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

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left the Duke to stand or fall before some other power which came to passe upon the entry of the next Successor The greatest trouble of his Government arose from the prosecution of a designe of his Grand-Fathers Henry the seventh for the uniting of the two Crownes of England and Scotland by marriage and settling an induring peace within this Isle and unto this worke all were ayders in both Nations but the Enemies of both But Gods wayes are not as Mans its a rare example to finde out one Marriage that did ever thrive to this end England meaned well in profering Love but the wooing was ill favoredly carried on by so much Blood Lastly As the Government was now tender so was it carried with much compliance with the People which ever gives occasion to such of them that are irregular to be more and such as are wel governed to be less because though pleasing it be yet it is with lesse awe and spirit which renders their obedience at the best but carelesse and idle unlesse such as are very consciencious be the more carefull over their owne wayes by how much their superiours are the lesse NOt thus was Queen Mary but like a Spaniard shee overruled all relations and ingagements by designe she was about forty yeares old and yet unmarried when shee came to the Throne it may seeme shee wanted a minde to that course of Life from naturall abstinency or was loath to adventure her feature which was not excellent to the Censure of any Prince of as high degree as shee held her self to be or her value was unknown so as to persons of meaner Interests shee might seeme too much above and to those of greater too much beneath Or possibly her Father was loath to let the World know her Title to the Crowne till needs must or to raise up a Title for an other man so long as he had hope of a Son of his own to succeed him and yet had formerly designed her for a wife to Charles the fifth and afterwards to the Dauphine of France Or it may be her self had set a command upon her self not to change her Estate till shee saw the course of the Crown either to or fro however the time is now come that shee must marry or adventure her Woman-hood upon an uncertaine and troublesome state of Affaires Shee liked the Lord Courtnoe above the Prince of Spaine but feared he would not designe with her Shee held him not unmeet for her degree for shee feared he was good enough for her Sister that then also had the Title of a Kingdome waiting so nigh her person as shee was an object of hope to her Freinds and feare to her Enemies And yet Queene Mary married the Prince of Spaine It may be it ran in the blood to marry into their owne blood or rather shee was thereto led by reason of state partly to inable her with greater security in the reseisure of her Kingdome in the Popish Religion wherein shee knew shee had to do with a People not easie to be reduced where Conscience pretended reluctancy and partly to assure her Dominion against the outworks of the French and Scottish designes And so shee yeilded up the Supremacy of her Person to the Prince of Spaine but thanks to the Nobility the Supremacy of the Kingdome was reserved to her own use for it was once in her purpose to have given up all to the man rather then to misse of the man And yet their condition was not much comfortable to either the peoples dislike of the match sounded so loud abroad that when the Prince was to come over the Emperour his Father demanded fifty Pledges for his Sons safty during his abode in this Land which was also denied when he was come over the English Feare the Spanish Tiranny and the Spanish the old Saxon entertainment of the Danes so both ly at their close guards as after some time the King and Queen did no lesse for the Queen was either never earnest in her affection or now much lesse finding his Body diseased and his Minde lingring after unlawfull game On the other side the King not finding that content in her Person especially after her supposed Concepcion that he expected looked to his owne Interest apart from hers and thereby taught her to do the like and this she thought cost England the losse of Callis and he Spaine the losse of many advantages that might have been obtained and was expected from this conjunction Thus by the severall interests betweene the King Regnant and the Queen Regent the Government of England became like a knot dissolving neither fast nor loose Towards the People she might well be reserved if not rigid for she knew her entry was not very acceptable though accepted and that her designe was contrary to her ingagements and therefore it was vaine to think to please her self and pleasure them Nor did she much busie her thoughts therewith that abominated trick of Impost upon Merchandise she brought into fashion which had by many publique acts been damned for the space of two hundred years this was done without either shame or fear for if the People turned head she knew she had a good reserve from Spaine and the People might very well consider of that though for her part she desired not much to improve that Forraine Interest because she might well see that Spaine designed to keep England so far