Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n assemble_v king_n parliament_n 11,796 5 6.7701 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A87609 A discourse consisting of motives for the enlargement and freedome of tradeĀ· Especially that of cloth, and other vvoollen manufactures, engrossed at present contrary to [brace] the law of nature, the law of nations, and the lawes of this kingdome. / By a company of private men who stile themselves merchant-adventurers. The first part. Aprill. 11. 1645 Imprimatur, Na. Brent. Johnson, Thomas, marchant. 1645 (1645) Wing J849A; Thomason E260_21; ESTC R212472 22,833 55

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

manner they without hope of comfort or reliefe and the Kings Customes and Subsidies and the Navy of the Land greatly decreased and minished and daily they be like more to decay if out reformation be not had in this behalfe Be it therefore enacted by the King our Soveraigne Lord by the advise and assent of the Lords spirituall and temporall and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by authority of the fame that every English man being the Kings true Leigeman from henceforth have free passage resort course and recourse into the said coasts of Flanders Holland Zealand Brabant and other places thereto nigh adjoyning under the obeysance of the said Archduke to the Marts there her easter to he holden with his or their Merchandizes Goods and wares there to buy and sell and make their exchange freely at his or their pleasure without exaction fine imposition extortion or contribution to be had leavied taken or perceived of them or of any of them to for or by any English person or persons to his or their own use or to the use of the said Fraternity of Fellowship or of any other like except only of ten Mark sterling And that no person English as is afore rehearsed hereafter take to his own use or to the use of the said Fraternity or Fellowship thereof any other English person of what estate degree or condition that he be of so alway that he be the King our Soveraigne Lords true Leige-man any fine exaction imposition or contribution for his liberty or freedome to buy and sell Goods wares or Merchandizes in or at any of the said Marts more or above the said summe of ten Mark sterling only upon paine of forfeiture to our Soveraigne Lord for every time that he doth the contrary of this Act 20. l. and also to forfeit to the parties so grieved in this behalfe tenne times so much as he contrary to this present Act taketh of him And that the parties so aggrieved shall have in this behalfe an Action of debt for the said forfeiture of tenne times in any of the Kings Courts within this Realm by writ Bill Plaint or Information and such processe to be made in the same as is or ought to be made in or upon an Action of debt at the Common Law and the triall thereof to be had in such Shire City or Place where the said Action is commenced or sued and that the Defendant in any Action bee not admitted to wage his Law nor none Essoine or Protection be for such Defendant admitted or allowed in that behalfe This Act of Parliament is in full force and validity to this day for there is none can deny that the vertue of an Act of Parliament is such that no Power can repeale or abrogate it but the same Legislative Power that made it now that a private Charter procured by gratuities favour and other clandestine wayes as shall be proved should have power to suspend and stop the execution of an Act of Parliament we beleeve no Iudge in the Land will affirme especially considering that this Charter doth authorize a few men to exercise both at home and abroad an extrajudiciall sway both over the consciences the bodies and estates of his Majesties leige people by oathes imprisonments amercements and taxes Touching the Oath they use to impose it runs thus being couched in this odde forme YOu sweare by Almighty God to be good and true to our Soveraign Lord the King that now is and to his Heires and Successours Kings of this Realme You shall be obedient and assistant to Mr Governour or his Deputy and Assistants of Merchant-Adventurers in the parts of Holland Zealand Brabant Flanders and within the Townes and Marches of Calais as also in East Freezland or any other Countrey or place on this or that side the seas where the said Company are or shall be priviledged All States and Ordinances not repealed which have beene made or shall he made by the said Governour or his Deputy and Fellowship you shall to your best knowledge truly bold and keep no singular regard to your selfe in hurt or prejudice of the Common wealth of the said Fellowship or else being condemned and or derly demanded shall truly from time to time content and pay unto the Treasurer for the time being all and every such mulcts and penalties which have and shall be limited and set for the transgressors and offenders of the same The secrets and privities of the aforesaid Fellowship you shall heal and not bewray and if you shall know any person or persons that intend any hurt harme or prejudice to our Soveraigne Lord the King or unto his Lands or to the Fellowship aforesaid or the priviledges of the same you shall give knowledge thereof and doe it to be knowne to the