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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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gather Armies though for never so honourable employment The Welsh chase is hotly pursued yet it did not rid much way for it cost the English a voyage of nine years travel before they could attain the shore although it had been often within their view It may be the King found it advantageous for his Government to maintain an Army in the field under the colour of the Welsh War that he might more bow his Subjects to his own bent for during these Wars the King made many breathings and took time to look to the husbanding of his own Revenue as those Ordinances called Extenta manerii and Officium Coronatoris do witness and the Statute of Bigami But the people were not altogether yet tamed for the times being still in Wars and they occasioning much waste of Treasure put the King to the utmost pitch of good Husbandry and one degree beyond the same so as under colour of seizing his own he swept up also the Priviledges and Liberties of his Subjects some Authors reciting the complaints of the Church-men others of the Laity so as it seemeth the King was no respecter of persons but his own This and others not unlike had almost occasioned another Combustion had not the meeting at Gloucester setled things for the present by referring the right of Franchises to debate in the Eyer and ordering reseizure of such Liberties into the Subjects hands whereof they had been dispossessed by Quo warranto and Quo jure under colour of the fourth Chapter of the Statute of Bigami Nevertheless however debonair the King seemed to be the sore between him and his Subjects was not fully cured nor did the Lords trust him further than needs must for whether they served in the Field or met at Council still they were armed and during this daring of each other were many profitable Laws made whilst neither party durst venture bloodshed in touching too nigh upon the Priviledges of each other principally because the affairs in Wales were but laid asleep and upon reviving might turn the ballance to either side The Wars awake again and therein are consumed nigh five years more of the King's Reign so as whatever his intent was he could have hitherto little opportunity to effect any thing for the advancement of the Prerogative of the Crown at home Nor had he scarcely breathed himself and Army from the Welsh Wars but he found both France and Scotland his Enemies at once The King faced onely the first and fought the second which held him work the remainder of his days and at the same time also he arrayed both the Clergy and Laity at his own home as if Providence had given him security for the good behaviour and yet it failed him in the issue and left him to the censure of the World whether his Justice was spontaneous or by necessity for as yet he held the Grand Charter at parley and therefore was rather eyed than much trusted Albeit he was put upon confidence in the Subjects discretion for aid of him in his continual undertakings nor did they disclaim him herein however chargeable it was for all seem willing he should be employed any where so as not within the four Seas It is probable the King knew it and therefore having made a Voyage into France he changed the Scene of War but to the other side as it were of a River in hope his Lords would follow but it would not be This angred him and he them nor would his Clergy allow him any aid Papa inconsulto and therefore he outs them from his protection These and his irregular preparations by War by summons not onely of his Knights but all other that held Land worth 20 l. per annum and Taxes imposed by an arbitrary way increased Rancor into a kind of State-scoul little better than a Quarrel For appeasing whereof the King granted a consultation upon a prohibition and unto both Clergy and Laity a confirmation of the Grand Charter at the long run and allowed it as the common Law of the Kingdom and seconded the same with many succeeding confirmations in the twenty seven and twenty eighth years of his Reign as if he had utterly renounced all thought of a contrary way But the Statute in his 28th year had a sting in the tail that was as ill as his saving of ancient aids and prisals which was in the Statute of confirmation of the Charters though it were omitted in this Statute for the saving was of such a sence as time and occasion would move the King's heart to make it and thus this Statute became like a Hocus Pocus a thing to still the people for the present and serve the King's turn that he might more freely intend the conquest of the Scots which once done he might if he would try masteries with England But God would not have it so the King in Scotland had power to take but could not overtake and the Scots like birds of the prey had wit enough to fly away and courage enough to return upon advantages and so the King was left to hunt the wind which made him to return He might now expect the applause of his people for his good success and the terrour of those that had stopped the broad way of his extravagant Prerogative and therefore looks big rubs up old sores and having his Army yet in the field sends for those Lords that would not follow him in his Wars in Flanders All come and submit and as it were in so many words let the King know that all England is now tame and like to be ridden at his discretion And now there 's nothing in his way but the fatal execration which he feared not in relation to God's anger but rather to the exasperated Clergie and the dread of the Pope's direful Thunder-bolt To avoid this storm he procures a Dispensation from Rome to perjure and oppress without sin a trick that he learned of his Father and hid it within his breast till now about two years before his end he brings it forth to tell all the world that hitherto he had been just against his will. But having obtained his purpose he nevertheless misseth of his end for a new King of Scots our old good enemies by divine providence suddenly crossed his way before him and now it boots not to contend for arbitrary rule in England and lose the Crown of Scotland which he once thought he had sure he faces about therefore and having spoken fair to his people for Scotland he goes Thus if all were not in a Parenthesis the King intended a good period but God onely knows what his furthest reach would have been if he had returned for he was taken out of this world in Scotland and so left this his government somewhat like an imperfect sentence His Son Edward should have compleated it but that he wanted his Father's sence and had too much of his Grandfather's superbient humour that meeting
Freemen in such cases it being contrary to the Grand Charter never asked by the Clergie formerly nor no complaint before now for denial for my part therefore I shall not apprehend it of a higher nature than the King 's Writ which in those days went forth at random if the 44th Article of the Clergies complaints foregoing be true It being so contrary to the common sence of Parliament to give the bodies of the Freemen to the will of the Clergie to whom they would not submit their Free holds But the Writ proceeds in enumeration of particulars Reparations and adornings of Churches and Fences of Church-yards Violence done to a Clerk Defamation to reform not to give damage Perjury oblations payments of Tythes between Rector and Parishioner Right of Tythes between two Rectors to a fourth part of the value Mortuaries due by custom A Pension from a Rector to a Prelate or Advocate The most of which were under the power of a prohibition in the time of Henry the Third who was King but yesterday as the Articles of complaint formerly set down do manifest Nor had the Clergie ever better Title than connivance of some such favourites as King Steven whose Acts may peradventure be urged against Kings but not against the people unless their own act can be produced to warrant them The learning in the Princes case will I suppose admit of a difference for it can never be made out that the King's Council in Parliament was the Magnum concilium Regni but onely the House of Lords and therefore whatever passed in Parliament by their onely advice might bind the King but could never reach the Commons nor their Liberties And thus the Grand Charter