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A34709 Cottoni posthuma divers choice pieces of that renowned antiquary, Sir Robert Cotton, Knight and Baronet, preserved from the injury of time, and exposed to publick light, for the benefit of posterity / by J.H., Esq.; Selections. 1672 Cotton, Robert, Sir, 1571-1631.; Howell, James, 1594?-1666. 1672 (1672) Wing C6486; ESTC R2628 147,712 358

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Parliament a solemne protestation for himself and the whole Clergie of his Province entered by word the effect whereof was That albeit they might lawfully be present in all Parliaments yet for that in those Parliament matters of treason were to be intreated of whereas by the Canon law they ought not to be present they therefore absented themselves saving their liberties therein otherwise And in the 21. of Richard the 2. for that divers judgements were heretofore undon for that the Clergie were not present the commons prayed the King that the Clergie would appoint some to be their common Proctor with sufficient authority thereunto The Bishops and Clergie therefore being severally examined appointed Sir Thomas Piercy their Proctor to assent as by their Instruments appeareth And the same year upon the devise of Sir Thomas Bussey most of the Bishops and Lords were sworne before the King again upon the Cross of Canterbury to repeal nothing in this year enacted So did sundry the Proctors of the Clergy and most of the Commons by holding up one of their hands affirmed that they the same would do In the judgement of the Duke of Norfolk and Earl of Warwick the same year the name and assent of the Procurator of the Clergy alleadged And in the first of Henry 4. the Bishop of Assaph for Arch-bishop and Bishops the Abbot of Glassenbury for all Religious Persons the Earl of Gloucester for Dukes and Earls the Lord of Barkley for Barons and Barronets Sir Thomas Irpingham Chamberlain for Batchelors and Commons of the South Sir Thomas Gray for Batchelors and Commons of the North Sir William Thirming and John Mekham Justices for the whole Estates came to the Tower to King Richard to whom Sir William Thirming for and in the name of them all pronounced the sentence of deposition and the words or resignation of homage and loyalty And when it was enacted anno 6. Henry 6. by the King Lords Temporal and Commons that no man should contract or marry himself to any Queen of England without the special licence and assent of the King on pain to lose all his Goods and Lands The Bishops and all the Clergie to this Bill assented so far as it was not against the Law of God And thus far for answer to the second part The third Reason Ecclesiastical Lawes enacted in Parliament The last which they granted from Presidents Parliaments since the Conquest they infer out of the Phrase and out of the practise The first by these words Rex Wintoniae celebravit magnum Concilium coram Episcopis Comitibus Baronibus mistaking the word as intending a Provincial Synod whereas it was in those dayes equal and usual for their Parliament that French Phrase never having admission in that sence here untill the time of Henry 2. and then but rarely That great assembly being formerly instiled Magnum Consilium and until of late often enjoyed the same name And this is evident out of the words of Benedictus Abbas in the life he wrote of the 2. 2. Henry Circa festum sancti Pauli venit Dominus Rex usque Northampton magnum ibi celebravit Consilium de Statutis Regni sui coram Episcopis Comitibus Baronibus terrae suae per Consilium Militum hominum suorum Here the intent manifesteth the nature of that assembly and the fuller in that the same Author in the same year saith that Richardus Cantuar. Archiepiscopus and Rogerus Eboracensis cum Sufraganeis suis congregatis apud Westmonasterium in Capella Monachorum infirmiorum tenuerunt Consilium or their convocation which had been needless if in their first they might have done their Church-affaires Here might I enter into a large and just discourse as well of the authority as antiquity of their Convocation or Synod Provincial no less antient as Beda mentioneth then in the year 686. when Austin adjutorio Regis c. assembled in Councel the Brittain Bishops from which unto this day there is successive Record of Councels or Convocations less interrupted then of Parliament Practice Now touching our practise to ordain in Parliaments Lawes Ecclesiastical either meer or mixt although it be by Record evident yet must it admit this difference First that it sprung not from our dispute or desire but solely from the Petitions of the Church as usual is in all the Rolls of Parliament receiving their distinct Title from those of the Commons And this they did to adde Seculare Brachium to their former Cannons too weak to