and the Sheriffs Rob. Belyngton and Ralph Aschewye were detain'd for a space P●isoners and others chosen in their places but how they got off my Author sets not down In the 39th year Edw. the King's Son's Wife was honourably received at London by the Citizens and the City adorn'd with rich Cloaths for the more state Yet notwithstanding all this Respect it was not long before the King seiz'd their Liberties anew for certain Money which the Q. claim'd for her right of them So that about Martins-tyde they were in a manner necessitated to give her 400 Marks before their Liberties were restor'd them and the King's Under-Treasurer discharg'd who for the time was made Custos or Keeper of the City What had she no other way to recover her Money if it was due but the Cities Liberties must presently be seized on The King's Brother had got well the last year by falling out with the City and getting their Liberties seiz'd Was it not then do ye think cunningly done of the Queen to try the same trick over again 'T was it seems too gainful a project to suffer it quietly to lye still without further prosecution before it grew too stale Though the Citizens and their Franchises were thus carpt at by Court-Favourites yet we find them still continuing their won●ed respect to the King and Queen when they came to London where they were honourably received this very same year and so convey'd to Westminster When the Citizens had to do with the Court and the King was pleased to interest himself in the affair History tells 〈◊〉 that they were more than once compelled to draw the● purses for Peace sake and Reconciliation but when they had their other fellow Subjects to deal with they proved Matches hard enough as particularly in their sui● with the Abbot of Waltham which was at last accorded in the 40th year to their own advantage Come we now to the 41th year a year not lightly to be forgotten by the worthy Citizens and such a● bear any respect to this honourable City by reason o● the many troubles that the Heads thereof underwent a● this time through the power and malice of some ill disposed Persons who bore no Good will to this ancien● foundation Hitherto we have met with but light Skirmishes a few trivial matters in comparison of wha● you shall here find related out of Fabian to have happened in the Mayoralty of Richard Hardell and Shrievalties of Rich. Ewell and William Ashwey A. C. 1257 The Relation is as followeth almost word by word In this 41th year and beginning of the same wa● found in the Kings Wardrobe at Windsor a Bill or Rol● closed in green Wax and not known from whence it should come in which was contained divers Articles against the Mayor and Rulers of the City and that by them the Commonalty of the City was grievously taxed and wronged which Bill was presented at length to the King Whereupon he sent John Mansel one of his Justices unto London where on St. Paul's day by th● Kings Authority he called a Folk-moot or Common-Hall at Pauls-Cross there being present Richard d● Clare Earl of Gloucester and divers others of the King● Council Whereupon the said John Mansel caused the said Roll to be read before the Commonalty and afte● shewed to the People that the Kings pleasure and mind was that they should be ruled with Justice and tha● the Liberties of the City should be maintained in every point and if the King might know those Persons that so had wronged the Commonalty they should be grievously punished to others example That done John Mansel charged the Mayor that every Alderman in his Ward should upon the morrow following assemble his Wardmoots and that all those Wardmoots should assemble in one place and choose of themselves 36 Persons without any Counsel or advice of any of their Aldermen and present them before the Lords and him at the same hour the next day in the Bishops Pallace at Pauls Upon the morrow all was done according to his Command When the said 36 Persons were presented before the said John Mansel Henry Baa Justices and others he said unto them that they upon their Oaths should certifie all such persons as they knew guilty in the Articles before shewed to the Commonalty Whereupon the 36 answered that it was contrary to ●heir Liberties to be sworn so many for any matter of Trespass between the King and any of his Citizens Wherefore they required a sparing with which answer John Mansel being discontented warned them to appear before the Kings Council at Guild-hall upon the morrow following where they kept their day Thither ●ame the said Justices John Mansell and Hen. Baa Sir Hen. Wengham Chancellour of England Philip Lovel Under treasurer and divers others of the Kings Council Then the said John Mansell exhorted the said Persons ●o be sworn by many means as he the other day had ●one but all was in vain For they excused themselves ●at it was contrary to their Oath and Liberty of their City Wherefore the Kings Council departed from the Hall in part discontented and shewed to the King the ●id Citizens demeanour Upon Candlemas Eve the Mayor being warned that the King would come to Westminster he with the more part of the Aldermen ●ode to Knightsbridge and tarried there to salute the King and know his further pleasure But when th● King came near that place and heard of their bein● there he sent to them an Esquire of the Houshold an● charged them that they should not presume to come i● to his sight with which message they being great●● discomforted returned home to the City Afterward● in the Octaves of the Purification Michael Tony an● Adam Basynge returned from Court who before we●● sent by the Mayor to such Friends as they had in th● Court to know the cause of the Kings high displeasur● and brought word back that the King was well minded towards the City but he was in full purpose to hav● such persons chastized that had oppressed the Commo●alty of the same Upon the morrow following came u● to the Guild Hall John Mansell with others of th● Kings Council who to the People there assemble● shewed many fair and pleasant words Amongst whic● he declared that the Kings Mind and Will was to co●rect all such persons as had oppressed the Commonalty of that his dearest beloved City and asked of the Co●mons whether they would be agreeable to the sam● The which incontinently many such as knew litt●● what the
care and vigilance Wh●● the occasion of this difference was I have not yet read ●ut to appease it I find a Counsel of the Lords called 〈◊〉 Westminster Fabian gives it likewise the Title of a Parliament which continued Three weeks and more To this Council came the Lords with great companies ●articularly the two contesting Parties intending it seems 〈◊〉 have lodg'd within the City So desirous so ambiti●us of pretending to London's favour that such seem 〈◊〉 have thought the bare lodging therein might have ●dded to their strength But upon the Mayors consult●●g with such as the King had left Rulers in his Ab●●nce and through the advice of the King's Brother it ●as concluded that neither the said Edward nor the said ●arl should come into the City there to lodge nor any ●●at held upon either side And further it was provi●ed that all within the City of the Age of 15 years ●nd above should be in Arms to watch and keep the ●ity day and night and that the Gates should be kept ●ut by day and certain men in Arms keep every Gate 〈◊〉 the City For the further safeguard of the City and 〈◊〉 keeping of the Peace therein the aforementioned ●ulers came into London and there lodged with their ●ompanies and such other persons as they assigned to ●●rengthen the City if need required Do people 〈◊〉 mathematical Demonstration Look here and see ●hat care's taken to keep the City safe and harmless ●nd in Peace as if then the Land must needs be in ●uiet too Preserve the City and its just Liberties and ●●en the Nations Quietness Peace and Safeguard is ●●rongly secured Behold here the Eyes of the Nation 〈◊〉 upon the City of London and her Actions and ●here's the party that dare strike while she Guards ●●eps and preserves the Kings Peace while he is ●●eased to busie himself in foreign Countries Such as ●ill not believe but what they see and so know let ●●em here credit their own Eyes if they be not Popish Transubstantiators or shut them to keep the light 〈◊〉 After the King was returned to London from 〈◊〉 the Sea by his order many of their lodgings 〈◊〉 altered direction was taken between the aforesaid 〈◊〉 testing Parties and a new Assembly of Parliament 〈◊〉 signed Anno 44. William Fitz Richard being Mayor 〈◊〉 Browning Richard Coventre Sheriffs after Candl●●●● by the Kings Command a Folk-Moot was called 〈◊〉 Pauls-Cross whither he came in person with his B●●ther Richard King of the Romans and many oth●● Nobles and commanded the Mayor that every str●●ling of 12 Years and above should before his ●●dermen be sworn the day following to be true to 〈◊〉 King and his Heirs Kings of England and that 〈◊〉 Gates of the City should be kept with armed Men 〈◊〉 before was determined Not long after this we 〈◊〉 of more suspicions of a breach between the King 〈◊〉 his Barons which in few years broke out into an 〈◊〉 War What did all this swearing then avail Those amo●●● the Children of men who look abroad into the world 〈◊〉 take notice of the common course of the Generality of 〈◊〉 living or are much conversant with the Monuments 〈◊〉 the dead may find it no very difficult matter to obser●● that let men take never so many Oaths make never so ●●ny Covenants Promises and Compacts that if they 〈◊〉 come to have Apprehensions that those to whom th● have sworn themselves endeavour to make use of th● religious Ties and Obligations designed at first 〈◊〉 mutual preservation to encroach upon their Liber●● deprive them of their Priviledges their Properti●● their Birth-rights to the enslaving of them and th● whole Posterity all former Subscriptions Oaths 〈◊〉 Promises Pacts and Covenants will scarce avail 〈◊〉 with the most But if Experience should chanc● legitimate their doubts and Fears by the others actual endeavours in the open face of the World it is rarely seen but that notwithstanding past transactions they will make the greatest opposition they can against the others arbitrary pretences And so all former religious Bonds are snapt asunder like Tow burnt by the Fire They who imposed Oaths for such ill intents might have considered if they pleased that many in such cases would not have scrupled at all to have broke them Or if any of the more devout had been a little ●●icer they could not doubtless be ignorant in those days what Remedies might have been bought for Money out of the Popes publick Store-house if other common ways of Evasion would not have pass'd currant with them How many of that nature have ●affed up and down in the World it may not be unwor●hy of our consideration sometimes to revolve in our minds if it be a thing feasible to bring them within ●hat compass True indeed quoth the subtile Sophi●ter I have sworn Allegiance but a latter lesser Tie 〈◊〉 invalid when a greater Obligation lies upon me True an Oath lies upon me but here 's my Liberty Life and Religion lying all at stake I was born free what can dispense with me to deprive me of my Birth-●ight Life is sweet Self-preservation is near and ●ear to me by the Instinct of Nature 'T is natural to ●reated Beings to defend their Lives against such as ●●ould destroy them what then can oblige me to suf●er my Life violently to be taken away by anothers in●●ry whenas I dare not deprive my self thereof by my ●wn Endeavours unless I will run into so foul an Of●●nce so unnatural a Fact as to proclaim my self to ●●e World a Self-Murtherer and so force my Soul to ●y out of my Body before I know 't is my Creator's ●ill she should My Religion is to obey God above ●●d before Man my Soul is his that gave it me and where 's the Obligation that can impower me justly 〈◊〉 give away that which is not my own to bestow 〈◊〉 my Religion which I believe is according to the La● of the Almighty stand or fall at another mans pleasure Must I take the matter manner and height of my D●votions from the imperious dictates of another's 〈◊〉 and that too upon the account of my Oath Must destroy my Religion in effect or else I cannot keep in shew Besides know ye not that my Oath was co●ditional Mutual Bonds make mutual Obligation Service was vow'd where Protection was promised an● expected Can any but an Idiot be supposed to swe●● away himself to be destroyed instead of being defended Must I still pay Obedience upon account of former C●●venants where I cannot get due Protection and ha●● but little encouragement to expect it though it was 〈◊〉 first promised since that now thence I fear utter rui●● and infallible destruction instead thereof With 〈◊〉 Inventions some may chance to be full and it may 〈◊〉 to make them seem more authentick they can produ●● them under the Printer's Hand 'T is in Print an A●gument which may sometimes weigh much with 〈◊〉 inconfiderate inobserving Persons who consider 〈◊〉 how