beneath that France might not get above And that Phillip neither loved the double Crowne of England no nor the triple Crowne at Rome otherwise then in order to that of Spaine This distance between her and her King wrought her to a more nigh dependency upon her Councell and English Nobility and so became lesse discerned in her Government although questionlesse she did much and wanted not Wisdome or courage to have done more but that she was not wholly her owne Woman All men do agree that she was devout in her kind of profession and therin as deeply ingaged as her Brother Edward had beene in his though it may be out of tendernesse of Conscience but she out of a Spanish kind of gravity that indures not change and whereunto she was well aided by her Clergy who were her beloved for her Mothers sake and now also so much the more sowre by how much the nigher to the bottome It s the lesse wonder therefore if the zeale of these times burnt into a flame that at length consumed even those that kindled it In one thing more above all the rest she acted the part of her Sect rather then her Place and the same contrary to the advice of her Ghostly Fathers and all rules of policy and the agreement between her King and self upon Marriage which was the ingageing of England in the Warr at Saint Qui ntins against the French contrary to the Nationall league formerly made Neverthelesse the issue was but sutable for though the English
b. fol. 7. a. which is a word of a vast extent serving rather to amaze mens apprehensions then to inlighten them and therefore the Reporter did well not to trouble himself or the Reader in the clearing or proof thereof but left the Point rather to be beleived then understood nor shall I in the Negative for God himself can have no other Legiance from an English man then 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 Universall and Immutable fol. 5. b. fol. 12. and neither defined by Time Place or Person As touching the Time and Person the Reporter inlarged 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 naturall Capacity as the Reporter would have it But as touching the Place it s 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 Dominion though otherwise Forrain as to the power of the Law of England yea saith the Reporter as farre 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 speake be absolute and omni soli semper then is it due to the King from an English man ubivis Gentium Neverthelesse to take the Reporter in a moderate sense it is worth consideration whether English Legiance in the dayes of Edward the Third extended as far as the Kings power of Protection when as he had the Crown of France in a Forrain 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 minde 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 Kings Dominions but concerning the ground it may be denied for though simply in it selfe considered as a notion Verity or Fidelity 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 modell which though not absolute and indefinite yet if according to the Lawes of the place wherein the man is he is truely said to be Verus Fidelis Secondly the Reporter argueth that the Kings Protection is not Locall 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 Syllogisme it had appeared lesse valuable for the Protection of an English King qua talis of an English man is locall and included within the bounds of the Kingdome But if the same King be also King of France or Duke of Aquitane and an English man shall travell into those parts he is still under the same Kings 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 unlimitted absolute Protection without regard had to the Customes or Lawes of the place yea contrary to them which I beleive the Reporter never intended to affirme Thirdly the Reporter falleth upon the matter in Fact and tells us that the King of England did many times De facto grant Protections to Persons in places out of the English Confines and it will not be denied But never was any absolute and indefinite Protection so granted for the Protection extends to defence from injury and all injury is to be expounded and judged according to the Lawes of the place Nor doe any the Presidents vouched by the Reporter clear that the King of England did grant as King of England Protection to any English man in any parts of the Kings Dominion beyond the Seas which was not qualified according to the Lawes and Customes of that place especially it being apparent that an English King may hold Dominion in Forrain parts in Legiance under a Forrain King as Edward the Third held the Dutchy of Guien and therefore cannot grant absolute Protection in such place nor receive absolute Legiance from any person there being Fourthly the Reporter saith that the King of England hath power to command his Subjects of England to goe with him in his Warres as well without the Realm of England as within the same therefore the Legiance of an English man to his King is indefinite and not locall or circumscribed by place or within the Kingdome of England Although the first of these be granted yet will not the inference hold for possibly this may arise from the constitution of a Positive Law and not from naturall or absolute Legiance