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A54682 The antiquity, legality, reason, duty and necessity of præ-emption and prourveyance, for the King, or, Compositions for his pourveyance as they were used and taken for the provisions of the Kings household, the small charge and burthen thereof to the people, and the many for the author, great mischiefs and inconveniences which will inevitably follow the taking of them away / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1663 (1663) Wing P2004; ESTC R10010 306,442 558

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Coronation The King is willing to doe the same and that all Statutes of Pourveyors be observed 11 H. 4. The King promiseth convenient payment for victuals taken by his Pourveyors Thomas Chancer chief ●●tler to the King sheweth what prices of wine the King ought to have of every Ship and how much the King was deceived thereof that the Citizens of London being exempt from the same did use notwithstanding to make strangers free thereof The King sent for the Citizens heretofore and further willeth that none shall enjoy any such liberty unless he be there a Citizen res●a●t and dwelling 3 H. 5. The Commons pray that no Ship be taken to serve the King by any Letters Patents but that the same Letters Patents may be seen before the Maior and other Officers of the Town that hire of the fraight may be by them made and ready payment had The Statutes heretofore made shall be observed 18 H. 6. Order was taken for the payment of the Kings debts and provision of his Houshold and authority committed to the Kings Council to take order concerning Pourveyors and the fourth part of the Tenth and Fifteenth to be imployed to the payment of the Pourveyance for his Houshold 20 H. 6. The Commons pray that certain Lords such as the King shall please may have authority to settle good order in his Houshold and that ready money be paid for victuals carriages and other dispenses of the same House Be it as is desired provided that this extend not to impeach any Assignments Grants Payments Benefit or Interest to any man lawfully granted or had before this Parliament 27 H. 8. cap. 24. The Kings Pourveyors may for the provision of the King Queen and their Children take all victuals corn and other kinds of things whatsoever according to their Commissions as well within the Liberties and Franchises as without any Grants Allowance or other thing to the contrary notwithstanding 1 2 Phil. Ma● It was ordained by Act of Parliament That no Commission of Pourveyors should continue above six moneths the County to be named where Beeves Weathers Lambs Calves Swine Salt-fish Corn Butter Cheese Bacon Conies Pigs Geese Capons and Hens and any other provision of victuals were taken the proportions and numbers of them and a Docquet to be made all things taken And cap. 6. No victuals shall be taken by the Kings Pourveyors within five miles of the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford nor in Oxford or Cambridge upon pain of forfeiture of four times the value provided that the Act be not put in execution at any time or times whensoever the Queen and her heirs and successors shall please to come to both or any of the said Universities or within seven miles of either of them but be suspended during that time and no longer 5 Eliz. cap. 5. Composition Fish heretofore granted to the Queens Majesty by the Subjects of this Realm travailing into Iseland may be taken by her Majesties Officers and Pourveyors in such sort as the same hath been lawfully used to be taken before the making of this Act saving to the Queens Majesty her Heirs and Successors and to all other persons such Fishes as be known and used to be called Regall Fishes whereunto her Majesty or the said other persons have or shall have right or interest for such recompence as heretofore hath been accustomed 13 Eliz. cap. 21. Reciting the said Act of the 2 and 3 of King Phillip and Queen Mary and that since divers of the Townships Inhabitants and Res●ants within the Limits and Precincts aforesaid having converted the benefit of the said Act to their private use and commoditie without any profit or commodities to the poor Schollars of either of the said Universities whereby the Queens Majesty was not only not served of provision of Corn Grain and other victuall to be taken for her Majesties-provision but also the said Universities were defrauded of the benefits and commodities to them intended It was ordained that no person whatsoever nor the Pourveyors of the Queen her Heirs and Successors nor no Badger or Poulter should take or bargain grain or victuals within the compass of five miles of the said Universities or within the Towns of Oxford and Cambridge without the consent of the Chancellors or Vice-Chancellors in writing under the Seal of either of the said Universities first had in writing And if any person or persons within the said Precincts should refuse reasonably to serve the necessary provision of the said Universities that then it should be lawfull to any of the Queens Majesties Takers or Pourveyors to provide any corn or victuall of any such person or persons within any part of the precinct aforesaid for the use of the Queen as should be declared and notif●ed to the said Pourveyors or Takers to be persons not worthy of the said priviledge for not reasonably serving the necessities of the said Universities by the Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor for the time being of either of the said Universities with the assent of the two Justices of Peace res●ant within the said Universities Town or County under the hands and Seals of the said Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor and the said two Justices of the Peace as the said Pourveyors or Takers lawfully may in any other place within the said Precinct and not otherwise Provided that the Act shall not be put in execution at any time or times whensoever the Queens Majesty her Heirs and Successors shall come to any of both the Universities or within seven miles of either of of them but shall be in suspence during that time only and no longer And King Henry the seventh who in the rage and scuffle of a fortunately fought Battel at Bosworth field having found his Crown thrown into a Hathorn or bush of Thorns as a presage of the cares which usually attend the wearers and by marriage once accounted the best of unions happily established himself in the Kingdom and stopt the issue of blood betwixt those two great contending Families of York and Lancaster and having afterwards as no giddy but a probable tradition hath left it in the successive memories of the servants of the Royal houshold for the better government and order of his Expences of his House and their provision of Diet put a rate or Reiglement as well in the quantity as quality and price thereof which in those cheaper times was little less then the Market rate or but that which might reasonably be afforded It continued uncomplained of in the Reign of King Hen. 8. when Cardinal Wolsey Lord Chancellor of England and the Kings Privy Council made certain Reiglements Constitutions touching the well ordering government of the Kings Houshold the motives thereof were therein expressed to be al honne●r de Diu a honneur profit de Saint Eglise al honneur du Roy a son profit du profit de son peuple for the honor of God and the honour
Last take upon them for the payment of all the Herrings that shall be sold by their assent to any persons and the hundred of Herring shall be accompted by sixscore and the Last by ten thousand That the people of London at such Fair shall bring the Last from Yarmouth to London for one Mark of gain and not above That the Fishers be compelled to bring the remnant of their Herrings not sold in the Road of Kirkley to the Fair to sell them so that none sell Herring in any place about the haven of Yarmouth by seven miles except in three Towns of Yarmouth that is to say Easton Weston and Southton unless it be Herrings of their own Fishing The Chancellor or Treasurer taking to them Justices and other the Kings Council shall have power to ordain remedy touching the buying and selling of Stock-fish of Saint Botolph and Salmon of Barwick and of Wines and Fish of Brist●ute and else-where to the intent the King and his People may better be served and have better Markets then they have had before this time and that the Ordinances by them made in this party be firmly holden Doggers and Landships of Blackney Haven shall discharge their Fish there the price of Dogger-fish and Loichfish that is to say Lob Ling and Cod shall be assessed by the Advice of the Merchants and Rulers comming to the Fair of Blackney and of the owners of the ships before any sale be made which shall be holden during the Fair Every man shall buy Herrings openly and not privily at such price as may be agreed betwixt him and the seller And no man shall enter into bargain upon the buying of the same till he that first cometh to bargain shall have an end of his bargain greable to the seller and that none increase upon other during the first bargain Londoners and other shall sell victualls by retail Sweet wines may be sold by retail at the price of Gascoyne wines Victuallers shall have but reasonable gains according to the discretion of the Justices of Peace there shall be but eight Bushels striked to the Quarter the severall measures of vessels of wine Eels Herrings and Salmons and vessels of Oil and Honey to be gauged 12 E. 4. ca. 8. Divers Patents being granted under the great Seal of England to divers persons to be Surveyors and Correctors of beer ale wine and victuals within divers Cities Boroughs and Towns it was ordained That they should be void and that the Mayors Bayliffs and chief Governours of Cities Boroughs and Towns Corporate shall be the only Searchers and Surveyors of victualls for that every City Borough and Town of substance in England for the most part have Court Lee●s and views of Frank-pledge holden yearly within the same Cities Boroughs and Towns surveying of all victualls therein and correction and punishment of the offenders and breakers of the Assise of the same which ought not to be c●ntraried Ordinances made by Guilds Fraternities and Companies of Trade shall be examined and approved by the Chancellor Treasurer of England or Chief Justices of either Benches or three of them or by Justices of Assise in their Circuits to prevent and hinder unlawfull Ordinances as well in prises of wares as in other things to the Common hurt and damage of the people When any victualler is chosen Officer in any City except London York and Coventry Borough or Town Corporate which by virtue of his Office should have the Assising and Correction for selling of victualls that then two discreet and honest persons neither of them being Victuallers shall during that time be sworn truely to sess and set the price of victuals such as sell false and mixt Oils to be searched and punished and such as destroy wild ●oul whereby formerly the Kings most honourable Houshold and the houses of Noblem●n Prelates were furnished at convenient prices to be punished Upon complaint made for enhauncing of prices of victuals the prices thereof shall be assessed by the Kings Councellors and Officers and they which have victuals to sell shall sell them at the same prises The Prises of the But Tun Pipe Hogshead c. of all kinds of wines when it shall be sold in gross shall be set by certain of the Kings great Officers Whosoever shall buy or sell any F●sant or Partridge saving the Officers of the Kings Queens or Princes houses shall forfeit for every Fesant six shillings eight pence and for every Partridge three shillings four pence to the King Conspiracies made by Victuallers touching selling of victuals shall be grievously punished Taverns may be appointed in every City Borough or Town Corporate to sell wine by Retail None shall retail wines but in Cities Market Towns c. Vintners which sell by Ret●il in Towns Corporate shall be assigned by the head Officers thereof and in other Towns by the Justices of Peace And 2 3 Ed. 6. by a temporary Act expired with the time therein limitted which may shew the minds and intents of the makers and what was then thought convenient for that small part of time and being probably only done upon some grounds or reasons of State for the present or in ease of the people or some popular designe of the then ruling Lord Protector was not then nor at any time after thought fit to continue any longer it was ordained That no Pourveyor or other person by authority of any Commission or other Warrant shall during three years then next ensuing pourvey or take for the provision of the Kings Houshold his Sisters or any others any Corn Beeves Muttons c. Wood Coal Straw Hay or any kind of Victuals without the full consent of the owner and at such price for ready money as the owner or Pourveyor can agree nor shall take for any of the Kings Affairs or the Warres or otherwise any Goods Chattels or other things whatsoever saving Barges Ships Carts and things necessary without the consent of the owners and at such prises for ready money as the owner Pourvey●rs can agree except Post-horses for which shall be paid a penny a mile and the King will allow to the owner of every Cart taken for his houshold four pence a mile and for the Warres and other Carriages three pence a mile The Lord Chancellor of England Lord Treasurer Lord President of the Kings Councel Lord Privy Seal and the two Chief Justices or any five four or three of them are authorised to set prises of wine and none to sell either in gross or by retail above those prises No Cattel shall be bought but in open Fair or Market but by a Butcher provisions of houshold Butter or Cheese shall not be bought to be sold again except it be by retail in open Shop Fair or Market Forestallers and Regrators shall be punished Badgers and Drovers licensed by three Justices of the Peace
for murage or repair of the walls of Towns as Ipswich Harwich Newcastle upon Tine Ludlow c. or Cities as London Norwich York Bristol c. which must of necessity raise the rates of commodities brought thither to be sold and by the same power or authority remit or release them and being granted to many Cities or Towns but for three of seven years or as to London for five years or some other short term since expired is as may be feared under a colour of custome or praescription as yet continued Or being Soveraign of the British seas to take weekly for all Herring taken therein six pence for every Ton and the like for other fish every three weeks either of his own Subjects or forraign Nations or for his Admiral under him to take the tenth of all the Prizes or Ships of his Enemies taken at the Sea and money for Anchorage paid by every Ship for their quiet riding in the river of Thames or any of the Kings Harbours And with as good reason as the Burrow Mealis in Scotland where quilibet Burgensis debet domino Regi pro Burgagio quinque denarios annuatim dicuntur incorporari annexique Fisco patrimonio Regis every Burgess was to pay five pence per annum for his mealis which Sir Henry Spelman interprets to be a Farme appropriated to buy provisions in regiae mensae apparatum for the Kings Table or Houshold and are said to be incorporate and annexed to the Patrimony of the King and his Exchequer Or as the Provost of Edenburgh or other borough Towns in Scotland may take and receive four pence upon every quarter of Malt of ilk Brewster quhe brewes aill all the zeir four pennies and for ●ne halfe zeir tw● pennies As the Apprisers of flesh are appointed to apprise it at the Kings price ilk dayes of the Markets and to admit the eath of the ●●s●er in that matter And as by the Statutes of King David the second it was ordained that for relief of the inward parts of the Realm quhair woll hes course and quhilks ar burdened with customes and that the remanent parts of the Realm may be made equall with them in all services and burdings It is Statute that certain sommes and quantities of victuall quhareof there is abundance in these utward parts sick as Marts beir and sicklike sall be taken up zeirly at the Chamberlains command to the expenses of the Kings house according to the prices quihilk in auld times used to be taken up in these places Queen Mary the Lord Governour and Lords of secret Counsell havand respect to the great and exorbitant dearth risen upon the will and t●me Fowles ordained the prices thereof as 5 s. Scottish the Swan the black Cock and gray hen six pennies twenty of their pennies being but two pence the Woodcock four pennies and the dous●n of Laverocks and uthers small birds four pennies c. And by as good reason as King James the sixth his Majesties Grandfather confirmed the Acts of Parliament made by his noble Progenitors for the stanching of dearth of Victuals and setting order and price on all Stuffe and ordained all Earls Lords Barons as well within regality as royalty and their Bailles to landwart and the Provestes and Bailles of all B●rrows and Cities to cause the said Acts to be put to due execution every ane within their boundes and Jurisdiction respective makand and constitutand them Justices to that effect with power to make and appoint Statutes and Ordinances for the special observation of the saidis Acts at every head Court zierly Assigned money and victuals of several Shires and places in Scotland to the keeping of the Castles of Edinburgh Dunbartane Strivilinge and Blacknes Declared the tenths of all Herrings taken in the Scottish Seas to be due unto him as King of Scotland and all infestments and Alienations in few ferme or utherwaies and all dispositions quhatsumever in all time bygane and to cum of the Assise Herring to be nil and of no avail because the said Assise Herring pertanis to the King as ane part of his Customes and annexed property And by as much or a greater warrant or assent of reason as King Henry the 5. of England did in a Patent or Grant of the Lord Lieutenancy of Ireland to James de Boteler Earl of Ormond authorise him ad victualia sufficientia necessaria pro expensis hospi●ii sui ac Soldariorum suorum in quocunque loco infra terram predictam per Provisores hospitii sui alios ministrossuos unacum Cariagio su●ficienti pro eisdem tam in●ra libertates quam extra feodo Ecclesie duntaxat excepto pro denariis suis rationabiliter solvend capere providere juxta formam diversorum Statutorum de hujusmodi provisionibus ante haec tempora factorum to take victuals sufficient and necessary for the expences of his Houshold and his Souldiers by his Pourveyors and other Ministers in any place whatsoever in Ireland with carriages sufficient for the same as well within liberties as without the Fees of the Church only excepted at reasonable prises according to divers Statutes made concerning provisions And was so well grounded upon Law and reason as all the succeeding Lord Lieutenants or Deputies of Ireland have ever since not wanted those necessary priviledges to attend their high honourable trusts imployments could so little be parted with in the 19. year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth when Sir Henry Sidney was Deputy of Ireland as the Earl of Desmond the Viscount Baltinglas other unquiet spirits refusing to pay the provision or Ceasse as they there called it for the Lord Deputies house the Souldiers in Garrison which the learned Camden saith was exactio rei Annonariae certo pretio provisions to be furnished at a certain rate or price ad alendum proregis familiam militesque praesidiarios for the Lord Lieutenants or Deputies Families the Souldiers in Garrison quasi non exigenda nisi ex authoritate Parliamentaria as not due unless it were ordained by authority of Parliament sending over their complaints into England the Lords of the Privy Council upon the hearing bate thereof committed them and those which remained in Ireland and had sent them were in like manner imprisoned untill they should submit to the payment and furnishing thereof for that it appeared by the Records of that Kingdome to be antiquitus institutum an antient constitution jus quoddam Majestatis a part of the right appertaining to the soveraign Power Praeeminence or Kingly Praerogative quae legibus non subjicitur nec tamen legibus adversatur ut Jurisprudentes judicarunt which being not against the Laws was not to be subjected to them saith that worthy Historian the Queen then only ordering the Lord Deputy to use as much moderation as he could in taking those Provisions or Pourveyances And as
or avarice by taking advantage of some particular persons folly or over-bidding and keeping up the excessive rates of the Market to the same or a more unreasonable price and not being willing to let them fall again to a lower price though there be plenty and reason enough to do it unlawful combinations and confederacies of Trades men to raise their prices or cause their wares to be made Slight or insufficient unconscionable adulterating of Commodities and making them seem what they are not to raise the greater prices evil Artifices of Forestallers of the Markets Ingrossers and Regrators who for their own ungodly gains can make a dearth and scarcity in the midst of plenty and like Caterpillars spoil and devour the Hopes of the years fertility the Landlords racking of rents and the price of all manner of houshold provisions and other things raised by the Tenants to enable them to pay them an universal pride and vanity of the Nation and enhaunce of prices to support them plunder miseries and desolations of War numberless tricks and deceipts of Tradesmen and fraud of the common and Rustick part of the people in the Counties neer London in keeping many of their Cattel half a mile or some little distance from the Fairs untill the Evening or much of the day be spent to make them to sell at greater rates frequent deceits of stocking or Tying up the Udders of Kine a day before hand to make them swell and seem to give great store of Milke And as many other tricks of Trade and deceit as the Devil and deluded consciences can invent And truely looked upon as causes or concurrent parts of the cause of the now grand and most intollerable inhaunce of the rates and p●ices of Victuals houshold provisions and other Commodities there will be little or no room for the supposed plenty of Gold and Silver to be either a cause or so much as any part of a cause of it Nor can be well imagined when as notwithstanding that betwixt the middle of the Raign of King Henry the eight and the beginning of the Raign of Queen Elizabeth the Gold and Silver Mines of the West Indies had by the Spanish cruelty to the Indians and their almost extirpation afforded such quantities of these baites of Satan and temptations as two hundred and sixty millions of Gold did appear by the Records of the Custom house of Sivill to have been brought from the West Indies into Spain all the plenty of that riches either by our Merchants bringing in of Bullion from Spain and its other Kingdomes and Provinces by Commerce or return of Merchandize did not so in England raise enhaunce the rates and prices of Victuals and houshold provisions but that we finde the Parliament of 24. H. 8. ordaining that Beef Pork Mutton and Veal should be sold by the weight called haber dupois no person should take for a pound of Beef or Pork above one half penny nor for a pound of Mutton or Veal above half penny farthing did believe they might be reasonably so afforded And the rates of Victuals and houshold provisions notwithstanding so increasing as in the yeer following It was ordained That Governors of Cities and Market Towns upon complaint to them made of any Butcher refusing to sell victuals by the weight according to the Statute of 24 H. 8. ca. 3. might commit the offenders toward untill he should pay all penalties limitted by the said Statute and were enabled to sell or cause to be sold by weight all such victuals for ready money to be delivered to the owner and if any Grasier Farmer Breeder Drover c. should refuse to sell his fat Cattel to a Butcher upon such reasonable prices as he may retail it at the price assessed by the said Statute The Justices of Peace Maiors or Governors should cause indifferent persons to set the prices of the same which if the owner refused to accept then the Justices c. should binde him to appear the next Term in the Star Chamber to be punished as the Kings Councel should think good And the same Parliament Enacting That upon every complaint made of any enhauncing of prices of Cheese Butter Capons Hens Chickens and other Victuals necessary for mens sustenance without ground or cause reasonable in any part of this Realm or in any other the Kings Dominions the Lord Chancellor of England the Lord President of the Kings most honorable Councel the Lord Privy Seal the Lord Steward the Lord Chamberlaine and all other Lords of the Kings most honorable house the Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster the Kings Justices of either Bench the Chancellor Chamberlains under Treasurer and the Barons of the Kings Exchequer or seven of them at the least whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer the Lord President of the Kings Councel or the Lord Privy seal to be one should have power and authority from time to time as the cause should require to set and tax reasonable prices of all such kinde of Victuals how they should be sold in gross or by retail and that after such prices set and taxed Proclamation should be made in the Kings name under the great Seal of the said prices in such parts of this Realm as should be convenient for the same Was not of op●nion that the plenty of Gold and Silver were any cause of the enhaunce of the prices or rates of Victuals but did in the preamble of that Act declare That forasmuch as dearth scarcity good cheap and plenty of such kinde of Victuals happeneth riseth and chances of so many and diverse occasions that it is very hard and difficult to put any certain prices to any such things yet nevertheless the prices of such Victuals be many times enhaunced and raised by the greedy covetousness and appetites of the owners of such Victuals by occasion of ingrossing and regrating the same more then upon any reasonable or just ground or cause to the great damage and impovershing of the Kings subjects Si● Thomas Chamberlaine qui mores hominum multorum vidit urbes who by his several Embassages f●om England into Foraign Countries in the Raigns of Ki●g Henry the eighth and King Edward the sixth was not a little acquainted with the customes of other Nations aswell as his own did in the Raign of King Edward the sixth in a Treatise entituled Policies to reduce the Realm of England unto a prosperous wealth and estate dedicated unto the Duke of Somerset then Lord Protector assign the causes of the high prices and dearness of Victuals far less then what is now to be abasing of Coyn and giv●ng more then Forty pence for the ounce of Silver ingrossing of Commodities the high price of Wooll which caused the Lords and Gentlemen being by the suppressing of the Abbies and liberality of King Henry the eight waxen rich to convert all their grounds into Sheep Pastures which diminished Victuals ten Lordships to the great decay of Husbandry
0 8 0 0 6 0 0 0 12 0 18 0 0 15 0 0 0 6 0 45 0 0 30 0 0 0 10 0 20 0 0 17 0 0 1 10 0 201 15 0 140 19 0 0 12 0 855 12 0 570 8 0 0 10 0 60 0 0 36 0 0 0 7 0 26● 3 0 153 16 0 1 10 0 373 0 0 203 2 6       4266 6 8 2931 2 2 Market price Totall Difference 2 0 0 400 0 0 333 6 8 1 2 0 44 0 0 20 0 0 1 2 0 110 0 0 76 13 4 0 18 0 18 0 0 15 0 0 0 16 0 8 0 0 6 0 0 0 12 0 12 0 0 10 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 8 10 0 0 6 0 12 0 0 8 0 0 1 10 0 303 0 0 262 12 0 0 12 0 126 15 0 84 7 0 0 10 0 90 0 0 54 0 0 0 7 0 70 0 0 40 0 0       1203 12 0 917 19 0   Kings price Totall   l. s. d. l. s. d. Oxen lean 40 at 2 13 4 106 13 4 Muttons lean 200 at 0 4 8 46 13 4 Wax 200 weight at 0 0 8 per lb 7 9 1 Summe       160 15 9   Kings price Totall Oxen fat 20 at 4 0 0 80 0 0 Muttons fat 200 at 0 6 8 66 13 4 Stirks 20 at 0 10 0 10 0 0 Lambs 150 at 0 1 0 7 10 0 Summe       164 3 4   Kings price Totall Oxen lean 110 at 2 10 0 275 0 0 Price of the Market Difference l. s. d. l. s. d. l. s. d. 6 10 0 260 0 0 153 6 4 0 14 0 140 0 0 93 6 8 0 1 4 14 18 8 6 9 4       414 18 8 254 2 4 Market price Totall Difference 9 10 0 190 0 0 110 0 0 1 0 0 200 0 0 133 6 8 2 13 4 53 6 8 43 6 8 0 8 0 60 0 0 52 10 0       503 6 8 339 3 4 Market price Totall Difference 7 0 0 770 0 0 495 0 0 And may shew with what justice equality and due consideration those profitable Agreements and Compositions were made by the several Counties when as they did bear no other parts of the whole Compositions yearly served in kind for provisions for his Majesties late Royal Fathers House and they in the general were no more then as followeth Compositions which were served in kind for Provisions of his late Majesties House           l. s. d. Wheat 3790 quarters at 0 l. 6 s. 8 d. 1263 6 8 Oxen fat 578 at var. pretium 1980 6 8 Oxen lean 915.110 at 50's pr. rest at 53 s. 4. d. 821 13 4 Muttons fat 5150 ad var. prec 1575 0 0 Muttons lean 1850 ad var. prec 373 6 8 Veals 1231 ad var. prec 386 16 8 Porks 310 ad var. prec 88 13 4 Stirks 410 ad var. prec 183 0 0 Boars 26 ad 13 s. 4 d. prec 17 16 8 Bacon 320 flitches ad var. prec 17 10 0 Lambs 6820 ad 12 d. prec 341 0 0 Butter 40 Barrels ad 45 s. br 60 0 0 Geese 145 dozen ad var. prec 28 0 0 Capons cours 252 dozen ad 4 s. doz 50 8 0 Henns 470 dozen ad 2 s. doz 47 0 0 Pullets cours 750 dozen ad 18 d. doz 56 5 0 Chickens cours 1470 dozen ad var. prec 126 10 0 Wax 3100 weight ad 8 d. lb 115 17 8 Sweet Butter 46640 lb. ad var. prec 804 6 8 Charcoals 1250 loads ad 13 s. 9 d. load 859 7 6 Tallwood 3950 loads ad 3 s. load 442 10   Billets 3950 loads ad 3 s. load 442 10   Faggots 3950 loads ad 3 s. load 442 10   Herrings 60 br ad 13 s. 4 d. br 40 0 0 Wine Caske from the Vintners 600 Ton at 3 s. 4 d. per Ton 100 l. And will upon the severest examination or inquiries appear to be no more then necessary for the food and provision of the Kings Houshold those great Lords and Officers of State and persons of honor extracted from the best Houses and Families of England which stand before him and manage the many several offices and imployments in his House their Tables Dyet and Bouche of Court allowed them the many Knights Esquires Gentlemen Yeomen which attend him in their monthly or weekly turns and courses and do take their Diet and Lodging therein which being not a few and yet not much above the ninth part of the 10000 which daily follow the Court of France made up of an hideous dissolute and unruly number of Pages Lacquies and Footboyes could not possibly be provided for and honorably worshipfully maintained with lesser proportions in that princely honorable and plentiful manner in which the King and his royal Progenitors have alwaies kept their household and family and according to the honor and worth of those who are faithfully and decently to serve and attend him where frugality and prudence which as antiently as in the later end of the raign of King Edward the first when Fleta a treatise so called was written appeares not to have been a litle and a not sometimes but dayly care of expending no more then needs must by those excellent Rules and Orders from the highest Office in the Court unto the lowest thorough all the rankes and degrees of it without any lessening or diminution of the honor of it which are not to be equalled or patterned in the Oeconomy or government of any of the Nobility Gentry Merchants Cittizens or sorts of people whatsoever in the Kingdom Where Honor and Majesty sate in its greatest lustre where the expences were great and princely and yet such as compared with other mens families might seem impossible to bring the year about with so little where Prudence and Largesse Bounty and Providence were so combined and entered into a League and Association as if the Queen of Sheba before the Erinnis of our fiery and factious Spirits had lighted us with her hellish Torch to our shamefull Misdoeings and Miseries had viewed the honor of our King and the order of his house his many officers and their manner of sitting at their meate the attendance of his ministers and their English not Frenchified or Phantasticall apparrell she would not only have said as she did concerning Solomons Court and State Blessed and happy are they that serve and stand before him who hath power opportunity and meanes at all times to preferre and advance them and their merits but have wondered how it should have been done with so small an yearly expence so litle noyse or trouble and in so goodly an order Which the more then seldom extraordinary Embassadors of forraign Princes coming hither may subscribe unto when as for some dayes before their Audience they have with some of every sort of the Kings Servants and Officers selected to
of the County and enter into Recognizances not to forestall or ingross provided that all Cities and Towns Corporate may assigne and licence Pourveyors for their provisions Which power of regulating weights and measures and reduction of victuals to reasonable prices and rates was no stranger in Ireland whither many if not all of our then Laws were transmitted by King John by exemplification unde● his great Seal of England and all our Laws reasonable Customes and Acts of Parliament both before and afterwards were by Act of Parliament called Poynings Act or Law allowed and enacted to be Laws in that Kingdome in the Reign of our King Henry the seventh Nor in Scotland where the assises of weights and measures were ordained by King James the first in Parliament in Anno Domini 1426. And it was also ordained by King James the second in Parliament that Schireffes Bayllies and uther officiars baith to burgh and to land take and inquire at ilk Court that they haldquhat persons within their boundes by is victuall and haldis it till a dearth and punish them which sall be found to offend therein and besides their uther punishment the victuall that they have be escheated to the King All which may declare and give us to understand how unreasonable it would be that the King who by his Oath and Kingly Office is to keep all his people from oppression which being one of the great sins of Sodom as the Prophet Ezekiel tells us in that she strengthened not the hand of the poor and needy caused God to say he would come down nd see the oppressions of his people should take no order to preserve himself from the more then formerly deceipts of his own people and their enhaunce of prises King Edward the second therefore and his Councell after that the Commons of England had in the second year of his Reign granted him in Parliament an aid of the five and twentieth part of their goods upon condition that he would answer and redress their grievances which they in eleven Articles had then presented unto him in some of which they complained that their Corn Victuals Poultrie and Fish as well fresh as salt were taken by those which called themselves the Kings M●nisters and paid nothing for it nor gave them any manner of satisfaction by which they were greatly impoverished And he had answered that there was an Ordinance made of those prises in the time of his Father King Edward which was for the good of the King and his people and willed that it should be kept and observed in all parts did in the fifteenth year of his Reign upon occasion of his being at Cirencester in the County of Gloucester with divers of the Nobility and great men of the Kingdome not think it to be any violation of the Laws formerly made for the regulation of Pourveyance to command and ordain by his Letters Pa●ents directed to the Sheriffs of Gloucester Worcester and Wiltshire in the words following viz. Rex vic al. ministris de Com. Glouc. Wigorn. Wilts salutem cum sumus in partibus Cirencestr cum pluribus magnatibus pro negotiis c. pro nostra ipsorum sustentatione plura victualia oportet providere plures frumentum hab●ntes ea penes se retinent non curantes illa vendic exp●nere nisi excessiva Caristia nos volentes sustentac ●orum providere prout decet assignavimuus Johan Hampton al. ad supervidendum blada in Com. praedict ad emend ubi blada invenerint pro pretio rationabili jam currente de quo ipsi respondeant illa quo pretio empt●●runt ad liberand pistoribus braciatoribus furnend braciand vend dictis magnatibus c. that a reasonable price should according to the ordinary Market rate beset upon Corn. No●●ere the Writs or Commissions de providentiis pro Rege faciendis to buy and make provisions for the Kings houshold in 7 E. 2. 37 E. 3. 3 R. 2. 1 H. 4. and other Kings Reigns directed to the Sheriffs of several Counties to whose oaths and Offices it belonged by the just and antient Laws and Customes of England to cause men to sell victuals and necessary provisions at reasonable rates and prices or Writs sent to the Sheriffes to make provisions for some of the Kings of Scotland and their Trains in their passage as they came to London to do their homage unto some of our Kings esteemed to be any breach of the peoples Liberties Neither did Queen Elizabeth that delight and love of her people enriching as well as easing and filling them with peace and plenty who was never of the opinion of Oliver Cromwel that grand Master of Iniquity who as carefull as he would seem to be of the peoples ease and liberties in his afterwards counterfeit kindness of taking away the Royal Pourveyance could when he was Lievtenant Generall of an Army of a distempered and disobedient part of the Parliament being moved by a Gentleman of Bedfordshire for some ease of their great Assessements and Burdens answere that he could never believe that the Country-men were poor or not able to bear them as long as they could whistle at the Plow and Cart but so contented them in her happy Government as the 20. day of November the beginning of her Reign is yet though above one hundred years agoe gratefully remembred with the ringing of Bells in many of the Churches of England conceive or understand it to be any grievance to the people for the Soveraign or Lex viva the maker Protector and Preserver of many of those good Laws which they enjoyed to ordain and publish by the advice of her Privy Councel who by the happy and sage conduct of all her affairs were well known by the effects as well as the causes the Mediums as well as the success to be as wise and prudent a Councel as any Prince of Christendome had to attend them That the Clerk of the Market in avoiding of the danger of the loss of his Office and further punishment at her pleasure should duly and substantially put in execution all such things as to his charge appertaineth as well for vittails to be had seasonable good and wholsome in the Towns and places near unto the Court as for the just observing of Weights and Measures assigned and assessed and likewise for setling of convenient and reasonable prises as well upon Meat and Drink Horse-meat Lodging Bedding and other things in such cases accustomed so as the Noblemen attending in the Court and all Suitors others following the same be not compelled in default of the said Clerk to be put unto excessive charges for their expences but such indifferency to be used therein as the plenty or sterility considered should accord with equity And straightly charged that no person of what estate or degree soever should in any wise pay m●re for Vittail Horsemeat Lodging or otherways then after the prises that
enforce them in requital thereof and care of themselues to stretch as much or more the prices of their Cattel and Commodities because their Landlords were insatiable and did never think their Rents high enough raised as long as they could find any pretences to raise them higher or any one to give them the utmost penny when they should not be able to pay their Rents maintain their wives and children and have some little comfort or incouragement by their honest labours unless they should as much as they could make every thing as dear as they could and imitate or exceed them All which combining and strongly confederating together his mersere malis have brought many an evil upon the Kingdome made our Atlas burthen much the heavier the poorer sort of the people to be greatly impoverished and devoured like sheep and the landed and richer part like the Israelites with Quails in their mouths murmurring in the midst of their peace and plenty and thinking that to be thanks enough for them and all their Mannah And like those which distempering their bodies and breeding and causing their own diseases are unwilling to acknowledge themselves to be the Authors of what they complain of but would willingly make the aire and heavenly influences to be in the fault and when they make the high wayes the fowler by their own travailing and riding in them and the worse for the next that shall come after them will lament the deepness or foulness of them Or as Landlords which can grievously complain and wonder at the high rates of Flesh Fish Corn Butter Cheese and other houshold provisions at the Markets when the enhauncing of their own pride extravagancies and profit to maintain them and sequestring themselves from the virtues and hospitalitie of their more beloved and honored Ancestors when they have any thing to buy themselves will not as they should lay the blame upon their own letting their Lands by exact and strict measures of the Acres Rods and Perches to the utmost rack and farthing and in many places by as much indiscretion as unconscionableness apportion and limit the wood which the Tenants are to burn or use by the loads as if it were something more pretious or to be brought by degrees to be weighed by the pound or ownces and will have more rent many times to be paid for it then can possibly be made of it with as many nomine paenes and impossible to be kept Covenants and restrictions as hard-hearted curiosity and diffidence can contrive and invent to the sometimes ruine or great losses of the Tenants in their endeavours to improve and make their Farms yeild as much as their Rents doe amount unto which necessitates them to sell every thing which they have to sell at the highest rates And by so letting their Lands at the highest rent and ten times higher then their Grandfathers some only few good and worshipfull imitators of their Progenitors virtues excepted or as much as can be gotten are not only the greatest cause of the enhaunching of all prices of provisions but by making another as great an advantage to themselves Do when as they do not pay Rents as their Tenants doe for the Lands out of which they raise their commodities add to the prejudice of the Buyers by holding of them up to the rates and humour of the Markets and getting as much as they can possible for what they themselves do sell and send to the Markets And by such or the like profitable and beneficiall customes which are sweet in the mouth or unto the taste but may be bitter in the stomach or digestion of making their benefits by the losses or oppression of the Buyers which at the Markets with those reckoned and included which are at home and to be fed with what is bought or brought from thence are forty for one that are sellers and those that have either Lands of their own or at a Rent are not one in every twenty for those which have not have very much enlarged their own Estates and impoverished the Commonalty Wherefore all those of our Nation which like the wanton at last unhappy Sybarites now troubled with a great deal more under a slavish government and dominion of the Turks then the crowing of the Cocks in the night time to disturb their sweet sleeps or repose which once they were so foolish as to account an inconvenience would but summon in their consciences and a right understanding of causes and effects to the Tribunal of reason and observe the dictates of that and common right The Praeemption which was never used to be denied to praeheminence but alwayes attended it as an insepeperable Concomitant and Consequence and so esteemed to be rational as the rude and unmannerly Dutch with their heads in a piece of a Rug and their good manners running out of their knees can afford it to the lowest rank of their Heeren self-created Lords or States or to a Schepen or Sindic Sheriffe or Recorder of a Town would not be found to be a grievance and where any Priviledges as there ought to be many are associate and incorporate with Soveraign Majesty the King of England under whose grants and allowance only every Seller as well as Buyer at Fairs and Markets claims and enjoyes the liberty of buying and selling should not himself be unkindly used or his Pourveyors debarred the liberty of a first Buyer which was in Anno 720. or thereabouts understood to be so necessary and inherent to Kingly authority and Supereminence the reverence respect and duty belonging unto it and a priviledge so just and reasonable and becoming Subjects to be well contented with and the Regality of Kings not to part with as King Ina one of our Saxon Kings did by a Law prohibit Fore Fang or Captio Obs●ni●rum quae in Foris aut Nundinis ab aliquo fit priusquam Minister Regis ea caeperit quae Regi fuerint necessaria the taking or buying of houshold prouisions by others in Fairs or Markets before the Kings Minister or Pourueyor took those things which were necessary for the King the words of that Law as the learned Sir Henry Spelman hath in the Version rendred them de Fore fang 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Saxon signifying ante or before and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prendere or to take i. e. de preventione decrevimus per totam Angliam quod idem judicium teneri debet We ordain that this Law of Prevention or Praeemption be firmly holden throughout all England And is more fit to be allowed unto the King whose just Rights and Jurisdictions every man is sworn or ought to swear to maintain and defend If there were no fifth commandement in being or any other Praecept in Scripture to honour and obey the King then unto Lords of Manors having Markets and Fairs belonging unto them or the Lord Maior or Sheriffs of London or the Magistrates of any other City or Town Corporate in England
for a greater observance is certainly to be tendered unto the King even in that particul●r of Praeemption which may well be believed by all that are not Quakers whose Tenants all the people of England are mediately or immediately by some or other Tenure Then that which is usually done to Lords of Manors Justices of Peace or Country Gentlemen by their Tenants or poorer sort of Neighbours who if they chance to catch any Woodcocks or Partridges in any of those Gentlemens Lands will bring them to their ●ouses to sell at such cheap and easie rates as they shall please to give for them and if which seldome happens they should carry them to the Markets and not thither are sure enough to be chid for it and crossed and denied in any greater matter which they shall have to doe with them And is but that or a little more curtesie which Butchers Fishmongers and other Tradesmen selling victualls or provisions in great quantities and all the year or often unto their constant Customers will not for their own ends fail to doe or neglect or to sell unto them at easier rates then unto others and find themselves to be many times no loosers by it insomuch as some have lately well afforded to sell to a constant Customer for great quantities at the same rate it was 40 or 60 years before And the Compositions of the Counties for Pourveyance to serve in Beefe Mutton Poultry Corn Malt and other provisions for the Kings Houshold and the maintenance and support of it at a more cheaper rate then the Markets yeild which when they were first set was but the Market rate or a little under long agoe made and agreed upon by the greater Officers of the Kings Houshold and some Justices of Peace in every County and easily and equally taxed and laid upon the whole and not upon any particular man which was poor or of a small Estate not fit to bear it May be with as much and more reason allowed and chearfully submitted unto as those many now called quit rents or Rent services which the most of our Nobility Gentry and others not for some few of them doe yet hold some of their Tenants to their antient and reasonable Customes doe receive and their Tenants easily and willingly pay for their several sorts of ●apola Gavels or Tributes charged upon their Lands before and since the Conquest in Kent a County recounting with much comfort of their many Priviledges and beneficiall Customes and most parts of England as Gavel Erth to Till some part of their Landlords Ground Gavel Rip to come upon summons to help to reap their Corn Gavel R●d to make so many perches of hedge Gavel Swine for pawnage or feeding their Swine in the Lords Woods Gavel werk which was either Manuopera by the person of the Tenant or Carropera by his Carts or Cariages Harth-silver Chimney-money or Peter-pence which some Mesne Lords do yet receive Were Gavel in respect of Wears and Kiddels to catch Fish pitched and placed by the Sea coasts Gavel noht or Fother or Rent Foder which did signifie pabulum or alimentum ut Saxones antiqui dixerunt and comprehended all sorts of victuals or provisions as the old Saxons interpreted it for the Lord probably in his progress or passing by them and was in usage and custome in the time of Charlemaigne the Emperor about the year of our Lord 800. when the people of Italy Regi venienti in Italiam solvere tenebantur pro quo saepe etiam aestimata pecunia pendebatur were to provide Foder or provisions for the King when he came into Italy in liew of which money to the value thereof was sometimes paid and was long after taken to be so reasonable as it was by the Princes and Nobility of Italy acknowledged in an Assembly to be inter Regalia as a Prerogative due to the King And after the Conquest for Aver Land or Ouver Land carriage of the Lords Corn to Markets and Fairs or of his domestick utensils saith the learned and Judicious Mr. Somner or houshold provisions of the Lord or his Steward when they removed from one place to another sometimes by horse Average sometimes by foot Average one while within the Precinct of the Manor thence called In average and at other times without and then called Out Average whereupon such Tenants were known by the name of Avermanni or Bermanni Smiths Land holden by the service of doing the Smiths work the not performing of which several services so annexed to the said several sorts of Lands and their Tenures made them to be forfeited which though not exchanged and turned into Rents Regis ad exemplum in imitation of the indulgence and favour of King Henry the first to the Tenants of his demeasne Lands either then or shortly after but many of them as appeareth by Mr. Somner continuing in Kent to the Reign of Henry the third others to Edward the first and Edward the third and some in other places to the Reign of King Henry the sixth and in all or many of the Abbies and Religious Houses untill their dissolution in the later end of the Reign of King Henry the eighth notwithstanding that the Lords of Manors and Leets receiving those free or quit Rents as they were called of their Freeholders and Tenants belonging unto their several Manors in lieu and recompence of those services did or ought in their Court Leets twice a year holden cause to be presented and punished any unreasonable prises for provisions or victuals sold in Markets Fairs o● otherwise or if they have not Leets are when they are Justices of Peace authorised to doe it and by that untill their Interests perswaded them to let their Tenants use all manner of deceipts in their Marketings and get what unreasonable prises they pleased so as they themselves might rack their Rents farre beyond former ages might have had their provisions untill this time at as low and easie rates as the Kings prouisions and Compositions were at when they were rated and set by the Justices of Peace in the severall Counties and all others of their Neighbourhood might also have enjoyed the benefit of the like rates which the Law intended them And the King may as well or better deserve and expect as many Boons or other services as the Nobility and other great men of the Kingdome doe notwithstanding many Priviledges and Indulgences granted by their more liberall Auncestors and better bestowing their bounties to their Tenants And to be furnished with Carts and Carriages at easie rates as well as the Earl of Rutland is at this day for nothing upon any removall from Belvoir Castle in Lincolnshire to Haddon in Darbyshire and elsewhere from one place to another with very many Carts of his Tenants which are there called Boon Carts when as all Lords or Gentlemen of any rank place or quality in the Kingdome doe take it to be no burden or grievance to their