in the first conception was conclusive to the King but was not the act of the Parliament because the Parliament cannot grant a Charter to it self of that which was originally custom And therefore this Law however countenanced can never be concluded to be other than a Permission not onely because it was never the Act of the Commons of England but because it is contrary to the liberty of the Freemen And it is beyond all imagination that the Commons should out themselves from the protection of the Common-Law and yoke themselves their Free-holds and Estates under the bondage of the Canons nor ought such a construction to be admitted without express words to warrant it As for the conclusion it is worse and not onely dishonourable to the King in binding his Arms from protecting his Subjects by the Common Laws and so in some respects making them Outlaws but dishonourable to it self whilst it makes Prohibitions grounded upon Laws to be nullities by a late trick of non obstante which was first taken up by the Pope then by Henry the third and by this King granted to the Clergie and thus are all set at liberty from any rule but that of Licentiousness Nevertheless this Law did thrive accordingly for we find scarce any footsteps in story of any regard had thereof till it became grey-headed For it was not long e're the King stood in need of money and was necessitated to try the good wills of the Clergie more than once this occasioned them to be slow in answer and in conclusion to deny that they should aid the King with any more money Papa inconsulto The King hereupon disavows the Clergy and leaves them to the Romish oppressions which were many and then the Clergie rub up all old sores and exhibit their complaints to their holy Father to this effect 1. That the King's Justices intermeddle in Testamentary causes accounts of Executors and cognizance of Tythes especially to the fourth part of the Living 2. That the Clergie were charged to the King's Carriages That the King's Mills were discharged from paying of Tythes That Clerks attending on the Exchequer were necessitated to non-residency And that after their decease their Goods were seized till their acounts were made That Ecclesiastical possessions were wasted during vacancies 3. That Clerks were admitted to free Chappels by Lay men 4. That the King's Justices took cognizance of Vsury Defamation violence done to Clerks Sacriledge Oblations Fences of the Church-yards and Mortuaries 5. That prohibitions are granted without surmise 6. That Clerks are called to answer in the King's Court for crimes and being acquitted the Informers escape without penalty 7. That Clerks are not allowed their Clergie 8. That after purgation made Clerks are questioned in the King's Court for the same offence 9. That persons in Sanctuary are therein besieged 10. That the Writ de Cautione admittenda issueth forth although the Church be not satisfied and excommunicate persons being imprisoned are enlarged in like manner 11. That Debts between Clerks due are determined in the temporal Courts 12. That Bishops are compelled by Distress to cause Clerks to appear in Lay-courts without cause 13. That the Church loseth it's right by the ceasing of Rent or Pension by the space of two years 14. That Nuns are compelled to sue in the Lay-courts for their right in possessions befalling by decease of their Kinred 15. That Churches are deprived of their Priviledges till they shew Quo warranto they hold them 16. That Ecclesiastical Judges are stopped in their proceedings by Sheriffs and great men 17. That Bishops refusal of Clerks presented are examined in the Lay-courts 18. That Patrons of Religious Houses do oppress them by extream Quarter 19. That Bigamy and Bastardy are tried in Lay-courts 20. That the King suffers his Livings to be vacant for many years 21. That the Clergie are wronged by the Statute of Mortmain Here 's all and more than all that 's true and more than enough to let the Reader see that the Writ Circumspecte agatis was but a face put on for the present after laid aside and the Clergy left to the bare Canon They likewise shew what the Clergy aimed at and in that they did not obtain it was to be attributed to the resolution of the Laity and not any neglect in themselves for the Arch-bishop died in the service and it is thought that grief for these matters was no little cause thereof But the times within a while grew troublesome and the King in pursuit of the French Wars being unadvised in his way angred the people by his arbitrary levie of Men and Money as it brought forth a State-scoul little inferiour to a Quarrel And to pacifie the Clergie he granted them the Writ de consultatione habenda in all matrimonial and testamentary cases which were of their least doubted priviledges and this qualified the first Article of complaint next foregowing if such cause they had of complaint and this was all that the Clergie got at Edward the first 's hands Edward the second was a man that was neither well-affected to Rome nor weak in spirit and yet so unhappy that his way neither promised good success nor ever had it and so he became a Servant unto
And thus the Free-men yielded up their liberty of Election to the Free-holders possibly not knowing what they did nevertheless the Parliament well knew what they did this change was no less good than great For first These times were no times for any great measure of Civility The Preface of the Statute shews That the meanest held himself as good a man as the greatest in the Country and this tended to Parties Tumults and Bloudshed Secondly Where the Multitude prevail the meaner sort are upon the upper hand and these generally ignorant cannot judge of persons nor times but being for the most part led by Faction or Affection rather than by right Understanding make their Elections and thereby the general Council of this Nation less generous and noble Thirdly There is no less equity in the change than policy For what can be more reasonable than that those men onely should have their Votes in Election of the Common-Council of the Kindom whose Estates are chargeable with the publick Taxes and Assessments and with the Wages of those persons that are chosen for the publick Service But above all the rest this advancing of the Free-holders in this manner of Election was beneficial to the Free-men of England although perchance they considered not thereof and this will more clearly appear in the consideration of these three particulars First It abated the power of the Lords and great Men who held the inferiour sort at their Devotion and much of what they had by their Vote Secondly It rendred the Body of the People more brave for the advancing of the Free-holder above the Free-man raiseth the spirit of the meaner sort to publick regards and under a kind of Ambition to aspire unto the degree of a Free-holder that they may be somewhat in the Commonwealth And thus leaving the meanest rank sifted to the very bran they become less considerable and more subject to the Coercive power whilst in the mean time the Free-holder now advanced unto the degree of a Yeoman becomes no less careful to maintain correspondency with the Laws than he was industrious in the attaining of his degree Thirdly But this means now the Law makes a separation of the inferiour Clergie and Cloistered people from this service wherein they might serve particular ends much but Rome much more For nothing appeareth but that these dead persons in Law were nevertheless Free-men in Fact and lost not the liberty of their Birth-right by entring into Religion to become thereby either Bond or no Free Members of the people of England Lastly As a binding Plaister above the rest First a Negative Law is made that the persons elected in the County must not be of the degree of a Yeoman but of the most noted Knights Esquires or Gentlemen of the County which tacitly implies that it was too common to advance those of the meaner sort Whether by reason of the former wasting times Knights and Esquires were grown scant in number or by reason of their rudeness in account or it may be the Yeomanry grew now to feel their strength and meant not to be further Underlings to the great Men than they are to their Feathers to wear them no longer than they will make them brave Secondly the person thus agreed upon his Entertainment must be accordingly and therefore the manner of taxing in full County and levying the rate of Wages for their maintenance is reformed and settled And Lastly their persons are put under the protection of the Law in an especial manner for as their work is full of reflection so formerly they had met with many sad influences for their labour And therefore a penal Law is made against force to be made upon the persons of those Workmen of State either in their going to that Service or attending thereupon making such Delinquents liable to Fine and Imprisonment and double damages And thus however the times were full of Confusions yet a foundation was laid of a more uniform Government in future times than England hitherto had seen CHAP. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni KIngs though they have vast Dimensions yet are not infinite nor greater than the bounds of one Kingdom wherein if present they are in all places present if otherwise they are like the Sun gone down and must rule by reflexion as the Moon in the night In a mixt Commonwealth they are integral Members and therefore regularly must act Per deputatum when their persons are absent in another Legialty and cannot act Per se Partly because their Lustre is somewhat eclipsed by another Horizon and partly by common intendment they cannot take notice of things done in their absence It hath therefore been the ancient course of Kings of this Nation to constitute Vice-gerents in their absence giving them several Titles and several Powers according as the necessity of Affairs required Sometimes they are called Lord Warden or Lord Keeper of the Kingdom and have therewith the gegeral power of a King as it was with John Warren Earl of Surrey appointed thereunto by Edward the First who had not onely power to command but to grant and this power extended both to England and Scotland And Peter Gaveston though a Foreigner had the like power given him by Edward the Second over England to the reproach of the English Nobility which also they revenged afterward Sometimes these Vice-gerents are called Lieutenants which seemeth to confer onely the King's power in the Militia as a Lieutenant general in an Army And thus Richard the Second made Edmund Duke of York his Lieutenant of the Kingdom of England to oppose the entry of the Duke of Hertford afterwards called Henry the Fourth into England during the King's absence in Ireland And in the mean while the other part of the Royalty which concerned the Revenues of the Crown was betrusted to the Earl of Wiltshire Sir John Bush Sir James Baggot and Sir Henry Green unto whom men say The King put his Kingdom to farm But more ordinarily the Kings power was delegated unto one under both the Titles of Lord Guardian of the Kingdom and Lieutenant within the same such was the Title of Henry Lacy Earl of Lincoln and of Gilbert de Clare Earl of Gloucester and of Audomar de Valentia Earl of Pembrooke all of them at several times so constituted by Edward the Second as by the Patent-Rolls appeareth So likewise did Edward the Third make his Brother John of Eltham twice and the Black Prince thrice and Lionel Duke of Clarence and his Brother Thomas each of them once in the several passages of Edward the Third beyond the Sea in the third fifth twelfth fourteenth sixteenth nineteenth and thirty third years of his Reign concerning which see the Patent-Rolls of those years And Henry the Fifth gave likewise the same Title and Authority to the Duke of Bedford upon the King's Voyage into France and afterward that Duke being sent over to second the King
so things were done according to his mind though he did them not And thus his Excellency seemed more eminent in finding and making instruments fitting to do his work than in doing his own work Nevertheless all this was but from hand to mouth no Fundamental Law is altered all this while If the Laws were made by Parliament the King made them not If the Judges turned the Law to the King's ear the Law was still the Crown though the King wore it But Henry the Eighth was no such man he had not this skill of undermining nor desired it he was tender of the least diminution of his Honour industrious in finding out the occasion and a most resolved man to remove it out of the way though it reached as high as the Triple Crown A man underneath many passions but above fear What need he care for pretences his Father loved Riches he Power When he came to traverse his ground he found quickly where the Church-men trespassed upon him and began with them resting upon the wisdom of his Father and the infallibility of the Pope Henry the Eighth had taken to Wife Katherine his Brothers Dowager and continued in that condition Eighteen years without wrinkle of Fame till the great Success of Charles the Fifth the Queens Brother against the Pope and French scared the King into a jealousie of his greatness and the Emperour 's failing in courtesie to Cardinal Wolsey the King 's Achates stirred the Cardinals spirit to revenge for the loss of his hopes in the Popedom For the Cardinal finding the King's mind to linger after another Bedfellow by whom he might have a Son he made the French Embassadour his Instrument to mind the King of his unlawful Marriage with the Queen and to mention unto him Margaret D' Alanson a Princess of France both in Bloud and Beauty The King liked the notion of Divorce but disliked the motion concerning the French Lady himself being prepossessed with a fair Object at home the Lady Anne Bullen then attending upon the Queen And thus being moved he entred into a scrutiny concerning the condition of his Marriage wherein he had been formerly touched both by the French and Spaniards themselves upon several motions made First Between Charles the Fifth and afterwards between the Dauphine and the Lady Mary afterwards Queen Hereat the Cardinal winked all the while till the infallibility of the Chair of Rome came upon the Stage then bestirring his Wits he lodged the Case upon Appeal thither as he hoped beyond all further Appeal and so held the King there fast till himself might accomplish his own ends But the Wheel once set a running would not stay The King espies the Cardinal in his way and bears him down Then finding the fallacy of the infallible Chair he hearkens after other Doctors follows their light and being loth to hear what he expected from Rome he stopped the way to all Importation of such Merchandize as might be any ways prejudicial to the Prerogative Royal with the penalty of the loss of Land or Liberty and Fine the two latter being formerly warranted by Law. The first served as a scare for though it were but by Proclamation men might justly fear that he who was so stout against the Pope would not stick to scourge his own Subjects out of his way in the time of his heat The King thus entred the Lists both against Pope and Cardinal now under Praemuniri whereof he died meets the English Clergie thus losing their Top-gallant standing up in the Reer against him and talking at large Nevertheless the King stops not his career puts them to the rout for maintaining the power Legatine They soon submit crave pardon give a sum of Money and perfume their Sacrifice with that sweet Incense of Supream Head of the Church of England This was done not by way of Donation for the Convocation had no such power but by way of acknowledgement in flat opposition to the Jurisdiction of the Pope It became the common subject of discourse amongst all sorts but of wonderment to the Pope Yet for fear of worse he speaks fair for he was not in a posture to contest but all would do no good The Queen had appealed to Rome the Pope by Wolsey's advice makes delays The Parliament espying the advantage at once took all Appeals to Rome away and established all Sentences made or to be made within this Land notwithstanding any Act from Rome and enjoyned the English Clergie to administer the several Acts of publick Worship notwithstanding any Inhibition or Excommunication from any Forein pretended Power The grounds upon the Preamble of the Law will appear to be Two. First That the King of England is Supream Head in rendring Justice within the Nation in all Causes therein arising which is more than the Recognizance of the Clergie two years before this Act did hold forth Yet this acknowledgement is not absolute but in opposition to Forein pretensions