nor doth any authority by him cited justifie any such Legiance But I cannot agree the first for it is not true that the King hath any such power from his own Personall interest nor doe the authoritie of former Ages warrant any such matter for a fuller disquisition whereof I shall refer the Reader to the eleventh Chapter ensuing because the Whole matter concerning the Militia commeth there to be handled in course Fifthly to close up all the rest the Reporter brings The Testimony of the Judges of the Common Law out of the Testimony of Hengham wherein an Action was brought by a French woman against an English man who refused to answer because the Plaintiffe was a French Woman and not of the Legiance or Faith of England This was disallowed by the Judges because Legiance and Faith was referred to England and not to the King Thereupon the Defendant averred that the Plaintiffe is not of the Legiance of England nor of the Faith of the King And upon this Plea thus amended the Plaintiffe gave over her Action The Reporter from hence observeth that Faith and Legiance is referred to the King indefinitely and generally and therefore it is so due to him The reason might have had more force had the Object of Allegiance or the nature thereof been the point in question but neither of them comming to debate and Allegiance being subjected to England and Faith to the King I see not what more can be concluded from hence but that Allegiance
underlings to the great men then they are to their Fethers to were them no longer then they will make them brave Secondly the Person thus agreed upon his intertainment 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 especiall manner for as their work is full of reflexion so formerly they had met with many sad influences for their labour And therefore a penall 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 uniforme Government in future times then England hitherto had seen CAHP. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni KIngs though they have vast dimensions yet are not infinite nor greater then the bounds of one Kingdome wherein if present they are in all places present if otherwise they are like the Sunn gone down and must rule by reflexion as the Moone in the night In a mixt common wealth they are integrall members and therefore regularly must act Per deputatum when their Persons are absent in another Ligialty and cannot act Per se Partly because their Lustre is somewhat eclipsed by another Horizon and partly because 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 Vicegerents in their absence ' giving them severall titles and severall powers according as the necessity of affaires required Sometimes they are called Lord Warden or Lord Keeper of the Kingdome and have therewith the generall power of a King as it was with John Warren Earle of Surry appointed therunto by Edw. 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 Forrainer had the like power given him by Edward the second over England to the reproach of the English Nobility which also they revenged afterward Somtimes these Vicegerents are called Lievtenants which seemeth to conferr onely the Kings power in the Militia as a Lievtenant Generall in an army And thus Richard the second made Edmund Duke of Yorke his Lievtenant of the Kingdome of England to oppose the entry of the Duke of Hertford Afterwards called Henry the fourth into England during the Kings absence in Ireland And in the mean while the other part of the Royalty which concerned the revenues of the Crowne was betrusted to the Earle of Wiltshire Sir John Bush Sir James Baggot and Sir Henry Green unto whom men say the King put his Kingdome to farme But more ordinarily the Kings power was delegated unto one under both the titles of Lord Gaurdian of the Kingdome and Lievtenant within the same such was the title of Henry Lacy Earle of Lincolne and of Gilbert De clare Earle of Glocester and of Audomar De valentia Earle of Pembroke all of them at severall times so constituted by Edward the second as by the Patent Roles appeareth So likewise did Edward the third make his Brother John of E●tham twice and the black Prince thrice and Lionell Duke Clarence and his Brother Thomas each of them once in the severall passages of Edward the third beyond the Sea in the third fifth twelfth fourteenth sixteenth nineteenth and thirty third years of his reigne concerning which see the Patent Rolls of those yeares And Henry the fifth gave likewise the same title and authority to the Duke of Bedford upon the Kings voyage into France and afterward that Duke being sent over to second the King in the French Wars the Duke of Glocester obtained the same power and place But Henry the sixth added a further title of Protector and Defendor of the Kingdome and Church of England this was first given to the Duke of Bedford and afterwards he being made Regent of France it was conferred upon the Duke of Glocester And towards the later time of Henry the sixth it was granted by him to Richard Duke of Yorke This title carried along with it a power different from that of a King onely in honor and the Person so adorned may be said to sway the Scepter but not to weare the Crowne And therefore in the minority of Henry the