the comfort of the Lands belonging to a Deanery Prebenda or Prebendship of Lands and other Revenues annexed to the Cathedrals many if not most of which with the Deanerles and Prebendships thereunto belonging as the Deanerie and twelve Prebends of Westminster by Queen Elizabeth were of the foundation and gift of the Kings Royal Progenitors Which comfortable and necessary supports of our Bishops administred by their Clergie are ex antiquo and long agoe resembled by some or the like usages in Ireland where the Coloni or Aldiones such as hold in Socage of the Irish Bishops did besides their Rents and Tributes erga reparationes Matricis Ecclesiae quidpiam conferre give something yearly towards the reparation of the Cathedral or Mother Churches and the Herenaci another sort of Tenants so called did besides their annual rent cibarià quaedam Episcopo exhibere bring to the Bishop certain provisions for his Houshold which was very frequent with the Tenants of Lands holden of our English Abbies and Religious Houses by an inquisition in the County of Tirone in anno 1608. it was by a Jury presented upon oath that there were quidam Clerici sive homines literati qui vocentur Herinaci certain learned men of the Clergy who were called Herinaci ab antiquo seisiti fuerunt c. And anciently were seised of certain lands which did pay to the Arch-bishop or Bishop of the Diocess quoddam charitativum subsidium refectiones pensiones annuales secundum quantitatem terrae consuetudinem patriae a dutifull and loving aid and some provisions and pensions according to the quantity of their lands and custome of their Country and the grants of such lands as appeareth by a Deed of the Dean and Chapter of Armach in Anno Domini 1365. to Arthur and William Mac Brin for their lives and the longer liver of them at the yearly rent of a mark and eight pence sterling una cum aliis oneribus servitiis inde debitis consuetis with all other charges and services due and accustomed had in them sometimes a condition of quam diu grati fuerint obedientes so long as they should be gratefull and obedient unto them Wherefore the Barons Nobility and Gentry of England who did lately enjoy those beneficiall Tenures by Knight-service now unhappily as the consequence and greater charges and burdens upon the people will evidence converted as much as an Act of Parliament in the twelfth year of the Reign of his Majesty that now is can doe it into Socage which were at the first only given for service and assistance of their King and Country and their mesne Lords in relation thereunto and have besides the before recited conditions many a beneficiall custome and usage annexed and fixed unto them and at the dissolution of the Abbies and Religious Houses had much of the Lands given and granted unto them and their Heirs in tail or otherwise with a reservation of a Tenth now a great deal below the value can doe no less in the contemplation of their honours dignities and priviledges received from them and many great favours continued unto their Heirs and Successors from Generation to Generation then doe that in the matter of Praeemption Pourveyance or Contribution towards the Composition or serving in of victuals or Provision for his Majesties Royal Houshold and the honor of his House and Kingdome which their Ancestors did never deny The Lord Maiors of London who doe take and re-receive yearly a payment or Tribute called Ale-silver and the Citizens of London who doe claim and enjoy by the Kings Grants Charters or Confirmations a freedom from all ●olls Lastage throughout England besides many other large priviledges and immunities and the Merchants of England and such as trade and trauell through his Ports and over his Seas into forrain parts and are not denied their Bills of Store to free their Trunks and wearing Clothes and other necessaries imported or exported from paying any Custome and other duties which with many other things disguised and made Custome-free under those pretences for which the Farmers of the Customes have usually had yearly allowances and defalcations would amount unto a great part of the peoples pretended damage by the compositions for Royall Pourveyance should not trouble themselves with any complaints or calculations of it when as both Citizens and Merchants can derive their more then formerly great increase of trade and riches from no other cause or fountain then the almost constant ●esidence of the King and Courts of Justice in or near London and the many great priviledges granted unto them and obtained for them by the Kings and Queens of England The Tenants in ancient Demeasne claiming to be free from the payment of Tolls for their own houshold provisions and from contribution unto all wages assessed towards the expences of the Knights of the Shires or Burgesses sent unto the Parliament which Sir Edward Coke believes was in regard of their helping to furnish the Kings Houshold provisions though since granted to other persons and their services turned into small rents now much below what they would amount unto and many Towns and Corporations of the Kingdome the Resiants in the Cinque Ports and Romney Marsh Universities of Oxford and Cambridge and the Colledges and Halls therein and the Colledges of Winton and Eaton claiming to be acquitted from the payment of Subsidies by antient Exemptions may be willing to pay or bear as much as comes to their share in that one of the smallest parts of duty which is not to be refused by such as will fear God and honour the King And all the Subjects of England who enjoy their Common of Estovers in many of the Kings Woods or Forrests Pannage or feeding of Swine with Acorns or fetching of Ferne from thence Priviledges of Deafforrestations Assart lands Pourlieus and Browse wood and have Common of Vicinage and Common appendant not only therein but in most of his Manors by a continuance or custome of the charity or pitty of his Royal Progenitors and where they have no grant to produce for those and many other favours will for refuge and to be sure not to part with it fly to praescription and time beyond the memory of man and suppose that there was a grant thereof because that possibly there might have been one should not think much to let him pertake of some of their thanks and retributions which will not amount to one in every twenty for all the benefits which they have received of his Royal Ancestors or doe yearly receive of him Nor should forget that God Almighty the maker of heaven and earth giver of all good things and bestower of blessings who fed his people of Israel with Quails in the Wilderness where none were bred Manna where none was either before or since and made the Rocks to yeild water did in his Theocraty or Government of them by his Laws and Edicts written
many of them who having racked their Tenants to the utmost can leave their Ancestors great and stately houses in the Country as if they had been lately infected with the plague or were haunted with some Devils or Hobgoblins and employ their expences which would have been more honourably laid out in hospitality in treatments of two or three hundred pounds at a time some of our prodigal Gentry expending fifty threescore or an hundred pounds in a Suit of Apparrel can give it away after twice or thrice wearing to a Pimp Sicophant or flattering Servant and lose two hundred or five hundred pounds in a night at Dice or Cards give a hundred pounds for a needle work Band and expend two hundred pounds per annum for Periwigs and all the racked Revenue either laid out by themselves or their wives who vie who shall spend most in the wicked and vain pursuits of a detestable luxury and as if they held their Lands not as formerly by Knight service but by Lady service and their Ancestors had taken pains to leave them estates to play the mad-men withall do make sin the only Errand and employments of their lives and conversations and by their prodigal expences and confining themselves to some few dishes of meat dressed at the Common Cooks in London do leave their Foot-boys and Servants so little of it as they are many times constrained to be glad with the bones and scraps which would have been better bestowed upon Beggars and have reason enough to believe that their Masters can doe no miracles nor multiply loaves of bread or fishes But our Nobility and Gentry demeaned themselves in a more honorable noble and Christian way as may be understood by that of Thomas Earl of Lancasters expences in house-keeping in the Reign of King Ed. 2. when money was scarcer than now it is and yet the account from Michaelmas in the 7. year of the Reign of that King unto Michaelmas in the 8. year of his Reign being but for one year was in the Buttery Pantry and Kitchin three thousand four hundred and five pounds And there was paid for 6800 Stock-fishes so called and for dried Fishes as Lings Haberdines c. 41 l. 6 s. 7 d. for one hundred eighty four Tonnes and one Pipe of Clarret wine and one Tonne of white wine 104 l. 17 s. 6 d. gave costly Liveries of Furres and Purple to Barons Knights and Esquires and paid in that year 623 l. 15 s. 5 d. to divers Earles Barons Knights and Esquires for Fees The house-keeping of the Nobility being not then mean or ignoble when in the fourteenth year of that Kings Reign Hugh Spencer the elder was by Inquisition found to have been possessed of at his several Houses or Manors 28000 Sheep 1000 Oxen and Steers 1200 Kine with their Calves 2000 Hogs 300 Bullocks 40 Tons of Wine 600 Bacons 80 Carcases of Martilmas Beef 600 Muttons in the Larder and 10 Tons of Sider Richard Nevil Earl of Warwick in the Reign of King Henry the fifth had in his house oftentimes six Oxen eaten at a Breakfast and every Tavern was full of his meat and he that had any acquaintance in his house might have there so much sodden and roste as he could prick and carry upon a long Dagger Cardinal Woolsey Arch-Bishop of York in the Reign of King Henry the eighth kept no small house when as his Master Cook in the Privy Kitchin went daily in Velvet and Satten with a chain of Gold about his neck had two Clerks of the Kitchin a Surveyor of the Dresser a Clerk of the Spicery four Yeomen of the ordinary Scullery four Yeomen of the silver Scullery two Yeomen of the Pastery and two Pastery men under them in the Scalding house a Yeoman and two Grooms In the Buttery two Yeomen Grooms and two Pages In the Pantery two Yeomen and in the Waferie two Yeomen Nicholas West Bishop of Ely in the year 1532. in the 23 year of the Reign of King Henry the Eighth kept continually in his house one hundred Servants giving to the one halfe of them 53 s. 4 d. a piece then an allowance for a Gentleman Servant but now by an unreasonable and illegall rise and exaction of servants wages not the halfe of a Carter or Ploughmans wages and to the other 40 s. a piece and to every one of his Servants four yards of broad Cloth for his Winter Gown and for his Summer Coat three yards and a half and daily gave at his gate besides bread and drink warm meat for two hundred poor people Edward Earl of Derby in the Reigns of Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth had 220 men in Checque Roll fed sixty eight aged persons twice every day besides all comers appointed thrice a week for his dealing dayes and every good Friday gave unto two thousand seven hundred poor men meat drink and money The Lord Cromwell in the declyning times of charity as Mr. John Stow well observed served twice every day at his ga●● two hundred poor people with bread meat and drink sufficient all the Gentry making it to be their honor in their lesser orbes to measure their Actions by those as good and honorable patterns And proportionable to their hospitality and the state and dignity of our then Nobility were the numbers of their Servants in their houses at home or in their journies or riding abroad many of the Knights Gentlemens Sons of England making it to be the best of their breeding education and way to preferment to serve or retain unto them insomuch as notwithstanding the Statute made against giving of Liveries or Badges 1 R. 2. cap. 7. and the suspicion which some of our Kings and Princes and King Henry the seventh had of their greatness and popularities the great so called Earl of Warwick in the Reign of King Henry the sixt rode with six hundred men in red Jackets embroidered with ragged staves before and behind Thomas Audley Lord Chancellor of England usually rode with many Gentlemen before him with coats guarded with velvet and chains of gold and his Yeomen following after him in Liveries not guarded William Paulet Marquess of Winchester did ride with a great attendance in Liveries and gave great reliefe at his gate and Edward Duke of Somerset did the like John de vere Earl of Oxford in the Reign of Queen Mary notwithstanding the rigour of the Law against Liveries and Reteiners which King Henry the seventh did so turn against one of his highly deserving Ancecestors as it cost him a fine of ten or fifteen thousand marks was accustomed to ride from his Castle of Hedingham in Essex to his City House at London Stone with eighty Gentlemen in tawny velvet Liveries or Coats and Chains of Gold about their necks before him and one hundred tall Yeomen in the like Livery of Cloth following him with the cognisance of the Blew Bore embroidered on their left shoulder Which being the custome of the good
subdued and conquered as they were enforced to be shaved and wear their hair shorter their Lands being given away to his Normans the greatest part of the Nobility and Gentry extirped many of the common people glad to be vassals and Tenants to those Lands which before were their own and had nothing to recompence their losses but the retaining of their good old Laws and their Masters and Conquerors having gathered all the money and riches of the Kingdom into their Chests and possessions there was after the harrassed English had gained some peace and that the long languishing Olive branches began again to recover their Sap and Verdure so small an improvement of the rent of Land amongst the Normans plenty of money as in the valuation of Lands in the sixteenth year of the raign of William the Conqueror there was such a wonderful small value put upon Lands fifty or sixty and more to one less then it is now the commodities and Cattel raised thereupo● being in all probability proportionable thereunto as in Drayton no unfruitful place in Cambridgeshire the Abbot of Croyland had fourteen or fifteen yard Lands twelve Villaines three Bordmen three Soccage Tenants and two Meadows which in the time of Edward the Confessor were of the value of five pounds per annum and at that time but four pounds and ten shillings In the Raign of King Henry the first which began his Raign in the year of our Lord one thousand one hundred when the Normans had something more improved their Lands and possessions their plenty of money made out of the English miseries did not banish their cheapness of victuals and provisions but left them at those small rates of one shilling for the Carcase of an Ox and four pence for a sheep and no more for the Provender of twenty horses the Denarius or English penny then being probably as the Roman which was but the fourth part of an ounce of Silver which in coyn or money made no more then twenty pence In the latter end of the Raign of King Richard the first who began his Raign in Anno Domini one thousand one hundred eighty nine and after his redemption from his imprisonment by the Emperor of Germany in his return from the Holy Land when money was so scarce in England as to make up the sum of one hundred thousand Marks for his ransome the Church Plate and Chalices were pawned an Oxe or Cow was but of the price of four shillings a Hogg ten pence a sheep of the finer Wooll ten pence and six pence of the courser In the Raign of King Edward the first whose raign commenced in the year of our Lord God one thousand two hundred fifty two when there was as much plenty of mony as peace and an increase of Trade under his ●appy and prudent Government Scotland conquered and subdued and such a plenty of money as some Esterlings or men of Germany from whom our Sterling money is well conjectured by Sir Henry Spelman to receive its denomination were here imployed to coyn our money the Market price of an Oxe was eight shillings and six pence twenty six seames or sums or horse-loads or quarters of Barley was at fourty three shillings a quarter of Oats for fourteen pence and the yearly value of an Acre of Meadow was in Buckinghamshire apud altum firmam at the Rack but eight pence per Acre and so small a power had the plenty of mony then upon the price of victuals as upon the payment of mony agreed to be paid upon a Bond or Deed which was not likely to be for any long time as the Case at Law tempore E. 1. Cited in 9. E. 4. informs us the price of a quarter of Barley which was at the time of the making of the Bond or Deed but three shillings a quarter was before the time of payment for it come to be thirty and two shillings a quarter which might happen from some other causes and not at all by reason of any extraordinary store of money which the Kingdom was then blessed withal In the eighth year of the Raign of King Edward the second which was in the year of our Lord God one thousand three hundred and fifteen a Parliament was assembled at London where all or most of the Prelates and great Lords of England were with the Commons assembled ●aith Thomas Walsingham ad tractandum de statu regni alleviatione rerum venalium a matter now mo●e then ever necessary to consult of the State of the Kingdom and the taking down the price of victuals which saith Walsingham was then so high ut vix posset vivere plebs communis as the common people could scarce live and would have been in a worse condition if the Landlords had then let their Lands at the Rack or beyond the value as many of them do now and many of the houshold provisions had been sold as they are now more then twenty times and others ten or fifteen times more then they were then where it was ordained that an Ox not fed with grain should be sold for sixteen shillings and if with grain and fat for four and twenty shillings and no more a fat Cow of the best sort for twelve shillings a fat Hogg of two years old three shillings and four pence a Mutton fat and shorn for fourteen pence and for one that was unshorn one shilling eight pence a Goose for two pence half penny a Hen for a penny and four Pigeons for a penny And though immediately after in the same year there followed such a very great famine as Flesh and Corn were scarcely to be had Hens and Geese seldom found Pigs and Swine wanted Food and Sheep dyed of the Rot or Murrain yet a quarter of Malt was sold for a Mark and a quarter of Corn for twenty shillings and upon the great dearth which happened in the next year after making such a famine as Horse-flesh was good Diet for the poor and causing a repeal of the Act of Parliament which was made the year before touching the price of Victuals three quarts of strong Beer was then sold for three pence and of small for two pence which in that sad and horrid famine the Magistrates of London understood to be so unreasonable as they prohibited it to be sold at so high a rate in the City and ordained that no more then three half pence should be taken for three quarts of strong Beer and a penny for small and the King by his Proclamation likewise commanded that in all parts of the Kingdom three quarts of Beer should not be sold for more then a penny In the 21. year of the Raign of King Edward the third notwithstanding any enhaunce of prices made or occasioned by the great famine which was in the eight and ninth years of the Raign of King Edward the second his Father and the continuance of it for four or five years
great Talbots or as the Prior of Canterbury did of his Tenants who in every Manor were bound ex antiqua consuetudine providere Priori ibidem de quodam Palifrido competenti tempore novae creations suoe by ancient custome to present the Prior at his election or first admittance a Palfrey fitting for him Or which the Prior of Rochester did of his Tenants of the Mannor of Haddenham in the County of Buckingham who by ancient custome in the eighteenth yeer of the raign of King Edward the third were to Mow and make the Lords Hey Weed his grain in his demesnes pay certain Rent Corn called Booting Corn and five hundred threescore and three Eggs at Easter which in Anno 18 H. 6. were by an agreement made with the Prior of Rochester released for the sum of three pounds and an increase of Rent from thence forward viz. for every Yard land twelve pence every half yard land six pence every Cotland eight pence and every worthy some Tenants so called four pence which is to this day paid and continued And being besides obliged by their customes to the works and services following viz. That every Tenant holding a yard land and the Tenants of two half yard lands ought to plough the Demeasne lands of the Lord two days in the year viz. in Winter and in Lent for which they were to have their dinner allowed by the Lord every Tenant holding a yard land ought in harvest upon a flesh day as also upon a Fish day to be assigned by the Reeve or Bailiff to find two able persons every holder of a half yard every Cotland or Cottogea and every worthy ought to finde the same day one able and lawful person with Hooks or Sickles to reap the Lords Grain in his Demeasnes for which they were to have their dinner allowed them at the charge of the Lord or his Farmer every yard land ought to carry half a quarter of the Lords grain to Oxford being about twelve miles distant to Wallingford neer as much or to Wickham being about ten miles distant being Market Towns near adjoyning to Haddenham and all the Carriers were to have one penny in common to drink the morrow they ought not to work every yard land ought to carry to Marlow eleven quarter of Grain of antient measure at three tearms of the year to be quit from all things by six weeks after and to carry the Lords grain from his demeasnes into his Barn from the furthest field four loads from Dillicot field six loads and if they carry nearer then all the day if it please the Lord also if the Lord shall buy Wood every Yard land ought to carry two loads of Wood from the place into the Lords Yard so it be ready to carry before the Feast of St. Michael otherwise each Yard land should onely carry a horse load so as they may in one day go and return and all that week they should remain quiet likewise if the Lord should build houses he ought to buy Tymber and the men viz. his Coppyholders ought to bring it home viz. each hide every day one Load untill the whole be carryed so as they may in one day go and return also if it please the Lord to send for fish four hides ought to be summoned and two shall go for fish to Gloucester which is about six and thirty miles from thence and other two shall carry it to Rochester upon their own cost and they should remain quiet until they return all the Cotterels and worthy Tenants ought to wash the Sheep of the Lord and to sheer them and fully to perform all thereunto belonging and have nothing therefore and if a theif should be taken in the liberty of the Lord the Cotterel Tenants should keep him And were so due and of so long a continuance as though the Tenants some few onely excepted which would not pertake of the Composition and are still contented to do their work and carriage services did upon a reference made by King James to Henry Earl of Manchester Lord President of his Councel in Anno 1624. to hear and determine the differences betwixt Sir Henry Spiller then Lord of the said Mannor and the Tenants concerning that and other matters within a short time after viz. in the first year of the raign of King Charles the Martyr agree for a Release of the said services not acquitted in Anno 18 H. 6. to pay yeerly unto the Lord of the Mannor and his heirs after the rate of three pence for every Acre and a penny for every Messuage or Cotage which had no land belonging unto it Or as many the like beneficial customes and priviledges at this day enjoyed by the Lords of some thousands or more of Mannors in England which beloned unto the Abbies and Religious houses for which they have quit Rents or other payments not unlike the Compositions for the Royal Pourveyance Or that the Steward of the Kings house should not if the Kings Pourveyance and Prae-emption had not been remitted by Act of Parliament have authority to do as much as the Steward of the Kings house did about the eighteenth year of the Raign of King Edward the second notwithstanding so great priviledges immunities and exemptions granted and confirmed to the City of London command that no Fishmonger upon pain of imprisonment and forfeiture of his goods and chattels should go out of the City to forestall any Sea or fresh fish or send them to any great Lord or Religious house or any person whatsoever nor keep from coming to Town untill the hour appointed for selling be past untill the Kings Achators or Pourveyers should have made their Pourveyance to the use of the King Or that the King of England whose Royal Ancestor King Richard the first did not onely give to many Religious houses as to the Priory of Royston in Cambridgeshire divers exemptions and priviledges to be free from Carriages c. but de Regalium domorum aedificatione ac omnimoda operatione of works towards the repair or building of the Kings houses Ac ut silvae eorum ad praedicta opera aut ad aliqua alia nullo modo capiantur that their Woods or Timber should not be cut or taken for that or any other purpose and whose other Royal Progenitors have abundantly furnished diverse Abbies Religious houses with priviledges to be free of Carriage by Carts Summage upon horses de Thesauro ducendo Convoy of the Kings Treasure de operationibus Castellorum Pontium Parcorum Murorum work to be done in the building or repairs of Castles Bridges or Walls de vaccarum solutione quae dari solebant pro Capitibus utlagatorum and the payment of certain Cows or Cattel to redeem the forfeitures of Outlaws and exemptions from payment of Fumage or Chimny money Lestage or licence to carry away from Markets what they had bought or in release or discharge of customes such as at Beleshale in
Warwickshire belonging to some Religious house where they were to Mow three dayes at the charge of the house three dayes to Plow and at the charge of the house to reap one day and to have a Wether Sheep or eight pence or twenty five loaves or peices of bread one of the best Cheeses in the house and a measure of Salt and if any horse Colt were foled upon the lands he was not to be sold without licence nor were any of the Tenants to marry a daughter without licence and by the custome of the Township of Berstanestone in Warwickshire horse Colts foled upon the land were not to be sold without licence for which a penny was to be paid nor any of their daughters to be married without licence c. which in divers old Charters and confirmations of our Kings and Princes do frequently occur may evidence that such or the like were once undeniable duties to their Kings and Benefactors and onely released in favor of those which were the owners and proprietors of the lands and priviledges and being now enjoyed were formerly regalities and rights inherent and vested in the Crown of England should retain no liberties or priviledges for himself And that the Quit Rents as they are now called taken by the owners and proprietors of some of the Abby and Religious Lands for Eleemosinae's or Alms-money given by Founders or other charitable persons many a sum of money formerly paid for Mortuaries Pardons Indulgences Pitances or Pourveyances and Oblations which are at this time kept on foot and received under the name and notion of Quit Rents might put them in mind how necessary it is for them to perform the duty of Pourveyance to the King being the heir and successor of many of those which gave them And how unbe●oming the duty of subjects pertaking the benefits thereof it would be that the King whose Royal Ancestors Saint Edward the King gave for ever to the Abby of St. Edmonds Bury the Mannor of Mildenhall in Suffolk to buy wheaten bread for the Monks to prevent their necessities of eating Barly bread which he perceived them to do when he came once to visit them King John gave for ever to the Abby of St. Albans and King Edward the first as many other Kings of England have done to other Monasteries and Religious houses gave and confirmed for ever to the Abby of St. Edmunds Bury divers Mannors Lands Tyths and yeerly Revenues of a very great yeerly Revenue to maintain their Hospitalities Pitances and Liu●●es of servants and for the relief of strangers and poor people coming thither should now have his own Hospitality and the means to support it taken from him And that if all the customes priviledges and Royalties as they are called which are now performed and willingly assented unto by Tenants and enjoyed by the Lords of other Mannors by the power and priviledges derived unto them from the King his Royal Progenitors were truely represented and brought to a publike view together with all the priviledges liberties exemptions and immunities granted unto the Cities Boroughs and Towns Corporate of England it might be wondered how they that enjoy so much so many liberties favours from the King his Royal Progenitors by grants or prescribed Indulgences should think there could be any reason to deny him those his most just necessary and ancient rights and liberties of Pourveyances or Compositions for them when at the same time they are so carefull to preserve and keep their own And it would be something more then unfitting that the King whose Royal Ancestors have allowed so many of his subjects those priviledges and liberties should be debarred from a greater right and legal liberty in his own case or when he should make his progress to Chester should be refused that priviledge more ancient then the Conquest of having of every Yard land two hundred Capons or Caponets a fat or stand of Beer and a certain quantity of Butter which as appears by the book of Domesday were by custome or Tenure to be provided for him and not enjoy as much liberty as Hugh Earl of Chester did when he could priviledge Nigell de haulton his Constable and his heirs Quod omnia quae ad praedicti Nigelli opus erant necessaria emant ministri sui ante omnes alios in Civitate Cestriae nisi praenominati Comitis ministri praevenerint sine cujuscunque contradictione that his servants should in the City of Chester without contradiction have a Prae-emption before any but the Earles servants and Officers or as the Abbot of Burgh who had a P●ae●emption in all necessaries concerning the Abby a priviledge to pay an half penny cheaper then others in every hundred of Herring or the Abbot of St. Albans who was by the Charter of King John to have a prae-emption for any of his provisions to be bought in London as well as any of the Kings Officers the Abbot of St. Edmonds Bury having a like priviledge for his Fodder Corn. That the King of England whose Royal Ancestor King Aethelstane was able to give to the Church of Beverlye quasdam avenas vulgariter dictas Hestcorn percipiendas de Dominiis Ecclesiis in illis partibus certain Oats commonly called Hestcorne to be taken out of his Demeasnes and the Churches in those parts which by the dissolution of the Religious houses are now probably claimed and enjoyed by Laymen and did in Anno Dom. 936. ex sua Regalitate by his Kingly authority saith the History of that Foundation give towards the Hospitality and relief of the poor coming to the Hospital of St. Peters or St. Leonards in York de qual bet Caruca Arante in Episcopatu Eboraci unam Travam bladi out of every yard land of errable in the Bishoprick of York one Thrave which is four and twenty sheaves of Corn Et ex consensu Incolarum Episcopatus Eboraci Rex habuit saith that Historian Travas praedictas sibi successoribus suis sic quod exterminaret lupos patriam devastantes and was ofterwards granted by the consent of the inhabitants upon condition that he would destroy the Wolves which wasted that Country Erat siquidem in Diocesi Eboracensi tanta adtunc multitudo luporum quod omnes fere villanorum bestias devorarunt for there were in that Diocess such a multitude of Wolves which King Aethelstane thereupon destroyed as they almost devoured all the Beastes and Cattel belonging to the Countrimen should now that the County and Bishoprick of York have in all the after ages and successions of our Kings not onely received of them many and greater benefits but have been by their many good Laws and Governments protected and defended from all manner of Wolves be denyed so small an observance or retribution as the Pourveyance or Compositions for them which were charged upon that County or Bishoprick did amount unto and at the same time do either not
exemption by an Assessement to be made for that purpose Or by the West Indians in Guaxara who by order of the high Justice do deliver unto Fryers travailing that way if they have no money Horses to ride on or to carry their carriages or provision without money so that at their departure they write it down in the Town book what they had spent and not abide above four and twenty hours in the Town where by a contribution their expences are defrayed Or by the old Irish one of which being a Tenant of Termonland or Land belonging to the Church and unwilling to change his old customes for new said to the Bishop of Dermot of whom he held his Lands non debet dominus mutare censum antiquum sed si careat rebus necessariis vaccis pinguibus c. debet ad nos mi●tere Et nos debemus subministrare nam quaecunque nos habemus Domini sunt nos etiam ipsi illius sumus My Lord ought not to change his ancient Customes Rents or services due out of the Land but if he wanteth necessary provisions for his house and family as fat Cows c. we ought to furnish them for whatsoever we have are his and we our selves are the Lords Or by the modern Irish or inhabitants of Ireland who notwithstanding the Pourveyance or Compositions for Pourveyance and Prae-emption allowed to the Kings Lord Lieutenant of that kingdom could since the abolition of that most useful necessary custome in England offer if Fame did not mistake her self an yeerly supply of 3000. Irish Oxen or Cattel towards the support of the King and his Family and have besides in their Act of Parliament lately made for the execution of his Majesties Declaration for the setlement of that kingdom consented That the Lord Chief Justice of his Majesties Court of Kings Bench the Lord Chief Baron of his Majesties Court of Exchequer and the Master of the Rolles or any other his Majesties Officers of that Kingdom for the time being shall and may have and receive such Port Corn of the Rectories Impropriations or Appropriate Tythes forfeited unto or vested in his Majesty his heirs ●nd successors which have been formerly paid or reserved Or by the Scots a people never as yet exceeding or so much as keeping even pace with their neighbors of England in civilities kindness and gratitudes who when their King Malcolme who raigned in Scotland in Anno Dom. 1004. had given and distributed all the Lands of the Realm of Scotland amongst his men and reserved na thing as the Act of Parliament of 22 Jac. 3. beareth in property to himself but the Royal dignity and the Mute hill in the Town of Scone could give and grant to him the ward and relief of the heir of ilke Baron quhan he sold happen to deceis for the Kings sustentation And did notwithstanding so well esteem and allow of those ancient rights of Pourveyance or Compositions for them as in the Raign of their King James the 4. in the year of our Lord 1489. The Lords spiritual and temporal and uthers his Leiges did declare in Parliament that it was the Kings property for the honorable sustentation of his house according to his Estait and honor quhilk may not be failized without great derogation of his noble Estaite and that his true lieges suld above all singular and particular profit desire to prefer the noble Estaite of his Excellence like as it was done in the time of his maist noble progenitors of gud minde And did therefore think it neidful expedient and reasonable And did statute and ordain that full derogation cassation and annullation be maid of all Gifts Donations Infeftments Fewes life Rents given by his Hieness to quhat sumever person or persons sen the day of his Coronation swa that all Lands Rents Customes Burrow Mailles Ferme● Martes Mutton Poultery avarage carriage and uther Dewties that were in the hands of his Progenitors and Father the day of his decease notwithstanding quhat sumeuer assignation or gift be maid thereupon under the Great Seal Privy Seal or uthers be all utterly cassed and annulled so that the haill profits and Rents thereof may cum to the King to the honorable sustentation of his house and noble Estaite Or so much degenerate from the Brittaines our Ancestors and predecessors who were heretofore so glad of any occasions to express their love and honor of their Princes as when they made their progress or had any occasion to visit any of their houses they flung the doors off the Hinges and gave them open hearted and free entertainment Nor deny those respects and duties to our Kings which no other Nations do refuse to their Kings or Princes which may make us to be an hissing and reproach to other Nations and by using our head so ill to be esteemed as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 people without an head or the Sciopedes who are reported to have such large feet as they can when they please cover their head with it and never let it be said that when a factious and rebellious part of our people could in the year 1656. suppose it to be their Interest to exchange with Cromwell their Antichrist or Mahomet their Religion Laws and liberties for his Tyrannical and Arbitrary will and pleasure and petition him in their Conventicle or pretended Assembly of Parliament that he would besides the remainder of the Kings Queens and Princes Revenues not disposed of except Forrests and Chaces and the Mannors thereunto belonging and of all the Lands of Delinquents in the Counties of Dublin Kildare Clare and Katerlaugh the forfeited Lands in Scotland which were great and considerable two parts of the Recusants Lands in England not compounded for and all Debts Fines Penalties Issues and casual profits belonging to the Keepers of the liberties of England so miscalled which was by them and their fellow Usurpers setled upon him and was of it self a Revenue too great for all the Brewers of England to accept of ten hundred thousand pounds sterling per annum to be leavyed upon the people with such other supplies as should be needful to be raised from time to time by consent of that which they Nick named a Parliament and three hundred thousand pounds per annum to be raised for the charge of the Administration of Justice and support of Government which he thinking not enough to serve his wicked occasions designes or desires to ●lay or keep in exile the heir of the Kingdoms tells his dutiful Parliament at a conference in April 1657. that the charge of the Government would yearly amount unto ninteen hundred thousand pounds sterling and therefore though the war with Spain should cease desired that the thirteen hundred thousand pounds per annum might have six hundred thousand pounds per annum more added thereunto and that that could be willingly assented unto and all the Loyal party enforced and driven to submit
The Antiquity Legality Reason Duty and Necessity OF PRAE-EMPTION AND POURVEYANCE FOR THE KING OR Compositions for his Pourveyance As they were used and taken for the Provisions of the KINGS Houshold the small charge and burthen thereof to the PEOPLE and the many great Mischiefs and Inconveniences which will inevitably follow the taking of them away By FABIAN PHILIPPS Manilius 3 Perquè tot Aetates hominum tot tempora Annos Tot Bella varios etiam sub pace labores Virgil Aeneid lib. 8. Sic placida populos in pace regebat Deterior donec paulatìm Decolor Aetas Et Belli Rabies Amor successit habendi London Printed by Richard Hodgkinson for the Author and are to be sold by Henry Marsh at the sign of the Princes Arms in Chancery-Lane 1663. To the Right Learned and truely Noble Lord Christopher Lord Hatton Baron of Kirkby Knight of the Bath Governor of the Isle of Guarnesey and one of the Lords of his Majesties most Honorable Privy Council My Lord THE Holy Evangelist St. Luke in his Gospel and History of the Acts of the blessed Apostles when he inscribed or Dedicated it to his friend Theophilus hath given us to understand that the Dedication of Books unto such as would read and peruse them is no late or Novel usage for it was in those times or shortly after not thought to be unfitting or unnecessary to take the approbation and opinion of Grave and Learned men of such things as were to be made publicke as Plinius Junior in his Epistles informs us so that it may with reason and evidence be concluded that the Dedication of Books was not originally to procure the favor of some great or good Man neither were the Epistles Dedicatory heretofore acquainted with those gross Flatteries untruths or immense and accumulated praises of the Patrons or their Ancestors which some Foraign Printers for their own private gain do use in publishing Books out of some Copies and Manuscripts left by the deceased Authors or as too many German and other Authors have of late stuffed their Dedications withall which Heroick and great Souls do so little relish as the Books themselves would meet with a better entertainment if they came without them but one of the best and most approved usages of Dedications hath certainly and most commonly been derived from no other Source or Fountain then the great desire which the Author had there being before printing most probably but a few Copies sent abroad to receive the friendly censure and approbation of some Learned man who would in those days carefully read and peruse it and not as now too many men do oscitanter and cursorily take a view onely of the Frontispice or Title and lay it in the Parlor or Hall Windows to be idly turned over by such as tarry to speak with them or else crowd it in their better furnished then read or understood Libraries to make a Muster or great shew of such Forces as they have to bring into the Feild of Learning when there shall be any occasion to use them but neither then or before are able to finde or say what is in them But your Lordship being Master of the Learning in Books as well as of an excellent well furnished Library with many choice Manuscripts never yet published and very many Classick Authors and Volums printed and carefully pick't and gathered together out of the Gardens of good letters which an unlearned and reforming Rebellion and the Treachery of a wicked servant hired to discover them did very much diminish And your Eye and Judgement being able before hand to Calculate the Fate of the Author in the good or bad opinion of all that go by any Rules or measure of right Reason Learning or Judgement I have adventured to present unto your Lordship these my Labours in the Vindication of the Legality Antiquity right use and necessity of the Praeemption and Pourveyance of the Kings of England or Compositions for the Provisions of their Royall houshold for that your Lordship is so well able to judge of them and having been Comptroller of the houshold to his Majesties Royal Father the Martyr King CHARLES the First and to the very great dangers of your person and damage of your Estate like one of Davids good servants gone along with him in all his Wars and troubles when as he being first assaulted was inforced to take Arms against a Rebellious and Hypocritical part of his people in the defence of himself and his people their Religion Laws and Liberties and the Priviledges of Parliament and not only remained Faithfull to him during his life but after his death unto his banished and strangely misused Royal Issue when Loyalty and Truth were accompted crimes of the greatest magnitude and like some houses infected with the plague had more then one ✚ set upon them with a Lord have mercy upon us And did whilst that blessed King continued in his Throne and Regalities so instruct your self in those Excellent Orders and Government of his house as you have been able to enlighten and teach others amongst whom I must acknowledge my self to have been one and out of a Manuscript carefully collected by your Lordship concerning the Rules and Orders of the Royal houshold which your Lordship was pleased to communicate unto me to have been very much informed which together with the many favors with which you have been pleased to oblige me the incouragements which you have given me to undertake this work and the great respect and veneration which I bear unto your Lordships grand accomplishments in the Encyclopaidia large extent and traverses of all kinde of learning and your knowledge of Foraign Courts and Customes which being very extraordinary if you were of the ranke of private men must needs be very much more when it shall be added to the eminency of your Birth and qualitie and the Trust and Emploiments which his Majesty hath been pleased deservedly to confer upon you have emboldened me to lay these my endeavors before your Lordship submitting them to an utter oblivion and extinguishment and to be stifled in the Birth or Cr●dle if they shall not appear unto your Lordship to be worthy the publike view and consideration Wherein although some may feast and highly content their Fancies with censuring me that I have been to prodigal of my labors in proving either at all or so largly the antiquity or legality of the Kings just Rights unto Prae-emption and Pourveyance or Compositions for them when as the Act of Parliament in Anno 12 of his now Majesties raign for taking them away doth give him a Recompence for them yet I may I hope escape the censure or blame of setting up a Giant of Straw and fighting with it when I have done or of being allied to such as fight with their own shadows or trouble themselves when there is neither any cause or necessity for it when as the Act of Parliament for taking away Pourveyance
and the Court of Wards and Liveries and Tenures by Knight Service either of the King or others in Capite or Socage in Capite did not expressely alleage or allow those Tenures and the incidents thereof to be their just rights but onely that the consequences upon the same have been much more burthensom grievous and prejudicial to the Kingdom then they have been beneficial to the King and alleadging also that by like experience it hath been found that notwithstanding divers good strickt and wholsom Laws some extending as far as to life for redress of the grievances and oppressions committed by the persons imployed in making provisions for the Kings houshold and of the Carriages and other provisions for his occasions yet they have been still continued and several Counties have submitted themselves to sundry rates Taxes and Compositions to redeem themselves from such vexations and oppressions and that no other remedy will be so effectual as to take away the occasion thereof especially if satisfaction and recompence shall be therefore made to his Majesty his heirs and Successors so as very many or most of the seduced and factious part of the people of this Nation having in the times of our late confusions been mislead or driven into an ill opinion of it may with the residue of the people be easily carryed along with the croud to a more then imagination that the Pourveyance and Prae-emption was no less then a very great grievance and that his Majesty was thereby induced to accept of a recompence or satisfaction for it and permit the people to purchase the abolition of that which they supposed to have been a grievance which do appear neither to be a grievance nor recompence but a great loss to the King and as much or more in the conclusion consideratis considerandis to the people And that the vulgar and men of prejudice and ignorance are not so easily or with a little to be satisfied as the learned and that in justification of a business from those Obloquies so unjustly and undeservedly cast upon it and so highly concerning the King and his people and in a way nullius ante trita pede altogether untroden wherein I cannot honor and obey the King as I ought if I should not take a care of the rights of his people which is his daily care nor love them or my self if I should not do all that I can to preserve his regalities I can be conscious to my self of many omissions and imperfections in regard of sundry importunities of Clients affairs some troublsome business of mine own which either could not or would not give me any competency of time or leasure but did almost daily and many times hourely take me off as soon as I was on and so interrupt and divert me as I had sometimes much ado when I got to it again to recollect my scattered thoughts and materials and Writing as the Printer called for it with so great a disturbance and a midst so many obstructions may possibly be guilty of some deformities in the method or stile some defects or redundancies impertinent Sallies or digressions or want of coherencies which might have been prevented or amended if I could have enjoyed an Otium or privacy requisite for such an undertaking or have had time to have searched the Archives and too much unknown or uninquired after Records of the Kings just legal Regalias or those multitudes of liberties customs and priviledges which the Lords of Mannors and their Tenants do at this day enjoy by the favour of the King and his royal Progenitors or to have raked amongst the rubbidge of time long ago tripped over and the not every where to be found Abdita rerum or recesses of venerable Antiquity or to have viewed all at once what I had done in its parts and delineations and perused it before it was printed in a compleat Copy with a deliberation necessary to a work of that nature and concernment But howsoever I speed therein I shall like those that brought the Pigeons or Turtle Doves instead of a more noble sacrifice content my self libâsse veritati to have offered upon the Altar of truth what my small abilities and greater affections could procure whereby to have incited such as shall be more happy in their larger Talents to assert those truths which I was so willing to have vindicated and to have rectified that grand and popular groundless mistake and prejudice which multitudes of the common people have by the late Vsurping Powers been cunningly taught to have against it And whether they intended evil or good thereby might be easily misled or mislead themselves to scandalize such an Ancient Legal and reasonable custome and Right of the King when as the great Civilian Paulus saith Rerum imperiti censuram sibi de rebus quibusdam arrogant volentes esse Legis Doctores nesciunt de quibus loquuntur nec de quibus affirmant ambitiosè pervicaciter insolenter ineptè de magnis rebus statuere And it was but a trick of the godless Tyrant and his company of State Gipsies to make the people the more able or willing to covenant and ingage for the maintenance and perpetuity of their Sin and Slaverie and to bear and suffer greater burdens taxes and oppressions then ever Englishmen did before And whatsoever the Fate of these my labors shall appear to be can conclude in magnis voluisse sat est and subscribe my self Your Lordships affectionate servant Fabian Philipps THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS CHAP. I. THe Antiquity of the Royall Pourveyance and Praeemption for the maintenance of the Kings Houses Navy Castles and Garrisons attended by a Jus Gentium and reasonable Customes of the most or better part of other Nations page 9. CHAP. II. Of the Vse and Allowance of Pourveyance in England and our British Isles p. 44. CHAP. III. The reason of Praeemption and Regall Pourveyance or Compositions for the Provision of the Kings Houshold p. 97. CHAP. IV. The right use of the Prae-emption and Pourveyance or Compositions for them p. 234 CHAP. V. Necessity that the King should have and enjoy his ancient rights of Prae-emption Pourveyance or Compositions for them p. 268 CHAP. VI. The small charge of the Pourveyance or Compositions for it to or upon such of the people as were chargeable with it p. 329 CHAP. VII That the supposed plenty of money and Gold and Silver in England since the Conquest of the West-Indies by the Spaniards hath not been a cause of raising the prices of food and victuals in England p. 341 CHAP. VIII That it is the interest of the people of England to revive again the Ancient and legal usage of his Majesties just rights of Praeemption and Pourveyance or Compositions for them p. 400 The Antiquity Legality Reason Duty and Necessity of Prae-emption and Pourveyance for the King Or Compositions for his Pourveyance as they were used and taken for the Provisions of the Kings Houshold the small
understanding and more distempered part of the people should be better and more to be followed and therefore to be taken in and receive as great an entertainment and applause as the Children of Israel did their Golden Calfe with shouts and acclamations whilst Moses as they thought had tarried too long with God Almighty in the Mount for his direction in the making of Laws or as the Romans did the more to be respected twelve Tables of Laws then those of their Mechanick and vulgar Judgements and reasonings which the wiser and more noble not the illiterate and foolisher sort of their Citizens and people had learned well considered and brought home from Athens and other cities of Greece as fit to be observed or imitated When as it might rather be remembred that God in his infinite mercy to the works of his own hands did so early distribute the Beams of his Right Reason and Illumination as the days of old were not without wisdom which being from everlasting and rejoycing afterwards in the habitable parts of the Earth her delights were with the sons of men And therefore Jeremy no Fanatique or man of an Imaginary or self conceited mistaken holiness but inspired by God Almighty and filled with the wisdom from above did not tell us as many of our Novelists and Commonwealth-mongers and the would be wise of the Rota's or Coffee-houses would make us believe that all the succesful experiments which the long lived world had approved to be right reason were either burthensome or oppressive and not to be any longer esteemed or that the paths of wisdom were worne out and not at all to be walked in but with a thus saith the Lord enjoyned us as if there and no where else it were to be found to stand in the ways and see and ask for the old Paths where is the good way and walk therein But that would have been to their loss and rather then faile of their purpose or forsake their beloved ignorant intermedling in Government they could never think any thing to be well until they had made all things ill and like Children would have liberty to do what they list which would do them as much good as the liberties of their misusing the power of the Sword or in medling in matters too high for them did in these last unhappy Twenty years and as little conduce to the publick or their own good and safetie as for Children to be permitted the use of Swords or Pistol● whereby to kill and mischief one another or of fire to burn themselves or set their Parents houses on fire or as they are said to do in Gonzaguas new discovered world in the Moon to govern their parents cannot finde the way to obey Laws and reasonable Customs unless their narrow Capaci●ies or small Understandings may apprehend the cause of it the reason of it must like the Lesbian rule be made to be as they why●●sie or fancie it and obedience to Kings or Laws cut out to their Interest and Conveniencies And will not believe that they have Liberties enough unlesse like Swyne got into a Garden they may foule and root up all that is good and beautifull in it And with their cries and gruntings could never be at quiet until they had trampled upon Monarchy and the majesty and loveliness of it digged up the Gardens of Spices and stopped the streams of our Lebanus And the late blessed Martir King Charles the First was no sooner in the defence of our Magna Charta and the Lawes and Liberties of England murdered but they and their Partisans must frame a Commonwealth and pretend a necessity thereof for avoiding the intollerable as they falsely called them burdens and oppressions of the people amongst which is ranked that great and most notorious piece of untruth that the Cart-taking for the King impoverished many of the people and that the Pourveyance cost the Country more in one year then their Assessments to the Army which with other matters contained in that most untrue and malicious Declaration of the Parliament of England as they then called themselves beraing date the 17. day of March 1648. are more against truth or any mans understanding then the tale of Garagantua's mighty mouth and stomach of eating three hundred fat Oxen at a meal and having five or six men to throw mustard into his mouth with shovels And as false as it was must for an edium to the late King and his Monarchicall Government be translated into Latine and sent and dispersed by their Emissaries into all the parts of the Christian world And from thence or some of the other I may not say causes but incentives or delusions the people too many of whom were inticed or made to believe any thing though never so much against truth reason common sense and their own knowledge must be taught for they could of themselves not find any cause to complain of it to believe that Declaration to be true to the end that whilst they did then bear and had long before endured very great assessements and burdens they might be enabled and be the better in breath to sustein for many years more a seaventy and sometimes a ninty and not seldome one hundred and twenty thousand pounds monethly Taxes and Assessments besides many other greater impoverishments and oppressions obedience must be called a burden every thing but ruining honest men and destroying of Loyaltie an oppression and every thing but vice and cheating to maintain it a grievance for the Truths sake therefore which every good and honest man is bound to submit unto and de●end and in vindication of his late Sacred Majesty and the Laws and Honor of my Country the too much abused England by such Tricks and Villanies and upon no other motive byasse or concernment but to make that scandal which only becomes the Father of Lyes and the causelesness of that complaint appear in their Deformities and proper colours I shall by an enquiry and search for the Original and Antiquity of Royal Pourveyance as to the furnishing of several sorts of Provision for the Kings House and Stable at a small or lesser rate then the markets and a praeemption for those or the like purposes used in this and most Nations of the World bring before the Reader the Laws and Acts of Parliament in England allowing it the Legality Reason Necessity and right use of it the small charge and burden of it and the consequences which will inevitably follow the takeing of it away which we hope will remove the ill opinion which some worthy men heretofore by reason of an abuse or misusage only and some very learned men of late misled by them have had of it CHAP. I. The Antiquity of Regal Pourveyance and Praeemption for the maintenance of the Kings Houses Navy Castles Garrisons attended by a Jus Gentium and reasonable Customs of the most or better part of other Nations WHich being not here intended or understood