London there passed an Inquest of Twelve Knights of Middlesex sworn upon a Jury between the Abbot of Westminster and the City for certain Priviledges the Citizens of London claimed within Westminster where by the said Jury it was found before the Chief Baron of the Kings Exchequer that the Sheriffs of London at those days might lawfully enter into the Town of Westminster and all other Tenements that the Abbot had within Middlesex and unto the Gate of the said Abby and there to make Summons and distrain for lack of Appearance all and every Tenant of the said Abbot 'T is not now adays only that the Londone's stand so strong for their Priviledges whatsoever some may think of it as if out of stubbornness and opposition Their Fore-Fathers were like-minded and stood up couragiously in defence of their just Rights and Liberties against Arbitrary Encroachers above Four Hundred years ago Anno 1262. After this the former Complaint of the Aliens and others was declared before the King and his Lords in the Parliament at Westminster This is the Term Fabian gives it but whether on the same account as he did before when he expounded a Parliament by a Council of Lords in the 43d Year pag. I am not so certain as positively to determine Here the Chronicle tell us it was at last sentenced but by what means and Inducements is not there set down that the Barons should restore all such Goods as they and their Company had taken from all Persons before that day as well to Aliens as other men both Spiritual and Temporal and also that such Menial Servants as should be daily in the Kings House and about his Person should be such as the King would choose and admit himself But the dissenting Barons utterly rejected these Articles whereupon the Fire of Dissention was again kindled between the King and those his Lords In the 47th Year by procurement of the Barons we are told that the Commons of London chose unto their Mayor for that Year Thomas Fiz Thomas Robert Moumphere and Robert de Suffolk were Sheriffs and without Counsel of the Aldermen swore him at Guild-Hall upon Simon and Jude's day and made no presentment of him the morrow following to the King nor to the Barons of the Exchequer as had been the custom For which we may easily suppose the King was much discontented with the City Whereupon the King perceiving the City would take the Barons part having caused his Son to seise Windsor Castle by a Train early in a Morning a little before Christmas he rode thither from Westminster whither shortly after came also many of the Lords that were upon the King's party As fast likewise the Lords and Knights on the Earl of Leicester's side drew towards London so that on either part was much People assembled In the mean time some well disposed Mediators endeavouring a Concord between the King and his Lords it was finally agreed by both parties that all matters concerning the foresaid Articles of the Statutes and Ordinances made at Oxford and afterwards by the 12 Peers should be referred to the French King to judge which should be held and which not Upon this Agreement were Copies made of the said Statutes with Letters shewing the ●ffect of the former Agreement and sent unto Lewis the French King Over sails the King with his S●n Edward and others of his Council on one side On the other were sent Sir Peter de Mountford and others as so many Sollicitors for their mutual Parties So that the Statutes were strongly argued before the French King by both sides In the end the French King Lewis calling before him both Parties on January the 24th and sitting in Judgment gave express Sentence that all and every of the said Statutes and Ordinances should be from that day forward utterly void and set at nought and all such Bonds and Promises that the King or any other had made for the maintenance of the same should be annulled and cancelled and the King and all others for any matter concerning those Statutes set at Liberty After this Sentence thus given the King returned into England and so to London February the 15th This King Lewis is named a Saint for that he was not I suppose so bad as other Princes too too commonly are or more probably for some deeds of his pleasing to the Popish Clergy as his sending to destroy the then accounted Heretical Albigenses his taking a Voyage once into the Holy Land and undertaking a second towards the same place at the Popes request For at that time the Holy War as 't is generally called was cried up in these Western parts of the World as a high piece of Devotion But whatever esteem Lewis had got in the World the Barons it seems continued not to have the same Veneration for him but were contrary wise much moved with his Sentence noting great Partiality in him thus to disannul all the foresaid Acts which were at first made in Parliament the King agreeing to them and had been variously confirmed by the Kings Grant his Oath and manifold Promises together with a solemn Curse denounced against such as would attempt in word and deed to break them It may be 't was the Fame of this King Lewis's Goodness that made the Barons consent to have him the Umpire as one concerned on neither party But what could be expected in the Case Could it be supposed that he a King would not favour his Brother King what he might rather than by confirming these Acts pretended so prejudicial to all Royal Prerogative give Example to his own Subjects to require the like at his hands or attempt to compel him thereto by force Had the Lords gotten an Umpire from among some disinterested Subjects of some other Land he perhaps would have adjusted the business wholly in their favour So hard had it been to have met with a just Arbitrator in the case who would not have declined to one or the other Party for fear nor favour King Henry having thus got a Verdict on his side and the Barons noting Partiality and therefore refusing to stand to the Judgment though the Chronicle intimates to us that they had promised assuredly to abide the French Kings Arbitration For King Lewis expresly excepting King John's Charter before granted the Barons persisted in defence of the Oxford Statutes as founded on that Charter What then remains but to commit all to the last Decision of the Sword and so the whole Arbitrement shall be cast more immediately into the hands of Providence Away from London go the Lords Westward into the Marches of Wales where drawing to them great Power they war upon the Lands and Castles of Sir Roger Mortimer to whose aid Edward the King's Son coming his People were distressed and he himself almost taken To redress these grievances a new Parliament was appointed at Oxford which Fabian says never came to effect Yet he mentions another Chronicle which affirms this Parliament
held at London within a short space though my Author writes that this never came to purpose So it seems that in those elder times a Parliament was the Subjects desire and as it were the last Refuge and means of Reconciliation to establish Peace and quietness in the Land Tuesday before Ascension-Day is the time named whereon the acceptable news of Peace were proclaimed between the King and his Barons in London and next day thither they came with the King his Brother and Son and the Two Princely Pledges were sent into safe Custody first to the Tower afterwards to Dover Castle In the time of these civil Distractions and before the Battle we find that the Wardens of the Cinqueports kept the Sea with Ships that no Stranger might enter the Land to the Kings aid against the Barons Sometime after the Battel we hear of Souldiers coming in great numbers unto Dover there to land But King Henry was induced to ride thither with a great power and force those Strangers to go back again and the Kings Brother sent Prisoner to Berkhamstead Castle till those Aliens were returned It stands upon Record in my Author that he and the Queen had sent over the Sea for them So that hence it had been manifest though the Relation of King John's Reign had not been extant that it is no late Device nor new Practice for Persons of Arbitrary Pretences to call in outlandish Souldiers when they fear they cannot raise assistance enough at home in their own Native Country to support and bring to effect their ill intended designs The Barons side stood firm for the Observation of the Parliament Acts The Kings party desired to have infringed them The Barons grew powerful and formidable the other side seem fearful that they should not be able to compass strength enough at home suitable to their Designs and desires and therefore sent abroad There being idle men enough to be had for mony in most places Soldiers were waged but there was a Sea to pass which required much time and a suitable Sail of Ships to waft them over and a considerable strength lay in the way to intercept them if they came not well provided for an attaque So that it was a day as it were after the Fair before they came and that was many hours too late whereupon they were compelled to return again without and against their first Intent This is the inconvenience some may think the great advantage others may conclude of an Island 's scituation that it cannot easily be over-run with forreign Forces as Lands upon the continent often are and with more facility If the shooing of themselves and their Horses with Cork would do the feat then they might happen more easily to pass the Sea but as things go in this Age of the World much time as well as a great Navy is requisite to transport an Army though little or no oppositio● be made Yet how difficult would it be to preva●● where among One Million Two Hundred Thousand One Million One Hundred and Fifty Thousand are on one side and Fifty Thousand on the other i. e. In Twenty four Twenty three parts against one part What could it avail if on some other fine neat pretence a good store of Forreigners might possibly happen to be introduced suppose Fisty Thousand Above Eleven to One would still be great odds If we should grant One Hundred Thousand could silently be let in under another Notion into how many little small Parcels must they be minutely divided at how many several Port● must they arrive what charge to keep and maintain them unless put upon present service And yet there 's still hazard enough in the World and to spare One Million one Hundred and Fifty Thousand against One Hundred and Fifty Thousands to every man an opposite and Ten-over Odds sufficiently at Foot-Ball if in a lesser number Were it not for the Law of the Land in how many places d'ye think the 9 Lay Sheaves would not devour the Parsons Tenth Sheaf England stands firm upon its old bottom of Freedom but France hath had Experience more than enough of the aforesaid truths 'T is well known the present French King keeps his poor enslaved Subjects under with a strong Force composed most of other Country Souldiers and by their assistance with some other● connivance and the help of French Money is become the Terrour of Europe I doubt not but much of this his present greatness sprung at first from a successful attempt made in his younger days to introduce forreign forces upon his less wary Nobility and Gentry in hehalf and by the Guidance of a great Minister of State whom some of them had desired to be discarded from sitting at the Helm of Government Whereof his present Majesty I believe had no very pleasing nor desirable Experience 'T was in the time when Providence permitted our King to be injuriously kept out of his right by an Usurper that the French Nobles were urgent to have their King exile Mazarine and the better to effect it were ready to have appeared in Arms But their King in shew granting their desires and it may be through the mediation of our Gracious Prince who had too sad an Instance of his own to urge from his Fathers unfortunate Fate the Princes grew secure and laid aside their combined strength whereupon the exil'd Mazarine comes out of Germany so have I heard with a strong Army of many Thousands up to Paris and then order'd things at his own Pleasure and the Kings The deceiv'd Princes could never vindicate themselves since and our then almost friendless King shortly after thought good to leave the Country though the Place of his Mothers Original lest he should have been bid to depart and that disgusted States-man as may be suspected causes the K. to close with England's usurping Power and desert a poor distressed over-power'd Prince with no more regard to him or his till his Protestant what if I had also added Presbyterian Subjects recall'd him to possess his Fathers Throne wherein long may he live and flourish to the Nations good and his own continued Wellfare An. 48. Thomas Fiz Thomas Mayor Osbert Wynter Phil Taylor being Sheriffs The Lords of the Marches about Christmas assembled and did much harm ● the Manours of the Earls of Leicester and Glocest●● the two noted Chiefs of the Barons Party thereabouts which occasioned the King to ride shortly after to Glocester where by a Council there called ●● was enacted that such of the Lords that did not come in and yield to the King by the Octaves of Hilary should be exil'd Let the question here be whether these Lords known to have been of the K'● Party both before and after this Transaction were guilty of Treason or Disloyalty in not coming in 〈◊〉 the King's Call yielding as the Barons party doub●less cordially desired with whom the K. was the● personally present Had they straightways obeyed and come in all
