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A34083 Lex talionis, or, The Law of marque or reprizals fully represented in the case of spoyls and depredations upon the ships, goods and factories of Sir William Courten and his partners in the East-Indies, China and Japan : whereupon letters patents for reprizals were granted under the great seal of England to continue effectual in the law against the States General of the United Provinces and their subjects ... : together with three several proposals of the creditors, to the King, and their answer (in a postscript) to the Lord Chancellour's arguments upon the scire facias brought by Sir Robert Sawyer ... concerning the letters patents aforesaid. Carew, George, Esq. 1682 (1682) Wing C549; ESTC R33340 30,399 34

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for the time being to be Aiding and Assisting to Turnor and Carew their Executors Administrators and Assigns and to take care that all things shall be favourably interpreted and construed in all respects to the benefit and best Advantage of the said Turnor and Carew their Executors Administrators and Assigns Witness himself at Westminster the Letters were made Patents the 19th day of May in the 17th year of his Reign Now how the Actions and Proceedings of several Ministers and Officers of the Admiralty and other Mercenary Mortals do quadrare with the Kings Honour and Iustice that have Issued out Warrants in the Kings name to apprehend and seize the Persons and Goods of his Majesties Subjects detain them in Prison and Irons until they were Tryed as Fellons and Pyrats for duly acting under his Majesties Royal Commission and Charter grounded upon the Laws and Statutes of England Whereby they were found innocent and accquitted Yet afterwars detained for Exhorbitant and Extrajudicial Fees of Registers and Marshalls of the Admiralty is left to any Mankind to Iudge Conclusion THe Commons of England in Parliament in the Preamble of their Acts acknowledging their thankefullness to His Majesty for His aboundant care in their preservation at Sea and the great charge necessary for the defence thereof granted to the King at several times during the two last short Wars between England and Holland the Sum of Five Millions Four Hundred and Forty Thousand Seven hundred and Fifty Pounds Eleven Shillings and Eight Pence Sterling Money For extraordinary supplies toward the said Wars whereof His Royall Highness the Duke of York received 120902 l. 15 s. 8 d. being one Months Tax as a present for his Heroick Courage at Sea This vast Expence of Treasure occasiond by the Hollanders gave hopes to the Kingdom for greater returnes than that only Debt of 151612 l. Liquidated and assertained for satisfaction That reason of State was depraved in the Lord Treasurer Danby who parted with 600000 Pattacons the price of so much English Bloud and Treasure out of England to the Prince of Orange that reaped the benefit of his Ancesters Offices and Honours by the last War besides his tributes as Lord High Admiral of the seven Provinces out of 1500 Ships and their Ladings taken from the English by the Dutch Capers having his general Letters of Marque during that War There was no necessity therefore for those great Ministers H. Finch C. S. Latimer Ormond Arlington H. Coventry and Marquess del Fresno to suffer the Debt of 151612. and Damages to remain incumbent upon the King or the States when treble the value of that Debt was offered to the English Ambassadors in the year 1673. at Cologne besides another Sum of Money in gross for the Fishries upon the English Coasts to purchase a seperate peace with England Divers Polliticians remarking the English Administrations of State and Justice Blushed for several miscariages in our later days Wherein the due course of Law hath been Obstructed Strangers and others suffered to eat our Bread and have disgested the very Bloud of many hundred Orphants and Widows Some by Imbeaziling the spoyls of Wars others in detaining our Monies and Goods All men in Office turning deaf Ears to our Complaints forgeting the Kings Honour and that Justice which Establisheth the Thorne and Exalts the Nation being unmindful of those very periods in his Majesties Speech to both Houses of Parliament on the 24th of Novemb. 1664. as follows Mr. SPEAKER ANd you Gentlemen of the House of Commons I know not whether it be worth My pains to endeavour to remove a vile Iealousie which some ill Men scatter abroad and which I am sure will never sinck into the breast of any Man who is worthy to sit upon your Benches That when you have given me a Noble and proportionable Supply for the Support of a War I may be induced by some evil Councelors for they will be thought to think very respectively of my own Person to make a suddain Peace and get all that Money for my own private occasion But let me tell you and you may be most confident of it that when I am compelled to enter into a War for the Protection Honour and Benefit of my Subjects I will God Willing not make a Peace but upon the obtaining and securing those ends for which the War is entred into and when that can be done no good Man will be sorry for the determination of it How far the Plea and the Judgement given upon the Demurrer concerning the 151612 l. will be reconciled to the Kings Speech or the Law of the Land is left to those Members of both Houses that heard it to resolve if any man can be safe in his Rights and Properties under such presidents as these which calls to my mind the Old Addage of Sir Fulke Grevil Lord Brook in his time Mankind is both the Form And matter wherewith all Tyranies transform For Kings can neither see act nor devise Without the Peoples Hands Hearts and Eyes And were not man by himself opprest Kings would not Tyrants could not make him Beast FINIS