said Governour or his Deputy And you shall not colour or free any Forreigners goods which are not free of this Fellowship of Merchant-Adventurers of England So help you God By the words of this extravagant Oath one may see what high illegall and transcendent power they assume to themselves to make Statutes which is proper and peculiar only to Parliaments Moreover they stile themselves a Commonwealth in so much that though they cannot be termed Regnum in Regno they may be well termed Dominium in Dominio Besides this Oath there is another called the purging Oath whereby one is bound to confesse whether he hath offended in such and such particulars and to accuse himselfe which is point blank against Law being a thing abhorring to nature and for which kinde of Oath some of our Courts were lately put down by this present Parliament and touching their Impositions and Fines they lay them ad libitum which they convert afterwards to their owne benefit whereas the King de jure partakes of all Fines but they passed an Order by which to use their owne words they were pleased to allow him the one moity The true copy of which Order shall be inserted here with others by which one may guesse at the rest At a Court holden March 4. 1603. THe Brethren of this Company assembled together doe bold it very requisite for the better carriage of their Trade that suite should be made unto the Kings Majesty by the meanes of my Lord Chancellor to be perferred that in the confirmation of the Companies Charters of Priviledges this also might be added and inserted that the Company in their Courts as well in England as beyond the Seas to bee holden may impose reasonable fines and penalties upon such Subiects of this Realme not free of this Company that shall ship Woollen Commodities into the Countreys and Places where they are priviledged thereby to cause such intruding subiects to desist from that trade which properly appertains to the Company of Adventurers In consideration whereof and in hope of the more favour in some other suites they meane to move hereafter they are pleased that the Kings Maiesty may have and
A DISCOURSE Consisting of MOTIVES FOR The Enlargement and Freedome OF TRADE Especially That of CLOTH and other Woollen MANUFACTURES Engrossed at present Contrary to the Law of Nature Contrary to the Law of Nations Contrary to and the Lawes of this Kingdome By a Company of private men who stile themselves Merchant-Adventurers The First Part. Imprimatur NA BRENT April 11. 1645 LONDON Printed by Richard Bishop for Stephen Bowtell and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Bible in Popes-Head Alley 1645. To the Right Honourable the LORDS and COMMONS in PARLIAMENT assembled Right Honourable THE scope and substance of this following Discourse is to demonstrate by clear and unanswerable Arguments the Illegality of the Incorporation of those who soly ascribe unto themselves the names of Merchants Adventurers though they Trade but unto two Townes only and those hard by and to show further how their Patent trencheth upon the native Rights of the freeborn subject which Patent hath been often complaind of and clamord against from time to time as an universall greevance to Town and Countrey tending to the diminution of Trade and of all sorts of Manufactures at home and to the dis-repute of the Policy of this Nation abroad the sayd Patent being accounted no lesse amongst all people then a Monopoly a word odious all the world over This Incorporation hath bin like an Vlcer upon the Body politique of this Kingdome a long time which hath beene often rub'd and lanc'd yet it clos'd againe and gatherd more corruption then formerly and now requires a greater cure then ever Therfore in all humblenesse it is prayed that this Honourable Court and highest Councell of the Kingdom who have already done so many glorious things for the publike Liberty Rights and Immunities of the free borne Subject would be pleased to peruse the ensuing Discourse and poise the weight of the Reasons Arguments and proofes therein produced which are derived from true fountaines and so to doe therein what in their high wisedome and justice they shall think expedient for the redresse of such a Nationall grievance A DISCOURSE Consisting of MOTIVES FOR The Enlargement and Freedome of Trade Especially That of CLOTH and other Woollen Manufactures Engrossed at present Contrary to the Law of Nature the Law of Nations and the Lawes of this Kingdome By a Company of private men who stile themselves Merchant-Adventurers THe Terrestriall Globe in cut out into Islands and Continents both which are created to be a Mansion for men and although they be severd by the work of Nature yet they may be said to be joynd together by Commerce which is that great link of humane Society that golden chaine which unites all Nations And though the Earth and Sea be of themselves as differing Elements as any of the rest yet the Divine providence by a speciall foresight hath so indented as it were and embosomd them one in the other that they make but one perfect Globe to render them thereby more apt for the mutuall Commerce and Negotiation of Mankinde Of all parts of the Earth Islands which by the violence of the Sea are torne off from the rest of the world stand