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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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there was a constant body framed that were sworn to that service for some in these times were sworne both of the Grand Councell and the Privy Councell and so entered upon Record The second of these Councells was also a great Councell and probably greater then the other but this was called onely upon occasion and consisted of all sorts like a Parliament yet was none An example whereof we have in the Ordinances concerning the Staple which at the first were made by the King Prelates Dukes Earles Lords and great Men of the Kingdome one out of every County Citty and Burrough called together for that end their results were but as in point of triall for sixe moneths space and then were turned into Statute-Law by the Parliament These two are Magna Concilia yet without power further then as for advise because they had no ancient foundation nor constant continuance Another Councell remaineth more private then the other of more continuall use though not so Legally founded and this is called the Kings Privy Councell not taking up a whole House but onely a Chamber or a Table signifying rather communication of Advice then power of Judicature which more properly is in Banco And yet the power of this grew as virile and royall as it would acknowledge no Peere but the Parliament and usurped the representative of it as that had bin of the whole Kingdome The ambition thereof hath ever bin great and in this most notoriously evident that as it had swallowed up the grand Councell of Lords it seldome can endure the mention of a Parliament but when Kings or Affairs are too rugged for their owne touch The platform of their power you may behold in this their Oath 1. That well and lawfully they shall councell the King according to their best care and power and keep well and lawfully his Councels 2. That none of them shall accuse each other of any thing which he had spoken in councell 3. And that their lawfull Power Aid and Councell they shall with their utmost diligence apply to the Kings rights 4. And the Crowne to guard and maintaine save and to keepe off from it where they can without doing wrong 5. And where they shall know of the things belonging to the Crowne or the rights of the King to be concealed intruded upon or substracted they shall reveale the same to the King 6. And they shall enlarge the Crowne so far as lawfully they may and shall not accouncell the King in decreasing the rights of the Crowne so farre as they lawfully may 7. And they shall let for no man neither for love nor hate nor for peace nor strife to doe their utmost as far as they can or doe understand unto every man in every Estate Right and Reason and in Judgement and doing right shall spare none neither for riches nor poverty 8. And shall take of no man without the Kings leave unlesse meat or drinke in their journey 9. And if they be bound by Oath formerly taken so as they cannot performe this without breaking that they shall informe the King and hereafter shall take no such Oathes without the Kings consent first had All which in a shorter summe sounds in effect that they must be faithfull Councellors to the Kings Person and also to his Crowne not to decrease the true Rights but to inlarge them yet all must be done lawfully And secondly that they shall doe right in Judgement to take no Fees nor any other Oath in prejudice of this The first of these concerne the Publique onely at a distance and yet the point of increasing and diminishing of the Crowne in the sixth Section is captious and may sound as if there is a Legall enlarging of the Crowne whereof he that takes the Oath is to judge A matter which onely and properly concerns the Parliament to order and determine or else farewell all liberty of the People of England The second concerneth immediately the King in his politique capacity but trencheth upon all the Laws of the Kingdome in the executive power and all the motions in the whole Kingdome either of Peace or Warre following in the reare either immediately or mediately are under this notion interested into the transaction of the Privy Councell to debate and determine the Kings judgement therein unlesse it will determine alone And how easie a thing it is for such as have power of determining the Action by the Law to slip into the determining of a Law upon the Action and so to rule by Proclamation experience taught succeeding times sufficiently Neverthelesse these times wherein Parliaments were every moment upon the wing and kept this Noble Band in awe by taking them into their Cognisance placing and displacing some or all of them directing and binding them by Oath as they saw occasion of which the Records are full and plentifull I say these times thus constituted added yet further incouragement to them by giving them powers by Statute-Law over and beyond what by ancient Custome they had obtained The King and Councell of Lords had anciently a power of Jurisdiction