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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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Fathers government Nor did he onely follow the counsels of others herein but even at such times as their counsels crossed he chose those Counsels that suited with the most popular way as is to be seen in the different counsels of the Archbishop of Canterbury and William Briware And yet two things troubled much those times one that they were times of parties the other that the Protector was somewhat too excellent to be a meer servant and it is hard for the English Nobility to endure him to be greater although it may seem reasonable that they that are thought worthy to govern a King should be much more worthy to govern themselves But the Pope put an end to all occasion of question hereabout for by his Brief he declares the King to be sixteen years old and of age to govern himself and therefore all Castles are forthwith to be rendred up into the King's hands This proved the rock of offence whilst some obeyed the Pope and were impugners of those that put more confidence in the Castles than in the Kings good nature Hence first sprang a civil broil thence want of money then a Parliament wherein the Grand Charter of Englands Liberties once more was exchanged for a sum of Money Thus God wheeled about successes But the King having passed over his tame age under the Government of wise Counsellors and by this time beginning to feel liberty it was his hard condition to meet with want of Money and worse to meet with ill Counsellors which served him with ill advice that the Grand Charter would keep him down make him continually poor and in state of pupillage To this giving credit it shaped an Idea in his mind that would never out for forty years after and thus advised he neglects his own engagement defies the Government that by his Royal word and the Kings his predecessors in cool bloud had been setled and that he might do this without check of Conscience he forbad the study of the Law that so it might die without heir and he have all by Escheat This sadded the English and made them drive heavily the King to add more strengh brought in Foraigners and foraign Councils and then all was at stand The Councils were for new ways The great designe was to get money to supply the King's wants and as great a designe was to keep the King in want otherwise it had been easie for those at the helm to have stopped the concourse of Foraigners other than themselves from abroad the confluence of the Queens poorer Allies lavish entertainment profuse rewards cheats from Rome and all in necessitous times But strangers to maintain their own interests must maintain strangeness between the King and his Subjects To supply therefore these necessities all shifts are used as revoking of Charters displacing of Officers and fining them Afforestations with a train of oppressions depending thereon Fines and Amercements corrupt Advancements Loans and many tricks to make rich men offenders especially projects upon the City of London Nevertheless all proved infinitely short of his disbursements so as at times he is necessitated to call Parliaments and let them know his wants At the first the people are sensible and allow supply but after by experience finding themselves hurt by their supplies to the King they grant upon conditions of renewing the power of the Great Charter and many promises pass from the King to that end and after that Oaths and yet no performance This makes the people absolutely deny supplies Then the King pretends Wars in France Wars in Scotland and Wars against the Infidels in the Holy-land whither he is going the people upon such grounds give him aids but finding all but pretences or ill success of such enterprizes they are hardned against supplies of him for the Holy War. Then he seems penitent and pours out new promises sealed with the most solemn execration that is to be found in the Womb of Story and so punctually recorded as if God would have all generations to remember it as the seal of the Covenant between the King of England and his people and therefore I cannot omit it It was done in full Parliament where the Lords Temporal and Spiritual Knights and others of the Clergy all standing with their Tapers burning The King himself also standing with a chearly contenance holding his open hand upon his brest the Archbishop pronounced this Curse ensuing By the authority of God omnipotent of the Son and of the Holy Ghost and of the glorious Mother of God the Virgin Mary and of the blessed Apostles Peter and Paul and of all the 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 holy Mother the Church all those which henceforth knowingly and maliciously shall deprive or spoil Churches of their 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 crossing in part or 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 Forests 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 thing against them or their Statutes or which have brought in any customs or being brought in have observed and all Writers of Ordinances or Councils or Executioners or such as shall judge by such things All such as are knowingly guilty of any such matters shall ipso facto incur this Sentence such as are ignorantly guilty shall incur the same censure if being admonished he amend not within fifteen days after admonition In the same censure are comprehended all perturbers of the peace of the King and Kingdom for everlasting memory whereof we have hereunto put our Seals And then all throwing down their Tapers extinguished and smoaking they said So let all that shall go against this curse be extinct and stink in Hell. The King all the while continuing in the posture above-mentioned said So God me help I will observe all these things sincerely and faithfully as I am a Man as I am a Christian as I am a Knight as I am a King crowned and anointed If we shall pare away the superstitious ceremonies and consider divine providence we may search into all Histories of all ages and we shall not find a parallel hereunto so seriously composed solemnly pronounced with an Amen from the representative body of the whole Kingdom put in writing under seal preserved to posterity vindicated by God himself in the ruine of so many opposers And yet the dust of time hath almost buried this out of the thoughts of men so as few
concerning Calvin's Case fol. 45 IX Of Courts for Causes criminal with their Laws fol. 54 X. Of the course of Civil Justice during these times fol. 56 XI Of the Militia in these times fol. 58 XII Of the Peace fol. 62 XIII A view of the summary courses of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth in their several Reigns fol. 68 XIV Of the Parliament during the Reigns of these several Kings fol. 75 XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni fol. 79 XVI Concerning the Privy Council fol. 83 XVII Of the Clergie and Church-government during these times fol. 86 XVIII Of the Court of Chancery fol. 95 XIX Of the Courts of Common-pleas and Common Law. fol. 97 XX. Concerning Sheriffs fol. 98 XXI Of Justices and Laws concerning the Peace fol. 99 XXII Of the Militia during these times fol. 102 XXIII A short Survey of the Reigns of Edward the Fourth Edward the Fifth and Richard the Third fol. 106 XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament f. 109 XXV Of the condition of the Clergie fol. 112 XXVI A short sum of the Reigns of Henry the Seventh and Henry the Eighth fol. 113 XXVII Of the condition of the Crown fol. 118 XXVIII Of the condition of the Parliament in these times fol. 130 XXIX Of the power of the Clergie in the Convocation f. 134 XXX Of the power of the Clergie in their ordinary Jurisdiction fol. 136 XXXI Of Judicature fol. 141 XXXII Of the Militia fol. 143 XXXIII Of the Peace fol. 148 XXXIV Of the general Government of Edward the Sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth fol. 152 XXXV Of the Supream power during these times fol. 157 XXXVI Of the power of the Parliament during these times fol. 162 XXXVII Of the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical during these last times fol. 166 XXXVIII Of the Militia in these later times fol. 168 XXXIX Of the Peace fol. 173 XL. A summary Conclusion of the whole matter fol. 174. THE CONTINUATION OF AN Historical and Political Discourse OF THE Laws Government OF ENGLAND THE former times since the Norman entry like a rugged Sea by cross Winds of Arbitrary Vapours in and about the Crown and by Forrein Engagements from the holy Chair made the true face of affairs cloudy and troublesome both for the Writer and the Reader Henceforward for the space of Three hundred years next ensuing Kings by experience and observation finding themselves unequal to the double chace of absolute Supremacy over the sturdy Laity and encroaching Clergie you will observe to lay aside their pretensions against the Peoples Liberties and more intentively to trench upon the Spiritualty now grown to defie all Government but that of Covetousness Nor would these times allow further advantage to Kings in this work they being either fainted by the ticklish Title of the Crown hovering between the two Houses of York and Lancaster or drawn off to forrein employments as matters of greater concernment for the present well-being of the Kingdom or for the spreading of the fame of such as desired to be renowned for valiant men It will be superfluous to recount the particular atchievements formerly attained by these Ecclesiastical men the former Treatise hath already said what was thought needful concerning that For the future I shall even premise this that the ensuing times being thus blessed with a Truce or stricter League between the Kings and Commons the errours in Government more readily do appear the corruptions in natures of men more frequently discover themselves and thereby the body of the Statute-Laws begins to swell