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

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have a Parliament wherein the People should have no more Religion then to beleive nor Learning then to understand his sense nor wisedome then to take heed of a Negative Vote But it befell otherwise for though it was called the Lack-learning Parliament yet had it well enough to discern the Clergies inside and Resolution enough to enter a second claime against the Clergies Temporalties and taught the King a Lesson That the least understanding Parliaments are not the best for his purpose For though the wisest Parliaments have the strongest sight and can see further then the King would have them yet they have also so much wisedome as to look to their own skins and commonly are not so venterous as to tell all the World what they know or to act too much of that which they doe understand But this Parliament whether wise or unwise spake loud of the Clergies superfluous Riches and the Kings wants are parallel'd therewith and that the Church-men may well spare enough to maintaine fifteen Earles fifteen hundred Knights six thousand two hundred Esquires and one hundred Hospitalls more then were in his Kingdome This was a strong temptation to a needy and couragious Prince but the Arch-Bishop was at his elbow the King tells the Commons that the Norman and French Cells were in his Predecessors time seized under this colour yet the Crowne was not the richer thereby he therefore resolves rather to add to then diminish any thing from the maintenance of the Clergy Thus as the King said he did though he made bold with the Keyes of Saint Peter for he could distinguish between his owne Clergy and the Romane The People are herewith put to silence yet harbour sad conceits of the Clergy against a future time which like a hidden fire are not onely preserved but increased by continuall occasions and more principally from the zeal of the Clergy now growing fiery hot against the Lollards For that not onely the People but the Nobles yea some of the Royall blood were not altogether estranged from this new old way whether it was sucked from their Grand-Father Duke John or from a Popular strain of which that House of Lancaster had much experience I determine not These were the Dukes of Bedford and Glocester Bedford was first at the Helme of Affaires at home whiles the King acted the Souldiers part in France as ill conceited of by the Clergy as they sleighted by him At a Convocation once assembled against the Lollards the Duke sent unto their Assembly his Dwarfe as a great Lollard though he was a little Man and he returned as he went even as Catholique as any of them all Non tam dispectus à Clero quam ipse Clerum despiciens atque eludens This and some other sleights the Clergy liked not they therefore finde a way to send him into France to be a Reserve to his Brother And in his roome steps forth Humphrey Duke of Glocester that was no lesse coole for the Romane way then he Henry the Fifth was not more hearty in Romes behalf for although he was loath to interrupt his Conquest abroad with contests at home yet he liked not of advancements from Rome insomuch as perceiving the Bishop of Winchester to aspire to a Cardinals Hat he said that he would as well lay aside his own Crowne as allow the Bishop to take the Hat Nor was he much trusted by the Clergy who were willing he should rather ingage in the Wars with France then minde the Proposalls of the Commons concerning the Clergies Temporalties which also was renued in the Parliament in his dayes Above all as the Lancastrian House loved to looke to its own so especially in relation to Rome they were the more jealous by how much it pretended upon them for its favour done to their House And therefore Henry the Fourth the most obleiged of all the rest looked to the Provisors more strictly then his Predecessors had and not only confirmed all the Statutes concerning the same already made but had also provided against Provisors of any annuall Office or Profit or of Bulls of Exemption from payment of Tythes or from Obedience Regular or Ordinary and made them all punishable within the Statute and further made all Licenses and Pardons contrary thereto granted by the King void against the Incumbent and gave damages to the Incumbent in such vexations for the former Lawes had saved the right to the true Patron both against Pope and King And thus the English Kings were Servants to the Church of England at the charges of Rome whiles the Popedome being now under a wasting and devouring Scisme was unable to help it selfe and so continued untill the time of Henry the Sixth at which time the Clergy of England got it selfe under the power and shadow of a Protector a kinde of Creature made up by a Pope and a King This was the Bishop of Winchester so great a Man both for Birth parts of Nature Riches Spirit and Place as none before him ever the like for he was both Cardinall Legate and Chancellour of England and had gotten to his aide the Bishop of Bathe to be Lord Treasurer of England Now comes the matter concerning Provisors once more to be revived First more craftily by collogueing with the Nobility who now had the sway in the Kings minority but they would none An answer is given by the King that he was too young to make alteration in matters of so high Concernment yet he promised moderation The Clergy are put to silence herewith and so continue till the King was six yeares elder and then with Money in one hand and a Petition in the other they renue their Suit but in a more subtill way For they would not pretend Ro●e but the English Churches liberties they would not move against the Statutes of Praemuniri but to have them explained it was not much they complained of for it was but that one word Otherwhere which say they the Judges of the Common Law expound too largely not onely against the Jurisdiction of the Holy Sea but against the Jurisdiction of the English Prelacy which they never intended in the passing of those Lawes Their Conclusion is therefore a Prayer That the King will please to allow the Jurisdiction of their Ecclesiasticall Courts and that Prohibitions in such Cases may be stopped But the King either perceiving that the Authority of English Prelacy was wholly dependent on the Sea of Rome and acted either under the shadow Legatine or at the best sought an Independent power of their own Or else the King doubting that the calling of one word of that Statute into question that had continued so long might indanger the whole Law into uncertainty declined the matter saving in the moderation of Prohibitions Thus the English Clergy are put to a retreat from their reserve at Rome all which they now well saw yet it was hard to wean them The Cardinall of Winchester was a
from such an ayre Two Kings we have at once in view both of them of an elate spirit one working more closely by cunning the other more openly by Command yet neither of them pretending so high as to doe all or be all in all Peace suited more with Henry the seventh then with his Son who delighted to be accounted terrible rather then good yet both of them were glad enough to be at peace at home and were industrious to that end though by severall meanes Henry the seventh pretended Justice and Peace a welcome news to a people that formerly accounted nothing theirs but by the leave of the Souldier and therefore sets upon the reformation of the Sheriffs Courts in the entring of Plaints and making of Juries suitable to that present time wherein men of Estates were very scarce and much of the riches of the Nation evaporated into the Warrs both Civill and Forraine although the continuance of that order concerning Juries in the succeeding times of opulency hath brought these Courts into contempt and made way thereby for the Kings Courts to swell in glory and to advance Prerogative even above it selfe Secondly He reformes Goales as well in their number as their use During the Civill Warrs every small party of men that could get a strong place made the same not only a Castle but a Goale and usually imprisoned and ransomed at their owne pleasure For remedy whereof Henry the seventh restores all Goales to the Sheriffs saving such as hold hy Inheritance and gives power to two Justices of the Peace one being of the Quorum to take Baile in cases bailable and Recognisances of the Peace to be certified at the next Sessions or Goal-Delivery Thirdly Both Kings concurr in providing against such disorders as more immediately did trench upon the publique Peace and reached at the Crowne it selfe by labouring to prevent by severe punishing and lastly by regulating the proceedings of Judicature in such cases These disorders were two Inordinate wearing of Liveries and unlawfull Assemblies The first being in nature of unlawfull assembly of minds and spirits of men the second of their bodies and persons Both these had formerly been provided against but the Judges of the Common Law unto whose Cognisance these Crimes were holden did restrain their punishments to the rule of the Common Law then thought to be too facile and mean for disorders that did flye at so high a pitch and therefore they are reduced before a higher tribunall as matter of State as hath been already mentioned The severity of punishment consisted not so much in aggravating the paine as the Crime matters of injury being made Felonies and those Treason This crime of Treason at first it concerned matters acted against the Nation afterwards it reached to matters acted against the King now it reacheth even to the very thoughts and imaginations of the heart not onely of bodily harme to the King but of the Queen or their heires apparent or tending to deprive them of their Title or Name of Royall Estate This crime was formerly made but Felony by Henry the seventh and then onely extended to such offence committed by one of the Kings houshold against the Person of the King or a Lord or any of the Councell Steward Treasurer or Controller so as the person of the Queene was not then in the Case and yet then newly Crowned and at that instant bearing in her womb that royall seed which was then the onely earnest of the stability and glory of England and therefore is it a subject of wonderment unlesse it were out of extremity of Jealousie least he should seem to make too great account of her title and thereby disparage his owne and then is it a peice of wit but not without weaknesse for he that is jealous of the slightings of other men shews himselfe unresolved in his owne pretentions Now Henry the Eighth not onely raiseth the price but addeth to the thing and not onely putteth the Queen but the Prince or Heire apparent into the Case making the same Treason So as it implyeth that English Allegiance tyeth the Subject not onely to the safety of the Person of the King but also of the Queen and Heire apparent otherwise the offence is made and declared Treason against the King Secondly the Election of the object is to be considered for whether the one or other Statute be observed it will appeare that although the King was the next object expressed yet a further was intended and that the Crime is not intended in regard of his naturall Capacity as a man but of his politique Capacity and in relation to the Common good of the Nation and this is evident not onely from the severall Prefaces of the Lawes but also from the manner of Election whereby the Title of Heire apparent is taken up and not the eldest Sonn or Daughter or these and not the other Children all which are equally dearly beloved in Naturall regard Thirdly though at the Common Law Treason be properly a Crime against Allegiance yet as in cases of Felony Crimes may be by the Statute made as Treason which at the Common Law are not against the legiance of an English man for this remaineth ever one and the same but one and the same fact may be made Treason and unmade by the Statute-Law as befell this Law of Henry the eighth by a Law within twenty yeares after like as also in former times one and the same fact hath many times received the like measure Other Treasons besides these already mentioned were by Henry the eighth created as Marriage with any of the Kings Sisters Daughters or Aunts of the Fathers side or the Daughters of his Brethren or Sisters without consent first had of the King Counterfeiting of currant Money not of the Kings Coynage was likewise made Treason by Henry the seventh who was well seen in that Mistery of Money-Trade and the like also became of Counterfeitures of the Kings Privy Signet and signe manuell And Lastly that horrid trick of poysoning was reduced to this Category rather that the Penalty might be more terrible in the Death which was by boyling then for any Tincture in the Nature of the Crime or in any Forfeiture of Estate The policy of these times thus irritated against Treason had proved very irreguler if the same had not been as rigid in cases of Felony diverse new ones of that kind are also dubbed amongst which Conjuration or Witchcraft comes first an old Felony in the Saxons time but since had gotten its Clergy now well nigh for the space of five hundred years and they it so as it never walked abroad amongst the Laity but under the favour of the Cloystered People nor ever came before the Civill Power till now Henry the eighth brought it forth into its own ancient and proper regiment Other Crimes being those of the season are made into the the same degree Such
of Matthew Paris Matthew Westminster and Hoveden although he pleaseth to mention the severall rankes of Great Men and those in blacke Letters of a greater size and saith That not one Commoner appeares yet Master Seldens Hoveden in that very place so often by the Opponent cited tells him that both Clerus and Populus were there Thirdly The Opponent citeth an instance of Lawes made by Richard the First in his twenty fourth page and hee setteth downe the severall ranks of Great Men and amongst the rest ingeniously mentioneth Milites but it is with a Glosse of his owne that they were Barons that were made Knights when as formerly Barons were mentioned in the generall and therefore how proper this Glosse is let others judge especially seeing that not onely Milites and Milites Gregorij but even Ministri were present in such conventions even in the Saxon times And Master Selden in the former knowne place mentioneth an Observation that Vniversi personae qui de Rege tenent in Capite sicut ceteri Barones debent interesse judicijs curiae Domini Regis cum Baronibus Fourthly He citeth in his twenty fifth page another instance in King Johns time in which after the assent of Earles and Barons the words Et omnium fidelium nostrorum are also annexed but with this conceit of the Opponents that these Fideles were those that adhered to the King against his enemies be it so for then the Commons were present and did assent or they may be saith he some specially summoned as Assistants take that also and then all the true hearted in the Kingdome were specially summoned and were there so as the conclusion will be the same In the fifth place hee citeth a strange President as he calls it of a Writt of Summons in King Johns time in his twenty seventh page wherein Omnes miletes were summoned Cum armis suis and he concludes therefore the same was a Councell of Warr. First Because they were to come armed it s very true and so they did unto the Councills in the ancient Saxon times and so the Knights of the Counties ought to doe in these dayes if they obey the Writte Duos Milites gladijs cinctas c. Secondly He saith That the Knights were not to come to Councill that is his opinion yet the Writt speakes that the Discreti Milites were to come Ad loquendum cum Rege ad negotijs regni Its true saith hee but not Ad tractandum faciendum consentiendum Its true it s not so sayd nor is it excluded and were it so yet the Opponents conclusion will not thence arise That none but the King and those who are of the House of Lords were there present The sixth and last instance mentioned by the Opponent is in his thirtieth page and concerneth Escuage granted to King John who by his Charter granted that in such cases he would summon Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Earles and the greater Barons unto such Conventions by speciall Writts and that the Sheriffe shall summon promiscuously all others which hold in Capite and thence hee concludes That none but the Great Lords and the Tenants in Capite whom he calls the lesser Barons were present but no Knights Citizens or Burgesses all which being granted yet in full Parliament the Citizens and Burgesses might be there For Councills were called of such persons as suited to the matter to be debated upon If for matters purely Ecclesiasticall the King and his Councell of Lords and the Church-men made up the Councill If for advice in immergencies the King and such Lords as were next at hand determined the conclusions If for Escuage the King and such as were to pay Escuage made up a Councill to ascertaine the sum which was otherwise uncertaine If for matters that concerned the common liberty all sorts were present as may appeare out of the very Charter of King John noted in my former discourse page 258. and also from an Observation of Cambden concerning Henry the third Ad summum honorem pertinet saith he Ex quo Rex Henricus tertius ex tanta multitudine quae seditiosa ac turbulenta fuit optimos quosque ad Commitia Parliamentaria evocaverit Secondly The Opponent takes that for granted that never will be Viz. That all the Kings Tenants In Capite were of the House of Lords when as himselfe acknowledgeth a difference page 28. Viz. That the Barons are summoned by Writs Sigillatim as all the Members of the House of Lords are but these are by generall summons their number great and hard it will be to understand how or when they came to be excluded from that Society I shall insist no further upon the particulars of this Tractate but demurr upon the whole matter and leave it to judgement upon the premises which might have beene much better reduced to the maine conclusion if the Opponent in the first place had defined the word PARLIAMENT For if it was a Convention without the People and sometimes without the KING as in the Cases formerly mentioned of the Elections of William Rufus and of King Steven And if sometimes a Parliament of Lords onely may be against the King and so without King or People as in the Case betweene Steven and Maud the Empresse and the case likewise concerning King John both which also were formerly mentioned possibly it may be thought as rationall for the Commons in after Ages to hold a Parliament without King or House of Lords and then all the Opponents labour is to little purpose THE CONTINUATION OF AN Historicall Discourse of the Government of ENGLAND THE former times since the Norman entry like a rugged Sea by crosse windes of arbitrary vapours in and about the Crowne and by Forraine ingagements from the holy Chaire made the true face of affaires cloudy and troublesome both for the Writer and the Reader Hence forward for the space of three hundred yeares next ensuing Kings by experience and observation finding themselves unequall to the double chace of absolute Supremacy over the Sturdy Laity and incroaching Clergy you will observe to lay aside their pretentions against the peoples Liberties and more intentively to trench upon the Spiritualty now growne to defie all Government but that of Covetousnesse Nor would these times allow further advantage to Kings in this worke they being either fainted by the tickle Title of the Crowne hovering between the two Houses of Yorke and Lancaster or drawne off to Forraine imployments as matters of greater concernment for the present well being of the Kingdome or for the spreading of the fame of such as desired to be renouned for valiant Men. It will be superfluous to recount the particular atchievements formerly attained by these Ecclesiasticall men the former Treatise hath already sayd what was thought needfull concerning that For the future I shall even premise this That the insuing times being thus blessed with a truce or stricter League between Kings and Commons the errours in
shall be imprisoned untill he shall satisfie the Defendant of his damages And furthermore shall make Fine and Ransome to the King But because that the Defendant many times held his advantage even to extremity this course lasted not long but a new Law was made which put the power of awarding damages in such cases into the Chancellor to doe according to his discretion And thus the Chancery obtained power to award damages which they never had formerly and the Chancellor a Precedency both in the Chancery and of the Councell in the Court of Starre-Chamber and in many cases in the Exchequer by the first he had a power in matters of meum and tuum by the last in matters Mei and Regis and by the other in matters Mei and Regni A considerable man certainly he was in the motions of Government but how much more if he be made Arch Bishop of Canterbury Cardinall and Legate è Latere or Arch Bishop Lord Treasurer and Legate è Latere as these dayes had divers times seen Extraordinary advancements bestowed upon the Nobility brings Honour to the Throne but if they be not men of noted worth and uprightnesse they make the Scepter stoope by stirring up of envy in the Nobility and indignation from the People For seldome is it seene that Advancements are fed from the Crowne though they be bred from thence but either maintained by new supplies from the Peoples purses or the ruine or decay of some Offices more ancient then themselves or both And such was the condition of the Chancellor he sucked fat from beneath and blood and Spirits from the Grand chiefe Justiciar of England and so reduced that Honourable Potentate unto the Degree of chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench leaving scarcely unto him the name or title of Lord. One thing more remaineth touching the election or nomination of this Great man At the first he was no better then a Register or the Kings remembrancer or Secretary having also the Honour to advise the King in such matters as came within the circuite of the Writings in his custody and questionlesse Eo usque its sutable to all the reason in the World that he should be of the Kings sole Nomination and Election But when it befalls that in stead of advising the King his word is taken to be the rule and a Judicatory power put upon that and unto this is superadded that Honourable trust of keeping and governing the great Seale of the Kingdome with the continuall growing power occasionally conferred upon him by the Parliament He is now become no more the Kings Remembrancer but the Lord Chancellor of England and Supreame Officer of State And it seemes but reasonable that he should hold his place by publique Election as well as the Grand Justiciar whose Plumes he borrowed and other Grand Officers of State did before him For he that will have his Servant to worke for another must give the other that Honour of Electing him thereto nor was this laid aside or forgotten by these times but a claim was put in for the Election or allowance of this principall Officer amongst others the Parliament obtaining a judgement in the case by the Kings Confession and so the thing is left to the judgement of future Ages Viz. Whether a King that can do no man wrong can dissemble the Royall Assent in Parliament or declare himselfe Legally in that manner by Proclamation CHAP. V. Of Admiralls Court. THis is a third Court that maintained the Kings judicatory power in a different way from that which is commonly called the Common law and by many is therefore supposed to advance the Kings Prerogative but upon mistaken grounds It is very true that the way is different from the common rode both in its originall and in the course of proceedings nor could it other be considering the condition of the Nations and the People of the same interested in common traffique The people thus interested as much differed from the other sort of dry men if they may be so called as Sea from Land and are in nature but as march men of severall Nations that must consenter in some third way for the maintenance of commerce for peace sake and to the end that no Nation may be under any other Law then its owne The condition of the Nations in the times when civillized government began to settle amongst them was to be under the Roman Emperours who having setled one Law in the generall grounds throughout all Nations made the Sea likewise to serve under one rule which should float up and downe with it that men might know upon what tearmes they held their owne wheresoever they went and upon what tearmes to part with it for their best advantage in its originall therefore this Law may be called Imperial and likewise in the process because it was directed in one way of triall and by one law which had its first birth from the Imperiall power and probably it had not been for the common benefit of Europe to have been otherwise at other time or by other directories formed Neverthelesse this became no Gemm of Prerogative to the English Crowne for if England did comply with forraine Natives for its owne benefit it being an Iland full of the Sea and in the common rode from the most parts of Europe that border upon the Sea and of delight in Merchandise it is but sutable to it selfe and it did so comply as it saved the maine Stake by voluntary entertaining those Laws without being imposed upon by Imperiall power for the Saxons came into this Kingdome a free People and so for ought yet appeareth to me continueth to this day I say that in those first times they did take into the consideration of Parliament the regulating of the fluctuating motions of Sea-laws nor were they then or after properly imposed by the Kings Edict For though it were granted that Richard the first reduced the Sea-laws in the Isle of Oleron yet that the same should be done without advise of Parliament in his returne from the holy Land is to me a riddle considering what Histories doe hold forth concerning of his returne through Germany nor can that be good evidence to intitle Kings of England to a power to make and alter Laws according to their private pleasure and interest Nor doth that Record mentioned in the Institutes warrant any such matter but rather on the contrary groundeth the complaint upon laws statutes Franchises and Customes Estabilished and that this Estabilishment was by the King and the Councell This Law was of a double nature according to the Law of the Land one part concerning the Pleas of the Crowne and the other between party and party for properly the Kings authority in the Admiralty is but an authority of Judicature according to Laws established which both for processe and sentence are different from the Common Law as much as the two Elements do differ yet not different in