of the Castle and Lodged by his Assignment except these five Persons viz. T●●mas Fizt Thomas Mayor Michael Tony Steven Bukker●● Thomas Pywellyson and John D●flete These five 〈◊〉 the King given to his Son Edward at whose co●mandment they remained in the said Tower long ●●ter notwithstanding the King 's safe Conduct to 〈◊〉 before made What became then of the King's wor● But who durst oppose a waking Lyons The 〈◊〉 Hunter in the fable lik't not to deal roughly wi●● him till his long Teeth were broken out and his 〈◊〉 cut off When upon the bruit of Queen Mary'● 〈◊〉 with Child King Philip of Spain her Husband 〈◊〉 to be chosen the Childs Guardian if the 〈◊〉 should Decease and offered the Parliament great ●●surances and Bonds of Security for his redelivery 〈◊〉 the Kingdom at the appointed time that Gentlem●● shew'd himself no Fool who when the assuranc● were likely to find acceptance stood up and inq●●●ed who should 〈◊〉 the Bond And the Parliame●● enough approv'd him when they immedintly the●● upon rejected the King's specious offers 'T is very d●●advantagious and often injurious to the Weak to 〈◊〉 making of bargains with the more Powerful who 〈◊〉 strong enough to break their Promises and Covena●● with Impunity or keep them but e'en as they pleas● When the tydings of the usage of the Mayor and th● rest at Windsor came to London whereas many 〈◊〉 fear had absented themselves before upon this new● many more convey'd away themselves and their good secretly into diverse parts of England so that many of them are said never to have return'd after In the 49th Year November the 6th We find tha● the King came to Westminster and shortly after gave to diverse of his Houshold-Servants near about sixty Houses and Housholds within the City so that the Owners were compell'd to redeem their Houses and Housholds with all the goods in them or else to depart and suffer such Persons to enter to whom th●●nd Houses were given This grant is said to have ●●●ended likewise to all the Lands Tenements Goo●● 〈◊〉 Chattels which the said Citizens had in any other ●●●ces of England Riches have often made Persons 〈◊〉 singled out for offendors while the poor Man ●● the mean time scapes free few envying him his Pove●ty After this was 〈◊〉 Constable of the Tower ●●de Custos or Guardian of the City who chose 〈◊〉 Adrian and Walter Hervy Citizens to be Bayliffs 〈◊〉 him and to him to be accountable to the King's 〈◊〉 Then took the King pledges of the best Men's 〈◊〉 of the City that 〈◊〉 peace should be surely kept 〈◊〉 th● same These were put into the Tower ●nd 〈◊〉 kept at their Parents cost Shortly after 〈…〉 Labour and S●it made the foresaid Londoners ●● the keeping of the Bayliff of the Castle of Windsor 〈◊〉 deliver'd and came to London except 〈…〉 viz. Richard Bonaventure Symon De'Had●st●k William De Kent and William De Glocester who with 〈◊〉 other five afore excepted were still kept in the Tow●r of Windsor Then dayly Suit and Labour wa● made to the King to have his Gracious Favour and ●o know his Pleasure what fine he would have of the City for their Transgressions and Displeasure by them ●o him done The former Transactions seem to bea● a Tendency hereunto The Citizens were prevail'd upon to resign up themselves their Lives and Goods into the King's hands submitting all to his Mercy that a good large fine might be the easier levied of them and the Nation the better made to beleive that the City was well dealt with for paying no more when as the King might have seiz'd upon all they having surrendred in a manner wholly upon discretion To what else tend the many preparatives before rehears'd but to make this bitter Pill go down 〈◊〉 smoother and quieter with them The Book ●●quai●ts ●● that the King asked 40000l and 〈◊〉 stood at ●0000 Marks I But the City alledged 〈◊〉 themselves that the poor Commons of the City 〈◊〉 of many were gone away were the Trespassers 〈◊〉 that the best of the City by these riotous Perso● were robid and spoil●● and had lost a great part o● their Substance in this 〈◊〉 some time by the R●vers of the Sea as the Wardens of the five Ports and others For these and many other considerations 〈◊〉 Citizens besought the King of his most Gracious 〈◊〉 your and Pity to take of them as they might ●ear This matter thus depending the King depart●● 〈◊〉 Westminister to Northampton having a little 〈◊〉 his departure Ordain'd Sir John Lynd and M● John 〈◊〉 Clerk to be Guardians of the City and Tow●● they ●eing nam'd in the King 's Writing 〈…〉 Steward 's of the City Upon the Day after th● King was gone these Two Stewards sent for Tw●●ty Four of the most notable Men of the City an● warned them to appear the Day following before th● King's Councel at Westminster At their appeara●●● it was shown unto them by Sir Roger Leyborn that t●● King's mind was That they should have the Rule o● the City in his absence under the foresaid Senescha●● and for to see good Rule kept in the City they should be sworn there before his Councel They were there upon sworn and countermanded unto the City The City's fine was inagitation till about Christmas 〈…〉 End was made with the King by such friends a● the City had about him for the Sum of 20000 Marks for all transgressions and offences by them before done some Persons excepted whom the King had giv'n to his Son Edward being those afore nam'd kept in the Tower of Windsor For the payment of this Sum at Days by agreement set where Sir 〈…〉 and Mr. Robert Wareyn Clerk assign'd to take 〈…〉 After Surety by them receiv'd and sent to 〈◊〉 King at Northampton the King sent immediately 〈◊〉 to th● Citizens a Charter under his Broad 〈…〉 may be seen in Eabian my Author in these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 needless to make many comments 〈…〉 upon this affair Through the whole it is ●●●ifest that the City was of considerable Power and 〈◊〉 so that the King thought not good to exaspe●●● the Citizens too much least evil should have 〈◊〉 of it To make a Bridge of Gold for a flying 〈◊〉 is no mean Policy Doubtless it was well 〈…〉 Court that they us'd not the 〈◊〉 violence 〈…〉 Baron's Party was not wholy destroyed as yet in 〈◊〉 hand though it was very much crush'd How 〈◊〉 the whole City joyn'd therewith might ha●e 〈…〉 pois'd if not turn'd the Scales had sh● been 〈◊〉 ●ar●hly dealt with I rather crave leave to 〈…〉 the Readers consideration than hastily presume 〈…〉 'T is certain enough that within less than 〈◊〉 Years the Cause was in great likelihood to have 〈◊〉 reviv'd to purpose had not convenient course 〈◊〉 taken to ●ush it a sleep again without rashly ●●●ceeding to the highest extremities as you may find 〈◊〉 the sequel of the History After the aforesaid 〈◊〉 was receiv'd by
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
Parliament holden at Westminster But in these present papers I think it may be more noted for what I am going now to relate verbatim out of Fabian In this year a Citizen of London Named Thomas Pywelysdon the which in the time of the Barons War before in the story of King Henry shew'd had been a Captain and a great stirrer of the Commons of the said City for to maintain the Baron's party against the Kings was newly accused that he with others of evil disposition should make Conventicles and Assemblies to the new disturbance of the City whereof Report was made unto the King the which remitted the inquiry thereof unto Sir Ralph Sandewych then Custos or Guardian of the City Then the said Thomas with others was put in sure keeping till the matter was duly enquired of After which Inquisition made and found report was made unto the King Then the King sent down a Writ and commanded it to be proclaimed shortly after within the bounds of the City whereof the Effect was thus that the said Thomas Pywelysdon William de Heywood Richard de Coundris Richard le Cofferre Robert de Derby Albyne de Darby William Mayo Mercer and Ivo Lyng Draper with divers others to the number of fifty Persons should be banished out of the City for ever And if any of the said fifty eight Persons were at that time of the Proclamation voided the City for fear or otherwise that they should so remain and not return unto the City upon pain of Life losing These being thus discarded and exiled the City who it may be would have stood firm to the City's old Liberties and Priviledges the rest of the Chief remaining might perchance hope the eafier to keep the Commons in aw whatsoever new Customs they should introduce for their own lucre and advantage th● to other men's dammage Here you may perceive ●ow jealous Governours are of all Meetings and Assemblies but what are of their own constitution and ordering The Caviliers doubtless can relate many Stories of their own experience hereof in Olivers days Neither are many of our Coffee-houses and Cl●b meetings I believe very grateful to some persons in the World though their open business there is mostly to drink smoke talk trade and the like By the aforesaid relation we may likewise observe Once counted an Offender and ever thought so Here Thomas Pyweldon or Pywelysdon for his name I find diversly Written though the same man be meant a noted man in the Barons War for which he had suffered deeply after their overthrow by long imprisonment and the charge of redeeming his Liberty for a great Sum of money of this same King Edward then only Prince was nevertheless after about sixteen years respite banished the City for ever on an accusation of attempting a new disturbance That any thing was prov'd against him I have not read besides the mention here of making Assemblies or Meetings Had there been any thing material found against him I scarce believe he should have scap't so well with his Life seeing old Crimes seem to have been remembred though new faults were pretended An Act of Oblivion is a very good Plaister in a publique Universal Offence But whatever Offender of Note thus pardoned out-lives the greatest number of those qually reputed guilty with him and times be so much turned that the ballance of the Nation leans very much on the governing side I think that man's life hangs but by a very slender thread whose safety and security depends only upon Pen Ink and Paper and not upon the Governours natural inclination to justice and honesty in the constant keeping and observing of his word and promise When in the late Wars on this side the World Messina in Sicily was reduc'd under the Spanish government by the French's forsaking it to whom the Messineses had before subjected themselves tho a general pardon was by the Spaniards publickly granted whereupon many return'd to the City● yet if my memory deceive me not there passed no long time before the publick news told us of the accusing and I think condemning of a Principal Man of that City for a new endeavour to stir up another Rebellion and Revolt therein New accusations and new offences pretended how unlikely soever may sometimes serve to blind the unthinking vulgar Herd but a man of thought doubtless will be apt to suspect that the old grudge lies at the bottom How easy and usual it is to suborn false Witnesses against a Man Jezabel● practice and the endeavour of the Chief Priests Elders and Council of a much later date may inform a Protestant Reader if he hath no experience in the world to instruct him The Citizens were accustom'd before this year to make good advantage to themselves by lodging Merchant strangers and selling their Merchandize for them for which they received so much in the pound But at this time by means of those Merchant strangers it was brought to pass that they hired Houses for themselves and their Wares so that no Citizen should intermeddle with them which was to the damage of many particular private men as well as to the hindrance of the Kings Custom and prejudicial as affirms the Book to the Realm in general by many deceits and frauds used by them Here was a new Custom disadvantagious to many of the Citizens introduc'd but for what reason at first permitted whether to advance Trade by drawing more Forreigners to the City or else to weaken their power and bring down lower the Citizens high stomachs by cutting off some of their gain and parting their Trade with others I pretend not to deliver until I meet with better Information my self than hitherto I have in the point Certain it is from the story that the King much advantag'd himself by searching into their fraudulent and deceitful dealings and punishing them for those offences by a considerable fine The 15th year was chargeable to the Jews who were fain to pay great sums of mony to the King which they were assessed at saith the Chronicle but out of an other Author it is recorded that the Commons of England granted to the King the fifth part of their movables to have the Jews banished out of the Land which to prevent the Jews of their own Wills gave the King great sums of mony Here then was taking mony of both sides A subtle Court way of Trading This year there was such a plenty of Wheat that according to my Authors Computation it was sold at London for Ten Groats the Quarter five pence the Bushel But the next year through distemperature of the weather we find the price raised up to 14 d. the Bushel after to 18 d. and encreasing yearly du●ing this Kings Reign and his Sons so that it stands upon Record to be sold at last for 40 s. the Quar●er and above The 18th may be remark'd by ●s for the Kings Honourable reception at London ●nd the punishment of divers offending Justices Sir