Mogende great and high and mighty Lords like a Corporation of Kings govern the people by a false perswasion of liberties under more burdens and Taxes then they ever endured under their Earles of Holland and Friesland and their German and Spanish Monarchs can in their Low-country and levelling humour and the ill measure which they take of reverence to their betters afford the Prince of Orange and his Court and Houshold which is not small a freedom from Excise upon the buying of all provisions for his house which after the rate of its griping would goe a great part of the way to as much as what the King of England saves by his Pourveyances and the like to the Queen of Bohemia her Retinue and Court when she was resident amongst them Embassadours of forraign Princes the English Company of merchants of the Staple their Armies common Souldiers when they are ●n the field or a Leaguer for all their victuals and such like provisions their ships and men of warre at sea and to the University of Leyden for their Wine and Beer The States Generall having great and fitting stipends from their several Provinc●s whom they represent in an Assembly or standing Counsel at the Hague and the Deputies of every Province sent to the Hague when their Comitia or as it were Parliaments are there assembled have each of them four Florens or our eight shillings a day allowed them the Princes of Orange besides their great places of Captain General by Sea and by Land which yielded them great profits as well as power had 1000 pounds sterling a moneth stipend e● cum in castris agebant et in ipsa erat expeditione when they were in the Leagure or any service of warre had for a present given them forty thousand Florens being almost four thousand pounds sterling for a Present or Honorary magnaque pecuniae vis qu● centum millia persaepe excedeba● in eundem conferebatur and a great sum of money over and above which many times was more then one hundred thousand Florens or ten thousand pounds sterling for Spies Intelligence and other necessaries without any accompt to be given for it which stipends of the Prince of Orange and the States of Holland or the Duke of Venice including their charges of Diet Servants and Retinue and all other necessaries belonging to the honor of their imployments being paid in money or raised by Taxes or Excise out of the people have no other difference with the Pourveyance or Royall provision for Kings or Princes but that the stipends are in money and a gross summe large enough to take in all occasions and necessaries and most commonly more then needs And as to that particular being a great deal more then the Pourveyance or compositions for it would amount unto many times falls more heavy upon the people in the lump then it doth or could in a Pourveyance by distribution of it into small parts for that Commonwealths and those Free States or Combinations of governing and taxing are never no loosers by making finding or taking advantage of necessities or catching opportunities of burdening the people and getting such overplus as may either help to enrich their Treasuries and furnish out their magnificence in publick or too often their private and particulars wherein our cunning Church-wardens and Epitomes of Free States in their Parishes and the Grandees of some of our Cities and Corporations are very well instructed In the German Empire now much lessened in its antient rights and pre●ogative by granting them away to several Princes Hanse Towns and Imperial Cities by indulgences necessity of State affairs or want of money the Angariae and Parangariae duties of furnishing horses and carts upon any publick necessity are not denied to the Emperor and upon occasions of warre extraordinariae collationes prastantur que Fodron appellantur et ea appellatione non solum pabulum equorum quod Futter vocatur set et frumentum hordeum aliaeque res ad Imperatoris exercitum victui extraordinary provisions called Foder are furnished which in the German or high Dutch signifieth not only horse meat but corn barley other food for the Emperors Army Et aliorum sententia verior esse videtur qui dicunt extraordinariam collationem quae pro Imperatoris Utilitate et necessitate indicitur supra ordinarias et statas indictiones census et tributa And the better opinion is that Pourveyance or Provisions may be taken for the necessary occasions of the Emperor over and above his Tributes or what is paid unto him And as that excellently learned D. Weymondus now deceased Chancellor to the Prince Elector of Brandenburgh was pleased to inform me at his late being here together with Prince Maurice of Nassau Embassadors from that Prince Elector prae-emption and a power of ordering moderate rates and prices in the Markets is passim in tota Germania now in use in all Germany as well by the Emperor as the Electors and many other lesser Princes And if the French who have yet their Terms des droits de Bordage of provisions which Tenants were obliged to furnish for the Kings Houshold and their grand Provost de l' hostel Lord Steward of the Kings house met priz et taxe a pain vin viandes foin et avoine had in the year 1654 power to rate the prices of wine victuals hay provender and all things appertaining to the provision of the Kings House And were wont to be very wary in parting with Regalities have by any ill advice turned away the honour of hospitality and that magnificence and good which ariseth thereby to their Kings and Princes and put their Court to board-wages which falling short or coming to be ill paid or long forborn will but starve the Houseshold and so keen the appetite and projects of the Court when they shall be every day pursued by their own necessities and put in mind to make what shift they can for themselves as that Nation which is already over-spread with Taxes as with a Garment may in due time if they doe it not already easily acknowledge the difference betwixt this Kingdome and its just Laws and Liberties and the present mode or fashion of that which by departing from their antient and better Laws and Constitutions is now for the most part cut into Tallages and Commands in warre Titles and Outsides of honor and Offices granted not to the deserver but the best Chapman and betwixt making Pourveyance for the Kings Houshold and necessaries to support his Regalities and paying as many kinds of Gabels and Impositions instead of it as there be weeks in the year and the rich and plentifull living of our English Yeomen Francklins and Farmers and their Paysants whose hardship and beggerly way of living makes them to be but as Slaves to their Gentry and Nobility And the dependencie of the Noblesse or the Nobility and Gentry upon the King for charges and places making them so little able to
pay one per cent for provision of Fortresses In the Kingdom of Barnagasso the King hath besides Silks and Cloth of Gold and other precious things for Tribute Horses and payeth himself 150. Horses to Pretious or Prete John Emperor of Ethiopia of whom he holdeth The Kingdom of Oghy besides a Tribute of Gold and Silver sendeth him yearly a thousand Beeves In Ethiopia the Prete or Emperor upon the coming or returning of Embassadors gives order to his Subjects or Vassals to furnish them with provisions for their Journey and not long agoe commanded one to whom he had but a little before given a little Lordship containing not above 80. Houses and two Churches to furnish an Embassador with five hundred Loads of Corn a hundred Oxen and a hundred Sheep The Gozagues do yearly pay to their King besides great quantities of Gold and Silver a thousand Beeves alive The Maldives do yearly pay unto their King the fifth part of the grains which they sowe and give him a Portion of their Coco's and Limmons and besides their Taxes compound also for fruits and honey The Princes and great men in Japan do contend who shall give most to the Caesar and almost impoverish themselves by their Presents All the houses in the City of the Kings Residence are by the King taxed towards the making of Fortresses In Firando in Japan when any forraign Merchants are by the King invited to see Playes and publick Shows they send Presents to him and every forraign Merchant that comes thither may not sell his goods untill he hath carried a Present to the Emperor And when any of the Kings white Elephants are brought unto him the Merchants in the City are commanded to come and see him and bring every one a Present of half a Ducat which altogether amounteth to a great sum of money In Industan when the Mogol goeth abroad or in progress euery one saith Sir Thomas Roe by whose house he passeth is to make him a Present Sir Thomas Roe himself doing it when the King or Mogol rode to the River of Darbadath All the Persian Merchants doe bring their goods first to the Mogol who buyes what he pleaseth and after his Officers have set the rate they may sell to whom they will All men strive to present him with all things rich and rare and no man petitioneth him for any thing empty-handed and thereby come to preferment some giving him one hundred thousand pounds in Jewels at a time The King of Achen commands those of Tecoo to bring thither their Pepper which none may buy but he and puts off his Surat commodities in truck to them at what rates he pleaseth and oftimes sends his commodities to Priaman and Tecoo enforcing them to buy them at his own rates none being suffered to buy or sell before he hath vented his own At Bantam the Governor or Protector so called useth to send in the Kings name to the people to serve him with sacks of Pepper some a hundred some fifty some ten some five at the Kings price which was a Riall less in a Sack then the Merchants paid Divers bring Presents of Rice and Cashes and some bring imbroidered cloth for the Kings wearing Nor were the more civilized part of the Heathen only accustomed to the way of Pourveyance or bringing provisions or presents to their Kings and Princes but the wild and savage part of them were by the Lawes of nature and glimmerings of the light of reason taught to doe it In Mexico in the West-Indies and its large Dominions under the Emperor Montezeuma containing 100 Cities and their Provinces the people did pay a certain yearly Tribute to the King for water brought by pipes into the City Those that hold lands did yearly pay unto him one third part of their fruit and commodities which they had or did reap as gold silver stones dogs hens fouls conies salt wax honey mantels feathers cotton and a certain fruit called C●cao which they there used for money also all kinds of grain Garden-herbs and fruits Some Towns paid 400 burdens of white Mantles others great Tropes of wood full of Maiz Fri●oles c. some four hundred burdens of wood others four hundred planks of Timber some every six moneths brought four hundred burdens of Cotton-wool and others two thousand loads of Salt two hundred pots of Honey twenty Xacaras of Gold in powder and some a Truss of Turkie stones and paid besides the King of Alzopuzalco a Tribute of Firre and Willow-trees towards the building of a City Divers Provinces are bound to provide fire-wood for the Kings house amounting unto two hundred and thirty weight a day which was five hundred mens burdens for the Kings particular Chimnies they brought the Bark of the Oak The Incas or Indian Kings before the coming of their unlucky loving friends the Spaniards had their Tributes yearly brought unto the Court and when any work was to be done or any thing to be furnished for the Incas the Officers knew presently how much every Province Town and Family ought to provide and by their Registers strings and knots knew what every one was to pay even to a hen or burden of wood And as Inea Garzilasco de la Vega a Native of Cozco relates in his book of the antient customes of those Countries did amongst other Tributes make and furnish clothes and Arms to be used in warr In Virginia the Weroances under-Lords or petty Kings did hold their lands habitations and limits to Fish Foul or Hunt of their soveraign King Powhatan to whom they pay Tributes of Skins Beads Copper Pearl Dear Turkies wild Beasts and Corn. And in all Savage Countries the English Merchants and Navigators as Mr. Edward Winslow a man afterwards too well known amongst the plundering and mistaken godly at Haberdashers Hall hath related at his return from thence doe make presents to the Savage Kings In new-New-England the Sachims or Lords are subject to one Sachim to whom they resort for protection and pay homage neither may any make warre without their privity every Sachim knoweth the bounds and limits of his Country and that is as his proper Inheritance and out of that if any of his men desire Land to set their corn he giveth them as much as they can use and puts them in their bounds Whosoever hunteth or killeth any venison which is there much of their food he bringeth him his Fee which is the fourth part of the same if it be killed on the Land but if in the water then the skin thereof Once a year the people are provoked by the Pinieses Knights or Councellors of the Sachims to bestow much corn on the Sachim who bring him thereupon many Baskets of corn and make a great Stack thereof In Florida where they all goe naked and doe but litle exceed the beasts of the field in understanding and want the wit of most part of the Nations of the world to cover their nakedness they can notwithstanding
crowd in amongst them and subscribe to that rule and part of right reason in making retributions and acknowledgements to their Kings or Governors for self-preservation so as a Lord of that Country brought the Governour of the Plantation which was made there two Deer skins and in one Town they made him a present of 700 wild hens and in other Towns sent him those which they had or could get A Ca●ique at Panico near Florida and his men as their manner is weeping in token of obedience made the Governor a Present of much Fish And this custom of Pourveyance and gratefull acknowledgments being thus diffused and to be found amongst the farre greater part of all the Nations of the world we may well conclude it to be almost as universal as the use of Beds Phisick Horses and Shooes or the custome of washing of hands and so generally as if the Sun had in his journies been imployed by God Almighty the Author of all Wisdome and Goodness to scatter and infuse it with his light into the minds and understandings of mankind And that those few places or parts of the world which have not that custome because their Kings are their Peoples Heirs take what part of their Estates they please and govern by an Arbitary power may when they arrive to a better understanding acknowledge and bewaile the want of it And that from these and the like customes of real and willing obedience love to their Princes and their honor and dignity in which their native Countries and themselves did pertake and had so great a share came those great and marvailous publick works As the Piramides of Egypt the Obelisk cut by Semiramis out of the mountains the Pensil Gardens made by Nebuchadonosor the costly and most magnificent Temple of Solomon which was seven years in building by one hundred eighty three thousand six hundred men imployed therein the second Temple at Jerusalem which was 8 years in building and 10000 workmen at a time working upon it a part of the River Euphrates cut and brought into Tigris Ninive built and walled 480 furlongs about and 10000 workmen at a time imployed The stupendious and great Wall of 40 leagues in length built in China the Picts Wall as yet a wonder in its ruines and remains built betwixt some part of England and Scotland of 80 miles in length by Adrian the Emperor and another in or near the same place by the Emperor Severus Grahams Dike in Scotland built by Caraus●us the Vallum Barbaricum a great Wall or Trench made by the Emperor Julian in Germany to defend it against the incursions of the Barbarians the four great High-wayes or Roads in England called Watlingstreet the Fosse Erminstreet and Iknel-street leading to the four Quarters or several parts of the Kingdome the Aquaeducts stately Buildings Palaces Castles and Forts and many other publick works built by the Romans and the greatest part of the Nations of the World serving to beautifie and adorn as well as strengthen it which could never have been made or done by the greedy rates of workmen or the extremities or hire of the utmost farthing And hence it will be now time to imbark for old England and our British Isles the more antient habitation of the Britains CHAP. II. Of the Use and Allowance of Pourveyance in England and our British Isles WHere those prudential as well as antient just reasonable Customes being by a long usage of time incorporated into the Civil Law and so universally allowed and received amongst many Nations as they may well be said to be established jure naturae gentium by a Law of Nature and Nations could not be any stranger when as the Romans by the conquest of it and the Governors and Legions transported hither were not likely to leave behind them their own Lawes and Customes especially such as these which had been appropriated to Martiall affairs and the support of the Honor and Dignity of the Governours or Lievtenants of Provinces For in Britain when Julius Agricola in the Reigns of Nero and Domitian governed for the Romans such kind of Pourveyance for publick uses or support of the Magistrate was taken as Tacitus his Son in Law in his life relates when he did frumenti tributorum auctionem aequalitate munerum mollire circumscisis quae in quaestum reperta mollifie the augmentation of Tribute and Corn with equal dividing of burdens cutting of those petty extortions which grieved the Subjects more then the Tribute it self for it seemed that the Romans had ingrossed all the Corn of the Country and instituting a Monopoly thereof compelled the poor Britains to buy it again of them at their price and shortly after laying a new charge upon them as to victuall the Army or the like to sell it again under foot and the Cart-takers for carriage of provision did use to take up Carts at places farre distant and make them pay well to be spared whereas the same thing saith Sir Hen. Savile the learned Scholiast or Commentator upon Tacitus might have been done without molestation of the people but not with like gain to the Officers nor were our Ancestors the Britains so unhappy in their friends the Saxons likely to be unlearned in those customes of Pourveyance when that great and famous Lawyer Papinian did afterwards at York for some years together under the Emperor Severus as our great Selden intimates dicere docere jus Caesareum keep the Courts of Justice according to the Roman Laws and that those Lawes flourished and continued here as directors and assistants of their Government for more then 350 years after that is to say from the fiftith year of Christ to about the year 410 since when or before the Irish paid very antiently their Coshery or exactio Dynastae Hibernici quando ab incolis sub ejus potèstate clientela victum hospitium capiebat pro seipso suaque sequela Tributes to their Kings or Rulers of lodging and victuals for them and their Retinue and so long continued it as it is not yet out of the memory of some men with how much honour and esteem an Earl of Desmond lived in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth amongst his Tenants in Ireland where when he yearly made his Progress they having comfortable bargains were some for one day and night others for two and some for a greater part of time to entertain him and his no small company And those reasonable Customes of Pourveyance without destroying of property have not been disused but have with relation to publick uses or benefits kept company with our municipall Lawes and Customes during all the Saxon times untill the Reign of Canutus the Danish King who notwithstanding his Agreement with King Edmond Ironside made in a single combat in Alney Mead before Gloucester in Campo Martio view of the Danish and English Armies to divide the Kingdomes of England and Denmark betwixt them having by the death of
upon any expedition by land or sea he was to have out of that Manor twenty shillings to feed his Buzcarles Mariners or Seamen or took for every five hides of land or that then esteemed honorable quantity of land a man with him But howsoever if that of Canutus discharging Pourveyance were a Law neither altered nor repealed it did but like his Laws touching Ordeal and delivering over the Murderer to the Kindred other of his Laws which proved to be unpracticable rather make the matter worse then better by his renouncing Pourveyance in his own Demeasnes for that Law and Resolution of his did meet with so little observance as in the Reign of King William Rufus and a great part of the Reign of his Brother King Henry the First the Kings Servants and Court for want of their former provisions grew to be so unruly as multitudo eorum qui curiam ejus sequebantur quaeque pessunda●ent diriperent nulla eos cohibente disciplina totam terram per quam Rex ibat devastarent and a multitude following the Court took and spoiled every thing in the way which the King went there being no discipline or good order taken Et dum reperta in Hospitiis quae invadebant penitus absumere non valebant ea aut ad forum per eosdem ipsos quorū erant pro suo lucro ferre ac vendere aut supposito igne cremare ●ut ●i potus esset lotis exinde equ●rum suorum pedibus residuum illius per terram effundere aut aliquo alio modo disperdere solebant and when they could not consume that which they found in the houses whereinto they had broken made the owners carry it to the Market and sell it for them or else burnt their provisions or if it were drink washed their horses feet with it or poured it upon the ground in so much as quique pre●ognito regis adven●u sua habitac●l a fugithant every one hearing before hand of the Kings coming would run away from their houses which probably bringing in a dearth or scarcity of co●n might be the cause of the Tenants of the Kings Demeasne Lands bringing in the later end of the Reign of King Henry the First for then it was and not before as it appears by Edmerus and William of Malmsbury who lived in his time to the King their Plowshares instead of Corn to Court on their backs and making heavy complaints of their poverty and misery procured that King to change their Rents which before were used to be paid for the most part in corn cattle and provisions and were wont abundantly to supply his houshold occasions and with which in primitivo regno statu post conquisitionem the Kings of England from the Conquest untill then did plentifully as Gervasius Tilburien●is who lived also in his Reign hath related defray the charges of their Courts and Housholds into money with six pence in the pound overplus left the value of the mony should afterwards diminish but whether Canut●● his Law were then in force or not or could be sufficient to abrogate those Jura Majestatis Rights or Prerogatives of our English Kings we find King Henry the first after those disorders in his greatest compliance with the English and his need of their aid to defend him against the pretensions and better Title of his elder Brother Robert Duke of Normandy and his cou●ting of them unto it per libertates quas sanctus Rex Edwardus spiritu Dei provide sancivit by the antient Lawes and Liberties of holy King Edward which he had granted them and a promise to grant them any other retaining his Pourveyance and putting it into better order for as William Malmesbury hath recorded it Curialibus suis ubicunque villarum esset quantum a Rusticis gratis accipere quantum quoto praetio emere debuissent edixit transgressores vel gravi pecuniarum mulcta vel vitae dispendio afficiens directing and ordering those of his Court in whatsoever places he should abide what and how much they were to receive from the Country people gratis and without money and at what prices and rates they should buy other things under great penalties of money or punishment by death and was optimatibus venerabilis provincialibus amabilis reverenced by the Nobility and beloved by the common people and in his Charter which was for a g●eat part of it the original of our Magna Charta where omnes malas consuetudines quibus regnum Angliae iniuste opprimebatur inde aufert he took away all the evill Customs with which England was oppressed Et quas as the Charter saith in parte hic posuit and which were in part recited and with which the discontented Barons Nobility of England claiming their antient Liberties were so well contented in the 14. year of the Reign of King John when Steven Langton Archbishop of Canterbury produced it unto them as gavisi sunt gaudio magno valdè juraverunt omnes quod pro hiis libertatibus si necesse fuerit decertabunt usque ad mortem they greatly rejoyced and swore that they would if need were contend unto death for those Liberties there is no mention of any evil in Pourveyance nor any order for the taking of them away And might as justly rationally continue in the Raign of King Henry the second his Grandchild as that custome or usage for the Bishops and dignified Clergy to take their provisions of the Inferior Clergy and their Carriages or Carts which Pope Alexander in a Councel or Synod held at Rome where were present the Bishops of Durham Norwich Hereford and Bath and divers Abbots sent from England did notwithstanding many complaints not against the Pourveyance it self but the immoderate use of it onely limit and restrain them secundum tolerantiam in illis locis in quibus am●liores fuerint redditus Ecclesiasticae facultates in pauperibus autem mensura tenenda to be moderately taken in such places as had more large possessions and Ecclesiastical Revenues and less of those who were in a poorer condition and then and long before the Domini hundredorum Lords or great men having the command or jurisdiction of Hundreds uti comes aut vicecomes as the Ea●l or Sheriff of the County had multa inde auxilia tributa sectas aliasque praestationes cum ad utilitatem tum ad voluptatē Cererē nempe frumentū receperunt c and received many aids tributes and Pourveyances aswel conducing to their profit as pleasure cujus hodie nomine Annuum penditur tributum pecuniarum for which now there is a certain rent in mony paid Nor could the rights of Pou●veyance Prae-emption be any thing less then denizend in Scotland or the Northern parts of our British Isles when as the Civil and universal Law of the World was there so long ago entertained and yet continues the great Director and Guider of their Justice where in
Anno 1487. in an Act of Parliament made by King James the third anent strange●s bringing in victuals and utheris merchandice it is provided that quhair any victuals of merchandise cummis gaining for the King that his Comptroller after that the price be maide with the strangers sall have sa meikle of the first and best as is needful to the Kings proper use for the quihilk full payment but delay and their learned Craig in the Reign of our King James doubts not to reckon the Angari● Parangariae plaustrorum navium praestationes furnishing of Carriages and Ships for publick uses inter ea quae Regalia dicuntur quae in annexo patrimonio numerantur amongst those Regalities which are annexed to the Crown of Scotland eo quod ad conservandam Regni dignitatem ex consensu ordinum constituta sunt in regard that by the consent of the Estates is thereby conserved the dignity of the Kingdom And their Ce●sus Cani Rent or Provision quh●●t beir aytes or uther kind of victuals reckoned by Bolls of Wheat and Chalders of victuals not yet forsaken or laid by may induce any man to believe that they were well acquainted with those just and ancient observances And in that Charter of our King Johns at Running Mede near Stanes being the same word for word which was after so long and bloody warres confirmed by King Henry the third which was made when his weaker forces were ready to be encountred by a farre stronger of his boysterous Barons there is no denying of Prae-emption and the reasonable part of Pourveyance the former of which as long as the fifth Commandement in the Decalogue and the acknowledgements and respects of inferiors to superiors the honor due to Kings Patribus Patriae and the common civilities of mankind shall continue in force and be practised and unrepealed is certainly to be continued and should not be disturbed by any the Sons of men who would preserve the honour and dignity of their Prince and Common Parent for it was there only agreed that nullus constabularius vel Ballivus noster capiat blada vel alia Catalla alicujus nisi statim inde reddat denarios No Constable or Bayliff of the King shall without present payment take any Corn or Cattle of any mans aut respectum inde habeat de voluntate venditoris unless the Seller should be contented to give day for it Et nullus Ballivus noster vel Vice-comes vel alius capiat equos vel caretas alicujus pro cariagio faciendo nisi reddat liberationem antiquitus statutum scilicet pro careta ad duos equos decem denarios per diem pro careta ad tres equos quatuordecim denarios per diem And that none of the Kings Bailiffs Under Sheriffs or other take any mans carts or horses for the Kings carriages without paying the antient rate or Livree appointed that is to say for a Cart and two Horses ten pence a day and for a Cart and three Horses fourteen pence Nor did the Conservatores libertatum Angliae enforced upon King Henry the third in his troublesome Reign make any quarrels or restrictions concerning it In Charta Foreste made at the same time no Foster or Bedil was to make Scota●● or gather Garb Oats Corn Lamb or Pig nor any gathering but by the view and oath of twelve Rangers the Exception allowing the things in casibus non exceptis and proving that such things might in such manner be then reasonably and lawfully taken And in that Kings Regin Writs were frequently sent to the Sheriffs as appeareth in the close Rolls to make provisions of Mutton Puletry Geese Eggs c. against Christmas and other principal Feasts and sometimes to the Chamberlains of London to make provision of wine Spices and Furres to be paid de denariis Regis and at other times to some others to make provision of Corn Bacon c. for fortifying a Castle promising that the Sheriff should make payment and be allowed upon his accompt out of the profits of the County so as although the provisions for the Kings own Houshold or for publick uses were not taken without monies to be paid for them yet they were as it may well be supposed at reasonable prices and by a priviledge or prerogative of Praeemption and not alwayes at such prices as the avaritious humour of the Sellers should exact when the Sheriffs in their Turns or Leets might compel them to reasonable rates And Sir Edward Coke will hardly be brought off from a mistake in alledging in his Comment upon the Statute of Artic●li super Chartas that when the Kings of Englands provisions began to fail and could not be had as formerly out of their own Demeasnes there were Markets kept at the Court gates which being not in the Reign of King Henry the first who changed his Provision Rent into money doe not appear to have been afterwards in his time or of the next succeeding Kings Stephen Henry the 2. Richard the 1 or King John and King Hen. 3. who needed not to have made use of his Sheriffs to have furnished his Christmas or other houshold provisions if Markets with that decency and regard which belonged to a Kings Court where those great Kings and a daily confluence of their then no small Nobility with their usual Trains and Attendants and many times forreign Princes or their Ambassadors were to pass had been or were then kept at the Court gates for Britton who wrote in the Reign of King Edward the first only saith that the Clerk of the Market or he which was to look to the measures was to goe with his Standard from Market to Market when he found the Market to be within the Virg● otherwise to make the Bayliffs to appear before him Tertio Ed. 1. ca. 7. it was enacted that of Prises taken by the Constables or Castellanes upon such folk as be not of the Towns where the Castles are no Constable or Castellane from thenceforth should exact any price or like thing of any other then of such as be of the Town or Castle and that it be paid or else agreement made within forty daies if it be not an antient price due to the King or to the Castle or the Lord of the Castle Tempore Ed. 1. ca. 2. It was ordained that no Officers of the King or of his Heirs should take Corn Leather Cattel ot any other goods of any manner of person without the good will and assent of the party to whom the goods belonged And ca. 3. the King granted for him and his Heirs that all Clerks Lay-men of the Land should have their Laws Liberties and free Customes as largely and wholly as they have used to have the same at any time when they had them best And if any Statutes have been made by him or his Ancestors or any Customes brought in contrary to them
2 R. 2. ca. 1. Upon complaint made in Parliament that Pourveyors and Buyers did take Provisions of the Clergy and enforce them to make carriages against their Liberties It was enacted that the holy Church should have and enjoy her Franchises and Liberties in all points in as ample manner as she had in the time of the Kings noble Progenitors Kings of England and that the great Charter and the Charter of the Forest and the good Laws of the Land be firmly holden and kept and put in due execution saving to the King his Regality which is in the Record but omitted in the Print by which Statute saith Sir Edward Coke there was nothing enacted but what was included in Magna Charta And in the same Parliament it was ordained that the Statutes heretofore made should be kept and that all Clerks should have their Actions against such Pourveyors by Actions of Trespass and thereby recover treble damages And in 7 R. 2. cap. 8. it was ordained that no Subjects Chator shall take any victuals or carriages to the use of their Lords or Ladies without the owners good will and the party endamaged if he will shall have his Suit at the Common Law 2 H. 4. cap. 15. Pourveyance of the value of forty shillings or under for the Kings house shal l be paid for presently upon pain of forfeiture of the Pourveyors Office 23 H. 6. ca. 14. If any Buyer or other Officer of the Duke of Gloucester or of any other Lord or person take any Victuals Corn Hey Carriages or any other thing of the Kings Liege people against their will or without lawfull bargain but only for the King and the Queen and their houses they shall be arrested and if any of the said buyers other then of the King and Queen shall be convicted of such unlawfull taking he shall pay treble damages 28 H. 6. ca. 2. None shall take any persons Horses or Carts without the delivery of the Owner or some Officer nor any money to spare them saving alwayes to the King his Prerogative and his Preheminence of and in the premisses And in the care of our Kings to redress the peoples grievances and satisfie their complaints against the Pourveyors rather then the Royal Pourveyances it may be understood also that they did not altogether lay aside the preservation and care of those antient and most necessary rights and parts of the Kingly Prerogative by their Answers given in divers Parliaments to the Petitions of the People concerning it as 13 Ed. 3. The Commons pray in Parliament that all Pourveyors as well with Commission as without shall be arrested if they make not present pay whereupon it was agreed that the Commissioners of Sir William Heallingford and all other Commissioners for Pourveyance for the King be utterly void 14 Ed 3. Ordered that the Chancellor by Writs doe pay the Merchants of Barton and Lynne for their Pourveyance of corne 17 Ed. 3. The Commons pray that remedies may be had against the outragious taking of Pourveyors The Statutes made shall be kept and better if it may be devised 20 Ed. 3. That payment be made for the last taking of victuals Order shall be taken therein They pray that Pourveyors not taking the Constables with them according to the Statute of Westminster shall be taken as Theeves and the Judges or Justices of Assize or the Peace may inquire of the same The Statutes made shall be observed 21 Ed. 3. Upon a complaint of the Commons That whereas in the Parliament in anno 17. and the next Parliament before it was accorded that Commissions should not issue out of the Chancery for Hoblers and taking of Victuals c. the said Ordinances are not kept If any such Imposition was made the same was made upon great necessity and with consent of the Prelates Counts Barons Autres grandees and some of the Commons then present notwithstanding the King will not that such undue Imposition be drawn into consequence but willeth that the Ordinances in this Petition mentioned be well kept And as touching the taking of victuals alwayes saving the Kings Prerogative his will is that agreement be made with such of whom the same are and shall be taken The Commons alleaging That whereas it was lately ordained and assented by the King and hîs Council that men and horses of the Kings Houshold should not be harbinged in any part of the Country but by Bill of the Marshall of the House delivered to the Constable who should cause them to have good sustenance for themselves and their horses as should be meet and cause their victuals to be prised by the men of the same Towns and before their departures should pay the parties of whom the victuals were taken and if they did not their horses should be arrested and that contrary hereunto they depart without payment pray that in every Bill mention be made of the number of horses and that no more but one Garson be allowed and that payment according to the Statute may be made from day to day The King is pleased that this Article be kept in all points according to the form of the Statute They complain that the Pourveyors of the King Queen and Prince severally doe come yearly assess and Towns severally at ten Quarters of Oates more or less at their pleasure and the same doe cause to be carried away without paying for the same and pray that such Tallages and Pourveyance may be taken away The King will forbid it and that no man take contrary to such prohibition saving to him the Queen his companion and their Children their rightfull takings Eodem Parliamento whereas the horses of the King Queen Prince do wander into divers parts doing much hurt and damage to the people and that hay oats c. are taken contrary to the Ordinances already made the Commons pray That the King will ordain that those horses may abide in some certain place of the Country where they are and that Pourveyance may be had for them in convenient time of the year by the Deputies as may be agreed between them and the owners of those goods The King is well pleased that the Ordinances already made shall be kept and that Pourveyances may be made for his best profit and ease of his People 45 Ed. 3. That no Pourveyance be made for the King but for ready money and that the King be served by common measure The Statutes made before shall be observed They complain of the decay of the Navy by reason tha● sundry mens ships were stayed for the King long before they served the Masters of the Kings Ships doe take up Masters of the Ships as good as themselves The King will provide Remedy 46 Ed. 3. They complain that Ships arrested have been kept a quarter of a year before they pass out of the Port and in that time the Masters or Marriners have no wages Y
and profit of holy Church and the King and his People Which Rules and Rates being not held to be a publick grievance in all his Reign and the Reigns of King Edward the sixth and Queen Mary some of the Counties in the beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth though the people thereof were most commonly well paid for their provisions by the Queens Pourveyors finding some trouble and attendance in the procuring their monies to be paid for their commodities which were sometimes taken upon credit by reason of so many Offices Cheques Intrada's and Comptrolments which they were to pass through at the Court did about the fourth year of her happy Reign petition her to accept the value in money to be yearly paid by the Countries which she by no means hearkening unto it came afterwards to an agreement what proportion those and severall other Counties should yearly serve in Oxen Calves Muttons Poultry Corn c. In which she was so carefull to preserve her Subjects and People from grievances or just causes of complaints as in Anno 32 of her Reign Nicholls one of her Pourveyors was attainted of Felony and hanged for forcibly taking provisions without money and those compositions and agreements for provision of the Houshold continuing all her glorious and happy Reign and all the Reign of the peaceable King James it was in the eighth year of his Reign in the case betwixt Va●x and Newman resolved by the Judges and allowed for law that it was lawfull for a Pourveyor paying for them to take Cattle for the Kings House by virtue of the Kings Commission and cited the book of 18 H. 6. 19 b. to that purpose And in the third year of the Reign of King Charles the Martyr were none of the grievances then complained of in order to the obtaining of the Petition of Right and confirmation of the Peoples Rights and Liberties or of those which were then alleaged to be infringed Although that in the Reign of King James some of his Pourveyors having taken greater quantities of provision for his House and Stable then ever came or were needfull to his use and caused Timber to be cut down thereupon in Anno 2. of his Reign it was resolved by all the Judges of England and Barons of the Exchequer upon mature deliberation that the Kings Pourveyors could take no Timber growing upon the Inheritances of the Subject because it was parcell of their Inheritances no more then the Inheritance it self of which the King and his Council being informed he did by a Proclamation dated 23 Aprilis anno 4 of his Reign prohibit such their ill dealings and divers Pourveyors were afterwards punished by the Court of Starre-chamber for Pourveying of Timber growing without the consent of the owners Nor had that fatal and ever to be bewailed Remonmonstrance of the House of Commons in Parliament the 15. of December 1641. in which was too industriously amassed and put together all the errors imaginable in the Government and Reign of that pious Prince and more then could be proved any thing to charge upon the Pourveyance or Compositions for the provision of the Kings Houshold but only that the people were vexed and oppressed with Pourveyors and Clerks of the Market neither in their nineteen Propositions in June 1642. sent to the King at Oxford wherein they would have lessened his power all they could and extended their own was there any thing proposed for the taking away of the Royal Pourveyance or Compositions or in other propositions afterwards sent thither or in the Treaties at Uxbridge and the Isle of Wight Nor if causes and circumstances be as they ought to be well weighed in the Ballance of Judgement and all things rightly considered could be any grievance or cause of complaint When as the remote Counties which had less benefit by the constant residence of Q. Elizabeth King James King Charles the First in their Chamber of London the heart of the Kingdome did bear very little and the near adjacent Counties which by heightning their Markets and prices of all sorts of Commodities by a large improvement of their Lands and Rents to above twenty times more then ●t was in the Reign of King Henry the seventh and ten times more then it was in the eighteenth year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth might better afford it did not pay or bear much in the Pourveyance or Composition which were made by the Justices of the Peace in each County upon consultation and agreement with the Officers of the Green-cloth in the Kings House for serving in a certain quantity of provisions out of every County at such rates and prices as were agreed on betwixt them as by a few instances of many may easily appear by what was yearly charged upon the Counties of Essex and Midlesex neer adjacent to London and the Counties of Derby Worcester and York which were more remote viz.   The Kings price Totall   l. s. d. l. s. d. Wheat 500 quarters at 0 6 8 166 13 4 Oxen fat 20 at 4 0 0 80 0 0 Muttons fat 300 at 0 6 8 100 0 0 Veals 300 at 0 6 8 100 0 0 Porks 100 at 0 6 8 33 6 8 Boars 6 at 0 13 4 4 0 0 Bacon Flitches 30 at 0 2 0 3 0 0 Lambs 1200 at 0 1 0 60 0 0 Geese 5 dozen at 0 4 0 1 0 0 Capons 10 dozen at 0 4 0 2 0 0 Hens 30 dozen at 0 2 0 3 0 0 Chickens 150 dozen at 0 2 0 15 0 0 Pullets 40 dozen at 0 1 6 3 0 0 Hay 134 loads at 0 8 0 53 12 0 Oats 1426 quarters at 0 4 0 285 4 0 Litter 120 loads at 0 4 0 24 0 0 Wood 769 loads at 0 3 0 115 7 0 Coals 250 chalder at 0 13 9 171 17 6 Summe       1201 0 6   Kings price Totall Wheat 200 quarters at 0 6 8 66 13 4 Veals 40 at 0 12 0 24 0 0 Veals 100 at 0 6 8 33 6 8 Green Geese 20 doz at 0 3 0 3 0 0 Capons course 10 doz at 0 4 0 2 0 0 Hens 20 dozen at 0 2 0 2 0 0 Pullets 20 dozen at 0 1 6 1 10 0 Chicken 40 dozen at 0 2 0 4 0 0 Hay 202 loads at 0 4 0 40 8 0 Oats 211 quar 2 bush at 0 4 0 42 5 0 Litter 180 loads at 0 4 0 36 0 0 Wood 200 loads at 0 3 0 30 0 0 Summe       285 3 0 The Market price Totall Difference l. s. d. l. s. d. l. s. d. 1 16 8 916 13 4 640 0 0 10 0 0 200 0 0 120 0 0 1 0 0 300 0 0 200 0 0 1 4 0 360 0 0 260 0 0 1 3 4 116 13 4 83 6 8 4 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 0 10 0 15 0 0 12 0 0 0 8 0 480 0 0 420 0 0 0 18 0 4 10 0 3 10 0 0 16
his Plate for religious uses for his Chappel and Devotion sell the Coats of the Yeomen of his Guard break in scorn his great Seal of England by the hand and hammer of a common Blacksmith which shewed what they intended to the life of the owner drive and engage all men into a monstrous Rebellion a slavery which proved to be the consequence and just reward of it and deprive him as much as they could of the loyalty duty love and obedience of his people and having abundantly enriched themselves and their Godless praying party by the Crown Lands and Revenues of the Church most of the Nobility and Gentry and many other good men and their Families did not think it reasonable to serve their Master for a little but as a further reward and recompence for their care and diligence to oppress and ruine their King and his better Subjects would be sure to make for themselves as good a Pourveyance and Provision as they could upon pretences of some little losses in their own small and necessitous Estates and allow one another besides their gaine of plundering and traiterous and sacrilegious purchases out of the improvements of the Common misery and washing as well as wasting three Kingdomes over in blood some fifty pounds some ten some four pounds a week towards thei● support and maintenance and to make their proportions the more plausible and to seem something reasonable would not leave out of the account the well stretched Items of the losses and charges of their Grandchildren married Sons and Daughters and when they had finished their ungodly work murdered the King Monarchy Magna Charta Petition of right and the Lawes and Liberties of the People and converted their own sins into the bloody and unsure foundation of a Common-wealth founded upon the blood and murther of their Soveraign and many thousands of his loyal and religious Subjects and the perjury of themselves and as many as they could perswade or constrain unto it and the greatest of iniquities and made the people who got as much ease by it as the Asse in the Fable who thought to make his burden of Sponges the lighter by lying down in the water with them believe that when two parts in three of the Kingdome were undone to enrich a third and brought under a slavery and arbitrary power of the mechanick and ruder sort of them that their freedome from Pourveyance and Cart-taking was an especial deliverance which amongst other wonderfull things as they called them pretended to be done for them being only to buy Sadles for their reforming Legislators to ride upon their backs and a favour much of kin to that of Pharoahs kind usage of the Children of Israel when he set Task-masters over them to afflict them with burdens made their lives bitter with hard bondage caused them to make bric● and double the Ta●e thereof and gather the straw was recompence sufficient for all their money and sins laid out in that wicked and detestable cause and for all that which they were to endure in this life and the next and in that seeming holy but assured cheating a miserable and strangely deluded Nation continued like the Egyptians in their way to the Red sea and oppressing of Gods people untill their Oliver and grand Impostor and Instrument had out-witted and undermined them and ins●ead of many Tyrants had set up his single Tyranny and having from an indebted and small Estate made much less by a former drunken and debauched conversation by which he was so streightned as not to be able to buy some oats or pease to sow a small parcel of ground but to borrow some of a friend upon his promise of a Repayment upon his hoped for increase at Harvest did notwithstanding neither then nor after a more plentifull crop of his wicked doings and that great Estate which the sinnes of a factious and wicked part of the people had made him Master of ever find the way to satisfie or repay And having largely pourveyed for himself better then he could do in his Brewhouse put an Excise upon Ale Beer and intoxicated as many as he could seduce with an opinion that Rebellion was Religion and gotten an Arbitrary power with a large Revenue in Lands which was the Kings and other mens an Army of twenty thousand Foot and ten thousand Horse and a formidable Navy to be maintained at the peoples charge to continue their misery and three hundred thousand pounds per annum to defray the charges of his tyrannical Government took himself to be a Child of Providence and something more then one of the smallest Branches of Cromwell alias Williams King Henry the eights Barber and therefore in order to a Kingship or something by another name amounting to as much made it his work to disguise and metamorphose the antient Government decry our fundamentall Lawes and every antient constitution dig up by the roots all that was not novel or assistant to his designs fit to make a head out of the Heels and after he had taken an oath to maintain and preserve the Laws and Liberties of the people imprisoned Serjeant Maynard Serjeant Twisden and Mr. Wadham Windam who pleaded in the behalf of a Client for them thought it to be conscience Law and Latin good enough to call our Magna Charta magna Farta and did so order his Convention or thing called a Parliament of England compounded and made up of time-servers and a Medly of Irish and Scottish of the like complexion as they were brought in Anno 1656. by one of their Tooles called an Act of Parliament to ordain that pourveyance or Composition for the Kings house which they were taught to alleage to be a grievance to the people and very chargeable when there was none at all at that time in being in England nor was ever intended by many of the worshipfull Mushrooms to be thereafter should no more be taken under pain of Felony And was as great a kindness and ease to the people as if they had ordained that no more Subsidies which seldome amounted to more then a tenth part of the late yearly Taxes should be imposed by Parliament but Assessments at 70 thousand pounds or one hundred and twenty thousand pounds per mensem as often as long as that which they called the supreme Authority should have or feign a necessity for it or that offenders should be no more sent for by the Kings messengers or tried by Juries and the known Laws of the Land but at Cromwells High Court of Justice or Shambles lined with red or bloody Bayes or that there should be no more use or trouble of the Train Bands but an Army of 30000 domineering Redcoats or Fanaticks with their Bashaws or Major-Generals maintained at the peoples charge to keep or make them quiet under their vassalage or slavery or that there should be no more Coat and Conduct money long agoe remitted by King Charles the Martyr
solvat persolvat postea forisfacturam nor to sell or buy any thing for money but within Cities and before three witnesses nor without a Voucher or warranty and if any did otherwise they were to be fined and at last incurre a forfeiture Item nullum mercatum vel forum fieri permittatur nisi in civitatibus regni jus suum commune dignitatis coronae quae constituta sunt a bonis predecessoribus suis deperiri non possunt nec violari sed omnia rite in aperto per judicium ●ieri debent likewise that no Market be kept but in Cities so that the right of the King and the dignity of his Crown as it was constituted in the times of his good predecessors might not be lost defrauded or violated and that all things be rightly and openly done according to right and justice King Henry the 1. his Son saith the Monk of Malmsbury corrected the false Ell or Measure so called of the Merchants brachii sui mensura adhibita omnibusque per Angliam proposita causing one to be made according to the measure or length of his own arm ordered it to be used through all England and in his Laws reckoneth the punishment of false Coiners and prohibiting and punishing of Forestall or forestalling of Markets inter Jura his Rights Royal Prerogatives quae Rex Angliae solus super omnes homines habet in terra sua which belonged to him only as King of England and without an Act of Parliament ordered the rate and value of mony which being the mensura rerum measure guide of all things in commerce and dealings one man with another hath no small influence or power in the heightning or lessening of the price of things and is such a part of Soveraignty as the Parliament in their 19. high and mighty and unreasonable propositions sent unto the late King Charles the Martyr in his troubles in June 1642. never attempted to restrain or take from him In the Reign of King Henry the second when as Ranuphus de Glanvilla Chief Justice of England under him saith in that book which is generally believed to have been written by him the Laws and Customes of England being ratione introductis diu obtentis founded upon reason and long used had arrived to that perfection as pauperes non opprimabantur adversarii potentia nec a limitibus Judiciorum propellabat quenquam amicorum favor gratia the poor were not oppressed by their adversaries power nor did partiality or friendship hinder any from Justice the inquiry and punishment of false measures and all manner of deceipts did appertain Coronae Regis to the King only Justices in Eyre were after the return of King Richard the first from his Captivity sent into all Counties of England to enquire amongst other things de Faeneratoribus vinis venditis contra Assisam de falsis mensuris tam vini quam aliarum rerum of Usurers and of wine sold contrary to the Assize and of false measures as well of wine as other things In Anno quarto of King John being thirteen years before the granting of Magna Charta de Libertatibus Angliae the great Charter of the Liberties of England the King did by his Edict and Proclamation command the Assize of bread to be strictly observed under the pain of standing upon the Pillory and the rates were set the Assise approved per Pistorem as Matthew Paris saith Gaufridi filii Petri Justiciarii Angliae Pistorem R. de Thurnam by the Baker of Jeoffry Fitz Peter Justice of England and the Baker of R. of Thurnam And in the Magna Charta and Liberties granted by him afterwards at Running Munde or Mead near Stanes assented which our Ancestors and Procurers of that Charter believed to be for a publick good that una mensura vini cervisiae sit per totum Regnum una mensura bladi scilicet quarterium Londinense una latitudo pannorum tinctorum russetorum haubergetorum panni genus a kind of Cloth saith Sir Henry Spelman then so called there should be throughout all England one measure of Wine and Beer and the like of Corn and of the breadth of Cloth died and russet or other kinds And was confirmed by King Henry the third his Son in Anno 9. of his Reign who by an Ordinance made by the Kings command and on the behalf of the King howsoever it be stiled a Statute and is placed in our Statute book collected by Mr. Poulton amongst those which he calleth Statutes incerti temporis made in the Reigns of Hen. 3. Ed. 1. or Ed. 2. but cannot assign by whom or in what years or times but in all probability in the Reign of King Henry the third did ordain that no Forestaller which is an open oppresser of poor people and of the Commonalty and an enemy of the whole Shire and Countrey which for greediness of his private gain doth prevent others in buying Grain Fish Herring or any other thing to be sold coming by Land or waters oppressing the poor and deceiving the rich and c●rrieth away such things intending to sell them more deer should be suffered to dwell in any Town he that shall be convict thereof shall for the first offence be amerced and lose the thing so bought and for the second time have judgement of the Pillory the third time be imprisoned and make Fine and the fourth time abjure the Town And this Judgement to be given upon all manner of Forestallers and likewise upon them that have given them counsel help or favour And providing that his people should not be oppressed with immoderate unreasonable prices in the buying of food and victuals and other necessaries did by his Writ limit the price of Lampreys and had as his Royal Progenitors such a power and just Prerogative of regulating and well ordering of Markets and Fairs as notwithstanding any Charters or Grants of Fairs and Markets to Cities and Towns he did in anno quinto of his Reign upon a complaint of some Merchants of Lynn that when they came to sell their goods and Merchandize at Norwich the Merchants or Tradesmen took away their goods and Merchandise to the value of three hundred marks by his writ give them power to arrest and seize any goods of the Norwich Merchants which should come to any Fairs at Lyn untill that Justice should be done unto them And in anno 49. of his Reign commanded the Barons of the Exchequer that they should inroll and cause to be executed his Letters Patents of a Confirmation to the Citizens of Lincoln of a Charter of King Henry the second his Grandfather that the Sheriff and other the Kings Officers and Ministers of Lincolnschiry should not hinder forraign Merchants to come to Lincoln to trade there ita rationabiliter juste as reasonably and justly as they were wont to do in