reach to corporal punishments as in the fifth of Richard 2. when to suppress the Schismes the Clergy became in Parliament the Petitioners to the Kings Laity where these words of their assistance are excluding the Commons from any Power of advice Habita prius bona matura deliberatione de communi Consilio ipsius Archiepiscopi Suffraganeorum suorum aliorumque Clericorum super quo idem Archiepiscopus supplicavit ut pro debita castigatione illorum qui conclusiones Schismaticas praedicare voluerint animo obstinato dignaremur apponere brachium Regiae potestatis ●idem And this aide was in order in the Conquerors time who by edict commanded that every Marshal Episcope Deo faceret rectum secundum Canones Episcopales leges Which if he doth not after excommunication Fortitudo et Justitia Regis adhibeatur And this even in the Primitive Church was thought convenient because as Saint Ambrose saith for the like intent to the Emperor Valentinian Non tantas vires sermo mecus habiturus est pro Trinitate bellum gerens quantum edictum tuum Hence it is that at this day the King's authority is annexed ever to the Convocation as in the antient Church were the like decrees of Kings as those of Eruigius ratifying the twelfth Councel of Toledo Nemo illiciator vel contemptor vigorem his Institutionibus subtrahat sed generaliter per cunctas Regni nostri provincias hoec Canonum instituta nostrae gloriae temporibus acta et autoritatis debitae fastigia praepollebunt irrevocabili judiciorum exercitie prout constituta sunt in omnibus Regni nostri Provinciis celebres habebuntur Si quis autem haec instituta contemnat contemptor se noverit damnari sententia Id est ut juxta voluntatem nostrae gloriae et excommunicatas à nostro caet●resiliat in super decimam partem facultatis suaefisci partibus sociandam amittat But that the Church-laws ever moved from the Lay-members I take it as far from President as it is besides nhe nature of their Commission The Bishops and Clergy being onely called in the Writ to that service the word being to come in fide delectione ad declarandum Consilium avisamentum ad consentiendum iis quae tunc de avisamento assensu Cleri nostri and not the Commons cotigerit affirmari But if any shall object unto me that many Laws as that of the Supremacy
And where those of Syphax had plotted the murder of Masinissa Non aliud mihi factum quàm quod sceleris sui reprehensi essent saith Appian The Ambassadors of the Protestants at the Counsell of Trent though divulging there the Doctrine of the Churches contrary to a Decree there enacted a crime equivalent to Treason yet stood they protected from any punishment So much doth public conveniency prevail against a particular mischief That the State of Rome though in case of the most capital crime exempted the Tribunes of the people from question during the year of office And the Civilians all consent that Legis de Jure Gentium indictum est eorum corpora salva sint Propter necessitatem legationis ac ne confundant jura comercii inter Principes The redress of such injuries by such persons the example of Modern and best times will lead us to Vivia the Popes Legate was restrained by Henry the Second for exercising a power in his Realm not admitted by the King in disquiet of the State and forced to swear not to act any thing in Praejudicium Regis vel Regni Hen. 3. did the like to one of the Popes Ambassadors another flying the Realm secretly fearing timens pelli sui as the Record saith Edward 1. so restraining another until he had as his Progenitors had informed the Pope of the fault of his Minister and received satisfaction of the wrongs In the year 1523. Lewis de Pratt Ambassador for Charles 5. was commanded to his house for accusing falsly Cardinal Wolsey to have practised a breach between Hen. 8. and his Master to make up the Amity with the French King Sir Michael Throgmorton by Charles the 9. of France was so served for being too busie with the Prince of Condy in his faction Doctor Man in the year 1567. was taken from his own house in Madriil and put under a Guard to a straiter Lodging for breeding a Scandal as the Conde Teri said in using by warrant of his Place the Religion of his Country although he alledged the like permitted to Ghusman de Silva their Ambassador and to the Turk no less then in Spain In the year 1568. Don Ghuernon d' Espes vvas ordered to keep his house in London for sending scandalous Letters to the Duke d' Alva unsealed The Bishop of Rosse in the year 1571. vvas first confined to his house after to the Tower then committed for a good space to the Bishop of Ely his care for medling with more business then belonged to the place of his imployment The like was done to Dr. Alpin and Malvisett the French Ambassadors successively for being busie in more then their Masters affairs In the time