Thomas Weyland Adam Stretton and others who being by the Kings order Examined and found guilty of the Trespasses laid to their Charge were ●ither out-law'd and lost their goods or else long ●mprisoned and deeply Fin'd A large Catalogue ●f them and their Fines are to be seen in Stows 〈◊〉 whence 't is observable how suddainly venge●nce over-takes Oppressors let them be never so Rich High and Mighty in Office Power or Authority as soon as ever the Kings mind is inspir'd from above to inspect their actions and punish their crimes Remarkable is the 19th Year for the Jews Banishment which we find bought of th● King by the Commons at the price of a Fifteen In the 21st year we hear of a Parliament held at London and of the King of Scot's coming thither with divers of his Lords The punishment inflicted on three men for rescuing a Prisoner from an Officer belonging to the Sheriffs of London by striking off their right hands at the wrist in Cheapside is noted for one of this years actions Hence let us leap to the 24th year and there among tha● years deeds we find mention made of a new subsidy levied by the King upon Wool going out o● England Fels and Hides for his War with th● French King of his Commanding the Mony before granted by the Clergy towards the defence o● the Holy Land to be brought into his Treasury upon the Report he had from Rome of Pope Boniface the 8ths manners of the grant he got of th● Clergy of half their Spiritual and Temporal Lands from a Benefice of 20 Marks and upwards to b● paid in three years And of the Tax he had also granted him by the Lay-fee viz. the Tenth penny of their movables to be paid in two years time If any one be desirous to certifie himself wha● Relation Scotland stood in towards England fo● many ages before let him read through the Relation of this years actions in Fabian's Chronicle and there he may be satisfied if it will conduce to his satisfaction to find that Scotland even in Elder times in a sort depended on England and wa● so far from giving Laws or an Example and Patern thereto that it's Nobles were fain to submit themselves to the King of England's Judgmen● and decree and do him Homage and Fealty in effec● by the submission of their King whom King Edward had appointed and set over them Memo●able is the six and twentieth year for that there●n the Londoners obtain'd of King Edward new●y come from beyond Sea into England and so to Winchester a grant of their Liberties and Franchises which had in some part been kept from them by ●he term of twelve years and more so that they ●gain chose a Major of themselves whereas in ●he aforesaid time their Custos or Guardian was appointed by the King or by such as the King would assign But we are to understand by the Chronicle that this was not redeem'd without a great Sum of money Some Writers it seems fixing it at three thousand marks As this King had many Wars especially with Scotland which put him to great charges and had much money granted him by his Subjects so he ceased not to devise other ways to raise more and get what was denied him For as much as divers men ●ichly benefic'd in the Land refus'd to aid him with their Goods as others had and for that end had purchased from the Pope an Inhibition that they and their goods should be free from the King's Taxes he put them this year out of his protection a strain of State policy beyond some other Kings and seis'd their Temporalties permitting them to enjoy their Spiritualties till they agreed with him Though this was a warlike Prince and oft successful in his undertakings yet the Clergy's power so over-top't the Laity's that he chose rather to make use of his Wits than his Arms in dealing with them So have I read in William the Second's days how when his Unkle being both a Bishop and an Earl grew troublesome to him he seis'd upon the Earl and clapt him in hold whereby he caught and revenged himself on the Bishop too without openly pretending to meddle with a Clergy Man An offence esteem'd piacular in those days to such an height of Pride were the Popish Clergy grown An other practice of King Edward was his suddain Condemning certain Coines of Mony call'd Pollards Crocardes and Rosaries in his twenty seventh year and causing them to be brought to a new Coynage to his great advantage as testifies the Historian Among others may be also numbred that Inquisition he caus'd to be made throughout the Land in the twenty eighth year which was after nam'd Trailbaston This we find made upon Officers as Majors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators and many others who had misborn themselves in their Offices and had us'd Extortion or treated the people otherwise than was according to the order of their Offices So vigilant appeared this Prince and careful of his people that they might not be abused nor oppressed by their fellow Subjects when got into power under pretence of being his Majesties Officers a thing we know common enough in the world In the twenty eighth year we have mention made of the City of London's Splendor and Magnificence upon the account of their receiving the new Queen Margaret Sister to the French King Thus runs my Authors short Relation hereof The Citizens to the number of six hundred Rode in one Livery of Red and White with the Cognizance of divers Misteries broidered upon their sleeves and received her four Miles without the City and so conveyed her through the City which then was garnished and hanged with Tapestry and Arras and other Cloths of Silk and Riches in most goodly wise unto Westminster This is the year wherein Fabian makes the first mention of Pierce of Gaviston in his Chronicle upon Occasion of the Bishop of Chesters complaining to the King of him his Eldest Son Edward and others for breaking the Bishops Park and riotously destroying the Game therein For this was the aforesaid Edward and his Accomplices Imprisoned So that under this famous King the very next Heir apparent scap'd not the Lash of the Law when he had offended even to an actual Imprisonment so far were men in those days from asserting him to be above the Law and not Lyable to condign punishment because the next Heir Afterwards the King Banished the aforesaid Gaviston out of England for fear lest he should debauch his Son But this Banishment was after his death annulled by his Son Edward when King to the great trouble and vexation of the Land afterwards The twenty ninth may be esteemed not unworthy of remark for the Kings giving to Edward his Son the Principality of Wales whereunto he likewis'd joyn'd the Earldom of Cornwal newly Vacant and return'd to the Crown In the 33d year we read of the taking arraigning drawing hanging and quartering of William Waleys who of an unknown
into Ireland Yet thither we hear of the Kings sending him oftentimes secret Messengers and comsorting him with many rich gifts and the next year we read of his being fetch'd home again to still the grudges springing up between the King and his Nobles and continue amity amongst them which prov'd but so much the more mischievous to the Realm For this exorbitant Favourite's power more and more encreasing he having the keeping of the Kings Treasure and Jewels convey'd many of them some of great value out of the Land and brought the King by means of his wanton Conditions to manifold Vices as Adultery and others whereupon by the Lords Counsel and Resolution taken at Lincoln he was shortly after exil'd into Flanders to the Kings great displeasure In comes Gaveston again though he had before abjur'd the Realm with this condition by the Barons added that if he were found again in any Lands subject to the King's dominions he should be taken as a Common Enemy and Condemned But being recall'd by the King he ventures on his favour and afterwards demeans himself worse and worse In so much that we read that he disdain'd the Lords of England and of them had many spiteful and slanderous words so that there 's the less wonder that the Queen and the whole Court were sorrowful because they saw the King as Stow words it not very sound so great was his Joy and Jollity for his receiving him in safety Whereupon the Lords of one mind saith my Author consented to put him to death which they soon after effected by taking the Castle wherein he was and so having him in their hands smote off his Head For this was the King grievously displeas'd with those Lords and vow'd we hear to revenge his Death so that after this he sought occasion against them to grieve and displease them If the foremention'd disorders with many before express'd by Authentick Writers to have fallen out under this King If Treachery Robberies Rapes Extortions Divisions Civil discords at home slights contempts and losses abroad and much blood-shed in Battels fought and lost both at home and abroad If murrain of Beasts and scarcity of Grain dearness of Victuals sickness and mortality of Men ravages and outrages of cruel insulting Enemies and almost a general desolation in several places of the Land be glories that can eternize a Man's memory to succeeding Generations I know not whether this Kings Name and Reign may ever be forgotten as long as England stands a fixt Island in the midst of the Ocean In the midst of these troubles and crosses you are not to suppose the City of London scap't free from partaking in the Common misery of the Land In the first of this King's Reign I find that he and his new Married Bride were received joyfully by the Citizens and so conveyed to Westminster but the times afterwards grew so cloudy and full of storms that I don't think they had over much reason to rejoyce more than the rest of their poor distressed fellow Subjects Yet Providence in good time delivered the City out of these troubles and with advantage too as may be observed and remark't in the end of this and beginning of the next Kings Reign Twice more particularly in this Kings Reign do we read of a breach made on the Cities Priviledges by constraining the Citizens at their own charges to raise and maintain a certain number of Soldiers and send them whether they were appointed but the last time it seems it was conditionally that it should not be made a President which possibly was to appease them when they refused to go out of the City to fight unless they might according to their liberties as Stow says return home again the same day before Sun-set For 't is plain how great soever their respect was towards their Soveraign that they had no great kindness for some about him And therefore when aid and assistance was requested of them against the Queen who with her Son Edward was newly Landed and pretended Reformation of abuses they made this plea or excuse as favouring rather Reformers than makers of Grievances yet with profession of due obedience and Honour to the King the Queen and their Son who was after his Father the Right and Lawful Heir to the Crown At the Parliament of Whitebands held in the twefth of this King whether the Barons came in Arms the Citizens were the Keepers of the Kings peace in the City a thousand of them well Armed by the Majors order watching by day and as many by night in divers Wards and at several Gates thereof under the inspection of two Aldermen with Officers assigned to Ride about every night to oversee them and the rest of the Citizens were enjoyned to have their Arms in readiness upon a very short warning for more surety And what pray now was the effect of all this but that the peace was kept the City guarded it and no disturbance hapned that I read of notwithstanding there was so great an Army then on foot Ill men were removed several things were ordained for the good of the Realm Transactions were carried on without violence or blood-shed the Parliament was peaceably dissolved and every one returned home in quietness safety and security But on the contrary afterwards in the later end of this Kings Reign when the Courtiers were much disgusted in the City by reason of many violences committed and much harsh dealing used by some towards their fellow Subjects in the time of their power under the wings of Authority and pretence of Law and Justice the Citizens were so far from keeping the King's peace as before that they soon shew'd openly their favour good will and kindness for the Queen who under the glozing pretence of reforming the ill Government was come into the Land with a considerable force of Soldiers and had sent to the Mayor and Commonalty for their aid help and assistance in carrying on this her pretended Reformation A work generally highly acceptable to all such as think themselves oppressed and glorious in the Eyes of the people but such is the misery fate and infelicity the frailty and imperfection incident to all sublunary attempts that it very seldom if ever fully answers the expectation of every one concern'd Neither was the Citizens affection to the Queen and her Party barely shewn in words and expressions but it went much farther and was publickly brought into Act by beheading such as they took to be the Queens enemies not so much as sparing the Bishop of Exeter himself a great man among the spiritualty who had been there left by the King to have the Rule of the City in his absence The occasion is said to have sprung from his stiff and peremptory demanding of the Keys of the City Gates by vertue of his Commission which highly exasperated the Commons against him and so much the more because as was the saying he had rais'd an Army to withstand the Queen a fault
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