so big that I must be enforced to contract my account of them into a narrower compass and render the same unto the Reader so far forth only as they shall concern the general stream of Government leaving those of privater regard unto every mans particular consideration as occasion shall lead him For whatever other men please to insist upon this I take for a Maxime That though the Government of a King is declared by his Actions yet the Government of a Kingdom is onely manifested by ancient Customs and publick Acts of Parliament And because I have undertaken a general Survey of the Reigns of thirteen several Kings and Queens of this Nation for I shall not exceed the issue of Henry the Eighth and to handle each of them apart will leave the Reader in a Wilderness of particulars hard to comprehend in the general sum I shall therefore reduce them all into three heads viz. Interest of Title Interest of Prerogative and Interest of Religion the last of which swayed much the three Children of Henry the Eighth the second as much in their two Ancestors viz. Henry the Eighth and Henry the Seventh and the first in the three Henries of Lancaster and three succeeding Kings of the House of York And because Edward the Third and his Grand-child Richard the Second do come under none of these Interests I shall consider them joyntly as in way of Exordium to the rest although the course of the latter was as different from the former as Lust falls short of a generous Spirit CHAP. I. A sum of the several Reigns of Edward the Third and Richard the Second SEveral I may well call them because they are the most different in their ways and ends of any two of that race that ever swayed their Scepter and yet the entrance of the first gave countenance to the conclusion of the last For the Scepter being cast away or lost by Edward the Second it was the lot of his Son Edward the Third a youth of Fifteen years of age to take it up he knowing whose it was and feeling it too heavy for him was willing enough it should return but being overswayed by Counsels drawn from reason of State and pressed thereto by those that resolved not to trust his Father any more he wisely chose to manage it himself rather than to adventure it in another hand But that is not all for as it is never seen that the Crown doth thrive after divorce from the Scepter but like a blasted Blossom falls off at the next gale of adversity such was the issue to Edward the Second his power once gone his Honour followeth soon after he had ceased to be King and within a small time did cease to be Edward His Son thus made compleat by his Fathers spoil had the honour to be the Repairer of the ruines that his Father had made and was a Prince which you might think by his story to be seldom at home and by his Laws seldom abroad Nor can it be reconciled without wonder that Providence should at once bestow upon England a courageous People brave Captains wise Council and a King that had the endowments of them all Otherwise it had out-reached conceit it self that this small Island wasted by the Barons Wars the people beaten out of heart by all Enemies in the time of the Father should nevertheless in the time of the Son with honour
certain Cases vouched to that purpose the first concerning the Legiance of Children to Parents which cometh not to this case because it is a Legiance of Nature and this Legiance whereof we speak is yet under a litigious Title And I suppose will in the conclusion be found to rest onely upon a Civil constitution therefore I leave that The second is That a man attainted and outlawed is nevertheless within the King's protection for this saith the Reporter is a Law of Nature Indelebilis immutabilis and neither Parliament nor Statue can take this power away fol. 13. b. 14. a. And therefore the Reporter concludes That as well the Legiance of the Subject as the Protection of him by the King are both of them from the Law of Nature An opinion that speaks much mercy yet it seems strange considering the Pen for if it be a Law of Nature and immutable for the King to protect persons attainted then must no such person suffer for if he be under the King's protection that being by a Law of Nature cannot be changed by any positive Law as the Reporter saith nor can the King be so bound by any such Statute but by a non obstante be can set himself at liberty when he pleaseth and then the issue will be this The King hath a natural power to protect the persons of Law-breakers from the power of the Law therefore much more their Estates and then farewel all Law but this of the Kings natural Protection I say that these are of a high strain considering what the Reporter speaketh elsewhere But to pursue his instance he saith That the King hath power to protect an attainted person That if any man kill him without warrant he is a Man-slayer and yet this person attainted hath lost the legal protection It is true yet not to all intents for by the Sentence of the Law his life is bound up under the Law of that Sentence viz. That he must not suffer in other manner than the Sentence determineth nor before Warrant of Execution issue forth to that end And notwithstanding the Sentence yet the Law leaveth him a liberty of Purchase or Inheritance though to the use of the Crown and therefore in some respects the Law protects his person so long as he lives and the King 's natural Protection is in vain in such cases Lastly suppose the King hath a power of Non ohstante if the same be allowed to him in a limited way by the Law it is no Argument to prove the King's natural power which is driven at under natural Legiance much less if it cannot be made forth that the Law doth allow any such power of Non obstante at all but by the iniquity of the times permitteth the same to subsist onely to avoid Contention as it came into this Kingdom by way of Usurpation And thus I have onely discovered the Foundation of this first Qualification which I shall onely leave naked supposing that no man seeing it will build at all thereupon The second Property that cometh to be considered is That English Legiance is absolute fol. 5. b. fol. 7. a. which is a word of a vast extent serving rather to amaze men's apprehensions than to enlighten them And therefore the Reporter did well not to trouble himself or the Reader in the clearing or proof thereof but lest the point rather to be believed than understood nor shall I in the Negative For God himself can have no other Legiance from an Englishman than absolute Legiance and Kings being as other men subject to erre especially in this point of Prerogative are much rather subject thereto being misled by such Doctrines as these are The Scripture determines this point and cuts the knot in sunder The third property of English Legiance which the Reporter insisteth upon is that it is indefinite which he explaineth to be Proprium quarto modo so as it is both Vniversal and Immutable fol. 5. b. fol. 12. and neither defined by Time Place or Person As touching the Time and Person the Reporter enlarged not at all therefore I shall onely leave the Reader to chew upon the point supposing himself in the first times of Edward the Fourth when Henry the Sixth was then alive and let him resolve to which of them his Legiance had been due considering them both in their natural capacity as the Reporter would have it But as touching the place it is reported that English Legiance is not onely due from an English man to an English King in England but in all places of the Kings Dominions though otherwise Forem as to the power of the Law of England Yea saith the Reporter as far as the Kings power of protection doth extend And yet this had not been enough if the Premises be granted For if this Legiance whereof we speak be absolute and omni soli semper then it is due to the King from an English man ubivis Gentium Nevertheless to take the Reporter in a moderate sence it is worth consideration whether English Legiance in the days of Edward the Third extended as far as the Kings power of Protection whenas he had the Crown of France in a Forein right to that of England In this the Reporter is extreamly positive upon many grounds which he insisteth upon First he saith that Verus and Fidelis are qualities of the mind and cannot be circumscribed within the predicament of Vbi and upon this ground he might conclude that this Legiance is due to the King from an English man all the world over as well as in all the King's Dominions But concerning the ground it may be denied for though simply in it self considered as a notion Verity or Fedility are not circumscribed in place yet being qualities of the Soul and that being in the Body in relation thereunto it may be in the predicament of Vbi for where-ever that Body and Soul is there is Faith and Truth according to its model which though not absolute and indefinite yet if according to the Laws of the place wherein the man is he is truly said to be Verus Fidelis Secondly The Reporter argueth that the King's Protection is not local or included within the bounds of England therefore also is not the Legiance for Protectio trahit Legiantiam Legiantia Protectionem Had this reason been formed into a Syllogisim it had appeared less valuable for the Protection of an English King qua talis of an English man is local and included within the bounds of the Kingdom But if the same King be also King of France or Duke of Aquitane and an English man shall travel into those parts he is still under the same King's protection yet not as King of England but as King of France or Duke of Aquitane Otherwise let the party be of France or Aquitane or England all is one he must be whether French or English under an unlimited absolute Protection without regard had