underlings to the great men then they are to their Fethers to were them no longer then they will make them brave Secondly the Person thus agreed upon his intertainment must be accordingly and therefore the manner of taxing in full County and levying the rate of Wages for their maintenance is reformed and settled And lastly their Persons are put under the Protection of the Law in an especiall manner for as their work is full of reflexion so formerly they had met with many sad influences for their labour And therefore a penall Law is made against force to be made upon the Persons of those workmen of State either in their going to that Service or attending thereupon making such Delinquents liable to Fine and Imprisonment and double damages And thus however the times were full of confusions yet a foundation was laid of a more uniforme Government in future times then England hitherto had seen CAHP. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni KIngs though they have vast dimensions yet are not infinite nor greater then the bounds of one Kingdome wherein if present they are in all places present if otherwise they are like the Sunn gone down and must rule by reflexion as the Moone in the night In a mixt common wealth they are integrall members and therefore regularly must act Per deputatum when their Persons are absent in another Ligialty and cannot act Per se Partly because their Lustre is somewhat eclipsed by another Horizon and partly because by common intendment they cannot take notice of things done in their absence It hath therefore been the ancient course of Kings of this Nation to constitute Vicegerents in their absence ' giving them severall titles and severall powers according as the necessity of affaires required Sometimes they are called Lord Warden or Lord Keeper of the Kingdome and have therewith the generall power of a King as it was with John Warren Earle of Surry appointed therunto by Edw. the first who had not onely power to command but to grant and this power extended both to England and Scotland And Peter Gaveston though a Forrainer had the like power given him by Edward the second over England to the reproach of the English Nobility which also they revenged afterward Somtimes these Vicegerents are called Lievtenants which seemeth to conferr onely the Kings power in the Militia as a Lievtenant Generall in an army And thus Richard the second made Edmund Duke of Yorke his Lievtenant of the Kingdome of England to oppose the entry of the Duke of Hertford Afterwards called Henry the fourth into England during the Kings absence in Ireland And in the mean while the other part of the Royalty which concerned the revenues of the Crowne was betrusted to the Earle of Wiltshire Sir John Bush Sir James Baggot and Sir Henry Green unto whom men say the King put his Kingdome to farme But more ordinarily the Kings power was delegated unto one under both the titles of Lord Gaurdian of the Kingdome and Lievtenant within the same such was the title of Henry Lacy Earle of Lincolne and of Gilbert De clare Earle of Glocester and of Audomar De valentia Earle of Pembroke all of them at severall times so constituted by Edward the second as by the Patent Roles appeareth So likewise did Edward the third make his Brother John of E●tham twice and the black Prince thrice and Lionell Duke Clarence and his Brother Thomas each of them once in the severall passages of Edward the third beyond the Sea in the third fifth twelfth fourteenth sixteenth nineteenth and thirty third years of his reigne concerning which see the Patent Rolls of those yeares And Henry the fifth gave likewise the same title and authority to the Duke of Bedford upon the Kings voyage into France and afterward that Duke being sent over to second the King in the French Wars the Duke of Glocester obtained the same power and place But Henry the sixth added a further title of Protector and Defendor of the Kingdome and Church of England this was first given to the Duke of Bedford and afterwards he being made Regent of France it was conferred upon the Duke of Glocester And towards the later time of Henry the sixth it was granted by him to Richard Duke of Yorke This title carried along with it a power different from that of a King onely in honor and the Person so adorned may be said to sway the Scepter but not to weare the Crowne And therefore in the minority of Henry the sixth when as the Government was ordered by the Parliament and to that end a Protector was made and he wel guarded with a Privy Councill and they provided with instructions one of them was that in all matters not to be transacted ordinarily but by the Kings expresse consent the Privy Councell should advise with the Prorector but this is not so needfull in regard that it concerneth the power of executing of Lawes which by right of the liberty of the Subject is the known duty of the Scepter in whose hands soever it is holden And therefore I shall passe to the Legislative power wherein its evident that the Protectors power was no whit inferiour to the Kings power For first the Protector Ex officio by advice of the Councell did summon Parliaments by Writs even as the Kings themselves under their owne Teste and if not bear the Royall Assent yet did they direct the same and received Petitions in Parliament to them directed as to Kings and every way supplied the roome of a King in order to the perfecting publishing and inforcing of Law to Execution Secondly the Parliaments holden by Protectors and Lawes therein made are no whit inferiour to those by the King whether for Honour or Power And therefore if a Parliament be-holden by the Lord Warden and sitting the Parliament the King in person shall arrive and be there present neither is the Parliament interrupted thereby nor the power thereof changed at all though the power and place of the Wardenship of the Kingdome doth utterly vanish by the personall accesse of the King because in all Cases where the King is subservient to the Kingdome or the Common-wealth The Lord Warden in his absence is conservient unto him being in his stead and not under him for the very Place supposeth him as not because not present And this was by a Law declaratively published at such time as Henry the fifth was Regent of France and therefore by common presumption was likely to have much occasion of residence in that Kingdome and it holdeth in equall force with all other Lawes of the highest Size which is the rather to be noted because it is though under a Protector obligatory to the King and makes his personall presence no more considerable then the presence of his shadow For the King spent three whole yeares in the French Warres and during that time never saw England where
the People However unequall it may seem yet both that and other advantages were gained by the House of Lords after the seperation was once made as many of the ancient Statutes by them only made do sufficiently hold forth which although in the generall do concern matters of Judicature wherin the Lords originally had the greatest share yet other things also escaped the Commons Vote which in after ages they recovered into their consideration again And the condition of the People in those times did principally conduce hereunto For untill the Norman times were somwhat settled the former ages had ever been uncertain in the changes between War and Peace which maintained the distance between the Lords and their Tenants and the Authority of the one over the other savouring of the more absolute command in War And after that the Sword was turned into the plough-share the distance is established by compact of Tenure by Service under perill of default although in a different degree for the Service of a Knight as more eminent in War so in Peace it raised the minde to regard of publique Peace but the Service of the plough supporting all is underneath all yet still under the common Condition of free men equally as the Knight Peace now had scarcely exceeded its minority before it brought forth the unhappy birth of Ambition Kings would be more absolute and Lords more Lordly the Commons left far behinde seldom come into mention amongst the publique Acts of State and as uselesse set aside this was the lowest ebb that ever the Commonage of England indured which continued till Ambition brought on contention amongst the great men and thence the Barons Warrs wherein the Commons parting asunder some holding for the King who promised them Liberty from their Lords others siding with the Lords who promisied them Liberty from the King they became so minded of their Liberties that in the conclusion they come off upon better advantage for their Liberties then either King or Lords who all were Loosers before their reckoning was fully made These Wars had by experience made the King sensible of the smart of the Lords great Interest with the People and pointed him to the pin upon which the same did hang to take which away a Designe is contrived to advance the value of the Commoners and to levell the Peerage that they both may draw in one equall yoke the Chariot of Prerogative The power of the Commons in publique Councells was of some efficacy but not much Honour for their meetings were tumultuary time brought forth a cure hereof the flowers of the People are by Election sent to the Representative and so the Lords are matched if not over-matched the People lesse admiring the Lords and more regarding themselves This was but a dazle an eclips ensues for Kings having duely eyed the Nature of Tenures between the Lords and Commons look upon it as an out-work or block-house in their way of approach Their next endeavour is therefore to gain the Knighthood of England within the compass of their own Fee and so by priority to have their Service as often as need should require by a trick in Law as well for their own safety in time of War as for their benefit in time of Peace This was a work of a continuing Nature and commended to Successors to accomplish by degrees that the whole Knighthood of England is become no more the Lords till Kings be first served and thus the power of the People is wholly devolved into the Kings Command and the Lords must now stand alone having no other foundation then the affections of the People gained by beneficense of Neighbourhood and ordinary society which commonly ingratiates the inferiour rank of men to those of higher degree especially such of them as affect to be popular Henry the seventh found out this sore and taught his Successors the way to avoid that occasion of jealousy by calling up such considerable men to attend the Court without other wage but fruitlesse hopes or under colour of Honour to be had by Kings from the presence of such great men in their great Traines or of other Service of speciall note to be done onely by men of so high accomplishment And by this meanes Lordship once bringing therewith both Authority and Power unto Kings before Kings grew jealous of their greatness in these later dayes is become a meer jelly and neither able to serve the Interest of Kings if the People should bestir themselves nor their own any longer henceforth the Commons of England are no mean Persons and their representative of such concernment as if Kings will have them to observe him he must serve them with their Liberties and Lawes and every one the publique good of the People No mans work is beneath no mans above it the best Honour of the Kings work is to be Nobilis servitus as Antigonus said to his Son or in plain English supreame Service above all and to the whole I now conclude as I found this Nation a Common-Wealth so I leave it and so may it be for ever and so will it be if we may attain the happinesse of our Fore-Fathers the ancient Saxons Quilibet contentus sorte propria A Table of the Principall Matters conteined in this Book A A Betting of Felony made Felony 299 Administration granted to the next of the Kindred 51 Admirals power from the Parliament 41. formerly under many brought into one 42. once gained jurisdiction to the high water-mark 44. and his Power regulated by Law ibid. over Sea-men Ports and Ships 44 Allegiance according to Law 18. vide Supremacy the nature thereof in general 79. its not natural 79 89. not absolute or indefinite 82. not to the King in his natural capacity 86. it obligeth not the People to serve in forrain War 10● it is due to the person of the King for the time being 246 279. what it is in time of War and relation thereunto 247. Henry the seventh and Henry the eighth indeavoured to advance it in relation to the Crown but effected it not 204. Appeals in cases Ecclesiastical restrained from Rome and given in the Kings case to the Convocation and in the cases of the People the Archbishop afterwards to the Delegates and were never setled in the Crown 227 233. vide Archbishop Archbishop hath the lawfull power of the Pope in Appeals and Dispensations Licenses and Faculties 233. the Archbishop of York looseth his jurisdiction over the Scottish Bishops 193 Arrays Commission of Array 178 vide War Assent of the King to Acts of Parliament serveth onely to the execution of the Law and not to the making thereof 21 Association of the People for the common safety before the Statute inabling the same 298 B. BAstardy not to be determined by the Ordinary before Summons to the Pretendors of Title to be heard 156 Bench the Kings Bench at Westminster abated in power by the Commissions of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery
betweene party and party should be determined in a more private way then to trouble the whole Representative of the Kingdome with matters of so meane concernment If then those Councils mentioned by the Author which concerne the Kings Grants and Infeodations and matters of Judicature be taken from the rest of the Presidents brought by him to maintaine the thing aimed at I suppose scarce one stone will be left for a foundation to such a glorying Structure as is pretended in the Title page of that Booke And yet I deny not but where such occasions have befalne the Parliament sitting it hath closed with them as things taken up by the way Fourthly It may be that the Author hath also observed that all the Records of Antiquity passed through if not from the hands of the Clergy onely and they might thinke it sufficient for them to honour their Writings with the great Titles of Men of Dignity in the Church and Common-wealth omitting the Commons as not worthy of mention and yet they might be there then present as it will appeare they were in some of the particular instances ensuing to which we come now in a more punctuall consideration The first of these by his owne words appeare to be a Church-mote or Synod it was in the yeare 673. called by the Arch-Bishop who had no more power to summon a Parliament then the Author himselfe hath And the severall conclusions made therein doe all shew that the people had no worke there as may appeare in the severall relations thereof made by Matthew Westminster and Sir Henry Spelman an Author that he maketh much use of and therefore I shall be bold to make the best use of him that I can likewise in Vindicating the truth of the point in hand For whatever this Councill was it s the lesse materiall seeing the same Author recites a president of King A●thelbert within six yeares after Austins entry into this Island which was long before this Councill which bringeth on the Vann of all the rest of the Opponents instances which King called a Councill styled Commune Concilium tam Cleri quam Populi and in the conclusion of the same a Law is made upon the like occasion Si Rex populum Convocaverit c. in both which its evident that in those times there were Councils holden by the People as well as the Magnates or Optimates His next instance is in the yeare 694. which is of a Councill holden by the Great Men but no mention of the Commons and this he will have to be a Parliament albeit that he might have found both Abbatesses or Women and Presbyters to be Members of that Assembly and for default of better attested the conclusions of the same notwithstanding the Canon Nemo militans Deo c. But I must also minde him that the same Author reciteth a Councill holden by King Ina Suasu omnium Aldermannorum Seniorum Sapientum Regni and is very probable that all the Wise men of the Kingdome were not concluded within the Lordly dignity The third instance can have no better successe unlesse he will have the Pope to be allowed power to call a Parliament or allow the Arch-Bishop power to doe that service by the Popes command for by that authority this what ever it be was called if we give credit to the relation of Sir Henry Spelman who also reciteth another Councell within three leaves foregoing this called by Withered at Barkhamstead unto which the Clergy were summoned Qui cum viris utique militaribus communi omnium assensu has leges decrevere So as it seemeth in those times Souldiers or Knights were in the common Councels as well as other Great Men. In the next place he bringeth in a Councill holden in the yeare 747. which if the Arch-Bishop were then therein President as it s sayd in the presence of the King was no Parliament but a Church-mote and all the conclusions in the same doe testifie no lesse they being every one concerning Ecclesiasticall matters And furthermore before this time the Author out of whom he citeth this Councill mentioneth another Councill holden by Ina the Saxon King in the presence of the Bishops Princes Lords Earles and all the wise old Men and People of the Kingdome all of them concluding of the intermarriage between the Brittons Picts and Saxons which formerly as it seemeth was not allowed And the same King by his Charter mentioned by the same Penman noteth that his endowment of the Monastry of Glastenbury was made not onely in the presence of the Great Men but Cum praesentia populationis and he saith that Omnes confirmaverunt which I doe not mention as a worke necessary to be done by the Parliament yet such an one as was holden expedient as the case then stood Forty yeares after hee meeteth with another Councill which he supposeth to be a Parliament also but was none unlesse he will allow the Popes Legate power to summon a Parliament It was holden in the yeare 787. and had he duely considered the returne made by the Popes Legate of the Acts of that Councill which is also published by the same Author hee might have found that the Legate saith that they were propounded in publike Councill before the King Arch-Bishop and all the Bishops and Abbots of the Kingdome Senators Dukes or Captaines and people of the Land and they all consented to keep the same Then he brings in a Councill holden in the year 793. which he would never have set downe in the list of Parliaments if he had considered how improper it is to construe Provinciale tenuit Concilium for a Parliament and therefore I shall need no further to trouble the Reader therewith The two next are supposed to be but one and the same and it s sayd to be holden Anno 974. before nine Kings fifteene Bishops twenty Dukes c. which for ought appeares may comprehend all England and Scotland and is no Parliament of one Nation but a party of many Nations for some great matter no doubt yet nothing in particular mentioned but the solemne laying the foundation of the Monastry of Saint-Albans What manner of Councill the next was appeareth not and therefore nothing can be concluded therefrom but that it was holden in the yeare 796. That Councill which is next produced was in the yeare 800. and is called in great letters Concilium Provinciale which he cannot Gramatically construe to be a Parliament yet in the Preface it is sayd that there were Viri cujuscunque dignitatis and the King in his Letter to the Pope saith concerning it Visum est cunctis gentis nostrae sapientibus so as it seemeth by this and other examples of this nature that though the Church-motes invented the particular conclusions yet it was left to the Witagen-mote to Judge and conclude them There can be no question but the next three Presidents brought by the Opponent were all of
also For Kings were mistaken in the Lords who meaned nothing lesse then to serve them with the peoples liberties together with their owne which they saw wrapped up in the grosse Thirdly by this meanes the Councils of the King and Lords grew potent not onely for advise in particular occasions but in matters of judicature and declaring of Law ordering of processe in Courts of Plees which in the first framing were the workes of Wise and Learned men but being once setled become part of the liberties of every Free-man And it is not to be doubted but these Councills of Lords did outreach into things two great for them to mannage and kept the Commons out of possession of their right during the present heat of their ruffling condition yet all this while could not take absolute possession of the legislative power I now come to the remainder of the particular instances produced by the Opponent which I shall reduce into severall Categories for the more cleere satisfaction to the Reader with lesse tediousnesse First it cannot be denied but the Councill of Lords gave advise to Kings in cases of particular immergency nor is it incongruous to the course of government even to this day nor meete that the Parliament should be troubled with every such occasion and therefore the giving of advise to William the Conqueror what course he should take to settle the Lawes of England according to the instances in Councills holden An 1060. And 1070. And to gaine favour of the great men according to that in An 1106. and in the manner of endowment of the Abby of Battell as in pag 25. of the Opponents discourse and what to do upon the reading of the Popes Letter according to that in An 1114. And whether the Popes Legate should be admitted as in pag. 18. And how King Steven and Henry shall come to agreement as An 1153. And how to execute Lawes by Judges and Justices Itinerant as An 1176. And touching the manner of ingageing for a voyage by Croisado to Jerusalem An 1189. And to give answer to Embassadors of a forraine Prince pag. 25. And how King John shall conclude peace with the Pope An 1213. Where neverthelesse Math. Paris saith was Turba multa nimis I say all these might well be done by a Councell of Lords and not in any posture of a Parliament albeit that in none of all these doth any thing appeare but that the Commons might be present in every one or many of them all Secondly as touching judicature the Lords had much power therein even in the Saxon times haveing better opportunites for Knowledge and Learning especially joyned with the Clergy then the Commons in those times of deep darknesse wherein even the Clergy wanted not their share as in the first part of the discourse I have already observed Whatsoever then might be done by Judges in ordinary Courts of judicature is inferiour to the regard of the Parliament and therefore the Plea between the Arch-Bishop and Aethelstan concerning Land instanced An 1070. And betweene Lanfranke and Odo An 1071. and betweene the King and Anselme pag 15 16. and the determining of Treason of John afterwards King against his Lord and King Richard pag 23. And the difference concerning the title of a Barony between Mowbray and Scotvile pag 25. And giving of security of good behaviour by William Brawse to King John pag. 26. All these might well be determined onely before the Lords and yet the Parliament might be then sitting or not sitting as the contrary to either doth not appeare and therefore can these forme no demonstrative ground to prove that the Parliament consisted in those times onely of such as we now call the House of Lords A third worke whereby the Opponent would prove the Parliament to consist onely of the House of Lords is because hee findeth many things by them concluded touching the solemnization and the settling of the succession of Kings both which he saith were done by the Lords in Parliament or those of that House and I shall crave leave to conclude the contrary For neither is the election or Solemnization of such election a proper worke of the Parliament according to the Opponents principles nor can they prove such Conventions wherein they were to be Parliaments Not the election of Kings for then may a Parliament be without a King and therefore that instance concerning William Rufus page 16. will faile or the Opponents principles who will have no Parliament without a King The like may also be sayde of the instance concerning King Steven page 18. Much lesse can the solemnization of the election by Coronation be a proper worke for the Parliament Neverthelesse the Opponent doth well know that both the election of a King and the solemnization of such election by Coronation are Spiritlesse motions without the presence of the people and therefore though his instance page 17. concerning the election of Henry the First by the Bishops and Princes may seeme to be restrictive as to them yet it is not such in fact if Matthew Paris may be beleeved who telleth us that in the Conventus omnium was Clerus and Populus universus and might have been noted by the Opponent out of that Learned Antiquary so often by him cited if he had pleased to take notice of such matters A fourth sort of Instances concerneth matters Ecclesiasticall and making of Canons and hereof enough hath been already sayd that such worke was absolutely challenged by the Church-motes as their proper worke and therefore the Instance page 16 17. of the Councill in Henry the firsts time and the Canons made by the Bishops there and that other called by Theobald Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and instanced by the Opponent page 19. I say both these doe faile in the conclusion propounded Fifthly As touching the most proper worke of Parliaments which is the making of Lawes concerning the liberties and benefit of the people the Opponent produceth not one instance concerning the same which doth not conclude contrary to his proposall for as touching those two instances in his thirteenth page Anno 1060. they concerne not the making of Lawes but the reviving of such as had been disused formerly which might well enough be done by private Councell But as to that in his fifteenth page of the Law made by the Conquerour concerning Remigius Bishop of Lincolne although it be true that wee finde not the particular titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses yet besides the Councill of Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbats and Princes we finde the Common Councill for so the words are Communi Concilio Concilio Archiepiscopus Episcopus Abatus omnium Principum although the Opponent would seeme to wave these words Et Concilio but putting them in a small Character and the rest in a voluminous Letter that the Readers eyes might be filled with them and overlook the other Secondly as to the instance of the Councill at Clarindon in his nineteenth page which he citeth out
set down It belongeth to the Parliament to declare Treason yet if I were a Peere and were commanded I should agree So did Thorning under-write and thereunto also consented Rickill and Sir Walter Clopton the last being chief Justice of the Kings Bench the first chief Justice of the Common-Pleas and the second another Judge of the same Bench. The summe in plainer sense is that if they were Peeres they would agree but as Judges they will be silent And thus the Parliament of England by the first of these foure last mentioned conclusions attainted themselves by the second yeilded up their liberties by the third their lives and by the last would have done more or been lesse And to fill up the measure of all they assigned over a right of Legislative Power unto six Lords and three Commons and yet the King not content superadded that it should be Treason for any man to indeavor to repeal any of their determinations The Common-wealth thus underneath the King tramples upon all at once for having espied the shadow of a Crown fleeting from him in Ireland he pursues it leaves the noble Crown of England in the base condition of a Farme subject to strip and waste by mean men and crosses the Irish Seas with an Army This was one of Englands Climactericall years under a disease so desperate that no hope was left but by a desperate Cure by sudden bleeding in the head and cutting off that Member that is a principle of motion in the Body For it was not many moneths ere the winde of affaires changed the King now in Ireland another steps into the Throne the noise hereof makes him return afarr of inraged but the nigher he comes the cooler he growes his conscience revives his courage decayes and leaving his Army his Lordship Kingdome and Libertie behinde as a naked man submits himself to release all homage and fealtie to resigne his Crown and Dignitie his Titles and Authoritie to acknowledge himself unworthy and insufficient to reign to swear never to repent of his Resignation thus if he will have any quiet this wilfull man he must be content for the future neither to will nor desire And poore England must for a time bee contented with a dolefull condition in which the King cannot rule and the Parliament will not and the whole body like a Chäos capable of any form that the next daring spirit shall brood upon it CHAP. II. Of the State of the King and Parliament in relation of it to him and him to it A King in Parliament is like the first-born of Jacob The excellencie of Dignitie and the excellencie of Power but alone unstable as water Examples of both these we have in these two Kings Whereof the first was Crowned by the Parliament and Crowned it the latter also Crowned it but with Thornes and yet the Parliament in all held on that wise way that it neither exceeded its own bounds nor lost its own right I shall enter into the consideration of particulars under these heads First In relation more immediately to the interest of the King Secondly To the interest of the Kingdome in generall The King though higher then all the people by the head and so hath the Prerogative of Honour as the most worthy yet his strength and abilities originally doe rise from beneath otherwise he is but like a Generall without an Army the Title big but aiery and many times his person subject to so much danger that in stead of drawing the eyes of all the people to look upon him with admiration they are drawn to look to him with observation and in this respect he may be said to be lesse his own man and more the Kingdomes then any of the inferiour sort This befell in both these Kings in a speciall manner each entering upon the grand government of a Kingdome before they were able to understand the work or govern themselves and therefore were under power of Protectors for the guard of their Persons and their Education and of the Parliament for Councell and Direction in Cases relating to the Kingdome The chide of a mean man when its Parents are dead is Filus Amici but of a King is Filius Populi to be by them trained up in such manner that he may be Pater populi when he is come to age In the mean time though he be a King yet his Person like a precious Jem must not out of the ring but must be directed by Councell though under some kind of restraint the Councellors all the while no Offenders in such Cases against the Prerogative Royall And therefore though it be true that Kings grow faster then other men and sooner come to full age then they yet Edward the third now in his sixteenth yeare might not passe over Sea into France though it were for restoring of Peace but by direction of the Parliament nor is it meet in such Cases that Kings should stand upon the Prerogative of a Negative Secondly it may likewise be said that his Family is lesse his owne as he is a man then another mans For private Families are no further under the publique Law then in relation to the publique Peace to punish after breach made But the Families of Kings are looked upon by all in relation to the honour and profit of the Publique not onely because the Kings servants have by their nigh attendance upon his Person a more powerfull influence into his actions which may reflect a malevolent aspect upon the whole course of affaires if they be not better ordered that are so nigh him But more especially in regard that the government and order of the Royall Family trencheth deep upon the Honor of the Kingdome and purses of the People who are concerned to see the same accommodated sutable to the State and Port which the Nation would bear forth to the World And therefore for the Parliament to intermeddle in the Kings Family is not forrain nor new Alice Piers was a Familier if not of the Family of Edward the third yet both her selfe and others of that Family were complained of as a grievance Richard the second was once a young man and ever a young King and what Edward the third wanted onely in his youth and in his infirme old age this man ever wanted for he that knew not how to govern himselfe how much lesse could he govern his Family And if in this condition the Parliament become his Stewards to set a yearely Survey and Check upon his Servants and Family in order to good order of the same and Kingdome otherwise men must conclude it did that which was just though Richard the second and those of his minde thinke not so But this is not all Kings have not onely such as serve the outward man but some that serve their Consciences of old time called Confessors in those dayes without name for feare of Superstition yet the thing remaineth still in some well favored Chaplain and