that hath bin in the first part of this discourse already observed yet it s very probable that it was not any select company of Lords but the whole Association for it s granted by all that they had originally a Principall hand in the jurisdiction And its hard to conceive how any private number should catch such a power if not by usurpation But the manner of acquiring is lesse materiall the principall consideration resteth upon the quality of this Jurisdiction For it is evident that much difference hath bin both concerning the place and manner of exercising this Authority In generall It must be granted that all Pleas Coram Rege were grounded upon Writs first purchased and returnable either in Banco or in Camera or in Cancellaria And no difference at all will be concerning the Jurisdiction in Banco for that was by the Course of the Common Law and the people held it one of their liberties to have one known course of Law for determining matters of right and wrong As touching these Pleas which were holden by Writs returnable in Camera they were properly said to be Coram Rege Consilio whose meeting was in the Councell Chamber in those dayes called the Star-Chamber For other returns of Writs in the Star-Chamber doe not we finde but such as were in Camera nor Prohibitions from thence but under the notion of the Kings Councell and this Camera as I said was the place of the joynt meeting of the Councell as well of those of the Chancery and Benches as of those that attended upon matters of State Now the influence of Society in point of Judicature principally aspected upon some Pleas belonging to the Crowne although even these also properly were determinable in the Kings Bench nor can I observe any rule to bound the powers of these two Judicatories but this that the Councell Table
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
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
Forrain and sudden invasion and attempts Thirdly the powers are not undefined but circumscribed 1. To Array such as are Armed so as they cannot assesse Armes upon such 2. To compell those of able Bodies and Estates to be Armed and those of able Estates and not able bodies to Arme such as are of able Bodies and not Estates but this must be Juxta facultates and salvo Statu 3. Whereas they straine themselves to make the Statute of Henry the Fourth and the Commission of Array to consist with the Statutes of 13 E. 1. 1 E. 3. and 25 E. 3. thereby they affirm so many more restrictions unto this power of Array as those Statutes are remediall in particular cases yet doe I not agree to their Glosses but leave them to the debate already published concerning the same Secondly as this power was not absolutely in the King so was it not originally from themselves because they had not the Legislative Power concerning the same but the same was ever and yet is in the Parliament hereof I shall note onely three particular instances First the Militia is a Posture that extendeth as well to Sea as Land That which concerneth the Sea is the Law of Marque and Reprisall granted to such of the People of this Nation as are pillaged by Sea by such as have the Kings Conduct or publique Truce And by this Law the Party pillaged had to recompence himself upon that man that had pillaged him or upon any other Subject of that Nation in case upon request made of the Magistrate in that Nation satisfaction be not given him for his wrong it was a Law made by the Parliament whereby the Chancellor had power to grant such Letters or Commission upon complaint to him made This was grounded upon the Statute of Magna Charta concerning Free Trade which had been prejudiced by the rigour of the Conservators of the Truce against the Kings Subjects although what was by them done was done in their own defence And by which means the Forrainers were become bold to transgress and the English fearfull in their own Charge and many laid aside their Trade by Sea and thereby the strength of the Kingdome was much impaired Nor is the Equity of this Law to be questioned for if the Magistrate upon complaint made grants not releif the offence becomes Publique and the Nation chargeable in nature of an Accessory after the Fact and so the next man liable to give satisfaction and to seek for releif at home The King then hath a power to grant Letters of Marque by Sea or Land and this power is granted by Parliament and this power is a limited power onely in particular cases in regard that many times these prove in nature of the first light skirmishes of a generall War Two other Instances yet remain concerning the Order and Government of the Souldiers in the Army the one concerning the Souldiers Pay Viz. That Captains shall not abate the Souldiers Wages but for their Cloathing under peril of Fine to the King The other concerning the Souldiers service That they shall not depart from their Colours without leave before the time of their Service be expired unlesse in case of sicknesse or other good cause testified and allowed by the Captain and such as shall doe otherwise