Selected quad for the lemma: majesty_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
majesty_n house_n parliament_n speaker_n 3,357 5 10.8139 5 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
A34160 Hinc illæ lacrymæ, or, An epitome of the life and death of Sir Wlliam Courten and Sir Paul Pyndar ... with their great services and sufferings under the crown of England : together with a brief narrative of the case and tryal of certain persons for pyracy and felony on the 10th of February 1680 : upon a special commission of Oyer and Terminer, grounded upon the statute of the 28 of Henry the 8 / faithfully and modestly collected by Thomas Carew ... ; with some remarques thereupon. Carew, Thomas, 1595?-1639? 1681 (1681) Wing C563; ESTC R12035 39,994 28

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Possession which was referred to the Committee of Foreign Plantations who found that by the Laws of Nations and of this Kingdom the Heirs and Assigns of Sir William Courten retained a Freehold in the said Island having no ways forfeited the same for any Offence Aud that the Patent to James Earl of Carlisle mentioning him to be Lord Proprietor of the said Island was declared void and against Law The Councel of Courten further affirming that no Soveraign Prince or State could Disseize a person of a Uacancy possest by him at his own proper Costs and Charges without manifest Injustice And that it was against the Honour and Prudence as well as the Iustice of a Nation to despoil any Subject that laid out himself for the good of his Country Yet no Restitution hath been made for the said Island and Plantations to the Heirs and Creditors of Courten either by the King or the Planters out of the Old Servile Rents of Sugar Cotton or Tobacco for every head due to the Original Proprietor or out of the four and half per Cent of all Goods Exported granted by the General Assembly of Barbadoes in lieu thereof to the Lord Willoughby and since Assigned to the King Secondly Concerning the Spoils and Depredations upon the two Ships the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura in the East Indies particularly excepted for Reparation by the 15 th Article of the Treaty concluded at London the 4 th September 1662. no ways performed It was therefore thought necessary and convenient upon the farther Applications of the persons Interessed and Injured to the King and to the Parliament that a War should be declared against the States General of the United Provinces which was carried on at the vast Charge of the Kingdom His Majesty being Graciously pleased upon the entrance into that War to express himself in a Speech to both Houses of Parliament as follows The 24th of November 1664. 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 Jealousie which Ill men scatter abroad and which I am sure will never sink into the breast of any Man who is worthy to ●it 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 Councellors 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 occasions 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 IN the Month of May following His Majesty out of a Iust sense of Sir William Courten's Sir Paul Pyndar's and their Partners Injuries Damages and Losses in their Shipe Goods and Commerce did in pursuance of His own Authority and Prerogative-Royal Grant a Special Commission for Reprizals under the Great Seal of England grounded upon the Law of Nations and the Laws and Statutes of this Realm to continue effectual in Law at all times until the sum of 151612 l. Sterling Money with incident Costs and Charges should be Recovered and Received as by the Letters Patents recited in the Plea to His Majesties Scire Facias brought in the High Court of Chancery remaining upon Record in the Petty-Bagg-Office hereafter set forth at large more plainly appears It is to be remarked that during the War several Dutch East-India Ships and other Merchant Ships were taken by the Kings Men of War and made Free Prize but no part thereof given towards the Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura although earnestly sought after Those Spoils of War the Sacred Returns due to the Injur'd and Oppressed the price of much Blood and Treasure spent in the Expeditions of Courten and his Partners were otherwise imployed Which lies heavy at the Doors of those that have eaten the Bread of the Fatherless and Widows for whom the Land Mourns IT is to be considered when the said Letters of Reprizal were put in Execution by Mr. Carew and his Associates in the beginning of the year 1666. The prosecution thereof was Arbitrarily suspended by Proclamation on the Tenth of August following without any Iudicial hearing their Seamen frequently taken away for the Kings Ships His Royal Highness and His Secretary also pretending that it was prejudicial to their Interest in obstructing ordinary Letters of Marque during the War Carew Committed to the Fleet by Order of the Council Board and Enlarged by the Dreadful Flames on the 2 of September following so that instead of a Remedy it proved a Grievance the Ships and Goods Reprized being not sufficient to repair one half of the Costs and Charges in Equipping out Frigots towards recovery of the Debt The Iniquity and Corruption of the Proctors and Common Claimers being such that discouraged all men concerned in that Affair of Reprizals which in the Nations of old were esteemed as Chattels Real and Sacred Decrees like the Laws of the Medes and Persians Nevertheless in the Month of June 1667. a Treaty was concluded at Breda wherein it was mentioned as it 's said that all Offences Injuries Losses and Damages should be buried in Oblivion and all Letters of Reprizal Revoked which Peace and Alliance continued for the space of four years The Dutch Trading in English Bottoms having a War with the French King Then His Majesty declared a second War in Conjunction with France against the States General which continued for the space of two years DUring which time the Proprietors and Creditors Revived their Demands and made fresh Applications to His Majesty in Council to be Relieved in a publick way whereupon several Orders were made at the Council Board That Instructions should be sent to the Embassadors and Plenipotentiaries for that purpose Which being delivered to the said George Carew with the Kings Letter to the said Embassadors in the Month of June 1672. Intimating that the Obligations of all past Treaties being Cancelled it was just and seasonable that provision should be made in the next Treaty for intire satisfaction of the Spoils and Damages of the two Ships Bona Esperanza and Henry Bona Adventura according to the Liquidation in the Letters Patents wherein the Debt was stated and confirmed under the Great Seal for Reparation as aforesaid But in the Month of August the States of Holland Apprehended the said Carew at the Hague notwithstanding his Passport from the Dutch Commissioners or Embassadors at Hampton-Court to Travel all parts of the United Netherlands and committed him and John Sherland to Prison and Condemned the said Carew for a Spie and an Enemy of their Country in obstructing the