deny such their important Requests ●o glorious and gracious did the City appear in the ●●ght of the good people of the Land or rather ●●ch was the influence she had upon the Nations re●resentatives As to the Common's Desires that 〈◊〉 the Counties might conform themselves to the ●eights and Measures made in London and the ●●der there made against Usury might be observed ●●oughout the Realm as if they would have this so famous a City more particularly give Law as well as example to all England I pass them over without pretending from thence to draw an Argument of the City's Grandeur and likewise Wave the priviledg by this King granted the Citizens that the Officers of the Mayor and Sheriffs should from that day forward use Maces of Silver parcel gilt as not intending to insist thereon as a more especial mark of honour design'd the City above the rest of the Nation in those days And choose rather to pass on to the last part of this King's reign wherein I must needs acknowledge there was a strong though short contest between the King and the Court But when was that and how hapned it 'T was when the King was grown old near to dotage after his good Queen Philippa was dead and he himself amidst the Infirmities of sickness and old age indulg'd his own lustful pleasures in the lascivious Embraces of a wanton Miss leaving the guidance of his Realm and all things about him to so ambitious a spirit as under the Wings of his Authority durst aspire so high as to the hopes of the Crown against the good Will of the people and the Title of a person much more affected and beloved at London The contest was short and sharp as may be seen in Stows Annals where it is plac'd in the fifty first i. e. the last year of the Kings Reign So short as not taking up the whole space of time between Christmas and the latter part of June wherein the King died and yet so sharp that the Cities Priviledges were in great danger menaces there were of deposing the Major which was at length actually done and of Creating a Captain in his Room with many other things threatned against their Liberties And all by the arts devices and contrivances of the aspiring Uncle who would fain have mounted up into the Throne of the Kingdom over his young Nephews head but that the Londoners opposed him in his designs both honourably and succesfully too So far were they from being Hector'd or trapan'd into a base Compliance with this Ambitious pretender and his flattering favourites desires who thought to have carried all before 'em because they esteem'd themselves sure of the Kings Authority and so lookt upon the principals of the opposite party if not under a Cloud at least under a great disadvantage comparatively such were their fond hopes and pretensions In the good Parliament as it was commonly called held in the fiftieth of this Kings Reign several Reformations had been made and divers at the Commons suit remov'd from about the King as evil Counsellors by the Mediation of the Black-Prince but the Parliament being ended and he dying the old King contrary to his promise soon recalled the former persons before removed and Committed the Government of the Realm again to his third Son John of Gaunt that aspiring Duke of Lancaster whereby the Tide being turn'd at Court the storm fell heavy upon some Patriots of the late Parliament who had been the greatest promoters and occasioners of ●he before mentioned change so lately made of the Ministers of State Now was the time to remember ●nd revenge all things about the King being mannaged by the Dukes order who making use of the Kings Authority turn'd out ●nd put in at his pleasure the more easily to bring ●bout his designs by his own Creatures now ●rought in again into the Government and man●gement of the affairs of State which tended to no less than the putting his Nephew the young Prince Richard an Orphan by the Fathers side though not the Mothers from the Crown and setling himself in the Throne upon the old weak Kings decease This it seems had been intended by the Duke for some time but now carried on more vigorously with all the art imaginable A Parliament is summoned to meet at Westminster after Christmas honour is openly shewn to the young Prince and his name made use of by his crafty Uncle to further and promote his own privy intentions and intreagues The name and power of the French as that they had raised great Armies and made new Confederacies to blo● out the English Tongue and Nation is likewise made use of for a stale to induce the Commons the more readily to part with a good round sum of Mony to put the King into a good posture of defence to speak and act as a King And the old Knights who in the last Parliament had stood up so couragiously in behalf of the Commonalty are by the Dukes meanes for the most part remov'd and Creatures of his own are made the chiefest managers of Parliament-business so that now he seem● ready to carry almost all things before him Bu● only there lies a rub or two in the way that migh● spoil his bowling if they were not timely removed London was not nor would be at the Duke● beck and therefore 't was thought da●gerous to attempt publickly what was privately and principally intended as long as the Laws and Customs o● the City were in force Moreover the Church o● England it seems in those days was look't upo● by the Duke as none of his best friends thoug●● I don't find but he might have been before an● was a Church-Man good enough afterwards as to outward appearance whatever he was in his heart and therefore if Stow may be Credited who writes after Walsinghams Pen he attempted to overthrow it for that end favouring Wickliff and his Disciples who went then under the name of L●llards among the Commons and were as much hated in those days for pretended Heresies laid to their charge for at that time you must know the Nations Religion was Popish as the Papists are now adays for repeated Plots and Conspiracies proved upon them Whether or no it was to pull down the English Bishops the better to facilitate his own intents and purposes that he was a favourer of the fam'd John Wickliff as Walsingham a great Papist and also a Monk affirms Providence out of the Dukes sinful Ambition raising Protection for the Maintainers of the true Religion or else that being convinced of the Conformity of Wickliffs Doctrine to Truth and Godliness He like Herod heard John gladly and did many things at his instance I shall not now pretend to determine But most certain it is from the story that 't was London not the English Clergy that put the greatest stop to the Dukes aspiring designs and dash'd all his Ambitious Intreagues in pieces to his and his Favourites no small Disappointment
Stones So great a value did this high-flown Duke set upon his grace and favour till the Citizens of this honourable City by their power and prudence had brought down his haughty spirit a Peg or two lower and that visibly too For we don't find him as ambitious as he still continued so openly aspiring to Englands Crown for the future how successfully soever his Son made a Rape thereon at the end of this Princes Reign under the pretence of I know not what hidden right accruing to him from his Mother We read indeed I confess in Cotton's Abridgment of the Records that in the seventeenth of this King the Earl of Arundel laid several things to the Dukes charge as not honourable for the King to suffer in him nor fit for him to do being a Subject as that he went Arm in Arm with the King and his Men wear the same Livery the Kings did which seems to shew much of Arrogancy and Ambition to say no more besides some other Objections but herein he was so far justified by the King himself that the Earl was ordered to crave the Dukes Pardon in full Parliament in a certain form of words appointed him In Stows Annals also we meet with an Accusation brought against him in the seventh of this Kings Reign tending to prove his intent and design suddainly to oppress the King and take upon himself the Kingdom but it seems little notice was taken of it by the King himself who was to have lost most had it been attempted Successfully and doubtless as little believ'd otherwise surely the Schedule containing the time place and other Circumstances had not been presently delivered into the Dukes hands nor the accuser committed at his request to the charge of his near Kinsman nor the occasion of his violent Death so little inquired into afterwards The Duke was not so powerful nor so great a Terror but the City was as well able still to deal with him and his whole party and make as vigorous opposition as ever in defence of their Soveraign Lord the King if occasion should have offered it self This we have reason to believe was known in those days to all the Nation much more to the Duke himself from former experience who therefore may be suppos'd not any more to have aspir'd openly whatever secret fires of Ambition lay hidden within his breast whether or no he design'd and attempted ought by unseen Plots and Conspiracies I leave to the Judicious Reader to believe or not as he pleases without speaking to or for in the case Besides the decree of an over-ruling Providence Common equity in siding with what was reputed the juster title natural humanity in defending the young and weak and a well grounded affection to the Prince for his Father and Grand-Fathers sake one the famous Black Prince the other the Glorious Edward the third their King and Sovereign we may conclude the generality of the Citizens had the greater aversion to the Duke and his faction because he was a known favourer of Wickliff and his Doctrines whether on a good account or only out of any Ambitious Design I shall not determine in this place and so look't upon perhaps as little better than another Juli●n the Apostate For we are to know that Londons Religion and consequently the Nations was at that time Popish and the generality of the People in Town and Country Romes Votaries who had Wickliffs Doctrine in as great detestation then under the Notion of Heresy as we Protestants have it now in esteem under the Seal and assurance of Truth As indeed for many of the ages past from our ever-blessed Saviours Birth through which I have drawn the thread of this discourse and under the succeeding Kings for above an hundred years Popery continued the National Religion under the power and prevalency of which perswasion was the body of the Citizens bred up who prov'd so famous in their Generations for their powerful influence on the grand concerns of the Nation in every considerable turn and change of the times before the Reformation And when England was made happy with this blessed alteration the Cities Power Strength and Esteem remain'd the same in effect as ever the change of her Religion introducing no change therein unless for the better she encreasing proportionably in every age in Wealth Riches and Honour as the Nation grew stronger and stronger And still continues as visibly conspicuous under Protestantism as before under the Romish Faith a thing easy to be demonstrated in due time and place How influential the Cities actions were upon the Nations affairs and her Love advantagious to the Orphan Prince in securing his Claim Right and Title to the Crown in his Grand-Fathers life time and setling him quietly on the Throne at his Death in spight of all the opposition the deep designs and daring Spirit of his Aspiring Uncle John of Gaunt and his faction could make when they had got the reigns of publick Government into their own hands through the Old Kings Connivance hath been the subject of several of the aforegoing pages The next thing of course falling under present consideration is to observe how this Honourable City of London behav'd her self after she had lent her ●ssistance to raise this Young Prince from the ●eanness of a Subject to the Royal Dignity and Grandeur of a King under the Name of Richard the Second what place she held in his affections ●nd of what esteem in the eyes of all the rest of ●he people But where shall I begin and when ●hall I end Sooner may I be wearied with read●ng and tir'd with writing than fail of matter ●o exercise my Pen so copious is my Subject and ●o full of Variety For in my searches into the Histories of this Kings Reign I find it plain to a ●emonstration that the City carried a great sway ●mongst all Ranks and Degrees from the Prince ●o the Subject from the King the Supream to ●is subordinate Magistrates and Ministers and was highly Honour'd Rever'd and Respected ●mong the Nobility Gentry and Commonalty ●f the Land both in the calm of peace and the ●oisterous storms of civil distractions I begin first with the Honourable House of Commons the known representative of the Commons of England and concerning them ob●erve out of Sir Robert Cotton's exact Abridgment of the Records in the Tower revis'd by William Prynne Esq that in the first Parliament of this King in his first year among other Petitions of the Commons there is to be found one particular division under the Title of Petitions for the City of London wherein the House of Commons become express Petitioners so great was the Cities influence over their Debates and so high a respect had they for her to the King for many considerable Grants in favour of the Citizens and to them very advantagious and beneficial As that all their Liberties may be confirm'd with a Non obstante That they attend upon no Commandment