the times of his great Grandfather Henry the first his Uncle King Richard and his Father King John or at any time in his own Reign untill his first going over the Seas into Britain for the Kings of England saith the learned Sir John Davies have always ●ad a special Prerogative in the ordering and government of all Trade and Traffique in Corporations Markets and Fairs within the Kingdom which the Common Law of England doth acknowledge and submit unto as amongst many other things may appear by the Charter granted to the Abbot of Westminster mentioned in the Register of Writs wherein the King doth grant to the Abbot his Successors to hold a Fair at Westminster for two and thirty dayes together with a Prohibition that no man within seven miles thereof should during that time buy or sell but at that Fair. Whence for the freedome of Markets and Fairs protection in going and retorning and other immunities had their extraction and original and no less just and reasonable then antient foundation those duties of Toll or Tribute for all things sold in them the Exemptions of the Kings own Tenants or in Auntient demeasn by writs de quietos esse de Theloneo to be Toll-free à regale and power not denied to any forreign Prince or King in Christendome or the States of Holland in their free as they would be called Common-wealth the benefit and authority whereof most of the Nobility and Gentry of this Nation tanquam Reguli as little Kings do by the Charters and Grants of the Kings of England or a Prescription or time immemoriall which supposeth it now injoy in their Manors under that part only of his Prerogative and many Cities Boroughs and Towns Corporate by their Charters have likewise not only before the 49 of Henry third but in almost every Kings Reign since their Liberties Customes and Franchises concerning their Markets and Fairs and the assise and correction of victuals Whence also were deduced the Standard kept in the Exchequer for all weights and measures the Kings power of the Mynt coyning enhauncing or decrying the value of moneys and his publick Beam or Weigh-house in London where all Merchandise brought from beyond the Seas are or should be justly weighed And whence it came that King Henry the 3. in the ninth year of his Reign caused the Constable of the Tower of London to arrest the Ships of the Cinque-Ports on the Thames and compel them to bring their Corn to no other place but only to the Queens Hithe charged in anno undecimo of his Reign the said Constable to distrain all Fish offered to be sold in any place but at Queen Hithe and that Tolls and payments were then and formerly made and paid to the Kings use for Corn Fish and all other provisions brought thither or to Down or Dowgate the rent and profit whereof were afterwards in anno 31. of his Reign granted and confirmed to the Maior and Commonalty of London at 50 l. per annum Fee-farme And in Anno 14 H. 3. forraign Ships laden with Fish were ordered to unlade only at Queen Hithe and if any did contrary thereunto he should be amerced forty shillings Whence also proceeded that well known and antient Office of the Clerk of the Markets in the later end of the Reign of King Edward the first who was not to be a stranger in the prices or rates of the Markets for his Office extended something further then the care of just weights and measures and as Sir John Davies saith was to oversee and correct all abuses in Markets and Fairs it being said in Fleta that ipse in notitia assisarum panis vini mensurarum cervisiae debet experiri ut inde notitiam habeat pleniorem he ought well to inform himself of the assises of Bread Measures Beer and Wine the later of which was not assised or rated by the assisa panis cervisiae in anno 51 of Henry the third and no man could be fitter to watch and hinder for the Justices in Eyre came but twice a year or seldome into every County Forestallers or such as made the Markets dearer or informe or give evidence thereof to the Justices in Eyre or Juries impanelled by them then the Clerk of the Markets who was probably attendant in all the Iters or Eyres for otherwise the Juries who had it then in charge to inquire of false weights and measures or such as buy by one measure and sell by another would have wanted or not so well have had their evidence and the Justices in Eyre could not so well inquire in their Eyres or Circuits de custodibus mensurarum of the Guardians of the measures or Clerks of the Market for so they may be understood to be which took bribes or gifts to permit false Measures if there had been but one Clerk of the Market infra villatas virgam hospitii Regis within the Townships or Virge of the Kings House or if as Sir Edward Coke supposeth the Clerks of the Market had been penned within the narrow compass of the Kings House and the Virge thereof or that the cares of the Fairs and Markets and the Justice of the Kingdome as to that concernment had been but only calculated for the Kings Houshold and confined unto it When as Bracton a learned Judge sub ultima tempora Henrici Tertii in the later end of the Reign of King Henry the third hath recorded in his book de Legibus consuetudinibus Angliae of the Lawes and Customes of England the Justices in Eyre did enquire de mensuris factis juratis per Regnum si servatae sint sicut praevisum fuit de vinis venditis contra Assisam c. of the Measures sworn to be observed whether they were kept as it was ordained and of Wines sold contrary thereunto And was of opinion that it was gravis praesumptio contra Regem coronam dignitatem suam si assisae statutae juratae in regno suo ad commuem Regni sui utilitatem non fuerint observatae a great offence against the King his Crown and Dignity if the assizes or rates which were appointed and sworn to be kept in the Kingdome to the common profit or weal publick thereof should not be kept Which do fully evidence that those antient Rights of the Crown were inquirable in the Eyres and Leets long before that which is called a Statute of view of Frank pledge in anno 18 Ed. 2. was made which at the best was but declaratory of what was before the Common Law some other antient Customes of England And anno 51 H. 3. in the assisa panis cervisae being as Decrees or Rates ordained which as to Ale and Drink the Judicious and right-learned Sir Henry Spelman believeth was altioris originis and as antient as 18 R. 1. mutatis ratione seculi mutandae to be altered and changed according to the rates
and prices of Barley and what they made it with and confirmed by Inspeximus of the Ordinances of divers Kings of England the Kings Progenitors which set the assise of Bread and Ale and the making of measures and howsoever stiled a Statute appears not to have been an Act of Parliament but an Exemplification only made of those Ordinances and Orders by King Henry the third at the request of the Bakers of Coventry mentioning that by an Act of Parliament made in the first year of his Reign he had granted that all good Statutes and Ordinances made in the times of his Progenitors aforesaid and not revoked should be still holden in which the rates and assise of bread are said to have been approved by the Kings Bakers and contained in a Writing of the Marshalsey of the Kings House where the Chief Justice and other Ministers of Justice then resided and by an Ordinance or Statute made in the same year for the punishment of the offending Bakers by the Pillory and the Brewers by the Tumbrel or some other correction The Bayliffs were to enquire of the price of Wheat Barley and Oats at the Markets and after how the Bakers bread in the Court did agree that is to wit waistel which name a sort of bread of the Court or Kings House doth yet retain and other bread after Wheat of the best of the second or of the third price also upon how much increase or decrease in the price of wheat a Baker ought to change the assize and weight of his bread and how much the wastel of a farthing ought to weigh and all other manner of bread after the price of a quarter of Wheat which shewes that the Tryal Test Assay or Assize of the true weight of bread to be sold in all the Kingdome was to be by the Kings Baker of his House or Court and that there was the Rule or Standard and that the prices should increase or decrease after the rate of six pence And Fleta an Author planè incognitus as to his name saith Mr. Selden altogether unknown who writ about the later end of the Reign of King Ed. 1. tells us that amongst the Capitula coronae itineris the Articles in the Eyre concerning the Pleas of the Crown which were not then novel or of any late institution enquiries were made de vinorum contra rectam assisam venditoribus de mensuris item de Forstallariis victualibus ●●nalibus mercatum obvi●ntibus per quod carior sit inde venditio de non virtuosis cibariis of wine sold contrary to the assize of Measures and Forestallers of the Market to make victualls dearer and of such as sold corrupt food or victuals An. 31 Ed. 1. it was found by inquisition that Bakers and Brewers and others buying their corn at Queen-Hithe were to pay for measuring portage and carriage for every quarter of corn whatsoever from thence to Westcheap St. Anthonies Church Horshoo Bridge to Wolsey street in the Parish of Alhallowes the less and such like distances one ob q to Fleetstreet Newgate Cripplegate Birchoners Lane East-cheap and Billingsgate one penny 17 Ed. 2. By command of the King by his Letters Patents a Decree was made by Hamond Chicwel Maior That none should sel Fish or Flesh out of the Markets appointed to wit Bridge-streat East-cheap Old-Fishstreet St. Michaels Shambles and the Stocks upon pain to forfeit such Fish or Flesh as were sold for the first time and for the second offence to lose their Freedome And so inherent in Monarchy and the royall Praerogative was the power and ordering of the Markets and the rates of provision of victuals and communicable by grant or allowance to the inferior Magistrates as the King who alwayes reserves to himself the supreme power and authority in case of male administration of his delegated power or necessity for the good and benefit of the publick is not thereby denuded or disabled to resort unto that soveraign and just authority which was alwayes his own and Jure coronae doth by right of his Crown and Regal Government belong unto him as may appear by the forfeiture and seising of Liberties and Franchises and many other the like instances to be found every age And therefore 41 King E. 3. without an Act of Parliament certain Impositions were set upon Ships other Vessels coming thither with Corn Salt and other things towards the charge of cleansing Romeland And 3 Ed. 4. the Market of Queen Hithe being hindred by the slackness of drawing up London Bridge it was ordered that all manner of Vessels Ships or Boats great or small resorting to the City with victuals should be sold by retail and that if there came but one Vessel at a time were it Salt Wheat Rye or other Corn from beyond the Seas or other Grains Garlick Onions Herrings Sprats Eels Whitings Place Codds Mackarel c. it should come to Queen-Hithe and there make sale but if two Vessels came the one should come to Queen-Hithe the other to Billingsgate if three two of them should come to Queen-Hithe and if the Vessels coming with Salt from the Bay were so great as it could not come to these Keyes then the same to be conveyed to the Port by Lighters Queen Elizabeth by advice and order of her Privy Councell in a time of dearth and scarcity of corn commanded the Justices of Peace in every County to enforce men to bring their Corn to the Markets limited them what proportions to sell to particular persons and ordered them to cause reasonable prices and punish the Refusers And the like or more hath been legally done by the Kings authority in the Reign of King James and King Charles the Martyr in the beginning of whose Reign by the advice of all the Judges of England and the eminently learned Mr. Noy the then Attorny Generall rates and prices were set by the Kings Edict and Proclamation upon Flesh Fish Poultry and most sort of victuals Hay Oats c. commanded to be observed All which reasonable laws constitutions customes were made confirm'd continued by our Kings of England by the advice sometimes of their lesser and at other times of their greater Councels the later whereof were in those early dayes composed of Bishops Earles and Barons and great and wise men of the Kingdome not by the Commons or universall consent and representation of the people by their Knights of the Shires or Burgesses sent as their Procurators ad faciendum consentiendum to consent unto those Acts of Parliament which should be made and ordained by the King and the Barons and Peers of England for they were neither summoned for that purpose nor represented in Parliament untill Anno 49 H. 3. and in Anno 26 or 31 Ed. 1. were called thither only ad faciendum quod de communi consilio per Comites Barones ceteros Proceres to do those things which by the King and the Barons and
Nobiltiy by their Common Council should be ordained and the Procuratores Cleri Proctors or Representers of the Clergy not Bishops who sate in Parliament and were summoned unto it as a third Estate and Barons inter Proceres Regni amongst the Nobility of the Kingdome ad consentiendum to consent only to such things as should be ordained in Parliament as hath been learnedly and accurately proved by examination of antient Records and Parliament Writs by Mr. William Prynne in his second part of a Register and Survey of severall kinds and forms of Parliament Writs And may well be deemed to be no less then Law and right Reason when as divers Acts of Parliament made by the advice of the Lords Spiritual Temporall and the assent of the Commons summoned called unto Parliament by the Kings Writ to consent only unto such Laws as should be made therein with the Royal assent and breath of life given by the King unto such Acts without which those Petitions and Bills which were intended and desired by the people to be Acts of Parliament are but as the matter to the form presented unto the King in his great Councill and Parliament and amount unto no more in the best of value and constructions which can be put upon them then Petitions and Requests or as bodies without souls or pieces of Silver or Gold uncoyned having not the power or effect of money without Caesars Image and Superscription and the Royal Stamp and Authority given them have enacted and ordained the same or the like cares and provisions as that without date made in the Reign of King H. 3. or Ed. 1. or Ed. 2. and to be found amongst the Statutes of 17 Ed. 2. if all or some of them were not made by the Kings Royal Authority and power only that the Toll of a Milne shall be taken according to the custome of the Land strength of the water-course either to the twentieth or four and twentieth corn and the measure whereby the Toll must be taken was to be agreeable to the Kings measure and taken by the rate and not by the heap or cantell The Assise of Ale to be according to the price of Corn. Butchers to be punished which sell unwholsome flesh ●ushels Gallons and Ells shall be kept by Mayors Bayliffs c. signed with the Kings Seal and he that buyeth or selleth with any other shall be amerced No grain shall be sold by the Heap or Cantell but Oats Malt and Meal Wines by the Act of Parliament of 4 Ed. 3. shall be assaied twice a year and be sold at reasonable prices and a Cry or Proclamation made that none should be so hardy as to sell wines but at a reasonable price regarding the price that is at the Ports from whence the Wines came and the expences as in carriage of the same from the Ports to the places where they be sold. No man may sell Ware at a Fair after i● is ended Victuals shal● be sold at reasonable prices and Butchers Fishmongers Regrators Hostelers Brewers Bakers Poulters and all other sellers of all manner of victuals shall be bound to sell the same victuall for a reasonable price having respect to the price that such victuals be sold at in the places adjoyning so that the said Sellers have moderate gains and not excessive reasonably to be required according to the distance of the place from whence the said victuals be carried None shall Forestall Wines and Victuals Wares and Merchandizes coming to the good Towns of England by land or by water to be sold. Auncel weight shall be put out weighing shall be by equall ballances every measure shall be according to the Kings Standard and be striked without heap It shall be Felony to forestall or ingross Gascoine wine Red and white wine shall be gauged Ballances and Weights shall be sent to all the Sheriffs of England and all persons are to make their Weights and Ballances by them And in anno 31 Ed. 3. because saith the Statute the Fishers Butchers Poulters and other sellers of Victualls in the City of London by colour of some Charters and by evil intepretation of Statutes made in advantage of the people that every man may freely sell victuals without disturbance and that no Maior Bailiffe or other Minister ought to meddle with the sale It was accorded assented That every man that bringeth victuals whatsoever they be to the City by land or by water may freely sell the same to whom shall please him without being interrupted or impeached by Fisher Butcher Poulter or any other and that the Maior and Aldermen of the said City may rule and redress the defaults of Fishers Butchers and Poulters as they doe of those which sell Bread Ale or Wine In the same year upon the complaint of the Commons that the people of great Yarmouth did encounter the Fishers bringing Herrings to the said Town in the time of the Fair and buy and forestall the Herrings before they come to the Town And also the Hostlers of the same Town which lodge the Fishers coming thither with Herrings would not suffer the said Fishers to sell their Herrings nor meddle with the sale thereof but sell them at their own will as dear as they will and give to the Fishers what pleaseth them whereby the Fishers did withdraw themselves from coming thither It was enacted that Herrings should not be bought or sold upon the sea That Fishers be free to sell their Herrings without disturbance of the Hostelers that when the Fishers will sel their Merchandises in the Port they shall have their Hostelers with them if there they will be and in their presence openly sell their Merchandises and that every man claim his part for the taking after the rate for the same Merchandises so sold. That no Hosteler or other buy any for to hang in their houses by Covin nor in other manner at a higher price the last then forty shillings but less in as much as he may That no Hosteler nor any of their Servants nor any other shall by land or Sea forestall the said Herrings No vessel called Piker of London nor of no other place shall enter into the said Haven to abate the Fair in damage of the people That all the Hostelers be sworn before the Wardens of the Fair and enjoyned upon a great forfeiture to the King to receive their Guests well and conveniently and to aid and ease them reasonably taking of every Last that shall be sold to other Merchants then the said Hostelers 40 d. That of Herrings sold to the same Hostelers to take in their houses the same Hostelers shall take nothing and that because of the profits which they shall have of victuals sold to their said Guests and of the advantage which they have more then other of carriage of Herrings so by them bought and hanging in their houses and for the advantage of 40 d. the
benefits received which highly pleasing the Almighty and being lovely in the eyes of all men which are not only enjoyed but held fast and enforced by all the Nobility Gentry and richer sort of men in England when it happens to be denied as the services and customes of all their Tenants to grind their corn at their Lords Mill or baking their bread at his common Oven in some Borough or Market Town The Reliefs in Tenures by Knight Service or Chivalry fixed and appropriate unto those Fewds and Tenures and paid at the death of every Tenant dying seised being at the first never condescended unto by the Tenants by any paction or stipulation betwixt them and their Lords But although there was antiently and originally betwixt the Lord and the Tenant mutua fides tuendae salutis dignitatis utriusque saith Bodin a mutual obligation betwixt the Tenant and the Lord to defend one anothers Estate and Dignity or as Craig saith pactionibus interpositis de mutua Tutela upon certain agreements to defend one another were lately notwithstanding received and taken by the Nobility and Gentry as a gratitude and in that and no other respect were by the Tenants willingly paid unto them The Reliefs paid by the Heirs of Freeholders in Socage after the death of their Ancestors which being not paid by Tenants for years by a rack Rent do appear to have no other commencement but in signum subjectionis gratitudinis a thankfull acknowledgement for benefits received Or those duties payments which many Lords and Gentry doe enjoy in Cumberland Westmerland and many of the other Northern Counties which were not at the first by any original contract or agreement as to their Tenants particular services for so it could not be a custome but the Tenants at the first upon the only reason of gratitude untill it had by length of time and usage uninterrupted gained the force of a custome and that the succeeding Heirs and Tenants were admitted according to those customes did as willingly observe and acknowledge them The Fines incertain at the will of severall Lords which the Nobility and Gentry of other parts of England do receive and take of their Copihold Tenants under the penalty of a forfeiture if not paid in a reasonable time after they were assessed and the priviledges which they retain of seising their Tenants Copihold Lands as forfeit whether the Fines were certain or incertain if they sued Replevins against them distraining for their Rents or Services and had no other parents or originall untill custome had settled it then the Tenants gratefull acknowledgements of the Lords or his Ancestors former kindess and benefits bestowed upon them or their Progenitors And the Socage Lands and Freeholders might be Tallied or have a Tax laid upon them by their Lords at their will and pleasure as their necessities or occasions required as well before as after the Statute de Tallagio non concedendo made betwixt the years 25 34 Ed. 1. and if it had been an Act of Parliament and not a Charter could bind only the King as to his extraordinary but not to his legall Tallages untill custome by the kindness or favour of time and the curtesie and good will of their Lords did permit them by a desuetude of imposing and a well rellished custome of the Tenants not paying to enjoy their easie and cheap bargains and freedome of their Lands for which they should doe well to remember better then they doe their Benefactors and be more mannerly and gratefull then of late they have been and were before those indulgencies held to be so accustomed and usual as it was not seldome found by Inquisitions and Juries upon oath that such or such land was holden Et Talliari potest c. And might have Taxes or a greater Rent laid upon them by the Lord of the Manor in so much as the Kings demeasne Lands were not free from Tallage which will be evident enough by a presentment of a Jury of Nottinghamshire before the Justices in Eyre in anno 8 E. 1. or King Edward the first when the Kings Letters Patents of a Grant of the Town of Retford to the Burgesses thereof and their Heirs in Fee Farm was found and mentioned in these words viz. Edwardus Dei gratia c. Sciatis nos concessisse c. Burgensibus nostris de Retford quod ipsi eorum haeredes de cetero habeant teneant ad feodi firmam de nobis haeredibus nostris in perpetuum villam nostram de Retford cum pertnen reddendo inde nobis haeredibus nostris per manus suas proprias decem libras per annum ad Scaccarium nostrum ad festum Sancti Michaelis pro omnibus serviciis c. Salvo inde nobis haeredibus nostris Tallagio nostro cum nos haeredes nostris Dominica nostra per Angliam fecimus Talliari c. reserving to himself and his Heirs a Fee Farme Rent of ten pounds per annum and the power of Tax or Tallage or improving what he had granted unto them when he should have occasion to make a Taxe or Tallage upon all his Demesne Lands in England And untill Rents were racked of which the Kings of England and the Officers of their Revenue in land were seldom or never yet much guilty that Rents were improved as high as the profits of Lands all the Lands of England except the Copihold Customary lands by Fines certain the curtesie of time and their Landlords suffering their good will and charity to be reduced into thankless customs escaped it were liable to be made contributaries to many of the necessities or occasions of the Lords of Manors who formerly did not make Leases and take Fines to lessen the rents as they doe now by a high rate or rule of interest and disadvantages procuring their rents to be advanced as it were in the name of a Fine before hand nor if the Lands were holden in Capite by Knight service untill time and their Princes favours had disused it could make a Lease unto any Tenant of such Lands but by licence and then also for no longer a term then 3. or 7. years And their Lands and Rents except Capite and Knight-service and Copihold land and lands in Frank Almoigne being capable of no higher Rents or improvement cannot now be any more by them Tallied which in effect is but a calling for more rent or raising it which every Landlord may do where his Tenants are at Will or when their Leases are expired when they are now all but those Lands before excepted as to the King and the mesne Lords and the Lands of the Freeholders and Cop holders at the utmost or a very high rent And such Tallage is at this day not laid aside by our Neighbours of France in very many places were les Tailles se paient par ceuz du Tiers estat c'est a dire par les habitans
he or his heirs did not unto the Lord or any of his Heirs of whom the Lands were holden his services within two years was upon a Cessavit per Biennium brought by the Lord and no sufficient distress to be found to forfeit the Lands so holden And from no other source or original was derived Escuage for the Tenants by Knight service not attending the King or their Lords in the wars which as Littleton saith was because the Law intendeth and understood it that the lands were at the first for that end freely given them whence also came the Aide to make the eldest Sonne of the King a Knight and to marry the eldest Daughter and the like assistances or duties unto the mesne Lords as gratefull acknowledgements for the Lands holden of them which the Freeholders in Socage are likewise not to deny and were not at the first by any Agreement betwixt the King and his particular Tenants nor likely to be betwixt the mesne Lords and their Tenants when the Lands were given them for that some of the mesne Lords might probably be without Sonne or Daughter or both or any hopes to have any when they gave their Lands and their Grants doe frequently mention pro homagio servicio in consideration only of homage and service to be done And being called auxilia sive adjutoria Aids or Assistances to their Lords who could not be then in any great want of such helps when the portions of Daughters were very much in vertue and little in mony and the charges of making the eldest Son a Knight the King in those dayes bestowing upon all or many of them some costly Furres Robes and the other charges consisting in the no great expences of the furnishing out the young Gentleman to receive the then more martial better used and better esteemed honour of Knighthood were reckoned by Bracton in the later end of the Reign of King Henry the third inter consuetudines quae serviciae non dicuntur nec concomitantia serviciorum sicut sunt rationabilia auxilia amongst those customes which are not understood to be services nor incidents thereof if they be reasonable But were de gratia ut Domini necessitas secundum quod major esset vel minor relevium acciperet and proceeded from the good will of the Tenants to help their Lords as their occasions or necessities should require Et apud exteros saith Sir Henry Spelman non solum ad collocandas sorores in matrimonium sed ad fratres etiam Juniores milites faciendos And with some forreign Nations as the Germans old Sicilians and Neapolitans not only towards the marriage of the Sisters of their Lords but to make also their younger Sons Knights For the good will and gratefull retorns of the Subjects to their Kings and Princes and of the Tenants to their Lords were not only since the Norman Conquest but long before practised and approved by the Britains the elder and most antient Inhabitants of this our Island and other world as is manifest by the Ebidiu or Tributum paid per Nobilium haeredes Capitali provinciae domino the Heirs of the Nobility or great men after the death of their Ancestors to the Lords or chief of the Province like unto as Sir Henry Spelman saith our relief which Hottoman termeth Honorarium a free gift or offering And that learned Knight found upon diligent enquiry amongst the Welch who by the sins of their forefathers and injury of the Saxons are now contented to be called by that name as Strangers in that which was their own Country that that Ebidiu was paid at a great rate non solum è praediis Laicis sed etiam Ecclesiasticis not only by the Laity but the Church-men And being not discontinued amongst the Saxons was besides the payment of Reliefs attended with other gifts and acknowledgements of superiority as well as thanks for Gervasius Tilburiensis in the Reign of King Henry the second when the people of England had not been so blessed and obliged as they were afterwards with the numberless Gifts Grants and Liberties which in the successive Reigns of seventeen Kings and Queens after preceding our now King and Soveraign were heaped upon them found oblata presents gifts or offerings to the King to be a well approved Custome and therefore distinguished them into quaedam in rem quaedam in spem some before hand for hopes of future favours and others for liberties or other things given and granted by the King and the Fine Rolles of King John and Henry the third his Son will shew us very many Oblata's or Free-will Offerings of several kinds which were so greatly valued and heeded as King Henry the third and his Barons in or about the 23 year of his Reign which was thirteen or fourteen years after his confirming of Magna Charta did in the bitter prosecution and charge of Hubert de Burgo Earl of Kent and chief Justice of England demand an Accompt de donis xeniis of gifts and presents amongst which Carucagii or carriages were numbred spectantibus ad Coronam appertaining to the Crown And upon that and no other ground were those reasonable Lawes or Customes founded that the King might by the Laws of England grant a Corody which Sir Henry Spelman ex constitut Sicul. lib. 3. Tit. 18. defineth to be quicquid obsonii superiori in subsidium penditur provisions of victuals made for superiors Et ad fundatores Monasteriorum and to the Founders of every Monastry though by the Constitutions of Othobon the Popes Legat in the Reign of King Henry the third the Religious of those houses were forbidden to grant or suffer any to be granted or allowed è communi jure spectabat corrodium in quovis suae fundationis monasterio nisi in libera Eleemosina fundaretur it belonged of common right to grant a Corrody in any Religious houses of their foundation if not founded in Franke Almoigne disposuit item Rex in beneficium famulurom suorum corrodium c. likewise the King might grant to any of his houshold servants a Corrody in any houses of the foundation of the Kings of England and as many were in all by them granted as one hundred and eleaven which that learned Knight conceived to be an argument that so many of the Monasteries were of their foundation Et issint de common droit saith the learned Judge Fitzherbert in his Natura Brevium and also of Common Right the King ought to have a reasonable Pension out of every Bishoprick in England and Wales for his Chaplain untill the Bishop should promote him to a fitting Benefice Which if the compositions for Pourveyances being reduced into contracts and a lawfull custome were or should be no other then gratitudes may be as commendable and necessary as those well approved Examples of thankfulness recorded in holy writ of Abrahams giving King Abimelech Sheep and Oxen
Henry the third his Sonne by their Magna Charta Agreement or Accord made with their then powerfull Barons and Church men and a discontented and seditious Commonalty since reduced into Lawes and confirmed by thirty Acts of Parliament wherein the people having many liberties granted them by those Kings the great Lords Prelates and superior part of the Clergy of whom they held which they could not then claim as rights but were to be received as favours and as much to be valued as their pardon and indemnity which was granted unto them by the same Charter King John therein promising them that all those Customes and Liberties quantum ad se pertinet erga suos omnes homines de regno suo tam Laici quam Clerici observent quantum ad se pertinet erga suos as much as belonged to him he would observe towards all men and that all as well Laick as spiritual should as much as belonged to them observe them towards such as held of them And by the late King Charles the Martyr who took but one hundred pounds for the Relief of an Earldome which was antiently accompted to be but of the yearly value of four hundred pounds per annum the least of which are now three or four thousand pounds per annum very many double as much and some sixteen or twenty thousand pounds per annum when as the hundred pounds was then according to the now value of silver above three hundred pounds And to disburse in houshold provisions according to the difference betwixt the rates and prises of victuals as they were in the Reign of King Edward the second which was above 80 years after the granting and confirming of Magna Charta by King Henry the third when a Capon was sold for two pence and what they are now will not be the fourth part as to some sort of provisions and victuals and as to others not the sixteenth of that hundred pounds for the Relief of an Earldome and so proportionably in other reliefs and the summe of five pounds for the relief of a Knights Fee which is but the fourteenth part according to the difference betwixt the antient and then value of the lands belonging unto a Knights Fee now estimated but at three hundred pounds per annum many of which are four or five hundred pounds per annum and others of a greater yearly value as the lands are lesser or more improved nearer or farther distant from London the grand Emporium of the Trade and Commerce of the Nation and the residence of the King and his superior Courts of Justice And are but the Antiqua Relevia antient Reliefs which King Henry the first in his Charter of Liberties granted to the people did not reduce unto any certain sums but ordered to be justa legitima And but two hundred Marks for the Relief of a Marques and two hundred pounds of a Duke although there were at the time of the making of those great Charters neither Dukes nor Marquesses in England or any such Titles in being and one hundred pounds for the relief of a Baron And if the warres had not hindred him from those and other his dues but 20 s. for every Knights fee according to the Statute in anno 3 E. 1. towards the marriage of his eldest Daughter and making his eldest Son a Knight and no more of every twenty pounds per annum in Socage Did not according to the Equity and Preamble of the Act of Parliament de anno quinto Eliz. cap. 4. which in regard that the wages and allowances limited and rated in former Statutes were in divers places too small and not answerable to that time respecting the advancement of prices of all things belonging unto Servants and Labourers and that the Law could not conveniently without the great grief and burden of the poor Laborers and hired men be put in execution and to the end that there might be a convenient proportion of wages in the times of scarcity and plenty did repeal so much of the said former Statutes as concerning the working and wages of Servants and Labourers and enacted that the wages of Artificers Labourers and Servants should be yearly assessed by the Justices of the Peace and Magistrates in every County City and Town Corporate with respect to the plenty and scarcity of the time and other circumstances necessary to be considered endeavour to raise them to any higher sums or make them proportionable to the present values of lands and money rates and prices of victuals And by the favour of his now Royal Majesty who delighting in the vestigiis and pathes of his many indulgent and Royall Progenitors though his own very great wants and necessities and their daily importunities might have advised him not to have kept the road of his Ancestors liberality and bounty but to reserve some kindness for himself and his more urgent occasions did not as King Henry the third and several other Kings of England his Successors cause his Taxes Assessements by Parliament to be assessed upon oath according to the full and true value of the peoples Estates or as was done by King Edward the sixth since the Statute of 6 Ed. 3. for restraining the Parliament aids to the old Taxation upon the assistance or relief then so called given unto him by Parliament and make enquiries upon oath of the best values of the substance of such as were to pay that Relief Dismes and Subsidies and by the oaths also of those who were to pay them and caused some to be sworn to value clothes to the end that the King might receive payment of Relief for every cloth or as Queen Mary did cause an enquiry to be made upon oath of the value of the goods and lands of such as were lyable to the payment of Fifteens Dismes and Subsidies in the 2 3 4 and 5 years of her Reign But in his Assessments Aids or Subsidies granted by Parliament did imitate his Royal Father King Charles the first who took and received all his Subsidies at two shillings eight pence in the pound for goods and moveables and four shillings for lands and immoveables with defalcation of debts and consideration of a greater then ordinary charge of children assessed by an express exception without oath and the Commissioners left at liberty to assesse themselves and the Assessors according to the old and easie Taxations Takes and receives his First-fruits or the first years value of Bishopricks Spiritual Promotions and of Benefices not under ten marks per annum and Vicarages not under ten pounds per annum since treble those values as they are said to be in the Kings books and for the Tenths of their Spirituall Promotions after no greater a rate or yearly value which no Act of Parliament ever obliged him to doe then they were long agoe valued with some very small encrease or raising long since in a very few of the Bishopricks but
to be charged upon the Revenues of the Holy Church and that of the Clergy but shall claim some priviledges and exemptions therein be pleased to remember that although Simon Islip Archbishop of Canterbury being in many things a man of a severe life and discipline did write his Speculum Regis aforesaid or a book so called sharply inveighing against the Kings Pourveyors and their manner of taking the Pourveyance without money or due payment in some sence and feeling probably of the taking of it from the Clergy complained of by them in the Parliament of 18 of Edward the third they being no longer before exempted from it some only as the Abbot of Battel and others specially priviledged excepted then the first year of the Reign of that King who as Matthew Parker in the life of Walter Reynold Archbishop of Canterbury mentioneth being very well pleased with the Clergy for so freely contributing to his Warres did in Parliament not only restore unto them vetera antiquissima privilegia Ecclesiae Anglicanae the old and antient Rights of the Church of England which by Magna Charta could as to Cart● taking claim but the same freedom which those did who held by Knight service viz. that their own Carts used in their Demeasnes should not be taken for the Kings use but de novis auxit i. e. de non exigendis a Clero in regis hospitium esculentis poculentis vecturis similibus gave them new priviledges that is to say to be freed from furnishing of Carts and provisions of victuals for the Kings Houshold Yet he and all other the Bishops of England could at the same time and their Successors after them do unto this day justly and lawfully take receive in their Visitations once every 3 years a certain Rate or Tax set upon every Benefice propter hospitium towards the charge of their expences house keeping and victuals which saith Mr. Stephens in his learned and judicious Treatise of Procurations and Synodals are Perquisites or Profits of their Spiritual Jurisdictions as creation money given to a Duke or Earl for the maintenance of his honour and by reason of the great Trains Attendance of Bishops heretofore with one hundred or two hundred men and horses at a time some of the Visitors carrying Hounds and Hawks with them and sparing not the exempt and priviledged placed it grew to be so excessive as interdum Ecclesiastica ornamenta subditi exponere tenebantur the poor Clergy were enforced to make provision for them by selling their Church plate and ornaments and it was therefore by a Constitution of Boniface the eighth about the year 1295. ordained that the Archbishops should be limited unto 40 or 50 men and horses the Bishops to 20 or 30 the Cardinals unto 25 and the Arch-Deacons unto 5 or 7 and they were prohibited to carry Hounds and Hawks along with them and that also bringing but little ease to the inferiour Clergie saith Mr. Stephens because when victuals were not furnished they being left unlimited in Compositions or summes of money to be taken in lieu or recompence thereof broke down the doors of Monasteries and Churches taking where they were denied what they could lay their hands on which caused the Councell of Vienna in the year 1311. to declaim against and prohibit such doings which being not redressed might have put Simon Istip in mind who was betwixt that and 1349. when he was elected Arch-bishop of Canterbury in almost the zenith and heighth of his preferment as Councellor and Secretary to King Edward the third and Keeper of the Privy Seal to have written as well against the abuse of Visitations and Procurations if the Book which I have not seen and is only to be found in Sir Robert Cottons excellently well furnished library do not as I could never understand it did mention them as against the abuses in the maner of making the Kings Pourveyances But was the cause howsoever that Pope Benedict the twelfth about the year 1337. which was the eleventh year of the Reign of King Ed. 3. did make a Canon or Constitution to settle a proportionable rate of mony to be paid in lieu of victuals or provisions out of all Churches Monasteries and Religious Houses not exempted and where custome and the smalness of the Benefices have not lessened it was as Lindewood saith in the Reign of King Henry the fifth of and out of every Benefice for the Arch-Deacons procuration no less then seven shillings and six pence which was for each man attending him twelve pence towards the defraying of his charges being then a great ordinary and eighteen pence for the Arch-deacon himself as well when they did visit as when they did not And even Simon Islip himself whilest he was so busie about other mens failings was not without some of his own nor was so great a friend to Justice in every part of it or in his own particular as he might have been for when he had been as Matthew Parker Arch-Bishop of Canterbury one of his reverend and worthy Successors in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth recordeth it at some extraordinary charges in repairing of his Manor house at Wrotham in Kent and obtained a Licence from the Pope to tax all the Clergie of his Province at a great in every twenty marks towards his expences therein the Collectors did probably by his privity so order it that they gathered a Tenth which being complained of could never be refunded And if he and his Successors had not continued the custome of their Procurations and other profits raised from the Clergy towards their more honourable and necessary support would have been blamed as much as he was by Matthew Parker and others long before his time with a malè audivit for releasing to the Earl of Arundel for 240 marks the yearly payment of 26 red and fallow Deer in their seasons to the Arcbishops of Canterbury Who as well as other Bishops can take and receive Subsidium Cathedraticum which is a duty of prerogative and superiority Quarta Episcopalis which is given to them for the reparation of Churches which if the Cathedrals be not intended thereby is not bestowed upon the Parochiall Churches which the Rectors and Parishioners are now only charged with Doe continue their taking also of Proxies being an exhibition towards their charges for their visitation of Religious houses since dissolved and not now at all in being and permit their Arch-Deacons in some Dioceses to receive their Pentecostalia or Whitsun farthings for every Family yet used and taken by the Bishops Arch-Deacons of the Diocesses of Worcester and Gloucester be well pleased with some good Benefices many times allowed them in Commendam to make out and help the inequality of the Revenues of some of their Bishopricks with the greater charges and expence of their spirituall dignities And their middle sort of Clergie can be well content to e●ke and piece out their Benefices with
by his own finger or spoken by his own mouth give all the Nations of the Earth a pattern or direction for Pourveyance and gratefull acknowledgements in his reserving the Tenths or Tithes for his Priests or Clergy notwithstanding their Glebe and 48 Cities with the Pomaeria's or Lands belonging unto them and their shares and parts out of the multitudes of Sacrifices with many other Fees and Priviledges which were for a further support and provision for them great offerings of Oxen Silver and Plate brought unto the Tabernacles by the Princes and the Heads of the houses of their Fathers which God himself directed Moses to receive and dispose amongst the Levites and the offerings at the Feast of the Passeover which later if not brought were to be very poenal to the refuser in being to be cut off from his people their Offerings and Free-gifts and First-fruits and that which was brought by Gods direction as a Pourveyance for the building of the Tabernacle which was then the only Church Which our fore-fathers the Britans as well as the Saxons had so good a mind to imitate as they did in the Feast of St. Martin yearly offer to the Church for their Ciricksceat or contributions to the Church certam mensuram bladi Tritici a certain measure or quantity of wheat and at Christmas gallos gallinas Hens and Cocks which in a Synode or Councell holden in Anno 1009. at Aenham in England were interpreted to be Ecclesiastica munera contributions to the Church and long before that established by a Law of King Ina's under a great penalty and by a Law of Canutus long after laid under a greater penalty of eleven times the value of the Bishop and two hundred and twenty shillings then a very great summe to the King And it may be remembred that our Saviour the blessed Son of God whilest he was upon Earth and was the Messiah or King of Israel long before prophecied and to ride as a King in a kind of triumph into Jerusalem and would not use unfitting or unjust wayes and means unto it did send two of his Disciples for a Colt or Foal of an Ass to ride upon with no other answer or satisfaction to be given to the Owner but that the Lord hath need of him and streight way he will send him hither which a learned Commentator upon that place understands to be some exercise of a Kingly power to convince the stubborn Jews of his Kingly office But if the Royall Pourveyance or Compositions for them shall be so unhappy as not to be able to grow or prosper upon the Stocks of gratitude or those every daies benefits quae magna accipientibus ac etiam dantibus which are great to the receivers if rightly valued and great and costly to the givers which the people of this might be fortunate Island have for those many ages and hundreds of years past had and received of the Kings and Monarchs thereof The contracts and agreements made with the several Counties for the Pourveyances their willing submission thereunto if the King had no former right as he had a sufficient one thereunto can no less then induce an Obligation that naturalem rationem honestatem naturalem juris fidei vinculum quibus necessitate omnes astringuntur natural reason and honesty with the Bonds and Tyes of the Law and common faith which ought to be in every man and one unto another And being the great Peacemakers cement and quiet if observed as they ought to be in all the affairs of mankind brings with them or are to enforce a necessity of performance But if the obligations which the faith and contracts of one man to and with another which generally binds the most rude and ignorant of mankind and the Heathen as well as Christian shall not be able to make any impression upon us Or if Gratitudes Duties and Retributions to our King and Common Parent can by any rules of Law or Reason be interpreted or understood to be no more then a Custome All the subordinate ranks and degrees of the People and Subjects of England might be perswaded to follow the counsel given by the blessed Redeemer of Mankind which the Emperor Severus and some of the Heathen Roman Emperors by the only light of nature could as if they had read his Gospels propose afterwards almost in the very same words of Doe unto others as they would have others doe unto them and believe that the legall priviledges and customes of the King in his Praeemption Pourveyance or Composition for his Houshold who gave or confirmed unto them all their Priviledges and Customes being rationabiles and by the Civil Law are unde●stood to be legitime praescriptae most reasonable and lawfully prescribed or used when they are bona fide and but for forty years and ought to be inviolabiles quia nec divino juri nec legibus naturae Gentium sive municipalibus contradicunt inviolable when they contradict not the Laws of God Nature and Nations and the Laws of the Land neither are nor can be any grievance but are justly due unto him as he is their Supreme when as it was well said by Judge Barkeley in his Argument in the Exchequer Chamber in the Case of the Ship-money unhappily there put to a dispute the whole Realm is but one body whereof the King is the head and all the Members doe center in that body and if one member epecially the head do suffer all the rest will suffer with him and though every man hath an Interest in the Common-wealth yet the Kings Interest is incomparable and beyond all others And the Compositions for the Pourveyance being not only a duty and a custome now above 88. years reckoned but from the 3. year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth which was the time of the first agreement or compositions for the most of the Counties of England and Wales to the death of King Charles the Martyr and from his death to the restauration of Charles the second his Son our gracious Soveraign in the twelfth year of his Reign will yeild no less a Totall of years then one hundred which is justly accompted to be a time immemoriall or beyond the memory of man and makes a more warrantable prescription and ground of Title then that in King Henry the seconds Reign tempore Henrici Regis Avi in the time of King Henry the first his Grandfather or post coronationem suam after his own coronation or post ultimam transfretationem in Normanniam after his last going over into Normandy or that in Henry the thirds time post ultimam transfretationem in Britanniam or that time of Limitation by the Statute of 32 H. 8. ca. 2. of 50 years for bringing of Writs of Right and Formedons c. And in the Kings case being a greater Epocha period or account of time must needs be the best of Prescriptions