most in need of Commerce as well for the encrease of shipping whereon their security and strength doth principally depend as for divers other advantages conducing to wealth to the expence of the superfluities of their owne native Commodities and the importation of forreigne to intelligence and prevention of dangers and lastly to the improvement of civility and knowledge And this our Island for ought any one knoweth might have remaind to this day in her first simplicity and rudenesse had she not refined and civilized her selfe by Commerce with those of the next Continent and they of the next Continent had they not crossed the Alps to Italy and the Italians themselves had they not had practise with the Levantines and other Eagle-eyed Nations who dwell nearer the Sun rising Amongst the Islands of the old world Great Brittain hath beene cried up for the biggest and best replenished with those Commodities that are most materiall and usefull for the life of man whereof she hath not only a competency for her selfe but enough to spare her neighbours which by way of surplusage she useth to disperse to most Countreys whereby she beates a generall Trade and makes rich returnes with her owne home-growne goods which Trade may bee termed the prime sinew and chiefest support both of her strength and riches Now there is nothing so advantagious and commendable in a Trade as Community and Freedome for in this particular as in most things else the topique Axiome holdeth Bonum quò communius cò meliùs the more common and diffusive a good thing is the better it is The most substantiall and staple Commodity that our Countrey affords for the maintenance of Trade is Cloth with divers Manufactures besides arising from Wooll which makes other Nations call Wooll Englands Golden Fleece and questionlesse the principall reason why in time of Parliament our Iudges who are the Oracles of the Law do sit in the House of Peeres upon Wooll-Sacks was to put them in minde of preserving and advancing the Trade and Manufactury of Wooll Therefore to barre any freeborn subject from the exercise of his Invention and Industry to convert this universall native Commodity to his best advantage at home or abroad is to deprive him of part of his birth-right and of that which God and Nature ordaynd for his subsistence and not only so but it is to set a mark of strangenesse or rather of a kinde of slavery upon him in his own Countrey Hence it may well be inferrd that for one Company or Incorporation to arrogate to it selfe and to engrosse the mannaging expence and vending of this necessary inmated Commodity is an injury to publike right and no lesse then a meere Monopoly And it is held an undoubted principle of State that there is nothing more pernicious and destructive to any Kingdome or Common-wealth then Monopolies which like Incubusses doe suck the very vitall spirits and drive into one veine that masse of blood which should cherish the whole body Nor doth this word Monopoly according to its true Etimology referre only to one individuall person but also to any one Town where many men are incorporated or aggregated into one body who have hooked to themselves the sole exercise and emolument of such and such a trade whereby they only enrich themselves and admit no others to enter into their Society without some exaction The fellowship and Charter of them that terme themselves Merchant-Adventurers under favour is a Monopoly of this kinde and is repugnant both 1. To the Law of Nature 2. To the Law of Nations 3. To the positive Law of the Land First it is repugnant to the Law of Nature in regard that Wooll and the draping and merchandizing thereof being the Cape Commodity wherewith Nature the handmaid of God Almighty hath
prejudiciall in the highest nature to the sale of our commodities for the pettie Shop-keepers and Retailers will not come so farre to buy our Commodities It is too chargeable costly and sometimes dangerous travelling and will not quit cost to travell so farre to buy small quantities Now this inconvenience is fallen upon it that the great traders or buyers of our Cloth which the Dutch call Grossiers and it is a proper name for them because they are engrossers of our Commodities doe come and buy great quantities together and when these men are come to Amsterdam and other remote places then they furnish all those smaller Shopkeepers and other Chapmen with our commodities and these men get a competent gaine thereby which if trade were free our Merchants might gaine so much the more or afford our Cloth so much the cheaper unto the Retailer and by cheap selling we should the sooner beat the Dutch from making But there is a greater harm in it then this for the chief makers of Cloth in Holland and those parts thereabouts be those great buyers or Grossiers who aime at ingrossing our cloth for two reasons first because they get good gaine upon our commodities in selling them as aforesaid to smaller tradesmen but secondly and principally to advance the sale of their owne home-made cloth before our English which is easily done having the sale of both in their owne hands none can hinder them and seeing it is so that the Dutch do make great quantity of cloth and other woollen commodities there is a far greater necessity