Arrest although contrary to them made voyde as touching the Process The goods of the Clergy are discharged from Purveyance and their Houses from Quarter The later of these was an Incroachment upon the greater Clergy men For under the Title of Hospitality which the Prelates were obliged to by their great Possessions and Revenues conferred upon them to that end Kings used to quarter Messengers to and from Scotland The Kings Horses Dogs and Haukes c. But the point of Purveyance was an ancient Prerogative belonging to Kings and by no Custome were the goods of any man discharged therefrom till it was by act of grace first confirmed by Edward the first and afterwards by grant of Edward the second yet by reason of the rudenesse of the times did not those acts prevaile to that settlement that was promised till now Edward the third renued the Law nevertheless could not this Law of Edward the third perfect that worke because it was but a bare command till Richard the second made a remediall Law giving thereby the Clergie that were wronged a right of action of trespass against the Purveyors and to recover treble damages whereas formerly they were liable only to a fine to the King which many times was as soone pardoned as asked These condiscentions might have wedded the English Clergy to the English Crowne but that it was coy and expected further gratuities besides they beheld their old Stepdame Rome now in its full Splendor and power and deeply interested in the sway of affaires in this Kingdome and above all the rest the nigh affinity between the Prelate and the Pope was such that they sucked one milke breathed one aire and like the Philosophers twinns lived in each other The later of these was not discerned by those dim sighted times and therefore they could do nothing towards the dissolution of that knot but left it to future times who found no other way then to cut it asunder But Edward the Third and his successor espied the first felt the inconvenience thereof and applyed themselves to such remedy as they found most ready at hand All things that are subject to time are also subject to change which comes comonly slower upon Governments that are less Eclesiastical for Churches continue longer in a growing condition then in their compleat estate like a Christian that seldom endures long after his full ripenesse Thus England it s hitherto above a thousand yeares since the Gospel came to the Saxons and well nigh a thousand yeares since the Pope set his foot amongst us ever approaching nigher the Throne and ascending thereunto but finding it full of a King that would not remove he sits downe in his lapp a heavy burden questionlesse he was considering his claime of jurisdiction his provisions pensions exemptions impositions and such like oppressions and therefore it s no wonder if the King feeling the incumbrance gives a lift at the Popes power by stoping the currant of mony from England Rome-wards To this end the Statute made at Carlile is revived wherby the Clergy are inhibited from conveying treasure beyond the Seas but the Pope knew how to ride and will not so easily forego his saddle The Roman Eagle had made many a faire flight in England and had not yet fully gorged himselfe he grants ten thousand Marks yearly out of taxes layd upon the Church livings in England unto two Cardinals neither of which did nor by the Canon could live in England the treasurership of Yorke also to another Cardinall after that the King had conferred the same else where He proceeds also further to invade the undoubted rights of the Crown by making an election of the B. of Norwich and causing him to be invested Rege renitente the King spent eight yeares in the recovery of his right and was deluded in the conclusion he now sees it bootelesse to stand alwayes upon his defence and receive affronts he resolves therefore to enter the lists and maketh seisure of the Deanery of York which formerly by usurpation the Pope had conferred upon a Cardinall and of all Church livings given by the Pope to aliens Then a Law is made more sharp then those in the eighteenth yeare wherein Provisors of Abbies and Priories are made lyable to a Praemuniri and Provisors of other Ecclesiasticall Livings and Dignities whereby the presentation of the rightfull Patron is disturbed to be fined and imprisoned untill the fine and damages to the party wronged be paide And all such as draw men to plead out of England in cases that belong to the cognisance of the Kings Court and all obtainers of provisions in the Court at Rome these were also subject to a Praemuniri For whiles these things were thus in action the Pope bestirred himselfe notably with Citations Excommunications interdictions and such other birds of prey not only against meane men but Judges Bishops and the Kings Councell as amongst others the case of the Bishop of Ely at the solicitation of some of inferior regard as I remember a Clerke or some such thing yet as these Bull-drivers or summoners to the Romish Court were no late upstarts so were not these times the first that tooke them to task for before the Statuts of Praemuniri we find provision was made against Provisors and that some Statute did precede those in Print which punished a disturber of the Kings Incumbent by a Bull from Rome with perpetuall imprisonment or at the Kings will besides the party wronged was allowed an action for his damages Qui tam pro Domino Rege quam pro seipso sequitur and before that time also bringers of Bulls from Rome were imprisoned although in all these cases aforesaide the liberty of the Persons both of Lords and Praelats was saved And thus all the while King Edward the third kept the field he gave the Pope cuffe for cuffe but retiring himselfe to take his ease he waxing wanton waxed weake and more slowly pursued the vindication of his owne right and his Subjectes liberty The Lawes are layde aside and Rome had further day given to plead and in the mean time execution is staid the double minde is double died and advantage is soon espied above sixty Church livings more are suddainely catched and given to the favorites at Rome the Parliament rings herewith yet the King delayes the remedy and in this Edy of affaires Edward the third dies and Richard the second takes up the place who had witt enough to observe what concerned his owne interest and courage enough to pursue it But neither witt nor courage to over-rule his lusts which in the conclusion over-ruled all rule and brought himselfe to destruction He found the people at his entrance into the Throne irritated with the Popes opressions and vexed at his Grandfathers desidiousnes His Spirit is also stirred within him and himselfe thereby pressed to tread in his Grandfathers former wayes and to outrunne him in his later
he made the penalty of Praemuniri to extend to all Farmores or others in nature of Bailiffs that held any Church maintenance to the use of any alien and unto all Aliens that are Purchasors of such Provisions to any use and unto all Lieges that shall in like manner purchase such Provisions But as touching such as shall accept such provisions he ordained Banishment for their Persons and Forfeiture of their Estate Notwithstanding all this the Romane Horse-leach would not so give over The King grew into displeasure with his Subjects and they with him and with one another they see the Pope still on Horseback and fear that the English Clergy their own Countrey men if not Friends and Abbettors yet are but faint and feigned Enemies to the Popes Cause Nor was it without Cause that their fear was such for as the Pope had two hands to receive so they had two hearts making show of forming blowes at the Pope but then alwayes at a distance or when without the Popes Guard and thus the Lawes begin to stammer and cannot speake so plain English as they were wont The people hereat offended resolve to put the Clergy into the Van and to try their mettle to the full At the last Parliament that Richard the Second did hold both the Lords Temporall and Spirituall are opposed one by one The Lords Temporall like themselves resolve and enter their Resolutions to defend the right of the Crowne in the Cases of Provisors although even amongst these great men all were not equally resolute for Sir William Brian had purchased the Popes Excommunication against some that had committed Burglary and he was committed to the Tower for his labour But the Prelates answer was ambiguous and with modifications which was all one to cry as men use to say Craven yet was the Statute made peremptory according to what was formerly Enacted And though the Prelates cautionary way of proceeding might be a principall reason why the Popes power held so long in England in an usurping way yet Kings also much conduced thereto by seeking too much their Personall ease above the Honour of their Place and the Popes blessings and opinion of his Favour more then their owne good or the Peoples liberty for there was no other balme for a distracted minde then that which dropped from the Popes lips In like manner Richard the Second being already at least in purpose estranged from his People sought to get freinds at Rome to hold by the Spirituall Sword what he was in danger to loose by laying aside the Sword of Justice which is the surest Tenure for Kings to hold by And though the Popedome was now under a Schisme between two Popes Clement and Vrban yet he was so farre won for Vrban that he not onely ingaged himselfe and the Parliament to determine his Election and uphold the same but also Ex abundante did by Implication allow to him an Indefinite Power to grant Provisions and so at once he lost the Die and gained a Stake that like a bubble looked faire but soon vanished away Neverthelesse these two Comrades whiles they were together resolved to make the most of each other that they could and therefore though the Popedome liked not the King yet the Pope had his love so farre as he could deny himselfe for he had already denied his Kingdome And if the Articles exhibited against the King by Henry the Fourth be true the Pope had his Faith also For that he might be rid of his reputed Enemy Arch Bishop Arundell he trusted the Pope with that Complement of making Walden Arch Bishop of Canterbury in Arundells stead which the Pope tooke so kindly as he made it a President for Provisors for the future Nor did the King stick in this one Singular but made it his Custome in passing of Lawes especially such as the King was most devoted unto to put more Confidence in the Popes Amen then in all the Prayers of his Commons with his owne Soit fait to boot The summe then will be that the Prize was now well begun concerning the Popes power in England Edward the Third made a fair blow and drew blood Richard the Second seconded him but both retired the former left the Pope to lick himself whole the later gave him a salve and yet it proved a Gangrene in the conclusion The second means used to bring down the power of the Pope in this Nation was to abate the power or height of the English Clergy for though the times were not so cleare as to espy the Root of a Pope in Prelacy yet experience had taught them that they were so nigh ingaged that they would not part And therefore first they let these men know that Prelacy was no Essentiall Member to the Government of the Kingdome but as there was a Government established before that ranke was known so there may be the like when it is gone For Edward the Third being troubled with a quarrell between the two Arch Bishops of Canterbury and Yorke concerning Superiority in bearing the Crosse and the important Affaires of Scotland so urging Summoned a Parliament at Yorke which was fain to be delaied and adjourned for want of appearance and more effectuall Summons issued forth but at the day of Adjournment none of the Clergy of the Province of Canterbury would be there and upon this Occasion the Parliament was not onely interrupted in their proceedings but an ill president was made for men to be bold with the Kings Summons in such Cases as liked not them and thereupon a Statute was made to inforce Obedience upon Citizens and Burgesses and such Ecclesiasticks as held per Baroniam Neverthelesse when the matters concerning Provisors began to come upon the Stage which was within two yeares after that Law was made the Clergy found that matter too warme for them and either did not obey the Summons or come to the Parliament or if they came kept aloofe or if not so would not Vote or if that yet order their tongues so as nothing was certainly to be gathered but their doubtfull or rather double minde These Prelates thus discovered the Parliament depended no more upon them further then they saw meet At sixe or seven Parliaments determined matters without their Advice and such as crossed the Principles of these men and therefore in a rationall way might require their Sense above all the rest had they not beene prepossessed with prejudice and parties in the matter Nor did Edward the Third ever after hold their Presence at so high Repute at such meetings and therefore Summoned them or so many of them as he thought meet for the Occasion sometimes more somtimes fewer and at a Parliament in his fourty and seventh yeare he Summoned onely foure Bishops and five Abbots And thus the matter in Fact passed in these times albeit the Clergy still made their claim of Vote and desired the same to be entered upon Record And
sore People yet many times Lawes are said to be many when as they are but one branched into many Particulars for the clearing of the Peoples understanding who usually are not excellent in distinguishing and so becomes as new Plaisters made of an old Salve for sores that never brake out before Such sore times were these whereof we now Treate wherein every touch made a wound and every wound went to the heart and made the Category of Treason swell to that bignesse that it became an individuum vagum beyond all rule but the present sence of timerous Judges and a touchy King Thus were many of the ignorant and wel meaning people in an hideous danger of the gulfe of forfeiture before they found themselves nigh the brimme All men do agree that treason is a wound of Majesty but all the doubt is where this Majesty resteth originally and what is that legiance which is due therto the breach whereof amounteth to so high a censure for some men place all Majesty in one man whom they call an absolute Monarch Others in the great men and others in the people and some in the concurrence of the King and body of the people and it is a wild way to determine all in one conclusion when as the same dependeth wholy upon the constitution of the body looke then upon England in the last posture as the rigider sort of monarchiall polititians do and Majesty will never be in glory but in the concurrence of the King and Parliament or convention of Estates so upon the whol account it wil be upon the people whose welfare is the supream Law Rome had Kings Consuls Dictators Decemviri and Tribunes long before the Orators time and he saw the foundation of an Empire or perpetuall Dictatorship in the person of the first of the Caesars any of all which might have challenged the supremacy of Majesty above the people and yet the often change of Government shewed plainly that it rested upon another pinne and the Orator in expresse words no lesse when speaking of the Majesty of that Government he allotteth it not to those in cheife command but defineth it to be magnitudo populi Romani afterwards when the pride of the Emperors was come to its ful pitch in the times of Augustus Tiberius an Historian of those times in the life of Tiberius tels us that he declared the bounds of Treason to be determined in three particular instances of treachery against the Army Sedition amongst the people and violating the Majesty of the People of Rome in al which men were not punishable for words but actions and indeavors I do not herein propound the Government of the Roman Empire as a modell for England but à majori may conclude that if the proper seat of Majesty was in the people of Rome when Emperours were in their fullest glory it s no defacing of Majesty in England to seat it upon the whole body from whom the same is contracted in the representative and so much thereof divided unto the person of the King as any one member is capable of according to the work allotted unto him These severall seats of Majesty making also so many degrees do also imply as many degrees of wounding for it s writen in nature that the offence tending to the immediate destruction of the whol body is greater then that which destroyeth any one member only and when the written Law maketh it treason to compasse the destruction of the Kings Person it leaveth it obvious to common sense that its a higher degree of Treason to compasse the destruction of the representative and above all to destroy the whole body of the People crimes that never entred into the conceit of wickednesse it selfe in those more innocent times much lesse saw they any cause to mention the penalty by any written Law Neverthelesse because many sadd examples had accurred within the memory of this present age of the danger of the person and honor of Kings and yet on the otherside they saw that in such cases of Treason the Kings honor was made of retching leather and might easily be strained within the compasse of a wound of Majesty therefore Edward the third imitating Tiberius reduced the crime of wound of Majesty in the Person of the King into certaine particular instances out of the compasse whereof the Judges of the Law in ordinary course must not determine Treason These concerne either the safety of the Person of the King or of the succession in the Royall Throne or lastly the safegard of the publique right by the board and privy seale the vallue of Mony and by persons in matters of judicature judicially presiding all of them reflecting upon the King considered in his politick capacity for otherwise many crimes might have beene mentioned more fatally reflecting upon the King in his naturall capacity which nevertheless are omitted as not worthy of so high a censure Other Treasons are left to the determination of the Parliament as occasion should offer it selfe whereof divers examples of a new stamp accurred within forty yeares next ensuing which were of a temporary regard and lived and died with the times To these two notions of Majesty and treason I must add a third called Legiance for it is that which maketh Majesty to be such indeed and lifteth it into the Throne and whereof the highest breach makes Treason and because that which hath been already sayd reflecteth upon an opinion or rather a knot of opinions for I find them not punctually adjudged in Calvins case I must a little demur to them because as their sense is commonly taken it alters the fundamental nature of the Government of this nation from a commonweal to a pure Monarchy In handling of this case the ho. Reporter took leave to range into a generall discourse of legiance although not directly within the conclusion of the case and therin first sets down the general nature therof that it is a mutual bond between an English King and his people and then more particularly sets forth the nature of this bond in the severall duties of obedience and fealty fo 5. a. and those also in their severall properties Viz. naturall absolute fo 7. a. due to the King omni soli semper fo 12. a. in his naturall and not politick capacity fo 10. a. whereas he saith this bond is natural he meaneth that its due by birth fo 7. a. By absolute if I mistake him not he meaneth that it is indefinite fo 5. b. Viz. not circumscribed by Law but above Law and before Law fo 13. a. and that Laws were after made to inforce the same by penalties fo 13. b. and therefore he concludeth that this legiance is immutable fo 13. b. and fo 14. a. Thus having stated the point as truely as I can both for the nature of legiance and the object thereof Viz. the King and not the people otherwise then in order to the safety
and honor of the Kings Person considered in his naturall capacity as he is a man I shall in the next place examine the grounds as they are severally set down and therein shall lead the Reader no further then the Reporters owne concessions Not troubling the Reader with any doubt whether this bond consists in obedience only or in that fealty and in all shall ever be mindfull of the honour of that Pen with which I have to deale First whereas it is said that English legiance is naturall and grounded upon the birth of each party within the Kings dominions and protection it needeth no debate so as the same be taken sano sensu Viz. for a qualified legiance beared of those sublimities of absolute indefinite immutable c. for otherwise if such a high strain of legiance be due from every English man by birth then all the Magna carta or laws concerning the liberties of the People come too late to qualifie the same because they cannot take away the Law of nature f. 14. a. and thus the party once born English must for ever remain absolutely obleiged to the King of England although haply he lives not two Months under his protection all his ensuing life time Secondly the legiance of an English man to his King ariseth from that civil relation between the two callings of King and subject and therefore it is not a naturall bond which cannot be taken away The first is true by the Reporters owne concessions Protectio trahit subjectionem subjecti oprotectionem so he saith fo 5. a. fo 9. b. and therefore though it be granted that Magistracy in general is from nature as he saith fo 13. a. yet of weak birth is that inference which he maketh Viz. That English allegiance is a principle in nature Unlesse it be also admitted that all men on earth that submit not to English legiance do sinne against nature The difference then will stand thus Magistracy is founded in nature therefore legiance also But English Magistracy is from civil constitution therefore is English legiance of the like nature In the next place the Reporter saith that before any municiple Law was made Kings did dare jura and he mounts as high for an example as the Trojans age by the testimony of Virgil but I beleeve he intended not much strength in this seeing its wel known by any that knows the scriptures that there were municipal laws given and that concerning the office of a King by Moses which was more ancient then those of Troy and long before the time of Virgil who neither tels us in what manner those Trojan Laws were made though the Kings gave them nor if al were according to the Reporters sense is the testimony of a Poet who somtimes useth his poetica licentia to be taken in terminis in the next place the Reporter vouches the testimony of Fortescue c. 12 13. which is as absolutely opposite to the maine point in hand as any Penn can declare for he tels us of divers sorts of Kingdomes some gotten by conquest as those of Nimrod and Belus c. But saith he there is a Kingdome politick which is by the association o● men by consent of Law making one cheife who is made for defence of Law and of his subjects bodies and Estates and he cannot govern by any other power and of this nature saith he the Kingdome of England is fo 30.31.32 A second peice of the foundation of this opinion of the Reporter is taken ab inane it is a vaine thing saith he to prescribe Laws but where by legiance foregoing people are bound to obey but this compared with the words of Fortescue formerly mentioned falls of it selfe to dust and therefore I shall not further inlarge concerning it Thirdly The Reporter brings in to helpe the matter the consent of the Law in elder times by certaine cases vouched to that purpose the first concerning the Legiance of Children to Parents which commeth not to this case because it is a legiance of nature and this legiance whereof we speake is yet under a litigious title And I suppose will in the conclusion be found to rest only upon a civil constitution therefore I leave that The second is that a man attainted and outlawed is neverthelesse within the Kings protection for this saith the Reporter is a Law of nature Indelibilis immutabilis and the Parliament nor Statute can take this power away fol. 13. b. 14. a. and therefore the Reporter concludes that as well the Legiance of the subject as the protection of him by the King are both of them from the Law of nature An opinion that speakes much mercy yet it seemes strange considering the penne for if it be a Law of nature and immutable for the King to protect Persons attainted then must no such Person suffer for if he be under the Kings protection that being by a Law of nature cannot be changed by any positive Law as the Reporter saith nor can the King be so bound by any such Statute but by a nonobstante he can set himselfe at liberty when he pleaseth then the issue will be this the King hath a naturall power to protect the Persons of Law-breakers from the power of the Law therefore much more their Estates and then farewell all Law but this of the Kings naturall protection I say that these are of a high straine considering what the Reporter speaketh elsewhere But to persue his instance he saith that the King hath power to protect an attainted person that if any man kill him without warrant he is a manslayer and yet this Person attainted hath lost the legall Protection It s true yet not to all intents for by the sentence of the Law his life is bound up under the Law of that Sentence Viz. That he must not suffer in other manner then the Sentence determineth nor before warrant of Execution issue forth to that end And notwithstanding the Sentence yet the Law leaveth him a liberty of Purchase or Inheritance though to the use of the Crowne and therefore in some respects the Law protects his Person so long as he lives and the Kings Naturall Protection is in vaine in such Cases Lastly suppose the King hath a power of Nonobstante if the same be allowed to him in a limited way by the Law it is no argument to prove the Kings naturall Power which is driven at under naturall Legiance much lesse if it cannot be made forth that the Law doth allow any such power of Nonobstante at all but by the iniquity of the times permitteth the same to subsist onely to avoyd Contention as it came into this Kingdome by way of Usurpation And thus I have onely discovered the Foundation of this first qualification which I shall onely leave naked supposing that no man seeing it will build at all thereupon The second property that commeth to be considered is That English Legiance is absolute fol. 5.