of Philip the second of Spain the Venetian Ambassador in Madrill protecting an offendor that fled into his house and denying the Heads or Justices to enter his house vvhere the Ambassador stood armed to vvithstand them and one Bodavario a Venetian whom they committed to Prison for his unruly carriage and they removed the Ambassador unto another house until they had searched and found the Offendor Then conducting back the Ambassador set a guard upon his house to stay the fury of the people enraged The Ambassador complaining to the King he remitted it to the Supreme Councel they justified the proceeding condemning Bodavario to lose his head and other the Ambassadors servants to the Galleys all vvhich the King turned to banishment sending the whole process to Inego de Mendoza his Ambassador at Venice and declaring by a publick Ordinance unto that State and all other Princes that in case his Ambassadors should commit any offence nnworthily and disagreeing to their professions they should not then enjoy the privilege of those Officers referring them to be judged by them vvhere they then resided Barnardino de Mendoza for traducing falsly the Ministers of the State to further his seditious Plots vvas restrained first and after commanded away in the year 1586. The last of Spanish Instruments that disquieted this State a benefit vve found many years after by their absence and feel the vvant of it now by their reduction Having thus shortly touched upon such precedent examples as have fallen in the vvay in my poor observation I humbly crave pardon to offer up my simple opinion what course may best be had of prosecution of this urgent cause I conceive it not unfit that vvith the best of speed some of the chief Secretarries vvere sent to the Ambassador by vvay of advice that they understanding a notice of this information amongst the common people that they cannot but conceive a just fear of uncivil carriage towards his Lordship or his followers if any the least incitement should arise and therefore for quiet of the State and security of his person they vvere bound in love to his Lordship to restrain as vvell himself as followers until a further course be taken by legal examination vvhere this aspertion begun the vvay they onely conceived secure to prevent the danger this fear in likelyhood vvill be the best motive to induce the Ambassador to make discovery of his intelligence when it shall be required I conceive it then most fit that the Prince and your Grace to morrow should complain of this in Parliament and leaving it so to their advice and justice to depart the House the Lords at the instant to crave a conference of some small number of the Commons and so conclude of a Message to be sent to the Ambassador to require from him the charge and proofs the Persons to be sent the two Speakers of the two Houses vvith some convenient company of either to have their Maces and ensigns of Office born brfore them to the Ambassadors Gate and then forborn to shew fair respect to the Ambassadors then to tell them that a relation being made that day in open Parliament of the former information to the King by his Lordship they vvere deputed from both Houses the great Councel of the Kingdom to the vvhich by the fundamental Law of the State the chief care of the Kings safety and public quiet is committed they vvere no less the high Court of Justice or Supersedeas to all others for the examining and correcting all attempts of so high a nature as this if it carry truth That they regarded the honour of the State for the Catholicks immoderate using of late the Lenity of Soveraign Grace to the scandal and offence of too many and this aspersion now newly reflecting upon the Prince and others meeting vvth the former distaste which all in publique conceive to make a plot to breed a rupture between the King and State by that party maliciously layd hath so inflamed and sharpned the minds of most that by the access of people to Term and Parliament the City more filled then usual and the time it selfe neer May day a time by custom apted more to licentious liberty then any other cannot but breed a just jealousie and