sixth when as the Government was ordered by the Parliament and to that end a Protector was made and he wel guarded with a Privy Councill and they provided with instructions one of them was that in all matters not to be transacted ordinarily but by the Kings expresse consent the Privy Councell should advise with the Prorector but this is not so needfull in regard that it concerneth the power of executing of Lawes which by right of the liberty of the Subject is the known duty of the Scepter in whose hands soever it is holden And therefore I shall passe to the Legislative power wherein its evident that the Protectors power was no whit inferiour to the Kings power For first the Protector Ex officio by advice of the Councell did summon Parliaments by Writs even as the Kings themselves under their owne Teste and if not bear the Royall Assent yet did they direct the same and received Petitions in Parliament to them directed as to Kings and every way supplied the roome of a King in order to the perfecting publishing and inforcing of Law to Execution Secondly the Parliaments holden by Protectors and Lawes therein made are no whit inferiour to those by the King whether for Honour or Power And therefore if a Parliament be-holden by the Lord Warden and sitting the Parliament the King in person shall arrive and be there present neither is the Parliament interrupted thereby nor the power thereof changed at all though the power and place of the Wardenship of the Kingdome doth utterly vanish by the personall accesse of the King because in all Cases where the King is subservient to the Kingdome or the Common-wealth The Lord Warden in his absence is conservient unto him being in his stead and not under him for the very Place supposeth him as not because not present And this was by a Law declaratively published at such time as Henry the fifth was Regent of France and therefore by common presumption was likely to have much occasion of residence in that Kingdome and it holdeth in equall force with all other Lawes of the highest Size which is the rather to be noted because it is though under a Protector obligatory to the King and makes his personall presence no more considerable then the presence of his shadow For the King spent three whole yeares in the French Warres and during that time never saw England where
now began to honour his Valour above his Fathers But the Tyde is spent the Prince of Chivalry dyes the brave Commanders wasted and the French too fickle to continue subject to the English longer then needs must tack about for another Adventure and make it plaine that France is too bigg to be Garrison'd by England and that it will cost England more to hold it then to have it His Religion was more to the purpose then of any of his Predecessors since the Norman times he reflected upon God in common events more ordinarily then the generall streame of the Clergy did in those dayes He loved if not adored devout men and their prayers and yet intentively disclaimed opinion of merits in the Creature Hee saw the Pope through and through loved him but little feared him lesse and yet lost neither Honour nor Power thereby His cheife policy at home was to be much at home great with his People and they great with him what the Parliament did he accounted well done he never questioned their Power though he was over-reached in questioning their Wisedome For he that shall preferr his owne wisedome above that of the Parliament must needs thinke himselfe extreamly Wise and so much the more to know himselfe to be such But the worst of his fate was to live to his Winter age and after fifty yeares Reigne or more to dye in his minority under the rule of a Woman of none of the best fame after hee had so long enjoyed the honour of greatest note in the Christian World in his dayes Such was not Richard the Second though the onely Son of that famous Cheiftaine the Black Prince of Wales a renouned Son of a renouned Father but as a Plant transplanted into a Savage soyle in degree and disposition wholly degenerate retained a tincture of the light inconstancy of his Mother and the luxuriousnesse of his Great Grandfather Edward the Second and running his course came to his end His entrance however by colour of Inheritance yet was a greater adventure then his Predecessors that came in by election upon the designation of his Father by his last Will say some For this man came in upon many disadvantages both of time and person The times were very troublesome the Kingdome new wrapped up in a double Warr abroad and which is worse flooded with distractions at home contracted partly by his Predecessors weaknesses in his decrepit estate partly by a new interest of Religion sprung up against the Papall Tyranny from the Doctrine of Wickleiff all which required a very wise Man and a brave Commander in both which the King fayled Religion now began to dawne through the foggs of Romish usurpations and superstitions ayded thereto by a Scisme in the triple Crowne that continued forty yeares with much virulency abroad and with as bad influence upon our Myters at home Some of whom were called Clementines others Vrbanists and yet none of them all worthy of eyther of the Names in their proper signification The Laity