b. fol. 7. a. which is a word of a vast extent serving rather to amaze mens apprehensions then to inlighten them and therefore the Reporter did well not to trouble himself or the Reader in the clearing or proof thereof but left the Point rather to be beleived then understood nor shall I in the Negative for God himself can have no other Legiance from an English man then absolute Legiance and Kings being as other men subject to erre especially in this Point of Prerogative are much rather subject thereto being misled by such Doctrines as these are The Scripture determines this Point and cuts the knot in sunder The third property of English Legiance which the Reporter insisteth upon is that it is indefinite which he explaineth to be Proprium quarto modo so as it is both Universall and Immutable fol. 5. b. fol. 12. and neither defined by Time Place or Person As touching the Time and Person the Reporter inlarged not at all therefore I shall onely leave the Reader to chew upon the Point supposing himself in the first times of Edward the Fourth when Henry the Sixth was then alive and let him resolve to which of them his Legiance had been due considering them both in their naturall Capacity as the Reporter would have it But as touching the Place it s reported that English Legiance is not onely due from an English man to an English King in England but in all places of the Kings Dominion though otherwise Forrain as to the power of the Law of England yea saith the Reporter as farre as the Kings power of Protection doth extend And yet this had not been enough if the Premises be granted for if this Legiance whereof we speake be absolute and omni soli semper then is it due to the King from an English man ubivis Gentium Neverthelesse to take the Reporter in a moderate sense it is worth consideration whether English Legiance in the dayes of Edward the Third extended as far as the Kings power of Protection when as he had the Crown of France in a Forrain right to that of England In this the Reporter is extreamly Positive upon many grounds which he insisteth upon First he saith that Verus and Fidelis are qualities of the minde and cannot be circumscribed within the predicament of Vbi and upon this ground he might conclude that this Legiance is due to the King from an English man all the world over as well as in all the Kings Dominions but concerning the ground it may be denied for though simply in it selfe considered as a notion Verity or Fidelity are not circumscribed in place yet being qualities of the soul and that being in the body in relation thereunto it may be in the predicament of Vbi for where ever that Body and Soul is there is Faith and Truth according to its modell which though not absolute and indefinite yet if according to the Lawes of the place wherein the man is he is truely said to be Verus Fidelis Secondly the Reporter argueth that the Kings Protection is not Locall or included within the bounds of England therefore also is not the Legiance for Protectio trahit Legiantiam Legiantia Protectionem Had this reason been formed into a Syllogisme it had appeared lesse valuable for the Protection of an English King qua talis of an English man is locall and included within the bounds of the Kingdome But if the same King be also King of France or Duke of Aquitane and an English man shall travell into those parts he is still under the same Kings Protection yet not as King of England but as King of France or Duke of Aquitane otherwise let the party be of France or Aquitane or England all is one he must be whether French or English under an unlimitted absolute Protection without regard had to the Customes or Lawes of the place yea contrary to them which I beleive the Reporter never intended to affirme Thirdly the Reporter falleth upon the matter in Fact and tells us that the King of England did many times De facto grant Protections to Persons in places out of the English Confines and it will not be denied But never was any absolute and indefinite Protection so granted for the Protection extends to defence from injury and all injury is to be expounded and judged according to the Lawes of the place Nor doe any the Presidents vouched by the Reporter clear that the King of England did grant as King of England Protection to any English man in any parts of the Kings Dominion beyond the Seas which was not qualified according to the Lawes and Customes of that place especially it being apparent that an English King may hold Dominion in Forrain parts in Legiance under a Forrain King as Edward the Third held the Dutchy of Guien and therefore cannot grant absolute Protection in such place nor receive absolute Legiance from any person there being Fourthly the Reporter saith that the King of England hath power to command his Subjects of England to goe with him in his Warres as well without the Realm of England as within the same therefore the Legiance of an English man to his King is indefinite and not locall or circumscribed by place or within the Kingdome of England Although the first of these be granted yet will not the inference hold for possibly this may arise from the constitution of a Positive Law and not from naturall or absolute Legiance nor doth any authority by him cited justifie any such Legiance But I cannot agree the first for it is not true that the King hath any such power from his own Personall interest nor doe the authoritie of former Ages warrant any such matter for a fuller disquisition whereof I shall refer the Reader to the eleventh Chapter ensuing because the Whole matter concerning the Militia commeth there to be handled in course Fifthly to close up all the rest the Reporter brings The Testimony of the Judges of the Common Law out of the Testimony of Hengham wherein an Action was brought by a French woman against an English man who refused to answer because the Plaintiffe was a French Woman and not of the Legiance or Faith of England This was disallowed by the Judges because Legiance and Faith was referred to England and not to the King Thereupon the Defendant averred that the Plaintiffe is not of the Legiance of England nor of the Faith of the King And upon this Plea thus amended the Plaintiffe gave over her Action The Reporter from hence observeth that Faith and Legiance is referred to the King indefinitely and generally and therefore it is so due to him The reason might have had more force had the Object of Allegiance or the nature thereof been the point in question but neither of them comming to debate and Allegiance being subjected to England and Faith to the King I see not what more can be concluded from hence but that Allegiance
from an English man is due to England and Faith to the King which I suppose must be intended to be in order to that Allegiance because by the former Plea England had them both and the King was wholly left out of the Case Neverthelesse I rather thinke that the present Point in controversie will receive little light herefrom on either part We are now come to the fourth Property of English Legiance that it is due to the Kings Naturall Capacity and not to his Politique Capacity or due to the Office of a King in regard of the Person of the man and not to the Person in regard of the Office fol. 20. And because this is of no small importance neither easily understood nor granted Therefore he backeth his Opinion by many reasons First he saith that the King sweareth to his Subjects in his Naturall Capacity therefore the Subjects swear to him in his Naturall Capacity This reason was intended to be taken from Relatives and then it should have been thus A King doth sweare to his Subjects in their Naturall Capacity therefore Subjects sweare to a King in his Naturall Capacity but it being otherwise it is mistaken and proves not the Point Yet if we should take the Reporter in sano Sensu there is no question but the Oath is made to the Naturall Capacity yet not Terminative more then the Oath of the Tenant to his Lord which this Author pleaseth to couple with the mutuall dependence between King and Subject fol. 4. b. 5. a. Nor doth the Oath of an English man binde him to the Obedience of all or any Commands which the King shall give in relation onely to his Naturall Capacity or in opposition to his Politick Capacity Nor will the Reporter himself allow that the Politique Capacity of the King can be separate from his Naturall Capacity fol. 10. And yet it is evident that a King may in his Naturall Capacity command that of which in his Politique Capacity cannot give allowance The second reason of this Opinion is taken from the nature of Treason which saith the Reporter is committed against the Naturall Person of the King and this is against due Legiance according to the form of Indictments in that Case provided This is not demonstrative because that crime which is done against the Naturall person of a man may as well extend to it in relation to his Place or Office and so may Treason be plotted against the Naturall Person of a King as he is King neither is their any other difference between the murther of a King and a private Man but onely in regard of the Place and Office of a King which makes the murther of him Treason for which cause all Indictments that doe conclude Contra Legiantiae debitum doe as well also conclude Contra Coronam Dignitatem c. The third reason is this A body politique can neither make nor take Homage 33. H. 8. Bro. tit Fealty Therefore cannot the King in his Politique Capacity take Legiance The first must be granted onely sub modo for though it cannot take Homage immediately yet by the means of the Naturall Capacity it may take such service and therefore that Rule holds onely where the Body Politique is not aggregate and not one person in severall Capacities for the Tenant that performes his service to his Lord performs the same to his Lord in his Naturall Capacity but it is in relation to his Politique Capacity as he is his Lord For Lord and Tenant King and Subject are but Notions and neither can give nor take service but that man that is Lord or Tenant or King or Subject may even as the power of Protection is in a King not as he is a Man but as a King The fourth reason is this The Kings naturall Person hath right in the Crowne by Inheritance therefore also in the Legiance of the Subject This is the strength as nigh as I can collect of that which is set down as a sixth reason but I make it the fourth because the third as I conceive is but an illustration of the second and the fifth is upon a supposall of a Fides ficta whereas that Faith of an English Subject which is according to Law is the truer of the twaine But to the substance of this fourth reason If the first be granted yet the Reporter cannot attain his conclusion for the King may in his Naturall Capacity have right to the Crowne by Inheritance and yet not right in the Legiance of his Subjects otherwise then in right of the Crowne As in the Case of Lord and Tenant the Lord may inherite the Lordship in his naturall Capacity but the Service is due to him as Lord and not as by Inheritance in the Service in the abstract And though it be granted that the Legiance to a King is of a higher strain then that of a Tenant to his Lord fol. 4. b. 5. a. Yet doth the Reporter bring nothing to light to prove them to be of a different Nature in this regard The fifth and last reason that commeth to consideration is from a Testimony of the Parliament for it is said That this damnable Tenet of Legiance to the King in his Politique Capacity is condemned by two Parliaments But in truth I can finde but one under that Title that mentioneth this Opinion and that is called Exilium Hugonis which in summe is nothing else but Articles containing an enumeration of the particular offences of the two Spencers against the State and the Sentence thereupon The offences are for compassing to draw the King by rigor to govern according to their wills for withdrawing him from hearkning to the advice of his Lords for hindering of Justice and Oppression and as a means hereunto They caused a Bill or Scedule to be published containing that Homage and Legiance is due to the King rather in relation to the Crowne then absolutely to his Person because no Legiance is due to him before the Crowne be vested upon him That if the King doe not govern according to Law the Leiges in such case are bound by their Oath to the Crown to remove him either by Law or Rigor This is the substance of the Charge and upon this exhibited in the Lords House the Lords super totam materiam banish them before their Case is heard or themselves had made any appearance thereto So as to the matter of this Scedule which contains an Opinion suitable to the Point in hand with some additionall aggravations the Parliament determineth nothing at all but as to the publishing of the same to the intent to gather a party whereby they did get power to act other enormities mentioned in the Charge and in relation to these enormities the Lords proceeded to Sentence of banishment all which was done in the presence of the King and by his disconsent as may appear by his discontent thereat as all Historians of those Affaires witnesse and it is not probable that the King
the most part grounded upon self respects and private prudence laboured to conceale that which could not be made whole by revealing and by after consent skind over the sore as to themselves which corrupted inwardly and indangered the whole body to cure which a Law is made to restrain such late connivance in the Woman by depriving her both of her Joyncture and Inheritance which otherwise had been saved to her by such compliance as after consent unto such violations CHAP. X. Of the Course of Civill Justice during these Times HOwever the course of the Law concerning matters of the Crown passed in a troubled wave yet in matters of Common Pleas it passed in a calme and full Channell as the Reports in Print doe sufficiently witnesse nor was their any change of Principles but onely some alteration tending to a clearer manifestation of the same I will not touch upon every particular but onely upon two which reflect somewhat upon the Publique pollicy the one touching the course of Inheritance in some particular Cases the other touching pleading in the Courts of Civill Justice The first of these was occasioned from Conjuncture of Affaires the Case being such that Edward the Third had now gotten himselfe a new Kingdome unto that of England and must looke to maintaine that by Power which he obtained by force and conducing thereunto must have continuall imployment of the English in that Service as being most trusty to his Cause And that it is un reasonable that such English as had devoted themselves to his Service in this Cause and in order thereunto had transported themselves and their Families into those Forrain parts should thereby loose the benefit of Leiges in the Birth-right of their Children borne in those Forraine parts Upon consideration had hereof and of a former leading Opinion of the Lawyers and Parliament a Declarative Law was made That all Children borne without the Kings Legiance whose Father and Mother at the time of their Birth shall be under the Faith and Legiance of the King of England shall have the benefit of Inheritance within the same Legiance as other Inheritors have These are the words of the Statute and doe occasion a double observation one from the matter the other from the manner of the Expression The Subject matter is so delivered not as an Introduction of a new Law but as a Declarative of the old that lay more obscurely hidden for want of occasion to reveale it and the substance thereof resteth onely in this to enable the Children of English Natives borne beyond the Seas not the Children of those that are of Forraine birth though within the Kings Teritories in those parts as the opinion hath beene nor doth any ancient President or Case warrant the same as might be at large manifested if it might conduce to the end of this discourse and for the same cause after this Statute when as the Commons would have had a generall Naturalizing of all Infants borne beyond the Sea within the Kings Segniories the same would not be granted otherwise then according to the former Statute and the Common Law That which in the next place concerneth the manner of expression is this That a Childe is said to be borne out of the Kings Legiance and yet the Father and Mother at the same time to be of the Faith and Legiance of the King of England It seemeth to me that it intendeth onely those Children of English Parents borne within the Kings Teritories beyond the Seas because the words insuing concerning Certification of Bastardy of such Children are that the same shall be made by the Bishop of such place upon the Kings Writ directed to him which could never have passed into those places that are not of the Kings Teritories and so the Issue will be that the Legiance of those born in those parts though they are Leiges to the King yet they are not of the Legiance of the King of England but as Lord of that Teritory The other matter to be observed concerning pleading in the Courts of Civill Justice is this That whereas anciently from the Normans time till these times the pleadings were in the Norman tongue they shall be henceforth in English out of an inconvenience I beleive rather supposed then felt for though some kinde of knowledge of Law-termes may be increased thereby yet unlesse that shall be professedly studied it will breed nothing but Notions and they an overweening conceit which many times sets men to suites in Law to their owne losse like some weake influence of the Celestiall bodies that are strong enough to stirre up humours but not to expell them or draw them out However even thus in part is the reproach of Normandy rolled away like that of Egypt from the Israelites at Mount Gilgall CHAP. XI Of the Militia in these Times WArre is ever terrible but if just and well governed majesticall the one may excite resistance and defence but the other Conquers before blow given because it convinceth the judgement and so prevails upon the Conscience For that heart can never be resolute in its own defence that is at Warre with its own understanding nor can such a heart consider such a Warre otherwise then as Divine and bearing the face of an Ordinance of God and then how can the Issue be unsuccessfull It is no strange thing for Kings to miscarry in their Warres because it s rarely seen that they are under good Councell but if a Christian Councell miscarry we may conclude it extraordinary in the efficient Cause and no lesse wonderful in the issue and end Upon this ground it concerneth a Christian Nation not onely in point of Honour but of safety and continuance to settle fundamentall Lawes for War against time of War as of Peace in time of Peace Neither was England deficient herein saving that ancient times were more obscure in the particulars and these dayes revealed them at such a time wherein we may say that Edward the Third approved himself not onely King of England but of himself above the ordinary strain of expectation for being now become a famous Commander and Conquerour having also an Army inured to fight and overcome and so might have given a Law he neverthelesse received the same submitting both it and himself to the Directory of the Parliament in making a Warre with France which was three to one against him in every respect but in the Title besides the disadvantage from Scotland that lay continually beating upon his reare The like may be observed of his Warre with Scotland in both which he evidently telleth the World that he held it unreasonable to enter upon the managing of an offensive Forraine Warre without the concurrence of the common consent of the people and that not onely for the thing it selfe but also for his owne personall ingagement in the Service For a King though he be the Generalissimo yet is he so from the people and his person being of that
high value is not to be exposed to every occasion that may provoke Warre without due advice first had with the publique Councell because in his person the people adventureth as well as himself And in this manner were the Warres in France by Edward the Third and in Scotland concluded upon debate In the next place as touching the arraies of Men for Warre I finde no foot-steps of any power which was claimed as peculiar to the King therein and acknowledged by the Parliament but many instances do I meet with in the opposite all which do plainly tell us that the old shifts of Jurati and obligati ad arma could do little either in the calling of men forth or arming them for the Warr. But in case of publique defence against forrainers men were summoned upon their Legiance as anciently was used And this was by both King and Parliament fully declared and all such obligations by writing called in and damned as dishonorable to the King In forraine service the course was no lesse regular if the Warr was by especiall direction of the Parliament they likewise ordered the manner of the raising of Souldiers Viz. So many out of a County and so many out of a Burrough all which are by the expresse words of the Statute said to be granted by the Knights and Burgesses But if it was only upon the Kings particular instigation and not by order or consent of the Parliament the King in such cases being Volunteir all the Souldiers were in like manner unlesse some particular Law or Tenure otherwise obleiged them As touching the arming of Souldiers the Law was yet more certaine and particular If the Souldiers were men of estate they were armed according to the ancient rule asserted by the Statute at Winton or otherwise were especially assessed by the Parliament or by vertue of their Tenures the first of these is confirmed by Edward the third in Parliament wherein he willeth that no man shal be urged to arme himselfe otherwise then hee was wont in the times of his Ancestors Kings of England The two later were likewise confirmed by another Law made in the same Kings time whereby it was ordained that no manshall be constrained to find men of armes Hoblers nor Archers other then those which hold by such services if it be not by common consent and grant made in Parliament By men of Armes meaning those which we now call Curiasseires or compleat armed by Hoblers meaning those now called light horse-men The Archers served on foot and were Principally armed with Bowes although they had also Swords or other such offensive portable Weapons The first of these concerneth only the arming of a mans owne person the other the finding of Souldiers and arming of them and both together sufficient for the safegard of the rights and liberties of the people invaded in those times by Commissions of array and such other expressions of Prerogative Royall for as touching the arming of a mans owne Person the Statute of 1. Ed. 3. formerly mentioned is cleare in the point And though the Statute of 25. Edw. 3. doth not in the letter direct as touching the finding armes for others as is urged in his Majesties answer to the Declaration of the Parliament concerning the Commission of Array July 4. 1642. yet is it therein granted that a compleate Souldier is within the Letter of the Statute and seeing the person of the Souldier is not in the power of any private Person in such cases to command him to the service it seemeth cleare to me that the Statute must intend the arming of him with compleat armes and not the armed person of the man The souldery thus arrayed they are in the next place to be called by their Rendezvouz the Knights by summons sent to the Sheriff but the rest by Proclamation If the Knights appeare not a fine is let upon them if others runne a way from their conduct a Writt issued to the Serjeant at armes to apprehend them if they were not arrayed then the recognisances of such as undertooke the worke are estreated All plunder or spoile committed by the Soudiers in their conduct was to be satisfied by the Conductor or Commander that received their Pay or Charges for their conduct And although the charges for conduct had formerly De facto been defraied somtimes by the County by vertue of Commissions that issued forth both for the raising and conducting of them yet was this no rule nor did Edward the third claime any such duty but disclaimed it and ordained by Act of Parliament that both the pay and conduct Money should be disbursed by the King from the time of their departure from their severall Counties For to this end and for the safegard of the Realme And for the maintenance of the Warrs of Scotland France and Gascoigne The King had supply from Aids Releifs Wardships Marriages Customes and Escheats nor did the Parliament grant any particular Aide by assessment or publique Taxe but when they evidently saw the burden of Warr to be extraordinary as it befell in the Conquest of so great and potent a Realme as France was Wherein although the Taxes were many yet so well ordered were they and with that compliance from the King that the people indured them with much patience so long as the King lived Lastly in all these Cases of forraine Warrs for of such Cases onely these Laws are to be understood it was especially provided that no man should be distrained or urged against his will to goe out of his County But in Case of defensive Warr the course was otherwise for all men in such Cases are bound by the Law of Nature to defend their owne Countrey from Invasion in order to the safety of their owne Estates and habitations They were arrayed or gathered together by Commission of Array from the King armed according to the Laws formerly mentioned and not by arbitrary order of the Commissioners And by vertue of such Commissions they were drawne forth and led to places where need required Sometimes to one Coast sometimes to another yet not altogether at the Kings pleasure for the Parliament upon occasion set rules of restriction and generally exempted the North parts beyond Humber from being drawn Southward and left them as a reserve for the defence of the Marches bordering upon Scotland and sometimes ordered the Array should be executed onely in some particular Counties and other times wholy exempted the Countrey adjacent within six miles of the Sea Coast And because the King might under colour of a defence Array the People where no such occasion led the way and command them out of their Countyes a Statute is made that states the Case wherein such Array shall be the words whereof are variously set forth in the Bookes in Print whether determinatively or carelesly I cannot tell but all of them doe differ in sence one from another and