are not of the Legiance of the King of England but as Lord of that Territory The other matter to be observed concerning pleading in the Courts of Civil Justice is this That whereas anciently from the Normans time till these times the pleadings were in the Norman Tongue they shall be henceforth in English out of an inconvenience I believe rather supposed than felt For though some kind of knowledge of Law-terms may be encreased thereby yet unless that shall be professedly studied it will breed nothing but Notions and they an over-weening conceit which many times sets men to Suits in Law to their own loss like some weak influence of the Celestial Bodies that are strong enough to stir up humours but not to expel them or draw them out However even thus in part is the reproach of Normandy rolled away like that of Egypt from the Israelites at Mount Gilgal CHAP. XI Of the Militia in these times WAR is ever terrible but if just and well governed Majestical the one may excite resistance and defence but the other conquers before blow given because it convinceth the Judgment and so prevails upon the Conscience For that heart can never be resolute in its own defence that is at War with its own understanding nor can such a heart consider such a War otherwise than as Divine and bearing the face of an Ordinance of God and then how can the Issue be unsuccessful It is no strange thing for Kings to miscarry in their Wars because it is rarely seen that they are under good Counsel but if a Christian Counsel miscarry we may conclude it extraordinary in the efficient cause and no less wonderful in the issue and end Upon this ground it concerneth a Christian Nation not onely in point of honour but of safety and continuance to settle fundamental Laws of War against time of War as of Peace in time of Peace Neither was England deficient herein saving that antient times were more obscure in the particulars and these days revealed them at such a time wherein we may say that Edward the Third approved himself not onely King of England but of himself above the ordinary strain of expectation For being now become a famous Commander and Conquerour having also an Army inured to fight and overcome and so might have given a Law he nevertheless received the same submitting both it and himself to the Directory of the Parliament in making a War with France which was three to one against him in very respect but in the Title besides the disadvantage from Scotland that lay continually beating upon his Rear The like may be observed of his War with Scotland in both which he evidently telleth the World that he held it unreasonable to enter upon the managing of an offensive Foreign War without the concurrence of the common consent of the People and that not onely for the thing it self but also for his own Personal Engagement in the Service For a King though he be the Generalissimo yet is he so from the People and his Person being of that high value is not to be exposed to every occasion that may provoke War without due advice first had with the publick Council because in his Person the People adventureth as well as himself And in this manner were the Wars in France by Edward the Third and in Scotland concluded upon debate In the next place as touching the Arrays of Men for War I find no foot-steps of any power which was claimed as peculiar to the King therein and acknowledged by the Parliament but many instances do I meet with in the opposite all which do plainly tell us that the old shifts of Jurati and Obligati ad arma could do little either in the calling of men forth or arming them for the War. But in case of publick defence against Foreigners men were summoned upon their Legiance as anciently was used And this was by both King and Parliament fully declared and all such Obligations by writing called in and damned as dishonourable to the King. In foreign service the course was no less regular if the War was by special direction of the Parliament they likewise ordered the manner of the raising of Souldiers viz. so many out of a County and so many out of a Burrough all which are by the express words of the Statute said to be granted by the Knights and Burgesses But if it was onely upon the King 's particular instigation and not by order or consent of the Parliament the King in such case being Voluntier all the Souldiers were in like manner unless some particular Law or Tenure otherwise obliged them As touching the arming of Souldiers the Law was yet more certain and particular If the Souldiers were men of Estate they were armed according to the ancient rule asserted by the Statute at Winton or otherwise were especially assessed by the Parliament or by virtue of their Tenures The first of these is confirmed by Edward the Third in Parliament wherein he willeth that no man shall be urged to arm himself otherwise than he was wont in the times of his Ancestors Kings of England The two latter were likewise confirmed by another Law made in the same Kings time whereby it was ordained That no Man shall be constrained to find Men of Arms Hoblers nor Archers other than those which hold by such services if it be not by common consent and grant made in Parliament By Men of Arms meaning those which we now call Curiassieres or compleat armed by Hoblers meaning those now called light Horse-men The Archers served on Foot and were principally armed with Bows although they had also Swords or other such offensive portable Weapons The first of these concerneth onely the arming of a man 's own person the other the finding of Souldiers and arming of them and both together sufficient for the safeguard of the Rights and Liberties of the People invaded in those times by Commissions of Array and such other expressions of Prerogative Royal for as touching the arming of a man 's own person the Statute of 1 Edward 3. formerly mentioned is clear in the point And though the Statute of 25 Edward 3. doth not in the latter direct as touching the finding Arms for others as is urged in his Majesty's Answer to the Declaration of the Parliament concerning the Commission of Array July 4. 1642. yet is it therein granted that a compleat Souldier is within the Letter of the Statute and seeing the person of the Souldier is not in the power of any private person in such cases to command him to the service it seemeth clear to me that the Statute must intend the arming of him with compleat Arms and not the armed person of the man. The Souldiery thus arrayed they are in the next place to be called to their Rendezvouz the Knights by Summons sent to the Sheriff but the rest by Proclamation If the Knights appear
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
controul for when displeasure was like to ensue he could speak fair and feast and if need was kiss away all discontent Towards his end as stale drink he grew sowr For as in the first part of his Reign he had been supplied by good-will against Law so in his latter times he had gotten a trick of supply by Law against good-will This was by penal Laws which are a remedy if they be used Ad terrorem but if strained beyond that the Remedy proveth worse than the Disease In their first institution they are forms of courtesie from the people to the King but in the rigorous execution of them are trials of mastery of the King over the people and are usually laid up against days of reckoning between the Prince and them Those penal Laws are best contrived that with the greatest terrour to the Delinquent bring the least profit to the King's Coffers Once for all this King's Acts were many his Enterprizes more but seldom attaining that end which they faced He was a man of War and did more by his Fame than his Sword was no sooner resolved in good earnest but he died left a Kingdom unassured his Children young and many friends in shew but in truth very few Now if ever was the Kingdom in a Trance Edward the Fourth left a Son the Prima materia of a King and who lived long enough to be enrolled amongst English Kings yet served the place no further than to be an occasion to fill up the measure of the wickedness of the Duke of Gloucester and a monument of Gods displeasure against the House of Edward the Fourth whether for that breach of Oath or treachery against Henry the Sixth or for what other cause I cannot tell But at the best this Prince was in relation to his Uncle the Duke of Gloucester little other than as an Overseer to an Executor that might see and complain but cannot amend For the Duke ruled over-ruled and mis-ruled all under the name of Edward the Fifth and left no monument of good Government upon record till he changed both the Name and Person of Edward the Fifth to Richard the Third his Fame had lifted him up and might have supported him had he regarded it But as no man had more honour before he ascended the Throne so no man ever entred and sate thereon with less His proceedings were from a Protector to an Vsurper and thence to a Tyrant a Scourge to the whole Nation especially the Nobility and lastly an instrument of Gods Revenge upon himself a man made up of Clay and Blood living not loved and dying unlamented The manner of his Government was strained having once won the Saddle he is loth to be cast knowing himself guilty all over and that nothing could absolve his Fame but a Parliament he calls it courts it and where his Wit could not reach to apologize he makes whole by recompence takes away Benevolences he is ready to let them have their present desires what can they have more He promiseth good behaviour for the future which he might the better do because he had already attained his ends Thus in one Parliament for he could hold no more he gave such content as even to wonderment he could assoon find an Army in the field to fight for him as the most meritorious of his Predecessors Hi● ill Title made him very jealous and thereby taught his best Friends to keep at a distance after which time few escaped that came within his reach and so he served God's Judgement against his adjutants though he understood it not Amongst the rest against the Duke of Buckingham his great Associate both in the Butchery of the two young Princes and usurpation of the Royal