shall suffer as Fellons Which Lawes could not have holden in force had they not been made by Parliament in respect that the Penalties concern the Estates and Lives of Men which are not to be invaded but by the Law of the Land so as both Captains and Souldiers as touching the Legislative power are not under the King in his Personall Capacity but under the Law of the Parliament Lastly as the rule of War was under the Legislative power of the Parliament so was the rule of Peace for whiles Henry the Sixth was in France which was in his tenth yeare from Saint Georges day till February following The Scots propound tearmes of Peace to the Duke of Glocester he being then Custos Regni which he referred to the Order of the Parliament by whom it was determined and the Peace concluded in the absence of the King and was holden as good and effectuall by both Kingdomes as if the King had been personally present in his full capacity CHAP. XXIII A Survey of the Reignes of Edward the Fourth Edward the Fifth and Richard the Third THe reign of Henry the Sixth was for the most part in the former parts of it like fire buried up in the ashes and in the later parts breaking out into a flame In the heat wherof the Duke of York after Fealty given by him to Henry the Sixth and dispensation gotten from the Pope to break his Faith lost his life and left his Sonne the Mark-grave to pursue his Title to the Crown which he claimed by Inheritance but more especially by Act of Parliament made upon the agreement between Henry the Sixth and his Father This was Edward the Fourth who neverthelesse reserved himself to the Election of the Lords and was by them received and commended to the Commons in the Feild by which meanes he gaining the Possession had also incouragement to maintain the same yet never held himself a King of full age so long as Henry the Sixth lived which was the one half of his reigne Nor did he though he held many Parliaments scarce reach higher then at reforming of Trade which was a Theame well pleasing to the People next unto their Peace which also the King carefully regarded For although he had been a Souldier of good experience and therewith successfull yet as one loath to trust too far either the constancy of the People of his own dominion or the fortune of War with his neighbouring Princes he did much by brave countenance and discourse and yet gain'd repute to the English for valour after the dishonorable times of Henry the sixth He had much to do with a wise King of France that knew how to lay out three or foure calme words at any time to save the adventure of his Peoples blood and make a shew of Mony to purchase the peaceable holding of that which was his only by force untill the winde proved more faire to bring all that continent under one head In his Government at home he met with many crosse gales occasioned principally by his owne rashnesse and neglect of the Earl of Warwicks approved freindship which he had turned into professed enmity And so weakned his own cause thereby that he was once under Water his Kingdome disposed of by a new intaile upon the Heires of Duke Clarence and so the Earle of Warwick remained constant to the House of York though this particular King was set aside Nor did he in all this gaine any thing but a Wife who though his subject and none of the greatest family neither brought any interest unto her Lord and Husband amongst forraine Princes brought neverthelesse a Pearle which was
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
neverthelesse in that interim three Parliaments had been holden one by the Duke of Bedford and two by the Duke of Glocester in the last of which this Law was made And in truth if wee looke upon this title of the Kingdomes Guardianship in its bare lineaments without lights and shadows it will appeare little better then a Crown of feathers worne onely for bravery and in nothing adding to the real ability of the governing part of this Nation Neither were the persons of these Magnificoes so wel deserving nor did the Nation expect any such matter from them Edward the first was a wise King and yet in his absence chose Edward the second to hold that place he being then not above fourteen yeares of age afterwards Edward the seconds Queen and the Lords of her party were wise enough in their way and yet they chose Edward the third to be the Custos regni then not fourteen yeares old his Father in the meane time being neither absent from the Kingdome nor deposed but onely dismissed from acting in the adminstration of the Government Edward the third follows the same example he first makes his Brother John of Eltham Custos regni and this he did at two several times once when he was but eleven yeares old afterwards when hee was about fourteene Then he made his Sonne the Black Prince upon severall occasions three times Lord Warden of the Kingdome once he being about nine yeares old and againe when he was eleven yeares old and once when about fourteen yeares old Lastly Edward the third appointed his son Lionell Duke Clarence unto this place of