mutually clashing in publick and what was ordain'd in one Parliament for the Commons good as was then pretended by an other repealed in favour of the other side former Laws Annull'd Pardons revok't Grants recall'd and new punishments inflicted for o●d offences And yet in an other Revolution within a very small space of time the last Parliaments Acts were casher'd and thrown out of doors to make room for the revival and Establishing the Elder Parliament Statutes Such changes were then Rung and so much contesting between Priviledge and Prerogative as if the differences were wh●lly and altogether irreconcilable or at least made to seem so by some mens poli●ies the better to carry on their own more particular Intreagues And therefore when fair words were fear'd not likely to prevail Arms were prepar'd to force and there was danger o● h●ving Swords drawn Bows bended and Arrows shot for the promoting the designs on foot But of all Statutes Acts Ordinances Laws and Grants most memorable and observable is the Petition of the Commons and the Answer thereto given in the Parliament begun at Westminster April 25th in the second of this Kings Reign The Petition is to be seen among the Commons Petitions in Cottons Abridgment of the Records in the Tower so often mention'd and Printed 1657. pag. 169. Tit. 28. in these words That Answer reasonably may be given to all their Petitions now or hereafter to be moved and that Statutes be thereupon made before departure of every Parliament The Answer hereto runs thus such Bills as Remedy cannot otherwise be had but in Parliament reasonable Answer shall be thereto made before such Departure Now we are to understand that Petitions in the old are Bills according to the new Stile which in this Parliament were thus ordained to be produc'd at least for the Royal Assent if not to be passed formerly into Laws So that if the Houses were so minded by straining this grant to its utmost bounds though perhaps further than was design'd at the first 't was no hard matter for them to sit e'n as long in a manner as they pleas'd and the old King of late Memory his present Majesty's Royal Father may hereby very easily be vindicated from the Censures of those undutiful Subjects who pretend to blame his conduct and Arraign if not condemn his Judgment for passing the continuing Act in the Parliament of forty whereby he more plainly and immediately put the dissolution thereof out of his own hands whereas before he had been haply lyable to have been trickt out of it with greater affront to his Prerogative by the quirks that nimble wits would have been apt enough at that conjuncture to have started out of this Grant For what would not they have attempted in that posture of affairs who actually did so much afterwards by the noise of an Ordinance a term new to the vulgar but weil enough known though possibly never in that use and extent before to the Learned Lawyers who can easily inform the Questionist out of the Records in the Tower that in the thirty seventh of Edward the third they met with the name and nature in a demand of the Chancellors to the whole Estates whether they would have such things as they agreed on to be by way of Ordinance or of Statute and in the Answer thereto made by way of Ordinance with this reason then and there given that they might amend the same at their pleasure If we wonder at this grant which seems to trail after it such inconveniencies to the Regal Power as were before hinted or at least might be made an Inlet to pretences as prejudicial to the Royal Prerogative we are to understand that this was obtain'd in the Kings Nonage though not perhaps in times absolutely factious for I don't read but that things were carried then calmly and quietly enough But when the King came to full Age then we may observe that he or his bosome Favourites were not well pleased with this or other Grants that confined the Regal Power within stricter Boundaries than their own desires pe●mitted them to like and therefore there was striving amain to remove the ancient Landmarks and the Court effected it at last for a short space but with so ill an event that the issue proved as fatal to the King himself as th●s counterplottings had been d●structive to many others before People hereupon may say what they think fit and pass their Verdicts as they please But can any blame that mans Will and Desire to disintangle himself from Fetters and Chains who thinks himself born free and so would fain live according to his own pleasure and good liking 'T is his Judgment rather that is to be quessioned when it suggests to him that he may command and ought to be obeyed in such things where no obedience was before due by nature or consent and the goodness of his Intellectuals are liable to be doubted of when they make him to fancy he may be absolute where known Laws and long continued Custom hath authoriz'd the contrary Such seems to have been Englands Case of old where the Subjects have oft put on Arms to prevent encroachments upon their dearly belov'd and many times dea●ly bought Liberties And such the Nations State under this King he being come to his full Age when several of the Barons headed by the Duke of Glocester his Uncle thought it their main interest and concern to speak high and look big with Armour on their backs and Swords by their sides though it subjected them to much ob●●quy and displeasure at Court and brought themselves and all theirs into much hazard and danger But this it seems they little thought of or as little valued That the Court highly resented the actings of such as indeavoured in Parliament time to bring some o● the Prime Favourites to Judgment ●or Crimes laid to their Charge is evident in that they had laid a Plot to invite the Principal Lords to a Supper in London and there murder them as such who crossed the King's cours●s But the present Lord Mayor utterly refused to do it though mov'd thereto saith my Author by the King himself and thereupon this design miscarried But then other Rodds were laid in Lavender and contrivanc●s secretly carried on to intrap and suppress the Country Lords The King calls all the High Sheriffs of the Counties before him and demands what strength they could make for him against the Lords if there should be occasion But they answered that the Common People did so favour the Lords as believing them to be loyal and true to the King that it was not in their power to raise any great Force against them Then they were commanded to take care that no Knight nor Burgess should afterwards be chosen to any Parliament but those whom the King and Council should name whereto they replied It was an hard matter in those times of Jealousy and Suspicion to deprive the People of their ancient Liberties
Neither were indeed these latter proceedings attempted till after that by several tricks and devices as naming Sheriffs fit to serve turns and imposing such Representatives on the Borough Towns as would be byass'd to betray their Country besides a violent seizure of the Country Lords likely to oppose the Court had got a Parliament to their minds that would do their own business not the Nations and prefer the private gain of some few before the publick benefit of the whole Common-wealth What sort of Parliament this was and how fairly things were carried we may inform our selves out of Stow's Annals where we find it upon Record in the twenty first year of this King how that all of a suddain in the midst of a great calm and outward serenity the King caus'd the principals of the party thought most opposite to Court designes to be feiz'd on and imprison'd and among the rest his own Uncle as Chief so unsecure is Kindred and Alliance among Kings and Princes tells the Commons by Proclamation that their apprehension was founded on new Transgressions not old Crimes though these afterwards were the great offences laid to their charge procures their Indictment at Nottingham suborns several Nobles to impeach them in the next Parliament Assembles many Malefactors of the County of Chester in the nature of a Guard and then summons the Parliament Thither came the Nobles with an Armed Retinue for fear of the King such Knights are chosen Prolocutors as are described to be void of all manner of goodness as in whom nought was to be found but a natural Covetuousness unsatiable Ambition Intollerable Pride and Hatred of the truth and the Clergy upon pain of losing their Temporalties injoyn'd to chose them a Common Proctor who thereupon appointed Sir Henry Percy Steward of the Kings Houshold to assent in their Names to all things done in the Parliament How then things were likely to be ordered in the two Houses 't is no hard matter for us to guess especially when we remember that the Annalist tells us the Parliament House was compass'd about with four thousand of the Kings Archers who seem to have been ready prepar'd on all occasions for an Onset and once more particularly mistaking the noise usually made at the Parliament's Men coming out of the House for a Tumultous Broil and Contention with their Bows bent Arrows fitted and drawing they were upon the point of shooting to the terrour of all present till the Kings coming rectified their mistake and pacified them To tell of recalling of Pardons disannulling of Charters making void of Commissions revoking former Judgments impeaching arraigning condemning and actually punishing the opposite Party some with loss of Estates Lives and all others with forfeitures of all worldly Goods and perpetual irrevocable imprisonment I esteem a needless labour Suffice it therefore to remark how sollicitous the Court was at this juncture to render their own Party as Saints and the others as most guilty Criminals to take off the contesting Lords as disloyal Traytors and restore in the Eye of the Law the Reputation of Courtiers formerly condemn'd in the eleventh year of this King as if they had been the honestest and loyallest Subjects in the Nation and undo as much as in them lay what ever was then done in the Parliament that wrought wonders not withstanding that in many things they imitated that Assembly when they thought it for their peculiar advantage as in Lords Appellants Oaths to make all the Judgments Ordinances and Statutes unrepealable and Excommunication of the Breakers or Impugners of them but in others far out did it as in revoking all Pardons pleaded by the opposite Lords under the notion of being unlawfully made or so by the King granted unto them as not to be against himself and excusing those equally guilty of the same actions because look'd on at that time as useful Instruments in carrying on the Court Intreagues viz. suppressing the principal Assertors of Liberty and Property in passing a general Pardon with the Exception of fifty Persons not express'd by name whereby any one at pleasure might be made liable to censure as one of the Persons excepted if thought a Favourer of the contrary side and conserring the whole Power of the Parliament upon certain Lords and Commons fully to answer all Bills and wholly to determine all other matters mov'd in Parliament and not determined with all their Dependants as mischievous a President as Sylla's Proscription though 't is hoped not as practicable besides the prejudging and confining of Parliament Debates by the Judges Opinions That when Articles are propounded by the King to be handled in Parliament if other Articles be handled before those be first d●termined that it is Treason in them that do it Such being the Acts of this Assembly and the consequences of the Courts present success in taking off the Heads of the other Party who durst at every turn contest therewith in behalf of those freeborn English Twins Liberty and Property under which the Nation with silent murmurs languished and lamented when they so soon after the end of this Parliament at Shrewsbury and the Kings Progress into the West saw no less than seventeen Counties in East England indicted by the Kings command and as a grievous offence laid to their charge that they had been against him with the Duke of Glocester Earls of Arundel and Warwick the late Principals amongst the contesting Lords but now secur'd fast enough the two first under the undissolvable Bonds of Death the other under the Chains of a perpetual Imprisonment in the Isle of Man and several honourable Persons sent to induce the Lords Spiritual and Temporal to make a Submission by Writing seal'd with their own Hands acknowledging themselves Traytors to the King though they never offended him in Word or Deed Besides the compelling all the Religious Gentlemen and Commons to set their Seals to Blank-Charters that they might be oppress'd severally or all at once at pleasure some being made to pay a thousand Marks some a thousand Pounds And an Order issued out through every Shire in England that all Gentlemen and Men of Substance should be sworn firmly to maintain according to their power all the Statutes Articles and Constitutions ordained in the last Parliament We may easily conclude the Court thought the Citizens of London were not over much in love with these enslaving Statutes unaccustomed Oaths insnaring Blanks and inforc'd Submissions and suspected them ready enough upon occasion to oppose and withstand these manifest encroachments of Antinomian Prerogative upon the Liberty of the Subject and strive to strike off these Fetters and Shackles of Slavery upon the next opportunity before they were thorowly rivetted by Time and Prescription and therefore esteemed it their wisest Course to begin with them first by the usual Method of Indictments while they had the Reins of Government in their own hands and so consequently power enough to manage the Law as they themselves pleased to
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
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
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