Scepter He lived till he had laid the Foundation of better times in the person of Henry the Seventh and then received his reward But an ill Conscience must be continually fed or it will eat up its own womb The Kings mind being delivered from fear of the Sons of Edward the Fourth now dead torments himself with thoughts of his Daughter alive ashamed he is of Butchery of a Girl he chuseth a conceit of Bastardizing the Children of Elizabeth Gray that calleth her self Queen of England but this proved too hard to concoct Soon after that he goes a contrary way The Lady Elizabeth Gray is now undoubted Wife of Edward the Fourth and her eldest Daughter as undoubted Heir to the Crown And so the King will now be contented to adventure himself into an incestuous Marriage with her if his own Queen were not in the way onely to secure the Peace of the Kingdom which he good King was bound in Conscience to maintain though with the peril of his own Soul and in this zeal of Conscience his Queen soon went out of the way and so Love is made to the young Lady But Henry Earl of Richmond was there before and the Lady warily declined the choice till the golden Apple was won which was not long after accomplished the King losing both the Lady his Crown and own Life together put an end to much wickedness and had the end thereof in Bosworth-Field CHAP. XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament THe seasons now in Tract were of short continuance lives passed away more speedily than years and it may seem useless to enquire what is the nature of the Government in such a time whenas the greatest work was to maintain Life and Soul together and when all is done little else is done For though the Title of the House of York was never so clear against that of Lancaster yet it had been so long darkned with a continual ●uccession of Kings of the Red Rose that either by their Merit had gained a Throne in the peoples Hearts or by their Facility had yielded their Throne up to the peoples will as it proved not easie to convince them that liked well their present Lot and were doubtful of change or to make them tender of the right of Edward the Fourth above their own quiet Above Threescore years now had England made trial of the Government of the Lancastrian Princes and thereof about Thirty years experience had they of Henry the Sixth they saw he was a gentle Price On the other side Edward the Fourth newly sprung up out of a Root watered with blood himself also a man for the Field This might well put the minds of the people to a stand what to think of this Man whose Nature and ends are so doubtful and brought nothing to commend him to the good wills of the people but his bare Title which the common sort usually judge of according as they see it prosper more or less Add hereunto that Divine Providence did not so clearly nor suddenly determine his secret purpose concerning this change by any constant success to either part by means whereof the one half of Edward the Fourth's Reign was spent while as yet Henry the
A brief censure of the Saxon Prelatical Church-Government 27 XVI Of the Saxons Commonwealth and the Government thereof and first of the King. 29 XVII Of the Saxon Nobility 33 XVIII Of the Freemen amongst the Saxons 34 XIX Of the Villains amongst the Saxons 35 XX. Of the grand Council amongst the Saxons called the Micklemote 36 XXI Of the Council of Lords 38 XXII Of the manner of the Saxon Government in the time of War. 39 XXIII Of the Government of the Saxon Kingdom in the times of peace and first of the division of the Kingdom into Shires and their Officers 40 XXIV Of the County-court and Sheriffs Torn 41 XXV Of the division of the County into Hundreds and the Officers and Court thereunto belonging 42 XXVI Of the division of the Hundreds into Decennaries 43 XXVII Of Franchises and first of the Church-franchise 44 XXVIII Of the second Franchise called the Marches 45 XXIX Of County Palatines ibid. XXX Of Franchises of the person 46 XXXI Of Mannors ibid. XXXII Of Courts incident and united unto Mannors 48 XXXIII Of Townships and their Markets 49 XXXIV Of the Forests 51 XXXV Concerning Judges in Courts of Justice 52 XXXVI Of the proceedings in Judicature by Indictment Appeal Presentment and Action 53 XXXVII Of the several manners of extraordinary trial by Torture Ordeal Compurgators and Battle 55 XXXVIII Of the ordinary manner of Trial amongst the Saxons by Inquest 56 XXXIX Of passing Judgement and Execution 59 XL. Of the penal Laws amongst the Saxons 60 XLI Of the Laws of property of Lands and Goods and the manner of their Conveyance 64 XLII Of the times of Law and vacancy 68 XLIII An Epilogue to the Saxons Government 69 XLIV OF the Norman entrance 70 XLV Of the Title of the Norman Kings to the English Crown that it was by Election 72 XLVI That the Government of the Normans proceeded upon the Saxon principles and first of Parliaments 75 XLVII Of the Franchise of the Church in the Norman times 77 XLVIII Of the several subservient Jurisdictions by Marches Counties Hundreds Burroughs Lordships and Decennaries 82 XLIX Of the Immunities of the Saxon Freemen under the Norman Government 84 L. Recollection of certain Norman Laws concerning the Crown in relation to those of the Saxons formerly mentioned 86 LI. Of the like Laws that concern common Interest of Goods 89 LII Of Laws that concern common Interest of Lands 90 LIII Of divers Laws made concerning the execution of Justice 94 LIV. Of the Militia during the Normans time 65 LV. That the entry of the Normans into this Government could not be by Conquest 97 LVI A brief Survey of the sense of Writers concerning the point of Conquest 99 LVII OF the Government during the Reigns of Stephen Henry the Second Richard the First and John and first of their Titles to the Crown and disposition in Government 103 LVIII Of the state of the Nobility of England from the Conquest and during the Reign of these several Kings 107 LIX Of the state of the Clergie and their power in this Kingdom from the Norman time 109 LX. Of the English Commonalty since the Norman time 117 LXI Of Judicature the Courts and their Judges 118 LXII Of the certain Laws of Judicature in the time of Henry the 2. 120 LXIII Of the Militia of this Kingdom during the Reign of these Kings 125 LXIV OF the Government of Henry the Third Edward the First and Edward the Second Kings of England And first a general view of the disposition of their Government 129 LXV Of the condition of the Nobility of England till the time of Edward the Third 137 LXVI Of the state of the English Clergie until the time of Edward the Third and herein concerning the Statutes of Circumspecte agatis Articuli Cleri and of General Councils and National Synods 140 LXVII Of the condition of the Freemen of England and the Grand Charter and several Statutes concerning the same during the Reign of these Kings 158 LXVIII Of Courts and their Proceedings 177 LXIX Of Coroners Sheriffs and Crown-Pleas 179 LXX Of the Militia during these Kings Reigns 184 LXXI Of the Peace 188. THE PREFACE THe policy of the English Government so far as is praise-worthy is all one with Divine Providence wrapped up in a Vail of Kings and Wise men and thus implicitely hath been delivered to the World by Historians who for the most part read Men and wear their Pens in decyphering their Persons and Conditions Some of whom having met with ingenious Writers survive themselves possibly more famous after death than before Others after a miserable life wasted are yet more miserable in being little better than Tables to set forth the Painters Workmanship and to let the World know that their Historians are more witty than they of whom they wrote were either wise or good And thus History that should be a witness of Truth and Time becomes little better than a Parable or rather than a Nonsence in a fair Character whose best commendation is that it is well written Doubtless Histories of Persons or Lives of Men have their excellency in Fruit for imitation and continuance of Fame as a reward of Vertue yet will not the coacervation of these together declare the nature of a Commonwealth better than the beauty of a Body dismembered is revived by thrusting together the Members which cannot be without deformity Nor will it be denied but many wise and good Kings and Queens of this Realm may justly challenge the honour of passing many excellent Laws albeit it is the proper work of the Representative Body to form them yet to no one nor all of them can we attribute the honour of that Wisdom and Goodness that constituted this blessed Frame of Government For seldom is it seen that one Prince buildeth upon the foundation of his Predecessor or pursueth his ends or aims because as several men they have several Judgements and Desires and are subject to a Royal kind of self-love that inciteth them either to exceed former Precedents or at least to differ from them that they may not seem to rule by Copy as insufficient of themselves which is a kind of disparagement to such as are above Add hereunto that it is not to be conceited that the wisest of our Ancestors saw the Idea of this Government nor was it any where in precedent but in him that determined the same from Eternity For as no Nation can shew more variety and inconstancy in the Government of Princes than this especially for three hundred years next insuing the Normans So reason cannot move imagination that these Wheels by divers if not contrary motions could ever conspire into this temperature of policy were there not some primum mobile that hath ever kept one constant motion in all My aim therefore shall be to lay aside the consideration of Man as much as may be and to extract a summary view of the cardinal passes of the Government of this Kingdom and