Custos regni when as he was scarce eight years old all which will appeare upon the comparing their ages with the severall Rolls of 25 E 1. and 3 5 12 14 16 19 E 3. If therefore the worke of a Custos regni be such as may be as wel done by the infants of Kings as by the wisest Councellor or most valiant man it is in my opinion manifest that the place is of little other use to this Common-wealth then to serve as attire to a comely Person to make it seeme more faire because it is in fashion nor doth it advance the vallue of a King one graine above what his personall endowments doe deserve Hitherto of the title and power the next consideration will be of the original Fountain from whence it is derived wherein the presidents are cleare and plaine that ordinarily they are the next and immediate ofspring of Kings if they be present whithin the foure seas to be by them enabled by Letters Patents or Commission But whether present or absent the Parliament when it sate did ever peruse their authority and if it saw need changed inlarged or abridged both it and them Thus was the Duke of Glocester made Lord Warden in the time of Henry the fifth he being then in France in the roome of the Duke of Bedford the like also in Henry the sixths time when as the King was young for then the Parliament made the Duke of Bedford Lord Warden and added unto that title the title of Protector Afterward at the Dukes going over into France they committed that Service to the Duke of Glocester if I forget not the nature of the Roll during the Duke of Bedfords absence and with a Salvo of his right Nor unlike hereunto was the course that was taken by the Parliament in these sullen later times of Henry the sixth whereof more hereafter in the next Paragraph Lastly the limitation of this high power and title is different according to the occasion for the Guardianship of the Kingdome by common intendment is to endure no longer then the King is absent from the helme either by voluntary deserting the worke or imployment in forrain parts though united they be under the Government of the same King together with this Nation such as are these parts of France and Ireland and Scotland then under the English fee This is apparent from the nature of that statute of Henry the fifth formerly mentioned for if there was need to provide by that Statute that the Kings Arrivall and Personall Presence should not dissolve the Parliament assembled by the authority of the Custos regni then doth it imply that the personall presence of the King by and upon his Arrivall had otherwise determined the Parliament and that authority whereby it sate But the presidents are more cleare all of them generally running in these or the like words In absentia Regis or Quamdiu Rex fuerit in partibus transmarinis It is also to be granted that the Kings will is many times subjoyned thereunto as if it were in him to displace them and place others in his absence yet doe I finde no president of any such nature without the concurrence of the Lords or Parliament and yet that the Parliament hath ordered such things without his consent For when Richard the First passing to the Holy Land had left the Bishop of Ely to execute that place during his absence in remote parts the Lords finding the Bishop unfaithfull in his Charge excluded him both from that place and Kingdome and made the Kings Brother John Lord Warden in his stead But in the Case of the Protectorship which supposeth disability in the Person of the King the same by common intendment is to continue during the Kings disability and therefore in the Case of Henry the Sixth it was determined that the Protectorship doth Ipso Facto cease at the Kings Coronation because thereby the King is supposed able to govern although in later times it hath not so beene holden For Kings have been capable of that Ceremony as soon as of the Title and yet commonly are supposed to be under the rule of necessity of Protectorship till they be fourteen years of age or as the Case may be longer For although Henry the Sixth was once thought ripe when he was eight yeares old yet in the issue he proved scarce ripe for the Crowne at his two and twentieth yeare Neverthelesse the default of Age is not the onely incapacity of Kings they have infirmities as other men yea more dangerous then any other man which though an unpleasant tune it be to harp upon yet it is a Theame that Nations sometimes are inforced to ruminate upon when God will give them Kings in his wrath and those also over to their own lusts in his anger In such Cases therefore this Nation sometimes have fled to the refuge of a Protector and seldome it is that they can determine for how long When Henry the Sixth was above thirty yeares old Richard Duke of Yorke was made Protector and Defendor of the Realme and of the Church It was done if the Record saith true by the King himselfe Autoritate Parliamenti It was further provided by the Parliament that though this was to continue Quamdiu Regi placuerit yet the Duke should hold that place till the Kings Sonne Edward should come