besides the first and last of Parliament and there was entred some Speeches by him uttered but that of all the rest is most of remark the reporter then present thus tells it This of the Duke of Clarence and the King Tristis disceptatio inter duos tantae humanitatis Germanos nemo arguit contra ducem nisi Rex nemo respondit Regi nisi dux some other testimonies are brought in with which the Lords are satisfied and so Formârunt in eum sententiam damnations by the mouth of the Duke of Buckingham the Steward of England all which was much distasted by the House of Commons The Raigne of Henry the seventh affords us upon the Rolls no one example The journall Bookes are lost except so much as preserves the passages of eight dayes in the twelfth year of his Raigne in which the King was some dayes present at all debates and with his own hand the one and thirtieth day of the Parliament delivered in a bill of Trade then read but had the memorials remained it is no doubt but he would have been as frequent in his Great Councell of Parliament as he was in the Starre-Chamber where by the Register of that Court it appeareth as well in debate of private causes that toucheth neither life nor Member as those of publique care he every year of all his raign was often present Of Henry the eighth memory hath not been curious but if he were not often present peradventure that may be the cause which the learned Recorder Fleetwood in his preface to the Annalls of Edward the fifth Richard the third Henry the seventh and Henry the eighth hath observed in the Statutes made in that Kings dayes for which cause he hath severed their Index from the former And much lay in the will of Wolsey who ever was unwilling to let that King see with his own eyes Edward the sixth in respect of his young years may be vvell excused but that such was his purpose it appears by a memorial of his own hand vvho proportioning the affairs of Councell to several persons reserved those of greatest vveight to his own presence in these vvords These to attend the matters of State that I will sit with them once a week to hear the debating of things of most importance Unfitness by sex in his two succeeding sisters to be so frequent present as their former Ancestors led in the ill occasion of such opinion and practise Most excellent Majesty your most humble servant in discharge of obedience and zeal hath hastned up this abstract vvhich in all humility he offers up unto your gracious pardon Presumption to enter the Closet of your Counsell is far from his modesty and duty vvhat hath been your powerfull Command he hath made his Work vvhat is fit to be done vvith it is only your divine judgment He dares not say Presidents are vvarrants to direct The success is as vvorthy observation as the knowledge of them sometimes have made ill example by extension of Regal power through ill Counsels vvith ill success Some as bad or vvorse vvhen the people have had too much of that and the King too little the danger no less To cut out of either of these patterns to follovv vvere but to be in Love vvith the mischief for the example The clearer I present this to your Highness the nearer I approach the uprightness of your heart the blessed fortune of your happy Subjects Pardon most Sacred Majesty that I offer up unto your admired vvisdome my vveak but dutifull observations out of all the former gathering In Consultations of State and decisions of private plaints it is clear from all times the King not only present to advise and hear but to determine also in Cases Criminal and not of Bloud to bar the King a part vvere to exclude him the Star-chamber as far from reason as example The doubt is then alone in Crimes meer Capital I dare not commend too much the times that lost these patterns either for the Causes or Effects but vvish the one and other never more To proceed by publick Act of Commons Peers and King vvas most usuall Appeals are given by Lavv of Hen. 4. of this in novv debate the vvay I fear as yet obscure as great advice to State is needfull for the manner as for the Justice The example in the cause of the Duke of Suffolke 28 Hen. 6. vvhere the King gave judgement vvas protested against by the Lords That of the Duke of Clarence of Edw. 4. vvhere the Lords and the high Stevvard the Duke of Buckingham gave judgement vvas protested against by Commons in both of these the King vvas sometimes present but vvhich of those may suit these times I dare not guess That of Primo Rich. 2. of Gomeneys and Weston accused by the Commons plaint for Treason vvas tried by the Lords in absence of the King but sentenced by the Lord Scroop Stevvard for the King The Accused vvere of the rank of the Accusers Commons and not Lords Hovv this vvill make a President to judg in causes Capital a Peer of Parliament I cannot tell But if I should conceive a vvay ansvverable as well to Parliament as other Courts if the King and the Lords vvere Tryers and the Commons assenters to the judgment to hear together the Charge and evidence The Lords as doth the Jury in other Courts to vvithdravv to find the Verdict and then the Stevvard for the King to pronounce the Sentence It passeth so by vvay of Act and Course that carrieth vvith it no exception and likely to avoid all curious questions of your Highness presence there If your humble servant hath in this expression of his desire to do you service presumed too far his Comfort is that vvhere zeal of duty hath made the fault benignity