Secondly That the Clergie in England having power may in matters Spiritual determine all doubts without Forein help and administer such Duties as to their place do belong Not hereby determining that the Church-men ever had such power by Law nor that they ought originally to have such power They never had it for no sooner were they dis-joyned from the Laity in these affairs but immediately they were under the Pope and received their power from him And de Jure they cannot challenge such power but by a positive Law such as this Law of Henry the Eighth which also giveth but a restrictive and limited power viz. In matters Testamentary of Divorce Matrimony Tythes Oblations and Obventions So as if they will challenge such power they must thank the Parliament for it and use the same accordingly as persons deputed thereunto and not in their own right or right of their places In all this the King's Supremacy is but obscurely asserted and rather by implication shewing what in reason may be holden than by declaration of what was making way thereby First Into the Opinions of men before they were enjoyned to determine their Actions but within Two years ensuing or thereabout the Law is made positive The King shall be taken and accepted the onely Supream Head on Earth of the Church of England and have power to visit correct repress redress reform restrain order and amend all such errours heresies abuses offences contempts and enormities as by any manner of Spiritual Authority or Jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed Which in the Preamble is said to be made to confirm what the Clergie in their Convocation formerly had recognized The corpse of this Act is to secure the King's Title the King's Power and the King's Profit As touching the King's Title it is said that in right it did formerly belong to him which is to be granted by all so far as the power is rightly understood But as touching the King's Profit it cannot
be said that the whole lump thereof did belong to the King because much thereof was not so ancient but De novo raised by the Pope's extortion and therefore the true and real profits are by particular Acts of Parliaments ensuing in special words devolved upon him The nature of this power is laid down in this Statute under a threefold expression First It is a visitatory or a reforming power which is executed by enquiry of Offences against Laws established and by executing such Laws Secondly It is an ordinary Jurisdiction for it is such as by any Spiritual Authority may be acted against Irregularities And thus the Title of Supream Ordinary is confirmed Thirdly It is such a power as must be regulated by Law and in such manner as by any Spiritual Authority may lawfully be reformed It is not therefore any absolute Arbitrary Power for that belongs onely to the Supream Head in Heaven Nor is it any Legislative Power for so the Law should be the birth of this power and his power could not then be regulated by the Law nor could every Ordinary execute such a power nor did Henry the Eighth ever make claim to any such power though he loved to be much trusted Lastly This Power was such a Power as was gained formerly from the King by Forein Usurpation which must be intended De rebus licitis and once in possession of the Crown or in right thereto belonging according to the Law. For the King hath no power thereby to confer Church-livings by Provisorship or to carry the Keys and turn the infallible Chair into an infallible Throne In brief this power was such as the King hath in the Commonwealth Neither Legislative nor Absolute in the executive but in order to the Unity and Peace of the Kingdom This was the Right of the Crown which was ever claimed but not enjoyed further than the English Scepter was able to match the Romish Keys And now the same being restored by Act of Parliament is also confirmed by an Oath enjoyned to be taken by the people binding them to acknowledge the King under God supream head on earth of the Church of England Ireland and the Kings Dominions in opposition to all forein Jurisdiction And lastly by a Law which bound all the people to maintain the Kings Title of Defender of the Faith and of the Church of England and Ireland in Earth the supream Head under the peril of Treason in every one that shall attempt to deprive the Crown of that Title We must descend to particulars for by this it will appear that these general Laws concerning the Kings refined Title contained little more than matters of Notion otherwise than a general bar to the Popes future interests And therefore the Wisdom of the State as if nothing had been already done did by degrees parcel out by several Acts of Parliament the particular interests of the Popes usurped Authority in such manner as to them seemed best And first concerning the Legislative Power in Church-Government It cannot be denied but the Pope De facto had the power of a Negative vote in all Councils and unto that had also a binding power in making Laws Decrees and Decretals out of his own breast but this was gotten by plunder he never had any right to headship of the Church nor to any such Power in right of such preferment nor was this given to the King as Head of the Church but with such limitation and qualifications that it is evident it never was in the Crown or rightly belonging thereto First Nigh three years after this Recognition by the Clergy in their Convocation it is urged upon them and they pass their promise In verbo Sacerdotii And lastly It is confirmed by Act of Parliament That they shall never make publish or execute any new Canon or Constitution Provincial or other unless the Kings Assent and License be first had thereto and the offences against this Law made punishable by Fine and Imprisonment So as the Clergy are now holden under a double Bond one the honour of their Priesthood which binds their Wills and Consciences the other the Act of Parliament which binds their powers so as they now neither will nor can start Nevertheless there is nothing in this Law nor in the future practice of this King that doth either give or assert any power to the King and Convocation to bind or conclude the Clergy or the People without an Act of Parliament concurring and inforcing the same And yet what is already done is more than any of the Kings Predecessors ever had in their possession A second Prerogative was a definite power in point of Doctrine and Worship For it is enacted that all Determinations Declarations Decrees Definitions Resolutions and Ordinations according to Gods Word and Christs Gospel by the Kings Advice and Confirmation by Letters-patent under the Great Seal at any time hereafter made and published by the Archbishops Bishops and Doctors now appointed by the King or the whole Clergie of England in matters of the Christian Faith and lawful Rites and Ceremonies of the Same shall be by the People fully believed and obeyed under penalties therein comprised Provided that nothing be done contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm A Law of a new birth and not an old Law newly revived or restored This the present occasion and the natural constitution of the Law do fully manifest The occasion was the present perplexity of the people for instead of the Statute Ex officio which was now taken away the Six Articles commonly called the Six-Stringed Whip were gotten into power by a more legal and effectual Original The Parliament had heard the cries of the People concerning this and having two things to eye at once one to provide for the Peoples Liberty and further security against Foreign pretensions the other which was more difficult for the liberties of the Consciences of multitudes of men of several Opinions which could not agree in one judgement and by discord might make way for the Romish party to recover its first ground And finding it impossible for them to hunt both games at once partly because themselves were divided in opinion and the bone once cast amongst them might put their own co-existence to the question and partly because the work would be long require much debate and retard all other affairs of the Commonwealth which were now both many and weighty In this troubled wave they therefore wisely determine to hold on their course in that work which was most properly theirs and lay before them And as touching this matter concerning Doctrine they agreed in that wherein they could agree viz. To refer the matter to the King and persons of skill in that mystery of Religion to settle the same for the present till the Parliament had better leisure the people more light and the minds of the people more perswaded of the way Thus the Estates and Consciences of