from the Truth some of the common Books have the words thus None shall be destrained to goe out of their Counties unlesse for cause of necessity and of sudden coming of Strangers or Enemies into the Kingdome Others reade it thus But where necessity requireth and the coming of strange Enemies into the Kingdome The Kings answer to the Parliaments Declaration concerning the Commission of Array would reade it thus Vnlesse in case of Necessity or of sudden coming of strange Enemies c. But the words in the Roll are these Et que nulls ne soient distresses d'aller hors de les Countees Si non pur Cause de necessity de suddaine venue des Stranges Enemies en Reqaulme In English thus word for word And that none be destrained to goe out of the Counties if not for cause of Necessity of sudden coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdome which words determine the Point That none shall be by Commission of Array drawn out of their County but in case of Necessity And secondly that this Case of Necessity is onely the coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdome so as probably the Invasion must be actuall before they be drawn out of their Counties and not onely feared and it must be a sudden Invasion and not of publique note and common fame foregoing for then the ordinary course either of Parliament or otherwise must be used to call those that are bound by Statute or Tenures or Volunteires to that Service seeing every Invasion is not so fatall as to require a Commission for a Generall Array Against what hath been thus noted the judgement of Sir Edward Coke in Calvins Cafe lies yet in the way who affirmeth that the Subjects of England are bound by their Legiance to goe with the King in his Warres as well within the Realme as without and this Legiance he telleth us is that Naturall Legiance which he saith is absolute and Indefinite c. and not Locall which if not so then were not the English bound to go out of England an inference that is neither necessary nor is the thing affirmed certain It is not necessary because English men may be bound to goe out of England by vertue of their Tenures particular Contract or else by speciall Act of Parliament and not by vertue of that Naturall Legiance which in Truth is no where Now for the maintenance of the Point the Reporter alledgeth two Statutes affirming the thing and Common practice and lastly Authorities of the Judges of the Common Law As touching the Statutes one in Henry the Sevenths time and the other in Edward the Sixths time I shall speake of them in the succeeding times when we come at them for they are no Warrant of the Law in these times whereof we now treat much lesse is the modern practice of these later dayes a Demonstration of the Law in the times of Edward the Third nor of the Nature of the Law in any time seeing that it is obvious to times as well as particular Persons to doe and suffer things to be done which ought not so to be and therefore I shall for the present lay those two Considerations aside But as touching the Opinions of the Judges of the Common Law two Cases are cited in the Affirmative which seeme in the Negative and the rest conclude not to the Point The first of the two cases is the opinion of Justice Thirning in the time of Henry the Fourth word for word thus A Protection lies for the Defendant in a Writ upon the Statute of Labourers and yet the Defendant shall not have such matter by way of Plea Viz. That the King hath retained him to goe beyond the Sea for the King cannot compell a man to goe out of the Kingdome That is as the Reporter saith Not without Wages intimating thereby that if the King shall tender wages to any man he must goe whither the King shall please to send him which is not onely destructive to the opinion of Thirning concerning the Plea but also though granted is destructive to the Reporters judgement in the main point For if an English man may refuse to goe without wages then is he not bound to goe by any naturall absolute Legiance as the Reporter would have it And as touching the second Case which is Bigots and Bohuns Case it cleareth the same thing for it was resolved that they ought to goe but in manner and form according to the Statutes then is not the ground in the absolute Legiance for that is not qualified but in the Positive Statute-Law which tieth onely in manner and form and that by voluntary consent in Parliament The rest of the Cases do neither conclude the main point nor the particular thing that the Reporter intendeth for he would imply to the Reader that English men were anciently used to be imprested for the Warres in France and hereunto he voucheth one Authority out of ancient Reports of Law in Edward the Thirds time one authority in the time of Henry the Fourth and three in the time of Henry the Sixth none of all which doe speake one word concerning impresting and that in Edward the hird doth imply the contrary for the Case is that in a Praecipe quod reddat a Protection was offered by the Defendant as appointed to goe beyond Sea with the Duke of Lancaster and the Plaintiffes Councell alledged that the Defendant had been beyond Sea with the Duke and was returned To this the Defendants Councell answered that the Duke was ready to return again and for this cause the Protection was allowed Yet a Quere is made upon this ground that it might be that the Defendant would not goe over with him nor was it proved that he would which sheweth plainly the party was not imprested for then the thing had not been in his power to will or nill The last instance that the Reporter produceth is that of Forinsecum Servitium or Forrain Service and that seemerh to be Knight Service to be performed abroad But this falleth short of the Reporters intention in three respects First though it belongeth to the King yet not to him onely but to other cheif Lords so saith Bracton Secondly it is not due from every English man And lastly it is a Service due by vertue of Tenure and then the Conclusion will be That which is due by Tenure of Lands is not due by naturall and absolute Legiance and so this Forrain Service arising meerly by compact and agreement between Lord and Tenant and not by the naturall duty of an English born Subject which is the thing that the Reporter driveth at in all this discourse will be so far from maintaining the Reporters opinion as it will evidently destroy the same And thus the Posture of this Nation in the Feild remaineth regular in the rule what ever hath been said against it notwithstanding that in the very instant of Action there may be some
tokens and liveries utterly inhibiting the meaner sort of the people from giving of Liveries to maintain quarrells upon pain of Fine and Imprisonment and the triall to be before the Justices of Assize which it seems was in affirmance of former Lawes as by the Preamble of the Statute doth appeare though the Lawes themselves are not extant About fifteen years after it was by sad experience found that the Lords maintained quarrells by multitude of Liveries and therefore another Law was made inhibiting the Lords to give Liveries to any but their meniall Servants and it s ordered that the Justices of the Peace shall make inquiry of such offences and punish them according to their discretion A third prevention was provided against gathering together of parties after they are sorted For the humors may so abound as nothing will keep them in they must either breake out into a sore or a long sicknes of State will certainly follow To this end therefore the Statute made at Northampton is again revived expresly forbidding all Persons to ride Armed unles in some particular Cases of executing Justice or guarding the Person of the King or his Justices and such like And if men will be so adventerous as to outdare Law by publique force Troopings together and Riotous ridings Another course is taken not by Commission of the Peace but rather of Warre directed unto valiant persons in every County and they have power thereby to apprehend such Offenders and imprison them untill the Goale-delivery though no Indictment be found thereof untill the Goale-delivery shall be By this Commission therefore power is given of Posse Comitatus in nature of a Commission of Array with an additionall power of fighting and destroying so as though the King granteth the Power by the Commission yet the Parliament giveth the power to the Commission and be it a Commission for Peace or Warre it is Originally from that power The fourth and last prevention was the taking away means of continuance and supporting such Riotous wayes Viz. Castles and Goales out of the Custody of private hands and restoring them to their Counties For Goales and Castles are taken promiscuously for places of security in times of Peace to keep ill persons from going out and in times of Warre from getting in Amongst these some belonged to the King and were committed to such as he favoured who commonly in such times of Oppression and Violence grew too big for Justice usurping a Gaole-delivery and making such places of strength many times even to the innocent a Prison to keep them from the Law but unto guilty persons an Assilum to defend them against the Law And these thus belonging to the King were under no Law but of Prerogative whereas other Castles of private persons were under the yoake of the Statute 13 E. 1. For remedy of all which the Kings Castles are once more returned to the Sheriffes Custody by Act of Parliament who questionlesse hath the power to dispose of all places of Strength whether in order to Peace or Warre and could not dispose them into a more fafe and indifferent hand then the Sheriffes who is as well the Kings Officer as the Kingdomes Servant and much intrusted by the Law in the execution of its owne power And thus is this Nation now prepared for a settled Peace a Condition that is long in ripening and soon rotten unlesse it be well fenced and over-awed by a good Conscience But Richard the Second was neither so good nor so happy his Heart affected to be high but his Head could not bear it he turns giddy and runs far wide Those that would reduce him he inforces into Forrain Countries and himselfe holds on his careere over hedge and ditch into Ireland where under pretention of holding Possession of that Kingdome he lost England and whiles he playes his game in that Country another playes King by your leave in this and steps into the Throne teaching the King thereby this lesson though too late That Nonresidency is dangerous for a Preist but unto a Prince fatall unlesse his Subjests be fast to him when he is loose to them CHAP. XIII A view of the summary Courses of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth in their severall Reignes HE that played this pranke was the banished Duke of Hertford sonne of John of Gaunt and by his death now become Duke of Lancaster by Title and as the times then were it proved not hard to get more For in uncertain Common-wealths it is an easie thing for a man of opinion that hath lesse then his due to get more then he ought As sonne of John of Gaunt this Duke had the peoples good wishes he a wise and a brave man and under oppression gained the more upon the people by how much they love brave men and compassionate such as suffer wrong especially from such persons from whom they all found the like measure All these concurring with the Kings absence invited the Duke to adventure himself upon the influence of the peoples favour to gain his own right and what more the people would allow him and if no more yet his Honour is saved he came for his own and attained his end Thus then he comes over without Army or Forraine power or other help saving the advice and interest of Arch-Bishop Arundell who was his Companion in suffering Partner in the Cause and no lesse welcome to the Clergy then the Duke himself was to the people and so gained power to the Duke though he brought none Upon their Arivall the aspects of all are benigne the Dukedome waits for him and in that as in a mirrour he beholds the way fair and easie yet further it pities him to see the Kingdome so torne in peices and spoyled The People knew him able and hoped him willing to amend all they offer him their Service which he accepts and therewith the Crowne so hard a thing it is for to put a stop to a Conquerour in his careere By this time was the Duke of Hertford thus become Duke of Lancaster and King of England under the name of Henry the Fourth by a designe that in the proof was more easie then commendable and which being effected cost more skill to make that seem fair which was so foul then to accomplish the thing He therefore first heaps together Titles enough to have buried the clamour of Usurpation if it would have succeeded Conquest was a Title freest from dispute whiles Power holds but it lookes better from a Forrain Enemy then one sworn to the English Crowne and therefore after that had served his turne he disclaymed it as that which was though meet enough to have yet unmeet to hold His right by Designation from his Predecessour he glanced upon but durst not adventure it too deep into the Peoples consideration whose Ancestors had formerly over-ruled the Case against King John He then stayed upon a concealed Title from a concealed Sonne of
Henry the Third of whom they who listed might be perswaded but few beleived the thing nor did himself but thence takes his flight up to a Jus Divinum or some hidden Fate that called him to the worke but even there his wings failed him and so he falls flat upon the Peoples Election De bene esse Some of these or all together might make Title enough for a great man that resolved to hold by hooke what he had got by crooke and therefore trussing them up all together he enters his claime to the Crown As comming from the blood Royall from King Henry and through the Right that God his grace hath sent me with the help of my Kinne and Freinds to recover the same which was in point to be undone for want of good Governance and due Justice The extract of all is that he was chosen by the People and Parliament then sitting And allbeit that by the Resignation of Richard the Second the Parliament might seem in strict construction of Law to be expired together with the Kings power who called them together yet did not that Parliament so apprehend the matter but proceeded not onely to definitive Sentence of Deposing him but declared themselves by their Commissaries to be the three States and Representative of the People of England maintaining thereby their subsistency by the Consistence of the Members together although their Cheif was for the present like a head in a trance till they had chosen Henry the Fourth to succeed in the Throne by this means preventing the conceit of discontinuance in the very Bud of the Notion Much like his entry was his continuance a continuall tide of Forraine and Domesticke Warre and Conspiracy enough to exercise his great Courage although he was more Wise then Warlike being loath to take up Armes for well he knew that a sick Title never sleeps but in a Bed of Peace and more loth to lay them down for besides Victory whereby he gained upon his Enemies in time of Warre he knew how to make advantage of them in time of Peace to secure his Freinds to keep others in awe to inforce such Lawes as stood with reason of State and the present posture of Affaires and where Lawes failed to fill up the period with Dictates of his owne will And upon this Account the Product was a government full of Ulcers of Blood-shed without regard of Persons whether of the Lay or Religious Order without Legall triall or priviledge of Clerke So was Arch Bishop Walden Dethroned Arch Bishop Scroope put to death and Dukes were dismounted without Conviction or Imputation saving of the Kings displeasure Taxes multiplied although begotten they were upon the Parliament like some monstrous Births shewne to the World to let it know what could be done but concealed by Historians to let it know what may not be done Yea the priviledges of Parliament invaded in point of Election A thing that none of his Predecessors ever Exemplyfied to him nor none of his Successors ever Imitated him in nor had he purposed it but that he was loath the People should know more of the Government then needs must To keep off Forrain troubles he made Peace with France for longer time then he lived yet was ever infested with the Sword of Saint Paul in behalf of Richard the Seconds Queene and with the Factions betweene the Houses of Orleance and Burgundy in which he had interested himselfe to preserve the Forraine Neighbour-hood in Parties one against another that himselfe might attend his owne Security at home He would have moved the Scots but they were already under English Banners nor could he reach so farre having so many Enemies even in his owne bosome The Welsh were big with Antiquity and Mountains of Defence they beginne to bethinke themselves of their Ancient Principality hold the Kings Armes at hard Duty till by Lawes enacted in Parliament they lost their Liberties of bearing Office Ministeriall or of Judicature of holding Castle of Convention without the Kings Licence yea of Purchase and so by degrees were brought downe from the height of a Free Principality to be starved in their Power and inferiour to a Free People And thus the Welsh on the one side the discontented Lords on the other and Mortimars Title in all so busied the King as though he lopped off the tops as they sprang up yet they sprang forth as they were lopped nor was it the Kings lot all this while to finde out the Root of All or to strike at that Lastly when time had made all troublers weary yet he stil sits upon thornes he was jealous of his Subjects jealous of his Son yea jealous of himself It being ever the first and last of his thoughts how to keep his Crowne For the most part of his Reigne he was troubled with the walking Ghosts of Richard the second ever and anon he was alive he was here he was there and so the Peoples mindes were alwayes kept at random but when all these Spirits are conjured downe Richard the seconds Ghoste is yet within Henries owne breast So ruled Henry the fourth an unhappy confident man that durst undertake more then he would did more then he ought was successfull in what he did yet never attained his end to be sure of his Crowne and quiet of minde For a plaister to this sore he turned somewhat towards Religion but shewed it more in Zeale to Church-men then workes of Piety and therefore may be thought to regard them rather as his best freinds in right of Arch Bishop Arundell then as in relation to Religion yet as if he overlooked that he desires their prayers becomes a strict observer of superstitious rights is fiery Zealous against the Lollards intends a journey into the holy Land and Warr against the Infidels the common Physick of guilty Kings in those dayes Breifly he did will to do any thing but undoe what he had done and had done more had his journey to the holy Land succeeded but whither hastned or delayed by a prophesie of the ending of his dayes falls not within my Penn to censure entring upon the worke he died in the beginning of his purposes in the midst of his feares never came to the holy Land and yet yeilded up his last breath in Jerusalem THe Parliament was then sitting and was witnesse of the death of Henry the fourth as it had beene of his entrance upon the Throne as if purposed to see to the cours of the Crowne in the doubtfull currant betweene the two Houses of Lancaster and Yorke and to maintaine their own honor in directing the Scepter according to their warranty upon a late intaile by act of Parliament yet did not all rest upon this for the Heire of Henry the fourth was a man every inch of him and meant not to Moote upon the point His Father died a King and he his Heire had the Crowne and was resolved to hold it A rough young man he
had beene formerly and bold enough to outface small doubts in point of succession for he could for a need outface common civility it selfe This might have lien in his way for he that cannot govern himselfe can much lesse govern a Kingdome Yet a hidden Providence concluded quite contrary and rendred him a cleare testimony of a strange change by the annointing oyle like that of Saul that forthwith had the Spirit of another man So though not hammered thereto by affliction as was Edward the first yet was he his parallell in Government and superiour in successe Being seated in the Throne all men thought it dangerous to abide the adventure of the turne of this Kings Spirit The Clergy had but yesterday tryed the Mastery with the Laity and gained it but by one Vote there was no dealing with the Clergy while Arch Bishop Arundell lived nor with him whiles Henry the fourth lived or his merits were in memory but now they both are dead the Clergy and the Laity are upon even ground this might make the Clergy now not over confident The Lords looked on the King as a man like enough to strike him that stands next The wise men saw he would be doing all men were tired with intestine quarrells and jumped in one that he that would be in action should act abroad where he might get renowne and a purchase big enough for his Spirit Scotland was a Kingdome yet incompetent to the Kings appetite France was the fairer marke and better game and though too big for the English gripe yet the Eagle stooped and sped himselfe so well as within six yeares he fastned upon the Sword and Scepter and a daughter of France and might have seised the Crowne but chose to suffer a blurr to lye upon his title derived from Edward the third rather then to incurr the Censure of Arrogancy over a stooping enemy or to Pluck the fruit from the tree before it was fully ripe which in time would fall into his lap by a better Law then that of the Sword otherwise it might be well conceited that he that hath both right and Power and will not seise disclaimes Besides the King was as well Inheritor to his Fathers Fate as Crowne still he had successe but the end was so farr distant that he died in the way thereto The brave Dauphine of France maintaining Warr after his Father the French King had yeilded up the Bucklers to Henry the fifth till Henry the fifth died and the English did foregoe what they had formerly gotten in France by the Sword of that great Commander Nor did the English gaine any thing in the conclusion of this Warr but an honorable windy repute of being one of the five cheif Nations of Christendome if honor it be to be reputed amongst the Nations a Conquerer of France the cheif Leader unto the dethroning of three Popes at once the election of Pope Martin and of giving a cure to that deadly wound of the Popedome which had spent the bloud of two hundred thousand mens lives lost in that quarrell These forraine ingagements made the King lesse solicitous of point of Prerogative at home and the rather because he knew the way to conquer his private enemies armes and his Subjects hearts without losse of honor in the one or reverence in the other He loved justice above the ranke of his Predecessors and in some respects above himselfe for he advanced Gascoigne for doing justice though to the Kings owne shame He liked not to intrude himselfe into elections and therefore though requested by the Monks of Canterbury he would not nominate a Successor to Arch Bishop Arundell but left the whole worke to them In the authority of his place he was moderate and where his Predecessors did matters without the Lords consent when he made his Uncle the Marquis of Dorcet Duke of Exceter and had given him a pention to maintaine that honor he asked the Lords consent thereto To the Clergy he was more then just if not indulgent led thereto by his Fathers example as being wrapped up in the same Interest as I conceive rather then out of any liking of their wayes now growing more bold upon usurpation then in former times Or it may be that having prevailed in that work in France which to any rationall man must needs appear above the power of the King and all the Realm of England he looked upon it as more then humane and himself as an instrument of Miracles and was stirred up in his zeal to God according to his understanding in those darke times to give the Clergy scope and to pleasure them with their liberty of the Canon Law that began now to thunder with fire and terror in such manner that neither greatnesse nor multitude could withstand the dint as was evidenced in that Penance inflicted upon the Lord Strange and his Lady in Case of bloodshed in Holy Ground and their hot pursuit of the Lord Cobham unto a death of a new Nature for somewhat done which was sometimes called Treason and sometimes Heresie And thus became Henry the Fifth baptized in the flames of the Lollards as his Father had sadly rendered up his Spirit in the same I say in this he is to be looked upon as one misled for want of light rather then in opposition against the light For in his last Will wherein men are wont to be more serious and sincere amongst his private regards he forgets not to reflect upon Religion to this purpose We further bequeath saith he to the redundant Mercy of the most excellent Saviour the Faith Hope and Charity the Vertue Prosperity and Peace of the Kings our Successours and of our Kingdome of England that God for his Goodnesse sake would Protect Visite and Defend them from Divisions Dissensions and from all manner of deceitfulnesse of Heretiques And thus Piety Justice and Moderation of Henry the Fifth Adorned and Crowned the honour of his Courage and Greatnesse with that honourable Title of Prince of Preists and had he been blessed with a clearer light he might as well under God have obtained the Title of Prince of Princes wanting nothing that might have rendered him a president of Fame BUt the time is now come that the Tide of Englands Glory must turn and the sudden Conquest in France by Henry the Fifth not unlike the Macedonian Monarchy must disgorge it selfe of what it had hastily devoured but never could digest Three things concurred hereunto one dangerous the other two fatall to the flourishing condition of any Nation First the King is a Minor in the least degree that ever any Prince sate on English Throne He entered thereinto neither knowing what he did nor where he was and some say he sate therein in his Mothers lap for his life had been more in the wombe then abroade A sad presage of what followed for many men thinke that he was in a lap all his dayes Nor are the cheife men to be