more uncapable of any new Light. But when the time fore-set is fully come all Mountains are laid low and double-folded Doors fly open and this Conquerour of all Nations attempts Britain not in the Rear nor by undermining but assails them in their full strength presents in a clear Sun-shine that one true Sacrifice of God-man at the appearing whereof their shadows of many Sacrifices of mans flesh fly away And thus those Druides that formerly had dominion of the Britons Faith become now to be helpers of their joy and are become the leaders of the blind people in a better way and unto a better hope and held forth that Light which through Gods mercy hath continued in this Island ever since through many Storms and dark Mists of time until the present Noon-day CHAP. III. Of the entry of the Romans into Britain and the state thereof during their continuance THis conversion of the Druides was but the first step to that which followed for the Decree was more full of grace than to make this Isle to be only as an Inne for him to whom it was formerly given for a possession The Romans are called into the work under whose Iron yoak God had subdued all Nations thereby more speedily to bring to pass his own conquest both of that one Head and all its Members The first Caesar had entred Britain before the Incarnation and having seen and saluted it and played his prize returned with the same only of Conquest of some few Lordships neighbouring to the Belgick shore and so it continued correspondent to the Romans or rather forgotten of them till the time of Claudius the Emperour who being at leisure to bethink him of the Britons Tribute or rather aspiring to honour by a way formerly untroden by his Ancestors first setled Colonies in Britain and brought it into the form of a Province and ingaged his Successors in a continual War to perfect that work which outwearied their strength at last and made them forego the prey as too heavy for the Eagle to truss and carry away It oft befals that things of deformed shape are nevertheless of excellent spirit and serve the turn best of all and it is no less remarkable that this tide of Roman invasion however it represented to the world little other than a tumour of vain-glory in the Romans that must needs be fatal to the Britons liberty and welfare yet by over-ruling providence it conduced so much to the Britons future glory as it must be acknowledged one of the chief master-pieces of supernatural moderatorship that ever this poor Island met with First he taught them to bear the yoke to stoop and become tractable for stubborn spirits must first stoop under power before they will stoop to instruction But this onely in the way for tractableness if good ensue not is of it self but a disposition for evil Secondly it brought into Britain the knowledge of Arts and Civility and questionless it was a wise policy of Agricola to go that way to work for it is an easie and Royal work to govern wise men but to govern fools or mad-men is a continual slavery and thus Religion already setled in Britain became honoured with a train of Attendants and Handmaids Thirdly they reduced the number of little Lordships nigher to the more honourable estate of Monarchy for the Romans by dear experience finding no stability or assurance in what they had gotten so long as so many petty Kings had the rule they wisely brought the whole into one Province because it is much easier to govern many subordinate each to other than co-ordinate one with another over which they allowed one chief to rule the people according to their own Laws saving their service to the Romans and their Lieutenants until they were necessitated to yield up all to the next occupant This served the British Church with a double interest The first Religion spreads sooner under one uniform Government than under variety and under Monarchy rightly ordered rather than any other Government whatsoever albeit that other Governments may afford it faster footing when it is entred Secondly Rome was a renowned Church throughout the world for gifts and graces and it is obvious to conceive that it was specially purposed by Divine Providence to make that place a Fountain that from thence the knowledge of Christ might convey it self joyfully with the influence of Imperial power as the spirits with the Blood into all Nations of that vast body Above one hundred years were spent in this Provincial way of Government of Britain under the Roman Lieutenants during all which time Religion spread under ground whiles the Roman power in a continual war sprang upward Nor is it strange that Religion should thrive in War the French Wars in Edward the Thirds time brought much of this happiness to England from the Waldenses and Germany had no less benefit by the wars of Charles the Fifth with the Italians French and Turks and thus the Romans levened with the Gospel by exchanging men with Britain and other mutual correspondencies insinuated that leven by degrees which in the conclusion prevailed over all For the Roman Lieutenants having gotten sure footing in Britain steered their course with a different hand generally they were of the Roman stamp seeking to kill Christ in the Cradle and by that means Religion met with many storms of bitter persecution and so was compelled to bear a low sail but some being more debonaire and of wiser observation soon found that the way of justice and gentleness had more Force in Britain than Arms and so endeavoured to maintain that by moderation which they had gotten by labour and blood as it is ever seen that where conquest is in the van gentleness follows in the rear because no Bow can stand long bent but at length must give in and grow weak And thus by connivance the Britons got a little more scope and Religion more encouragement till it became acquainted with the Roman Deputies began to treat with the Emperours themselves and under the wise government of Aurelius the Emperour mounting into the British Throne Crowned Lucius first of all Kings with the Royal Title of a Christian. He now not so much a Vassal as a Friend and Ally to the Romans and perceiving the Empire to be past noon and their Lieutenants to comply with the Christians began to provide for future Generations and according to the two grand defects of Religion and Justice applied himself for the establishment of both Religion in Britain hath hitherto been for the most part maintained by immediate influence from Heaven No Schools no Learning either maintained or desired the want whereof together with the persecutions stirred up by the Emperours especially Domitian brought the Church to so low an ebb that the Sacraments ceased for Histories tell us that Lucius sent to Rome for relief and that the Bishop of that place whether Evaristus or Eleutherius sent
shew a kind of rage and some rashness it might be imputed to the common infirmity of great men for as Oppression upon those that are inferiour makes them mad so doth Treachery against them that are superiour make them little other especially if they be overtaken with a fit of passion in the instant or their minds wrapped into a whirlpool of affairs But the change of Laws makes the greater noise wherein what change they suffered may appear from the premises if Writers have dealt uprightly otherwise general imputations without particular instances will never sway Opinion contrary to the current of the Laws that are published especially seeing we have observed the errour of the best Historian of those times in calling those things new which were anciently used in England before Normandy was in a condition of a State. Yet if this should be granted and that there were such change of Laws as is pretended it makes nothing to the point of Conquest so long as the new Laws are made by advice of Common-council and for the common good and so long as they are established to be Rules for Government I remember it is affirmed by some of those ancient Writers That the Duke or King would have brought in the Customs of Norway but the earnest Mediation of the English prevailed against it and this evinceth two things to my opinion First that there was question made what Law should be established Secondly that notwithstanding the interest that the Normans had in the Kingdom they could not prevail to bring in the whole body of their Law or of the Customs of Norway which were not onely the prima materia of their Law but also in kind had a setling at that very time in those places of this Kingdom where the Danes had their principal seat and therefore not altogether strange to the Saxons themselves The sum of which will be this That upon debate a Law must be setled and that not the Law of the Conquerour's own Will nor the Law that suits with his Desire but the ancient Law of the Kingdom And therefore if at any time the unquietness of some of the English brought the King to some thoughts of Arbitrary Rule and to shake off the clog of the Saxon Law it was long e're it stirred and sprang up too late to raise the Title of Conquest and withered too soon to settle it As touching the change of Customs for that also is imputed to the Conquerour it cannot be denied but some alteration might be in matters of smaller consideration yet are the Writers not without mistake in the particular instances For whereas they tell us that the Conquerour took away the custom of Gavel-kind and brought the custom of discent to the eldest Son and that Kent saved their Liberties and continued this custom of Gavel-kind I shall not contend about the Liberties of Kent but must till I see better reason hold the opinion of the change of Inheritance to be a meer conceit For besides what hath been already said concerning that custom of Gavel kind if we believe Glanvil the difference was between Lands holden by Knight's-service and in Socage the first of which in his time by ancient custom always descended to the eldest and those Lands that were holden in Socage if not partible by custom in which case they went equally to all the Sons went by custom in some places to the eldest in other places to the youngest so as the Rule of Inheritance in the Norman times was custom as