the Summons to the Parliament doth hold for this Quae de communi consilio ordinari contigerint and the words in the Coronation-oath Quas vulgus elegerit do speak no less whether they be taken in the ●●eter perfect-tense or the Future-tense the conclusion will be the same True it is that in all Kings are supposed as present yet is not that valuable in the point of Council which is the foundation of the positive Law. For as the best things under heaven are subject to infirmity so Kings either short or beyond in Age or Wit or possibly given over to their lusts or sick or absent in all which the name of a King adds little more to the Law than a sound yet all the while the Government is maintained with as much honour and power as under the most wise and well-disposed King that ever blessed Throne This is done in the Convention of States which in the first times consisted of Individuals rather than Specificals The great men doubtless did many things even before they saw the English shore that Tacitus noteth yet in the publick Convention of all did nothing alone till of one House they became two The particular time of the separation is uncertain and the occasion more It may be the great Lords thought the mysteries of State too sacred to be debated before the vulgar lest they should grow into curiosity Possibly also might the Commons in their debates wish the great men absent that themselves might more freely vote without angering their great Lords Nevertheless the Royal assent is ever given in the joynt Convention of all But how a double Negative should rest in the house of Lords one originally in themselves the other in the sole person of the King whenas in no case is any Negative found upon Record but a modest waring the answer of such things as the King likes not is to me a mystery if it be not cleared by Usurpation For it is beyond reach why that which is once by the Representative of the People determined to be Honestum should be dis-determined by one or a few whose Counsels are for the most part but Notionary and grounded upon private inconveniencies and not upon experimentals of most publick concernment or that the veult or Soit fait which formerly held the room onely of a Manifesto of the Regal Will to execute the Law then made as his Coronation-Oath to execute all Laws formerly established should be taken to be a determination of the justness or honesty of the thing When as this Royal Assent is many times given by a King that knows no difference between good and evil and is never competent judge in matters that in his opinion do fall into contradiction between his own private interest and the benefit of the people However unequal it may seem yet both that and other advantages were gained by the House of Lords after the separation was once made as many of the ancient Statutes by them onely made do sufficiently hold forth which although in the general they do concern matters of Judicature wherein the Lords originally had the greatest share yet other things also escaped the Common Vote which in after-ages they recovered into their consideration again And the condition of the people in those times did principally conduce hereunto For until the Norman times were somewhat setled the former Ages had ever been uncertain in the changes between War and Peace which maintained the distance between the Lords and their Tenants and the authority of the one over the other savouring of the more absolute command in Law. And after that the Sword was turned into the Plough-share the distance is established by compact of Tenure by Service under peril of default although in a different degree for the Service of a Knight as more eminent in War so in Peace it raised the mind to regard of publick Peace but the service of the Plough supporting all is underneath all yet still under the common condition of Free-men equally as the Knight Peace now had scarcely exceeded its minority before it brought forth the unhappy birth of Ambition Kings would be more absolute and Lords more Lordly the Commons left far behind seldom come into mention amongst the publick Acts of State and as useless set aside This was the lowest ebb that ever the Commonage of England indured which continued till Ambition brought on Contention amongst the great men and thence the Barons Wars wherein the Commons parting asunder some holding for the King who promised them Liberty from their Lords others siding with the Lords who promised them Liberty from the King they became so minded of their Liberties that in the conclusion they come off upon better advantage for their Liberties than either King or Lords who all were losers before their reckoning was fully made These Wars had by experience made the King sensible of the smart of the Lords great interest with the people and pointed him to the pin upon which the same did hang to take which away a design is contrived to advance the value of the Commoners and to level the Peerage that they both may draw in one equal yoke the Chariot of Prerogative The power of the Commons in publick Councils was of some efficacy but not much honour for their meetings were tumultuary time brought forth a cure hereof the flowers of the people are by election sent to be the Representative and so the Lords are match'd if not over-match'd the people less admiring the Lords and more regarding themselves This was but a dazle an Eclipse ensues for Kings having duly eyed the nature of Tenure between the Lords and Commons look upon it as an Out-work or Block-house in their way of approach Their next endeavour is therefore to gain the Knighthood of England within the compass of their own Fee and so by priority to have their Service as often as need should require by a trick in Law as well for their own safety in time of War as for their benefit in time of Peace This was a work of a continuing nature and commended to Successors to accomplish by degrees that the whole Knighthood of England is become no more the Lords till the Kings be first served And thus the power of the People is wholly devolved into the King's Command and the Lords must now stand alone having no other foundation than the affections of the People gained by beneficence of Neighbourhood and ordinary Society which commonly ingratiates the inferiour rank of men to those of higher degree especially such of them as affect to be popular Henry the Seventh found out this Sore and taught his Successors the way to avoid that occasion of Jealousie by calling up such considerable men to attend the Court without other Wages but fruitless hopes or under colour of honour to be had by Kings from the presence of such great men in their great Trains or of other service of special note to be done onely by
renitente and appeared either personally or by proxie Others came as parties to give and receive direction or hear Sentence in matters tending to spiritual regards And for this cause issued Summons even to Kings as at the Council of Lyons aforesaid it is said that the Pope had cited Regis terrae alios mundi principes dictum principem meaning Henry the third the matter was for assistance to the holy War and to determine the matter between Henry the third and his Clergie men And as in that case so in others of that kind Kings would send their Embassadors or Proctors and give them power in their Princes name interessendi tranctandi communicandi concludendi First of such matters quae ad reformationem Ecclesiae universalis in capite membris then of such as concern fidei orthodoxae fulciamentum Regumque ac principum pacificationem or any other particular cause which occasionally might be inserted So long then as Kings had their votes in the general Councils they were engaged in the maintenance of their decrees and by this means entred the Canon-law into Kingdoms Nor was the vote of Kings difficult to be obtained especially in matters that trenched not upon the Crown for the Pope knowing well that Kings were too wise to adventure their own persons into foraign parts where the general