of goodness vvill grant the Pardon A DISCOURSE OF THE LAWFULLNES OF COMBATS To be performed in the presence of the KING or the Constable and Marshall of ENGLAND Written by Sir Robert Cotton Knight and Baronet 1609. LONDON Printed in the Year 1672. A DISCOURSE OF THE LAWFULLNES OF COMBATS To be performed in the presence of the KING c. COMBAT WHere difference could not be determined by legal proof or testimony there was allowed the party his purgation Which was either Canonicall or Legall The first by Oath and called Canonicall because it is Lawfull The other which was either Per aquam candentem ferrum ignitum or Duellum called vulgare because it was brought in by the barbarous people without the pretext of any Law untill the Gothish and Lombard Kings seeing their Subjects more addicted to Martiall Discipline than to Civill Government reduced those trialls to Form and Rule Which Constitutions are now incorporated in the Civill Law From the Northern Nations of which the Saxons and Normans or Northmanni are part it was brought into this Land And although it grew long ago both by the Decrees of
not a cord about their necks ready for vengeance if it were found unprofitable but let such Stoicks know that there is great difference between the penning of a Law and advice giving for the manner of executing it neither by their leaves are all innovations to be rejected for divine Plato teacheth us that in all Common-wealths upon just grounds there ought to be some changes and that States men therein must behave themselves like skilfull musicians Qui artem musices non mutant sed musices modum V. That an evil weed groweth fast by the example of the new Catholique increase is clearly convinced but he that will ascribe this generation simply to his Majesties heroicall vertue of Clemency argueth out of fallacy which is called Ignoratio Elenchi was not the zeal of many cooled towards the last end of Queen Elizabeths Raign hath not the impertinent heat of some of our own side bereft us of part of our strength and the Papacy with tract of time gotten a hard skin on their Consciences Parva metus primo mox sese attollit in altum But if we will with a better insight behold how this great quantity of spaun is multiplied we must especially ascribe the cause thereof to their Priests who by their deaths prepare and assure more to their sect than by their lives they could ever perswade It were incivility to distrust a Friend or one that hath the shew of an honest man if he will frankly give his word or confirm it with an Oath but when a Protestation is made upon the last gasp of life it is of great effect to those that cannot gainesay it upon their owne knowledge The number of Priests which now adayes come to make a Tragicall conclusion is not great yet as with one Seal many Patents are sealed so with the loss of few lives numbers of wavering spirits may be gained Sanguis Martyrum Semen Ecclesieae And though those Priests having a disadvantagious cause are in very deed but counterfeit shadowes of Martyrs unto a true understanding yet will they be reputed for such by those that lay their Souls in pawn unto their Doctrine with whom if we list to contend by multitude of voices vve shall be cried down vvithout all peradventure for the gate of their Church is vvide and many there are that enter thereinto VI. By divers means it is possible to come to one and the self same end seeing then that the summe of our vvell-vvishing is all one namely that Popish Priests may have no power to do harm it is not impertinent to try sundry paths vvhich may lead us to the perfecting of our desires Politicians distinguish inter rempublicam constitutam rempublicam constituendam according to the severall natures vvhereof Statists art to dispose of their Counsells and Ordinances vvere now the Rhemists and Romulists new hatched out of the shell the former course of severity might soon bury their opinions with their persons but since the disease is inveterate variety of medicines is judicially to be applyed The Romans did not punish all crimes of one and the selfsame nature vvith extremity of death for some they condemned to perpetuall prison and others they banished into an Island or some remote Countrey even in the case of Religion they vvere very tender to dip their fingers in bloud for vvhen Cato vvas Consull and it seemed good unto the Senate to suppress with violence the disordered Ceremony of the Bacchanalls brought by a strange Priest into the City he vvithstood that sentence alledging that there vvas nothing so apt to deceive men as Religion vvhich alwayes pretends a shew of divinity and for that cause it behoved to be very vvary in chastising the professors thereof lest any indignation should enter into the peoples minds that some-what vvas derogated from the Majesty