of any but had their remedies by a writ of ne injuste vexes where their Lords did indebita servicia exigere require customs and services not due or writs to command their Lords to keep their Courts when the necessities of Justice the Tenants required them seising them if they did not do Justice causing their Lands to be seised for not holding of their Courts or for wrongful proceedings or requiring unreasonable rents services taking unreasonable Amerciaments the like gives remedies by his Courts of Chancery Common-Pleas Kings-Bench Exchequer to any unreasonable exactions or hard-heartedness of their Landlords those Acquittances and Freedoms which the King and his most illustrious Progenitors have given many of the people of England to be free de omni praestatione of furnishing Corn Lamb and Wooll to the use of the Forresters of Buckstall or assisting them in the Chase when the King comes to hunt or of Tristris to hold Grey-hounds or of Sumage or carriages by Horse or Carts or Chiminage for travelling through the Forrests or of Bridgebote to be quit of making of Bridges in the Forrests or their bounds and granting likewise that antient priviledge to the Nobility Bishops Barons coming to Parliament or returning from thence to kill one or two of his Deer in any of his Forrests Chases or Parks should be as unwilling to see his Royal Liberties Legal Customs and Priviledges infringed denied or taken from him as their own But if neither gratitude for benefits and favours recieved in particular by every Family Kindred Generation in the Nation one time with another from the King or his Royal Progenitors immediately or mediatly nor contracts nor customs can oblige or perswade to that small part of Subjects duty in the Praeemption or royal Pourveyance or compositions for it which Oliver his Complices the Contrivers of much of our late sins shame and misery taught them by a strange mistaking to call a burden or grievance They should not deny them as retributions oblations which they are to make unto their King if he or his royal Ancestors had not in every age Kings reign given them any honours dignities estates lands liberties or priviledges for his protection only care of them and for their peace plenty good Laws the happiness imparted by them which is not to be out-weighed by any assistance which they can give unto their Prince Defender of their faith as well as their estates or as tributes which Peter Martyr a godly learned foreign Protestant Divine ca●●●d hither by K. Ed. 6. to assist in the work of Reformation saith are velu●i symbola subjectionis mercedis cujusdam eorum laborum qui sua propria neglexerint ideo necesse est ut de publico provideatur as signes of subjection and retributions for their cares of the people whilest they neglect their own affairs and therefore it is fit they should be provided for out of the publick by Tributes which besides the allowance which our Saviour Christ the Son of God the greatest of Legislators gave of them were so necessary and usuall as feré cum Regibus esse nata nullamque penè gentem fuisse unquam quae Regibus atque Magistratibus suis de publico non solvent tributa unanimis est Historicorum ac Politicorum consensus they were as antient almost as Kings and brought into the world with them saith Besoldus and it is the unanimous opinion of all that know any thing of history and policy that there never was Nation in the world which did not pay tributes to Kings and Magistrates And may deem his just and legall prerogatives and reasonable priviledges and customes in his rights of Pourveyance to be as deservedly belonging unto him his Royall Crown and Dignity as Swans not and marked and Whales Sturgeons which Bracton tells us do propter privilegium de jure gentium by priviledge and the Law of Nations belong unto the Crown and Porpoises Dolphins and all other Fishes strange for bulk rarity or quality for that by custome the Soveraign Prince say the ancient Sea Laws of Oleron ought to have his share demand or pleasure therein and with good reason for the Subject owes obedience and tribute to his Soveraign who may as his Ancestors grant Kaiage Plankage and ought to h●ve as much right as great a privilege not yet rest ained o● taken away by his Royal Progenitors assent to any Act of Parliament in his Praeemtion and royal Pourveyance as King Henry the third had in the fourth year of his reign who being to transport his Army into France commanded by his Proclamation omnes victualium mercatores all Market folk in the Counties of Berk. Southt Somerset Dorset and Wiltshire quod veniant ad Portsmouth cum victualibus quod nullum mercatum teneatur in Comitat. praedict quamdiu c. to bring victuals and provisions to Portsmouth and that no Markets should in the mean time or as long as the Army there continued be kept in the said Counties which would of necessity abate the prices Or as King Ed. 1. did in anno 34 of his Reign assigne Robert Bacon the Sheriffe of Cambridge and Huntington Shires ad blad● emenda infra Ballivam suam per visum ordinationem Willielmi de sancto Georgio Gulielmi de Say milit mitend usque Berwicam super Twedam ad expensas hospitii exercitus Regis in guerra Scotiae to buy and provide corn within his Baliwick by the view and assistance of Sir William St. George and Sir William de Say to be sent and conveyed to Barwick upon Twede for the provisions of the Kings Houshold and Army in the warres of Scotland viz. 40 quarters de frument 425. quarters Brasii prec quarter 4 s. 425 quarters 3. avenae prec quarter 2 s. 6 d. 40 quarter of corn and 425 quarter of Malt or Barley at 4 s. a quarter and 425 quarter of Oats at 2 s. 6 d. Or as King Ed. 3. had by his Letters Patents in the three and thirtieth year of his Raign to seise and take Falcons and Hawks to his use and limit the price of them en le Cite de Londres les lieux environ cibien en ●au come en terre cest a scavoir le falcon gentil pour 20 solz le Tersel gentil pour 10 solz le Laner pour demy mark destre payer par les mains des ses visc●nts in London and the parts adjacent as well upon the water as the land that is to say twenty shillings for the Falcon-gentil ten shillings for the Tersel-gentil and a noble for a Laner to be paid by the Sheriffs which hath an affinity or neer resemblance with Solomons Merchants receiving the linnen-yarn which came from Egipt at a price Or to grant a Toll without act of Parliament as well before as since the Conquest
forty or if as they were in the beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth at six pence a piece in the Market would buy 200 Capons and at two shillings six pence but forty and the five pounds Fee Farme ●ent in King Edward the second 's time when a fat sheep was sold for twenty pence would buy thirty but now at twenty shillings a fat Sheep no greater a number then five And the Kings losses and the Tenants gains thereby will many times multiplied yearly exceed the yearly sum which they pretend is lost in the Compositions for his Majesties Pourveyance And all the people of England who doe pay Tithes in Corn Cattle c. in kind when Corn at the rate which Wheat was sold at in 51 Hen. 3. when the Assize of Bread and Ale was set or confirmed but at 12 d. a quarter is at 32 s. a quarter which was the price in 3 Caroli primi now 34 years since when by a Statute made in that year it might when it should happen to be so cheap be transported into the parts beyond the seas not the thirtieth part of that then esteemed to be an easie and reasonable price or at two shillings six pence the quarter supposed in 51 H. 3. to have been a rate which in a dearer time it might have risen unto would be but the thirteenth part of two and thirty shillings or at twelve shillings the quarter which was in those antient times deemed to be the highest rate that any dearth or scarcity could bring it unto is but little more then one part in three of that medium or moderate rate in 3 Caroli of 32 s. the quarter and farre short of the rate of 40 or 48 shillings a quarter when it is now reckoned to be cheap and reasonable or of 4 l. a quarter as it is in this present year much dearer are not to deny the payment of the improvement of their Tythes by their own industrie or what they exceed the first intentions or grant of them And that part of the people which doe pay their Tithes to Impropriators and Lay men cannot be ignorant that the first intention and right use of them is so laid by and disused as the hospitality reliefe of the poor repair and adorning of Churches which were some of the causes for which they are paid and which the Abbies and Monasteries when they were in being took a greater care of then those that lay it out in the excess pride vanities and humours of themselves or their lavish and expencefull wives and convert all their hospitality and care of the Poor and Churches into gilded Coaches and Butterflye Lacquies which being most of the houshold which can be afforded to be kept are carried up and down the streets of London that grand Magazine and Nurserie of all vices at the end or breech of the Coaches whilest the Church is but meanly repaired and ill-favouredly kept at the charge of the Parishes the Poor not pitifully but beggerly and in a wofull manner provided for by a rate or taxe of the Parishes the Vicar not allowed the fifth if it be a small Appropriation or in many places where they are greater little more then a tenth and at the best not enough to keep him and his wife and children from being the prognosticks of a fam●ne and comes short at the years end of Mica's Salary of ten shekels of silver a suit of apparrel and his victuals which renders him a scorn to the wicked and a pitty to those that love God and goodness who are not certainly mistaken when they think a better allowance would yeild them better Preachers May be as little displeased with the failing or falling of the Kings price or rate for his houshold provisions as they were in being quitted of Cerage or Waxscot thrice a year paid towards the charge of candles in the Churches Or as the Landlords or Lords of Manors who doe now receive their Rent-services or Quit-rents at a far lesser value then they were originally intended or now are or the Tenants and those that pay them who are by so much more the gainers And the Town of Alesbury in the County of Buckingham may the better bear her part of the Composition for the Royall Pourveyance for that the Town it self and their then liberties and priviledges were freely granted by some of the Kings Royal Progenitors to hold in Capite by the service of keeping all the distresses of Cattel c. which in those dayes were many which the King or his Sheriff or other Ministers in the County of Buckingham should cause to be taken for his debts and feed them in the common Pasture of Alesbury And to take for every Colt Oxe Horse and Cow not milcht a penny for every four Sheep a penny for every four hogs a penny and for every day and night whilest they stay there pro singulis districtionibus for every distress a penny And the Sheriffe was to bring his distresses taken for the King no where else which the Town by a disuse being altogether freed from doe not at all murmur at that which was given them for no other intent or purpose Also the owners of the Manor of Byker in the County of Northumberland which is holden of the King by the Serjeanty to receive and keep safe at Bykere all distresses taken within that County for the Kings debts not being now troubled at all with the distresses taken for the Kings debts need not repine at the Pourveyance or Compositions for it For they and all other are to consider that if the Kings Royal Progenitors had not as King Henry the first condescended to accept of the rents or such part as was usually paid in provisions for his housekeeping the lands which they or those which claim under them have ever since held and are so greatly improved as five or more to one in some places and twenty or more in another allowing them a variation according to the nature or fertility of the ground or distance nearer or further from London or other Towns of trade or intercourse or the Sea Ports might well have born the charge of the Kings provisions though they do now so much exceed their Market rates And that as that King and his Successors have exchanged it for money which makes them to be the greater loosers and the Tenants the greater gainers by so much as the money reserved for rent falls under the now value of money and the Market price for things to be bought with it would amount to a great deal more then the pretended losses by the Kings Pourveyance or compositions for it That the Law Justice and Equity which binds the King to that prejudiciall as it hath since happened condiscention of his Royal Ancestor King Henry the first in taking money for his provisions ought a fortiori to bind his Subjects to those beneficiall contracts made by their Fore-fathers and Predecessors with Queen
Elizabeth if they stood upon equall terms with him and owed him neither gratitude allegiance or subjection That he who is so great a looser by the change alteration of times and his own his Royal Progenitors bounties and indulgences might howsoever be allowed to be a little gainer in that one particular of the Compositions for his Pourveyances for in every thing else he is abundantly a very great looser and ought as well to take an advantage by it as the Clergie and Impropriators of England doe by the rise and encrease of their Tithes and imp●ovement of their Glebes and are sure to be gainers by the difference in the value and price of commodities when as they sell their corn at the highest rates and make the improvement of their Glebes to follow the rise of money and the Markets And may take it to be no Paradox or stranger to any mans understanding or belief that the King who by his Lawes hath ordered that reasonable prises and rates should be taken for victuals and houshold provisions for himself and all his people and if his Sheriffs Justices of Peace Clerks of the Markets and the Lords and Stewards of Court-leets had but imitated the care of their Predecessors in the execution of the trusts committed unto them by their Soveraign and his Laws or of the Sheriffs in the reign of King Henry the third when as the King by his Writ being petitioned to give the Sheriffe of Bedford a power to dispence with the Vintners in the Town of Bedford for selling wine above the rates assize doth it in these words Rex c. Vic. Bed salutem Quia Villa de Bedeford distat a quolibet portu maris duas dietas tibi praecipimus quod permittas Vinitar Bed Sextarium vini Franc. vendere pro 8. denar sextarium vini Andeg. Wascon de Blanc pro 10 d. non obstante c. Teste R. c. allowing them to take for a pint and a half if the Sextarie was then accompted to be no greater a measure of wine 7 d. and for the like measure of white wine of Anjou and Gascoine 10 d. And had not as they doe daily too much neglected the execution of the Laws and laid by their duties to God their King and Country and by being over wakefull and diligent to improve their estates and private interests taken a Nap or fit of sleeping in point of time farre beyond that of the seven notorious Sleepers might at this day have been out of the reach of the causeless murmur of those who as they were seduced and fooled by Oliver and his Associates in the greatest of iniquities can make a Non causa to be a cause of their Complaints and of a grievance to themselves when as they and many of their fellow Subjects are and have been the only and immediate causes of it and if rightly considered is a reall grievance to the King and to all that buy more then they sell. And that if the King and his Laws had been as they ought to have been better obeyed and observed in such a Land or Kingdome as England is which is justly accompted to be blest with so much peace and plenty and such an over-plus of all things good and pleasant as well as necessary for the sustenance of the People or Inhabitants thereof as a deer year is not heard of above once at the most in ten or twenty years but many very cheap ones The rates or prices agreed upon by the Counties in the fourth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth would have been enough and sufficient or more then enough if the Acts of Parliament of 25 H. 8. ca. 2. to suppress the enhaunce of the then Market rates which may well be supposed to have been much cheaper then what it was in Anno 4 of Elizabeth and the Statutes of incerti temporis or King Henry the third 3 4 Ed. 6. ca. 19. 5 Ed. 6. ca. 14. against Forestallers had been duly put in execution And that the 12. Counties bordering upon London and adjacent as Middlesex Essex Kent Surrey Sussex Hertford Buckingham Berkshire Bedford Oxford Cambridge and H●ntington Shires making no small gains by the vent and rise of their provisions and commodities and an high improvement of their Lands beyond all other Counties and Parts of England would if the Markets had been regulated and kept down to such just and reasonable prices as might have been well enough afforded have for want of their now great rates for victuals and commodities night and day sent unto London that greatest belly and mouth of the Kingdome and their racking or improving of their Lands been constrained to let fall and diminish their rates and prices and follow the regulating of the Markets and make their prices and rates to be conformable to the Laws and plenty of the Kingdome which would have brought unto them and their Estates a greater or more then supposed damage many times and very far exceeding the pretended losses of serving in their proportions of the Kings provisions as they were agreed upon And if this shall not be believed without experiments or demonstrations they may be quickly brought to assent unto that which will certainly p●ove to be a truth that if the King should as King Henry the second keep his Court and Parliament for a time at ●larendon in Wiltshire or as King Edward the first did keep his Court and Parliament in Denbigh-shire at Ruthland too often mistaken and called Rutland or at Carnarvon in Wales or at York where whilest he was busie and imployed in his Warres against the Scots he kept his Terms and Court for seven years together or as many of the former Kings did keep their Christmas and other great yearly Festivals sometimes at Nottingham other times at Worcester Lincoln and other places far remote from London And as the Sun yearly diffuseth his li●ht and heat in his journey through the Tropicks some at one time and some at another unto all parts of the world or as the blood in the body naturall daily circulates visits and comforts all the parts of it should enrich comfort most of the parts of his Kingdom with the presence and influence of his Courts and residence Those rates and prises in the Composition for Pourveyances would rather prove to be too high a rate and allowance then too little As it happened to be in Anno 1640. when the late King and Martyr was enforced to be with his Court and Army about Newcastle upon Tine on the borders and confines of Scotland where the cheapness of victualls and other provisions at the Market rates in those parts fell to be very much under the Kings rates or allowance according to the Compositions for his Pourveyance made in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth which the Inhabitants and People thereabouts understood so well as a great store and farre more p●ovisions being daily brought in at those rates then
the King and his then more then ordinary numerous retinue could expend he was which many that were then present can testifie enforced by a Proclamation to forbid the bringing in of great quantities or more then was necessary And if the rates which Queen Elizabeth accepted her provisions to be served in by the Counties had been agreed to have been paid in money and not in kind and had by the fall of the Markets which the Lawes well executed would in a Kingdome of peace and plenty have easily brought to pass been too high a rate and more then the provisions served in kind would have amounted unto those who made that agreement for themselves and the Counties and places which they represented could not have receded from it no more then she or her Successors if the provisions served in kind should have grown cheaper or might have been had for less money or been bought by her Officers at easier rates then the Compositions could without the help of a Proviso with honour or Justice have desired that her provisions might not have been served in kind by the several Counties of England and Wales but that the money or rate then agreed upon to have been the price of those provisions should have been yearly paid into the Exchequer to be disposed of for that purpose which probably might have been the reason that at the first agreement made by several Counties for the Compositions some for 3 years some for four and some for seven there was a proviso that either party disliking which until our mad times or quarrelling with the fifth Commandement and finding fault with every thing that fed not the rebellious humour was not at all done by the Counties should be at liberty and free from that agreement For there can be no reason unless ingratitude and unreasonableness neglect of Laws and Duties breach of Faith and Contracts and reasonable Customes unto the King and Soveraign shall be installed virtues and put in the seat of reason and understood to be no otherwise that when all the Lands of the twelve adjacent and neighbour Counties of London have been so exceedingly and to such a height improved and the Lands of all the other Counties of England and the Dominion of Wales have by neighbourhood and communication largely likewise and more then formerly improved and raised their rents and estates by the rise and greater prices given for Corn Cattel Victuals and all other Houshold Provisions more then they were heretofore the Landlords made to be so very great gainers and the Tenants if they be no great gainers sure enough to be made savers by heightening the prices of Corn Cattel and all other victuals and houshold provisions the King only should bear the burden and not partake of some of the fruits if there were nothing else to require or deserve it of their great advance and increase in all their Estates and Revenues And that he by whose power alliance and interest with forreign Princes the People of England doe enjoy the trade as well inward from for●aign parts as outward into them the many priviledges and immunities procured for our Merchants by his famous Progenitors and Predecessors as that of Burgundy and the Neatherlands France Spain Portugal Ligorne the Russian or Muscovy Trade the Hanse or Hamborough Turkish and East-Indie Trades for all which but Burgundy and the East-land Trades our Merchants are beholding to Queen Elizabeth and King James the Rex Pacificus with the Trades now begining to florish in and with our English Colonies in Virginia Bermudas Barbados St. Christophers Mevi● new-New-England and Sianam c. which doe serve to augment our plenties and delicacies in England and his protection of them and all their Trades with forreign Princes by his Leagues Confederacies and Ambassadors and allowing them the freedom of the Seas and Ports and that beneficiall Trade for the London Woodmongers or Colliers to Newcastle upon Tine for coals where their Chaldrons by which they buy are more then double to what they sell and measure by at London and the owners of the Colleries to gain their custome doe not only sell at cheap and easie rates but give and allow them for nothing seven and sometimes eight or nine Chaldron of their great and double chaldrons or measures in every twenty or score of chaldrons and notwithstanding their easie and small rates can by engrossing and keeping them upon the River of Thames unsold and a combination and confederacy among themselves sell their coals at 24 or 30 s. a single or London chaldron and think that also not to be gain or profit enough unless they can upon any Frost or increase of winter weather or the news sometimes but feigned or pretended that a Ship or two of coals were cast away by storms raise their coals 2 3 5 10 or 20 shillings more in a chaldron when they please to the damage of the Rich and great oppression of the Poor who buy their coals by the peck and must pay a greater rate for them then their labours small earnings every day from 4. in the morning until 12. at night will amount unto and did in the times of Rebellion and pretence of Gods glory to be advanced by it continue their mystery of trade and oppression to such a height impudence as when it was proved at a Sessions at the Old-Baily in London that they might sell cheaper and the Lord Maior and Justices had put a rate upon coals and ordered that they should sell accordingly neither the fear of Laws or Magistrates was able to perswade them to an obedience or diswade or deterre them from their Liberty of sinning should be denied such a legal antient and reasonable duty And may believe that the granting and permitting of Marts Fairs and Markets at home and the improvement of his Subjects Estates Revenues a five times mo●e in some places and ten in others within the space of 200 years last past and 20 times more then what they were before that period by their peace and liberties may very well deserve so small an acknowledgement and return and so petit a priviledge as the having of a Praemption and his Provisions served in for his household at reasonable prices which is no more then what the Law it self enjoyneth to be done unto all the People and Subjects of England from the highest to the lowest and to the poorest as well as unto the aboundantly or indifferently rich And that when in our Magna Charta or great Charter of our Liberties the Praeemption Pourveyance was not denied upon present payment for all under 40 shillings and for the rest within forty dayes after and the Cart-taking upon the payment of ten pence a day for a Cart with two horses and fourteen pence a day for three secundum antiqua pretia after the old rates for which now are allowed better rates and being afterwards confirmed by King Henry the third in a solemn procession
of the King Arch-Bishops Earls Barons and the most eminent men of the Kingdome with candles or torches burning in their hands in Westminster Hall denouncing excommunication direfull curses and Anathema's against the Infringers thereof by the candles or torches flung upon the ground and wishing that so their souls might burn in hell And the same Magna Charta being by thirty Parliaments since confirmed and accompted to be part of the peoples Birthright It can be no less then the greatest of reason that those his Liberties and Priviledges mentioned and agreed therein should be as well preserved unto him as those of the people unto them and with the greater reason in that his were alwaies his own and many of theirs but newly granted them And that he was not in the confirming of Magna Charta without some care of preserving his own rights and priviledges as appeareth by his Writ or Proclation better in former times then now obeyed sent unto the Sheriff of York in these words Cum probis hominibus nostris libertates concesserimus per Cartas nostras in quibus continetur that which we have of that excellent Law and Charter being by many learned men believed to be but a Transcript quòd nihilomninus salve sint omnibus libertates liberae consuetudines quas prius habuerunt libertates nostras de quibus maxime specialis mentio in Cartis praedictis facta non est nobis volumus inviolabiliter observari unde tibi districtè praecipimus quatenus omnes libertates nostras usitatas tempore domini Johannis Regis patris nostri quas quidem nobis non subtrahimus ex speciali mentione facta in praedictis Cartis nobis facias firmiter observari nullius obstante reclamatione sicut usitatae fuerunt temporibus antecessorum nostrorum maxime tempore predicti patris nostri wherein he having granted that their Liberties which they had before should not be prejudiced commanded him that all his Liberties and Priviledges which were not specially mentioned and granted away in those Charters should be specially observed notwithstanding any allegation to the contrary as they were used and accustomed in the times of his Ancestors and especially in the Reign of his Father King John For the reason which gives Aaron and his Sons the Clergie their Tythes and Pourveyance should perswade the people to think the Composition for Pourveyance to be no burden when as it is as short of the Tithes as one unto a hundred And it should be reason if any thing can be reason and it be not fled after Astraea into the upper Regions and left some counterfeit and false resemblance instead of it that all or many or most of the males and men of England and such as in the Court Leets and elswhere have taken the Oath of Allegiance which all the men of England and their generations are so born under as by the Laws and Customes of England it is and ought to be as Connaturall and Congaeniall unto them and the Oath of Supremacy to maintain and defend the Kings Rights and Jurisdictions and all the Citizens and Freemen of London and other Cities and Corporations of England taking an Oath to the like purpose all the Freeholders of the Kingdome holding of him immediately swearing in their homage and fealty to doe him service and be faithfull unto him all the Copiholders holding of him swearing unto him their Fealty and all the Freeholders and such as hold of their mesne Lords by Knights service or Socage in their homage and fealty unto them excepting their allegiance and duty to the King should have as great a care not to deny him those parts of his Jurisdictions Praeeminences and just rights as they would not to perjure and forswear themselves or bring the curses and woes attending such grievous sins or the breach of that part of Magna Charta upon the heads of them and their posterities which a Kings assent to any Acts of Parliament for the taking away or extinguishing such individua annexa Coronae jure diadematis potestatis atque authoritatis inseparable parts of Majesty and the Rights of his Crown Regal power and Prerogative If any Law or Sanction could enable him to that which all Laws both Civil and Common doe deny will not be sufficient to acquit or discharge for although the dispensation of Oathes by those to whom and for whose benefit they were made be in some cases allowed by the Canon Law and some Roman Casuists doe believe that violation of oathes have been well dispensed withall by those for whose interest and benefit they were made it will not be hard to determine in the greatest veneration of Parliaments which are to be obeyed actively or passively and of whose acts no man is so much as to think evil that Laws of that kind when they shall be by importunities and necessities made or enacted against the Lawes of God and right reason cannot give an absolution for oathes violated nor if they could be excused for the not payment of those most necessary duties to their King and common Parent in foro humano in this world will ever be excused in foro animae in the next And if the Parliament in Anno 18 Eliz. took it to be for the good of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge that the Colleges Halls and Houses for Students therein should receive the third part of their Rents in Corn and Mal● and ordered them so to doe and that their Tenants who had then have since such comfortable Bargains and Leases under them as every man is glad to purchase or get them and inroll themselves for their Tenants wherein if a deer year comes once in 7 or 10 years and their Bargains happen to be so much the worser as the prises which are to be ruled according as the like was sold the Market day next before the Rent day exceeds the former or cheaper prices the yearly profit notwithstanding of their Lands being alwaies more then the Rent and six or nine cheap years to one may pacifie their complaints or grudgings the King certainly may expect as much or more care to be had of him and his house-keeping as there was of the Universities Colledges and Halls and not to be denied in his particular of Pourveyance or compositions for it that which every man thinks reasonable in his own Nor to be made so great a sufferer under those heaps of mischiefs and inconveniencies which by the great and excessive rates and prises put upon victuals and household provisions daily more and more encreasing doe assault and lessen his too smal a Revenue Neither should be rendred more helpless and in a worser condition then the Lords of Leets Sheriffs in their Turns Justices of Peace in their Counties Magistrates in Cities and Towns Corporate Judges in their Circuits the University of Oxford who hath liberty to punish the breakers of the Assise of Bread Beer and Ale and
promises of gratitude and thankfulness after they are had and received to have given him in perpetuity as much or a great deal more than ever the P●aeemption Pourveyance or Composition for it would have amounted unto and imprecated curses and woes as many or more then the plagues of Egypt to have fallen upon them and their after generations neglecting it for it is ever to be understood that the Subsidies Assessements and other Ayds given to the Kings and Princes of England by their Subjects and People in Parliament or at any time taken or otherwise received by them have been more with respect unto their own particular Estates included in the safety of his greater and his granting them free and general pardons not only for offences criminal committed one against another but for offences committed against the King and incroachments and intrusions upon the royal Revenves and for his Royal protection and defending of them and preserving them in their peace and plenty then as for any retributions or acknowledgements of their favours shewed to any or many in particular There being as much reason for the King to expect and receive the presents or acknowledgements of his people as it was for King Solomon to take his presents sine quibus saith the great and excellently learned Grotius Reges Orientis adire non solebant without which the people were accustomed not to come unto their Kings and continued long after to be a custome as may be understood by the Kings or Wise men coming out of the East to worship and adore our blessed Saviour at his birth and is at this day not disused in the Africk and Asiatick Countries And did not nor ought to dull or lessen the alacrity and payment of other necessary duties and tributes when as Solomon besides the provisions of his Houshold brought and served in every year by a rate and what he had of the Governors of the Countrey which if they were not provisions or conducing thereunto might be some other Tributes and did receive Gold and Tributes or Customs of the Merchant men of the Traf●ick of the Spice Merchants For if it hath been reason every where and amongst all Nations where either subjection and duty to superiors or humane prudence had any entertainment or abode to take as much care as may be of general and publick safeties when the safeties of particulars are included and comprehended in them and to be willing in the common or publick calamities of a Warre already fastned upon them or hope to prevent them readily to contribute to their Princes or permit them to take provisions sometimes without any price at all and at other times but at reasonable prises in order to their preservation or repelling of evils or inconveniences which would a great deal more molest or trouble them or to give him or his Army free quarter as the men of Israel Juda did unto David their King or bring or send victuals and provisions to his Camp or marching Army and can think it no ill husbandry though they have but the day before paid contribution to the Enemy had much of their Cattel and Provisions taken away by the Enemy a Husband Brother or Sonne killed women and children slain and butchered and the bloody and dreadfull Scenes or Pageants of Warre every where to be seen heard of or lamented or to do as the Danes did lately to the unjustly invading Swedes give money to keep their houses from spoiling or burning It can be no less then reason to contribute something yearly to a King who not only keeps us from those and many other woes and miseries by land and by Sea but daily heapes and multiplies his blessings upon us in protecting and defending us and not only gave many of us our Vineyards but procureth us all to sit quietly under the shadow pleasure content and fruitfulness of our ow● vines and by his care at home and abroad preserves us and our Estates in an envied peace and plenty And be the more willing to allow him his Praeemption and Compositions for Pourveyance which amounts not unto the two hundreth or five hundreth part and sometimes not the one thousand part or more of the expence and losses which warre and the many times not to be avoided unruliness and spoil thereof may bring upon them Unless like Ulisses Companions transformed into Swine by the accursed charms of a Cir●e or inticements of selfish or foolish interests for the maintenance of our vices and luxuries we should think it to be either Religion Duty Conscience Reason or Prudence to take all we can from a King who is the Guardian of all his people and a nursing Father to the Church which his Royal Progenitors Kings of England were so long agoe accustomed to rank amongst their principall cares as in the 23. year of the Reign of King Edward the first it was alledged in a pleading and allowed for law right reason that Ecclesia est infra aetatem in custodia Regis qui tenetur jura haereditates ejusdem manu tenere defendere the Church is as an Infant under age and in the custody of the King who is bound to defend and maintain its rights estates and hereditaments who governs by no Arbitrary will or power but by our known Lawes which are so excellent beyond all the Laws of other Nations so rational so binding and transcendent so carefully watching over the peoples liberties and proprieties such a Buckler Guard and strong Tower of defence unto them and poenal to all that shall but execute any unjust or illegall commands tending to the violation of them not to be denied by the most seditious and undutifull Subjects when they shall but be pleased to be friends and at peace with their reason and understanding as if by any divine punishment proceeding from an iratum Numen an angry and just God after ages should find England to be governed by a King or Prince as cruel as Nero or Commodus and as arbitrary and unruly as some of the Roman or Eastern Emperors have been there cannot untill the sword shall have cut the strings of our Magna Charta and silenced or banished the Laws be any oppression or evil happen to the people without the Balm of Gilead and remedies as quickly brought and found out by our Lawes as there can be any necessities or occasions of them Wherefore we should not like people altogether transported and carried out of humanity into a Lycanthropia or woolfish nature think it to be rationall honest or becoming us instead of every mans saying Domine quid retribuam Lord what shall I render thee for all thy benefits to make it the greatest of our care imployment and business not only to take from the King but keep all we can from him And if they would or could tell how to doe it without the just reproach of disloyalty dishonesty and villany should not do it in his
at Westminster Commanded in the 28 year of his Reign Hugh Gifford and William le Brun that upon Friday next after the Epiphany they should cause to be fed in the Hall at Windsor ad bonum focum omnes pueros paup●res Egen●s quot inven●re p●terint it a quòd aula impleatur si tot inveniantur at a good fire all the poor boyes and needdy so that the Hall may be filled if so many might be found Also in the 32 year of his Reign commanded William de Haverhull and Edward of Westminster quod singulis diebus a die Natalis Domini usque ad diem Circumcisionis computatis illis duabus diebus impleri faciant magnam Aulam Regis de pauperibus eos pasci That every day from Christmas to Newyears-tide reckoning and including those two dayes they should fill the great Hall of Westminster with poor and feed them And in the same year commanded the said William de Haverhull his Treasurer and Edward Fitz Odo to feed upon the day of Edward the Confessor pauperes in magna Aula Westmonasterium sicut fieri consueverunt ipsis monathis pittantiam eadem die sicut consueverunt habere faciant the poor as they were accustomed to do in the great Hall of Westminster and to give the Monks their accustomed pittances or exceedings Which would have cost more then a little if prices and plenty of provisions for food and victuals had not better accorded then now they doe or if the King had not had his Prae-emption and Royal Pourveyance or that his Prerogative had been no more in regulating of the Markets and such prises as the avarice of the sellers should enforce upon the buyers then to pay for his own houshold provisions double or treble the worth and the utmost farthing And 174 l would not have been sufficient for King Edward the first his Son by his Writ directed to John L●vetot and Jeofry de Newbald Guardians of the Temporalities of the Bishoprick of Durham to allow unto Alexander King of Scotland coming to London to the Coronation of his Brother in Law guarded with a goodly Troop of Knights and Gentlemen pro expensis suis per quinque septimanas videlicet singulis diebus centum solidos in veniendo ad Westmonasterium ad mandatum ipsius Domini Regis inde ad partes suas redeundo c. for his expences for five weeks that is to say five pounds for every day in his coming at the Kings command to Westminster to do him homage and returning from thence At whose great Feast and Coronation the said Alexander King of Scotland came as an old Manuscript cited by Mr. Weaver mentioneth to doe him servyse and worschip And whahne King Edward was coronyd annyontyd as ryghte heyre of Eng●lond withe moche honor worsschyp Aftur Masse the King went to hys Paleys for to holde a ryall fes●e amonges them that hym had doon servyse and worsschyp And whahne he was set at hys mete King Alexandre of Scotland come to doe hym servyse and worsschyp wyth a queyntyse and an hondred Knyghtes wyth hym horsed and arayd And whanne they wered lyght of theyr horse they let theyr horse goon whether th●y wolde and they that wolde take them had them to their own behofe without any challange And aftyr that come Syr Edmond King Edwards Broder a curtayse Knight and a gentyl of renoon and the Erle of Cornwayle and the Erle of Glowcestre And aftyr theym come the Erle of Penbroke and the Erle of Warren and eche of them led on theyr hondes be themselfe an hondred Knights disgyse in their Armes And whanne they weren a lyght of theyr horse they let them goo whedyr they wolde and they that cowd them take had them stylle at theyr own lyking And whanne all this was doon Kyng Edward dyd his dyligens and his myght to amende the Relme and redresse the wronges in the best manner to the honor of God and profyte to the Crown and to holy Cherch and to amende the anoyance of the Common people The worthiest Knight he was of alle the world of honor and worsschyp for the grace of God was in hym and he ever had the victory of hys enemies Which is here repeated to shew how well the people of those times liked any honor done to their Kings and rejoyced in it And not only in the better course and customes of those times but in all the after ages untill that in which we now are when the pride luxurie and vanity of the Nation have conquered and almost extirpated all the hospitalities of England and made vice and sinfull prodigalities the only care and imployment of their time and Revenues could not leave or forsake the pathes of their more prudent Progenitors when the Nobility and Gentry by their charities alms-deeds bounties and benificences building of Churches permitting of Copihold Estates being only antient allowed and continued charities and succouring of the poor needy founding of Monasteries Priories and Religious houses the then grand supports and Magazines of charity relief alms-deeds to the poor to travellers strangers and the sick and needy granting of large proportions of Commons unto Villages and Townships in that which was part of their own Demesnes and Common of Estovers Turbary for their wood and firing in divers of their Woods and Forrests did so continue the honorable customes of a great hospitality retinue and Attendance great love and good will to their Tenants who enjoying Lands and Leases under them at small and reasonable Rents took them to be their tutelar Gods and as helps and refuges in all their necessities And so intent upon charity were those better and less sinfull times and so much were the necessities of the poor taken to heart as the Bishops and Prelates in venerable B●d●'s time which was long before the Conquest had as he writeth alwaies on their Table at meals an Alms dish wherein was carved some good portion of meat out of every dish brought unto the Table which the poor were sure to have besides the fragments left Ethelwald Bishop of Winchester in the Reign of King Edgar about the year of Christ 963. did in a great Famine sell the Plate belonging to the Church to relieve the almost starved people Walter de Suffild Bishop of Norwich in a time of great dearth in Anno 1245. sold all his Plate and distributed the money made thereof unto the poor Robert Winchelsey Arch-bishop of Canterbury about the year 1293. gave besides the daily fragments of victuals expended in his house every Friday and Sunday unto every Beggar which came unto his gate a loaf of bread sufficient for a day and in times of scarcity relieved on those dayes four hundred and some times five hundred poor people Nor was the house-keeping retinue and attendance of the Nobility and Gentry in those and after ages so small or sparing as it is now in too
people Subjects and men of Honor in England in those more honorable more performing less complementing times but since withering and growing fruitless and out of fashion when that great commander Luxury had with his Regiments and Brigades of vices new fangles and vanities subdued and put the people to a greater contribution towards such their wicked and vain expences and all that they can now make shift for is too little to support and bear out their extravagancies It is well known and experimented to the great comfort of such as lived within the virge of the Kings houses and residence that the Hospitality of the Kingdome like the heart in the body naturall the primum vivens beginner and conservator of life beginning in the Kings house and propagating and diffusing it self in and through as many of the Nobility and Gentry as being de meliori lut● of a more then ordinary extraction did strive as much as became them to imitate Royal Examples would be in the Kings house the ultimum m●riens the last which expired And that besides the necessary grandeur and magnificence of the Kings houshold plenty and variety of meat and drink to entertain at his Officers Tables the Nobility Gentry and Citizens which had any occasion to come thither and 240 gallons of Beer allowed the poor every day at the Buttery Barre three gallons every day at the Court gate for thirteen poor men six services or messe of meat and seven pieces of beef a day as wast and extraordinarie for the Kings Honor the chippings of bread sometimes more then should be and the fragments and knapstry of broken or quarter or half joynts of meat carcases of Fowl and Poultry pieces of Pie-crust or other provisions carefully and daily gathered and put into severall Almes-baskets left at every Table and Chamber in the Court and distributed unto the poor by two Grooms and two Yeomen of the Elemosinary or Almnery who enjoy an yearly Salary and maintenance from the King for that only imployment which hath fed and supported many poor Families in and about Westminster as well as Common Beggars the Lodgings and accomodations of Nobility and Gentry resorting to the Court have so greatly enriched all the Streets and parts about it as that end of London and parts adjacent have like trees planted by the water side so very much prospered as Westminster which originally had but some scattered houses adjoyning to the Abby and the Kings Palace came aftewards to be a Burrough Town Corporation endowed with great Liberties and Priviledges and sending Burgesses to the Parliament afterwards to be a City and the people of other parts as birds haunting the woods for shelter shade or succor observing the plenty happiness which they enjoyed have built made their nests habitations as near as they could unto that place and Royal seat of bounty charity and magnificence insomuch as the swelling and increase of London at this day every where to be seen not without some admiration in her Extent and buildings hath within this and the last Century of years very much outgrown that antient City it self and as Mr. John Graunt and some others have truly and ingeniously observed extended it self Westward and as near as it could unto the Royal bitation as if that were more to be desired for a neighbourhood then the River of Thames the Exchange or Custome-house of London and places of Trade and Traffick They therefore that shall remember how his Majesties Maundie or Charity kept as his Royal Ancestors ever did upon the Thursday before Easter or Eve of Good-Friday with a Joul of Salmon a Poll of Ling 30 red Herrings and as many white garnished with ●erbs in new clean wooden dishes four six penny loaves of Court bread cloth for a Gown and a Shirt a pair of New Shoes and Stockins and a single penny with a twenty shillings piece of gold overplus put in severall little purses given to as many poor old men as the King is years old and the state and decency observed in the distributing of it after their feet washed and dried and the King with a condiscention and unexampled humility beyond the reach and example of any of his Subjects kneeling upon his knees and devoutly kissing the feet of those his Almes-men cannot certainly tell how to murmur at such an hospitality or Provisions which afforded him the means wherewith to doe it Nor should the many cures which he yearly doth unto such as are Lame Blind Diseased or troubled with the Disease called the Kings Evil because he cureth it the patience and meekness which he employeth in it and the yearly charge of at least three thousand pounds per annum which his Angel Gold of the value of ten shillings and a silk Ribbon put about the neck of every one be they rich or poor young or old which doe come to that English Pool of Bethesda to be healed and cured be forgotten or thought unworthy a gratitude or some remuneration or acknowledgements Neither can any that ever understood or read of the round Tables of our King Arthur the great Roger Mortimer and the famous Hospitality of England continued through the British Saxon and Norman times all the turmoyls and troubles of the after Generations in their greatest extremities of the Barons warres and the direfull and bloody contentions of the two great discording Houses of York and Lancaster with the vast quantities of Land given besides to Monasteries and Religious Houses to the great increase of Charity and Alms-deeds which was then the only Trade driven or thought on in the way to Cabo di buona speranza the everlasting rest of the righteous the large proportions of Lands given for Chantries in a then supposed pious care of themselves and their Progenitors great gifts and remunerations to Servants and curtesies and kindness to Neighbours and Tenants when most of our Nobility and Gentry thought themselves not great unless they were good nor a Gentleman because he had only the insignia virtutum Armories and marks of the honor of his Ancestors descended unto him without the virtuous noble and heroick qualities which were the cause or original of them when pride and interest the Devils Deputies were not the Soveraign which they most obeyed vanity and all the folli●s of sin the neighbours which they loved as themselves when virtue was not reckoned as it is now amongst too many a base or simple companion nor honour turned into a Pageant or n●men inane or only made a pretence to deceive mens expectations when almost every English Gentleman was in his Parish and amongst his Tenants like Job that good accomptant of his talents a deliverer of the poor that cried the fatherless and him that had none to help him caused the Widows heart to sing for joy was eyes to the blinde feet to the lame brake the jawes of the wicked pluckt the spoils out of his teeth grieved for the poor
wept for him that was in trouble and sate chief and dwelt as a King in the Army as one that comforteth the mourners the ears that heard him blessed him and the eye that saw him gave witness to him when men gave care and waited and kept silence at his counsel although it must be acknowledged that there are now some of the Gentry more learned accomplished then in former ages and might equall or goe beyond their worthy and honorable Ancestors if they would but imitate their Alms-deeds and hospitality and not permit their greater expences in matters less warrantable and laudable to make and enforce an ava●ice or Rubiginem animarum canker or rust of the soul to hinder or keep them from it And Gentlemen were not then as too many now are the fools of the Parish and so little valued as they are now when too many of them may be beaten and kickt in the Market-places in the view and sight of their over-racked and disobliged Tenants piget pudet dicere I would there were no cause or occasion to speak it and with their few attendants of Sicophants Pimps and Foot-boyes be as little helped or regarded by the Common people as a ridiculous pride and a large and wastfull retinue of sins and folly ought to be But kept great hospitalities and were heretofore in their houses in the Country as the Dii Tutelares of the poor or such as were in any want or necessit●es the Cities of refuge in all their distresses the Esculapius Temple for wholsome or honest medicaments or unmercinary cures of wounds and diseases which the good Ladies and Gentlewomen their Wives or Daughters were then well practised in and had great respects and reverence paid unto them for it And see how little is now done in any of those kinds if he hath any fear of God or care of goodness love or respect to his Country and posterity forbear a bewailing of the ruine and decay of the moralities virtues and honor of England and wonder how that only remaining relique of our fore-fathers magnanimity and virtues that seed plot of love and good will which the Angels in their song and rejoycing at the birth of our Jesus and Redeemer proclaimed to be a blessing that seminary of reverence honor and respect that ligament and tye betwixt the inferiours and superiours that incitement and encouragement to reciprocations of love and duty and that heretofore so famous and well imployed strength and power of the Nobility and Gentry should be disused and laid side and that those laudable pious and honorable actions of Hospitality and Charity in which our Kings of England so much delighted and by a solemn and thrice repeated crie or proclamation made by one of the Heralds of a Largesse a Largesse at the creation of every Baron Earl or Duke being as the cry or joy of the Harvest mentioned in the holy Scriptures and at St. George's Feasts did put the Nobility and Gentry in mind to doe the like in their several orbes and stations should be now restrained by the want of Pourveyance or Compositions for it or that there should be any endeavours to decay and hinder it at the fountain or well head by stopping the pleasant and refreshing waters which gladded our Sion and the Inhabitants thereof and made it to be the terror of all the Nations round about us or that any should think it to be for the good and honor of England to lessen that hospitality and plenty in the Kings House or Court which is so pleasing and suitable to the humor and constitution of the English Nation hath gained the Kings of England so much love at home and honor abroad maintained so fair a correspondency and intelligence betwixt the Court and Ministry and relieved the poor and needy the Widdow and the Fatherless And is so essentiall and proper to Majesty as David when he offered sacrifice unto the Lord after the bringing back of the Ark did give to every one of the people men and women a Cake of bread a good piece of flesh and a Flaggon of wine and so customary as the Romans could not think themselves secure in the good wills affections of the people without their Epulae and publick Feasts and caressing of the people which Julius Caesar nor his Successor Augustus would not adventure to omit Nor Domitian and Severus who gave oyle wine and other necessary provisions a Fin as Lois d' Orleans rightly understood it d' concilier l' amour de leurs Subjects quils prenoient par lebouch● to procure the love of the people who were taken by the mouth and was so customary in France as well as England as at a great solemnity there after that our King Henry the fifth had espoused the Daughter and Heir of France and the people of Paris in great numbers went unto the Louvre to see the King and Queen of England sit at meat together with their Crowns upon their heads but being dismissed without an invitation to eat or drink by some of the Officers or Masters of the houshold as they were accustomed they murmured exceedingly for that when they came to such grand solemnities at the King of Frances Court they used to have meat and drink given them in great plenty and those which would sit at meat were by the Kings Officers most abundantly served with wine and victuals and at extraordinary Feasts as that at the marriage of King Henry the fifth of England and the Lady Katherine Daughter of Charles the sixth King of France had Tables furnished with victuals set in the streets where they which would might sit and eat at the Kings charges as was afterwards also done at Amiens at the enterview of Lewis the eleventh of France and Edward the fourth of England And was there in those dayes most laudably used a fin d● unir le peuple au Roy les pieds a la teste pur affirmir le corps politick le lier par une gracieuse voire necessaire correspondence to the end to fasten the people unto the King and the feet unto the head to strengthen the body politick and unite all the parts thereof by a loving and necessary compliance and was an usage so well entertained in other Nations as the Tartars and Laplanders would not be without it and the Graecians thought themselves dishonored if there were not a more then ordinary care to entertain strangers of free cost insomuch as a Law was made amongst the Lucani to punish such as took not a care of them and the Swedes and Gothes esteemed it to be so great an unworthines not to doe it as they did by a Law ordain That whosoever denied lodging or entertainment to any strangers and was by witnesses convicted to have thrice offended in that kind his house was to be burned Those or the like kind and charitable customs haveing so crept through the cranies of humane
