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A54688 Ligeancia lugens, or, Loyaltie lamenting the many great mischiefs and inconveniences which will fatally and inevitably follow the taking away of the royal pourveyances and tenures in capite and by knight-service, which being ancient and long before the conquest were not then, or are now, any slavery, publick or general grievence with some expedients humbly offered for the prevention thereof / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1661 (1661) Wing P2010; ESTC R7943 37,109 71

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or illegal or the old age or sickness of a formerly lusty and healthfull man which renders a small weight to be very heavy which was at other times not at all troublesome to him can make it in it self to be so much as he now takes it Nor are the supposed Grievances and Burdens of Tenures in Capite and Knight-Service naturally originally or intrinsecally to be found either in them or by them but are often occasioned by the parties groundless complaints and the troubles and burdens which they bring upon themselves who like men very sick by distempers and diseases of their owne making and complaining heavily of their paines and anguish can many times only tell that they are sick and not as they would or should be but not whence it came or if they could are unwilling to remember the causes of it For The Reason why they seem to be Burdens and Grievances and heavier then formerly CAnnot be hid from those which shall but enquire and rightly and judiciously search into the Causes of that which now lyes more upon some mens spirits or imaginations then need to be if they would doe by themselves in the Oeconomie and manage of their Estates and Affairs as their more prudent and virtuous Ancestors did who when Meadow ground was in H. 6. dayes now not much above 200 yeares agoe in the most fertile Counties of England at no greater a yearely value then 8 d per Acre by the yeare and other lands of 4 d. or 5 d. an Acre per Annum could keep greater houses or hospitalities by five or ten to one then they doe now a greater retinue of servants and dependants gave great quantities of lands in Common and Estovers of wood to the poore or whole Townshipps live honorably if they were Barons and worshipfully if they were Knights and Esquires and serve their Prince faithfully did great acts of Piety and Charity by building and endowing of Churches and stood as greater and lesser Pillars in their severall Counties did not rack and skrew their Tenants to the utmost that any would give for lands with harsh and hard Covenants and Conditions did grant Mannors Annuities and Farms to Gentlemen in Fee or for lives to serve and go along with them and their Prince upon occasion of wars were not troubled at their Tenures in Capite and by Knight-service did not thinke those benefits to be any burdens though great summs of money were somtimes paid as 6000 l. by a mother of an Earle of Oxford and 20000 marks by a mother of in Earle of Clare in the raigne of King H. 3. for their wardshipps when marriage Portions or Dowries in money were but small and their large and great revenues considered were but as accumulations of many lesser wardshippe were not so much indebted as now nor so much enforced to mortgage or sell Lands get Friends Servants or Tradesmen to be bound for them to have their Lands extended or the persons of such of them as were under the degree of Baronage outlawed or arrested were not up to the ears in Shop-keepers or Trades-mens Books or Items but lived within the pale of Virtue and fence of Sobriety and far better then they do now when they do let errable land at 13 or 16 s. per Acre by the year Pasture at 20 or 30 s. and Meadow at 40 s. or sometime 3 l. the Acre per An. were not driven out of their ancient and former love and reputation in their Countries or Neighbourhood by letting the Kitchin chimneys of their Country houses fall down for want of making but ordinary fires in them but did in their several orbs and ranks live more honourably and worshipfully then now they do or can when they are guilty of few of those great and good actions did not as too many do spend in the pursuit of Vanities ten times more then their Forefathers who had long kept and enjoyed the same or greater Estates nor sit up all night to come home drowsie and discredited in the morning with the loss of 4 or 500 l. and sometimes 3 or 4000 l. by gaming bestow 2 or 300 l. on a Coach and 100 or 200 l. upon a Band Spend more in gaming drinking and whoring which their forefathers though sometimes addicted thereunto could get at cheaper rates then by maintaining a costly Corinthian Lais or a sumptuous Cleopatra then would pay for the charge of a Wardship and lose more in a careless or not at all taking of their Accounts or looking to their Estates Affairs then would twice over discharge it nor did tamely permit their flatterers sycophants and promoters or concealers of their vices to go a share in their Estates and Fortunes Too many of their eldest sons were not so mounted to the height of Fashions as to spend more in Powder Plays Coaches and Ribbons the lesser circumstantials of their vain expences then their forefathers when they were Heirs apparent had allowed them for all necessaries and a better kind of education and expend more in Peruks or Periwigs at 3 or 5 l. price for every one then would pay for the charges of suing out their Fathers Liveries too many of their wives and daughters did not racket with a troop of young Gallants or Gentlemen of Amours or Dalliance nor discourse more of Romances then the Word of God Virtue and good Examples send their Linnen for the attire of their heads and necks when they are above one hundred miles from London by the weekly Posts to be washed or starched by the Exchange-women hunt after the newest and most costly fashions sacrifice to all the parts of pride gluttony prodigalities and luxuries drive a trade of black Patches and Painting give 10 20 or 40 l. for a yard of Lace did not make it their designs to vie with every one they can perceive to wear Jewels Diamond Lockets Necklaces of Pearl or more costly Apparel then themselves did not give insana pretia extravagant and cheating prices because such a mad great woman or a neighbours purse-emptying wife had given the same 't would be a disparagement to come as they say behind them or wear any thing at a lesser rate nor adventure and many times lose 5 10 or 20l. in an afteroonn or evening at Cards which is now become most of their huswifery their daughters did not in their hopes of getting Princes to their Husbands or impossible great Marriages help to cast their fathers estates and purses into a consumption and spend more money betwixt their age of 13 and 20 then would have made treble the marriage portions of their Grandams when 100 l. or 2 or 300 l. was a good portion for a good Knights well-bred Daughter when 1100 marks was in 2 H 6. a good portion for a marriage betwixt Thomas Lord Clifford and a Daughter of the Lord Dacre when Henry Lord Clifford having great and large Revenues in the North parts of England and else where did in 33 H. 8. suppose it to be a good provision for his Daughter Elizabeth Clifford to devise to her by his last Will and Testament one thousand pounds if shee married an Earle which in those dayes were men of no small revenues or an Earles sonne and heire 1000 marks if a Baron and 800 marks if a Knight and that Henry Lord Clifford his sonne did