well as in former times And furthermore if the custom of Gavel-kind had been the general custom of this Nation the King by his change had contradicted his own Prerogative and granted as great a Liberty to his Subjects as could have been invented For had the custom of Gavel-kind happened upon the Lands in Knight-service it had brought all the Sons under the Law of Wardship and had made a ready way to enthral all men of Worth and undo all Husbandry the first whereof had been as advantageous to the King 's private interest as both destructive to the publick Nor is it clear from any Author of credit that the Normans changed the Tenures of Lands albeit that it cannot be denied but such Lands as he had by forfeiture or otherwise were in his own power to dispose upon what Tenure he pleased for as well before the Normans time as long after Tenures were like as the Services were all at the Will of the Donor and were of as many Individuals almost as the minds of the Owners Some being of more general regard and publick use are recorded amongst the grounds of English Laws none of which appear to me to be of Norman original although they received their names according to that Dialect The next thing objected is the change of Language which thing some Writers tell us the King endeavoured or which is worse to be so absolute as to be absolute Tyrant and to publish Laws in a foreign Language that the people through ignorance might the rather transgress and thereby forfeit their Estates This if true so sar differed from the nature of a Conquerour as rather proveth that he was put to his shifts Nevertheless the thing tasteth so much of Spleen as it might occasion distrust of other relations concerning this subject For besides that it is nonsence for a Conqueror to entitle himself by a cheat where he hath an elder Title by Conquest I shall in full answer to that calumny insert a passage of an Historian that was in the continual view of publick affairs in those times who speaking of the Conqueror saith That he commended the Confessor's Laws to his Justices in the same Language wherein they were wont formerly to be written lest through ignorance the people might rashly offend And another Author saith That the King had a desire to learn the English Tongue that he might the better know their Law and judge according thereto It is probable nevertheless that the Laws were in the Norman Tongue and it is no less likely that the Pleadings in real Actions especially were also in the same Language else must the Normans be put to School to learn English upon peril of loss of their Estates But that either the written Laws were wholly concluded into the Norman Tongue or that the publick pleading of Causes by word of mouth in all Actions where the issue was left to the Country were in any other Language than English no advised Reader will conceive seeing it had been a madness for an English Jury to pass their Verdict in any case wherein it is likely many of them understood scarce a syllable of the Norman Language much less ought of the matter upon which their Verdict should be grounded Adde hereunto that it is not likely but the Conquerour inhibited the use of the English Language in all matters of publick Record inasmuch as the Charters made by him to corporate Towns and
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
this power within its own bounds than the watry Element upon which it sloated but it made continual waves upon the Franchise of the Land and for this cause no sooner had these great men savoured of the Honour and Authority of that Dignity but comes a Statute to restrain their Authority in the Cognizance of Cases only unto such matters as are done upon the main Sea as formerly was wont to be And within two years after that Act of Parliament is backed by another Act to the same purpose in more full expressions saving that for Man-slaughter the Admirals power extended even to the high water-mark and into the main streams And this leadeth on the next consideration viz. What is the subject matter of this Jurisdiction and Authority I shall not enter into the depth of particulars but shall reduce all to the two heads of Peace and Justice The Lord Admiral is as I formerly said a Justice of Peace at Sea maintaining the Peace by power and restoring the Peace by setting an Order unto matters of Difference as well between Foraigners as between the English and Foraigners as may appear by that Plea in the fourth Institutes formerly mentioned Secondly That point of Justice principally concerneth matters of Contract and Complaints for breach of Contract of these the Admiral is the Judge to determine according to Law and Custom Now as subservient unto both these he hath Authority of command over Sea-men and Ships that belong to the State and over all Sea-men and Ships in order to the service of the State to arrest and order them for the great voyages of the King and Realm and during the said voyage but this he cannot do without express Order because the determining of a voyage Royal is not wholly in his power Lastly the Lord Admiral hath power not only over the Sea-men serving in the Ships of State but over all other Sea-men to arrest them for the service of the State and if any of them run away without leave from the Admiral or power deputed from him he hath power by enquiry to make a Record thereof and certifie the same to the Sheriffs Mayors Bailiffs c. who shall cause them to be apprehended and imprisoned By all which and divers other Laws not only the power of the Admiral is declared but the original from whence it is derived namely from the Legislative power of the Parliament and not from the single person of the King or any other Council whatsoever But enough hath been already said of these Courts of State in their particular precincts One general interest befalls them all That as they are led by a Law much different from the Courts of Common-Law so are they thereby the more endeared to Kings as being subservient to their Prerogative no less than the Common-Law is to the peoples liberty In which condition being looked upon as Corrivals this principal Maxime of Government will thence arise That the bounds of these several Laws are so to be regarded that not the least gap of intrenchment be laid open each to other lest the Fence once broken Prerogative or Liberty should become boundless and bring in Confusion instead of Law. CHAP. VI. Of the Church-mens Interest BUt the Church-mens interest was yet more Tart standing in need of no less allay than that of the King's Authority for that the King is no less concerned therein than the people and the rather because it was now grown to that pitch that it is become the Darling of Kings and continually henceforth courted by them either to gain them from the Papal Jurisdiction to be more engaged to the Crown or by their means to gain the Papal Jurisdiction to be more favourable and complying with the Prerogative Royal. The former times were tumultuous and the Pope is gained to joyn with the Crown to keep the people under though by that means what the Crown saved to it self from the people it lost to Rome Henceforth the course of Affairs grew more civil or if you will graced with a blush of Religion and it was the policy of these times whereof we now treat to carry a benign Aspect to the Pope so far only as to slave him off from being an enemy whilst Kings drove on a new design to ingratiate and engage the Church men of their own Nation unto it's own Crown This they did by distinguishing the Office or Dignity of Episcopacy into the Ministerial and Honourable Parts the later they called Prelacy and was superadded for encouragement of the former and to make their work more acceptaple to men for their Hospitalities sake for the maintenance whereof they had large Endowments and Advancements And then they reduced them to a right understanding of their Original which they say is neither Jus Divinum nor Romanum but that their Lordships power and great possessions were given them by the Kings and others of this Realm And that by vertue thereof the Patronage and custody of the Possessions in the vacancy ought to belong to the Kings and other the Founders and that unto them the right of Election into such advancements doth belong not unto the Pope nor could he gain other Title unto such power but by usurpation and encroachment upon the right of others But these great men were not to be won by Syllogisms Ordinarily they are begotten between Ambition and Covetousness nourished by Riches and Honour and like the Needle in the Compass turn ever after that way Edward the Third therefore labours to win these men heaped Honour and Priviledges upon them that they might see the gleanings of the Crown of England to be better than the vintage of the Tripple Crown Doubtless he was a Prince that knew how to set a full value upon Church men especially such as were devout and it may be did somewhat outreach in that course For though he saw God in outward events more than any of his Predecessors and disclaiming all humane merits reflected much upon God's mercy even in smaller blessings yet we find his Letters reflect very much upon the Prayers of his Clergy he loved to have their Persons nigh unto him put them into places of greatest Trust for Honour and Power in Judicature and not altogether without cause he had thereby purchased unto his Kingdom the name and repute of being a Kingdom of Priests But all this is but Personal and may give some liking to the present Incumbents but not to the expectants and therefore the Royal Favour extended so far in these times as to bring on the Parliament to give countenance to the Courts and Judiciary power of the Ordinaries by the positive Law of the Kingdom although formerly the Canons had already long since made way thereto by practice I shall hereof note these few particulars ensuing Ordinaries shall not be questioned in the King's Court for Commutation Testamentary Matters or Matrimonial Causes nor other things touching Jurisdiction of Holy-Church Things