though lookers on yet were not quiet For though Liberty be a hopefull thing yet its dangerous to them that are not a Law to themselves especially in matter of Opinion for that arraines the rule and layes the way open to licentiousnesse And now that the Liberty from the Keyes began to be taught as a duty of Religion the inferiour sort meet with Doctrines of licentiousnesse upon mistake of the notion and will acknowledge no rule now they must be all at liberty and thus sprang up the insurrection of the Servants and Bond-men against their Lords and Masters under Cade and Strawe that might have brought the Common wealth into a hideous Chaos had not the Lords and Great Men betimes bestirred themselves and the King shewed an extraordinary spirit or rather a kinde of rage that put it selfe forth beyond the ordinary temper of his minde Much of this mischeife was imputed to Wickleiffs Doctrine for it is an ordinary thing to proclaime all evills concurring with the very joynt of Reformation to be the proper fruits thereof but I looke upon it as a fruit of corruption that indeavours to stopp the breath of Reformation in the birth and there is somewhat of a hidden influence from Above in the thing for it was not onely the Cupp of England to be thus troubled but France and other places had their portion sutable The Kings minority rendred him unequall unto these contrary motions he was in his eleventh yeare when he entred the Throne and which was worse his yeares came on faster then his Parts but his worke posted before them all The common helpe of Protectors left him yet more unhappy for they were prepossessed with strong ingagements of particular Interests and so were eyther not wise enough or not good enough for all This brought forth a third inconvenience the change of Protectorship and that change of Affaires and Interests an uncertaine good that brings forth a certaine evill for variety of Instruments and Interests move severall wayes and though the end be one the difference concerning the way many times doth as much hinder the Journey as so many blocks in the way The Protectorship was thrice changed the Kings Unkles had the first essay any one of them was bigg enough for one Kingdome but all of them together were too great to make one Protector The Duke of Lancaster would have done well alone if he had been alone and that work alone but he being somewhat ingaged with the Wickleiffists and so intangled with the Clergy and other restlesse spirits and drawne off by his private ayme at the Crowne of Castile saw this worke too much and so he warily withdrew himselfe leaving the Directory to a Committee of Lords a soveraine Plaister questionlesse where the times are whole but not for these distractions wherein even the Committee it selfe suffered its share Thus the breach is made the wider and for a cure of all the Government is committed into one hand wherein the Earle of Warwick acquitted himselfe well for he was wise enough to observe such as the people most honoured And thus passed over the two first yeares of the Kings Reigne The remainder of the Kings minority was rather in common repute then in true account For the King however young took little more from the Protector then he saw meet to collour his own commands with opinion of Regularity and so his will came to full strength before his wisdome budded Thus lifted up he sets himself above all interests of Parliament Protectors Councellors Unkles wise Men and Law leaving them all to be rules for those below And so long as the Kings desire is thus served he is content to be reputed a Minor and be as it were under protection of others though not under their direction and is content to continue thus untill his two and twentieth year Some might thinke him very moderate had hee been moderate but he forbears suing out his
obtained their part of the honour of that day yet in the consequence they lost Callis the last foot that the English had in France henceforth England must be content with a bare Title As this was deserved so was it also reserved by the Queen to make the World beleeve that she died for greif therefore as a Mother of her Countrey although her bodily disease contracted by a false Conception wherein she beguiled both her self and the World concurred thereto In sum the worst that can be said of her is this That she was ill principled and the best that she acted according to her principles and so lived an uncomfortable Life shaped a bloudy Reigne and had but a dim Conclusion The Night was now spent and Queen Elizabeth like the morning Star rising into the Throne sent forth the benignant Influence of both her Predecessors and many waies excelled them both she was begotten in a heat against Rome wherein also she was borne and trained up by her Father and Brother Edwards Order and saw enough in her Sisters course to confirme her therein For Queen Mary was not very Catholique in her Throne though she was in her Oratory Nevertheless Queen Elizabeths Course hereunto was very strange and might seem in outward respects to lead her quite wide for her youth was under a continuall yoke her Mother dead whiles she was at the breast her Father owning her no further then as his Child born of a rebellious Woman never