blamed herein for its a certain Truth that its much better that Election of a King should be grounded upon a rule that is known though it be by discent of Inheritance then upon none at all For if a Childe should succeed or a Lunaticke yet where the Principle of Government resteth upon the Representative of the People there is the lesse cause of complaint the Government being still the same both for Wisedome Strength and Uniformity though it may be the Nation not so active and brave For a Common-wealth can admit of no Minority though a Monarchy by descent may Secondly this deficiency in Nature might have been supplied but that these times were unhappy in the great power of the Lords to please whom the Government is parcelled out into two shares One is made Protectour of the Kings Person the other Protectour of the Kingdome too many by one For let their Persons be never so eminent for Abilities if they be not as eminent for Humility and selfe-Command their hearts will soon over-rule their heads into a Faction And therefore though the Earle of Warwicke was a wise man and the Duke of Glocester a wise man yet the Earle of Warwicke with the Duke of Glocester were not wise On the other side the Protectorship of the Kings Person being in the Duke of Exceter and that of the Realm in the Duke of Glocester things succeeded passing well for they both had one publique aime and the Duke of Exceter could comply with the Spirit of the Duke of Glocester who otherwise was not so pliant But after five years the Duke of Exceter dying and the government of the Kings Person devolving to the Earle of Warwicke who sided with the proud Cardinall of Winchester against the Duke of Glocester and so not onely consumed the rest of the Kings Nonage in a restlesse disturbance of Affaires but also dispoyled Henry the Sixth of the spirit of a King for the future and so the Kingdome of a King For it was not the condition of Henry the Sixth to be indowed with a spirit of such height but might well have been led by advice and needed not the Earle of Warwicke rugged brow to overlooke him who was not content to have the King onely attendant upon his advice but must likewise have him under his rod to be corrected for his faults and that by a Commission under the Kings owne hand and seale dated in the eleventh yeare of the Kings Reigne and so under colour of Curbing he killed that spirit in the King which otherwise doubt lesse had both spirit and pride enough to act himself above his due height and could not have been so long a Childe and so little a Man as he was It is very true that Henry the Fifth by Will seemed to countenance his Brothers and it cannot be denied but the Duke of Glocester was of such noble parts that they could hardly dilate in any work inferiour to the government of a Kingdome Neverthelesse to yeild much to the will of a diseased King in such Cases is as ill a President as the making of a King by Adoption and it had been better for the People to have adhered to the Duke of Glocester alone then by joyning him with another bring into president such a luxurient Complement of State as a Protectorship of a Kingdome which is of such little use to a Common-wealth and of so bitter Fruit to the Party as must needs bring repentance when it is too late For he that can manage the Protectorship of a Realme without anger of good men or envy of bad men is fitting to live onely with Angels and too good for the World Nor did the Duke of Glocester meet with better measure how wise soever he was and truely devoted to the good of the Realme For after foure and twenty years government so wisely and faithfully carried on by him that Justice it self could not touch his Person unjustice did and he received this reward from his Nephew Henry the Sixth that he died in the darke because the Cause durst not indure the light Now is Henry the Sixth perswaded that he is of full age he had laid aside his Guardian the Duke of Glocester but forgetting to sue out his Livery he betakes himself from the Grace of God into the warm Sunne as the Proverb is changing the advice of a faithfull experienced wise Councellour for the government of an Imperious Woman his Queen who allowed him no more of a King then the very Name and that also she abused to outface the World and after she had removed the Duke of Glocester out of the way undertook the sway of the Kingdome in her own Person being a Forrainer neither knowing nor caring for other Law then the will of a Woman Thus the glory of the House of Lancaster goes down and now a Star of the House of Yorke appears in the rising and the People looke to it The Queene hereat becomes a Souldier and begins the Civill Warres between the two Houses wherein her English party growing wise and weary she prayes aide of Ireland a Nation that like unto Crowes ever wait to prey upon the infirmities of England The Warres continue about sixteen yeares by fits wherin the first losse fell to the English party the pretentions being yet onely for good Government Then the Feild is quiet for about foure yeares after which the clamor of ill Government revives and together therewith a claime to the Crown by the House of Yorke is avouched thereupon the Warres grew hot for about foure yeares more and then an ebbe of as long quiet ensues The Tide at last returnes and in two yeares Warre ends the quarrell with the death of fourescore Princes of the blood Royall and of this good man but unhappy King Unhappy King I say that to purchase his Kingdomes Freedome from a Forraine Warre sold himselfe to a Woman and yet lost his bargaine and left it to Observation That a Conscientious man that marries for by-regards never thrives For France espied their advantage they had maintained Warre with England from the death of Henry the Fifth with various successe The Duke of Bedford being Regent for the English for the space of fourteen yeares mightily sustained the fainting condition of the English affaires in those parts and having Crowned his Master Henry the Sixth in Paris in the ninth yeare died leaving behinde him an Honourable Witnesse even from his Enemies That he was a brave Commander a true Patriot and a faithfull Servant to his Lord and Brother Henry the Fifth and to his Sonne Henry the Sixth But now the Duke of Bedford is dead and though France had concluded a Peace with the English yet they could not forget the smart of their Rod but concluded their Peace upon a Marriage to be had with a Woman of their own blood and interest and what they could not effect by Armes in their own Feild they did upon English ground by a
feminine Spirit which they sent over into England to be their Queen and in one Civill Warre shedding more English blood by the English Sword then they could formerly doe by all the men of France were revenged upon England to the full at the English mens own charge For what the English gain by the Sword is commonly lost by discourse A Kingdome is never more befooled then in the Marriage of their King if the Lady be great she is good enough though as Jezabell she will not either reverence her Husband obey her Lord and King nor regard his People And thus was this Kingdome scourged by a marriage for the sinne of the Wise men that building upon a false Foundation advised the King in the breach of Contract with the Earle of Arminiacks Daughter And thus the King also for that hearkning to such Councell he murthered the Duke of Glocester that had been to him a Father yeilded up his Power to his Queen A Masterlesse and proud Woman that made him like a broken Idol without use suffered a Recovery of his Crown and Scepter in the Parliament from his owne Issue to the Line of Yorke then renewing the Warre at his Queens beck lost what he had left of his Kingdome Countrey and Liberty and like the King that forgot the kindnesse of Jehojada lost his life by the hand of his Servant CHAP. XIV Of the Parliament during the Reignes of these Kings THe interest of the Parliament of England is never more Predominant then when Kings want Title or Age The first of these was the Case of Henry the Fourth immediately but of them all in relation to the pretended Law of the Crown but Henry the Sixth had the disadvantage of both whereof in its due place The pretended Law of the Crown of England is to hold by Inheritance with power to dispose of the same in such manner by such means and unto such persons as the King shall please To this it cannot be denied divers Kings had put in their claimes by devising their Crowne in their last Will but the successe must be attributed to some Power under God that must be the Executor when all is done and which must in Cases of Debate concerning Succession determine the matter by a Law best known to the Judge himselfe Not much unlike hereunto is the Case of Henry the Fourth who like a Bud putting up in the place of a fading Leafe dismounts his Predecessor First from the Peoples regard and after from his Throne which being empty some times he pretending the resignation of his Predecessor to him other whiles an obscure Title by descent his Conscience telling him all the while that it was the Sword that wrought the worke But when he comes to plead his Title to Forrain Princes by Protestation laying aside the mention of them all he justifies upon the unanimous consent of the Parliament and the People in his own onely Person And so before all the World confessed the Authority and power of the Parliament of England in disposing of the Crown in speciall Cases as a sufficient barr unto any pretended right that might arise from the House of Mortimar And yet because he never walks safely that hath an Enemy pursuing him still within reach he bethinks himself not sure enough unlesse his next Successors follow the dance upon the same foote to this end an Act of Parliament leades the tune whereby the Crowne is granted or confirmed to Henry the Fourth for life and intailed upon his Sonnes Thomas John and Humphrey by a Petition presented 5. Hen. 4. Thus Henry the Fourth to save his owne stake brought his Posterity into the like capacity with himselfe that they must be Kings or not subsist in the World if the House of Yorke prevailes and so he becomes secured against the House of Yorke treading on his heeles unlesse the Parliament of England shall eat their owne word However for the present the House of Lancaster hath the Crown intailed and the Inheritance is left in the Clouds to be revealed in due time For though this was the first president of this kinde yet was it not the last wherein the Parliament exercised a Power by Grant or Confirmation to direct the Law and Course of the Crown as they pleased The due consideration hereof will make the things that follow lesse strange For the Parliament according to occasion as the Supreame power of this Kingdome exercised Supreame Jurisdiction in order to the safety of the Kingdome as if no King had beene to be found in issuing forth Writs under the great Seale concluding of matters without the Royall assent treating of Peace with Forrain Nations and of other matters and determining their Resolves before discovery made to the King of their Councells making Ordinances and ruling by them 3 H. 6. n. 29. 2 H. 6. n. 27. 8 H. 6. n. 12. referring matters determinable in Parliament to be determined according to their directions Authoritate Parliamenti Confirming Peace made by the King protesting against Peace made without or against their consent making Ambassadours with power to ingage for the Kingdome making Generals of the Army Admiralls at Sea Chancellors Barons and Privy Councellors and giving them instructions 8 H. 4. n. 73. 76. 31. 5 H. 4. n. 57. 31 H. 6. n. 21. and binding them to observance upon Oath 11 H. 4. n. 19.39 Ordering the Person of the King denying his power of Judicature in Parliament and ordering his Houshold and Revenue besides many other particulars Now if such as these things were thus done not by one Parliament which possibly might be overwayed by Factions but by the course of a Series of Parliaments that mightily laboured against Faction and unworthy ends and aimes that man shal determin the same to be unjust or indiscreet should himself first be determined to be very just and exceeding wise Nor was the Parliament partiall in all this but being in a way of Reformation it set upon the work of reforming it selfe Some that are very zealous in the point of Arbitrary and absolute Government of Kings in this Nation and all in other amongst other grounds rest upon this one That an English King hath power to call Parliaments and dissolve them to make and unmake Members as he shal please I do easily grant that Kings have many Occasions and Opportunities to beguile their People yet can they do nothing as Kings but what of right they ought to doe They may call Parliaments but neither as often or seldome as they please if the Statute-Laws of this Realme might take place Nor if they could is that power necessarily and absolutely arising from Supremacy seeing it is well known that such power is betrusted by the Superiour States in other Nations to the Inferiour who dayly attend on publique Affaires and therefore can discern when the generall Conventions are most necessary As touching the dissolving of Parliaments against the wills of
the Houses its true that sad Presidents have beene of later times in that kinde and so for want of due attendance Parliaments have been inforced to adjourn to prevent a worse inconvenience but these are infirmities better buried in silence then produced as Arguments of power seeing its evident that Kings themselves were no greater gainers thereby then an Angry man is by his passions It is true also that Kings may make Lords and Corporations that may send their Burgesses to the Parliament and thus the King may make as many as he will as the Pope did with the Bishops in the Councill of Trent yet cannot he unmake them when he pleases nor take the Members from the Parliament without attainder and forfeiture according to the knowne Law Neither can all these Instances prove that the Kings of England have the sole and supreame Power over the Parliament Nor did the Parliament in these times allow of any such Authority and therefore proceeded for the reforming of themselves by themselves in many particulars as the Statutes do hold forth And first in the point of Elections for an error in that is like an error in the first Concoction that spoiles the whole Nutriment they ordained that the Election of Knights shall be at the next County Court after the Writ delivered to the Sheriffe That in full Court betweene the houres of eight and nine in the morning Proclamation shall be made of the day and place of the Parliament That the Suters duely summoned and others there Present shall then proceed to the Election notwithstanding any Prayer or Commandement to the contrary That the names of the Persons elected whether present or absent they be shall be returned by Indenture betweene the Sheriffe and the Elizors and that a Clause to that end shall be added to the Writ of Summons This was enough to make the Sheriffe understand but not to obey till a penalty of one hundred pound is by other Lawes imposed upon him and a yeares imprisonment without Baile or Mainprise besides damages for false return in such Cases and the party so unduely returned Fined and deprived of all the wages for his service Thus the manner of Election is reduced but the Persons are more considerable For hitherto any man of English blood promiscuously had right to give or receive a Vote although his residency were over the wide World But the Parliament in the time of Henry the Fifth reduced these also whether they were such as did chuse or were chosen unto their proper Counties or else rendered them uncapable to Vote or serve for any County And the like Order was made for the Burroughs Viz. That no Person must serve for any City or Burrough nor give Vote in Electing such as shall serve for that Towne unlesse they be both Free and Resiants within that City or Burrough A Law no lesse wholsome then seasonable For the times of Henry the Fourth had taught men to know by experience That a King that hath Souldiers scattered over the Kingdome can easily sway the County-Courts and make Parliaments for their owne tooth Yet this was not enough For all Elizors though of the meanest sort yet are still able to doe as much hurt with their Vote as those of the best sort both for wisedome and publique minde can doe good by theirs This made Elections much subject to parties and confusions and rendered the Parliament much lesse considerable A remedy hereunto is provided in the minority of Henry the Sixth Viz. That no man should give his Vote in Elections in the County unlesse he hath forty shillings yearely in Free Lands or Tenements and this is to be testified upon Oath of the Party And more plainly it is ordered within two yeares after that each Elizor shall have Frank Tenement of that vallue within the same County And thus the Freemen yeilded up their liberty of Election to the Free-holders possibly not knowing what they did Neverthelesse the Parliament well knew what they did this change was no lesse good then great For first these times were no times for any great measure of Civility The Preface of the Statute shewes that the meanest held himself as good a man as the greatest in the Countrey and this tended to parties tumults and bloodshed Secondly where the multitude prevaile the meaner sort are upon the upper hand and these generally ignorant cannot judge of Persons nor Times but being for the most part led by Faction or Affection rather then by right Understanding make their Elections and thereby the Generall Councell of this Nation lesse generous and noble Thirdly there is no lesse equity in the change then policy for what can be more reasonable then that those men onely should have their Votes in Election of the Common Councell of the Kingdome whose Estates are chargeable with the publique Taxes and Assessements and with the wages of those persons that are chosen for the publique Service But above all the rest this advancing of the Free-holders in this manner of Election was beneficiall to the Free-men of England although perchance they considered not thereof and this will more clearly appeare in the consideration of these three particulars First it abated the power of the Lords and great men who held the inferiour sort at their Devotion and much of what they had by their Vote Secondly it rendered the body of the people more brave for the advancing of the Free-holder above the Free-man raiseth the spirit of the meaner sort to publique regards and under a kinde of Ambition to aspire unto the degree of a Free-holder that they may be some what in the Common-wealth and thus leaving the meanest rank sifted to the very branne they become lesse considerable and more subject to Coercive power whiles in the mean time the Free-holder now advanced unto the degree of a Yeoman becomes no lesse carefull to maintain correspondency with the Lawes then he was industrious in the attaining of his degree Thirdly by this means now the Law makes a separation of the inferiour Clergy and Cloystered people from this service wherein they might serve particular ends much but Rome much more For nothing appeareth but that these dead Persons in Law were neverthelesse Fsee-men in Fact and lost not the liberty of their Birth-right by entering into Religion to become thereby either Bond or no Free-Members of the people of England Lastly as a binding plaister above the rest First a Negative Law is made that the Persons elected in the County must not be of the degree of a Yeoman but of the most noted Knights Esquires or Gentlemen of the Countrey which tacitely implies that it was too common to advance those of the meaner sort whether by reason of the former wasting times Knights and Esquires were grown scant in number or by reason of their rudenesse in account Or it may be the Yeomanry grew now to feel their strength and meant not to be further
perpetuall and so gave a restraint unto the power of the King and Councell But where no Positive restraint was made by any Statute the King and Councell seemed to have the sole power left unto them to open and shut the passes of Trade as they pleased For whereas the Commodity of Butter and Cheese was made Staple the King and Councell had power to stop the sale thereof notwithstanding that the Law gave full liberty to the Subjects to bring all their Staple Commodities to the Staple Neverthelesse this power in the King is not Primitive but derived from the Parliament for they had power over the Kings Licences and Restraints in such Cases as by the severall Statutes doe appeare A third power given to the Privy Councell was a power of Summons and Processe against Delinquents in Cases of Riots Extortions Oppressions and greivous Offences the Summons to be by Privy Seale the Process Proclamations and for Non-appearance Forfeiture if the Delinquent be of the Degree of a Lord if of inferiour ranke then a Fine or Outlary At the first view the Statute hath an ill-favoured aspect as if it raised up a new Court of Judicature but the time is to be considered with the occasion for it was made for the securing of the Peace in a turbulent time And besides the Law carrieth along with it two Restrictions which puts the right of Cognisance in the Privy Councell to the question First it saveth the Jurisdiction of other Courts and provideth further That no matter determinable by the Law of this Realme shall be by this Act determined in other forme then after the course of the same Law in the Kings Court having determination of the same which implieth that some kindes of Riots and Extortions are of so high a nature that though determinable in the Kings Court yet are they to be determined before the Lords In the next place this Law provideth that such offences as are determinable by the Law of the Realme that is by Jury shall still be so tried Secondly if Conviction be upon Confession or by Certificate in case where by reason of Parties and partakings Inquisition by Jury can not be had there the Lords shall immediately determine the same Lastly if the Certificate be traversed then the same shall be tried in the Kings Bench. But there is another Restriction that undoeth all in effect in point of right because what this Law setleth therein it setleth but for seven yeares and leaveth the Privy Councell to the limits of the Common Law for the future In the mean time the Privy Councell may be thought terrible and very high both by this Law and the greatnesse of the Lords Kings Unkles and Kings Brothers are Subjects indeed but of so high a Degree that if a little goodnesse of Nature or publique Spirit shine in them they soon become the Objects of Admiration from the Vulgar and gain more from them by their vicinity then the King can doe at a distance For the Commons of England by the fair demeanour of popular great men are soon won out of their very cloathes and are never more in danger to part with their liberties then when the Heaven is faire above their heads and the Nobility serve the King and flatter them Neverthelesse as I said the season must also be considered of this power thus by this Law contracted for what the Lords gained not by their Popularity the Queen did with her power who now mindfull of her contemned beauty and opposition from the Duke of Glocester against her marriage removes him out of the way gets the reines of Government into her hand and like a Woman drives on in full careere The Duke of Yorke and other Lords not liking this gallop indeavour to stop her pace but are all overborn the Duke taken prisoner and doubtlesse had pledged the Duke of Glocester but that the Heire apparent of the House of Yorke steps in to rescue and new troubles arise in Gascoigne to put an end to which the Queenes party gaines and takes the Duke of Yorkes word for his good behaviour gets this Law to passe expecting hereby if not a full settlement at Home yet at least a respite to prevent dangers from abroad during the present exigency And thus upon the whole matter the Lords and Privy Councell are mounted up by the Commons to their own mischeif CAHP. XVII Of the Clergie and Church-government during these times IT was no new thing in the World for Princes of a wounded Title to goe to the Church-men for a plaister and they are ready enough to sing a Requiem so as they may be the gainers The Princes therefore of the House of Lancaster had offended against common sense if they had not done the like themselves being not onely guilty in their Title but also by a secret Providence drawn into one interest together with the Church-men to support each other For Henry the Fourth and Arch-bishop Arundell meeting together under one condition of Banishment become Consorts in sufferings and Consorts in Honour for Society begotten in trouble is nourished in Prosperity by remembrance of mutuall kindnesses in a necessitous Estate which commonly are the more hearty and more sensible by how much other Contentments are more scant But the Arch-bishop had yet a further advantage upon the heart of Henry the Fourth though he was no man of power yet he was of great Interest exceedingly beloved of the English Clergy and the more for his Banishment sake Now whatsoever he is or hath is the Kings and the King is his the sweet influence of the Arch-Bishop and the Clergy enters into his very Soule they are his dearly beloved for the great Naturall Love as he sayes to the World they beare to him what he could he got what he got he gave to the Church Thus the Family of Lancaster becomming a mighty support unto the Clergy Romane as it was they also became as stout maintainers of the crackt Title of that younger House So was fulfilled the old Prophecy of the Oyle given to Henry the first Duke of Lancaster wherewith Henry the Fourth was anointed That Kings anointed with that Oyle should be the Champions of the Church Now for the more particular clearing of this we are to consider the Church absolutely or in relation to the Politicall Government of the People Concerning the later many things did befall that were of a different peice to the rest in regard that the Lords for the most part were for the Clergy and they for themselves but the Commons began to be so well savoured with Wickl●●fs way that they begin to bid defiance to the Clergies self-ends and aimes and because they could not reach their heads they drive home blowes at their legs A Parliament is called and because the King had heard somewhat feared that the People were more learned then was meete for his purpose and that the Parliament should be too wise he therefore will
his ends Thus in one Parliament for he could hold no more he gave such content as even to wonderment he could as soone finde an army in the feild to fight for him as the most meritorious of his Predecessors His ill title made him very jealous and thereby tought his best freinds to keep at a distance after which time few escaped that came within his reach and so he served Gods judgement against his adjutants though he understeod it not Amongst the rest the Duke of Buckingham his great Associate both in the Butchery of the two young Princes and usurpation of the Royall Scepter he lived till he had laid the Foundation of better times in the Person of Henry the seventh and then received his reward But an ill Conscience must be continually fed or it will eat up its owne wombe The Kings minde delivered from feare of the Sonnes of Edward the Fourth now dead torments himselfe with thoughts of his Daughter alive ashamed he is of Butchery of a Girle he chooseth a conceit of Basterdizing the Children of Elizabeth Graye that calleth her self Queen of England but this proved too hard to concoct soon after that he goes a contrary way The Lady Elizabeth Graye is now undoubted Wife of Edward the Fourth and her eldest Daughter as undoubted Heire to the Crown And so the King will now be contented to adventure himself into an incestuous Marriage with her if his own Queen were not in the way onely to secure the Peace of the Kingdome which he good King was bound in Conscience to maintain though with the perill of his owne Soule and in this zeale of his Conscience his Queen soon went out of the way and so Love is made to the young Lady But Henry Earle of Richmond was there before and the Lady warily declined the choice till the golden Apple was won which was not long after accomplished the King loosing both the Lady his Crowne and owne life together put an end to much wickednesse and had the end thereof in Bosworth-Feild CHAP. XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament THe seasons now in Tract were of short continuance lives passed away more speedily then years and it may seem uselesse to inquire what is the nature of the Government in such a time when as the greatest work was to maintain life and soul together and when all is done little else is done For though the Title of the House of Yorke was never so clear against that of Lancaster yet it had been so long darkned with a continuall Succession of Kings of the Red-Rose that either by their merit had gained a Throne in the Peoples hearts or by their facility had yeilded their Throne up to the Peoples will as it proved not easie to Convince them that liked well their present Lot and were doubtfull of change or to make them tender of the right of Edward the Fourth above their own quiet Above threescore years now had England made triall of the Government of the Lancastrian Princes and thereof about thirty years experience had they of Henry the Sixth they saw he was a gentle Prince On the other side Edward the Fourth newly sprung up out of a Root watered with blood himself also a Man for the Feild This might well put the minds of the People to a stand what to think of this Man whose nature and ends are so doubtfull and brought nothing to commend him to the good wills of the People but his bare Title which the common sort usually judge of according as they see it prosper more or lesse Add hereunto that Divine Providence did not so clearly nor suddenly determine his secret purpose concerning this change by any constant successe to either part by means whereof the one half of Edward the Fourths reign was spent while as yet Henry the Sixth was in veiw and the minds of men left unassured neither trusting much to Edward the Fourth nor he to them and after that Henry the Sixth was gone out of the way Edward the Fourth could not readily change his posture used Arguments of force and power and for the most part looked like a Man in Armes with his hand on his sword ready to draw upon the next man that stands in his way Thus are the People partly driven and partly drawn into an Oath of Allegiance unto Edward the Fourth under perill of Attainder and the Parliament assured unto him once more For immediately upon the departure of Edward the Fourth beyond Sea after tenne yeares of his Reign the Parliament never staying for the issue of Providence declared the Throne void of Edward the Fourth and Henry the Sixth King The Judges likewise of the Courts at Westminster determined the same thing as may appear by the Law Reports of those times in Print wherein Re-attachments were often granted by them upon discontinuance of processe by this Demise of Edward the Fourth And thus Henry the Sixth is once more King for six moneths Viz. from October to Aprill at which time the ballance turns Edward the Fourth returns gets into the Throne Henry the Sixth is again Dethroned all things are as they were and all confirmed by Act of Parliament For that Body is ever wise enough to side with power rather then to spend much time upon fruitless Orders and Votes that will peirce no Armour and therefore like the times must needs be subject to fits of distemper at the comming in of every Tide and did build and pull down Enact and disenact turn and return the English Crown from Yorke to Lancaster and back again and in conclusion for some time did do little but undo Nor can they be justly censured herein for Councells of men are not ordained to hinder Divine Providence or over-rule Fate but to foresee and close with occasions in the most advantageous way for the Publique good and when both winds and Currents are uncertain to ride at flote till they can discern the most commodious Haven to Winter in To impute therefore fault unto the Parliament in such Cases for want of Uniformity and Immutability of Councells is somewhat like the Notion that Batchelours conceit of Wives they would have but they do not know what other then an Idea of their own Fancy Now if it be inquired which course prevailed in order either to the Kings Royalty or the Peoples Liberty I shall answer neither of these but the House of Yorke prevailed to hold the Crown and might have advanced the Authority thereof had they not falne out amongst themselves for the spoyle and Edward the Fourth was not altogether disposed thereto The successe that he had in the Feild and his Souldiery made him look big like a King of the greater size but Kings sleep not securely upon such pillowes when the Militia is on hors-back it is as ready to be a Guard upon the King as for him and when it is most sober not so easily governed as a Common-wealth And