Councils were holden and that it was thrift for them to send such Proctors that might not altogether spend upon the King's purse allowed Bishops and Clergy-men to be Proctors for their Princes that in the Negative they might be pii inimici and less active but in the Affirmative zealous and so make the way wider by the Temporal and Spiritual vote joyned in one Neither did Kings onely save their purse but they also made their own further advantage hereby for by the engagement and respect which these their Proctors had in Councils they being for the most part such as were had in best esteem obtained better respect to the cause that they handled and speedier dispatch Nevertheless the case sometimes was such as could not expect favour and then as the King's temper was they would sometimes ride it out with full sail and to that end would either joyn with their Ecclesiastcal Proctors some of the Barons and great men of their Realm to add to the cry and make their affairs ring louder in the ears of fame although the Pope had the greater vote or otherwise would send an inhibition unto their Proctors and their assistants or an injunction to look to the rights of the Crown as Henry the Third did at the Council at Lyons and this sounded in nature of a Protest and within the Realm of England had the force of a Proviso or Saving But if the worst of all come to pass viz. that the Council passed the cause against Kings without any Inhibition or Injunction yet could it not bind the Law of the Land or Kings just Prerogatives no not in these times of Rome's hour and of the power of darkness For at a Synod holden by Arch-bishop Peckham An. 1280. the Acts of the Council of Lyons were ratified and amongst others a Canon against non-residency and pluralities and yet neither Council nor Synod could prevail for in Edward the Second's time an Abbot presenting to a Church vacant as was supposed by the Canon of pluralities the King whose Chaplain was disturbed enjoyned the Abbot to revoke his presentation upon this ground Cum igitur c. in English thus Whereas therefore that Decree bindeth not our Clerks in our service in regard that the Kings and Princes of England from time to time have enjoyed that liberty and prerogative that their Clerks whilst they attend upon their service shall not be constrained to undertake holy things or to be personally resident on their Benefices c. And if this present Law be considered whereof we now treat which took leave to enact a sence upon a former Canon so long since made and which is all one to mak● a general Council will or nill it to tread in the steps of an English Parliament or which is more mean to speak after the sence of an English Declaration that had not yet attained the full growth of a Statute as was then conceived it will evidently appear that the power of a council made up of a mixture of a few votes out of several Nations or the major part of them being unacquainted with the Laws and Customs of Nations other than their own was too mean to set a Law upon any particuler Nation contrary to its own original and fundamental Law. And as the Voters sent to the grand Councils from England were but few so neither were the Proctors as may appear from this that Pope Innocent out of his moderation if we may believe it and to avoid much expence as he saith did order that the number of Proctors in such cases should be few But in truth the times then were no times for moderation amongst Popes and their Officers and therefore it was another thing that pinched for multitude of Proctors if their number had not been moderated might perhaps if not prevail yet so blemish the contrary party that what the Pope should get must cost him loss of spirits if not bloud And although the Bishops being fast Friends to the Pope by vertue of their Oath did prevail in power and the Pope had the controul of the Council yet the exceeding number of the Proctors on the contrary might render their conclusions somewhat questionable in point of honesty as being made against the mindes of the greater number of persons present though their votes were fewer To avoid this difficulty therefore for more surety-sake the Popes enlarged the number of Voters for whereas it seemeth to be an ancient rule that onely four Bishops should go out of England to the general Council in after-ages not one Bishop could be spared unless in cases of great and emergent consequence as may appear by the Pope's Letter to Henry Third and the case required it for the oppressions of the Pope began to ring so loud as the holy Chair began to shake Neither did Kings confine themselves to any certain number of Proctors notwithstanding the Pope's moderation but as the case required sent more or less as unto the Council at Pisa for the composing and quieting that great Schism in the Popedom Henry the Fourth sent solemn Embassadors and with them nigh eighty in all But unto the Council at Basil Henry the Sixth sent not above twelve or thirteen as Mr. Selden more particularly relateth And unto the Council at Lyons formerly mentioned the Parliament sent but six or seven to remonstrate their complaints of the extortions of the Court at Rome their Legates and Emissaries The sum of all will be that the Acts of general Councils were but Counsels which being offered to the sence of the Parliament of England might grow up
espyed the danger and how necessary it was for the people to be well armed in these times of general broil and upon that ground allowed this Law to pass That all such as had Lands worth 20 l. yearly besides Reprizals should be ready not to be Knights nor under the favour of others is there any ancient precedent to warrant it but to find or to enter into the field with the Arms of a Knight or to provide some able person to serve in their stead unless they were under 21 years of age and so not grown up to full strength of body nor their Lands in their own possession but in custody of their Lords or Guardians Nevertheless of such as were grown to full age yet were maimed impotent or of mean estate and Tenants by service of a Knight it was had into a way of moderation and ordered that such should pay a reasonable fine for respit of such service nor further as concerning 〈◊〉 persons were they bound But as touching such that were under present onely and not perpetual disabilities of body upon them incumbent as often as occasion called they served by their deputies or servants all which was grounded not onely upon the Law of Henry the Second but also upon common right of Tenure The Arms that these men were to finde are said to be those belonging to a Knight which were partly for defence and partly for offence Of the first sort were the Shield the Helmet the Hauberk or Breast-plate or Coat of Mail of the second sort were the Sword and Lance and unto all a Horse must be provided These Arms especially the defensive have been formerly under alteration for the Breast-plate could not be worn with the Coat of Mail and therefore must be used as occasion was provided of either and for this cause the service of a Knight is called by several names sometimes from the Horse sometimes from the Lance sometimes from the Helmet and not seldom from the Coat of Mail. The power of immediate command or calling forth the Knights to their service in its own nature was but ministerial and subservient to that power that ordered War to be levied and therefore as in the first Saxon Government under their Princes in Germany so after under their Kings War was never resolved upon but if it were defensive it was by the Council of Lords if offensive by the general Vote of the Grand Council of the Kingdom So by vertue of such Order either from the Council of Lords or Grand Council the Knights were called forth to War and others as the case required summoned to a rendezvouze and this instrumental power regularly rested in the Lords to whom such service was due and the Lords were summoned by the Lord Paramount as chief of the Fee of which their Tenants were holden and not as King or chief Captain in the Field for they were not raised by Proclamation but by Summons 〈◊〉 forth to the Sheriff with distress and this onely against such as were within his own Fee and held of the Crown The King therefore might have many Knights at his command but the Lords more and if those Lords failed in their due