view the differences between York and Lancaster in the lump considering them under the Notion of one particular Contest though of a long and large durance and throughout with all plainness and perspicuity I can lay claim to shew what powerful Rays of Influence from London were shed abroad upon the Face of the Land For I intend not to Write an Abridgement of Englands general History as having only undertaken a particular Argument relating to this Honourable Cities Fame Renown and Glory abroad Strength Riches and Power at home within her self and the various Influences she cast all over England in the more special turns and changes of Affairs For the rest the Curious may peruse the laborious Works of our English Historians Therefore choosing my own Method I shall make a division of what I have to produce in this place into two Parts or general Heads under which I hope to comprehend the most material Passages I meet with sutable to the design and purport of this Attempt The first containing Instances of Lon●ons affection to the Red Rose and the other shewing the sollicitous care and regard she had for the preservation growth and advancement of the White First then and foremost to begin with the Citizens respect to the House of Lancaster who bore the Red Rose for their Badg of their continued Favour and Affection thereto in the prime of its flourishing condition while the many and great Victories gain'd in France were yet fresh in their Memories and Henry the Sixth enjoy'd the Fruits of his Fathers Labours and retain'd the English Conquests therein there is no doubt to be made But I presume I have a much stronger proof to produce from no less convincing an Argument than Statute Law as authentick an Evidence in the Case as the Subject is capable of to be found Anno octavo Henrici sexti cap. 11. where we have express mention made of the entire affections and great kindnesses done and shewed to the said King in all his Affairs by the Citizens of the City of London which to reward and for the future the more to encourage the King was induc'd by Authority of Parliament to give them leave to put and take in Apprentices according to their ancient manner form or custom of which they had some time before been abridg'd by a former Statute to the great hindrance and damage likely thereby to redound to them If any shall require further Instances hereof let them but have recourse to the Annals of this Kings Reign and there I doubt not but they 'l have their Expectations answer'd and their Curiosity highly satisfied when they shall have carefully and thorowly boserv'd the Noble Equipage of the Mayor Aldermen and Citizens in the Tenth Year when they rode forth to meet the King upon his return out of France the Pomp and Gallantry wherewith they receiv'd him at London and entertain'd him in his passage through it and the costly Present they made him afterwards at Westminster And take Notice of their splendid appearance in Scarlet blew Gowns broider'd Sleeves and red Hoods to convey his Princely Bride Queen Margaret through the City in the Twenty-Third of his Reign But when this Daysy Flower of France being thus linkt to the Red Rose of England the Queen and her Creatures rul'd all about the King at home and things went every day worse and worse abroad through Envy and Emulation among the Nobles and negligence of the Kings Councel ill conduct and management of State Aff●●rs by the new Favourites at Court and the good Duke of Glocester greatly belov'd and ador'd among the Commons was privily taken out of the way in a clandestine manner to the great and bitter resentments of the People the Citizens soon began to alter in their affections and inclinations and look with favourable Eyes upon the opposite Party then springing up under Richard Duke of York the chief and principal Head thereof whose Sails upon the aforesaid Dukes death being full blown with fresh Gales of Ambition He became a secret pretender to the Crown and privately among his Familiars whisper'd a more plausible Right and Title thereto than the King Regnant himself had though in actual Possession Yet they did not so soon forget their old Love as presently to side with the Yorkists against the Lancastrians but seem for a while to have continued as it were in a state of indifferency sometimes favouring the one sometimes the other as if uncertain with whom to side till the Number of publick Grievances being greatly encreast or else more eagerly and plainly remonstrated to them by the other Party they more openly at length shifted all their Sails and with fix't Resolutions espous'd the Yorkist Interest and so that Family got Possession of the Throne thereby Then which what greater Evidence can there be of the Cities Power and Influence in those Times And yet in this interval and space of time which I venture and I hope with truth enough to term the State of her indifferency or neutrality several other Instances of her Power are produceable for the further illustration of the Point in hand to demonstrate beyond dispute that the variation alteration and change of the Citizens Minds over-rul'd the Affairs of the State in each turn and change of Things though as mutable for a season as the ebbing and flowing of the Sea yet likewise as succesful as the turning or returning of the Tyde in bearing all before them The first Instance that comes to my hand shall be that of Jack Cade Captain Mendal who calling himself Mortimer Couzen to the Duke of Yorke upon the specious promises of reforming grievances and freeing the Commons from immoderate Taxes and Impositions the fame of keeping good Orders among his people and his successfull overthrow of the Staffords with other Hotspurs of the Court at Seven-Oke-Wood had so strengthned himself the City of London being at that time saith Stow full favourable to him that upon the King and Queens remove from the City to Killingworth Castle distrusting their own Servants and Soldiers he came to Southwarke and marched over the Bridg in good Order into the City with such Confidence and assurance that passing along by London-Stone he struck it with his Sword and said Now is Mortimer Lord of London and so possibly might have continued he had so won the Hearts of the Commons by his orderly behaviour and got such an encrease of Power as to give the Mayor Orders how he would have his People dispos'd of they coming and going freely as they pleas'd had he but followed the Mayors Advice who bad him take ●eed he attempted nothing against the Quiet of the City and made good his own Reply Let the Wor●●●ake notice of our honest Intention by our Actions But when he once grew so inconsiderately Insolent as to fall a robbing the Citizens themselves he presently lost their Favour and good Will the honest and wealthy Commons disliking such extravagant Proceedings and
assuredly raised about their ears to their mutual disadvantage had they been guilty of such unadvised rashness and daring presumption as to slight and contemn her Magistrates Order and Resolution An other stands on Record in the same Author and other Writers among the next years transactions under the Ma●oralty of Godfery Boleyn and Shrievalries of William Edward and Thomas Reyner For upon the Kings Calling of a grand Councel at London to accommodate differences and the Lords of each Party coming up thereto with great Retinues they having from Four-hundred to One-thousand-Five-hundred in a Company lodging some within some without the City holding their Consultation apart each from other as if at mutual defyance and ready to put all to the decision of the Sword the Mayor kept Five-thousand Citizens as Fabian Numbers them dayly in Arms riding about the City and Subburbs to preserve the peace and for the night Watch provided Two-thousand to give Attendance upon three Aldermen till Seven a clock next morning that the day Watch was set by reason whereof continues my Author good order and rule was kept and no man so hardy once to attempt the breaking the Kings peace The Councel was held in quietness and a Reconciliation patch'd up for the time For who durst move when the City says nay Several such Instances are to be seen in the Chronicles and have been hinted before in the precedent Relation And if need were I might produce the Disturbance likely to have hapned in the Fourth year of this King by the Bishop of Winchesters meanes then at Variance with the Protector the Duke of Gloucester when upon strict Commandment given to the Mayor he set a sure Watch by night that kept out the Bishops Servants by force and would not permit them to enter the City over the Bridg whereupon a pacification was at length concluded between these two great Men their differencies in time amicably adjusted and the City seems to have protected the Protector himself But that I hasten to the fecond general Head before propos'd under which I am to make out the visibility of the City's affection to the house of Yorke distinguish'd from that of Lancastor by the white Rose their particular badg and thee ffect thereof her influencing the nation in their favour in behalf of the Yorkists Interest to the raising it up above the Lancastrians And this may be demonstrated beyond contradiction both from the suspicions fears and jealousies of the Queen and the Court that in their Hearts the Citizens bore too great Respect to the other side and would assist them upon Occasion and from their actual joyning at last openly with the Yorkists in word and deed to the visible exaltation of that Family above the other whereby the White Rose grew up amain and flourished not only above the rest of the flowers of the field but also above the Red though it's whiteness was first ting'd with a Scarlet dye and the Red had lost much of it 's before lovely ruby Colour so much blood was there shed in this unhappy Contest It being related out of Philip de-Comines that within his Remembrance in the Civil-Wars of England dyed above Eighty Persons of the Blood Royal. For the proof of the Queens Suspicions or others Apprehensions Instances more than one or two and a triumvirate of Witnesses may be brought Stow tells us before the battail of St. Albans how that the King having assembled his Power to oppose the Duke of York then marching towards London at the Head of an Army his meaning was rather to meet the Duke in the North parts than about London where it was thought he had too many friends and therefore departs with speed from Westminster on the same ●ntent And afterwards acquaints us that upon the difcharging of York and Salisbury of their high Offices and Places of Government about the King This change among the Nobility caus'd sudden alterations and attempts which he calls Seditious to spring in the Commonalty especially in the City of London Fabian informes us that the Queen caus'd the King to remove in his Thirty-fifth from London to Coventry and their held him a long season as suspecting the City of London and deeming it to be more favourable to the Duke of York's Party than to Hers. Baker gives us much the same Story under the Notion of the Queens perswading the King for his Health and Recreation to make a Progress into Warwickshire as finding the little Respect the Londoners bore to Her Party or the Kings And Stow shall here bring up the Rear to back their Informanions with this expression that because the Duke was had more in estimation among the Citizens than either the King or Queen she caus'd the King to make his Progress as perceiving she could attempt nothing against him near to the City of London If we consider Actions and respect Matters of Fact we shall find the Yorkists often received at London when the Lancastrians were either expresly refus'd or at least compell'd to get further off into other parts for their better security and safeguard After the Yorkists had won the Battel at St. Albans London was the place whereto they presently remov'd carrying the King along with them and kept there their Whitsuntide with great Joy and Solemnity When an Assault was made at Court upon the Potent Earl of Warwick a great Yorkist as he was coming from the Councel Table by the Kings Servants with Intentions to have Slain him London was the place whereto he Row'd in all hast as soon as got into his Barge and thereby escaping the danger intended he Consults with the Principals o● his Party and retires afterwards to Callice Thi● was the place to which the Chronicle saith the Earl of Salisbury his Father was coming up with some Thousands of Men when he was necessitated to Fight his Way through his Enemies i● Bloreheath Field Here likewise was Warwick received encouraged and refreshed in the 38th of Hen. 6. before the Battel of Northampton when the Lord Scales appointed by the other side with some Troops to go and secure the City was directly refused admission by the Mayor and being received into the Tower he was besieged by Land and Water and they of the City planted great Guns against it and break the Walls in divers places And after the fatal over-throw of the Lancastrians at the aforesaid Battels hitherto was the King conveyed by the Party a Prisoner in effect tho' in shew a King as if eager there to shew their Triumphant Success or else further to secure to themselves the Londoners good will love and affections by their Presence For Fabian tells us they return'd hither in haste upon their obtaining this Victory the Duke of York comes out of Ireland to them and after a Report banded about the City that King Henry was to be Deposed and the Duke to be made King to make Tryal doubtless of the peoples mind and sound the Citizens
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