selfish or sparing in his kindeness to them Shame our promises and protestations made unto him at his retorne from that misery wherein the sins and madness of a factious part of his subjects had cast him of sacrificing their lives fortunes and estates and all that they had for him that had rescued them from an utter destruction and yet when hee had told them of his wants and how much it troubled him to see his people to come as they did flocking to see him at Whitehall that hee had not wherewithall to entertain them or make them eat make such hast to take away his antient Rights of Pourveyance or dayly and necessary support of Him his Queen Children and Servants and for entertainment of Embassadors of Forreign Princes which for three days untill they have their Audience which is so sumptuous and extraordinary as it costs him at the least three or four hundred pounds a day When as the ill-nurtured and unmannerly Dutch gnawing a pickled Herring and an Onion in one hand and a piece of ruggen bread in the other can in their slovenly and small moralities to their Prince of Orange allow him and his Court which after the griping high rate of their Excise goes a good part of the way to as much as what the King saved by his Pourveyances a freedom from payment of Excise upon all Provisions and the like to the Queen of Bohemia and Embassadors of Forreign Princes all the year and to their Army every common Soldier when they are in the field or leaguer or upon a march to the Ships of Merchants aswell as those of Warr in their Victualling and to the English Company of Merchants of the Staple there residing and deny not the Universitie of Leyden a freedom of having their provision of Wine and Beer laid in Excise-free When the Lord Mayor of London hath an allowance or tolls out of Oats and Sea-Coals which are brought to be sold to London of Stallage and Pickage in the Markets and Faires out of Cattel brought to be sold in Smith-field and many other things towards the charge of his extraordinary House-keeping in the Yeare or Time of his Majorality which the simplest and poorest Citizen never grumbles at but acknowledgeth it to be for the honor of their City hath every Company or Corporation of Trades bringing him forty shillings in retribution of a Dinner and a cheap Silver Spoon every Citizen contributing to the charge of Triumphal Arches in entertainment of their Prince upon extraordinary occasions every Company bearing the charge of the Livery men and chief of their Company in their Pageants on the Lord Mayors days and every little Borough-Town in the Country can be well content to help one another in the charges which are put upon it when the King shall in his Progress receive any entertainment from them Such a great provision as is necessarily to be made for the Kings Houshold and his multitude of Servants and Attendants will when much of his Provision shall not be sent as formerly to his Court which did prevent it sweep and take away the best sorts of Provision from the Markets and as experience hath already told us make scarce and dear all that can be brought to the Market near the Kings residence or his occasions Teach the people whose measure and rule of conscience is to ask high rates and take as much as by any pretence tales falshoods or devices they can get and more of the King Nobility and Gentry then common people to heighten their prices and get thereby unjustly of the King more then all their Subsidies or Assessments shall come to and render him in no better a case or condition as to prices or good husbandry in buying his necessary provision as they say by the peny then a Landlord that lets a Farm of 50l. per Ann. to his Tenant and takes his rent in Wheat Malt Oats Wood Beef Mutton Veal and Poultry at such rates as he shall exact of him Every Clown or Carter every mans servant or Kitching-maid shall in matters of Market and Provision be at liberty to buy a Salmon Phesants Partridges or Bustards and the like fitter for the King then their Masters out of his Pourveyors hands and do by him as a Trim over-monied Citizens wife did by a Gorget of 60l. price now too low a price for those kinde of Gentlewomen which she bought in Anno 1641. in the beginning of our pretended religious but irreligious Warr out of the Queens hand and being afterwards sent to with a proffer of some advantage could finde neither manners nor duty to perswade her to part with it And the e will be then but few Araunahs who when David and his Servants came to buy his Threshing-floor for to build an Altar bowed himself before the King on his face upon the ground and answered Let my Lord the King take and offer up what seemeth good unto him Behold here be Oxen for burnt-sacrifice But every Nabal will be ready to answer our David and his Pourveyors or Servants Who is David and who is the son of Jesse or as one of that kindred did lately to the Kings Harbinger a Windsor at the solemnities of the Feast of the Garter when hee could say the King had quitted his Tenures Pourveyance and was now no more to him then another man he was at liberty to let his Lodgings to any one would give him sixpence more though the poor Persian so much celebrated in History who rather then he would offer nothing to his Prince in his Progress by his Cottage could run to the next water and bring as much of it as he could carry in hish and for a present would if he were now alive in a horror and detestation of so great a bestiality and such a Monstrum horrendum take his heels and run quite away from such an ingratitude or inhumanity Disable the Brewers who complaining heavily of the Excise-men or Tormenters as they call them will by the mysteries of their Trade lay the burden as much as they can upon their customers will not be able to give as much as formerly to the Maltsters nor the Maltsters to those that sell the Barley but all of them shifting of the burden one upon another will be a cause of the enhancing of the rates of Beer and Ale vitiating or making of it worse and by false Gaugings Expilations and Tricks of Excise men lesser measures used by the Retailers and every ones labouring to ease themselves as much as they can and using too many devices to make themselves savers or to increase their gain by the pretences of it will not fail to bring a huge trouble much damage and many inconveniencies upon the people and the poorer part of them Will very much in the matter of Pourveyances which Oliver and his Conventions were content not to molest now thrown into that bargain diminish the magnificence and grandeur of the