correspondency with the King all those of the inferiour Orb were carried away after them so the King is left to shift for himself as well as he can And this might be occasioned not onely from their Tenures by which they stood obliged to the inferiour Lords but probably much more by their popularity which was more prevalent by how much Kings looked upon the Commons at a further distance in those days than in after-times when the Commons interposed intentively in the publick Government And thus the Horse-men of England becoming less constant in adhering to their Soveraign in the Field occasioned Kings to betake themselves to their Foot and to form the strength of their Battels wholly in them and themselves on foot to engage with them One point of liberty these Souldiers by Tenure had which made their service not altogether servile and that was that their service in the Field was neither indefinite nor infinite but circumscribed by place time and end The time of their service for the continuance of it was for a set time if it were at their own charges and although some had a shorter time yet the general sort were restained to forty days For the Courage of those times consisted not in wearying and wasting the Souldier in the Field by delays and long work in wheeling about and retiring but in playing their prizes like two Combatants of resolution to get Victory by Valour or to die If upon extraordinary occasions the War continued longer then the Tenant served upon the pay of the common Purse The end of the service of the Tenant viz. their Lord's defence in the defence of the Kingdom stinted their work within certain bounds of place beyond which they were not to be drawn unless of their own accord And these were the borders of the Dominion of the Crown of England which in those days extended into Scotland on the North and into a great part of France on the South And therefore the Earl-Marshal of England being by Edward the first commanded by vertue of his Tenure to attend in person upon the Standart under his Lieutenant that then was to be sent into Flanders which was no part of the Dominion of England refused and notwithstanding the King's threats to hang him yet he persisted saying He would neither go nor hang. Not onely because the Tenants by Knight-service are bound to the defence of their Lord's persons and not of their Lieutenants but principally because they are to serve for the safety and defence of the Kingdom and therefore ought not to be drawn into foreign Countries Nor did the Earl-Marshal onely this but many others also both Knights and Knights fellows having twenty pounds per Annum for all these with their Arms were summoned to serve under the King's pay in Flanders I say multitudes of them refused to serve and afterwards joyned with the rest of the Commons in a Petition to the King and complained of that Summons as of a common Grievance because that neither they nor their Ancestors were bound to serve the King in that Country and they obtained the King's discharge under his broad Seal accordingly The like whereunto may be warranted out of the very words of the Statute of Mortmain which was made within the compass of these times by which it was provided That in case Lands be aliened contrary to that Statute and the immediate Lords do not seize the same 〈◊〉 King shall seize them and dispose them for the defence of the Kingdom viz. upon such services reserved as shall suit therewith as if all the service of a Knight must conduce thereto and that he is no further bound to any service of his Lord than will consist with the safety of the Kingdom This was the Doctrine that the
of Edward the Sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth WE are at length come within sight of the shore where finding the Currents various and swift and the Waves rough I shall first make my course through them severally and then shall bring up the general Account of the Reigns of One King and Three Governours The King was a Youth of about Ten years old yet was older than he seemed by Eleven years for he had all the Ammunition of a wise King and in one respect beyond all his Predecessors that made him King indeed By the Grace of God. He was the onely Son of Henry the Eighth yet that was not all his Title he being the first President in the point of a young Son and two elder Daughters by several venters the eldest of whom was now thirty years old able enough to settle the Government of a distracted Nation and the Son so young as by an Act of Parliament he was disabled to settle any Government at all till he should pass the Fifteenth year of his Reign But the thing was setled in the life-time of his Father whose last Will though it speak the choce yet the Parliament made the Election and declared it The condition of this King's Person was every way tender born and sustained by extraordinary means which could never make his days many or Reign long His spirit was soft and tractable a dangerous temper in an ill air but being fixed by a higher principle than nature yielded him and the same beautified with excellent endowments of Nature and Arts and Tongues he out-went all the Kings in his time of the Christian world His Predecessors provided Apparel and Victual to this Nation but he Education and thereby fitted it to overcome a fiery Trial which soon followed his departure The Model of his Government was as tender as himself scarce induring to see his Funeral ready for every change subject to tumults and Rebellions an old trick that ever attends the beginning of Reformation like the Wind the Sun-rising The diversity of Interests in the Great men especially in point of Religion for the most part first set these into motion for some of them had been so long maintained by the Romish Law that they could never endure the Gospel and yet the different Interests in matters of State made the greater noise All was under a protector fitly composed to the Kings mind but ill matched with rugged humorous aspiring minds whereof one that should have been the Protectors great Friend became his fatal Enemy and though he were his Brother to prejudice his Interest pawned his own blood The other which was the Duke of Northumberland had his will but missed his end for having removed the Protector out of the way and gotten the chief power about the King yet could he not hold long what he had gotten for the King himself after Sixteen months decaying went into another world and left the Duke to stand or fall before some other Power which came to pass upon the entry of the next Successor The greatest trouble of his Government arose from the prosecution of a design of his Grandfather Henry the Seventh for the uniting of the two Crowns of England and Scotland by marriage and setling an enduring Peace within this Isle and unto this Work all were Aiders in both Nations but the Enemies of both But God's ways are not as Man 's it is a rare Example to find out one Marriage that did ever thrive to this end England meaned well in proffering Love but the Wooing was ill-favouredly carried on by so much Bloud Lastly As the Government was now tender so was it carried with much compliance with the People which ever gives occasion to such of them that are irregular to be more and such as are well governed to be less because though pleasing it be yet it is with less awe and spirit which renders their obedience at the best but careless and idle unless such as are very consciencious be the more careful over their own ways by how much their Superiours are the less NOT thus was Queen Mary but like a Spaniard she over-ruled all Relations and Engagements by Design she was about Forty years old and yet unmarried when she came to the Throne it may seem she wanted a mind to that course of life from natural abstinency or was loath to adventure her Feature which was not excellent to the Censure of any Prince of as high degree as she held her self to be or her value was not known so as to persons of meaner Interests she might seem too much above and to those of greater too much beneath Or possibly her Father was loath to let the world know her Title to the Crown till needs must or to raise up a Title for another man so long as he had hope of a Son of his own to succeed him and yet had formerly designed her for a Wife to Charles the Fifth and afterwards to the Dauphine of