Arms and forwardness of Service as if the City had been a Camp and they not Men of the Gown but all profess'd Soldiers which they perform'd to their great Cost but greater Commendation saith Sir Richard Baker But the greatest Inducement may be supposed to have been that they never appear'd prone to join with the King's Enemies of which he had good store abroad besides Domestick Troubles and private Insurrections at home especially towards the latter end of his Reign when he had taken away the Pope's Supremacy excluded his Authority and suppressed the Abbies and Monasteries the chief Fortresses and Pillars thereof either by force of an Act of Parliament or by vertue of the Resignations of their Governours either over-aw'd by fear or brib'd with Pensions Not long after which there were several Commotions in the Land which might have much shaken the Throne had the Citizens openly shew'd any inclination to joyn with these disturbers of the Kings rest and repose but they continuing quiet th●se troubles were quickly compos'd and so the foundation undesignedly doubtless was laid for a publick Reformation which was more vigorously carried on in the next Kings Reign though I hardly think it hath yet arriv'd to such perfection as to render it so compleat as might be piously desired Short was the Reign of this pious Prince Edward the sixth yet not so short but that it gave such an Addition of strength to the Protestant Religion by removing out of the way many of the Relicks of Popery and openly encouraging the Preaching of the Gospel that hitherto it could never be rooted out of the Land notwithstanding the damage it sustained under the next Successor a most violent and rigid Papist and the many secret Plots and practices of Popish Emissaries to undermine it and introduce Popery again into England prov'd upon them Thus was the outward face of Religion visibly chang'd in the City under this Religious King but yet her power we find not in the least diminished nor the esteem our great men had thereof of which we meet with an evident instance in History on account of the difference arisen between the potent Earl of Warwick and some of the Privy Council on the one hand and the Lord Protector Seymour the Kings M●ternal Uncle on the other The Privy Counsellors having designs upon the Protector and withdrawing themselves from Court got to London with their attendance and taking possession of the Tower made it their business to secure the City to their side by sending for the Lord Mayor and Aldermen to Ely house in Holborn where they were assembled and entertaining them with a long Oration about the ill government of the Protector and the many mischiefs that came thereby as they affirm'd upon the Kingdom attended with a request of their joynt assistance to help them to remove him wherein they were so successful that upon the arrival of two Letters almost at the same instant to the Common Council held at Guildhall one from the King and Lord Protector for a thousand of the City to be arm'd in defence of the Kings Person and the other from the Lords to have two thousand men to aid them with the same Plea for defence of the Kings Person and that the City should be well kept with Watches day and night the Citizens shew'd themselves so inclinable to the Lords that they arm'd an hundred horse men and four hundred foot men in defence of the City suitable to the motion of the Lords and sent no Assistance to the Protector though it had been desir'd in the Kings Name but rather suffered a Proclamation containing diverse Articles against him to be made in several Parts of the City and the Lords were entertain'd with a Dinner at one of the Sheriffs the eighth of October after they had been themselves in Person at Guildhall and on the tenth they din'd at the other Sheriffs after that by a Common Council the same day in Stows Computation five hundred men of the City had been granted to be ready on the next morning Evident marks signs and tokens doubtless which way the City bended and the event is a sufficient confirmation thereof For the next News we hear is the removal of the Protector from about the King and the sending him to the Tower within two or three days after where an humble Confession and Submission was his best security for that time by which he got his Liberty some time after and was sworn again a Privy Counsellor but no more a Protector Had the City sent him the Aid requ●sted he would possibly have had little reason to have stood infear of the combined Lords or had but her Magistrates continued Neuters in the Case and not been so openly favourable to his Enemies he might perhaps have been able enough to have cop't with them with little or no bazard for he had raised much People about Hampton Court in the Kings Name and conveyed him to Windsor with a great number of Horsemen and Footmen But the Strength and Authority of the City was not to be contradicted much less opposed Thus the Protector lost his Place and well it might have been haply for the King and Nation if that had been all For his Enemies having remov'd him from his Protectorship and thereby gain'd the greater access of Power to themselves and the Principal of them the politick Earl of Warwick lately created Duke of Northumberland advanced in Title and Honour equal with and in Authority and Power above the highest whereby his aspiring thoughts were grown ripe to be put in execution they were resolv'd to have the other touch with him for his Life wherein they made use of the Cities Power to secure them for his Tryal by ordering every Housholder in London to take care of his own Family keep his house and have one ready in arms upon call for the day time and that by Night a sufficient Watch of substantial Housholders should be kept in every Ward So litte durst they attempt without ingaging the City therein and so frail and transitory had been their projecting designs had she refused But with her concurrence what could they not do So then at last tryed the late Protector was acquitted of Treason and condemned for Felony and afterwards beheaded on Tower-Hill much against the Kings Will the Constables of every Ward in London by vertue of a Precept directed from the Council to the Lord Mayor strictly charging the Citizens not to stir out of their houses before a prefixt hour for fear perhaps of a Rescue for 't was known he was well belov'd generally by the People and plainly evidenced when upon a mistake thinking him acquitted they gave so great a shout for joy that it was heard Stow tells us from Westminster-Hall to Long-Arce to the Lords astonishment So fell Sommerset by the malice of his Enemies and weakness of his Friends and we may easily believe 't was not design'd the King should be long liv'd
in England and under the auspicious influence of her Reign the City flourish'd to such an height of Grandeur whether we respect the concourse of Forreign Merchants from abroad or the stateliness of her publick buildings at home the freedom and security of Traffick and the flowing in of Riches and Wealth thereby the famous exploits perform'd by her Citizens in other Countries and Climates and the foundation in those times laid for much greater atchievements by the necessary preparatives of skill and knowledge in Military affairs gain'd by the more frequent Musters and Warlike ex●rcises of her Inhabitants than in former times or learn't at that Grand Nursery of Souldiers the Artillery Garden that 't is easie to conjecture how secure her Majesty was in the Ctiizens love and loyalty and how happy they thought themselves in the favour and protection of so good great and gracious a Princess 'T is not therefore to be expected that such turns and changes should occur in her days wherein the City might have occasion to interpose her Authority to settle and secure the Nation against the furious attempts of arbitrary Pretenders or lye under any unavoidable necessity of shewing her Power and Influence over it in contradiction to other mens aspiring and ambitious Designs However I am not destitute of an Instance to demonstrate the consequence of her Example and how much all England was influenced thereby to the manifestation of their zeal love and duty to their Soveraign In 88. a year so famous for the Spanish Invasion the Queens Counsel had demanded what the City would do for her Majesty and their Country and the Lord Mayor and Aldermen had referr'd it to their Honours to make their Proposals whereupon fifteen Ships and five thousand Men being required and two days respite at the Cities desire granted for Answer they returned in convenient time and season and entreated their Lordships in sign of their perfect love and loyalty to their Prince and Country they are Stows words kindly to accept ten thousand Men and thirty Ships amply furnished double the number of what was asked and even as London saith my Author gave President the whole Nation kept ranck and equipage so ready were the other Cities Counties Towns and Villages to follow where London went before A plain instance of her powerful influence deny it who can As to what concerns the frequency of the visits the Queen made to London and the great splendor wherewith they commonly welcom'd her home at the end of her Country progresses I pass them all over though undeniable demonstrations of the present content and satisfaction they took in Queen Elizabeths good Government Neither shall I take notice of the many Companies of Soldiers she several times rais'd at her own charges for her Soveraigns Assistance it having been commonly done before under Princes in whom she took delight because I would hasten to King James the first Monarch of great Britain in whose Person England and Scotland were first united though his present Majesty King James's Grand-son was the first born Heir of that happy Union that was Crowned King of both Realms and the first English King by Birth of the Scottish race that ever sate upon the English Throne that we read of To tell how this City flourish'd under this Prince in wealth and riches in a general encrease of trade by forreign Merchandizes and home-made Manufactures The great ornament she received from her publick and private buildings the strength that accrued to her by the numerousness of her Inhabitants and the enlarging her borders the conveniences procur'd her for water by Midleton's River for Recreations by Morefields and pleasantness by pa●'d Streets and the various expressions she made of her glory in the many noble Entertainments of King James and other great personages Forreigners and Natives and the rich presents she frequently gave besides the renown she got abroad by sending greater Numbers of her Ships than formerly into all trading Parts of the World and planting Colonies of her own people in Ireland and Virginia would be tiresome perhaps to the Reader and needless for the Writer since that in Stows Chronicle continued by How these particulars have been so largely treated of whether the curious and inquisitive may apply themselves for further satisfaction Neither shall I trouble my self with making large remarks upon the great honour and dignity for the City's sake belonging to the Lord Mayor thereof of which we seem to have an Instance in the beginning of this Kings reign when Sir Robert Lee then Lord Mayor of London subscrib'd in the first place to the invitation sent the King to come into England before all the great Officers of the Crown and all the Nobility This great Magistrate upon the Kings death being said to be the prime person of England than which what greater honour can there be appertaining to a Subject I have indeed read in Cotton that upon a Poll Bill the Lord Mayor paid four pound as an Earl many years ago in King Richard the second days when but few of the Nobility if any besides the blood Royal bore any higher title And find since at our Kings Coronations that he hath had a principal place and part assigned him particularly at his present Majesties April 23d 61. and in the honourable Cavalcade made from the Tower to Westminster the day before in order thereunto where the Suppliment to Baker's Chronicle out of Elias Ashmole the Windsor Heralds Copy hath placed him between the principal Officers of the Crown and the Duke of York a place doubtless designed him as most suitable to his Dignity and the high Office he bore and yet I count none of these Honours comparable to that before mentioned which seems paramount to all others To be the highest by place in the Kingdom of course for a season sounds greater than to be a Second a Third or a Fourth and is more doubtless to the Honour Credit and Reputation of the City that conferrs this place as she pleases But the chiefest point I intend here to insist on with all convenient brevity and perspicuity is the Declaration of the Cities love and affection to King James and the requital made her by him in return The first I know not how it could be better expressed than by the wonderful readiness and hearty gladness as the Annalist words it of the great City of London where the Magistrates and all other inferior Citizens shewed all possible signs of perfect joy and contentment amidst the general applause of the whole English Nation when he was first proclaimed King of the Realm and we have further demonstrations thereof from the Kings honourable Reception when he came near to London by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen in Scarlet Robes and five hundred grave Citizens in Velvet Coats and Chains of Gold all very well mounted like the Sheriffs and their train one of which had threescore men attending him in fair livery Cloaks Another instance