by Law The first served as a scare for though it were but by Proclamation men might justly fear that he that was so stout against the Pope would not stick to scourge his owne Subjects out of his way in the time of his heat The King thus entered the Lists both against Pope and Cardinall now under Praemuniri whereof he died meets the English Clergy thus loosing their top-gallant standing up in the reare against him and talking at large Neverthelesse the King stops not his carreere puts them to the rout for maintaining the power Legatine They soon submit crave pardon give a summe of money and perfume their Sacrifice with that sweet Incense of Supreame Head of the Church of England This was done not by way of Donation for the Convocation had no such power but by way of acknowledgement in flat opposition to the Jurisdiction of the Pope It became the common subject of discourse amongst all sorts but of wonderment to the Pope Yet for fear of worse he speaks faire for he was not in Posture to contest but all would do no good the Queen had appealed to Rome the Pope by Woolsies advice makes delayes The Parliament espying the advantage at once tooke all appeales to Rome away and established all sentences made or to be made within this Land notwithstanding any Act from Rome and enjoyned the English Clergy to administer the severall acts of publique worship notwithstanding any inhibition or excommunication from any forrain pretended Power The grounds upon the preamble of the Law will appeare to be two First that the King of England is supream head in rendring Justice within the Nation in all causes therein arising which is more then the recognisance of the Clergy two yeares before this Act did hold forth yet this acknowledgment is not absolute but in opposition to Forraine pretentions Secondly that the Clergy in England having Power may in matters spirituall determine all doubts without forrain help and administer such duties as to their place do belong not hereby determining that the Church-men ever had such Power by Law nor that they ought originally to have such Power They never had it for no sooner were they disjoyned from the Laity in these affaires but immediately they were under the Pope and received their Power from him And De jure they cannot challenge such power but by a positive Law such as this Law of Henry the eighth which also giveth but a restrictive and limited power Viz In matters testamentary of divorce matrimony tithes oblations and obventions So as if they will challenge such power they must thanke the Parliament for it and use the same accordingly as persons deputed therunto and not in their owne right or right of their places In all this the Kings supremacy is but obscurely asserted and rather by implication shewing what in reason may be holden then by declaration of what was making way thereby First into the opinions of men before they were enjoyned to determine their actions but within two yeares ensuing or thereabout the Law is made positive The King shall be taken and accepted the onely supreame head on earth of the Church of England and have power to visite correct represse redresse reforme restraine order and amend all such errours heresies abuses offenses contempts and enormities as by any manner of spirituall authority or jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed Which in the preamble is saide to be made to confirm what the Clergy in their Convocation formerly had recognized The corps of his Act is to secure the Kings Title the Kings Power and the Kings Profit As touching the Kings Title it is sayde that in right it did formerly belong to him which is to be granted by all so far as the Power is rightly understood But as touching the Kings Profit it cannot be saide that the whole lump thereof did belong to the King because much thereof was not so ancient but De novo raised by the Popes extortion and therefore the true and reall Profits are by particular Acts of Parliament ensuing in speciall words devolved upon him The nature of this power is layd downe in this Statute under a three fold expression First it is a visitatory or a reforming Power which is executed by inquiry of offences against Lawes established and by executing such Lawes Secondly it is an ordinary jurisdiction for it is such as by any Spirituall authority maybe acted against irregularities and thus the Title of supreame Ordinary is confirmed Thirdly it is such a Power as must be regulatd by Law and in such manner as by any spirituall Authority may lawfully be reformed It is not therefore any absolute arbitrary Power for that belongs onely to the supreame Head in Heaven Nor is it any legislative Power for so the Law should be the birth of this Power and his Power could not then be regulated by the Law nor could ever Ordinary execute such a Power nor did Henry the eighth ever make claime to any such Power though he loved to be much trusted Lastly this Power was such a Power as was gained formerly from the King by forraine Usurpation which must be intended De rebus licitis and once in possession of the Crown or in right thereto belonging according to the Law for the King hath no Power thereby to confer Church-livings by Provisorship or to carry the Keyes and turn the infallible Chaire into an infallible Throne In breife this Power was such as the King hath in the Common-wealth neither legislative nor absolute in the executive but in order to the Unity and Peace of the Kingdome This was the right of the Crowne which was ever claimed but not enjoyed further then the English Scepter was able to match the Romish Keyes And now the same being restored by Act of Parliament is also confirmed by an Oath enjoyned to be taken by the People binding them to acknowledge the King under God supreame head on earth of the Church of England Ireland and the Kings Dominions in opposition to all Forraine jurisdiction And lastly by a Law which bound all the People to maintaine the Kings Title of Defender of the faith and of the Church of England and Ireland in earth the supream head under the perill of Treason in every one that shall attempt to deprive the Crowne of that title We must descend to particulars for by this it will appeare that these generall Lawes concerning the Kings refined title contained little more then matters of Notion otherwise then a generall barr to the Popes future interests And therefore the Wisdome of the State as if nothing had been already done did by degrees parcell out by severall Acts of Parliament the particular interests of the Popes usurped Authority in such manner as to them seemed best And First concerning the Legislative Power in Church government It cannot be denied but the Pope De facto had the Power of a negative vote in all
Councels and unto that had also a binding Power in making Lawes Decrees and Decretalls out of his own breast but this was gotten by plunder he never had any right to headship of the Church nor to any such Power in right of such preferment nor was this given to the King as head of the Church but with such limitations and qualifications that its evident it never was in the Crowne or rightly belonging thereto First nigh three yeares after this recognition by the Clergy in their Convocation it is urged upon them and they passe their promise In verbo sacerdotii And lastly it is confirmed by Act of Parliament that they shall never make publish or execute any new Canon or constitution provinciall or other unlesse the Kings Assent and License be first had thereto and the offences against this Law made punishable by fine and imprisonment So as the Clergy are now holden under a double bond one the honor of their Preisthood which binds their Wills and Consciences the other the Act of Parliament which bindes their Powers so as they now neither will nor can start Neverthelesse there is nothing in this Law nor in the future practise of this King that doth either give or assert any power to the King and Convocation to binde or conclude the Clergy or the People without an Act of Parliament concurring and inforcing the same And yet what is already done is more then any of the Kings Predecessors ever had in their possession A second Prerogative was a definitive power in point of doctrine and worship For it is enacted that all Determinations Declarations Decrees Definitions Resolutions and Ordinances according to Gods word and Christs Gospell by the Kings advise and confirmation by Letters Patents under the great Seale at any time hereafter made and published by the Arch-Bishops Bishops and Doctors now appointed by the King or the whole Clergy of England in matters of the Christian faith and lawfull rights and ceremonies of the same shall be by the People fully beleeved and obeyed under penalties therein comprized Provided that nothing be done contrary to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme A Law of a new birth and not an old Law newly revived or restored This the present occasion and the naturall constitution of the Law do fully manifest The occasion was the present Perplexity of the People for in stead of the Statute Ex officio which was now taken away the six articles commonly called the six stringed whip was gotten into power by a more legall and effectuall originall The Parliament had heard the cries of the People concerning this and having two things to eye at once one to provide for the Peoples liberty and further security against forrain pretentions the other which was more difficult for the liberties of the consciences of multitudes of men of severall opinions which could not agree in one judgement and by discord might make way for the Romish party to recover its first ground and finding it impossible for them to hunt both games at once partly because themselves were divided in opinion and the bone once cast amongst them might put their own co-existence to the question and partly because the worke would be long require much debate and retard all other affaires of the Common-wealth which were now both many and weighty In this troubled wave they therefore wisely determine to hold on their course in that worke which was most properly theirs and lay before them And as touching this matter concerning doctrine they agreed in that wherein they could agree Viz. To refer the matter to the King and Persons of skill in that mistery of Religion to settle the same for the present till the Parliament had better leisure the People more light and the mindes of the People more perswaded of the way Thus the Estates and Consciences of the People for the present must indure In deposito of the King and other Persons that a kind of Interim might be composed and the Church for the present might enjoy a kind of twilight rather then lye under continuall darknesse and by waiting for the Sun rising be in a better preparation thereunto For the words of the Statute are that all must be done without any partiall respect or affection to the Papisticall sort or any other sect or sects whatsoever Unto this agreement both parties were inclined by diverse regards For the Romanists though having the possession yet being doubtfull of their strength to hold the same if it came to the push of the Pike in regard that the House of Commons wanted faith as the Bishop of Rochester was pleased to say in the House of Lords and that liberty of conscience was then a pleasing Theame as wel as libertie of Estates to all the People These men might therefore trust the King with their interests having had long experience of his Principles And therefore as supream Head they held him most meete to have the care of this matter for still this title brings on the Vann of all these Acts of Parliament On the other side that party that stood for reformation though they began to put up head yet not assured of their owne Power and being so exceedingly oppressed with the six Articles as they could not expect a worse condition but in probabililty might finde a better they therefore also cast themselves upon the King who had already been well baited by the German Princes and Divines and the outcries of his owne People and possibly might entertain some prejudice at length at that manner of woship that had its originall from that Arch enemy of his Head-ship of the Church of England Nor did the issue fall out altogether unsutable to these expectations For the King did somewhat to unsettle what was already done and abated in some measure the flame and heat of the Statute although nothing was established in the opposite thereto but the whole rested much upon the disposition of a King subject to change As touching the constitution of this Law that also shewes that this was not derived from the ancient right of the Crowne now restored but by the positive concession of the People in their representative in regard it is not absolute but qualified and limited diversly First this power is given to this King not to his successors for they are left out of the act so as they trusted not the King but Henry the eighth and what they did was for his owne sake Secondly they trusted the King but he must be advised by Councell of men of Skill Thirdly they must not respect any sect or those of the Papisticall sort Fourthly all must be according to Gods Word and Christs Gospel And Lastly nothing must be done contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm And thus though they trusted much yet not all nor over long For it was but a temporary Law and during the present condition of affaires Nor did the King or People
rest upon this Law for within three yeares following another Law is made to confirme what was then already done by the King and a larger power granted to the King to change and alter as to his Wisdome shall seeme convenient Thus the Kings injunctions already set forth were established all opposall to them inhibited and the King hath a power of Lawing and Unlawing in Christs Kingdome and to stab an Act of Parliament in matters of highest concernment And the reason is the King will have it so and who dares gain-say it as Cranmer said the King loves his Queene well but his own opinion better for new things meeting with new love if it be once interrupted in the first heat turnes into a displeasure as hot as the first love nor had either party great cause to boast in their gainings for none of them all had any security but such as kept close to a good conscience All this though much more then any of his Predecessors ever attained was neverthelesse not enough till his Title was as compleat The Pope had fashioned him one now above twenty yeares old for his service done against Luther and others of that way and sent it to him as a Trophee of the victory this was Defender of the faith which the King then took kindly but laid it up till he thought he had deserved it better and therefore now he presents it to the Parliament who by a Statute annexed it to the Crown of England for ever now made triple by the Royallizing of that of Ireland amongst the rest A third Prerogative concerned the Kings Power in temporall matters and now must England look to it selfe for never had English King the like advantage over his people as this man had His Title out-faced all question Left rich by his Father trained up in the highest way of Prerogative absolute Lord of the English Clergy and of their Interest in the People of a vast spirit able to match both the Emperour and French abroad and yet more busie at home then all his Predecessors A King that feared nothing but the falling of the Heavens the People contrarily weary of civill Wars enamored with the first tastes of Peace and Pleasure whiles as yet it was but in the blushing child-hood overawed by a strange Giant a King with a Pope in his belly having the temporall Sword in his Hand the spirituall Sword at his command Of a mercilesse savage nature but a word and a blow without regard even of his bosome companions what can then the naked relation of a Subject do with such an one if providence steps not in and stops not the Lions mouth all wil be soon swallowed up into the hungry maw of Prerogative To set all on work comes Steven Gardiner from his Embassage to the Emperor sad apprehensions are scattered that the motions abroad are exceeding violent and sudden that the Emperor and French King are fast in nothing but in change according to occasion that like the Eagle they make many points before they stoop to the prey That if the motions at home do wait upon debates of Parliament things must needs come short in execution and the affaires of this Nation extreamly suffer A dangerous thing it is that the King should be at disadvantage either with the Emperour or French King for want of power in these cases of suddaine exegencies and for some small time during the juncture of these importent affaires that seeing likewise at home the point concerning Religion is comming to the Test the mindes of men are at a gaze their affections and passions are on their tiptoes It s reason the King should steare with a shorter Rudder that this care might meete with every turne of providence which otherwise might suddainly blow up the Peace and good Government of this Nation These and the like represented a faire face to that which followed and made way for the King without shame to ask what no King before him suffered ever to enter into conceit I meane a Legislative power to this effect That Proclamations made by the greater part of the King for the time being and his Councell whose names hereafter follow with such penalties as by them shall be thought meet shall be of equall force to an Act of Parliament provided it shall not extend to forfeiture of Estates or Priviledges nor to losse of Life but in cases particularly mentioned in the Law provided no Proclamation shall crosse any Statute or lawfull or laudable Custome of this Realme All which at length comes to be demanded by a formall Bill with as ill favored a preface as the matter it self which was much worse ere it was well licked in the House of Commons and when all was done proved a Bare still Whatever it was it passed in manner above said neither much to the desire of the Commons that so much was given nor to the good liking of the King that there was no more For in stead of a Legislative power which he grasped at for himself he received it in common with his Councell and so becomes ingaged neither to alter nor destroy that Brother-hood if he intended to reape any fruit of this Law leaving the point in doubt whither his gaine or losse was the greater For this Law thus made for this King these Councellors and these times and occasions can be no president to the future unlesse to informe Kings that the Parliament hath a power to give more Authority and prerogative to Kings then they or the Crowne have by common right and to give it with such limitations and qualifications as seemeth good to them And secondly that even Henry the eighth acknowledged that the Legislative power was not in the Crown nor was the Crowne capable thereof otherwise then it was conferred by the Parliament Onely Steven Gardiner might glory in this atcheivement having for the present obtained much of his ends by perswading the King that forrain Princes estranged from him not so much for his departure from the Pope as for some apprehensions they had of his departure from that way of Religion and Worship which they apprehend every Christian ought to maintaine And therefore if he meaned to gaine better correspondency amongst these Princes he must ingage more resolvedly to the fundamentalls of the Worship though he shook of some sleighter ceremonies with the Romish supremacy for he knew that they were willing enough with the later though the other could not go downe with them thus did forraine correspondency float above when as the Church as then it stood was underneath and gave the tincture to every wave And it was holden more safe by the Romish party to trust the King thus attempered with the legislative power in the Church matters then the rough Parliament whose Course steered quite wide from the Roman shore as if they never meant to look that way any more though Cranmer and the cheif Officers of State and of the Houshold
were by the Law Judges of the matter in fact as well as the King yet in the conclusion the King only was of the Quorum all this yet further appears in the penalty for by a Provisor it is moderated as to all forfeitures of Life Limb or Estate and in the conclusion extended only to Fine and Imprisonment unlesse in some cases mentioned and excepting offences against Proclamations made by the King or his Successors concerning Crimes of Heresie For it is the first clause of any positive Law that ever intimated any power in the King of such Cognisance and punishment of Heresie too weake a principle it is to settle a prerogative in the King and his Successors as supream head of the Church thus by a side winde to carry the keyes of Life and Death at their girdle and yet a better ground cannot I find for the martyrdome of diverse brave Christians in those times then this touch of a Law glancing by All which passing Sub silentio and the Parliament taking no notice thereof made way for the Statute 32. H. 8. ca. 26. Formerly mentioned to come more boldly upon the Stage This was one wound to the legislative power of the Parliament thus to divide the same Another ensues that in its consequence was no lesse fatall to that power which remained and it was wrought by some Engine that well saw that the disease then so called grew to be epidemicall amongst the more considerable party in the Kingdome that the Lady Jane Seymor now Queene was no freind to the Romanists that she was now with child which if a Sonn as it proved to be was like to be Successor in the Throne and be of his Mothers Religion and so undoe all as in the issue all came so to passe To prevent this neverthelesse they fancy a new conceit that Lawes made by English Kings in their minority are lesse considerately done then being made in riper yeares And so by that one opinion countenanced a worse which was that the Legislative power depended more upon the judgment of the King then the debates and results of the Parliament a notion that would down exceeding well with Kings especially with such an al-sufficient Prince as Henry the eight conceived himself to be upon this ground a Law is made to enable such of the Kings Successors by him appointed as shall be under the age of twenty and foure yeares when Lawes by him are made to adnull the same by Letters Patents after such Prince shall attaine the said age of twenty foure yeares Thus the Armes of the Parliament are bound from settling any Reformation let them intend it never so much a Muse is left open for the Romish Religion still to get in when the Season proves more faire The Parliament was now in its minority and gives occasion to the Reader to bewaile the infirmities of the excellency of England A fourth advance of Prerogative concerned the executive Power in the Government of the Church This had formerly much rested in the Prelacy and that upon the cheife Praelatissimo at Rome now there is found in England a Prelater then he the Pope was already heheaded and his head set upon the Kings shoulders To him it is given to nominate all Bishops and Arch-Bishops within his dominions by long desire and that the party once elected shall sweare fealty and then shall be consecrated by Commission and invested but if upon the long desire no election be certified within twelve dayes the King shal by Commission cause his own Clerke to be consecrated and invested The occasion that first brought in this President was the accesse of Cranmer to the See at Canterbury for though the head-ship had beene already by the space of two yeares translated from Rome to England and yet the course of Episcopizing continued the same as formerly it had beene I mean as touching the point of Election For though in their originall Bishops were meerely Donatives from the Crowne being invested by delivery of the Ring and pastoral staffe and untill King Johns time the Canonicall way of Election was disallowed yet King John by his Charter De communi consensu Baronum granted that they should be eligible which also was confirmed by diverse publique Acts of Parliament in after times and now by this Law last recited and with this way the King was contented for the space of six yeares for the Reformation intended by the King was not done at once but by degrees and therefore though this course of long desire was brought into use yet the Parliament being of six yeares continuance a necessary thing in times of so great change of policy began this course of Election by giving the King Power to nominate and allowing of the Pope Power to grant to such his Bulls or Pall at his owne will otherwise they should be consecrated by Commission without his consent this at the first the Popes concurrence was not excluded though his Negative was In this posture of Affaires comes Cranmer to be consecrated Arch-Bishop And being nominated therunto by the King the wily Pope knowing the Kings aime meaned not to withstand least he should loose all but granted the Pall as readily as it was desired so as Cranmer is thus far Arch-Bishop of Canterbury without all exception yet he must go one step further and take the old oath to the Pope which the King allowed him to do Pro more and which he did Renitente conscientia say some and with a salvo say others and all affirme it was done Perfunctoriè like some worne Ceremony or civill Complement Neverthelesse it was not so soone turned over the Arch-Bishop loved not the Office the King loved no partnorship in this matter and it was evident to all that no man could serve these two Masters any longer an agreement is soon concluded in Parliament to exclude the Popes Power quite out of this game and all is left to be done by the King and his Commissioners by the Law formerly propounded In all this the Pope is the looser the English Clergy the savers for the Pall cost Cranmer nine hundred markes And the Crown is the great gainer for hereby the King got the men sure to him not onely by their own acknowledgment and submission but also by a Statute Law And lastly by Oath which to make sure was treble twined once upon their first submmission in the Kings twenty second yeare when they had beene under Premuniri Secondly soone after the decease of Queene Katherine Dowager in the twenty sixth yeare which Oath was more compleat then the former containing First A Renunciation of all fealty to the Pope or any sorraine Power Secondly an obligation to adheare to the cause of the King and his Successors Thirdly a disavowing of the Pope otherwise then as another Bishop or fellow Brother Fourthly an ingagement to observe all Lawes already established against the Popes Power Fifthly A disavowing of all appeales to