of God Others more freely have not spared to place Relgion I mean that Religion vvhich is ignorantly zealous amongst the kinds of Frenzie vvhich is not to be cured otherwise than by time given to divert or qualifie the fury of the conceipt Tantum Religio potuit suadere malorum VII Howsoever in valuing the power of a City or strength of arguments quality and vvorth is to be preferred before number nevertheless vvhere the uttermost of our force is not known it imports much to have it conceived That the multitude stands for us for doubts and suspicions cast in an enemies vvay evermore makes things seem greater and more difficult than they are indeed vve have by Gods mercy the Sword of justice drawn in our behalf which upon short warning is able to disunite the secret underminers of our quiet we have a King zealous for the house of the Lord who needeth not to feare less success in shutting up of Priests than our late Queen had in restraining them in Wisbich Castle where lest their factious Spirits should grow rusty they converted their Cancer to fret upon themselves and vomitting out Gall in Quod-libets shewed that their disease was chiefly predominant in the spleen what tempests they have raised in their College at Rome their own books and many travellers can witness the storm whereof was such that Sixtus Quintus complained seriously of the vexation which he received oftner from the English Scholars then all the Vassals of the Triple Crown and untruly is the Magistrate noted of negligence or overmuch security that layeth wait to catch the Foxes and the little Foxes which spoyl the Vineyard though afterwards without further punishment he reserve them to the day wherein God will take accompt of their Stewardship for if Aristotles City defined to be a society of men assembled to live well be the same which in our Law hath reference to the maintaining of the people in Peace so long as we taste of the sweet of a peaceable Government we cannot say but that we live well and that the City consisting of men and not of walls is happily guided VIII An Oath is a weak bond to contain him that will for pretended conscience sake hold not faith with heretiques or by absolution from a Priest thinketh himself at liberty to fly from any promise or protestation whatsoever therefore when I remember that Watson the Priest notwithstanding his invectives against the Jesuits gained liberty to forge his traiterous inventions and had others of his society in the complot I judge if safer to make recluses of them than to suffer such to dally with us by books and some idle intelligences cast abroad onely as a mist to bleare our eyes But how shall we finde the meanes to apprehend those disguised Romanists that borrow the shape of Captaines Merchants Gentlemen Citizens and all sorts of people and by equivocation may deny themselves to be themselves In answer to this question I will first shew the reason why they are not pursued and taken and hereafter make an overture how they may be bolted out of their hutches
and so transported and his Mint thereby set less on work then now 3. Whether the advancing the Silver-coyn in England will not cause a transportation of most of that that is now currant to be minted in the Netherlands and from them brought back again whereby his Majestie 's Mint will fail by the exported benefit 4. Whether the advancing the Silver coyn if it produce the former effects will not cause the Markets to be unfurnished of present coyn to drive the exchange when most of the old will be used in Bullion 5. Whether the higher we raise the Coyn at home we make not thereby our Commodities beyond-sea the cheaper 6. Whether the greatest profit by this enhauncing will not grow to the ill members of the State that have formerly culled the weightiest peeces and sold them to the stranger-Merchants to be transported Certain General Rules collected concerning Money and Bullion out of the late Consultation at Court GOld and Silver have a twofold estimation in the Extrinsick as they are monies they are the Princes measures given to his people and this is a Prerogative of Kings In the Intrinsick they are Commodities valuing each other according to the Plenty or scarcity and so all other Commodities by them And that is the sole power of Trade The measures in a Kingdom ought to be constant It is the Justice and Honour of the King for if they be altered all men at that instant are deceived in their precedent contracts either for Lands or money and the King most of all for no man knoweth then either what he hath or what he oweth This made the Lord Treasurer Burleigh in 73. when some Projectors had set on foot a matter of this nature to tell them that they were worthy to suffer death for attempting to put so great a dishonour on the Queen and detriment and discontent upon the People For to alter this publick measure is to leave all the Markets of the Kingdome unfurnished and what will be the mischief the Proclamations of 5. Edwardi 6. 