understanding and right reason into the ruder sort of the heathen as in some parts of Africk the King thinks he is not beloved of his people unless he doth sometimes feast them and the heads of the Cowes which are killed for that provision are painted and hung up like pictures in his Chamber as for an honor to the King whereby such strangers which did come to his Court might perceive that he was a good King Being like the Agapes or Love Feasts allowed by St. Paul and those which the primitive Christians continued as an excellent Custome and usage when the rich as Tertullian witnesseth brought to those publick feastings meat and provisions and fed and feasted the poor which were so usefull and well-becoming all such as intended or desired the comfort and blessing of it as that thrifty as well as magnificent Commonwealth of Venice doe not only order and encourage yearly Feasts among the several ranks and Classes of their Citizens and people but doe make an allowance to their Duke or shadow of Monarchy for the feasting of the principal of the Senate and to send yearly in the winter to every Citizen a certain petty present of wild foul And if the virtue of charity which St. Paul makes to be the chief or summa totalis of all the virtues and excellencies which humane nature or frailties can be capable of and will not allow that of speaking with the tongues of Angels which certainly is more to be valued then our last twenty years English complement nor the gift of prophecy and understanding of all mysteries and all knowledge neither the having of such a faith as might remove mountains to be any more then nothing in him or a noise or emptiness if charity be not joyned with it be so superlative The people of England as well as their Kings and Princes were not mistaken when they did so heed and thought it necessary to be observed as a good part of the Tythes given by Aethelulph in the year after the birth of Christ 855. not only of his own Lands in demeasne but as most of the Writers which lived nearer that time have as the most learned and judicious Selden rightly observed it extended unto a grant made by the consent omnium Praelatorum ac Principum suorum qui sub ipso variis provinciis totius Angliae praeerant of all the Bishops and Prelates and the Princes and Earles which under him governed in the severall Provinces and whether the Tithes came first to be setled here by that great King Ethelulphus and his Bishops and great men or were assented unto or granted afterwards by the piety and devotion of particular men and the owners of lands and goods of which very many grants doe occurre before they were settled by a very just and binding authority of the Secular Ecclesiastical power and authority in this our Isle of great Britain some part of them may be certainly said to be in the use and application of them to the Church and Ministry and sacred uses dedicated and designed for hospitality Which the People of did so greatly regard and look after as the supposed want of it in the reverend Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury begot a project in the reign of King Henry the eighth as Doctor Peter Heylin that learned and great Champion of the Church of England and the truth even after he was blind hath recorded it Whereby a design was laid by a potent and over-busie Courtier to ruine the Revenues belonging to that Arch-Bishoprick by informing the King that the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury had fallen much Wood let long Leases for great Fines and made great havock of the Revenues of his Arch-Bishoprick whereby to raise a fortune to his wife and children and with so large a Revenue had kept no Hospitality that it was more meet for Bishops to have a sufficient yearly stipend out of the Exchequer then to be incumbred with Temporal Revenues and that the Lands being taken to his Majesties use would afford him besides the said Annual stipends a great yearly Revenue But the King rightly apprehending the device sent the Informer on an errand about Dinner time to Lambeth-house where he found all the Tables in the great Hall to be very bountifully provided the Arch-Bishop himself accompained at Dinner with diverse persons of quality his Table exceeding plentifully furnished and all things answerable to the port of so great a Prelate wherewith the King being made acquainted at his coming back gave him such a rebuke for his false information and the design which was built upon it as neither he nor any of the other Courtiers du●st stir any further in that suite And the common people of England have always with so much reason loved and applauded Hospitality good House-keeping Alms Deeds and works of Charity and in that besides their own benefits and concernments did but delight in the ways of God which he hath commanded and is well pleased with whereby the heretofore famous and greatly beloved Nobility and Gentry of England have gained so much love honor power reverence and well deserved esteem as the greatest part of the respects which are now afforded and paid by them unto their Issues and remaining generations are as unto too many of them more in remembrance of the good and vertuous deeds of their Ancestors then any personal good or vertue is either to be found in them or according to the courses which they now hold is so much as expected from them who think a name or title like some gaudy Sign-post hung out of an empty ill governed and worse furnished house where vice and all manner of sins in their horrid and ugly deformities being treated and entertained do crawle up and down like Toads Frogs and Serpents in some dark and loathsome Dungeon or that a pedigree deriving their discents from some or many Heroes and Worthy Patriots is honor enough for them do scorn all but their own foolries and suppose a witty Drollery and the Friskes and Funambuloes of an ill governed wit or of brains soaked and steeped in drink more to be valued then the wisdom in the Proverbs of Solomon hate vice and admonition shun vertue and morality as they would do the burst and fire of a Granado and believe d●ink●ng Dicing and Drabbing to be a more Gentile and cleanlier way of Hospitality and make the common people whilst they stand almost amazed at their Debaucheries and irregularities ready to swear they are illegitimate or some Changelings crept into the name and estate of their Hospitable and vertuous Progenitors and if any of them should be well affected and inclined to walk in the ways of their Ancestors and keep good houses can never be able to do it by reason of the no Reason of their Ranting and expensive Wives twenty of which sort of new fashioned women for there are some though not so many as should be which are or would be helpers to
preserve and increase their Husbands estates not to waste or destroy them would if they might injoy their spending humors in the wasteful course of their lives be able to consume the value of all or the greatest part of the Lands and Estates in a County But however such kind of people shall so misuse their estates and Talents our Kings Princes being to guide their Actions by higher more transcendent rules then any of their Subjects did in the better times of vertue and Hospitality are not certainly to be restrained in the magnificence and state of their House-keeping nor to have the means whereby they should do it diverted or diminished when as Alexander the Great answered some that ●ound fault with the greatness of his gift or bounty to a mean man The gifts of Kings are not altogether to be proportioned according to the men who receive it but of the King that giveth it and as the Duke of Savoy said unto King Henry the fourth of France when he found him unwilling to grant or remit unto him the Marquisate of Saluces Kings do wrong the greatness of their courage if they shall not give great things For if there were no necessity of a largeness of heart and expences in Hospitality in the Nobility and Gentry of this Nation they would not be good Subjects to blame it in their King nor honorers of him unless they should as they ought and are enjoyned by their Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy maintain and defend his Honor and Jurisdictions who by the preeminency of his Imperial Dignity is not to want that which should help to support and adorn it when as to that and the preservation of his people who are to sub●ist and be protected by his welfare honor and happiness there will be a real and very great CHAP. V. Necessity that the King should have and enjoy his Ancient Right of Pourveyance or Compositions for them FOr that there is and should be always a necessity to observe the Laws of God Nature and Nations right reason and the Laws and reasonable Customes of England and of honoring and obeying the King and keeping him from mischiefs and inconveniencies and that the members of the body Politick should as every part of the body natural doth be willing to assist and contribute unto the good and well being of the head and better part of it And although that sin the fruitful parent of all our evils and miseries be not in numero eligibilium or to be put within the pleas of necessity yet goodness vertue and the duties of holy life are propter se expetibilia for their real benefits and excellencies to be desired and thirsted after as the Hart panteth and thirsteth after the water brooks And it would be neither wisdom nor goodness in the people to subject the King to an yeerly loss of seventy three thousand six hundred seven pounds fourteen shillings and seven pence which he did the last year loose in his house-keeping by the want of his Pourveyance or Compositions for them and by the excessive Rates and Prices of Provisions for his houshold which were put upon him by the avarice and ill custome of such as sold or furnished them besides his greater then formerly charge of Carts and other parts of the Royal Pourveyance and drive him thereby into wants of money which may either cause him to be more sparing then he would be otherwise in his Royal favors bounty indulgences and Charity to his people or to seek after and take those many legal and just advantages to support himself in his Kingly Office which the Law affords and cannot be denyed him or give a greater liberty or attention then otherwise he would to his necessities or the designs or invention of those who by finding out ways of supply to an over-burdened and insufficient Royal Revenue may shew the people their errors in the denyal of just rights and duties and by putting him to inconveniencies exceedingly increase and multiply their own and that it would be much better to imitate the prudence of Abigail who to make some recompence to Davids keeping safe all that appertained to her husband N●bal so that nothing was missing whilst he was a wall unto him and his people by night and by day made haste and took two hundred Loaves two Bottles of Wine five Sheep ready dressed five measures of parched Corn an hundred Clusters or Lumpes of Raisins and two hundred Cakes of Figgs and intreated him to accept of the blessing or present which she had brought unto him then the indiscretion ingratitude and folly of her Husband Nabal and consider that even the Beasts of the Forrest would think themselves more happy and safe when the Lyon shall have his Food and Dyet provided for him and his family then that he and the young Lyons should roar for hunger and that it would be better for the Shephard to bring him a Lambe or two of the Flock then to enforce him in the extremity of hunger to come and take away three times as many more and carry to his Den. That the Turks may as they have for many ages past rejoyce in the foolish covetousness of the Citizens of Constantinople whose generations may curse and abominate their selfishness and then supposed wisdom in denying their Emperor money and means to defend them bewail the loss of Greece and weep unpittied for their children when they are by the command of that grand Tyrant of the Mahometan Empire taken from them and driven like heards of Cattle and Flocks of Sheep never more to know or remember their parents or be of the Christian Religion to his Serraglio where the Males are bred up in the service of his wars or civil affairs and many of their daughters made to be his Concubines And the French may lament their ill usage of their King Charles the seventh in his great extremities in refusing necessary Aids to resist the successes of our English Conquering forefathers which brought the Pesantry and lower ranks of that ●ince Gabelled and over Salted people not only to their present miseries and that fertility of Taxes which is since most fatally rivetted and entailed upon them but the loss of all their liberties Experience having told our Progenitors how much the necessities and wants of some of our Kings and Princes have heretofore given way to the excursions of some of their servants and Ministers upon the rights and liberties of the people which made the Lords and Commons in Parliament frequently in sundry Ages and Parliaments past to take a great care for the support and honor of their House-keeping the preserving of the Kings Rights and Revenues and the punishment of such as were any cause of the waste or diminishing of it And that a supply of the Kings wants or for the payment of his debts could never yet nor can be so Arithmetically made or proportioned either as to what was past or to come as
to even the Tax or Assessements of the people or to make them to be just so much and no more then the Kings wants but were alwayes like the Tax in France for money to buy the Queen Pins or the Aids given to some Foreign Princes to marry their eldest daughters which amounted unto many times double the sum of the greatest portions which they gave with them or the Aides in England to make the Prince or the Kings eldest son a Knight when the expences never came neer the sum contributed and as heretofore the City of London and other Cities and Corporations have done in their Taxes and Subsidies leavyed upon the Citizens and Townesmen which did usually by a considerable everplus furmount the necessities and occasions of them Or if there could be any Reason Prudence or Religion for the people to permit their Soveraign who is to protect and defend them to live under the Tyranny discredits and pressures of Debts and necessities when as that which is grievous or too much for him to bear may easily be supplyed or helpt by a contribution of the multitude or many giving every one a little It cannot be for their good that the Kings small Revenue and the Hospitality and honor of his house-keeping should be subject to the enhaunce of Prices cosening and cheating of Tradesmen and of every one which his Officers and Servants shall have occasion to deal with or that the Royal Revenues should be like Pharaohs lean kine devoured by the fat or daily tormented and gnawn upon like Titius heart in the Fable with greedy and never gorged Vultures Which if the King and his Revenue could bear at the present will be every year and oftener more increased as the pride of the people and their avarice and cheating to maintain it shall multiply When such a great Provision of Meat and Victuals as is necessarily to be made for the Kings houshold and his multitude of Servants and Attendants will when his Provision shall not be sent in as formerly to his Court which did prevent it sweep and take away the best sorts of Provisions from the Markets and as experience hath already told us make scarce and dear all Commodities not only in the Markets within the Virge or in or near London but in the more remote places or threescore miles off and as far as Salisbury all that can be brought to the Markets near the Kings residence or his occasions Teach the people to heighten their Prices whose measure and rule of Conscience is to ask high rates and take as much as by any pretences tales falshoods or devices they can get and more of the King Nobility and Gentry then of the Mechanick or Common people and get thereby unjustly of the King more then all their Subsidies and Assessements if they be not very great shall come unto And if the great enhaunce of Prices were not or could not be so great a consumption of the Kings Revenue it must needs be altogether indecent and unbefitting the Duty and Honor of Subjects to their Kings That the Kings Harbingers should be so ill entertained as one of them was lately by one of the Tribe of Na●al at Windsor at the solemnities of the Feast of the Garter who answered his demand in the Kings name for lodgings for some of the Kings Court or retinue that the King had quitted his Pourveyance and was now no more unto him then another man and he was at liberty to let his lodgings to any one who would give him six pence more Or as one of his Pourveyors was by a London Poulterer by Trade and a Captain by a sinful mistaken Commission who upon the ingagement of an unwarrantable Covenant with hands lifted up to heaven to testifie his Loyalty to the late King Charles the Martyr whilst with the same hands he did fight against his Person Authority for liberty of Conscience to destroy him his more Loyal and Honest Subjects did no longer ago then the last Christmas when he should have bewailed his Rebellion and the sad account which he was to make to God for those numberless sins which he had accumulated by ingaging in such an ungodly and unwarrantable war and should have bin more thankful for his Majesties Pardon and Act of Indempnity and abhorred and repented his former wickedness buy against the will of the Kings Pourveyer three Bitternes which he was bargaining for and buying of a Poulterer and though he was informed by the Pourveyor that he was buying and had bid money for them for the King could in a most unchristian rude and barbarous manner say He cared not a Turd for the King he had bought and would have them and would by no means be perswaded to permit the Kings Pourveyer to have them Or that every Clown and Carter and every mans Kitchin-Maid shall in matters of Market and Provision be at liberty to buy Salmons Phesants Partriches Bustards or the like fitter for the King then their Masters or Mistresses out of his Pourveyers hands Or if the product of the taking away of the Pourveyance and Compositions for them could be so innocent as not to swell and multiply the Kings charges beyond its just or former dimensions there will be many other Evils and Inconveniencies by enforcing the Officers and servants of the Kings-houshold to buy and provide his and their food and provisions as the common people do theirs when they shall be larded or inlaid with all the oaths deceits and pretences which the invention of the Market people can possibly lay upon it and when that and many over-reaches and cou●ening tricks shall be endured cannot by the carelesness of the Clerks of the Market and too many of the Justices of the Peace be always at any certainty that they do not buy the Beef of some diseased Oxe or Cow which had the knavish help of a Butcher to make mans meat of that which was more fit to make a Feast for the Crows or such Dogs as should have the happiness to smell out the Carrion and go a share with them or that the Poultery which they shall buy were not killed by some accident or disease as many times they are before they are brought or offered to be sold. And if that all the many other mischiefs inconveniencies which ●hall happen by taking away the Kings Pourveyances Compositions for them levelling him and his Officers Servants ranking them in the business of Markets amongst the Vulgus Plebeians or common or rudest sort of the people and rendring them in the particular of Pourveyance in a worse condition and more to be exacted upon then many of the Nobility Gentry and Lords of Mannors are whose Tenants are not at liberty to use them either as Strangers or Inferiors and in as bad a condition as the poorest or meanest laborer of the Parish were fit to be endured or could be reckoned amongst the honors and respects due unto
the sellers shall be pleased to put upon him shall for want of his Pourveyance or Compositions be enforced to lay down his Officers and Servants Tables and put all or most of his servants to Board-wages and that the money which shall be intended or assigned to pay them shall afterwards upon some emergencies or necessities of State affairs for the defence or preservation of himself or his people be transferred to other important uses When the wants and cravings of his servants who cannot live by unpaid Arrears may set them to hunt the people for monys which they suppose may by reason of some neglected rights or concealments be due from them to the King their Master or to devise projects and perswade him to strain his Prerogative in the reformation of known abuses in Trade or other dealings wherein many of the people do appear to be very great gainers more then by Law or Conscience they ought to be to the end that he might help his servants who think it to be reasonable enough for them to essay lawful ways and means to support themselves whilst they conceive that they should not have wanted their daily bread or maintenance if the business of the Common-wealth and the Kings care of the people in general had not bereaved or deprived them in their particulars And that their sufferings want of Wages and fitting maintenance was to procure the wel-fare and happiness of their fellow subjects Or if that way which many times galles vexes more in the maner then the things themselves shal not extend unto their relief will at the best after dangerous discontents and commotions in the minds of the people but beget larg● Taxes and Assessements in exchange of projects or some other necessitated incursions upon the peoples liberties or produce some Artifices of Policies of State to raise money from them as the Crusadoes by the Popes in the Reign of King Henry the third and dispensing for money with such as had engaged to go to the wars in the holy Land and were sick or not able or had a minde to ●arry at home or as some Kings and Princes have done by pretending fears of invasion from some neighbor Princes or a necess●ty of transporting the war out of their own into an enemies Country and when they had raised great sums of money and made ready their Armies dismissed all but the money which was gained by them to return home again upon an overture of a peace or a certainty that there was no need or likelihood of wars When it is well known that the people had no just cause to complain of the Pourveyance or Compositions for it nor of the Cart taking as to themselves or their servants when the Masters had two pence a mile allowed them for their Horses and Carts which most commonly went not above twelve miles from their habitations the Horses having no want of Grass Provender or Hey the men had better Beer and Victuals then they had at home And the owners of Carts and Horses within the Virge of the Kings houses or Palaces or in the way of his progress were no loosers by his coming when either for his recreation or refreshment or to visit the several parts and Provinces of his kingdom he should think fit to make his progress to meet with and redress any complaints or grievances which should happen therein So as the fault must needs be in themselves if they would now finde fault with that which they could not do before when as those just and ancient rights of the Kings of England and duties of their subjects were alwayes so necessary and inseparable to the Crown and their Imperial dignity as that if our ancient Kimgs of England had not enjoyed those their just rights which the fury of the Barons wa●s against King John and his son King Henry the third and those grand advantages which they had over those Kings in so great a commotion of the people which the power and interests of those Barons for all had not laid aside their loyalty had stirred up against them did not in the making and confirming of our Magna Charta think fit to deny them if they paid the antiqua pretia ancient rates and hire they could not without an immense charge which we do not finde they were at have removed so often and so far as they did from London to their several houses and Palaces which their many Forrests Chases and Parks for their disport and Hunting in several Counties and remote parts of the Kingdom will evidence that they did not seldom do and make so many Voyages into Normandy as our Norman Kings William Rufus and Henry the first and their successor Henry the second and he and his son King John and Richard the second did into Ireland or as other of their predecessors did into Wales or as King James did from and into Scotland or King Charles the Martyr his son when he went thither to be Crowned nor keep their Christmas and other Festivals or their Parliaments as many of our Kings and their successors did in several places of the Kingdom which their Letters Pattents dated from thence do frequently testifie or the term as King Edward the first did at York Neither could our late Royal Martyr King Charles the first have made so good a shift as he did to remove himself and his Court Northerly and to York in the yeer 1641. to save himself from the London tumults nor have gathered Forces or had means or time to defend himself and his people if he had released and forbid his Pourveyances by Act of Parliament but must like a Bird without Feathers or with broken wings have been taken with a little running after and been brought back again by the Sheriff of the first County he had escaped into which the Rebellious pa●ty in the late distempered and fatally unhappy Parliament were confident would have been the consequence of his going away from them without granting unto them his regality and surrendring up the care and protection of his people into their arbitrary way of governing them in his name to their own use and as they pleased by Votes and Ordinances If his officers and servants could not when the Factious party in that Parliament had seised his Rents and Revenues have hired a Cart for his use without an order or provision of Carts and Horses made by the appointment of two of the next Justices of Peace or at a lesser rate then six pence a mile or what more every rich sturdy Clown or his rude unmannerly servants should have demanded of them to be paid before hand and upon refusal of their Carts or Carriages should have had no other remedy but to complain to the Justices of Peace to compell or punish them The want of which part of the Royal Pourveyance as well as his other Pourveyance and Compositions for them hindring his now Majesty in the last Summer 1661. when he
some immunities and priviledges to them their successors and after generations in perpetuity When some families may be forever made happy as one was in a progress of King James when a careful Gentlewoman with her seven young children having too small an estate to educate them being purposely placed in a stand where the King was brought to shoot at a Deer and pleasantly tendred to the King as a Hen with her seven Chicken gave his Princely charity and bounty the opportunity to take them into his care and service when they came to be fit for it and brought either all or most of them to great preferments when poor people or their children being lame or diseased with the sickness called the Kings Evil may be freed from their otherwise tedious journeys and charges in going to London their abode there and returning home which if a Tax were laid upon their Parishes to furnish would come to as much if not more then the charge of Cart taking and Pourveyance did cost them When our Pool of Bethesda shall be Itinerant and the good Angel shall yearly ride his Circuit to bring blessings and cures to those that need it and where a multitude of people shall not be the cause of uncovering the roof of any house to let down the sicke in their beds to be healed All which with many other comforts and benefits which the King by his progress or residence brings to all which are or shall be near it The City of York in the North parts of England and her adjacent and neighbor Provinces would purchase at a greater rate then the Pourveyances or Compositions for them do or did ever yearly amount unto and being like to be g●eat and glad gainers by it would be most chearfully willing and ready to carry or remove his travailing goods or utensils from or to any of his Royal houses at his no contemptible or unreasonable rates or Prices O● the City of Worcester or Town of Shrowsbury with their adjacent bordering Shires would in the prospect or certain gain of it be not at all discontented or troubled at the neighbo●hood of such an enriching staple comfort Which every man may believe when as he must be a great stranger to England as well as to common sense and understanding who cannot apprehend how much relief an old fashioned English Gentlemans house for we must distinguish betwixt rich hospitable good men and those who being weary of Gods long continued mercies and patience do think they are not Gentlemen or well educated if they do not swear as fast as they can God damne me and the devil take me and make themselves and their wives and children their estate and all that they have the prey and business of Taylors Vintners Cooks Pimps Flatterers and all that may consume them is unto two or three Cottages or poor peoples houses near unto it what small Villages and Towns and how mean unfrequented and poor Oxford and Cambridge were before the founding of those famous Universities and the Colledges and Halls in them How many Villages and some Borrough Towns have been founded and built by the warmth and comfort of the Kings Palaces as Woodstock c. how many have been built or much augmented by the neighborhood of Abbies and Monasteries c. as Evesham Reding Bangor St. Albans c. and of Bishops houses as Croydon Lambeth c. though many or most of the Religious Houses in England and Wales were at the first designed intended for solitude How many great Towns and Villages in Middlesex Essex and Kent have been more then in other Counties more remote built or much augmented and increased by the Kings residence at London and the Port Towns and conveniency for Shipping How many Farmers in Berkshire and other Counties near London have more then in those farther distant converted their Barns into Gentlemens Halls or stately houses and began their Gentility with great and plentiful revenues to support it What addresses or suites are often made to Judges in their Circuits to transfer the keeping of the Assizes from some City or Shire Town to some other Town in the County to help or do them some good by the resort and company which comes to the Assizes as to keep it at Maidstone and not at Canterbury in the County of Kent at Woolverhampton not at Stafford in the County of Stafford c. or to keep Terms in a time of Pestilence and adjornment from London to St. Albans Hertford or Reding how like an Antwerp or the Skeleton or ruins of a forsaken City the Suburbs of London now the greatest and beautifullest part of it would be if the residence of the King and his Courts of Justice should be removed from thence or discontinued How many thousand families would be undone and ruined and how those stately buildings would for want of that daily comfort which they received by it moulder and sink down inter rudera under its daily ●uines and give leave to the earth and grass to cover and surmount them and turn the new Troy if that were not a fable into that of the old Which the Citizens of London very well understood when in the raign of King Richard the second and the infancy of those blessings and riches which since have hapned to that City by the Kings of England making it to be their darling or Royal Chamber that King was so much displeased with them as besides a fine of ten thousand pounds imposed upon them for some misdemeanors their liberties seised their Maior committed prisoner to the Castle of Windsor and diverse Aldermen and substantial Citizens arrested he removed his Court from London where not long before at a solemn Justes or Tourney he had kept open house for all comers they most humbly and submissively pacified ●im and procured his return to so great a joy of the Citizens as they received him with four hundred of their Citizens on horseback clad all in one Live●y and p●esented the King and Queen with many rich gifts All which and more which may happen by the Kings want of his Pourveyance or Compositions for them and keeping him and his Officers and Servants in want of money or streightning him or them in their necessaries and daily provisions may perswade every man to subscribe to these Axioms that the more which the King hath the more the people have That whosoever cozens and deceives the King cozens and deceives the people that the wants and necessities of the King and common parent which is to be supplyed by the people are and will become their own wants and necessities That it cannot be for the good or honor of the Nation that the King who is not onely Anima Cor Caput Radix Reipublicae the Soul heart head and foundation of the Commonwealth but the defender and preserver of it should either want or languish in his honor and estate when as unusquisque subditorum saith Valdesius Regi ut
quondam Protector and whether the turning of their freedom into a slavery and the intreating of him by that which by a dreamed authority of Parliament they called the Petition and advice to accept o● ten hundred thousand pounds per Annum to be charged upon the people without a Land Tax for the maintenance of a Navy ten thousand horse and Dragoons and twenty thousand Foot to keep them and their posterities in sin and slavery with such other supplies as should be needful to be raised from time to time and three hundred thousand pounds per Annum in like manner to be raised for the support of his Arbitrary and Tyrannical Government were less trouble and charge than the Kings Tenures in Capite and by Knight Service and his Compositions for Pourveyance the greatest yearly profit by the Tenures in what was paid to the King not amounting unto above one hundred thousand pounds per Annum and the Pourveyance which saved the King in his Houshold expences above one hundred and forty thousand pounds per Annum not charging the people in these late times of enhaunce of prices above Sixty five thou-pounds per annum Who when they shall have paid double or treble more then the Excise is rated at by colour of the Excise which was by Act of Parliament given to the King and his Heirs and Successors in supplement of his exhausted and overwasted Revenue and racked and oppressed one another by occasion or pretence of the charge of it cunning and avari●e of the selling and richer part of the people Merchants Retailers and Mechanicks of the Nation every one striving to put the damage from themselves and shift as much as they can the burden upon others will by a lamentable summa totalis find how little they have gained by putting their Prince into necessities and how small a gain or blessing they will leave to their posterities When by begging getting and keeping all they can from the King and cozening him all that they can the common people unless they will have their body Politick to be without a head and as they were in the Time of Usurpation when there was no King in Israel busied like the Beasts of the Forrests and Fishes in the Sea in devouring and oppressing one another in a Chaos of villany and confusion cannot subsist or maintain themselves in peace and plenty without enabling the King to support himself to protect an● defend them And may without any violence used to their judgments believe that it was better with the common people of England when they paid for thei● Farms some rent in mony some in provisions of house-keeping when by the hospitality of their Landlords they were sure to partake of them their Lands and Rents being not tortured or drawn up to the highest pin or screw of the Rack or any possible improvement which might be made of it And the plowing of some part of their Lords Demeasnes reaping or carrying in of their Corn and helping them to fetch home some Wood or Coals did not amongst a many of Tenants according to their proportioned services for which they reckoned the love protection and hospitality of their Landlords to be satisfaction enough amount unto the Twentieth or Thirtieth part of the rack Rent which now they do pay and have not so much as a Cup of Beer or a morsel of Bread given them when they come to pay it Which the people of Scotland may to their cost experiment if they should as the rustick part of the people of England have done never think themselves happy untill they have shaken off the services and obligations to their Lords and Benefactors and in stead of paying some Chald●rs of Victuals Mailes and other more easie duties have their Lands let by their Landlords to the utmost penny and bidding and like the Israelites in their Egyptian bondage make Brick and gather the Straw and pay a Rent as much as the Land or Farm can possibly yeild or it may be a great deal more And may perswade the people that there is a grand necessity attended with many other great necessities that the King should have again his just and harmless rights and prerogative of prae-emption Pourveyance and Compositions and as great a necessity for the people if they will avoid those heaps of evils and inconveniences which may otherwise happen upon them and their posterities to desire that he should have it When the oppression of the Markets and the peoples working upon one anothers necessity the most part of them walking by no rule of piety virtue morality humanity charity or conscience but labouring all they can in their actions to advance the kingdom of Sin and Satan and their own everlasting punishments shall by their wicked and illegal enhauncings ingrossings combinations and contrivances make the prizes of every thing to be so immense and unreasonable as the vicious and Rooking part of the people will if such rates and prices shall hold on continue and grow higher and higher as they are like to do without some Bando or reiglement and a greater care taken by the Justices of Peace and Clerks of the Market then hitherto they have been pleased to bestow in the execution of their places and duties undoe and begger the virtuous or such as shall be inforced to buy at such unreasonable rates their provisions of food and livelyhood make as a Jew lately well observed none but the richer part able to live with any plenty or content u●terly ruine the middle ranks of the people and enslave and begger the poorer who must like the Gibionites be well contented to be hewers of Wood drawers of Water that they may live and eat bread And that all that the King and his Council can do by putting in practice the antient usage of a Jury impannelled by the Clerk of the Market within the Virge of the Court and commanding them upon their Oaths to set a marketable and reasonable rate according to the usual prices of Victuals and household provisions in Markets and elsewhere which all men were enjoyned by His Majesties Proclamation strictly to observe cannot now that the Pourveyance or Compositions for it are laid aside keep their rates and prices within the bounds and limits of any reason but the people are so insatiable in their gains and so cuning to promote their unjust designs therein as they do not only not keep the Kings rates but to enlarge their profit and prices do all they can to bribe and go a share with some of his Pourveyers When it is very evident and demonstrable and our own happiness might tell us if we did not too much mistake and abuse it and make our sins to be the product of it that now that in England by laying down of Tillage more than it should there is more Pasture Land to feed or fatten Cattel ten or twenty to one then ever it had before and that this our fruitful Isle hath both
for Tillage and Pasturage agros luxuriantes rich and fertil Lands watered and enriched with many Rivers her Mountains and Downs covered and replenished with Sheep and far more then they were before the Raign of King Edward the third abounds with Corn Butter Cheese and all manner of Commodities for the u●e and livelyhood of mankind and by a greater improvement of all the Lands of the Kin●dom within this last Century or hundred yeares then was in three or four hundred yeares before and by watering marling and burning the more barren parts of it is gone far beyond the time and expectation of our Fathers and Progenitors either Brittaines Saxons or Normans and is in the yearly value of Land increased in many parts or particulars thereof twenty thirty or fourty to one more then it was insomuch as we may to our comfort say and believe that Forraign Writers were well acquainted with our happiness when they called England the Court of Ceres and as Charles the great or Charlemaigne of France our neighbor was wont to term it the Granary of the Western world a Paradice of Pleasure and Garden of God and was many ages before in the Brittish times so fruitful in all kinde of Corn and Grain as the Romanes were wont yearly to transport from hence with a Fleet of eight hundred vessels then but something bigger then Barges great store of Corn for the maintenance of their Armies and our Brittains could before those large improvements of Lands and Husbandry which have been since made in it declare unto the Saxons when they unhappily called them in to their aid and took them to be their friends that it was a Land plentiful and abounding in all things Pope Innocent the fourth in the Raign of our King Henry the third called it Hortus deliciarum a Garden of delights ubi multa abundant where all things are plentiful And in the Raign of King Edward the third where there was small or very little enriching or bettering of Lands compared with what it is now the English Leigier Embassadors at Rome hea●ing that Pope Clement the sixth had made a grant as he then took upon him to the King of Spaine of the Fortunate Islands now called the Canaries did so believe that to be England which was then granted by the name of the Fortunate Islands as they made what haste they could home to inform the King of that which they believed to be a danger And may now more then ever well deserve those Encomiums or commendations which our industrious Speed hath given it that her Vallies are like Eden her Hills as Lebanon her Springs as Pisgah her Rivers as Jordan and hath for her Walls the Ocean which hath Fish more then enough to feed her people if they wanted Flesh and had not as they have such innumerable Herds of Cattle flocks of Sheep such plenty of Foul Fruit Poultery and all other provisions on the Land for the sustenance life of man to furnish the delicacy of the richer part of the people and the necessities of the poorer if they would but lay aside their too much accustomed Lazines and carelesseness with which the plenty of England hath infected her people and not suffer the Dutch to enrich themselves and make a great part of their vast Commerce and Trade by the Fish which they catch and take in our Brittish Seas multiplying the stocks of their children and Orphants whilst too many of ours for want of their parents industry have none at all or being ready to starve or dye do begg up and down the streets when the waters have made her great the Deep hath set her on high with her Rivers running round about her plants and sent out her little Rivers unto all the Trees of the field when she is become the Merchant for many Isles hath covered the Seas with her ships which go and return a great deal sooner then Solomons Ships to or from Ophyr searcheth the Indies and the remotest parts of the earth to enrich her borders and adds unto her extraordinary plenty the Spices Sugar Oyl Wine and whatsoever foreign Countries can produce to adorn our Tables which former Ages wanted or had not in so great an abundance And that her people are now if so much no more numerous than formerly by her emptying of multitudes of her Natives into Ireland since the Raign of King Henry the Second many of whose Inhabitants have been English transplanted gone thither by our many great Plantations since the middle of the Raign of Queen Elizabeth sent into America as Virginia Bermudas new-New-England Barbadoes St. Christophers Mary-Land Charibe Isles Me●is c. By our many Voyages at Sea and to the Indies more than formerly our Fishing in Newfound Land which we had not in former dayes our Nursery of War and Regiments of English in Holland and the United Provinces and our greate● than formerly Luxury use of Physick and shortning the lives of the richer part of the people by it When the Provisions for the Kings Houshold or the Compositions for them in so great a plenty as England is now more than formerly blessed with notwithstanding that we do keep fewer Vigils Fasting Eves than heretofore and do as it hath been an usage custom of this Nation eat more flesh in every one month of every year the time of Lent excepted which since the Reformation of our Religion the return of it from the now Church of Rome to that which is more Orthodox is very little at all or not so well observed as our Laws intend and it ought to be than all France Spain the Netherlands do in every year would if the Universal Pride Luxury of the people and their Racking and Cheating one another to maintain it did not hinder it be as cheap or cheaper afforded than it was heretofore For that our Ancestors well approved and much applauded customs of Hospitality are almost every where turned out of doors and an evil custom of eating no Suppers which a Tax for a little time of as much as was saved by one meal in every week introduced and brought into fashion to maintain the Grand Rebellion hath helped the Back to cozen the Belly and the Back with its Brigade of Taylors and all other the abused and retaining Trades to Lucifer hath cheated and rooted out Love Charity and good House-keeping and retrenched much of the Provisions which were wont to be better employed That the Lands of most part of the Monasteries and Religious Houses in England and Wales and their yearly Revenues which at the old easie rates were in or about the Raign of King Henry the Fourth computed to be sufficient and enough to maintain fifteen Earls which after the rate of Earls in those dayes and their great Revenues could not be a little fifteen hundred Knights six thousand two hundred Gentlemen and an hundred Hospitals besides ●wenty thousand pounds per Annum to be given
Aurum Reginae Gold or presents made and given to the Queen in return of their Gifts and favors received from the King Great liberties and priviledges by grants of free Warren Mines Felons and Outlaws goods Deodands Waiss Estraies Fishings Court Leets Tolls and freedom from Tolls to many Cities and people of England granted since the ninth year of the raign of King Henry the third when for the like and some other liberties then confirmed unto them the people of England not having half so much before that time granted unto them as by the bounty and Indulgences of the succeeding Kings and Princes they have had since took it to be no ill bargain to give unto the King for that his grace and favour a Subsidy of the Fifteenth part of all their moveables not loosely rated or much undervalued as their posterities have found the way to do Abundance of Wood and Tymber sold and destroyed by their prodigal posterities which yeelded them as much money as the inheritance of the Lands would have done some of their wives like the story of Garagantuas lusty Mare whisking down with their Tailes whole Woods and great store of Timber in them of two or three hundred years growth A lesser number of servants and retainers and charge of Badges and Liveries especially since the Statutes of 1 R. 2. ca. 7. and 8 E. 4. ca. 2. made against too great a number or the abuse of them when as now many Gentlemen can put a Coachman Carter into one and supply the places of a Servingman Butler and Taylor by one man fitted for all those imployments A great increase of Wool and the price thereof since the Raign of King Edward the third by our quondam flourishing Trade of Clothing untill that our late giddy times of Rebellion had so very much lessened and impaired it Many great Factories or Manufactures of Bays Sayes Serges and Kerseys at and about Colchester Sudbury c. and of stuffs at Norwich Canterbury Sandwich Kiderminster c. erected and encouraged before our long and late unhappy wars and the raign and Rapine of Mechanick Reformers The Lands of Wales greatly improved since the Raign or King Henry the fourth and his severe Laws which denyed them the intercourse commerce and priviledges of England The freeing of some of the Northern Counties as Cumberland Westmerland and Northumberland from the trouble charge and damages of maintaining their Borders against the Scotish formerly and frequent outrages invasions and taking away their goods and cattle by day and by night And the like freedom from the incursions and depraedations of the Welch assured and settled upon the four Shires or Counties of Gloucester Worcester Hereford and Shropshire by the guard and residence of a Lord President of Wales and the Marches thereof Abundance of Markets and Fairs now more then formerly granted so as few or no parts of England and Wales can complain of any want of them within every four or five miles distance Great sto●e of Welch Scottish and Irish-cattel now yearly brought into England when as few or none were heretofore Horses Oxen and Cattel now by Law permitted to be transported into the parts beyond the Seas which were formerly denyed A greater profit made to many private Lords of Mannors by Lead and other Mines c. more then heretofore Many Fruit Trees bearing Apples Pears c. yearly planted and great quantities of Sider and Perry made more then formerly Many Rivers made Navigable and Havens repaired The loss of Cattel and great damages by Inundations of the Sea or the Creeks thereof or of some boysterous and un●uly Rivers prevented by contributions to the making of Sea walls by several Statutes or Commissions for Sewers None or very little trouble or charges before ou● late wars for maintaining of Garrisons c. or by the disorder or Rapines of any of them Our Ships better then in former times secured upon the Sea Coasts by light houses c. Some of our Principal native Commodities as F●llers Earth Leather Hides c. and Corn when it is not cheap prohibited to be exported Divers Statutes restraining Aliens not being Denizend to Trade or keep Shops c. Convenient provisions made for Vicars in case of Churches appropriate The goods of Foraigners to be taxed for the payment of fifteens The breed of large Horses and increase of Husbandry commanded divers Statutes made for the incouragement of Merchants Merchandize and Mariners preservation of Fishing Fuel Cattel and Rivers and against Freequarter of souldiers excessive Tolls Forestallers Regrators Ingrossers and Monopolies Riots Routs and Vagabond Rogues and to relieve the poor All Commotes or unlawful gatherings of money in Wales and the Marches thereof taken away Weights and measures Regulated Depopulations prohibited Many an unjust title in concealed Lands made good by sixty years quiet possession Interest for money lent reduced to a lower rate then formerly and Brokage forbidden No Tillage or errable land to be laid down but as much to be broken up Merchants Strangers permitted to Trade and sell their Merchandize in England and buy and sell things ve●dible and a great improvement of Trade and Merchandize six or seven times exceeding that which was in or before the raign of Queen Elizabeth Fishgarthes in the Rivers of Ouse and Humber ordered to be pulled down The passage upon the River of Severne freed from Tolles imposed by the proprietors of the Lands upon the Banks The bringing of Silver Bullion into England by our English Merchants encouraged the transportation from thence of Gold and Silver without the Kings licence prohibited and the care of the Kings Exchangers untill the disuse of it now of late preventing all abuses in the coyn or money of the Kingdom Merchants Aliens and Merchants of Ireland ordained to imploy their mony received in England upon the Commodities thereof and every Merchant Alien to finde Sureties that they shall not carry Gold or Silver out of this Realm The keeping of great numbers of Sheep by rich men whereby meaner men were impoverished restrained to a certain number Ordinances made for Bakers Brewers and other Victuallers The prices of victuals to be rated and assessed by the Magistrates Rents of houses in Staple-Towns to be reasonable and assess●d by the Maior Great quantities of waste grounds and Commons inclosed and improved A long and happy Peace at home for more then two hundred years Many an Act of Parliament made to prevent or remedy grievances enlarge the peoples liberties and make them the most free and happy Nation in the world si sua bona Norint if they could but be content with their happiness and know how to use it All the Revenues and Estates of the people aswell reall as personal exceedingly and by many degrees improved more then formerly And all manner of Victuals and provisions sold at such excessive rates and prices as would busie our Forefathers with no common or ordinary wonder if they could be alive again