Rome Sixthly an ingagement to informe the King of all Messages or Bulls sent from Rome into England Seventhly An ingagement not to send or be privy to the sending of any message to Rome for any such purpose The third oath was that of fealty which anciently was due to Kings and now revived to be taken by all Bishops upon their admission And thus the English Prelacy having beene sworn slaves to the Papacy ever since Beckets time are now preferred to a more Royall service and the persuit by Kings after their right being laid a side by the space of 300. yeares is now renued and the prey seised upon by the Lion we found it upon a better title and in better condition by much then when at the first it was lost for it was upon som semblance of reason that the Arch-Bishop and Clergy gained it but being afterwards dispossessed thereof by the Pope and yet without any other shadow of Title but the Power of his own gripe for the present he is the occupant and becomes Proprietor by prescription Till now the felon apprehended the stolne goods are the Kings in right and by Remitter whereunto the Parliament were by the Statute adding their conveiance establishes the same by an unquestionable Title neverthelesse their service is no lesse servile to this Crown then it had beene to the Romish Miter formerly they asserted the Popes infallibility now the Kings supremacy They are now called by the King made by the King sent by the King maintained by the King whatsoever they are whatsoever they have all is the Kings He makes Bishops he makes new Bishop-ricks and divides or compounds the old as he pleaseth by a power given to Henry the eighth by Parliament which oath was never in any Prince before or after him that I can finde so as the Crown had it not but the man and it died with him The King thus loaden with Power and Honour above all his Predecessors if without proportionable maintenance to support the one and act the other must needs consume himself as one in a Tympany by growing great For though he was left rich by his Fathers Treasure yet his Zeale to Rome in its now Poor captived condition under the Imperiall power stirring up in him great underrakings abroad besides his own pleasures and gallantry at home exhausted that and doubtlesse had starved these his grand designes had he not found the hidden Treasures of the Cells and Monastries the sight whereof so rouzed up his Spirits that he adventured upon the purchase though he knew difficulties enough to have stopped his undertakings if he had not resolved both against feare and flattery It was not done without deliberation for the thing was felt as a greivance before the Norman times and complained of in Parliament above a hundred and forty years ago and diverse times since but Kings either understood not or beleeved not or durst not give remedy or had much else to do But now the King is beyond all his Predecessors he knowes much dares do more and is at leisure he will go as far as Emperour or French King and beyond them also but would not try masteries with either for they were all Cocks of the game The first occasion that discovered the wroke feasible was a president made by Cardinall Woolsie whose Power was enough to dissolve some petty Cells and no opposition made The King might well expect the worke would be as lawfull for him and not much more difficult or if any stormes ensued the People that had so long complained and felt the burthen of these excrescences of the Clergy would soon find out a way to Calme them the King need do no more then speake and the people will do This opened the doore but that which brought the King in was the hold the Pope had in this Kingdome by these Cloystered People who were persons dead in Law and dead to all Law but the Canon and upon this account the Kings Ancestors had possessed themselves of the Cells in the hands of Forrainers in times of War and now a deadly feud is stirred betweene Henry the eighth and the Pope their holy Father the Children cannot expect to thrive when as their Father is cast out of doores and so all must out together yet the manner is observable they must not be cast out but must go out the inferiour and greater part are dead persons have learnt obedience they can neither bark nor bite and therefore they may sleep and what is don must be don with such of them as are alive Upon a Visitation these are brought under the Test and found in such a condition that they had better give way and voluntarily surrender then abide the triall Once more the smallest are picked out whiles the greater stand by and wonder but either do not foresee or in dispaire of altering the Kings resolution do nothing but expect the sad hour which within four yeares comes upon them all every one of them choosing rather to surrender and expect the Kings mercy for maintenance during life then adventure against the dint of his Justice and Power and so loose all for they were ill befreinded amongst all sorts of the People Thus came the personall Estate and Stock of these Houses to the Kings immediate Treasury and their yearly maintenance to the disposing of the Crowne which might have advanced the same well nigh to the value of two hundred thousand pounds yearly but that the King intended to let the People enjoy the fat as well as he that they might be mutually engaged to maintain hold of the prey that they had joyntly gotten Out of all which neverthelesse the Crowne had a small rent or service annuall for the acknowledgement of their tenure besides the first fruits of the spirituall dignities and the tenths both which he formerly had already obtained The first whereof was but casuall and occasionall in the payment arising onely at the entrance of the party into his promotion and which was gained by the Pope from Edward the first although at his Parliament at Carleile in his thirty fourth yeare he withstood the same This was above three hundred and twenty thousand pounds in the whole summ The later was annuall and amounted to above thirty thousand pounds And thus the Popes Usurpaons are turned into duties to the Crowne but were much lessened in regard that these Cells and Monastries were accounted amongst these Ecclesiasticall promotions which by their dissolution fell off in that account Neverthelesse the advancement that might by a parcimonious King have beene made of the fall of this Ceder was such that the Crowne might have been rendred of it self absolute and al-sufficient But Henry the eighth was not thus minded the affairs of Europe were gotten into a high pitch Princes generally over active Henry the eight inferior to none of them what comes in goes out and he is a rare example of that Divine proverb
as were taking of women into captivity unlawfull huntings with disguises malicious breaking of the Dikes and Bankes in Marshland Servants embezzelling their Masters Goods to the value of forty shillings or upward which besides that of Heresie whereof formerly though of a new stamp yet of so good a constitution that they remaine unto this day under the same brand But let the Lawes be never so severe if they have not free liberty to walk at large they are soone ghostlesse and therefore these two Kings especially the later gained that Honour above their Predecessors that they gave the Law a free and full scope over all persons but themselves and their Assignees and in all places First Concerning places every one knowes the Notion but few considered the extent of Sanctuary ground in England that could sanctifie any Crime or Criminall person in such manner that though the eye of Justice could see yet the hand of Justice could never reach them till Henry the eight plundered them of all their sanctity and made all places common so as no Treason could hide it self but where the Act of Parliament did appoint and turned their names from Sanctuaries to priviledged places The sanctity of the person was yet more mischivious and hard to be reformed it had been often attempted before these times with little successe Henry the seventh gained some ground herein beyond his Ancestors the Delinquent might have his Clergy once but not the second time though he fled to the hornes of the Alter and was ever after known by a brand in the hand Thus far did Henry the seventh go and would have done more even as far as unto those in holy orders But Henry the eighth comming on in point of Treason made all persons common without respect of their orders or profession Death makes an equall end of all In cases of Murther Robbery Burnings of Houses Fellonies done in holy ground high Way or Dwelling House refusall of triall peremptory challenge of above twenty of the pannell Servants imbezzelling their Masters Goods in value forty shillings or upwards in all these Cases no Clergy could be allowed but to persons in holy Orders and those also to be perpetually Imprisoned in the Ordinaries Prison and yet this exception held not long in force but these men also were equally wrapped up in the same course to have their Clergy and indure the brand even as other men Two difficulties yet remaine which hindred the execution of the Lawes against Treason One concerning the place the other the person The place many times of the plotting and beginning of the Treason befalleth to be without the walk of the Kings Writ in which case by the Common Law it cannot be inquired or tried or it may be that the men of the place be generally disaffected and then no hope of finding out the matter In such cases therefore it is provided that be the Crime wheresoever the Delinquent will it shall neverthelesse be inquired and tried where the King will The Person of the Delinquent also many times changed its condition it might be sober at the time of the Delinquency and afterwards upon discovery prove lunatick and thereby avoide the Triall this whether in jest or earnest by a Statute is made all one and it is ordained that in case the fact be confessed by the Delinquent before the Lords of the Councell at such time as the party accused was of sound minde and the same be attested under the hands of foure of those Lords the same shall be a good ground to proceed to inquisition before Commissioners and the same being found to try the Delinquent without answer or appearence saving unto Barons their Triall by their Peeres And thus however in their Fits the Will of the Persons of these Kings was too hardy for the Kings to mannage according to rule yet the Law still in Title kept the saddle held the Reines and remaineth the cheife Arbitrator unto every man CHAP. XXXIV Of the generall Government of Edward the sixth Queene Mary and Queene Elizabeth WEE are at length come within sight of the shore where finding the Currents various and swift and the Waves rough I shall first make my course through them severally and then shall bring up the generall account of the Reignes of one King and three Governours The King was a Youth of about ten yeares old yet was older then he seemed by eleven yeares for he had all the Amunition of a wise King and in one respect beyond all his Predecessors that made him King indeed By the grace of God He was the onely Son of Henry the Eighth yet that was not all his title he being the first President in the point of a young Son and two elder Daughters by severall venters the eldest of whom was now thirty yeares old able enough to settle the Government of a distracted Nation and the Son so young as by an Act of Parliament he was disabled to settle any Government at all till he should passe the fifteenth yeare of his Reigne But the thing was settled in the life time of his Father whose last Will though it speake the choise yet the Parliament made the election and declared it The condition of this Kings Person was every way tender borne and sustained by extraordinary meanes which could never make his dayes many or Reigne long His spirit was soft and tractable a dangerous temper in an ill aire but being fixed by a higher principle then nature yeelded him and the same beautified with excellent indowments of nature and Arts and Tongues he outwent all the Kings in his time of the Christian World His Predecessors provided Apparell and Victuall to this Nation but he Education and thereby fitted it to overcome a firy tryall which soon followed his departure The modell of his Government was as tender as himselfe scarce induring to see his Funerall ready for every change subject to tumults and Rebellions an old trick that ever attends the beginning of Reformation like the winde the Sun rising The diversity of Interests in the Great Men especially in point of Religion for the most part first set these into motion for some of them had been so long maintained by the Romish Law that they could never endure the Gospell and yet the different Interests in matters of State made the greater noise All was under a Protector fitly composed to the Kings minde but ill matched with rugged humorous aspiring mindes whereof one that should have been the Protectors great Freind became his fatall Enemy and though he were his Brother to prejudice his Interest pawned his owne blood The other which was the Duke of Northumberland had his will but missed his end for having removed the Protector out of the way and gotten the cheife power about the King yet could he not hold long what he had gotten for the King himselfe after sixteen moneths decaying went into another World and
left the Duke to stand or fall before some other power which came to passe upon the entry of the next Successor The greatest trouble of his Government arose from the prosecution of a designe of his Grand-Fathers Henry the seventh for the uniting of the two Crownes of England and Scotland by marriage and settling an induring peace within this Isle and unto this worke all were ayders in both Nations but the Enemies of both But Gods wayes are not as Mans its a rare example to finde out one Marriage that did ever thrive to this end England meaned well in profering Love but the wooing was ill favoredly carried on by so much Blood Lastly As the Government was now tender so was it carried with much compliance with the People which ever gives occasion to such of them that are irregular to be more and such as are wel governed to be less because though pleasing it be yet it is with lesse awe and spirit which renders their obedience at the best but carelesse and idle unlesse such as are very consciencious be the more carefull over their owne wayes by how much their superiours are the lesse NOt thus was Queen Mary but like a Spaniard shee overruled all relations and ingagements by designe she was about forty yeares old and yet unmarried when shee came to the Throne it may seeme shee wanted a minde to that course of Life from naturall abstinency or was loath to adventure her feature which was not excellent to the Censure of any Prince of as high degree as shee held her self to be or her value was unknown so as to persons of meaner Interests shee might seeme too much above and to those of greater too much beneath Or possibly her Father was loath to let the World know her Title to the Crowne till needs must or to raise up a Title for an other man so long as he had hope of a Son of his own to succeed him and yet had formerly designed her for a wife to Charles the fifth and afterwards to the Dauphine of France Or it may be her self had set a command upon her self not to change her Estate till shee saw the course of the Crown either to or fro however the time is now come that shee must marry or adventure her Woman-hood upon an uncertaine and troublesome state of Affaires Shee liked the Lord Courtnoe above the Prince of Spaine but feared he would not designe with her Shee held him not unmeet for her degree for shee feared he was good enough for her Sister that then also had the Title of a Kingdome waiting so nigh her person as shee was an object of hope to her Freinds and feare to her Enemies And yet Queene Mary married the Prince of Spaine It may be it ran in the blood to marry into their owne blood or rather shee was thereto led by reason of state partly to inable her with greater security in the reseisure of her Kingdome in the Popish Religion wherein shee knew shee had to do with a People not easie to be reduced where Conscience pretended reluctancy and partly to assure her Dominion against the outworks of the French and Scottish designes And so shee yeilded up the Supremacy of her Person to the Prince of Spaine but thanks to the Nobility the Supremacy of the Kingdome was reserved to her own use for it was once in her purpose to have given up all to the man rather then to misse of the man And yet their condition was not much comfortable to either the peoples dislike of the match sounded so loud abroad that when the Prince was to come over the Emperour his Father demanded fifty Pledges for his Sons safty during his abode in this Land which was also denied when he was come over the English Feare the Spanish Tiranny and the Spanish the old Saxon entertainment of the Danes so both ly at their close guards as after some time the King and Queen did no lesse for the Queen was either never earnest in her affection or now much lesse finding his Body diseased and his Minde lingring after unlawfull game On the other side the King not finding that content in her Person especially after her supposed Concepcion that he expected looked to his owne Interest apart from hers and thereby taught her to do the like and this she thought cost England the losse of Callis and he Spaine the losse of many advantages that might have been obtained and was expected from this conjunction Thus by the severall interests betweene the King Regnant and the Queen Regent the Government of England became like a knot dissolving neither fast nor loose Towards the People she might well be reserved if not rigid for she knew her entry was not very acceptable though accepted and that her designe was contrary to her ingagements and therefore it was vaine to think to please her self and pleasure them Nor did she much busie her thoughts therewith that abominated trick of Impost upon Merchandise she brought into fashion which had by many publique acts been damned for the space of two hundred years this was done without either shame or fear for if the People turned head she knew she had a good reserve from Spaine and the People might very well consider of that though for her part she desired not much to improve that Forraine Interest because she might well see that Spaine designed to keep England so far beneath that France might not get above And that Phillip neither loved the double Crowne of England no nor the triple Crowne at Rome otherwise then in order to that of Spaine This distance between her and her King wrought her to a more nigh dependency upon her Councell and English Nobility and so became lesse discerned in her Government although questionlesse she did much and wanted not Wisdome or courage to have done more but that she was not wholly her owne Woman All men do agree that she was devout in her kind of profession and therin as deeply ingaged as her Brother Edward had beene in his though it may be out of tendernesse of Conscience but she out of a Spanish kind of gravity that indures not change and whereunto she was well aided by her Clergy who were her beloved for her Mothers sake and now also so much the more sowre by how much the nigher to the bottome It s the lesse wonder therefore if the zeale of these times burnt into a flame that at length consumed even those that kindled it In one thing more above all the rest she acted the part of her Sect rather then her Place and the same contrary to the advice of her Ghostly Fathers and all rules of policy and the agreement between her King and self upon Marriage which was the ingageing of England in the Warr at Saint Qui ntins against the French contrary to the Nationall league formerly made Neverthelesse the issue was but sutable for though the English
eighth to lead the way chose rather to pursue a Rule then to make one and soon determined the point viz. That the Crown of England with all the Priviledges thereof equally belong to a Woman in possession as to a Man or Childe A bold Adventure I say it was but that Henry the eighth was a bold Leader and yet the bolder it was if the consequence be considered for Queen Mary as a Woman brought in one new President but in her Marriage a worse for she aimed not onely at a forrain blood but at a Prince in Power and Majesty exceeding her own and thereby seeking advancement both to her self and her Realm indangered both The matter was long in debate between the Spanish and English and now had busied their wits above ten years at length a Supremacy is formed sutable to the Lord and Husband of Queen Mary that could not be content to be one inch lower then her self Philip had the name of a King and precedency and in many cases not without the Allegiance of the English Their offences against his person equally Treason with those against the Queens own person and Indictments run Contra pacem coronam D. Regis Reginae That in some cases he participated in the Regal Power may appear in that by the Articles he was to aid the Queen in the Administration of the Kingdom he joyned with the Queen in the royall Assent and in Commissions Letters Patents and in Writs of Summons of Parliament as well as others yet in the words the Crown is reserved onely to the Queen and she must reign as sole Queen Now if the King had broken this Agreement either the Parliament must over-rule the whole or all that is done must be undone and England must bear the burthen A Queen Regent is doubtless a dangerous condition for England above that of an Infant King unless she be married onely to her People This was observed by Queen Elizabeth who therefore kept her self unmarried nor did the People otherwise desire her Marriage then in relation to Posterity Few of them liking any one of their own Nation so well as to prefer him so highly above themselves and fewer any Forrainer This was soon espied by forrain Princes and the Queen her self perceiving that she was like to receive prejudice hereby in her interest amongst them signified by her Embassadours that she never meaned to stoop so low as to match with any of her Subjects but intended to make her choise of some forrain Prince who neither by Power or Riches should be able to prejudice the interest of any of her neighbouring Princes A pretty Complement this was to gain expectation from those abroad and better correspondency thereunto Upon this ground divers Princes conceived hopes of more interest then by triall they could finde And the Arch-duke of Austria began a Treaty which seemingly was entertained by her but her Proposals were such as silenced all those of the Austrian Interest for ever after viz. 1. That the Romish Religion should never be admitted into England 2. That no man that she married should ever wear the Title of King 3. That no Forrainer should ever intermeddle in the Rule and Government of the Church or Common-wealth nor in the Ministry of the Church 4. That if he survived the Queen he should never challenge any Title or Interest in the Government or any Possession in England 5. She would never marry any one that she might not first see So as either she aimed at some inferior Prince that durst not look so high or else she did but make semblance till she was nigh fourty years old and in all declared that she liked not her Sister Maries choise To these two Powers of Determining and Distributing I shall add a third of Deputing which the Parliament exercised as formerly it had done Henry the eighth had in Ecclesiastical matters exercised a Power beyond the reach of Law and yet by Parliament had provided positive Laws by which the same ought to have been ordered these were also confirmed in Edward the sixths time with some Additionals By these particular Commissioners were appointed for the making of Ecclesiastical Constitutions and the King himself had a power Episcofactory without Conge deslire They likewise limited the power of Ecclesiastical Courts altered their Process reformed their Censures even that grand Censure of Excommunication it self The like or much more may be said of their deputing power in Civil Affairs as well inlarging the Kings power as in abridging the same for whereas some of the Successors of Henry the 8. had power by vertue of his Letters Patents after 24 years of age to annull any Act of Parliament by them made before that Age. In the time of Edward the sixth notwithstanding the Proviso in that Law and although Edward the sixth was not then twelve years old yet the Parliament repealed all and restored to Edward the sixth onely that power for the time to come but not to any of his Successors and whereas Henry 8. had gained to himself his Successors a Legislative Power by Proclamation the Parliament in Edward the sixths time took the fame quite away and reduced Proclamations into their former sober posture The like may be observed of the power of the Parliament in ordering the Lives Members and Estates of the People in matters criminal and in making and altering Courts of Justice and bounding their power altering their Process abridging their Terms for Judicature reforming Errors in pleading amending common Conveyances and Assurance as in passing Fines with Proclamations their course in the County Palatine Limitations of Prescription fraudulent Deeds Recoveries by Collusion c. in all which the Crown had no power but in and by the Parliament Many particulars more might be added if the matter so required for the Statutes are more full in these later Times then formerly and may soon lead us beyond a just Period in so clear a matter CHAP. XXXVII Of Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical in these last Times IN the general and in relation to the forrain Jurisdiction of Rome it was like a Childe in an Ague under Fits of Heat and Cold but in it self under the Prelacy still growing in stature though not in strength Edward the sixth came in like a storm that tore up Episcopacy by the Roots yet a Top-Root remained intire with the stock bearing shew of a kinde of Divinity that though bared of the old Soile of the Papacy yet transplanted into the new Mould of Royalty soon conveyed a new life which made the stock still flourish and grow into a better condition then formerly it had Their Legislative power in matters concerning their own interest though in outward view seeming their own yet was doubly disturbed from the Pope and the King who though many times opposed one another yet evermore were both of them in opposition to the Church with the greater bitterness by their