the issue will be And therefore though it in the general be more beneficial that all Exportation and Importation might be by our own Shipping yet in regard times may be such as now they were that the Shipping of this Nation is more than ordinarily employed for the service of the State And that every Nation striveth to have the benefit of Exportation by Vessels of their own And Lastly in regard the case may be such as Importation may be at a cheaper rate by forein Vessels and Exportation likewise may for the time be more prejudicial to this Nation if done by our own Shipping than those of other Nations Therefore the course must be changed so far forth as will stand with the occasions of the State and common profit of this Nation And for these causes and such-like in the times whereof we now treat the Laws often varied Sometimes no Staple-Commodity must be Exported in English bottoms sometimes all must be done by them and within a year again that liberty was restrained and after that liberty given to Foreiners to Export as formerly The third and last Consideration is as necessary as any of the former for if Trade be maintained out of the main Stock the Kingdom in time must needs be brought to penury because it is their Magazine And for this cause it was provided That all Wool should remain at the Staple 15 days to the end it might be for the Kingdoms use if any one would buy they must do it within that time otherwise it might be exported The sixth means of advancement of Trade was the setling of the Staple for as it was an encouragement to the first establishing of the Manufacture that the Staples were let loose so when the Manufactures had taken root the Staple especially now fixed to places within this Kingdom brought much more encouragement thereto First For preserving a full Market For whilst the Commodity lies scattered in all places the Market must needs be the leaner partly in regard the Commodity lies in obscurity and partly because when it is known where yet it is not easily discovered whether it be vendible or not and besides small parcels are not for every man's labour and the greater are not for every man's money Secondly Staples are convenient for the slating of the general price of the Commodities in regard the quantity of the Commodity is thereby the more easily discovered which commonly makes the price And the quantity of the Commodity thus discovered will not onely settle the price to it self but also ballance the price of the Manufacture Thirdly The Staple having thus discovered the quantity of the Commodity will be a ready way to settle the quantity of the main Stock that must be preserved and regulate Exportation as touching the overplus But it cannot be denied that the first and principal mover of the making of the Staple was the benefit of the Crown For when the Commodity was gone beyond the Sea it importeth not to the Subjects in England whether the same be sold at one place or more or in what place the same be setled until the Manufacture was grown to some stature and then the place became litigious The benefit of Exportation pretended much interest in the setling thereof beyond the Sea but in truth it was another matter of State. For when it was beyond Sea it was a moveable Engine to convey the King's pleasure or displeasure as the King pleased for it was a great benefit to the Countrey or place where-ever it setled or else it moved or stayed according to the inclination of the People where it was either for War or Peace But on the contrary the Interest of the people began to interpose strongly And for these causes the Parliament likewise intermeddled in the place and thus the Scene is altered Sometimes it is beyond the Seas in one place or in another sometimes in England In Edward the Third's time we find it sometimes at Calis sometimes in England In Richard the Second's time we find it again beyond the Seas at Middleburgh thence removed to Calis and after into England Where at length the people understood themselves so well that the Parliament setled the same it being found too burthensome for the Manufactures to travel to the Staple beyond the Seas for the Commodity that grew at their own doors besides the enhansing of the price by reason of the Carriage which falling also upon the Manufactures must needs tend to the damage of the whole Kingdom This was one way indeed and yet possibly another might have been found For if a Computation had been made of the main Stock and a Staple setled within the Kingdom for that and the overplus exported to a Staple beyond the Sea it might have proved no less commodious and more complying It is very true that there are many that call for the Liberty of the people that every man may sell his own Commodity as he pleases and it were well that men would consider themselves as well in their Relations as in their own Personal Respects For if every man were independent his liberty would be in like manner independent but so long as any man is a Member of a Common-wealth his liberty must likewise depend upon the good of the Common-wealth and if it be not good for the Nation that every man should sell his own Commodity as he pleaseth he may claim the liberty as a Free-man but not as an English-man Nor is that liberty just so long as his Country hath an interest in his Commodity for its safety and welfare as in his own person I do not assert the manner of buying the Staple-Commodities by Merchants of the Staple to sell the same again in kind for their private advantage Divers limitations must concur to save it from an unlawful ingrossing nor doth it appear to me that the Staplers in these times used such course or were other than mere Officers for the regulating of the Staple in nature of a Court of Piepowders belonging to some Fair or Market Nevertheless I conjecture that it may well be made evident from principles of State that Marts Markets and Staples of Commodities that are of the proper Off-spring of this Nation are as necessary to Trade as Conduits are to places that want Water The seventh and last means that was set on foot in these times for the advance of Trade was the regulating of the Mint and the current of Money This is the life and soul of Trade for though exchange of Commodities may do much yet it cannot be for all because it is not the lot of all to have exchangeable Commodities nor to work for Apparel and Victual Now in the managing of this trick of Money two things are principally looked unto First That the Money be good and currant Secondly That it should be plentiful As touching the excellency of the Money several Rules were made as against
This reducing of Treason into a narrower ground made the Regiment of Felonies to swell A hard thing it was in a Warring time for men to conceit themselves well drest until they were compleatly armed Some used it for a Complement and amongst others honest men had as good cause to use it as some that were ill-affected had a bad and of the last sort some did aim at private revenge though many aimed against the publick quiet But however the intentions of men thus harnassed might be different the looks of them all are so sour that it is hard to know a man for Peace from a man for War. And therefore the people were now so greedy after Peace as they are ready to magnifie or multiply all postures of arm'd men into the worst fashion being well assur'd that the readiest way to keep themselves from the hurt of such men is to have none of them at all But Edward the Third had more need of them than so and will therefore allow men to ride armed but not to Troop together to rob kill or imprison any man and if any person did otherwise it should be Felony or Trespass but not High Treason All this was in favour to the people and yet it was not all for when Mercy groweth profuse it becomes Cruelty Murther is very incident to times of War yet is an Enemy to the Peace of so high a nature that though the King's Pardon may do much yet both King and People declare it an impardonable crime by the Common Law and that the King's Prerogative shall not extend so far as to pardon the same This Justice done to the party dead was a mercy to them that were alive a means to save bloud by bloudshed and not so much by the King's Grant as by his Release One thing more in these cases of bloud the people obtained of the King which they had not so much by Release as by Grant and that was the taking away of Englishire an ancient Badge of the Imperial power of the Danes over the Saxons and which had either continued through the desidiousness of the Saxons in the times of Edward the Confessor unto the Normans time or by them taken up again and continued until these times that Edward the Third was so far desirous to declare his readiness to maintain the Liberties of the people as to be willing to restore them where they failed and in particular took away the manner of presentment of Englishire blotting out the Title and Clause concerning it out of the Articles of Inquiry for the Judges Itinerant And thus whether Native or Foreiner all men are now made in death equal and one Law serves all alike Next unto bloud these times grew more sensible of Ravishments than former times had done For though they had determined a severe penalty against so foul a crime and made it in the nature of a Felony capital which was enough to have scared any man from such attempts yet for the proof of the matter in Fact much rested upon the will of the Woman which for the most part grounded upon self-respects and private prudence laboured to conceal that which could not be made whole by revealing and by after-consent skin'd over the sore as to themselves which corrupted inwardly and endangered the whole Body To cure which a Law is made to restrain such late connivance in the Woman by depriving her both of her Joynture and Inheritance which otherwise