France Or it may be her self had set a command of her self not to change her Estate till she saw the course of the Crown either to or fro However the time is now come that she must marry or adventure her Womanhood upon an uncertain and troublesome state of Affairs She liked the Lord Courtnee above the Prince of Spain but feared he would not design with her She held him not unmeet for her degree for she feared he was good enough for her Sister that then also had the Title of a Kingdom waiting so nigh her person as she was an Object of Hope to her Friends and Fear to her Enemies And yet Queen Mary married the Prince of Spain It may be it ran in the Bloud to marry into their own Bloud or rather she was thereto led by reason of State partly to enable her with greater security in the resetling of her Kingdom in the Popish Religion wherein she knew she had to do with a People not easie to be reduced where Conscience pretended Reluctancy and partly to assure her Dominion against the Out-works of the French and Scotish designs And so she yielded up the Supremacy of her Person to the Prince of Spain but thanks to the Nobility the Supremacy of the Kingdom was reserved to her own use for it was once in her purpose to have given up all to the man rather than to miss of the man. And yet their condition was not much comfortable to either The Peoples dislike of the Match sounded so loud abroad that when the Prince was to come over the Emperour his Father demanded fifty Pledges for his Sons safety during his abode in this Land which was also denied When he was come over the English fear the Spanish Tyranny and the Spanish the old Saxon entertainment of the Danes So both lie at their close guards as after some time the King and Queen did no less for the Queen was either never earnest in her
the Opponents Instances which King called a Council stiled Commune Concilium tam Cleri quam Populi and in the conclusion of the same a Law is made upon the like occasion Si Rex Populum Convocaverit c. In both which it is evident that in those times there were Councils holden by the People as well as by the Magnates or Optimates His next instance is in the year 694 which is of a Council holden by the Great men but no mention of the Commons and this he will have to be a Parliament albeit that he might have found both Abbatesses or Women and Presbyters to be Members of that Assembly and for default of better attested the Conclusions of the same notwithstanding the Canon Nemo militans Deo c. But I must also mind him that the same Author reciteth a Council holden by King Ina Suasu omnium Aldermannorum Seniorum Sapientum Regni and it is very probable that all the Wise men of the Kingdom were not included within the Lordly Dignity The third instance can have no better success unless he will have the Pope to be allowed power to call a Parliament or allow the Archbishop power to do that service by the Pope's command for by that Authority this whatever it be was called if we give credit to the Relations of Sir Henry Spelman who also reciteth another Council within three leaves foregoing this called by Withered at Barkhamstead unto which the Clergie were summoned Qui cum viris utique militaribus communi omnium assensu has leges decrevere So as it seemeth in those times Souldiers or Knights were in the Common Councils as well as other Great Men. In the next place he bringeth in a Council holden in the year 747 which if the Archbishop were then therein President as it is said in the presence of the King was no Parliament but a Church-mote and all the Conclusions in the same do testifie no less they being every one concerning Ecclesiastical matters And furthermore before this time the Author out of whom he citeth this Council mentioneth another Council holden by Ina the Saxon-King in the presence of the Bishops Princes Lords Earls and all the wise old men and People of the Kingdom all of them concluding of the intermarriage between the Brittons Picts and Saxons which formerly as it seemeth was not allowed And the same King by his Charter mentioned by the same Penman noteth that his endowment of the Monastery of Glastenbury was made not onely in the presence of the Great Men but Cumpraesentia populationis and he saith that Omnes confirmaverunt which I do not mention as a work necessary to be done by the Parliament yet such an one as was holden expedient as the case then stood Forty years after he meeteth with another Council which he supposeth to be a Parliament also but was none unless he will allow the Pope's Legate power to summon a Parliament It was holden in the year 787 and had he duly considered the return made by the Pope's Legate of the Acts of that Council which is also published by the same Author he might have found that the Legate saith That they were propounded in publick Council before the King Archbishop and all the Bishops and Abbots of the Kingdom Senators Dukes or Captains and People of the Land and they all consented to keep the same Then he brings in a Council holden in the year 792. which he would never have set down in the List of Parliaments if he had considered how improper it is to construe Provinciale tenuit Concilium for a Parliament and therefore I shall need no further to trouble the Reader therewith The two next are supposed to be but one and the same and it is said to be holden Anno 974 before nine Kings fifteen Bishops twenty Dukes c. which for ought appears may comprehend all England and Scotland and is no Parliament of one Nation but a Party of some Nations for some great matter no doubt yet nothing in particular mentioned but the solemn laying the Foundation of the Monastery of Saint Albans What manner of Council the next was appeareth not and therefore nothing can be concluded therefrom but that it was holden in the year 797. That Council which is next produced and in the year 800 and is called in great Letters Concilium Provinciale which he cannot Grammatically construe to be a Parliament yet in the Preface it is said that there were Viri cujuscunque dignitatis and the King in his Letters to the Pope saith concerning it Visum est cunctis gentis Nostrae sapientibus so as it seemeth by this and other Examples of this nature that though the Church-motes invented the particular conclusions yet it was left to the Wittagenmote to judge and conclude them There can be no question but the next three Precedents brought by the Opponent were all of them Church-mates For the first of them which is said to be holden in the year 816 is called a Synod and both Priests and Deacons were there present which are no Members of Parliament consisting onely of the House of Lords and they all of them did Pariter tractare de necessariis utilitatibus Ecclesiarum The second of them is called a Synodal Council holden Anno 822 and yet there were then present Omnium dignitatum Optimates which cannot be understood onely of those of the House of Lords because they ought all to be personally present and therefore there is no Optimacy amongst them The last of these three is called Synodale Conciliabulum a petty Synod in great Letters and besides there were with the Bishops and Abbots many wise men and in all these respects it cannot be a Parliament onely of the great Lords The next Council said to be holden in the year 823 cannot also be called properly a Parliament but onely a Consultation between two Kings and their Council to prevent the invasion of the Danes and the attests of the Kings Chaplain and his Scribe do shew also that they were not all Members of the House of Lords The Council cited by the Opponent in the next place was holden Anno 838 being onely in nature of a Council for Law or Judicature to determine the validity of the King 's Grant made to the Church of Canterbury which is no proper work for a Parliament unless it befal during the sitting of the same The next is but a bare title of a Council supposed to be holden Anno 850 and not worth its room for it neither sheweth whether any thing was concluded nor what the Conclusions were The work of the next Council alleadged to be holden Anno 851 was to confirm the Charter of the Monastery of Croyland and to determine concerning affairs belonging to the Mercians and if it had been a Parliament for that people it might be worthy of enquiry how regularly the Archbishop of Canterbury and the