of a free trade and selling cheape then heretofore when the Hollanders made none or but few for then it was easie to make them give what price we pleased for cloth but now we must not onely endeavour to sell our commodities but should chiefly aime to sell so cheape as might cause the Dutch to desist from making of cloth The greatest bane which ever the commerce of this Kingdome received was that the Hollanders and others fell to the making of cloth and other woollen manufactures and if the Flemming should come to set up woollen Loomes as the Hollander doth to what a low ebbe our trade of cloth would sinke unto it is an easie thing to be a Prophet Therefore there is no one thing that requires the policie of England more then to draw the one and prevent the other from making of cloth and other woollen commodities in that abundance Now there is no way under Heaven to doe it but by devising wayes to sell our Manufactures at cheaper rates and disperse them more up and downe the Countrey which cannot be otherwise effected then by a free Trade and multitude of Merchants and by fitting all places and remote parts with such kind of Manufactures as are most proper for them These reasons no doubt will give good satisfaction to indifferent men who under favour cannot deny but this Company of Merchant-Adventurers is as prejudiciall to this Kingdome as ever the French or Spanish Companies were and to prove they were so it will be requisite here to insert an Act of Parliament in tertio Jacobi by which they were dissolved the Act runs thus VVHereas divers Merchants have of late obtained from the Kings most excellent Majesty under the Great Seale of England a large Charter of Incorporation for them and their Company to trade into the Dominious of Spaine and Portugall and are also most earnest suiters to obtain the like from his said Majestie for France whereby none but themselves and such as they shall thinke fit as being meere Merchants shall take the benefit of the said Charter disabling thereby all others his Majesties loving Subjects of this Realme of England and Wales who during in divers respects greatly charged for the defence of their Prince and Countrey and therefore ought indifferently to enjoy all the benetits of this most happy peace and also debarring them from that free enlargement of common Trafficke into those Dominions which others his Majesties Subjects of his Realmes of Scotland and Ireland doe enjoy to the manifest impoverishing of all owners of Ships Masters Mariners Fishermen Clothiers Tuckers Spinsters and many thousands of all sorts of Handy-crafts men besides the decrease of his Majesties Customes Subsidies and other impositions and the ruine decay of Navigation together with the abatement of the prices of our wools Cloth Corn and such like commodities arising and growing within this his said Majesties Realm of England and the enhancing of all French and Spanish commodities by reason of the insufficiency of the Merchants they being few in number and not of ability to keep the great number of our Ships and Seafaring men a work and to vent the great store of commodities which this his Majesties Dominion of England doth yeeld And by meanes that all Owners and Mariners with divers others if these Incorporations should continue shall bee cut off from their ordinary meanes of maintenance and preserving their estates And finally by reason that all French and Spanish commodities shall be in a few mens hands In respect whereof as for many other manifold inconveniences growing thereby much hurt and prejudice must needs redound to all his Majesties loving Subjects of this his Highnesse Realme of England if reformation for the prevention of so great an evill be not had in due time For remedy whereof be it enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same That it shall and may be lawfull to and for all his Majesties Subjects of this his Highnesse Realme of England and Wales from henceforth at all times to have free liberty to trade into and from the Dominious of Spaine Portugall and France in such fort and in as free manner as was at any time accustomed sithence the begining of this his Highnes most happy Reign in this his Realm of England and at any time before the said Charter of Incorporation was granted paying to the Kings most Excellent Majesty his Heires and Successors all such customes and other duties as by the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme ought to be paid and done for the same The said Charter of Incorporation or any other Charter Grant Act or any thing else heretofore made or done or hereafter to be done to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Provided alwayes that this Act or any thing therein contained shall not be of force to enable or give liberty to any person or persons to goe over Seas without licence who by the Laws and Statutes of this Realme or by any Statute hereafter to be made shall be restrained from going beyond the Seas without licence any thing to the contrary notwithstanding Were there nothing more said then what this Act of Parliament relates it is sufficient to convince any rationall man of the unsufferable wrong the Kingdom receives by such illegall Incorporations severall Parliaments have