had been saved to her by such compliance as after-consent unto such violations CHAP. X. Of the Course of Civil Justice during these times HOwever the course of the Law concerning matters of the Crown passed in a troubled Wave yet in matters of Common Pleas it passed in a Calm and full Channel as the Reports in Print do sufficiently witness nor was there any change of Principles but onely some alteration tending to a clearer manifestation of the same I will not touch upon every particular but onely upon two which reflect somewhat upon the publick Policy the one touching the course of Inheritance in some particular cases the other touching pleading in the Courts of Civil Justice The first of these was occasioned from Conjuncture of Affairs the case being such that Edward the Third had now gotten himself a new Kingdom unto that of England and must look to maintain that by power which he obtained by force and conducing thereunto must have continual employment of the English in that Service as being most trusty to his Cause And that it is unreasonable that such English as had devoted themselves to his Service in this Cause and in order thereunto had transported themselves and their Families into those foreign parts should thereby lose the benefit of Lieges in the Birth-right of their Children born in those foreign parts Upon consideration had thereof and of a former leading Opinion of the Lawyers Parliament a Declarative Law was made That all Children born without the Kings Legiance whose Father and Mother at the time of their birth shall be under the Faith and Legiance of the King of England shall have the benefit of Inheritance within the same Legiance as other Inheritors have These are the words of the Statute and do occasion a double observation one from the matter the other from the manner of the Expression The Subject matter is so delivered not as an Introduction of a new Law but as a Declarative of the old that lay more obscurely hidden for want of occasion to reveal it and the substance thereof resteth onely in this To enable the Children of English Natives born beyond the Seas not the Children of those that are of foreign birth though within the Kings Territories in those parts as the Opinion hath been Nor doth any ancient Precedent or Case warrant the same as might be at large manifested if it might conduce to the end of this Discourse And for the same cause after this Statute whenas the Commons would have had a general Naturalizing of all Infants born beyond the Sea within the Kings Segniories the same would not be granted otherwise than according to the former Statute and the Common Law. That which in the next place concerneth the manner of Expression is this That a Child is said to be born out of the Kings Legiance and yet the Father and Mother at the same time to be of the Faith and Legiance of the King of England It seemeth to me that it intendeth onely those Children of English Parents born within the Kings Territories beyond the Seas because the words ensuing concerning Certification of Bastardy of such Children are That the same shall be made by the Bishop of such place upon the Kings Writ directed to him which could never have passed into those places that are not of the Kings Territories And so the Issue will be That the Legiance of those born in those parts though they are Leiges to the King yet they
not a Fine is set upon them if others run away from their Conduct a Writ issued to the Serjeant at Arms to apprehend them if they were not arrayed then the Recognizances of such as undertook the work are estreated All plunder or spoil committed by the Souldiers in their Conduct was to be satisfied by the Conductor or Commander that received their Pay or Charges for their Conduct And although the Charges for Conduct had formerly de facto been defrayed sometimes by the County by virtue of Commissions that issued forth both for the raising and conducting of them yet was this no rule nor did Edward the Third claim any such duty but disclaimed it and ordained by Act of Parliament That both the Pay and Conduct-money should be disbursed by the King from the time of their departure from their several Counties For to this end and for the safeguard of the Realm and for the maintenance of the Wars of Scotland France and Gascoign the King had supply from Aids Reliefs Wardship● Marriages Customs and Escheats Nor did the Parliament grant any particular Aid by the Assessment or publick Tax but when they evidently saw the burthen of War to be extraordinary as it befel in the Conquest of so great and potent a Realm as France was Wherein although the Taxes were many yet so well ordered were they and with that compliance from the King that the people endured them with much patience so long as the King lived Lastly in all these Cases of Foreign Wars for of such Cases onely these Laws are to be understood it was especially provided That no man should be distrained or urged against his will to go out of his County But in case of defensive War the course was otherwise for all men in such cases are bound by the Law of Nature to defend their own Country from Invasion in order to the safety of their own Estates and Habitations They were arrayed or gathered together by Commission of Array from the King armed according to the Laws formerly mentioned and not by Arbitrary order of the Commissioners And by virtue of such Commissions they were drawn forth and led to places where need required Sometimes to one Coast sometimes to another yet not altogether at the Kings pleasure for the Parliament upon occasion set rules of Restriction and generally exempted the North-parts beyond Humber from being drawn Southward and left them as a reserve for the defence of the Marches bordering upon Scotland and sometimes ordered the Array should be executed onely in some particular Counties and other times wholly exempted the County adjacent within six miles of the Sea-coast And because the King might under colour of a defence array the people where no such occasion led the way and command them out of their Counties a Statute is made that states the Case wherein such Array shall be the words whereof are variously set forth in the Books in print whether determinatively or carelesly I cannot tell but all of them to differ in sence one from another and from the Truth Some of the common Books have the words thus None shall be distrained to go out of their Counties unless for cause of necessity and of sudden coming of Strangers or Enemies into the Kingdom Others read it thus But where necessity requireth and the coming of strange Enemies into the Kingdom The Kings Answer to the Parliaments Declaration concerning the Commission of Array would read it thus Vnless in case of Necessity or of sudden coming of strange Enemies c. But the words in the Roll are these Et que nulls ne soient distresses d'aller hors de les Countees si non pur Cause de necessity de suddaine venue des Stranges Enemies en Reyaulme In English thus word for word And that none be distrained to go out of the Counties if not for cause of Necessity of sudden coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdom which words determine the point That none shall be by Commission of Array drawn out of their County but in case of necessity And secondly that this case of necessity is onely the coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdom so as probably the Invasion must be actual before they be drawn out of their Counties and not onely feared and it must be a sudden Invasion and not of publick note and common fame foregoing for then the ordinary course either of Parliament or otherwise must be used to call those that are bound by Statute or Tenures or Voluntiers to that service seeing every Invasion is not so fatal as to require a Commission for a General Array Against what hath been thus noted the judgement of Sir Edward Coke in Calvin's Case lies yet in the way who affirmeth that the Subjects of England are bound by their Legiance to go with the King in his Wars as well within the Realm as without and this Legiance he telleth us is that natural Legiance which he saith is absolute and indefinite c. and not local which if not so then were not the English bound to go out of England an inference that is neither necessary nor is the thing affirmed certain It is not necessary because English men may be bound to go out of England by vertue of their Tenures particular Contract or else by special Act of Parliament and not by vertue of that natural Legiance which in truth is nowhere Now for the maintenance of the point the Reporter alledgeth two Statutes affirming the thing and common practice and lastly Authorities of the Judges of the Common Law. As touching the Statutes one in Henry the Seventh's time and the other in Edward the Sixth's time I shall speak of them in the succeeding times when we come at them for they are no Warrant of the Law in these times whereof we now treat much less is the modern practice of these later days a demonstration of the Law in the times of Edward the Third nor of the nature of the Law in any time seeing that it is obvious to times as well as particular persons to do and suffer things to be done which ought not so to be and therefore I shall for the present lay those two Considerations aside But as touching the Opinions of the Judges of the Common Law two Cases are cited in the Affirmative which seem in the Negative and the rest conclude not to the point The first of the two Cases is the opinion of Justice Thirning in the time of Henry the Fourth word for word thus A Protection lies for the Defendant in a Writ upon the Statute of Labourers and yet the Defendant shall not have such matter by way of Plea viz. That the King hath retained him to go beyond the Sea for the King cannot compel a man to go out of the Kingdom that is as the Reporter saith Not without Wages intimating thereby that if the King shall tender Wages to