to see or understand it and makes the former Market prizes and rates to be but as Pigmies or Dwarfs to those which are now so immense and Gigantine So as if the Laws of God Nature and Nations right reason and the heretofore well approved custome of England with the care of avoiding of evils and inconveniencies which was wont to be the primum mobile and greatest Orator in worldly affairs to incite and stir up most mens cares and preventions m●ny of whom have had cause to lament the not allowing of that and oother the Kings ancient and just rights and a due submission thereunto cannot perswade or lead them unto that great part of reason duty called Prae-emption Pourveyance or Compositions for them the consideration of the l●berties and happiness which they do now enjoy more then many of their Ancestors might certainly drive or carry them into their more laudable ways and courses When the peoples want of a liberty of unmannerliness or Praeemption before their Soveraign or his servants on his behalf begets no other loss or grievance unto them then a disturbance of their Fancies or their not obtaining that which did not become them or their Humor of hindring their betters from having of it or to make a vie betwixt them and the Kings servants either to hinder him from having of it or to make him pay for it a great deal more then it was worth Which Davids three Worthies who hazarded their lives And brake thorough the host of the Philistims to draw water out of the Well of Bethlehem and brought it to David who longed and had a desire to drink of it would never have done but would have been ashamed to offer unto their Prince so great an indignity And the charge and enhaunce of the prices of all Commodities necessary for houshold provisions will by the needless racking of rates and prices and the Insana praetia intollerable rates and prices which the King by the avarice and insatiableness of the sellers is and shall be inforced to give so infect and spoile the markets of such part of the people as shall have occasion to buy which are many to every one that is a seller those that are sellers having sometimes also occasion to be buyers as if the wisdom of the King and his great and Privy Councel prevent it not there will in a few years be ten times or a greater charge more then was in the same year when the Pourveyance or Compositions for it were abolished imposed upon the subjects by the Tyranny of rates and prices then ever the Compositions for the Kings Pourveyance or houshold provisions did amount unto And when the difference in the Compositions for the Kings Pourveyance betwixt the Market rates and the Kings price do amount at the utmost but unto sixty five thousand pounds per annum or thereabouts and is charged upon so many and in so easie and petit proportions And being no greater a charge or inconvenience the people who in a legal and Parliamentary way are to help him to sustain and bear his burdens if they love and tender their own good and the well being of themselves and their posterities will too prodigally cast away too much of their own happiness and as much of their own Estates if they shall for want of so small and easie accommodations which are so just and so necessary to the honor and support of their Prince enforce him into so great a prejudice and damage as to pay yearly four times as much as sixty five thousand pounds per annum shall amount unto in many if not all the particulars of his houshold provisions as may be instanced in four and twenty shillings the price of a Sheep which was in the Compositions to be served in at three shillings four pence A● Oxe twelve pounds which was to have been furnished at four marks three shillings or two shillings six pence for a Hen which was to be furnished for two pence four shillings for a Goose which was to be sent in for four pence Lambs at twelve pence a piece for which he now pays eleven or twelve shillings and at Christmas sixteen or twenty shillings Wheat at ten pence a Bushel the Market rate being no more for Wheat in 18. of Queen Elizabeth for which he lately paid before the late dearth 7 s. 6 d. a Bushel and cannot furnish sixteen dishes of meat to the Table of one of his great Officers of his houshold if report be true under twenty shillings a dish And if weather beat●n by such an exaction and enhaunce of prices he shall seek a shelter or Port by putting one thousand two hundred and fourty servants the Queens servants above and below stai●s not included to Board●wages the profits and allowed avails of their places which contrary to the Laws of England the honor of the King the weal and profit of him and his people too many have dea●ly bought and paid for will to reduce their vails and profits of their places into a certain yearly Board-wages their standing Wages and Pensions being so very petit and inconsiderable cost him in such an unreasonable and intollerable exaction and enhaunce of Rates and Prices as there is in the Markets ten times more in money and twenty times more in some then what he now paies if his servants shall not like hunger bitten starved and ragged Beggars be enforced to torment aswell as shame him with their daily Petitions and importunities or be as the naked attendants about the Salvage Kings Or if he shall not make them recompence for the losses of their Diet and availes arising by it will undoe and ruine very near so many Families and Dependencies who have nothing to live upon but his Majesties service and their hopes of subsistance by it Or if the loss of Pourveyance or Compositions for them shall in his house-keeping endamage him but two hundred thousand pounds per annum it will with one hundred thousand pounds per annum profit which was heretofore made by the Tenures amount unto three hundred thousand pounds per annum which will be more then that part of the Excise which was allowed in lieu of the Tenures and Pourveyance and the supplemental Revenue of the Chimney money deductis deducendis will yearly bring into the Kings Exchequer So great a damage will arise unto the King by the loss of his Pourveyance and Compositions for them and so much the greater if he shall put his servants which never King of England was yet inforced unto and the Nobility and Gentry of England untill of late disdained to do to Board-wages and give them recompence for their losses and will be not onely a very great damage and inconvenience in the consequence to the people But a great dishonor unto the King whose sublimity Majesty and Honor is not to be measured or managed by the narrow rules of private men or house-keepers for although it may relish very well
with some that have Tables daily furnished at the Kings charge to feed so many as depend upon it and entertain such men of quality as shall come to his Court about his or their affairs and would much advance their private purses and do well in their own families to have the expences of it turned into a yearly Pension in money wherein the King is like to be as much a saver as King Charles the Martyr was when he allowed Mr. Andrew Pitcarne the Master of his Hawks ten shillings per diem to provide Pigeons Hens and other meat for his Hawks and as he and many of his Progenitors have been in converting allowances or provisions into Salaries And that some of those who advise a Sparing not at all becoming the grandeur and honour of a Prince to make themselves the greater gainers by his bounty to be worse imployed upon themselves may suppose that which might be a fit Espargne in their own lesser Orbes and Oeconomies may serve for the Court and Family of an English King and that the Grandeur and Magnificence thereof would be but little or not at all lessened by some thriftie contrivances and abatements calculated only for their own Meridian and that the Power Authority and Virtue of a Prince can well enough subsist without the prop and support of that due Awe and Reverence which are to attend the Majesty of Kings and that some in their short sighted Policies may reckon such or the like good husbandries to be no small part of Prudence and Providence very laudable and fit to be put in practice Yet the Laws of God Nature and Nations and the state and magnificence of Kings and their Princely Families allowed as well as mentioned in the Book of God and Holy Writ as that of Pharaoh Saul David Solomon and Ahashuerus The State and Magnificence of all the Christian and Heathen Kings and Princes Grecian Magistrates Romane Consuls and Dictators Venetian Doges and Dutch Stadtholders and our laudable customs of England can teach every man who hath not abjured his own reason as well as the Laws of God and Nature and the reasonable customes of England how very necessary the honor and State of Princes are to the obedience and good Government of the people how much they conduce to their well-being how the observance honor and reverence due unto Kings are lessened by the meannesse of their Servants and diminishing their State and Port how unsafe and insipid such new found policies and contrivances would be and that the dishonor of the Prince is the unsafety and dishonor of the people who may easily and every where find a necessity of his Pourveyance or Compositions for it and no reason at all to deny it When the total of the charges of it will be so useful to their Soveraign so becomming his Royal Dignity so necessary to the honor and splendor of his house-keeping and that the parts which shall be charged upon particular men to make up that total will be so petit and inconsiderable as our Laws and the Compositions for Pourveyance had ordered it CHAP. VI. The small charge of the Pourveyance or Compositions for it to or upon such of the people as were chargeable with it AS may evidently and undeniably appear by the Compositions for Pourveyance which were agreed to be paid by the several Counties As For the County of Anglisey in Wales which hath eighty three Parishes but five pounds which is for every Parish not one shilling three pence it being commonly in every County charged onely upon the Lands of inheritance of the greater size or quantity not upon Copyholders or small Freeholders and upon those kind of Lands which were most proper for it and could better afford it as Wheat Malt c. upon Errable Lands and Cattel upon Pasture c. For the County of Mountgomery who we●e to provide yearly but twenty Sturks or smaller sized Cattle so called or sixty pounds per annum and had Fifty four Parishes whereof five or six were Borough Towns which made the charge upon every Parish to be little more then twenty shillings per annum All the charge of the Compositions for the Kings provisions being onely of one hundred and eighty Sturks in Wales and its thirteen shires or Counties which costes that Dominion yeerly no more then three hundred and sixty pounds The County of Worcester which hath one hundred and fifty two Parishes paid but four hundred ninety five pounds besides the Kings p●ice or rate allowed for provisions served in kinde which is but three pounds and seven shillings or thereabouts to be assessed upon every Parish Derbyshire having one hundred and six Parishes paid but two hundred fifty four pounds two shillings two pence which is something less then fifty shillings upon every Parish Yorkeshire which hath four hundred fifty nine Parishes besides many large Chapelries was charged with no more then four hundred ninety five pounds which was not two and twenty shillings upon every Parish one with another and would not be six pence a year upon every house one with another if no respect were to be had to the real or personal Estates of the proprietors which admits of large differences or proportions more or less then one another The County of Midlesex having seventy three Parishes besides what are in the London Suburbes paid but nine hundred seventeen pound nineteen shillings which by her great benefits by the Kings constant residence in it is in a better condition with her few but v●ry plentiful and numerous Parishes then the Counties further distant and by the letting and setting of their Lands Houses and Lodgings and the great rates and prices of all the Commodities which they sell to other people gaineth fourty to one at the least of what they loose by the Kings prices for his Pourveyance or houshold provisions the City of Westminster and the Suburb Parishes of London consisting more of houses then Lands or Pasture and being not at all charged or troubled wi●● 〈◊〉 The County of Essex paid for Composition but two thousand nine hundred thirty one pounds two shillings and two p●nce and having many of the benefits which Midlesex enjoyeth far exceeding the charge of the Compositions for Pourveyance hath four hundred and fifteen Parishes which is little more then seven pound five shillings upon every Parish chargeable for the Compositions and provisions served in kinde Bedfordshire which hath one hundred and sixteen Parishes paid but four hundred ninty seven pounds eight shillings four pence which was but four pounds five shillings nine pence upon every Parish The County of Buckingham which hath one hundred eighty five Parishes two thousand fourty pounds sixteen shillings and six pence which was but something more then eleven pounds upon every Parish one with another Berkshire having one hundred and fourty Parishes but one thousand two hundred and fifty five pounds seventeen shillings and eight pence which did not charge every Parish with
nine pounds per annum Cheshire having sixty eight Parishes and furn●shing but 25. lean Oxen at the Kings price 2l 13s -4d a peice Total 66 l. 13 s. 4 d. at the Market price 6 ● 10 s. Total 162 l. 10 s. 0. Difference 95 l. 16 s. 8 d. was not thereby charged with more then one pound nine shillings upon every parish Cornewall having an hundred sixty one Parishes and furnishing but Ten fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total ●0 l. Market price 10 l. Total 100 l. Difference 60l did bear not so great a contribution as eight shillings upon every Parish The County of Devon having three hundred ninty four Parishes and furnishing but Ten fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total 40 l. Market price 10 l. Total 100l Difference 60 l. Muttons fat 150. at the Kings price 6 s. 8 d. Total 50 l. Market price 18 s. Total 135l Difference 85l paid no greater a sum in that yearly Composition then ten shillings upon every parish Gloucestershire which hath two hundred and eighty parishes paid but four hundred twenty two pounds seven shillings eight pence which was not one pound eleven shillings upon every parish Hertfordshire numbering one hundred and twenty parishes paid but one thousand two hundred fifty nine pounds ninteen shillings four pence which laid upon every parish but abou● ten pounds ten shillings Herefordshire furnishing but 18. fat Oxen at the Kings price 4 l. Total 72 l. Market price 10 l. Total 180l Difference 108 l. and having one hundred seventy six par●shes made every one of them a contributary of no more then about twelve shil●ings six pence upon every parish Kent having three hundred ninety eight parishes and being a very great gainer by the Kings so constant abode in his Chamber of London more then its charge of Pourvey●nce amounted unto paid but three thousand three hundred thirty four pounds and six shillings which laid upon ever parish for Composi●ions for the Pourveyance no more then about eight pounds ten shillings Lincolnshire which hath six hundred and thirty parishes and paid but one thousand one hundred seventy five pounds thirteen sh●llings and eight pence charged every parish with no more then about nineteen sh●llings six pence or thereabouts The County of Northampton having three hundred twenty six parishes and being like to be no looser by its gainful vicinity to London and the Royal Residence paid no more towards the Pourveyance and Compositions then nine hundred nine●y three pounds eighteen shillings four pence which was for every parish very little more then three pounds The County of Norfolke having six hundred and sixty parishes paid but one thousand ninety three pounds two shillings and eight pence which charged every parish not with one pound eleven shillings Somersetshire which hath three hundred eighty five parish●s and paid no more then seven hundred fifty five pounds fourteen sh●llings eight pence laid no greater a leavy for the Composition for Pourveyance upon every Parish then about fourty shillings The County of Surry having one hundred and fourty parishes and paid no more then one thousand seventy nine pounds three pence rendered every parish a contributer for the Pourveyance of not above seven pounds nineteen shillings The County of Sussex which hath one hundred and twelve parishes and paid no more to that kind of contribution then one thousand and sixteen pounds two shillings six pence makes every Parish to be charged with no greater a sum or proportion then three pounds thirteen shillings six pence or thereabouts And London which is and hath been the greatest gainer by the residence of the King and his principal Courts of Justice at Westminster and by the confluence of the people not onely of this Nation but many Merchants and people from all parts of the Christian word is grown to be the grand Emporium and Town of Trade in England mighty and strong in shipping a Merchant-like Tyrus for many Isles and as great and famous as any City or Mart Town of the World to whom all the Ships of the Sea with their Mariners do bring their Merchandize the most of Nations are her Merchants by reason of the multitude of the Wares of her making and with the multitude of her riches and Merchandize makes all the other parts Counties Cities and Borough Towns of the Kingdom as to riches money and Trade her vassals and retailers doth for all these benefits contribute with the out Ports only for the Kings Grocery ware which if it could be called a contribution did in some years amount according to the full price but unto two thousand pounds per annum and in other years but unto sixteen hundred pounds or there abouts and is raised and charged by way of Impost upon the gross quantites of such kinde of Merchandise and being repayed the Merchant by the retailer and by the buyer to the retailer was no more in the fifth year of the Raign of King Charles the fi●st in the Impost or Rates of Composition then as followeth viz. Rates of Composition for Grocery wares for his Majesties House Pepper The hundred pound xviii d. Cloves The hundred pound xviii d. Mace The hundred pound xviii d. Nutmeggs The hundred pound xviii d. Cynamon The hundred pound xviii d. Ginger the hundred pound xii d. Raisons of the Sun the hundred waight iii. d. Raisons great the piece i. d. ob Proyns the Tun xvi d. Almonds the hundred waight v. d. Corrants the Tun ii s. Sweet oyle the Pipe iii. s. Sugar refined the hundred waight viii d. Sugar powder and Mukovadoes the C. waight v. d. The Chest xx d. Sugar corse and paneles the C. waight iii. d. Figges the Barrell i. d. Figges the Piece ob q. Figges the Topnet ob Dates the hundred waight viii d. Rice the hundred waight iiii d. ob Olives the Tun iiii s. Castel and all other hard Soap the C. waight vi d. Anniseeds the hundred waight ii d. Licorish the hundred waight ii d. And so petit as in a pound of Raisins of the Sunne now sold for four pence a pound it falls to be less then the eighth or tenth part of a farthing increase of price in every pound of Raisins of the Sun And as inconsiderable in the charge or burden of it laid upon the Grocers or Retailers as that of their pack-thred and brown paper which in the vent of those commodities and accommodation of Customers are freely and willingly given into the bargain And when the Brewers in London and four miles about did before the granting of the Excise upon Ale and Beer and taking away of the Pourveyances or Composition for them pay four pence in every quartet of Malt which they Brewed the Composition thereof amounting but unto three thousand five hunded pounds per annum being now remitted and not paid by reason of the said Excise that yearly Impost or Composition did not onely lye upon the Brewers but was dispersed and laid upon
all their Customers and Inhabitants of London who paying for it in the smalness of their Ale and Beer and of the measure were notwithstanding no loosers by it when as the damage that the poorest sort of house-keepers received thereby came not when their gains were least unto the twentieth penny nor of the richer to the hundreth or two hundreth peny of what they gained by the Kings residence by trade letting of lodgings or the greater rent of their houses and if the Brewer had paid it himself and not laid it upon his Customers might for his priviledge in Brewing in the Cities of London and West●minster and not being removed or punished for the Nuisance have very well afforded so small a sum as four pence in every quarter of Mault containing Berkshire Cheshire Cornewall Devonshire Gloucestershire Hertfordshire Herefordshire Kent Northampton Norfolk Somersetshire Surrey Sussex and London may give the prospect of the rest and how small the proportions were which were charged upon such as were to bear or pay them may make it appear that that so much now of late complained of charge of Pourveyance or Compositions for them will be so little as there will be no cause at all for it when as the yearly charge of buying Babies Hobby horses and Toys for children to spoil as well as play with which costs England as hath been computed near one hundred thousand pounds per annum or of amending the High ways yearly Treatments given to Harvest Folk or the expences of an Harvest Goose and a Seed Cake given yearly to their Plow-men keeping a Wake or Parish Feast every year or the monyes which the good Women in every Parish and County do expend in their Gosshippings at the birth of their Neighbours Children or many other such like trivial and most cheerful and pleasing expences will make the foot of the accompt as to the several kinds of those particulars to be a great deal more then the charge of that necessary duty of Pourveyance or Compositions for them which was so ●asy and petit as in most of the Counties of England it was many times not singly rated or assessed by it self but was joyned with some other Assessements and in Kent where more was paid then in any one County near London it was so little felt and regarded as a Tenant paying one hundred pounds rent per annum for his Land did not think it to be of any concernment for him to reckon it to his Landlord and demand an allowance for it Which caused the people of Oxfordshire Barkshire Wiltshire and Hampshire upon his now Majesties most happy restoration receiving his gracious letters offering them the Election of suffering him to take his Prae-emption and Pourveyance or to pay the Compositions to return answer by their letters which were read before the King in his Compting-house in White-Hall that they humbly desired him to accept of the Compositions And all the other Counties and the generality of the people of the smaller as well as greater Intellectuals to understand it to be so much for the good of the King his People as many of them are troubled and discontented that he hath them not And they who causing the Markets and the prices of things to be so unreasonably dear and excessive by their own raising of prices for their own advantages may when they please make the difference betwixt the Kings rates and theirs to be none at all or much lesser if they would but sell as cheap as they might afford their commodities according to the plenty of Victuals or provisions which is in England The high prices and rates which are now put upon Victuals and Provisions for Food and House-keeping being neither enforced nor occasioned by any plenty of Gold or Silver in England and if there were any such store or abundance of it non causatur effective cujus effectus est necessarius nisi aliunde impediatur could not be so the sole or proper cause of it as if not otherwise hindered it could not want its necessary effect Berkshire Cheshire Cornewall Devonshire Gloucestershire Hertfordshire Herefordshire Kent Northampton Norfolk Somersetshire Surrey Sussex and London may g●ve the prospect of the rest and how small the proportions were which were charged upon such as were to bear or pay them That so much now of late complained of charge of Pourveyance or Compositions fo● them will be so little as there will be no cause at all for it when as the yearly charge of buying Babies Hobby-horses and Toys for children to spoil aswell as play with which costes England as hath been computed near one hundred thousand pounds per annum or of amending the High ways yeerly Treatments given to Harvest Folk or the expences of an Harvest Goose and a Seed Cake given yearly to their Plowmen keeping a Wake or Parish Feast every year or many other such like trivial and most cheerful and pleasing expences will make the foot of the accompt as to the several kinds of those particulars to be a great deal more then the charge of that necessary duty of Pourveyance or Compositions for them which was so easie and petit as in most of the Counties of England it was many times not singly rated or assessed by it self but was joyned with some other Assessements and in Kent where more was paid then in any one County near London it was so little felt and regarded as a Tenant paying one hundred pounds rent per annum for his Land did not think it to be of any concernment for him to reckon it to his Landlord and demand an allowance for it And the people of Oxfordshire Barkshire Wiltshire and Hampshire upon his now Majesties most happy restoration receiving his gracious letters offering them the Election of suffering him to take his Prae-emption and Pourveyance or to pay the Compositions returned answer by their letters which were read before the King in his Compting house in Whitehall that they humbly desired him to accept of the Compositions And all the other Counties and the generality of the people of the smaller as well as greater Intellectuals do understand it to be so much for the good of the King and the people as many of them are troubled and discontented that he hath them not And they who causing the Markets and the prices of things to be so unreasonably dear and excessive by their own raising of prices for their own advantages may when they please make the difference betwixt the Kings rates and theirs to be none at all or much lesser if they would but sell as cheap as they might afford their commodities according to the plenty of Victuals or provisions which is in England The high prices and rates which are now put upon Victuals and Provisions for Food and house-keeping being neither enforced nor occasioned by any plenty of Gold or Silver in England and if there were any such store or abundance of it non causatur effective
afterwards by reason of the Murrain of Cattel and a more then ordinary unseasonableness of those years twenty quarters of Corn were furnished for the Kings use and taken by the Sheriff of Kent at eleven shillings the quarter as appeareth by a Tally struck fo● the payment thereof yet extant in his Majesties Receipt of the Exchequer and although that in the year next following by reason of a peace with France and the great victories before obtained against it by the English when the King was rich and the people rich which makes a Kingdom compleatly rich with the riches and spoiles gained thereby and that great store of Gold and Silver Plate Jewels and rich vestiments sparsim per Angliam in singulorum domibus were almost in every house in England to be found and that in the 23. year of the Raign of the said King so great a mortality of men and Cattle happned ut vix media aut decima pars hominum remaneret as scarce a third par● and as some were of opinion not above a tenth part of the people remained alive which must needs have made a plenty of money tunc redditus perierunt saith the Historian hinc terra ob defectum Colonorum qui nusquam erant remansit inculta tantaque miseria ex bis malis est secuta quod mundus ad pristinum statum redeundi nunquam postea habuit facultatem insomuch as Rents or Tenants for Lands were not to be had the Lands for want of husbandmen remained untilled which would necessarily produce a dearth and scarcity of Victuals And so great was the misery as the Kingdom was never like to recover its former condition And that in the 25. year of the Raign of King Edward the third by reason of the Kings coyning of groats and half groats less in value then the Esterling money Victuals were through all England more dear then formerly and the Workmen Artificers and servants raised their Wages yet in Anno 12 R. 2. though there was a great dearth yet Wooll was sold for two shillings a Stone a Bushel of Wheat for thirteen pence which was then thought to be a great rate a Bushel of Wheat being sold the year before for six pence And in Anno 14. of King R. 2. in an account made in the Receipt of the Exchequer by Roger Durston the Kings Bayliff he reckons for three Capons paid for Rent four pence half penny for thirteen Hens one shilling and seven pence for a P●ow●share paid for Rent eight pence and for four hundred Couple of Conies at three pence a couple one hundred shillings In Anno 2 H. 5. the Parliament understood four pounds thirteen shillings four pence to be a good yearly a●lowance or salary for a Chaplain being men of more then ordinary quality so g●eat a cheapness was there then of Victuals and other provisions for the livelihood of men and for Parish Priests six pounds per annum for their Board Apparrel and other necessaries and being to provide that Jurors which were to be impanelled touching the life of man Plea Real or Forty Marks damage should be as the Statute of 42 E. 3. c. 5. required men of substance good estate and credit did ordain that none should be Jurors in such cases but such as had fourty shillings per annum in Lands above all charges which was so believed to be a good estate in 5 H. 8. c. 5. which was almost one hundred years after as the Parliament of that year did think it to be an estate competent enough for such kind of men In the Raign of King Henry the sixth after that France a great and rich neighboring kingdom was wholy conquered and possessed by the English who had not then learned their waste●ul Luxuries or Mimick fashions and could not with such an increase of Dominion and so great spoils and riches transported from thence hither but be abundantly and more then formerly full of money the price and rates of Victuals was so cheap as the King could right worshipfully as the Record saith keep his Royal Court which then could be no mean one with no greater a charge then four and twenty thousand pounds per annum and in the 33. year of his raign which was in Anno Domini one thousand four hundred fifty and five by assent of Parliament granted to his son the Prince of Wales but one thousand pound per annum whilst he had Dirt and Lodging for himself and his servants in his house until he should come to the age of eight years and afterwards no more then 2000. Marks per annum for the charge of his Wardrobe Wages of servants and other necessa●y expences whilst he remained in the house of the King his ●ather which was then thought sufficient to support the honor and dignity of the Prince and heir apparent of England though now such a sum of money can by some one that m●ndeth his pleasure more then his estate and the present more then the future be thrown away in one night or day at Cards or Dice In Anno 37 H. 6. Meadow in Derbyshire was valued but at ten pence per Acre and errable Land at three pence In the 22. year of the Raign of King Edward the fourth which was ●n the year of our Lord one thousand four hundred eighty and two the price and value of six Oxen was at the highest valuation but ten pounds In the seventh year of the Raign of King H 7. which was in Anno Domini one thousand four hundred ninety and two Wheat was sold at London for twenty pence the Bushel which was then accounted a great dearth and three years after for six pence the Bushel Bay Salt for three pence half penny Namp●wich Salt for six pence the Bushel white Herrings nine shillings the Barrel red Herrings three shillings the Cade in the fifteenth year of his Raign Gascoign Wine was sold at London for fourty shillings the Tun and a quarter of Wheat for four shillings In the 24. year of the Raign of King Henry the 8. a fat Ox was sold at London for 26 s. an half peny a pound for Beef and Pork and a half penny farthing a pound for Veal and Mutton was by Act of Parliament thought to be a reasonable price and with gain enough afforded In the fourth year of the Raign of Queen Mary which was in the year of our Lord God one thousand five hundred fifty and seven when very many families and multitudes of the people of England had been but a little before greatly monyed enriched by the lands spoil or the Monasteries and other Religious houses and their large possessions Wheat was sold before Harvest for four Marks the quarter Malt at four and fourty shillings the quarter and Pease at six and fourty shillings and eight pence but after Harvest Wheat was sold at London for five shillings the quarter Malt at six
shillings eight pence and Rye at three shillings four pence the quarter and in the Country Wheat was sold for four shillings the quarter Malt at four shillings eight pence and in some places a Bush●l of Rye for a pound of Candles which was worth but four pence In the eighteenth year of Queen Elizabeth when the Act of Parliament was made in favour of the two Universities of Oxford and Cambridge that the Colledges and Halls should take a third part of their rents in Corn Malt c. the price of a quarter of Wheat was valued but at six shillings eight pence the quarter and Malt at five shillings and the Tenants or Lessees might if it should be cheaper make their election to pay them after the rate as it should be the next Market day before their rents should grow due Anno 25. Eliz. four good Leggs of Mutton could be bought in London for four shillings two Roasting Piggs for two shillings and six pence four Pullets for four shillings four pence and four Leggs of Pork for four shillings and six pence which may prove that the Compositions for Pourveyance made with the County of Essex in or about the fourth year of her blessed Raign for six shillings eight pence a quarter of Wheat six shillings eight pence for a Mutton no more for a Pork and eighteen pence for a Hen was if not more or as much but a very little below the Market In Anno 34. Eliz. after her many glorious successes against the Spanish King with whom she had no commerce or alliance to bring any fruits of his golden Mines into England and the many plunderings and ransackings of his Indian Treasurs by our famous Drake and his worthy contemporaries in their high adventures and the enriching of our Land and people thereby that or any other plenty of money did not so increase if at all it had been able our Market prices for food and houshold provisions but that they might be bought at London at lesse then half the rate they are now at and the whole charges of a plentiful Dyet for a society of twenty four Gentlemen of no ordinary quality or condition with Beef Mutton Beer Bread Rabits Chickens Geese Capons Piggs Fish Sawses and Oysters and the charges of Fire Washing of Table Clothes and Napkins the Cooks and Butlers Salaries and all other appu●tenant expences of household Provisions with Suppers as well as Dinners came then by the week but unto six pound five shillings and fou● pence which amounted unto very little more then five shillings a man In Anno 43. Eliz. two necks of Mutton were bought for one shilling and ten pence and four large Shoulders of Mutton for five shillings six pence and a weeks Commons for the same society and number of quality which might have contented Justices of Peace and men of worsh●p came but to eight pound ten shillings seven pence which charged every man with little more then seven shill●ngs a peece In Anno 20. Jac. after that England had suffered too many of the hungry never satisfied Scotish Nation not only to pertake of her plenties here but to carry home all the monies and riches which an over kind gracious Soveraign sending away few of their desires unanswered had so liberally distributed amongst them and the more then formerly profusions expences of ●ur own nation making such a scarcity of money as might have made provisions for housekeeping cheap if the supposed Rule of plenty of money would make them dear the rates of victuals and provisions met with some augmentation notwithstanding more then needed And in quarto Car. primi when too many mens unnecessary expences and the higher rack and rent of Lands had informed every man that victuals and household provisions were dearer then they should have been the rates and prices of diet and houshold provisions be-but a little more advanced And the stretch of prices and rates of victuals and houshold provisions from that time keeping pace with the rack and increasing of Rents or rather out going them and so far surpassing the bounds of reason and moderation as well as the customs and usage of former times and ages as a Tenant by several Leases of a Farm in the County of Essex almost fourty miles distant from London of no extraordinary Lands being raised since the beginning of the Raign of King James from five and twenty pounds per annum to eight thirty pounds per annum after that to sixty pounds per annum was most unconscionably turned out of his Farm this present yeer because he could not afford to give his ●acking Landlord one hundred Marks per annum and too many of the Landlords Tenants and Selle●s vying who should most drain and disadvantage the purses of the buyers or those which had need of their Lands or Commodities as if God Almighty the revenger of oppressions and relief at one time or another or by one way or another of such as suffer by it had onely made and ordained mankind to devour and take advantages one of another have so brought the Markets and prices of houshold provisions from those formerly more moderate gentle and easie to those immoderate and unconscionable rates which are now imposed upon the buyers as we may plainly see from whence they do proceed and that the raising and increase of the price of the ounce of Silver could not cause or effect them For although that our Denarius both Anglo Saxonick and Norman had more weight and Silver in it when the ounce of Silver was valued but at twenty then when it was at thirty pence and that had more weight and Silver in it then when it was at fourty or five and fourty pence then as it is now at five shillings the ounce and that a Denarius or English peny is but now the sixtieth part of an ounce and that when it was in the raign of King Henry the sixth raised to thirty pence the ounce in regard of the enhauncing of mony in foraign parts that our Denarius or penny passed as Mr. Malines saith in his Lex Mercatoria for three half pence and in the raign of King Edward the fourth for two pence when the ounce of Silver was raised to fourty pence and so continued untill the raigns of King Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth and was then valued a three pence because the ounce of Silver was enhaunced to sixty pence or five shillings and that all three pences coyned by that Queen did weigh but a peny weight and the six pence but a two penny weight which is rather to be understood as to the weight of the penny or two pence in the coyning or mynting of it then to the denomination of it or the value as the people did receive or pay it in Commerce and exchange when as six single pence or three two pences we●e then as they are now esteemed taken for no less then a six
a consumption of their estates making the greatest most universal and extended g●ievances and oppression of the Nation When as there is and hath been for some yeers of late in England the greatest want of money and Trade which should introduce and procure it that ever it languished and groaned under for three hundred years last past by an universal poverty and want of it by reason of twenty years great and heavy Taxes which yearly enforced and called for more money then the King of Spain during that time received for his West Indies for his own account or England ever paid in Taxes all being summed up together in the space of 500. years before together with a gene●al pride luxury since wasting and carrying away that little that was left of our money whilst all or the most of our Gold have been inticed and transported into Foraign Countries by reason of the fineness of our Standard and their putting a greater value upon our coyne much of our Silver hath in coyne or Plate been carried into Ireland and Scotland and from thence or from England into Foraign parts and that little which remained of it together with a great part of our Silver converted into Gold and Silver Lace or other vain and needless manufactures some millions of money imployed here by the Dutch at interest because that their own Country yeelded not above four per cent for it called home and taken away by reason of our distempers and troubles the bringing of interest by our usu●ping Legislators to six per cent whereby to advance the sale of loyal mens lands which they had without law or reason taken from them eighty thousand pounds in coyne and Silver Bullion or Ingotts of our small ●emainder of mony yearly carryed out of England by our East Indian company into the East Indies or Persia to purchase Spices many superfluous and transmarine commodities without which our forefathers could live longer more plentifully and healthy then now they do And so little money left in the Nation in general or amongst the common people as they are many of them being dragged by their necessities enforced to endure the greatest bitings and extortions from the Usurers and the Cancer or Gangreen of Usury Brokage grown so high and intollerable as by a judicious computation lately made there are no less then 3000. publike and private Brokers and Harpies in and about the City of London taking fourty sixty or eighty per cent far exceeding that of the Jews or the Caursini when they to●m●nted England with their unmerciful Usuries untill they were banished many of our Merchants by reason of the adulterating of our Commodities and taking away the credit of them or by the inticements of an unlawful gain buying their Corants at Zant and Silks and other Commodities in the Levant and Turky with pieces of eight and their Deal and Timber in Norway with Dollars which hath made such a scarcity and want as all the Silver money coyned in the Kingdom by the late Parliament so called with their dolorous Cross and ill tuned Harp amounted when it was called into the Mint after his Majesties restoration to no more with some store of Brass Copper or Lead counterfeit money crept in amongst it then five hundred thousand pounds sterling or thereabouts and that which went about of the Coynes of Queen Elizabeth King James and King Charles the Martyr not being estimated to be much above as much more no● making a total with both included together of more then a million and a half of sterling monies which amongst four millions of people if that should be the account of the number of the inhabitants men women and children in England there being not likely to be many less would afford but seven shillings and six pence to every one and if the money in the Kingdom should as some have guessed it more at random then upon certainty or p●obability amount unto twenty seven hundred thousand pounds or to make it numerum rotundum for the more even and easie computing of it three millions sterling would yeild every one but fifteen shillings which renders the mony of the kingdom to be lamentably scarce too little for the people may without the blame of being over sanguine or credulous induce any man to believe that the credit which the people have one with another far exceeds the money of the Nation that they which are any thing rich in the Kingdom the Nobility Gentry and such as live upon their Lands and Estats without trading onely excepted are but as the Pikes in the Ponds or Rivers which devour and feed upon the multitude and smaller Frye of F●shes that there is no such plenty of money now in England when poverty and want are as Regiments of armed men breaking in upon every County and part of England and Wales the lamentations of the poor and such as are undone for want of trade and imployments are as the noise of many waters and the excessive rates and prices of victuals and houshold provisions are to seek for some other causes or originals then a supposed plenty of money when as there is no housekeeper but feels the burden and smart of them and may hear almost every body not as Usurers which do it to conceal their money from such as might over importune them to borrow it or to heighten the necessities of such as they may scrue up to their exactions or in a greedy humor or appetite never think they have money enough but as a people exhausted and impoverished by wars and luxury lamenting their want of money and that every Town Corporation City and County of the Kingdom the more vain and prodigal part of the people who make hast to spend all that they have or can come at onely exepted have too many symptomes and signs of a poverty and want of Trade and tire themselves with the complaints of it And it cannot be either want or plenty of money which causeth such extraordinary rates and prices of food and houshold provisions servants and workmens wages greatness of Rents and the intollerable and unreasonable prices of all that are to be bought either for the Belly or the Back now more then it was twenty years ago and then more then it was some hundred years before making the sin of oppression and cozening one another to rise like the waters of Noahs Flood prevailing and increasing greatly but the wickedness in the hearts of men doing and devising evil continually oppressing and cheating one another For it was not an abundance of mony that hath made Beef to be at three pence Mutton four pence a pound and to be much dearer at Christmas and other Festivals then at other times in the year but an evil custome only the will pleasure of the Butchers or that hath raised ●he Board wages of a Footmen to be seven shillings and a valect du Chambre or extraordinary Serving-man ten shillings
her herse trimmed up as stately as the Armes-painters and Abusers can devise it with Tapers burning in great silver Candlesticks hired at the Goldsmiths and four or six women in mourning fitting to attend it to shew the beholders the unbecoming pride and vanity of it and a Shop keepers Wife whilst her husband complains of want of trade must not want a Velvet Gown every Servant must as much as their wages will reach unto imitate their Master and Mistresses in their clothes and the fashion of them which Queen Elizabeth did well prevent when she caused the Taylors to enter into Bonds or Recognizances not to make clothes finer then the degree of such as were to wear them every Cotager and Day-labourer will do what they can to eat of the best and live after the rate of a Farmer every Farmer live and have his diet like a Gentleman every Gentleman of the smallest estate whatsoever strives to live like a Knight and some Gentlewomen taking themselves to be higher born then any of their kindred or neerest relations can remember will not think their husbands do their duty unless they permit them like Baronesses to have Carpets foot paces on the ground when the Madam so called shall have a mind to sit in her garnish of sin and foolery to receive the visits of those which when the Marmalet is eaten do most commonly appear to have come onely to view and censure her pride every Knight will spend and live like a Lord or Baron and the sons and daughters of too many of our Gentry ready to tear them in peices to enforce them to make them an allowance proportionable to their pride and prodig●lities whilst the Gentlemen racking and raising their Rents beyond the yearly Income and value of the Tenants Lands are too often the cause that the Tenants do put as high rates and prices as they can upon their commodities to be sold or sent to the Markets and use as many Cheats as the Country Devil can invent for them to abuse and cozen the buyers the Citizens raise the price of their wares and commodities to maintain their delicacies workmen their wages because victuals are so dear servants by a sinful necessity of pride never think they have wages enough to the end that they may wear better Clothes then they should do King William Rufus Hose or Breeches of three shillings price or a Mark as he was afterwards perswaded to believe it then thought to be magnificent worthy enough for a mighty Kings wearing is not now a rate or price enough for a Ploughmans ordinary wearing And the improvements of our Lands and Estates do seem to have served for no other purpose then to improve and multiply our sins and vices whilst the hospitality and virtues of England like the brave Brittish Caractacus or Catacratus Prince of the Silures following in his chains the triumphs of the Romish Conquerers are made to be the attendants of the Triumphs of our vices and wickedness and Truth and Honesty like the distressed Naomi and her daughter Ruth going their mournful Pilgrimages to finde a better entertainment So as there must needs be a want of Trade when there is so great a Trade driven of pride and vanity and a dearness of all things when every one almost some poor and despised Moralists and men of Religion and care in their ways and walkings onely excepted makes what shift he can per fas aut nefas to save and get what he can for himself and there is scarce a courtesie done for one another without a bribe or fellow-feeling the sons are ready to betray their parents and the parents to prostitute and deliver up their children to the slavery of sin for the support of their pride and luxuries the most of our friendships and realities now turned into a lying most dissembling and accursed complement the rich making it their hoc age and onely business to oppress the poor who since the fall and dissolution of our Abbies and Religious Houses are so impoverished and increased as a Gentleman of the same and no more Land and Estate then he had fourty years ago paying but three shillings four pence per annum is now constrained to pay forty shillings per annum and the rates and prices of workmens wages victuals and every thing else so increased and beyond reason more then was formerly as may appear by the difference betwixt what was in Anno Domini one thousand four hundred thirty and seven in the sixteenth year of the Raign of King Henry the sixth now but two hundred thirty and two yeers ago when ●hichely Archbishop of Canterbury built that famous Colledge of All-Souls in Oxford there was paid to a Stone-cutter but two shillings ten pence a week a Carpenter four pence a day a Sawyer fourteen pence a hundred for sawing of boa●ds a Joiner five pence half penny a day and but sixteen pence for himself and his servant for two days four pence a day to laborers five pence a day to such as digged stones four pence a day for a Cart for a weeks Commons for Mr. John Wraby who was comptroller of the works and an eminent man in those times fourteen pence for his servant ten pence for the meat of his horse for a week ten pence half penny and for the expences o● Mr. John Druel Surveyor of the works travailing with two servants and three horses from Maidstone to Lambeth and their charges at Lambeth for two nights and two days seven shillings And what is now paid to workmen when a Carpenter will have three shillings a day and eighteen pence or two shillings a day for his man and eighteen or twelve pence a day for a common laborer as there is never like to be any more easie or reasonable rates for houshold provisions or workmens Wages or any hospitality to be found in England nor any thing else of vertue or goodness unless the wisdom of the King and his great Councel shall prevent that Ultimam ruinam great and destroying ruine which citato cursu as to the peoples Estates in this life and sending their souls into the other world with a Lord have mercy upon us is galloping upon the Nation and will never be prevented either by preaching or Church Censures or the King and his Nobilities own examples without some severe and well observed Sumptuary Laws now very much wanted by an unhappy repeal of all in that kind which we had before and without which all that can be done to hinder and destroy an innundation of miseries which by our pride and luxury far surmounting any of our forefathers is suddainly like to over-run us will be to as little purpose as that which the King of Achen is said to do when he and all his nobilty do in the blindness of their Religion upon a certain day in every year ride in great pompe and procession to the Church to look if
of himself and his own posterity to further and advance the peoples cheating and oppressing of one another or to cause the King to pay the dearer or incur so great a damage as now it plainly appears he doth in his house-keeping for want of his Pourveyance when as all the Landed and rich men in England all the Farmers and all the Citizens and Tradesmen of the Nation the later of whom like aqua fortis can eat and make their way to be sauers thorough the dearest or highest rates or prices of houshold provisions by adulterating or raising their Commodities or as a London Brewer lately said concerning the Excise upon Ale and Beer that it should never hurt him whilst there was water enough in the Thames those of that profession being not contented to be repaid by the house-keeper the six pence rated for the Excise upon every Barrel of six shillings Beer unless they may leave out of such a Barrel of Beer six penny worth of Malt and make it by an half Boyling of it to save the expence of fire little better then so much half sodden water and are not satisfied also with such an unchristian cozening of the people and making their drink by such their doings and puting in Broom and other noxious ingredients in stead of Hopps to be as unwholsome as it is weak and naughty unless they may likewise cozen the King of his Dues upon the Excise and put as many tricks as they can upon him and his Laws and Officers and when by these and many other devices they make themselves very great gainers by the Excise in abusing both the King and his people are as busie as any in raising the cry against the Excise as a very great grievance and when all the Mechanick and Rustick part of the Nation workmen day-laborers maid-servants and men-servants shall not onely be savers but gainers by the enhance of rates and prices and the King onely and the poor of the Kingdom be the very great loosers and sufferers by it Or for the interest of the body Politick that the pinch and hardship should lye all on the Princes part and he onely be the greatest looser by his want of Praeemption Pourveyance or Compositions of the Counties as he had formerly be as an Amorite or stranger in our Israel and pay usury for his victuals by being constrained to give two parts in three or more sometimes then fourty per cent for the houshold provisions which his officers and servants do buy or provide for him four parts in five in many things six parts in seven in some other more then the Market rates and prices were in the beginning of the Raign of Queen Elizabeth when the Compositions were made by the Counties and willingly assented unto or that now there is a greater plenty of Food and houshold provisions Trade and Manuf●cture then were in the former ages and all things may be afforded to be sold as cheap as they were retroactis seculis or some hundred years ago or as they were in the four and twentieth year of the Raign of King Henry the eight and cheaper then they were in the beginning of the Raign of Queen Elizabeth every thing should be dearer to him then to others or that so great an increase of Rates and Prices as have been within this last hundred years and all the mischiefs and inconvenienc●s of them which have been brought upon the King and his people by private and particular interests the non execution of good Laws and the neglect and carelesseness of the subordinate Magistrates Justices of Peace and Clerks of the Markets should with an addition be continued and fixt upon the King who if he should resume but his Tolles in Fairs and Markets which the Civilians do rightly enough derive a tollendo from taking many of which are now accompted to be as the proprieties inhe●itance of private men or Lords of Mannors are in some cases more by the indulgence of the Kings Royal Progenitors and a prescription claimed by long enjoyments or continuance of favors then de jure or were by grants or confirmations allowed where they were before but usurped and with-held from him and a Royalty and prerogative so antiently allowed in the Roman Empire as Valens and Valentinian the Emperors a mercatoribus seu negotiatoribus quae ad domum imperialem pertinent exegerunt necessitatem debitam pensionum ex emolumentis negotiationum did raise a good part of their Pourveyance or provisions for their houshold out of the Tolles or profits made by Fairs and Markets those of the people of England who do claim an exemption from the payment of them and those very many proprietors of Lands or Mannors who by many Royal grants and favors do claim and enjoy the profit of the Tolles would finde to be a greater damage and prejudice unto them then that which the Olivaria● party and the troublers of our Israel pretended to be by the Royal Pourveyance or Compositions for them or should as he never doth let his Lands to the uttermost penny measure his gifts or bounties by that of private men and proportion his favors according to his wants or occasions of keeping or saving what he can for himself or the ingratitude or forgetfulness of those which receive them and be as unwilling to answer acknowledge benefits as too many are unto him or take his Reliefs Herriots First fruits Fee Farms Quit Rents Customes Fines for alienation Fines certain or incertain of his Copyhold estates at the full and present value and the Fees for his Seals in Chancery and the other Courts and all his Subsidies according to the alteration of monys the disproportion betwixt the present and the former rates there would be cause enough for them to acknowledge his favou●s already received and believe that those small retributions in his Pourveyance or Compositions for them will bear so small a part in the Ballance as they should rather lay their hands upon their mouths and rest assured that they which are daily craving and gaining by the King and blest with a peace and plenty under his government cares and protection should be ashamed to make him to be so great a looser and themselves such gainers by his loss and damages And that it can no way become them to suffer him that granted or confirmed their Fairs and Markets to be oppressed by them pay a shilling and many times more for every groat he disburses for his necessary occasions and at the same time in the distribution of his bounties and rewards give a shilling more for every groat which he intended to give shall be kind to every body and receive in acknowledgement thereof no more then to get keep all they can from him which in their own particular estates would bring no less then ruine to all the people of England and those that so very much enrich themselves by putting him to more expences then