3. Mariae and 4. Elizabethae will manifest when but a Rumor of the like produced that effect so far that besides the faith of the Princes to the contrary delivered in their Edicts they were inforced to cause the Magistrates in every Shire respectively to constrain the people to furnish the Markets to prevent a mutiny To make this measure then at this time short is to raise all prizes or to turn the money or measure now currant into disise or Bullion for who will depart with any when it is richer by seven in the hundred in the Mass then the new monies and yet of no more value in the Market Hence of necessity it must follow that there will not in a long time be sufficient minted of the new to drive the exchange of the Kingdome and so all Trade at one instant at a stand and in the mean time the Markers unfurnished Which how it may concern the quiet of the State is worthy care And thus far as money is a measure Now as it is a Commodity it is respected and valued by the intrinsick quality And first the one metall to the other All commodities are prized by Plenty or scarsity by dearness or cheapness the one by the other If then we desire our Silver to buy Gold as it late hath done we must let it be the cheaper and less in proportion valued and so contrary for one equivalent proportion in both will bring in neither We see the proof thereof by the unusual quantity of Gold brought lately to the Mint by reason of the price for we rate it above all other Countries and Gold may be bought too dear To furnish then this way the mint with both is altogether impossible And at this time it was apparently proved both by the best Artists and Merchants most acquainted with the Exchange in both the examples of the Mint-masters in the Rex Dollar and Reall of Eight That Silver here is of equal value and Gold above with the forreign parts in the intrinsick and that the fallacy presented to the Lords by the Mint-Masters is only in the nomination or extrinsick quality But if we desire both it is not raising of the value that doth it but the ballasing of Trade for buy we in more then we sell of other Commodities be the money never so high prized we must part with it to make the disproportion even If we sell more then we buy the contrary will follow And this is plain in Spain's necessities For should that King advance to a double rate his Reall of 8. yet needing by reason of the barrenness of his Countrey more of Forreign Wares then he can countervail by Exchange with his own he must part with his money and gaineth no more by enhauncing his Coyn but that he payeth a higher price for the Commodities he buyeth if his work of raising be his own But if we shall make improvement of Gold and Silver being the staple Commodity of his State we then advancing the price of his abase to him our own Commodities To shape this Kingdom to the fashion of the Netherlanders were to frame a Royal Monarch by a Society of Merchants Their Countrey is a continual Fair and so the price of Money must rise and fall to fit their occasions We see this by raising the Exchange at Franckford and other places at the usual times of their Marts The frequent and daily change in the low Countries of their monies is no such injustice to any there as it would be here For being all either Mechanicks or Merchants they can rate accordingly their labours or their wares whether it be coyn or other Merchandise to the present condition of their own money in Exchange And our English Merchants to whose profession it properly belongs do so according to the just intrinsick value of their Forreign coyn in all barter of Commodities or exchange except at Usance Which we that are ruled and tyed by the extrinsick measure of monies in all our constant Reckonings add Annual bargains at home cannot do And for us then to raise our coyn at this time to equal their proportions were but to render our selves to a perpetual incertainty for they will raise upon us daily then again which if we of course should follow else receive no profit by this present change we then destroy the Policy Justice Honour and Tranquility of our State at home for ever THE DANGER WHEREIN THIS KINGDOME NOW STANDETH AND THE REMEDY Written by Sir ROB. COTTON Knight and Baronet LONDON Printed in the year 1651. THE DANGER Wherein this Kingdome now standeth and the REMEDIE AS soon as the house of Austria had incorporated it self into the house of Spain and by their new Discoveries gotten to themselves the Wealth of the Indies they began to affect and have ever since pursued a fifth Monarchy The Emperour Charles would first have laid the foundation thereof in Italy