intending her for the Crown so long as any hope was left of any other with her age the yoke grew more heavy her Brother Edward being but of the half blood except in point of Religion might repect her at a distance beyond his Mothers family but this lasted not long her Sister Mary comes next of a stranger blood to her then her Brother was looking ever back upon her as one too nigh her heele and more ready to tread upon her Traine then support it the difference in Religion between them two added yet further Leven and this occasioned from her Sister to her many sowre reflections bitter words harsh usage concluding with Imprisonment and not without danger of Death All which Queen Elizabeth saw well made the lesse noise in Religion walked warily and resolved with patience to indure the brunt for she might perceive by her Fathers Will that her way to the Crown if ever she arived at the end must be through a feild of blood and though she knew her change of Religion might make the way more plain yet God kept her in a patient waiting untill the set time was come Thus passing over her Minority with little experience of youthfull pleasures she had the happiness to have the lesse sense of youthfull lusts which meeting with naturall Endowments of the larger size rendred her the goodliest mirror of a Queen Regent that ever the Sun shone upon God adding thereto both Honour and continuance above all that ever sate in that Throne Her entrance was with more joy to others then her self for she kept her pace as treading amongst thornes and was still somwhat reserved even in matters of Religion though she was known to be devout She had observed that the hasty pace both of her Brother and Sister brought early troubles before either of them were well setled in their Throne And therefore whereas her Sister first set up the Masse and then indeavoured to settle it by disputes she contrarily first caused the point to be debated and thereby gained liking to lay it aside It s true the moderatorship in that dispute was imposed upon a Lay man as their term is but his work being to hold the Disputants to order in debate and not to determine the point in Controversie which thing was left to the Auditory might therefore more rationally be done by him then censured by any Historian that shall undertake to judg them all The first step thus made one made way for another till the whole became levened her proceedings against Opposers were with much lenity rather overlooking then looking on and such as stood more directly in her path she would rather set a side then trample down And be faire to all without respect to difference of Religion that would be faire to her Much of her happinesse depended upon Election of her Councell more in observing their advice that whether she did rule or were ruled or did rule by being ruled might deserve some consideration This she did to give satisfaction to such as took prejudice at her Sex rather then out of any sense of imbecility in her own intellectuals for therein she equalled the best of her Predecessors and in learned Endowments exceeded them all Generally she was of a publique minde if not populer she loved to be seen of the People and yet kept her distance Her Sex taught her to use her tongue much and her education to use it well and wisely That with a reserved carriage was her Scepter winning thereby applause from the inferiour sort and awe from the greater· A wise man that was an eye witnesse of many of her Actions and of those that succeeded her many times hath said That a Courtier might make a better meale of one good look from her then of a good gift from some other King Anothet felicity She had beyond others of her place She loved not to be tied but would be knit unto her People To them She committed her confidence under God and they to her their cheifest Treasure on Earth Viz. Their hearts to her Parliament which was the most considerable party that She had to deale with She could personate Majesty equall to any Emperour and advise commend yea and chide if She saw occasion And yet ever had a trick to come off with a kinde conclusion without blur of Honour So as of thirteen Parliaments called during her Reigne not one became abortive by unkindness and yet not any one of them passed without Subsidy granted by the People but one wherein none was desired And sometimes the aid was so liberall that She refused the one half and thanked the People for the remnant a courtesie that rang loud abroad to the shame of other Princes She would often mention her Prerogative and yet not hold her self wise enough either to interrupt the Judges in their way nor the Bishops in theirs Abeit She spared not also as She saw occasion to check the best of them for their irregularities She had no Beloved yet entertained Favorites at a cheaper rate and in better order then Kings use to do for She had a preferment within her power beyond the reach of them all and passion also soon at command or rather somtimes beyond command Yet if calmely taken it ever proved good for that party that suffered in the conclusion However her love She held under her own power and therein excelled her Forefathers She had the President of her Sister that adventured upon a Prince for her