should be And that it was and will be for the good of the people unless the oppressing and cheating one another shall be understood to be for their good that the King and his subordinate Magistrates should correct and regulate the deceits and excess of rates and prices in Markets as those of the Fishmongers of London were by King Edward the first when they were fined five hundred Marks pro illicitis negotiis Forstallamentis aliis transgressionibus in officio suo Piscatorum for Forstallings and other unlawful practises in their Trades or as King E. 3. did when upon a Complaint made by the Commonalty of the City of London that the Butchers such a watchful eye was then kept more then now upon the deceits of Trade did stick and fasten the fat of great or fat Oxen upon the flesh of the lean whereby to promote the sale and price in deceptionem populi to the damage and deceipt of the people he commanded the Maior to provide a remedy or as an Assise of Bread and good and needful Ordinances for Bakers Brewers Inholders Vintners and Butchers was set and made there being an old Assise book made and Ordained in Anno 12 H. 7. by the Lords of the Privy Councel to Queen Elizabeth viz. John Archbishop of Canterbury Sir Christopher Hatton William Lord Burghley Henry Earl of Derby Charles Lord Howard Henry Lord Hunsdon Thomas Lord Buckhurst Sir Francis Knowles Sir Thomas Heneage Sir John Fortc●cue and Sir John Wolley or the Decree if had been observed which was made in the Star Chamber the thirteenth day of November Anno 11. of the Raign of King Charles the Martyr after consultation had with diverse Justices of the Peace and the Certificate of all the Judges of England viz. Sir Thomas Richardson Knight Sir Robert Heath Knight Sir Humfrey Davenport Knight Sir John Denham Kt Sir Richard Hutton Knight Sir William Jones Knight Sir George Croke Knight Sir Thomas Trevor Knight Sir Ge●rge Vernon Knight Sir Robert Barkley Knight and Sir Francis Crawley Knight and confirmed by the Kings Letters Patents under the great Seal of England the 14. day of December then next following that No Inkeeper or Ostler within the Cities of London and Westminster or ten miles distant who have since made such excessive rates as have affrighted many of their Customers away who finde it less chargeable to come to London in passage Coaches or send their horses back into the Country to finde out more honest Inkeepers should take above six pence for Hay for a horse standing night or day nor more then six pence for a peck of Oats of the measure called Winchester measure No Tavernor or Victualler selling Wine by Retail should sell or make ready for sale any sort of Flesh Fish or other victual save bread nor procure to be set up the Trade of a Cook within the same house or in any Shop or Room thereunto belonging or in any house near adjacent nor permit or suffer any Flesh Fish or other Victual except bread to be brought into the house to be there eaten by any of his Guests And did likewise upon hearing of divers Inkeepers who could not deny but that the rates before specified were competent further ordain that where Grain and Hey should at a further distance from London be sold at lesser prices there the rates prices should be accordingly And that that Ordinance should continue in the County of Middlesex untill it should be made to appear to the Justices of the Kings Bench and in other Counties and places to the Justices of peace that because of the increase of prices in the parts adjoyning greater rates should be necessary to be permitted and that thereupon other rates should from time to time be set and being set were commanded and en●oyn●d to be strictly and duely observed untill by the like authority they should be altered And cannot deny but that if the King and his Royal Progenitors if they could ex praevisione by some foresight of things to come of which supernatural eminencies there is a non datur or denyall even to Kings and Princes have understood that their ancient and lawful rights of Pourveyance and Prae-emption would in return of all their benefits daily and yearly heaped upon their subjects have been ever thought to have been a grievance or oppression or endeavored to be withheld from them they might have saved as much and more as that would have come unto by reserving upon all their bounties and grants or Leases of their Mann●rs or Lands their Pourveyance or houshold provisions or when they gave Lands of inheritance rendring small or disproportionate Rents or Fee Farms to the greater yearly value which they now appear to be might have added so much of Pourveyance or provisions as might have taken away that causeless murmur against the Pourveyance which our old Saxon King Aethelstane who raigned here in Anno Dom. 938. understood to be so necessary for his housekeeping as when he had subdued the Wel●h Princes made them his Tributaries he caused them to Covenant with him at Hereford not onely to pay him yeerly twenty pounds weight of Gold and three hundred of Silver but five hundred head of Cattl● with Hawks and Hounds to a certain number towards which payment by the Statutes of Howel D●a saith our Industrious Speed the King of Aberfraw was charged at sixty six pounds an Early Composition rate for Pourveyance the Prince Dinemore and the Prince of Powys being to pay the like sums of money And that now to deny it unto the Crown is a greater injustice and injury then to have denyed it to Queen Elizabeth King James or his son King Charles the Martyr or in some hundred years before for that then our Kings and Princes might have preserved themselves and their successors from the rapines and unconscionable rates and prices of houshold provisions which some of his subjects might have forborn to impose upon their King though they do it upon others That if in the Raign of King Henry the seventh a Law or Act of Parliament had been made that for one hundred and fifty years after to the end to make a Treasury or provision of money which Common-wealths and many Kingdoms are not without for the protection and defence of the people against invasions or emergent evils the prices taken in the Markets more then formerly over and above the genuine and real worth of the Commodities should be collected and laid up for the good of the Publike or that all that took Lands to Farm should pay ten times the former yearly value and all things bought in the Market should like the King of France his Salt be for some things at three or four times or for others at ten fifteen or 20. times beyond the true value it would not be imaginable how near the peoples murmuring would have arrived to that of the Children of Israel in the Desart when they
forgot the mercies and wonders of the Almighty or that they would have been brought to any manner of beliefe that ever they should have been able to bear so great and so intollerable as they would have called it a burden And yet now that time and custome like Milo's Calf carryed untill he be a Bull and being a Bull found to be no heavyer then when he was a Calf the burthen is not so heavy at the last as they would have believed it would have been at the first because the people have hitherto made shift to bear it by cheating or impoverishing one another and by laying the burden one upon another will dispendio reipublicae to the not to be avoyded loss and ruine of the Commonwealth be for some time longer able to endure it if the rich may grinde and devour the poor and the King now his Pourveyance is taken away must bear the greater part of the burden That if the King before he had granted the greatest Act of Pardon Bounty and Indempnity that ever any or all the Kings of England had done before him to a company of Factious and Rebellious people who had out done either Sheba or Shimei or any of the sons of Zeru●ah and deserved less then any of their forefathers unless the murder of his Royal Father and all the groundless obloquies and reproaches which they could cast upon him the banishing persecuting of himself his brethren murder and ruine of his loyal subjects and dispossessing him of his Estate Kingdoms and Revenues for twelve years toge●her and all things endeavoured which might load him or them with scorn and indignities can by any Fanaticks or Factious people be proved which it never can to have been by dispensations or communication with God and a living and walking in the spirit had taken in again to the Crown all those forfeited Rights Franchises and priviledges which had been heretofore too liberally given or granted from it and reserved a ten times greater Pourveyance then is by any now complained of the people of England would have been so glad with their Quailes as they would have blamed themselves for murmuring without a cause either before or after they had them And that those who could adventure to transgress the Laws which by their Idolized Covenant they bound themselves to observe and buy Places and Offices in the Kings houshold the greatest part of the profits whereof were made by the Kings allowance of Dyet may now that many of those Dyets and Tables are taken away come to a better understanding of the necessity and right use of Pourveyance and Compositions for them That the allowance of fifty thousand pounds per annum proposed as a recompence for his losses in the want of his Pourveyance is not to be found in the moyety of the Excise of Ale and Beer settled upon him and his heirs and successors for that the benefit thereof will not make amends for what he lost by his Tenures in the yearly Revenue thereof for as to the honor regality and right use of it that and Ten times more and all that could be given in money or an yearly rent would not have been enough for the purchase That thrice the sum of fifty thousand pounds per annum cannot ballance so great a loss and damage as the King sustains by his remitting of the Royal Pourveyance or Compositions for them That the splendor and magnificence of the Kings house cannot be so well supported by any certain yearly allowance in money nor the Squeeze and enhance of the Markets be so well escaped as they will be by that most easie laudable and accustomed way and establishment of the Royal Pourveyance or Compositions for them and that it can be no less then an undenyable truth and reason that it is the duty and should be the care of every good subject to further rather then hinder the Royal Pourveyance or Compositions for them That the mischiefs and inconveniences of taking away the Royal Pourveyances or Compositions for them have so visibly and often appeared to every unprejudiced eye or judgement as there is scarce an Englishman unless it be Cornelius Holland one of those that helped to kill the heir for his inheritance and would rather have Pourveyance to be a grievance then that he should fail of getting to him and his heirs Creslow P●stures in Buckinghamshire which were appropriate to the fatting of the Kings lean Cattle for the provision of his houshold as every man may well conclude that it will be more for t●e good and ease of the people who can never be rich or happy when their Prince is poor or necessitous and if they love themselves are to love and support him that the King should have his Prae●emption and Pourveyance or Compositions for them then that he should be so much dishonored or oppressed as he is already and like to be more and more for want of it Which should be numbred amongst those ancient and legal priviledges and rights belonging to soveraignty pu●chased by the cares and labors of our many English Kings and Monarchs with the hazard of their lives fortunes and estates in the preservation of the wel-fare of the people and a Monarchy which is of more then one thousand years continuance and being a duty ought to be more cheerfully submitted unto then any Ordinances By Laws or Customes of any Cities Borough Towns or Corporations or those of the Lords of Mannors by Grant Allowance or permission of Royal Indulgences or those of the City of London that great ingrosser of Liberties and priviledges who besides their Court of Wards and Orphans which yeildeth them very great yearly profits and advantages do receive take amongst many other things not here particularly mentioned by a Grant of King Henry the third of his Tolles at Queen Hithe Belines Gate and Downgate and else where in the City of London for a small Fee Farm Rent of fifty pounds per annum if enjoyed by so good a title which were formerly taken for the Kings use For every Tun of Beer carryed from Billingsgate by Merchant Strangers beyond the Seas four pence out of every hundred of Salmons brought to Queen Hithe by foraigners or such as are not free of the City two Salmons for every thousand of Herrings bought in Shops an ha●f penny twenty six Mackarels out of every Mackarel Boat one Fish out of every Dosser of Fish not having in it Mullet Ray Congre Turbut c. Two Salmons out of every Bark which bringeth Salmons out of Scotland some Sprats out of every Boat or Barke with Sprats two pence of every Oyster Boat out of every Bark or Boat of Haddocks twenty six Haddocks out of every Ship or Bark laden with Herrings from Yarmouth two hundred Herrings for all kind of Fish brought to London after the same rate as was paid to the King at London Bridge for every Ship Bark or Vessel not belonging to London or
the Cinque Ports which cometh within the Orlokes two pence five Eggs in every hundred brought to London for Poultery brought thither on horseback three Farthings and on foot an half penny for every load of Cheese two pence for every dozen of Sheep brought to Smithfield to be sold an half penny for every Cow or Beast bought out of the Franchise a penny and of every foraigner bringing Cows Beeves Sheep Swine or Porks to Smithfield to be sold betwixt the Feast of St. Martin and Christmas the third best Beast Sheep Swine or Pork after the two first best or some Composition for them and if the Beast be of the value of a Mark the Bailiff was to restore fourty pence for his skin and might take for lean Hogs or Porks brought thither to be sold betwixt Hock tyde and Michaelmas the third best next af●ter the first best or twelve or six pence in lieu thereof which with their other Tolles and Perquisites and the yearly Scavage or Shewage the profit of Tronage and Pesage at the Balance together with their yearly income by the Cole Meters places would if the King for the better supply of his Pourveyance should take into his own hands as they are now Collected and taken either in money or in specie the above mentioned Tolles and Customes which are but the Irradiations and participations of the power and authority of the King imparted unto them for the better order and management of the peace and affairs of the people in those lesser Orbes and as was covenanted in a confirmation of the Fee Farm of three hundred pounds per annum for the Shirivalties of London and Middlesex by King John in case of taking away or granting any of the profits thereof release and discharge the said Fee Farm Rent of fifty pounds per annum bring a good assistance to his charge of Pourveyance and houshold provisions and make him some amends and recompence for his daily great damages sustained in his more then formerly expences for his houshold provisions by making his so constant aboad in that his Imperial Chamber Being priviledges better to be liked and approved then many of those which are not discommended in Military affairs where a Colonel of horse hath liberty besides his pay of a Colonel to reckon a pay for a Captain though he hath none and to be allowed for a certain number of spare Horses and to Muster and take pay for ●ix of his own servants and the like for one in every of the six Troops of his Regiment And may be allowed a soveraign as well as those daily and frequently practised given received and taken acknowledgments of Favors Reciprocations and discharges of obligations which are in and thorough the Kingdom performed as well as expected by all the people of the Nation one unto another and by all mankind in their several actions and affairs one with another and their dependencies and relations one unto another And as little to be omitted as the duty and priviledge of the Prae-emption of the Tyn at a reasonable rate with many other allowances and liberties in the Counties of Cornwall and Devon not to be denyed to the King or his Royal Predecessors Kings of England who before they had granted them away had all or the greatest part of the Lands or soyle where the Tynne Mines are For it cannot be any injustice or have so much as any aspect of wrong or oppression that he whose Royal Ancestors have granted confirmed to all his people their liberties and priviledges should seek to preserve his own which helpes to preserve theirs and be unwilling to part with them and his praestationes Angariarum Parangariarum Plaustrorum navium c. his Pourveyance Cart taking and impressing of Ships which as Bossius cited by Zecchius saith Regi competunt ratione Excellentiae ejus dignitatis quae Regalia dicuntur for that as Zecchius alleadgeth multa adjumenta sunt ti necessaria ut dominium intus externe Tueri valeat many things are necessary for a Prince to defend his Dominions at home as well as abroad Or if any should be willing to have it to be no duty would be such strangers to the Scriptures the right interpretation and meaning thereof as to think that the fifth Commandement extendeth onely to parents natural when any shall have a minde to respect them or to let their Fancies run as wild as the zealous reformer did at Cr●ydon in the beginning of the grand Rebellion when he would have prohibited the reading of that and the other Commandments in the Decalogue by alleaging that they were made by the Bishops they cannot if they will not throw away their Reason and understandings but acknowledge that if Uriah could rationally conclude it to be unfit for him to go to his own house and take the comfort of it when his Lord Joab and the servants of his Lord the King were incamped in the field and hath been ever since applauded for it It cannot be thought to be correspondent to the greatness and Majesty of a King or the duty of his subjects that he should want those ordinary and no very chargeable respects and conveniencies of Pourveyance or Compositions for them and the priviledge to have his goods in progress or upon removals carryed for him at easie rates by his subjects and such as hold of him or have been raised and brought to what they have by the bounties and Royal influences of him and his Princely Progenitors and protected and defended by them when as many of the Nobility and Gentry of England do enjoy those or the like services from their Tenants for letting them heretofore have good penniworths of them or in hope that they may hereafter be good unto them and should not at all grumble or grudge to perform those duties and remunerations to their King whose honor and jurisdictions they are sworn to defend and maintain when they can do it willingly to others upon l●sser hopes or gratifications and that he hath already and may as well deserve it as that great and honorable family of the Cliffords late Earles of Cumberland whose heir the Lady Anne Clifford Countess of Pembroke Dorset and Mountgomery doth at this day of her obliged Tenants in the North whose Carts are not to be denyed at any removal from her Castle of Skipton in Craven in Yorkshire by certain proportioned journeys to her Castle of Appleby in Westmerland where her Tenants in that County are to furnish yearly six hundred Hens or a groat for eve●y H●n and six hundred Bushels of Oats distinguished or called by the name of Sergeant Oats and those in Craven as many Hens or six pence for every Hen or as others who take benefit by such or the like retributions Customs and usages in other parts of England or the North thereof as Boon Hens c. at Sheffeild in the County of York once the inheritance of the
pay those Thraves of Corn which would far exceed the Pourveyance charged upon that County or have compounded for them or do pay them to such as have obtained Grants of the Lands and Revenues belonging to that Hospital Or that he whose Royal Ancestor King Henry the second took a care as appears by the black book in the Exchequer that the Barons of the Exchequer who were then taken to be a part of the Kings houshold should have their provisions at easier rates then others Et de victualibus suae domus in urbibus Castellis maritimis nomine consuetudinis nihil solvunt Quod si minister vectigalium de hiis quicquam solvere compulerit dummodo presens sit serviens ejus qui suis usibus empta fuisse oblata fide probare voluerit Baroni quidem exacta pecunia restituetur inde in integro improbus exactor pro qualitate personae pecuniarum penam luet and pay nothing for custom for the victuals or provisions for their houses in Cities Castles and Maritime places and if any Officer should compell them to pay any thing for them whilst●their servants were ready to testifie and prove that they were bought to their use the money was to be again restored and the party so wickedly exacting it amerced or fined according to the quality of his person And that our succeeding Kings and Princes causing a Pourveyance and provision of Diet to be made for the Justices of Assize Justices of the Peace at the Assizes Sessions by the Sheriffs in every County making an allowance for the same out of the Exchequer Q. Elizabeth in Anno 1573. finding that to be troublesome inconvenient for the Sheriffs ordained that charge to be defrayed out of her Coffers as may appear by a Copy of a letter from the Lords of her Privy Councel communicated unto me by my worthy and learned friend Mr. William Dugdale and here inserted and that expence being since ordered to be defrayed out of the Fines and profits of the Counties after the rate of four shillings per diem at the Assizes Sessions to every Justice of the peace and two shillings per diem to the Clerk of the Peace and the King being at more then 10000 l. per annum charges to the Judges of the superior Courts at Westminster who by their Circuits do to save his people a great deal more charges cause a cheap and impartial Justice to be twice in every year brought into every County and is at many other yeerly expences to others in the administration of Justice for which Cromwell and his fancied Parliaments thought a large yeerly allowance to be little enough makes an yearly allowance of one thousand one hundred and six pounds thirteen shillings and four pence per annum to the Lord President of Wales and the Justices attending that Court for the provisions of their Diet with an allowance of Dyet to the Justices of Wales in their great Sessions twenty four shillings per diem to the Domestick Clerks or servants of the Lord Chancellor an allowance of Forty Marks per annum to the Kings Remembrancer in the Exchequer which may shew what cheapness was formerly for the diet of himself and of his eight Clarks who ought to table with him the like for the Treasurers Remembrancer and his twelve Clarks and to the Clark of the Pipe five pence per diem for his diet every day when he sitteth in Court and the like to the Comptroller of the Pipe should be now put to seek his own Provisions or Pourveyance at the dearest most disrespectful rates or that the Kings servants and Officers of his houshold in whose honor or dishonor the Majesty whom they serve as that of David was in the reproach of his servants or Embassadors sent to the King of Ammon is not a little concerned should now for want of the Pourveyance or Compositions for them complain that the beauty is departed from the Kings house his servants are become like Harts that finde no Pasture and they that did feed plentifully are desolate in the streets And that the servants of the Abbot of St. Edmunds Bury were in a better condition when as he could allow John de Hastings the Steward of the Courts of his Mannors who claimed the said Office by inheritance a Provision when he came at night unto him for eight horses and thirteen men with an horse load of Provender and Hey sufficient Wine and Beer twenty four Wax Candles in the Winter time and twelve in the Summer eight loaves of Bread for his Greyhounds two Hens for his Hawks pro se hominibus suis honorabilem sustentationem in Cibo potu and an honorable provision for himself and his servants in meat and drink And as those of the children of Israel which returned from the Captivity lamented the difference betwixt the glory of the first and second Temple bewail the desolation of the house wherein the Kings honor dwelled and the alteration reducing of it to what it is now from that which it was in the raigns of Queen Elizabeth King James or King Charles the Martyr And that Foraigners and Strangers who were wont so to magnifie and extoll the Hospitality state and magnificence of the King of Englands Court and house-keeping as that Philip Honorius after an exact survey of many other Kingdoms and their Policies hath publikely declared that no Nation in the world goeth beyond our Brittain in the honor of the Kings Court and houshold in maggior numero di servitori con maggior distinctioni d' officii e gradi multitude of servants Officers and distinction of degrees and cannot be ignorant of the respects and honor done by all Nations to Foraign Princes though no Monarchs or their superiors in their passages and journeys through any Towns or Cities beyond the Seas by making them presents of Wine Fish Oats and the best of houshold provisions which those places afforded and that even those mechanick souls of Hamborough and Amsterdam can think it worthy their imitation shall finde the King of England whose Ancestor Offa King of the Mercians in Anno Dom. 760. would be so little wanting to himself and his posterity in the preserving the honor and rights of Majesty as he ordained that even in times of peace himself and his successors in the Crown should as they passed thorough any City have Trumpets sounding before them to shew that the person of the King saith the Leiger book of St. Albans should breed both fear and honor in all which either see him or hear of him to be so scanted de ea sublimitate amplitudine augustaque illa Majestate in that honor and reverence which his predecessors would never abate any thing of as his Officers and servants like some Beggars who are not used to be trusted with a Mess of Pottage to be put into their hands when they buy it at the
Cooks stall unless they shall first lay down their little peice of Coyn for it shall like some Mounsieur Mal-regard be inforced to pay for a Cart or horses before hand as if there were no other way to deal with them And in stead of being as the children of the servants of Solomon when Nehemiah long after returned with the children of Israel from Captivity found in the Registers in order to a preferment there being then no selling of Places in fashion be afterwards no where to be found unless it be in the Role of the Beggars or that they who have spent their times and industry in the hopes and expectation of their Princes favour should when the Jews who as the learned Grotius hath recorded would not suffer any Qui ministerio fuerant Regio alterius se quam Regis successoris ministerio addicere who had once served the King to serve any but his successors which our Kings of England have frequently observed be constrained to betake themselves to the services of subjects or such as they can finde have a mind to entertain them And not onely his servants who are or should be well wishers to the return of Pourveyance or Compositions for them some of whom as the Treasurer and Comptroller are by the orders of the house to be sworn That all things in the Kings house be guided to the Kings most worship and that they search the good old rule worshipful and profitable of the Kings Court used before time and them to keep and better if they can But all the people of the Nation should remember that the honor and magnificence of David and that Royalty of Solomon which amazed the Eastern world in the distribution of their Officers and servants in their houses and order the●eof were justly numbered amongst the greatest Actions of their might and Majesty And that the wisdom of our King Henry the seventh was not a little conspicuous in the happy effects which it produced when after a retu●n from his troubles and afflictions in his great care and wisdom to prevent avoid the like and make such an establishment of the Crown for himself and his posterity which he had as happily as unexpectedly attained unto as might continue to as long a duration as the world was capable of he did so order his Court and houshold as it was a composure and assembly of men of the best birth education fortunes and estates qualities endowments and reputation in every County of the Kingdom were most popular best allied and beloved therein and had no small influences upon their Tenants Allies and dependencies some of whom he made to be the Gentlemen of his Privy Chamber Esquires of the body Pensioners Carvers Cupbearers Sewers Ushers and Waiters and made the Yeomen of his guard out of the best of the Yeomandry or such as were recommended by the Gentlemen of his Privy ●hamber or other of his servants of the higher ranks which together with other carefully pickt and well chosen servants not introduced by money or the avarice of such as were about him disguises parti●lities or false recommendations were as so many Intelligencers Eyes and Ears to the better ordering of his Government and affairs which were then in a nice and perplexed condition or as the Wheels in Ezekiels vision and the eyes in them to inform as well as Act served as a glass in the absence of Parliaments to represent unto him from time to time the symptomes and indications of the peoples contents or discontents and if any thing were to be rectified for the good of his subjects or done by him were by the great obligations which the people and such as were not his servants had and owed unto them which were his servants and were sure to have them reciprocally to be their Advocates and Intercessors to the King for favors to be granted or done unto them the most sure silent and never failing engines and contrivances to accomplish their soveraigns just and reasonable ends by which excellent and ever to be imitated order and very easie to be put in practice in the choice and election of such as were to serve and stand before him which is and ever hath been one of the greatest pa●ts of prudence either in the manage of smaller affairs in every mans private Family or that of a K●ngdom which is the Complexum or comprehension of all of them And such an happy as well as wise and successeful constitution which many of the Heathen Princes and those that live in the dark of understanding do not omit for their own security by making the children of their subjects to be their servants and bred up in their Courts as Hostages and Sureties for their parents good behaviours made and observed in his Court and within doors conjoyned with that without doors by agreement and good accord with the then potent Barons and great men of the Kingdom who by their hospitalities and letting of their lands at small Rents which were as Loadstones to attract the hearts and affections of the common people did not onely augment their own grandeur but like Solomons Lyons upholding his Throne imployed it in the support of the honor and magnificence of their King and Soveraign did to the unive●sal content both of Prince and people Domi forisque atchieve and bring to pass his many great and difficult affairs by imitation whereof and continuing that or the like course King Henry the eighth his son did deliver his people and Kingdom from the Impositions of Rome wherewith it had formerly been much troubled And Queen Elizabeth likewise waded through those many difficulties which had beleagured her Crown and Scepter and did those other great actions in defence of her self and her people which have laid her up in glory and made her remembrance to be as precious as the Spikenard or the sweet smelling Mirrhe and the most precious of Odors The consideration whereof and what will necessarily follow by any contrary course to be held and the lessening of Officers and servants by the want of Pourveyance or Compositions for them upon pretences of thrift and good husbandry or being supernumerary may inform us that it will not onely diminish and cloud the Majesty and splendor which is necessary to be in the Courts of Princes where the people should behold as well as rejoyce in the State and honor of their Kings which in England did outgo and surpass all that of our neighbour Princes but break the Links of that golden chain of order in the English Court when it will be apparent that such as otherwise may seem to be supernumeraries are not to be judged or looked upon as they would be in private families where their concernments are most commonly with a respect unto profit more then Worship or Honor that Princes are to have and keep a greater State then any of their subjects and that such a State which is some times made up
licencia an unbounded licence in the Magistrate to Tax the people and a licence to the people in stead of a liberty to Trade and coz●n one another makes them so patient to undergo those vectigali● ac Collationes aliaque servil●a onera Taxes payments and servil burdens which otherwise they would be unwilling to endure All or most of which being continued and lying heavy upon them upon pretences of debts incurred for the publike to be paid or otherwise have made such a dearth of all houshold provisions as that notwithstanding that their huge Granaries at Amsterdam are always stored with abundance of Corn to transport and sell to all other Nations and Kingdoms where they finde any scarcity or want of it a family of ten persons more then one half whereof have been young children have this last Winter amongst other Victuals as Flesh Fish Roots c. been inforced to spend 17 s. sterling in a week in ordinary and common bread and twelve shillings sterling within the same Circle of time for Turfe or Firing and the generality of the Nation are sinking so fast into a poverty as by an exact account taken thereof there have been this last year more then in any of the former years above eighty thousand Pawns brought into the publike Lumbard at Amsterdam and may teach them and all the world at last how great the difference will be betwixt a natural and hereditary Prince governing by the known Laws of a Nation and with less charges and that which is onely upheld by the power of money and Taxes to make and preserve an interest for those who are the only gainers by it Did not in any of his necessities as some of his predecessors Kings of England have done in theirs both before and since the Conquest continue and take the Tax of Dane gelt laid to expel that Nation out of England after they were quieted and returned home nor as many of the English Lords of divers Mannors have done and do to this day require and take of their Tenants Peter pence or Chimney money amounting in some Mannors to considerable summes though it was long since abolished by Act of Parliament and was not to be taken in that kind or for that purpose nor doth by wars or impositions impoverish his people as some of his neighbors have done or made them to complain as the common people of Normandy did not long ago that they were une uraye Anatomy de corps humain auquel ne reste plus que les os le Peau encore foulez like an Anatomy of a mans body which had nothing but bones and skin left upon it and that also foul enough but hath made them in the generality richer then himself and more abounding in plenty and riches then any Nation of Christendom And being the son and heir of the Crowns and Kingdoms as well as afflictions of his Royal Father King Charles the Martyr who in the Halcion and peaceable days of the former part of his Raign did so much abhor the mode or manner of an Arbitary Government as he did imprison in the Tower of London that Monarch of Letters and Learning the great Selden together with Mr. Oliver St. John for but having in their custody or divulging a Manuscript or discourse written by Sir Robert Dudley a titular Duke of Tuscany and an English Fugitive of the way and means how to make the King a great Revenue according to the manner of Gabels or Taxes in Italy borrowed by Mr. St. John out of Sr. Robert Cottons famous library where it had otherwise slept and caused his Attorney General to exhibit a Bill in the Star Chamber against the now Earl of Clare the said Mr. Selden and Mr. St. John for the publishing of it though but in Manuscript and was so far from any action desire or intention of a Tyrant as when he might like the Dairo or Emperor of Japan have wallowed in riches and pleasures and as a Minotaur have fed upon the liberties of the people if he would have but delivered up the Church of England and his subjects and their after generations as slaves to the Arbitrary will Government of a Rebellious part of the people calling themselves a Parliament he did on the contrary not only most constantly endure all the miseries dangers ignominies which they could cast upon him but rather then he would betray or give up their Religion Laws or liberties laid down his life as a sacrifice to preserve them and hav●ng before his death established our excellent Laws of Magna ●harta and made them stronger and more binding then ever they were before by confirming them and other their liberties and customs under the name and notion of their petition of Right and at the signing or ratification thereof used a saying or sentence deserving to be written in Letters of Gold which he called his Maxime and declared to be his own That the peoples liberty strengthens the Kings prerogative and that the Kings prerogative is to defend the peoples liberty did not for all those unparalelled sufferings and great Misusage of his Father and himself take any advantage of those that forfeited their interest in those excellent laws and liberties but pardoning all their transgressions restored them to all that they could but so much as pretend unto And notwithstanding that he and his Royal predecessors had quamplurimisdonis largitionibus by their very many favors and bounties to such as deserved well of the Commonwealth and had been instrumental in the preservation or promoting the good of it given away the most part of the Crown Lands and many of their Regalities doth not make an Aera●ium or Treasury of mony for himself or his own particular use out of his own revenues separate from that of the publike as Lewis the 12. of France did but doth with that very small part of his Lands which remaineth and his legal and undenyable rights and prerogatives without any Taxes or Impositions laid upon the people other then what is assented unto by themselves and their representatives in Parliament bear and support the burden and continual charges of the Government and affaires thereof Which should rouze and stir up the hearts and affections of his people of England and perswade them who have now and had before the Taxes raised to improve Rebellion fewer Taxes and impositions laid upon them then any Nation within the walk or perambulation of the Sun and are the freest and do enjoy more liberties immunities and priviledges then any people of the world not to deny or withhold from him and of his just Regalities rights and preheminences but think it to be more necessary for their good and well-being to permit him to enjoy his Prae-emption and Pourveyance or Compositions for them then that which many of our Acts of Parliament have done to enjoyn the repairs of Havens and Peers as was in the last Session of Parliament for the Peer
to those and as many more burdens and payments as should be necessary to keep them their posterities in a perpetual slavery we should when the Kings Revenue real and casual much enlarged since his happy Restoration and yet appearing not to be enough to go thorow with his important and necessary occasions and to amount but to nine hundred and fifty thousand pounds per annum his Revenue in lands being also included take it to be consistent with the duty of subjects to put in dolio perforato a vessel that leaks more then ordinary or wants a bottom the remembrance of all the benefits and ●avors of our King and Soveraign Who hears no body say or do as that great Commander and as much a Gentleman Mounsieur de la Noüe did to his Grandfather the great Henry of France who finding himself much obliged unto him when he was King of Navarre and full of troubles for raising and bringing to his assistance one hundred horse well furnished at his own charges and unfurnished with money to recompence him sent a grant by Letters Patents unto him and his heirs of certain Crown lands lying neer unto his estate which the virtuous and generous la Noüe not thinking fit to receive brought back again to the King with these words Sire ce m'est beauecoup d' honneur de contentment de receuoir ces tesmoignages de la bonne v●lonte de votre Majestè je ne les refuserois pas si vos affaires estoient en estat de faire telles liberalites Quand je vous verray Sire au dessus vos Ennemis possedant des biens proportionnees a la grandeur de vostre courage de vostre naissance je receuroy de bon Caeur vous gratifications pour cette heure si vous vouli●z recompencer de ceste facon tous ceux qui vous serviront vostre Majeste seroit incontinent ru●nee Sir These testimonies o● your Majesties good will towards me and the honor which you have done me therein do very much content me and I would not refuse them if your Majesties affa●●s and estate were in a condition to afford such bounties and when I shall see your Majesty to have overcome your enemies and possessing an estate becoming your grandeur and birth I shall be very willing to accept of your gratifications in the meantime if you shall go on in a way of recompencing in this manner all those which shall serve you your Majesty will be suddainly ruined and by no means would receive it but all his life after continued a great Warrior and suffering most heroically in the troubles and affairs of his Soveraign lost his life in them Or imitate Jesurum who like an Heifer waxing fat kicked against the cause of it or do as the Athenians taken by Philip King of Macedon did at the Battel of Chaero●ea who could not remember his favors in releasing of them out of their Captivity unless they might have what they lost also restored unto them Or be guilty of a national Ingratitude the sin whereof being next to blasphemy the most ugly and horrid of all other sins which can be in a particular man was so abhorred by the heathen as Hippocratidas did as some wise Christians have since done wish it were made a crime as punishable as Felony Or so despoil our Land of its ancient vertue and love to their Princes as to have Nabalisme incouraged and our Araunahs and Barzillai's to dye childless and unimitated or suffer our selves to be misled by any Temptations of particular sparing or profits to do as some of the worser sort of the late reforming Traitors did pick out the choicest Jewels of the Crown and put in counterfeits in stead of them or hearken to the Syren songs of those who for an advantage which may before the account be cast up prove a greater disadvantage will suppose it to be for the good of the Nation to disuse and lay by those necessary duties and grateful acknowledgements of Pourveyance and Compositions for them to their King and Soveraign which Renatus Choppinus a learned French Advocate in his Treatise of the Domaines and Revenu● of France stiles Dominicum jus primitus sceptris addictum in necessarios Regiae mensae Aulaeque sumptus honorificum ad summi Imperii inclitae decus Majestatis conservandum a pa●t of the Kings Domaine belonging and annexed to the Royal Scepter and appropriate to the necessary uses and provisions of the Kings Court and houshold for the honor and conservation of the Rights of Majesty And was with us in England in the Case of one Richards a Pourveyor combining with some Constables to charge the Country with more then the Pourveyance amounted unto for which he was grievously fined and punished no longer ago then in Michaelmas Term in 3 Jac. certified by all the Judges of England to be a prerogative of the King at the common Law and ●hat all the Statutes which have been made to correct abuses in Pourveyance took not away Pourveyance but confirmed it for qu● tollit iniquitatem firmat proprietatem confirmat usum the taking away of the abuse confirmeth the Right and when the Reputation and credit of a Town and City shall be so dear unto the Inhabitants as they will to preserve ancient Customes supply the charges thereof with publike contributions as the Town of Yarmouth doth in entertainments frequently given to strangers of quality comming thither and the Town of Droitwich in Worcestershire can allow the yearly profit of four of their Salt vats or portions of Salt so called for the like purpose shall endeavor all they can to lessen that of the Kings And the Gentry of Cheshire who are above those of many other Counties well known to preserve the ancient honor of the English Hospitalities and are accustomed to send provisions of meat one to another to help to bear out the charges of their entertainments when any of their friends come unto them will not do well to murmur at so small an yeerly contribution for the provision of the Kings houshold as ninety five pounds sixteen shillings eight pence per annum which is all was charged upon that County Nor can all the housekeepers of England who do well understand that the breeding and raising of their own victuals and houshold provisions by and out of the profits of their Lands are a great help to their house-keeping and makes it to be far cheaper and easie unto them then to buy all that they spend at the Markets where every one doth improve their gain and Commodities and put the loss and hardships upon the buyers think it to be their duty to put a necessity of these inconveniences upon the King which they do all they can to avoid themselves Or when the designs of profit or hopes of reciprocations of courtesies one from another do ordinarily invite the people in their commerce or affairs one
with another to a custome of some little favors or ease in their buyings and bargains as the Baker his one loaf of bread to the dozen the Brewer a Barrel of strong Beer at Christmas the Tallow Chandler his Christmas Candle the London Draper his handful or more then the yard called London measure and that of the hundred and ten pound to some hundred of things sold by weight and one hundred and twenty to others and the Vintners sending some Hippocras at Christmas to their yearly and constant Customers and the like can suppose it fit to save such a petty contribution as the Kings Composition for Pourveyance which throughout England do scarcely amount to so much as those small Civilities and being saved will probably be spent in pride and vanities or for worse purposes Or to weaken the hand of our Moses which they should rather help to sustain and strengthen and when all Nations rejoyce in the power might and Majesty of their Kings shall make it their business to eclipse or diminish it by cutting of our Sampsons locks and that which should promote it For if the men of Israel are said to do well when they perswaded their King Ahab not to hearken to the insolent demands of Benhadad the King of Syria to deliver him his silver and gold c. the people of England must needs be believed to do ill to deny the King so necessary a part of his Regality which was more precious then gold and silver and put him to a treble or very much greater then formerly expences in his houshold provisions when the mercies of God which have hitherto spared our transgressions accomplished our unhappy warfare broken the staffe of the wicked driven them far away that would have swallowed us up and restored our Princes and nobles and mighty men the men of war the Judges and Prophets the prudent and the ancient so as the light hath shined upon them that dwelt in the Land of the shadow of death our Cities have not been laid waste our vallies have not perished nor our habitations been made desolate should put us in mind to be more mindful of his Vicegerent and annointed and remember how much and how often he did threaten his judgements and brought many upon his chosen people of Israel for their ingratitude and how much he was offended with them for not shewing kindness to the house of Gideon and Zerubbaal according to all the goodness which he had shewed to Israel and that as Bornitius saith Quicquid boni homo civisque habet possidet quod vivit quod libere vivit quod bene quod beate omniumque rerum bonorum usu interdum etiam copia ad voluptatem utitur fruitur totum hoc benificium Reipublicae Civilique ordini acceptum est referendum that whatsoever a subject enjoys or possesseth that he lives and lives freely well and happily and abounds w●th pleasure and plenty are benefits proceeding from the Commonwealth and good order and government thereof And that omnis homo every man Et res singulorum in Republica conservari nequeant nisi conservetur res publica sive communis adeoque singuli sui causa impendere videntur quicquid conferunt in publicum usum every mans particular estate cannot be in any condition or certainty of safty unless the Commonwealth be preserved so that whatsoever is laid out or expended for the Commonwealth is at the same time laid out and expended for every mans particular and that St. Chr●sostom was of the same opinion when he said that ab antiquis Temporibus communi omnium sententia principes a nobis sustentari debere visum est ob id quod sua ipsorum negligentes communes res curant universumque suum otium ad ea impendunt quibus non solum ipsi sed quae nostra sunt salvantur That anciently and by the opinion of all men Princes ought to be supported by their subjects for that neglecting their private affairs they do imploy all their power and care for the good of the Common-wealth whereby not onely what is their own but that which is the subjects are preserved That the King whose Royal progenitor King Edward the third could take such a care of the honor and Pourveyance of the City of London as to grant to the Maior of London who by reason of the wars had not for two years received that great profit which he was wont to receive de mercatoribus Alienigenis illuc confluentibus of Merchants strangers resorting thithe● one and twenty pounds per annum de reddit diversorum messuagiorum shoparum ibidem out of the Rents of divers Messuages and Shops in London in relevamine status sui for the maintenance and support of his estate might have as much care taken if duty and loyalty should not be as they ought to be the greatest obligations of his more ancient rights and Pourveyance or Compositions for them And may consider that if such an inseparable right and concomitant of the Crown of England should hereafter appear not to be alienable by any Act or exchange betwixt the King and the people they and their posterities will have but an ill bargain of it if the Pourveyance or Compositions for them should hereafter by any reason or necessity of State be resumed and the Excise or imagined satisfaction granted as a recompence for that and the taking away of the Tenure in Capite and by Knight service should be retained That it cannot be for the good or honor of the English Nation that our King should be reproached as some of a light headed and a light heeled neighbor Nation observing his want of Pourveyance have of late very falsly that he had not wherewithall to buy bread for his Family Or that other Nations should think our English so Fanatick or improved to such a madness by a late rebellion as to embrace the opinion of Arise Evans that pittiful pretender to Prophesie and Revelations who when the men of the Coffee-house Assembly or Rota mongers were with their Quicksilver Brains together with some Rustick or Mechanick nodles framing a new Government or moddel for a Kingdom torn in pieces would likewise shoot his Bolt and publikely in Print advise that the best way would be to Elect some honest p●or man of the Nation to be King onely during his life and allow him but one hundred pounds per annum which would be a means to keep off all Plots and Treasons against him or any ambitions or designs to enjoy his Office and when he should die to chose another for the term of his life and so successively one after anoth●r upon the same and no better terms or allowance Or that we have a minde to do by our gracious King as the Fifth-Monarchy-men do by their King Jesus who notwithstanding all their pretences of setting him upon his Throne are well enough content to gather what they can the while for